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Quinte West News

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School runs for Terry Fox and for Cameron By Kate Everson

News - Quinte West - Five-year-old Cameron Hunter, a Senior Kindergarten student at Bayside Public School, led the Terry Fox run for the students on September 26. “Cameron was diagnosed with acute myeloid leukemia in 2011,” said her mother Michele Hunter, who also brought her son Calvin, three, to the field behind the school for the run. She said Cameron is a two times survivor and is currently in remission. She had a relapse in 2012, but so far has been 18 months cancer free. “She is on meds, but no chemo,” Michele said. Cameron had a bone marrow transplant from a related donor in 2012 at Sick Kids Hospital. “She’s a typical kid,” Michele says. “When she goes to the doctor she just accepts it, like that’s what everybody does.” Michele said her daughter had a high fever for a week that would not break, and when they took her to the doctor for tests that is when they got the diagnosis. Around her neck, Michele wears strands of beads, representing the treatments the five-year-old has had in the past two years. Inside the school, the children watched a three-minute Terry Fox video then went outside to walk or run around the field. Their goal was to raise $3,000 for cancer research. Two constables from Community Policing set off the starter siren to launch the run. After the run, some students cut off their hair to raise more funds. “We are here to build child cancer Cameron Hunter checks out the beads on her mother’s neck, each one representing a treatment for cancer. She’s a Senior Kindergarten student at Bayside Public awareness,” Michele said. “It doesn’t just happen to adults.” School and led the Terry Fox run for the students on September 26. Photo: Kate Everson

Heritage Lancaster flies in for reunion

By Kate Everson

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News - Trenton - The mighty Lancaster flew over 8 Wing Trenton a few times and landed on the tarmac to the delight of those celebrating the 70th anniversary of 424 Squadron on September 27. “This Lancaster was restored after 11 years,” said one of its pilots John McLenaghan. He said this aircraft did not actually go to war but was built in 1945 just as the war ended. It was stored then converted to maritime patrol for the RCAF.

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“My uncle was a tailgunner in the war and he died,” John added. “That’s part of why I’m here. I also like aviation history.” The Lancaster is part of the collection of the Canadian Warplane Heritage museum in Hamilton, one of only two in the world capable of flying. “It’s hard to taxi,” John noted. “There’s only a hand brake, no tow brakes. And there is a delay on the brakes.” He added that the Lancaster was not designed to

land on asphalt but on grass fields where the brakes would not have been as much of a problem. There are six pilots trained to fly the heritage aircraft. Museum members are able to get a ride in it several times a year and it can take four passengers. It is also involved in air shows. John noted that they changed the lettering on the aircraft to QBA for the 424 Squadron reunion just a day before the event.

“This shows our respect for the members of that squadron,” he said. “This squadron has a great history, outstanding.” The Lancaster was one of the aircraft used by the squadron when it was first formed in England in wartime. Now the squadron is a Search and Rescue operation. It demonstrated its skills with a parachute drop from a Hercules and two jumpers hoisted up by a Griffon. Please see “Squadron” on page 3

Come and enjoy all the things you love about Fall … the crispness in the air, a bountiful harvest and the wonderful aromas and tastes of the season. We invite you to join us as we host a complimentary afternoon to celebrate some of Fall’s favourite activities, tastes, sights and traditions.

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Economic Development update includes mayor’s breakfast

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News - Quinte West - A monthly update by Linda Lisle, manager of Economic Development, includes notice of a Mayor’s Breakfast on Tuesday, October 8. “This is scheduled for 7:30 a.m. in the council chambers at city hall,” Lisle reported to the Economic Development and Revitalization Committee. This informal session will include a presentation by Chris King, chief executive officer of the Quinte Economic Development Commission and Mike Hewitt, co-ordinator for the Manufacturer’s Resource Centre. The presentation will highlight the findings of the 2013 Labour Market Study along with a moving forward plan and roundtable discussions. Lisle also reported that Crowe Productions Inc. and city staff are currently working on the production of six videos, including a quality of life, a business attraction, sports tourism and event hosting promotional video, an activity montage highlighting natural attraction and outdoor activity. “City staff have been assisting in writing scripts, scheduling recording interviews and attending industry visits while videos are being recorded,” she said. The videos will be presented to the economic development and revitalization committee. The Corporate and Financial Services committee recently approved reallocating $30,000 to the Community Improvement Plan budget to offset current CIP incentive program applications. The Front Street and Walkway redevelopment project is nearing completion which involves renovating the walkway from the Veterans’ Skyway bridge to the Chamber of Commerce office. This includes new sidewalks, curbs, road asphalt, decorative street lighting, benches, interlocking brick, trees, plantings and banners. Infrastructure upgrades are completed as part of the project. A Farmers’ Market update reported that the electrical work was completed to install the outdoor audio system, which includes four speakers. The market has issued 15 annual permits and 15 daily permits and continues to be busy throughout the summer construction months.

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Squadron dedication held at the air park Continued from page 1

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ron” stuffed animals, hats and badges. “I came all the way from England for Local residents Bill and Penny Moody with a smile. There was also memorabilia inside A barbecue lunch was available and this reunion,” said Maurice Sanderson. were also at the reunion. Bill was in the The weekend included several events the hangar with photographs from the visitors were taxied back to the air force “I grew up with the Halifax and Lan- squadron from 1978 to when he retired culminating in a squadron dedication at past as well as souvenir “tiger squad- museum on a bus. casters.” in 1990. “It’s great to be here,” he said the air park on Sunday.

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Wellness rooms set up for staff at four hospital sites By Kate Everson

News - Quinte West - The first event for the new staff wellness campaign was kicked off with a barbecue and music at Trenton Memorial Hospital on September 25. “We are focussing on employees’ wellness,” said Mitch Birken, director of Human Resources for Quinte Health Care (QHC). He said they are surveying staff to see what is important to them and to ask individual questions to shape the campaign. “A Wellness Room will be set up at TMH in the third week of October,” he added. “It will be a get-away for staff. There will be a massage chair, a TV and DVD, exercise mats and equipment. This is something they can do before or after work as we grow the program.”

Birken said their focus is to keep people healthy and in a positive frame of mind. The Wellness Rooms are open to all hospital staff. “We want a motivated staff,” he said. “Better feeling staff means better feeling patients.” The TMH Foundation helped kick off the campaign with a barbecue by chair John Smylie from Smylie’s Independent, and a trio of musicians with Pat Clark, Dan Koets and Cory Tucker. The fund-raising campaign by the staff and for the staff included gathering money from pledges to go toward the health and wellness centre. “With funds raised they will all benefit from having access to a facility that will provide wellness workshops plus the tools and resources to help them live well and stay healthy,” said executive

director Wendy Warner. Staff members who pledge their support will be eligible for daily draws with a variety of prizes from local merchants from September 23 to October 31. “Phil Panelas, a livelong advocate of TMH, will match every dollar pledged up to $5,000,” noted campaign volunteer Kathy Hyland, inpatient unit. John Smylie said the Foundation is totally behind this campaign. The next event is a hockey game on October 19 between Quinte Docs and RCAF Flyers at the RCAF arena, with proceeds going to the wellness centre. The new wellness centre at TMH will open October 22 at 2 p.m. with fun wellness activities and healthy snacks. More details on the wellness initiative will be announced later throughout all four hos- Pat Clark, Dan Koets and Cory Tucker played for the launch of the new wellness centre at TMH. Photo: pitals. Kate Everson

8 Wing’s DCC office hosts Security in Contracting Seminar News - Trenton - Experts from Defence Construction Canada (DCC), with a special guest from the Office of the Auditor General, and affiliated government organizations will host a security seminar for 8 Wing personnel and industry contractors on October 8 at 8 Wing/CFB Trenton. As the recapitalization of 8 Wing/CFB Trenton progresses and in anticipation of the pending significant northern expansion, security requirements for contractors, their employees, and subcontractors will be subject to stringent security protocols—many already implemented.

“We want contractors to have an opportunity to learn the facts about our security requirements, and learn how to pursue the correct clearances,” said Mark Farrer, Defence Construction Canada’s Ontario Region Security Coordinator. “It is our goal to ensure this is a fair and transparent process where security goals are understood and met.” Open to industry contractors as well as DND, DCC, and Canadian Armed Forces personnel, the seminar features a high profile lineup of speakers. Marianne Avarello, Director of Managing Performance Audits with the Office of the Auditor General will make a presentation on the 2013 Spring Report

of the Auditor General of Canada section Status of Security in Contracting. “This is a significant opportunity for everyone involved in contracting with DCC and DND,” explained Mr. Farrer. “The representative of the Office of the Auditor General is a unique opportunity and Ms. Avarello can clarify the findings and answer questions. We’re proud DCC was recognized for making satisfactory progress in the report, and this seminar will bring all aspects of security in contracting together. In addition to the Office of the Auditor General, the event includes presentations from Kenneth Clupp and Cara Mantle from the RCMP

Departmental Security Branch, and Michel Boulet from the Director of Defence and Security Office. The Deputy Provost Marshal’s office is represented by Dawn Murray and Sasa Medjovic of DPM Police and Security and Claude Desrochers from DPM Policy and Plans. Michael White from the National Special Centre (responsible for ensuring all aspects of security for Level III assets and sensitive compartmentalized information facilities), and Mario Emond and Mark Farrer from Defence Construction Canada’s Corporate Security complete the speaker’s list. “This seminar is not only for R0012151161

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Influenza Immunization Community Clinics 2013 Location

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Trenton: Knights of Columbus Hall 57 Stella Crescent Belleville: Maranatha Christian Reformed Church 100 College Street West Frankford: Royal Canadian Legion 12 Mill Street Belleville: Quinte Sports & Wellness Centre 265 Cannifton Rd. Bancroft: St. John’s Anglican Church 21 Flint Street Belleville: Holy Rosary Parish 169 North Park St. Stirling: St. Paul United Church 104 Church Street Wellington: Wellington United Church 245 Wellington Main Belleville: Thurlow Community Centre 516 Harmony Road Belleville: Maranatha Christian Reformed Church 100 College Street West Madoc: Trinity United Church 76 St. Lawrence Street East Trenton: Knights of Columbus Hall 57 Stella Crescent Tweed: Tweed Agricultural Society White Building 27 Louisa Street Marmora: Marmora Pentecostal Church 53 Madoc Street Picton: Salvation Army 46 Elizabeth Street Belleville: Thurlow Community Centre 516 Harmony Road Trenton: Knights of Columbus 57 Stella Crescent

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Guidelines to Photo Composition News - Trenton - The Quinte West Public Library is pleased to host a free tutorial by PicsofCanada.com webmaster and photographer Jacques Surveyer. Participants will learn how to do great things with their digital photographs. There will be an optional hands-on exercise. Bring a laptop and we will load one of three free photo editors. Bring a photo and see how it fits guidelines. This tutorial takes place at Quinte West Public Library, Trenton Branch, in the MultiPurpose Room on Tuesday, October 8, from 6:30 to 7:45 p.m. Please reserve a place by calling 613394-3381 ext. 3325 or by email at <roberta@quintewest.ca>.

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The influenza vaccine is available at no cost to all persons over the age of 6 months who live, work or attend school in Ontario. These clinics are run by the Health Unit and do not require an appointment. If you have any questions about the flu vaccine, please contact the Immunization Team at 613-966-5513 x313. Toll Free 1-800-267-2803 x313. TTY 613-966-3036. 4 Quinte West EMC - Thursday, October 3, 2013

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contractors—it is for anyone who wants to contract with DCC, as well as those who interact with the contractors, including Canadian [Armed] Forces personnel, suppliers, and subcontractors. As we move forward on construction at 8 Wing/ CFB Trenton and plan and contract for the northern expansion, we want to ensure our contracting community has all of the information and assistance necessary to successfully participate in these projects.” The 2013 Security in Contracting Seminar will be held at the Canadian Army Advanced Warfare Centre, 76 E North Star Drive. It runs from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. on October 8, and while there is no cost to participate, advance registration is necessary owing to limited enrollment. For more information contact Mark Farrer at <mark.farrer@dcc-cdc.gc.ca> or 613-392-4976.

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OPINION

Roads not taken

Editorial - Two governments did bold, brave things last week. One of them quit and called a new election even though it had a viable majority in parliament. The other arrested the leaders of a neo-fascist party on charges of heading a criminal gang. And you can’t help wondering if things would have turned out a lot better if a couple of other governments had had the courage to do the same thing. Last Saturday, the Tunisian government that has been in power since the country’s first free election in 2011 announced that it would resign. Ennahda, the leading party in the ruling coalition, had not tried to impose its Islamic values on the whole population, and it had brought non-Islamic parties into the coalition, but the situation in the country was starting to feel like Egypt. So Ennahda quit. Like any post-revolutionary government, Ennahda faced a huge economic challenge, and its inevitable failure to create enough jobs to meet the expectations of the young had eaten into its popular support. But what really brought it into a confrontation with the secular majority of the population was two assassinations of high-profile opposition leaders. Nobody thinks that Ennahda was involved in the killings of Chokri Belaid last February and Mohammed Brahmi in May (both with the same pistol). At worst, people think that the government was not severe enough in cracking down on the Salafists, Islamist radicals who are widely suspected of responsibility for the murders. In fact, the killings may really be the work of a single nutcase, or of figures from the old regime trying to subvert the new democracy, in which case even the harshest antiSalafist measures would have made no difference. Yet the first prime minister of the Ennahda-led coalition quit after Belaid’s assassination, and now the whole party is leaving office because it failed to prevent the death of Brahmi. With many of its former voters suffering from the dire state of the economy, Ennahda will probably not win the next election (which is to be organised by a caretaker government). But Tunisia will still be a democracy, Ennahda will still be a legal party, and there will not be thousands killed by the army in the streets. Unlike Egypt. You can find some excuses for why Egypt stumbled back into a military dictatorship last July. The Muslim Brotherhood overplayed its hand and made secular

Gwynne Dyer

Egyptians feel they were under attack. The army had been running the country for decades, and wanted to protect its many privileges. But if President Mohammed Morsi had had the wisdom to do what Ennahda has done, even at the last moment, Egypt would still be a democracy today. And now to Greece, where the ruling coalition of centre-right and left-wing parties has taken decisive action against Europe’s most violent political movement, the neo-fascist Golden Dawn Party, over the past two weeks. The sweep culminated in an anti-terrorism operation early last Saturday morning in which police stormed the homes of party leader Nikos Michaloliakos and five other Golden Dawn members of parliament. Only three years ago Golden Dawn was a tiny fringe party that ranted about “subhuman foreigners” stealing Greek jobs and polluting the Greek gene pool, and got less than one per cent of the vote in the 2010 election. Then came the debt crisis that has plunged Greece into poverty—and in last year’s election it got seven per cent of the vote. Waving Greek flags and the party’s logo (which looks quite like a swastika), Golden Dawn’s bully-boys took over the streets, attacking immigrants, gays and leftists. It had the support of some senior police officers, and its members were arming themselves for some final confrontation. But Prime Minister Antonis Samaras’ government moved first. “Golden Dawn tried to test the endurance of democracy,” said Public Order Minister Nikos Dendias. “Today it got an answer from state justice.” The charge sheet against the party’s senior leaders runs to nine pages, detailing instances of murder, extortion and money-laundering. If those charges stand up in court (and they probably will), Golden Dawn may well be banned. Golden Dawn’s members openly admire Adolf Hitler, but the only reason they even know his name is that the German state failed to take similar action against his National Socialist (Nazi) party in the last years before Hitler took power in 1933. Like Golden Dawn, the Nazis’ share of the national vote jumped sevenfold after the onset of the economic crisis in 1929, but they were still a small minority in Germany, and their violence against their opponents and the Jews gave the state ample reason to act against them. It didn’t, and as Germany’s economic situation worsened the Nazis’ support grew further. In the 1933 election they got one-third of the vote, and Hitler was appointed Chancellor. That was the end of German democracy and much else besides. Greece is not a great power, so what happens there matters much less, but without this prompt action it could have ended up the same way. It’s a lot easier to be wise after the fact, but it is the job of politicians to be wise before the fact. Some pass the test; others do not.

LETTER TO THE EDITOR

Thanks to Applefest volunteers Dear Editor, It has been said time and again that volunteers are the backbone of our communities. This sentiment was once again proven true in Brighton this past weekend through the efforts of dozens of tireless volunteers who contributed to the overwhelming success of the 39th annual Applefest. Over the last 12 months the volunteer committee met regularly to plan all of the wonderful events that thrilled thousands upon thousands of citizens and tourists at this year’s event.

Quinte West News P.O. Box 25009, Belleville, ON K8P 5E0 250 Sidney Street Phone: 613-966-2034 Fax: 613-966-8747 This edition serves the following communities: Trenton, Frankford and area Published weekly by: Record News Communications, A division of Performance Printing Limited

Thank you to all volunteers for your tireless commitment to our community and for an extremely successful event. Finally, thank you to everyone who visited Applefest and shopped in our local stores and had something to eat at a local restaurant. We value the support you have provided our community. Thomas Rittwage, Councillor, Municipality of Brighton

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Climate change - hoax or reality? By John Campbell Editorial - We’re doomed. Or so it would seem, given the fifth assessment report put together by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), announced September 27. “It is extremely likely that human influence has been the dominant cause of the observed warming since the mid-20th century,” and that warming is “unequivocal,” said the panel in making available a summary of its findings for policymakers. The numerous climatic changes that have occurred since 1950 are “unprecedented” in so short a period, during which time “the atmosphere and ocean have warmed, the amount of snow and ice has diminished, the global mean sea level has risen and the concentrations of greenhouse gases have increased,” said Qin Dahe, co-chair of IPCC Working Group 1. The projections for climate change to continue in the coming decades are unsettling: heat waves will occur more often and last longer, while wet regions receive more rainfall and dry regions receive less. Oceans will warm, causing glaciers and ice sheets to shrink, resulting in sea levels around the world rising at a rate faster than has ever been experienced in the last 40 years, Dahe said. Thomas Stocker, Dahe’s co-chair, said: “Continued emissions of greenhouse gases will cause further warming and changes in all components of the climate system.” The IPCC still holds out hope it’s possible to head off a global disaster in the making and gathering momentum but at this stage, after decades of not doing anywhere near enough to counter what was happening, it won’t be easy. “Limiting climate change,” Stocker warned, “will require substantial and sustained reductions of greenhouse gas emissions.” The task verges on the impossible. How likely is it that “substantial and sustained reductions of greenhouse gas emissions” will be achieved in a world so badly rent by political ideologies, racist beliefs, religious mania and territorial ambitions, when what is required is international co-operation of a scale not seen in human history? This is the species, after all, that clear cuts forests, depletes the ocean’s fish populations, poisons the air, paves over fertile lands, annihilates other species, and murders its own kind for the most sordid of reasons: to satisfy mammon and base instincts. This is the same species whose individual members form groups that choose to remain divided by centuriesold hate, that bully and suppress other segments of society, that prefer to sow tumult in budgetary matters that threatens to drive a country to financial ruin, rather

than employ compromise in service to the greater good. It’s risible to think that totalitarian governments will ever join a global initiative to alter behaviours detrimental to the climate, when they show so little regard for their own citizens. And what of the tea party mindset that has seized control of the agenda south of the border, does it offer hope of looking beyond its narrow interests to consider what is good for humanity as a whole? How many of us, in fact, are prepared to make sacrifices that are sure to become onerous the longer they are put off, in order to sustain a quality of life we have come to enjoy and would be reluctant to relinquish—but will be forced to later on? Expect the climate change deniers to challenge again the work that’s been done by IPCC, citing missteps the panel has made since its first assessment report in 1990, including a leaked exchange of emails that called into question the integrity of the process for gathering, interpreting and presenting data. It’s the custom of deniers to attach undue weight to errors that are to be expected in a project as large as that undertaken by the panel at the request of the United Nations, and they are quick to present contrary opinions by a few members of the scientific community. But their objections in total cannot match the authority that comes with a report that relies on a wide range of disciplines to assess, in the panel’s words, “the scientific, technical and socio-economic literature relevant to understanding climate change, its impacts and future risks, and options for adaptation and mitigation.” The deniers argue vast sums of money and human capital will be diverted needlessly away from maintaining a strong economy to be wasted on green power technologies and programs for reasons that will ultimately prove to be a hoax or the outcome of misguided thinking. Even if the deniers turn out to be right, the re-allocation of resources and investments will not have gone for naught, because, as writer Thomas L. Friedman has observed, transforming the economy could lead to “a real revolution” in creativity and innovation, resulting in cleaner air and water, the more efficient production of goods, and less reason to fight over resources. However, if the deniers are wrong and nothing was done because their views held sway, “we will have a future full of droughts, floods, melting glaciers, rising sea levels, resource conflicts, massive disruptions along coastal areas all over the world,” Friedman says. The stakes are high but the safe bet would be to listen to what the world’s leading experts on climate change have to say and act accordingly.

Vice President & Regional Publisher Mike Mount mmount@perfprint.ca 613-283-3182, ext 104

Editor Terry Bush tbush@metroland.com 613-966-2034, ext 510

Advertising Consultant Peter Demers pdemers@theemc.ca 613-966-2034, ext 501

Distribution Kathy Morgan kmorgan@metroland.com 613-475-0255, ext 210

Regional General Manager Peter O’Leary poleary@perfprint.ca 613-283-3182, ext 112

Quinte West News Kate Everson kate.everson@gmail.com

Advertising Consultant Mark Norris mnorris@theemc.ca 613-966-2034, ext 506

Production Manager Glenda Pressick gpressick@theemc.ca 613-966-2034, ext 520

Advertising Consultant Susan St.Hilaire ssthilaire@theemc.ca 613-966-2034, ext 518

Read us online at www.InsideBelleville.com

Group Publisher Duncan Weir dweir@perfprint.ca 613-283-3182, ext 164 Publisher John Kearns jkearns@theemc.ca 613-966-2034, ext 570

Belleville News Steve Jessel sjessel@theemc.ca Classifieds Heather Naish hnaish@theemc.ca 613-966-2034, ext 560 1-888-Words Ads Deadline: Monday 3:00pm

THE DEADLINE FOR DISPLAY ADVERTISING IS MONDAY AT 11:00AM Quinte West EMC - Thursday, October 3, 2013 5


There’s a different type of fish downtown

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including very large custom designed setups. “When I first moved to Canada in 1970 my first job was in a pet store,” says owner Michael Mak. “I worked for a big chain store in Mississauga and then opened a new store for them in Ottawa before I opened my first store in Kingston in 1988. I still run into

You’ve heard the saying it takes a village to raise a child, well keeping children safe is a responsibility we all share. October is Child Abuse Prevention Month which is marked by the purple ribbon campaign. Highland Shores Children’s Aid and the Quinte Children’s Foundation encourage you to learn more about how you can help to prevent child abuse and neglect in our community. We hope you’ll join in recognizing this important month by dressing in purple on October 18th or by wearing a purple ribbon during October to help raise awareness. You can also come out and cheer at the “Go Purple with the Wellington Dukes” home game on October 4th.

some of my old customers and I am looking forward to working with my new customers to help them with their aquariums.” Aquarium Kingdom is located at 72 King Street in downtown Trenton and will offer a wide variety of fish that are legal to import to Canada. They will be breeding some of the fish at the

store to keep the prices more affordable and are happy to help customers set up their own breeding tanks if they are interested in learning about the life cycle of the fish. Also, the store will offer trades to customers who have fish that have grown too big for their tank and are unable to set up a bigger tank. “Specialty shops in the downtown are very important,” says chamber manager Suzanne Andrews “as they bring shoppers into the downtown looking for specific items. They really want good service and quality products along with competitive pricing and they really appreciate it when there are experts on site to help them with their questions.” Aquarium Kingdom also sells many different types of live and frozen food to feed fish of any size. In the store they have fish that are specially trained and will follow fingers from one end of the tank to the other waiting for their food which is a big hit with the customers.

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Business – Trenton - The Quinte Region is well known for its sport fishing but a new business in downtown Trenton will be specializing in a totally different kind of fish. Aquarium Kingdom will be specializing in exotic tropical fish from all over the world and helping customers set up aquariums of all sizes

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A ribbon cutting was held at Aquarium Kingdom with Stephanie Campbell from MP Rick Norlock’s office, Tina Stephens for MPP Rob Milligan, owner Michael Mak, Mayor John Williams and Chamber of Commerce manager Suzanne Andrews. Photo: Kate Everson

The right food is important so the fish can stay healthier and stronger in the customer’s tank. “We joke with our customers and say a fat fish is a healthy fish,” says Michael, “but it’s not just because we want to see the customer more regularly; it is important that the fish eat well if you want them to last a long time.” It is very affordable for most families to start up an aquarium and Aquarium Kingdom will sell small, medium and huge aquarium setups for a very reasonable price. “A beautiful aquarium is a nice piece of furniture in your home,” says Michael. “After a long hard day at work it is very relax-

ing to sit beside a beautiful aquarium. I have customers that tell me they sit and watch their fish for hours.” Aquarium Kingdom also carries a very good selection of pond fish and pond plants for outdoor or indoor garden or fish tanks. They want to be well known in the region as the place to go if you want nice healthy fish for your pond or aquarium. They want to ensure that every person that comes through the door has a good experience and will even do house calls after hours to help customers with their aquariums. For more information and for special deals check out their Facebook page or call 613-9550984.

Help us celebrate 60 years! Maranatha Church  1953 - 2013 Everyone Welcome! Open House & Free Community BBQ Saturday, Oct. 5

Open House 10 am to 2 pm  BBQ 11:30 am to 1 pm Building tours with refreshments Climbing wall & bouncy castle for the kids Hamburgers, hotdogs, chips and pop

Celebration Worship Service Sunday morning, 10 am, Oct. 6

A time of worship and thanksgiving led by praise team, choir and children Guest Speaker – Rev. Kevin Dowling Senior Pastor of Desert Stream Fellowship and longtime member of the BCM (Belleville Christian Ministries) with a word of encouragement to Maranatha for our part in what God is doing in Belleville. Everyone welcome!

Maranatha Church  100 College St. W. Belleville, ON  613-962-2062 website: maranatha-church.com 6 Quinte West EMC - Thursday, October 3, 2013

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Franco-Ontarian flag raised at city hall by students By Kate Everson

News - Quinte West - Frenchspeaking students poured off the buses in front of city hall on September 25 to raise the Franco-Ontarian flag beside the Canadian flag. “The French language has been present in Ontario for 350 years,” said Chantale Brisson, a teacher at Marc-Garneau. Quinte’s three French schools in the area: Cité Jeunesse public elementary school, l’Envol Catholic elementary

school and the Marc-Garneau public secondary school brought more than 350 students for this very special day for the French community. “Francophones make an important contribution to Canadian society and I know I am part of a dynamic community,” said Tanja Morin-Kovacevic, principal of Cité Jeunesse and Marc-Garneau. “I am so proud to say that I do belong in this amazing community.” The Franco-Ontarian flag consists of two

bands of green and white. The left portion has a solid light green background with a white fleur-de-lys in the middle, while the right portion has a solid white background with a stylized white trillium in the middle. The green represents the summer months while the white represents winter. The trillium is the floral symbol of Ontario with the fleur-de-lys representing the French-Canadian heritage

of the Franco-Ontarian community. The Franco-Ontarian flag was raised for the first time at Sudbury University on September 25, 1975. Raising the flag at city hall were Mayor John Williams, LieutenantColonel Christian Roy, Tanja MorinKovacevic, acting principal of Marc Garneau, Helene Nadeau, acting principal for Cité Jeunesse and Carole Beauchamp-Kavanaugh, acting prin-

cipal for the Catholic School L’Envol. About 2,000 French-speaking families live in the Quinte region, most of whom come from 8 Wing Trenton. Ontario’s Francophone community numbers 582,690, and is the largest French-speaking community in Canada outside of Quebec. The first French speakers to come to Ontario were the missionaries who established the mission of Ste-Marie-amongthe-Hurons in 1639

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Students from Marc Garneau helped raise the flag at city hall. Photo: Kate Everson

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Principals from the three French schools raised the flag with Mayor John Williams and LieutenantColonel Roy. Photo: Kate Everson

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When the weather outside gets frightful, poorly insulated windows can allow cold air into the home. That often has a trickle-down effect on finances, forcing you to turn up the thermostat in an attempt to offset the cold air pouring into the home. Whether you need your windows replaced or simply need to patch up any leaks, a Home improvement projects can add value to a home and proactive approach to leaky or older windows do-it-yourselfers know the sweat-equity that goes into such in the fall can save you from unnecessarily high projects can give homeowners a greater sense of pride in heating bills come the winter. Addressing leaky their homes. But no two home improvement projects are the windows also makes a home more comfortable same, and homeowners should know that certain projects for its inhabitants. Fall is the ideal time to address a home’s winare best tackled during certain times of the year. Fall is a great season to work on your house, as the weather dows because the temperature outside tends to is often at its most agreeable once the summer heat has be pleasant. This means you likely won’t have to gone and before winter weather arrives. The following are a make much of an effort to offset the elements, handful of fall-friendly home improvement projects for hom- and open windows in the fall won’t make your

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Painting is another home improvement project that seems tailor-made for fall. A fresh coat of paint or a new color scheme around the house can give a home an entirely new look and feel. But paint can be pungent and the aromas may last if it’s applied at a time of year when it can’t dry while the windows are wide open. Paint fumes inside a home can make the home uninS ! the habitable, but painting at a time ofC Ayear L L Ulike fall, when you can keep the windows open during and after the project, can help air the home out. But interior painting isn’t the only painting project homeowners can tackle in the fall. Many exterior paints are temperature-sensitive and need the temperature outside to be above 40o F. Paint that freezes won’t dry properly, and homeowners might be left with a costly and unsightly mistake on their hands. Fall temperatures tend to be amenable to both interior and exterior painting projects, just be sure to check the weather forecast before making your first brush stroke.

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Legion launches poster and literary contest for students the Legion’s most important role,” says organizer Manny Raspberry. “The Poppy has been widely recognized as a symbol of Remembrance and by wearing the Poppy, we demonstrate our gratitude to those who gave their lives for the freedom we enjoy. “The Legion wants our youths to know that the freedoms they enjoy did not come without a price. The annual Remembrance Poster and Literary Contest challenges our youth to think about the sacrifices made by those who gave their lives to preserve our freedom.” This Contest with a “Remembrance” theme includes a poster (colour and black and white), an essay, and a poetry category. New Bert Lewis & Son this year is also a Jewellers Ltd. video competition. The video is to be We Repair a three- to fourminute video of • Jewellery & Rings “Remembrance” • Watches, Clocks & submitted in two Grandfather Clocks separate categories: individual and 178 Roblin Rd. BELLEVILLE collaborative. Also (west of Taste of Country) new this year, a 613-966-7174 dance will be held OPEN on completion of TUES-FRI 9-6 SAT 9-4 the awards cer-

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News - Trenton - Almost every Legion Branch in Canada is involved in one or more youth programs. Branch 110 in Trenton sponsors many youth programs including Public Speaking, Youth Merit Awards, Track and Field and annual Remembrance Poster and Literary Contest. Legion Remembrance programs commemorate the men and women who died in military service of Canada during war and peace. “We believe that maintaining the tradition of Remembrance is a sacred trust and

This black and white poster by Melissa Mourez, of Bayside Secondary School, placed first at our Branch, Zone F-2 and District F competitions last year. Photo: Submitted

emonies for those student in attendance. The contest is divided into four categories (by school grades 1-3, 4-6, 7-9 and 10-12) and a great way for students to show our brave military veterans that they are not forgotten and that they realize the sacrifices that were made so that we may enjoy our freedom. Submissions for the Royal Canadian Legion literary contest can be in either official language and all entries will be judged by bilingual judges. The deadline for entries is 4 p.m. October 25, 2013. Students may enter as many contests as they wish but may submit only one entry for each category. Contest rules and entry forms with complete details are available at all Trenton area school administrative offices or visit <http://legion.ca/Poppy/contests_e. cfm>. Contact Legion Branch 110 Youth Education Co-ordinator Tamara at 613847-2263 or <tinitym@hotmail.com>.


The association is always open to new members and offers encouragement and support to emerging and established artists. Further information is available on the Internet at <belevilleart.ca> or by calling 613-968-8632.

News - Stirling - As it celebrates 55 years of artistic expression, the Belleville Art Association (BAA) has several installations in place this month, including a show at the Stirling-Rawdon Public Library gallery. Association representative Nancy Sherk, who was at the library in late September to help hang the Stirling exhibit, admits it will be a busy month, but adds it is very much a celebration of local art as well. In keeping with its now 40-year relationship with the John M. Parrott Art Gallery in Belleville, the 55-year-old association is also holding its annual juried show there through the month of October. And that, Sherk says, amounts to “95 years of art.” Included in the Stirling exhibit are paintings by 15 of the group’s membership that now numbers more than 100. And the show offers a wide range of subjects, styles and approaches. And with varying levels of experience, from the beginner through to art teachers, Sherk says the group provides an extremely supportive atmosphere for all involved, as well as the opportunity to show their work. At the Parrott Gallery, the BAA holds monthly shows featuring the works of several artists, generally based on a theme rather than highlighting the pieces of an individual member. Those shows, like the current exhibition at the Stirling gallery, Nancy Sherk is one of more than 100 members of the Belleville Art Association who are celebrating the organization’s 55th offer a glimpse of the local talent and are anniversary this year. Here she hangs a Pat Werden painting at the Stirling-Rawdon Public Library art gallery.

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sale. Works include photography and painting as well as fibre art and sculpture. As well as offering an open studio session every week, the association also runs workshops, bus trips and other art events throughout the year.

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certain to provide something for a breadth of artistic tastes, she says. The association also operates a gallery and studio at 392 Front Street in Belleville, open from Tuesday to Saturday, where original artwork is also available for

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Bridgeway Recovery Systems- Stephen Herald

with accounts receivable management companies and had held increasingly senior positions in the credit granting and recovery industries. In layman’s terms, Stephen had a long career history in the debt collection trade. When the opportunity presented itself to become selfemployed, Stephen investigated the Ontario Self-Employment Benefit program. The OSEB Program is administered by Trenval Business Development Corporation for the Ministry of Training, Colleges and Universities and provides financial support, a 5-week inclass business training program and ongoing mentoring. “Although I had many years experience in senior management, I had never started a business from scratch before.

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Trenval Business Development Corporation was created in 1987 by the Federal Government to support small business and aspiring entrepreneurs. They grow our local economy by providing free business counselling, lending funds to small business, delivering entrepreneurial training and how-to workshops, as well as an expanding list of small business services and resources. Congratulations to this Trenval client and successful Entrepreneur in Action! A bridge is a structure that carries you over an obstacle. When Stephen Herald, owner of Bridgeway Recovery Systems launched his business, he chose this name specifically to illustrate his desire to take clients over obstacles and have them reach a positive outcome. He had 25 years of experience

If I wanted success, I thought I should prepare myself the best I could”. Stephen Herald put as much effort and commitment into building a successful business for himself as he did to ensure

his business would 100% reflect the core values of the clients he served. He is the complete opposite of that stereotypical debt collector using intimidating tactics and demeaning language. Stephen

utilizes many professional and respectful account receivable recovery methods and ensures his clients that he considers himself an extension of their good reputation. There are times that bills and payments fall behind and berating someone is not going to get the relationship back on track and monies received. Bridgeway Recovery carries a staff of six (and expanding) that Stephen has personally trained and consistently monitors in his downtown Belleville office. “Today we have in excess of $172 million under our administration and we have over 200 active customers and growing.” This success is due to the tireless efforts of Stephen to become a leader in his industry. “Hanging a sign on your wall does not make a business. You make it!”

And he’s quick to show his appreciation to Trenval and the OSEB program. “The training was absolutely essential to my current progress. From creating a business plan to forcing me to think through my concept and make it a living entity, all areas covered by the OSEB proved beneficial.” If you are a local business, medical, dental or law office, private venture or corporation, Stephen offers training on accounts receivable recovery strategies as well as contracting as that needed third party to collect outstanding funds. More information is available online at www. bridgewayrecoverysystems.ca. The Board and Staff of Trenval congratulate Stephen Herald and are glad to have been a part of his successful business journey!

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Turtles get advance warning of road crossings By Kate Everson

News - Quinte West - Turtles crossing the road next spring are getting an early start to warning motorists. “Turtle crossing signs are ahead of the game this year,” said Terry Cassidy. A letter was received in council from Christine Jennings of Quinte Conservation informing the city that the conservation authority has purchased some turtle crossing signs to install throughout their watershed. “We are offering member municipalities the opportunity to have signage for an appropriate location,” Jennings writes. The turtle signs are Ministry of Transportation approved and have antitheft hardware. However, they do not come with poles. The installation would be the responsibility of the municipality.

“We have a limited number of signs available,” she noted. “Requests will be fulfilled as they come in until the signs are gone.” She noted there are some areas throughout the watershed identified as crossing hot spots and the conservation authority might be able to offer ideas with areas that require turtle signs. Leslie Roseblade noted she has seen Autistic Child signs posted on the road and wondered what that was about. Chris Angelo of Public Works said they are one of ten municipalities posting the signs as requested by people living on those streets. “We have had positive feedback,” he added. “They are modelled after provincial signs.” He noted the autistic signs are also

Jim Alyea asked about renaming the demolished. He suggested putting it out to posted in Rosewood subdivision in Wooler Hall site now that the old hall is a committee to choose a name. Frankford. Roseblade also asked about confusion for motorists on Dundas Street East in Trenton. Angelo said they are posting signage to notify drivers about the island and the direction of travel. “The island will allow emergency vehicles up on it,” he added. He noted that transport trucks are going up on the concrete apron but works are under way to correct that. Jim Harrison asked if farm signs are needed on the roads. He noted that a park could be designated to Norm Mallory who was a member of Murray Township council. Mayor John Williams said there have been concerns expressed about Dundas Street East. “It really looks great,” he said. “We will get through this. It’s News - The Canadian Cancer Society would like to thank the staff and supporters of Trenton Diagtough but we will be nostics for the barbecue they hosted on Saturday, September 28. Mansour and Amin Ataollahi were celebrating the installation of their brand new state-of-the-art low-dose digital mammogpretty happy.”

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News - Quinte West - The first Bay of Quinte Road Race Challenge saw great weather and participation as over 70 cyclists took part in the 26and 44-kilometre leisure rides as well as the 120kilometre Ontario Cycling Association sanctioned road race. With 51 competing in the sanctioned course that took riders through Prince Edward County, the City of Belleville and both urban and rural areas of Quinte West, riders were thrilled with the scenery and condition of the course and said they would definitely be back. Following each of the three rides, participants were treated to a gourmet barbecue provided by The Ramblin’ Pit. “This event is a real success story of how our regional partners are working together,” noted Bay of Quinte Tourism President Ryan Williams. “Cycle tourism is such a growing market and we are so fortunate in the Bay of Quinte Region to have such great trails, roadways and routes to draw tourists to our area,” he adds.

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Participants in the race Sunday, September 22, were not only able to take in the scenery and enjoy a great lunch, but also support a great cause. A portion of each registration fee will go directly to the local Heart & Stroke Foundation and riders also had the option of pledging additional amounts. Funds are being tallied, with a total expected later this week. The 120-kilometre race results were as follows; Youth (Open) - 1st Place: Derek Harnden (3:01:11), 2nd Place: Lucas Bent (3:01:43), 3rd Place: Tyler Allsopp (3:31:32), Adult Open 1st Place: Kevin Black (3:01:25), 2nd Place: Greg Woitzik (3:01:26), 3rd Place: Casey Roth (3:01:34), Senior (Open) – 1st Place: Richard Westwood (3:01:44), 2nd Place: Kevin Wheeler (3:23:01), 3rd Place: Florian Braig (3:45:17). The day’s overall winner was Derek Harnden from the Peterborough Cycling Club. Committee Chair, Quinte West Councillor Fred Kuypers, reported that they were pleased with the results of the first event and look forward to further improvements for next year. “This was the start of a new Harold Fledderus opportunity for Quinte West,” he commented. “We appreciate the support provided by the many volunteers, race officials, local municipalities, staff, Bay of Quinte Tourism and the Quinte West Rachel De Wal OPP and Belleville Police who provided support along the routes and made it possible.” Full race results are available at <www.ontariocycling.org>. Jessica Hoornweg

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Club hopes to “Paint the Town Red” By Sue Dickens

News - Campbellford - Plant a bulb, grow a community is the concept behind a new project of the Rotary Club of Campbellford called “Paint the Town Red.” Members of the club gathered last Saturday to package 3,000 stunning red Apeldoorn tulip bulbs from Holland which are being sold to raise funds for the service club. “This is the first year for the project; we’ve never done anything like this before,” commented Susan Gibbs, club member and the inspiration behind the fund raiser. “I thought it would be fun to do something colourful for the area and raise funds at the same time,” she explained. The afternoon was a busy one as the members packaged up 3,000 tulip bulbs. “We decided to make them all red, to just have one colour and red is so dramatic,” said Gibbs while putting bulbs into the paper bags to get them ready to sell. “It also makes this process simpler,” she added, with a grin. Working alongside the

club members were four high school students earning their community service hours, three from Campbellford District High School, Kelsey Stapley, Emma Stapley and Katherine Forestell, all in Grade 9 and Cassidy Meier, a Grade 9 student at St. Mary’s in Cobourg. “Emma texted me and said do you want to do this for community hours and I said sure,” said Cassidy Meier. “I believe volunteer hours are a good idea because you are going to have to get a job anyway so this way you get introduced with it. The tasks are not really difficult, they are just simple things that you can do and I mean you are helping people,” she added. Some of the bulbs have been preordered but most will be sold here in town. The cost is $1 per bulb and they are packaged in paper bags, five at a time. “If people buy more than 500 they get them for 80 cents a bulb,” said Gibbs. “They can be planted anytime up until the frost this fall and will bloom the first two weeks in May.

Terry’s dream lives on

And then if the flower heads are cut off once the petals fall, then they will grow again the next year. So we are hoping to have lots of red tulips everywhere,” she added. “This is a Trent Hills wide project, not just Campbellford,” commented Gibbs, who explained that some club members are from the Hastings area. If all the bulbs are sold theoretically the club could raise $30,000 minus the cost of the bulbs. Crutches did not stop Benoit from participating Money raised by the tulip in the Terry Fox Run at L’Envol Catholic School on sales will be used to support News - Students in Grade 2 at L’Envol Catholic school get their pictures September 27 accompanied by M. Sylvain. Photo: Rotary projects in the community. taken before the Terry Fox Run on September 27. Photo: Kate Everson Kate Everson Anyone wishing to support Rotary that does not have a garden, are encouraged to buy and donate the bulbs to such places as the Legion, hospital or for planting in public places in all our communities. To purchase bulbs drop in to Earth Angel Designs 53 Bridge Street, Campbellford. The club will also be selling bulbs at the Farmers’ Market in Campbellford on the Wednesday and Saturday after Thanksgiving weekend and at Sharpe’s Food Market.

Annual Life Chain Sunday, October 6, 2013 due to our presence and our prayers. Many pastors are reluctant to speak about abortion because they feel that abortion has become a political issue. Abortion is always a crime against human life. Abortion is clearly an unspeakable crime, because we do not want our children to know that we are capable of killing an unwanted child. In Canada, preborn babies have no legal protection. The Right to Life is the first human right. Reproductive health has become a code word

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for abortion. World wide, millions of tiny, innocent preborn babies have been eliminated before they are born. Each human life is surely worthy of our love and concern. During every natural disaster or act of Grade 2 students William, Holly, Etienne, Maxime, Isabella and Maxim pose with their teacher Mme Helene Hebert at L’Envol violence, we are instinctively Catholic School before their Terry Fox Run. Mme Hebert said she actually met Terry on his run in Hawkesbury. Photo: Kate Everson appalled when innocent human life is lost. . Recognizing our Local Volunteers Out of town churches and those Trenton churches not situated on Dundas Street, can meet at 1:45 p.m. at Trenton Town Centre, Dundas Street West.

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News - Trenton - Trenton area 23rd annual Life Chain Sunday, will be held rain or shine on Sunday, October 6, 2013, along Dundas Street, Trenton, from 2 until 3 p.m. At 3 p.m. all Life Chain participants are invited to fellowship at St. Peter’s School Gym, Queen Street, to share pro-life reflections, music and refreshments. Life Chain has been a silent and prayerful pro-life witness since 1990. Each year, all Trenton area churches are encouraged to participate with their pastor. Signs are available at churches along Dundas Street and Trenton Town Centre, Dundas Street West (formerly Zellers parking lot). Please assemble at 1:45 p.m. at your church or Trenton Town Centre to choose your sign and pray together before proceeding quietly to Dundas Street to begin your silent Holy Hour of Prayer. Stand or sit (bring a lawn chair) and quietly pray for all the victims affected by abortion and for the end of abortion in Canada. Each year motorists are reminded that Abortion Kills Children, that Adoption is the Loving Option and that Jesus Heals and Forgives. For the past 23 years, we have been a visible impact in Trenton. Only God knows how many hearts and minds have been changed to Choose Life

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If you would like to submit the name of someone who gives freely of their time and talents to our community, please send details and contact information to: 244 Ashley Street, P.o. Box 155 Foxboro, ON K0K 2B0 613-966-2034 • email: jkearns@theemc.ca Quinte West EMC - Thursday, October 3, 2013 13


SPORTS

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more unassisted, while Kelly scored with a helper by Stewart. The third period saw Douglas net his fourth of the game, on a nice pass from Hayden McLaughlin. Kelly scored the game winner, on a play set up by Jacob Parsons and Harbour. Cole Kirby and Dylan Prinzen shared the goal tending duties for both games. The team roster includes Dylan Prinzen, Cole Kirby, Jack Kelly, Abigail Hicks, Parker Stewart, Jacob Parsons, Dawson Douglas, Raiden Anderchuk, Nelson Williams, Lucas Harbour, Hayden McLaughlin, Brian Harrison, Grant Galbraith, Thomas Cheer and Cole Stevenson. The Hawks are coached by Percy Haines, Kevin Stewart, trainers Scott Kelly and Shawn Hicks. Next weekend the Hawks take on Whitby again at 2:15 p.m. in Trenton at Rink #1.

September 30 Report: The CPS Wood Products Minor Atom Hawks fell 4 - 2 this weekend in a rematch with the Whitby Wildcats (White). The Wildcats took a two-goal lead in the first but the Hawks (2-1-0) came back with one in the second on a goal by Raiden Anderchuk assisted by Dawson Douglas. However, Whitby scored two more in the second leading 4 - 1 going into the third. The Hawks notched one more in the third with Jack Kelly set up by Lucas Harbour but it wasn’t enough, and they fell to the Wildcats 4 - 2. Cole Kirby and Dylan Prinzen shared the battle in the net; the Hawks were outshot 39 - 22. The Hawks play again at home on Saturday at 2:15 p.m. as they take on the Ajax Knights for the first time this season. Come on out and show your support.

Cross-country meet planned Sports - Trenton - The Quinte West Track Club will be hosting an invitational cross-country meet for elementary school age children from the local school boards on Saturday, October 5. The event is geared for children between Grades 3 and 8 .The location of the cross-country meet will be at Hanna Park in Trenton. Registration begins at 8 a.m. followed by a course inspection tour. The race schedule is as follows: 10:00 a.m. Grade 3 (Girls then Boys) 10:30 a.m. Grade 4 (Girls then Boys) 11:00 a.m. Grade 5 (Girls then Boys) 11:30 a.m. Grade 6 (Girls then Boys) 12:00 p.m. Grade 7 (Girls then Boys) 12:30 p.m. Grade 8 (Girls then Boys) Meet organizer Duncan Armstrong is hopeful the turnout will be good and attended the recent ASG cross-country meet held in Trenton to promote the QWTC meet. “I handed out close to 300 flyers to parents and kids and the response was excellent!” Cost to enter the meet is $5 per child. The QWTC would also like to encourage participants and spectators to bring a food item for the Care and Share Food Bank since the Food Drive “Stomp Out Hunger” campaign will also be going on during the day throughout the city. Con-

tainers will be set out for folks to drop off their food item donations. Armstrong, along with QWTC coaches Sue Tripp and Allan Faulds are in the premiere stages of building the local community based track and field program and are treating this event as an excellent means of promoting involvement in the club. The club is presently engaged in cross-country training every Tuesday at 4:30 p.m. and Saturday at 10 a.m. In November, the program will turn back to indoor training for track and field, with plans to attend meets in Toronto and Ottawa over the course of the winter. ”The club grows every practice and we are closing in on thirty members which is very good for a first year program,” remarked Coach Tripp. “We already have some success stories, namely Leaugen Fray who won a gold medal at the 2013 Canadian Legion Track and Field Championships and Rachel Faulds, who is presently attending the University of West Virginia on a Cross-Country/Track and Field Scholarship.” For more information about the meet or the Quinte West Track Club, please contact Duncan Armstrong at 613-3973236 or email <duncanarmstrong@ hotmail.com>.

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SPORTS

Foley Bus Lines start season with a win Cameron Supryka, and Daniel Panetta each netted a goal. Assisting on the goals for Quinte were Emmett Pierce (2), Keegan Hunt, Michael Andrews, and Cole Leal. Ty Everden was solid in goal picking up his first regular season win. The team will travel to Port Perry this coming Saturday for a 7:30 game against the Central Ontario Wolves and then will host the Ajax/Pickering Raiders Sunday at the RCAF arena. Puck drop at 3 p.m. Carpet One – Atom The Quinte Carpet One Atom Red Devils faced stiff competition at the highly regarded Rochester 2003 Invitational tournament featuring 28 teams from across Ontario and various American states. In the opening game, the Devils overcame a slow start and a 1 - 0 deficit to defeat the Amherst Knights 4 - 2. Lucas Culhane had a goal and an assist in the win while Nate Burelle, Ross Maycock and Ty Gauvin added single goals. Isaac Macleod picked up an assist while Ethan Fraser chalked up the win between the pipes. In game two, the Devils faced the Cleveland Junior Jacks, and held the opposition to only five shots on goal in a 3 - 1 victory. Culhane (2) and Macleod found the back of the net for the Devils. Tanner Jones picked up an assist. Dixon Grimes earned the victory in the Devils’ goal. The Devils opened up day two of the tournament facing the Middle-

sex Elite AAA Islanders. The Devils gave the Islanders fits all game with a relentless forecheck, picking up a 1 - 1 tie. Culhane roofed a beautiful centreing pass from Jones in the draw. It was the first goal the Islanders had allowed in the tournament. Ethan Fraser was outstanding in goal for the Devils. In game four the Devils faced ETA rival Oshawa Junior Generals, dropping a tough 2 - 1 overtime loss. Culhane, with his fifth goal in four games, scored the lone Devils goal unassisted. Dixon Grimes was sharp in the Devils net. The Devils once again faced overtime heartbreak in game five, dropping a 3 - 2 decision to the West Seneca Wings. Burelle scored both goals for the Devils in the loss, including a bank shot off the boards from the Devils blueline which handcuffed the Wings goalie. The Devils played 18 of the 36 regulation minutes shorthanded, including four and a half minutes down five on three. Ethan Fraser took the loss in the Devils goal while Maguire Shortt picked up an assist. The Devils return to action on Wednesday when they host the Clarington Toros at 6 p.m. in Tamworth. Kwik Kopy - Minor Bantam The Kwik Kopy Minor Bantam Red Devils split their two games this past weekend with one win and one loss. On Saturday South Central Coyotes were defeated 4 - 1 by the Red Devils. Scoring in the game went to Scott Belanger with one goal and one assist, Matt Sherwin with

one goal and one assist, Braydon Crowe and Mathew Poole each with a goal and Nathan Dunkley, Theo Citrullo and

Zack Wheeler each with one assist. On Sunday the tables turned with a 5 - 0 loss to the Clarington Toros.

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the win versus the Express while Munro earned his against the Coyotes. The Minor Atoms look to continue their winning ways next weekend at home (Saturday 1 p.m. Wally Dever) in a rematch with the Coyotes and a match Sunday on the road against always favoured Whitby Wildcats. CrossFit - Peewee The CrossFit Peewee Red Devils started their 2013-2014 season with three straight wins. Quinte opened the season hosting the Kingston Jr. Frontenacs with a 3 - 2 victory. Quinte held a 3 - 0 lead heading into the third period, but the visiting Kingston team made it interesting scoring twice late in the third. Scoring for the Red Devils were Michael Andrews, Landon McLellan, and Derrick Vos. Assists came from Daniel Panetta and Elijah Brahaney (2). Ethan Taylor earned the win between the pipes. On the weekend the boys played two road games during their annual northern trip. Saturday in Barrie, Quinte held on for a 2 - 1 win. Elijah Brahaney and Michael Andrews scored for Quinte while Jake Campbell and Derrick Vos each chipped in with an assist. Ethan Taylor played a strong game in net for the Red Devils. Sunday, the team travelled to Rama to play the North Central Predators. Quinte came out fast and strong and dominated the Predators for a 5 - 2 win. Dalton Bancroft led the attack with a pair of goals, while Michael Andrews,

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Sports - The Foley Bus Lines Minor Atom Quinte Red Devils have managed to roll out to a 4 - 0 start in their inaugural season in ETA AAA play. The Devils started with a home match versus the Oshawa Generals where the Devils came out on top 7 - 2. Goal scorers were Cooper Matthews with two, Connor Hunt, Corbin Roach, Trevor Hoskin, Cole Campbell and Marcus Asimis. Helpers went to Hunt (2), Nathan Woods (2), Blake Ellis (2), Hoskin, Kendrick Webster, Liam Filip, Owen Gibson and Rheydan McCoy. Andrew Munro was solid between the pipes taking the win. The Red Devils travelled to Marmora for a Tuesday home game with the Central Ontario Wolves with Corbin Votary picking up the win in net with a 7 - 1 finish. Hunt and Webster picked up a pair each with singles going to Roach, Hoskin and Nathan Bassett. Setups went to Hunt (2), Roach (2), Webster (2), Filip, Matthews, Asimis, Bassett and Donovan McCoy. On the road this past weekend for the next pair versus York Simcoe Express and South Central Coyotes both ended in 5 - 3 scores in favour of the Devils. Snipers on the road trip were Roach (2), Webster (2), Hoskin (2), Ellis, Matthews, D. McCoy and Asimis. Feeding the pucks were Hoskin (3), D. McCoy, Hunt, Roach, Woods and Ellis. A stellar weekend between the pipes was had by both goalies as Votary picked up

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Dem Bones Smokeshack and Sports Bar Belleville FNHL games results Sports - The Back In Motion Red Wings started things off with a 5 - 4 win over the Canopy Media Maple Leafs. Nate MacDonald had a pair of goals in the win, while Scott Birney scored two goals for the Leafs. In the second game of the night, the Lasher Masonry Blackhawks defeated the Bruins 5 - 3.

Scott Matthews netted a pair of goals for the Hawks in the win while Adam Gordon had two assists for the Bruins in the loss. The third game was a low scoring affair with the Stewart Electric Sabres topping the Police 3 2. Mark Middleton led the Sabres with two goals on the night, with Thor Parker potting one goal in the win. Kosta Brindakis scored

both goals for the Police. The fourth and final game had the Coldwell Banker Oilers tying the Thirsty Bull Flyers 2 - 2. Tim Harte-Maxwell and Scott Clarence each scored to put the Flyers up 2 - 0, then Paul Biddleston and Chris Scriver each scored to tie the game up.

Do you know of a big game coming up? Email us the details. tbush@metroland.com

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2013 Applefest the biggest ever

Events - Brighton - What a weekend. By all accounts, the 2013 Applefest was the largest ever and much of the credit goes to car show promoter Don Postma. “It was the biggest I’ve ever seen,” said municipal Councillor Emily Rowley. “Kudos to the promoter for a hugely successful car show.” After a one-year hiatus for the show because of construction at Brighton Public School, it was Postma who brought the idea to the Applefest committee to bring television personality Danny Koker to Brighton for his firstever Canadian appearance. And it sure paid off. Postma estimates at least 20,000 people strolled through the school grounds to have a look at the 600 vehicles on display. And for many, to stand in line for an autograph from Koker and Counting Cars co-host Kevin Mack. “You Canadians are car crazy,” declared Mack, after touring the show. “We’ve never seen anything like this.” Koker even promised the crowd he’d be back in Brighton next year. “It’s something for the committee to think about,” said chairperson Carol Loader, in an interview after the show. Her day began at 5 a.m. on Saturday, getting ready for the thousands of people who would be making their way to Brighton to take in a host of attractions throughout the day. And show up they did, so many that Mayor Mark Walas figured, at least for one day, the municipality’s population quadrupled. The Applefest committee barely has a chance to catch their breath after the weekend event. They are scheduled to meet with municipal Economic Development Manager Elisha Purchase at press time this week to go over grant applications to help fund the 40th anniversary of the festival in 2014. Please turn to pge B2 for more Applefest photos

This group of youngsters rode on one of the more seasonally decorated floats in the Applefest parade. Photo: Ray Yurkowski

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Batman, aka Orangeville resident Glenn McCullagh, turned a former Chevrolet Caprice Classic police car into a re-creation of the Batmobile from the 1989 movie. Photo: Ray Yurkowski

Long lineups were the order of the day as thousands of people showed up last weekend for Applefest. Photo: Ray Yurkowski

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Applefest fun

Kevin Mack (foreground left) and Danny Koker (foreground right), who arrived at the car show by limousine, are seen here with promoter Don Postma.

(r) Laser tag was one of the more popular attractions this year at the Applefest children’s village.

Deputy Fire Chief Harry Tackaberry and Fire Chief Lloyd Hutchinson ride the parade route in style, in a fully refurbished 1948 International fire truck. A ten-year project to complete, the vehicle was the entire fleet when Tackaberry started as a firefighter in 1968.

Photos by Ray Yurkowski Local historian Dan Buchanan demonstrates an antique apple peeler and corer to curious onlookers at the Applefest street fair.

The Applefest Committee is, (seated) vice-chairperson Patti Stewart, chairperson Carol Loader, (back row, from the left) Victoria Parker, municipal parks and recreation director Jim Millar, Frances Seymour-Reed, Nancy Bahniuk, Laurie Caouette, Jean Hundreds of vehicles line up at the Brighton Public School grounds as more can be seen arriving along Terry Fox Drive for the House and Don Postma. Missing from the photo are municipal Councillor John Martinello and Christine Waterhouse. return of the Applefest car show.

A Natural Attraction

2013 PHOTO CONTEST

We invite you to share your photos of Quinte West with us to help to promote the City on our website, in brochures and other promotional material. We are looking for photos that illustrate the “Natural Attraction” of Quinte West. If your photos depict our community, lifestyle, landscapes, landmarks, activities, or events, we invite you to enter them in our photo contest. Your photographer’s eye may have captured an image that will entice visitors and businesses to our beautiful City!

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t First Place: $300 in cash and an item embroidered with City of Quinte West logo t Second Place: $200 in cash and an item embroidered with City of Quinte West logo t Third Place: $100 in cash and an item embroidered with City of Quinte West logo t 3 Honourable Mentions: $50 and an item embroidered with City of Quinte West logo

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Studio Tour visitor numbers continue to grow

By Scott Pettigrew

and many are return customers who make it an annual event. I have quite a few people say they start their Christmas shopping with the tour. It is very worthwhile for the artists involved and many who are on the tour are there to buy art.” Pam added, “I wish we could go around as artists and see the tour ourselves, for example Elaine Tyner, who is a basket maker and has fixed up the one room school house that she once attended. We keep trying to organize it to go the night before but it never happens.” The tour was very well signed with directional arrows pointing the way to the

various studios and it was like being on a car rally driving through some pretty remote back roads to find the various studios. Pam said just about everyone who takes part in the tour also takes part in helping organize the event; they meet four times each year to set up the event and are always looking for new artists to open up their studios. Often more than one artist join another in one studio. If you are interested go to <www.tweedstudiotour.org> or call 613477-2869. Pam was joined by quilter Ann Fales and Linda Pauk as well as her son Jacob who was on the tour for the first time after just finishing an art course at Sheridan College in Toronto. “It is really something to have Jacob be part of the tour this weekend,” said Pam. “I remember when he was just a little boy, he and his friends going around and serving lemonade and treats to the visitors. He really used to look forward to this event.” Jacob is now 22 and said he was a little nervous exposing his art to Stained glass artist Linda Pauk, from Plainfield, is in her second year of the Tweed Studio Tour at Pam-Bailey-Brown’s studio and says it has been a very the public for the first time. “I put a lot of heart into my work successful event for her. Photo: Scott Pettigrew and it is interesting to see other people’s reactions to it; sometimes I don’t know if people like my work or if they just like me and say that’s really nice. You never know if that Home Heating Fuels is genuine. It is nice to have people Budget Plans you don’t know come in and look Propane at piece and like it; it makes me smile.” Commercial & Farm Fuels Jacob said that at present he is Shell Lubricants working as a courier in Toronto but Furnaces & Fireplaces Award-winning quilter Ann Fales is seen here explaining to studio tour visitor Larry Huffman a little about the process of making he hopes art will eventually become his full-time occupation. 305 Bell Blvd. • 613-968-2900 or 1-866-330-3325 quilts at Pam-Bailey Brown’s studio on the Moneymore Road. Photo: Scott Pettigrew News - Tweed - This marks the 16th year for the Tweed Studio Tour and each year the Central Hastings News focuses on a different studio, this year visiting the pottery studio of Pam Bailey-Brown. Pam says she has been part of the tour from the very beginning. “This year’s tour is very strong with fourteen studios. The numbers of studios involved fluctuates; three years ago we had 30 studios involved. The one thing that we can say is the number of visitors keeps growing. I had about 150 people pass through my studio last year

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Heart of Hastings Hospice benefits from Trillium By Diane Sherman

News - Madoc - The Heart of Hastings Hospice received $87,500 from the Ontario Trillium Foundation (OTF) to build a wheelchair accessible ramp to the lower level of Hospice House at 17 McKenzie Street in Madoc. In addition that grant allowed the organization to hire a full-time director to oversee palliative care and bereavement support services on a oneyear contract. Volunteers, board members and staff were on hand for the formal ribbon cutting of the OTF funded project. OTF grant review team leader Deanna Dulmage and Todd Smith, MPP for Prince Edward-Hastings, addressed those gathered at the Friday morning ceremony. Dulmage pointed out, “This is the second year in a row HHH has received funding from the foundation.â€? She said the project is deserving of assistance. “This will make this organization more selfsufďŹ cient, even though ongoing funding is a community responsibility, our goal is to work toward independence for the agency.â€? Todd Smith said it was a pleasure to hand out money to “people like you who have worked together as a community. That is why you were chosen.â€? Both Dulmage and Smith were impressed with the house. Smith said, “There is a fantastic atmosphere

here. You have created a ďŹ rst-class house for the terminally ill and their families.â€? Doctor Janet Webb, chair of the HHH board, said, “The OTF has been wonderfully supportive of our goal to provide physical, emotional and spiritual comfort and promote the dignity of terminally ill persons ‌ This grant assists us to move farther in that direction.â€? The new director is Donna Frair, a registered practical nurse, who has worked in the area for the past ten years. She ďŹ rst came to HHH in 2004 to assist with the volunteer visiting program. Prior to that she held management positions in healthcare organizations in southwestern Ontario and Toronto region, and was a career adviser with the Registered Practical Nurses Association of Ontario. She was hired in July. Services of Hospice House are available to residents of the ďŹ ve surrounding municipalities at no cost to the users. This past year staff and volunteers have made 2,109 visits to 160 patients. The house opened last fall and since that time staff has served eight patients and their families with end-oflife care. Dulmage was particularly impressed by comfortable and homey nursing rooms. Though the rooms are equipped with hospital beds, she noted the homemade quilts and recliner chairs in each room. She reected a moment, then stated, “I wish we had a place like this when my parents were in their last days.â€?

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LIFESTYLES

Needles and evergreens

Lifestyles - It has happened already, Gentle Reader. Several customers have asked us what is wrong with their tree because they have noticed discoloration of the leaves and, in some cases, crispy brown curling along the margins (edges). We usually wait for a moment and the answer presents itself to the individual. If the light doesn’t click on, we say

“Autumn,” and then watch as the soft pink glow of the bulb illuminates their facial tones. (My in-house editor tells me that phrase is a titch obscure and not everybody is going to realise that it refers to the red flush of embarrassment. I suppose the line could be rewritten but that would require serious thinking and I’m not the best of thinkers.) GR (and those of you who have asked that question in the past) we do not view this as a stupid question. It is more a statement of denial; a spoken wish that summer is not over. So there is no need to be embarrassed unless you ask the same question every year. However, when we field the same query about evergreens the puzzlement is understandable. We are taught, as youngsters, that some trees never lose their needles and stay green all year long, hence the moniker “evergreen.” We learn this at a very early age either in school

or during a walk with our parents in the forests. It doesn’t matter if that forest is Algonquin Park or a row of trees at the back of the local park. That knowledge becomes a part of us but it is seldom refined as we grow older, especially if we are denizens of the urban environment. So here is that refinement, with qualifications: evergreen trees are those which have needles/leaves year round. But … not always the same needles. There is a changing of the guard as older needles do fall off and sometimes, especially in the more wispy types such as eastern white pine, the fall drop is much more noticeable. The natural pine green (urban types can open up their box of Crayolas to see that exact colouring) provides the perfect backdrop for the bright yellow needles soon to fall. As an aside, I admit that, in spite of post-secondary designing courses where we were introduced to colours, tints,

hues, shades, international designations etc., my real and current knowledge of colours is thanks to the folks at Crayola. Burnt sienna, Prussian blue, middle green and shamrock are still names I use. Back to the white pine: at this time of the year, customers tend to shy away from purchasing these chappies because of the colour contrast so we will actually “flag” (remove dead needles) them. I did an experiment one year where I cleaned up one row of trees and left the other au naturel; guess which sold first. Did you know that evergreens swap out their needles at different rates? Here’s a list of those you might find in our area: one year - tamarack and redwood; two year - white pine, Scotch pine; three year - most Japans pines, including red, white and black; four year - red pine and five year - mugho pines. You all know mugho pines, right? The ones that looked like soft little tussocks when you bought it at

the nursery five years ago and now they tickle the bird tummies as they fly past? Other evergreens with “scary” needle drop include taxus (yews), thuja (cedars) and juniperus (okay- I’ll continue the theme here - junipers). The caveat is this is a natural occurrence at specific times but it can also indicate a problem when it happens out of turn. Learn the “bio” of your plant so you can respond to issues in a timely fashion; the time to address the situation is before the post-mortem. When needles fall, leave them lie. They return important carbon back to the soil, they take a while to break down which allows for better aeration but … surprise, they do not make the soil more acidic. Okay, they do but only in micro amounts that have almost no bearing on soil pH. For a future column: can you name the three common to Ontario conifers that are not evergreen?

Self-interest isn’t really so selfish

Lifestyles - I was browsing through some old news clippings recently when I found one that sounded straight out of an episode of The Office: a hazmat team had to be called and an AT&T office building in San Jose evacuated when a frustrated employee decided to finally clean out the fridge. The noxious fumes were so bad that they sent seven people to a hospital.

I hate to think of what was in that fridge. But many of us have experienced this: when the fridge belongs to all of us, and it’s no one individual’s responsibility, it doesn’t get cared for. People just shove their old mayonnaise jars and ham sandwiches back there forever. It works like that with most things. When people can realize the benefit of something directly, they take care of it. When they don’t get any personal benefit from it, they don’t. It’s as simple as that. That’s why collectivity has never worked. When the first settlers arrived at Plymouth Plantation in 1620, they all farmed communally. Within a few years people were starving. It turns out that people don’t tend to work very hard if everyone is going to get the same thing, regardless of the effort they expend. Then they started parceling out land to individual families and the harvests went up. A similar thing was seen in Russia: when the Communist Party took over and collectivized all the farms, what was once the breadbasket of Europe

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collapsed. Self-interest sounds selfish, but it’s actually just normal human behavior. People do whatever will get them the best rewards. We want a kitchen appliance that will save us work but cost us the least amount. We want a job that pays the most for the amount of work we’re willing to put in. We want to maximize our rewards and minimize our costs. It’s not that we don’t want to work at all, though. It’s just that if we do work, we want to get as much benefit as we can. People work harder on their own gardens than they do caring for the sides of highways. Once people own a home, they tend to keep it cleaner than when they rented. When we own something, we tend to care for it more than when other people own it—or when everybody owns it. One of the measures of economic health is how much

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“human capital”—human intelligence, and skills, and effort—is actually being used versus how much is being wasted. A country where people work—not just at jobs but at bettering their homes and communities—will be better than a country where people don’t put in the effort. No amount of government can make up for people’s wasted elbow grease. What a country needs, then, is incentives to make sure people work. We tend to think altruism and compassion are good words, while self-interest is a bad word, but personally, I think a healthy society needs large doses of all three. Without self-interest, we wouldn’t have any money to be compassionate and altruistic with. Without the ability to better ourselves, it would be difficult to pass on any of those rewards to others who need a hand up. Self-interest isn’t a bad word;

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it’s just a description of how everyone makes decisions. And human nature is not going to change. If we want a better society, instead of asking, “How can we make people share more of what they have?” we should ask, “How can we help

everyone to have more of a stake in our community?” When people have a stake, they work hard. When no one has a stake, it’s as if we’re living together in a giant fridge in that AT&T building. And that’s hazardous to more than just your health.

It’s been an experience

By Bob Larocque

Editorial - It’s been about 40 years since I last sent a young’un off to school in early September, but I did so again this year. My wife, a bilingual university graduate who has been unable to find satisfying employment in the Quinte area, decided to go back to school. But this time she was going to follow her passion and study Culinary Management. I went along with the idea because I thought it would be nice if she learned how to cook. Well, that first morning was quite a scene. With tears of joy running down my cheeks, I took her picture as she was going out to the car. It was like that TV commercial: Hairdresser $80; Textbooks - $490; Glowing smile - Priceless. She just loves being in an academic environment once again. I have never seen anyone, that’s not smoking something funny, as excited as she is when she comes home from school. When she does come through the door at the end of her school day the first thing we do is check all her digital appendages

to make sure she hasn’t chopped anything off. Later, I help her with her homework. Actually, at this stage, I just watch her as she demonstrates the proper way to chop onions, flower carrots, and to spatchcock (to flatten) a chicken. After watching her do her homework, I’m really pleased that she didn’t decide to take the embalming course. In short, she’s really enjoying this experience and she’s got such a radiant glow around her I thought Pope Francis was talking about making her a saint when he addressed the 10,000 people in St. Peter’s Square last Sunday morning. And divine intervention may be needed as she has lost the combination number for her locker at school. Anyway, I’m really enjoying the experience. Prior to this, the most exciting part of my day was when I took my digestive pills before each meal. By the way, we’re now saving money on them as well. And, as a writer, I can’t tell you how nice it is to have the house to myself once again.


TRAVEL

Leuven, Belgium, is the beer capital of the world

In the spotless “kitchen” of Stella Brewery, where the brewing takes place in large vats.

The automated assembly line can put out 150,000 cans per hour.

Beer flows through a pipe that runs from the Domus Brewery directly into the restaurant next door.

Lifestyles - Beer and its consumption may be of major interest to some travelers at this time of year, with “Oktoberfest” celebrations taking place in various locations. For example, Munich, Germany’s renowned Oktoberfest takes place from September 21 to October 6 this year, and our very own Kitchener, Ontario’s celebration is held from October 11 to 19. However, a strong argument can be put forward for yet another destination, Leuven, Belgium, as being the actual beer capital of the world. After all, Leuven had more than 30 active breweries in the early part of the 20th century, has been home to Stella Artois since 1926 (which traces its roots back to 1366), and is now the headquarters of the largest brewing company in the world, AB InBev. It’s estimated this one company has about 30 per cent of the world market, and in addition to Stella Artois, its brands include such well-known names as Busch, Beck’s, Budweiser, Lowenbrau, Michelob, Alexander Keith’s, Kokanee, Lakeport, and Labatt. Leuven has its major “Beer Festival” in April rather than in October, and more than 100 brewers will then present about 500 different beers. It has become the country’s largest beer trade fair and entry is free. There’s even a free shuttle service to/from this event! Leuven is also said to have “the world’s longest bar,” for there’s bar after bar in the vicinity of the city’s Old Market Square. This Belgian city, located about 25 kilometres east of Brussels, is also home to the country’s largest brewery, Stella Artois, and to one of its smallest, too: Domus. While in Leuven, I took a tour of its largest brewery, and I was very impressed by both the size and cleanliness of this operation. Johann was my personal guide in the Stella Brewery, and we first visited its “kitchen,” where the “cooking” takes place in large vats that hold 65,000 litres of brew each. We then proceeded to the fermentation, filtration, and bottling sections; everything appeared to be both large and spotless. I was amazed there were not a lot of assembly line workers, for most of this process was automated with the workers actually sitting in a control room, monitoring the activities. I was also struck by the sheer quantity being produced, for I was told that the automated assembly line can put out 150,000 cans and 200,000 bottles per hour! Green bottles were used for the export market and brown bottles were for domestic sales. As I watched this assembly line, I noticed certain cans were automatically being discarded as they moved along, and Johann explained that “everything is weighed at certain intervals, so if there’s a small leak in a can, that beer won’t weigh the proper amount and will be thrown off the line and discarded”. Tours of the facility, in English, are available on summer weekends at 2:30 p.m. For more information, visit its web site at <www.breweryvisits.com>.The Stella Artois Brewery operates 24 hours a day, so a lot of beer is being produced here! However, none of it is stored, for it’s simply loaded up in trucks and moved out that very day in bottles,

cans, or kegs. I also discovered there’s very little waste here, for even most of the “leftovers” in the process were sold to local farmers as cattle feed. Johann told me to look at the neighbouring cows on my next visit to the countryside, “for you’ll find them to be some of the happiest cows in the world!” After my visit to Stella Artois, I, of course, ended up in the tasting room, where I received a free sample and I was told about the proper way to pour beer. I learned that we tend to do it incorrectly in North America, for the bottle or tap should not touch the glass (impurities), and there should be a proper head, “to release the beer’s aromatics and add to the overall presentation.” I discovered that there’s actually an annual “Draught Master Championship,” and it has been won by Belgian pourers more often than by any other country! Later that day, after my visit to the largest brewery, I dined at Domus, the city’s smallest brewery, where beer flows directly from the brewery itself, via a copper pipe, into a tap installation in the restaurant next door. You talk about getting a fresh brew! I was served one of their beers while I dined on a rather traditional Belgian meal that included a bucket of mussels accompanied by a plate of French fries.

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Purdy remembered in Rednersville show

Richard Turtle, portraying poet Al Purdy, steps from the barstool to the po- Entertainment - Rednersville - Al dium to read a poem during a performance of Al Purdy at the Quinte Hotel. Purdy’s Canada very much included Proceeds from the fund raiser will go toward a writer in residence program Hastings and Prince Edward counties. at the Purdy-built A-Frame on Roblin Lake. A fund raiser near the celebrated

poet’s Ameliasburgh home, and attended by many including his widow, Eurithe, as the guest of honour, featured

a pair of performances of Al Purdy at the Quinte Hotel as well as readings and musical performances by local artists. Hosted by the Active Arts Studio and held throughout the day last Saturday, more than 80 people attended the event that also included a silent auction of signed Purdy works as well as sales of his anthology. And at the end of the day organizers were able to raise nearly $600 for the Purdy A-Frame project and plans there for a writer in residence program. The play, written by Toronto-based playwright David Carley, includes several of Purdy’s poems delivered from his familiar and comfortable watering hole. Using several of his poems, penned over a long career and several cross-Canada trips, Al Purdy at the Quinte Hotel tells the story of Al Purdy as well as the stories of countless other Canadians. Saturday’s play, performed by Richard Turtle, incorporates many recognizable poems with the barroom banter that one might expect from a writer with a beer in his hand and also featured an original score written and performed by Andy Thompson. A-Frame representatives Lindi Pierce and Michele Lintern-Mole were extremely pleased with the response as well as the quality of the performances, offering their thanks to Jeff and Tracey Keary for donating the space as well as their time and energy to the fund raiser as well as to all the participants who took the stage. Between the afternoon and early evening performances of the play, Martin Durkin, who was described by several in attendance as a perfect ďŹ t for the event and a poet worthy of note, read selections of his own work that has appeared in published form or on his blog, recounting experiences from the memorable to the mundane. Durkin took the podium following a well-received set of folk and pop songs performed by Marmora musician Morley Ellis. Said Jeff Keary of the event, “It was completely awesome—quite literally spellbinding.â€? And, he says, he hopes to bring more quality theatre to his home in Rednersville, which is becoming recognized locally for its musical performances.

96 Young Street, Brighton presents

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Evening Performances at 8:00 p.m. September 27, 28 October 3, 4, 5, 10, 11, 12, 2013

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B8 EMC B Section - Thursday, October 3, 2013

Box Office:

613-475-2144

ca

Produced by special arrangement with Samuel French Inc.

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Sunday Matinee 2:00 p.m. September 29, October 6, 2013

Eurithe Purdy poses with hosts Jeff and Tracey Keary following a production of Al Purdy at the Quinte Hotel at their Rednersville Active Arts Studio.


Golden celebration set for school open to visitors from 6 p.m. until 8:45 p.m. Twenty-five years ago the school community celebrated in several ways over the course of the year with a balloon launch, Christmas parade, tree planting, and operetta called Time For a Change and an open house which featured the time capsule sealing. There was also a reunion dinner and dance. Student winners of the balloon race which included

prizes for the first returned and the farthest travelled were Jacelyn Truckle, Jeff Rylott, Brooks DeRossi, Tara Nurse, Kerri Stillwell, Justin Patterson, Jeremy Deline and Shannon Foster. Releasing those balloons was a cherished memory for student Vicki Blakely who recalls waiting to see if anyone would return them. Each balloon contained a stamped envelope that balloon catchers could use to contact HBPS.

“To this day I’m still waiting for mine,” Blakely says on the fiftieth anniversary web site. “Although not really an environmentally friendly gesture, but guess what, it was the ’80s.” The anniversary web site includes photos from the school’s construction and its twenty-fifth anniversary; a memory page allows graduates to share their thoughts about their days at the school.

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ANNOUNCEMENT The much-anticipated unsealing of the Havelock Belmont Public School twenty-fifth anniversary time capsule will take place Friday night during the school’s fiftieth anniversary celebrations. Photo: Bill Freeman By Bill Freeman

News - Havelock - It will be a golden night of reminiscing and memory sharing at Havelock Belmont Public School October 4 as the venerable Mathison Street East building celebrates its milestone fiftieth birthday. Organizers have been planning the celebration in earnest since the end of the 2013 school year with decade rooms, photo and memorabilia displays, tours

of the school and the muchanticipated unsealing of the time capsule which stands in a central location in the front foyer greeting visitors with the invitation to return on the fiftieth anniversary to find out what mysteries in contains. The alluring time capsule was officially sealed during the school’s twenty-fifth anniversary celebrations on May 20, 1989, with student Tammy Drain and her mother Heather (McLean) Drain, a

student at HBPS when it first opened, participating in the ceremony along with 1964 principal H.R. Hunter and P.W. Greenley, principal of the school in 1989. Friday evening’s festivities will run from 6 until 9 p.m. with opening ceremonies, including a cake-cutting, planned for 6:15 p.m. The time capsule is set to be released from its 25-year slumber at 8:30 p.m. The decade rooms will be

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EMC B Section - Thursday, October 3, 2013 B9


Military participants head to Loyalist for workshop News - Trenton - Transitioning Canadian Forces members, veterans and their spouses are invited to Loyalist College on November 9, 2013, to attend “Be Your Own Boss,” a free one-day entrepreneurial workshop facilitated by the military Entrepreneur-in-Residence of the Canadian Youth Business Foundation (CYBF) and developed in partnership with Trenval Business Development Corporation and Enactus Loyalist College. During the second in a series of workshops being offered across Canada, “Be Your Own Boss” participants will explore their business

ideas through classroom presentations, interactive group work, discussion and one-on-one time with experienced small business professionals as well as business students from Enactus Loyalist College. The workshop is part of the Prince’s Operation Entrepreneur (POE), a national program for transitioning Canadian Forces members interested in becoming entrepreneurs. The oneday workshops are a new addition to the range of offerings of the Prince’s Operation Entrepreneur, which include business planning resources, education

has a new set of wheels and a new News - Trenton - Phil Cook has always appreciation for the drums. been confined to a wheelchair, but When Wrought Iron Roots drummer thanks to a group of musical friends Richard Ellis heard about Cook’s sinand the support of the community, he gle-item wish list back in the spring, he was sure there was something he * SEE OUR FLYER IN TODAY’S PAPER could do to help. Cook was using a bulky electric wheelchair that, while totally functional, wouldn’t With so many amazing leather styles, allow him access you may need to sit down. to a new set of drums. He needed lot to love about our great looking leather styles. From its unequalled beauty to its soft and supple feel, there’s a any home... and any lifestyle. And now during Comfortable, durable and long lasting, leather fits beautifully into make genuine leather an even greater value. our Ultimate Leather Sale, you’ll find factory authorized savings that

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assist and take would-be entrepreneurs to the next level.” The Prince’s Operation Entrepreneur is a program of Prince’s Charities Canada, built on the strength of two key founding partners, CYBF and Enactus Memorial. The program is supported by the Department of National Defence (DND) and Veteran Affairs Canada (VAC). Sponsors include the Government Canada, True Patriot Love, Canada Company and The Queen’s Silver Jubilee Trust. Registration is open at <https://poe2. eventbrite.com>.

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But the news and details were not revealed until the day of the show. “It was a complete surprise to him, and very emotional,” Couch adds. And just in time for the Hockeyville celebrations in Stirling, Cook took delivery of his new wheels. “Check it out,” he said during a recent trip to the rink. “I just got it.” He has already offered his personal thanks to the band, he says, but adds he is also grateful to the community and all those involved in helping him get around a little more freely. And Cook was able to experience another first in his brand new chair when he arrived at the Stirling arena to get nice and close to the Stanley Cup.

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the end Couch says, created a lot of teary eyes. “When we had the jamboree, there were still people outside and we’d filled the Legion,” Couch says, noting support for the Frankford concert was overwhelming. Included in the concert were Steve and Spike Piticco, Debbie McLean, Julie Simpson, Robin Edgar and Stompin Jon with John and Rita Harpell, And before the night was over, they were able to announce they had successfully reached their goal. Ticket sales for the show amounted to about half the necessary total and “Medigas came through to cover the rest,” says Ellis.

Admission $2

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a sleek new model, without the electrics, that would give him the necessary freedom of movement to swing a pair of sticks. But with a price tag of about $5,000 and a personal fundraising effort that netted a mere $30 Cook was a long way from his goal back in April. “That was the one thing he wanted,” says Ellis of a wheelchair Cook had found online and shown to him. “That was it.” So with the help of bandmates Travis and Brandon Whaley, Richard Ellis, Bruce Forsythe and Lynzi Couch the group set up a fund raiser that, in

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we are always growing, developing and offering programs in the communities where they are required.” “We are pleased to partner with Enactus Loyalist and the Prince’s Operation Entrepreneur to support Canada’s largest airbase. Trenval’s outstanding 26-year history of providing business information, counselling and financing to businesses is well known in our community,” said Glenn Kozak, Executive Director, Trenval. “This oneday workshop will outline business startup basics as well as ongoing local resources, including Trenval, to further

Chair arrives in time for Stanley Cup visit

By Richard Turtle

Available upgrades:

(week-long intensive summer boot camps operated in partnership with three universities), mentoring and financing. “The Prince’s Operation Entrepreneur is focused on the development and delivery of programs that can help ease the transition of military personnel and veterans into civilian life and successful business ownership,” says Beth Dea, program manager for POE and Director of Programs at CYBF. “Our partnerships with Enactus programs across the country and community organizations like Trenval ensure that

Phil Cook has a new set of wheels thanks to the generosity of Wrought Iron Roots, a group of fellow musicians and the support of the community. After taking delivery recently, the Trenton resident arrived in Stirling to check out the Stanley Cup.

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Hooters for Healthcare calendars launched

Dr. Joe Barbero of the Trent Hills Family Health Team, was one of the many doctors and firefighters who served hors d’oeuvres at Hooters for Healthcare fund-raising event to raise money for the digital mammography unit at CMH. Photo: Catherine Holt

purchase on September 30 at several locations in Trent Hills including at the CMH Foundation office at the hospital, the Campbellford Seymour Community Foundation office, Earth Angel in Campbellford, Bridgewater Coffee and Donuts in Hastings and Glover’s Market in Warkworth.” In a press release Catherine Holt, donor relations officer at the CMH Foundation noted “there are many people who made this great idea a reality.” Sarah Rowland, photographer and owner of Creations Behind the Lens, did an outstanding job capturing the calendar’s images. McColl and her grandmother Margaret, who is 92 years old and is a breast cancer survivor who has had

a double mastectomy, posed first to show other calendars girls what to expect. Margaret was so enthusiastic about helping the digital mammography campaign, that she inspired all of us.” The two Hooters For Healthcare calendars will retail for $20 each and feature a message of Hope and Heartache from each calendar girl and boy. Both Holt and McCollSmith agreed that, “There were many surprises along the way, such as men wishing to pose for the campaign and three generations posing together”. “The calendars are in a handy desk-top case and we know folks will be delighted with not only the photos, but the amazing messages shared by the calendar models,” said McColl-Smith.

News - Campbellford - Women from Trent Hills came together Saturday evening to celebrate months of preparation and to unveil two calendars featuring local women and men, discreetly posing topless in support of digital mammography at Campbellford Memorial Hospital (CMH). This fabulous and fun opportunity to raise funds was the idea of Flourish Campaign Co-ordinator Tonya McCollSmith. The Ladies Night included delicious hors d’oeuvres served by handsome, local gentlemen, including Trent Hills Family Health Team doctors Paul Williams, Brett Jamieson and Joe Barbero as well as volunteer firefighters from Stirling-Rawdon. As Tonya explains, “the response to our call for calendar girls was so enthusiastic we decided to create two Hooters for Healthcare calendars, one for 2014 and one for 2015. The calendars will be available for

The Hooters for Healthcare night saw Stirling Rawdon volunteer firefighters Jesse Hubble and Captain Steve Finch serve. The Ladies Night included hors d’oeuvres served by these gentlemen alongside Trent Hills Family Health Team doctors Paul Williams, Brett Jamieson and Joe Barbero. Photo: Catherine Holt

THANKSGIVING DAY IS

OCTOBER 14

TH

Please note the following classified deadlines: Thursday, Oct. 10 edition Thursday, Oct. 17 edition Thursday, Oct. 24 edition

Monday, Oct. 7, 3 p.m. Friday, Oct. 4, 12 p.m. Monday, Oct. 17, 3 p.m.

To book your ad, please call: 613-966-2034 ext. 560 613-475-0255 1-888-967-3237

Our office will be closed on Monday, Oct. 14 for Thanksgiving

Dr. Paul Williams of the Trent Hills Family Health Team, joined the others who served hors d’oeuvres at the Hooters for Healthcare fund-raising event to raise money for the digital mammography unit at CMH. Photo: Catherine Holt

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Brett Jamieson of the Trent Hills Family Health Team, served hors d’oeuvres at the Hooters for Healthcare fund-raising event. Photo: Catherine Holt

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FOR REGISTRATION AND INQUIRIES 613-961-7999 events@smallbusinessctr.com www.trenval.on.ca

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EMC B Section - Thursday, October 3, 2013 B11


BIRTHDAY

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 5, 2013 AT

ISLAND PARK RETIREMENT HOME 18 TRENT DRIVE CAMPBELLFORD, ONTARIO 2:00PM TO 4:00 PM

COMING EVENTS

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BEST WISHES ONLY

WEDDING

WEDDING

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Clark-Young

BIRTHDAY

10 Pin Mixed Adult league in Belleville needs Bowlers Tuesday nights, 6:30 pm. Call Sue 613-848-6496 or Debbie 613-477-2200. ALL YOU CAN EAT ROAST BEEF DINNER October 5th, 2013 5 pm at Petherick Corner’s Lodge Hall. Adults $12.00 Children 12 & under $5.00 Everyone Welcome Art ShowColebrook Keirstead annual art show. Oct. 5 and 6, 12 and 13. Sale prices on originals and prints. 2570 Marlbank Rd. (near Tweed). 613-478-5370. New Rental PricesStirling Lions Hall. Available for receptions, dances and catering. $100 without the bar, $200 with bar. Call: 613-395-3408

FOR SALE

FOR SALE

250

$

n/c within 20 km

Call Pat:

CL435677

/cord - delivery

613-478-2843

Jeff and Ann-Marie Young

CL439390

Happy Birthday Shawn Whalen

CL439393

do not return

Ann-Marie Baumhour, daughter of Ray and Jean Clark and Jeffrey Wayne Young, youngest son of Gary Young (late Alberta Young) and Pat Thomas were joined in matrimony Friday, September 20. The wedding took place in Actinolite at the Marble Arts Centre and the reception followed at the Actinolite Community Hall. Ann-Marie’s oldest son Joe Baumhour gave the bride away and the matron of honor was Johanna Clark (the bride’s sister-In-law) with Flowers girls Terra Clark (bride’s niece) and Emma Young (groom’s daughter). The groom’s best men were Ben Young and Sam Young (groom’s sons). Their honeymoon began in Niagara Falls, Ontario followed by a pilgrimage to the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in Cleveland, Ohio. Many thanks to all our friends and family who attended and special thanks to Johanna & Wanita and Co. for the incredible flowers and decorations, Jessie for her beautiful wedding cake, Brad for sound/music, Noam for photographing our wedding and finally to all the wonderful entertainers who provided live music.

CL470618

Old St. Andrews Presbyterian Church is pleased to announce the marriage of our pastor the

Dale & Cathy Lockhart 40th Wedding Anniversary on October 6th, 2013

B12

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

NEW APPLIANCES

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

Reverend Michael Calderwood to Chris Lusk on September 21, 2013 at Old St. Andrews Presbyterian Church, Colborne. We wish them happiness and good luck for the future.

EMC B Section - Thursday, October 3, 2013

CL472920

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

We Sell Gas Refrigerators!

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Attention

Janome Baby Lock Elna Bernina Sewing Machine Tune-ups from New Machines from

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45 22900 95

NOW IN THREE LOCATIONS

62 Bridge Street East Campbellford (705) 653-5642 51 B King St. E. Bowmanville (905) 623-2404 182 George St. N. Peterborough (705) 742-3337

Phone 1-705-924-2482 M IL

Y

T

URKEY

FOR SALE

F

Locally Grow Grown r n • Vegetable egettable Grain F Fed

TURKEY

DEATH NOTICE

PHILLIPS, MARY JOYCE At her home in Brighton on Wednesday, September 25th, 2013, age 76 years. Mary Phillips, daughter of the late Dalton Hadwen and the late Leah (Kemp). Loving wife of Harold Phillips. Dear mother of George Phillips of Belleville and Gary Phillips and his wife Sylvia of Barrie. Sister of Jack Hadwen (Vera) of Baltimore, Ontario and Stan Hadwen (Eileen) of Whitebear, Saskatchewan. Predeceased by her sister Lorna McCloud. Sadly missed by her grandchildren David, Natasha, Courtney, and her four great grandchildren. The family will receive friends at the Walas Funeral Home, 130 Main Street, Brighton on Wednesday, October 2nd, 2013 from 12 o’clock noon. Service to follow in the funeral home at 2 o’clock. Cremation with interment Greenwood Cemetery, Smithfield. As an expression of sympathy, donations to the Cancer Society would be appreciated by the family. www.rushnellfamilyservices.com

Peter J. SPERRING

CL473113

PAYS CASH $$$

ANNIVERSARY

will be celebrating their

USED REFRIGERATORS

CL430782

ANNIVERSARY

NEW & USED APPLIANCES

FOR SALE

Pet owners & Hunters

DEATH NOTICE

Seasoned Mix Hardwood

Missing 54 year old

FOR SALE

Passed away unexpectedly, but peacefully on the morning of Saturday, September 28th, 2013 in his 84th year. Peter is survived by Fran, his much loved wife of 55 years, daughter Claire (Richard) Grazette, son Mark (Lorna) and granddaughter Richenda Grazette. He will be fondly remembered, by many, for his kindness, honesty, unique style, sense of humour and his love for his family. And of course for his hats! A private family visitation was held prior to cremation and a memorial will be arranged at a later date. The family has asked for donations to the Canadian Diabetes Association in lieu of flowers. Online Guest Book & Condolences at www. weaverfuneralhomes.com “…and you know that we shall meet again if your memory serves you well” - Bob Dylan

CL440390_0926

office@parkside-landscaping.com

Bessie Chatterson

FOR SALE

LTD

Mixed soft and hard wood, various lengths in 30 yard bins. Approx. 3-4 cords, $250. Depending on distance and number of loads, delivery varies. Call 613-967-9658 or email

HONOURING

FOR SALE

A

Firewood. Includes Oak, Maple & Ironwood. 2 Season split & dried $150/bush cord (4x4x8) on skids. Pick up (Delivery Extra) 20 Cords Available will sell all. Call Reg 613-472-5875 (Marmora).

100th

BIRTHDAY CELEBRATION

COMING EVENTS

3312 County Road #21, Spencerville, Ontario www.lyonsturkeyfarm.com

613-658-3148

Member of Turkey Farmers of Ontario NOW TAKING ORDERS FOR THANKSGIVING AT SELECT STORES

DEATH NOTICE

CL472936

Debt Relief Allen Madigan Certified Credit cousellor. Solving financial problems for over 15 years. Renew hope seniors respected. Free Dry maple firewood, $240 confidential consultation. for full cord, picked up. 613-779-8008 Delivery available. Wayne Anderson, Consecon. We have the key to 613-392-8380 unlock locked-in pension funds. Free consultation. To relieve Dry Seasoned firewood. Call for details Greg Davis financial stress, call 613-478-2103. Marlbank. 613-779-8008.

BIRTHDAY

L YO N S F

BIRTHDAY

ANNOUNCEMENT

CL473124

FIREWOOD Dried seasoned firewood. Cut, split and delivered within Tweed area. $250/per cord. Extra for delivered outside Tweed. Call 613-478-9955.

DEATH NOTICE

WAY, Joseph Francis “Joe” Entered peacefully into rest at the Belleville General Hospital on Monday September 30th, 2013 at the age of 69. Loving son of the late Patrick and Madeline Way. Beloved husband of Deirdre Way (nee Uhl) for 17 wonderful years. Dear father of Joe (Pam), Steve (Lee), Janessa, and Deandra. Also remembered by Dianne Way, mother of Joe and Steve. Survived by his sisters Mary, Estella, Joanne, Jane, and by brothers Michael, and Gregory. Devoted grandfather of Ali, Carley, Victoria, Brett, Justin, and Dominique. Predeceased by brother Bill. In keeping with Joe’s wishes, there will be a memorial mass held at St. James the Minor Catholic Church, Stirling on Saturday, October 5th, 2013 at 11a.m. Inurnment St. James the Minor Cemetery. In lieu of flowers, donations to the Education Fund for Janessa and Deandra would be appreciated. Arrangements entrusted to the STIRLING FUNERAL CHAPEL 87 James St., Stirling (613-395-2424). On-line condolences at www.rushnellfamilyservices.com

2008 Chev Duramax diesel 2500 crewcab. 48848 km’s. 2008 32ft. Jayco Eagle fifthwheel. 2 slideouts both in beautiful condition. Pkg. deal $54,950. Phone 613-847-6551. 3 shotguns and 7 various caliber rifles. Plus extra shotgun barrels. Very good condition. 905-342-3307. AquaMaster softeners. Rated #1 in Canada! Rent, purchase or finance. Only available at Water Source 613-968-6256. ITHACA 12 gauge pump action shot gun. $200 . Muzzle loading rifle; CVA 54 caliber. $250. 613-398-7694

Classified Word Ad Deadline: Mondays at 3 p.m. Ads can be placed online at www.EMCclassified.ca or by calling 613-966-2034 x560 613-475-0255 or 1-888-WORD-ADS

RESIDENTIAL ADS starting at

12.75/wk

$

2nd week FREE! COMMERCIAL ADS Includes rental ads

starting at

14.80/wk

$

Offices: 250 Sidney St. (in the parking lot behind Avaya) Belleville or 21 Meade St. Brighton

DEATH NOTICE

Ward: Viola Mabel - At Caressant Care Nursing Home, Marmora on Wednesday September 25, 2013 Viola (Cherrie) in her 98th year. Wife of the late Aylmer Ward. Mother of Elwood (Jean), Bowmanville; John (Jane), Marmora and the late Catherine Christenson. Mother-in-law of Gary (Linda) Christenson, Oshawa. Grandmother of Sharleen & Andrew; Bryan & Lora; Sarah & Scott. Great grandmother of Monica, Tom; Dillon, Austin; Tyler, Ashley; Nolan, Carter; Easton, Kaycee; Alyssa, Nathan, Benjamin. Sister of the late Adelaide Hodgins, Gordon Cherrie & Mary Henry. Aunt of Eileen Hodgins, Cherrie Ann Gibson and Robert Henry. The family received friends at the McConnell Funeral Home, Marmora on Saturday September 28, 2013 from 12:00 noon until service time in the Chapel at 2:00 pm. Interment: Mount Lawn Memorial Gardens Monday September 30, 2013 at 11:00 am. Donations: Diabetes Association. (www.mcconnellfuneralhome.ca) CL435679


Relaxation Massage Peggy Goslin Craniosacral Therapist. 613-962-8156. Brighton special. 4-1 hr massages/$200. Offer ends October 31

WANTED

Central Boiler outdoor Wood Furna eS FurnaCeS

5,990

$

THE

FURNACE BROKER

Godfrey, ON 613-374-2566

CL415120

Delivery and maintenance package included. Limited time offer. Instant rebates up to $1,000.

DALE LOCKLIN APPLIANCE SERVICE PARTS, REPAIRS, SALES & INSTALLATIONS

NEW LOCATION 72 KING ST., TRENTON

CALL: (613) 394-8536 • (613) 395-9009 IN YOUR HOME REPAIR • DRYER & DRYER DUCT CLEANING

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CENTRAL BOILER

OUTDOOR FURNACES

2013 HARVEST THE SAVINGS with savings up to $750

SALE ENDS OCT. 15/13 Call for more information Your local DEALER

FRANKFORD, ON 613.398.1611 BANCROFT, ON 613.332.1613 FARM

FARM

NEW CROP HONEY NOW AVAILABLE

Twin Sisters Hive & Honey Products

CL430232

231 Frankford Road, Stirling We sell bulk honey in your containers, prepackaged liquid and creamed honey, beeswax skin creams & lip balms, candles, pollen, maple syrup and more. We also have sweet little honey wedding favours

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

Mortgage Solutions Purchases, Consolidations, Construction. Lower than bank posted rates (OAC) On-Site Private Funds for credit issues, discharged bankrupts and BFS without proven income. Chase Financial 1-613-384-1301 Chase Financial o/b 835289 Ontario Inc. Brokerage License #10876

1994 Buick Roadmaster, 185,000 km, good running condition, emission test done June 2013, 350 cu. in. Corvette engine. Sells as is for $3,000 or trade. 613-392-5772.

Airless spray painting, roofs & sides, steel roofs repairs. 5 & 6” seamless eavestrough, soffit, facia, gutterguard installed or delivered. Free estimates. 1(877)490-9914.

Barn Repairs, Steel roof 1999 Dodge Ram $1200 repairs, barn boards, beam obo. 613-394-6530 repairs, sliding doors, eavestroughs, screw nailing, roof painting, barn TRAILERS / RV’S painting. Call John 613-392-2569. 2004 34’ Triple E Embassy V10. 30,000 kms. Slide-out. Sleeps 6. Gen- Dion box and wagon, erator. Selling due to $1,500; NH 782 harvester, health reasons. Good con- $2,250; IH 454 loader, dition. 613-392-7762. $4,500; JD 2350 4x4 loader, $11,750. 613-223-6026.

WANTED

CL430443

WOOD HEAT SOLUTIONS www.chesher.ca

$$MONEY$$ CONSOLIDATE Debts Mortgages to 90% No income, Bad credit OK! Better Option Mortgage #10969 1-800-282-1169 www.mortgageontario.com

Antiques Wanted. Jewellery, wrist watches, pocket watches, sterling silver, china, wooden decoys, fishing lures, war medals, Canadian coins, antique furniture, paintings, books. COMMERCIAL RENT (905)885-0190, Toll-free, (877)329-9901. DOWNTOWN BRIGHTON office space for lease. Contractor pays top cash Multiple sizes and for property in need of configurations possible. renovation or repair, any Plenty of parking. Call area. Gerry Hudson, King- 613-813-2774. ston (613)449-1668 Sales Representative Rideau Town and Country Realty Warkworth Main St., 2 Ltd, Brokerage adjoining stores/offices (613)273-5000. available now. First is 689 sq. ft. for $575, second is Standing timber, hard 546 sq. ft. for $550 or maple, soft maple, red and create one 1,235 sq. ft. white oak, etc. Quality space for $1,000/month workmanship guaranteed. HST and utilities extra. (613)847-1665. Water, parking and back courtyard included. Call Wanted: Standing timber, 705-924-3341 and leave mature hard/softwood. message. Also wanted, natural stone, cubicle or flat, any size. 613-968-5182. FARM

Turn your exhausted wood lots and unused pasture lots into productive farm land. Phone 1-705-653-7242 or 1-905-436-5954

DUMP RUNS

Junk removal & willing to move articles for individuals. 613-475-9591

FOR RENT

MUTTON METAL SALVAGE Free removal of scrap metal. Call Jeff at 905-344-7733.

2 bedroom apt. Heated, fridge and stove. 75 Station Rd. Kaladar. $450/mth. Available Oct. 1. 613-336-9429.

BUSINESS SERVICES

SUNSTRUM’S HOME IMPROVEMENTS

Free pickup

Scrap vehicles. Will pay $150-$300 Ray Brown’s Auto and Light Duty Towing 613-394-3335

General Home Repair & Remodeling CL429596

Starting at

MORTGAGES

Electrical. Plumbing. Carpentry. Painting. Flooring. Cleanup

905-355-1357 Brighton, ON

Dennis 905-269-6295 Sharon 905-925-4081

FOR RENT

TrenTon eAST Side 2 storey, 3 bedroom semi-attached. 4pc + 2pc bathrooms, comes with full unfinished basement. $900/month, plus utilities.

Kenmau Ltd. (Since 1985)

Property Management

613-392-2601

CL435643

CL439389

ApArtments p r a d a

Sharp’s Auto in Port Hope

Brown's Painting & Decorating

Quality work at reasonable prices. No job too big or small. Senior Discount Call Ray at

613-394-3335

c o u r t

Featuring 2 bedroom apartments with all amenities including: fridge, stove, air conditioning and wheelchair access. The apartments are attractive and the buildings are secure. Ideal for Seniors or retired couples CALL

CAREER OPPORTUNITY

1-800-706-4459 613-475-3793 9am - 5pm

CAREER OPPORTUNITY

CAREER OPPORTUNITY

www.pradacourt.com • Hairstyling / Cosmetology (Diploma)

PRINCE WILLIAM APARTMENTS

(All 4 Campus Locations)

• advanCed estHetiCs / spa tHerapy (Diploma)

165 Herchimer Ave. Fantastic 1 & 2 bdrm suites! Outdoor pool, sauna, exercise rm, social rm w/events, 24/7 on-site mgmt. DrOp in tODAy! Don’t miss out!

(Oshawa Campus Only)

enroll now for november Earn a College Diploma in less than a year! • Monthly start dates • Flexible schedules and payment plans • Instructor led hands-on training

1-866-906-3032 www.realstar.ca

Space is limited, secure your placement, register today!

DON’T MISS OUT

613-962-8490

292 Front st., belleville www.artandtechnique.com

Bay Terrace Apartments

• Oshawa • COrnwall • BramptOn • BEllEVIllE Registered as a private career college under Private Career Colleges Act, 2005

TENDERS

Kenmau Ltd.

1-888-478-7169

Belleville

Brighton Downtown

East side (Turnbull St.) 1 bedroom with fridge, stove, heat, hydro & water included, $650/mth

1 & 2 Bedrooms with fridge & stove $525-$675 plus utilities

East side (Albert St.) 1 bedroom with heat, fridge, stove, water & hydro included, $650/mth

Kenmau Ltd.

TReNTON

since 1985

West side (Dundas St. W.) 2 bedroom with fridge, stove, heat & water. Laundry facilities. Secure building. $750/mth + hydro Call Kenmau Ltd.

Property Management 613-392-2601

BRIGHTON

Attractive 2 bdrm with new fridge & stove, water and balcony. New window coverings & flooring, freshly painted. Building has security entrance & laundry facilities. $750/mth plus heat & hydro.

Property Management (Since 1985)

613-392-2601

MORTGAGES

Kenmau Ltd.

MORTGAGES

613-392-2601

• Renewals • Mortgages & Loans • Leasing - 1st, 2nd & Private Mortgages/Loans • Free Down Payment Program OAC • • Bank turn downs, self employed welcomed

Belleville (Pringle Drive) 2 level, 2 bedroom apartment with private entrance, fridge, stove & water included. $750/mth plus heat & hydro.

CREDIT PROBLEMS? I HAVE SOLUTIONS! Andrea Johnston A.M.P 200 Dundas Street E, Suite 305 Belleville, ON K8N 1E3 Office: 613-968-5151 Toll Free: 1-888-216-7770 ext 306 Email: andrea005@sympatico.ca Web:

Kenmau Ltd. (Since 1985)

Property Management

www.mortgagesbyandrea.com FSCO Lic# M08002475 Broker# 10202 Independently Owned and Operated

TENDERS

TENDERS

MUNICIPALITY OF BRIGHTON Public Works & Development 67 Sharp Road, Brighton, ON K0K 1H0 Tel: 613-475-1162 Fax: 613-475-2599

- TENDER The Municipality of Brighton is issuing the following tender. ALL TENDER QUOTES MUST BE SUBMITTED IN A SEPARATE ENVELOPE CLEARLY MARKED AS TO THE TENDER NUMBER AND TENDER ITEM. TENDER FORMS THAT MUST BE USED ARE AVAILABLE AT THE PUBLIC WORKS AND DEVELOPMENT OFFICE AND SHOULD BE RETURNED TO THE SAME LOCATION LOWEST OR ANY TENDER NOT NECESSARILY ACCEPTED. ALL TENDERS ARE SUBJECT TO FINAL MUNICIPAL BUDGET APPROVAL TENDERS AND RFP ARE AWARDED BY RESOLUTION OF COUNCIL TENDERS WILL BE RECEIVED UNTIL 11:30 A.M. Friday, October 18, 2013 REQUEST FOR QUOTATIONS PW-2013-24 REHABILITATION OF SOUTH BERM AND SUPPLY, REMOVAL AND REPLACEMENT OF BAFFLES LOCATED AT THE MUNICIPALITY’S WASTEWATER TREATMENT LAGOON Scott Hodgson Public Works Projects Supervisor 613-475-1162

METRO CITY MORTGAGES

(Since 1985)

Property Management

613-392-2601

is seeking a Class A, Licensed General Mechanic to work in a busy, independent automotive shop. The successful candidate should have 2+ yrs of general repair experience, be reliable, have own tools and a valid drivers license. Send resume: Sharp’s Custom Exhaust & Automotive Repair 406 Croft St. E. Port Hope, L1A4H1 905-885-0299 or email: ernbo68@hotmail.com

d co n & Se tS t eIplIc an p e ac c a p We areer c

LOOK NO FURTHER

334 Dundas St. E. Come see our GREAT Renovations! Fantastic 1 & 2 bdrm suites. NUMEROUS Amenities! Indoor pool, gym, social rm w/events. MOVE IN INCENTIVE! Drop in today. DAILY OPEN HOUSES.

CAREER OPPORTUNITY

CL430417

CL429775

Dog Grooming by Bernadette. Professional services with TLC. New clients welcome. 550 TrentonFrankford Rd, 1 minute north of 401. (613)243-8245.

NEW TWO BEDROOM townhouses, for seniors, downtown Brighton. One level, central air, $1050 monthly, plus utilities (gas, hydro, water). 613-475-6032.

Luxury Suite in Grafton: Short-term rental for the month or week, ideal for those in between homes or wanting to escape a renovation. $500 a week or $1500 a month. 905-376-9130.

CAREER OPPORTUNITY

LEGAL

LEGAL

CL472433

FITNESS & HEALTH

FOR SALE

PETS

Brighton small 2 bedroom house, large yard, available Nov. 1. $700 per month plus utilities. ghamilton@colestimbermart.ca

CL430446

FOR SALE

Havelock- Newly Decorated, quiet building. Large bright 1 bdrm $675; 2 bdrm $725. Appliances, storage unit, parking and laundry facilities included Utilities extra. Call 705-778-2429.

CL435653

Stove Pellets, 40 lbs Dish and Direct Satellite bags, $4.75 per bag plus accounts. All movie chan- HST. Low Ash/moisture, HUNTING SUPPLIES BTU. shavnels also all regular chan- high ings@live.com or Weekend Canadian Firenels. Call 613-848-1049 613-847-5457 arms and Hunter Safety 10 AM till 9 PM 7 Days. Course, Oct. 25, 26, 27, at the Thurlow Community Warehouse shelving, Centre in Thurlow. To reFlooring deals, berber carpet 99 cents sq. ft.; 12 racking, lockers and exte- serve a seat or to chalmm laminate $1.49/sq. ft.; rior signs, good condition. lenge the PAL or Turkey modern cut/loop carpet To buy or sell, call Lloyd exam, please contact Ron H u t c h i n s o n 1.49/sq. ft.; Free shop at 613-530-7840. Website: home service. Saillian Car- shelvingandrackingworld.ca (613)968-3362. No phone calls after 8 p.m. pets 1-800-578-0497, Email: info@aworldofrentals.ca (905)373-2260.

Bedding & Feed: Shavings for $4.75/each, bedding pellets for $4.00/each, Tiz Whiz grain for $15/each and Triple Crown grain for $25/each. plus HST. shavings@live.com or 613-847-5457

BUSINESS SERVICES

FOR RENT

CL435642

GOALIE EQUIPMENT Goalie pads 30 inches long, 10 inches wide, 1 blocker, 1 catching glove. Name brand “Brown” size 9 Bauer goalie skates. Phone 705-924-2482 Warkworth.

FOR RENT

CL435652

STEEL BUILDINGS/METAL BUILDINGS UP TO 60% OFF!30x40, 40x60, 50x80, 60x100,80x100 sell for balance owed! Call: 1-800-457-2206 www.crownsteelbuildings.ca

FOR RENT

CL430445

Butcher Supplies, Leather + Craft Supplies and Animal Control Products. Get your Halfords 136 page FREE CATALOG . 1-800-353-7864 or email: order@halfordhide.com. Visit our Web Store w w w. h a l f o r d s m a i l o rder.com.

LIVESTOCK

CL439275

SPORTS EQUIPMENT

CL435641

FOR SALE

CL429645

FOR SALE

LEGAL

Domtar Newsprint Employees (Trenton) Credit Union Limited, In Liquidation NOTICE OF SPECIAL GENERAL MEETING OF MEMBERS AND SHAREHOLDERS NOTICE is hereby given that a Special General Meeting of members and shareholders of Domtar Newsprint Employees (Trenton) Credit Union Limited in liquidation is to be held at: Address: Quinte West Public Library – Main Branch 7 Creswell Drive, Trenton, Ontario. Date: October 16, 2013 Time: 1 p.m. for the purpose of presenting the final account of the liquidator and providing any explanations thereto. This meeting is being held pursuant to Section 298, sub-section (20) and (21) of the Credit Unions and Caisses Populaires Act, 1994. PLEASE TAKE NOTICE THAT THIS CREDIT UNION WENT INTO VOLUNTARY LIQUIDATION ON SEPTEMBER 13, 2010 PURSUANT TO A RESOLUTION PASSED BY ITS MEMBERS. Dated this day 25th of September, 2013

EMC B Section - Thursday, October 3, 2013

B13


HELP WANTED

Work in Brighton to Cobourg area.

FULL TIME & PART TIME

Contract Drivers & Dispatcher

613-966-2034

needed for Belleville/ Trenton Courier Service. Must have own vehicle. Call Tues. To Fri. 8 am - 2 pm. 613-392-5585 or 613-967-5941

HELP WANTED

HELP WANTED

613-813-4452

Sell it fast!

DAN’LL DO IT!! HAN”D”MAN SERVICES

DOING THE JOBS YOU...CAN’T WON’T, DON’T HAVE TIME TO!!

LOST & FOUND

PERSONAL

LOST - Small leather clip with folded money lost in downtown Brighton area. Reward. Please call 613-475-0946.

TRUE PSYCHICS For Answers, CALL NOW 24/7 Toll FREE 1-877-342-3032 Mobile: #4486 www.truepsychics.ca

TRAVEL/VACAT/COTTG

DANIEL 905-376-4457 or WAYNE 613-921-4197 E-Mail - dan_lynda@xplornet.ca

Exclusive, furnished South Florida Condo’s. Seasonal, 6 month rental, close to beach, shopping, golfing, pool (on site). Details call 613-267-5653.

“Book NOW for your FALLIDAY Projects”

Sell it fast!

Free Quotes + Reasonable Rates + Guaranteed Work

HELP WANTED

1-888-967-3237

HELP WANTED

HELP WANTED

SuperviSor required for Gas station w/car

Part time ContraCt Drivers requireD

wash and convenience store for operation in Trenton. Salary $30,000 per year. Candidate should have completed high school. Post-secondary education and experience in retail environment, a definite plus. Will be responsible for evening, night and weekend supervision and coordination of staff, preparing work schedules, resolving customer issues, maintaining and ordering stock, handling cash reports and preparing reports for manager. Strong communication, math and computer skills required. Applicants should fax resume to 613-965-6928 or E-mail us at ultramartrenton@hotmail.com

CL439330

CL439270

Perfect position for retired person! Flexible availablity! You choose your days Must have a clean drivers abstract. Enjoy driving! Friendly! Customer Oriented! Please bring resume & drivers’s abstract to 97 Church St., Belleville, ON

BUSINESS SERVICES

www.careeredge.on.ca

This Employment Ontario program is funded in part by the Government of Canada.

“We Need You!” Carrier Routes Available # PAPERS

MAIN STREET

North Park St

Belleville

FA004

106

Bongard Cres

Belleville

FA023

123

Prince of Wales Dr

Belleville

FA027

80

Grier St

Belleville

FA031

103

Forrester Crt

Belleville

FF016

133 (2 routes) Kiping Dr

Belleville

FB004

70

Hillside St

Belleville

FB009

56

Avondale Rd

Belleville

FB048

65

Aldersgate Drive

Belleville

FC013

80

Byron St

Belleville

FC014

62

Centre St

Belleville

FC016

54

University Ave

Belleville

FC012

63

West St

Belleville

FC003

78

Ann St

Belleville

FC006

61

Lingham St

Belleville

FC009

90

Brassey St

Belleville

FC021

65

Foster Ave

Belleville

FD00

34

Dufferin Ave

Belleville

FD005

36

Burnham St

Belleville

FD003

90

Chatham St

Belleville

FE027

86

Herchimer

Belleville

FE013

64

Munro Ave

Belleville

EMC B Section - Thursday, October 3, 2013

HELP WANTED

LOCATION

78

For more information on any of these routes please call Belleville/Central Hastings: Kathy LaBelle-613-966-2034 ext 512 QW/Brighton/Trent Hills: Kathy Morgan-613-475-0255 ext 210 B14

Metroland Classifieds work for you!

CANCEL YOUR TIMESHARE. NO RISK program. STOP Mortgage & Maintenance Payments Today. 100% Money Back Guarantee. FREE Consultation. Call us NOW. We can Male- 50’s, hard-working, Help! 1-888-356-5248 healthy, happy. Many interests including outdoors Help Wanted! Make $1000 and music, seeks female. weekly mailing brochures Call Rob after 5 PM, from HOME! 613-922-8730. NO experience required. Start immediately! www.TheMailingHub.com REAL ESTATE

SERVICES

Hill top country 20 acre farm. Picturesque 9 room home, large barns, garage, tractor. Belleville area. $169,000. Gerry Hudson, Kingston (613)449-1668 Sales Representative Rideau Town and Country Realty Ltd, Brokerage (613)273-5000.

HELP WANTED-LOCAL PEOPLE NEEDED!!! Simple & Flexible Online Work. 100% Genuine Opportunity. F/T & P/T. Internet Needed. Very Easy...No Experience Required. Income is Guaranteed! www.ezComputerWork.com

HELP WANTED

BUSINESS SERVICES

BUSY SERVICE company in Prince George, BC, is currently seeking a Journeyman Plumber. with gas licence to work in a fast paced, service company. Experience in service & installation of heating and cooling systems, gas & wood fireplaces and all aspects of plumbing as an asset. Good communication, troubleshooting skills, valid drivers licence. The company offers a very competitive wage and excellent benefit package. Applicants should send resume to mainplum@telus.net

County Water TreatmentSofteners, U.V. Lights, R.O. systems, chemical free iron and sulphur filters. Sales, installation, service and repair. Steven Menna. (613)967-7143.

CAREER OPPORTUNITY

CAREER OPPORTUNITY

Hardwood Floor Installation and resurfacing. Ceramics. Light renovations and upgrades. Over 30 years experience. Please call for free estimate 613-394-1908.

Ken Chard Construction. Renovations, decks, siding, sidewalks, fences, ceramic, windows, painting LIVE-IN NANNY needed etc. Free estimates. Call: for 10 year old and baby 613-398-7439. on the way due in January. $10.56/hour for 40 hours per week. Fax resume to MAID FOR YOU NOW HIRING!!! $300+ 613-439-8701. • House Cleaning PER DAY Typing compaAPART- • Light Meal WORK WANTED nies advertising online. We RETIREMENT Preparation provide the training & the MENTS, ALL inclusive. (613)969-1103 Painter and Handyman. jobs to perform. Real Op- Meals, transportation, acEavestrough cleaning bun- portunity. PT/FT. Experi- tivities daily. Short leases. galows only. Seniors dis- ence Not Required. Monthly specials! Call Man with compact traccount. Call Roger w w w . G e n u i n e W e b - 877-210-4130 tor and backhoe loader. 613-242-3958. Can do landscape project, Jobs.com BUSINESS SERVICES gravel driveways, retaining walls and small TENDERS TENDERS Roger’s Mobile Wash and ponds Call Paul Detailing: For all your (613)398-7333. washing needs. Auto, Boats, RVs, Homes, Decks, Patios, Driveways, Steve Collins, InsulationHeavy Equipment, and Blown cellulose, attics, Monument cleaning. Also, walls, floors. Save money Store Front, and Graffiti -live comfortably. Warm in cleaning. Bug Spraying winter, cool in summer. PROPERTY MANAGEMENT SERVICES available. Free Estimates Quality work since 1974. Call Bid #: T-2013-2 Home 613-962-8277 or Free estimates. (613)847-6791. Date: October 1, 2013 to October 23, 2013 Cell 613-885-1908.

REQUEST FOR TENDERS

Tender documents may be obtained from the Co-operative’s Office, 100-243 Milroy Dr. Sealed bids will be received until October 23, 2013 at 4pm by Leta Brownscombe to (trailer on site) 100-243 Milroy Drive, Peterborough, ON K9H 7L8 Bidders must submit ten (10) copies of their bid. Please Note: Bidders must be knowledgeable about co-operative operations, RGI, the Housing Services Act and the Co-operative Corporations Act. A Mandatory Meeting will be held on Tuesday, October 15, 2013 at Leta Brownscobe Co-operative Homes, 243 Milroy Dr, Commons Room at 6 p.m.

HELP WANTED

HELP WANTED

Voortman Cookies has an opening for an

Independent Route Salesperson

in the Kingston/ Belleville area Candidates must be energetic and driven to grow sales in this established, protected territory. Investment is required. Please submit resume to mycareer@voortman.com HELP WANTED

HELP WANTED

Mental Health & Addictions Registered Nurses Full-time, Part-time

CL421488

ROUTE FA003

CL416726

Busy general contractor requires carpenters/labourers for home building including framing, roofing, siding, stairs, trim, flooring, drywall etc. Please forward resume to candice@pmvhomes.com

CAREER EDGE JOB FAIRS Career Edge in Trenton is pleased to be hosting Two Job Fairs on Thursday October 10, 2013 S & P Data is hiring for fulltime inbound & outbound positions. Applicants must have excellent computer and customer service skills. Time: 10am-12pm KAS Staffing is looking for employees to fill immediate temporary positions in Trenton and Belleville. Opportunity for permanent positions exists! Grade Twelve is not required but must be willing to work various shifts. Time: 2pm-4pm Please bring your resume and be prepared to interview. Please call to register 613-392-9157

HELP WANTED

Kingston, Belleville, Brockville and Smiths Falls geographical areas Responsibilities will include: assisting school boards in recognizing and responding to student mental health and addiction issues; providing services and support to students with mild to complex mental health and substance abuse issues; developing plans for clients with mental health and addiction needs including the transition of students back to school from hospitalization; providing support or intervention for issues such as self‐harm or treatment refusal. You will also play a key role in helping students and/or parents’ access services such as family health and/or addictions agencies. Qualifications: • direct clinical experience in providing mental health and/or addictions services for children and youth; • knowledge of the mental health and addictions service system for children and youth; • solid knowledge of health care related legislation and practices; • advanced assessment and diagnostic reasoning skills; • ability to work independently; • effective interpersonal and communications skills ; • Registered Nurse and relevant related experience; • current registration with the College of Nurses of Ontario; • must have valid driver’s license and access to a vehicle; • travel will be required; and, • proficiency in French is an asset.

How to Apply: please forward your resume and covering letter to careers@se.ccac-ont. ca indicating Posting #98-2013 in the subject line on or before October 13, 2013. “La version Française de cette annonce est disponible sur demande.”

CL435446_1003

Village of Hastings. 1 bedroom cottage, $750/mth. 2 bedroom cottage, $900/mth. Fully furnished. Includes heat, hydro, cable, water, WI-FI and parking. Laundry facilities. Available Nov. 1-April 30. Lured Away Cottages. 705-696-2132.

Labourer Wanted for Framing Crew

Must have own hand tools and Transportation

BUSINESS SERVICES

HELP WANTED

CL435609

Stirling Downtown: Bright 2 Bedroom Apartment, $680/month plus heat and hydro. Parking included. 1st/last/references required. Call 613-480-6633.

CAREER OPPORTUNITY

CL435590

FOR RENT


CL429814

Gary Warner Auctioneer • 905-355-2106 www.warnersauction.com CELEBRATING 25 YEARS IN BUSINESS.

AUCTION SALE ESTATE OF ALTHEA KAISER 6 FRANKLIN STREET, BELLEVILLE, ONT. THURSDAY OCTOBER 10TH AT 11:00 AM SOUTH of Dundas Street East onto South Foster (Vicinity of TSC) to Franklin Street. Oak centre pedestal round dinette table and 4 chairs, walnut finish dining room suite with table, 6 chairs, and china cabinet, antique walnut cedar chest, antique parlour table, antique harps- a –chord, antique dresser, antique steamer trunk, antique walnut side table, curio cabinet, glass top display cabinet, bedroom furniture, double beds, chesterfield, La-Z- Boy chair, coffee and end tables, occasional chairs, Royal Doulton figurine – Bedtime, February; depression glass lamps, antique glassware’s and china, wild life prints, Kenmore upright freezer, Frigidaire chest freezer, hand and garden tools, power lawn mower, numerous other articles. TERMS: CASH OR CHEQUE OWNER & AUCTIONEER NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENT OR INJURY DAY OF SALE SULLIVAN AUCTIONEERS Plainfield 613-477-2082 www.sullivanauctions.com

CL429812

CL410842

DAVE A. SNIDER At 613-386-3039 Phone Between 7:00 A.M. - 8:00 A.M. or 8:00 P.M. - 9:00 P.M. Thanks Or Leave a Message and I Will Get Back To You For Updates go to www.daveasniderauctionservice.ca

440 BIGFORD ROAD, R.R.# 4 TRENTON, ONT. FRIDAY OCTOBER 11TH AT 11:00 AM 5 miles SOUTH of 401 Highway on Wooler Road (Interchange 522) and turn WEST onto English Settlement Road for 3 miles and turn SOUTH onto Bigford Road. WOOD WORKING EQUIPMENT: Felder K-6 sliding panel table saw with electrical updates- like new; Woodmaster Model 725 molder/ planer like new; 6.5 hp 80 gal upright air compressor-like new; Auto Planer 15” surface planer, 12” surface disc sander, Brico 6” jointer, Craftex B702 wood shaper, King table top drill press, DeWalt 10” table saw, The Hawk scroll saw, 36” wood lathe, Dewalt 12″ mitre saw, Makita mitre saw, bench grinder, quantity of Makita power wood working tools, quantity of wood clamps, quantity of hand tools, quantity of recharegable tools, air tools, paint sprayer, quantity of cabinet making materials including rolls of laminate, 1” lumber, trim, 4×8 sheets of cupboard material, drawer sliders, door hinges, VEHICLES 1997 Ford F150 XLT pick up truck with crew cab, automatic transmission- 324,000 kms- good running condition – sells as is; 2000 Dodge Ram 2500 cargo van with 123,600 kms –good running condition – sells as is; 2000 Buick Century 4 door sedan with 132,000 kms – good running condition – sells as is; ATV – 1987 Honda Foreman 400 cc 4 x 4 ATV, numerous other articles. TERMS: CASH OR CHEQUE OWNER & AUCTIONEER NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENT OR INJURY DAY OF SALE SULLIVAN AUCTIONEERS Plainfield 613-477-2082 www.sullivanauctions.com

CL429811

9:30 A.M.

Midway Between Toronto/Montreal, Approx. 12 Miles West of Kingston, From 401 (Exit 599 Odessa) Cty. Rd. #6 South Through Lights #2 To Odessa Fairground on Left. - Horse Drawn Vehicles and Related Appointments - Antique Farm Machinery and Related Items - Harness/Saddles and Tack - Service Station Memorabilia - Antique Car Accessories - Lamp, Horns, Wheels Etc. - Collectibles - Cast Iron Seats, Drill Ends Etc. - Antiques/Collectibles of All Types - Consign Early For Advertising, First Come, First Served - Many Good Items Already Have Been Registered. For Consigning To Sale Please Contact:

240 RITZ ROAD, R.R.#1 CORBYVILLE , ONT. SATURDAY OCTOBER 12TH AT 10:30 AM 2 miles NORTH of Belleville on Highway 37 and turn EAST onto Blessington Road for 1/4 mile and turn NORTH onto Ritz Road. Ford 9n gas tractor with front end loader – restored – good running condition; 2001 Honda TRX 350cc 4 wd ATV- good running condition; 2009 14 ft tandem axle flat deck trailer; 3 point hitch 6 ft scraper blade, WOOD WORKING TOOLS and LUMBER- 2008 Model 718 Woodmaster molder/planer/ in line rip machine; quantity of molder planer profiles, General 350 10” table saw with Excalibur fence, King Commercial 16” double surface planer- like new; Busy Bee 16” single surface planer, Delta Milwaukee surface grinder with magnetic hold down bed, Sandpaper America profile sander, Busy Bee 8” jointer, Beaver 36” wood lathe with 4 jaw chuck, hand crafted lumber drying kiln with digital readout and 500 board feet capacity, Hitachi 3 1/4” portable planer, Veil planer/ jointer blade sharpener, “Dino” bandsaw tooth setter, Craftsman 9” table saw, General Dust collector, 3/”socket set, 14”metal chop saw, Mortising jig, Champion 389cc gas engine -new; conveyor roller, work benches, power tools, quantity of wood clamps, 3” & 5” cant hook, antique and vintage wood working tools including log rules, cross cuts, adzes, Stanley 45 plane; quantity of several thousand feet of 1”& 2”rough cut kiln and air dried lumber including pine, oak, ash, butternut, cherry, hickory; all tools in excellent condition. TERMS: CASH OR CHEQUE OWNER & AUCTIONEER NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENT OR INJURY DAY OF SALE SULLIVAN AUCTIONEERS Plainfield 613-477-2082 www.sullivanauctions.com

AUCTION SALE “WOOD HUTCH” CABINET MAKING SHOP ESTATE OF BRUCE HUTCHINSON

SNIDER’S ANNUAL FALL AUCTION SAT. OCT. 26th, 2013

AUCTION SALE MR BOB CONE

CL435655

Duncan Phyfe table with 4 leaves, 4 chairs & matching corner china cabinet, Vilas maple table with 4 chairs, Honderich cedar lined chest, enamel top bakers table, antique china cabinet, double bed, single bed, dresser & night stand, single pedestal desk & chair, hall tree, chest of flatware, several pieces of cranberry including 2 small pitchers, vase & bowl. Books by Mika & Boyce, finger jug, Riverside Dairy milk can, Singer featherweight sewing machine, shoe shine box, music stand, art easel framed paintings & prints, several ladies hats in boxes, marble base floor lamp, stained glass table lamp, cook books, dehumidifier, extension ladder, qty of garden & shop tools. See my web site for detailed list & photos. AUCTIONEERS: DOUG JARRELL & BEN TREVERTON 613-969-1033 www.dougjarrellauctions.com

AUCTION SALE MR HAROLD GAINFORTH 352 DALMAS ROAD, R.R. # 1 WOOLER , ONT. MONDAY OCTOBER 7TH AT 11:00 AM 5 miles NORTH of 401 at Wooler Road (Interchange 522) and turn WEST onto Old Wooler Road for 1/2 mile and turn NORTH onto Dalmas Road for 1 mile. Antique horse drawn buggy’s, 2 antique horse drawn cutters, antique wheel barrow handle scales, antique walking plow, antique oak centre pedestal extension table, 6 antique oak chairs, antique oak sideboard, antique pine 2 door jam cupboard, antique walnut step back cupboard with upper glass doors, antique washstand, antique treadle sewing machine, antique walnut cedar chest, antique oak finish dressers, antique mantle clocks, antique parlor lamps, antique blanket box, antique settee with side chairs, antique walnut drop leaf side table, antique sho fly rocker, antique wicker chairs, maple table with chairs, La-Z-boy chair with heat, 3 piece chesterfield suite – like new; Yamaha electric keyboard, bedroom furniture, 2 air conditioners, quantity of antique glass and china including lustres, biscuit barrels, silver plate pieces, silver flatware, commemorative coins, Royal Doulton figurine – Romance, hand painted china pieces, Cornflower crystal, antique picture frames, FIREARMS -PAL required-Mossberg 16 ga shot gun, Glenfield 22 cal rifle; hunting clothes and boots; numerous other articles. TERMS: CASH OR CHEQUE OWNER & AUCTIONEER NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENT OR INJURY DAY OF SALE SULLIVAN AUCTIONEERS Plainfield 613-477-2082 www.sullivanauctions.com

CL435656

Warner’s Auction Hall, 12927 Hwy 2, Just West of Colborne. Selling house hold furnishings & lawn furniture, some antiques, collectables, china, glass, dishes, house hold articles, pictures, prints, etc. from a Cobourg estate, attractive solid walnut curio cabinet, other curio cabinet, attractive dining room suite with Queen Anne legs, exceptional sofa table, hall table, antique wash stand with mustache pulls, 1/4 cut antique oak drop front desk, other oak antique drop front, antique table, several interesting hand painted chests, bakers rack, pair modern glass top metal based tables, walnut tea wagon, good fridge & stove, dryer, plus more, including large selection of smalls with glass china, crystal, cranberry, figurines, knick knacks, depression pink pcs, vases, decorative pcs, artwork, lamps and more. Terms: Cash, Cheque with ID, Visa, M/C, Interac.

AUCTION SALE WED, OCTOBER 9, 2013 AT 5:00 P.M. DOUG JARRELL SALES ARENA, BELLEVILLE

Waddingtons.ca/Cobourg 9 Elgin Street East, Cobourg

LARGE 2 DAY AUCTION Saturday October 5th & Sunday October 6th

Preview @ 9:30 p.m. Auction starting at 11:00 a.m. SATURDAY: The Estate of Kenneth McGowan of Scarborough, A Long Time Collector to include: Porcelain & Bronzes, Silver-Plate, Hand Painted Limoges, Nippon, Collection of Royal Doulton Figures, Cut Crystal, Collector’s Items, Numerous Oils & Watercolours. Large Selection of Georgian & Decorative Furniture to include: Campaign Chest, Breakfast Table, Sets of Chairs, Corner Cabinet Mahogany Display Cabinets, Victorian Furniture, Small Tables, Desks, Lacquer Screens, Corner Cabinets, Chest of Drawers, Upholstered Furniture, Lighting & Oriental Carpets. SUNDAY OCTOBER 6TH

SPECIALTY INUIT AUCTION

Auction to Include: Over 100 Lots of Select Stone Sculptures from Various Listed Artist from Cape Dorset, Northern Quebec & POV. Further to include: Stone Cuts, Lithographs & Prints from Related Areas of Northern Canada.

Giant Indoor ½ Price Yard Sale to include Furniture. Watch the Website for Updates & Photos. www.waddingtons.ca/cobourg David Simmons Auctioneer & Appraiser Caterer: Julies’ Cafe. BROWSE OUR HOME FURNISHINGS CONSIGNMENT STORE QUALITY ITEMS AT A FRACTION OF RETAIL.

CL472923

AUCTION THURSDAY, OCTOBER 3rd @ 6:00PM

161 OLD KINGSTON ROAD, R.R.# 4 BELLEVILLE ONT. WEDNESDAY OCTOBER 9 th at 10:30 AM 1 mile EAST of Belleville on Old Kingston Road. Kurzweil Mark 110 digital grand piano in ebony finish- excellent; mahogany cased grandfathers clock with triple brass weights, antique French style mantle clock with orbs and cherubs, Mennonite crafted dining table with 6 high back chairs, Mennonite pine 5 piece bedroom suite with Queen size bed, Mennonite hand crafted hall bench, antique walnut spinnette desk, antique walnut sofa table, mahogany glass front curio cabinet, Ansonia Antique mantle clock, antique steeple clock, Asian motif dressing screen, antique walnut bookcase, artwork by Edwin Mathews, print by James Lumbers, gold cased pocket watch in hunters case, limited edition crystal bust of Winston Churchill by Webb Corbett Crystal, cranberry glass snuff jar, Beswick elk, LLadro figurines, Staffordshire figures, Spelter figure, Vintage photos, collection of smoking pipes, collection of horseshoes, cast iron collectibles, Canadian, US and international coinage, vintage Canadian paper money, WW11 German helmet, collection of walking sticks, Sony flat screen TV, stereo equipment, crystal table lamps, LaZBoy chair, 2 piece chesterfield suite, 2 single Craftmatic beds, few hand tools, garden tools, Husqvarna 22 hp riding lawn mower, numerous other articles. TERMS: CASH OR CHEQUE OWNER & AUCTIONEER NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENT OR INJURY DAY OF SALE SULLIVAN AUCTIONEERS Plainfield 613-477-2082 www.sullivanauctions.com

CL429809

Get the word out to more than 70,000 homes. Call 613-966-2034

CL429810

METROLAND MEDIA AUCTIONS

AUCTION SALE ESTATE OF DR BERT CONN

HAVE AN UPCOMING AUCTION?

Tel: 905.373.0501 Toll Free: 1.855.503.2963 Fax: 905.373.1467 Email: pn@waddingtons.ca 9 Elgin St. E., Unit 6, Cobourg ON K9A 0A1

Auctions continued on page B16 EMC B Section - Thursday, October 3, 2013

B15


Merrickville Community Centre, 106 Read Street, Merrickville, Ont.

GAMING & RESTAURANT Evinrude Centre 911 Monaghan Rd. Peterborough AUCTION

SellingThursday, the Estate ofApril Gwen 12th Brown ~ of Weller 5pm St. 2pm auction PartialViewing List includes: Antiques, rugs,day. bedroom Morrow Building ~room 171 Lansdowne St., Peterborough suites, dining suites, large quantity SELLING ENTIRE CONTENTS FROM A GAMBLING HALL. of furniture, china, Doulton Partial list includes: fork glass, lift, slateRoyal pool table, leather figurines, collectibles, jewellery, books,at sofas, poker tables, bar stools, cigar humidors, screen tv’s, projectors restaurant artwork, mirrors, firew/large boxesscreens, & much more! kitchen appliances and much more! View photos & listing at: CALL TO CONSIGN 705-745-4115 www.ruslands.com ••info@ruslands.com www.ruslands.com info@ruslands.com

Featuring a large collection of Beer and Soda collectibles including several serving trays from Frontenac, Black Horse, Boswell, vintage bottle openers, Large selection of Porcelain door Push bars, Gas and Oil collectibles from BF Goodrich,Michelin, Imperial, Sunoco, White Rose, Mobiloil, B/A, Oil Bottles and oil rack. Vending machines, advertising calenders, porcelain and tin signs from Bell Canada, Coca Cola, Salada Tea, Pepsi, Robin Hood and several others. Very Rare unused 1972 Canada Summit series Montreal Forum Hokey ticket. Pepsi salesman sample advertising. Over 400 lots to be sold. Check out our website for additional details and photos on our webpage @

www.colinlatreilleauctions.ca

Terms - Cash, Cheque, Visa, MC & Interact

A Trusted Name Since 1972 705-745-4115

Call us to consign Colin Latreille Auction Services 613-258-0173

Network AUTOMOTIVE

ANNOUNCEMENTS BUILDING COMMUNITY - ONE STAR AT A TIME. Recognize a six to 17 year old with the prestigious 2013 Ontario Junior Citizen of the Year Award nomination by Nov. 30. www.ocna.org/juniorcitizen or call 905-639-8720 ext 221.

FINANCIAL SERVICES

$$$ 1st, 2nd, 3rd MORTGAGES Debt Consolidation, Refinancing, R e n o v a t i o n s , Ta x A r r e a r s , n o CMHC fees. $50K you pay $208.33/ month (OAC). No income, bad credit, power of sale stopped!! BETTER OPTION MORTGAGES, CALL TODAY Toll-Free 1-800-282-1169, www.mortgageontario.com (LIC# 10969). AS SEEN ON TV - Need a MORTGAGE, Home Equity Loan, Better Rate? Bad Credit, SelfEmployed, Bankrupt? Been turned down? Facing Foreclosure, Power of Sale? CALL US NOW TOLLFREE 1-877-733-4424 and speak to a licensed mortgage agent. MMAmortgages.com specializes in residential, commercial, rural, agriculture, farms, & land mortgages. Visit: www.MMAmortgages.com (Lic#12126).

GARAGE SALE

GARAGE SALE

GARAGE SALE

STREET FLEA MARKET And Now:

Christmasshoppe!

Yea r Ro un d

FURNITURE • ANNIVERSARY • WEDDINGS • GARDEN ORNAMENTS • AND MORE

7 DAYS 9am to 4pm • 613-284-2000 streetfleamarket.net/auction-hall 5 MILES SOUTH OF SMITHS FALLS

OPEN

CORNER OF HWY 15 & BAY ROAD

DRIVERS WANTED

Westcan Bulk Transport Located throughout Western Canada is: Recruiting Experienced TRUCK DRIVERS to drive on a Seasonal, Rotational or Full-Time Basis for our busy Fall and Winter seasons Travel to and from the location of employment provided APPLY ONLINE AT:

www.westcanbulk.ca

GARAGE SALE Divorce Sale- October 11, 12, 13th, 8 a.m-4 p.m daily. Rain or shine. Toys, books, glassware, knickknacks, furniture, trains, lots of collectable’s. No junk! 425 Conc. 2, West, Warkworth. Fall/Christmas Craft sale Saturday, October 5, 12 & 19 10 am - 3 pm 4 Bayside Dr. Carrying place Roseland Acres

GARAGE SALE

Garage Sale Ads

$

starting at

12.75

2nd Week FREE PLUS 2 FREE Signs

PERSONALS

EMPLOYMENT OPPS. ACCENTUS IS HIRING experienced Medical Transcriptionists to work from home. Candidates must have 1 year of acute experience. Apply today! Send resume to hr@accentus.ca.

TRUE PSYCHICS! For Answers call now 24/7 Toll Free 1-877-3423036; Mobile #4486; http://www.true psychics.ca. DATING SERVICE. Long-term/shortterm relationships, free to try! 1-877297-9883. Talk with single ladies. Call #7878 or 1-888-534-6984. Talk now! 1-866-311-9640 or #5015. Meet local single ladies. 1-877-804-5381. (18+)

FOR SALE

CALL 1.888.WBT.HIRE (928.4473) Want to talk to someone about gambling problems? Ontario Problem Gambling Helpline 1-888-230-3505 www.ProblemGamblingHelpline.ca Also find us at: Ontario Problem Gambling Helpline on Facebook or @ConnexOntario on Twitter

FREE Consultation

WESTCAN will be hosting a series of Open Houses in Ontario from October 17-19. CONFIRMED ARE: October 17, 2013: - London Husky, Hwy 401 Exit 195 & Hwy 74, 10am-2pm - Brantford Esso Truck Stop, 11 Sinclair Blvd, 6-9pm October 19, 2013: - Pickering Flying J, Hwy 401 Exit 399 (Brock Road), 10am-2pm

$$ MONEY $$

More details to follow regarding additional locations

• 1ST, 2ND & 3RD MORTGAGES FOR ANY PURPOSE • DEBT CONSOLIDATION • BAD CREDIT • TAX OR MORTGAGE ARREARS • DECREASE PAYMENTS UP TO 75% • SELF-EMPLOYED • NO PROOF OF INCOME

LAIDLAW CARRIERS VAN DIVISION requires experienced AZ licensed drivers to run the U.S. Premium mileage rate. Home weekly. New equipment. Also hiring Owner Operators. 1-800-263-8267

Ontario-Wide Financial Corp. 1-888-307-7799 www.ontario-widefinancial.com (Licence #10171)

STEEL BUILDINGS S T E E L B U I L D I N G S / M E TA L BUILDINGS 60% OFF! 20x28, 30x40, 40x62, 45x90, 50x120, 60x150, 80x100 sell for balance owed! Call 1-800-457-2206 www.crownsteelbuildings.ca

HELP WANTED

BUSINESS OPPS.

MYSTERY SHOPPER - Perform Customer Service assessments for auto service (oil change) mystery shops. Paid for shop completion plus expense reimbursement. Apply online: www.frontlineshoppers.com

M O V I N G H E L P. C O M . P a r t - t i m e work. Full-time pay. Now in Ontario! Be your own boss! Set your own rates. Set your schedule. Apply now! Go to MovingHelper.com. Powered by: U-Haul.

#1 HIGH SPEED INTERNET $32.95/Month Absolutely no ports are blocked Unlimited Downloading Up to 11Mbps Download & 800Kbps Upload ORDER TODAY AT: www.acanac.ca or CALL TOLL-FREE: 1-866-281-3538 SAWMILLS from only $4,897 - MAKE MONEY & SAVE MONEY with your own bandmill - Cut lumber any dimension. In stock ready to ship. FREE Info & DVD: www.NorwoodSawmills.com/400OT 1-800-566-6899 Ext:400OT.

CAREER TRAINING THERE’S A CRITICAL DEMAND for qualified Medical Transcriptionists in Canada. Enroll today with CanScribe and be working from home in one year. 1.800.466.1535 www.canscribe.com info@canscribe.com.

REAL ESTATE TEXAS U.S.A. BEST BUY - Own a 20 Acre Texas Ranch, now only $395 per acre, $99 per month. FREE BROCHURE FINANCING AVAILABLE. CALL TOLL-FREE 1-800-875-6568.

Connect with Ontarians – extend your business reach! www.networkclassified.org B16

call 1-888-967-3237

ALL YOUR FRIENDS & CO-WORKERS MARRIED? No single friends to introduce you to? Turn to a professional. MISTY RIVER INTRODUCTIONS can help you find your life partner. CALL (613)2573531, www.mistyriverintros.com. No computer required.

Under the Join Our Team Link

HEALTH

MORTGAGES

Auctioneer: Allen McGrath

1 ad 5 newspapers 1 small price

For more information contact your local newspaper.

GUARANTEED APPROVAL DRIVE AWAY TODAY! We lend money to everyone. Fast approvals, best interest rates. Over 500 vehicles sale priced for immediate delivery OAC. 1-877-796-0514. www.yourapprovedonline.com.

1 in 5 Canadians will experience a mental health issue in their lifetime Mental Health Helpline 1-866-531-2600 www.MentalHealthHelpline.ca Also find us at: Mental Health Helpline on Facebook or @ConnexOntario on Twitter

1-705-696-2196

Terms of sale: Cash, Debit, M/C, Visa Canteen & Washrooms

$20.95

CL421683

WANTED

OLD DUCK DECOYS - Collector/ Researcher Looking for Wooden Duck Decoys. Interested in Buying, Photographing and Learning about their origin. FREE Appraisals, Confidential, No Hassle. CALL 613-376-6723 or Cell: 613-888-9540.

Large auction, partial estate, other interesting items plus many consignments. Boxes as yet unpacked. 192 Front W. Hastings, ON K0L 1Y0

ADVERTISE ACROSS ONTARIO OR ACROSS THE COUNTRY!

FIREARMS WANTED FOR OCTOBER 19TH, 2013 AUCTION: Rifles, Shotguns, Handguns. As Estate Specialists WE manage sale of registered / unregistered firearms. Contact Paul, Switzer’s Auction: Toll-Free 1-800694-2609, info@switzersauction.com or www.switzersauction.com. WA N T E D : O L D T U B E A U D I O EQUIPMENT. 40 years or older. Amplifiers, Stereo, Recording and Theatre Sound Equipment. Hammond organs. Any condition, no floor model consoles. Call Toll-Free 1-800-9470393 / 519-853-2157.

Ads starting at

CL4435628

Saturday, October 5, 2013, 9:30 am

Weddings & Engagements

RIVERSIDE AUCTION HALL

CL433486_1003

ANTIQUE, COLLECTIBLE & FINE FURNISHINGS AUCTION Tuesday October 8 - 5pm

Tues Oct 8th @ 6pm Doors open at 5:00pm AUCTION SALE at

Advertising & Collectibles Auction

Preview Saturday, October 5, 8:00-9:30 am

CL435611

AUCTIONS

Auctions continued from page B15

EMC B Section - Thursday, October 3, 2013

JOURNEYMAN AUTOMOTIVE Service Technician(s) in Hanna Alberta. Hanna Chrysler Ltd. offers competitive wages from $30/hour, negotiable depending on experience. Bright, modern shop. Full-time permanent with benefits. Friendly town just 2 hours from major urban centres. More info at: hannachrysler.ca Fax 403-854-2845; Email: chrysler@telusplanet.net.

COMING EVENTS Grow Marijuana Commercially. Canadian Commercial Production Licensing Convention October 26th & 27th. Toronto Airport, Marriot Hotel. www.greenlineacademy.com. Tickets 1-855-860-8611 or 250-870-1882.

SERVICES

Have you become addicted to prescription medication? Drug & Alcohol Helpline 1-800-565-8603 www.DrugAndAlcoholHelpline.ca Also find us at: Drug and Alcohol Helpline on Facebook or @ConnexOntario on Twitter

ADVERTISING REACH MILLIONS OF CUSTOMERS IN ONTARIO WITH ONE EASY C A L L ! Yo u r C l a s s i f i e d A d o r Display Ad would appear in weekly newspapers each week across Ontario in urban, suburban and rural areas. For more information Call Today Toll-Free 1-888-219-2560, Email: k.magill@sympatico.ca or visit: www.OntarioClassifiedAds.com.

VACATION/TRAVEL D I S C O V E RY TO U R S - C U B A , COSTA RICA or EL SALVADOR Unique 2 week escorted tours b a l a n c e h i s t o r y, n a t u r e a n d culture. Small groups, relaxed pace. www.thediscoverytours.ca. Brochure available. CALL Toll-Free 1-800-4170250 weekdays.


COMMUNITY CALENDAR Events

BELLEVILLE Overeaters Anonymous meeting every Friday, 10 a.m. Calvary Temple, corner of Wallbridge Loyalist and Hwy 2 West. Contact Dianne 613-392-0081. “Insights into Mental Illness, an Illness like any other”, Tuesday, October 8, 7-8:30. Speaker Jeannie McQuaid, facilitator, NAMI Family to Family Programme. Learn how to obtain support and tap into education programs. The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, 135 Palmer Rd., Belleville. Call 613-968-8113 John Sands in Concert, St. Mark’s United Church, 237 Cannifton Rd N, Monday, October 7, 7 p.m. A time of fellowship will follow. Tickets $12. Info: Nancy at 613-968-8268 Habitat for Humanity is looking for volunteers for an upcoming build in Picton. Skilled trades, fundraising, public relations and more. Call 613-969-1415 Dance to the Country music of The Land-O-Lakes Cruisers, Friday October 4, Belleville Club 39, Belleville Fish & Game Club Hall, Elmwood Dr. 8 pm to Midnight. Lunch served. Members $10, Non members $12. Singles and Couples welcome. 613-395-0162 or 613-395-4901 Open Door Café - Every Wednesday from 11:30am to 1:00pm at Eastminster United Church, 432 Bridge St. E, Belleville. There is no cost for this hot meal however donations are gratefully accepted. For more info: 613 969-5212. Raise the Woof Comedy Tour to Benefit the Quinte Humane Society, Oct 12, 7 pm. Fish and Game Club Belleville, $30 each or table of 10 for $250 includes snacks/coffee. Cash Bar, Silent Auction Info: facebook.com/QLDNhelp Fashion Show and Luncheon, Wednesday, October 9, 12:00-2:00pm, 290 Bridge St W Belleville. $12. Special Guest speaker, free nursery. Reservations: Darlene 613 -961-0956. Sponsored by Belleville Christian Women’s Club. Food Addicts in Recovery Anonymous, Wednesdays, 7 p.m., St. Columba Presbyterian Church, 520 Bridge St E, Belleville for those suffering from overeating, food obsession, under-eating, or bulimia. No dues or fees for members. Info: Susan at 613-471-0228 or Hilly at 613-354-6036 or visit foodaddicts.org. Diners Club Belleville: Every Tuesday from 12noon until 2:00pm, Parkdale Community Centre, 119 Birch St. Belleville. Info: 613-969-0130 Craft and bake sale, Hillcrest Community Center, Centre St. Belleville, Sat. October 5, 9-3. BBQ lunch served from 102. Crafts, baked goods and local preserves. White elephant tables, prize draws. Cooking Basics Class, Belleville and Quinte West Community Health Centre, 161 Bridge St. W. Belleville.Wednesdays from October 16 to November 6, 2-4 pm. Registration required. Info 613-962-0000 ext 233 Foot Care every Tuesday, starts at 9am, Seventh Day Adventist Church, Belleville. Call 613-392-4181 to book an appointment. “My Girlfriend’s Closet” Sale. Recycled women’s clothes, jewellery, purses, shoes, scarves. Saturday, October 5, 12-6 and Sunday October 6, 10-3 Bay of Quinte Yacht Club, Belleville. Proceeds to Arthur Frederick Community Builders 613 969-6588 Bring your art supplies and join us at the John M. Parrott Art Gallery, Tuesday, October 8, 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. for “Open Studio Tuesdays” program. For novice and experienced artists. Free. 613-968-6731

x2240 or gallery@bellevillelibrary.ca Sunday, October 6, book launch for Vern Whalen’s “Point Anne: History of a Cement Factory Village”, published by the Hastings County Historical Society. Point Anne Firehall, 2:00 p.m. Display of historical photos. Everyone welcome Trillium 2000 Seniors Club at 75 St. Paul St., Belleville. Tuesday: cribbage; Wednesday: euchre; Thursday: carpet bowling and shuffleboard; Friday: darts. Cribbage 3rd Sunday of month. All start at 1 p.m. Open to all seniors 50 and over. The ANAF Unit 201 Pipes and Drums is recruiting members. Free lessons and Band practices are at the ANAF Unit 201 (upper Floor) 187 Front St, Belleville, Tuesday nights from 630-830pm. All are welcome. For info: www.anaf201.ca Quinte Seniors Euchre Club meets at the Parkdale Community Centre every Mon. at 1:30 pm. Everyone 50 plus welcome. Cost $3.00 includes door prize, 50/50 draw and euchre score prizes Brown Bag Lunch celebrating the BAA’s 55th and the John M. Parrott Art Gallery’s 40th anniversary. Wednesday, October 9, noon in Gallery One. Bring your lunch and a friend! Belleville Brain Tumour Support Group meets monthly on the second Wed.,7:30 p.m., Eastminster United Church. If you or someone you know has been affected by a brain tumour come join us. The Ontario Early Years Centre at Family Space supports families learning through play. Drop-in playrooms, 301 MacDonald Ave., Belleville. Open 6 days a week. Info: www.familyspace.ca or 613-966-9427. The Schizophrenia Support Services support meetings. Every second Wednesday of the month, 7- 8:30pm. Canadian Mental Health Association Offices, 199 Front St., Belleville. For info call, Sara MacDonald (613)888-5322. Belleville Chapter Shout Sister Choir practices Tuesdays 7-9 p.m. We do not audition and learn our music by ear. All levels of singers welcome. Eastminster United Church, 432 Bridge St. E, Belleville.

BRIGHTON Callanetics Class: Stretch of Yoga, strength of ballet. Fridays, 10 a.m. at Trinity-St. Andrews United Church, 56 Prince Edward St. Brighton. Call Gail to register 613-967-4447. Parkinsons Support Group meeting, Wednesday, October 9, 12;30, Fellowship Christian Reformed Church, 204 Main St. Info: Lynne & 613-475-9267. St Paul’s Church Brighton, 48 Sanford St, Noo Too Yoo Sale October 4 and October 5. Info Church Office: 613475-2000. TOPS Brighton Take off pounds sensibly weight loss support group. Meets every Wednesday at the Brighton Legion, 25 Park St. at 4:30 p.m.

CAMPBELLFORD Campbellford Senior Citizens Club, 55 Grand Road. Weekly events: Monday: 1:30 pm Bridge. Tuesday 1:00 pm Euchre, 7:30 pm Bid Euchre. Wednesday 1:30 pm Euchre. Thursday 1:30 pm Shuffleboard. Friday 1:30 pm, Cribbage, 7:30 pm Euchre. Campbellford Softball Association General Meeting, Tuesday, October 15, 7:30 p.m. sharp, Vimy Room, Royal Canadian Legion, Campbellford. Everyone welcome Fall Craft and Gift Sale, Saturday, October, 10am-3pm, Campbellford Community Centre, 65 Bridge St. E. Free

admission, door prizes. Proceeds to Alzheimer Society Campbellford Lawn Bowling, Mondays and Thursdays at 6:30 pm, Wednesdays at 2 pm. For fun and fellowship. 68 Trent Dr., Campbellford Every Monday, 7 p.m. Campbellford Citizen’s Choir meets at Senior Citizen’s Building. All welcome Learn the Art of Taoist Tai Chi classes available throughout the week, Community Resource Centre 65 Bridge St, Campbellford, Join at anytime. Info: 705 696 1841 or 705 243 5216. Lighthouse Diner (soup kitchen). Serving warm, nutritious meals at 12:00 p.m. every Friday. Come at 10 a.m. for fellowship and games. Free Methodist Church, 73 Ranney Street N. For info call (705)653-4789 or (705)653-4185 or email: cfordfmc@gmail.com Baptist Busy Bee Yard sale, 166 Grand Rd., Campbellford. Customer Appreciation Sale, closing weekend. Thurs. Oct. 10 - Fri. Oct. 11 and Sat. Oct. 12. 9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. The Trent Hills Gallery and Studio Hop, October 5 and 6. Map and brochure at www.galleryhop.ca In recognition of Mental Illness Awareness Week, the Mental Health Centre is bringing TSN’s Michael Landsberg to Campbellford High School. Wednesday October 9, 7:00 pm. Tickets are $10 at the door and various locations. Campbellford Osteoporosis Support Group meeting, Tuesday Oct 8, 2pm, Trent Hills Library 98 Bridge St Topic: Philips Lifeline PROBUS CLUB of Trent Hills Foundation Meeting Wednesday October 9, Auditorium St. John’s United Church, Campbellford 10 a.m. - noon. Of interest to retired and semi-retired men and women.

Fri. & Sat. 11-4). Men’s Social Group, Tuesdays at Community Care Northumberland, 11 King St. E. Colborne, 10-11 a.m. Info: 905-355-2989.

Church, Hastings. Weigh-in 5:15-6:15pm and meeting 6:30-7:30 pm. Join anytime. For info Kathy (705) 696-3359 Friday, October 4, 9-11 am, The “Hastings Kitchen” is open. Experience cooking from scratch. Share and learn new food skills and swap healthier recipes and take what you make home. Low cost/no fee available. Childcare available. Registration: Ontario Early Years Centre, Hastings Civic Centre or HKPR District Health Unit 1-866-888-4577 x 325. St. George’s Anglican Church, Hastings, Rummage Sale, Sat. Oct. 5, 8 am to 1 pm. Fill grocery bag $5. Saturday, October 5, Hastings Historical Society 2014 calendars are available at the Hastings Village Market, Post Office parking lot, 8:00-1:00. Knitting Club, Thursdays, 1-3pm. Yoga, Fridays, 2pm, cost $3. Zumba classes, Tuesdays and Fridays, 9:30 am, cost $3. Line dancing classes, Wednesdays 10 am, cost $3. Belly dancing classes, Thursdays 10 am, cost $3. Hastings Civic Centre, 6 Albert St. E.. Info: Sarah 705-696-3891. Tony Edwards 5 km Challenge and 2 km Junior Jog. Run or walk on the Trans-Canada trail in Hastings Saturday October 5. Start and Finish at: St. George’s Anglican Church 38 Bridge St S Hastings. Info: Jackie at jax30@hotmail.com YMCA Northumberland Ontario Early Years Centre, 6 Albert St E, Hastings. Open 5 days a week. Info: www.ymcanorthumberland.com or 705-696-1353

FOXBORO Hastings Federation of Agriculture, Central Summit Meeting, Monday, October 7, 10am - 3pm. Gilead Hall, Thurlow Township. $10 includes lunch. RSVP Judy Hagerman 613 473 4444. Agenda - Farm Machinery on the Roads presentations by MTO and OPP

FRANKFORD Take Off Pounds Sensibly (TOPS) Weekly Meetings, Wednesday Evenings, 7-8 p.m. Holy Trinity Anglican Church, 60 North Trent St. Frankford. For more information call Fern 613-3952345 Sunday October 6, Stockdale United Church will be celebrating World Wide Communion Service begins at 9:45 AM Everyone is welcome. Sunday Worship Service and Sunday School at Frankford United Church 10:30 am. All are Welcome! Alcoholics Anonymous Keep It Simple Group, 8 pm every Thursday at Holy Trinity Anglican Church Hall, 60 Trent St. N. (rear), Frankford. Info: www. quintewestaa.org or 1-866-951-3711

GLEN MILLER

Buffet Lunch at Christ Church Glen Miller, across from the bridge. Wednesday, Oct 9 , 11:30- 1:00 pm. Assorted hot and HAVELOCK cold dishes, sandwich fixings, desserts, tea Havelock’s Wellness Program at & coffee. Cost $8.00 per person. Take out the Town Hall, 8 Mathison St. in Havelock, available. 613-394-7236, please call before from 10:00 am to 12:00 pm every Tuesday 11:00 am. Everyone Welcome. and Thursday. 10-11 exercise and 11-12 The 413 Wing Pipes and Drums band various activities. Call (705)778-7831 is hosting a spaghetti dinner, Glen Miller Havelock Seniors Club weekly Christ Church, 770 Hwy 33 N, Saturday events: Cribbage Mondays 1 pm. Euchre October 5, 4:30 - 7 pm. $8 for adults, $4 Wednesdays 7 pm and Fridays 1 pm. Bid CODRINGTON for children 12 and under, $20 for a family Euchre Thursdays 1 pm. 2nd Wednesday of the month, (2 adults, 2 children). Help support 413 Codrington Women’s Institute 7:15 pm, Wing Pipes and Drums Scotland 2014! Havelock Legion: Mondays, LA Bingo. Doors open 5:30 pm, Early Bird 7 Codrington Community Centre pm. Fun Darts start 1 pm. Saturdays, Meat HASTINGS Thrift Shopping Fashion Show, Roll start 3 pm. All Welcome Wed. Oct. 9, Codrington Community TOPS (Take Off Pounds Sensibly) meetings Wednesdays at the Trinity United Continued on page B18 Centre, 2992 County Rd. 30. Everyone welcome at 7:30 pm. Free Admission! Door prizes! Sponsored by Codrington Women’s Institute ROSE Program. Info: 613-475-3508 Codrington Library open Tuesday, 2-5 pm; Thursday 9:30-11:30 am; Friday ONE AD, 5 NEWSPAPERS, OVER 70,000 HOMES 5-8 pm; Saturday 10am – 2pm.

Social Notes

COLBORNE Food Addicts Anonymous Meetings, Wednesdays, 11-noon, Prospect House, 1 Elgin Street (at King), Colborne, www. foodaddictsanonymous.org Discuss your child’s development, speech and behaviour, Wednesdays at Colborne Public School, 8 Alfred Street, Colborne. 1:00 – 2:00 pm. Info: Cheryl McMurray, Northumberland Child Development Centre, 905-885-8137 x209 or 1-866-218-1427. cheryl@ncdcent.com The Colborne Art Gallery presents Off the Map, new works by Barbara Buntin, October 5 – November 10. Opening reception, Saturday October 5, 2-4pm. Play Group, hosted by Northumberland Cares for Children, Colborne Public School, 8 Alfred St. Colborne, Fridays, 10 a.m. to noon. Info: Cheryl McMurray 905-885-8137 ext.209. Colborne Library Storytime program for children 2-5 years. Thursdays at 11:00am This free program introduces the world of books to your children. To register call 905 357-3722 or drop by (library hours: Mon. 3-8, Tues. & Thurs. 11-8,

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B17


COMMUNITY CALENDAR Continued from page B17

HAVELOCK The first Sunday of the month, Bid Euchre at the Havelock Lions Club. Games start at 1 p.m. $5.00/person. For information, contact Glen Shearer 705-778-3169 or Glen Ellis 705-778-3039. Havelock Seniors Club Bid Euchre, first Saturday of the month, 1 pm.

MADOC BADMINTON every Tuesday and Thursday, 7-9:30 p.m., Centre Hastings Secondary School, Coaching for Junior players 6-7:00 p.m. Info: Terry, 613473-5662 Foot Care Clinic: Thursday, Oct 3: 47 Wellington St, Seniors Building Common Room,from 8:00 AM. Opened to seniors and adults with physical disabilities. Community Concert, Oct. 6, 2pm, Madoc Trinity United Church, featuring show tunes etc., by various local musicians and a community choir. A free-will offering to the local Medical Centre. Sunday Afternoon Jams, second Sunday of each month. Come in to enjoy or join in. Amazing Coffee, Madoc. Diners: Monday, Oct 7, St John’s Anglican Church Hall, 115 Durham St N., 12:00 noon. Please bring your own plate, cup, and cutlery. Opened to seniors and adults with physical disabilities.

MARMORA Marmora Legion Bid Euchre every Monday starting at 1 p.m. Bingo every Monday at 7 pm Blood Pressure Clinic: Tuesday, Oct 8, Caressant Care Common Room, 58 Bursthall St, 9:30-11 am. Opened to seniors

and adults with physical disabilities. EUCHRE Fridays, 7 p.m.,Deloro Hall. Please bring light lunch. (Organized by Marmora Crowe Valley Lions) New to You Shoppe Fall Sale, Saturday October 5, 8:30am-noon, St. Andrew’s United Church Marmora. Fall Fashions & Halloween costumes, gently used fashions. Deloro UCW coffee shop upstairs. Diners: Wednesday, Oct 9, Marmora and District Community Centre (Arena), Victoria Ave., 12:00 noon. Please bring your own plate, cup, and cutlery. Opened to seniors and adults with physical disabilities. Marmora Legion: Saturday, October 5, Turkey Meat Roll 1:00 - 2:30 followed by Music On the Q T. Monday October 7, Ultimate Euchre 1pm & Bingo 7pm Euchre for Seniors each Friday all summer 1:30 p.m. in Marmora - William Shannon Room. $2

NORWOOD

Picton afternoon Shout Sister Choir welcomes new members. Practices are Wednesdays, 2-4 p.m., St Mary Magdalene Church, 335 Main St, Picton. www.shoutsisterchoir.ca

STANWOOD Community Diners, Oct. 10, Stanwood United Church,13th Line East, Stanwood, at 12pm Cost is $ 9. For more information call Sarah at 705-696-3891

STIRLING Weekly Monday Night Bingo, Upstairs of Stirling Arena. Cards on sale at 6:15pm. Starts at 6:50pm. Proceeds to support community projects. Sponsored by Stirling & District Lions Club. Blood Pressure Clinic: Thursday, Oct 10, 204 Church St, Seniors Building Common Rm, 9 am-12pm. Open to seniors and adults with physical disabilities. The Stirling Festival Theatre, The Phoenix Ensemble, Sunday October 6, 2pm. An afternoon of classical music. The bar be open. All seats $15. The History of Rock & Roll, Wednesday, October 9, 2pm & 8pm featuring Pauly & the Greaseballs. All Seats $32.50. Info: 613-395-2100 or www.stirlingfestivaltheatre.com

am-1 pm, Grace United Church, 85 Dundas St. E. Trenton, Adults $7.00, children under 5 yrs.$4.00. Everyone welcome, Supporting Youth. Knights of Columbus Oct 10, Roast Beef Dinner with all fixings, dessert, tea & coffee. Knights of Columbus Hall 57 Stella Cres. Trenton, 5-7pm , Cost $10.00. Take out available. Everyone is welcomed MONARC Weight Loss Surgery Support Group for bypass, band or sleeve recipients or those interested, Monday, Oct 7, 7pm,Trenton Memorial Hospital, 2nd floor Boardroom. www.monarcwlss. weebly.com Quinte Bay Cloggers, every Friday, 6:30 - 9:00 pm, hall at the Salvation Army, Dundas St, Trenton. All ages welcome, no experience necessary. First two nights are free. Info: Eve or Ozz at 613-966-7026 Trenton Lions Club 77 Campbell Street hosts a weekly Thursday Night Bingo. Cards on sale at 6pm regular program starts at 7pm. Everyone welcome. Quinte West MS Society Support Group, every second Monday of the month, MFRC, Rivers Dr., Trenton. 6:30-8pm. For those affected by MS, caregivers and friends. Info: trentonmsgroup@live.ca JOIN Quinte West’s Kente Kiwanis. Meetings held every Thursday morning. Everyone welcome. Call Secretary John Eden at 613-394-0316 for more info. Trenton Lions Club is looking for new members. Meetings are 2nd and 4th Wed of each month, Sept to July. Info: Membership Chairman Darlene Hiltz 613969-9502 or darlene_hiltz@yahoo.ca

October 6, 1-4pm. Open mic and dancing with L&A Country with Bill White.

TYENDINAGA Dance featuring Jeff Code, Sat. Oct. 5th 8:00 - 12:00 pm., Orange Hall, York Rd., Call Lorraine, 613-396-6792 Community Care Closet Thrift shop, 393 Main St. Deseronto, open Tuesday through Saturday from 10:00 until 4:00 Meals on Wheels Deseronto: Tuesday through Friday a hot meal delivered to your door around noon, for more information call 613-396-6591

WARKWORTH Warkworth Legion hosts bid euchre at 2 p.m. every Wednesday and a dart league at 7:30 p.m. every Thursday. Everyone welcome Stoney and the Sundance Band Open Mic Jamboree, Warkworth Legion Norham Rd, Sunday, Oct 6, 1-5. $5 admission. $3 for call up musicians. Open bar. Annual Trent Hills Grannies Sale of Well-Loved and Vintage Jewelry. Lunch available. Saturday October 5, 10am to 4pm, St. Paul’s United Church “Gathering Place”, 60 Main St. Warkworth. Free admission. In support of the Stephen Lewis Foundation. Held in conjunction with the 1st Annual Trent Hills Gallery and Studio Hop. Warkworth Spinners and Weavers, 10am, 2nd Thursday of month, Percy Heritage Building. 35 Church St. Warkworth. Karen Richens 705-696-1460.

Norwood Legion: Wing Night Thursdays, from 4:30pm. Meat Draws Fridays from 5 p.m. Dance with the Donegal Fiddlers Orchestra. Saturday October 5, 7 to 10 pm, Norwood Town Hall, 2357 County Road 45 Norwood. Admission is $5.00. TRENTON Lunch is pot luck. Jigs, reels, 2 steps and Friends of the Quinte West Library Book Sale, every Tues and Thurs and the square dance tunes. All welcome. last Sat of month, 10 am-1 pm. Accepting P.E. COUNTY book donations as well. 25 cents to $1.50. Albury Friendship Group - Quilts Quinte West Public Library. for sale each Wed 10 am - 12 noon. Albury Toastmasters InternationChurch Rednersville Rd. Proceeds to local al, Trenton Library. Every 2nd and 4th WOOLER charities for women. Wednesday, 6:30-8 pm. New members TWEED Soup and Sandwich, Monday October Every Thursday night, Mixed Fun and guests welcome. 7, 11:30 am – 1pm. $7 per person. Wooler Country Music, Actinolite Hall. First Darts Consecon Legion, 7 pm. Soup & Sandwich Buffet Luncheon by United Church A.O.T.S. Men’s Club, Sat. October 5, 11 Sunday of each month, October to May.

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B18

EMC B Section- Thursday, October 3, 2013

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