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Troop B celebrating 100 years of service pg. 5

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Valley News Tri-Lakes

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• EDITION •

Communities mourn: Stephen F. Duso Sr. laid to rest

Honors, cortège remember longtime firefighter, sheriff’s deputy, court officer who was beloved husband, father, grandfather and a great neighbor By Kim Dedam and Lohr McKinstry STA FF W RITERS

ELIZABETHTOWN | Elizabethtown firefighter and Essex County Court officer Stephen F. Duso Sr., who died suddenly on Wednesday, Aug. 30, is being remembered as a gentle man who helped others. “Steve joined the fire department as soon as he got out of high school,” Elizabethtown Volunteer Fire Department Chief Edward Martin said, as dozens of firefighters and emergency personnel gathered to pay final respects last Friday evening. “He was dedicated and always responded. You could always depend on him. And if he didn’t have a right answer, he got a right answer.” The somber line of dress uniforms showed how far-reaching Duso’s reputation was for service, courage and commitment. Fire personnel from Schroon, Westport, Keene Valley, Moriah, Wills-

boro and beyond waited to walk together into the funeral home. Many uniformed officers represented the Essex County Sheriff ’s department, where Duso had worked as a deputy for 16 years. A group of about 12 court officers spoke quietly of their long-time colleague, who had spent 16 years as bailiff in Essex County courtrooms and was a sergeant for the state Office of Court administration. They recalled how he treated people with respect. And how he took great joy in spending time with his children, grandchildren and his wife, Wanda. Duso, 60, was also an Essex County Fire Investigation Unit investigator and a county deputy fire coordinator.

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CELEBRATION PICTURE PAGE INSIDE pg. 11

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‘TRULY WONDERFUL PERSON’

Town of Lewis Supervisor Jim Monty said the loss would be felt deeply in these communities. “Steve was one of a kind. He was very communities-oriented, not unlike » Duso Cont. on pg. 7

Shearing day at DaCy Farm

Westport family farmstead sees visit from sheep shearer Roger Hastings By Kim Dedam STA FF W RITER

WESTPORT | The three youngest Johnston farmers at DaCy Meadow Farm donned their rubber boots and long pants and waited in the laneway. Sunflowers tossed in a late morning breeze and chickens clucked their way through the cleanly cut field.

LOCAL EVENTS & ACTIVITIES au suncommunitynews.com

The visit from sheep shearer Roger Hastings last week meant their round and puff y woolen sheep, Grace, would have a trim. Gwen, 11, Fiona, 8, and Izzy, 4, hadn’t seen shearing done before. “It’s our first time,” Gwen said. The plan was to collect the wool, card it, wash it and spin it into yarn for knitting. » DaCy Cont. on pg. 2


2 • September 9, 2017 | The Valley News Sun (TL)

» DaCy Cont. from pg. 1 Grace arrived at DaCy about a year ago, their mom Erika Johnston said. She was a rescue along with three pygmy goats with long shaggy beards, their fur mottled black and white. The four long-time farm animals have side-by-side pens again. When asked what the goats’ names were, the girls grinned. “Salt and Pepper,” they smiled. “And Whipped Cream,” young Izzy said, of the name he gave to the bigger and most curious goat with a round white belly. Hastings arrived with his shearing clippers and a motor that hooked to the barn’s power outlet. For her part, Grace paced in one corner of her stall, unsure why all the attention was focused on her. Gwen helped corral the round ewe, while the goat friends milled about their manger. “They stay cooler in summer with the wool on them,” Hastings said, as he rigged the overhead clippers. From Dickinson Center, Hastings has been shearing sheep for 20 years and travels from Sacket’s Harbor to Lake Champlain to trim the wool from herds large and small. It’s been a challenge scheduling fleece trimming this summer, he said, given the amount of rain.

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Sheep have to be sheared in dry weather because of the electric shears and because wet fleece can felt. “You want it dry,” he said. Grace is a Romney sheep, he said as he began to carefully buzz beneath the deep layers of wool. First he trimmed one side, laying Grace against one knee. She seemed to calm down immediately, the points of her hooves sticking up. Even folded in half, Grace the ewe didn’t wriggle much. Then Hastings turned the sheep and began to shear the other side. The youngest DaCy farmers remained entranced and carefully collected the first few tufts of fleece, moving swiftly around the stall as Hastings sheared the wool. One sheep takes about 20 minutes, but Grace had lots of wool this time. Each trim nets between six to eight pounds of wool, generally, Hastings said. Often they are trimmed in summer or fall, but Romney wool can be collected twice a year. As the big puffball of wool slipped away, the rich mottled blacks and grays of Grace’s rich coat came into view. Hastings said the brown and cream tones of wool come as the sun has bleaches the outer layers of wool. Hastings raises about 200 sheep on his farm in Dickinson. He estimates that he shears between 1,000 and 2,000 sheep, de-

pending on the year. Dave Johnston, co-owner of DaCy Meadows Farm with his wife Cynthia, watched his three grandchildren as they learned — hands on — about the fleece. “At least we know someone who can card and spin wool,” he smiled, lifting little Izzy up. Sheep shearing isn’t always a family adventure. But it was well-received morning chore here. Gwen and Fiona turned tufts of wool sticky with lanolin in their hands and filled one bag full. Izzy promptly threw his four-yearold self onto the big downy bag, all smiles. Beside quiet sun-strewn fields at DaCy, Grace jumped up from the big pile of wool and seemed light as a feather. “She looks perfect,” Hastings said of the young Romney ewe, whose tail flicked as she pranced to the edge of the barn. Hastings said many farms are returning to an old-time method of cleaning fleece. “It’s called fermentation cleaning. You leave it submersed in water and covered for a week,” he said. “Then you lay it out to dry for a week,” he said. “Some people do three fleeces in the same water.” Shearing Romney sheep twice a year provides shorter tufts of wool that are easier to spin, he said. But the Johnston children and mom Erika

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are ready for the next adventure with Grace’s wool: to card and clean it. ■ COVER, ABOVE & BELOW: Roger Hastings trims wool from Grace, the ewe DaCy Meadow Farm rescued last year. Photo by Kim Dedam

BELOW LEFT: Grace before and after (two photos) Grace at DaCy, was a puffball of wool before and a slender, mottled gray and black ewe after. Photos by Kim Dedam

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The Valley News Sun | September 9, 2017 • 3

Conservation Conversations

Dances with turtles Every once in a while I will get a phone call, a letter or an email from someone who has a concern or would like some direction on a problem. Recently I received a call from a By Rich Redman local fellow who has traveled back and • COLUMNIST • forth to work over the same stretch of highway for the last thirteen years. Tom Briggs of Moriah works as a blasting driller at NYCO in Lewis and travels the Lincoln Pond Road daily — same path, same time. When you drive the road daily, you see the subtle changes. Maybe it’s the weather, maybe wildlife, or the day to day change of a construction site; a kind of time lapse photography. You mentally take that picture every day and program the changes. Tom has an eye for wildlife. He noticed and noted the times when the turtles build their nests near Lincoln Pond. He pointed out that the second and third weeks of June are prime time for turtles to come ashore and scrap out a hollow to deposit their eggs into. Sometimes they cross the road, and sometimes they don’t make it. He has seen drivers deliberately crush the turtles. While walking the shoreline, he pointed out nesting sites. As a guy who drives the Lincoln Pond Road daily, he sees the turtles make their nests, and notes their locations. Tom has also noticed that the new guard rails along the causeway were installed at the same time the turtles were involved in their nesting. Without a doubt, some nests were trampled by the construction, plus others are being destroyed by the foot traffic off the causeway. Tom wanted to point out that most people don’t know the nests are there. If

Tom Briggs walking the shores of Lincoln Pond.

Photo by Rich Redman

they knew, they may have a respect for the area and appreciate what Tom Briggs of Moriah is trying to do. stay off the banks. It’s a simple thing. We are all part of the ecology. There Tom wasn’t sure what to do, and asked if I could is no reason to smash and destroy wildlife nests. Let’s help. I said I’ll write an article and call it “Dances with give them a chance to live too. Turtles,” not as humorous, but out of respect. According to a Native American website, turtles play positive roles in the folklore of many Native American So, I am letting you know about the nests and maybe tribes. In the creation myths of some East Coast tribes (such — that’s a big maybe — the Lincoln Pond people and WE FIX WE FIX as the Iroquois and Lenape) the Great Spirit created their New York State Department of Environmental ConserHAIL DAMAGE! HAIL DAMAGE! by placing earth on the back of a giant turtle. We Beat thehomeland HAIL vation could put up a sign warning folks, or even desOut of it! We Beat the HAIL ignate off-limit areas during the nesting period so the This is why some contemporary Native Americans refer Out of it! turtles have a chance. It may be too late for this season, to North America by the name “Turtle Island.” Turtles are but life continues next spring and the following springs. a symbol of the earth in many different Native cultures. Locally Owned & The areas could have some sand spreadOperated where other tribes, turtles are often associated with for Over 30InYears! Locally Owned & turtles could lay eggs and maybe have an easier time healing, wisdom, and spirituality. Operated for Overdigging 30 Years! out a nest. It’s too late Paintless for this year, butRepair not Tom Briggs, I and many others respect the circle of life. PDRDent for the future. This could be done on many road side For many of us, it’s simple: we give a damn and appreciate Factory Trained GM Tech On Site with 30 Years Experience not just on Lincoln Pond, as an educational tool. seeing living things live. We all dance with something! ■ • Auto Collision Repair • Recreational Vehicles • Tractor/Trailer PDR- Paintless Dent Repairponds, To some people this• Muscle will be but many • Boats Carfoolish, Restorations • Bed Linerswill • Windshield Repair Factory Trained GM Tech On Site with 30 Years Experience

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4 • September 9, 2017 | The Valley News Sun (TL)

Thoughts from Behind the Pressline

Nothing to prove I received a fair amount of correspondence after the recent column titled “Misguided efforts.” As you might expect, By Dan Alexander some disagreed with • PUBLISHER • my position and others agreed. What’s also interesting are those who want to go on record versus those who want to share their thoughts privately. It speaks to the ever-growing divide and despite how strongly many feel on both sides of the issue, they remain fearful of personal attacks or reprisals should they share their thought publicly. Here’s another thought with respect to that column I want to share. I’m not immune to the plight of African Americans nor minorities in the preceding years of our country. Slavery was a terrible practice inflicted on them, through the centuries, but it was America that stood tall in the 1800s and since to make the civilized world understand that humans were not a commodity to be bought and sold. To further my point, in the 21st century all Americans of all nationalities have a great opportunity to accomplish anything they set their mind to. No other person, group of protesters or statue can ever take that way nor claim they are inferior in anyway. There isn’t one field of interest that African Americans and other minorities haven’t excelled to the highest level of accomplishment. Government, medical, technical, law-enforcement, business, social, sports, education, entertainment, you name it — there is complete equality among the races bar none. Look no further than former President Barack Obama and Dr. Ben Carson; from humble beginnings Obama reached the highest office in the land, while Carson performed the most intricate surgery known to medicine. There is nothing more for this race to prove. It’s no longer about the color of one’s skin, nor nationality, that holds one back nor advances one forward. Today it’s all about self commitment and self conduct. If we’ve accomplished anything in the last 150 years it must be that we look past skin color and judge people on the merits of their individual efforts. More than any time in the past, people have the option to make themselves into whatever they choose if they are willing to follow their dream and nothing from the distant past can change what accomplishments people can achieve today. We are all created equal. We can marvel at what some accomplish and shake our heads at what other do with their lives, but race is not — repeat not — the common denominator! ■

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Opinion

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From the Editor

Celebrating commonality through high school sports

Tailgates. Pep rallies. Friday night lights. The new school year is here! And that’s exciting news for student athletes and high school sports fans alike. Research shows that being a student athlete is about a lot more than fun and games. It teaches important life lessons, too. In fact, high school athletes not only have higher grade point averages and fewer school absences than non-athletes, they also develop the kind of work habits and self-discipline skills that help them become more responsible and productive community members. Attending high school sporting events teaches important life lessons, too. Among them, it teaches that we can live in different communities, come from different backgrounds, faiths and cultures, cheer for different teams and still have a common bond. That’s why attending the activities hosted by your high school this fall is so important. It’s not only an opportunity to cheer for your

hometown team, it is also an opportunity to celebrate our commonality. And that’s something our country needs right now. The bond we share is mutually supporting the teenagers in our respective communities. We applaud their persistence, tenacity, preparation and hard work, regardless of the color of the uniform they wear. We acknowledge that education-based high school sports are enhancing their lives, and ours, in ways that few other activities could. And we agree that, regardless of what side of the field we sit on, attending a high school sporting event is an uplifting, enriching, familyfriendly experience for all of us. Many of the high schools in our state lie at the heart of the communities they serve. They not only are educating our next generation of leaders, they also are a place where we congregate, where people from every corner of town and all walks of life come together as one. And at no time is

Letters to the Editor

Hurricane Harvey was strengthened by climate change

To the Editor: The pictures and stories coming out of Houston tear at our hearts. We may have family, friends or acquaintances who lost everything. But what should also tear at our hearts are three up-front-anddistinctly-clear things: the severity of the storm was worsened by climate change; the severity of the destruction was worsened by land use decisions in Houston and the surrounding area; and the severity of the losses are being particularly borne, as always, by the poor. Hurricane Harvey might have happened with or without climate change — but Harvey was made more ferocious by the more than 7 degrees warmer air over the Gulf that carried much more moisture than usual. It was flooding, more than the winds that destroyed.

BRIEFS

Free health screenings offered Sept. 12

ELIZABETHTOWN | Local hunters can receive a free health screening at Elizabethtown Community Hospital on Sept. 12 from 4-6 p.m. The screening will assess blood pressure, glucose, cholesterol, oxygen levels and more. For more information, call 518873-6377 or visit ech.org. ■

‘IRONKIDS’ races into village Sept. 9

LAKE PLACID | Kids from all around the region will have their shot at athletic glory this Saturday. The IRONKIDS Fun Run, a scaled-down, child-friendly version of Ironman, is set for 10 a.m. on Sept. 9 along Mirror Lake Drive.

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Community pig roast to benefit injured motorcyclist

ELIZABETHTOWN | A community pig roast to raise money for Elizabethtown resident Jacob Diehl is slated for Sept. 23 at 5 p.m. Diehl was involved in a motorcycle accident late last month. He sustained serious injuries and is now in the ICU with a very long road ahead of him, organizers say. A basket raffle is also planned.

Letters can also be sent to our offices: 14 Hand Avenue: P.O. Box 338. Elizabethtown, NY 12932 Letters and guest commentaries do not reflect the editorial opinion of the newspaper and its owners. We’re always looking for guest columnists to offer extended commentaries. Contact pete@suncommunitynews.com to learn more. Endorsement letters for announced political candidates are not accepted and are considered paid endorsements. The paid endorsement notice can be purchased in three sizes — a quick 50 words or less for $15; a 51-175 word endorsement for $ 50 or a 176-300 word endorsement for $75.

— This editorial is co-authored by Bob Gardner, executive director of the National Federation of State High School Associations and Robert Zayas, Executive Director of the New York State Public High School Athletic Association.

Publisher’s note: It has not been the policy of this paper to concede this prominent editorial space, but with this important message from NYSPHSAA, we’ve made an exception. High school athletics, good sportsmanship and the added value they bring to the education process are to be enjoyed and prized by all — including those who participate as spectators. We applaud and endorse this commentary fully.

Harvey might have destroyed homes and businesses, but paving over hundreds of acres of farmland with impervious concrete, filling in wetlands and ignoring even weak regulations on building within the floodplain practically guaranteed that losses from a hurricane would be incredibly high. Harvey did not distinguish between rich and poor, but folks in substandard housing or those who could not afford insurance will have a much harder time recovering. We grieve with the victims and want to help. But in addition to empathy, humans have at least some degree of forethought. While spending our tax dollars to help Houston rebuild, does it not make sense at the same time to summon our political will, our tax money and our common sense toward long-term climate action that can mitigate future destruction? Katharine M. Preston, Essex ■

The run is geared toward children ages 3-13. Those interested in registering can visit the Lake Placid Conference Center on Sept. 8 from noon to 7 p.m., register day-of on Mirror Lake Drive from 8 to 9:30 a.m. or visit ironman.com. Registration costs $20 and includes a race bib, finisher shirt, medal and more. ■

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this unity more evident than during a high school athletic event. This is the beginning of a new school year. Opportunities abound in the classroom and outside it. Let’s make the most of them by attending as many athletic events at the high school in our community as possible. Turn on the lights and let the games begin! ■

For more information, contact Amanda Demar at 518-860-0958 or Shannon Christian 518-637-9094. ■

Community blood drives announced

ELIZABETHTOWN | The North Country Regional Blood Donor Center will conduct several blood drives this month. Locations and times are as follows: Sept. 12 at the Elizabethtown Community Hospital from 3 - 6 p.m., Sept. 15 at the New York State DEC Headquarters in Ray Brook from 9:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m., Sept. 21 at the Au Sable Forks Ambulance Service from 2:30 - 6:30 p.m. and Sept. 25 at the Essex Fire Department from 4 - 7 p.m. For more information, call 518-562-7406 or visit uvmhealth.org. ■

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The Valley News Sun | September 9, 2017 • 5

Smart Growth grants awarded to area towns Port Henry, Crown Point, Willsboro among Essex County communities to win funds for public parks and recreation improvements

By Kim Dedam STA FF W RITER

ELIZABETHTOWN | Seventeen communities and cultural organizations in the North Country won Smart Growth grant awards last month as part of an ongoing state effort to boost local economies, recreation programs and infrastructure. In Crown Point, for example, the town won $75,000 to upgrade wastewater treatment services to the War Canoe Distillery, a new business moving into an unused feed store on Route 9N. Crown Point Supervisor Charles Harrington said the funding is a welcome addition to the town’s effort to bring in new business. “This grant funding is for upgrades to the system, as the distillery wastewater needs to be pretreated for our plant.” War Canoe Distillery is investing this year in the external part of the structure, the old Agway Store. “Then they will be working with the engineering aspects of the distillery,” Harrington said. As to the wastewater treatment improvements, Harrington said the work has begun. “The Essex County Planning Office was instrumental in ensuring that we pursue

North Country SPCA

Share your story Share your story of love to help support the North Country SPCA! Have you adopted a pet from us? Submit By Kathy Wilcox your story to the Petco • COLUMNIST • Holiday Wishes Campaign at petcofoundation.org/holiday-wishes. Simply describe how your adopted pet brings more joy to your life each day and how their love has changed your life — in big or small ways — for a chance to win big for the animal welfare organization you adopted from. You’ll also have the chance to win a Petco gift card up to $1,000. Your entry could result in a grant to the North Country SPCA for up to $100,000! If you have any questions or need assistance, email volunteer@ncspca.org.

this grant and be successful in obtaining the funds,” Harrington said. A grant award of $75,000 is going to the Town of Willsboro to continue development at the Florence Hathaway Recreation Park, a joint project of the town and the Youth Commission. The Rec Park is open year-round and has a tennis court, a play-trail system for families and children in addition to volleyball courts, a community garden, picnic areas and a nature/cross-country ski trail that connects with the Champlain Area Trails along the Lake Champlain valley. The Town of Moriah won $75,000 to help transform the waterfront in the Hamlet of Port Henry. The Fort Ticonderoga Association won $25,000 for stone deck repairs at Fort Ticonderoga. Other monies were awarded to municipalities and to local cultural centers for plans also underway, stretching from Franklin County to the southernmost edge of the Adirondack Park.

TRI-LAKES REGION

In the Tri-Lakes region, the Village of Saranac Lake won $75,000 to help construct the Saranac Lake Southern Gateway Multi-Use Trail. The cultural arts center at BluSeed Studios in Saranac Lake won a $39,010 grant for building and site improvements along the Saranac Lake travel corridor.

And the Town of Tupper Lake won $75,000 for Tupper Lake Rail-Trail readiness planning and improvements.

WARREN AND SO. ADIRONDACK COUNTIES

Warren County won $67,936 to promote their First Wilderness Heritage Corridor projects. The Adirondack Folk School was awarded $18,700 for video promotions. The Sagamore Institute of the Adirondacks won $67,620 for their Great Camp Sagamore Visitor Interpretation and Education Project. The Lake George Land Conservancy was awarded $40,000 toward Pilot Knob Trail reconstruction. A $60,000 grant for Hamilton County will support phase one of the Adirondack Cycling Strategy toward bicycle tourism. A $73,500 grant for the Town of Indian Lake will support development of Essex Chain Lakes and Cedar River Flow Hamlet gateway facilities. The Town of Caroga won $6,000 toward planning the Wheelerville Trails System. The Town of Johnsburg won $73,981for Ski Bowl Park Improvements and Little Gore Summit Trail and beach improvements. The Village of Northville won $42,000 for zoning updates.

State police to host open house Troop B celebrating 100 years of service RAY BROOK | New York State Police Troop B are hosting an open house Saturday, Sept. 23 to celebrate 100 years of service. The event will go on from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the Troop B Headquarters on State Route 86 in Ray Brook. Throughout the day, there will be building

tours, Special Operations Response Team (SORT) demonstrations, K-9 demonstrations, historical displays, a helicopter display and face painting by Belly Buttons the Clown. Food vendors will be on site. The event is free and open to the public. For more information, call 518-897-2000. ■

Quality distribution to every household is one of the foundation pillars The SUN uses to provide our customers with superior service. While costly, we know, and more importantly our customers know, that there is no better delivery method for their money saving fliers each week than The SUN.

Our featured pet this week is Chuck, a Domestic Shorthair-mix who we believe is only about 2 years old. Chuck was found as a stray, but this handsome gent is sure loving the indoor life! He loves people and is quite the charmer, showering people with plenty of affection. However, he does not however get along with other cats. He would make a great companion for someone in need of some kitty kisses who is looking for a feline to be their only cat. He is also such a handsome fellow, with his dilute orange tabby markings and stunning green eyes — you won’t be able to resist him! Please come meet him today. ■

The combination of superior delivery, exceptional local news coverage and top notch customer service are just a few of the reasons why The SUN continues to add new customers each week and expand it service area. Wise marketers and even national agency placement firms recognize the changing times and the limited market coverage provided by other media firms that insist on charge consumers to receive their products. Consumers demand and expect so much more today, that's why The SUN continues to meet those demands and continues to grow stronger each week. The numbers clearly show you can not produce results for today's dominate retailers without a sound investment and watchful eye on the delivery and readership of your newspaper. In the North Country Region The SUN continues to offer a brighter newspaper alternative.

114,235 Readers Weekly* (Average reader formula 1.8 readers per 63,484 audited circulation)

Call 518-873-6368

to advertise in The SUN!

- Locally Owned since 1948 Source of Data- 2016 eve Audit & Readership Survey •circulation Verification Council is an independent, third party auditing company. CVC audits and data are an unbiased source of market circulation and reader information. Neither Denton Publications nor The SUN pays eve to perform its service. 099162

And the Otter Lake Fire Company won a grant for $19,210 toward a feasibility study for senior citizen housing in Forestport. Additional grants in this round were given to communities and sustainable development programs in the Catskills.

SMART GROWTH

In all, the state awarded $1.35 million in this round of Smart Growth funding, which is drawn from the Environmental Protection Fund in coordination with the Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC). “The Catskill and Adirondack parks are two of New York’s premier year-round destinations, offering unmatched outdoor recreation and stunning natural beauty for residents and visitors alike to enjoy,” Gov. Andrew Cuomo said, in announcing awards. DEC Commissioner Basil Seggos said the monies are designed to help localities develop and implement smart growth strategies. “DEC’s Smart Growth Implementation Grants Program promotes growth that recognizes the link between economic development, the built environment, and protecting our irreplaceable natural resources and healthy communities,” Seggos said. ■

Elizabethtown Social Center

Upcoming Yoga classes are back this fall! Karin DeMuro will lead yoga classes on Mondays from 4:30By Arin Burdo 5:30 p.m., starting • COLUMNIST • on Sept. 18. DeMuro is a certified Yoga Alliance teacher. She teaches Hatha, Vinyasa and Yin yoga. It is a slower and nice-paced class, yet designed for all levels! Starting with breath work, DeMuro can help you focus on proper pose positioning, helping to build your strength and flexibility. Yoga compliments any and every lifestyle, helping balance out both mind and body. Hope to see you there! DeMuro’s yoga classes will cost $10 per class on a walk-in basis, or $50 for a 10-class punch card good for classes from Sept. 18 through Dec. 18. Please bring a yoga mat to class. Limited supplies will be available to borrow. The fall Pleasant Valley Chorale rehearsals begin on Tuesday, Sept. 12, from 7-9 p.m. at the social center. The Pleasant Valley Chorale is a fun group with over 30 members from all over the region. The ensemble will be singing holiday music in preparation for two concerts in December. Dues for the fall chorale session are $15. No audition is required. For additional information, please contact the social center. The 2017-18 paddle tennis season begins on Oct. 1. Membership fees are due by the end of next month. Membership fees for social center paddle tennis are very reasonable — and it can be played all year. A single paddle membership is $135 until Nov. 1. After that date, the cost goes up to $160. The family rate, applicable to all members of a household, is $250. After Nov. 1, the family rate goes up to $300. Please contact the center anytime if you have questions about paddle tennis or membership. Details can be found at elizabethtownsocialcenter.org and on facebook. For more information, call 873-6408. ■

~ ~


6 • September 9, 2017 | The Valley News Sun (TL)

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TH E L A RG E S T SO U RC E O F CO M M U N IT Y E V E NTS I N TH E N O RTH CO U NTRY.

Calendar Events ............. ...... ......... ...... ..of .............. ..... ................ ............... ..........·····ci

Contact Kasey Rosselli at (518) 873-6368 ext. 104 or email kasey@suncommunitynews.com to list your event.

. •. . ••. ••. . . •. . . •. . ••. ••. ••. SEP. 9

Wilmington » Festival of Colors

held at Tee-ball Field; 10:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. The event features numerous local artists, produce growers, bakers, homemade crafters, and an all new Battle of the Cupcakes. The day kicks-off with a live children’s comedy routine performed by our favorite clown and her assistants. Then make way for a well-known band, Raisinhead. Other items throughout the day include arts demonstrations, food vendors, and many children’s activities.

SEP. 12

Elizabethtown » Hunter’s Health

Screening held at Elizabethtown Community Hospital; 4:00 p.m. - 6:00 p.m. This free health screening will allow hunters the opportunity to have a physical that will assess their overall health before they set out into the woods. Results will be reviewed by a physician that evening and mailed out within two weeks. Additionally, participants will also be able to

speak with health professionals if they have any specific concerns. Essex » Ruminations & Estimations: pasture and livestock needs primer held at The Whallonsburg Grange Hall; 6:00 p.m. - 7:30 p.m. For those who were not able to attend Dr. Turco’s introductory clinic in April, an abbreviated primer will be available for free by Ashlee Kleinhammer of North Country Creamery and Nathan Henderson of Reber Rock Farm in preparation for the September 23-24th Advanced Grazing Clinic. It is highly recommended that you attend this primer prior to the Advanced Clinic. RSVP by email to essexfarminstitute@gmail.com. Elizabethtown » Blood Drive held at Elizabethtown Community Hospital; 3:00 p.m. - 6:00 p.m. The blood drive is being managed by the North Country Regional Blood Center which provides blood and blood products to local hospitals. The main benefit of working with the North Country Regional Blood Center is that donations are processed, stored and used locally at hospitals throughout the North Country region.

SEP. 13

Wilmington » The Amazing

SEP 9TH

Festival of Colors held at the Tee-ball Field, Wilmington

Story of Antique Bottles held at ASRC: Whiteface Mountain Field Station; 7:00 p.m. From Ancient Egypt to Modern Figural Avon Bottles. Learn how to determine a bottle’s age, its use and how it was made. A visual and informative presentation by Marc du Bois. Free and open to the public, 518-9462142.

SEP. 13

Downtown Walking Tour held at Riverside Park Bandshell; 10:30 a.m. The tour concludes with a visit to the Saranac Laboratory Museum on Church Street. The museum visit is included in the cost of the tour. Rain or shine. $5/person, children and members of Historic Saranac Lake free.

program is open to the public and a $5 donation is requested. Refreshments will be served. Details: 518-891-7117. Peru » Peru Applefest held at St. Augstine Church; All Day Events Enjoy fall festivities at St. Augustine’s annual Applefest in Peru, including crafters, vendors, games, horse rides, music, food and more!

Saranac Lake » Annual Fall

Westport » Adirondack Harvest

Saranac Lake » Historic

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T H U R S DAY

14 SEP.

FILM: “SUFFRAGETTE” held at

Adirondack History Museum, Elizabethtown.

SEP. 14

SEP. 16 - SEP. 17

Rummage Sale held at Saranac United Methodist Church; Thurs. from 9:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m.; Fri. from 9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Items 1/2 price, from 4:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m. Items are 25-cents a bag; Sat. from 9:00 a.m. to 10:30 a.m. ALL Items are FREE.

Festival held at Westport Fairgrounds; Work up an appetite with a hike in the Lake Champlain Region, then celebrate the Adirondack harvest with music and locally produced food. On Saturday, there are two pre-dinner options: Spend the day hiking or learn about life on the farm with an afternoon of demonstrations, a movie screening, and a Q & A with filmmaker Ben Stechschulte

Free. Sponsored, in part, by Humanities NY. Details: 518-873-6466 or email echs@adkhistorymuseum.org 101796

S AT U R DAY

TUES. - THUR.

SEP. 15

Elizabethtown » Chicken BBQ held at Cobble Hill Golf Course; 5:00 p.m. - 7:00 p.m. Please join us for a chicken bbq to help raise $$ for a new ambulance!!

SEP. 15 - SEP. 17

Peru » Annual Tent Sale held at

St. Vincent’s Thrift Store; will be holding its annual tent sale of gently used fall and winter clothing on Thursday evening (9/14) from 6:308:30 p.m. and Friday (9/15) through Sunday (9/17) from 9:00 a.m.-3:00 p.m.

09 SEP.

Thursday: 7:00 pm

28 NOV.

TRUNK SALE held at

VFW, 116 Boynton Ave, Plattsburgh.

- THRU -

30

Saturday: 9:00 am - 2:00 pm

NOV.

CHRISTMAS IN NEW YORK CITY TRIP held at

New York City.

SEP. 16

Saranac Lake » Joe Dockery

Trio in Concert held at Saranac Village at Will Rogers; 7:30 p.m. Joe Dockery, Donna Moschek and David Mishanec will present an evening of songs from the 50’s, 60’s and 70’s along with a few jazz standards and more. This

Three days, 2 nights - November 28th 30th. $599 per person. Includes Christmas Spectacular Broadway Show by the Rockettes. Deadline to reserve is 9/14. Reservations: 518-891-3378 or 518-891-3484 41:J4

All items new. Nothing over $20. Ladies designer boots, women’s designer dresses, wintr boots, jockey socks, games, suitcases, household decore and more! All proceeds benefit Literacy Volunteers of Clinton County. Details: iva-cc.org 105264

........... - ........ ~-; .·; .·•·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·;·;·; ·;·;·;· ;·;· ;·;· ;·;· ;·;·; ·;·:·:·;·;·;·;·;·;·;·;·;·;·;·;· .................................................................................................................................................105041 .

Bulletin Board

Contact Shannon Christian at (518) 873-6368 ext. 201 or email shannonc@ suncommunitynews.com to place a listing.

REACH EVERY HOUSEHOLD IN YOUR COMMUNITY LOOKING FOR YOUR ACTIVITIES & SERVICES

BINGO

COMMUNITY OUTREACH

COMMUNITY OUTREACH

COMMUNITY OUTREACH

COMMUNITY OUTREACH

PUBLIC MEETINGS

PERU - K of C or Knights of Columbus Bingo, Tuesdays @ 7:10 p.m. St. Augustines Parish Center, 3030 Main St. All welcome!

AUSABLE FORKS – Essex County 2017 WIC shedule at the Amblulance Building January 4, Feb 1 , March 1, April 5, May 3, June 7, August 2, September 6, October 4, November 1, December 6, 9:30-2:30pm Call us to schedule an appointment or find out more information at 518-873-3560 or 518- 569-3296

KEESEVILLE – Essex County WIC 2017 schedule at the United Methodist Church January 26, Feb 23, March 23, April 27, May 25, June 29, July 27, August 24, September 28, October 26, November 30, December 28 9:30- 2:45pm. Call us to schedule an appointment or find out more information at 518-873-3560 or 518- 569-3296

PLATTSBURGH - The Unitarian Universalist Fellowship Tuesdays, 7 p.m., Search for Meaning Discussion Group. An evening of personal growth and a chance to join others in the search for truth and meaning. This fall, the group read and explore A New Earth: Awakening to your Life's Purpose by Eckhart Tolle, author of The Power of Now. All are open to the public, free and at 4 Palmer St., unless otherwise noted.

TICONDEROGA - Essex County Lethernecks, Marine Corps League, Det 791, Ticonderoga American Legion Post. 6 p.m. Active Marines and Marine Veterans invited. First Thursday of every month.

CADYVILLE – Al-Anon Family Group Meeting every Sunday 7pm8pm, Wesleyan Church, 2083 Rt. 3, Cadyville, NY. For more information call 1-888-425-2666 or 518-561-0838.

ELIZABETHTOWN – Essec County 2017 WIC Schedule at the Public Health Building January 5, Feb 2 , March 2, April 6, May 4, June 8, July 6, August 3, September 7, October 5, November 2, December 7 8:00 – 3:45pm.

LAKE PLACID – Essex County 2017 WIC Clinic Schedule at the Thomas Shipman Youth Center January 3, Feb 7, March 7, April 4, May 2, June 6, July 5, August 1, September 5, October 3, November 7, December 5 9:30-2:30pm.

January 18, Feb 15, March 15, April 19 , May 17, June 21, July 19, August 16, September 20, October 18, November 15, December 20 10:00-5:30pm Call us to schedule an appointment or find out more information at 518-873-3560 or 518- 569-3296

January 24, Feb 28, March 28, April 25, May 23, June 27, July 25, August 22, September 26, October 24, November 28 December 19 1:30- 6pm. Call us to schedule an appointment or find out more information at 518-873-3560 or 518- 569-3296

PORT HENRY Port Henry Knights of Columbus, bingo, 7 p.m. Every Monday TICONDEROGA - Bingo, Ticonderoga fire house, 6:45 p.m. Doors 5 p.m. Every Thursday. BOOKS ELIZABETHTOWN - The Elizabethtown Library on River Street is open M/W/F 10-5 and Sat 10-2. FREE Public WiFi and Computer Use. Copying and Faxing at a minimal fee. FREE Library Card to Checkout Books, Magazines and Movies. Bring the Family and EXPLORE YOUR LIBRARY! COMMUNITY OUTREACH PERU - St. Augustines Soup Kitchen, Free Delicious Meal Every Wednesday, 3030 Main St., 4:30 to 5:30 p.m.

SARANAC LAKE – Grief Support Group First Tuesday of Each Month Saranac Lake, St. Luke's Church in the Baldwin House 12:30-1:30pm. For more information. Marie Marvull 518-743-1672 MMarvullo@hphpc.org SARANAC LAKE – NYC Trip, 3 days 2 nights November 28th-30th, $599 per person, includes Christmas Spectacular by the Rockets & a Broadway Show. Deadline 9/14/17. Call 518-891-3378 or 518-891-3484 for more info.

PUBLIC MEETINGS

PLATTSBURGH – Al-Anon Adult Children Meeting every Monday at 7pm-8pm, United Methodist Church, 127 Beekmantown Street, Plattsbugh. For more information call 1-888-425-2666 or 518-5610838.

AU SABLE FORKS - Please take note that the regular monthly meetings of the Au Sable Forks Fire District for the year 2017, will be held on the second Tuesday of each month at 6:30 PM at the Au Sable Forks Fire Station located at 29 School Lane, Au Sable Forks, N. Y. 12912. The meetings are open to the public.

PLATTSBURGH – Al-Anon Family Group Meeting every Thursday at United Methodist Church, 127 Street, Plattsburgh Beekman 7:30pm-8:30pm. For more information call 1-888-425-2666 or 518-561-0838.

CADYVILLE – Al-Anon Family Group Meeting every Sunday 7pm8pm, Wesleyan Church, 2083 Rt. 3, Cadyville, NY. For more information call 1-888-425-2666 or 518-561-0838.

PLATTSBURGH – ALATEEN Meeting every Thursday at United Methodist Church, 127 Beekman Plattsburgh 7:30pmStreet, 8:30pm. For more information call 1-888-425-2666 or 518-561-0838.

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» Duso Cont. from pg. 1 Charlie Martin. He always put others before self,” Monty said. “He gave his all for his community, his family, his grandchildren. He was a truly wonderful person.” News of the sudden passing left a pallor on the rural towns last week. Via social media, Essex County lawyer Debra Whitson, a former assistant district attorney, said many were shocked and saddened by his sudden passing. “Stephen Duso never failed to make me smile and laugh, whether it was at the courthouse, sometimes even in the courtroom at the most inappropriate times, or on Facebook, where he loved to joke with me and so many others,” she said, in a poignant remembrance. “He had a heart as big as they come, and had a fierce love for his family and a strong loyalty to his friends, co-workers, fellow law enforcement officers and fellow firefighters/ EMS workers.” She said she felt safer knowing Duso was on duty in a courtroom. “I always knew that he had my back in the courthouse, and there were more times than I care to admit that I thought he might actually have to jump in and protect me,” she said. She related a story of Duso helping a developmentally challenged young woman in the courtroom.

“My most memorable moment of Steve is the afternoon that my clients’ developmentally disabled and extraordinarily shy 18-year-old daughter was awaiting her court appearance,” Whitson said. “Steve immediately noticed how terrified and out of her element this sweet young lady was as she sat in the courtroom for her case to be heard. I was busy readying myself to speak on her behalf, and I turned around to see Steve, in his court officer uniform, sitting with this young lady. She was giggling and smiling as he did silly magic tricks and told even sillier jokes to her. “I have tears in my eyes even recalling how touched and grateful I was that he put that lovely soul at ease at a tense and scary moment in her life.” She said that anecdote expresses Stephen Duso through and through. “That was how he lived his life,” she said. “Everyone mattered to him. He made everyone’s day just a little brighter.” Essex County Emergency Services Director Donald Jaquish said Duso was a great resource to his department. “Steve was someone you could count on,” he said. “He served the community. He will be missed very much.”

FINAL GOODBYE

The calling hours last Friday saw hundreds of people from Elizabethtown and nearby towns waiting in line.

Obituaries Wesley E. Lanyon (June 10, 1926 - June 7, 2017)

KEENE VALLEY | Wesley “Bud” Lanyon, 90, of 7 Snowshoe Lane, Keene Valley, died peacefully on June 10, 2017 at the Liberty Commons Nursing Facility in North Chatham, Massachusetts after a long and brave battle with cancer. He was born in Norwalk, Connecticut on June 10, 1926, the son of Frances Merrill and William Jacob Lanyon, and grew up in Hanover, New Hampshire. He graduated as the valedictorian of his high school class on June 16, 1944 and reported for service in the U.S. Navy just three days later. His 18th birthday on June 10, 1944 was but four days prior to the allied invasion of Normandy. He served two years as a radioman on the U.S.S. Satterlee and was honorably discharged from the Navy in 1946. He matriculated at Cornell University in Ithaca. He received his A.B. degree from Cornell in 1950 and his Ph.D. from the University of Wisconsin in Madison in 1955. His thesis work specialized in meadowlarks, using the thennovel technique of tape recording and playing back their calls. His thesis work later earned him the Brewster Award, the American Ornithologists’ Union’s highest honor. In 1951, he married Vernia (“Vickie’’) Elizabeth Hall of Harrisburg, Pennsylvania in Washington, D.C. and their marriage lasted until her death in 2004.

(TL)

On Saturday, United Church of Christ in Elizabethtown was filled beyond capacity with final prayers for a man who will be long remembered here. As the funeral procession moved slowly from the church on Court Street to Black Brook Cemetery, state police and sheriff’s department cars lead Elizabethtown Volunteer Fire Department in a funeral cortège with Duso making one final run on the back of the company’s shining white antique fire truck. The line of more than a hundred vehicles passed under an American flag fluttering gently over River Street, beside the Boquet River, as it hung from the aerial truck brought in by Keeseville Volunteer Fire Company. Family, friends and neighbors were joined in the sad and slow processional by supreme court justices, local elected officials, sheriff’s department officials, business owners, emergency services personnel, court and state police. Bag pipes lifted a slow and solemn final serenade for Duso, notes carried in a gentle late summer wind into blue September skies. A convocation was held after burial on Saturday at the Elizabethtown Volunteer Fire Department fire house. “As I just said goodbye; my heart hurts thinking about the great man that was my ‘uncle’ Steve,” wrote Marlene LaRose in a deeply touching public remembrance on social media. “Our community has lost a man that most could only imagine to be. May we all, but

The Valley News Sun | September 9, 2017 • 7

especially Aunt Wanda, Beaner, RB and Willie, have the strength to let the memories of this great man heal our hearts.” Duso was born in Elizabethtown on July 31, 1957, son of the late Harold and Erika (Ransom) Duso. He is survived by his loving wife, Wanda (Dougal) of 35 years, three sons, Stephen Jr. (Elissa), Richard (Kimber), William, and his beloved Bloodhound “Duchess.” He is also survived by his sister, Sharon Rivers, and brothers Bernard (Linda) and Thomas (Alma). He also is survived by numerous aunts, uncles, nieces and nephews. His grandchildren, Calen, Anna, Keenan and Scotty, were the joy of his life. Steve graduated from Elizabethtown High School in 1976. His obituary shared words written by Ernest Hemingway: “Every man’s life ends the same way. It is only the details of how he lived and how he died that distinguishes one man from another.” ■ Firefighters, fire officials and law enforcement personnel gathered from all sections of Essex County to pay their last respects to Stephen F. Duso Sr. last Friday evening at Heald Funeral Home. The funeral cortège wound slowly through Elizabethtown the following day, passing beneath an American flag placed above River Street by the Keeseville Volunteer Fire Department. Photos by Kim Dedam

suncommunitynews.com/public-notices/obituaries

Lanyon had a distinguished career as an educator and professional ornithologist. He was an Assistant Professor at the University of Arizona in 1955-56 and at that time performed research at the Museum’s Southwestern Research Station. He moved to Miami University in Ohio for a year, but in 1957 he joined the Department of Ornithology at the American Museum of Natural History (AMNH) in New York City, where he remained until retirement in 1988. Soon after joining the AMNH staff, Bud was appointed the first, and only, director of the Museum’s Kalbfleisch Field Research Station on Long Island, and he was in residence there from 1958 until 1973. In 1973, he became Chair of the Department of Ornithology at AMNH. Bud remained Chair until 1980 and continued as a Curator until his retirement. Bud and Vickie resided at the AMNH Kalbfleisch Field Research Station on Long Island and during the summer months there, Bud was a mentor to many undergraduate college students conducting research sponsored by the US National Science Foundation. His many ornithological research trips in Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, Bolivia and Suriname are legendary. After retirement in 1988, Bud participated in many AMNH Discovery Tours often serving as the natural history guide for the tour. Bud and Vickie purchased property in Adrian’s Acres, Keene Valley, in 1977 and built a log home in 1980, and spent summers there after his retirement from AMNH. Bud continued to carry on an active bird banding program

at the cabin, and with Vickie enjoyed hiking, canoeing, and camping in the Adirondack Park. Winters were spent traveling and enjoying birding, and visiting friends and family from Massachusetts to Arizona. His wife, Vickie, predeceased him in August 2004. He is survived by his two children, Cynthia L. Chandler, on the staff of the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution in Woods Hole, Massachusetts; and Scott M. Lanyon, vice-provost and dean of graduate education at the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis, Minnesota. He was known affectionately as “Da” by his four grandchildren, Ashley and Cassie Lanyon of Lino Lakes, Minnesota and Jeff and Jonathan Chandler of Falmouth, Massachusetts. He also leaves a sister, Joyce L. Horne of Alton Bay, New Hampshire. A gathering of friends and family to celebrate his life will be held at the Nature Conservancy in Keene Valley from 4-6 p.m. on Wednesday, Sept. 6. Friends from the Keene Valley area are encouraged to join family and other friends to share memories. In lieu of flowers the family recommends donations in his memory be made to the Adirondack Nature Conservancy, P. O. Box 65, Keene Valley, NY 12943, an organization that meant a great deal to him and in which he was active well into his 80s. ■


8 • September 9, 2017 | The Valley News Sun (TL)

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From the Sports Desk

Welcome back to high school sports, everyone!

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Sports

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The opening weekend of the fall sports calendar saw a lot of teams set the pace for their seasons in soccer and football, as Class D teams look to again be at the peak of competition in several areas. In football, Moriah opened the new season at Linney Field with a 40-20 win over defending Class B champion By Keith Lobdell Peru, while defending • SPORTS EDITOR • Class D champion Ticonderoga scored a 25-7 win over Beekmantown (BCS) in a game where the Sentinels held the Eagles scoreless into the fourth quarter. It was a mixture of run-pass for the Vikings, as Connor Anderson rushed for 161 yards and two scores, while Dylan Trombley threw for 233 yards and a pair of scores. Ryley O’Connell was a bright spot for the Indians, throwing for 239 yards and three touchdowns while the Vikings held the Indians rushing attack to just 19 yards. For the Sentinels, Evan Graney ran for 83 yards and two scores while Trevor Parent ran for 85 yards and a score while recording a fumble recovery for a score against Beekmantown. The Sentinels held the Eagles to 180 yards of offense, while themselves recording 200 yards in the rushing game alone. Ticonderoga is the two-time defending CVAC champion, and Moriah has set itself apart with a strong win, which puts the Class D teams at the head of the class and makes Friday, Sept. 30, a must-see game when the Vikings travel to Ticonderoga. AuSable Valley (AVCS) and Saranac made statements in Class C, as the Patriots relied on the legs of Matt Pray (259 yards, two touchdowns) to score a 38-30 win over Saranac Lake. Pray looks both faster and stronger this season, which coach Ed McCallister and Pray both said came from a strong off-season workout plan. Jarrett Ashton had 232 yards and three scores for the Red Storm, which was not enough as AVCS controlled the game late. For Saranac, it was Luke Maye throwing for 189 yards and two scores while rushing for 100 yards and another touchdown as the Chiefs scored a 28-14 win over Plattsburgh High School (PHS). The Chiefs were able to contain PHS quarterback Mitch Senecal, who threw for 100 yards (36 coming on a late second quarter touchdown pass) with eight yards on the ground. In soccer, the countdown to 100 career goals is on for Beekmantown sensation Kirsten Villemaire, who scored six goals in the Eagles’ two games in the Be The

Match Chazy girl’s soccer tournament to help power BCS to the championship at the event. Villemaire recorded a hat trick in each game, putting her at 82 career goals, 18 shy of the 100 mark for her career. The current record stands at 125, a mark set two seasons ago by Minerva/Newcomb standout Mackenzie Winslow. Franklin Academy won the Saranac girl’s soccer tournament by defeating Northern Adirondack 1-0. The Lady Bobcats defense looks to be solid this season, anchored by goalie Paige Chilton and Emily Peryea. It should lead to a decent Division II game this Thursday against the Elizabethtown-Lewis/Westport (EL/W) Lady Griffins, who scored an 7-0 win over Willsboro last week. For boys, Northern Adirondack (NAC) and PHS won the Saranac and Chazy tournaments, respectively, The Bobcats scored a 4-1 over Saranac Lake in a Class C matchup as NAC moves up from Class D and Saranac Lake moves down from Class B. Both will have to contend with Seton Catholic, which scored a decisive win over Lake Placid and controlled the majority of their game against Northeastern Clinton (NCCS) before the Cougars scored a 2-1 overtime win in the NCCS tournament. Meanwhile, the Hornets scored a late, 1-0 win thanks to a goal from Connor Cota in their Frankie Garrow Memorial Tournament win against host Chazy, in a game which felt more like a state championship then preseason matchup, which is proper when two state championship programs come together. Also in boys, Keene and Willsboro played to a scoreless tie as both teams started the season 1-0-1 in the Keene tournament. Keene defeated EL/W, 3-0, in their first game, while Willsboro scored a 5-3 win over Schroon Lake. This week, the regular season for Northern Soccer League teams begins, as does the cross country, volleyball and gymnastics. The football weekend offers Plattsburgh High (0-1) hosting Moriah (1-0) and Ticonderoga (1-0) hosting AuSable Valley (1-0) Friday night, while Saranac Lake (0-1) hosts Saranac (1-0) in a Class C matchup and Peru (0-1) hosts Beekmantown (0-1) in a Class B showdown Saturday. Also, if you haven’t looked at our editorial page this week, please do so, as we have a great op-ed piece from the New York State Public High School Athletic Association. ■

Saranac Lake’s Colter Cheney-Seymour controls the ball against Salmon River defender Dillon Spinner in the opening round of the Saranac boy’s soccer tournament Sept. 1. The Red Storm defeated the Shamrocks before falling to Northern Adirondack in the championship game. For more photos from this game, visit mycapture.suncommunitynews.com Photo by Keith Lobdell

Jarell Paul of Lake Placid battles for possession of the soccer ball against AuSable Valley’s Caleb Hamilton in the Northeastern Clinton tournament’s consolation game. After falling to Seton Catholic, the Blue Bombers scored a win over the Patriots to place third. For more photos from this game, visit mycapture.suncommunitynews.com Photo by Keith Lobdell

Jarrett Ashton ran for 232 yards and three touchdowns for the Saranac Lake Red Storm Sept. 1 against AuSable Valley. The Patriots were able to score in the fourth quarter and keep the Red Storm scoreless in their final two drives as AuSable Valley scored the 38-30 win. For more photos from this game, visit mycapture.suncommunitynews.com Photo by Keith Lobdell

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Hundreds of people came out for Au Sable Forks’ annual Labor Day celebration on Sept. 4. Throughout the day, guests of all ages enjoyed a parade, live entertainment, games, wood bear carvings, shopping and food from local vendors. Photos by Teah Dowling

(TL)

The Valley News Sun | September 9, 2017 • 11


12 • September 9, 2017 | The Valley News Sun (TL)

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Lake Placid native sworn in as US ambassador John P. Desrocher credits his hometown’s international spirit with sparking long career in foreign service

By Kim Dedam STA FF W RITER

LAKE PLACID | John P. Desrocher, the newest ambassador to Algeria, grew up in Lake Placid — and has since traveled around the globe. Though not a winter sports competitor, his work maintains a deep focus on international spirit. The worldly flair of his hometown inspired a lifelong career in foreign service with the U.S. Department of State (DOS). Desrocher was appointed as the new ambassador to Algeria (Algiers) in June. With the appointment approved by the U.S. Senate in early August, Desrocher was sworn in this week, just after Labor Day. In a recent telephone interview from Washington, D.C., Desrocher spoke of his early experience with international protocol at home. “I was 15 when the winter games were held in 1980,” he said. “I was a sophomore at Lake Placid High School that year. When you’re 15 and there is something as big as the Olympic games in your home town, it has an enormous impact. You can’t help but consider the broader world when you’re surrounded by people from many different countries.”

FOREIGN SERVICE

After graduation from high school in Lake Placid, Desrocher went on to attend the Edmund A. Walsh School of Foreign Service at Georgetown University. “I became very oriented toward foreign service as a career. I took the foreign service exam at the end of my undergraduate years and then joined the foreign service in 1988.” Foreign service, he explains, is a different way to serve your country. Beyond other jobs, such as in the military or with non-government service, this carries express focus on diplomacy. It is a service that joins experience with other cultures,

customs and languages to policy and communication, he said. Desrocher speaks English, French, German, and Arabic. In taking the ambassador’s post in Algeria, he will leave a current job as deputy assistant secretary for Egypt and Maghreb affairs in the Bureau of Near Eastern Affairs at the Department of State, a position he has held for four years. Previous roles in foreign service brought Desrocher from Europe to the Middle East to New Zealand and back to northern Africa. In 2013, he served as deputy chief of mission at the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad. According to his State Department biography, he also served in Baghdad from 2009 to 2010 as minister counselor for economic coordination, responsible for U.S./Iraq economic policy issues. “In the interim he served in the Department of State as the Director of the Office of Iraq Affairs and briefly as Acting Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Maghreb Affairs,” reads his Department of State biography. From 2006 to 2009 he served as the consul general in Auckland, New Zealand, and before that in Cairo, Egypt. While in Egypt, according to the Department of State, Desrocher “participated in Palestinian-Israeli economic negotiations while serving at the U.S. Consulate General in Jerusalem in the late 1990s and served as State Department desk officer for Iraq in the mid-1990s. “While detailed to the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative, he led portions of free trade negotiations with Chile and Singapore.” Desrocher also served in the U.S. Embassies in Monrovia and Bonn, Germany, as well as in the State Department Operations Center and Office of European Union Affairs.

ALGERIA

Asked what he looks forward to most in this ambassador’s post in Algeria, Desrocher said the role will provide opportunity to share cumulative knowledge and experience. “Really what you try to build over time is an ability to see

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In announcing the appointment on June 21 this year, the White House spoke highly of Desrocher’s leadership: “He is known for his economic acumen, leadership, knowledge of the North Africa and Middle East regions and ability to SEPTIC manage people and resources in high-threat environments.” The assignment, Desrocher said, is at the pleasure of the GERAW'S .· president but generally extends for three years. OK SEPTIC1. SERVICE . , ~{!_ff::c The Lake Placid native said his wife, Karen, will join - CESSPOOLS & SEPTIC TANKS him in traveling to the U.S. Embassy in El Biar, Algeria. CLEANED & INSTALLED - ELECTRIC ROOTER SERVICE “It is a very historic place, a place a lot of Americans don’t -DELIVERY OF GRAVEL • STONE • TOPSOIL- know too well,” Desrocher said. -ALLTYPE BACKHOE WORK“It’s a fascinating part of the world.” PORTABLE RESTROOM Working for the State Department, he said, forms an FASTSERf/lCE extremely gratifying fit between service to country and in5181 [ ternational affairs. DE5lll He does come home to visit Lake Placid, and was here earlier this summer to visit his mom, Mary. ■

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things from the perspective of others. It’s always tough to drop your own filter and see things as others see them,” he said. And as ambassador, he will coordinate state department officials working in various areas toward economic, security, and diplomatic relations. “Really the ambassador’s job is to understand and then implement the entirety of our country’s policy with a given country and to make sure all of our work is pulling in the same direction.” The role of any diplomat, he explained, is to understand and explain the country that you’re in to colleagues in Washington, and vice-versa. “We work one-on-one with many government officials, in public at public events.”

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Clinton County Transactions

DATE

GRANTOR

GRANTEE

-LOCATION

PRICE

Peru

$245,000

08/08/17 Emery and Katie Dergosits

Scott Morris and Olivia Seymour

08/08/17

Steven and Jeffrey Foley

Joseph Coupal

Champlain

$70,000

08/08/17

Arthur Lefevre

Matthew and Erin Lefevre

Plattsburgh

$205,000

08/08/17

Robert and Tosca Carpenter

Alan Clark

Saranac

$145,000

08/08/17

Bruce and Brent Ladue

Kathryn Nichols

Chazy

$111,240

08/09/17

Michael and Joyce Doorey

Kirsten Lamora

Peru

$120,000

08/09/17

William Eckler

Candice Eckler

Plattsburgh

$64,725

08/09/17

Melissa Czaplicke

Dianne Agnew

Plattsburgh

$193,000

08/09/17

Hilary Rogers et al

Vanderbilt Mortgage and Finance Inc

Mooers

08/09/17

Phoebe Everson and Robert Thompson Bruce and Mary Darrach

Plattsburgh

$210,000

08/09/17

Secretary of Veterans Affairs

Aaron Desimone

Champlain

$20,000

08/09/17

Paul Almonte and Theresa Desmond

Monika Zimna and Szymon Nowosielski

Plattsburgh

$185,000

08/10/17

Mark Garrand

Maynard and Margaret Rascoe

Plattsburgh

$101,000

08/11/17

Mohamed Djerdjouri

Mustafa Demir

Plattsburgh

$202,500

08/11/17

Mary Picard and Bruce Wheeler

Cecilia Gregoire

Plattsburgh

$175,000

08/11/17

Sasha Pulsifer and Sasha Filion

David Langlois

Plattsburgh

$78,000

08/14/17

Barbara Boynton

Matthew Browndorf

Chazy

$345,000

08/14/17

Deborah Kampschror

Patrick Mcfarlin

Plattsburgh

$163,500

08/14/17

Moore Family Real Estate LLC

Walter Mousseau and Kerry Cahill

Ausable

$32,000

08/14/17

Michael and Pamela Depo

Michelle Larrabee

Plattsburgh

$76,076

08/14/17

Clifford and Carole Rugar

11 Plattsburgh LLC

Plattsburgh

08/15/17

Gary and Carlton Liberty

Robert Douglas

Ausable

$122,400

08/15/17

Michael Kulik and Jennifer Colver

Heather Vanarsdel

Plattsburgh

$132,500

08/15/17

Dale and Eleanor Sample

Jason and Nichole Fresn

Mooers

08/15/17

Michael and Natalie Rogers

Michael and Brenda Demulling

Plattsburgh

$82,000

08/15/17

Marie Joan Clifford

Thomas and Annmarie Curle

Plattsburgh

$100,000

08/16/17

Mousseau Properties

Carol McLean

Plattsburgh

$99,900

08/16/17

Seth Tobrocke

Evan Mousseau

Plattsburgh

$173,048

08/16/17

Benjamin Wildman

Andrew Coss

Plattsburgh

$58,000

08/16/17

Lynn Rock

Dustin Snyder

Altona

$99,000

-

Essex County Transactions

DATE

GRANTOR

GRANTEE

-LOCATION

$90,000

$22,000

PRICE

Benjamin Kernan

John and Susan Sargent

08/11/17

Eloise Griffin

Terri Sanacore and Joseph Carr

Wilmington

$2,500

08/11/17

Matthew and Mary Woodruff

William and Jane Gnadinger

North Elba

$105,000

08/11/17

Dean and Melissa Antonucci

Kyung Ah Kim

Wilmington

$456,000

08/11/17

Jean Rook

Ruth Benning

Willsboro

$200,000

08/11/17

Brian Draper

Andrew Pickreign and Abigail Newton

North Elba

$150,000

08/11/17

Russell and Cheryl O’Neill

Jared and Jenna Dupuis

Chesterfield

$190,000

08/11/17

PJ Hyde & Son Inc

Cynthia Mcguire

North Elba

$12,500

08/14/17

Richard, Thomas and Harold Lennon

Kimberly Caneda

North Elba

$55,000

08/14/17

Joseph, Stephen and Joan Defayette

Amy Reeves

Ticonderoga

$95,000

08/14/17

Richard Martin et al

Randy Martin et al

North Elba

$1

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08/14/17

Robin Keysor

Cory Keysor

Wilmington

$117,000

08/14/17

George Millard

Michael Pozzouli

Moriah

08/14/17

Peter and Cynthia Van Dien

Christian and Maria Angela Verzosa

North Elba

08/15/17

Michael and Aileen Carr

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Ticonderoga

$90,215

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08/15/17

Peter and Paula Taylor

Robert Lee

Minerva

$75,000

08/15/17

Sharon View

Debra Stanton

North Elba

08/15/17

Judith Pareira and Arthur Hartwell

Federal National Mortgage Association

Jay

$131,512

08/15/17

Joseph and Carol Chiarella

Kenneth Silver and Jacqueline Reiner

North Elba

$39,000

08/15/17

Mary Odell

Stuart and Karena Levesque

St. Armand

$145,000

08/15/17

Jennifer Holman

Dustin Teriele

Ticonderoga

$22,000

08/15/17

Essex County

Nicole Kristensen

Ticonderoga

$42,915

08/16/17

Essex County

Lake Placid Properties LLC

North Elba

$85,725

08/16/17

Essex County and Keith Dubay

Keith and Kimberly Dubay

Minerva

$36,286

08/16/17

Essex County and Elizabeth Welch

Elizabeth Welch

Schroon

$11,365

08/16/17

Essex County and Paul Sharkey

Paul Sharkey

Ticonderoga

$16,412

08/16/17

Essex County and Timothy Harland

Timothy Harland

Moriah

$9,989

08/16/17

Essex County and Warren Fischer

Charles and Warren Fischer

Schroon

$32,343

08/16/17

Alta Longware et al

Alan Jones

Elizabethtown

$131,900

08/16/17

Essex County

James and Margaret Goggins

Moriah

$29,984

08/16/17

Donna Page

Michael and Judy Revai

Schroon

$515,000

08/16/17

Essex County

James and Angela Vradenburg

Ticonderoga

08/16/17

John Langford

John and Darrel Parker

Wilmington

$60,000

08/16/17

John Langford

Megan Parker

Wilmington

$1

08/16/17

John and Darrell Parker

John and Darrell Parker

Wilmington

$1

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Wants to purchase minerals and other oil and gas interests. Send details to P.O. Box 13557 Denver, Co. 80201

• CaseManager • CNA/HHA • LPNFloor Manager

I

Doug at (518) 817-9108 ext. 403 jobs@champlainassistedliving.com 105878

Disclaimer text goes here in the footer if needed

Keene

$72,000

08/11/17

HIRING

Call Email

-

The Valley News Sun | September 9, 2017 • 13

$25,000

$61,100 $155,000

$240,000

$533


14 • September 9, 2017 | The Valley News Sun (TL)

www.suncommunitynews.com

Published by Denton Publications, Inc. ANTIQUES & COLLECTIBLES

THESUN COMMUNITY

NEWS

&

FOR SALE

PRINTING

CustomHO-scalemodelrailroad locomotives& rollingstock.

FEATURED PROPERTY ELIZABETHTOWN NY 42 County Route 8 This 1880's completely renovated home is move in ready. Hardwood floors throughout this spacious yet cozy 3 bedroom, 1.5 bath with an amazing attention to detail. Enjoy the family room with gas fireplace or the large living room. Granite tops com pliment the beautiful kitchen cabinets. Wanting some quiet time, relax on the wrap around

COLDWeLL. BANl(eR~

Conrail, D&H,CSX(tonamea few) Contact RICHIE ERIKSEN LATHAM,NY

FOR SALE ANTIQUE UNIQUE 4 1/2' BEAR CLAW tub, Asking $300; 1930's ANTIQUE GAS RANGE 4 burners/oven, working condition, asking $350. 518-873-3296 BERBER CARPET LIKE NEW, Used 3 yrs., Remodeling, 24x13 ½, 322 Sq. yd., Sculpted, Neutral Beige/Taupe, No Seams, $300 OBO. 518-359-2578

porch, back patio or hammock between the large shade trees. This 1.7 acre parcel is almost completely level with plush lawn. Paved driveway leads you to your 2 car garage with loft above and work room to the side. Complete with old ice house for storage. Located just outside the hamlet of Elizabethtown, you are still within walking distance of town. Come see.

WHITBECK ASSOCIATES

$289,500

MLS#l60604

Frigidaire Dishwasher $25; GE Electric Stove $25, both good condition. Call 518-873-2253 LOGGING

ChristineBenedict RealEstate Salesperson (518) 593-0533

20MillerSt.,Plattsburh, NY12901• 518-562-9999 • www.whitbeckassociates.com • info@coldwellbankerwhitbeck.com

PRECISION TREE SERVICE 518-942-6545

KEESEVILLE, NY•$119,900 • MLS#159398

PORT KENT, NY•$239,900 • MLS# 159780

PERU, NY•$184,900 • MLS# 160368

KEESEVILLE CONTEMPORARY 3bd,2bahomewalkable to all hamletamenities. Masterbdrmw/privatedeck.

PORT KENT OLDSTYLE Updated 4bd,1.5bahomewalkable to beach, ferry,parkandpostoffice.

PERU COLONIAL 1998sqft4bd,2baColonialin PeruSchool District.2caalt garage,nearPortKent.

SueAnnCarter,RealEstateBroker/Owner 51 (518) 834-7608• sueannrealtor@yahoo.com~

SueAnnCarter,RealEstateBroker/Owner 51 (518) 834-7608• sueannrealtor@yahoo.com~

ANNEPORTER.COM

SueAnnCarter,RealEstateBroker/Owner o (518) 834-7608• sueannrealtor@yahoo.com~

PURCHASING STANDING TIMBER Paying $ or % on all species of timber clean forestry and references available call 518-5349739 Erick. WANTED TO BUY

ANNEPORTER.COM

WANTS TO PURCHASE minerals and other oil & gas interests. Send details P.O. Box 13557, Denver, Co 80201

Having an Open House?

NANI 25 DRIVER TRAINEES NEEDED NOW! Earn $1000 per week! Paid CDL Training! STEVENS TRANSPORT COVERS ALL COSTS! 1877-209-1309 drive4stevens.com AIRLINE MECHANIC TRAINING Get FAA certification. Approved for military benefits. Financial Aid if qualified. Job placement assistance. Call Aviation Institute of Maintenance 888-686-1704 ALL INCLUSIVE RESORT packages at Sandals, Dreams, Secrets, Riu, Barcelo, Occidental and many more. Punta Cana, Mexico, Jamaica and many of the Caribbean islands. Search available options for 2017/2018 at www.NCPtravel.com or call 877-270-7260. CARS/TRUCKS WANTED!!! All Make/Models 2000-2015! Any Condition. Running or Not. Competitive Offer! Free Towing! Were Nationwide! Call Now: 1-888-4162330. CASH FOR CARS: We Buy Any Condition Vehicle, 2000 and Newer. Nations Top Car Buyer! Free Towing From Anywhere! Call Now: 1-800-864-5960. Cash for unexpired DIABETIC TEST STRIPS! Free Shipping, Best Prices & 24 hr payment! Call 1www.Test855-440-4001 StripSearch.com. Habla Espanol. CASH PAID for unexpired, sealed DIABETIC TEST STRIPS! 1 DAY PAYMENT & PREPAID shipping. HIGHEST PRICES! Call 1-888-7767771. www.Cash4DiabeticSupplies.com DENTAL INSURANCE. Call Physicians Mutual Insurance Company for details. NOT just a discount plan, REAL coverage for 350 procedures. 888-623-3036 or http://www.dental50plus.com/58 Ad# 6118 Dish Network-Satellite Television Services. Now Over 190 channels for ONLY $49.99/mo! HBO-FREE for one year, FREE Installation, FREE Streaming, FREE HD. Add Internet for $14.95 a month. 1-800718-1593 Lung Cancer? And 60+ Years Old? If So, You And Your Family May Be Entitled To A Significant Cash Award. Call 877-648-6308 To Learn More. No Risk. No Money Out Of Pocket. Make a Connection. Real People, Flirty Chat. Meet singles right now! Call LiveLinks. Try it FREE. Call NOW: Call 1-877-737-9447 18+ Owe the IRS? You May qualify for Relief today! Stop Bank Levy's & Wage Garnishments. Mon-Thurs 8-8pm Fri 8-6pm and Saturdays 95pm CST Espanol Available, Free consultations. Call NOW 1-800214-1903

LOOKING FOR A JOB? WANT TO KNOW MORE ABOUT CAREER OPPORTUNITIES IN THE NORTH COUNTRY? WESTPORT, NY• $249,900

LEWIS, NY•$134,900 • MLS#R158673A

3BR/2BA. beautifully renovated (circa1929), w/woodburning fireplace, newwindows throughout, newroof, hardwood floors,townwater& sewer. & muchmore!

9177U.S.RT9: 2/3BR/15BA openlayout incl.deck. Basement apt.w/fullbath&officeorextrabedroom. Onecargarage, outside woodburning boiler, generator hookup.

Sandra Goodroe,Real Estate Broker (518) 962-8313• bradamant@juno.com

Bruce Pushee,AssociateReal Estate Broker ~ (518) 873-6400• bruce@friedmanrealty.net ~

0

"' ~

BRADAMANTREALESTATE.COM

FRIEDMANREALTY.NET

COME TO THE North Country Chamber of Commerce, OneWorkSource, North Country Workforce Development Board, JSEC, Hometown Radio & Hall Communications, Plattsburgh-No. Country Service Corp & WPTZ-TV

JOB FAIR Wednesday, September 13 3:00pm - 7:00pm @ West Side Ballroom

I

253 New York Rd, Plattsburgh

WILLSBORO, NY•$127,500 • MLS #152305 1266SUNSET DRIVE: 3BR/1.5BA newlyrenovated farmhouse stylehome. Country kitchen, 3-season L-shaped porch, largefenced-in yard& garden.

1245 SUNSET DR.: 3-4BR Victorian w/wraparound porch. lg. groomed lawn. landscaped gardens, large barn, garden/tool shed, back deck, above-ground pool. Home isturn-key.

3632ESSEX RD:2BR/1 BAnewlyremodeled home, newappliances, newflooring, back deck, screened porch, storage shed, ondouble lot

Christine Benedict,Real Estate Salesperson Christine Benedict,Real Estate Salesperson Christine Benedict,Real Estate Salesperson (518)593-0533• Christine@whitbeckassociates.com (518)593-0533• Christine@whitbeckassociates.com (518)593-0533• Christine@whitbeckassociates.com

WWW.COLDWELLBANKER.COM WWW.COLDWELLBANKER.COM WWW.COLDWELLBANKER.COM

ESSEX. NY•$409,000 • MLS #R158897 A

WESTPORT, NY•$299,000 FIRM • MLS #155946

2307MAINST:Historic 4BR/2BA, renovated kitchen & baths, stone fireplace, perennial gardens, back yard,plank I floors, balcony, patio,many recent improvements

214FT.ONLAKE CHAMPLAIN - Atedgeofvillage on1.67 ac.w/ 5BR, 3BA,heated indoor pool(16x 301 w/exercise room& hottub,cathedral ceilings, lakeside decking.

0

Lauren Murphy,Real Estate Broker/Owner ~ (518)963-7876• essexrealestate@westelcom.com"'

~ ~

ASSOCIATES

VENTURENORTH.NET

3DRPD USA, INC. A.N. DERINGER, INC. ADVOCACY AND RESOURCE CTR BEHAVIORAL HEALTH SERVICES NORTH BERKSHIRE FARM CENTER CAMSO MANUFACTURING, USA CASELLA WASTE CLINTON COUNTY DEPT. OF PERSONNEL COMBINED INSURANCE CONGRESSWOMAN ELISE STEFANIK CORYER STAFFING CORPORATION CURTIS LUMBER CO., INC. ELDERWOOD OF UIHLEIN AT LAKE PLACID ETS, INC. HALL COMMUNICATIONS HCR HOME CARE HICKOK & BOARDMAN, INC. HOMETOWN RADIO, INC. HOTEL SARANAC HULBERT SUPPLY Co-Sponsored By:

IEC HOLDEN INC. LOCAL 22-WVNY / LOCAL 44-WFFF MANPOWER MEADOWBROOK HEALTHCARE MOLD-RITE PLASTICS, LLC MOUNTAIN LAKE SERVICES NBC5 NORTH COUNTRY HOME SERVICES NORTH COUNTRY WORKFORCE DEVELOPMENT BOARD PERU CENTRAL SCHOOL PROTECH BUSINESS SOLUTIONS RESOLUTE FOREST PRODUCTS RIDGEFIELD ONE, LLC SEACOMM FEDERAL CREDIT UNION SPENCER ARL - NEW YORK, INC. SUNMOUNT DEVELOPMENTAL CTR UNITEDHEALTHCARE COMMUNITY PLAN OF NEW YORK WESTAFF WOODMENLIFE and more 105237

ESSEXREALESTATE@WESTELCOM.COM CALL 518-873-636B EXT.106

VENTURE NORTH

Many companies will have representatives available to take resumes and/or applications. Information about the companies and career opportunities will be available. Here’s some of the companies that will be there:


YORK COUNTY OF ESSEX; Index No.: CV-15-0628. Filed 08/16/2017. U.S. BANK TRUST, N.A., (TL) The Valley News Sun | September 9, 2017 • 15 Published by Denton Publications, Inc. www.suncommunitynews.com AS TRUSTEE FOR LSF9 MASTER PARTICIPAPURSUANT TO SECTION TION TRUST, Plaintiff, FCPNY 4-118 of the New York NANI MOBILE HOME FCPNY FCPNY V. State Election Law, noTrapped in your OXYGEN - Anytime. Anywhere. Do You Owe $10K+ in IRS Tax LUNG CANCER? And 60+ Years SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILITY? THE ESTATE OF tice is hereby given that 2012 WILDWOOD GRAND No tanks to refill. No deliveries. Debt?? Take 60 seconds for a Old? If So, You And Your Family Up to $2,671/mo. (Based on paidmarket? WILLIAM L. WARD, SR. the official Primary ElecLODGE - RV The All-New Inogen One G4 is only FREE Consultation to end IRS colMay Be Entitled To A A/K/A WILLIAM in amount.) WARD,FREE evaluation! tion will be held on $32,000 - 2 bedrooms, sleeping lections. Call now! 800-508-2824 Significant Cash Award. Call Bill Gordon & Associates. 2.8 pounds! FAA approved! FREE SR. A/K/A WILLIAM L. Tuesday September 12, loft, 1 1/2 bath, sleeps 8, central info kit: 844-558-7482 Call 1-877-689-5293 To Learn 1-800-919-8208. WARD A/K/A WILLIAM 2017, from 12:00PM to a/c and heat, stone wall w/elecMore. No Risk. Mail: 2420 N St NW, Washington DONATE YOUR CAR TO CHARITY. WARD; THE UNKNOWN 9:00PM of said day, in tric fireplace, dishwasher, SENIOR LIVING referral service, A DC. Office: No Money Out Of Pocket.HEIRS OF THE Receive maximum value of write ESTATEBroward Co. FL., the following districts: garbage disposal, microwave, PLACE FOR MOM. The nation's member TX/NM Bar. off for your taxes.Running or not! OF in WILLIAM L. WARD, REPUBLICAN PARTY full sized refrigerator and more. MANY RN POSITIONS available largest FREE, no obligation senior All conditions accepted. WILLIAM DISTRICT: TOWN OF (518)984-0081/817-2166 your vicinity. Hospitals, SR. A/K/A VACATION HOME, CAMP OR living referral service. Contact our Advertise in this paperand Free pickup. Call for details. SR. FORA/K/A ELIZABETHTOWN correctional facilities, andWARD, LAND SALE OR RENT? Advertrusted local experts today! 1others like it all around 1-855-587-1166 WILLIAM tiseL.withWARD OFFICE: TOWN home health assessments. Great us! We connect you with 800-217-3942 New YorkState. FCPNY A/K/A WILLIAM WARD; consumers (plus Pay & Benefits. White Glove CLERK/TAX COLLECTOR nearly 3-million Got Knee Pain? Back Pain? ShoulSocial Security Disability? Up to KATHY WARD, HEIR-ATPlacement 1-866-387-8100 more online!) with a statewide JANET790,000 E. CROSS REACHFROM TO MORE der Pain? Get a pain-relieving A PLACE FOR MOM. The nation's $2,671/mo. (Based on paid-in LAW; NEWclassified YORK STATE ad. Advertise your prop#202 recruit@whiteglovecare.net R. BROOKS 3.2 MILLION HOMES. THANDEBRA brace at little or NO cost to you. largest senior living referral amount.) FREE evaluation! Call Bill !:3 DEPARTMENT erty OF for TAXAjust $489 for a 25-word MOBILEHELP, America's Premier Call Shannonat: !::l Medicare Patients Call Health service. Contact our trusted, local Gordon & Associates. 1- 855-376ad, zoned ads start at $229. Visit TION AND FINANCE; DEMOCRATIC 518-873-6368 ext. 201 orPARTY email: "' Mobile Medical Alert System. Hotline Now! 1- 855-439-2862 experts today! Our service is 6502. Mail: 2420 N St NW, WashAdNetworkNY.com or UNITED STATES OF DISTRICT: TOWN OF Shannonc@suncommunitynews.com Whether You're Home or Away. FREE/no obligation. ington DC. Office: Broward Co. FL., 315-437-6173 AMERICA O/B/O call INTERJAY For Safety and Peace of Mind. CALL 1-800-553-4101 member TX/NM Bar. IF ADVERTISING IN ONE FREE NAL REVENUE SERVICE, OFFICE: TOWN COUNCIL No Long Term Contracts! PAPER IS SMART, then advertisDefendants. SUMMONS ROBERT SEGALL Free Brochure! Call Today! AVIATION Grads work with SUPPORT our service members, ing in hundreds of them is pure AND NOTICE. KATE COMEGYS 1-800-960-8653 JetBlue, Boeing, Delta and othersveterans and their families in their genius! Do it with just one phone TO THE ABOVE NAMED MONGULLA start here with hands on time of need. For more information NEW AUTHORS WANTED! Page call! Reach nearly 3 million DEFENDANTS: CHRISTOPHER M. GARtraining for FAA certification. visit the Fisher House website at Publishing will help you self-pubconsumers statewide in print -YOU ARE HEREBY SUMROW Financial aid if qualified. www.fisherhouse.org lish your own book. FREE author plus more online -- quickly and inMONED to answer the SPENCER REYNOLDS Call Aviation Institute of submission kit! Limited offer! expensively! Zoned ads start at Complaint in the above VIAGRA & CIALIS! 60 pills for Maintenance 1-866-296-7094 Why wait? Call now: $229 for a 25-word ad. Visit us at captioned action and to $99. 100 pills for $150 FREE shipREPUBLICAN PARTY 1-877-635-3893 serve a copy of your AnAdNetworkNY.com or call ping. NO prescriptions needed. DISTRICT: TOWN OF BUYING FRESH GINSENG for Over 315-437-6173 OXYGEN - Anytime. Anywhere. Money back guaranteed! 1-888swer on the Plaintiffs atNOTICE OF PUBLIC KEENE 50 years. Monday and Thursday No tanks to refill. No deliveries. 278-6168 torney within twenty HEARING OFFICE: SUPERINTEN6:00-8:00 PM or by appointment. LAKEFRONT LAND LIQUIDATION The All-New Inogen One G4 is only (20) days after the serTOWN OFDiscounted LEWIS for Markets are stable, High-quality DENT OF HIGHWAYS VIAGRA 100MG and CIALIS 15 Lakefront Lots 2.8 pounds! FAA approved! FREE Full-time, part-time and relief positions available as a Direct SupportHOMES Professional, vice of this Summons, up, Poor quality down. Please The Town Lewis will D. CRAIG 20mg! 50 Pills + 10 FREE. SPEOne Weekend Only of September info kit: 1-855-839-1738 Don t wash! Bruce Phetteplace exclusive ofproviding the day public Offers: hearing2 on SCOTT C.inSMITH dailyofsupport to people with developmental disabilities their home CIAL $99.00 100% guaranteed. 16th &hold 17th aSample 1-607-334-4942. September 12,- $49,900 2017 at Stop OVERPAYING for yourservice, pre- or within thirty FREE Shipping! 24/7 CALL: 1-888Acres w/463ft Lakefront and community in Saranac Lake, Tupper Lake and Malone Areas. 6:45pm the Lewis (30) days after compleREPUBLICAN PARTY scriptions! SAVE! Call our licensed 868-9758 Hablamos Espanol. 8 Acres w/600ft atLakefront CARS/TRUCKS WANTED!!! Hall, US Canadian and International tion DISTRICT: TOWN OF phar- of service where $89,900 Town Unspoiled Lake,8574 Woods, We buy 2000-2015 Cars/Trucks, Routefor9,Getaway Lewis, Cabin! NY for macy, compare prices andservice MINERVA WANTED OLD JAPANESE MOTORget is made in any Views, Perfect Running or Not! theCity! purpose of hearing other manner than by OFFICE: SUPERINTENCYCLES KAWASAKI Z1-900 $25.00 OFF your first prescription! 3 hrs NY Wine Country! Nationwide Free Pickup! public comments on the personal delivery within DENT OF HIGHWAYS (1972-75), KZ900, KZ1000 (1976CALL 1-844-520-6712 Promo EZ terms! 1-888-701-1864 Call 1-888-416-2208 Town of Lewiss commu- Code CDC201725 Z1R, KZ 1000MK2 1982), the State. The United JONATHAN L. FISH NewYorkLandandLakes.com (1979,80), W1-650, H1-500 nity development needs, States of America, if TIMOTHY J. SHEEHAN DENTAL INSURANCE. (1969-72), H2-750 (1972-1975), and to discuss the posdesignated as a DefenCall Physicians Mutual Insurance S1-250, S2-350, S3-400, KH250, sible submission of one REPUBLICAN PARTY dant in this action may Company for details. KH400, SUZUKI-GS400, GT380, or more Community DeDISTRICT: TOWN OF ST answer to appear within NOT just a discount plan, REAL HONDA-CB750K (1969-1976), velopment Block Grant ARMAND sixty (60) days of sercoverage for 350 procedures. CBX1000 (1979,80) CASH!! 1Physicians Mutual (CDBG) applications for Insurance Company vice hereof. In case of OFFICE: Highway Super855-434-9221 or 800-772-1142 1-310-721-0726  FREE RETIREMENT CONTRIBUTION the 2017 program year. your failure toStarting appear or$11.00 per hour intendent http://www.dental50plus.com/44 wage usa@classicrunners.com The CDBG program is answer, judgment will A less expensive way to help get DOUGALS E. SNICKLES  FREE LIFE INSURANCE  initial you sign onby bonus of $200.00 is offered DISH TV. 190 channels. administered bydental the Newcare you deserve be taken against JR. the HOME IMPROVEMENTS $49.99/mo. for 24 mos. Ask About  Generous sick, vacation and York State Office of default for theforrelief ROGER OLIVER full-timedepositions after completion of Exclusive Dish Features like Community Renewal SUPREME COURT OF manded in the required Combackground checks and trainings. holiday leave provided If you’re over 50, you can get coverage for about $1 a day* CENTRAL BOILER CLASSIC EDGE Sling® and the Hopper®. PLUS (OCR), and will make plaint. THE STATE OF NEW REPUBLICAN PARTY OUTDOOR WOOD FURNACE. Heat HighSpeed Internet, $14.95/mo. Keep your own dentist! NO networks to worry about  After 6 months you will receive  ExcellentDISTRICT: affordable healthTOWN care available to eligible local NOTICE YORK OF more with LESS WOOD. Adiron(Availability and Restrictions approxiDANGER COUNTY OF –ESSEX; In- YOU ARE IN$200.00 TICONDEROGA Coverage and dental/eye Nogovernments wait for preventive care and no deductibles today OFapply.) dack Hardware Call Dennis NOTICE TV for Less, Not Less TV! mately $8 million fortomorrow the dex No.: CV-15-0628. OF LOSING YOUR HOME FORMATION OFFICE: SUPERVISOR you could get a checkup 518-834-4600. Ext. 6 1-855-891-5734  FREE College education program After a year,to you will receive another 2017 program year for Filed 08/16/2017. If you do not respond of Limited Liability R. WILLIAM GRINNELL Coverage for economic over 350 procedures – including cleanings,N.A., housing, de- U.S. this Summons and BANK TRUST, Company (LLC) JOSEPH M. GIORDANO $200.00  Opportunities for advancement exams, fi llings, crowns…even dentures velopment, public facili- AS TRUSTEE FOR LSF9 Complaint by serving a Name: FC Houghton, PURSUANT TO SECTION REPUBLICAN PARTY ties, public infrastrucLLC. Articles of OrganiNO annual or lifetime cap on theMASTER cash benefitsPARTICIPAyou can receive copy of the answer on ture, and planning activi- TION TRUST, Plaintiff, the attorney for the DISTRICT: TOWN OF zation filed with the Sec4-118 of the New York The noAdirondack Arc Residence ties, with the principal V. mortgage company who TICONDEROGA retary of State of New State Election Law, * Free Vehicle/ Boat Pickup ~ purpose of benefitting THE ESTATE OF filed this foreclosure OFFICE: TOWN COUNCIL York (SSNY) on Februtice is hereby given that Ph~ ici:ins 54 Trudeau Road ANYWHERE Mutual" the Information FREElow/moderate Informationincome Kit WILLIAM L. WARD,Here's ary 23, 2017 Office *We Lo- Accept All Vehicles proceeding against you the official Primary Elec- FRED V. PROVONCHA youSR. requestedonDentalins ,ji,; • • Saranac Lake, NY 12983 persons. The hearing A/K/A WILLIAM WARD, and filing the answer tion will be held on DAVE WOODS cation: Essex County. Running or Not will provide further in- SR. A/K/A WILLIAM L. with the court, a default The Secretary of State HEATH TOWNE Tuesday September 12,For questions Make-A-Wish® * Fully Tax Deductible call H formation about the WARD A/K/A WILLIAMYour Name has been designated as judgment may be en- 2017, from 12:00PM to JOYCE GALLANT COOPwww.dental50plus.com/cadnet .,~_ Northeast CDBG program and will WARD; THE UNKNOWN tered and you can lose 9:00PM of said day, in(518)ER359-3351 agent New of the York company allow for citizen partici- HEIRS OF THE ESTATE upon whom process the following districts: COME SEE US your home. *Individual plan. WILLIAM L. WARD, may WheelsForWishes.org be served, and the REPUBLICAN PARTY inMT,the Section 6-160.2, of the Product not pation available in MN, NH, RI,developVT, WA. AcceptanceOF guaranteed for one insurance policy/certificate ofSpeak to an attorney or thistype. Contact us for of complete about this insuranceSR. solicitation.A/K/A This specific offer is not available ingo CO, to the court where WILLIAM Secretary State 650-1110 shall DISTRICT: TOWN OF New York State Election ment anydetailsproposed Call:of(518) NY;call 1-800-969-4781 or respond for similar offer. Certificate C250A (ID: C250E; PA: C250Q); Insurance Policy SR. A/K/A your case is pending for ELIZABETHTOWN mail a copy of any prograntNY: P150NY; OK: applications Law provides that all P150 (GA: P150GA; P150OK; TN: P150TN) WARD, 105241 further information on OFFICE: cess against the compafor TOWN persons designated and/or to provide techni- WILLIAM L. WARD 6096C MB16-NM001Gc A/K/A WILLIAM WARD; how to answer the Sum- CLERK/TAX COLLECTOR ny served upon him or uncontested offices shall cal assistance to develop protect your JANET E.LEGALS her to FCLEGALS Houghton, LLC be deemed nominated or CROSS alternateLEGALS proposals. KATHY WARD, LEGALS LEGALS LEGALSHEIR-AT- mons and LEGALS LEGALS The term of the limited elected thereto, as the DEBRA R. BROOKS Comments on the CDBG LAW; NEW YORK STATE property. AKWEKS HOLDING LLC, liability company shall NBRSR LLC Articles of program or proposed DEPARTMENT OF TAXA- Sending payment to case may be, without Org. filed NY Sec. of project(s) will be re- TION AND FINANCE; Arts of Org filed with be perpetual. balloting. NOTICE IS DEMOCRATIC PARTY your mortgage company SSNY on 06/02/17. Off. The purpose of the limit- State (SSNY) 8/21/2017. ceived at this time. The UNITED STATES OF will not stop this fore- DISTRICT: TOWN OF HEREBY FURTHER GIVLoc.: Essex County, ed liability company is to Office in Essex Co. hearing is being con- AMERICA O/B/O INTER- closure action. JAY EN that the polling SSNY designated as engage in any lawful act SSNY desig. agent of ducted pursuant to Sec- NAL REVENUE SERVICE, YOU MUST RESPOND places of said Primary OFFICE: TOWN COUNCIL agent of LLC upon or activity for which lim- LLC upon whom pro- tion 570.486, Subpart I Defendants. SUMMONS BY SERVING A COPY OF ROBERT SEGALL Election will be the whom process against it ited liability companies cess may be served. of the CFR and in com- AND NOTICE. THE ANSWER ON THE KATE COMEGYS polling places in each may be served. SSNY may be organized. SSNY shall mail copy of pliance with the require- TO THE ABOVE NAMED MONGULLA district of the County of ATTORNEY FOR THE shall mail a copy of pro- VN-08/26-09/30/2017process to 1698 Front ments of the Housing DEFENDANTS: PLAINTIFF (MORTGAGE CHRISTOPHER M. GAR- Essex at which votes cess to: The LLC, PO 6TC-161391 St., Keesville, NY 12944. and Community Devel- YOU ARE HEREBY SUM- COMPANY) AND FILING ROW were cast at the last preBox 2149, Lake Placid, Purpose: Any lawful pur- opment Act of 1974, as MONED to answer the ceding General Election THE ANSWER WITH SPENCER REYNOLDS NY 12946. Purpose: to pose. amended. Complaint in the above THE COURT. (unless otherwise adverengage in any lawful act. VN-09/09-10/14/2017The Town of Lewis is ac- captioned action and to To the above named de- REPUBLICAN PARTY tised), and that all are VN-08/12-09/16/20176TC-162541 cessible to persons with serve a copy of your An- fendants: The foregoing DISTRICT: TOWN OF handicap accessible. NOTICE OF FORMATION 6TC-160069 disabilities. If special ac- swer on the Plaintiffs at- Summons is served KEENE OF LIMITED LIABILITY Essex County Board of NOTICE OF PUBLIC commodations are need- torney within twenty OFFICE: SUPERINTEN- Elections, COMPANY (“LLC”) upon you by publication NOTICE OF FORMATION HEARING ed for persons with dis- (20) days after the ser- pursuant to an order of DENT OF HIGHWAYS County of Essex, ElizaOF LIMITED LIABILITY Hemlock Apologist, LLC. TOWN OF LEWIS abilities, those with vice of this Summons, Articles of Organization bethtown, NY 12932 the Hon. Martin D. Auf- D. CRAIG HOMES COMPANY The Town of Lewis will hearing impairments, or exclusive of the day of fredou, a Justice of the SCOTT C. SMITH Dated: August 14, 2017 Under Section 203 of filed with the Secretary hold a public hearing on those in need of transla- service, or within thirty Supreme Court of the of State of New York VN-09/02-09/09/2017the Limited Liability REPUBLICAN PARTY (30) days after comple- State of N.Y., dated July 2TC-161260 (“SSNY”) on August 1, September 12, 2017 at tion from English, those Company Law 6:45pm at the Lewis DISTRICT: TOWN OF 21, 2017 and filed along Name: BHENY Holdings, 2017 for business con- Town Hall, 8574 US individuals should con- tion of service where with the supporting pa- MINERVA LLC, Articles of Organi- ducted from an office lo- Route 9, Lewis, NY for tact James Monty, Su- service is made in any THE ADIRONDACK ATOFFICE: SUPERINTENpervisor, at 518-873- other manner than by pers in the Essex County zation filed with the Sec- cated in Essex County, TIC LLC Articles of Org. the purpose of hearing DENT OF HIGHWAYS 6777, Clerks personal at least one week delivery within Office. This is an NY. The “SSNY” is desretary of State of New filed NY Sec. of State public comments on the action to foreclose a JONATHAN L. FISH York (SSNY) on July 25, ignated as agent of the Town of Lewiss commu- in advance of the hear- the State. The United (SSNY) 6/5/2017. Office TIMOTHY J. SHEEHAN ing States mortgage date to allow for necon the properof America, if “LLC” upon whom pro2017. Office location: in Essex Co. SSNY denity development needs, essary ty designated arrangements. as a Defenlocated 466 Valley cess against it may be Essex County. SSNY is sig. agent of LLC whom and to discuss the pos- Written comments may dant in this action may REPUBLICAN PARTY Road, Jay, NY 12941 designated as agent of served. “SSNY” shall sible submission of one process may be served. DISTRICT: TOWN OF ST also answer also be submitted to Suknown as SBL No.: to appear within mail a copy of any prothe LLC upon whom SSNY shall mail copy of or more Community De- pervisor, ARMAND 27.3-1-39.200. sixty Town of (60) days of serEssex cess to the “LLC” at 447 process against it may process to PO Box 5, Lewis,, P.O. Box 59, vice hereof. In case of County is designated as OFFICE: Highway Super- NYS 10987 Rt 73, Hurley Road, Westport, velopment Block Grant be served. SSNY shall (CDBG) applications for Lewis, NY 12950 until your failure to appear or the place of trial based intendent NY 12993. mail a copy of process the 2017 program year. September 12, 2017. DOUGALS E. SNICKLES Keene, NY 12942. Prinanswer, judgment will upon the location of the VN-09/09-10/14/2017to: c/o The LLC, 2272 cipal business loc: NYS The CDBG program is JR. be VN-09/09/2017-1TCtaken against you by property being foreSouth Main Street, PO 6TC-162244 10897 Rt 73, Keene, NY administered by the New 162544 ROGER OLIVER default for the relief declosed. Attorneys for Box 57, Essex, New York 12942. Purpose: Any York State Office of manded in the Com- Plaintiff: Stern & Eisen12936. Purpose: Any lawful purpose. Community Renewal SUPREME COURT OF plaint. berg, PC, 485 B Route 1 REPUBLICAN PARTY lawful act or activities. VN-08/05-09/09/2017THE STATE OF NEW NOTICE South, Suite 330, Iselin, DISTRICT: TOWN OF 6TC-159333 NOTICE BY PUBLICA- (OCR), and will make VN-08/05-09/09/2017YOU ARE IN DANGER NJ 08830, T: (516) TICONDEROGA TION OF FORMATION available to eligible local YORK 6TC-159334 OFFICE: SUPERVISOR 630-0288. OF LIMITED LIABILITY governments approxi- COUNTY OF ESSEX; In- OF LOSING YOUR HOME dex NOTICE OF FORMATION mately $8 million for the No.: CV-15-0628. R. WILLIAM GRINNELL NOTICE OF FORMATION If you do not respond to COMPANY VN-08/26-09/16/2017of Filed Limited Liability 2017 program year for 08/16/2017. JOSEPH M. GIORDANO OF LIMITED LIABILITY this Summons and 4TC-161262 Jambs 6476 Main R LLC Company (LLC) housing, economic deU.S. BANK TRUST, N.A., COMPANY (LLC) Complaint by serving a filed articles of organizaName: FC Houghton, tion with SOS of NY on velopment, public facili- AS TRUSTEE FOR LSF9 REPUBLICAN PARTY Name: Tom Duca The copy of the answer on PURSUANT TO SECTION PARTICIPAMASTER LLC. Articles of Organi- 8/30/2017. Principal of- ties, public infrastrucDISTRICT: TOWN OF Essex Builder, LLC. Artithe attorney for the zation filed with the Sec- fice is in Essex County, ture, and planning activi- TION TRUST, Plaintiff, 4-118 of the New York TICONDEROGA cles of Organization filed mortgage company who V. retary of State of New New York. The SOS of ties, with the principal State Election Law, no- OFFICE: TOWN COUNCIL with the Secretary of filed this foreclosure THE ESTATE OF proceeding against you tice is hereby given that FRED V. PROVONCHA York (SSNY) on Febru- NY is designated as purpose of benefitting State of New York WILLIAM L. WARD, SR. and filing the answer the official Primary Elec- DAVE WOODS income ary 23, 2017 Office Lo- agent for service of pro- low/moderate (SSNY) on August 22, cation: Essex County. cess against the LLC, persons. The hearing A/K/A WILLIAM WARD, with the court, a default tion will be held on HEATH TOWNE 2017 Office Location: The Secretary of State and SOS shall mail a will provide further in- SR. A/K/A WILLIAM L. judgment may be en- Tuesday September 12, JOYCE GALLANT COOP- Essex County. The SSNY has been designated as copy of process in any formation about the WARD A/K/A WILLIAM is designated as agent of tered and you can lose 2017, from 12:00PM to ER agent of the company CDBG program and will WARD; THE UNKNOWN your home. 9:00PM of said day, in the LLC upon whom action or proceeding upon whom process allow for citizen partici- HEIRS OF THE ESTATE Section 6-160.2, of the process against it may Speak to an attorney or the following districts: against the LLC to the may be served, and the REPUBLICAN PARTY New York State Election be served. SSNY shall LLC at 6476 Main St., pation in the develop- OF WILLIAM L. WARD, go to the court where Secretary of State shall Westport, NY 12993. SR. A/K/A WILLIAM ment of any proposed your case is pending for DISTRICT: TOWN OF Law provides that all mail a copy of any promail a copy of any pro- The LLCs purpose is to WARD, grant applications SR. A/K/A further information on ELIZABETHTOWN persons designated for cess to the LLC at: 2224 cess against the compa- engage in any lawful ac- and/or to provide techni- WILLIAM L. WARD how to answer the Sum- OFFICE: TOWN uncontested offices shall Lake Shore Road, Essex, ny served upon him or tivity. A/K/A WILLIAM WARD; mons and protect your CLERK/TAX COLLECTOR cal assistance to develop be deemed nominated or NY 12936. her to FC Houghton, LLC alternate proposals. KATHY WARD, HEIR-AT- property. JANET E. CROSS elected thereto, as the VN-09/02/2017VN-09/09-10/14/2017The term of the limited Comments on the CDBG LAW; NEW YORK STATE case may be, without 10/07/2017-6TC-161524 Sending payment to DEBRA R. BROOKS 6TC-162543 liability company shall program or proposed DEPARTMENT OF TAXA- your mortgage company balloting. NOTICE IS be perpetual. project(s) will be re- TION AND FINANCE; HEREBY FURTHER GIVwill not stop this fore- DEMOCRATIC PARTY The purpose of the limitceived at this time. The UNITED STATES OF closure action. DISTRICT: TOWN OF EN that the polling ed liability company is to hearing is being con- AMERICA O/B/O INTER- YOU MUST RESPOND JAY places of said Primary

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