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Boaters await opening of Lower Trent-Severn locks at Trent Port Marina, give rave reviews BY ERIN STEWART

Trenton — If you needed to wait at one marina during a delayed navigation season, the Trent Port Marina is the best one, said boater Dan Pudleiner. Pudleiner, from Brooklin, Ont., said he was patiently waiting at the Trent Port Marina to continue his journey home — a journey called “The Great Loop,” which started last August on Lake Simcoe and continued down south to the Bahamas for the winter. “The Trent Port Marina is a wonderful marina; it’s a very beautiful spot. If I’m going to be stuck somewhere, I’d rather be stuck here than over in the United States. So, I’m glad that I’m back in Canada,” he said. The Trent-Severn Waterway navigation season had a delayed opening of one week, set for May 26, but the Lower Trent-Severn locks remain closed due to elevated water levels and velocity of water unsafe for boaters. The locks are opening in stages, with locks 20 to 21 and 28 to 45 open for navigation as of Saturday, May 27. Being so close, yet so far, Pudleiner said he’s hoping the locks will open so they can

Boater Dan Pudleiner and his dog Tucker wait for the locks to open at the Trent Port Marina. Erin Stewart/Metroland

get on their way, but they’re monitoring the situation online and getting information from lock one. “We’re going to go to the Italian restaurant for dinner tonight and just spend a little money in town, and enjoy the place while we’re here,” he said on Friday, May 26. “This is a fantastic marina, not just one of the nicest ones.

We’ve been in many, many marinas and this is right up there. It’s a great place, and the people are really friendly and nice.” Katherine Ruby docks her sailboat at the Trent Port Marina. She said she’s concerned about the delayed opening because she’s been promoting the Trent-Severn and the free 2017 seasonal lockage per-

mits, as part of Canada 150 celebrations. “I am on a lot of boating groups and I have been promoting the Trent-Severn — especially because this year it’s free — and on these groups, there are people from all over North America. They’re doing “The Great Loop,” and the Trent-Severn can be part of that,” she said.

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Ruby said she was concerned people would make their way without realizing the lower locks remained closed. Craig Carter, manager of the Trent Port Marina, said the marina has about seven boats waiting to get up the Trent River as of Saturday, May 27, and he expects another 12 to 15 boats to come through within the next week. “There’s a lot of people on their way from Florida, and all that will be arriving here probably this week sometime to go up the system. But, with computers and all the technology of today, they obviously know what situation is happening,” he said. “The people are quite content that are staying at the Trent Port Marina, because it’s such a beautiful facility. So, I don’t think it’s too disruptive at this point.” From what he’s heard, Carter said he’s hoping and anticipating the locks will open on Wednesday, May 31 or Thursday, June 1. For the most current boater-specific information, including wait times and mooring availability, Parks Canada has created two new twitter accounts to keep boaters upto-date, @TSWBoaterInfo or @VTNSInfoNav.

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Lower Trent-Severn remains closed for boaters’ safety, will see staged opening

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Trenton — Much of the TrentSevern Waterway remains closed to navigation, with elevated water levels and velocity of water making it too dangerous for boaters. The locks will open in stages, said Chad Buchner, manager of operations for the Trent Severn Waterway, as increased precipitation over the past weekend coupled with forecasted rainfall has created the requirement for additional time to reduce water levels and flows to a point that ensures safe boating conditions across the system. Only portions of the upper waterway are now open for boating traffic. Locks 28-42, Stoney Lake to Lake Simcoe, opened as of Friday, May 26. “Right now, with the kind of water flows that we’re still experi-

encing, especially those south of the lakes coming down the rivers, the water velocity there is still just too high above our safe navigation ranges,” said Buchner. Staff are watching and monitoring the system closely on a day-today basis, he said, and watching the weather systems moving through the region. “We’re taking it day by day, and we’ll be following up as soon as we possibly can with more information on hopefully decreasing these water flows and getting the rest of our system open,” Buchner said. For the most current boaterspecific information, including wait times and mooring availability, Parks Canada has created two new twitter accounts to keep boaters up-to-date, @TSWBoaterInfo or @ VTNSInfoNav.

Woman assaulted in Trenton Trenton — A woman was transported to hospital with non-life threatening injuries after being assaulted at a Dundas Street East home in Trenton on Wednesday, May 24. Quinte West OPP officers responded to a report of an assault, arrived on scene and located the in-

jured woman. The investigation is ongoing, stated Const. David Ludington, and there is no threat to public safety. Anyone with information is asked to call the Ontario Provincial Police at 613-392-3561.

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Prince Charles and Duchess Camilla coming to Trenton, The County on Royal Tour BY ERIN STEWART

Trenton – Their Royal Highnesses Prince Charles, The Prince of Wales and Camilla, The Duchess of Cornwall, will pay a visit to Canadian Forces Base Trenton and Wellington Farmer's Market in June. As part of an official Royal Tour, the Prince and Duchess will join Canadians to celebrate Canada’s 150th anniversary of Confederation, announced by Neil Ellis, MP for the Bay of Quinte, on behalf of Melanie Joly, Minister of Canadian Heritage on Thursday May 25. The Royals’ tour will start June 29 in Iqaluit, Nunavut and then the Royal couple will be welcomed to the Bay of Quinte at CFB Trenton and the Wellington Farmer’s Market on Friday June 30. The Wellington Farmer’s Market event will be open to the public. CFB Trenton/8 Wing commander Col. Colin Keiver said the base is ramping up for what promises to be an honour and a whirlwind of protocol and pageantry. "I think I speak on behalf of all of us, I think we are all honoured that they are coming here," said Keiver. "I mean, this is thefuture king, this is a big deal. So the fact that the Prince of Wales and the Duchess of Cornwall want to come here and visit 8 Wing, and see what the men and women of 8 Wing do, and give us the opportunity to talk to them about it, it’s a great honour.” “I’m flabbergasted, it’s fan-

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Prince Charles and Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall, sit at the Manitoba Legislature in Winnipeg, Manitoba, May 21, 2014. Photo by Mark Blinch

tastic to have royalty here,” said Quinte West Mayor Jim Harrison upon hearing the news. “I’d be glad to do whatever I can do to make their trip enjoyable and to make it pleasant for all the residents of this area.” Having a Royal visit to celebrate Canada is fantastic, said Harrison. “It’s quite an occasion, you don’t have a 150th Birthday often so it’s great to have them

come and join with us to wish Canada a Happy Birthday and hopefully we can all get to see them before Canada Day.” After a visit in Trenton and Wellington, the royal couple will head to Ottawa and Gatineau for the final leg of their tour, ending July 1. Harrison recalled the last time he saw Royalty in Trenton, a mere 65 years ago. “It was 1952, I stood down on the street corner by St. Pe-

ter’s school to watch the Queen come through here, June 1952,” he said. The Bay of Quinte is always happy to roll out the red carpet for our guests,” said Ellis. “On June 30, we’re proud to have the opportunity to share the same warmth and simplicity of life that make our region such a wonderful place to visit, and live, with Their Royal Highnesses, Charles and Camilla.”

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PUBLIC WORKS & ENVIRONMENTAL SERVICE 2017 HYDRANT FLUSHING SCHEDULE Hydrant ensures proper ws for as well as insures a fresh water supply to our residences. Sediment in the mains can be stirred up during this process causing dirty water. If this occurs please run your tap until it clears. Also, doing laundry during may cause stains. We recommended that laundry not be done during this period. Flushing will be carried out daily 7:30 am until 4:00 pm Monday to Thursday and 7:30 until 10:30 Fridays. We apologize for any inconvenience this may cause. For more information, please visit our website at www.quintewest.ca and search Hydrant Flushing. Area # 9 -June 5 to June 9- All of Sidney ward

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ONTARIO ENERGY BOARD NOTICE TO CUSTOMERS OF HYDRO ONE NETWORKS INC. Hydro One Networks Inc. has applied to raise its electricity distribution rates and other charges. Learn more. Have your say. Hydro One Networks Inc. has applied to the Ontario Energy Board to raise its electricity distribution rates effective January 1, 2018 and continuing each year for another 4 years, until December 31, 2022. If the application is approved, a typical residential customer of Hydro One Networks Inc., using 750 kWh per month, would see increases as set out in the table below: 2018 an increase of $2.79 per month 2019 an increase of $2.47 per month

2020 an increase of $2.31 per month 2021 an increase of $1.95 per month

2022 an increase of $2.23 per month

Other customers, including businesses, may be affected as well. Hydro One Networks Inc. has also acquired the electricity distribution assets of Norfolk Power, Haldimand County Hydro and Woodstock Hydro. The distribution rates for the former customers of these distributors will remain frozen at current levels until December 31, 2020. As part of this application, on January 1, 2021, and January 1, 2022, the distribution rates for these customers will also be increasing. If the application is approved, a typical former residential customer of these three distributors, using 750 kWh per month, would see increases as set out in the table below: Former Utility Increase 2021 2022 $3.18 per month $1.09 per month Norfolk Power $4.52 per month $1.09 per month Haldimand County Hydro $1.08 per month $0.84 per month Woodstock Hydro Other former customers of these distributors, including businesses, may be affected as well. Hydro One Networks Inc. has also applied for new service charges and for adjustments to many of its specific service charges, including increases to charges for the collection of accounts, for disconnection, reconnection and removal of load control devices and for access to Hydro One Networks Inc. power poles. You are encouraged to review the application carefully to determine whether you may be affected by these changes. The Ontario government has introduced the Fair Hydro Act, 2017 that, if passed, would implement electricity rate reductions starting in the summer of 2017. The amounts set out above are provided before the application of any credits that would be implemented under the Fair Hydro Act, 2017. THE ONTARIO ENERGY BOARD IS HOLDING COMMUNITY MEETINGS The Ontario Energy Board (OEB) will be hosting several regional community meetings. Please check the Ontario Energy Board website at www.oeb.ca under the EB-2017-0049 case number for specific details of the meetings in your area. The community meetings are designed to allow customers to: • Learn more about Hydro One’s costs and rate application. • Find out how the OEB will review the application. • Get involved and provide your comments about the application to the OEB. THE ONTARIO ENERGY BOARD IS HOLDING A PUBLIC HEARING The OEB will hold a public hearing to consider the application filed by Hydro One. During the hearing, we will question Hydro One on its case for the rate increases. We will also hear questions and arguments from individual customers and from groups that represent Hydro One’s customers. At the end of this hearing, the OEB will decide what, if any, rate increase will be allowed. Hydro One has applied for approval of rates for 5 years. You may not get notice of future rate changes during this 5 year period. The OEB is an independent and impartial public agency. We make decisions that serve the public interest. Our goal is to promote a financially viable and efficient energy sector that provides you with reliable energy services at a reasonable cost. BE INFORMED AND HAVE YOUR SAY You have the right to information regarding this application and to be involved in the process. • • • •

You can review Hydro One’s application on the OEB’s website now. You can attend the OEB’s community meeting where you can ask questions, make comments and voice your concerns. You can file a letter with your comments, which will be considered during the hearing. You can become an active participant (called an intervenor). Apply by June 14, 2017 or the hearing will go ahead without you and you will not receive any further notice of the proceeding. • At the end of the process, you can review the OEB’s decision and its reasons on our website. LEARN MORE These proposed charges relate to Hydro One’s distribution services. They make up part of the Delivery line - one of the five line items on your bill. Our file number for this case is EB-2017-0049. To learn more about this hearing, find instructions on how to file letters or become an intervenor, or to access any document related to this case, please select the file number EB-2017-0049 from the list on the OEB website: www.oeb.ca/notice. You can also phone our Consumer Relations Centre at 1-877-632-2727 with any questions. ORAL VS. WRITTEN HEARINGS There are two types of OEB hearings – oral and written. Hydro One has applied for an oral hearing. The OEB is considering this request. If you think an oral hearing is needed, you can write to the OEB to explain why by June 14, 2017. PRIVACY If you write a letter of comment, your name and the content of your letter will be put on the public record and the OEB website. However, your personal telephone number, home address and email address will be removed. If you are a business, all your information will remain public. If you apply to become an intervenor, all information will be public. This rate hearing will be held under section 78 of the Ontario Energy Board Act, 1998, S.O. 1998 c.15 (Schedule B).

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Students’ support helps Relay for Life exceed $100,000 in Quinte West laps at Trenton High School BY ERIN STEWART

Trenton — Relay for Life Quinte West far exceeded its $60,000 goal, reaching $100,000 thanks to the help of students from St. Paul Catholic Secondary School, Cité Jeunesse, Marc-Garneau and the community. Prior to the Quinte West relay for life event at Trenton High School on Saturday May 27, St. Paul students raised $23,000 and Cité Jeunesse and MarcGarneau joined forces to raise $26,000 for the Canadian Cancer Society. “I don’t have words, they blew me away,” said Lauren Dashnay, chair of the Quinte West Relay for Life. “We usually try a goal of $60,000 and it’s going to be blown out of the water, it’s phenomenal." This year’s relay had less participants, with 19 teams compared to the previous year’s 33, but Dashnay said you would never know because of everyone’s tremendous spirit at the event. The 19 teams also fundraised more than last year, raising a total of $51,000. Guest speaker Evelyn Jordan, cancer survivor, shared her experience battling cancer during the opening ceremonies.

“I’m a mother, a wife and a friend,” said Jordan. “In 2012 I was diagnosed with cancer and then again in 2016, once was hard, twice was devastating and just when all looked good, a third time a few months ago.” Having gone through six cancer related surgeries, five months of chemo, 27 radiation treatments and numerous other procedures, Jordan said she prepares for another surgery and possibly more radiation. Jordan said she’s grateful for all of the support she’s received from family, friends, the school communities at St. Paul and St. Peter’s and her sons’ rep soccer and hockey teams. “Today there is hope, today there is a possibility, however, without events like this it is not a possibility,” she said. “I thank you all for coming out, donating and volunteering, without you cancer patients like myself have a much harder fight. Together maybe we can come as one and beat this thing. Remember, cancer sucks, life doesn’t, live life to live.” CFB 8 Wing Commander Col. Colin Keiver also shared his own story about how cancer has touched his family.

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“It was not quite five years ago that we were sitting in a neurologist office in Kingston and we were told that our 11-year-old son had a brain tumour,” he said. “What was amazing about that experience was the community support and the support that came from everywhere almost instantaneously, to the point that it almost made us feel guilty accepting it all.” Keiver thanked everyone for showing leadership by being at relay and making a difference. “Even those we’ve lost to cancer, we should absolutely be celebrating the fact that we as a community got behind them, we did everything we could for them during that brave fight and right here today, by being here today, we pledge ourselves to continue that fight, to fight this horrible, horrible disease,” he said. Quinte West Mayor Jim Harrison, joined by Deputy Mayor Jim Alyea and Coun. Duncan Armstrong, said the best part of his job is seeing so many people taking on responsibility to help others in the community. “I want to thank you all for what you do and it’s mandatory that we continue

Cancer survivors in yellow lead the way for the first lap at Quinte West Relay for Life at Trenton High School on Saturday May 27. Photo by Craig Worgan

the fight,” said Harrison. “I can only tell you that I’m so proud of what you’ve done.” Before the first lap commenced, everyone paid a special tribute to Teresa Bell, last year’s guest speaker, who lost her fight to cancer. Bell died in December 2016 at 48-years-old. Brad Warner, community fundraising specialist with the local Canadian Cancer Society branch, remembered Bell for her tremendous support of the organization and for her loud spirit.

Instead of a moment of silence, Warner asked Quinte West Relay for Life participants for a “moment of cheer for Teresa Bell,” to which they enthusiastically obliged. Since the first Relay for Life event was held in 1999, more than $500 million has been raised across Canada. Funds support promising cancer research in Canada and vital support services for people with cancer and their families.

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OPINION

Islamist terrorism: Who’s to blame? It happens after every major terrorist attack by Islamist terrorists in a Western country: the familiar debate about who is really to blame for this phenomenon. One side trots out the weary old trope that the terrorists simply “hate values”, and other Gwynne Dyer our side claims that it’s really the fault of Western governments for sending their troops into Muslim countries. There’s a national election campaign underway in Britain, so the ghastly Manchester bombing last week has revived this argument. It started when Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn (who voted against the invasion of Afghanistan in 2001, the invasion of Iraq in 2003, and the seven-month bombing campaign that overthrew Libya’s dictator Muammar Gaddafi in 2011) made a speech in London on Friday. “Many experts, including professionals in our intelligence and security services, have pointed to the connections between wars our government has supported or fought in other countries and terrorism here at home,” he said. In a later clarification, Corbyn added: “A number of people since the interventions in Afghanistan and Iraq have drawn attention to the links with foreign policy, including (British foreign secretary) Boris Johnson in 2005, two former heads of MI5 (the Security Service), and of course the (parliamentary) Foreign Affairs Select Committee.” With Labour catching up with the Conservatives in the polls, Prime Minister Teresa May leapt at the chance to twist Corbyn’s words and all but accused him of treason. “Jeremy Corbyn has said that terror attacks in Britain are our own fault ... and I want to make something clear to Jeremy Corbyn and to you: there can never be an excuse for terrorism, there can be no excuse for what happened in Manchester.” Boris Johnson chimed in: “Whatever we do, we can’t follow the logic of the terrorists and start blaming ourselves or our society or our foreign policy. This has been caused not by us – as Jeremy Corbyn would have us believe – it’s been caused by a sick ideology, a perverted version of Islam that hates us and hates our way of life.” But both sides in this argument are wrong. The“Salafi” extremists who are called “Islamists” in the West (all of them Sunnis, and most of them Arabs) do hate Western values, but that’s not why they go to the trouble of making terrorist attacks on the West. And it’s

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not because of Western foreign policies either: there were no major Western attacks on the Arab world in the years before the 9/11 atrocity in 2001. There had been plenty of attacks in the past: the Western conquest of almost all the Arab countries between 1830 and 1918, Western military support for carving a Zionist state out of the Arab world as the European imperial powers were pulling out after 1945, Western military backing for Arab dictators and absolute monarchs ever since. The West turned against one of those dictators, Iraq’s Saddam Hussein, after he invaded Kuwait, but it had the support of most Arab countries when it drove him out of Kuwait in the first Gulf War in 1990-91. And between then and 9/11 the West did nothing much to enrage the Arab world. Indeed, it was even backing the Palestinian-Israeli “peace process”, which looked quite promising at that time. But there was violence in many Arab countries as Islamist revolutionaries, using terrorist tactics, tried to overthrow the local kings and dictators. Up to 200,000 Arabs were killed in these bloody struggles between 1979 and 2000, but not one of the repressive regimes was overthrown. By the turn of the century it was clear that terrorism against Arab regimes was not working. To win power, the Islamists needed a new strategy. The man who supplied it was Osama bin Laden. He had missed out on the long terrorist war in the Arab countries because he went to Afghanistan to fight a Soviet invasion in 1979. But in Afghanistan he fought in a war that Islamists actually won: having lost 14,000 dead, the Russians gave up and went home in 1989. The Afghan Islamists (the Taliban) came to power as a result. Bin Laden realized that this could be a route to power for the Islamists of the Arab world as well: provoke the West to invade Muslim countries, lead the struggle against the Western occupation forces – and when the Western armies finally give up and go home (as they always do in the end) the Islamists will come to power. That was why he founded al-Qaeda, and 9/11 was intended to sucker the United States into playing the role of infidel invader. Western governments have never recognized this obvious fact because they are too arrogant ever to see themelves as simply the dupes in somebody else’s strategy. Their foreign policy error was to fall for bin Laden’s provocation hook, line and sinker – and they are still falling for it 16 years later. Gwynne Dyer is an independent journalist whose articles are published in 45 countries.

Vice President & Regional Publisher Peter Bishop pbishop@metroland.com 613-283-3182 Ext. 108 General Manager Seaway Gavin Beer gbeer@metroland.com 613-966-2034, ext 570 Editor Chris Malette chris.malette@metroland.com 613-966-2034, ext 510 Regional Managing Editor Ryland Coyne rcoyne@metroland.com

Comment by Chris Malette The headline on the story screamed: “The Real Muslims Are The Terrorists. Period. Here’s How We Make It Common Knowledge.” It was the morning after the Manchester bombing and newspapers and TV news channels were ablaze with coverage. But, the headline wasn’t in a newspaper. It appeared online in a blog and, while it was seen by only a few thousand online followers, its rage and scorn for Islam was jarring. And that’s just the way the writer intended it to be. Its author, a 25-year-old self-styled ‘alternative media’ commentator from Belleville, used it as a platform in the hours after the Manchester bombing to educate all of us that “real Muslims” are the ones who blow up kids at concerts and “fake Muslims” are the ones who calmly carry on their lives in our communities, attend mosques, shop in our stores, serve in Parliament. The latter are not true followers of Islam, according to Belleville’s own beacon of intolerance, one Stefanie MacWilliams. You’d be forgiven for not recognizing her in her hometown, as she likes it to be, but to ask her and her acolytes, she’s a pretty big deal with the far right, veering to alt-right, online miasma. Post Manchester: “Buckle up, my fellow indels, apostates, ka r, and dogs! There will be more. There will always be more, and it will always get worse. That is, until we actually do something about Islam. And since most of our impotent leaders seem unwilling to do anything about Islam, well, I guess it’s up to us. “And ‘we’ always starts with ‘I’. “I’m Stefanie, I love Good and hate Evil, and I am doing my part to learn about Islam, speak fearlessly about Islam, and most of all, help my readers to do the same.” The “news” site where much of her opinion – and it is all opinion, all the time, despite the fact the out t bills itself as a “news organization” – is based somewhere in New Jersey and called Halsey News. It describes itself as featuring “accredited journalists from across the world...” None, however, are actual journalists, nor are their names recognizable outside the echo chamber of their ilk, a network of far-right Twitter followers or assorted ranting You Tube channels. The website has little to no advertising, other than ads promoting dating Russian girls, but there’s no shortage in its editorial content of outrage and intolerance. When she’s not trying to single-handedly raise a rambunctious 18-month-old boy, Mac-

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Williams tweets incessantly – up to 100 times a day – engaging in online rumbles with femi- nists, “lib-tards” and fancies herself a deft ver- bal jouster when calling them out on their ar- guments. This newspaper, it should be noted, was blocked by MacWilliams from seeing any- thing she posts on Twitter some months ago. But, her content is most always based on intolerance, anger and fear-mongering. Of the Manchester bombing on May 22, MacWilliams tweeted: “Islamophobia is not the problem. It is the solution.” On her Twitter feed May 24, MacWilliams, as she often does, bemoaned the fact she still lives in Canada, longing as she does to become an American. “Unfortunately I live in a shitty country where I can’t even protect myself,” she said, on being scared for her life for vehemently proclaiming “I hate Islam with every ber of my being...” Of her upbringing and current life: “I came from a poor family and now I’m a single mother...” She’s exceptionally proud – and incessantly re-tweets – what she believes to be a clever observation: “Christianity is a good religion that can be perverted to be evil. Islam is an evil religion that can be perverted to be good.” You get the picture. MacWilliams swears she’s researched Islam deeply, almost becoming a Koranic scholar in the “true meaning” of the religion (which she doesn’t term a religion – it’s an ideology and a “death cult”). Within two hours of the attack on London on March 22, she tweeted: “If you’re not scared of Islam, you’re suicidal. Get help.” And: “The onus is on Islam to stop being a barbaric death cult, not on me to assume the best of them as they slaughter Westerners weekly.” On Europe welcoming refugees: “Actually, I oppose mass immigration from inferior cultures, I’m just not a Nazi.” But, she does acknowledge she has been called a racist so many times, the term no longer fazes her. And so it is, then, that the beliefs of this “right millenial” are becoming more main- stream in the instant world of Twitter and the Internet, fortunately for most, within the echo chamber of those far right followers. But if, as MacWilliams dreams to someday do, she comes to a campus university or town hall meeting to preach her brand of ‘the truth,’ it’d be wise to do that which would torture her. Ignore her.

CLASSIFIEDS 1-888-Words Ads EDITORIAL Quinte West News Erin Stewart erin.stewart@metroland.com PRODUCTION 613-966-2034

Read us online at www.InsideBelleville.com Quinte West News - Thursday, June 1, 2017 7


No plans to close Belleville’s P&G plant BY STEPHEN PETRICK

Belleville –There are no plans to close Belleville’s Procter & Gamble plant, a company spokesman said one day after news broke that the manufacturing giant plans to close its Brockville operation. “Belleville is considered to be a strategic site for us,” said Jeff LeRoy in an interview with the Belleville News on May 25. Procter & Gamble held an emotional town-hall-style meeting at its Brockville operation earlier in the week and announced that the plant would close in either late 2020 or early 2021. The Brockville plant, located a two-hour drive east of the Belleville operation, employees 480 people. Much of the work that takes place in Brockville, which heavily involves production of Swifter and Bounce products, is being transferred to a new plant in West Virginia. This decision was made as a result of a company study on how to improve its supply chain management process. But the Belleville operation, which employs about 800 people out of its recently-expanded University Avenue plant, is no longer part of that study, LeRoy said. The Belleville plant is one of Procter & Gamble’s largest operations, he added. Among the 25 plants Procter & Gamble operates in North American, Belleville is in the top five or six in employee numbers, he said. It’s known for producing Always femi-

nine products. When asked what makes the Belleville plant more strategically important than the Brockville plant, LeRoy said there’s no one single answer. “You have to look at the entire supply chain holistically,” he said. “There are many factors that are considered. What are the opportunities for the site and the brands it makes to be cointegrated.” But he added that Belleville’s geographical location and the city’s la-

Classic Cruise Nights kick off in Quinte West BY ERIN STEWART

Trenton – You know summer is around the corner when Classic Cruise Nights are back in town, every Sunday from 4-8 p.m., May to September, at the Front Street parking lot in Trenton. Hosted by Quinte Access, all proceeds fundraised from the cruise nights go to Quinte Access’ afterhours, weekend and holiday service. Kathy Martin and Ed Moshynski happened to stumble upon the display of classic and specialty vehicles at the first event of the season after spending an evening out for dinner downtown Trenton.

bour force make the plant valuable for the company. He said the company takes pride in its Belleville operation and realizes what its Belleville employees contribute to the community. Procter & Gamble is one of the city’s largest private employers and its employees are among the most important contributors to the annual United Way Hastings Prince Edward campaign. Last year, P&G employees raised more than $500,000 for the

campaign. LeRoy said that the company hopes to reduce the number of layoffs as a result of the decision, through retirement packages and transfers. He said it’s likely that some Brockville employees will be given an opportunity to transfer to Belleville, should they choose to. “The goal is to not have anyone leave the company,” he said. Belleville’s economic development manager Karen Poste was relieved to

hear the Belleville Procter & Gamble plant will remain a fixture in the city. Although Autosystems and Convergys (with each have about 1,000 employees according to the mostrecent city data), are slightly bigger employers, Procter & Gamble is definitely one of the biggest private employers in the city, she said. “Losing P&G Belleville would be dramatic to say the least,” she said. “They have one of the largest private sector payrolls in the community and of course the spin offs from the business are countless. If you think about the money the business alone spends in the community with hiring contractors, purchasing supplies, trucking, the taxes they pay, the contributions to local charities like United Way that they make – they have a significant impact on the local economy every single day. Factor in the number of families that rely on that P&G income and the spinoffs are mind boggling.” Poste said the city works closely with Procter & Gamble and the two parties have a good relationship. “We connect with our employers on a regular basis and we try to make sure we are doing what we should to support them in the community. P&G in exceptionally community minded and I think our relationship is very strong. They have been growing and investing in the Belleville facility and I’m confident they will be here much longer but we are working to make sure the community provides the needed support.”

Belleville’s Procter & Gamble plant is located on University Avenue. Stephen Petrick/Metroland

“We’re enjoying this rare, nice warm weather in the evening and this is an extra treat to see all of these cars, I think it’s a great setup and I love the music in the background too,” said Moshynski on Sunday May 28. It’s nice to see well-preserved machinery, he said, at a nice venue by the river to get people outdoors for an evening. “I enjoy seeing how cars developed, they had such class and style in the era when gasoline was cheap,” said Moshynski. “I think it’s the kind of thing that gets people, families, out here to get out and

take a look.” Gary Mansfield, Cruise Night volunteer, said they usually get between 60-100 vehicles out every Sunday. “People come from all over the Quinte area, we get people from Cobourg, Oshawa, the Cruise Nights are very popular all across Canada and the United States,” he said. “It gives everyone a chance to bring their classic cars and trucks out, all winter long they’re sitting dormant in the garage so the summer nights come it’s nice to get out Kathy Martin stands next to a classic car and A&W display at the first and enjoy them.”

Classic Cruise Night of the season, Sunday May 28 at the Front Street parking lot in Trenton. Erin Stewart/Metroland

8 Quinte West News - Thursday, June 1, 2017


Furry friends get active at Barks by the Bay BY ERIN STEWART

Trenton — Barks by the Bay was back in town for the 11th annual event, bringing four-legged friends together for a day of fun at Centennial Park on Saturday May 27, in Trenton. This year, Barks by the Bay offered multiple interactive events for dogs, including an obstacle course by Hot Diggity Dogs Fly Ball Club. Natalie Cornell founded Hot Diggity Dogs with her husband 18 years ago in Quinte West and has attended local festivals and events for many years to showcase fly ball racing, tricks, high jump, disc, and “fungility.” “New this year, we opened up a course to the public and dogs,” said Cornell. “A lot of people always say they want to try the equipment and we just didn’t have it set up to do that, so because of the interest we thought we could do it and get people in here to play." With supervision, dog owners took their pets through the basic course between shows. “People are having a blast coming in with their dogs, they watch the show on the side and say ‘My dog can do that,’ and then they can come in and try,” said Cornell. Hot Diggity Dogs has had many new members out to join the recreational dog club this season, said Cornell, a great way to get out and have fun as regular backyard dog owners. Isabelle Duchaine attended Barks by the Bay for the first time with her brother and his four-month-old Scottish terrier, Maggie. “I’ve never seen so many different kinds of dogs in one place,” she said. “We did both the obstacle course and the agility work and it was fantastic, it’s really cool to see which dogs were a bit hesitant and which ones were totally into it.” The day was wonderful and it was great seeing the shows, said Duchaine. “It really shows people how any dog, any breed, once they’ve had some love, some attention and some training can really accomplish some really fantastic things, it’s cool to see,” she said. “I would very much recommend everyone to come and check it out.” Phoebe Lindgren, vendor with All Pawz Inn from Colborne, said they were back at Barks by the Bay for their second year. “This event is the one we look forward to the most annually because there’s a lot of dogs, there’s a lot more vendors so it does bring a lot of people with their pets, there isn’t really many events like this in the area,” she said.

It’s a great event to build clien- Phoebe Lindgren, vendor with All tele, said Lindgren. Pawz Inn from Colborne, is kissed “We get quite a lot of new clients by Smooch, a Shar Pei puppy, at from this event,” she said. “I think Barks by the Bay in Centennial this year is actually busier, they Park on Saturday May 27. have a lot more events for the dogs Erin Stewart/Metroland to participate in so I think that’s really cool.” Karen Parker, special events co- Daisy, also known as the Jr. A ordinator with Quinte West, said the Trenton Golden Hawks’ mascot, day went very well. leaps through a hoop in the Hot “The turnout was more than we Diggity Dogs’ obstacle course, could ever hope for,” she said. “It’s a great day to celebrate everyone’s showing off her Hot Diggity Dogs four-legged furry friends and there’s training at Barks by the Bay on over 50 vendors here so it’s all things Saturday May 27. Erin Stewart/Metroland dogs.”

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The City of Quinte West has completed a Municipal Class Environmental Assessment (EA) study to determine the preferred location for a bulk water loading facility to replace the current facility at Pelham Street in Trenton which is scheduled for closure. In order to meet the demands of the community (including businesses, farmers and the public) for bulk quantities of treated municipal water, the City intends to establish a new bulk water loading facility at the existing Trenton Water Treatment Plant site on Chester Road. This study was carried out in accordance with the requirements for a Schedule “B” Municipal Class Environmental Assessment. The planning and decision making process - including consultation with the public and review agencies, assessment of environmental impacts of alternative solutions, and identification of the preferred solution - has been completed and the project file is available for review. For more information or to provide comments please email one of the following project contacts by July 3, 2017: Matt Tracey Tony Guerrera, P. Eng. Manager Water & Wastewater Services The Greer Galloway Group Inc. Public Works & Environmental Services 1620 Wallbridge Loyalist Road City of Quinte West Belleville, ON K8N 4Z5 7 Creswell Drive, PO Box 490 T: (613) 966-3068 Trenton, ON K8V 5R6 F: (613) 966-3087 T: (613) 392-2841 ext. 4482 Email: tguerrera@greergalloway.com F: (613) 392-7151 Email: mattt@quintewest.ca If concerns regarding this project arise that cannot be resolved in discussion with the City of Quinte West, a person/party may request that the Minister of the Environment and Climate Change make an order for the project to comply with Part II of the Environmental Assessment Act (referred to as a “Part II Order”), which would elevate the level of assessment and require the City to undertake additional consultation. Requests for a Part II Order must be received by the Minister (address below) by July 3, 2017, with copies sent to the Director, Environmental Approvals Branch (address below) and the project contacts listed above. Honourable Glen R. Murray Director, Environmental Approvals Branch Minister of the Environment and Ministry of the Environment and Climate Change Climate Change 77 Wellesley St. W. 11th Floor 135 St. Clair Ave. West, 1st floor Toronto, ON M7A 2T5 Toronto, ON. M4V 1P5 If there are no Part II Order requests received by July 3, 2017, the Class EA will be considered approved and the City may proceed with design and construction. This notice issued June 1, 2017. Under the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act and the Environmental Assessment Act, unless otherwise stated in the submission, any personal information such as name, address, telephone number and property location included in a submission will become part of the public record files for this project and will be released, if requested, to any person. Quinte West News - Thursday, June 1, 2017 9


Leon’s partners with Trenton Memorial Hospital Foundation to provide beds BY ERIN STEWART

Trenton — Leon’s Superstore Trenton is selling beds to buy new beds for Trenton Memorial Hospital. The Quinte West business has partnered with the Trenton Memorial Hospital Foundation to support the foundation’s bid to buy eight new beds at a cost of about $100,000. For each mattress purchased at $299 or more, Leon’s will donate $25 to the foundation to purchase new beds, said Jane Brummell, marketing and promotions coordinator for Leon’s Superstore Trenton. “It’s huge to be a part of the community and Trenton Memorial Hospital does so much for the community and the entire Quinte area,

S

their services touch almost every family,” she said. “It’s just very important that everybody has a comfortable place from diagnosis to recovery and everything in between.“ Leon’s goal is to raise enough money for at least three beds for the hospital, a cost of about $24,000. “If someone comes in that isn’t purchasing a mattress but would like to donate, we would be glad to accept the donation and we will send it forward to the Trenton Memorial Hospital Foundation and they will issue receipts,” said Brummell. The Superstore is also in the process of setting up a donor recognition wall in the bedding department, each donor’s name will be posted to the wall. “We’re just really excited here at the

store to be a part of this. Over the year, we are going to do some fun events and different things to try and draw a little more attention to what the community can do and how we can help out,” she said. Wendy Warner, executive director of the Trenton Memorial Hospital Foundation, said there is a need to replace eight beds on the inpatient unit this year. The beds cost between $8,000 and $15,000 each. “With the critical nature of the patient that needs these beds, it is absolutely vital that we upgrade to beds that have 'smart bed' technology including alarms, nurse call systems, weigh scales, better patient positioning controls, and bed brakes,” she said. Trenton Memorial Hospital admits over 750 patients each year to 26 beds in its in-patient unit. It treats more than 32,000 patients through the emergency de-

partment in the hospital and beds are critical pieces of equipment, serving as a means of care 24 hours a day, 365 days a year. “At 10, 15, and even 20 years old, the beds are approaching the point at which they must be replaced with advanced technology and surfaces that enhance patient care, safety, and comfort,” said Warner. The hospital also requires three new stretchers in the emergency room to replace older stretchers that do not have the essential monitoring tools staff require to care for older, more fragile patients. The cost to replace each stretcher is $6,113. From emergency care to inpatient unit, palliative care and beyond, every area of the hospital has unique bed requirements in order to provide the most appropriate level of care tailored to the patients' individual needs.

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10 Quinte West News - Thursday, June 1, 2017

ASPARAGUS

BY MARTIN DURKIN

CFB Trenton - It was an evening of jovial fun as Quinte Conservation and CFB Trenton joined with local members of Scouts Canada in planting trees on Wilson Road in Foxboro. To assist in offsetting the carbon footprint created by the Quinte International Air Show (QIAS), 8 Wing Trenton purchased 2,000 trees to be planted in the Quinte Conservation watersheds. The funds covered the cost for this year’s Seedlings for Shorelines program and will pay for two other separate planting events. Despite the bother of blackflies and a halfflooded field, the Scouts along with Colonel Colin Keiver, Lt.-Col. Cathy Blue, and Wing Chief Warrant Officer Darcy Elder; trudged along in rubber boots between tractor tracks and began digging holes. Before the tree-planting took place, Keiver and Elder joked about the nicknames given to them by the Scouts. “I was a Beaver leader,” said Keiver, “I was called, Grey Wolf.” “Why am I named Stink Bug?” asked WCWO Elder. “Call me Shrek instead.”

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As the early evening wore on, 2,000 trees found new homes, the laughter continued as kids and 8 Wing personnel swarmed together dropping trees into holes. “Hey, how many people does it take to plant one tree?” asks a Scout leader in the crowd. “Three officers and one pilot!” Joked Lt.-Col. Blue. However a young scout joined in and responded, “Three officers, a pilot, and a Scout!” During the tail end of the planting, Elder and Cub Scout, Owen Clarence worked together planting one of the final trees. During the planting, Clarence told Elder that it was birthday and he was turning nine. Elder pulled a Canadian flag patch off his shoulder and slapped it onto Clarence’s arm. “Here’s a present for you, get your Mom to sew that on and make it permanent,” said WCWO Elder who then asked to have a picture taken with his new buddy. Clarence, who was beside himself with admiration, looked at his mom saying, “This is a day I will remember my whole life.”

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Quinte West girls’ rugby teams represent at OFSAA

Trenton High School and Bayside Secondary School’s girls’ rugby teams are representing Quinte West at this year’s OFSAA A/AA tournament in Oshawa, Monday May 29 to Wednesday May 31. Both team’s finished off day one with a win, but day two results were too late for our press deadline. The Trenton High Tigers dominated with a 55-0 victory over Blenheim District High School. Tries were scored by: Summer Bradley (2), Kailing Muir (2), Addy Walker (2), Johanna Dewitt, Megan Dyer, Maddison Bartlette, Kyara Qwan and Melissa Lajoie. Bayside Secondary School also pulled through with a convincing 34-5 victory Trenton High School’s Lauryn Bons controls the ball against a Blenheim District High School student on over the G.L. Roberts CVI. For up to date details on OFSAA re- day one of OFSAA, Monday May 29. Catherine Frost sults, go to insidebelleville.com.

St. Paul girls win COSSA gold

Youth from Toronto to Ottawa hit, pitch and run in Quinte West On Sunday, May 28, the Quinte West Amateur Baseball Association hosted the MLB Pitch, Hit and Run Sectional for the regional winners from Toronto to Ottawa. Competitors were vying for the opportunity to compete in the third round of the MLB program at Rogers Centre in Toronto. Quinte West participants (pictured) were: 7-8 years old – Nathan Miron, 9-10 yeas old- Leighton Simms, Hudson Pocknell and Keagan Carr, 11-12 Years old – Braiden Devries, Jackson Kehoe, Kaleb Sarvinson, Carter Rightmeyer, 11-12 year old Softball – Brianna Demille, 13-14 years old – Nathan Chard, Kole Calbury and Nicolas Freudman.

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In COSSA girls junior A soccer action last Wednesday at MAS Park, Belleville, a St. Pauls Falcons defender vies for the ball against a Peterborough St. Thomas player. St. Paul’s, which went on to win the gold with a 2-1 win over Nicholson, beat St. Thomas 6-0 in the match shown here. Chris Malette/Metroland

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Quinte Royals blank Kanata in doubleheader

Quinte Royals’ Joe Blakely, midget division, slides onto base as the Royals took on Kanata in a doubleheader at Bayshore Field in Trenton on Saturday May 27. The Royals dominated both games, coming out on top 6-1 in game one and 12-0 in game two. The Royals are off to a great start to the season, now sitting at four wins and no losses.

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Hastings — Lennox and Addington — 10 new projects in Hastings — Lennox and Addington have been approved under the federal government’s Clean Water and Waste Water Fund. The announcement was made in a press release May 24, by Mike Bossio, MP for Hastings — Lennox and Addington in Napanee. The government is providing up to 50 per cent of funding for these projects ($796,849): $67,158 in Marmora and Lake; $447,983 in Napanee; $131,708 in Bancroft. The provincial government is providing $398,426, and the municipalities will provide the balance of funding. “Ensuring that rural communities have the tools they need to thrive is one of my top priorities, so I am very happy that the federal government is making such historic investments in Napanee, Bancroft, and across our riding,” said MP Mike Bossio.

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The Paquita dance is being performed by students in the professional division of the Quinte Ballet School. Stephen Petrick/Metroland

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Quinte Ballet School ready for Spring Showcase Quinte Ballet School of Canada students Brittany Vaters (foreground) and Amanda Whitehead perform a dance called the Paquita, during a rehearsal for their upcoming year-end Spring Showcase performance. The show, featuring students in the professional division, takes place Saturday, June 10 at 7 p.m. at Centennial Secondary School. Students in the recreation division will also hold their Assemble show on Saturday, June 3 at 2:30 p.m. at Centennial. For more details visit quinteballetschool.com .

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“The $796,426 of federal funding that I announced today for 10 water and wastewater infrastructure projects are essential for building long term, sustainable rural communities right here in Hastings — Lennox and Addington.” Marmora and Lake, Stone Mills, StirlingRawdon, and Tweed will see stormwater and wastewater upgrades, as well as feasibility studies for other water systems. In Bancroft, wastewater collection systems will be rehabilitated, and a feasibility study will be conducted for wastewater systems. Residents of Napanee will see upgrades to their Wastewater Pollution Control Plant. “These projects are essential to keeping our waterways clean and our communities healthy and livable.” Deputy Mayor of Marmora and Lake Linda Bracken, said, “The project will rehabilitate two existing older sanitary and sewer collec-

tion assets. The fund provides an opportunity to advance some of our infrastructure requirements, since one has not been updated since 1974. Thank you for the contributions of the federal and provincial governments. Without our partnerships, we would go nowhere. We need to work together.” Deputy Mayor of the Town of Bancroft Paul Jenkins said, “The Town of Bancroft would like to express our gratitude to the federal government and our MP Mike Bossio for the announced CWWF funding. Repairs to our wastewater infrastructure is in critical need. This financial support will allow the town to take the first step in addressing our major infiltration issue in order to make the system more efficient and affordable for our citizens.” To view videostream of the announcement go to: https://www. f a c e b o o k . c o m / m i ke. b o s s i o. l i b e ra l / v i d eos/1061026364030399/

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It was a short but eclectic agenda for Hastings County Council, partly to accommodate a two-day session of hosting a meeting of the Eastern Ontario Warden’s Caucus, of which Hastings has been one of its most active members. At Thursday morning’s meeting, CAO Jim Pine commented the caucus meeting was “today and tomorrow.” Council also viewed a video promotion of a new Canadian musical by the now widely known Tweed Theatre company to make its world premiere at the Tweed Pavilion as a sesquicentennial project June 28 through July 7. Artistic director of the company, Tim Porter, a Tweed native, introduced the actors in the video who each contributed their own comments, and said the show, “Hastings, the Musical,” summarizes many of the legends of people and events over the county’s history, set to toe-tapping music and with a generous splash of irreverence and comedy. The video also reviewed the outstanding success of the small townbased company with shows in Toronto and across Canada, starting with their first big musical, “Tweed – the Musical” back in 2009,followed by one called “Alex Bell,” about the iconic inventor of the telephone.

Tweed seems to be the hub for summer events this year as Mayor Jo-Anne Albert also promoted the “Farm to Table” community dinner there on Saturday, July 22 at 4 p.m. featuring many professionally prepared dishes of local produce, tickets just $5, children under five, free. The outdoor meal will be served on Tweed’s Metcalf Street, which will be closed to traffic to accommodate the event. Reviewed again from a recent meeting of the Community and Human Services Committee was a video outlining the problems of homelessness and promoting full support for a new provincial program called “Home for Good” targeted to address supportive housing to resolve homelessness among chronic cases, youth, indigenous and those released from provincially –funded institutions. “Your committee believes this program is timely and has authorized staff to submit a proposal in partnership with the SE LHIN and other support agencies,” was the recommendation included in the report, which was adopted. CAO Pine also commended newspaper reporter Luke Hendry for his commitment on publicizing the homelessness issue and also thanked all media members for their support of county activities.

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Ivanhoe - Talking about death is part of life. Are you dying to talk? The Heart of Hastings Hospice is hosting an evening where you can come and enter into your own journey of reflection and communication about your values, beliefs and goals for your end of life, and those you love. Television host, nurse and author Yvonne Heath will be giving a one-hour talk about her passion – “Loving Your Life To Death.” She is energetic and engaging and passionate about life and death. Community agencies such as the Alzheimer Society, Centre Hastings Support Network and McConnell’s Funeral Home will be setting up displays and providing information and workshops. The Heart of Hastings Hospice will be talking about the many free services and programs it of-

fers, including: caregiver support; grief support group; home volunteer visiting program; equipment lending, and information on their residential hospice. Staff and volunteers will talk about volunteering opportunities either in direct client care or as a “Friend” of hospice who helps with fundraising opportunities, gardening or other practical roles. Refreshments, door prizes and a candy bar will be available. The event takes place on Wednesday June 7 at the Huntington Veterans Hall in Ivanhoe (11379 Hwy 62) and runs from 5:30 p.m. to 8 p.m. Admission is by donation with all proceeds going to The Heart to Hastings Hospice. For further information, contact Hannah at The Heart of Hastings Hospice, 613-473-1880, or email info@heartofhastingshospice.ca.


CHEO is the go-to place for sick kids in Eastern Ontario BY TIFFANY LEPACK Metroland Media

John Lepack loves superheroes. It doesn’t matter if it is SpiderMan or Batman, his imagination runs wild with their adventures. The thing my son doesn’t know, is he is already a superhero in my eyes. Shortly after John was born June 11, 2013, staff at Almonte General Hospital noticed something not right. They were able to quickly recognize he needed to be rushed to the Children’s Hospital of Eastern Ontario (CHEO). Kevin Keohane, president and chief executive officer of the CHEO Foundation, calls this a very typical story of CHEO working with rural hospitals outside of Ottawa, who he calls very important partners in care. “We have some tremendous community hospitals throughout the area that CHEO also serves. For the vast majority of families the first place that you go when your child needs care is to your community hospital. And we strongly encourage supporting the hospitals in your own areas,” said Keohane. “But at the same time, CHEO plays an important role with those community hospi-

tals. When I think about CHEO it is a regional hospital.” As a new mom from Arnprior, who just experienced a 24-hour labour in Almonte, it was a difficult moment to be told John needed the care from CHEO. But we were not alone. CHEO truly is a regional hospital, and in 2016 there were, for instance, 351 total visits to CHEO from patients from the Belleville area, 168 of those emergency care visits. “I think the important thing is there are other types of health care needs that kids from Belleville had and could be well

served at within their own community,” said Keohane. “But when they have the most serious cases and ones requiring paediatric speciality they would come to CHEO and that’s a good balance. “You want kids to be served closer to home as often as possible and when they have to travel to CHEO we want them to feel as at home as we can possibly make them and make their stay here as good as possible and get them back home and in their own communities as quickly as possible.” CHEO not only serves patients from Eastern Ontario; but their catchment stretches all the way to Northern Ontario and Nunavut. Last year 52 per cent of patient visits to CHEO came from Ottawa and 33 per cent from other towns and cities in Eastern Ontario and Northern Ontario totalling 107,000 patient visits. “That means there is an awful lot of children and families living outside the Ottawa area who are needing the services of CHEO, and it is a privilege for CHEO to be able to provide these services,” said Keohane. John was transferred from Almonte to CHEO via a neonatal transport unit. When the CHEO team arrived to take John they explained ev-

erything about the unit and how they were going to transfer him. Although at the time I was scared that my newborn was leaving my side, I was reassured that he was safe. Over 500 times last year the neonatal transport unit went to communities outside of Ottawa to bring babies to CHEO. When John arrived at CHEO he was admitted to the neonatal intensive care unit. He was showing signs of meningitis and had to have a spinal tap to test the fluid. To say my husband and I were scared is an understatement. However, from the moment we walked in to CHEO until the moment we left, I knew he was in the best possible hands. The team who worked on him always explained how they were examining him and what the next steps were. Thankfully, after a week at CHEO, he was discharged, having battled back from an infection. The equipment used to transfer, test and care for John while he was at CHEO was made possible due to community support. The provincial government provides money to CHEO for the staff to operate the equipment,

but not the machines. One of the biggest boosts to CHEO is its annual telethon, which is set this year for June 10 and 11 on CTV Ottawa. In 2016, the telethon celebrated more than $8 million raised throughout the year. “Every donation big and small goes toward helping CHEO deliver on its mission. And that really is to make sure kids and families get the best care they can receive,” said Keohane. As for John and the rest of the children who receive care at CHEO, Keohane agrees they are superheroes. There are more superheroes to add to the list as well. “The kids are definitely heroes, but the donors are heroes too,” said Keohane. “We could run a telethon and we can tell everyone the work CHEO is doing, and it all doesn’t matter unless people respond. So when you respond you are being a hero for kids, a hero for CHEO, and you are helping us to provide the care at a different level than we wouldn’t be able to without your help.” For more information on CHEO and the telethon visit: www.cheotelethon.com

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The Good Earth How about showing your horticulturalists respect?

By Dan Clost There comes a time at the start of every gardening season when we all run smack dab into the wall. There’s no doubt that we (horticultural workers) are as excited as you (horticultural, um, doers) about the new season. So it seems odd that, just as the time of doing arrives, we’re feeling done in. I can tell you that

myself and many of my coworkers- especially those of us with knees that can predict rain two days ahead of time- are more than a titch tired. This year it seems to be more onerous as the constant rain has slowed everyone down. It’s been tough getting hothouse plants to grow especially with all the cloud cover blocking the sunlight. It’s been tough getting the beds prepared because they’re either too soupy or they are a consistency akin to gumbo. It’s been difficult on home gardeners for many of the same reasons, too. You’re a bit behind in everything including mowing the lawns. (“Wet blades” are a myth, GR.) Unfortunately, some mowing just has to happen and that’s when you hear an engine turning at higher rpm’s but see the mower plodding along at a slower ground speed. The culmination of all of this is that there are some

tired and stressed out folks cluttering up both sides of the counters at the nurseries and tempers are fraying. One might wish to look upon these counter encounters as opportunities for grace but not all of us (and especially not this one) have saintly temperaments. I certainly understand the frustrations; in fact, I share them. I’d love to bring home a load of soil for top-dressing and topping up beds. This past week (at the time of writing) the topsoil was so waterlogged that four cubic yards was almost enough to surpass the Ministry of Transport weight limits on our 1-ton delivery truck. The ground at the delivery sites, your homes, is so saturated that tires easily break through the turf. Either the truck gets stuck or there are great ruts left behind when the vehicle pulls away. I know of three delivery trucks and one tractor that bogged down on Wednesday

and Thursday alone. In fact, on that Thursday, one of the area’s largest bulk product supply yards closed due to the rain. We’re fortunate that we sell other things, e.g. plants, and we have a roof over them, so we were able to stay open. Hopefully we sold enough petunias to cover the hydro bill. Now, Gentle Reader, we get to the core of this column. It was prompted by an unpleasant telephone conversation, actually a loud diatribe, directed at the young person who answered the phone. This telephone conversation was ostensibly about soil

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and the requirement that a deferred delivery be made immediately. We did deliver it as requested because, after the appropriate caveats have been expressed, it is the customers’ ultimate decision that is respected. Within ten minutes of the call, our truck was loaded and on the road. I used the word “ostensibly” because of the tone used by the callers (a two-phone, two-person tag-team effort.) It is fine to be adamant and upset when things go awry. It is not fine to cross over the line of decent manners and disrespect a person, especially to one who is pow-

erless to respond. Would the conversation have taken a different tone if a manager had picked up the receiver? I suspect so. There are very few things over which we have control and our interactions with others is one of those things. Respect is more than an expectation, it is a requirement. So for all of us who have run into that wall, let’s pause a moment, recover our equilibrium and express ourselves with grace. A musical end note: The Group of Two is playing The Grind in Trenton on Friday, 2 June from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m.

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In praise of the fix it shops New York is leading a fight to pass “Right to Repair” legislation, called the Fair Repair Act. As the world moved to the don’t fix it, replace it, the global dumps filled up ever more quickly. Arrayed against those who would repair stuff are companies such as Apple, Toyota, Verizon, Caterpillar and The Consumer Technology Association, which in today’s doublespeak represents the manufacturers. The new rules would require companies to sell replacement parts and ban “software locks” which restrict after market parts, apparently John Deer is well know

for this technique. Coming from an era of a cobbler shops and TV repair shops I still regard those still existing as rebels against the system. Since most stuff today has too much software for many people, its not just cell phones which are affected. A recent study by a defense annalist claimed that even the F35 fighter jet could be hacked rendering the pilot helpless. The Same goes for most of the auto industry with demonstrations of vehicles being taken over by hackers, while we can upgrade defenses on a home computer/laptop, I have never heard of cars

having software defense patches installed. Upgrades to the latest operating system are often met with dubious results, the UK nuclear submarines are still using Windows XP possibly with upgrades the general public is not aware of, and maybe not. One sub fired a Trident missile off the coast of the USA recently (presumably without its warhead) and instead of heading into the Atlantic it went west toward the mainland and had to be destroyed. Sometimes the magic works, sometimes it doesn’t. Paul Whittaker RR#1 Gilmour.

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TRAVEL

Montreal throws itself a spectacular 375th birthday party BY JOHN M. SMITH

A view of Bonsecours Market. John M. Smith/Metroland

with its intricately designed interior and its magnificent stainedglass windows that depict parish history. I’d also visit the Montreal Museum of Archaeology and History (where you’ll find self-guiding, interactive tours), the Clock Tower (a memorial to the men of the Merchant Fleet who were lost during WWI) and the Bonsecours Market (which was the city’s main agricultural marketplace for over a century and now houses several boutiques). Other points of interest include the Biosphere (housed in the geodesic dome that was the American pavilion during Expo ‘67), the Casino de Montreal (housed in the former Quebec and French pavilions of Expo ‘67), Habitat ’67 (an experimental housing development built out of

prefabricated concrete slabs), the History Centre (housed in a 19th century fire station), and St. Joseph’s Oratory (one of the world’s largest basilicas). The Montreal Museum of Fine Arts (the oldest art museum in Canada), the Biodome (a museum of the environment), La Ronde (the province’s largest amusement park and site of the International Fireworks Competition), and the Bell Centre (home to hockey’s Montreal

Canadiens) are also of interest. Furthermore, I’d recommend checking out Mount Royal Park (with its spectacular view of the city and its large cross at the summit) and Olympic Stadium (where an elevator will take you to the top of the world’s tallest inclined tower for another breathtaking view of the city). You might also like to spend some time in Montreal’s beautiful BotaniFor More Information: www. cal Garden, where you’ll see the tourisme-montreal.org

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A visit to our eastern neighbour, Montreal, is definitely worthwhile. After all, I’ve always found it to be a unique, fun-loving, charming, and vibrant city. Its party atmosphere is enhanced by the many festivals hosted annually, including the Montreal Festival of Lights (Feb.), Go Bike Montreal Festival (June), Beer Festival (June), International Jazz Festival (June & July), Just for Laughs Festival (July), International Fireworks Festival (July & Aug.), and Old Montreal’s Extravaganza Festival (Dec.). Of all these, my favourites is, of course, the Go Bike Montreal Festival – and it will take place this very weekend. Certain roads will be closed to motor vehicle traffic so that cyclists can enjoy a relatively stressfree ride through the city. Cyclists can choose from a 28 km route or a 50 km route. Many participants will dress up in colourful costumes for the event – and there will be riders of varying ages and abilities. I can remember going up in a boom truck to photograph the participants awaiting the start of the ride a few years ago - and I marvelled at the spectacular sight of about 10,000 cyclists all lined up and ready to go! I’m so old that I can even remember visiting Montreal for “Expo ‘67”, and this year marks the 50th anniversary of that event. However, the city is also celebrating a much older event than that, too, for it’s the 375th anniversary of its actual founding (but I wasn’t there for that). A mission named Ville Marie was built back in 1642, 375 years ago, and it became a centre for the fur trade. This area eventually became Montreal (which was incorporated as a city in 1832). Therefore, this would be an especially good year for a visit to Montreal, for there will be several special celebratory events. For example, a spectacular 30 minute light show took place on the Jacques Cartier Bridge back on May 17 – and from May 17 to Sept. 2, there will also be a unique multimedia show on the west sector of the Old Port of Montreal, with projections that pay tribute to the St. Lawrence River and the city’s history. If you do plan a visit in the near future, be sure to include a stop in Old Montreal, with its cobblestone streets, historical landmarks, museums, and boutiques. I’d recommend checking out Notre Dame Basilica, Montreal’s oldest Roman Catholic Church,

Montreal Insectarium (with its magnificent collection of butterflies and insects) and colourful displays of the many species and varieties of plants in its more than 30 gardens. Any visit to this city of trendy fashions and gastronomical delights must also include time for both shopping and sampling of the delectable local cuisine – and Montreal’s remarkable underground pedestrian network, “the city below the city”, offers about 30 km. of well lit walkways linking several shopping centres, restaurants, boutiques, theatres, and hotels - and convenient access to the subway system. If you prefer not to drive around and search for parking spots, the STM Tourist Pass is the fastest and easiest way to get around, for it offers unlimited travel by metro (the subway system) and bus (web site: www.stm. info). Several companies also offer guided bus tours of the city, including a hop-on and hop-off bus tour. There are specialty excursions available, including an architecture tour and a ghost walking tour. Boat trips of the harbour area are also plentiful. If you intend to check out some of Montreal’s fascinating, informative museums while in the city, then save money by purchasing a Montreal Museum Pass (a 3-day pass, including public transit, is $80.00).

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AUCTION SALE MR KEN BOOSE 32 TANNER ROAD, CAMPBELLFORD, ONT. THURSDAY JUNE 8TH AT 11:00 AM 1 mile SOUTH of Campbellford on Highway 30 and turn EAST onto Trent Drive- cross single lane bridge and proceed to Tanner Road. TOOLS – Craftsman 36â€? 4 chuck wood lathe, Craftsman 10â€? table saw, Craftsman 12â€?band saw, King floor model drill press, Craftsman scroll saw, portable air compressor, Chicago 10â€? compound mitre saw, Simoniz power washer, 12â€? metal cutting chop saw,1’ & ½â€? belt sanders, power tools, hand tools, routers and bits, builders hardware, clamps, vises, storage cabinet, multi tools, Craftsman shop vac, HOUSEHOLD CONTENTS – SELL AT 11:00 AM oak oval dining table and 6 chairs – like new; leather chesterfield and chair, La- Zboy leather chairs, La-Z- Boy rocker, queen size 4 piece bedroom suite, Dynex 36â€? flat screen TV ,occasional chairs, love seat, single bed, wall units, living room furniture, Tri star vacuum, stainless steel BBQ, dehumidifier, bar supplies, small kitchen appliances, everyday dishes, Kenmore upright freezer – like new; vintage parking meter, numerous other articles TERMS- CASH OR CHEQUE OWNER & AUCTIONEER NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENT OR INJURY DAY OF SALE SULLIVAN AUCTIONEERS 3ODLQĂ€HOG www.sullivanauctions.com

BRED COW SALE

Saturday, June 3 - 2:00 p.m. Kawartha Lakes Community Sale Barn Inc. 580 Woodville Rd., Woodville, ON 2 kms east of Woodville!

Selling 150 cow & cow/calf pairs, from 5 herd dispersals! To consign to this sale or for more information call or visit our web site! Sale Barn 705-439-4444 Kevin Barker 705-878-2947 Bruce Woodrow 705-879-0507 Sale Managed & Sold by: Kawartha Lakes Community Sale Barn Inc. Web: www.klcauction.ca

Auctions continued on B7

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AUCTION SALE WALTER AND BARB RUMSEY

15970 HIGHWAY 62, R.R.# 1 ELDORADO, ONT. FRIDAY JUNE 9TH AT 10:30 AM 6 miles NORTH of Madoc on Highway 63 – just NORTH of Eldorado. RECREATION AND TOOLS 2009 Suzuki 500cc King Quad 4 x 4 ATV- power steering – 800 miles – like new condition; 18 ft steel flat deck tandem axle trailer with electric brakes, front winch – excellent; 1987 Yamaha Excel 340cc snowmobile with electric start – good running condition; Coleman 4000 w portable generator, Cub Cadet 5 hp wood shipper, Power Fist Mig welder, Honda gas powered water pump, Simoniz 4.5 hp hi pressure washer with Honda engine, hydraulic wood splitter, 40 ft aluminum extension ladder, Craftsman 10� table saw, Craftsman , Poulan chainsaws, Poulan grass trimmer, Makita 12� mitre saw, power and hand tools, rechargeable tools, shop vac, stacking tool chest, builders hardware, 12’ x 20’ portable garage, 12’ aluminum boat, 14 ft fiberglass canoe, 1.5 hp outboard motor, 5 hp garden tiller, motorcycle jack, Craftsman 14 hp riding lawn mower, single axle bush trailers, camping supplies, picnic tables, work benches, propane patio heater, propane BBQ; HOUSEHOLD CONTENTS – SELL AT 10:30 AM Vintage hard maple butchers block, antique oak sideboard, antique oak library table, antique Eastlake style dresser, antique dresser with tear drop pulls, antique parlour tables, antique walnut sideboard, chesterfields, oak drop leaf table, antique oak arm chair, oak finish extension table and press back chairs, pine book shelves, living room furniture, oak storage cabinet, 4 poster bed, pine bedroom furniture, walnut vanity, air conditioners, Kenmore sewing machine, numerous other articles. TERMS- CASH OR CHEQUE OWNER & AUCTIONEER NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENT OR INJURY DAY OF SALE SULLIVAN AUCTIONEERS 3ODLQÀHOG www.sullivanauctions.com

AUCTION SALE ROSS AND IDA CHAMBERLAIN

527 7TH LINE SOUTH BELMONT R.R.# 3 HAVELOCK, ONT. WEDNESDAY JUNE 7TH AT 10:30 AM 2 miles EAST of Havelock on Highway 7 and turn SOUTH onto 7th Line South Belmont. EQUIPMENT AND TOOLS John Deere 2120 2 wd diesel tractor with front end loader, cab – good running condition; 30 ft pipe bale elevator with electric motor, McKee 7 ft double auger snow blower, 5 ton wagon running gear, 20 ft flat deck tandem axle trailer, International W4 Standard gas tractor- not running – parts only; Elite 7000 w portable generator with electric start, Poulan chainsaw, Yamaha FF 1000 inverter generator, Mastercraft drill press, Craftsman bench top band saw, bench grinder, Mastercraft 12â€? single surface planer, 3/4â€?sockets, shop vacs, garden trailer, garden trailer,100 gallon poly water tank, 12’x 16 ‘ car shelter, quantity of lumber including rough cut 2â€?pine 8’& 10’lengths, 1â€?pine, 2â€?white oak; HORSE RELATED horse drawn rubber tired wagon with plank seats – excellent; fore cart, heavy horse sleighs, skidding cart, 3 Western saddles, Halflinger team harness, heavy horse harness, neck yokes, feed buckets, hay bags, tack, blankets, pony harness, HOUSEHOLD CONTENTS- SELL AT 10:30 AM oak dining table, 6 chairs and china cabinet; antique press back rocker, antique treadle sewing machine, antique consul model radio, antique oak extension table, antique oak side board, antique trunks, cookware, 10 x 10 gazebo frame, propane Bbq, air conditioner, VEHICLES 1999 Honda ES 450cc Foreman ATV with 5 ft snow blade- excellent condition;1996 Ford F 250 gas pick up truck -230,000 kms- running condition – sells as is; 1997 Ford F 150 pick up truck – 167,000 kms- running condition – sells as is;1982 Lionel tent trailer, Numerous other articles TERMS- CASH OR CHEQUE OWNER & AUCTIONEER NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENT OR INJURY DAY OF SALE SULLIVAN AUCTIONEERS 3ODLQĂ€HOG www.sullivanauctions.com

LOCH SLOY BUSINESS PARK 343 COUNTY RD 22, PICTON, ONT SATURDAY JUNE 10TH AT 10:30 AM 2 miles SOUTH of Picton on County Rd 10 & turn onto County Rd 22 for 2 miles to Lock Sloy Business Park TOOLS DeWalt single surface planer, Dewalt portable air compressor, Ryobi 8 1/4� radial arm saw, Delta 10� table saw, Bosch mitre saw, combination belt/disc sander, Job Mate drill press, Rigid power tools, clamps, Mastercraft 6� jointer, portable propane heater, shop-vac, builders hardware, hand tools, ANTIQUES & COLLECTIBLES – SELL AT 10:30 AM neon corona signage, wooden model sailing ships, antique farmers foam with components, antique walnut extension table, antique mantle clock, cuckoo clock, antique gingerbread clock, antique oak face finish sideboard, antique Eastlake style dresser, antique chairs, trunks, wool winder, marine collectibles, vintage Eska, Johnson outboard motors, wet suits, vintage luggage, window frames, vintage farm related tools, wooden boxes, stain glass windows, childs sleigh, wicker rocker, tins, kitchenwares, buggy seat & step, light fixtures, oil lamp chimneys, numerous other articles TERMS- CASH OR CHEQUE OWNER & AUCTIONEER NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENT OR INJURY DAY OF SALE SULLIVAN AUCTIONEERS 3ODLQÀHOG www.sullivanauctions.com

AUCTION SALE Sat June 10th at 10:30 A.M. To be held on site at civic #2215 Daley Rd. Roblin (Postal Code K0K 2W0, Tydenaga Township), From Hwy 401 Take Exit 579 Napanee, Travel North on Hwy 41 Approx. 15Kms to Westplane Rd., Turn West and travel approx. 10.5Kms to auction site (Westplane Rd. turns into Daley Rd.) Shop Tools & Equip, Boats, ATV, Guns & Much More Tools & Shop Equip to Incl.: Lincoln 180 mig welder & cart, Lincoln 225 AC/DC elec welder, Devilbiss vert. air comp. with cast iron head, Lrge qty of air tools, tire changer, Box planer, Compound miter saw, Metal chop saw, Drill press, Table saw. Lrg qty of hand and power tools including; impact sockets, reg. sockets, flat wrenches and more, Wood lathe chisels, O/A torches (one set brand new), Mastercraft chest on chest tool box, Mastercraft workbench, steel workbench with vice, Lrg air nailer, Small Brad nailer, Assortment of chains and chain binders, floor jacks, and much more. Boats, ATV, Tractor, Lawn, Garden & Other Misc. Items to incl.: Smokercraft 16ft boat on trailer with Merc 75 motor, Trolling motor, and fish finder, 12ft alum boat and trailer with 9.9 Merc 4 stroke engine, Alum 14ft boat, Fibreglass canoe, 2002 Honda 350 Fourtrax ES ATV, 2001 Chev Silverado 4WD truck with snowplough, IH 250 tractor with Allied front end loader, Set of pallet forks, 6.5HP Yardworks push mower, Plastic water tote mounted on trailer with 5.5HP gas powered pump for garden watering, Champion 5800 generator (like new), Stihl 290 chainsaw, Stihl 009L chainsaw, Husqvarna 42 chainsaw, 2 Stihl Whipper snippers, 2 wheeled trailer, Qty of steel pipe, Qty of scrap steel, Roll of wire (new), Qty of hunting and fishing items incl.: portable fish hut, Gas powered ice auger, Hummingbird fish finder, ice fishing fish finder, Fishing rods reels and tackle, hunting and skinning knives, Wooden pelt stretchers, Skinning table, Large assort of traps, 2 Live traps Pheasant cage, Steel saw horses, Car ramps, ATV ramps, Tires, Milk cans, Canthook, Garden tools, Lumber, Safety harness, Bicycles, Stoplight, Fire hydrant, Qty of welding items including large assort of welding rods, Assorted plumbing and electrical supplies, Qty of oils and lubricants. Propane heater, Wisconsin 4 cycle engine, Guns to incl.: Crosman powermaster 760 .177 cal Pellet repeater, Wolf Black powder muzzle loader, Stevens Savage model 770 shotgun, Cooey model 840 410, Mossberg 22, Remington SPRG model 7400 30-06, Stevens Savage model 58 12 gauge shotgun, Stirling model 20 22 cal semi automatic, NP 303, Winchester model 69A 22cal repeater, Stirling LR model 20 22, Baikai shotgun, Barnett compound crossbow, Note: Purchasers of firearms must present valid P.A.L. certificate at time of auction, no exceptions. Owner & Auctioneer not Responsible for Loss or Accident Canteen & Washroom Available on Site Terms: Cash or Good Cheque with Proper I.D. Prop: The Late Greg Sexsmith Auctioneers & Sales Managers Tom Harrison Peter Ross Auction Services Ltd. Amherstview On Ingleside On 613-813-2044 613-537-8862 www.peterrossauction.ca

CLS756476_0601

METROLAND MEDIA AUCTIONS

Auctions continued from B6

AUCTION SALE ANTIQUES, TOOLS, & COLLECTIBLES

Auction, Thurs. June 1, 6:00 pm At 12927 Hwy 2 just west of Colborne. Antiques, collectables, toools, home furnishings including living room, rec room, bedroom furnishings, power tools, drill press, hand tools, leather recliner, lge quantity vintage comic books, table, French doors, new small articles nevr used, plus much more. Check website for updates. Terms: cash or cheque with I.D. Gary Warner, Auctioneer, 905-355-2106

AUCTION SALE DENNIS ARMSTRONG 20 JAMES STREET, STIRLING, ONT. MONDAY JUNE 5TH AT 10:30 AM Vicinity of covered bridge in Stirling. BOATS AND TRAILERS 16, 14, 12 ft fiberglass canoes, AMF 12’“ Pufferâ€?sail boat, vintage 15 ft aluminum pleasure boat with Evinrude 40 hp outboard and trailer- restoration project; 15 ft flat deck tandem axle trailer with pintle hitch, 24 ft “Scamperâ€?– “Hunt Camp Specialâ€?travel trailer, 5’x 10’single axle utility trailer, TOOLS Honda 6.5 hp hi pressure washer, 125000 btu propane heater, portable air compressor, electric power winch, Beaver 6â€? jointer, Delta 10â€? table saw, scroll saw, extension ladder, masonry tools, hand tools, power tools, vintage tools including lumber rule, adze, beam boring drill, cross cuts; flower bed tiller, electrical supplies, pipe vise, jack stands, tile cutting saw, COLLECTIBLES AND MISC quantity of 1972 VW 1600 & 1500cc engine parts including motors, flywheels, generators, antique Eastlake style sideboard, cast iron grates, carpenters trunk, antique pine frame mirror,garage collectibles, traffic signs, church pews, church doors, antique extension table, antique mahogany dresser, pine blanket box, vintage garage lighting hoods, milk cans, Pitico 16â€?stainless steel deep fryers, 45’s records, depression glass, oil lamps, numerous other articles TERMS- CASH OR CHEQUE OWNER & AUCTIONEER NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENT OR INJURY DAY OF SALE SULLIVAN AUCTIONEERS 3ODLQĂ€HOG www.sullivanauctions.com

AUCTION SALE WEDNESDAY, JUNE 7/17 AT 5:00 P.M. DOUG JARRELL SALES ARENA, BELLEVILLE This is an exceptional offering of very clean contemporary furniture. Frigidaire washer & dryer, counter height table & chair, ODUJH IROGLQJ OHJ WDEOH SLHFH FKLQD KXWFK EOXH FKHVWHUĂ€HOG with reclining seats, 3 piece faux suede love seat, chair & ottoman, electric lift chair ( light green), blue swivel rocker recliner, green swivel rocker, hall table, pine quartz grandmother clock, wing back chair, glass entertainment unit, twin bed, double bedstead with matching hi boy chest dresser/mirror & night table. Rubbermaid storage FDELQHW GUDZHU Ă€OH FDELQHW VHYHUDO DUHD UXJV SODQW tables, cabinets, book shelves, lawn swing/canopy. Partial setting of Royal Albert “Old Country Rosesâ€? including 7 dinner plates, 7 salad plates, 7 b&b, cups & saucers, small RSHQ YHJHWDEOH FDNH SODWH Ă€QJHU SLFNOH GLVK )ORRU table lamps, Lionel 36 piece “Gâ€? gauge train set, BMP, costume jewelry, cups & saucers, carnival glass bowl, collector plates, Royal Doulton “Daydreamsâ€? HN 1731, FRUQĂ RZHU PRUH Troy-bilt front wheel drive lawn mower (excellent), Yardworks snow thrower & electric weed eater, shop vac, lawn spreader, wheel barrow, hand power tools, hardware, lawn & garden furniture and numerous other pieces. See my web site for a detailed list & photos. AUCTIONEER: DOUG JARRELL 613-969-1033 www.dougjarrellauctions.com

Visit us online www.InsideBelleville.com Section B - Thursday, June 1, 2017 B7


County to distribute federal gas tax BY JACK EVANS

With more than $1,212,000 revenue for its share of federal gas tax, Hastings County will keep only $57,748, apportioning the rest among the 14 member municipalities based on population. The breakdown in the bylaw passed by county council last week is as follows: Tyendinaga, population 4,150, $126,173; Deseronto, 1,835, $55,790; Stirling-Rawdon, 4,978, $151,347; Centre Hastings, 4,543, $138,121; Tweed,6,057, $184,152; Madoc Town-

ship, 2,197, $66,796; Marmora and Lake, 4,074 $123,862; Tudor and Cashel, 586, $17,816; Limerick, 352, $10,702; Wollaston, 708, $21.525; Faraday,1,468, $44,632; Bancroft, 3,880, $117,964; Carlow/Mayo, 892, $27,120; Hastings Highlands, 4,168, $126,720. The amounts listed do not reflect the county’s equal portion of its retained amount reduced from each municipality so the actual payments fall a few thousand dollars short. Council also passed bylaws to establish tax ratios for the current year and actual levy apportionments.

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2006 YAMAHA G22 GAS POWERED GOLF CART

$

3695*

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2009 Club Car Villager 4 - Factory 4 passenger Golf Cart L.E.D Headlights and Tail lights, Gas gauge Gas Powered - Runs Great Factory 4 passenger cart with full length top, Jake’s 6 inch lift kit, 12inch wheels with off road tires Sold serviced with oil change and new drive belt

2014 CLUB CAR PRECEDENT OFF ROAD CUSTOMIZED

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6595*

New Alpha Off Road Series - Truck inspired Street Series Body Kit Body Kit includes New Front and Rear cowl - Includes Automotive flush mount style LED headlights and Tail lights, Street series front grill With Upgraded Colour matched hood scoop. Cart is equipped with 2015 Batteries, Premium 12” low profile and Street style tires, upgraded Brand New front Club Car black OEM cushions - Brand new 54” Club Car OEM roof, powerdrive charger - Warranty Ends December 31st 2017

2006 CLUB CAR PRECEDENT GAS 4 PASSENGER

$

3995*

LIMITED SUPPLY! 2006 Club Car Precedent Gas - New Automotive Quality L.E.D Quality Light Kit - New - Premium O.e.m Club Car Rear Seat Kit, Club Car Seat Kit Is Only Available At Authorized Club Car Dealerships - Rear Seat Kit Features A Flip To Flat Bed Feature, Cart In Very Good Condition For The Age - Cart Sold Serviced, Limited 90 Day Parts And Labour Warranty 2014 CLUB CAR PRECEDENT STREET - CUSTOMIZED

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* 6595 New Alpha Street Series - Mustang inspired Street Series Body $

Kit - Body Kit includes New Front and Rear cowl - Includes Automotive flush mount style LED headlights and Tail lights, Street series front grill With Upgraded Colour matched hood scoop. Cart is equipped with 2015 Batteries, Premium 12” low profile and Street style tires, upgraded Brand New front Club Car black OEM cushions - Brand new 54” Club Car OEM roof, powerdrive charger - Warranty Ends December 31st 2017 2014 CLUB CAR PRECEDENT CUSTOM PAINTED GOLF CART!

$

6995*

2014 Club car Precedent Electric Golf Cart Automotive Quality L.E.D Headlight and Tail light package installed, Club Car Premium Rear seat kit with flip to flat bed option, 2015 Batteries - Test in Great condition Custom Painted Body - Unique 2 Tone Colour Option, Jake’s 6 inch lift kit, 14inch MJFX Wheels, Premium Timber wolf tire upgrade - DOT Tire Sold with E.R.I.C Charging system Sold with Warranty Untill December 31st 2017

Trenton, ON 613-965-1837 Gananoque, ON 613-382-1937 Williamsburg, ON 613-535-1837 Carleton Place 613-253-1837 B8 Section B - Thursday, June 1, 2017

Tick talk from local health professionals BY SUE DICKENS

Northumberland/Peterborough counties — An established population of blacklegged ticks in the Brighton area and Havelock is having an impact on how the local health professionals are dealing with the danger they pose. The talk among health professionals these days is about the dangerous Lyme disease bacteria which ticks can carry. Media releases are coming from all directions, the Haliburton, Kawartha, Pine Ridge District (HKPR) Health Unit, the Peterborough CountyCity Health department, and Dr. Rosana Salvaterra, medical officer of health for Peterborough Public Health to name a few. May is designated as Lyme disease awareness month and so the press releases are coming fast and curious to warn and educate people. As mentioned the ticks have shown up are in Havelock and Brighton and those are only the reported findings. The Peterborough County-City Health is asking local residents to be aware of Lyme disease and how to prevent it. While not all blacklegged ticks carry Lyme disease, populations of infected blacklegged ticks are spreading due to climate change. “Locally we are closely monitoring for evidence of infected ticks in our area, so we encourage residents to check for ticks on their bodies and bring them to the third floor of the Health Unit for identification,” explained Atul Jain, manager of environmental health programs. Dr. Salvaterra of Peterborough Public Health stated that about 400 Ontarians contracted the disease in 2015, with indications that these numbers will only grow as the tick that carries the infection continues to make more parts of the province its home. Ontario has many high-risk areas, mostly nestled along the northern shores of Lake Erie, Ontario and the St. Lawrence River. But ticks can hitch a ride on a passing migratory bird, or a deer, and show up anywhere. Checking pets for ticks after taking them for a walk is a must for owners. Last year, Peterborough Public Health (PPH) found positive ticks in Havelock as well as inside the city of Peterborough. “What is currently a “low risk” situation seems poised to grow into one where the risk requires more of our attention and action,” stated Dr. Salvaterra. The HKPR District Health Unit says it time

Dr. Rosana Salvaterra, medical officer of health, Peterborough Public Health is one of many health professionals issuing warnings about the dangers of ticks She said the province has released a 10-step plan focusing on building public awareness through the provision of updated resources, toolkits and education in early August. photo submitted

for ‘tick talk’ to remind people to watch out for these blacklegged ticks (also known as deer ticks) that can carry the bacteria. The health unit says blacklegged ticks live in forests, tall grasses and bushes, and thrive in wet environments. In Northumberland County, it is through Health Unit surveillance that the discovery was made that blacklegged ticks are now established in the Brighton area, including Presqu’ile Provincial Park. “We know that blacklegged tick populations are known to live along the north shore of Lake Ontario and the St. Lawrence River, so the discovery of an established tick population in the Brighton area is not a surprise,” says Richard Ovcharovich, manager of environmental health with the HKPR District Health Unit. The discovery of an established population of blacklegged ticks in the Brighton area means a change in the tick surveillance program run by the Health Unit. Effective June 1, the Health Unit will no longer accept ticks for testing in the area east of Colborne and south of Highway 401. People can still submit ticks from other parts of Northumberland for testing (testing is done for surveillance purposes only to determine if the ticks in this area are the type that can transmit Lyme).


s i e n u J Reasons to include more dairy in your diet A healthy diet can improve quality of life and reduce a person’s risk of developing disease or other negative health conditions. For example, a diet rich in fruits and vegetables can boost the immune system and promote cardiovascular health, lowering your risk of heart disease in the process. While the benefits of including fruits and vegetables in your diet are widely known, the medical benefits of dairy are often overlooked. The following are a handful of ways that dairy products like low-fat milk, cottage

cheese and yogurt can make a nutritious and beneficial addition to your diet. • Dairy packs a protein- and calcium-laden punch. One cup of nonfat yogurt can provide as much as onethird of your daily recommended calcium intake and nearly 20 percent of your daily recommended protein intake. Though dairy products like ice cream don’t pack the same nutritious punch as yogurt, healthier fare like reduced-fat cheese and skim milk can go a long way toward meeting your daily intake of protein and calcium.

Tel: 613-395-3551 • Fax: 613-395-4649 235 Green Rd., Stilring, ON K0K 3E0

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George Posthumus

Continued on next page

Custom Cutting & Wrapping of Beef, Pork & Lamb Government Inspected Fresh & Frozen Meats

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• Dairy is a great source of vitamin D. In addition to providing sufficient calcium and protein, dairy also helps men, women and children boost their vitamin D. That’s especially important in the winter months when people tend to get less exposure to the sun. Exposure to the sun is a natural way to boost your vitamin D, but the shorter days and colder weather of winter can make it hard to get sufficient vitamin D during that time of year.

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Section B - Thursday, June 1, 2017 B9


A Special Thank YOU to All The Farmers and Their Families for their Dedication

s i e n Ju

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Reasons to include more dairy in your diet Continued from previous page

Dairy products like low-fat milk can boost your vitamin D, which can improve your bone health and, according to recent research, might help reduce your cancer risk. • Dairy may help lower your blood pressure. Men and women with high blood pressure might benefit from including more dairy in their diets. In a study of 5,000 adults, Spanish researchers found that those who reported consuming the most low-fat dairy products were more than

50 percent less likely to develop high blood pressure than those who consumed less low-fat dairy.Though researchers are not certain as to the reason behind low-fat dairy products’impact on blood pressure, some theorize that their calcium and protein content are likely behind the benefit. • Dairy benefits your bones. Dairy has long been known to improve bone density. But it’s not just seniors who benefit from the bone-strengthening impact of dairy. Youngsters who consume dairy can also expect an increase in bone

mass, which can make them less susceptible to injuries like broken bones. Seniors who consume dairy to improve their bone density should know that a recent study from researchers at the Institute for Aging Research found that not all dairy products are equal when it comes to improving bone density. While milk and yogurt were linked to higher bone mineral density, dairy products like cream and ice cream contain less protein, calcium and vitamin D and more fat and sugar than yogurt and milk, and these products may actually be associated with lower bone mineral density. Though there are many ways men and women can improve their overall health, it’s important to consider the nutritional value of dairy when making any alterations to your diet.

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Section B - Thursday, June 1, 2017 B11


s i e n u J INTRODUCING THE NEW 5700 & 6700 GLOBAL SERIES TRACTOR We use

Ron Anderson

PAINTS

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REPORTS FOR MAY 2017 REPORTS FOR MAY 2017

“I Pledge My Head to clearer thinking, My Heart to greater loyalty. My Hands to larger service, My Health to better living. for my club, my community and my country.�

friends. Each year is a new experience Try them all. Discovery Days-Cold Springs Memorial Hall, Cobourg Camp date July 4th 2017 ------ register by June 20th 2017 www.4-HOntario,ca/Discovery-Days

The Hastings County 4H Plowing Club Discovery Days For youth ages 6-12 for 4-H members & NON- members $19 per attendee Discovery days are for: Learning about 4-H, sharing 4-H with a friend, trying new projects with fun activities and sports. Discovery Days are a fantastic one-day 4-H experience for youth curious about joining and for 4-H members. Try your hand at making crafts, make your own grasshead, explore why PH is important to ruminants like cows, use teamwork to play a version of 4-H field hockey, showcase your trivia smarts in our famous Go for the Gold game, make a delicious snack that you can then enjoy, all in one day. Along with all of this, you’ll get a pizza lunch, a t-shirt you can decorate and take home with you and you will meet new

has begun again. We have had two meetings so far. Our first meeting was at the Springbrook Hall, where we discussed meeting dates, elected our council and welcomed any new or returning members to our club. Our next meeting was at McKeown Motor Sales in Springbrook. We watched a few short clips about how to operate farm machinery, such as the tractors we will be using, safely. We also went for a tour of the lot and looked at all of the different plows that McKeown had. We talked about the parts of them and how to be safe while using a plow. We then ate pizza and dessert provided by McKeown’s. Our next meeting is on May 29, 2017 in the field behind McKeown Motor Sales. This will be our first meeting using the tractors and plows. As reported by Zach Kay

The Centre Hasting Beef Club

Meeting number one of the Hastings County 4-H Beef Club was held on May 9, 2017 There were lots of new and returning faces at the meeting. We did our elections for President, Vice President, Secretary, and Press Reporter after we got to know everyone a little bit. When elections were complete we talked about what a good beef heifer looked like and what the number one thing to look for was. Good structure is the number one thing to look for in a beef heifer secondly you want them to be well behaved so you can show them along with that you want your calf to have good muscle structure to them. Once everyone had an idea of what a good 4-H beef heifer looked like we went threw the year’s schedule. The club has grown greatly from last year and we are still welcoming new members. If you are interested the next meeting for the Hastings County 4-H Beef Club is on May 24, 2017 at 6:30. As reported by Sydney Summers

The Cloverbud program for youth 6-8 Years old Can plastic be made out of milk? How can an apple tell us how much land is used for agriculture? Have you ever

grazed like a cow, or made a vegetable skeleton? Get the answers with the Cloverbud program. The Cloverbud program is a hands on, activity based program For youth aged 6-8 (as of December 31st 2016), covering a variety of topics, including agriculture, food, crafts, lifeskills, the environment and science. C;overbuds get a taste for the topics in 4-H projects and understanding of 4-H values. The program provides many opportunities to “Learn to do by doing� There are three distinct years of Cloverbud Program materials. Each year of programming contains 24 units, with each unit covering a different topic. Youth participating in Cloverbuds for three years could cover 72 topics! Cloverbud participants pay a membership fee to take part in the program – similar to traditional 4-H membership fees. To successfully complete a year as a Cloverbud. Youth must finish a minimum of just 4 units, a total of 8 hours. However, participants can take as many units as are offered by Cloverbud leaders – up to 24 units. Hastings County has in place a Cloverbud Program if you are interested in this program please contact Rebecca Posthumus at: rebeccavposthumus@gmail.com

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Concert for our times at The Regent Picton - He’s known by many live music fans across eastern Ontario as the king of lounge entertainers. Spencer Evans, based in Kingston, has played extensively throughout the province, including Brockville, Picton, Belleville, Ottawa, Westport and on recordings with major artists, such as Sarah Harmer. A few months ago, he put together a show called “Fats, Ray and Jerry Lee,” which thrilled an excited crowd at the large Brockville theatre, where the manager de-

scribed it as “ the best ever.” Now he brings that show to the Quinte area, featuring a backup band and singers, to The Regent Theatre, Saturday, June 10 at 7:30 p.m. Truly music known to almost everyone, it will include the classic hits of Fats Domino, Ray Charles (“Georgia,”) and the lively rhythms of rocker Jerry Lee Lewis. Tickets are available at The Regent Box Office by email or phone (613) 476-8416. This is a complete family fun night, say organizers.

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1-800-900-5557 Section B - Thursday, June 1, 2017 B13


DEATH NOTICE

DEATH NOTICE

MAU, Nicholas

DANO, Donald Winfred

At the Maplewood Long Term Care Facility, Brighton on Tuesday, May 16, 2017, age 88 years. Nicholas Mau, of Brighton, son of the late Armand Mau and the late Marguerite (Sauer). Beloved husband of the late Lorraine (Foster), dear friend of Lillian Cowley of Brighton. Loving father of Michael Mau (Sylvie Longval) of Calgary, Ann Mau (Simon Arcand) of Wellington, James Mau (Nathalie Roy) of Montreal, and Robert Mau of Ottawa. Predeceased by his sister Irene Beauregard. Sadly missed by his seven grandchildren and his one great granddaughter. A private family service was held. Cremation. As an expression of sympathy, donations to the Northumberland Community Care, Brighton, or the Canadian National Institute for the Blind, would be appreciated by the family. Arrangements in care of the Brighton Funeral Home (613-475-2121). www.rushnellfamilyservices.com

Peacefully at his home in Brighton on Saturday, May 20, 2017, age 78 years. Donald Dano, son of the late Winfred Dano and the late Marie (Evans). Loving husband of Judith Irene (Abrams). Dear father of Theresa Shillington and Deborah Dano, both of Trenton. Brother of Barbara Huck of Rockport, and Robert Dano and his wife Patsy of Gananoque. Predeceased by his brothers, Douglas Dano, Ronald Dano, and his brotherin-law Arthur Huck. Sadly missed by his grandchildren, Tara, Daphne, his great grandchildren, David, Axel, and his many nieces and nephews. A Celebration of Don’s Life will be held at the Royal Canadian Legion, Branch 100, Brighton, on Saturday, June 10, 2017 from 1 to 3 p.m. Cremation with interment Mount Hope Cemetery. As an expression of sympathy, donations to the Community Living Quinte West, would be appreciated by the family. Arrangements in care of the Brighton Funeral Home (613-475-2121). www.rushnellfamilyservices.com

PUTNAM, James Wilfred

SANDERS, Elizabeth “Liz” (nee Bennett) It is with great sadness that we announce the passing of Liz at the Peterborough Regional Health Centre while surrounded by her family on Wednesday, May 24th, 2017, in her 70th year. Beloved wife of Stephen Sanders for 52 wonderful years together. Loving daughter of the late Austin (Pete) Bennett, and Effa (Nan) Ingram. Stepdaughter to Polly Bennett and Ken Laundry. Dear mother of Tracey Sanders, Shawn Sanders (Donna), and Crystal Boivin (Maurice). Grandma, Gram Cracker and G-ma to David, Retalee, Jordyn, Monique, and Ethan, and great grandmother to Damion, and Levi. Survived by her sister Janice Denholm (George), brothers Butch Laundry (Sharon), Rick Laundry (Patsy), Bob Laundry, Dale Laundry (Vicki), and Robert Bennett (Marilyn). Will sadly be missed by her aunts, uncles, nieces, nephews, and many close friends. A Celebration of “Liz’s” Life will be held at the “farm” (430 2nd Line East, Campbellford) on Saturday, July 8th, 2017 at 1:00p.m. to honor the gatherings of friends and family she always organized and enjoyed. Cremation has taken place as per her wishes. In lieu of flowers, donations to the Campbellford Memorial Hospital Foundation, Peterborough Regional Health Centre - Palliative Care Unit or Lakeridge Health Foundation would be appreciated by the family. Arrangements entrusted to the Weaver Family Funeral Home 77 Second St., Campbellford. Online guest book and condolences at www.weaverfuneralhomes.com

Suddenly at Trenton Memorial Hospital on Thursday, May 18th, 2017. Jim Putnam of Brighton and formerly of Wooler in his 90th year. Beloved husband of June (Anderson) Putnam. Loved father of Jane (Larry) Maxwell of Peterborough, Jerrilynn (Reginald) Coulthard of Trenton and Jill Tripp (Roland Montgomery) of Brighton. Ever remembered grandfather of Jamie (Laurie), Ian (AJ), Amanda, Lindsey, Emily (Jon Villeneff), Allan James; great-grandchildren Ashley, Kate and Travis. Predeceased by his parents Roy and Edith (Richards) Putnam and brother Arthur. An outstanding Member and Steward of Wooler United Church, faithful Mason and Past Master of Franck Lodge #127, Leader with the Boy Scouts of Wooler and dedicated employee of the Brewers Retail for 37 years. A Private Family Graveside Service will be held at Stockdale Cemetery at a later date. Arrangements entrusted to the RUSHNELL FUNERAL CENTRE, 60 Division Street, Trenton (613-392-2111). If desired, Memorial Donations to the Wooler United Church or Trenton Memorial Hospital Foundation would be appreciated by the family. On-line condolences at www.rushnellfamilyservices.com

Visit us online www.InsideBelleville.com B14 Section B - Thursday, June 1, 2017

ANNOUNCEMENT

AIR COND. HALL For receptions, weddings, etc. Catering & bar facilities available. Wheelchair accessible.

BRIGHTON LEGION BR 100

(613) 475-1044

Book your ad 613-966-2034 DEATH NOTICE

HALLS & LODGES

COMING EVENTS

HALL RENTALS Belleville Shrine Club 51 Highland Ave Belleville Rooms available for large or small parties or meetings. Now taking bookings for Christmas. Licensed by LLBO. Catering available. Wi-Fi available. Air conditioned. Handicap access w w w. b e l l e v i l l e s h r i n e club.com. For more information call 613-962-2633 or 613-921-9924

Born July 6, 1965 in Toronto. Passed away Dec, 2016 in Vancouver BC. Survived by his loving mother Megan Cappell (Sweet), lifetime friend Caroline Tykoliz, niece Johnna (Somerville) nephew Devon Sweet, sister-in-law Bareilly (Terry) Great Aunt Edith Bailey (King) and many Aunts, Uncles & cousins. Bill is also survived by his Godmother Lorraine Blatherwick. Predeceased by his father Ronald (Aug 2016), eldest brother Terry (Oct 2011), his twin brother Donald (Feb 2015). There will be a memorial service June 3, 2017 at the old United Church in Lonsdale, at 11 a.m. to remember Bill, Don & Terry. Reception following the service in the old school in Lonsdale. With family interment at Melrose Cemetery.

GENEREAUX, Charles Raymond Suddenly at home on Friday, May 26th, 2017. Charles Genereaux of Frankford in his 57th year. Beloved husband of the late Teresa Simpson-Genereaux. Loving father of Amy Tynes-Caissie (Robert) of Ottawa, Justin Simpson-Genereaux of Belleville and Zak Simpson-Genereaux of Pickering. Ever remembered grandfather of Michael, Andrew and Kayla. Survived by siblings Mona (Fred), Sandra (Bimbo), Marilyn (Joe), Pauline, Michael (Wendy), Theodore and many nieces and nephews. Predeceased by his parents Theodore and Marie (Kente) Genereaux and sister Beverly (surviving Rick). The family will receive friends at the RUSHNELL FUNERAL CENTRE, 60 Division Street, Trenton (613-3922111) on Saturday, June 3rd, 2017 from 4:00 to 8:00 p.m. Cremation with Inurnment at St. Margaret’s Cemetery, Scarborough at a later date. If desired, Memorial Donations to the Lung Association would be appreciated by the family. On-line condolences at www.rushnellfamilyservices.com

COMING EVENTS

Tupperware Sale

100 Boat Launch Rd., Madoc Friday, June 2nd 10:00 am - 8:00 pm Saturday, June 3rd 9:00 am - 4:00 pm Everyone receives a free piece of Tupperware. Great deals, surprise packs, demo’s, draws. South of Madoc, just off Hwy 62. Look for signs.

Call 613-473-2358 DEATH NOTICE

DEATH NOTICE

DEATH NOTICE

THOMPSON, Glen Allan Peacefully, at his home, surrounded by his family, on Wednesday, May 24, 2017. Glen Thompson, of Marmora, in his 59th year. Son of the late Harold & Helen Thompson. Husband of Terry (nee: Elsasser). Father of Stefanie (Eugene) Hagiwara, San Francisco, CA; and Twin Sons Robbie (Brittany) of Marmora and Ryan (Andrea) of Kingston. Grandfather of Jaxton, Jorja, and Oliver. Brother of Grant (Virginia) and Garry (Bonnie). Glen had a strong career in the automotive industry with employment at Don McCurdy, Wells Ford, Woodbeck Auto Parts, and Dan Patterson Auto. At Glen’s request, cremation has taken place. Donations made to the Heart of Hastings Hospice would be appreciated. “Where there is life...there is hope.” www.mcconnellfuneralhome.ca

TYPHAIR, Myrtle Alefa Peacefully in Brighton on Friday, May 26, 2017, age 77 years. Myrtle Typhair, of Brighton, daughter of the late George Campbell and the late Margaret (Ruddy). Loving mother of Diane Dale (Glenn) of Brighton, Catherine Reid (Donald) of Eldorado, John Weese (Tracy Clarke) of Brighton, and Doreen Montminy of Trenton. Predeceased by her daughter Patricia O’Brien (Patrick O’Brien). Mother-in-law of Patrick O’Brien. Dear sister of Victoria Grosjean of Brighton, Muriel Brine of New Brunswick, and Fred Campbell of Carrying Place. Sadly missed by her nine grandchildren, seven great grandchildren, and her many nieces and nephews. A Celebration of Myrtle’s Life will be held at the Royal Canadian Legion Branch 100, Brighton on Saturday, June 3, 2017 from 1 to 4 p.m. Cremation. As an expression of sympathy, donations to Cancer Research, would be appreciated by the family. Arrangements in care of the Brighton Funeral Home (613-475-2121). www.rushnellfamilyservices.com

FOR SALE

NEW & USED APPLIANCES

Open House

DEATH NOTICE

SWEET William (Bill) Russell Elliott

COMING EVENTS

USED REFRIGERATORS Stoves, washers, dryers, freezers, 3 months old & up. Sold with written guarantee. Fridges $100. and up.

NEW APPLIANCES At the lowest prices in the area. Trade-ins accepted on new appliances. Big selection to choose from.

PAYS CASH $$$ For good used appliances in working order or not, but no junk, please. VISA & MASTERCARD accepted. We have our own financing also. Shop at our competitors and then come see for yourself, quality at low prices. Open evenings 7 days a week. WE DELIVER.

CL447164 CL642293

DEATH NOTICE

CL443017 CL460544

DEATH NOTICE

We Sell Gas Refrigerators!

SMITTY’S APPLIANCES LTD. 1-613-969-0287 DEATH NOTICE

ROY, Yvan

Peacefully at home on Saturday, May 20th, 2017. Yvan Roy of Trenton at the age of 76. Beloved husband of the late Ursula (Schleh) Roy. Loved father of Cairen (Clark) Glimps, Mike, Raymond, Robert, Daniel and Richard (Lissette). Ever remembered grandfather of ten and great-grandfather of seven. Survived by siblings Fabien, Francoise, Paul-Andre, Gerard, Lise, Blanche, Claire, Hugues, Suzanne, Regis and Louise. Predeceased by his parents Fridolin and Marie Louise (Goulet) Roy and siblings Marie-Marthe, JeanRoche, Bernadette, Jean-Eudes, Marie Reine, Raymond and Huguette. The family received friends at the RUSHNELL FUNERAL CENTRE, 60 Division Street, Trenton. Funeral Service was held in the Chapel on Thursday, May 25th, 2017 at 11:00 a.m. Inurnment Mount Calvary Cemetery at a later date. If desired, Memorial Donations to the Canadian Cancer Society would be appreciated by the family. On-line condolences at www.rushnellfamilyservices.com


ANNOUNCEMENT DEBT OR CREDIT CRISIS NEED HELP? ALLEN MADIGAN CREDIT COUNSELLING .COM Visit Our New Web Site For details of our unique service Free consultation Call 613-779-8008

FOR SALE

FOR SALE

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CENTRAL BOILER OUTDOOR FURNACES

ASK US ABOUT THE NEW

Sale price $7950.00

Call for more information Your local DEALER

1000 Island RV. Ask for Felix 613.962.6353 Finance for

WOOD HEAT SOLUTIONS

$81.00

www.chesher.ca

FRANKFORD, ON 613.398.1611 BANCROFT, ON 613.332.1613

Self Propelled Baracuda pool cleaner for sale. Used only twice. Purchased last year. 613-473-5568

P R A D A

WANTED - WANTED (Unwanted or scrap) Cars and trucks running or not. $ Cash paid $ Fast Pick Up 613-847-9467

Book your ad 613-966-2034

FARM

ANTIQUES & COLLECTIBLES

3PPG 1BJOUJOH t #BSO 1BJOUJOH

air front & rear, tilt, telescoping, cruise, CD, power windows, doors, power sliding doors, front & rear leather interior, heated front seats, dual power front seats, back up camera navigation, bluetooth, keyless, roof rack, alloy wheels, tinted glass, stow & go all seats. Excellent condition, one owner well maintained since new. Safety, e-test, 6 month p train warranty. Sale price $12,500.00

'"3.4 t '"$503*&4 t )0.&4 t NPCJMF TBOECMBTUJOH t QPXFS XBTIJOH 45&&- 300'4 QBJOUFE SFQBJSFE SFQMBDFE All Work Guaranteed

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Finance for

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COMING EVENTS

COMING EVENTS

Bi-Weekly 5.99% 60 mths COMING EVENTS

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1st ANNUAL

DESERONTO GUN SHOW

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$127.00

Residential items only

Buy, Sell & Trade SAT. JUNE 10, 2017 & SUN. JUNE 11, 2017 ! HT [V ! WT à ® ! HT [V ! WT Deseronto Community Centre 51 Mechanic Street, Deseronto Ontario

Admission $5.00, ladies and children 15 and under are free accompanied by an adult. In celebration of the 100th Anniversary of Camp Rathbun & Camp Mohawk ALL RCAF Personnel admitted free both days

**All Firearm laws must be obeyed & Trigger locks are required** *HSS +H]L 1VULZ H[ VY LTHPS KH]LQN\UZ'NTHPS JVT Vendor’s tables are $25.00 each

Classified Deadlines: Mondays at 3 pm

We sell bulk honey in your containers, prepackaged liquid and creamed honey, wedding favours, buckwheat honey, beeswax skin creams & lip balms, candles, pollen, maple syrup, honey butter, gifts and more.

Open Saturdays only, 10 am-4pm. Call 613-827-7277

ANTIQUES & COLLECTIBLES

5WPFC[ ,WPG r COs RO Meyersburg Flea Market 5082 County Rd. 30, Campbellford

All makes and models welcome. $5 registration. Door Prizes Free early bird goody bags. 50/50 Draw. Silent Auction. Swap meet vendors welcome. $20 per table. Book early as there is limited space. Proceeds going to a local charity. TENDERS

11th Annual Great Merrickville Arms Collectors Fair & Gun Show Sunday June 4, 2017, 9 am-3:30 pm at the Merrickville Community Centre Main & Read Sts. Merrickville. Admission: $6.00 Ladies and accompanied children under 12 free. Buy-SellTrade. Antique arms militaria -collector’s cartridges -modern sporting arms -swords bayonets -powder flasks hunting supplies -reloading equipment and related items. For show info and table inquiries call John 6 1 3 - 9 2 6 - 2 4 6 9 johnbelton219@gmail.com All firearm laws are to be obeyed, trigger locks are required.

TENDERS

FITNESS & HEALTH Peggy Goslin 613-962-8156. Craniosacral Therapy, Aromatherapy and Relaxation Massage, for pain and stress release.

WANTED Buyers of Standing Timber -hard maple, soft maple, red and white oak, etc. Work is done through good forestry practices with professional foresters and certified tree markers on staff. 705-957-7087. Converting to Grass, shrubs, evergreens, perennials, ground cover. You dig them up, $5-$15 each. Bar Fridge $65. 613-394-2472 WANTED Records, stereo equipment, music related accessories. Call 613-921-1290

TENDERS

TENDERS

MUNICIPALITY OF MARMORA AND LAKE PO BOX 459, 12 BURSTHALL STREET MARMORA, ON K0K 2M0 PH. 613-472-2629 FAX 613-472-5330

Invitation to Tender

NOW OPEN!

231 Frankford-Stirling Road, Stirling (Highway 33)

ANTIQUES & COLLECTIBLES

Meyersburg CAR & BIKE SHOW

Twin Sisters Hive & Honey Products

1000 Island RV. Ask for Felix 613.962.6353

Buy 1 weet 1kfree! ge

CALL

HUNTING SUPPLIES

www.pradacourt.com

7 passenger. V6, 3.6 engine auto,

Metroland Media Classifieds

C O U R T

BRIGHTON Featuring 2 bedroom apartments Featuring 2 bedroom apartments with all amenities with: fridge, stove, including: air conditioning. fridge, stove, air conditioning and Laundry facilities on site. wheelchair access. The apartments are attractive The the apartments and buildingsare areattractive secure. and the buildings are secure. Ideal for retired couples. Ideal for Seniors or retired couples

613-475-3793 9am - 5pm

FARM

2012 Dodge Grand Caravan Crew

FOR SALE

FARM

Bi-Weekly 5.99% 60 mths

FOR RENT

APARTMENTS

CAR FOR SALE

FOR SALE

FOR RENT

CAR FOR SALE

4 cyc auto, air, tilt, cruise, p windows, door locks, keyless, auto start, manual up & down front seats, bluetooth, tinted glass. Safety, e-tested, 6 month p train warranty.

SUMMER REBATE SAVINGS UP TO $800

Romeo & Juliet Dance Party- Saturday, June 3rd. rainbow night! dress in colour, enjoy new music & support everyone looking for love. Top Floor Trenton Legion 9pm -1am 613-392-9850.

WANTED

2012 Chev Cruze LT 4DR

EDGE

COMING EVENTS

WANTED

FOR SALE

SANITARY SEWER COLLECTION REPAIRS CONTRACT NO. -2017-01-ENV The Municipality of Marmora and Lake is inviting interested Contractor(s) to participate in their bidding process for ~ 4km of Sanitary Sewer Work to include: Cleaning, CCTV inspection, reports, pressure testing and repairs. Bid packages can be picked up at:

Municipality of Marmora and Lake 12 Bursthall Street Marmora, ON K0K 2M0

Packages will also be made available on the website at www.marmoraandlake.ca Contact: Telephone: Fax:

Victor Reid Environmental Services Manager 613-472-6285, Cell: 613-849-9719 613-472-1023

The closing date for this tender is: 2:00pm June 30th 2017 Tender packages must be returned to:

Municipality of Marmora and Lake 12 Bursthall Street Marmora, ON K0K 2M0

***Late Tender Packages will not be accepted*** The Municipality of Marmora and Lake reserves the right to accept or reject all or any part of any Bid, also reserves the right to accept other than the lowest Bid and to cancel this call for Bids at any time. Section B - Thursday, June 1, 2017 B15


WANTED

FOR RENT

Wanted: Standing timber, mature hard/softwood. Also wanted, natural stone, cubicle or flat, any size. 613-968-5182.

WATERFRONT COTTAGE TO RENT Situated on clean lake with beachfront Minutes off 401 Colborne cut off Newly renovated, 2 bedrooms, separate bunky (sleeps 6), child friendly, great for swimming, gradual walk out, boating, fishing etc. Lots of extras. Available weekly June, July or August $1150.00 per week Call 416-566-6120

FOR RENT House for Rent, waterfront, Rideau River, near Hwy 416 & Kemptville. 2+1 bedrooms, boatdock, a/c, garage, 5 appliances, no pets, non-smoker, first/last, references. $1400/mnth plus utilities, August 1/17. 613-258-5080.

HELP WANTED

HELP WANTED

Seasonal Full Time Farm Labourer Plant, cultivate, irrigate crops, Harvest Crops. $11.43/hr required now to Nov 15, 2017 Scarlett Acres Ltd. Colborne, Ontario Please apply within or email amycook@knights-appleden.ca HELP WANTED

REAL ESTATE

HELP WANTED

BUSINESS SERVICES

Wanted: call me for best price on waterfront homes, cottages and vacant land. Free evaluation on request. Call Gerry Hudson personally 1-613-449-1668 Sales Representative Rideau Town & Country Realty Ltd. Brokerage 613-273-5000

Brighton Children’s Centre Summer Camp Assistant – Full time Student position July 4th – September 1st. Must have current: Vulnerable Sector Check, 1st Aid & CPR-C, current vaccinations; Must have an understanding of children’s needs and the ability to supervise effectively. The successful candidate must possess an eagerness and ability to work cooperatively with fellow educators, community partners, children and families. ECE Assistant will be supervised by and share teaching responsibilities with the Head Teacher. Please submit your resume and cover letter by fax 613-475-5675; email admin@brightonkids.ca; or in person at 24 Elizabeth St; Brighton. Deadline for applications is June 8th, 2017.

Roger’s Mobile Wash and Detailing: For all your washing needs. Auto, Boats, RVs, Homes, Decks, Patios, Driveways, Heavy Equipment, and Monument cleaning. Also, Store Front, and Graffiti cleaning. Bug Spraying available. Free Estimates Home 613-962-8277 or Cell 613-885-1908.

NOTICES

MEDICAL CONDITION?

Get up to $50,000 from the Government of Canada. Do you or someone you know Have any of these Conditions? ADHD, Anxiety, Arthritis, Asthma, Cancer, COPD, Depression, Diabetes, Difficulty Walking, Fibromyalgia, Irritable Bowels, Overweight, Trouble Dressing...and Hundreds more. ALL Ages & Medical BUSINESS SERVICES Conditions Qualify. CALL ONTARIO BENEFITS Ken Chard Construction. 1-(800)-211-3550 Renovations, decks, siding, sidewalks, fences, ceramic, windows, painting etc. Free estimates. Call: 613-398-7439.

Book your ad

613-966-2034

HELP WANTED

HELP WANTED

JOURNEYMAN MILLWRIGHT UNIMIN CANADA LTD., a leading producer of Industrial minerals, with facilities throughout the U.S and Canada, has an immediate opening for an experienced licensed individual at our Nepheline Syenite Operation located at the Blue Mountain Plant near Peterborough. The successful candidate will possess a minimum of five (5) years’ experience in crushing, screening and grinding operations. Experience in forklift operation, maintenance, dust collection, bagging and shipping equipment would be an asset. Generous benefits package as per the Union contract.

WORK WANTED

GARAGE SALE

CAREER OPPORTUNITY

CAREER OPPORTUNITY

CAREER OPPORTUNITY

BRANCH 228 STIRLING

BOOK KEEPER

QuickBooks V16 expertise in JV/Inventory/Report Generation Bi-weekly payroll, T4 ROE Knowledgeable of WSIB, Source Deductions, HST & Accounting Principles Approx 12hrs/month By June 15th 4:00pm Email resume with Book Keeper as Subject. Include hourly rate. legionbranch228@Hotmail.com

Booking deadline: Mon. 3 p.m. B16 Section B - Thursday, June 1, 2017

GLOBAL LEADERSHIP YARD SALE June 3 8AM-2PM 41 Elizabeth St. Brighton Lots of great stuff. ALL MONIES GO TOWARDS ANIMAL RESCUE PROGRAM

NOT YOUR TYPICAL YARD SALE Herb businessRetirement June 3 10am-3pm 100 Lakeshore Rd Brighton. If into Herbs or making your own products, do not want to miss this one.

BUSINESS SERVICES

BUSINESS SERVICES

Huge Yard Sale, Saturday June 3, 9-4pm, 237 Homewood Ave, Hastings, items for men, women & kids.

BUSINESS SERVICES

BUSINESS SERVICES

BUSINESS SERVICES

Seamless Eavestroughing Soffit and Facia

Steven Switzer OWNER

stevenswitzerconstruction@gmail.com www.stevenswitzerconstruction.com

613-920-3985

Trenton, 25 Northumberland Blvd, June 3, 8-3. Antiques, collectable’s, Nippon, Crocs, wood products, and more.

Visit us online www.InsideBelleville.com GARAGE SALE

GARAGE SALE

GARAGE SALE

GARAGE SALE

GARAGE SALE

WORK WANTED

"OZ 5JNF t "OZ 8IFSF Dump & Metal Runs 1 ton cube van

Call: 613-478-1154 Cell: 613-919-2639 Fax: 613-478-2285

GOT CLUTTER? PLANNING A

YARD SALE? Book your Yard Sale ad in the Classifieds for as little as

For consideration, please send your resume in confidence to: pboivin@unimin.com

An equal opportunity employer

GARAGE SALE

MOVING SALE Lots of good stuff. Boat, furniture, clothing, household items. June 9, 10, & 11. 8 am - 4 pm 603 Belmont Con, #8 Havelock

Little Truck Trucking

NOTICES

GARAGE SALE

NOTICES

NOTICE TO CREDITORS AND OTHERS In the Estate of Raymond John Campbell All persons having claims against the estate of RAYMOND JOHN CAMPBELL, late of the Municipality of Brighton, County of Northumberland, truck driver, who died on or about the 6th day of October, 2016, are hereby notified to send particulars of same to the undersigned on or before the 15th day of June, 2017, after which date the estate will be distributed with regard only to the claims of which the undersigned shall then have notice and the undersigned will not be liable to any person of whose claim they shall not then have notice. DATED at Brighton the 25th day of May, 2017. CAROLYN CAMPBELL Estate Trustee by her solicitors THOMPSON LAW OFFICE 67 Main Street, P.O. Box 40 Brighton, Ontario K0K 1H0

$13.01

(+ HST)

Book early and get 2nd week FREE

Ads can be placed by calling

1-888-967-3237 613-966-2034 x 560

Classified Deadlines: Mondays at 2 p.m.


EVENTS BELLEVILLE ALZHEIMER USED Book Sale June 6-8 at the Bay View Mall, 470 Dundas St E Belleville. 8:30–4:30 all three days. Tues – reg price, Weds – ½ price, Thurs – bag for $5. 613-962-0892 for more info. BELLEVILLE CLUB 39 presents the Music of The Code Family Friday June 2 at the Belleville Legion Br. 99 132 Pinnacle St. Belleville (upstairs) 8pm to Midnight Singles & Couples are welcome. Members $10 non Members $12 Lunch will be served. info 613-395-0162 or 613-966-6596 KIWANIS CHICKEN BBQ, June 7, 11am–6pm, Quinte Curling Club. Tickets $13 in advance, 15 at the door. Dinner includes half BBQ chicken, potato, roll, coleslaw. Visit kiwanisbelleville.ca or 613-771-1758 YARD / Bake Sale and Open House at Belleville Lawn Bowling Club, 40, Yeomans Street Belleville, June 3, from 8am-3pm. Come and try your hand at lawn bowling (instruction and equipment provided). QUINTE REGION Crokinole Club, every Tuesday, 6:30pm, Quinte Wellness Centre, Cannifton Rd., Belleville. http://www.qrcc. ca . Info: Dave Brown at 613-967-7720 or Louis Gauthier at 613-849-0690. VOLUNTEERS NEEDED! Belleville General Hospital Auxiliary seeks adults and students at least 16 years of age to volunteer in a variety of hospital settings, daytime Monday to Friday. Some weekend shifts available. Call BGHA Volunteer Office at 613-969-7400 ext 2297 to set up an information session MONTHLY DOODLING sessions, 3rd Thursday of month. Bring your creations, tools of the trade, and share your creativity. Free sessions, 10am-12pm, John M. Parrott Art Gallery. Info: Rachel comeau_rachel@ hotmail.com or www.facebook.com/groups/ thedoodlegroup/ BLOOD CLINIC Date: Belleville Fish and Game Club170 Elmwood Drive Belleville K8N 4Z4 June 5, 1pm–7pm FINANCIAL LITERACY Workshop: Budgeting Basics June 3, 2:30-4pm Budgeting is an important skill everyone should know, Belleville Public Library has you covered! Our Budgeting Basics workshop will cover how to draw up a budget, tips to help you reach your financial goals, and ideas to help adjust spending. No registration is required for this free event; for more information call 613-968-6731 x2237. ANNUAL YARD and Bake Sale, sorry for the cancellation last weekend, we have rescheduled our event for June 2 and 3rd at 258 Melrose Rd, Shannonville. Fri. 8 am-5pm and Sat. 8am-4pm.Huge amount of well priced items and yummy baked goods. Thanks for your support.. C.A.M.Q.

BRIGHTON BRIGHTON RELAY for Life is being held at the King Edward Park Community Centre/Arena on June 9/ June 10, 7am-7 pm. Fight Back against cancer by raising funds for the Canadian Cancer Society. Call Karen White for details 613 965 0423 100 WOMEN WHO CARE, Brighton Chapter will hold the next meeting on June 6, at the Evangel Pentecostal Church,

30 Butler St. East, Brighton at 6:15 p.m. OPEN HOUSE; June 3rd 1pm–4pm at the Masonic Hall 153 Main Street Brighton. BRIGHTON GARDEN Club SPRING FLOWER SHOW, 2-4pm. June 3, King Edward Community Centre, Brighton Admission: $3 including Afternoon Tea & Door Prizes Info: 613-475-4009 or 613-475-9563 BRIGHTON EVANGEL Pentecostal Church , 30 Butler St. in Brighton. June 3, 10-2pm, the church is putting on a garage sale but everything is FREE we are blessing the community of Brighton.

CAMPBELLFORD CAMPBELLFORD MEMORIAL Hospital Auxiliary Fundraiser Yard Sale, June 3, 8-2pm at 85 Kent St. Campbellford. Rain or Shine! ALL proceeds go to CMHA. DONATIONS ARE WELCOME Contact Sheila Turner 705-632-6756 CAMPBELLFORD & District Horticultural Society regular monthly meeting, followed by Lenni Workman’s program on Gardening as Art, on June 5, 7:30pm. Members & guests welcomed at Christ Church (Anglican), 154 Kent Street, Campbellford. Also, visit us at http://www. gardenontario.org/site.php/campbellford/ about/meetings & on Facebook. COMMUNITY LIVING Campbellford/ Brighton’s Annual Charity Golf Tournament is taking place at the Warkworth Golf Club on July 11th. This tournament raises money in order to help people pay for things such as tuition, orthotics, medical supports, going to see a favorite team, travelling somewhere special, and reconnecting with family. register now: 705.653.1821 x235 IMPRESSIONISTIC LANDSCAPES in Acrylic Workshop with Bob Pennycook June 7, 2-5pm Fee: $10. 6-9pm Fee: $10. Location: CCN’s Activity Room To register, call CCN (613)475-4190 JUNE 8, Maple cooking W/shop 6-8pm Campbellford – Forrest Dennis Seniors Centre. To register, contact CCN Office – (705)653-1411. CAMPBELLFORD LEGION Br 103, 34 Bridge St Campbellford, 705 653 2450. Thurs 730 pm open 8-ball, Sunday 3-7 pm open Jam Session No cover

ROYAL CANADIAN Legion, Branch 387, Frankford 1st Friday of the month is TGIF 4-7pm. 3rd Wednesday of the month is beef or chicken dinner. 4th Sunday of the month is Euchre tournament. Mondays 1pm Senior fitness group, 1pm Cribbage. Tuesday 1pm Euchre. Wednesday 1pm Seniors fitness group.Thursday 6:30pm Snooker. TOPS (TAKE off Pounds Sensibly), Wednesday, Anglican Church Hall, 60 N Trent Frankford, weigh-in 3-3:30pm. meeting 3:30-4:30 pm. OPEN HOUSE at the Quinte Masonic Centre 33 King Dr. Frankford June 3rd 11am- 2pm Masons Celebrating 300 Years Tours, BBQ, face painting & balloons for the kids All welcome GENTLE YOGA, Suitable for everyone. Classes every Tuesday 1pm, Holy Trinity Anglican Church, Frankford. Info: Sarah 613-398-6407 MOONSHOT EUCHRE every Wednesday, 1pm. Tournaments Every 3rd Sunday of the Month, 1pm. Frankford Lions Club MASONS CELEBRATING 300 years open house june 3, 11am–2pm 33 king drive frankford events: tours of the lodge, barbeque, face painting & balloons for the kids. all welcome

HASTINGS

Oak Streets, Havelock, every Wednesday. Doors open at 12, tunes begin at 1 pm. Bring your instruments (excluding drums), your voice, your song book and your smiles to join in the circle. Musicians, vocalists and visitors welcomed and encouraged

MADOC UNVEILING LIONS Club Friendship Arch. The arch will be unveiled at the corner of Highway 7 and Russell Street on June 4, 3pm. MADOC LEGION presents Stompin’ Jon and Lorraine Marie June 3, 2-4pm performing tribute to “Stompin Tom” , impersonations of Patsy Cline and Linda Ronstadt and a wide variety of entertaining and diverse music. Everyone Welcome. LADIES MEETING hosted by Ivanhoe Wesleyan Standard Church June 3, 10am. Special Guest - World Hope Executive Director Stephanie Gilmer. Refreshments to follow. Come and bring a friend.

MARMORA OPEN MIC - June 2, 7pm Marmora and Area Curling Club, 2 Crawford Drive. Come & join the great line-up of musicians or just enjoy the entertainment. No cover charge. ST. ANDREW’S United Church New to You Shoppe is having a sale June 3 from 8:30 to noon. Deloro UCW will be having their coffee party at the same time. JUNE 3, 7pm. “Larger Than Life Finale” a Community Youth Event at Marmora Senior School. Come join us for a time of “Giant” Games and Activities, Food and More! open to all youth (grades 6 and up). For more information contact (613) 472-5030 or (613) 472-3219. MARMORA TEAMS wanted: Co-ed three pitch tournament Marmora June 23,24. Contact Jason at 647 331 6575 ST. PAUL’S Annual Yard, Bake, Plant and Jewellery Sale June 3, 8am-12noon, 8 Bursthall St., beside St. Paul’s Anglican Church, Marmora. Come one, come all. Rain date: June 11th MEMORY CAFÉ, 2nd Thurs. of month, 10-11:30am. Marmora Library W. Shannon Rm. 37 Forsyth St. 613-962-0892

JUNE 3 The Wonders of our Woodlots, Quinte Woodlot Association AGM & Field Day. Learn about Trail Cameras & forest photography. Doors open 9am, Moira Hall, 29 Carson Road (off Moira Rd) in Centre Hastings. Outdoor option in the afternoon. Lunch is provided IF you preregister. $10 for OWA members and $25 for non-members. RSVP to Kevin at 613-396-6381 or email quintewoodlotassociation@gmail.com ST. GEORGE’S Church, Hastings, weekly used book sale every Wednesday, 10am -2pm. Books priced at bargain prices. Enter at rear of church. TOPS (TAKE Off Pounds Sensibly) meetings Wednesdays at the Trinity United Church, Hastings. Weigh-in 5-5:45pm and meeting 6-7pm. Join anytime. For info Kathy (705) 696-3359 SALVATION ARMY Lunch, 11:30AM1PM on the 2nd and the 4th Friday from NORWOOD September to June, Civic Centre, Hast- IN CELEBRATION of Canada’s 150th CODRINGTON ings. Soup, sandwiches, salad, dessert, birthday, dance with the Donegal Fiddlers NORTH BRIGHTON Seniors Club coffee, tea and juice. Everyone welcome to an all Canadian fiddle music program, looking for new members. Meeting 3rd June 3, 7-10pm at the Norwood Town Wednesday of month. Potluck lunch at HAVELOCK Hall, 2357 County Road 45 Norwood. noon followed by short business meeting, PAINT NITE Tickets Are Going Fast Admission is $5. Lunch is finger food pot guest speakers and cards. Other social www.Paintnite.com June 8 From 7-10pm luck. Kick up your heels to jigs, reels, 2 events through the year. Joan Walker At Havelock Legion steps and square dance tunes. All welcome. 613-475-4631. HAVELOCK MASONIC lodge will be P.E. COUNTY hosting an Open House on June 3, 11-2. COLBORNE BURR’S CEMETERY: Annual DecoEVERY SATURDAY is Meat Draw, A free lunch and entertainment as well ration Day will be held Sunday June 4. as tours of the lodge hall and the history Colborne Legion. Draws at 3pm, 4pm Donations gratefully accepted. Official and 5pm. $8 for nine chances to win. of the 122 years the masonic lodge has tax receipts available. been in Havelock will all be part of this Everyone is welcome. community event.Everyone is welcome. STIRLING FRANKFORD 1950/60’S DANCE June 3, 8-2pm $5.00 per BLOOD PRESSURE Clinic: June 8: 204 JUNE 4 The Frankford United Church person Light snack Prizes for best 50/60’s Church St, from 9am-12pm. Please contact era costume Open to Public! Everyone Choir presents “Spring Sing” 7pm. All Community Care for Central Hastings are welcome, free will offering. Refresh- Welcome! RC Legion Br 389, Havelock 1-800-554-1564 to pre-register ments to follow in the Rose Lowery Hall. TRADITIONAL COUNTRY Music Jam Sessionsm Ol’ Town Hall, Matheson and STIRLING CLUB 55 and Over regular

euchre every Wednesday in Stirling Legion 1pm. $2 to play, prizes and treats. Also monthly birthday celebrations. Info Ruth 613-395-3559

TRENTON SEWING SOCIAL, Tuesdays, 1-4pm, Trenton Library Bring your sewing machine (with power cord and foot control), your selected project, and an extension cord. Beginners are welcome. Info email to: kristar@quintewest.ca LEARN TO Linedance-Every Monday 10:30-12:30. Trenton United Church, 85 Dundas St E at South St. everyone welcome. great for beginners. Phone or text Linda 613 392-2116. Good friends, good fun, good times. TRENT PORT Historical Society Annual General Meeting June 7, 7pm @ Trenton Town Hall – 1861 55 King St. Trenton

TWEED BLOOD PRESSURE Clinic: June 7: 23 McCamon Ave, 8am-12pm. Please contact Community Care for Central Hastings 1-800-554-1564 to pre-register SEMI-ANNUAL BOOK Sale, Friends of the Tweed Public Library. June 8, 2-6 pm, June 9, 10-5pm, June 10, 102pm. Special added feature: Pre-loved jewelry sale! 230 Metcalf St, Tweed. Stock up on your summer reading! www. tweedlibrary.ca TWEED & District Horticultural Society: June 6, 7pm at the Tweed Public Library, John Poland, an avid vegetable and flower gardener will present: “A Lifetime of Gardening”. TWEED LIBRARY: Bridge every Tuesday from 1-4. Knitting every Friday from 2-4 DO YOU struggle to lose weight? Have a history of yo-yo dieting? Eat out of emotions? Free Craving Change workshop at Gateway CHC to change your thinking to change your eating habits. Info: the Dietitian at 613-478-1211 ext. 228. TWEED TOPS (Take Off Pounds Sensibly), Mondays, 10-11:30am, 23 McCamon Avenue, Tweed (Hillside Apartments) Common Room. Weight loss, Support Food and Exercise plans. $2 per week. Info: Marilyn at 613-478-9957. SENIOR MEN’S ‘Huff and Puff’ Exercise Class, Tuesdays and Thursdays, 10-11 AM, Land O’ Lakes Curling Club. Instructed muscle toning, balance and stretching. Light weights available, bring your own mat. 7/class or $40 monthly. Show up or contact Larry: 613-478-5994

TYENDINAGA ORANGE LODGE Dance June 3, Orange Hall on York road in Tyendinga Territory. Band is Jeff Code & Silver wings from 8pm to midnight. $12 each. Dance,Lunch,Prizes Contact 613-396-6792. FREE LUNCH Time Fitness with Active membership at the Tyendinaga Fitness Resource Centre. $20 for seniors (55 +) $30 for adults no taxes or contracts Open to the Public. Stop in classes 12:15pm Monday to Thursday. (613) 962-2822 Section B - Thursday, June 1, 2017 B17


Taylor Angus duo stars onstage at Caper’s June 3 Belleville - The first thing that grabs you is the voice. Crisp yet emotive and utterly indifferent to gravity, it glides then soars over a deceptively simple foundation of guitar and piano alternately conjuring jazzy pop and poppy jazz with a smidge of folk that’s utterly unlike anything you’ve heard before but something you instantly want to hear again. This is the music of Taylor Angus, the fast-emerging duo featuring namesake singer/songwriter and multi-instrumentalist Taylor Angus and her partner, guitarist/songwriter Logan Brown and her partner. The duo takes over the intimate Caper’s in downtown Belleville June 3 for a not-to-bemissed show, said the popular downtown resto-lounge. Together, the pair - by their reckoning, spiritual cousins to Buckingham Nicks, but musically closer to Ella Fitzgerald and Joe Pass – crafts original songs so unique yet accessible

Taylor Angus and her partner, guitarist/songwriter Logan Brown play the Capers room in Belleville June 3. Submitted photo

that their brilliant new six-track World domination is in the EP, Sympathy For You, can be crosshairs for the Kingston/Otviewed as both an artistic state- tawa-based musicians, a point ment and a statement of intent. corroborated by their dazzling

2016 debut First Light of Dawn which electrified music fans, radio programmers and even British synth-pop star Howard Jones, who invited them on tour. “Our hope is that this EP will do what our last record did: open doors for us as artists able to do this full-time,” Brown says. “This is a total blessing, and to have First Light of Dawn garner real fans that weren’t our parents was amazing,” the guitarist howls. Judging by the early success of the new EP’s saucy, guitargoosed focus track, ‘You’re Gonna Wish I Stayed,’ it looks like Taylor Angus’ desire to “shoot for the moon and land among the stars” is very much on track. Recorded over a few intense days in winter 2017 at Hamilton’s Catherine North Studios with bassist Oscar Ansetti guesting, Sympathy For You is a snapshot of Angus and Brown’s total convergence as a duo after performing solo: she at Ottawa Bluesfest and recording a demo

with legendary producer Thom Panunzio at Interscope Studios in Los Angeles, and he winning multiple guitar and songwriting awards across Ontario. The duo’s easy harmony is palpable in songs like ‘Cry Me A River’ which finds Angus’ voice draped like a shawl across Brown’s supple acoustic guitar, and in the earwormy and sprightly ‘Your Choice’ which, along with plaintive ballad ‘Lay Down,’ features Brown sharing lead vocals for the first time. That Sympathy For You comes with 3D glasses to better enhance its cover image is further proof the couple follows their instinct no matter what. “It is an undertaking to include the glasses in the CD,” Angus laughs. “But we thought it would be cool.” Sometimes, cool is enough… especially when you boast the inimitable sound and style of Taylor Angus. The show gets underway at 8 p.m. for diners. Reservations are recommended at 613-968-7979.

Quinte Conservation’s electric car drives home message BY STEPHEN PETRICK

Belleville – Quinte-area drivers may soon notice a white Ford Focus with, oddly, a green-lettered Ontario licence plate on the road this summer. It’s an electric car, owned by Quinte Conservation. The environmental agency recently purchased the vehicle from Prinzen Ford, in Bloomfield. General Manager Terry Murphy said the organization is trying to lead by example. By driving an electric car, in replace of a normal gas guzzler, Quinte Conservation is contributing to a better environment. “We’re trying to run our own mandate, doing the right thing to protect the environment,” he said. Quinte Conservation’s board approved the purchase a year and a half ago, but it took some time for the organization to find a dealership in its area that had a licence to sell electric cars. While not able to site exact numbers, Murphy said the vehicle cost the organization about $20,000, (but that was after it received a rebate valued at $14,000 from senior government to purchase the vehicle.) Murphy said, right now, the incentive for owning an electric car isn’t for financial reasons. A normal gas car is more practical Terry Murphy charges the electric car, with a charging station installed for most people. However, Quinte Conservation outside the Quinte Conservation office. Stephen Petrick/Metroland is tracking how much electricity B18 Section B - Thursday, June 1, 2017

Quinte Conservation General Manager Terry Murphy stands by the environmental agency’s new electric car. Stephen Petrick/Metroland

the car consumes and how much it will save in the long run by not purchasing gas and not needing oil changes. In time, he said, Quinte Conservation hopes to build a new garage at its Old Highway 2 location and power it with solar panels. If those solar panels can then power the car, the vehicle would leave no significant environmental impact. Murphy has driven it a few times already and said “it’s quite comfortable and quiet … It’s like

driving a golf cart.” He said the car, when fully charged, can drive about 180 kilometres. That allows it to do return trips to most areas, within Quinte Conservation’s jurisdiction, which includes the Moira, Salmon and Napanee river watershed, plus Prince Edward County. In the past, Quinte Conservation has owned hybrid vehicles, which were run on both gas and electricity. But, this vehicle is its first fully electric car.


Kids of all ages enjoyed Quinte Symphony season finale BY JACK EVANS

Belleville - Quinte Symphony’s final full concert for the current season Sunday afternoon at Belleville’s St Theresa School great hall drew a small but happy audience as children got a chance to try their hand at conducting and playing different instruments. Even some of the adults tried their hand at the instruments in a program, which featured local actor Rick Zimmerman narrating the famous “Tubby the Tuba” educational piece for orchestra, which focuses on the tuba, but also highlights every different instrument and section. The venue was the first time the orchestra has performed in this hall and the sound while described by players on the stage as “wooden,” was spectacularly great for those in the audience, with every solo bit soaring out into the hall from the stage and sections booming through loud and clear. The one-level convenience and abundant nearby parking were also noted. Zimmerman pointed out that the opening work, Mozart’s over-

ture to his beloved opera, “The Magic Flute,” was like a fairy tale with a beautiful princess, a villain and a dashing hero. For Saint-Saens’ rhythmic and stirring “Marche Militaire Francaise,” conductor Dan Tremblay allowed several of the children

a chance to conduct portions of it, after first giving them an impromptu lesson. For “Tubby the Tuba,”the orchestra’s Greg Henderson was front of stage to play an instrument who only wanted a chance to play a “beautiful melody,” instead

of “oom pah.” The program concluded with music from the popular contemporary family musical, Frozen.” Then it was instrument “petting zoo” time. Various orchestra members will still be seen and heard at community events during the sum-

mer months, starting with the Arts and Wine Festival on Saturday, June 10 from 10 a.m. until 8 p.m. on the riverfront across from City Hall, and some other events. The orchestra’s first concert for its new season is Sunday, Oct. 1, called “Orchestral Favourites.”

Help keep your community clean. Please recycle this newspaper.

BTG’s new musical scary, but funny BY JACK EVANS

In the words of Cole Porter, this Thursday brings “another opening of another show.” “Little Shop of Horrors” brings doo-wop style music front and centre of the stage for a popular musical, which could be called scarily hilarious or hilariously scary. Directed by Meaghan Lattanzio, making her Pinnacle Playhouse debut in that job, the show itself is a new first time production for the BTG. When a cute little plant is discovered in the “inner city,” its proud new owner soon discovers that it is a man-eating monster and must find a way to deal with it, along with keeping his terrible mistake away from the love of his life. In her director’s remarks, Lattanzio says: “it shows the extremes one might go to for fame, fortune and love.” Toe-tapping music comes from a pit band comprising drummer and music director Nik Buchowski, piano, Charlie Jiang, guitars Dalin Whitford and Liam Greer and bass, Quinn Guernsey, all of them first time participants at the Playhouse except Whitford. The mostly youthful cast also includes a predominant number of newcomers to the Playhouse stage, including Skylar Pierson, Matthew Hawley as Puppeteer, Kevin Pierson, Reg. Stacey, Jonathan Wright, MacKenzie Hogle and Amanda Robertson, leaving Wendy Roy and Alyssa Ross as the only two cast members from previous BTG shows. Show time is 8 p.m. for opening night tonight and the rest of the run, plus some Sunday matinees at 2 p.m. As usual, opening night will be followed by a reception to meet and greet the cast in the downstairs green room. Section B - Thursday, June 1, 2017 B19


B20 Section B - Thursday, June 1, 2017


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