The Country Editor North 5.15.13

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May 15, 2013

Countryy Editor Just good reading

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Lifesaving Lemonade

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North Keep your cool: Don’t get stuck on the road this summer ~ Page 7

The Landlord’s Dog by Jan P. Case ‘Landlord says the dog has got to go.’ That’s a bit of a stretch, since I am the landlord, but that was what I told people while trying to relocate a male pit bull puppy who, at 10 months of age, was already exceeding 75 pounds. Like most moms, I got into this situation due to my kid. Last May my 17 year old daughter announced that her friend had given her a puppy. It was a pit bull, but good news — he was already named! Seriously, that was her selling point. I do not see a future in marketing for Abigail. But how could I say no? After all, he was already named! Onyx arrived at the end of May. He was a cutie: big ears, big eyes, and the cutest smile. Spring turned into summer and Onyx took his rightful position in our home and in our hearts. He had so much love, so much energy. He loved to hike, run and chase bears (a story in itself for another time.) He also loved to chase Annie the Jack Russell; Annie would chase the tennis ball and Onyx would chase her. Then there was the chewing — he would chew anything he could, his palate included dining room chairs, scissors, and sadly my eyeglasses. But the chewing was always forgiven because he was the best hugger. Onyx knew enough to rest his head against you when you went in for the squeeze.

Everyone enjoyed plenty of outdoor time and hugs well into the fall. But time stands still for no one and by the time fall turned into winter, the cute puppy had turned into a still cute, but exceeding 75 pound, puppy. I took him for a lot of walks in the village, but he never would get to run around like he enjoyed in the summer, it broke my heart to see him so bored. Beyond his boredom, I began to notice another issue with owning a pit bull. While walking Onyx, I noticed other pedestrians scurrying to the other side of the street when we met. I noticed a change in my neighbor’s demeanor around Onyx and me; he would wave but would no longer stop and chat. The final clue that something was amiss was the holidays. My brother made his annual trek home to the farm, but never stopped at my home in the village. I asked my mom what was up with that and she told me he was afraid of Onyx. “He’s just too big,” she explained. “And you know, he is a pit bull.” Poor Onyx, burdened with the stigma of being a pit bull. His size and apparent scare factor led to the decision to try to find Onyx a new home as soon as possible. I had no luck at all. At the same time I contacted our local no-kill shelter, there was a huge pit bull rescue in a neighboring village. I called rescue groups within a 75 mile radius. Most responses

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by Jamie Aloi Growing up my weekends consisted of traveling about an hour away from home to an old farm where about six different families, with up to four generations, went to get away from the daily grind. This place is an outdoor club located on a piece of land that was once a farm with a large pond, open field, and forests full of trails. Each family owned either a trailer or rented out a room in the old farm house or redone chicken coop. We, as kids, would all play in the open field during the day and at night everyone would cram into the old barn that had been converted into a club house to hang out, eat and mainly play cards — pitch was the game of choice. During the day we would go out and explore the land. There were about five different trails we could choose to take on any one day, There were two along the pond (that depending on the time of year would connect all the way around the pond), one along the creek that was formed from the water exiting the pond, one leading away perpendicular to the pond and one leading away from the open field. We would almost every weekend

Onyx and Abbie at their home last February. Photos by Jan P. Case were the same: we are maxed out, we can put you on a waiting list, and do you know how hard it is to find a new home for a pit bull? Things were not looking good for Onyx. I work for a weekly agriculture paper. Onyx needed room to run. Who has that? Farmers. So I placed an ad in Country Folks: ‘Free dog, 10 mos. old, 75 plus or minus lbs.

explore at least one of these trails, usually the one next to the creek where we would also play, making dams or bridges and catching crayfish. The trail leading away from the pond was the longest trail we had that if you took it long enough you would come upon a corn field. Sometimes we would go though the cornfield and eventually swing around and meet up with the trail that connected to the open field. Along that trail there was a path that veered off that would lead us to an old abandoned stone foundation of what was once a sugar mill. There was also a trail that the men of the camp created that connected the two trails about halfway inbetween, but this one also depended on the height of the water because it crossed the creek and there was no bridge. Exploring these trails never got old as there was always something new; new growth, new trees down or running into animals scurrying away from the rowdy kids. This was our childhood home away from home that we will always have and let the future generations of our family

See Onyx page 3

enjoy. Having this experience growing up has helped create who I am today. Most children these days don’t get to experience living in the outdoors with no access to internet or television. We explored and discovered things that wouldn’t happen if we stayed inside. There are things I learned from this place that I never would have been able to learn from a classroom or the internet. This sparked my love for the outside and helped shape for my future career of wanting to work outside and not at a desk in some building. I believe that every child should get to live this way.


May 15, 2013 • THE COUNTRY EDITOR NORTH •

Page 2


by Kelly Gates The sight of a front yard lemonade stand conjures up images of a carefree childhood, of 10 cent signs promoting watered down powder mix and kind-hearted passersby who choke down a cup for the kiddos. But for one little girl, her lemonade stand stood for something much more. Having been diagnosed with neuroblastoma as an infant, four-year old Alexandra “Alex” Scott, announced to her parents in the summer of 2000 that she wanted to hold a lemonade stand to raise money to help find a cure for all children with cancer. “Things have changed drastically in recent years thanks to major advancements in research, so much that if Alex were diagnosed with her particular type of cancer today, she would be treated differently and would have a much better prognosis,” said Liz Scott, Alex’s mother and coexecutive director of Alex’s Lemonade Stand Foundation. “We went from seeing Alex out in the front yard with her little pitcher of lemonade and a poster board to

having 35,000-plus lemonade stands and hundreds of thousands of people raising money to find a cure for childhood cancer across the country.” Sadly, Alex passed in 2004 at the age of eight. But during the four years she sold lemonade, she helped raised $1 million to help find a cure for the disease that took her life. The foundation she founded recently reached the $60 million mark, having funded more than 325 research projects across the country involving more than 70 institutions committed to finding cures for over 24 types of cancer. Since Alex held that first stand, the Alex’s Lemonade Stand Foundation has also inspired individuals and entire corporations even, to carry on her legacy of hope. The Lemon Society of Philadelphia was formed by young professionals in the “City of Love” to help support the charity. During a recent fundraiser, the group raised nearly $90,000 through a silent auction and speakeasy event. Ruth’s Chris Steakhouse has hosted

lemonade stands for the charity. So have Daniel Webster Elementary School in New Jersey, the University Center at the University of Tennessee, and many families honoring friends and family members who have survived cancer or lost their battles with the disease. Alex Guarnaschelli, who recently won Food Network’s “Next Iron Chef: Redemption” and is a regular judge on the primetime show “Chopped,” is another avid supporter of Alex’s Lemonade Stand Foundation. She is currently working on a lemon lime lemonade recipe and a pairing of ginger cookies that she plans to present to the foundation. “I have a daughter who has taught me a lot along the way. She is only five, but she is a powerful little human,” says Guarnaschelli. “It stuns me how effective children can be in their messaging; and I believe that every child should enjoy that basic right to become an adult. Getting rid of childhood cancers is one effective way to reach that goal.” Anyone who wishes to host a lemonade stand–or

run a marathon, bike multiple miles or raise money for the group in any other way–begins by signing up on the Alex’s Lemonade Stand Foundation website ( www.alexslemonade.org ). They are then mailed a bright yellow envelope filled with a banner, posters, photos of young “heroes” who have cancer and talking points containing detailed information so they can accurately educate others about childhood cancer.

The foundation also puts on local and nationwide events to increase awareness and bring in additional funds for cancer research. In September of this year, a new activity will challenge people throughout the U.S. to collectively run or walk one million miles. “We will be asking people to walk or run as many miles as they can during September, which is Childhood Cancer Awareness Month. The goal is to combine all of

the miles and hopefully, reach one million miles in total,” said Liz. “Each participating person or team will get a page on our website to post photos and messages of encouragement. Their friends and family can go to the site and donate pledges in support of the walkers and runners.” Any parent would go a million miles if it would help cure his/her child of cancer and this event is a great way to symbolize the commitment to finding that cure, she added.

Lemon Society of Philadelphia presents a check to the foundation after a speakeasy and silent auction fundraiser in April 2013. Photo courtesy of Alex’s Lemonade Stand

Onyx from Page 1 anywhere right now and pick him up.’ I made plans to drive Onyx to meet these folks the very next day. During the trip, I questioned my actions. What am I doing, driving over an hour and a half to a remote location with my daughter and dog, to meet folks I know very little about? Perhaps a little more foresight was called for! I tried not to let Abigail see how nervous I was. Onyx was just happy to be on a road trip. When we got closer I talked to Abigail about how we were going to handle the situation. If we did not like the looks of the place, we were going to just drive on by; we should keep him on his leash and hold it until we are sure; we better keep the tail gate open so we can load him as quick as possible. She made a comment about how I should watch less Criminal Minds and more Animal Planet. We finally arrived and met Dan, Kelly and their dogs, Melee and Sophie. We visited with them for a while and finally Abbie, with all the grace a teenager posseses, Onyx with his new family: Dan, Kelly, Melee, and Sophie. states she is so relieved that they

Landlord says dog has got to go. Dog wonders what a youth in Asia has got to do with him, saveonyx@gmail.com.’ My coworkers scoffed. “You can’t put an ad like that in the paper,” they said. “Somebody is going to complain about the ‘youth in Asia,’ and they may think you are being rude.” My response was, “Maybe, but I know somebody is going to read it and chuckle. They are going to be the right fit for Onyx. They will have a sense of humor. That is the person I want.” It worked. I was flooded with emails. One email that stood out, said ‘we want your dog; we will drive

Onyx gives the ultimate “puppy dog” look. He knows just how to milk those big ears and eyes!

are not crazy, weird people, and said she felt very comfortable leaving Onyx with them. Dan and Kelly are beef farmers, and Country Folks subscribers. We took a leap of faith and it turned out well. Onyx is very happy; Dan and Kelly love him very much. They send me periodic updates and let me know how he is doing. Onyx now gets plenty of exercise, he has become fast friends with Melee, and Kelly happily reports that he still gives the best hugs — truly a happy ending for both Onyx and this landlord.

Page 3 • THE COUNTRY EDITOR NORTH • May 15, 2013

Lifesaving lemonade


Page 4 May 15, 2013 • THE COUNTRY EDITOR NORTH •

Old Man icon honored 10 years after statue fell by Holly Ramer, Associated Press CONCORD, NH (AP) — Edward Geddes already had spent two long days on the mountain when the weather turned. Battered by wind and soaked by rain — “like shower baths of ice water” — he clung to a rope and pressed on, even after the rain turned to ice that coated his clothing and left two of his fingers crooked for the rest of his life. It was 1916, and the crew assigned to help Geddes rescue New Hampshire’s Old Man of the Mountain had given up. But Geddes continued the work alone, drilling 11-inch holes into the granite and installing turnbuckles and rods to hold the ledges in place. “When the men Col. Greenleaf had hired to help me all deserted, I did not intend to be beaten. I leave it to you to judge whether I had time to play or not,” he wrote when the work was complete. Thanks to Geddes’ efforts and those of others who followed, the 40-foot-tall natural rock formation that resembled an old man’s face remained suspended 1,200 feet above Franconia Notch until May 3, 2003, when it smashed to the ground. Over the years, it became the state’s most recognizable symbol — the Legislature adopted it as the state emblem in 1945, and it still appears on the state quarter, highway

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signs, license plates and countless souvenirs. A decade after the Old Man’s demise, the famed stone profile is little more than a historical footnote to the state’s youngest residents. But it remains a beloved family member to others, including the descendants of Geddes, a granite quarry superintendent from Quincy, MA, who performed the first repair work on the Old Man nearly a century ago. Ronald Geddes, 71, was a toddler when the man he knew as Uncle Ed died in 1944. But his father — Edward Geddes’ nephew — was close to him, and Ronald Geddes grew up hearing about his connection to the Old Man. “He was very focused, very wiry, and he was fearless,” Geddes said of his great-uncle. “He suffered, and he prevailed.” Geddes, who lives in Boston, visited the Old Man many times growing up and as an adult. And while his first thought was always how proud he was that “someone in our family actually did that,” he also understood what drew countless others to the site. “It became a symbol of something. It had a magical, spiritual quality,” he said. Although no one knows how old the Old Man of Mountain was before it fell, several groups of surveyors working in the Franconia Notch area took credit for discovering it in 1805. It quickly became a popular tourist attraction and inspired many works of art and literature. Statesman Daniel Webster compared it to the signs hung outside shops to indicate specific trades: “Shoe makers hang out a gigantic shoe; jewelers a monster watch, and the dentist hangs out a gold tooth; but up in the Mountains of New Hampshire, God Almighty has hung out a sign to show that there he makes men.” Edward Geddes, who returned to the mountain in 1937 amid rumors that the Old Man was about to topple, offered a slight tweak to that quotation after his measurements showed the rocks had not moved even a sixteenth of an inch in 21 years. “I came to the conclusion that the words of Daniel Webster should be extended to read that once in a while New Hampshire as well as producing men produces a few ‘liars,”’ he said, according to an article published in the Quincy Patriot Ledger at the time. Although Geddes was followed by other equally devoted caretakers who protected and patched up the Old Man in later years, Mother Nature had the last word. Soon after the profile’s 2003 tumble, a nonprofit volunteer group began raising money for a $5 million multiphase memorial dedicated to the Old Man, but donations dried up after the first phase was completed in 2011 and no further work will be done, said Dick Hamilton, a board member of the Old man Legacy Fund. More than 25,000 people visited the memorial site last summer, but it’s unclear whether it will continue to attract visitors. Some visitors who left reviews on the travel website tripadvisor.com said they appreciated learning more about the Old Man’s history, but

A Tree in Fall by Conni Partridge Driving through the back roads of New England in the fall of the year can be dangerous. With my camera beside me on the seat, I set out to photograph the awesome beauty of the great northeastern woods. Carefully parking or stopping on the roadside, I photographed vines creeping colorfully over rocks, trees with bright canopies and even bushes in their autumn glory.

Old Man of the Mountain on April 26, 2003, seven days before the before the collapse. A night spring snow fell the night before. Photo courtesy of Jeffrey Joseph

The site of the Old Man of the Mountain in July 2010, 7 years after the collapse. Photo source: Wikipedia Commons others complained that it wasn’t worth the trip. At a Concord playground Thursday, 8-year-old Alexis Tramontozzi of Goffstown paused for a moment when asked if she had ever heard of the Old Man of the Mountain before replying with a definite “no.” Her grandmother, Eloise Frank, said her family always stopped to see the Old Man when they took vacations in the White Mountains when she was a child, but she is unlikely to ever visit the memorial site. But that doesn’t mean she wants the state to find a new symbol. “I think it should stay,” she said. “What would you change it into?” In 1955, President Dwight D. Eisenhower and 5,000 others attended a 150th birthday party for the Old Man at the Cannon Mountain tramway parking area. On May 3, a much smaller ceremony was held to commemorate the 10th anniversary of the Old Man’s fall. Ralph Geddes, another great-nephew of the profile’s first repairman, drove up from his home in Raynham, MA, much like he did a decade ago. “The morning I heard he fell, I went straight there,” he said. “I needed to do it. It was in my family.”

Suddenly a great, tall, black-barked tree loomed before me dressed in raiment of brilliant yellow. Its giant, oval shaped leaves took me by surprise. I checked the road both ways then stepped from my car and aimed for a vertical shot. Suddenly the road seemed to move backwards, away from my car! In my haste to get a shot of that rugged old tree with its primary-yellow leaves, I had left my car in forward gear. I tried to grab the door but fell flat on my face in the street, bruising my hands and knees. I scrambled to my feet, and, sprinting on my 65-year-old legs, I caught the gearshift and tried to throw it into neutral. As I plopped into the seat, the shifter bypassed neutral and lurched my car into reverse. The next instant, my foot was on the brake. Retrieving my camera from the street, I drove home, laughing sheepishly to myself. I got the shot.


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This is a hammer by Samantha Mazzotta Kid-tough baseboards Q: For a recent do-ityourself project, I replaced the baseboard along two walls of the kids’ playroom with a length of two-by-four wood. The kids tend to ram their toys into the base of the wall and this dented and marred the original baseboard and even damaged the drywall behind it. I removed the original baseboard. I also patched the damaged sections of drywall by cutting them away and replacing with new pieces of drywall held in place with wooden strips behind the drywall. This also helped to reinforce the base of the wall. Next, at my home-improvement store, I had

two pieces of 2-by-4 cut to the length of each wall’s base. I left a quarter-inch off each end because I decided to leave the baseboard in place on the other walls. There was one error here: I had to re-cut one piece of wood because I forgot the two pieces would intersect at one corner. But it was not too difficult to saw off a couple of inches from one end. I attached the new “bumper boards” to the wall studs. To make it easier, I located and marked the studs first, then pre-drilled the boards. Once the boards were in place, I attached them to the studs using 4-inch wood screws, countersunk the screw heads slightly and cov-

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ered with wood putty to hide them from the kids. Finally, I painted the new boards. The plain wood tended to soak up paint, so I had to put on two coats of primer first. Then I painted them with a “kid-resistant” paint (available at any paint store) with an eggshell finish that is easier to wipe clean. Once the kids are grown, I will likely replace the bumper boards with regular baseboard. You can save the old baseboard, but mine is too damaged, so I plan to scrap it and start fresh. Hope your readers can benefit from my experience! — Sam G., Baltimore A: That sounds like a great fix for the playroom.

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(BPT) — Summer is the time for road trips, whether they cover thousands of miles across the country, or are “staycation” day trips. As we head into the summer months, gasoline prices continue to fluctuate and are expected to average $3.56 per gallon for regular-grade gasoline, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration. Whether you’re driving for hours or sitting in traffic, you will want to make sure your vehicle is ready for the road. The most important component that makes your vehicle run is the engine. Your vehicle will

last longer if you take care of the engine by following regularly scheduled maintenance as recommended by the manufacturer. This includes oil changes, replacing the air filter and keeping a detailed history log of the work that has been done. Just as important to the engine itself are the components around it that help it run. Check the hoses that are connected to the radiator. They help pump coolant to and from the engine. Look for cracks, leaks and loose connections, paying special attention to where hoses are clamped. Make sure the engine is cool when you touch the hoses. They should be firm and not soft.

Belts that help cool the system should also be checked for cracks and damage. A visual inspection is good enough, but for the more mechanically inclined, you could also remove the belt to make sure the material inside isn’t separating into layers. Cracked hoses or a belt snapping will result in your engine overheating, leaving you stuck on the side of the road. Another way to help cool your engine and protect it is to use a radiator coolant additive. Taking the time to maintain your engine and its components will get your further down the road and on your way to a great summer vacation.

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Automotive

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Page 8 May 15, 2013 • THE COUNTRY EDITOR NORTH •

Vigilante planter targets Manhattan neighborhoods by Katherine Wartell, The Manhattan Mercury MANHATTAN, KS (AP) — Andy Deckert isn’t a gardener by trade. He’s not even a gardener by life-long hobby. But over the past decade, he’s become something of a guerrilla greenskeeper in the neighborhoods near his Manhattan home, planting irises along public walkways and roads to spruce up otherwise dull horizons. You could call him Johnny Iris-seed if you were so inclined to such corniness, or if the irises were actually grown from seeds and not spread through rhizomes, a rootlike subterranean stem. (That’s a lesson from Linda Deckert, Andy’s wife). Deckert, a retired teacher, has already planted 2,000 irises along a stretch of Miller Parkway, near where the couple lives, and plans to

plant 2,000 more to reach the water tower located off of Mill Knoll Terrace. He’s also planted irises beside 31 fence posts along Amherst Avenue, behind a guardrail on Davis Drive, in a large plot on Brierwood Drive and in a grassy median on Miller Parkway, not far from the K-18 exit. It’s at that median where Deckert first started his work back in 2001, after moving to Manhattan the previous year following his marriage to Linda, a longtime Manhattanite. Though Deckert was never big on gardening, the iris became his calling card after his fatherin-law from his previous marriage, Bill Pickering, thinned his own patch of irises growing outside of the kitchen door of his WaKeeney house. Pickering gave Deckert

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the thinnings. “I didn’t know what to do with them,” Deckert said, before he set his eyes and shovel on the boring patch of grass in the middle of Miller Parkway. “I just started spading it,” Deckert said, planting irises and daylilies. All lavender and purple irises that Deckert plants come from that original patch in WaKeeney, he said. Deckert’s father-in-law died about seven years ago, but not before he could see his son-in-law’s

handiwork. The Deckerts have a photograph of Pickering sitting in a lawn chair in the middle of the median amongst the irises as they are at full bloom. Last summer, Deckert had to thin the irises from the plot. Once again not knowing what to do with them, he started spading and planting the thinnings along a sidewalk that runs the length of Miller Parkway. But irises aren’t Deckert’s only plant of choice

— in front of a sign for Miller Ranch, Deckert planted little groups of daffodils, salvaged from a lackluster patch that had been there previously. “I love these,” he said, of the cheery, bright yellow flowers, planted with liriope grasses, but calling them, “sort of an accident.” Deckert had so many excess daffodils from the pruning that he planted several in his family’s yard and in true guerrilla fashion, planted a row at the very edge of his next

door neighbor’s yard without their knowledge. “They haven’t gotten rid of them,” he said. He also planted flowers in the front yard of another neighbor who eventually moved, Deckert said, and never tended to their yard. He gave even more excess daffodils to a friend who lives on Leavenworth Street. That friend in turn passed them around to others because there were so many.

Vigilante 9


Page 9 • THE COUNTRY EDITOR NORTH • May 15, 2013

Vigilante

from 8

But perhaps his largest project is on Brierwood Drive, where family friend Larry Weigel owns a house and the plot of land behind it. With the permission ofWeigel’s next door neighbor, the pair cleared a nearby plot

of land in 2011 and planted 1,000 irises, catmint, loriope grass, Russian sage, garlic cloves, crepe myrtle, daisies, daylilies, chrysanthemum, sedum and Yukon gold potatoes. The patch yields about nine pounds

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of potatoes. “Neighbors just come by and laugh,” Deckert said, of the potato patch. The pair gave away the potatoes last June. The plot is across from residential construction and the soil the potatoes were planted in was so poor when Deckert first began planting that he could barely get his shovel through it. Now the soil is soft and malleable. They’ve also decorated the plot with rocks and a stone bench, and Weigel hung a sign on one of the surrounding trees that reads, “Andy’s Corner.” “Do we really know what we’re doing? Most

times not,” Deckert said. A short drive from the Brierwood plot is Deckert’s final contribution — a row of irises planted behind a guardrail on Davis Drive, near the K-18 exit. The irises were first planted much closer to K18, beside a ravine, but construction on the highway forced Deckert to move the flowers. He moved them to a strip of land by the home of an elderly couple who had been receiving notices from the city to mow the area. “I accomplished something really good accidentally,” he said. Linda Deckert is also a plant enthusiast, though she prefers perennials with longer bloom times than irises, which bloom for about two weeks. She tends to her own flowers in a potting room she designed. The couple grew up together in Pawnee Rock but after high school Deckert attended Kansas Wesleyan in Salina and Linda enrolled at Kansas State University. After moving away, Deckert married a woman from WaKeeney, while Linda married a man who

worked in the veterinary department at K-State. He died of a heart attack. After Deckert, a father of two, lost his first wife to cancer in 1998, Linda, a mother of two, sent him a sympathy card and the pair continued to corre-

spond until Linda suggested dinner. They were married in 2000 and celebrated their 13-year anniversary on Tuesday. Deckert will continue gardening throughout the summer. His irises should bloom in June.

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by Dean Fosdick, Associated Press Whoever believes there’s nothing new under the sun hasn’t seen the plants being introduced for the 2013 gardening season. Think multi-colored blooms, high-yield vegetables bred for containers and ornamental edibles packing still more nutrition as breeders try to anticipate consumer demand. Grafted tomatoes appear to be the hottest new trend in home gardening, while cocktail gardens, featuring plants that make or embellish alcoholic drinks, top this year’s niche category.

product development for Ball Seed Co., a division of Ball Horticultural Co. The West Chicago-based company lists 295 new introductions for 2013. “We’re trying to create contrasts,” Roethle said. “Deeper colors on leaves and more vibrant blossoms.” Those attributes spur impulse buying, he said. “You’re picking up milk and bread at a quick-stop (grocery) and then you wind up walking away with some flowers, too.” Another trend sees many old standbys made new again. These include bi-color dahlias, petunias with deep colored blooms and variegated foliage,

• Pint-size vegetables including the first sweet corn you can grow in a pot. No need to garden in large rectangles when you can plant edibles in 24-inch containers. On Deck Sweet Corn leads the parade of several high-yield vegetables being developed for patios or tight spaces.

• Herbs that are emerging as the hot new flowers. Many herbal varieties look great as standalones or when mixed with traditional blooms. Check out the new Cha Cha chive with its unique “leafettes” and eminently edible flower heads. • Flowers with a surprising new look. Throw

away the trellises if adding the Sun Parasol Garden Crimson mandevilla to your landscape. This is the headliner in a new series of compact bedding plant mandevillas from Suntory, the Japanese company that brought you the first blue rose in 2009. Excellent branching also makes it a natural for hanging baskets, Suntory breeder Tomoya Misato said. And then there is Longfield Gardens’ new Double Oriental Lily, producing petals from the center of the flower rather than a stamen. A Longfield spokeswoman says that gives it the look of a dou-

ble bloom, while doing away with pollen stains. • Grafting. Over a billion tomatoes are grafted annually for improved yields and disease resistance, industry analysts say. Many heirlooms are uncommonly delicious, but produce too few fruit and are prone to disease and nematodes. These varieties become more vigorous and deliver larger crops for longer periods when grafted to proven rootstock. Try the Black Krim and Big Rainbow tomato heirlooms for grafted combinations that deliver good looks with good taste.

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New blooms, veggies and more debuting for 2013

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by Hillary Speed, Associated Press For their wedding reception in Bourne, MA, Jason and Amelie Neese turned to their shared love of literature as inspiration for table names and homemade escort cards. Guests sat at tables

named after the couple’s favorite books, such as “The Great Gatsby,” “A Movable Feast” and “Sophie’s World.” And the escort cards, which tell guests which table they’ve been assigned to, were made of old-school library cards and pockets that the Neeses or-

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at individual table settings, or escort cards at the front of a reception area. “Couples are getting increasingly creative,”

yourself ideas on her website, including one using vintage fashion illustrations and another using found sea glass. “Place cards can be the

tional,” she said. Kelsie Evans and Douglas Woodhouse, who got married in Antrim, NH, made seed packets that doubled as escort cards

said Christina Friedrichsen, founder and editor o f IntimateWeddings.com. “For a barn wedding, for instance, they might tie a place card to a pear or apple. For a literarythemed wedding, they might use Scrabble tiles as place cards. For a destination wedding, luggage tags might be used.” Friedrichsen details a number of playful do-it-

perfect way to infuse a little whimsy or add the element of surprise,” she said. One couple featured on her blog fastidiously spelled out each guest’s name using Legos. Friedrichsen favors place cards that are multi-functional. “For instance, you can pin vintage brooches to card stock, add the guest’s name and voila, you have a favor and place card in one. Stamp or stencil the guest’s name onto a linen napkin, and again you have something that is multi-func-

for their 110 guests. Woodhouse handmade the packets and decorated them with 16th-century botanical illustrations.They were marked with the guests’ names and assigned tables, filled with assorted wildflower seeds and hung with clothespins in an empty picture frame, which was displayed in a tree. Wedding blogs and Pinterest contain many ideas for turning just about any found object into a place card or es-

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Page 11 • THE COUNTRY EDITOR NORTH • May 15, 2013

Get creative with place cards, escort cards


Page 12 May 15, 2013 • THE COUNTRY EDITOR NORTH •

Woman meets circus tiger in bathroom SALINA, KS (AP) — A central Kansas woman likely won’t remember her first circus for the clowns or performances — it’ll be the tiger in the bathroom.

The big cat had escaped briefly after its turn in the ring Saturday at the Isis Shrine Circus in Salina. Staff members blocked off the concourses at the Bicentennial

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Center as the tiger wandered into the bathroom, where one of the doors was blockaded. About that time, Salina resident Jenna Krehbiel decided she needed to use the restroom. When she walked in the door that hadn’t been blocked off, she found a tiger standing about 2 feet away, The Salina Journal r e p o r t e d (http://bit.ly/11eq218 ). “You don’t expect to go in a bathroom door, have it shut behind you and see a tiger walking toward you,” Krehbiel said. Chris Bird, manager at the Bicentennial Center, said the bathroom was only 25 feet long. “Once she saw the tiger, I’m sure she knew to go the other way,” Bird said. “Overall, it was a scary, surreal moment. I am glad no one was hurt or injured.” The tiger was captured within minutes and returned to its enclosure. Krehbiel, a social worker, said she didn’t scream or run because she is trained to stay calm. “Looking back, it was a scary ordeal,” she said. “At the time, I was think-

ing I just needed to get out.” Krehbiel said her 3year-old daughter had a different reaction. “My daughter wanted to know if it had washed its hands,” Krehbiel said. “That was her only concern. I think that shows the thoughts of children and that they wouldn’t have known there was danger.”

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pride in supporting himself and his family. He is thrifty. He avoids extravagance and lives within his income. He meets his obligations and pays his bills promptly. He is industrious. He enjoys his work and believes that all honorable work is dignified and necessary, and that

there is no substitute for honest toil. The true American is broad-minded and humane. His heart and hand go out to help the needy and the helpless. The true American is a good citizen. He endeavors to live by the Ten Com-

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mandments and the Golden Rule. He attends regularly the church of his choice and participates in community affairs. The true American helps keep our educational, religious, and political institutions free from communistic influences and propaganda. The true American, by precept and example, instills in his children moral and spiritual integrity. He trains his children the way they should go, believing that the family is the backbone of the nation. The true American believes in the two-party system. He serves on juries if called upon to do so.

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The true American desires world peace but not the kind that is to be had by surrendering to the communists. He is a loyal and patriotic citizen. The true American believes the noblest life is one that renders service and that the ultimate aim in life is to serve God and his fellowman to the best of his ability. He believes in serving his country, rather than having his country serve him. He makes his voice heard and his actions felt. A minister at a local Herkimer church saw a young boy studying the scroll honoring those who died in time of war. The boy wondered why all the names were there. The minister answered, “They are the names of the boys

who died in the service.” The boy then asked, “Which service? The 9:30 or 11:00 one?” Talking about getting your money’s worth: a bachelor farmer placed a “Wife wanted” ad in the statewide farm paper. The ad read, “Wanted: Wife with a tractor. Send picture of the tractor.” The farmer said to his wife, Janet, “Well, my dear, I’ve carried you safely over all of the rough spots in the road of life, haven’t I?” “Yes,” she said, “and I don’t believe you missed a single bump.” The disgruntled farmer said, “Ya! Life is like a bowl of cherries after you spit out the pits.” Thinking of a deep subject — have you got your

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lawn mower out yet? Remember Roy Rogers, “Happy trails to you, until we mow again,” or something like that. Is it ever polite to brag? Our company is bursting at the seams with the wonderful reception The Country Editor is receiving in Herkimer County. Each week over 26,000 homes in Herkimer County receive The County Editor by U.S. mail. Possibly bragging is not proper… however, it is always proper to say thank you. Thank you all 26,000 homes (which actually equates to 91,000 people) in Herkimer County for your reception of this new, weekly mailed publication — The Country Editor. A life without God is barely worth living. Say hi to your neighbor. Wave when the red Spyder goes by. Fly with the Lord as your life companion.

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HOSKING SALES • WEEKLY SALES EVERY MONDAY Weekly Sales Every Monday starting at 12:30 with Misc. & small animals, 1:00 Dairy. Call for more info and sale times. Our Volume is increasing weekly - join your neighbors & send your livestock this way! Monday, May 6th sale - cull ave. .69 Top cow $ .91, bulls/steers $.78 - $.96, bull calves top $1.55, heifer calves top $1.00, dairy feeders $.40 - $.88, feeder bulls $.83 - $1.25, Feeder heifers $.80 - $1.22, feeder steers $.68 - $1.25. Dairy bred heifers up to $1050. Lambs 30# - 49# $1.14 - $1.20. Monday, May 20th - Monthly Sheep, Lamb, Goat & Pig Sale. Monday, May 27th - Memorial Day - We will be open. We will be starting at 10:00AM with flowers, plants, shrubs. If you want to participate in consigning to the plant sale contact us as soon as possible. Note the time of sale! We will have our normal schedule after the plant sale. Monday, June 3rd - Monthly Fat Cow & Feeder Sale. LOOKING TO HAVE A FARM SALE OR JUST SELL A FEW - GIVE US A CALL. ** Trucking Assistance - Call the Sale Barn or check out our trucker list on our Web-Site. Call to advertise in any of these sales it makes a difference. Directions: Hosking Sales 6096 NYS Rt. 8, 30 miles South of Utica & 6 miles North of New Berlin, NY. www.hoskingsales.com Call today with your consignments.

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Page 13 • THE COUNTRY EDITOR NORTH • May 15, 2013

Hello from 5


Page 14 May 15, 2013 • THE COUNTRY EDITOR NORTH •

Smalll Business

Bible trivia by Wilson Casey 1. Is the book of Nehemiah in the Old or New Testament or neither? 2. From Luke 1:56, how many months did Mary stay with Eliza-

beth? 1/2, 1, 3, 5 3. What’s a small room or closet in a church? Zapa, Zeta, Zander, Zari 4. Eve’s name appears in the New Testament how many times? 1, 2, 46, 63?

5. From Psalms 27:1, The Lord is my light and my “what"? Rock, Glory, Salvation, Anointed 6. After David, who wrote the most Psalms? Solomon, Paul, Job, Asaph

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southwestern Illinois home after being returned from where he turned up more than 900 miles away. Suburban Journals of Greater St. Louis (http://bit.ly/Y9rhBc) reports 5-year-old Dauz went missing from the Dausman family’s fenced Collinsville yard in July of last year, only to turn up last month at an animal shelter in Fairfax, VA. Alicia Dausman believes Dauz was stolen by a friend’s family member who temporarily was living with them. Dauz was reunited after the Virginia shelter scanned the digital identification chip implanted in the dog’s neck and notified the family. Dausman says the pet is thinner, lighter in color

Please join the Herkimer County Chamber of Commerce in supporting our local small businesses during

Small Business Week in Herkimer County May 19th-25th

In return our local businesses are offering you the following discounts and/or specials: Small Business Week Specials 1. Adirondack Bank - Stop into an Adirondack Bank branch during Small Business Week and mention Small Business Week, plus open a new checking account and you will receive your first order of checks free. 2. Licari Motor Car, Inc. (Herkimer) - $250 off any Vehicle Purchase or 15% off All Under Body Repairs - Both offers valid May 20th - 24th, 2013. 3. Herkimer County HealthNet (Herkimer) - During Small Business Week, be one of the first 20 to stop by the Chamber office and pick up information on the Herkimer County HealthNet’s “The ABC’s of Creating Healthy Places to Live, Work, and Play” and receive a free water bottle. 4. Froggy’s Take-Out (Ilion) - 25% Off your “entire” check. Restriction- One time savings during that week please. 5. Heads-R-Turning Salon & Spa (Ilion) - Receive a “FREE Mini-Facial ($30.00 Savings) with the purchase of a 1 Hour Blended Massage- $85.00 (Includes Swedish, Hot Stone and Deep Tissue Therapy). 6. Geraty Pool & Spa (Herkimer) - Spend $100 and receive a Free Liberty Mattress and Swim Ring a $21 Value - while supply lasts. 7. The Cakery Café (Dolgeville) - buy one bakery item you get one free excluding cakes. 8. NBT Bank - We will be honoring Small Business Week by hosting a Customer Appreciation Day on Monday, where we will have a cake that says: In Honor of our Small Business Customers! 9. Crystal Chandelier (between Herkimer & Middleville) Mention Small Business Week and receive 15% off dinner on Thursday, May 23rd. 10. Dominick’s Deli (Herkimer) - Mention Small Business Week and receive a free drink with any purchase on Wednesday May 22nd. 11. Herkimer County Chamber of Commerce (Herkimer) - Become a paid new member during Small Business Week and besides getting a free insert in our mailed newsletter (already a new member perk) you will receive one free eblast ad ($50 value).

12. Mohawk Station Restaurant (Mohawk) - 10% off on Wednesday, May 22nd. 13. Waterfront Grille (Herkimer) - 20% off Lunch or Dinner on Wednesday, May 22nd. 14. Salvatore’s (Herkimer) - 10% off a meal purchase May 20th - 23rd. 15. Hummel’s Office Plus (Herkimer) - 25% off Garden Accessories May 19th - 25th. 16. Paesano’s Pizzeria (Mohawk) - Get a large one-topping pizza for $8.00 Wednesday, May 22nd. 17. Herkimer Diamond Mines, Inc. (between Herkimer & Middleville) - Special discount for the week of May 19th - 25th Receive a 30% discount on all Herkimer Diamond Mines jewelry and gift items. 18. Gems Along the Mohawk (Herkimer) - Special discount for the week of May 19th - 5th - With any purchase at Gems Along the Mohawk, you become eligible to win a gift basket featuring a variety of items from several of our Herkimer County vendors. Value $300.00. 19. Herkimer Curves will waive the joining fee on all memberships during Small Business Week May 19-25! That will be a $59 savings! 20. Weisser’s Jewelers (Herkimer) - During Small Business Week FREE Jewelry Cleaning and Appraisals - Promote Gold Buying, 15% off for all precious metals sold. 21. “New 2 You Consignments” and “The Sellers Ave” (Ilion) are offering 10% off any clothing purchase from May 21st - 25th. 22. Crazy Otto’s (Herkimer) - May 22nd buy one breakfast, lunch, or dinner entree at regular price, get the second one for 1/2 price. 23. Casey’s Restaurant at the Knights Inn of Little Falls 10% off your meal purchase on May 22nd. 24. Vintage Spirits (Herkimer) - Free Wine & Spirits Tasting May 17th from 4-7:00pm featuring Lake Placid Spirits. 25. HBE Group (Herkimer, Dolgeville) - Stop in during Small Business Week to be entered into a free drawing for an iPad (drawing in September).

Join in on the following events. Free networking opportunities are priceless 20th Main Street Monday - Shop Local Small Businesses 21st Tidy-Up Tuesday - Meet Deb Cabral the DeClutter Coach/DC Efficiency Consulting-Herkimer County Community College 8:30am 22nd Wine & Dine Wednesday - Support our Local Restaurants 23rd Thank You Thursday - Find out how HCCC can help your business at an Evening Reception at Herkimer County Community College • 5:30-7:30pm Finger Foods and Adult Beverages 24th Fun Friday - 7:30-9:00am Stop in the Chamber office for additional information from the week’s events and grab some coffee and a doughnut on your way to work.

and barks raspier, but appears happy to be home.

IS® 1500Z $

5,999

Model: IS1500ZKAV2044

• 28/26 gross hp* Briggs & Stratton® Commercial Turf Series™ engines • 24/23/18.5 gross hp** Kawasaki® V-Twin engines • Available in 44”, 48”, 52” or 61” cutting widths • Ground speed up to 10 mph and mows up to 5 acres per hour, based on 80% efficiency

V

ERTUCCI

POWER EQUIPMENT LLC www.vertuccipower.com

1831 US Hwy 20, 5 Miles West of Richfield Springs, NY 13439

(315) 822-4264

* All power levels are stated gross horsepower per SAE J1940 as rated by Briggs & Stratton. ** All power levels are stated gross horsepower per SAE J2723 as rated by Kawasaki.


cort card. These include: small rocks, painted

with colors that correspond to the assigned

Does Reaching

26,100

Homes in Herkimer County by US Mail Mean Anything To You?

518-673-0129

table; names and table numbers written onto leaves or seashells; and little name cards held in place by wine corks or pinecones. “One of the biggest trends we’re seeing is edible escort cards,” said TheKnot.com’s site director, Anja Winikka. “From mini basil leaf pots and jam jars to full fruits like clementines, apples or pears and cutely packaged containers of candy, they’re pulling out the stops to get creative and have guests well fed before the ceremony has even started.” Here’s just one idea for DIY place cards: Sunprints Try revisiting your favorite 5th-grade scienceclass project with a sunbased art project called

PUBLIC AUCTION

Valuable Real Estate & Farm Dispersal Friday, June 7, 2013 at 9:00 AM

Sunprint Kits. The project, featured on the blog R u f f l e d (ruffledblog.com), is simple enough to do at home. “Brides and grooms want their guests to feel cherished, so there’s a lot of interest in expressive, handmade stationery,” said Jessica McCarty, a calligrapher and designer from southern Illinois who runs a wedding stationery business, Magpie Paper Works (magpiepaperworks.com). As an added convenience, the Sunprints place cards take care of your “something blue.” Materials: Sunprint Kits (you can order online at www.sunprints.org) Your favorite font (consider using McCarty’s original Vermandois font) 8.5-by-11-inch printable transparency film Inkjet or laser printer

Sunprint Template (make your own 4-by-4inch squares or visit Ruffled to download from their blog post: http://ruffledblog.com/ diy-sunprint-placecards/) Cardboard Scissors Water Directions: Type guests’ names in your chosen font onto the 4-by-4-inch squares. Print the squares onto transparency paper. Cut your squares out, leaving the black border behind so it doesn’t show up on the print. In a dim room (avoiding sunlight), put your Sunprint paper on a piece of cardboard. Put your transparency paper cutout with your guest’s name on top of that. If you want, add a flourish, like a leaf or flower. Finally, put the acrylic pressing sheet that comes with the kit on top of that. If you want to do

many at a time, buy a larger acrylic sheet at a home-improvement store. Bring all of it outside into the sun. If it’s a sunny day, it will take three to five minutes to achieve the right exposure. If it’s cloudy, wait a little longer (up to 20 minutes). You are finished when the blue paper has faded to white. Take the Sunprint paper inside when it’s white and rinse it in cool water. You can soak it in a tray of water or run it under cool water. The water changes the blue to white and the white to blue. When the color has changed completely, blot-dry the paper. Dry further by placing paper towels and a book on top of the paper. Once all the water has evaporated (about 12 hours later), the cards are good to go!

Goodyear Direct Dealer

Location: Brookman’s Corner Road, Fort Plain, NY 13339 Directions: From Fort Plain, take 80 south to Brookman’s Corners Rd. Make left approx. 2 miles on left.

Operating dairy farm with 196 acres of quality well maintained and fertilized land. 2013 crops are being planted and will be sold to buyer of the farm. Farmland borders 3 roadways including Brookman’s Corner, Mill Lane, and Rt. 80. Buildings: 98 cow dairy barn. 3 bedroom, 1 bath, dining room, and kitchen farmhouse. 1 car garage, 40x36 pole barn, 30 stall heifer barn, 3 concrete silos, 1 Harvestore silo. Plenty of water with 2 wells and 1 pond. The farmland is some of the best in the Mohawk Valley region and is well known for quality corn crops. Real Estate Terms for financing are 10% day of sale, balance on or before 45 days. Buyers must pre-register and show proof of financing prior to day of sale and must be willing to pay the minimum bid asked by the seller.

1% Broker Participation Available.

Attorney: Gregory Dunn Licensed Real Estate Broker: Krutz Properties LLC. Laurie Weingart, 518-330-8608

Sale held for Oscar and Norma Fox Food Available Day Of Sale All Announcements Day of Sale Take Precedence Over Advertising

JR’s s Auctions

56 Willett St., Fort Plain, NY 13339

(518)) 993-4668

JR’S Sold It!

Consignments, Tools, Antique Furniture, Collectables, and Much More!!

Public Antique Auction!! Thursday, May 16th 6:00 PM Living Estate from Greene, NY Already Coming is a Mid 1700’s 6 Drawer Hi Boy all panels are 1 board, (very nice piece), Mid 1800’s Double 8 Drawer Solid Oak Filing Cabinet with wooden full extension drawers, Antique Cash Register, Early Hanging Lamp, Lots of Collectables, Stamps, Consignments, Furniture, and much more will be here by auction time!! This is only a partial list!! Call for info 518-993-4668 or Tim @ 518-332-5157

Tailgate, Small Animal and Building Material Auction!! Saturday, May 25th, 10:00 AM Will be having a large selection of Lumber, Windows, Doors, Plywood, Insulation, Small Animals, Baked Goods, Furniture, Tools, Equipment, and much more!!! Small Animals & Building Material Consignments Wanted!!

You may bring Household, Kitchen Items, Shrubs, Flowers, Cars, Trailers, Trucks, & More!! We will sell them right off your truck, trailer or car!! Bring anything you want to sell!! Line up will be on our big parking lot right beside our Grocery Store!! Don’t miss our Food Stand, Homemade Soft Pretzels, Ham Sandwiches, Subs, Hot Dogs, Hamburgers, Strawberry Shortcake & More!! All Profit Proceeds to benefit Local Amish Schools and Hospital Bills!!

Gun & Tool Auction!! Wednesday, May 29th • 6:00 PM Gun and Tool Consignments Wanted!! Bring Them On!! Call for info 518-993-4668 or Tim @ 518-332-5157

Thursday, June 6th • 6:00 PM

556 Sanders Rd., Fort Plain, NY

(Call for details and showing.)

10.4 Acres with 14' x 70' Mobile Home, with 12' x 32' Addition, 3 Bedrooms, Kitchen, Living Room, Open Porch, 130' Dug Well, Hand Dug Well, Small Pond, 330' Road Frontage!!

Call for info 518-993-4668 or Tim @ 518-332-5157 Watch ads for details and pictures!

Public Real Estate Auction

Truck, Tire & Auto Center

100 Spruce St., Ilion • Hours: Mon-Fri 8-5

(315) 894-5087

Full Line Commercial Truck, Industrial - OTR Tires • Fleet Accounts Welcome • Goodyear National Accounts & Credit Cards Accepted • All Light Truck & SUV Tires on Sale • Retreading Available & Sold • Cooper - Bridgestone/Firestone • Power Trans Service • Power Coolant Flush • Air Conditioning Service & Recharging

Public Consignment Auction Every Tuesday Night • 6:00 PM

Public Real Estate Auction

Seasons

Discount Tires

Watch for listing on complete dairy cow and equipment dispersal.

JR’S Sold It!

4

Authorized Tire Center

Saturday, June 8th • 10:00 AM

73 Main Street Fonda, NY (Call for details and showing.) 1 Acre 2 Family Brick House, Complete Estate, Household Contents, Outbuildings!! Another Great Auction with Antique and Collectable Items!!

Call for info 518-993-4668 or Tim @ 518-332-5157 • For a full list of Auctions go to auctionzip.com ID # 29324

BLACK TOP PAVING SPECIALISTS OWNER IS ON THE JOB! FREE ESTIMATES COMMERCIAL & RESIDENTIAL

Over 40 Years Experience

DRIVEWAYS • PARKING LOTS BLACKTOP SEALING POWER SPRAY

WE DO THE COMPLETE JOB!

315-894-4411 • 315-866-0091

CHUCK HUMPHREVILLE

Page 15 • THE COUNTRY EDITOR NORTH • May 15, 2013

Get from 11


Page 16 May 15, 2013 • THE COUNTRY EDITOR NORTH •

Country Editor

Number / Classification 20 Air Compressors 25 Air Tools 35 Announcements 45 Antiques 55 Appraisal Services 75 ATV 80 Auctions 82 Auto Body 110 Bedding Plants 120 Bees-Beekeeping 130 Bird Control 140 Books 155 Building Materials/ Supplies 157 Building Repair 160 Buildings For Sale 161 Bulk Foods / Spices 165 Business Opportunities 170 Butchering Supplies 173 Carpentry 175 Cars, Trucks, Trailers 180 Catalogs 182 Catering 190 Chain Saws 195 Cheesemaking Supplies 205 Christmas 214 Clocks & Repair 215 Collectibles 216 Clothing 235 Computers 253 Consignment 265 Construction Equipment For Rent 275 Construction Machinery Wanted 277 Construction Services 280 Construction Supplies 312 Crafts 325 Custom Butchering 330 Custom Services 360 Deer-Butchering & Hides 370 Dogs 410 Electrical 415 Employment Wanted 440 Farm Machinery For Sale 445 Farm Machinery Wanted 447 Farm Market Items 460 Fencing 470 Financial Services 480 Fish 483 Flooring 495 For Rent or Lease 500 For Sale 510 Fresh Produce, Nursery 525 Fruits & Berries 527 Furniture 529 Garage Sales 530 Garden Supplies 535 Generators 537 Gifts 575 Greenhouse Supplies 585 Guns 587 Hair Styling 589 Hardware 600 Health Care/Products 605 Heating 610 Help Wanted 653 Hotel / Motel 683 Jewelers 700 Lawn & Garden 711 Lessons 760 Lumber & Wood Products 790 Maple Syrup Supplies 805 Miscellaneous 810 Mobile Homes 811 Monuments 812 Multi Media 813 Music 815 Motorcycles 817 Nails 820 Nurseries 910 Plants 950 Real Estate For Sale 955 Real Estate Wanted 960 RVs & Motor Homes 975 Rentals 980 Restaurant Supplies 1040 Services Offered 1075 Snowblowers 1080 Snowmobiles 1096 Sports 1109 Thrift 1140 Trailers 1147 Trains 1148 Travel 1165 Trees 1170 Truck Parts & Equipment 1180 Trucks 1187 Vacuum 1190 Vegetable 1200 Veterinary 1205 Wanted

Announcements

Announcements

ADVERTISING DEADLINE Friday • 2:00 PM For as little as $4.00 - place a classified ad in

The

Country Editor

Call Peg at 1-800-836-2888

or 518-673-0111 or email classified@leepub.com Announcements

Auctions

CHECK YOUR AD - ADVERTISERS should check their

BREEDER SALE: Sunday, May 26th at 11:33 am at King’s, Burrows Rd., West Winfield, NY, (315) 822-5221.

ads on the first week of insertion. Lee Publications, Inc. shall not be liable for typographical, or errors in publication except to the extent of the cost of the first weeks insertion of the ad, and shall also not be liable for damages due to failure to publish an ad. Adjustment for errors is limited to the cost of that portion of the ad wherein the error occurred.

Saturday Night Consignment Auction every week at King’s, Burrows Rd., West Winfield, NY. (315) 822-5221.

FREE: Cat needs a good home. Gray & White tiger, female. Nice cat, litter trained and friendly. 315-867-0208 or 315-219-2939 HUSQVARNA Lawn Mowers On Sale! Full line of mowers, trimmers & chain saws in stock. Randall Implements Company, Rt. 5S, Fultonville, NY. 518-853-4500

PHOTO ENLARGEMENTS 8x10 - $2.00 • 11x17 - $5.00 • 12x18 or 13x19 - $7.00. Come see us at Lee Publications, 6113 State Rt. 5, Palatine Bridge, NY 13428 518-673-3237

Antiques FOR SALE: Antiques, Collectibles, Shabby Chic, Amish Baskets, Primitives, Jewelry, Country, Re-purpose, Handcrafted Items, Adirondack Décor, Unique Gifts and Much More! “Newport Marketplace” 7583 Main St, Newport “Gift Certificates now available”

ATV ATV TRAILERS by Bosski Industries first automatic “Dump Assist” trailers GVWR 800lbs.+ 1600lbs. models available. Come check them out at North Creek Auto 315-866-3698

classified@leepub.com Computers LUCKY STAR COMPUTER SERVICES: Service and repair all PCs and Notebooks. Software Programming. Virus Removal. Senior and Military Discounts. 315-823-0923, 315-219-2790

Custom Services COLOR GLOSSY PHOTO CALENDARS: Only $12.00 includes tax. Send us your digital prints and we will make a beautiful keepsake calendar for you. You may also bring in your photos on a disc or thumb drive. If you would like us to mail it is a $5.00 extra fee. Only 3 day turnaround time. Contact Lee Publications bsnyder@leepub.com or 518673-0101 FRAN’S PAINTING & STAINING. Lead Certified. Spray or brush. Free estimates. 315717-2061

TURN your wedding, baby, graduation, scenery photos into beautiful canvas prints starting at only $40.00. Call Beth at Lee Publications 518-673-0101 or email bsnyder@leepub.com

Report any errors to 800836-2888 CRAFTERS WANTED: OHIO Days. August 10-11. Volunteers needed. Coldbrook,NY. Contact Karen 315-826-5533.

PO Box 121, 6113 State Hwy. 5 Palatine Bridge, NY 13428 800-836-2888 • Fax: 518-673-2381

Bedding Plants Annuals, Perennials, Herbs & Baskets are ready now! Heirloom veggie plants. Visit our garden center today! www.BrickHouseAcres.com 315-737-5635

Building Materials/Supplies INSULATION: All Types. New/ Existing Buildings. Free Estimates. Fully Insured. Call Upstate Spray Foam Insulation 315-822-5238. www.upstatesprayfoam.com

Dogs YORKSHIRE TERRIERS, 3 females, ready to go, May 10th. ACA registered, vet checked. 1st shots. $500 each. 315-271-3521.

For Sale 14FT STARCRAFT BOAT w/older 7½HP Johnson motor. $600, obo. 315-894-4909

1993 CORVETTE convertible, triple black, 6 speed, leather, both seats electric, CD & cassette player, no rain w/cover, 36,000 miles, $15,000. 315271-3602

Collectibles COINS WANTED! Silver Coins, Old Coins, Proof Set, Collections, Estates. Since 1974. Terry West Coins 315797-7875 WANTED - CA$H PAID: For old jewelry, books. Dolls toys, even if broken, 1970s older. 1960s & older: Clothing. Old frames, Christmas, Halloween items. Interested in almost anything old. Shirley 315-8949032.

Furniture Repair & Regluing • Countertops • Speaker Cabinets “Formica Work Is Our Specialty”

John F. Duda 734 Lafayette Street Ph. & Fax (315) 733-4715 dudawood@roadrunner.com Utica, NY 13502

Furniture

Garage Sales

BIG Dupa’s breaking your chairs? Call Duda Woodworking & Chair Hospital. 734 Layfayette St., Utica. 315-733-4715. Custom Formica Counter tops too!

LAWN SALE: 105 Willis Ave., Herkimer. Sat.- Mon. Memorial Day Weekend. Adirondack decor, clothes, tools, furniture, craft supplies, houseware, more. Twin bed mattress, new, $300. Dresser, bar memorabilia, camping gear.

CUSTOM FORMICA Countertops. Cash & Carry or Installed. Duda Woodworking & Chair Hospital, 734 Lafayette St., Utica 315-7334715 “Quality Work for Over 33 Years!” Hide-a-bed couch; rocking chair; end table, coffee table set; dining room set, 11 pieces/insets; mirror; bookcase; set: womans chest with mirror, mens 5 drawer chest; 21” TV; all-in-1 printer; floor lamp; fur coat; set of china; set of Oneida flatware. 315-2199021 MAHOGANY Dining Room Hutch, table two leaves, six chairs, $325.00; white kitchen hutch, $50.00; child’s roll top desk, maple, $125.00. Call 315-429-3665 after 4:00pm

Garage Sales ESTATE SALE: 578 McGowan Rd., Ilion. Sat. May 25th through Sun. May 26th. 8 am3 pm. No early birds. GARAGE SALE: 1192 Elizabethtown Rd., Ilion: Household items, clothing & more. May 25th and 26th from 8am5pm

Adorable MINI LOP BUNNIES! Our purebred babies are sweet & friendly. Pedigrees available. $25.00 each 315-737- 5635

HUGE SALE: Lovingly used Antiques, Primitives & Country Reproductions. May 17 & 18, 9am-4pm, 9299 Paris Hill Rd., Sauquoit. Pictures on Craigslist.com

DOLLS FOR SALE: If interested in buying contact at bjcaldw@gmail.com. FOR SALE- MOVING: Guilbransen Organ Double Keyboard, needs some work, $200/firm. Call 518-993-2069

NEED BUSINESS CARDS? Full color glossy, heavy stock. 250 ($45.00); 500 ($60.00); 1,000 ($75.00). Call Beth at Lee Publications 518-673-0101 or bsnyder@leepub.com PORTABLE Carry-On BOAT air conditioner & cover, $800.00. 315-376-6639 leave a message.

Furniture

UDA D WOODWORKING G & CHAIR R HOSPITAL

1996 20’ BOAT and trailer, outboard 120 rated 130, like new. For more information 315-736-3756

Cars, Trucks, Trailers 1968 ELCAMINO SS 396, 4speed, all original, very, very nice, serious only, $18,000/ OBO. 315-429-3253

Furniture

MOVING SALE: 279 Loomis Street, Little Falls, Sat. May 18th 9-4pm, Sun. May 19th 92pm. Quality antiques plus, Mohogany, Cherry, Oak & Harden furniture. Vintage & Collectible items (Poland, West Germany, Japan, Czechoslovakia, Waterford & more.) Gateleg table, Hitchcock/Dragon chairs, Mission Oak Desk, Meyda lighting, twin bed, antique stands, china closet, settee, parlor bench, antique parlor cabinet, linens, kitchen & baking items, small appliances, glassware, dishes, sports equipment, gadgets, holiday decor, queen size mattress (Grace Furniture), freezer & designer clothes (by Donna-Treasure Estate Pickers).

Hair Styling HAIRDRESSER: In Home Ser vices. Experienced. Perms, Cuts, Colors & Sets. Call Pam H. 315-725-9404

Hay - Straw For Sale HORSE HAY: Round bales $40.00 per bale. Mohawk Valley Produce Auction. 518-568-2257

Lawn & Garden FOR SALE: 2005 Snapper Zero Turn Mower. For more information call (315) 5658156. HUSQVARNA Lawn Mowers On Sale! Full line of mowers, trimmers & chain saws in stock. Randall Implements Company, Rt. 5S, Fultonville, NY. 518-853-4500 VALLEY LAWN SERVICE. Mowing, shrub trimming, mulch and clean-ups. Fully insured, free estimates. 315894-4331.

A is a Thousand

It’s easy & economical to add a picture to your ad!

For Information Call

800-836-2888


Lessons

Motorcycles

Services Offered

ERNIE BALL, D’ADDARIO, Dean Markley GHS guitar strings (lessons available). Imagineering Drum & Guitar Shop. 27 West Main St. Little Falls. 315-823-1500

2007 HARLEY DAVIDSON 1200 XL Custom Vance & Hines Pipes, Vance & Hines Fuel Pak, Stage 1 EFI Kit, Black, 8,500 Miles, $7,500. Excellent Condition!

JACK’S HANDYMAN SERVICE: Doing odd jobs of all kinds since 2004. Free estimates. 315-725-1133

Lumber & Wood Products

FOR SALE: 2000 LS Suzuki Savage, 11,000 miles, leather saddle bags, color green, excellent condition. 518-573-7468, 518-5732969. Or trade for 4 wheeler or snowmobile.

HEMLOCK LUMBER, Siding Boards, Framing Lumber, Beams. Miller’s, 6027Cty.Hwy. 18, WestEdmeston. 6miles south ofU.S.Rt.20

518-378-3279

Real Estate For Sale Magnets BUSINESS CARD MAGNETS only $75.00 for 250. Free Shipping. Call Beth at Lee Publications 518-673-0101 or bsnyder@leepub.com Please allow 7-10 business days for delivery

Miscellaneous HUSQVARNA Lawn Mowers On Sale! Full line of mowers, trimmers & chain saws in stock. Randall Implements Company, Rt. 5S, Fultonville, NY. 518-853-4500

STAG PARTY TICKETS Call Beth at Lee Publications 518-673-0101. Questions bsnyder@leepub.com Free Shipping

Music EVANS, REMO DRUMHEADS, drumsticks by ProMark, Zilojian, On Stage. Imagineering Drum & Guitar Shop. 27 West Main St. Little Falls. 315-823-1500

GREG BENNETT Guitars. Authorized dealer. Imagineering Drum & Guitar shop. 27 West Main St. Little Falls. 315-823-1500

Motorcycles 1986 YAMAHA ADVENTURE ROYAL, fully dressed, new brakes & tires, 2 leather jackets, $2,000 OBO. 315-8263478

10 ACRES. Bridgewater,NY. Outstanding Views. Electric. $32,000.00. 845-783-8408 Fo r S a l e B y O w n e r. c o m #23928210 ADIRONDACK CAMP in park, Speculator area, redone, nice & clean, 2/3 bedroom, private beach access, $1,100 yearly lot rent. Your weekend getaway. Won’t last long, only $29,950. 315-868-9207 for details. FOR SALE BY OWNER: Family-ready country home. 3 bedrooms, 2 fulls baths, living room, kitchen, multi-purpose dining / sunroom, pantry. 2 car garage, utility shed on acre. Above-ground pool, spa, decking. Appliances stay. Everything upgraded last 3 years. Asking $134,500. By appointment only. 8 am-6 pm. Leave message 518-7624730 LOCATED in the Foothills of the Adirondacks on busy Route 28 and the shore of a renowned Trout River. Centrally located 20 minutes from either Utica or the Valley. This Fabulous Property Includes: 3 Storefront Rental Units; Vendor Mall with 36 Multi-dealers, Organic and Gourmet Food Market, Barber Shop, and Dance Studio. Owner currently running Market and Vendor Mall. $150,000. 315-725-8822 or 315-845-8822

PATRICIA’S SERVICE TO SENIORS: Helping you at home with shopping, meals, housekeeping. Pat 315-2977063

PHOTO CALENDARS now available right here at Lee Publications. 6113 State Hwy. 5, Palatine Bridge, NY 518-673-3237. Choose up to 24 photos. Only $12.00 for digital photos and $15.00 if we scan them. TED’S Painting and Home Repairs: Book now through April 30th get FREE power wash w/deck staining, good for April, May, June only. Call 315-429-3253

Tires & Tire Repair Service USED TIRE SALE: Huge Inventory, mounting & balancing FREE. No appointment necessary! Save money call Auto World, 534 North Perry Street, Johnstown 12095 518762-7555

classified@leepub.com

L I A M L L A C OR

CLIP & SEND

The

Country Editor

PO Box 121, Palatine Bridge, NY 13428 • Ph: 518-673-3011 OR 800-836-2888

$4.00/

14 words $.10 each additional per week

Deadline Friday 2pm - Fill Out This Form OR Call Us To Place Your Reader Ad • CLASSIFIED READER AD FORM • Date________ COPY:

____ # of Weeks

______Starting Issue Date (Wednesday Date)

(First 14 words $4.00 each additional word 10¢)

______________ ______________ ______________ ______________ ______________ ______________ ______________ ______________ ______________ ______________ ______________ ______________ ______________ ______________ ______________ 14 words - $4.00

______________ ______________ ______________ ______________ ______________ ______________ ______________ ______________ ______________ ______________ 24th word - $5.00

______________ ______________ ______________ ______________ ______________ Tractors MASSEY FERGUSON 65 tractor/ backhoe with front end loader and extra rims, $4,000 or best offer. Dan 518-706-0249

TEN ACRES West Canada Schools, wooded, pond, electric at road, eight miles to Utica, broker/ owner financing with 20% down. $32,900. 315796-4425

(800) 836-2888 To Place Your Ad Here

______________ ______________ ______________ ______________ 34th word - $6.00

Name (Print): ____________________________________________________________________ Farm/Company Name: ______________________________________________________________ Street: __________________________________________ County: ________________________ City: __________________________________________ State: __________ Zip: ______________ Phone #:______________________ Fax #: __________________ Cell #: ____________________ Email Address: ____________________________________________________________________ Payment Method: K Check/Money Order K American Express K Discover K Visa K MC Card #: ____________________________________________________ Exp. Date: ____________ MM / YY

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Mail: The Country Editor, PO Box 121, Palatine Bridge, NY 13428

Page 17 • THE COUNTRY EDITOR NORTH • May 15, 2013

Country Editor

PO Box 121, 6113 State Hwy. 5 Palatine Bridge, NY 13428 800-836-2888 • Fax: 518-673-2381


Page 18 May 15, 2013 • THE COUNTRY EDITOR NORTH •

Home Country by Slim Randles Those of us who call this little valley home have a unique blessing in the form of Perry, our dentist. Yes, when we go to get the fangs fixed up at O’Dontall Dental, down in the old brick building near the office of the Valley Weekly Miracle, the grinding and scraping and numbing and lip shaking is accompanied by … well … acting. You see, Perry worked his way through dental school by treading the boards … acting on stage, that is. When all was said and done and he received his final mouth mirror, he’d become a darn fine dentist, and could quote Shakespeare and others at the drop of a hat. And he’d even drop the hat for you. It was like that for Dud recently, when he went in for his six-month checkup and polish job. “Ah, Dudley,” Perry said, peering into his mouth, “the years have favored you kindly in the mouth department. Very little cleaning to do.” “Ahhhks,” Dud said. “You’re welcome. Here’s a scraper on number six, however. I can only say, as I scrape … out, out damned spot! Leave and take with thee the spectre of decay! Begone and tarry no more to add to the misery of my

France to honor 11 U.S. World War II veterans FORT LAUDERDALE, FL (AP) — Eleven U.S. World War II veterans will be honored by the consul general of France. The consul will award the veterans the “Knight in the National Order of the Legion of Honor” Sunday for fighting alongside France in World War II. The ceremony is taking place at the Broward Center for the Performing Arts in Fort Lauderdale. The French consulate in Miami says the ceremony will serve as a link between past, present and future generations. The US Naval Academy appointments class of 2017 and another group of youths will represent present and future generations at the event.

boon companion!” Dr. O’Dontall sometimes uses his native Irish accent to emphasize things, as well. “’Tis brushing after every meal you be, Dudley, my eyes tell me true…” “Errrrrt” “That’s right fine, lad, right fine. And thanking you kindly for years to come your mouth will be, for efforts now lead to

years of chewing free …” “Ahhhks,” Dud mumbled.

“You’re welcome.” Perry doesn’t even charge extra for this.

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Page 19 • THE COUNTRY EDITOR NORTH • May 15, 2013

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42,733 Miles

4.7L 8 Cyl., Auto

2010 DODGE RAM 1500

17,542 Miles

3.5L 6 Cyl., Auto

2010 DODGE AVENGER R/T

49,302 Miles

3.5L 6 Cyl., Auto

2010 DODGE CHARGER SXT

6,531 Miles

19,995

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1.4L 4 Cyl., CD, Spoiler

28,995

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2013 DODGE DART

12,491 Miles

4WD, 3.5L 6 Cyl., Auto

13,995

2012 JEEP GRAND CHEROKEE

27,285 Miles

$

2.0L 4 Cyl., Auto

16,995

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2010 DODGE CALIBER MAIN STREET

60,713 Miles

3.8L 6 Cyl., Auto

2008 CHRYSLER TOWN & COUNTRY TOURING

20,888

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62,813 Miles

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2010 GMC TERRAIN SLT-1

19,506 Miles

2LT, 1.8L 4 Cyl

2012 CHEVROLET SONIC SEDAN

55,678 Miles

Ext Cab, Short Box, 2WD, 6 Cyl

2009 CHEVROLET SILVERADO 1500

7,236 Miles

FWD, Manual

2013 CHEVROLET MALIBU LS

73,094 Miles

8,888 $

4Dr, 2.2L 4 Cyl, FWD, Manual

27,888 $

2006 CHEVROLET COBALT LS

23,701 Miles

LT w/2LT, 3.6L 6 Cyl, Auto

17,888

2012 CHEVROLET TRAVERSE AWD

15,719 Miles

$

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22,880

$

2012 CHEVROLET IMPALA LT

8,223 Miles

FWD, 3.0L 6 Cyl., Auto, AC, Tilt

2012 CHEVROLET CAPTIVA LT

28,441 Miles

14,900 $

FWD, 4 Cyl

29,900 $

2012 FORD FOCUS SE

18,255 Miles

AWD, 3.5L 6 Cyl

20,900 $

2012 FORD EDGE LIMITED

34,338 Miles

4WD, 2.5L 4 Cyl

15,450

2011 FORD ESCAPE XLT

44,294 Miles

$

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2009 FORD MUSTANG COUPE

25,013 Miles

18,900 $

FWD, 2.5L 4 Cyl

15,900 $

2012 FORD FUSION SE

7,216 Miles

FWD, 1.6L 4 Cyl

27,900 $

3.5L 6 Cyl

2012 FORD FIESTA SEL

63,613 Miles

Page 20

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2011 FORD F150 4WD

52,432 Miles

FWD, 3.5L 6 Cyl

2009 FORD FLEX SE

May 15, 2013 • THE COUNTRY EDITOR NORTH •


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