Belleville092817

Page 1

News. THE BELLEVILLE

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 2017

INSIDE THIS WEEK

®

8 Wing Trenton SAR crews train for disaster scenario. Please see story, photos on pages B1, B3

CONNECTED TO YOUR COMMUNITY INSIDEBELLEVILLE.COM

SAVEWITHTHISGREATDEAL 50% OFF MONDAY

2 X TUESDAY

ONLINE ONLY @ MENU PRICE

BUY 1 GET 1 FREE @ MENU PRICE

ONLINE ONLY SPECIAL

Order Code: 8700

ORDER CODE: MON50P

ORDER CODE: 8521

WING WEDNESDAY

SCHOOL LUNCH

BUY ANY PIZZA @ MENU PRICE AND GET 10 WINGS FOR

SPECIAL PRICE FOR SCHOOL LUNCH

ORDER CODE: 8611

4

$ 99

Sun. - Wed. 11am - Midnight Thurs. 11am - 1am Fri. & Sat. 11am - 2am

PLEASE CALL US FOR MORE INFO

LOAD IT UP 1 LARGE 4 TOPPING PIZZA

ORDER CODE: 4201

613-962-4949

143 College St. W. BELLEVILLE

613-394-5888

257 Dundas St. E. TRENTON

11

$

99

DOMINO’S DELIVERY

DEBIT

Debit surcharge may apply.

Delivery available within City Limits. Some restrictions may apply. Special Prices For Party Orders

Drivers Carry Less Than $2000 At All Times


START YOUR ORDER CHOOSE CRUST

CHOOSE SIZE

CLASSIC HAND TOSSED CALS 120-176 HAND TOSSED THIN CALS 120 CRUNCHY THIN CRUST CALS 84-115 BROOKLYN STYLE (L & XL ONLY) CALS 125-220 GLUTEN FREE (SMALL ONLY)** CALS 87 PAN (MEDIUM ONLY)** CALS 192

CHOOSE SAUCE

SMALL (10”)

CALS 190 SERVING 1/6 PIZZA

MEDIUM (12”)

CALS 207 SERVING 1/8 PIZZA

LARGE (14”)

CALS 270 SERVING 1/8 PIZZA

X-LARGE (16”)

CALS 301 SERVING 1/10 PIZZA

SINGLE PIZZA (CHEESE)

ADDITIONAL PIZZAS

ADDITIONAL TOPPINGS

PREMIUM TOPPINGS

8 $ 1099 $ 1299 $ 1499

6 $ 99 8 $ 1099 $ 1299

0 $ 00 1 $ 00 1 $ 00 2

$ 98

$ 99

$ 99

1 $ 78 2 $ 78 3 $ 78 4

$ 00

CHOOSE TOPPINGS

PIZZA SAUCE CALS 8-24 BBQ SAUCE** CALS 13-23 ALFREDO SAUCE** CALS 17-34 RANCH SAUCE** CALS 66 -166 GARLIC PARMESAN** CALS 31 -62

MEATS PEPPERONI CALS 27-43 HAM CALS 10-16 GROUND BEEF CALS 37 -56 BACON CALS 45-67 ITALIAN SAUSAGE CALS 42-65 BROOKLYN PEPPERONI CALS 9-17 CHICKEN** CALS 17-26 PHILLY STEAK** CALS 12-17 ANCHOVIES** CALS 10-11

VEGGIES ONIONS CALS 2 GREEN PEPPERS CALS 2-3 JALAPENOS CALS 2-3 BLACK OLIVES CALS 12-20 GREEN OLIVES CALS 12-20 MUSHROOMS CALS 3-4 TOMATOES CALS 2-6 PINEAPPLE CALS 8-11 BANANA PEPPERS CALS 3-4

CHEESE MOZZARELL CALS 44-71 PROVOLONE* CALS 17-34 AMERICAN* CALS 35-47 CHEDDAR* 19-40 FETA* CALS 10-15

ROASTED GARLIC CALS 160 SWEET ICING CALS 250 MARINARA CALS 30 RANCH CALS 197 BBQ CALS 70 * MAY BE CONSIDERED HOTS CALS 50 A PREMIUM TOPPING ** MAY BE AT ADDITIONAL CHARGE

699¢

NOT All TOPPINGS OFFERED AT All STORES. VISIT www.dominos.ca for a complete listing of toppings.

The average adult requires approximately 2,000 to 2,400 calories per day; however, individual calorie needs may vary.

CHOOSE ANY FEAST PIZZAS

BEVERAGES

2$ 74 1 $ 11 1

$ 99

SERVING SIZE: S (1/6 PIZZA), M (1/8 PIZZA), L (1/8 PIZZA), XL (1/10 PIZZA) PEPPERONI CALS 223-255

Lots and lots of pepperoni topped with an extra layer of cheese.

S: 10 M: 13 L: 15 XL: 17 $

99

$

99

$

99

$

99

MEATZZA CALS 240-388

S: $1299 M: $1599 L: $1899 XL: $2299

HAWAIIAN CALS 199-321

Succulent pineapple & slices of ham, with an extra layer of cheese.

Loads of pepperoni, ham, Italian sausage, beef, fresh onions, green peppers, mushrooms, olives and an extra layer of cheese

VEGGIE CALS 179-286

S: $1299 M: $1599 L: $1899 XL: $2299

S: $1199 M: $1499 L: $1799 XL: $1999

PHILLY CHEESE STEAK CALS 240-388

DELUXE CALS 206-330

S: $1299 M: $1599 L: $1899 XL: $2299

Fresh green peppers, onions, tomatoes, mushrooms and olives.

A combination of pepperoni, Italian Sausage, fresh green peppers, mushrooms, onions and an extra layer of cheese.

CHICKEN BACON RANCH CALS 223-335

S: $1299 M: $1599 L: $1899 XL: $2299

CHICKEN BACON ALFREDO CALS 229-370

CANADIAN CALS 226-365

Loads of pepperoni, fresh mushrooms and smoked bacon, topped with an extra layer of cheese

S: 11 M: 14 L: 17 XL: 19 BROOKLYN† CALS 206-330 99

$

99

$

99

$

99

A ranch sauce base with a Mozzarella/Cheddar blend, fresh tomatoes, green peppers, all white-meat chicken and bacon

S: 12 M: 15 L: 18 XL: 22 $

99

$

99

$

99

$

99

An Alfredo sauce base with a Mouarella/Cheddar cheese blend, fresh mushrooms, onions, all white-meat chicken, bacon & Provolone cheese.

S: 12 $

99

$

99

$

99

$

99

2 Wrap Belleville News - Thursday, September 28, 2017

BONELESS CHICKEN

Boneless chicken is lightly breaded with savoury herbs, made with 100% white bread meat. Comes with our signature BBQ sauce or with any of our other dipping sauces.

7

$ 99 /8

CALS: 57 PER 1/8 SERVING

BUFFALO CHICKEN WINGS Hot, BBQ, Sweet Mango Habanero or Honey Garlic, served with Rach or any of our other sauces for dipping.

7

† SERVING SIZE = 1/16 PIZZA

Sun. - Wed. 11am - Midnight Thurs. 11am - 1am Fri. & Sat. 11am - 2am

CHICKEN

1399

$ 99 $

Large Brooklyn style pepperoni. Designed to be thin and foldable

L: $1399 XL: $1699

CANS*

Loaded with tender pieces of steak, melted Provolone cheese, fresh onions, mushrooms, green peppers and American cheese.

S: $1199 M: $1499 L: $1799 XL: $1999 BBQ CHICKEN CALS 233-345

Smothered in falvourful BBQ sauce and loaded with chicken, bacon, fresh onions, green peppers and cheddar cheese.

500ML*

EXTRAVAGANZZA® CALS 240-388

S: $1099 M: $1399 L: $1599 XL: $1799

$

2L*

Slice after slice of pepperoni, ham, savoury Italian Sausage and beef topped with an extra layer of cheese.

613-962-4949

143 College St. W. BELLEVILLE

613-394-5888

257 Dundas St. E. TRENTON

/10

CALS: 102-110 PER 1/10 SERVING

DOMINO’S DELIVERY

DEBIT

Debit surcharge may apply.

Delivery available within City Limits. Some restrictions may apply. Special Prices For Party Orders

Drivers Carry Less Than $2000 At All Times


News.

THURSDAY

SEPTEMBER 28, 2017

THE BELLEVILLE

®

2017 GRIZZLY Financing s 700 EPS as low a AC 1.89% O

Includes WARN® 3000 Winch Kit

10,100

$

Includes freight & PDI

WWW.MOTOSPORTSOFTRENTON.COM 114 MCCAULEY RD., TRENTON

CONNECTED TO YOUR COMMUNITY INSIDEBELLEVILLE.COM

Hasty Ps honoured at bay bridge park

613-965-6626

GEROW PROPANE LTD.

OVER 60 YEARS EXPERIENCE

BY STEPHEN PETRICK

Belleville – It has three golden maple leaves behind a logo and a sign that boldly says “Hastings & Prince Edward Regt. Canada.” They’re connected to a grey brick wall and flower gardens surrounded by limestone rocks and newly planted shrubs and trees. “Yes, beautiful,” said Mayor Taso Christopher, as a blue cloth was removed from it to reveal it publicly for the first time. A new parkette at the corner of Dundas Street and Bay Bridge Road was dedicated to the Hastings & Prince Edward Regiment during a ceremony that took place in stifling heat on Saturday, Sept. 23. Despite the scorching temperatures, there was a joyous atmosphere as a monument to the regiment, affectionately known as the Hasty Ps, was unveiled. The ceremony was not only to pay tribute to the regiment – a military organization with deep roots in the region that still employs reservists today. It was also to celebrate the completion of work to expand the intersection of Bay Bridge Road and Dundas Street and the new overpass that links Bay Bridge Road to the Norris Whitney Bridge, which links Belleville to Prince Edward County. The roughly $20-million Build Belleville infrastructure project is finally complete after about two years of work and several more years of See ‘Parkette’ Page 3

Residential, Commercial & Industrial Heating Specialists Bulk Sales, & Retail SALES - SERVICE - PARTS

BOX 1030 BRIGHTON 15384 COUNTY RD. 2 GEROW PROPANE

613-475-2414

ONLINE at insidebelleville.com

News, events and information on your desktop, laptop or mobile device

Events Calendar

See what’s happening by visiting our online community calendar. http://www.insidebelleville.com/ bellevilleregion-events/

Report the news chris.malette@metroland.com www.facebook.com/InsideBelleville

Mayor Taso Christopher (right) shakes hands with Hastings Prince Edward Regiment commander Lt.-Col. Chris Comeau as a monument for the Hasty Ps is unveiled. Stephen Petrick/Metroland

@InBelleville

JAPANESE • THAI CUISINE Enjoy our skillfully prepared Japanese and Thai specialties, from sushi and sashimi to teriyaki, tempura and savoury noodle dishes.

New Items On The Menu 265 North Front Street, Belleville 613.969.0988

Lunch $14.99 • Dinner $23.99 ALL YOU CAN EAT • IPAD ORDERING

Lunch: 11:00am-3:00pm, Sunday - Thursday Dinner: 3:30pm - 10:00pm, Sunday - Thursday Lunch: 11:00am - 3:00pm, Friday & Saturday Dinner: 3:30pm - 10:30pm, Friday & Saturday


JOIN OUR TABLE AND YOU COULD WIN Enter now at yourindependentgrocer.ca

3 DAY DEALS

SALE

177474

3

SEPTEMBER 28/29/30 ONLY

1

99lb

SALE

SAVE $2 LB Butcher’s Choice® pork sausage family size, mild or hot 4.39/kg

SAVE $2.50 LB

chicken breasts or thighs

rest of week Oct. 1-4 $2.99 lb 6.59/kg ®

Try it...you’ll love it!

see our guarantee at

447887

1

77

pc.ca

1

PC® or Blue Menu® vegetables selected varieties frozen 500-750 g

LIMIT 12 over limit $2.49 ea.

Campbell’s broth selected varieties 900 mL

725714 580662

with PC® Black Label Normandy-style cultured butter regular or stuffed, all available sizes, frozen 3.28/kg

strawberries product of U.S.A., no. 1 grade 454 g or Farmer’s Market™ mini cucumbers product of Ontario, Canada no. 1 grade pkg of 6

2

over limit $3.99 ea.

rest of week Oct. 1-4 $3.99 ea.

681808

392971

399

99lb

O

LIMIT 6

Black Diamond cheese bars 400/450 g, shredded PC® fruit 400/600 g, Tenderflake pie, tart shells cheese 340 g or Cheestrings 16’s, PC® 300/400 g 195-397 g, Kraft Cool Whip 1 L or Breyers Classic or no name® 400/450 g cheese bars, PC® 300/340 g frozen dessert 1.66 L selected varieties frozen or no name® 340 g shredded cheese selected varieties 163477

349

881715

188

LIMIT 12 over limit $4.99 ea.

Coca-Cola, Canada Dry or Pepsi soft drinks selected varieties 12x355 mL/6x710 mL

LIMIT 12 over limit $2.99 ea.

699

SALE

SAVE $3 LB

fresh Atlantic salmon fillets skin-on 19.82/kg

LIMIT 10 over limit $9.99 ea.

PC® Pacific white shrimp large raw Zipperback® 31-40 per lb, frozen 400 g

Fresh seafood items subject to availability. 884353

249

599

LIMIT 8

over limit $3.49 ea.

Lay’s potato chips 240-255 g, Philadelphia cream cheese product 227/250 g or dips 227 g selected varieties

3

277

MULTI

less than 2 $1.99 ea.

over limit $3.49 ea.

E. D. Smith pure pumpkin 796 mL or fruit pie filling 540 mL selected varieties

Ocean Spray cranberry sauce selected varieties 348 mL

599

$

LIMIT 4

over limit $6.99 ea.

gourmet apple lattice pie or Farmer’s Market pumpkin pie 960 g-1.02 kg

10

20 pc chicken wings assorted varieties, hot or chilled available in the Meals to Go department

in proud association with

Please donate in store.

Flyer prices effective from Thursday, September 28th to Wednesday, October 4th, 2017.

400 Dundas St. E, Belleville 613.968.3888

HOURS: Monday-Friday, 8:00 am-9:00 pm Saturday, 8:00 am-7:00 pm Sunday, 8:00 am-7:00 pm

2 Belleville News - Thursday, September 28, 2017

cure situation if there’s believed to be a threat in the general vicinity of the school. It means doors will be locked and monitored, but classes will continue as normal. It’s not as serious as a Lockdown situation, where classrooms are locked because of a threat inside the school. A call to a Belleville Police spokesperson seeking information on the incident wasn’t returned and there was no mention of it in police’s daily report released the next morning.

Belleville

A pharmacy first

Trenton

Brighton

THIS WEEK’S BEST BUY FRIDAY SEPT 29 - THURSDAY OCT 5 622794

THANKSGIVING FOOD DRIVE Dewe’s YIG

Belleville – Belleville Police haven’t released any details on an incident on Wednesday, Sept. 20 that caused Centennial Secondary School to briefly lock its doors. The high school went into a “hold and secure” situation in the late morning, in keeping with school board emergency response protocols. A school board employee told the Belleville News it was due to a situation outside the school and no students were in any danger. A school will go into a hold and se-

SALE

Janes Pub Style chicken fries, strips, nuggets, burgers or popcorn chicken frozen 800 g

389554 904171

LIMIT 12

were seized from the vehicle. Since July 1, the home on West Street and another home on Burnham Street had experienced similar acts of mischief, police say. Rocks and ball bearings had struck doors and windows of both residences. The man was charged with 11 counts of mischief, one count of arson, two counts of criminal harassment, and one charge of wearing a disguise while committing an indictable offence. The arson charge was in relation to a chicken coop that burnt at the rear of the West Street residence on September 8. There were no chickens in the coop at the time. The man, whose name was not released, was held for a bail hearing.

Threat outside led to CSS secure and hold

SAVE AT LEAST $3

114553 592919

2/$

lb

837520

0

Nestlé Pure Life water 24x500 mL

0

899

Belleville – A slingshot, a bag of rocks and a machete seized. A chicken coop destroyed. A charge of wearing a disguise while committing an indictable offence. They all made their way into one bizarre Belleville police media release on the weekend, which detailed the arrest of a Quinte West man, believed to be linked to crimes on West Street and Burnham Street. Just after midnight on Sept. 24, officers responded to a mischief call on West Street. The homeowner reported that someone had hit the house with a rock. As a result of an investigation a vehicle was stopped in the city’s west end and a 53-year-old Quinte West man was arrested. A slingshot, a bag of rocks, a machete, and a balaclava

9 EA.

product of Ontario, Canada no. 1 grade 3 lb bag

975523

over limit $3.49 ea.

5

Farmer’s Market™ carrots or onions

applewood or hickory smoked 6.59/kg

299

LIMIT 8

4/$

640279

PC® spiral-sliced bone-in half ham

890394

over limit $6.49 ea.

MULTI

444965A

LIMIT 12

5

OR $2.59 EA.

PC® butter infused turkey

0

Planters roasted cashews, almonds or mixed nuts selected varieties 200-250 g

$

SAVE $2 LB

rest of week Oct. 1-4 $1.99 ea.

299

MULTI

244131

49lb

over limit $2.99 ea.

rest of week Oct. 1-4 $2.49 ea.

125

family size, fresh boneless skinless 8.80/kg

TM*

SALE

LIMIT 12

803106

lb

QW man charged in slingshot, machete, coop-burning case

Smylie’s YIG

293 Dundas St. E. Trenton 613.392.0297

HOURS: Monday-Friday, 8:00 am-9:00 pm Saturday, 8:00 am-8:00 pm Sunday, 9:00 am-6:00 pm

FREE $10 REXALL GIFT COUPON WHEN YOU SPEND $30 OR MORE ON ALMOST EVERYTHING IN STORE 3 DAYS ONLY!

6

$ 99

Each

FOLGERS COFFEE 920G, K-CUPS 12’S

BUY TWO GET JAMIESON VITAMINS, MINERALS OR HERBAL ONE FREE SUPPLEMENTS

Free item to be equal of lesser value 109 Dundas St. E., Trenton • 1 Main St., Brighton • 173 Dundas St. E., Belleville


PARKETTE DEDICATION

Loyalist a ‘destination college,’ says president BY STEPHEN PETRICK

Belleville – The community college that fuels Quinte’s economy continues to change with the times. Loyalist College today has a strong focus on serving international students and partnering with universities for degree-diploma programs to help get skilled graduates into the local work force, said College President Dr. Ann Marie Vaughan. That was the thrust of her speech delivered to business leaders and local dignitaries at a Belleville Chamber of Commerce breakfast at the Travelodge Inn on Wednesday, Sept. 20. “Loyalist is changing,” she said. “We’re a destination college. The diversity on our campus reflects that.” Vaughan said that this year Loyalist is hosting 350 students from countries outside of Canada. Such students, who come to Canada on study permits, are permitted to work in Canada. It’s the student’s responsibility to get a social insurance number, she said, and the employer should make sure the employee has the proper permit to work in Canada.

“They are living in this community and are available for work,” she said. She said Loyalist also continues to embrace university partnerships, which are sometimes known as “pathway” or “articulation” agreements. A pathway agreement the college recently reached with York University, for instance, will allow eligible animation, journalism and communications and film and TV production graduates to enter York’s consecutive bachelor of education in technological education program. That agreement is one of about 70 examples of programs where Loyalist students can combine university and college level education in pursuit of qualifications necessary for a skilled career. To prove Loyalist’s contribution to the local economy, Vaughan mentioned that a job portal provided by the college’s career centre has about 2,950 students actively registered. The same career center has posted 2,100 employment opportunities since January. “If you’re searching for employees, we can provide you with students who can provide fabu-

Ann Marie Vaughan lous value to your business,” said Vaughan. The presentation included speeches from two three recent graduates – Madhulika Potukuchi, Richard Joseph (both international students) and Kaitlyn Purchase – who all spoke highly of their time at Loyalist College and how they’ve started careers in the area. Joseph, now an employee of International Truckload Services, praised Loyalist for giving the same opportunities to international students as domestic students. He encouraged businesses to hire graduates. “It gives us an opportunity; it gives you an opportunity. It bridges the gap,” he said.

planning. All three levels of govern- he said shortly after the monument was ment contributed to the project. unveiled and guests began laying poppies Bay of Quinte MP Neil Ellis spoke on the gray brick wall. “Coming off the at the event on behalf of infrastructure bridge, you can’t miss it.” minister Amarjeet Sohi. But he was also The blistering mid-summer like heat proud to be there because he was mayor during the ceremony caused a young caof Belleville when planning on the project det who was guarding flags and dressed started. in full uniform to collapse. Firefighters “Kudos to council,” he said. “I want to tended to him and brought him water. He commend you all for supporting the proj- appeared to be okay moments later and ect.” the ceremony continued uninterrupted. But the ceremony was mostly to celSome Second World War veterans who ebrate the long history of the Hasty Ps, attended the event left shortly after in a whose glory is well documented in the van, into which military officials helped 1955-published Farley Mowat book, The them. Regiment. Environment Canada had a heat warnThe Hastings Prince Edward Regiment ing in effect for the Belleville region on was Canada’s most decorated regiment in Saturday, with temperatures at about 25C. the Second World War, as it won 31 battle The ceremony was not advertised to the honours. public ahead of time because the parkette The new monument is at an intersec- is small and only had room for a handful tion, which, city officials say, about 25,000 of people. It was an invite-only event. vehicles pass each day. So the monument allows the at Now 613-771-1094 city to proudly honour the regiment and ensure parker financial its legacy is cherished. insurance The regiment’s honorary colonel, Ken Arm& Loyalist Investment Centre strong, was among those who spoke at the ceremoWe have moved to ny and he expressed gratiQuinte Mall Office Tower tude for the city’s efforts to recognize those who 100 Bell Blvd., Suite 315, Belleville Jim Parker ON K8P 4Y7 served. Independent Broker parker@cogeco.net Since 1983 “I’m very impressed,”

PIZZA DINING TAKE OUT

Cooking for one is a lot of work.

EST 1977

Now I can easily order balanced meals with free delivery! Get delicious, frozen meals, soups and desserts delivered directly to your home.

NOW

HIRING Made for Seniors Request your FREE Menu Catalogue Today! 1-844-384-2333 HeartToHomeMeals.ca

Free Delivery*. No Obligation. Delicious Choices. *some conditions may apply.

Continued from Page 1

HELP WANTED

FULL TIME & PART TIME COOKS AND KITCHEN STAFF Paid training. We offer paid comprehensive training for all job functions plus performance paid wage increases are regularly reviewed. Interested applicants should email their resume to jobsvitosbrighton@gmail.com

36 Prince Edward St., Brighton • www.vitosbrighton.ca Belleville News - Thursday, September 28, 2017 3


Belleville actor lands role as young Rachel Zane on ‘Suits’ they finished super quick, the director was amazing, he was so nice.” Filmed in Toronto over the sumBelleville – St. Michael Catholic School student Maria Nash found mer for season seven, episode 10, Maherself well suited for a role on the ria said one of her scenes was a little small screen, playing young Rachel challenging. “There was one scene that was sad Zane on Suits. The seven-year-old acted in flash- and emotional and that scene, I have back scenes as a young version of to say, was a scene I did have trouble lead actress Meghan Markle, who is with because it’s so sad,” she said, known for her lead role on the legal adding the other scene was a tea party. “It looked like an actual tea party drama television series and for dating I’ve had, it was just really fun to film,” Prince Harry. Maria said she was really excited she said. Although Maria said she had never for her role. ”It was an honour to play Meghan watched Suits before, she had heard of Markle, I didn’t get to see her, she was the popular show because her mother doing a different scene somewhere watched it. “I feel like this is a bigger role beelse,” she said. “The people there were super nice, cause I feel like more people watch they were just amazing people and Suits,” she said. In the two years that Maria has been acting, HOME DELIVERY she has racked up • Beer & Liquour quite the list of roles including a • Grocery Orders series regular role • Fast Food on Opie’s Home • Restaurant Deliveries and roles in Con• Pharmacy Deliveries viction, Accord• Corner Store Pick-Up & Deliveries ing to Kids and Private Eyes. Maria Nash sits on Rachel Zane’s chair on the set of Suits. Submitted DEBIT AT “Experiencing THE DOOR all of these dif- part,” said Maria, who said she plans landed the role on Suits, something ferent sets and to keep doing what she usually does. she said she wasn’t sure would hapstories is the best “You get an audition, you hit them pen. hard and then you “They wanted someone who looked find out,” she said. like Rachel Zane and I wasn’t sure, Maria’s mother aside from the warm brown eyes that Marisa Dragani they both have, that she was a match,” said the pair were she said. ecstatic when they “You’re never sure at these audifound out Maria tions what they’re looking for so you BY ERIN STEWART

®

GREEN APPLE

SCHOOL

S

PR GRAM

“Fireplace Showroom”

encouraging healthy eating habits

REDUCE YOUR ENERGY COSTS

Metro’s Green Apple School Program awards $1,000 grants to school programs that encourage healthy eating habits!

pecializing

in your Home Comfort

WITH AN AMANA HI-EFF NATURAL GAS OR PROPANE FURNACE Built better than it has to be with a lifetime unit replacement warranty plus 10 years parts & labour.

plus

$250.00

Find out more at greenapple.metro.ca.

O.P.A. rebate Heating & Air Conditioning LASTS AND LASTS AND LASTS

OLD MAN WINTER IS COMING!!!

CALL TODAY TO SCHEDULE YOUR FURNACE TUNE-UP

Call or visit us today for your FREE No Obligation quote “You’ll Be Glad You Did!” 122 Parks Dr. Belleville 613-966-8848

Locally owned and Operated to Serve You Better Since 1995

4 Belleville News - Thursday, September 28, 2017

just go in and you do you.” Maria has been acting for about two years but it was not something she originally had much interest in. After moving to Belleville when Maria was three, Dragani said her daughter did not like herself. “Maria came home every day saying ‘I want to be blond, I want to be blond, I want to be blond,’” she said. “There’s not a lot of diversity, it’s getting better. When she started school I had to hear for a good six to eight months about how brown people were ugly, how she wanted to be blond, and how she wanted straight hair, that’s all I heard in her first year of school.” In order to boost Maria’s self esteem Dragani said she wanted to get her involved in acting. “I thought getting her involved like this might give her more confidence, seeing herself reflected in media might help change that, so I decided to try to get her involved,” she said. Maria did very well, said Dragani, and now things are full swing ahead. “It’s been pretty non-stop for us,” she said. “The feedback is that she’s got good acting skills so we will keep going, we will see where it takes us, we just take it one day at a time.” It’s a big commitment to juggle school and activities while also being a working single mother, said Dragani, but Maria’s self-esteem has greatly improved. “She’s pretty unstoppable now,” she said. Catch Maria in Suits’ season seven, episode 10 titled “Donna.”

Woman charged with assault, kicks police on way out Belleville – A 27-year-old woman is facing numerous charges after Belleville Police were called to a College St. E. home on Thursday, Sept. 21. Police were called to the home at 11:15 where the woman was arrested for assaulting two adults in the home. During the arrest the woman kicked both police officers. She continued to kick and struggle for the duration of the arrest. The woman was held for bail on September 22, on two charges of assault, to charges of assaulting police, resisting arrest and breach of a recognizance. One of the adults received medical attention for a minor injury; the other adult and the two officers were not injured in the incident, police say.


STYLE SAVINGS EVENT! THE STOCKTON A VINTAGE RUSTIC CHARM QUEEN 3 PIECE BED

119999 LEATHER MATCH SOFA $139999

$

INCLUDES - HEADBOARD, FOOTIBOARD, AND SIDE RAILS

LOVESEAT $1379.99 CHAIR $1199.99

NIGHT STAND $499.99 | CHEST $1099.99 | DRESSER $1099.99 | MIRROR $199

YOUR CHOICE

CONTEMPORARY STYLE RECLINERS IN POWER OR MANUAL. YOU CHOOSE THE STYLE, AVAILABLE IN LEATHER OR FABRIC. SWIVEL, ROCKER GLIDER OR WALL HUGGER.

POWER OPTION AVAILABLE PRICED FROM

899

$

RECLINING SOFA

99

RECLINING LOVESEAT $1379.99 ROCKER RECLINER $1099.99

149999

$

BRING YOUR INSPIRATION TO LIFE

JOIN THE EXPRESS LANE…

Palliser® Express offers a wide selection of quick-ship customizable Palliser furniture options to choose from. Have it made in Canada, for your home, in your style, and your way.

See your sales associate and begin the journey to creating a home that reflects your creative vision.

POWER OPTION AVAILABLE LEATHER MATCH

5 PIECE SET

INCLUDES: TABLE, 4 CHAIRS SERVER & BENCH ALSO AVAILABLE

FEATURES INCLUDE:

Solid Pine construction throughout all tops, legs, shelves and aprons. Durable hardwood dowel construction. Live Edge on the long legth sides of the table. Table has 2x12” leaves.

SOFA 99 RECLINING RECLINING LOVESEAT $1679.99 $

1899

$

ROCKER RECLINER $1149.99

169999

PETERBOROUGH LOCATION

www.myheritagefurniture.ca

*local delivery on mattress sets $799 or more.

1 Mile East of Peterborough, Hwy #7

705.742.7573

QUINTE LOCATION

Hwy 401 & Glenmiller Rd. Trenton

613.394.4792

Belleville News - Thursday, September 28, 2017 5


Trenval celebrates 30 years of helping business grow

Spend this winter somewhere warm. At home. With the free Union Gas Home Weatherization Program, you can stay

Trenton – The Trenval Business Development Corporation celebrated 30 years of supporting local business with a milestone mingle on Tuesday, Sept. 12. The event featured presentations by local dignitaries including MP Neil Ellis, MPP Lou Rinaldi, MPP Todd Smith, Quinte West Mayor Jim Harrison and Belleville Mayor Taso Christopher. Glenn Kozak, executive director, summed Quinte West Coun. Sally Freeman, Mayor Jim Harrison, execuup Trenval's accomplish- tive director Glenn Kozak and Lt. Col. David Alexander, Trenval ments as he spoke to over Chair, at the milestone mingle. Submitted photo 100 people in attendance. Trenval’s 30th anniversary generates multiple “Trenval has been assisting small business in the Belleville, Quinte emotions but likely the big one is our activities West, Stirling-Rawdon, Tyendinaga and Dese- creating and maintaining more than 7,000 jobs ronto region since 1987 and has invested more through lending, advisory services and program than $34 million in small businesses through its delivery. At Trenval, we grow jobs,” said Lt. Col. David Alexander, Trenval chair. investment fund.” Trenval is a federally-supported, not-for-profit Also in attendance was Wilf Wilkinson, who, in 1987, along with the late Jack Gibbons and Community Futures Development Corporation, the late Ted Parker, made an application for the administered by a volunteer board of directors Community Futures program to come to the in partnership with the Federal Economic DevelBay of Quinte area with the mandate to provide opment Agency for Southern Ontario. It is committed to helping to develop and dicounselling and access to capital to aspiring enversify the local economy through community trepreneurs. “Being privileged to lead the organization, strategic planning, business information, counselling and investment in small business.

cosy and save energy no matter what winter brings. If you qualify, you’ll receive free home improvements that will keep you – and your energy bills – more comfortable all year round. Take advantage of the program that has helped 9,700 Ontario households save money and energy.

for pennies on the dollar

Apply now at uniongas.com/homeweatherization. Or call our authorized contractor EnviroCentre toll-free at 1-877-580-2582, Option 1.

shed student loans shed collection calls shed credit cards shed CRA troubles shed wage and bank garnishments Free insulation, free installation

Year-round comfort

Save money and energy

No cost to you

QUALIFICATION REQUIREMENTS HOUSEHOLD INCOME

YOUR HOUSE

Household Size

Annual Household Income

Built before 1975 and requires more insulation

One person ................................ Two people ................................ Three people ............................. Four people ............................... Each additional person ............

$32,843 or less $40,886 or less $50,266 or less $61,028 or less +$8,849

Has a natural gas furnace and you pay the bill

6 Belleville News - Thursday, September 28, 2017

Call Today for Fast, Friendly, Debt Relief.

1-855-677-6311 COME VISIT YOUR LOCAL OFFICE


OPINION

It’s election season. Got your haz-mat suit?

Germany: The rise of the right Angela Merkel’s slogan in her campaign for a fourth term as Chancellor was terminally bland and smug – “For a Germany in which we live well and love living” – but it did the job, sort of. Her DemoGwynne Dyer Christian cratic Union (CDU) is back as the largest party, so Merkel gets to form the next coalition government. But the neo-fascists are now in the Bundestag (parliament) too, for the first time since the collapse of Nazi Germany. It’s not Merkel’s fault, exactly, but the numbers tell the tale. The CDU had its worst result ever, down from 40 per cent of the vote at the last election to only 33 per cent this time. And it looks like the 7 per cent of the vote that the CDU lost went straight to the Alternative for Germany (AfD), the neofascist party, whose support was up from just under 5 per cent last time to 12.6 per cent this time. That makes the AfD the third biggest party in the Bundestag. All the other parties have sworn to have nothing to do with it, so Merkel’s party will have to seek its coalition partners elsewhere. It will take at least a month to make the coalition deal, which will probably link the CDU with the businessfriendly Free Democrats and the Greens, but that is not the big story. The rise of the hard right is. ‘Rise’ is a relative term, of course: only one German in eight actually voted for the AfD. But that is still shocking in a country that thought it had permanently excised all that old Nazi stuff from its politics. And if you look more closely, the AfD’s support was strongest in the same parts of the country that voted strongly for the Nazis in the 1933 election that brought Hitler to power. The AfD was founded by an economics professor who just wanted Germany to leave the euro currency. Alice Weidel, the AfD’s co-leader, has described Merkel’s government as “pigs” who merely serve as “marionettes of the victorious powers of the Second World War, whose task it is to keep down the German people.” And the party’s other co-leader, Alexander Gauland, said in an election speech last week: “We have the right to be proud of the achievements of the German soldiers in two world wars.”

News. THE BELLEVILLE

CONNECTED TO YOUR COMMUNITY INSIDEBELLEVILLE.COM

250 Sidney Street Belleville, ON K8P 3Z3 Phone: 613-966-2034 Fax: 613-966-8747 Published weekly by:

®

That sort of comment might be interesting to debate in a university seminar on German history, but 72 years after Hitler’s death it is still too soon to say out loud in a Europe that was ravaged by German armies in the Second World War. Gauland, Weidel and their AfD colleagues are playing with fire and they are well aware of it. The truly alarming thing, however, is not the occasional echo of the Nazis in AfD rhetoric. It is the fact that Germany is conforming to a general trend towards the authoritarian, ultra-nationalist right in Western politics. Each country does it in its own historical style. The pro-Brexit campaign in the United Kingdom last year was actually led by isolationist “Little Englanders”. Their implausible promise of a glorious free-trading future for the UK outside the European Union was just a necessary nod in the direction of economic rationality – but the Brexiteers won because enough people wanted to believe them. Similarly, Donald Trump fits comfortably into the American tradition: he is channelling American demagogues of the 1930 like Huey Long and Father Coughlin. The economic situation of American workers and the lower middle class today is close enough to that of the 1930s that they responded to his mixture of nationalism, dog-whistle racism and anti-big-business thetoric by voting him into the presidency. In France, Marine Le Pen appealed to nationalism, anti-immigrant sentiment and the resentment of the long-term unemployed to win almost 34 percent of the vote in last May’s presidential election. She lost, but the more important fact is that one-third of French voters backed the neo-fascist candidate. And now, in German, the AfD. The common thread that runs through all these events, beyond the racism, nationalism and xenophobia, is economic distress. The economies may be doing well, but a large proportion of the people are not. The gap between the rich and the rest was tolerated when everybody’s income was rising, but that has not been true for 30 years now, and patience among the “losers” has run out. This is still early days, but the direction of the drift in Western politics is clear, and it is deeply undesirable. The only thing that will stop it is decisive action to narrow the income gap again, but that is very hard to do in the face of the currently dominant economic doctrine. Houston, we have a problem.

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

Editorial by Chris Malette Election season is approaching. How to tell? The nastiness meter is creeping from “warm” to “hot enough to roast your nuts by.” We’re in for a nasty, heavy election year in 2018, heading to the polls in June to choose a new provincial government and in October for municipal governments. Sigh. I once knew an editor who actually admitted he was a “political junkie…” and loved everything about elections. After 40 years covering them, this scribbler loathes them and here’s why. It’s a down and dirty game at the best of times, absolutely soul-sucking when it goes gutter war. Case in point: the attack ads have begun. Yes, yes, they’ve been debated ad nauseam and the consensus is pretty plain – agreed, we all ‘abhor’ them, think they’re crass and classless, but, dammit, they work.(Well, in many cases they work – except the positively horrendous ‘But, he has nice hair’ campaign that flopped horribly for the Harper Conservatives in the last federal election.) We’re seeing the first instance of ‘ugly time’ on the airwaves with the first rollout of attack ads on the woman who promises to be a virtual piñata of pummelling ads by next June, Premier Kathleen Wynne. The Progressive Conservatives have unleashed a new attack ad against “untrustworthy” Premier Kathleen Wynne that accuses the governing Liberals of being corrupt. Wynne has enough on her plate trying to defend ballooning hydro costs, the perception in rural Ontario that the urbanite Wynne ‘just doesn’t get us’ and on and on. Many mutter, none to quietly, either, about everything from her looks to the fact she’s a lesbian. You say it’s 2017? Not everywhere, friend. Released last week, the U.S.-style attack features a grim-faced Wynne against a red and black backdrop as an ominous true-crime soundtrack plays, reported the Toronto Star. The ad comes with “sound effects reminiscent of jail cell doors being clanked shut, the ad splashes headlines critical of the Liberals from the Star and other news outlets.” “Kathleen Wynne is untrustworthy,” intones the male narrator in the 30-second commercial that is airing on numerous channels in prime time and on CP24 around the clock. “The Liberal party is politically corrupt. From the gas-plant rip-off and eHealth billions to their cash-for-access fundraising scheme,” he continues. “Now the premier is testifying at a bribery trial. Just imagine what’s next,” says the narrator. “Kathleen Wynne will say anything to get elected. You can’t trust her or them ever again.”

DISTRIBUTION MANAGER Paul Mitchell 613-966-2034, ext 508 SALES MANAGER Melissa Hudgin 613-966-2034, ext 504 ADVERTISING SALES Norah Nelson, 613-966-2034 ext 501 Michael Kelly, 613-966-2034 ext 506 Morgan Scott, 613-966-2034 ext 518

While the ad boasts a small Ontario PC logo, there is no mention of Tory Leader Patrick Brown. Wynne is threatening to sue Brown for defamation after he incorrectly claimed on Sept. 12 that she was on “trial” in the Sudbury byelection bribery case. On the eve of her taking the stand as a Crown witness, the Tory leader said Ontario had “a sitting premier sitting in trial” and that she “stands trial.” Brown, for his part, defended the hard-hitting TV spots, which are airing as the criminal trial of two top ex-McGuinty aides — David Livingston and Laura Miller — continues. They have pleaded not guilty. Let’s be clear, the provincial election is going to be all about slamming the now-easy target of Wynne and her second term Liberal government and little to nothing of substance about what the other guys plan to do. Need much context locally? Prince EdwardHastings MPP Todd Smith was quick to interject the buzzword “scandal” into a discussion on the Sudbury byelection hearings in a recent appearance to the cozy confines of his former employer’s radio program, Lorne Brooker show. The host mentioned the appearance by Wynne to testify and Smitty chimed in, “You mean the byelection bribery scandal…” Stick in the shiv, twist, wash, rinse and repeat. Last weekend, in front of a packed hall at the Port Hope Lions Centre, David Piccini was elected as the Progressive Conservative candidate in the riding of Northumberland – Peterborough South. He’ll take on Liberal stalwart Lou Rinaldi in the June election. “I have heard from countless residents who are in despair over the increase in taxes and rising hydro prices,” Piccini said, sticking to script. “People simply cannot afford to pay their bills. Wynne’s tax hikes and reckless spending spree on the backs of the hard-working people of (your riding here) Northumberland – Peterborough South is simply unacceptable.” You have been hearing it from Smith and will hear it endlessly from Groundhog Day-resurrected Tory darling Daryl Kramp, who plans to run, this time, for provincial politics out of HastingsLennox & Addington. We’re seeing the politics of smear broadly played in places like Brighton and Belleville councils, where the knives have long been out for mayors there. Background operatives and frontline muck-chuckers are hoping just one whiff of scandal will stick to their opponents. Why? Because it works. As Ron Burgundy said, “Stay classy, San Diego.”

CLASSIFIEDS 1-888-657-6193 EDITORIAL Belleville News, Steve Petrick steve.petrick@metroland.com PRODUCTION 613-966-2034

Read us online at www.InsideBelleville.com


LETTER TO THE EDITOR

Thank you from Belleville Lions Club My name is Larry Brown and I am the President of the Belleville Lions Club and the host for the Concerts On The Bay. This year we hosted 22 free concerts at the Lions Pavilion – Zwicks Park taking place on Wednesdays and Sundays. I would like the thank all those who attended our concerts for their friendship and free will donations that many of them make at every concert. As a non-profit organization, the Lions Club relies totally on donations that enable us to help those in our community who, for whatever reason, need help in everyday life. We have a very large following and the generosity of these people never ceases to amaze me.

We receive donations from those that have and we also receive donations from those who have not. We have even received donations from some that we help. I cannot stress how rewarding it is to see this kind of generosity and outpouring in our community, and the support we get from our entertainers goes right along with this. You would never be able to see some of these entertainers in another venue for free, and believe me, they do not get paid a lot. I thank everyone who attends and helps to make the concert’s a success. Larry Brown

Quinte Region Presented by:

QUINTECAREERFAIR.CA Meet with local employers who are looking to hire! AND Speak with employment service providers and training institutions for tips and resources. ASL-English Interpreters will be available from 11:00 a.m. - 3:00 p.m. Don’t forget to bring several copies of your resume! The Quinte Region Career & Training Fair is sponsored in part by:

8 Belleville News - Thursday, September 28, 2017

Career & Training

Fair

THURSDAY October, 4th 2017 April 27, 2017 10:00 a.m. - 6:00 p.m.

Quinte Sports Sports && Wellness Wellness Centre Centre Quinte 265 Cannifton Cannifton Road, Road, Belleville Belleville 265

Flavours of Fall, Porchfest, Culture Days offer a full weekend of family fun BY STEPHEN PETRICK

Belleville – Saturday, Sept. 30 will be one busy day in downtown Belleville, as the city will host the Flavours of the Fall festival and Porchfest. The events also coincide with Culture Days weekend, an Ontario-wide program that takes place over the Sept. 29 to Oct. 1 weekend and promotes the arts. If past years are any indication, about 2,500 people will make their way downtown on the Saturday for Flavours of Fall, an action-packed free family festival. This year’s event is back at the former Quinte Hotel site at Bridge and Pinnacle Jordon Hilton works on a pumpkin during a streets. Although the location is now owned carving activity at a past Flavours of Fall Festiand being primed for development by B.C.- val in Belleville. Stephen Petrick/Metroland based company FairTradeWorks, it’s vacant now and the company has made the land Flavours of the Fall, a festival that debuted at available for the festival, said Susan Walsh, the Belleville Chamber of Commerce special Zwick’s Island in 2008 when it was known as events co-ordinator who’s planning the festival. Country Harvest. Seven years ago, the festival Activities will take place from 10 a.m. to 3 shifted to the downtown core, to help attract p.m. on the site and on Campbell Street, near more tourism there. Although the locations have changed, the the Belleville Public Library. Pumpkin carving activities, as part of the festival, will also take emphasis has remained the same; it’s an opportunity for families to enjoy the fall weather in place at the Belleville Farmers’ Market. The activities will include horse drawn trolley downtown Belleville. “It’s extremely rewarding when you see the rides, pony rides, corn-husk doll making, clay sculpturing and more. Indigenous drumming smiles on the kids’ faces,” Walsh said. For more details on the festival visit bellevilactivities will also take place at 11 a.m. and 1 lechamber.ca/flavours-of-fall.php . For more on p.m. A new feature this year will be a free shuttle Porchfest visit www.porchfest.ca As for Sept. 20, three Belleville activities were bus that will take people from The Core building (at Pinnacle and Campbell streets) up through registered on the Culture Days official website, the East Hill, where they’ll have easy access to on.culturedays.ca . A book talk on The Halifax Explosion & Porchfest concerts. Porchfest is an annual event put on by the Boston Christmas Tree is scheduled for SaturRotary Club of Belleville. It involves free music day, Sept. 30, 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. at the Quinte Arts performances set, literally, from porches of East Council building at 36 Bridge St. A course on Sight Singing is also being ofHill homes. The performances take place from 1 fered on Saturday at 4 p.m. at St. Thomas p.m. to 4 p.m. Porchfest and Flavours of the Fall have taken Church, 201 Church St. This is an opportunity place side-by-side in the past, but the free shut- for adults (and youth 15 and up) to learn the batle bus feature will allow them to better compli- sics of sight-singing, including clefs, note values, keys and the “moveable do”. The workshop will ment each other, Walsh said. Several downtown restaurants will also have be conducted by music directors Francine and booths at the festival to sell food and, as usual, Matthieu Latreille. An opportunity to explore St. Thomas’ Chofree apple cider will be provided. Walsh takes great pride in the fact that Fla- ral Academy is also offered on both Friday at 6 vours of the Fall has remained a free festival p.m. and Sunday at 12:15 p.m. Children between 8 and 15 years old are inand one that’s easily accessible for downtown families. That can only happen with the support vited to join a rehearsal of St. Thomas’ Choral of generous sponsors who have helped the festi- Academy, a choir modelled after the programs of English cathedrals. val grow over the years, she said. This year marks the 10th anniversary of


Fire safety initiative for kids returns to Belleville Belleville – The Belleville Fire & Emergency Services is once again leading an educational fire safety initiative for local elementary students. Dedicated to helping young people get the information they need to prevent fire-related injuries and fatalities, this is the eighth time the organization has brought an award-winning safety resource to area kids. The program involves the book Smart choices for LIFE, a comprehensive 112-page handbook geared to young people, which is full of useful information about avoiding fire, planning an escape route from your home, and what to do if fire breaks out. The books will be distributed to students through their schools. The materials are produced by Community Safety Net, and are widely used to educate young people about fire prevention. In addition to educating youth, Fire Safety: Smart choices for LIFE is a comprehensive family resource. It offers health and first-aid information, along with great safety tips for parents, teachers, and babysitters. A free downloadable app for smartphones and tablets is included, which is customized to provide local safety contact numbers — along with safety tips, videos, and other important safety information. This valuable safety resource was made available to the kids through the generous support of local businesses and organizations. House fires are the third-leading cause of death among children — mostly as a result of smoke inhalation. Sadly, kids start 30 per cent of these fires. Such sobering statistics illustrate the need for fire safety education among young people, the Belleville Fire Department says. NEWSPAPER RETRACTION FOR THE BEST BUY SEPTEMBER 22nd CORPORATE FLYER In the September 22nd corporate flyer, page 2, the LG 55” 4K webOS 3.5 Smart HDR LED TV (Web Code: 10620673) was advertised with an incorrect screen definition. Please be advised that this TV is equipped with a 4K UHD screen definition. We sincerely apologize for any inconvenience this may have caused our valued customers. NEWSPAPER RETRACTION FOR THE BEST BUY SEPTEMBER 22nd CORPORATE FLYER In the September 22nd corporate flyer, page 13, the Sony True Wireless Noise Cancelling In-Ear Headphones (Web Codes: 11429688/11429685) were advertised as available for purchase. Please be advised that the launch date of these products has been delayed by the vendor and that these products won’t be available for purchase until further notice. We sincerely apologize for any inconvenience this may have caused our valued customers.

Belleville News - Thursday, September 28, 2017 9


Senators are on the ice, some carrying weight of disappointment BY STEPHEN PETRICK

Belleville – Quinte Sports & Wellness Centre this week is home to several hockey players coming off the biggest disappointments of their lives. But, given that, there sure is an upbeat atmosphere. Players with the new Belleville Senators American Hockey League franchise are now in town, some of them fresh from getting cut from the Ottawa Senators National Hockey League roster. Their job this week is to understand where they fit in with the parent club’s plan and make efforts to improve. But coming into a hockey-loving city where there’s a noticeable buzz about a new team softens the blow, say players. “Everyone wants to play in the National Hockey League; no one has aspirations to play in the American Hockey League their whole life,” admitted new Belleville Senator player Ben Sexton, following Monday’s practice. “At the end of the day it’s a process. Everyone’s on a different journey. And anytime you get a chance play in a place like Belleville, a Canadian market that clearly loves their hockey (it’s great). There’s a buzz here and I know people are excited after losing the Bulls. It’s going to be a great place to play.”

By Monday, the second day of training camp, players had only been in town for about 48 hours. But even in that time, they could sense the buzz about the team. “(On Sunday), when we were practicing we noticed the fans that were watching,” said Cody Donaghey, a player preparing for his first year as a pro. “Even just talking to the rink attendants, it seems everyone’s excited to have us here. And we’re excited to be here. We’re definitely looking forward to this season and playing in front of this crowd.” The Sens are preparing for two exhibition games this weekend, both in Laval against Le Rocket, the new farm team of the Montreal Canadiens. They’ll return to the Montreal suburb the following weekend to start the regular season with two more games against Laval, Oct. 6 and 7. The Belleville Senators will play nine straight road games before opening their home schedule against the Syracuse Crunch on Wednesday, Nov. 1, a date by which renovations to the Yardmen Arena will have to be complete. An AHL training camp is an odd experience for a coach. By Monday, the team had fewer forwards than needed to ice a team and a surplus in defencemen. But that’s how it works, explained coach

STORE HOURS: Monday thru Sunday 8:00am - 10:00pm

Belleville Senators coach Kurt Kleinendorst keeps the mood light during a practice Monday. Stephen Petrick/Metroland

ing the city. “It’s not easy,” he stressed. “They all showed up to Ottawa for training camp; their goal was to make the Ottawa Senators and then when that doesn’t happen and you get the news you’re going to Belleville (it’s difficult). And it has nothing to do with Belleville – it has everything to do with their expectations. But, what you find is, over time, guys understand the big picture. They understand this is part of the process. “When they honour that, over time the guys that are deserving that have the potential, they find their way to Ottawa at some point. We have a lot guys here who are going to get a phone call at some point and they’re going to go to Ottawa to play in the NHL.” Kleinendorst, like the players, senses the excitement in the city. And he said by the time the season starts, the players will be focussed on winning games for the new franchise. “Once next week rolls around and you start the process and prepare for the opening game, your focus is here, it’s in Belleville,” he said “You’re focusing on helping the Belleville Senators win a hockey game.”

Kurt Kleinendorst, whose job will be to Ottawa’s ECHL affiliate team in to take whatever players the big club Brampton. sends down before its training camp Kleinendorst said he’s been imfinishes and determine how best to pressed with how his players have shape the Belleville club. handled being sent down to Belleville There’s no limit on how many play- – and that bodes well for when they ers can be on an AHL club’s roster, but put the new black and red B logo jerKleinendorst expects to eventually go sey on and begin officially representwith 13 forwards, seven defencemen and two goalies. Some player may be reassigned Belleville – The Loyalist Lancers women’s that saw Loyalist put up the most points by any Rugby Sevens team won two out of three side in a match against the powerhouse Humgames during a day of competition Saturday at ber Hawks this season. PRICES EFFECTIVE St. Lawrence College Kingston. In the Sheridan game, three different players Thursday September 28 As a result, the Lancers now sport a 3-3 scored tries. Kierstyn Bennett and Brooke Babto Wednesday October 4 record and are now ranked third in standings cock each scored one while Bailey Meraw confor the provincial colleges athletics association tributed two. Against Algonquin, Bennett had behind league-leading Humber in first (6-0) another big game, scoring one try and kicking and Fleming (4-2). There are nine teams in the two converts. Kiara Kirby had two tries and OCAA women’s sevens league. Annabelle Sine had the other. Saturday, the Lancers beat Sheridan 20-7 Against Humber, the Lancers found themand then Algonquin 24-14. They then lost 28- selves down 21-0 at the half, but actually out10 to Humber College in a gritty performance scored the top team 10-7 in the second half. The Lady Lancers return to action on Saturday Sept. 30 when they’ll play four more games at Fletchers Field in Markham. The Lancers men’s rugby team, which plays the 15-man game, lost its Ontario Colleges Athletic Association home opener on Saturday 47-0 to Harold Fledderus Fleming. They’re back in action on C.A.I.B. Saturday, Sept. 30 when they host Algonquin at 3:30 p.m. The highlight of the past week for Part of SurNet Insurance Group Inc. the Loyalist Lancers women’s soccer team was a 2-2 tie versus host Fleming HOME • AUTO • BUSINESS on Wednesday, Sept. 20. The Lancers dropped their Friday, FARM • LIFE • TRAVEL Jessica Hoornweg Sept. 22 game 8-0 to Algonquin. On R.I.B. Sunday, they lost 6-1 to Seneca.

Lancers Rugby Sevens team continues to impress

SurNet

NESTLE PARLOUR 1.5L NOVELTIES 6’S OR 12’S SELECTED VARIETIES

BUTTERBALL OR RAISED WITHOUT ANTIBIOTICS NATURALLY FROZEN TURKEYS 3.24/KG

THIS WEEK ONLY

THIS WEEK ONLY

$ 44 /ea

2 $ 47 1

/lb

Bayview Mall - 470 Dundas St. E. Belleville 10 Belleville News - Thursday, September 28, 2017

Fledderus Financial GROUP • DISABILITY

Rebecca Veenstra R.I.B.

INVESTMENTS

NEWSPAPER RETRACTION FOR THE BEST BUY SEPTEMBER 22nd CORPORATE FLYER

‘‘If you don’t know Insurance, know your Insurance Broker’’

In the September 22nd flyer, page 5, the Bose Virtually Invisible® 300 Wireless Surround Speakers (Web Code: 10486189) were advertised with an incorrect price. Please be advised that this speaker pair is sold at $399.99.

(613) 968-2121 • ffib.ca

We sincerely apologize for any inconvenience this may have caused our valued customers.


Shamrocks shake drought for SBHL crown BY STEPHEN PETRICK

Melrose – Victory is sweeter when the wait is longer; just ask members of the Melrose Shamrocks. The team in green won the South Hastings Baseball League championship on Thursday, Sept. 21 by beating rival Uens 7-2 in a decisive Game 7 of the final series. It’s the first time a Melrose team has won the championship of the 84-year-old league in a generation. A league official said 1978 might have been the last time a Melrose team won the title (it’s hard to say for sure, because the league history isn’t well documented). “We waited a long time to get it, we won’t forget this,” said Melrose coach Chris Murphy. Murphy, one of numerous Murphys on the small community team, said he’s been involved with the same organization for 19 years now, although the team wasn’t always called the Shamrocks. Many of the players, now young men, have played together since they were kids. “I remember playing with these guys as the Melrose Tigers in peewee,” he said. Yet after fielding competitive – but not quite championships – teams for years in the SHBL, the Shamrocks finally put it all together in the late summer of 2017. The team placed fifth out of eight teams in the regular season, but swept Shannonville 3-0 in a first-round series and then beat the regular-season champions, the Read Young Guns, in a tense series that went a full seven games. That set up a matchup with the pinstriped perennial contenders, Uens. The Shamrocks found themselves down two games to one after a 23-8 beating in Game 3, but bounced back with wins of 15-6 and 6-4 in Games 4 and 5. Uens beat Melrose 8-2 in Game 5 on Tuesday, Sept. 19 to force Thursday’s Game 7. And with the season on the line, pitcher Nick Walsh delivered a masterful performance for Melrose. Pitching on just three days rest – he also pitched in Sunday’s win – the right-hander threw a complete game. He gave up a run in the first, but held Uens’ powerful lineup scoreless for the next four innings. In the sixth he worked out of a two-on-nobody-

Nick Walsh delivers a pitch to Uens batter during Game 7 of the South Hastings Baseball League final. Stephen Petrick/Metroland out jam and held Uens to just one run, averting what could have been a late rally to make things interesting. Walsh contributed offensively, too, by scoring two runs. He was named the most valuable player of the playoffs after the game. Walsh was one of many pitchers who helped the team to the title, Murphy said. While the scoring lines weren’t always pretty, “the pitchers definitely stepped up and threw big games when we needed them.” Melrose players and family members rushed to the mound to celebrate after the final out. The game was played in front of several hundred fans at the Tyendina-

ga Township Recreational Complex, which is at an intersection of the municipality that locals simply refer to as Melrose. That park now hosts all South Hastings Baseball League games. It’s a great baseball community, Murphy said. And because the community is so close-knit, it has a great baseball team. “We’re a big family team,” he said. “We all hang out together all year.”

Football under the lights Belleville – It works in Texas and apparently in Belleville, too. High school football under the lights got off to a great start on Thursday, Sept. 21 as hundreds of fans packed Mary-Anne Sills Park’s turf field for the start of the season. Three junior games took place, from late afternoon into the late evening. This year the CSS’s Ford Facette-Grondin tries to break a tackle majority of Bay of from a Quinte defender. Stephen Petrick/Metroland Quinte Athletics at 4 p.m.; Centre Hastings vs. Moira high school football games will take place on the turf field, at 6 p.m. and Bayside vs. Quinte at 8 with multiple games taking place p.m. Senior action will resume Friday, Sept. 29 with two games: Quinte most Thursday and Friday nights. In one of the junior games on vs. Trenton at 4 p.m; Moira vs. St. Thursday, the Centennial Chargers Theresa at 6 p.m. The regular season will continue in ran their way to a 28-6 victory over October, leading up to the semifinals the Quinte Saints. High school junior football will on Thursday, Oct. 26 for seniors and resume on Thursday, Sept. 28, with Friday, Oct. 27 for juniors. The Bay three games: St. Theresa vs. Trenton of Quinte championship games are scheduled for Saturday, Nov. 4.

EARN POINTS & SAVE

BELLEVILLE

GREENS PHARMASAVE

BELLEVILLE

Geen’s Pharmasave current flyers are now available on

Cl k on “Fl Click “Flyers”” and d scroll down to find Geen’s current flyer.

CHECK IT OUT AT: www.save.ca facebook.com@save Belleville News - Thursday, September 28, 2017 11


CELEBRATING 15 YEARS

CUSTOMER APPRECIATION

WEEKEND Friday, September 29 - Sunday, October 1

WEEKEND SPECIALS!

2

$

50

Egger Sandwiches AVAILABLE ALL DAY

3

$

50

Teen Burgers ALL DAY

Buy any combo and receive a ballot to win 1 of 15 $100 gift cards to A&W! You can also have the chance to win tickets to upcoming Belleville Senators games!

BELLEVILLE LOCATION ONLY! - 366 NORTH FRONT STREETM BELLEVILLE 12 Belleville News - Thursday, September 28, 2017


GET PIZZA AND MOREE ANY CHICKEN SIDE & ANY 2L COKE PRODUCTS

9

$

99

CODE 8000

ANY BREAD SIDE & ANY 2L COKE PRODUCTS

$

6

99

1 SMALL 1 TOPPING PIZZA

499

$

CODE 2006

UPSIZE TO MEDIUM ADD

300

$

CODE 3008

$

21

$

1999

CODE 2415

UPSIZE TO MEDIUM ADD

CODE 8562

6

$

00

CODE 3415

$

99

CODE 3048

UPSIZE TO LARGE ADD

$

*CARRY-OUT ONLY

3 SMALL 3 TOPPINGS ON EACH

2 LARGE 2 TOPPING, BREAD SIDE, CHICKEN SIDE & 2L COKE PRODUCTS

1 MEDIUM 3 TOPPING, BREAD SIDE & 10 WINGS

2

00

22

UPSIZE TO X-LARGE ADD

$

1 LARGE 3 TOPPINGS & BREAD SIDE

1699

$

99

CODE 3275

600

500

CODE 5388

UPSIZE TO LARGE

$

CODE 4388

CODE 4166

2 MEDIUM 3 TOPPINGS AND BREAD SIDE

$

3499

CODE 4075

UPSIZE TO X-LARGE ADD

300

$

CODE 4276

CODE 5175

ORDER NOW

Sun. - Wed. 11am - Midnight Thurs. 11am - 1am Fri. & Sat. 11am - 2am

613-962-4949

143 College St. W. BELLEVILLE

613-394-5888

257 Dundas St. E. TRENTON

DOMINO’S DELIVERY

DEBIT

Debit surcharge may apply.

Delivery available within City Limits. Some restrictions may apply. Special Prices For Party Orders

Drivers Carry Less Than $2000 At All Times Belleville News - Thursday, September 28, 2017 Wrap 3


GREAT DOMINO’S DEALS INSIDE FAMILY MEAL DEAL

LUNCH SPECIAL

2 PIZZAS, 3 TOPPINGS EACH

1 SMALL 1 TOPPING PIZZA

with any Chicken Side, any Bread Side & a two 591ML Coca-Cola® Products

MEDIUM

29

$

99* $ ORDER CODE 3371

LARGE

35

99* ORDER CODE 4373

DOUBLE DOWN

GET A

FREE 4 POP

15

$

99* $ ORDER CODE 3216

2 FEAST PIZZAS

with any Chicken Side, any Bread Side, & a 2L Coca-Cola Products.

LARGE

20

ORDER CODE 2044

FEED THE WHOLE GANG

2 PIZZAS, 2 TOPPINGS ON EACH MEDIUM

$ 99*

99* ORDER CODE 4210

$

MEDIUM

35

99*

$

ORDER CODE 3374

LARGE

40

99*

ORDER CODE 4374

DINNER & DESSERT

MANAGERS SPECIAL

2 PIZZAS, 2 TOPPINGS EACH

2 PIZZAS, 1 TOPPING ON EACH

with 2 Chocolate Crunch Lava Cakes & a 2L Coca-Cola® Product

MEDIUM

22

$

99* $ ORDER CODE 3391

LARGE

26

99* ORDER CODE 4390

with any Bread Side.

$

MEDIUM

19

99* $ ORDER CODE 3265

LARGE

24

99* ORDER CODE 4268

Order Now Sun. - Wed. 11am - Midnight Thurs. 11am - 1am Fri. & Sat. 11am - 2am 4 Wrap Belleville News - Thursday, September 28, 2017

613-962-4949

143 College St. W. BELLEVILLE

613-394-5888

257 Dundas St. E. TRENTON

DOMINO’S DELIVERY

DEBIT

Debit surcharge may apply.

Delivery available within City Limits. Some restrictions may apply. Special Prices For Party Orders

Drivers Carry Less Than $2000 At All Times


00

MOST VEHICLES

Trenton: 613-392-1354 Cobourg: 905-372-6664

Ê

TO YOUR COMMUNITY INSIDEBELLEVILLE.COM

139

$

BRAKE PADS INSTALLED

Ê

Connected 2ND SECTION

BRAKES

Simulated air disaster gives SAR teams real training BY MAKALA CHAPMAN

Mountain View - Canada’s top search and rescue (SAR) personnel are putting their skills to the test at this year’s National Search and Rescue Exercise (SAREX). Despite record-breaking heat, more than a dozen technicians and responders from across the country could be seen in full inform as they swarmed the scene of a simulated major air disaster (MAJAID) at Canadian Forces Detachment (CFD) Mountain View in Prince Edward County on Sept. 25. Making for a ghastly sight, actors covered in fake lacerations and other wounds were also seen strewn amongst the simulated wreckage to help add to the authenticity of the exercise. Donning their signature orange jumpsuits, the military first responders executed everything from a parachute jump out of an aircraft, medical assistance and rescue attempts during the training display. While some could say it looked like a scene straight out of a movie, the mock disaster site was just a mere glimpse into some of the reallife situations Canada’s search and rescue technicians respond to. Overseeing his fellow comrades in action was 424 Transport and Rescue Squadron’s Sergeant Jean-Paul Benoit. Benoit, who is also the deputy SAR technician leader, said the main goal of the MAJAID exercise was to see if there were any areas of the rescue plan that could be improved. “We’ve got some great training to prepare us for (disastrous) situations,” he said, adding that each rescue mission often differs from the previous. “It’s good to get experience with difficult terrains, difficult extractions and different kinds of injuries and illnesses.” Benoit went on to explain that in the case of an air disaster, an aircraft would be sent to survey the scene before a small group of SAR technicians would be sent in to investigate further. After their analysis, a larger group would be brought in to help with things like triage, medi-

Search and rescue technicians carry a victim from the wreckage of a crashed aircraft during this year’s simulated major air disaster at Canadian Forces Detachment Mountain View Monday. Makala Chapman/Metroland.

cal assessment and rescue efforts. During that process, other search and rescue partners are tasked with delivering supplies, setting up medical workstations, and preparing for evacuation. It was also noted that Canadian Forces Base (CFB) Trenton’s SAR technicians are responsible for covering from the British Columbia and

Alberta border, all the way to the Arctic and into part of the province of Quebec. “It’s a pretty big area to cover,” he said, noting that the teams are often expected to work in different climates and environments. “In six months we could be working in minus 40, but we have a job to do and we will do it.” Sporting a head laceration, thanks to the

power of costume makeup, was Cpl. Greg Denyes. When the call came for volunteers to help participate in the MAJAID exercise, he said he had been quick to volunteer and was happy to help the search and rescue technicians with training. Continued on Page 2...

PREVENTATIVE DENTISTRY, ORTHODONTICS, TMJ, SLEEP APNEA At Riverside Dental Centre Trenton we are committed to helping you maintain your healthy teeth and gums. We are very excited to announce Dr. Julie Crowell to our practice! Call today to book your appointment.

Visit us in the Riverview Plaza, 255 Glen Miller Rd., Unit #3, TRENTON. Just north of Highway 401.

NEW PATIENTS WELCOME! Dr. Julie Crowell, DDS

613-392-2732 riversidedentalcentre.com

Dr. Bradley Oldfin, DDS Section B - Thursday, September 28, 2017 B1


SAR skills put to the test Continued from Page 1... “It’s important to be able to see an incident, how to triage, and make decisions on the fly,” he said. “It’s also much easier for the team if they can actually see examples instead of working with dummies that can’t respond.” As for the authenticity of the injuries, Denyes said he had been impressed and even joked that his new makeover was just in time for Halloween. Also in attendance and having helped set up the scene of the mock crash site was MCpl. John Fleming of 424 Transport and Rescue squadron. He noted that having real aircraft for the SAR members to work with was an extra bonus since

in previous years they had just used an old bus. “It took a bit of work but I wanted to make it as real as possible,” he said, adding that the interior of the aircrafts had wires and panels coming out from the ceilings and walls, “but it’s nice to see everything come together.” As for the aircraft after SAREX, he said it would remain at Mountain View and would be used for future training exercises. The major air disaster was just one of many exercises taking place during SAREX from Sept. 23-29, with other events taking place in Hamilton, Ont. The main objective of SAREX is to highlight the capabilities of the SAR community and the Royal Canadian Air Force (RCAF) through controlled exercises.

Far left: Corporal Greg Denyes, a mock aircraft crash survivor, dons a fake head laceration as search and rescue personnel help escort him to safety. Left: The inside of an actual aircraft that was refurbished and used as the crash site for this year’s major air disaster training exercise. Top: A search and rescue technician parachutes down to the scene of the major air disaster training exercise. Photos by Makala Chapman/Metroland

Pharmasave Team welcomes you to visit our Store For • Home Health Care • Diabetes Care • Blister Packaging • Medication Reviews • Senior’s Discount* • Free Delivery* *See store for details.

Pharmasave Vitamin C

Ensure Plus Calories

100 Tablets, 1000mg

Chocolate, Vanilla, Strawberry

6

$

99

7

$

99

235ml

Ask about senior’s fee discounts and much more at Pharmasave

Travel Vaccination, Diabetes Care, Senior’s Discounts*, and FREE Delivery* VISIT STORE FOR MORE SERVICES | *See store for details. Trenton Pharmasave 290 Dundas St W, Trenton, ON K8V 3R9

Ph: 613-955-0707 (Next To Great Lakes Walk-In Clinic) B2 Section B - Thursday, September 28, 2017

Bayview Mall Pharmasave 470 Dundas St E, Belleville, ON K8N 1G1

Stirling Pharmasave 160 North St, Stirling, ON K0K 3E0

Ph: 613-779-8800

Ph: 613-395-2353


David Piccini to run for the Conservatives in Northumberland - Peterborough South in 2018 Voters will have a choice between incumbent Lou Rinaldi or challenger David Piccini when they cast their ballots in the new riding of Northumberland - Peterborough South in June 2018. Piccini was chosen as the Progressive Conservative candidate on Friday (Sept. 22). “I congratulate David on his nomination as the Ontario PC candidate for Northumberland-Peterborough South," says party leader Patrick Brown. “David understands the importance of public service, and has gained unique experience as an analyst at Agriculture Canada as well as working for the Minister of International Trade. "He currently works as an advisor to the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada, where he has developed a deep understanding of the challenges the Liberal government’s reckless cuts to health care have had on Ontario families and seniors. “Having grown up in Port Hope, David has strong roots in the community and I know he will be a strong representative for the residents of Northumberland-Peterborough South." The provincial riding was realigned to match the new boundaries set for the 2015 federal election, including Peterborough County townships of Otonabee-South Monaghan and Asphodel-Norwood with Northumberland. “After 14 years in power, life is harder with the Liberals," Brown adds. "Ontario families

UINTE B AY O F Q

KINGSTO

N

CONGRATULATIONS KATHY REID

David Piccini is shown here after he won the nomination as the Ontario PC candidate for Northumberland-Peterborough South on Saturday. Sept. 23, 2017. -

This month we celebrate your passion to grow, achieve, and to inspire. We knew we made the right choice 5 years ago when we invited you to join our team, and today we thank you for choosing us. You are the essential ingredient that makes our family flourish and thrive. We are enriched by you and we are looking forward to continued success together.

Todd McEwen/Northumberland News

are working harder, paying more, and getting less. It’s time for a change. Only the Ontario PC Party will make sure hardworking Ontario families pay less and get ahead. “In Northumberland-Peterborough South

and across the province, the Ontario PC Party will continue to work hard for a better future. I look forward to working with David as we share our message of change for the better.

ION 2017 EDIT

2018 Edition Coming January 2018 Local love stories

RESERVE YOUR COPY TODAY Send an email by October 18, 2017 to WeddingTrendsSeaway@metroland.com

GORGEOUS WEDDINGS INSIDE

ENDS.CA

WEDDINGTR

PLUS PLANNING PAGES

Section B - Thursday, September 28, 2017 B3


LETTER TO THE EDITOR

War has never ended in Korea Re: Editorial, Sept. 21: ‘Catastrophe in the making…’ Mr. Campbell is reasonably fair with the first half of the editorial but then drops the ball laying the blame on Kim Jong Un for the belligerence. Remember that the USA bombed North Korea to the point that they ran out of targets, Napalm much of it made in Canada burnt villages “to save them”. My brother was REME (mechanic) for a tank regiment there. I have several books on that war “Now Thrive the Armorers“ being well worth reading. The war never ended just a ceasefire, yet each year the South and the USA mount war games on the border with “decapitation exercises” simulating taking out the leader. The significance of nukes in all this, is the record of US direct and indirect regime

change. From the decades in South America read General Smedly Butlers book on being a hit man for the banks and United Fruit Company, to Saddam, Qaddafi Assad the assisted overthrow of the democratically elected government of Ukraine and others with the sole road block appearing to be nuclear weapons. To place the blame for the fist waving name calling dangerous game playing out now on China not reigning in Kim is a bit thick. The empire expects its victims to roll over or be crushed, nukes change the game, the chance to get American missiles on the border of China is getting bogged down. Paul Whittaker Gilmour.

Childhood Cancer Clinical Trials at CCTG Established in 1980, the world-renowned Canadian Cancer Trials Group (CCTG) is the only group in Canada that carries out all types of clinical trials for all types of cancer. Thanks to CCS donors, CCS is able to provide core funding to CCTG to make running about 100 trials at any given time possible. Along with their comprehensive portfolio of adult clinical trials, CCTG is creating more opportunities for Canadian children, adolescents and young adults to access emerging treatments in clinical studies in Canada. They are working with Canada’s hospitals to allow children to receive early access to experimental therapeutics, and have recently launched a new initiative focused on adolescents and young adults (AYAs), to bridge the challenging gap between care in the pediatric and adult settings. CCTG is collaborating on two clinical trials in children and AYAs that are currently recruiting patients. In one trial, children and AYAs newly diagnosed

with a form of sarcoma (a cancer of the soft connective and supportive tissues in the body) will be treated with a drug called pazopanib in combination with radiation or chemotherapy and radiation together before surgery. Pazopanib is approved for use in adults, but not yet for younger patients. This study will determine whether the combination treatment is beneficial for children and AYAs, which could eventually change clinical practice. Inthesecondtrial,childrenwithneuroblastoma or rhabdomyosarcoma tumours that do not respond to available treatments or have come back after treatment will be treated with a new combination treatment including pazopanib and a chemotherapeutic called topotecan. This early-phase clinical trial, led by Sick Kids Hospital, will determine the best dose to use in further trials, how the drug is processed in the body, and how it interacts with other drugs.

You can learn more about CCTG and childhood cancer by visiting cancer.ca or calling

1-888-939-3333 B4 Section B - Thursday, September 28, 2017

Belleville author has a fondness for fish BY STEPHEN PETRICK

Belleville – There’s something fishy about Hilary MacLeod’s career. Literally speaking, that is. The Belleville-based author is about to release her sixth book in her Shores murder mystery series. The new title is Cod Only Knows. The theme is in keeping with her five previous books, set in a small fishing village in Prince Edward Island, inspired by Sea View, PEI, MacLeod’s summer home since 1990. “The Shores series is as much about people and place as about plot. Each story stands alone, but the same characters inhabit book after book,” says MacLeod. The series features Gus Mack, the octogenarian quilter, who sees everything that goes on in the village from her big picture window. There’s also Hy McAllister, the “come-from-away” would-be sleuth who’s clumsy with corpses. “She trips on them, throws up on them and stumbles across them constantly,” MacLeod says. And Jane Jamieson is the by-the-book cop, who’s transforming into a maverick under the influence of the sea air, rural beauty and eccentricity of The Shores. In Cod Only Knows, 90-year-old Abel Mack has gone fishin’ – and gone missing. He’s after a giant cod, the one that got away 30 years before, a 300-pound fish that trails murder and mayhem in its wake. Mountie Jane Jamieson suspects Abel may be dead – by foul play or exposure. His wife Gus insists he’s alive and sure to return. But readers may ask themselves, does Abel even exist outside Gus’s memory or imagination? Cod Only Knows will be launched Wednesday, Oct. 4 at 5 p.m. at the Parrott Centre at Loyalist College. Everyone’s welcome to come celebrate, MacLeod said. Loyalist is a fitting place for MacLeod to launch the book, because she was an instructor at in the college’s broadcast journalism course for several years. She taught reporting and writing/media performance from 1990 to 2012. Prior to teaching, she had a lengthy career in radio in Montreal and in Atlantic Canada. While MacLeod still lives in Belleville during the winter, she spends her summers in PEI working on books.

Belleville author Hillary MacLeod. Submitted photo

Her first book in the series, Revenge of the Lobster Lover, won a CBC Bookie award, following its release in 2010. She’s since published Mind Over Mussels 2011, All is Clam 2012, Something Fishy 2013 and Bodies and Sole 2014. All of these books have been published by Acorn Press, a Charlottetown, PEI, publishing house that has an interest in promoting the island. MacLeod, now 68, said she aspired to be author from the time she was five years old. As her teaching career wound down, she finally built up the nerve to attempt a book. “I thought; okay I’m not going to regret never trying to write a novel,” she said. MacLeod was a fan of the Hamish Macbeth mystery series of novels, which are set in her birth country of Scotland. Upon reading that series, she thought she could attempt a similar series based out of PEI, given her love and vast knowledge of the island. “I love the island, I love the character there and the language that they speak,” she said. “The characters I’ve created are not anyone in particular – but they’re quite representative of the Maritimes.” MacLeod’s books are meant to be taken as satire, but they also remind readers of the tough nature of life on the water. “Even though the books are funny … there is a dark side of life – the tragic things people do with it,” she said. MacLeod’s books can be found in most major bookstores. She’s also recorded them for 91X, the Loyalist College-based radio station. Segments of the stories air on Sunday nights, at 7 p.m. MacLeod said that students often ask her the secret to writing a book. She said writers have to give themselves a schedule and a goal to aspire to – whether it’s to set aside time for writing every day, or every weekend. Then they have to pump out the material and not be hard on themselves; the original draft can always be edited, she said. “It’s 99 per cent sweat, one per cent inspiration.”


TRAVEL

Exploring Eastern Europe via a luxury river cruise BY JOHN M. SMITH

Several years ago, I biked along the Danube River all the way from Passau, Germany to Vienna, Austria, and I felt that it was a fantastic experience. I’d actually arrived in Vienna ahead of schedule, so I’d continued pedaling into a section of Hungary before returning to Vienna. Therefore, I was delighted when I received an opportunity, this summer, to complete my journey along the Danube, going this time from Budapest, Hungary to Bucharest, Romania – and instead of cycling the entire way, I’d be luxuriating on the AmaCerto, an AmaWaterways cruise ship! Last year, my wife and I experienced our very first luxury river cruise, on France’s Seine River, travelling between Paris and Normandy with AmaWaterways, and the experience was so wonderful that we were ecstatic when this new opportunity came along. Our first cruise had provided me with the opportunity to research a “Remembrance Day� travel piece about the beaches at Normandy, which was published here last November, and this new excursion would fulfill my “bucket list� item of visiting Romania’s Transylvania, for I’ve wanted to write a Halloween piece about Bran Castle and Dracula for quite some time (and will this October). This latest river cruise took us into five countries in Eastern Europe (Hungary, Croatia, Serbia, Bulgaria, and Romania). The “Gems of Southeast Europe� turned out to be yet another fantastic adventure trek, with many enticing ports of call and a plethora of optional shore excursions. In fact, there were so many trips to choose from that my wife would sometimes go on one tour while I’d do another. For example, I hiked to the Belogradchik Fortress in Bulgaria while my wife learned how to make some Bulgarian Banitsa (a pastry prepared by layering whisked eggs, dough, and cheese). On another day, I biked along the Danube on a paved path while my wife took a tour of the beautiful city of Pecs, Hungary. One of the things that I particularly like about this cruise line is that they have bicycles on board, and several cycling tours as options, so I was able to do yet another section of the Danube Bike Path via two wheels. This time I cycled from Mohacs, Hungary to the tiny village of Kolked, where I was able to visit a wonderful stork museum. I learned that this area is home to both white and black storks, and they spend their ‘off season’ in Africa. I also found out that this area has white tailed eagles – and herds of Grey Cattle (a national symbol, dating back to medieval times). I think that the bicycles on board are an attempt by AmaWaterways to attract a younger, more active traveller, and this strategy may, indeed, be working, for there were some younger people on this cruise, including an Edmonton couple who were on their honeymoon. Yet another reason for selecting AmaWaterways for a cruise is that it’s the only river cruise line inducted into La Chaine des Rotisseurs, a prestigious culinary organization, so this meant that we would be having great food during the voyage. Indeed, we did! Not only were there delectable daily specials offered, but there were also wine pairings available at lunch and dinner – and these drinks were included at no additional cost (as Maui, Hawaii

Cruising through Eastern Europe’s Iron Gates. John M. Smith/Metroland

were beer and soft drinks). We also had the great honour of being invited to dine with the captain one evening. In addition, there was also an opportunity, available to all passengers, to sign up for the exclusive “Chef’s Table� option for an evening meal, served in a separate dining room, where we experienced a great variety of tastings, with explanations by the chef himself. Our particular cruise began in Budapest, Hungary, and our initial ‘treat’ was an “Illumination Tour� that first evening (this was so awesome that I plan to write a separate piece on this experience next week). We then cruised on the Danube through Hungary, docking at Mohacs, before continuing our voyage into Croatia. In Croatia, we learned a lot about the Croatian War of Independence (1991-1995) and visited its Ovcara Memorial (dedicated to those who lost their lives during this struggle). We then continued our journey into Serbia, where we visited both the cities of Nova Sad and Belgrade (Serbia’s capital). Next we traversed the most scenic section of the route, through the Iron Gates (a series of gorges that separate Serbia and Romania). We crossed into Bulgaria and docked, finally, at Giugiu, Romania (which is located just across the river from Rousse, Bulgaria). Our cruise ended at

Giurgiu, but we were then taken by bus to Bucharest for our extended land tour, and we spent two nights at the Athenee Palace Hilton. While here, we toured Bucharest and took a day trip to Transylvania – and I was then able to research my future piece on the Bran Castle and Dracula. It was an awesome cruise! Travelogue: If you’re interested in seeing my photos of this trip, I’m doing a travelogue on Fri. Oct. 20 at 7 pm at Rednersville-Albury Church, 2681 County Road 3 (Rednersville Road) in Prince Edward County. [Travel and accomodations provided by AmaWaterways: www.amawaterways.com]

= > ....................?@ A(/ St. Jacobs ........................................Oct 12, Nov 25 Muskokas Getaway .............................. Oct 15-17 Discover Quebec City........................... Oct 16-19

8 % # : " # ..................Oct 16-19 Formerly ' ; <'' # ............... Oct 26

.......................... Oct 27-30 @ : # ' ..........Oct 30-Nov 2 B " : % ................. /E ++ ........................... Nov 11-12, Dec 2-3

.......................... Nov 16-19 Caribbean Christmas ............ Dec 22-Jan 3 ‘18 = : # ? ....................... +/ New York to Caribbean ................ Feb 1-16 ‘18 .............................. Nov 20-25 Fly: Hawaii ....................................Feb 13-24 ‘18 New York to Caribbean ............... Mar 5-17 ‘18 One of a Kind Show .....Nov 25, 26, 29 & Dec 2 New York to Bahamas ...............Mar 10-18 ‘18 ! " # $ %........... Feb 5-Mar4 New York to Bermuda ........ Apr 28-May 6 ’18 " ............................ ' ( % )*+/ ............................. Sept 21-Oct 3 ‘18 Fly: Venice to Rome.................... October 2018 Quebec City to Boston.................Oct 5-12 ‘18 San Juan Caribbean ................ November 2018 New York to Caribbean .. Nov 24 to Dec 9 ‘18 81 Millennium Parkway, Unit D, Belleville ON K8N 4Z5

Help keep your community clean. Please recycle this newspaper.

To escape the cold visit www.travelalerts.ca/EndlessSummer

Last-Minute Packages | Early-Bird Escapes Start planning your endless summer escape with travel deals on hotels, vacation rentals, tours and more!

613-969-8884

TICO#50023382

All Inclusive Cruises!

EXPERIENCE THE ROAD TO EXCELLENCE Diefenbunker Canada’s Cold War Museum ..........................Wednesday, October 11 Cirque du Soleil “VOLTA�..............................................................Sunday, October 15 “Bat Out of Hell� the Musical .....................................................Thursday, October 26 Pumpkinferno - Upper Canada Village ...................................... Saturday, October 28 Royal Winter Fair......................................................................Saturday, November 11 Vaughan Mills Shopping with Samko & Miko Toy & IKEA....Saturday, November 18 Branson - Christmas Shows............................................................... November 18-25 Shopping Watertown................................................................Saturday, November 25 Upper Canada Village - Alight at Night.....................................Saturday, December 9 Arizona, Texas & The Grand Canyon.............................January 10-February 2, 2018 Pennsylvania Amish Country & Strasburg Railway...........................April 9-12, 2018 Music Cities Spectacular - Nashville, Memphis & Branson ......April 22-May 1, 2018 “Come From Away�.........................Wednesday, April 18, May 30 & August 15, 2018 Cape Cod Adventure ...........................................................................June 10-14, 2018 Call us for your group transportation needs. We offer the most modern and diversified fleet in the area and along the 401 corridor. Our goal is to offer SUPERIOR SERVICE at an OPTIMAL PRICE!

613-966-7000 or Toll Free 1-800-267-2183

www.franklintours.com TICO Reg1156996

Section B - Thursday, September 28, 2017 B5


EVENTS BELLEVILLE FISH FRY at St. Mark’s United Church, 237 Cannifton Rd. N. on Oct. 1 from 12 noon to 2:30 pm. New Zealand Cod with all the fixings including homemade cake for dessert. Adult $15.00, Children under 12 $7.00. Please reserve at 613-968-8268. Take out available while quantities last COMEDY NIGHT - CMHA is hosting comedy legend Mike MacDonald, live at the Greek Hall, 70 Harder Drive, on Oct. 5, 8 p.m. Doors open at 7. Tickets are $20 each, must be 19 or older. A night of comedy in support of the Canadian Mental Health Hastings and Prince Edward. Tickets available calling 613-969-8874. Silent auction and cash bar available. RUMMAGE AND Bake Sale, St. Thomas Anglican Church 201 Church St. Fri. Sept 29th 5:00 pm - 7:00 pm Sat. Sept. 30th 9:00 am Noon Clothing, Household Items, Books, Toys, CD’s, Games Plus Home Baking!! Something for everyone!! BELLEVILLE CLUB 39 Presents the Music of a bit of Nostalgia on Friday Oct. 6th form 8pm to Midnight. at the Belleville Legion Br. 99 132 Pinnacle St. Belleville Ont. (upstairs) Singles & Couples are welcome. Members$10 NonMembers$12. Lunch will be served for info 613-395-0162 or 613-966-6596. LUNCHEON ON Oct. 11 from 12 - 2pm at 290 Bridge St W Belleville $ 13.00 Featuring Lisa Smith of Connon Nursery “putting your gardens to bed”. Special Guest speaker Judy Cobham from Kingston. Free nursery and reservations please call Darlene @ 613-961-0956 . Sponsored by Christian Women’s Connection affiliated with RSVP Ministries. JOIN OUR Craving Change workshop to help you understand why you eat the way you do, comfort yourself without food, and change your thinking, change your eating. Thursdays, Oct. 5 to 26 from 10am-12pm. Call Belleville and Quinte West Community Health Centre at 613-962-0000, ext. 233. FREE COMPUTER classes at Belleville Public Library. Adult Computers II. This intermediate class will continue where our basic class left off--we will discuss more in-depth Windows and web applications, and we will work further with your Google Account. To register, or for more information, please visit or call the Information Servers Department at 613-968-6731 x2237. Recommended prerequisite is Adult Computers I. Tuesdays, 2-3:30 pm. Sept. 12, 19, 26; Oct. 17, 24, 31; Nov. 7, 14, 21; Dec. 5, 12, 19. COMMUNITY CARE for South Hastings currently has board vacancies. People with backgrounds in legal, healthcare, marketing, business, social services, etc. welcome. Please call Lee at 613-969-0130 NEED SOME help with indoor or outdoor work? Call Community Care for South Hastings Belleville office at 613-969-0130 or Deseronto office 613-396-6591 for more information. MEALS ON Wheels Monday, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday a hot meal is delivered to your door around noon. Frozen meals available also. Call Joanne at 613-969-0130 BELLEVILLE LAWN Bowling Club, 40, Yeomans Street Belleville, invites you to try lawn bowling for free. Mondays at 11am, Tuesdays and Thursdays at 7pm. instruction and equipment provided. Call 613-968-3625. TGIF FROZEN Meal Distribution Every Fri-

day at Bridge St. United Church. Meals can be picked up every Friday, 2-4pm at 60 Bridge St. E. entrance. Register on your first visit by showing I.D. for each meal you wish to pick up. For more info visit www.bridgestreetchurch.com, then click “our missions” then “food ministry” TRILLIUM SENIORS Club has Monday bingo,Tuesday cribbage,Wednesday euchre,Thursday carpet bowling and shuffleboard, Friday darts.Cribbage on the 3rd Sunday of each month. Come by 12:45p.m. Open to all Seniors 50 and over. 613-968-2526 LIONS CLUB, every 2nd and 4th Tues. dinner and meeting. 2nd Tues. catered dinner, 4th Tues. pot luck. both at 7pm. Meeting 7:45pm. 119 Station Street. Call 613-962-6559 to leave a message. QUINTE QUILTER¹S Guild, 7pm, first Wednesday of the month. St. Columba Church, Bridge St. E. Everyone is welcome. BELLEVILLE GENERAL Hospital auxiliary needs musicians. Belleville General Hospital are looking for musicians to donate their time and perform in various units in the hospital in organized group programs. Contact Jay Moxness at 969-7400 Ext 3376. BELLEVILLE SCOTTISH COUNTRY DANCE SOCIETY invite you to social dancing. SCD is the Scottish version of Ballroom dancing. Starting Sept. 12 we meet every Tuesday at Harry J Clarke School, Rollins Drive. From 7pm to 7:30 we offer instruction for beginners followed by dancing from 7:30 to 9:30. More info: Bill or Jan Cunningham at 613-965-4212 or David or Jean Aston at 613-885-2181. BAY OF Quinte Chorus - Ladies do you love to sing 4 part harmony, make new friends, grow vocally and have fun, then join us & our new Director, Patrick Headley. Rehearsals Sundays 4:30-6:30. Amica Quinte Gardens, 30 College St. W. For more info. call 613-403-4763. URBAN POLING Walking Program in the Belleville community, led by a trained instructor. Walking poles will be provided for use during the 5-week program. Wednesday evenings, Aug. 30 to Sept. 27 from 6:00-6:45 pm. Call Belleville and Quinte West Community Health Centre at 613-962-0000, ext. 233. COMPUTER COACH Drop-In at Belleville Public Library Every other Wednesday, 10-11 am beginning Sept. 20 for anyone who wants exra help with computers. Starting September 20 from 10-11 am. For more information call 613-968-6731 x2237. KNITTERATI CIRCLE Belleville Public Library’s social knitting circle “Knitterati” returns. Bring your knitting, crochet, or other fiber craft project to this free drop in program on the second floor of the library to work as a group, chat, and meet other knitters. Every other Tuesday, from 5:30-7:30pm. Call 613968-6731 ext. 2237 QUINTE QUILTERS’ GUILD meets the first Wednesday of each month in our new location, at the Salvation Army on Bridge Street West, at 7:00 pm. Check out our website for further details: www.quintequiltersguild.ca/

BRIGHTON STAMPS, COINS and Postcard Event, Sept. 30. 10:30a.m.-3:30p.m. King Edward Community Centre / Hockey Rink Complex, 5 Elizabeth St. / Hwy #2 East. Free admission and parking. BREASTFEEDING CLINIC and Support, October 3, 10 am to Noon, 170 Main St. in

B6 Section B - Thursday, September 28, 2017

Family Health Nurse provides one-on-one breastfeeding support for moms to ask questions and address concerns. Appointments preferred; drop-ins welcome. Call the Health Unit toll-free at 1-866-888-4577. PROBUS CLUB of Presqu’ile welcomes all retired or semi-retired people (singles or couples) to our monthly programs.Guest speakers, presentations, refreshments.Third Wednesday every month at the King Edward Park Community Centre, Brighton, 9:30-noon. Call Jean 613-2425387 or visit www.probusnorthumberland.com. TRINITY-ST. ANDREW’S United Church Clothing Depot 58 Prince Edward Street. Store hours: Wednesday, 10-2, Thursday, 10-2, Friday, 10-6pm and Saturday, 10-1. Donations welcome during business hours. Bag Sale last week of each month. Interested in Volunteering? Call Jean 613-242-5387. BRIGHTON CLOTHING DEPOT, 5 Craig St. Thursday 10-4pm, Friday 10-8pm and Saturday 10-1. No furniture ot TVs. TOPS CANCELLED indefinitely. The “Take Time Out” group in Brighton has been closed.

CAMPBELLFORD RUMMAGE SALE Christ Church Anglican, Kent St.,Thurs. Sept 28th 12:30 pm - 4:00pm, Fri. Sept. 29th 9:00am to 4:00 pm, Sat. Sept. 30th 9:00 am to 12:00 pm bag day. CAMPBELLFORD & District Horticultural Society will hold its regular monthly meeting followed by Jan Thornhill’s program on FUNGI, Mon. Oct. 2nd at 7:30 p.m. Members & guests [1st meeting is free & annual membership is only $15.00] welcomed at Christ Church (Anglican), 154 Kent Street, Campbellford. Visit: http:// www.gardenontario.org/site.php/campbellford & Facebook. SEXUAL HEALTH Clinic, Oct. 3, 10 am to Noon. The clinic provides clients with confidential access to cervical screening, low-cost birth control, pregnancy testing and sexual health teaching. Testing and treatment of sexually transmitted infections are also provided. For more information, locations or to make an appointment, call the Health Unit at 1-866-888-4577, ext. 1205. BABY’S OWN Group, Starts, October 3, 10:30 am to Noon, Ontario Early Years Centre (Rotary Hall, 179 Saskatoon Ave.). A weekly support/ information group for parents of children up to a year old that focuses on infant nutrition, adjustment to parenthood, child growth and development, and more (continues on the following dates: Oct. 10, 17, 24, 31 and Nov. 7). Call 1-866-888-4577 for information or to register. DENTAL SCREENINGS, Oct. 5, 10 am to Noon, Ontario Early Years Centre (Rotary Hall, 179 Saskatoon Ave.) Free dental screenings for children. Call: 1-866-888-4577 for more details. FRIENDS OF Ferris Provincial Park Guided Walks at the east end of the Suspension Bridge at 9am every Tuesday from May 2-Dec. 12th., rain or shine. PROBUS CLUB of Trent HIlls meets the second Wednesday of the month, 10am-noon in the church hall of St. John’s United Church in Campbellford.Denise Kelsey at 705-653-6763 for more info.

COBOURG SEXUAL HEALTH Clinic, Tuesday, October 3, 4:30 pm to 6:30 pm. The clinic provides clients with confidential access to cervical screening, low-cost birth control, pregnancy testing and

sexual health teaching. Testing and treatment Hastings Civic Centre.Free. DOnations of acrylic of sexually transmitted infections are also pro- yard aways welcome. For more infomation call vided. For more information, locations or to 705-696-3891. make an appointment, call the Health Unit at HAVELOCK 1-866-888-4577, ext. 1205. RC LEGION Br 389 Havelock, 8 Ottawa St. CODRINGTON Havelock, On, Monday Senior Darts, 12:30Pm, CODRINGTON FARMERS Market runs Bingo 6:30Pm, Tuesday Shuffleboard, 12:30Pm, May 14-October 29, Sundays, 10am-2pm Pro- Thursday Ladies Darts 1 Pm, Friday Open Darts duce, baking, honey, cider, flowers, syrup and 7:00 Pm, Saturday Meat Draws 3:00 Pm more.Monthly craft shows, live music, coffee, TRADITIONAL COUNTRY Music Jam walking trail.Located at 2992 County Road Sessions at the Ol’ Town Hall on the corner 30 in Codrington (north of Brighton). Info: of Matheson and Oak Streets in Havelock 613-475-4005.FO every Wednesday till June. Bring along your instruments, your voice and your smiles. The COLBORNE doors will be opened at 12:00 and the music DENTAL SCREENINGS, Tuesday, October will start at 12:30. Musicians and visitors will 3, 10 am to Noon, Colborne Public School (8 be welcomed and encouraged. Alfred St.). Free dental screenings for children. MADOC Call: 1-866-888-4577 for more details. MEALS ON Wheels hot and frozen meals are BREASTFEEDING CLINIC and Support, Tuesday, October 3, 1-2 pm, Colborne Public available year round hrough Community Care School (8 Alfred St.). Family Health Nurse for Central Hastings, 1-800-554-1564. provides one-on-one breastfeeding support for MADOC ACTIVE Living Exercise: Every moms to ask questions and address concerns. Wednesday, at 10:30am. Timber Trails RetireAppointments preferred; drop-ins welcome. ment Residence,167 St. Lawrence St.E Starting Call the Health Unit toll-free at 1-866-888-4577. Sept.13/17. Please contact Community Care for Central Hastings 1-800-554-1564 to pre-register FRANKFORD if you are not already a member of the Active BEEF ‘N Pork Buffet at the Quinte Masonic Living Program Centre 33 King Dr. Sept. 29th Social Hour 5:15, Dinner 6:15 Only $15.00. All welcome. MARMORA FRANKFORD UNITED Church: Sunday “A NIGHT of Music” – 6:30 p.m. on Saturday, service with Sunday School at 10:30am. All September 30th. Featuring “Fourgiven” and “King’s Own” Worship Team. This event will are welcome. be held at the Marmora Free Methodist Church ENCORE THRIFT Shop, Holy Trinity Angli- (30 McGill St., Marmora). Admission is free. can Church, 60 North Trent Street, Frankfordon Call 613-472-5030 (church office) for more Saturdays from 9:00 a.m.-1:00 p.m. Something information. for everyone; all kinds and sizes of clothing, bedding, kitchen supplies, knickknacks, etc. OPEN MIC - Friday Oct 6 at 7 PM Marmora and Area Curling Club, 2 Crawford Drive. Come FRANKFORD UNITED Church: Sunday & join the great line-up of musicians or just enjoy service with Sunday School at 10:30 a.m. All the entertainment. No cover charge. are welcome. MARMORA DINERS: Wednesday, Oct.11/17: THE RETIRED Teachers of Ontario (Belleville Marmora and District community Centre (Arena), and area) invite all members and welcome other Victoria Ave. Lunch is served at 12:00 noon. retired teachers, especially those new to the area Please bring your own plate, cup, and cutlery. to their Fall Luncheon at Emmanuel United Please contact Community Care for Central Church in Foxboro at 11am on Wednesday, Hastings 1-800-554-1564 to pre-register if you October 4th. Food and guest speaker. $15 per are not already a member of the Diner’s Program. person. Please wear red and white in honour of Canada 150. For more information and to FASHION SHOW and Tea Sat. Sept. 30 from reserve your place please call 613-968-8268 1:30 pm to 3:30 pm. St. John’s Anglican Church Hall, 115 Durham St. N. Madoc. Fashions by Julia’s Women’s Wear of Stirling. Admission $8 GRAFTON GRAFTON HORTICULTURAL Society ST. ANDREW’S United Church New to “Attracting & Feeding Birds in your Garden” You Shoppe is having a sale on Saturday with Brenda Ibey on Oct. 10. Doors Open at October 7 from 8:30 to noon. At the same 7pm - 9pm All Events are Free. Everyone is time the Deloro UCW is having their cofWelcome. Location: St. Andrew’s United Church, fee party. 137 Old Danforth Road, Grafton BLOOD PRESSURE Clinic: Tuesday, Oct.10/17: Caressant Care, 58 Bursthall HASTINGS St, from 9:30 AM to 11:00 AM. Please HASTINGS LEGION Sept. 29th, Karaoke ft. contact Community Care for Central HastKaraoke Krooner John Coburn, Doors open at ings 1-800-554-1564 to pre-register if you 8:30pm dance begins at 9pm, $2.00 cover Age are not already a member of the Blood of majority event. Pressure Program FRIENDS OF the Hastings Branch Library GIRL GUIDES: Tuesdays at 6:30 the Marmora Annual Author’s Night Featuring Janet Kel- Girl Guide units have their weekly meetings upstairs lough, Sept. 29, 7:30 p.m. At the Hastings Civic of the Marmora Arena: Sparks SK-gr1 - 6:30-7:30, Centre 6 Albert Street (Albert St. & Bridge Brownies gr2-3 - 6:30-8:00, Guides gr4-6 - 6:30St.) Admission is a freewill offering which 8:30, Pathfinders gr7-9 - 6:30-8:30. Contact Barb will benefit ongoing programs at the Hastings Davies for any further info. 613-243-9609, Sign Branch Library. Info: 705-696-2111, www. up at girlguides.ca trenthillslibrary.ca See more events on Page 7. KNITTING CLUB every Thursday 1pm-3pm,


EVENTS

MARMORA AND Lake Public Library, Tuesdays musical story time from 10:30am11:15am, toddlers-6 years. Stories, crafts and games 1pm-3pm, ages 6 and up. Thursday arts and crafts, July only, 3-5pm,a ges 6 and up. Call library 613-472-3122 or info@marmoralibrary.ca BINGO EVERY Monday at Marmora Legion, early birds/lightening start at 6:45 pm. Jam session every Monday night at Marmora Legion Club Room, 6-9 pm. Chase the Ace every Friday Marmora Legion. Tickets on sale 1-8pm. Draw to follow.

NAPANEE PHOTO ART 2017 33rd Annual Exhibition & Sale of Photography by members of the Napanee Photo Club.At the gallery of the Lennox & Addington County General Hospital in Napanee.Parking is free and so is the exhibition.Open daily from 9am till 8pm From October 14th till November 2nd Celebrate the Napanee Photo Club’s annual show at the awards presentation on October 17th at 7:30pm.

STIRLING BLOOD PRESSURE Clinic: Thursday, Oct.12/17: 204 Church St, from 9 AM to 12PM. Please contact Community Care for Central Hastings 1-800-554-1564 to preregister if you are not already a member of the Blood Pressure Program MEMORY CAFÉ, 3rd Wed. of each month, 2-3:30pm. Stirling Rawdon Public Library, 43 W. Front St.Seniors with early memory loss or who are worried about their memory meet to discuss brain health, practise brain boost activities and gentle movement. Inquiries call 613-962-0892 MEALS ON Wheels - Hot and Frozen meals are available year round through Community Care for Central Hastings, 1-800-554-1564

THOMASBURG TURKEY SUPPER at Thomasburg United Church Sept. 30, 2017 continuous settings 5

to 7 Advance tickets only Adults $ 15.00 12 TWEED and under $7.00 under 5 Free take out available call Doug at 613-477-2628 or Sheila KIDS BLACK light dances, Sept. 29, Tweed agricultural hall, JK-Gr.5 - 6-8, Gr. 6-8 -8-10,. at 613-477-2636 CHILI LUNCH on Oct. 1, noon-4p.m. at the TRENTON Land O Lakes Curling Club, 301 St. Joseph TRIVIA NIGHT at Trenton Legion. Ev- Street. $5 per person. eryone Welcome, Great Prizes. Fri. Sept. LADIES CONFERENCE “Adorned 29th at 6:30 pm. 19 Quinte St. Trenton, Women Mentoring Women the Titus 2 Way” 613-392-0331 www.rcl110.ca Sept. 29 & 30th - 4 sessions - Free Admission AOTS MEN’S Club Trenton United Church includes dinner on Friday evening and light 85 Dundas St. E, Luncheon Buffet, September lunch on Saturday. Hosted by Heart to Heart 30, 11am - 1pm, Build your own sandwich Ministry at Tweed Pentecostal Church 16 from a variety of choices, delicious soups, Jamieson St. W. RSVP & details: Kristin desserts and beverages.Adult: $8, Child: @ 613-847-3742 $4 at the door. Everyone welcome! Come TWEED & District Horticultural Society: On and enjoy!! October 3rd at 7:00 p.m. at the Tweed Library, RETIRED WOMEN Teachers, Trenton & Jenna Empey will share her knowledge about District, will meet on Thurs. Oct. 5 at 11:30 the natural fermentation of sauerkrauts, kimchi, A.M. at Westminster United Church, 1199 brined vegetables and pickles. Everyone is Wallbridge-Loyalist Rd., Belleville to hear welcome. Non-members $3. “Buddy’s Story”. Soup & sandwiches $12 COMMUNITY DINNER The first monthly (Guests $15). All retired women teachers Tweed Community Dinner is Oct. 10, 5p.m. are welcome. Diane 613 398-0952 to 6.30p.m. at the White Building, 617 Louisa TRENTON LEGION Dean James and band St. by the arena. A pay as you can meal. are back by popular demand, Oct. 7 at 8pm, Everyone welcome. To confirm attendance advance tickets $8-$10, door price: $12. 19 please RSVP to Lorraine at 613-243-4555 by Quinte Street. Call 613-392-0331 or visit October 3rd and leave your name, telephone # and number attending.” www.rcl110.ca QUINTE CANADIAN FilmFest is Quinte’s BLOOD PRESSURE Clinic: Wednesday, only film festival showcasing the best in lo- Oct.4 23 McCamon Ave, 8 am to 12pm. cal and Canadian Cinema over a three-day Please contact Community Care for Central period, September 29th through October 1st. Hastings 1-800-554-1564 to pre-register if you are not already a member of the Blood www.quintefilmfest.ca Pressure Program URBAN POLING Walking Program in the Trenton community, led by a trained ACTINOLITE HALL - bid euchre, Every instructor. Walking poles will be provided Tuesday at 7 pm and third Sunday of the month for use during the 5-week program. Tuesday at 1pm. Regular euchre Thursday at 1pm. evenings, Sept. 5 to Oct. 3 from 6:00-6:45 pm. FIT & Fun Ladies Exercise Classes: MonCall Belleville and Quinte West Community day, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday 9am at Health Centre at 613-962-0000, ext. 233. the Tweed Curling Club. $30 per month or HAPPY HARMONY Women’s Choir featur- $7.00 per class. Call Judy 613-478-5994 ing popular hits from past decades at Trenton or Jan 613-478-3680 for more information. United Church 85 Dundas Street East Friday, FREE COMMUNITY kitchens, Gateway Sept. 22nd at 7pm Tickets: $10 at the door CHC, third Tuesday of each month, 1:303:30pm. Taste new foods, learn to cook in

healthy ways, and meet new people. Info or to register, call the Dietitian at 613-4781211 ext 228. MEALS ON wheels hot and frozen meals are available YEAR ROUND through Community Care for Central Hastings, 1-800-554-1564. YOUTH JAZZ Ensemble Gateway Community Health Centre introduces the Youth Jazz Ensemble. Open to Grades 5-8, no experience necessary. Runs from Sept.-May. Tuesday and Thursday evenings 6-8 pm. Call 613-478-1211 to register/ HEAR BIBLE Truths that give you Hope, Trust, Joy, Confidence, Peace and Understanding for Tomorrow. dynamic multimedia seminar designed specifically to make a real and lasting difference in your life. Meetings are held Friday, Saturday, Sunday, Monday, Wednesday at Tweed Elementary School. https://tinyurl.com/HisWayOfHope

TYENDINAGA ORANGE LODGE Dance at Orange Hall on York Rd. in Tyendinga Territory. Sat. Oct. 7th. Jeff Code & Silver Wings. Dancing From 8pm to Midnight. Cost $12 each, DAnce,Lunch,Prizes. Contact 613-396-6792. UNLEASH YOUR inner rock star with Happy Harmony Women’s Choir. Sing 50s/60s songs Thursdays 7-9 p.m at Brittany Brant Music Centre, off Hwy. 2, 10 minutes east of Belleville Hospital, phone 613-438-7664.

Help keep your community clean. Please recycle this newspaper.

No auditions.

WARKWORTH TRENT HILLS Grannies for Africa holding annual Jewellery Show and Sale of previously loved vintage and costume jewellery, including a lovely selection of accessories. Sept. 30, at The Gathering Place, St. Paul’s United Church, Main Street, Warkworth. Food available for purchase.Doors open at 10.00am to 4.00 pm. Proceeds support The Stephen Lewis Foundation’s work with the grannies of sub-Saharan Africa. Donations of jewellery accepted. More info: Carol at 705-653-0164. WARKWORTH GUIDING – Mondays 6:30-8 pm beginning Sept 11th units meet at various locations. Sparks: SK-grade 1; Brownies: grade 2-3; Guides; grade 4-6; Pathfinders grade 7-9. Contact Tracy for further info 905-344-7709. Sign up at girlguides.ca

WOOLER ROAST BEEF Supper & Silent Auction. Wooler United Church Friday, Sept. 15, 2017 5-6:30pm. Advance Tickets Only Roxie 3971600; Anne 397-3106 or Joyce 398-7694. Adults: $15 children (6-12): $8 SOUP AND Sandwich Monday October 2 at 11:30 am-1 pm $7 per person Wooler United Church.

Tables & Chairs • Bedrooms & Home Accents

RUTTLE BROTHERS FURNITURE SINCE 1974

1 mile N. of WALMART on HWY 62, Belleville • 613-969-9263

www.ruttlebrothersfurniture.com

OPEN HOUSE GUIDE DATE & TIME

ADDRESS

PRICE

AGENT

REAL ESTATE COMPANY

CALL

MLS

Saturday, Septeber 30 11:00-12:30 176 Moira St. W., Belleville 2:00 - 4:00 9 Fox Lane, Foxboro 1:00 - 3:00 PM 1 Mary Avenue, Wellington

$208,000 $419,900 $449,900

Tina Pennacchio* John Chisholm*** Cliff DeLeon

Direct Realty Ltd., Brokerage Direct Realty Ltd., Brokerage EXIT Realty Group

613-966-5011 613-966-5011 613-920-5984

402480077 405250031 EXCLUSIVE

Sunday, October 1 1:00 - 3:00 PM

$449,900

Cliff DeLeon

EXIT Realty Group

613-920-5984

EXCLUSIVE

1 Mary Avenue, Wellington

Section B - Thursday, September 28, 2017 B7


Fatal Collision on Highway 401 Quinte West – A 70-year-old Montreal woman was killed in collision on Highway 401 last Wednesday afternoon. Officers with the Napanee and Quinte West OPP detachments were called around 3 p.m. for a multi-vehicle collision involving a sedan and an SUV in the westbound lanes of Wallbridge-Loyalist Road. Irene Savdie-Buenavida a 70-year-old woman from Montreal, Quebec was pronounced deceased at scene. The driver and front passenger of the sedan

were taken to hospital with non life-threatening injuries. The driver of the SUV was uninjured. Highway 401 west bound was closed for six hours while the OPP Technical Traffic Collision Investigators completed their investigation. No charges have been laid, the investigation is ongoing. Constable Belear of the Napanee OPP would like to speak with anyone who witnessed the collision and can be contacted at the Napanee detachment at 613-3543369.

Dr. Suresh Appan & Associates

Quinte Symphony to seek additional funding

BY JACK EVANS

Quinte Symphony had a good year for its 201617 season with increased revenue and larger audiences, the annual meeting was told last Sunday. But with costs increasing, there will be a need to work for more funding, Kevin Baskur, new treasurer, told the gathering in Belleville. In her annual report, Debbie Shaw, who also plays flute with the orchestra, also painted a picture of a successful year, with the purchase of a complete set of high quality timpani, thanks to the Parrott Foundation, another hugely successful Tribute to the Brave concert at the air museum and a near capacity spring concert in The Regent Theatre, Picton, with guest artists, The Sultans of String. Various members of the orchestra also were involved in community outreach with performances at community events and a fund raising night at Chapters Books, plus a modestly successful children’s concert in May. That project may be expanded into a three-day festival with other artistic partners this season, she suggested. She stressed that there remains a need for more volunteers and also additional board members, which have now declined to six from about a dozen. She said a grant application to the Ontario government failed and that, too, is impacting the orchestra’s finances for the new season. Conductor Dan Tremblay commented on how

David Shewchuk of Oshawa was confirmed as the symphony’s new concert master for the 2017-19 season. Jack Evans/Metroland

pleased he is with the orchestra’s developing capabilities and improved sound, and especially with the increase in attendance at concerts. Members of the present board were returned by acclamation.

Looking for a new friendly and courteous dental team? Call us and receive

FREE TEETH WHITENING

(Limited Time offer with New Patient Exam and X-rays)

New patients are always welcome! Our patients enjoy: ✔ Evening and weekend appointments ✔ Same day emergency appointment ✔ Sedation dentistry ✔ Free sports guards for young athletes ✔ In-treatment TV ✔ Video games for kids 73 Division Street, Trenton

Our Services: ✔ 3-D Dentistry ✔ Crowns & Bridges ✔ Implants ✔ Initial Oral Examination ✔ Invisalign®

Call us now at 613.394.3883 www.trentonfamilydental.com B8 Section B - Thursday, September 28, 2017


Woman wins $120K in lottery Frankford - A Quinte West woman is more than $120,000 richer after winning an Ontario Lottery prize in the Poker Lotto All In game. Cathy Reid of Frankford last week picked up her prize worth $115,597.90 in the Sept. 11, 2017 draw. She also won $5,000 on the instant portion of her Poker Lotto play bringing her total winnings to $120,597.90. The winning ticket was purchased at Oasis Grocery & Gas Bar on Riverside Parkway in Frankford.

Lotto winner Cathy Reid, of Frankford, is shown with her winning cheque. Submitted photo

F LY E R S

COUPONS

SHOPPING LISTS

SHOP SMART Save more on your weekly shopping.

MEET DR. KEN MADISON Passionate about his profession, Dr. Madison prides himself in furthering his education and knowledge in dentistry. He loves his patients and is currently welcoming new patients to the Belleville Dental Care family!

TECHNOLOGY

PRECISION

COMFORT

DOWNLOAD THE FREE Save.ca MOBILE APP

613-969-8800 | 135 VICTORIA AVE. | BELLEVILLEDENTAL.CA Section B - Thursday, September 28, 2017 B9


Hastings ‘artist swap' part of Culture Days showcase

Hollywood North Film Festival will show you The Meaning of Life

ed Guelph-based musician Don Sawchuk along with two original plays. Hastings performers include Sheldon Renouf and Tyler Cochrane. There will also be a performance by the Little Town Theatre featuring actors from both Hastings and Fergus. Brown says the troupe will perform excerpts from some of its shows. The artist swap has received support from SPARC (Supporting Performing Arts in Rural Communities), a grassroots network of artists dedicated to “igniting and sustaining” performing arts communities in rural Ontario. The free Hastings showcase starts at 7 p.m. A similar presentation will be held Oct. 1 at the Fergus Grand The-

BY BILL FREEMAN

Hastings — In what’s being called a first for the annual Culture Days celebration, Hastings will host an “artist swap” on Sept. 30 at the Hastings Civic Centre showcasing talent from Fergus and the Hub of the Trent. “Other communities are having Culture Days but Fergus and Hastings are the first to have an artist’s swap,” says Ida Brown, the founder of Hastings Little Town Theatre and director and producer of children’s theatre. Her daughter Bethany of the Hastings House Restaurant is teaming up with Eric Goudie of the Fergus Grand Theatre to present the showcase. Goudie will introduce highly-regard- atre.

A scene from The Meaning of Life, a film starring Tyler Shaw. Submitted photo

Dr. Elmira Dadmarzi, CFPC Glazier Medical Centre is pleased to announce the arrival of Dr. Elmira Dadmarzi to the clinic in the practice of Family Medicine commencing October 2, 2017. Dr. Dadmarzi will be accepting new patients at our location at 11 Gibb Street in Oshawa. Please call 905-579-1212 ext. 521 during regular business hours to book an appointment.

11 Gibb Street, Oshawa, Ontario L1H 2J9 • 905-579-1212

Belleville – The Hollywood North Film Festival has announced this year’s lineup. The festival will open on Friday, November 10 at the Empire Theatre in Belleville with Canadian film The Meaning of Life. Directed by Cat Hostick, the film stars Canadian recording artist Tyler Shaw. The film follows a struggling musician who gets a temporary job as a therapeutic clown, working to help a nine-year old leukemia patient get past her illness through music. Shaw is expected to attend the opening gala and will be performing live and taking part in the post-Q&A after the film. On Saturday, Nov. 11, films will play all day the Centre Theatre to celebrate 100 years of film in Quinte. These films are the best of the best and include local, Canadian, international and animated short films. Saturday evening will close with a screening of “Brigsby Bear” written and starring Saturday Night Live’s Kyle Mooney, Mark Hamill (Star Wars) and Greg Kinnear (Little Miss Sunshine).

Brigsby Bear Adventures is a children’s TV show produced for an audience of one: James. When the show abruptly ends, James’s life changes forever, and he sets out to finish the story himself. Following the film, the HNFF will hold its first awards ceremony at the Trent Port Marina to celebrate this year’s achievements in film and to announce the award winners selected by the Festival Jury. To close the festival on Sunday, Nov 12, films will play in the afternoon at the Regent Theatre in Picton. A selection of short films will play with the closing film (to be announced at a later date). The festival received over 300 film submissions, the most in its three-year history. The third year is gearing up to be better than ever, organizers says, with celebrities and filmmakers confirmed to attend. A list of all films can be found online at HNFF.ca. Information on festival and day passes can also be found on the website.

Kraft Village Since 1986

TM

WE HAVE CHOPPED THE PRICE ON ALL OUR FLEECE FOR A LIMITED TIME! LARGE SELECTION WHILE QUANTITIES LAST Only $9.99* Per Meter! 2006 Prowler 295BHS 5th wheel with bunks very good condition sold serviced with Warranty

$12900.00 B10 Section B - Thursday, September 28, 2017

2013 Travellite 800SBX short box model like new condition

$13900.00

installed on your truck

*Some exclusions and restrictions apply, see store for details, taxes extra.

191 Dundas St. E, Belleville • 613-966-9964 • kraftvillage.ca

KRAFT VILLAGE, IT’S WORTH THE VISIT!


Take it Outside

What’s your excuse for gardening rut?

By Carson Arthur As a landscaper designer, I’ve seen it all; from backyard wastelands to front yard jungles that got away. When did the outdoors become so intimidating? Most homeowners are afraid to make changes outside for a variety of reasons,

unfortunately the results are always the same…year after year. Here are my 5 favourite excuses that people use when stuck in a gardening ‘rut’. 1. “If I replace my lawn with gardens, I will have to spend more time in the backyard working”. FALSE! The truth is, grass requires more maintenance then any other outdoor feature and while the perfect lawn is definitely something to enjoy, a well-planned garden will use less water and require less weekly attention then the average patch of grass. The key is to have a garden that works in your location. Doing a little research will provide years of reward. Bring in a reputable company to help you plan the project. Many of the good design firms have an hourly consultation rate, which is perfect for giving you a customized approach for tackling your yard. Also consider getting your camera or smart phone and taking some pictures of what grows well in your neighbour’s yard. Take those to your favourite garden centre for a little insider information because if your neighbour can grow

it, chances are that it will do well in your yard too! 2. “I have a large tree and nothing grows under it”. This really isn’t a challenge but an opportunity. Under a tree is the first place people want to sit in the hot summer months. Make this garden inviting using the following simple tips. Work with the roots of the tree instead of trying to compete with them. Plan the garden in the area between the roots and think of them as your framework for designing the space. Using shade-loving plants sometimes isn’t enough, as they have to compete with the tree for water and nourishment. Plant your shrubs and perennials inside a larger pot that is then planted in the ground so that you don’t even know its there. This allows you perennials a chance to get established. Also plan a space for a bench or some garden art. Neither of these require any work on your part and both are a great source of visual interest. 3. “It’s going to be expensive to make big changes”. It’s true, landscaping is never cheap if done properly but there are

a few things to consider. A well-designed outdoor space holds its value when it comes to resale. Also, no one ever said that you had to do it all at once. Have a plan and work towards the yard of your dreams as the funds become available. According to Realtor.com, a welllandscaped yard can increase your homes value by 28%. This makes it a little easier to invest when you know that you will get a return 4. “I don’t have time to look after my outdoor space”. Having the right tool for the job makes it so much easier. With new technology, gardening has never been so simple. Light weight, battery operated, environmentally conscious garden tools make all the difference. Gardening is supposed to

be a pleasure, not a chore. 5. “My children need a place to play”. Perfect…kids love to garden. Plan a space with your children that they can participate in. Let them help pick plants and design their own section of the yard. Remember, this is a garden for them to play in and some things aren’t going to make it but that’s okay. A garden is a great spot to spend the afternoon for the whole family. The truth is, if you want to make a change in the way you use your outdoors, then you should go for it. What’s really stopping you? Start the planning now for a spring renovation because this is the time of year that the experts are most available!

Help keep your community clean. Please recycle this newspaper.

Frank Meiboom, Bob Sills, Hessel Kampstra welcome Gerry Terry to the staff at M&R Auto Repair and welcome all Gerry’s friends, family and former customers to visit. WE WANT YOU HOOKED ON OUR SERVICE, NOT BY OUR TRUCK!

Frank Meiboom

frank@mandrautopro.com www.mandrautopro.com

M&R Auto Repair

342 Sidney Street, Trenton

613-394-6618 Section B - Thursday, September 28, 2017 B11


B12 Section B - Thursday, September 28, 2017


Groundbreaking for new emergency services base

Truck augers in

BY BILL FREEMAN

Academy Towing had its work cut out for it hauling this pickup truck out of the swampy patch of marsh grasses on Moira Street West last Thursday. Police issued no statement or reported no charges against the driver, but it appeared the motorist who planted the truck firmly into the greenery over-steered and lost the edge of the road into the deep ditch. There were no reported injuries.

Ready to Take the Real Estate Plunge? Find your answer in the Metroland Classifieds. In print and online! Go to www.InsideBelleville.com

Roseneath — The ground has been turned on a new $3.8 million emergency services base on County Road 45 in Alnwick-Haldimand. Officials from Northumberland County and the Township of Alnwick-Haldimand were on hand to launch construction of the shared paramedic and fire facility. “It is exciting when we celebrate a ground breaking in Alnwick-Haldimand and deliver something of value to the Chris Malette/Metroland community,” said Alnwick-Haldimand Mayor and county coun. John Logel. “With existing bases for both services in Roseneath coming to the point where they no longer meet operational needs, FOR SALE BY OWNER this shared facility really makes sense and we are very pleased STARTER HOME, 2-b edroom ranch. Great location to be partnering with the county to make this possible,” said . Just reduced. Call Wendy 555-3210. Logel. Construction is estimated at $3.8 million with the township and county contributing based on the square footage to

be occupied by each service. Sharing a single facility will create new opportunities for communication and collaboration between first responders including joint training initiatives and enhancing service delivery, the county says. With operations managed by a single organization, the base will “create efficiencies” and reduce costs related to cleaning, snow removal, landscaping and other requirements. “Shared services continues to be an important focus for county council, says Northumberland Warden Mark Walas. “The base will be another expression of this commitment. “It is also a wonderful opportunity to enhance partnerships between our first responders who often work so closely together when supporting our residents facing emergency situations,” Walas added. “Construction of the Roseneath Emergency Services Base is expected to be completed in the fall of 2018.

Dooher’s Bakery The tastes of Thanksgiving!

Your #1 Choice

Take a break and allow us to do the baking! Pumpkin pies, dinner rolls, donuts tarts & more. Baked fresh from our family to yours!

• Heating Oil • Gasoline • Diesel Fuels • Mobil Lubricants

E LAST CHANCE TO TRY TH E TH OF T NU DO R BE SEPTEM L IR SW A MONTH: NUTELL

& Site Fueling We offer On Pricing Competitive

noco.ca

613-966-4731

CALL NOW to place your advanced order for Thanksgiving weekend! Open Fri. Oct. 6 & Sat. Oct. 7 (705) 653-1460

1-888-284-7777

Ottawa 613-723-2533 800-871-2160

Serving Northumberland, Hastings & Prince Edward Counties & Eastern Ontario Commercial • Residential • Farm

Renfrew & Pontiac Counties 613-432-3200 800-267-0115

61 Bridge St. E., Campbellford • (705) 653-1460

Celebrating 68 Years!

STAY CONNECTED

Section B - Thursday, September 28, 2017 B13


CLASSIFIEDS MONDAY - FRIDAY t 8:30 - t DMBTTJĂĽFETFBTU!NFUSPMBOE DPN t

CL443017 CL460544

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

BRIGHTON LEGION BR 100

(613) 475-1044 DEATH NOTICE

ANNIVERSARY

ANNIVERSARY

POOL BUSINESS? Advertise your pool closing service here! Call 1-888-657-6193 to place your ad!

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

Metroland Media Classifieds

Buy 1 wetek ge 1 free!

Residential items only

1-888-657-6193

DEATH NOTICE

ROBERTSON, Roberta Dianne “Bobbe� (nee Scott) The family of Bobbe is saddened to announce her sudden passing on September 8, 2017 at home in Brighton at the age of 75. Bobbe was the beloved wife of the late Kenneth Charles Robertson (2014), and mom to Squib. She is survived by 3 children, 2 step-daughters, 9 grandchildren, 2 stepgrandchildren, 5 great grandchildren, and 5 great step-grandchildren, and many friends. A graveside memorial service will be held at the Mount Hope Cemetery in Brighton where she will be laid to rest beside her husband Ken. This will be announced at a later date. Arrangements in care of the Brighton Funeral Home (613-475-2121).

ANNOUNCEMENT

FOR SALE

CENTRAL BOILER OUTDOOR FURNACES

ASK US ABOUT THE NEW

EDGE

www.chesher.ca

FRANKFORD, ON 613.398.1611 BANCROFT, ON 613.332.1613

DEATH NOTICE

MASON, Margaret Virginia Oh, we’re all travelling down that long winding road that ultimately leads us to the end. For MARGARET VIRGINIA MASON that road sadly ended September 20, 2017 in Northumberland Hills Hospital, Cobourg, Ontario. This followed an extended life of 101 years, 4 months. Mom was born May 2, 1916 in Baltimore, Maryland, to Harold and Pearl (Durham) Baker. Harold died of pneumonia shortly after her birth. She and her mother then moved back to Toronto. Life had many challenges, including the Depression. On June 2, 1939 Marg and Howard (Bud) Frederick Mason were wed and went on to a further 46 years together. Bud passed away in 1985 following a lifelong career with the Bank of Commerce, ending as Manager of the Bloor and Yonge Branch, in Toronto. Together they raised a family of 5: Richard (Jill), Paul (Carol), Lynn (Ted Passmore), Don (Barb) and John (Kathi). A tireless, dedicated and principled mother, she devoted herself to family first and seldom sought the spotlight. As an extended family, we wish to recognize and praise Marg for her dedication, courage and devotion, throughout her lifetime. She lovingly leaves 12 Grandchildren (Alison, Andrew, Bonnie Christopher, Dylan, Jason (deceased), Julie, Kate, Kyle, Robert, Scott, Susan), along with 9 Great Grandchildren (Andie, Ashley, Cameron, Graydon, Hannah, Henry, Mason, Owen and Victoria). Visitation was held on Monday, from 10:30 - 11:30 a.m., September 25, at the Brighton Funeral Home on Main Street in Brighton, Ontario. The family would like to thank Dr. Xi, the staff of both Rosewood Estates (Cobourg) and Empire Crossing (Port Hope). A special thank you to the Restorative Care and Palliative Units of Northumberland Hills Hospital and to Lynn and Ted Passmore for their respectful and compassionate care. Burial took place at Park Lawn Cemetery, Bloor St. West, Toronto at 3:00 p.m. followed by a private family celebration of Marg’s life. Rest in Peace. B14 Section B - Thursday, September 28, 2017

DEATH NOTICE

Junk removal & willing to move articles for individuals.

NEW & USED APPLIANCES 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.

Call to book your classified 613-966-2034 ext 560 DEATH NOTICE

DUMP RUNS

FOR SALE

WOOD HEAT SOLUTIONS DEATH NOTICE

WANTED

613-475-9591

FALL REBATE SAVINGS UP TO $550 Call for more information Your local DEALER

FOR SALE

Come join us in celebrating 60 years of marriage for Frank and Marlene Bailey. The celebration will take place on Saturday, September 30th from 1:00pm to 4:00pm. It will be open house style, come for a piece of cake and memories at Mount Pleasant Church Hall, 1050 Hoards Road, Stirling. Warmest wishes only please. Hope to see you there!

FOR SALE

HALLS & LODGES

FOR SALE

HALL RENTALS

1 TAN RECLINER LIKE NEW $150.00 2 SLEEPING BAGS $40.00 BOTH 1 EXECUTIVE OFFICE CHAIR (BLACK) $75.00 FIRM 2 XL CHAINSAWS ONE RUNS $80.00 BOTH 613-847-5480

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

SENIORS SERVICES

30-30 MARLIN Carbine, 308 Remington Model 742 automatic deluxe woodmaster, 12 gauge automatic Remington shotgun model 1100. P.A.L. required, all guns mint. 613-962-7930

CHIPPER/SHREDDER SERVICE. Serving the Brighton-Colbourne area. ABOVE GROUND KAYAK POOL Call for more information 40’x 20’ with deck. Pool 905-376-4457. size 32’ x 16’. Accessories included. You dismantle. COMING EVENTS $1,500 OBO (613) 392-2440 Weekend Canadian Firearms and Hunter Safety Pedersen Family Course, Oct. 13, 14, 15 Homestead (Farm) Thurlow. To reserve a We sell whole chickens, seat, please contact Dave pork beef honey, thanksgivTaylor at 613-478-2302 ing turkeys. 613-472-0692 or Ron Hutchinson at Everything on our farm is 613-968-3362, No phone free range, including the calls after 8 p.m. bees.

WANTED

WANTED

PAYS CASH $$$ DEATH NOTICE

AKERMAN, Joyce Hilary Harriet It is with great sadness we announce the passing of Joyce in her 88th year on Friday, September 22nd, 2017 peacefully at Hastings Manor. Joyce was the daughter of the late Harry Thomas and Beatrice (Everett) and the wife of the late Donald M. Akerman. She was the loving mother of Wendy J. Wiersma (Bill) and Cynthia D. Akerman. Dearly loved grandmother of Bill (Heidi) Wiersma and will always be remembered and missed by her cherished greatgrandchildren Cailea, Lucas, Ellayna and Kellan Wiersma. Predeceased by her sisters Gwen, Nancy, Milly and Dilys. Over the years Joyce was a longtime volunteer of The Canadian Cancer Society and The Kidney Foundation of Canada. Cremation will take place with a Graveside Service of Remembrance at Carrying Place Cemetery Annex on Saturday, September 30th, 2017 at 1:00 p.m. If desired, Memorial Donations to The Canadian Cancer Society would be appreciated by the family. Arrangements entrusted to the RUSHNELL FUNERAL CENTRE, 60 Division Street, Trenton (613-392-2111). On-line condolences at www.rushnellfamilyservices.com

BLAIN, Alice Peacefully on September 24, 2017 in her 99th year at Summit Place Long Term Care Home in Owen Sound, Ontario after living with cancer for 20 years. Predeceased by her husband William Leonard Alvoy Blain, (1973) and Daughter Gail Natalie McLean, (1998). Loving mother of Heather Gibb (Allan) and Alvoy Blain (Ruth). Proud grandmother of James and Lisa McConachie; and Alvoy, Travis and Kimberly Blain. Survived by brother Ted (Procyshyn) and Sister Sophie (Pikor). Predeceased by 12 sisters and brothers. Alice grew up on the family farm in Beamsville and lived in Montreal, Port Credit, Germany and was a longtime resident of Brighton, before moving to Owen Sound. The family expresses their appreciation to the staff of Summit Place for their compassion and care. Cremation has taken place. A Funeral Service will be held in the Vineland Chapel of Tallman Funeral Home, 3277 King St. Vineland followed by a reception in the Fireside Room at a future date, to be announced. If so desired, donations may be made to the Children’s Make a Wish Foundation or a charity of your choice. Online condolences at www.tallmanfuneralhomes.ca

Visit us online www.InsideBelleville.com

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 WE week. DELIVER.

CL447164 CL642293

AIR COND. HALL

POOLS, SPAS, HOT TUBS

CL472835

ANNOUNCEMENT

We Sell Gas Refrigerators!

SMITTY’S APPLIANCES LTD. 1-613-969-0287 ANTIQUES & COLLECTIBLES

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

FOR SALE

FOR SALE

All New Husqvarna and Echo Chainsaws on Sale Now t 3BODIFST XJUI JODI CBST t &DIP $4 5JNCFS 8PMG XJUI PS JODI CBST BOE ýWF ZFBS XBSSBOUZ 8FMM PWFS OFX TBXT JO TUPDL Call Belmont Engine Repair in Havelock UPEBZ #BS PJM BOE DIBJOT BMM PO TBMF 'PS BMM ZPVS $IBJOTBX DVUUJOH OFFET *G OFFE B TBX DPNF JO BOE MFU T NBLF B EFBM 705-778-3838

ANTIQUES & COLLECTIBLES

t 'MPPST UP 7JFX QMVT TNBMM CBSO PVUEPPS WFOEPST t %SPQ CZ HSFBU EFBMT GSJFOEMZ WFOEPST t 4JU EPXO TOBDL CBS Plus much more

Meyersburg Fleamarket & Antiques

ANTIQUES & COLLECTIBLES

IN BUSINESS FOR 30 YEARS PLUS

t 5BDL 4IPQ t 8PPEFO $BSWJOHT t 'VSOJUVSF t 1SJNJUJWF 4FMFDUJPO

"OUJRVFT t $PMMFDUJCMFT t 4JHOT

Cty. Rd. 30, 3 miles south of Campbellford For vendor space, call Tom or Lola Holmes )PNF t 8PSL


FITNESS & HEALTH GET FIT FOR FALL Zumba Fitness 1 hour classes. Mondays 5:30 pm Brighton Masonic Hall, Wednesdays 6 pm at ENSS single gym. Call Cynthia 613-847-1183.

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.

FARM

WANTED Records, stereo MEDICAL equipment, music related CONDITION? accessories. Get up to $50,000 from Call 613-921-1290 the Government of Canada. Do you or someone Wanted: Standing timber, you know Have any of mature hard/softwood. these Conditions? ADHD, Also wanted, natural Anxiety, Arthritis, Asthma, stone, cubicle or flat, any Cancer, COPD, Depression, Diabetes, Difficulty size. 613-968-5182. Walking, Fibromyalgia, Irritable Bowels, Overweight, Trouble DressVEHICLES ing...and Hundreds more. ALL Ages & Medical EXTRA VEHICLE in your Conditions Qualify. CALL driveway? Get some extra ONTARIO BENEFITS CA$H and post it in the 1-(800)-211-3550 classifieds! Call 1-888-657-6193 to place your ad!

STORAGE RENT OUT your extra space for extra cash! Call 1-888-657-6193 to place your ad!

Metroland Media Classifieds

Buy 1 weet 1kfree! ge

Residential items only

1-888-657-6193

FARM

FARM

FOR RENT

FOR RENT

Kenmau Ltd.

BELLEVILLE

199 Moira Street West Bright one bedroom side apartment in triplex. $675/ month + heat/Hydro.

TRENTON

234 Dundas Street West 1 bedroom-fridge and stove included. No parking/walking distance to downtown. Laundry on-site. $675.00/month + Hydro Call

Kenmau Ltd.

613-392-2601 or visit www.kenmau.ca

Property Management (Since 1985)

2 BEDROOM, 1 BATH 1000 Sq ft. Beautiful apartments “Elizabeth Gardens� in Hastings under construction ready for Feb/Mar 2018. Two buildings - 6 units each. Garden floor & 2nd floor units. Private entrances to all Suites. Walk up to 2nd floor units from ground floor entrance. Comfortable & spacious. six brand new appliances included. Each apartment has its own washer & dryer. Individual central heating & air conditioning. Large kitchen & great room, balcony, 9 ft ceilings, $1,400.00/mo includes gas heat. Other utilities extra. Parking provided on property. Strictly Non Smoking Property. Credit check will be done. Deposit required after lease signed to hold your new apartment for early spring occupancy. Call 705-696-2120 or email little.jj@eastlink.ca

APARTMENT EMPTY? Don’t lose your precious income! Book your apartment ad here. Call 1-888-657-6193 to place your ad!

3PPG 1BJOUJOH t #BSO 1BJOUJOH '"3.4 t '"$503*&4 t )0.&4

FOR RENT

HELP WANTED

HELP WANTED

HELP WANTED

t NPCJMF TBOECMBTUJOH t QPXFS XBTIJOH 45&&- 300'4 QBJOUFE SFQBJSFE SFQMBDFE All Work Guaranteed

613-395-2857 1-800-290-3496

HONEY FOR SALE Twin Sisters Hive & Honey Products

OPEN SATURDAYS!

231 Frankford-Stirling Rd, Stirling (Highway 33)

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

PART TIME DRIVERS 1 – 2 days a week or month! Your choice! Excellent position for retiree or additional income! Positions available for G license or F licenses. Must be friendly and customer orientated with a clean drivers abstract. Please forward resumes to 96 South John St., Belleville Ontario K8N 3E6 or email ontariocoachway@bellnet.ca

TOWNSHIP OF MADOC Casual Winter Patrol Employment Opportunity November 10, 2017 – April 20, 2018 The Township of Madoc currently has an opening for a Casual Winter Patrol person. Duties will include but are not limited to: t 1BUSPM BOE SFDPSE XFBUIFS BOE SPBE DPOEJUJPOT t &RVJQNFOU BOE SPBE NBJOUFOBODF SFHVMBS BOE XJOUFS

t 4FSWJDFT UP SPBET SPBETJEFT TJHOT QVCMJD QSPQFSUZ BOE other municipally owned infrastructure " WBMJE A%; MJDFODF JT SFRVJSFE )PVST NBZ WBSZ BT determined by road conditions. 0OF UP UISFF ZFBST FYQFSJFODF JT QSFGFSSFE JO XJOUFS DPOUSPM PQFSBUJPOT BOE NBJOUFOBODF SPBE DPOTUSVDUJPO BOE SFMBUFE IFBWZ FRVJQNFOU PQFSBUJPOT JODMVEJOH CVU OPU MJNJUFE UP CBDLIPF QMPX FRVJQNFOU MPBEFS FUD A current Driver’s Abstract and criminal background check is to be submitted with the applicant’s resume. Applications will be accepted by the undersigned until 5IVSTEBZ 0DUPCFS BU QN 0OMZ BQQMJDBOUT TFMFDUFE GPS BO JOUFSWJFX XJMM CF DPOUBDUFE Cassandra Boniface Clerk-Treasurer #PY )JHIXBZ .BEPD 0OUBSJP , , , clerk@madoc.ca

HELP WANTED

HELP WANTED

APPLE PACKERS

required Immediately Knight’s Appleden Fruit Ltd. Please apply within or email amycook@knights-appleden.ca

HELP WANTED

HELP WANTED

HELP WANTED

BGL Contractors Corp

BGL Contractors Corp is a general contracting firm with head office in Waterloo. We are looking to hire for the following positions at our Trenton location: - Millwright/Installers Welder/Pipe Fitters - Metal Fabricators -Skilled Labourer We offer competitive wages and benefits. If interested please forward resumes to careers@bglcc.ca or fax to 519-725-5002.

HELP WANTED

JOB POSTING: Print Sales Representative, Full Time BUSINESS UNIT: Metroland East, Advertising, 65 Lorne St., Smiths Falls, ON K7A 3K8 THE OPPORTUNITY We are looking for an individual interested in a PRINT Sales Representative position. Applicants must be self-starters and exceptionally goal oriented as the focus of this position is on developing new revenue opportunities for both the print and digital media products. KEY ACCOUNTABILITIES t Prospect for new accounts, source leads, cold call, and research to generate sales in print platforms t Responsible for ongoing sales with both new and existing clients t Consistently attain and/or surpass sales targets and hitting revenue targets t Develop and maintain strong business relationships with clients to build business opportunities in the print industry t Provide professional customer service in ensuring superior client satisfaction at all times t Create proposals and advertising solutions through compelling business cases t Provide customers with creative and effective advertising solutions and play a key role in the overall success of our organization t As part of this role, you will be required to handle credit card information. Metroland Media is PCI compliant company, and requires people in this role to take PCI training to handle cards in a safe and compliant manner

WHAT WE’RE LOOKING FOR t College Diploma in Business, Marketing or related ďŹ eld t Prospect for new accounts, source leads, cold call, and research to generate sales in multi-media and Print platforms t Responsible for ongoing sales with both new and existing clients t Consistently attain and/or surpass sales targets and hitting revenue targets t Develop and maintain strong business relationships with clients to build business opportunities t Provide professional customer service in ensuring superior client satisfaction at all times t Create proposals and printing solutions through compelling business cases t Provide customers with creative and effective advertising/printing solutions and play a key role in the overall success of our organization t A valid Driver’s License and reliable vehicle OUR AODA COMMITMENT Metroland is committed to accessibility in employment and to ensuring equal access to employment opportunities for candidates, including persons with disabilities. In compliance with AODA, Metroland will endeavour to provide accommodation to persons with disabilities in the recruitment process upon request. If you are selected for an interview and you require accommodation due to a disability during the recruitment process, please notify the hiring manager upon scheduling your interview. If this sounds like a ďŹ t for you please apply by October 5, 2017: Internal Candidates: apply to our internal posting portal on MyMetNet under My Career External Candidates: apply to https://careersen-metroland.icims.com

PLEASE NOTE: BOOKING DEADLINE FOR ADS IS MONDAYS AT 3 P.M. Ads can be placed by calling 613-966-2034 ext. 560 or 1-888-657-6193

SELL YOUR unwanted items here! Call 1-888-657-6193 to place your ad!

NOTICES

CLS777981_0921

WANTED

FOR SALE

Thank you for your interest. Only those candidates selected for an interview will be contacted.

Section B - Thursday, September 28, 2017 B15


Shifts for days, nights & weekends Candidates must be 25 years of age or older for insurance purposes. Must have a valid driver’s licence and a clean driving abstract. Pay is based on commission and gratuities.

For more information please call Deal Taxi Limited at 705-778-7979

KITCHENS PLUS

Buy 1 weet 1kfree! ge

Residential items only

1-888-657-6193

Complete Kitchen & Bath Renovations Visit us: www.kitchensplusquinte.com

GARAGE SALE

Contact Steve Csanyi t LJUDIFOTQMVT!MJWF DPN

GARAGE SALE

Economical Solutions for Your Renovation Investment

HUGE YARD SALE 190 BOUNDRY RD

4 KM WEST OF BRIGHTON OFF HWY 2 SAT. SEPT. 30 & SUN OCT. 1 8AM – 4PM APPLIANCE, WINDOWS, TOYS, CLOTHING, HOUSEHOLD ITEMS, FURNITURE, RIMS, TOOLS, BIKES MUCH, MUCH MORE. VERY CLEAN SALE NO SALE BEFORE 8AM 600 PLUS ITEMS

between the hours of 7 a.m. and 4 p.m. Please leave your name and number

HELP WANTED

CAREER OPPORTUNITY

CAREER OPPORTUNITY

CAREER OPPORTUNITY

CAREER OPPORTUNITY

We Grow JOBSÂŽ

INDUSTRIAL ELECTRICIAN UNIMIN CANADA LTD., a leading producer of Industrial minerals, with facilities throughout the U.S and Canada, has an immediate opening for an experienced individual at our Nepheline Syenite Operation located at the Nephton Plant near Peterborough. We are currently in need of certified licensed industrial electricians with five years industrial experience. Generous benefits package as per the Union contract. Consideration will also be given to candidates possessing an Electrician - Construction & Maintenance Certificate of Qualification, but these individuals must have extensive experience in maintenance and troubleshooting of industrial equipment including PLC’s.

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

An equal opportunity employer

THE CORPORATION OF THE COUNTY OF PRINCE EDWARD JOB OPPORTUNITIES The County of Prince Edward is an island community on the shores of Lake Ontario with a proud United Empire Loyalist heritage. Boasting beautiful beaches and a unique rural landscape, the County offers serene country living. Our strong agricultural roots, thriving tourism attractions, renowned regional cuisine, and growing wine industry combine to offer a unique and unmatched quality of life. Our Human Resources Department is currently accepting applications for the following vacancies: • Manager of Human Resources • Labourer – Operations (2 Vacancies) For further details on these positions, please visit our website at www.thecounty.ca. If you are interested in any of the above opportunities, please follow the application process outlined in the postings and apply prior to the deadline indicated. We thank all candidates for their interest, however, only those selected for an interview will be contacted. We are an equal opportunity employer and support applicants with disabilities. Accommodations are available upon request throughout the recruitment process. The personal information being collected will be used in accordance with The Municipal Act and The Municipal Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act and shall only be used in the selection of a suitable candidate.

B16 Section B - Thursday, September 28, 2017

CAREER OPPORTUNITY

Executive Director Trenval Business Development Corporation is a federally-funded organization whose mission is to support small business in Quinte West, Belleville, Stirling/Rawdon, Tyendinaga and Deseronto. Through its delivery of business information, counselling and lending services, it engages aspiring entrepreneurs and small business owners in their attempts to start and to grow their business, creating jobs in the process. Reporting to a volunteer Board of Directors, the Executive Director takes a leadership role in overseeing all aspects of the operations, providing day-to-day direction to salaried and contracted staff, assuring the effective delivery of its core programs, as well as other related provincially and municipally-funded contracted services, which currently includes the Small Business Centre operations as well as the federal Eastern Ontario Development Program. The successful applicant will possess the following qualifications: t 1PTU TFDPOEBSZ EFHSFF EJQMPNB JO B CVTJOFTT SFMBUFE Ă˝ FME PG TUVEZ TUSPOH LOPXMFEHF PG BDDPVOUJOH BOE Ă˝ OBODJBM NBOBHFNFOU JT EFTJSBCMF t 1SPWFO SFDPSE PG QSPHSFTTJWF NBOBHFNFOU FYQFSJFODF JO FJUIFS PS CPUI B QSJWBUF BOE QVCMJD TFDUPS FOWJSPONFOU t 1SPĂ˝ DJFOU WFSCBM BOE XSJUUFO DPNNVOJDBUJPO TLJMMT t " HPPE LOPXMFEHF PG UIF 5SFOWBM DPNNVOJUZ JUT TPDJP FDPOPNJD DIBMMFOHFT BOE opportunities t 'BNJMJBSJUZ XJUI UIF $PNNVOJUZ 'VUVSFT 1SPHSBN Compensation will be commensurate with skills and experience. "QQMJDBUJPOT NVTU CF SFDFJWFE CZ QN PO 'SJEBZ 0DUPCFS BOE EJSFDUFE UP Trenval Business Development Corporation "UUFOUJPO $IBJSNBO PG UIF #PBSE # 8BMMCSJEHF -PZBMJTU 3E 10 #PY #FMMFWJMMF 0/ , / # By email: info@trenval.on.ca 'BY Only candidates selected for an interview will be contacted.

$

13.01 for 75 words Info: 613-966-2034

METROLAND AUCTIONS Annual Nursery Stock Auction Saturday October 14th at 9 am. Trees â—? Shrubs â—? Evergreens â—? Fruit Trees â—? Perennials and more Free Coffee and Hot Dogs Business as usual before, during and after auction 10% Buyers Premium 5599 Cty. Rd. 45, Baltimore, ON 905-372-2662 www.baltimorevalley.ca

20 word ads only.

Part-time Drivers in Campbellford, Norwood, Havelock, Hastings, Warkworth, Marmora and surrounding areas.

BUSINESS SERVICES

t FYU

Deal Taxi is looking for

BUSINESS SERVICES

FRs,EreEsid!ential

TAXI DRIVER’S WANTED

Metroland Media Classifieds

BUSINESS SERVICES

CLASSIFIEDS

HELP WANTED

MOVING/GARAGE SALE Everything must go. Furniture, household items, yard tools, gas stove 130 Golfdale Rd Belleville Sat Sept 30 & Sun Oct. 1/17 8:00 am - 4:00 pm

BUSINESS SERVICES

Call or visit us online to reach over 69,000 potential local buyers. Deadline: Mondays at 2 p.m.

HELP WANTED

GARAGE SALE

12n3d w.0ee1k

Ken Chard Construction. Renovations, decks, sid- LARGE 2 DAY YARD SALE FRIDAY SEPT 29 & ing, sidewalks, fences, ceSATURDAY SEPT 30 ramic, windows, painting 8am - 4pm etc. Free estimates. Call: 636 River Road Corbyville 613-398-7439. Huge variety of antiques collectibles plus Roger’s Mobile Wash and and Detailing: For all your Christmas and Country Folk art washing needs. Auto, Boats, RVs, Homes, Empire Loyalist 2 door Decks, Patios, Driveways, cupboard, vintage archiHeavy Equipment, and tectural cast iron pieces, Monument cleaning. Also, unique garden gate, old tin Store Front, and Graffiti tiles, 8trach tapes, old records, signed prints, cleaning. Bug Spraying duck decoys, vintage glass available. Free Estimates and much more. Home 613-962-8277 or Cell 613-885-1908.

GARAGE SALE

1PTU BO BE UPEBZ

GARAGE SALE

$

BUSINESS SERVICES


METROLAND MEDIA AUCTIONS

AUCTION, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 6:00 PM at 12927 Hwy 2, just west of Colborne with something for everyone, from tools to some furniture, ant. and modern. Collectables, depression glass, crystal, china, large 1950’s Kool-Aid advertising pc, Coke metal aircraft, selection tools, 3000 watt generator, power woodworking tools, large selection tables with folding legs, both wooden and fibre (ideal for yard sales etc), Royal Doulton figures, Hadro figure, flatware sets in cases, milkshake machine, large selection carts with 4 large wheels on each, some garden & lawn tools, small tables, Victorian chairs, rare library ladder, lge selection pictures and frames, large selection floor and table lamps, trilites. Cleaning our large stock room. *No Reserves* Terms: Cashier known cheque with I.D. Gary Warner, Auctioneer, 905-355-2106 See our website for details.

AUCTION SALE WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 4/17 AT 5:00 P.M. DOUG JARRELL SALES ARENA, BELLEVILLE Round single pedestal table, kitchen table & chairs, living room furniture, hall tree, chests of drawers, coffee & end tables, plant tables, large qty. of antique pieces including old Lionel train pieces including engines, cars, track, transformers & accessories, Royal Canadian Mint coin sets, costume jewelry, Hastings & Prince Edward atlas, hardware scales, old prints, die cast cars, dough board, cast iron pieces 7 numerous other old pieces. See the web site for detailed list & photos. AUCTIONEER: DOUG JARRELL 613-969-1033 www.dougjarrellauctions.com

AUCTION SALE PAUL AND MARIEL ROLLINS “ORIGINAL SPRINGBROOK GENERAL STOREâ€? 4840 STIRLING- MARMORA ROAD, SPRINGBROOK, ONT. WEDNESDAY OCTOBER 4TH AT 11:00 AM 8 miles NORTH of Stirling on Stirling – Marmora Road to the Hamlet of Springbrook. Original Poul Thrane 16â€? x 20â€? signed oil painting, antique oak library table, antique rocker, antique parlour and end tables, curio cabinet, vintage newspaper stand, antique platform weigh scales, walnut finish 8 piece dining room suite, vintage banana box and packing crates, antique occasional chairs, butternut cased Grandmothers clock, oak finish writing table, chesterfield and chairs, La-Z-Boy chair, living room furniture, Whirlpool refrigerator and stove – like new; Frigidaire washer and dryer, Kenmore trash compactor, Whirlpool chest freezer, air conditioner, Hotpoint refrigerator – like new; Sony 24â€? flat screen TV, Royal Doulton figurines, Royal Winton, Depression glass, silver plate pieces, Carnival glass, character toys, Toronto Maple Leaf collectibles, Canada Post collectibles, local history books, sewing notions, quilts, Christmas decorations, garden tools, hand tools, shop vac, propane BBQ, 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

IMPORTANT DOUBLE AUCTION NOTICE THANKSGIVING WEEKEND SATURDAY OCTOBER 7, 2017 START 10:30 VIEWING 9AM FEATURING ANTIQUES, COLLECTABLES, CHINA, GLASS, ART, PRINTS, BARBER CHAIR, WELSH CUPBOARD, RARE AFRICAN COLLECTION TO INCLUDE IVORY, EBONY CARVINGS, APPROX. 25+ GUNS, TOOLS TO BE SOLD WITH SECOND AUCTION RING CONSIST OF HAND TOOLS, SNOW BLOWERS, LATHE, GENERAL TABLE SAW, BAND SAW, DRILL PRESS, WELDER, AIR COMPRESOR, BOX LOTS, ETC.

MONDAY OCTOBER 9TH, 2017 LIVE AND WEBCAST 10:30 AM VIEWING FROM 9AM. FEATURING MASSIVE FARM TOY TRACTOR COLLECTION, CCM CONSTRUCTION TOYS, VINTAGE TIN TOYS, ANTIQUE TOYS, PRESS STEEL, DIECAST, TIN AND PORCELAIN ADVERTISING SIGNS, ETC.

GLOBAL ASSETS SOLUTIONS INC. 2544 County road #64, Carrying Place, Ontario SEE www.globalassetssolutions.com FOR DAILY UPDATES CONSIGNMENT WELCOMED

TERMS: Cash, Visa, MasterCard, Debit, (NO CHEQUES) Standard 10% buyer’s premium in effect. All sales are final. Internet bidders 13% buyer’s premium. Not responsible for accidents or injuries. Great restaurant food offered by “THE MASON JAR� Pickup and delivery is available.

To sell or consign, please call “HOSS� WE BUY COMPLETE ESTATES, PARTIAL OR COMPLETE COLLECTIONS 613 392 8777, toll free 877 776 6854, cell 289 259 1788.

AUCTION SALE ESTATE OF CARL WILCE 186 WILCE, R.R.# 2 COLBORNE ONT. SATURDAY OCTOBER 7TH AT 10:30AM Exit NORTH off 401 Highway at Colborne (Interchange 497) onto County Rd 25 for 3 miles and turn EAST onto Dingman Road for 3 miles and continue EAST onto Penryn Road for 1/4 mile and NORTH onto WILCE ROAD TRACTORS: John Deere 2120 2WD diesel tractor- good running condition: John Deere B row crop gas tractor good running condition, Allis Chalmers 200 2WD diesel tractor with cab, Massy Harris 44 gas tractor-needs restoration, International Farmall Super M gas tractor-needs restoration, John Deere 335 big round baler-good condition EQUIPMENT,Mac Don 9ft hay bine, Bush Hog 146 6’ off set disc, Athens 62 tandem disc with front notch disc-like new, Glenco 10’trail type cultivator, 10ft trail type tandem disc, Triple K 3pt hitch 10ft cultivator with levelers, New Holland 273 small square baler,30 ft big bale wagon with steel bar floor, 12 ton wagon running gear with wood box, 3 wheel trai type hay rake, 16ft steel mesh floor hay wagon, John Deere 3 furrow trip beam plow, Mayrath 30ft hay/grain elevator, 3 gravity grain wagons-185 bushel, 30 ft pipe hay elevator, Double Bar single axle feeder wagon, International steel wheel seed drill, Cockshutt two row corn picker, ES Martin livestock head gate, bale feeders, Champion oat roller, horse drawn buggies, cutters, sleigh, Democrat wagon, pony harness, heavy horse harness, western saddles, steel wheel dump rake, Massey Eclispe two furrow walking plow, two furrow tractor plow, Witte &. McCormick hit and miss engines, large quantity of rough cut lumber including, oak. Maple, pine, hemlock – stored inside; maple syrup equipment including- plastic lines, bulk tank storage tanks, gas powered pumps; cement mixer, portable, generator chain saws, power tools, King 10’table saw, antique wheel barrow handled scales, wooden sap buckets, milk cans, barbed wire, buggy wheels, milker pails,14ft canoe, 12ft aluminum boat, quantity of treated soy bean seed, numerous other articles from and old homestead. TERMS- CASH OR CHEQUE OWNER & AUCTIONEER NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENT OR INJURY DAY OF SALE SULLIVAN AUCTIONEERS 3ODLQÀHOG www.sullivanauctions.com

AUCTION SALE ELLIS AND RUTH LODER 699 ROSEBUSH ROAD, R.R.# 1 FRANKFORD, ONT. MONDAY OCTOBER 2ND AT 11:00 AM 2 miles SOUTH of Stirling on Highway 33 and turn onto Rosebush Road for 3 miles. ATV AND TOOLS 1995 Suzuki King Quad 300 cc 4 WD ATV with front mount blade- good running condition; Delta 12�planer, Campbell Hausfield portable air compressor, Rockwell Beaver band saw, Mastercraft drill press, Ryobi mitre saw, Champion 4000 w portable generator, power tools, hand tools, hardware, single axle utility trailer, Troy Bilt 13 hp riding lawn mower, garden trailer, FIREARMS- PAL REQUIRED Remington 30.06, Savage 270 bolt action, Winchester 12 ga; HOUSEHOLD CONTENTS – sell at 11;00 AM antique oak claw foot extension dining table, 6 press back chairs, antique oak glass front dispay cabinet, antique oak sideboard with mirrored backsplash, vintage table top radio, antique Victorian settee, antique press back rocker, walnut chest of drawers, walnut bed, antique trunk, antique glass and china including Cranberry, Depression glass, Royal Doulton, Royal Winton, hand painted china, oil lamps, wall bracket lamp, toilet set pieces, wall clock; electric lift chair, La-Z-Boy chesterfield and chair, end tables, oak night stands, mahogany finish wardrobe, 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 ESTATE OF DOUGLAS F LESTER 1430 COUNTY ROAD 12, R.R.# 1 PICTON, ONT PRINCE EDWARD COUNTY FRIDAY OCTOBER 6TH AT 10:30 AM 5 miles SOUTH of Bloomfield on County Road 12- vicinity of Sandbanks Park VINTAGE VEHICLES 1932 “Rigbyâ€? open station firetruck with 6 cyl engine – running condition; 1962 Cadillac 2 door hardtop , automatic, 84,000 miles – running condition; 1959 AMC Rambler 4 door sedan – running condition; 1962 Vauxhall Victor 4 door sedan with automatic – running condition; 1960’s Toyota Deluxe 700 2 door – restoration project; 2 1970’s Honda Trail 70 cc mini bikes, vintage Cady mo- peds, vintage Honda Express mo ped, 1960’s Mercury “Rocketâ€?, “Lightningâ€? and “Iekhaefeâ€? snowmobiles, ; COLLECTIBLES 3 Gilbarco gas pumps – need restoration; vintage Vendo Coca Cola vending machine, Buckingham tin sign, McLaughlin horse drawn buggy, antique horse drawn Democrat 4 seat wagon, antique 2 wheel pony cart, 2 antique cutters, wooden spoke buggy wheels, sleigh bells, harness, antique wheelbarrow handle scales, wooden butter churn, wooden washing machine, vintage milking machine, cast iron pieces, lamps and lighting, several antique agricultural related hand tools, antique chainsaw, vintage CCM bike, baskets, steel wheels, antique kitchenware’s, antique fire extinguishers, hose reels, EQUIPMENT AND VEHICLES Massey Ferguson 50 diesel tractor- running condition; Massey Harris single furrow sulky plow, horse drawn cultivator on steel, Caterpillar D326 Series F stationary generator with electrical box; Onan 15 kw 3 phase generator; 1986 Oldsmobile Toronado 2 door coupe with automatic trans – running condition – as is; 1985 Ford 350 Econoline camper van , automatic, 128,000 kms, running condition – as is; 1990’s Hyundai “Ponyâ€? 4 door hatchback , automaticrunning condition , as is; Trillium 12ft single axle camper, tandem axle vehicle trailer, 1962 Cadillac parts only, 1929 Durant body parts and engine block, 2000 Chevrolet dual wheel pick up with 5 speed trans, flat deck platform with post hoist- as is, 1995 GMC SLE1500 pick up with auto trans – as is; 1989 Chevrolet Cheyenne dual wheel truck with standard trans, dump box- as is; quantity of vintage car parts including carbs, generators, lights, horns, springs, engine blocks, Chilton manuals, 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 Section B - Thursday, September 28, 2017 B17


World premiere for opening symphony concert able. Other concert favourites are also included. The orchestra’s third annual Tribute to the Brave The symphony enters its new season with reinforce- concert is set for Sunday, Nov.19 at 2:30 p.m. in the The new 2017/18 season for Quinte Symphony gets ments in the key violin sections with Conductor Dan National Air Museum at CFB Trenton, again combining with the 8 Wing Concert Band and 8 Wing off to an early start this year with the first concert Tremblay remaining at the podium. and Drums. This salute to all those who serve set for Sunday, Oct. 1 at Bridge Street Church. Tickets for the show, to begin at 2:30 p.m., are Pipes will include tributes to music of the First and SecTitled “Orchestral Favourites,” this concert will ond World Wars and other classic favourites. highlight the much-loved opera, “Carmen” with sev- now available on line at thequintesymphony. The Christmas season brings another popular eral selections from the “Carmen Suite.” The highlight should be the world premiere by an com, also at the Quinte Arts Council Office, Sam concert on Sunday, Dec. 10, at 2:30 at Centennial Secondary School, featuring yuletide music and original new symphony by youthful, up and coming the Record Man at the Quinte Mall and Books an audience singalong, plus music from “The NutCanadian composer Brett Vachon, who has already cracker.” earned acclaim for previous works. His “Symphony and Company, Picton. Prices remain the same Moving into spring, it’s Sunday, March 25 and in C minor” involves influences from Romantic era as last year - $25 for adults, $20 for seniors, $10 Sunday, May 12, both at 2:30 p.m. and in Bridge composers such as Brahms, Dvorak, Beethoven and Street Church. Schubert, he admits in some personal comments. “I for students and children free. Season tickets Anyone interested in playing with the orchestra am really excited to see this work getting a world can leave their name on the website or contact Conpremiere with Quinte Symphony,” he added. With and 20 per cent discount are available also on ductor Tremblay at a concert. its traditional-flavoured melodies and rhythms, the line. audience should find this work accessible and enjoyBY JACK EVANS

Woman targeted by fraudsters FOR EVERY REASON AND EVERY SEASON

TM

All Trailers Are Subject To HST And Ontario Tire Tax. Pre-Delivery Inspection Is Included At No Charge.

Trailers are subject to Freight Charges. Please call for prices. 2018 N & N 5.5 X 10 ALL SPORT SERIES TRAILER

$

2,395

2018 N&N Allsport Series Trailer - 5.5 x 10 Hot Dipped Galvanized, Adjustable Tongue, 15”Galvanized Panels, 4” Galvanized Drop Axle Installed, Radial Tires on Galvanized rims, Upgraded with Full Mesh Rear Ramp, 16” ground Clearance - Cross Members 16 On center, Pressure treated Plywood floor, L.E.D Lights - Sealed Wring Harness, 4 Factory Installed floor mounted D-rings. ALLS66123G

2018 EXCALIBUR 2700LB SINGLE AXLE PONTOON BOAT TRAILER

$

2,295

2018 N&N 6 X 12 UTILITY TRAILER UPGRADED SIDES

$

2,695

2018 6 X 12 - INNO Series With Upgraded Closed panel Sides Custom Carts Exclusive with upgraded panel sides - Upgraded with Full Mesh Ramp, 205/75R14 Tires mounted on Galvanized Rims - 5/8 Pressure treated floor - 2” ball - Cross members 16 On center, L.E.D Lights - 3500 Lb Galvanized Axle , 12” tall sides Slipper spring Suspension 20” ground clearance S72144

2018 EXCALIBUR BT1200 SINGLE AXLE BOAT TRAILER

$

1,195

Excalibur 2700lb capacity single axle Pontoon Boat Trailer. Will fit 17`- 21`Pontoon boats. Fully welded TUBE steel frame, Hot Dipped Galvanized after welding, heavy duty axle with EZ lube hubs, 14 in C Range tires on galvanized wheels, fully adjustable bunks, front tower with boarding ladder, fully sealed lighting and electrical, tongue jack & 3 year full warranty. PT2721

Excalibur BT1200 Single Axle boat trailer. 1200lbs total boat capacity. Fully welded tube steel construction, Hot Dipped Galvanized after welding, fully adjustable winch & tower, 2200lb axle, EZ lube hubs, galvanized wheels, 12 tires, fully sealed lighting and wiring, fully adjustable bunks for maximum hull support, 900lb winch and strap & 3 year warranty. Will fit up to a 16’ boat

2018 AMERA-LITE BLAST SNOWMOBILE / ATV TRAILER

2018 AMERA-LITE SNOWMOBILE TRAILER UPGRADED!

$

4,995

2018 Blast Snowmobile / Cross Over Trailer - Upgraded with Side Man Door, Rear ramp door with Spring Assist, Wheeled Tongue jack included, Front access hatch, S-Lock Screwless Exterior, All Aluminum Construction, Drymax Enginereed flooring, 10” powder coated wheels, Spring axle suspension, 4 pin premium wiring ATP stone guard LED lights, 2 Tie Down Bars with adjustable slide track - Rear Stabilizer jacks. ABSXT8512SA

9,495 2018 Amera-lite ADSXT723TA2 - 7 ft W x 23 ft L Upgraded $

with Snow Special Package! White on silver Exterior with 2tone divider bar, Helmet Cabinet, Super Lock Screwless Exterior, High Performance Radial Tires Aluminum Mag Wheels, Water Resistant Dry Max Engineered Panels, New Generation LED Lights, Both Ramps All Aluminum Construction with Triple tube tongue, 16 On Center Side wall supports, 16 On center Roof bows, Spring Axles - Slant V-Nose With Drive out Ramp with included ski guide on ramp.

Trenton, ON 613-965-1837 Gananoque, ON 613-382-1937 Williamsburg, ON 613-535-1837 Carleton Place 613-253-1837 B18 Section B - Thursday, September 28, 2017

Quinte West — A local woman was the target of a fraudulent gift card scheme in Quinte West, involving a man coming to her door and using her telephone. On Thursday, Sept. 21, officers from the Quinte West OPP investigated the suspicious activities surrounding a gift card the homeowner had won. On Wednesday, the homeowner reported that at about 10 a.m. she received a telephone call from an unknown female advising her she had won a $500 gift card. The homeowner was told a representative would go to her residence with the gift card. At about 5 p.m. on Wednesday, an unknown man attended the address and presented the homeowner with the gift card. The man also asked if he could use the telephone and was granted permission. While he was on the phone, the homeowner overheard the man’s conversation about the residence having a lock box containing a key. The man then left the residence and after investigating the gift card, police determined it was counterfeit with no value.

The man is described as Caucasian, cleancut, mid-20s with short dark hair. He was wearing a white T-shirt and had no audible accent. He was driving a small sedan, black, which was free of any rust and appeared clean. Anyone with information about the occurrence is asked to contact the Quinte West OPP at 613-392-3561 or, should you wish to remain anonymous, contact Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-8477, where you may be eligible to receive a cash reward of up to $2,000.

Getting Married? We want to see it! B AY O F QU I N T

E

K I N G ST

ON

2017 E DITI

ON

We are looking for real weddings from local couples for our 2018 edition of Wedding Trends Magazine serving Quinte and Kingston regions.

Criteria for submitting: • Weddings must be local - unless they are destination weddings. • Wedding photos must be professionally shot*. • Include any unique features of your day. • We require a photo or 2 of the couple, venue (where it was held), and a few detail shots as low resolution jpegs (all photos must be under 5mb). • If your wedding is selected, you will be contacted for high resolution photos* and to tell your story! (*release must be signed by all photographers for permission of use.)

Local love stories

Photographers welcome! WEDDI

NGTRE

NDS.CA

If your wedding meets these requirements, email us by October 18, 2017 at WeddingTrendsSeaway@metroland.com Subject Line: Wedding Trends 2018


Quinte’s

ONLY

boutique style

October 1st, 2017

bridal event

nveiled

What makes us the most unique and upscale Bridal Event happening in Quinte?

boutique bridal event

Join us for our nineth boutique style bridal event that invites brides-to-be to mingle and plan with amazing local wedding vendors in a swanky, social atmosphere! It is almost like a girl’s night out on a Sunday afternoon. Featuring a runway show by Lily’s Bridal, cocktails, delicious treats, and everyone has a chance to

Win a Ladies’ Bulova-16 Diamond Dial Watch

We’re giving away to the first 100 brides a complimentary bottle of wine!

Plus a light bistro style lunch for all attending.

BRIDES, complete your passport at the show for your chance to see how quickly, and how much money you can grab from our $CASH VAULT $! Must be present to win.

Come & mingle with us on Sunday, October 1st, 2017 • 10am-3pm Trenton Knights of Columbus Hall, 57 Stella Crescent

613-475-4567

Tickets $12 at the door (A portion of every ticket sold is being donated to the G May Project) For a complete list of vendors visit unveiledbridalevent.ca

Like us on facebook for updates, details, and vendor information.

unveiledbridalevent.ca/tickets VENUE SPONSOR

FASHION SHOW SPONSOR

FLORAL SPONSOR

DECOR SPONSOR

DESIGN SPONSOR

MEDIA SPONSORS

OFFICIAL CHARITY

A division of Metroland Media

Trenton Knights of Columbus

Section B - Thursday, September 28, 2017 B19


FREE CASINO SHUTTLE AVAILABLE LE* SEATS ARE LIMITED! BOOK YOUR RIDE CALL TOLL FREE 1-888-896-8085 *The shuttle is only available if seats are booked!

$10 FREE PLAY

PERSON. 3 HOUR MINIMUM ** **PER VISIT REQUIRED. VALID AXIS REWARDS MEMBERSHIP CARD REQUIRED.

Looking for a morning or afternoon of fun with a group of friends? Enjoy Shorelines lunch buffet and refreshments. Try your luck at the slots or tables! Shorelines Casino keeps the fun going everyday with exciting promotions and activities.

FREQUENCY OF FUTURE SHUTTLES WILL DEPEND ON DEMAND!

SHUTTLE SERVICE IS NOW AVAILABLE ON WEDNESDAYS Below are the times the shuttle will be at the following locations. SHUTTLE WILL ONLY STOP AT THESE LOCATIONS IF WE HAVE CONFIRMED BOOKINGS. Please call the toll free number to confirm the number of passengers and location of pick up. Pick up Times

Pick up Locations

Arrive Casino

Leave Casino

11:30am

Brighton Legion Curling Club South end of parking lot

1:15pm

4:15pm

11:50am

12:00pm

12:15pm

12:30pm

12:45pm

Walmart,Trenton Upper south parking lot

1:15pm

Metro, Trenton Side street between Metro & Sunrise Apt (Creswell St.)

1:15pm

Smylie’s Your Independent Grocer, Trenton Upper right corner of parking lot

1:15pm

Kenron Estates

Bayside Estates

1:15pm

1:15pm

4:15pm

4:15pm

THIS SHUTTLE SERVICE IS NOT IN PLACE YET.

BELOW ARE THE TIMES THE SHUTTLE WILL BE IN YOUR TOWNS! Please call the toll free number to confirm the number of passengers and convenient locations in order for us to better serve you. Pick up Times

Pick up Locations

4:15pm

Leave Casino

Day 1 9:00am

Tweed

10:30am

1:30pm

9:20am

Madoc

10:30am

1:30pm

9:35am

Marmora

10:30am

1:30pm

10:00am

Stirling

10:30am

1:30pm

10:15am

Foxboro

10:30am

1:30pm

Day 2

4:15pm

4:15pm

Arrive Casino

8:45am

Campbellford

10:30am

1:30pm

9:05am

Warkworth

10:30am

1:30pm

9:20am

Codrington

10:30am

1:30pm

9:40am

Wooler

10:30am

1:30pm

10:00am

Frankford

10:30am

1:30pm

Transportation provided by:

1-888-896-8085 B20 Section B - Thursday, September 28, 2017


Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.