jan. 10, 2013, b section

12
(See Kirkaldy, Page 4B) Score Score BOARD SPORTS ALSO IN THIS SECTION: ADDISON COUNTY INDEPENDENT B Section THURSDAY, JANUARY 10, 2013 ANDY KIRKALDY Sports Sports BRIEFS $XWKRULW\ ¿JXUHV VKRZ EDG VLGH RI SUR VSRUWV Commodores pull away from Mt. Abe Eagles start fast, but VUHS cruises HIGH SCHOOL SPORTS Boys’ Basketball 08+6 YV %XUU %XUWRQ 98+6 YV 0W $EH Girls’ Basketball :LQGVRU YV 29 0W $EH YV 0LOWRQ COLLEGE SPORTS Men’s Hockey 1RUZLFK YV 0LGG Women’s Basketball 0LGG YV 6XIIRON HIGH SCHOOL SPORTS Girls’ Hockey 6WRZH DW 08+6 SP 1RUWK¿HOG DW 08+6 SP 08+6 DW %UDWWOHERUR SP Boys’ Hockey 5LFH DW 08+6 SP 08+6 DW 5XWODQG SP Boys’ Basketball 0W $EH DW :LQRRVNL SP 0RQWSHOLHU DW 08+6 SP 29 DW 0LOO 5LYHU SP 08+6 DW 0LOWRQ SP 0W $EH DW 0LOO 5LYHU SP 29 DW 3URFWRU SP 08+6 DW 0LOO 5LYHU SP 0W $EH DW 29 SP Girls’ Basketball 98+6 DW &ROFKHVWHU SP 29 DW 3RXOWQH\ SP 6 %XUOLQJWRQ DW 08+6 SP 0W $EH DW 0LVVLVTXRL SP 29 DW 0LOO 5LYHU SP 6 %XUOLQJWRQ DW 0W $EH SP 98+6 DW 0W 0DQV¿HOG SP 08+6 DW 0LOWRQ DP Wrestling 08+6 DW /LYHUPRUH 7RXUQH\ 29 DW 0$8 29 DW 5XWODQG 290W $EH98+6 DW (VVH[ Indoor Track 98+6 DW 890 DP 98+6 DW 1RUZLFK Gymnastics 6W - DW 08+6 SP 08+6 DW 0LOWRQ SP Nordic 08+6 DW 6WRZH SP 29 DW :RRGVWRFN SP COLLEGE SPORTS Men’s Hockey 0LGG DW 3ODWWVEXUJK SP &ROE\ DW 0LGG SP %RZGRLQ DW 0LGG SP Women’s Hockey $PKHUVW DW 0LGG SP $PKHUVW DW 0LGG SP 0LGG DW %RZGRLQ SP 0LGG DW %RZGRLQ SP Men’s Basketball &RQQ &ROOHJH DW 0LGG SP :HVOH\DQ DW 0LGG SP 0LGG DW &DVWOHWRQ SP +DPLOWRQ DW 0LGG SP Women’s Basketball &RQQ &ROOHJH DW 0LGG SP :HVOH\DQ DW 0LGG SP 0LGG DW &ROE\6DZ\HU SP +DPLOWRQ DW 0LGG SP Spectators are advised to consult school websites for the latest schedule updates. Schedule Schedule VUHS track athletes fare well at UVM BURLINGTON — Several mem bers of the Vergennes Union High 6FKRRO LQGRRU WUDFN DQG ¿HOG WHDP KDG ¿QH LQGLYLGXDO SHUIRUPDQFHV RQ 6DWXUGD\ DW D PHHW DW WKH 8QLYHUVLW\ RI Vermont. 6HQLRU KXUGOHU -RQ :HOFK WRRN VHF RQG LQ WKH ER\V¶ PHWHU KXUGOLQJ HYHQW MXVW VHFRQG RXW RI ¿UVW DQG DOVR KHOSHG WZR &RPPRGRUH UHOD\ WHDPV VFRUH SRLQWV Senior Eddie Devino took third at PHWHUV DQG MRLQHG :HOFK RQ WKH WKLUGSODFH IRXUE\PHWHU UHOD\ WHDP DORQJ ZLWK /DQH .HVVOHU DQG +DUU\ 6HQHVDF 2Q WKH JLUOV¶ VLGH VRSKRPRUH $OO\ 6WHDUQV SURYLGHG WKH KLJKOLJKW E\ WDN LQJ WKLUG LQ WKH VKRW SXW ,Q DOO WKH 98+6 ER\V VFRUHG SRLQWV DQG ¿QLVKHG HLJKWK LQ WKH team meet, and the girls scored six SRLQWV DQG ZHUH WK 7KH FRPSOHWH UHVXOWV IRU 98+6 DWK OHWHV RQ 6DWXUGD\ DW 890 ZHUH BOYS PHWHUV 1DWKDQ 8QJHU &KULV 'D\WRQ WLH -DFN 0F&DUWK\ &KULV &DVWLOOR DQG 6HEE\ &URZHOO .HVVOHU 6HQHVDF .HVVOHU 'HYLQR -DUHG 0LHGHPD 0DWWHR 3DOPHU KXUGOHV :HOFK ; UHOD\ .HVVOHU &DVWLOOR &URZHOO :HOFK ; .HVVOHU 6HQH VDF 'HYLQR :HOFK 7ULSOH MXPS &DVWLOOR 6KRW SXW 6WHYH 9DQ :\FN GIRLS $EEH\ %DNHU $OL[ .DXIIPDQ KXUGOHV .DXIIPDQ 6KRW SXW 6WHDUQV 0RXQW $EUDKDP¶V 1DWDOLH 0D\ DOVR FRPSHWHG LQ WZR GLVWDQFH HYHQWV WDN LQJ WK DW PHWHUV LQ DQG WK DW PHWHUV LQ MUHS wrestlers place at N.Y. meet 3(58 1< ² 7KH 0LGGOHEXU\ 8QLRQ +LJK 6FKRRO ZUHVWOLQJ WHDP SODFHG QLQWK DPRQJ URXJKO\ teams and second among several 9HUPRQW VTXDGV DW D 3HUX 1< WRXUQDPHQW RQ 6DWXUGD\ +RVW 3HUX FRDVWHG WR WKH WHDP WLWOH ZLWK SRLQWV (LJKWKSODFH 6W -RKQVEXU\ KDG SRLQWV WR HGJH WKH 7LJHUV ZKR VFRUHG WHDP SRLQWV $ KDOIGR]HQ 7LJHUV VFRUHG WRS VL[ ¿QLVKHV WRSSHG E\ -XQLRU -DNRE 7UDXWZHLQ¶V VHFRQGSODFH HIIRUW DW SRXQGV ZLWK D UHFRUG 6HQLRU 6N\OHU 6KXWH WRRN IRXUWK SODFH DW ZLWK D UHFRUG ZKLOH VHQLRU *DEH /DEHUJH ZHQW RQ KLV ZD\ WR IRXUWK DW 6HQLRU 7\OHU /D3ODQW WRRN ¿IWK DW SRXQGV DIWHU JRLQJ DQG IUHVKPDQ :\DWW /DEHUJH ZDV VL[WK DW 6HQLRU :DOWHU 2GHOO WRRN ¿IWK DW ZLWK D UHFRUG $FFRUGLQJ WR 7LJHU DVVLVWDQW FRDFK -RQ $VKOH\ IUHVKPDQ 1LFN %HDXFKDPS DW FRQWULEXWHG YDOXDEOH WHDP SRLQWV ZLWK KLV ¿UVW YDUVLW\ ZLQ E\ SLQ Tiger skiers earn WRS ¿QLVKHV ($67 02173(/,(5 ² 7ZR 0LGGOHEXU\ 8QLRQ +LJK 6FKRRO 1RUGLF VNLHUV FUDFNHG WKH WRS RQ 6DWXUGD\ DW D WHDP IUHHVW\OH PHHW KRVWHG E\ 8 )UHVKPDQ 6RSKLH +RGJHV ZDV QLQWK LQ WKH JLUOV¶ UDFH LQ +HU SHUIRUPDQFH KHOSHG WKH 7LJHUV WR D VL[WKSODFH ¿QLVK LQ WKH JLUOV¶ division. 6HQLRU 0DF *URYHV ¿QLVKHG WK LQ WKH ER\V¶ UDFH LQ +LV HIIRUW KHOSHG WKH 08+6 ER\V ¿Q LVK IRXUWK DQG WKH\ WUDLOHG RQO\ WKH host Raiders among the Division II WHDPV FRPSHWLQJ &KDPSODLQ 9DOOH\ VZHSW WR FRQ YLQFLQJ ZLQV LQ ERWK WKH ER\V¶ DQG JLUOV¶ HYHQWV (YHU\ QRZ DQG WKHQ WKH VHDP\ VLGH RI VSRUWV LV IXOO\ GLVSOD\HG 7KLV SDVW ZHHNHQG ZDV VXFK D WLPH DQG LQ PRUH ZD\V WKDQ RQH /HW¶V VWDUW ZLWK ¿UVW WKLQJV ¿UVW :RUG EURNH ODWH RQ )ULGD\ WKDW WKH 1DWLRQDO +RFNH\ /HDJXH RZQHUV DQG SOD\HUV KDG resolved their ODERU GLVSXWH DIWHU GD\V DQG E\ 6XQGD\ LW ZDV FRQ ¿UPHG ,W¶V QRW WKDW WKH UHVROX WLRQ ZDV XQZHOFRPH QHZV LW¶V WKDW WKH ZRUGV ³ODERU GLVSXWH´ DUH XVHG NLQGO\ ,W ZDV DOO WKH RZQHUV DQG FRPPLVVLRQHU *DU\ %HWWPDQ¶V IDXOW :KHQ \RX KDYH WKUHH ORFNRXWV XQGHU RQH FRPPLVVLRQHU¶V ZDWFK « :HOO DIWHU D ZKLOH \RX KDYH WR ZRQGHU LI WKH JX\ LV D VKLOO ZRUN LQJ IRU JUHHG\ UREEHU EDURQV %XW GRQ¶W ZRQGHU WRR KDUG 7KDW¶V WKH VLWXDWLRQ 7KLV ODWHVW ORFNRXW FDPH EHFDXVH WKH RZQHUV GLGQ¶W OLNH WKH GHDO WKH\ themselves signed after their last ORFNRXW '¶RK GRQ¶W \RX KDWH LW ZKHQ WKDW KDSSHQV" $Q\ZD\ LW PXVW EH UHDOO\ KDUG IRU HYHU\RQH LQYROYHG WR ¿JXUH RXW KRZ WR VSOLW ELOOLRQ LQ UHY HQXH ,W PXVW WDNH WHDPV RI ODZ\HUV PRQWKV DQG VWDFNV RI SHU KRXU ELOOV WR FRPH XS ZLWK D VROX THE MIDDLEBURY COLLEGE men’s and women’s swim teams had a big weekend with wins over Colby on Saturday and Bates on Sunday. Pictured from Sunday’s meet are, clockwise from top, freshman Paul Lagasse sophomore Christine Swartwout and junior Nick Keenan. Independent photos/Trent Campbell Top form COMMODORE SENIOR STANLEY Salley puts up a shot during Tuesday’s game against Mount Abraham. Salley scored 14 points in the 8748 Vergennes win. Independent photo/Trent Campbell (See Basketball, Page 3B) By ANDY KIRKALDY VERGENNES The visiting 0RXQW $EUDKDP 8QLRQ +LJK 6FKRRO ER\V¶ EDVNHWEDOO WHDP WRRN D ¿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their mark. VUHS coach 3HWHU 4XLQQ VDLG HYHQ WKRXJK WKH DWPRVSKHUH LQ WKH ULYDOU\ JDPHV LV DOZD\V HQMR\DEOH KH ZDV ZDU\ RI the Eagles — he remembered a QHDU XSVHW D \HDU DJR ZKHQ WKH &RPPRGRUHV ORVW MXVW WZLFH LQ WKH UHJXODU VHDVRQ RQ WKH ZD\ WR WKH 'L YLVLRQ ,, ¿QDO ³<RX¶UH DOZD\V QHUYRXV « 2QH of the teams is better than the RWKHU DQG WKH GRZQ WHDP SXWV RXW D JDPH DQG FKDOOHQJHV IRU D YLFWRU\ EHFDXVH RI WKH ULYDOU\´ 4XLQQ VDLG )LUVW\HDU 0RXQW $EH KHDG FRDFK 0LNH (VWH\ VDZ VRPH SURJUHVV HYHQ LI WKH ¿QDO VFRUH ORRNHG RQHVLGHG ² KH ZDV KDSS\ WR VHH WKH (DJOHV VWDUW VWURQJ DJDLQVW VXFK D WRXJK IRH ³:H¶YH EHHQ FRPLQJ RXW VORZ DQG D OLWWOH ÀDW DQG ZH FDPH RXW ZLWK D ORW RI HQHUJ\ 2I FRXUVH LW¶V 9HU “You’re always nervous … One of the teams is better than the other, and the down team puts out a game and challenges for a victory because of the rivalry.” — coach Peter Quinn

Upload: addisonpress

Post on 23-Mar-2016

219 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

Addison Independent Jan. 10, 2013, B section

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Jan. 10, 2013, B section

(See Kirkaldy, Page 4B)

ScoreScoreBOARD

SPORTSALSO IN THIS SECTION:

ADDISON COUNTY INDEPENDENT

B SectionTHURSDAY, JANUARY 10, 2013

ANDY KIRKALDY

SportsSportsBRIEFS

Commodores pull away from Mt. AbeEagles start fast,

but VUHS cruises

HIGH SCHOOL SPORTSBoys’ Basketball

Girls’ Basketball

COLLEGE SPORTSMen’s Hockey

Women’s Basketball

HIGH SCHOOL SPORTSGirls’ Hockey

Boys’ Hockey

Boys’ Basketball

Girls’ Basketball

Wrestling

Indoor Track

Gymnastics

Nordic

COLLEGE SPORTSMen’s Hockey

Women’s Hockey

Men’s Basketball

Women’s Basketball

Spectators are advised to consult school websites for the latest schedule updates.

ScheduleSchedule

VUHS track athletes fare well at UVMBURLINGTON — Several mem-­

bers of the Vergennes Union High

Vermont. -­

Senior Eddie Devino took third at

team meet, and the girls scored six

BOYS

GIRLS

MUHS wrestlers

place at N.Y. meet

teams and second among several

Tiger skiers earn

division.

host Raiders among the Division II

resolved their

themselves signed after their last

THE MIDDLEBURY COLLEGE men’s and women’s swim teams had a big weekend with wins over Colby on Saturday and Bates on Sunday. Pictured from Sunday’s meet are, clockwise from top, freshman Paul Lagasse;; sophomore Christine Swartwout;; and junior Nick Keenan.

Independent photos/Trent Campbell

Top form

COMMODORE SENIOR STANLEY Salley puts up a shot during Tuesday’s game against Mount Abraham. Salley scored 14 points in the 87-­48 Vergennes win.

Independent photo/Trent Campbell (See Basketball, Page 3B)

By ANDY KIRKALDY

VERGENNES — The visiting

their mark.VUHS coach

the Eagles — he remembered a

of the teams is better than the

“You’re

always

nervous …

One of the

teams is

better than

the other,

and the

down team

puts out a

game and

challenges

for a

victory

because

of the

rivalry.”

— coach

Peter Quinn

Page 2: Jan. 10, 2013, B section

PAGE 2B — Addison Independent, Thursday, January 10, 2013

If you’re not Sleeping, maybe you’re doing it wrong.

Woodware proudly supports

United Way of Addison County

DRUMMONDVILLE FIRM

Twin Set ....$449 Full Set ........$549 Queen Set ..........$649 King Set ................$899

Better Sleep For The Two Of You®

Motion Separation Index

170SUPER POCKETED COIL™ SPRINGSTHE GOLD STANDARD IN UNDISTURBED REST.

All Simmons® mattresses are built so well you never have to flip them

for the life of the mattress.

SIDNEY PLUSH FIRM

Twin Set ...$799 Full Set ......$1299 Queen Set ........$1399King Set ...............$1699

Better Sleep For The Two Of You®

SIDNEY EXTRA FIRM

Twin Set ...$799 Full Set ......$1299 Queen Set ........$1399King Set ...............$1699

Better Sleep For The Two Of You®

RORYURO TOP

Twin Set ....$699 Full Set ........$749 Queen Set ..........$799King Set .................$999

Better Sleep For The Two Of You®

BEAUTYRESTBLACK

Full Set ......$1995 Queen Set ........$2395King Set ...............$2695

Full Set .......$3399 Queen Set ........$3699 King Set .............$4099Cal King Set ...........$4099

COMFOR PEDICMYKONOS

1-800-261-WOOD

388-6297

FREE DeliveryFREE Set-upFREE Removal

High school basketball: Middlebury boys, Otter and Eagle girls all winADDISON COUNTY — In area

high school basketball action earlier this week, the Middlebury boys and Otter Valley and Mount Abraham girls all posted wins. The VUHS boys also hosted Mount

Abe;; see story on Page 1B. Other lo-­cal teams were idle on Monday and Tuesday. TIGER BOYS

On Monday, the Tiger boys im-­proved to 5-­2 and dealt visiting Burr

Mar-­

rott Weekes (15 points), David Burt (10) and Perry DeLorenzo (10) all

close throughout once the Bulldogs re-­covered from the Tigers’ game-­open-­ing 11-­1 run. The Tigers’ clinched the game in

the waning moments, when Mitchell Clarke — making his return from a badly sprained ankle — sank four key free throws, and DeLorenzo added two more from the line. Joey Shehadi (15) and Jake Stalcup (13)

led the 6-­1 Bulldogs. OTTER GIRLS

Also on Monday, the OV girls evened their record with a convinc-­

-­sor. The Otters set the tone by taking

-­ing which Jessica Frazier scored 10 points and Brittany Bushey hit a pair of three pointers.

Taylor Aines scored 11, and Amy Jones added six

EAGLE GIRLS

On Tuesday, the Eagles ran out to

remained undefeated at 8-­0. Ashlie Fay sparked the Eagles

with 16 points, 10 boards, eight as-­sists and seven steals, and Sam Driscoll and Meghan Livingston chipped in eight points apiece as the Eagles remained atop the Division II standings.

Men’s hockey drops two of threeMIDDLEBURY —

The Middlebury College men’s hockey team won

recent games. The Pan-­thers fell to 5-­6-­2 overall

play.The Panthers split

two weekend NESCAC games. On Friday, they

Evan Neugold scored at 1:10 and Robbie Do-­browski scored with 2:11

two goals, but Max Sil-­coff gave Middlebury the lead for good at 6:23 of the third period. He then added what proved to be the game-­winner at 8:25, on an assist from Neugold, while Middlebury was on the power play. Panther Nick BonDurant minded

the Panther net and post-­ed 28 stops.On Saturday, Middle-­

bury lost, 2-­1, at 15th-­ranked Trinity.

13:12 into the game. -­

maining before the

forward Derek Pimen-­tel returned the favor with a power-­play tally from Rob Donahoe and Thomas Freyre. The Pan-­

shots after 20 minutes,

edge in the second pe-­riod. But Trinity forward

John Hawkrigg scored the game win-­

The Panthers came up short despite

20 saves. On Tuesday, Middlebury fell to

top-­ranked Norwich (12-­1), who

the opening period, but Middlebury

advantage. Panther Zach Haggerty scored the team’s only goal — and the

-­ond period. Middlebury held a slim

leaving the game tied at 1-­1.In the third period the Cadets took

a 2-­1 lead at 12:03, then scored again with 2:16 remaining.

Middlebury returns to action on Friday when they visit 10th-­ranked Plattsburgh.

MUHS dancers

win competitionBENNINGTON — The Middle-­

bury Union High School dance team on Saturday rolled to wins in both its categories and to the over-­all title at a six-­team competition hosted by Mount Anthony.The Tigers won both the hip-­hop

and jazz disciplines on the way to

Burr & Burton in second overall at

Hip-­hop proved to be the Tigers’ strongest performance, as they

place Burr & Burton’s 226.

Burr & Burton (210.5) and Mount Anthony (202.5) led the way in pom.

The Panthers

held a 17-9

edge on shots

after 20

minutes, and

held a 16-7

shooting edge

in the second

period. But

Trinity forward

John Hawkrigg

scored the

game winner

at 12:40 in the

second period.

IN A TRIPLE overtime championship game, the Middlebury PeeWee AB team brought home the title from the Saranac Lake Hockey Asso-­ciation’s Ultimate Chill Tournament held Jan. 4-­6. Pictured are, kneeling left to right, Abby Gleason, Ben Turner, Alexander Yurista, Robbie Bicknell and Konnor Shea;; standing left to right, Kamrin Bartlett, Tyler Giorgio, Brian Kiernan, George Cairns III, Max Hirdler, Ziven McCarty, Devon Kearns and Jake Peluso;; and coaches Mark Gleason, Mark Peluso, Terri Phelps and George Cairns Jr.

Sharp skaters

Visit us at FosterMotors.com

FOSTER MOTORS

Route 7 South, Middlebury, Vermont

Business Link Dealer. Not Responsible for typographical or printing errors.

Service/Recon/Body ShopMon-Fri 8-5 Sat 8-12Sales Mon-Fri Sat 8-4Approved Auto Repair

2013 Chrysler 200 Limited

CRYSTAL BLUE PEARL COAT, 3.6 L, V6, 6-SPEED, AUTO, PWR SUNROOF, 6.5” TOUCHSCREEN RADIO W/ NAVIGATION, U-CONNECT VOICE COMMAND W/ BLUETOOTH, SIRIUSXM TRAVEL LINK W/ 1 YEAR FREE SUBSCRIPTION, PWR WINDOWS & LOCKS, CRUISE CONTROL, FACTORY REMOTE START.

* NO MONEY DOWN!* FIRST PAYMENT DUE AT SIGNING ONLY!* 36 MONTH LEASE* 10,000 MILES PER YEAR

2013 Dodge Dart SXT

BRIGHT WHITE CLEAR COAT, 2.0 L DOHC 4 CYL., 6-SPEED AUTO, ACTIVE GRILL SHUTTERS, FACTORY REMOTE START, LED “RACETRACK” TAILLAMPS, KEYLESS ENTRY W/ PANIC ALARM, TILT/TELESCOPING STEERING WHEEL. 34 MPG!!

* NO MONEY DOWN!* FIRST PAYMENT DUE AT SIGNING ONLY!* 36 MONTH LEASE* 10,000 MILES PER YEAR

2013 Dodge Avenger SE

BLUE STREAK PEARL COAT, 2.4 L,16-VALVE, DUAL VVT ENGINE, 4-SPEED, AUTO, A/C, PWR WINDOWS & LOCKS, TRACTION CONTROL, SECURITY ALARM, LED TAILLAMPS, 18” ALUMINUM CHROME CLAD WHEELS

* NO MONEY DOWN!* 0% FOR 72 MONTHS!!

2013 Jeep Grand Cherokee Laredo

WINTER CHILL PEARL COAT, 3.6 L,V6, 24-VALVE VVT ENGINE, 5-SPEED, AUTO, QUADRA-TRAC1 4WD SYSTEM, PWR WINDOWS & LOCKS, FOG LIGHTS, TILT/TELESCOPING STREERING WHEEL, 17” ALUMINUM WHEELS, DUAL ZONE TEMPERATURE CONTROL

* NO MONEY DOWN!* FIRST PAYMENT DUE AT SIGNING ONLY!* 36 MONTH LEASE* 10,000 MILES PER YEAR

STK # 2S613

Introducing... Credit Acceptance at Foster Motors!! Call Sue for information!!

Lease for $299.00 per month!

Lease for $299.00 per month!

Buy for $299.00 per month!

Lease for $390.00 per month!

STK # 2S613

STK # DT1013

STK # AV713

STK # 1831

**Qualified Buyers. 2013 Grand Cherokee must be a current Chrysler Group lessee. Tax, title, registration fees all included!

Page 3: Jan. 10, 2013, B section

Addison Independent, Thursday, January 10, 2013 — PAGE 3B

HARDWOODS & SOFTWOODSKiln Dried Lumber Mill Direct

RepairsRemodelingNew ConstructionJobs of Any Size

Pine, Maple, Oak,Cherry, Ash...

Over 100 yearsSuperior Quality/ Great Prices

PanelingFlooring

SidingTrim

Furniture & Cabinets

www.score.org

Anchor Your Online Strategy with a Solid WebsiteBlogs, photo-­sharing, and other types of social media may be getting all the buzz these

days, but websites remain the foundation of a successful online marketing strategy.

building, these channels are limited in size, content, and time. In order to truly “tell your

story”—what your small business does and how it can help your customers—a well-­

designed, comprehensive website is a must.

“Think of your website as your home base,” advises Michael Pranikoff, Global Director

of Emerging Media for PR Newswire. “All of the channels that are outside of your main

page should be set up to drive people to your business. Make sure that you are linking

all of those various posts on Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, and more back to where you

want to drive people.”

Creating a professional-­looking website has never been easier, thanks to WordPress

and other do-­it-­yourself online design tools. But looks aren’t everything. As with every

other facet of online marketing, good content is critical to both attracting customers and

enticing them to learn more.

That’s why it’s important to organize and build your website from the customer’s

perspective:

operation, etc.

Complementing narrative with photos and video is helpful, but don’t go overboard.

Often, less is better, and what you do include should look as professional as possible.

(In other words, use a digital camera or camcorder instead of a cell phone, and edit out

material with more timely, relevant information.

Many entrepreneurs have added educational components to their websites, providing

relevant information about issues customers are dealing with or their industry. As a

result, the website becomes an information resource that can help customers on an

ongoing basis.

Also make sure your website’s content is optimized for mobile devices, especially if you

own a restaurant or other business that customers may visit on impulse, or when they’re

“Mobile devices are hugely complimentary to a small business owner’s online presence

commerce and marketing. “There are great opportunities to capture the customer with

mobile search, geo-­tagging, and location-­based services like Facebook Places and

Foursquare when they are in the area.”

This column is brought to you by the local SCORE chapter and the Addison Independent.

For more information visit champlainvalley.score.org or addisonindependent.com

Little City Family Practice

Dr. Don is Retiring

We want to sharewith you the

news thatDr. Don Bicknellretired from our practice in late

December.

We will be hosting a receptionat Little City Family Practice on

Monday, Jan. 28 at 4:30 p.m.to thank him for his service

to our patients and community.Please join us to acknowledge Dr. Don!

Little City Family Practice10 North St., Vergennes

877-3466 www.portermedical.org

NOW OPEN!

GIFT CERTIFICATES AVAILABLE

CALL TO MAKE AN APPOINTMENT

BOSTON — The Middlebury College women’s basketball team (7-­5) went 1-­1 in NESCAC play this weekend before earning a non-­league win at Suffolk (7-­4) on Tuesday.

-­SCAC game on Friday, prevailing 72-­68 over host Bates. The Panthers

half, but Bates (5-­6, 0-­1) started out the second half with 11 unanswered points to cut Middlebury’s lead to 37-­32. The Panthers regained a 12-­point

cushion with a 7-­0 run, with Tra-­

points. She assisted on a three by Laura Lowry, then converted a lay-­up on an assist by Scarlett Kirk, and stole the ball from a Bates player at midcourt and coasted in for a bucket and a 55-­43 lead with 11:43 left to play.The Panthers still led by 12 with

4:01 to play, 66-­54, before Bates’ Al-­lie Beaulieu knocked down consecu-­tive threes to make it 66-­60 with 1:49 remaining. The Bobcats later got a steal and a layup by Julia Rafferty to make it 67-­62 with 34 seconds left.After Katie Pett made a free throw

for Middlebury, a Meredith Kelly three-­point play made it 68-­65 with 18 seconds left. Borsinger hit six

seconds to offset a three by Rafferty to seal the win.In addition to Borsinger’s career-­

high 29 points, Rachel Crews add-­ed 14, Lowry scored 10 and Pett grabbed 13 rebounds to go with nine

assists and eight rebounds.On Saturday, the Panthers suffered

a NESCAC loss at undefeated Tufts, 54-­41. The win moved Tufts to 13-­0 on the season and 2-­0 in the NESCAC. Kirk and Lowry had 10 points

apiece for Middlebury. Kirk added 10 rebounds for a double-­double.

the Panthers to go along with seven points.On Tuesday, the Panthers earned a

60-­44 win at Suffolk (7-­4) on. Trail-­

half, Middlebury went on a 7-­0 run

the lead for good. The Panthers went into the locker room with a 26-­22 ad-­vantage.Middlebury outscored Suffolk, 20-­

-­ond half to lead, 46-­27. Two threes from Borsinger helped spark the run. The lead grew to as many as 20 before Middlebury came away with the win.Borsinger paced the team with 18

points, followed by 12 from Crews with 10 points, and 10 boards for

game, while Jesse Miller scored six with seven boards.The Panthers return to NESCAC

play this weekend when they host Connecticut College on Friday and Wesleyan on Saturday.

Women’sbasketballtakes two of three

Basketball(Continued from Page 1B)

EAGLE JUNIOR SAWYER Kamman chases down Commodore senior Zach Ouellette during Tuesday night’s game in Vergennes. The Commodores won the game, 87-­48.

Independent photo/Trent Campbell

EAGLE JUNIOR TRAVIS Bachand beats Commodore Dan McGrath to a rebound Tuesday night.

Independent photo/Trent Campbell

VERGENNES UNION HIGH School senior Shep Carter puts up two of his game-­high 18 points against Mount Abraham Tuesday night in Vergennes.

Independent photo/Trent Campbell

gennes, and they’re good. They’re real good. They get to the hoop well, and Pete does a nice job with them. They play together well. But I really like the way we came out tonight and came in here and played,” Estey said. “The boys played well tonight.”Estey said he and his team also

enjoyed the atmosphere, including the dueling student chants, the pep bands, the cheerleaders, and the fact so many from the Mount Abe com-­

for two points for the Eagles, and it was 25-­19, VUHS after one. Then the Eagles’ wheels came off

for a few minutes: They committed 11 second-­period turnovers and went

VUHS reeled off 12 points, six from Salley inside and four from Quattrocci. VUHS led, 36-­19, when Barnes hit a jumper at 2:25. The teams exchanged hoops the rest of the period, and VUHS led at the break, 42-­27. Then Kamman drained

a three to open the second half, and the Eagles were alive. But, as Estey said, the Commodores were playing too well for his team to hang in. “Their experience and

their depth kind of sepa-­rated (them) out a little bit, but I’m real pleased with our effort tonight,” Estey said. “I hope it’s something we can build on going forward.”Eagle senior forward Cody Al-­

exander tied Bachand for the team rebound high with four, and scored four points and contributed a team-­high three assists, while Scott added

munity traveled to back them. “(We had) great support. It was en-­

tertaining,” Estey said. “It was good energy for us, an exciting place to play, like it always is.”The Commodores’ Carter said he

always enjoys the Mount Abe games — he grew up watching two older brothers play in them, and Tuesday was his seventh. “There’s nothing like it, with the

stands full in Vergennes, and when you go to Mount Abe it’s always full there, and everybody’s chant-­ing,” Carter said. “And it’s a good rivalry. It’s not a dirty rivalry. It’s not bad blood or anything. I think it’s a good, healthy rivalry and it’s really fun to play these games.”Both fan bases had plenty to

-­ter. The Commodores took a 10-­4 lead as senior center Stanley Sal-­ley (14 points, a game-­high 10 re-­bounds) scored four second-­chance points. But after Estey called for time,

Despite six straight VUHS points from Carter, the Eagles went on a 13-­6 run and took a 17-­16 lead. Senior forward Ryan Barnes and

in the surge, which was capped by treys by Kamman, senior forward Jona Scott and Barnes.But the lead was short-­lived —

run. Ouellette set up a trey by senior forward Devin Hayes, senior guard Cody Quattrocci (10 points) went coast-­to-­coast, senior forward Dan McGrath (eight points, four boards off the bench) hit two free throws, and Carter hit on the break with an assist from Hayes. Travis Bachand converted one of his four rebounds

eight points. Estey said despite Mount Abe’s

lack of success so far, his team has remained positive. “They come in every day and

work hard … They get along good, they support each other, and it’s been

fun,” Estey said. “We’re moving forward.”For VUHS, Ouel-­

assists, four steals and four boards;; Quattroc-­

Carter added three as-­sists;; Hayes, senior guard Nate Cannon, and junior guard Brendon Huestis

forward Charlie Stapl-­eford scored four.Carter said the Com-­

modores are not fully sat-­

are playing, however. Although he said the ball movement and offen-­sive balance and depth is strong, the Commodores

have hit a “lull” defensively in their past three games. “We need to talk a lot more on

defense. We also need to stop reaching and stop leaving our man wide open and start boxing out

more,” Carter said. “We’re just not all there yet.”Quinn agreed the defensive ex-­

ecution could be better. “We’re just trying to play our

best game every night, and it’s re-­ally hard to do,” Quinn said. “The guys have a real sense of purpose offensively, and they’re executing well. The defensive end, I’m not so happy with them. We’re just not smart enough right now.”The Commodores want to win

the D-­II title that just eluded them a year ago, and Quinn said they have to keep their effort level high to do so, and Quinn and Carter said the Commodores realize they need to keep trying to be their best if they want to reach that goal. “This is the last year for about

10 of our guys,” Carter said. We’ve got 10 seniors, and we’re very con-­

got to keep playing better to reach

Andy Kirkaldy may be reached at [email protected].

“Their experience and their depth kind of separated (them) out a little bit, but I’m real pleased with our effort tonight. I hope it’s something we can build on going forward.”

— CoachMike Estey

Page 4: Jan. 10, 2013, B section

PAGE 4B — Addison Independent, Thursday, January 10, 2013

“Wellness is more than the absence of illness.”

A Center for Independent Health Care Practitioners

S

OMAWOR

K

WELLNESSCENTER

Jim Condon

®

®

® ®

Gaia Billings, CMTCerti! ed Massage " erapist

Insurance Billing ~ Gi# Certi! cates

802-377-2507 www.gaiabillings.massagetherapy.com

63 Maple Street, Suite 5 (Marble Works) Middlebury

We all contain within us an ability to go to a place of deep relaxation and to develop skills to ease mental, emotional, and physical suffering. In this class, we begin with some simple techniques for quieting the mind, and soon learn powerful skills which we can

happiness and ease; the ancient skills taught in traditional meditation classes, such as those of Green Mountain Sangha, lead to a deeper, settled happiness in which we know our connection to all beings. We meet weekly in Middlebury and offer occasional retreats at our Skymeadow Retreat Center in Ripton. Beginners will be started whenever they arrive; drop-ins are welcome.

For more information please contact us at:[email protected] or 388-7329.

Green Mountain SanghaAnn Barker

wellnessd i r e c t o r y

Center for Integrative Bodywork and

Massage TherapyStacey Lee-Dobek, CMT Jack Dobek, CMT

For dissipating the effects of stress, promoting rapid healing of injury, and enhancing personal wellness, we offer our client-centered practice in a creative and collaborative fashion.

388-0414 54 Main Street, Middlebury, VT

16

802-989-5563

If you’d like to be listed in this Wellness Directory, call Pam at 388-­4944.

LICENSED ACUPUNCTURIST

802.385.1900ACUPUNCTUREHERBOLOGYM A S S A G ELeslie Galipeau

Vermont Holistic Health

Schedule a Free Consultation

[email protected] or 545-2680

Are you having a hard

time losing weight?

I specialize in helping you

your healthy body weight.

“See all things with the eyes of compassion”–Lotus Sutra

GREEN MOUNTAIN SANGHA

MeditationFor stress and in Theravadan Buddhist tradition(non-denominational as taught worldwide in hospitals)

Teachings free$5 toward rental of room unless hardship.

All levels welcome.

Thursdays 6 - 8 pm Teacher, Ann S. [email protected]

388-7329

Supporting a Healthier You

middleburyspa.com

388-0311

Foot Refl exologystimulates healing in all parts of the body.Including, but not limited to, treatment for Plantar Fasciitis, Sciatic Pain & OVERALL HEALTH

Katherine Windham, Certifi ed Refl exologistKatherine Windham, Certifi ed Refl exologist

388-­0934for information or appointment.

for over 18 years

Clinical PsychologistMarble Works

152 Maple St.Middlebury, VT 05753

425-4206Hours by Appointment

Roger A. Marum, Ph.D.

tion while league-­dependent busi-­nesses in or near rinks desperately scrape by and fans sputter helpless-­ly on the sidelines. Or they could have just said up

front, OK then, how about 50-­50, eh? Because that’s where they end-­

Sure, there were other issues: Players asked for and kept their

$300,000 to make up for wages lost because owners wouldn’t let them play. Owners got to lower teams’ salary caps from about $70 mil-­lion to roughly $64 million, starting next season, and a limit on lengths of contracts to seven years. (That last provision simply protects own-­ers from their own stupidity in giv-­ing out contracts that are too long, BTW.)See any deal-­breakers there? I

didn’t think so. See anything that required a work stoppage and that couldn’t have been settled over lunch in July? Well, maybe two lunches?Next up this past weekend we got

to ask on Sunday if NFL Washing-­ton Offensive Nicknames Coach Mike Shanahan sleeps well at night. Look, it’s already been well-­doc-­

umented that NFL coaches, general managers and administrators have a — well, to be charitable — com-­plicated attitude about players’ health. On the one hand, there has been a

lot of handwringing about and sev-­eral rule changes made to prevent concussions. On the other hand, owners have

pushed for an 18-­game schedule, and teams are asked — for the sake

of revenue, of course — to play on Thursday nights with little rest. The Baltimore Ravens thus opened their season with four games in 17 days.But all that pales in comparison to

Sunday, when Shanahan sent out a quarterback with a bad knee, injured a month before, to limp around the

trying to reach for a bad snap. He couldn’t even move to attempt to go after the nearby ball.Shanahan said the QB in ques-­

tion, rookie sensation Robert Grif-­

he could and wanted to play and had clearance from his doctor. His doc-­tor denies that, and anybody with working vision — apparently not our Mike — could tell RGIII could not, in fact, really play. And even if the Washington Of-­

fensive Nicknames could win on Sunday, what was the likelihood RGIII’s knee could survive three more playoff games? Much more likely was what did happen — a potentially devastating injury to a talented and charismatic player who is the future of the Offensive Nick-­name franchise. What observers saw in that game

was a complete lack of common sense and perspective, and a com-­plete disservice to the athlete.This observer doesn’t believe ei-­

ther Bettman or Shanahan should keep their jobs.Editor’s note: This column was

written before news revealed this week that RGIII probably has com-­plete tears in two knee ligaments.Andy Kirkaldy may be reached at

[email protected].

Kirkaldy(Continued from Page 1B)

COMMODORE SENIOR ZACH Ouellette goes up against Eagle Nick Driscoll Tuesday night in Vergennes.

Independent photo/Trent Campbell

In the paint

Men’s hoop wins two games to stay perfectMEDFORD, Mass. — The Middle-­

bury College men’s basketball team remained unbeaten winning two week-­end NESCAC games on the road. The Panthers (11-­0, 2-­0 NESCAC),

ranked second in last week’s NCAA Division III poll, topped host Bates (5-­8, 0-­1) 59-­56 in Friday’s game, the NESCAC opener for both teams. Joey Kizel had game-­highs of 17

points, seven rebounds, four assists and two steals to lead the Panthers. Nolan Thomp-­

-­tributed 13 and 12 points, respectively, and Thompson added six boards and three assists. Thompson personal-­ly outscored Bates, 8-­3, over a four-­minute stretch mid-­way through the second half, including a trey that erased a 34-­34 tie at 11:42 and an-­other at 9:49 that put the Panthers in front, 40-­35.Kizel kept Middlebury going in the

half with 10 points, two assists and two steals. Bates narrowed the Panther lead to 42-­41 with 7:41 left, when Middle-­bury’s Peter Lynch fed teammate James Jensen for a layup. A three by Nate Bulluck widened the lead to 47-­41 with 6:43 to play.

answered a lay-­up by Bates’ Graham Safford with a 15-­foot jumper to make it 54-­50 with 1:15 to go. Kizel and

throws for a 58-­52 Middlebury lead. Two Bobcat hoops then made it 58-­56, Panthers, at 0:08. Kizel made one of two free throws

with 5.9 seconds left, and missed a

three-­point buzzer-­beater from the cor-­ner to give the Panthers the 59-­56 win.Then on Saturday, the Panthers

overcame a 13-­point second-­half

Jensen to secure a 70-­69 win at Tufts (6-­7, 0-­2). They were led by 13 points

-­ryman.The Jumbos trailed and led by as

many as 13 points in the

three-­point play by Scott An-­derson with 1:57 remaining. However, Middlebury got

seconds to narrow the mar-­gin to 37-­30 at intermission.

the Panthers.Tufts built a second-­half

lead, 58-­49, but the Panthers initiated a 14-­3 run. Six Middlebury players scored during the stretch as they surged to a 63-­61 lead on a layup by Jensen with 4:39 left.Tufts tied the score at 63, but the

and led 68-­63 with 2:45 left. Tufts scored once, but Lynch responded for a 70-­65 Panther margin. Tufts closed it to 70-­67 at 1:39.The Jumbos came within one, 70-­

69, with 24 seconds on the clock. Following another time-­out, Jensen turned the ball over, but made amends by blocking a last-­second Tufts at-­tempt. Four Panthers scored in double

digits, including 12 points each by Kizel and Lynch. Kizel added nine re-­

and Thompson both recorded seven boards

Joey Kizel kept Middlebury going in the half with 10 points, two assists and two steals.

Page 5: Jan. 10, 2013, B section

Addison Independent, Thursday, January 10, 2013 — PAGE 5B

Notice

DOG TEAM CATERING. Seating 250, plus bar avail-­able. Full menus available. 802-­388-­4831, dogteamca-­tering.net.

PARTY RENTALS; China, flatware, glassware, lin-­ens. Delivery available. 802-­388-­4831.

Cards of Thanks

THANK YOU HOLY Spirit and St. Jude for prayers answered. MA.

THANK YOU ST.JUDE for prayers answered. AL.

Public Meetings

AL-­ANON: FOR FAMI-­LIES and friends affected by someone’s drinking. Members share experience, strength and hope to solve common problems. New-­comers welcome. Confiden-­tial. St. Stephen’s Church (use front side door and go to second floor) in Middlebury, Sunday nights 7:15-­8:15pm.

ALATEEN: FOR YOUNG PEOPLE who’ve been af-­fected by someone’s drink-­ing. Members share experi-­ence, strength, hope to solve common problems. Meets Wednesdays 7:15-­8:15pm downstairs in Turning Point Center of Addison County in Middlebury Marbleworks. (Al-­Anon meets at same time nearby at St. Stephens Church.

ALCOHOLICS ANONY-­MOUS NORTH FER-­RISBURGH MEETINGS: Sunday, Daily Reflections Meeting 6:00-­7:00 PM, at the United Methodist Church, Old Hollow Rd.

ALCOHOLICS ANONY-­MOUS VERGENNES MEETINGS: Sunday, 12 Step Meeting 7:00-­8:00 PM. Friday, Discussion Meeting 8:00-­9:00 PM. Both held at St. Paul’s Church, Park St. Tuesday, Discussion Meeting 7:00-­8:00 PM, at the Congre-­gational Church, Water St.

ALCOHOLICS ANONY-­MOUS BRISTOL MEET-­INGS: Sunday, Discussion Meeting 4:00-­5:00 PM. Wednesday, 12 Step Meet-­ing 7:00-­8:00 PM. Friday, Big Book Meeting, 6:00-­7:00 PM. All held at the Federated Church, Church St.

ALCOHOLICS ANONY-­MOUS BRANDON MEET-­INGS: Monday, Discussion Meeting 7:30-­8:30 PM. Wednesday, 12 Step Meet-­ing 7:00-­8:00 PM. Friday, 12 Step Meeting 7:00-­8:00 PM. All held at the St. Thomas Episcopal Church, RT 7 South.

ALCOHOLICS ANONY-­MOUS RIPTON MEETINGS: Monday, As Bill Sees It Meet-­ing 7:15-­8:15 AM. Thursday, Grapevine Meeting 6:00-­7:00 PM. Both held at Ripton Fire-­house, Dugway Rd.

ALCOHOLICS ANONY-­MOUS NEW HAVEN MEET-­INGS: Monday, Big Book Meeting 7:30-­8:30 PM at the Congregational Church, New Haven Village Green.

ALCOHOLICS ANONY-­MOUS MIDDLEBURY MEETINGS SUNDAY: 12 Step Meeting 9:00-­10:00 AM held at the Middlebury United Methodist Church on N. Pleasant Street. Discus-­sion Meeting 1:00-­2:00 PM held at the Turning Point Center in the Marbleworks, Middlebury.

ALCOHOLICS ANONY-­MOUS MIDDLEBURY MEETINGS MONDAY: As Bill Sees It Meeting Noon-­1:00 PM. Big Book Meeting 7:30-­8:30 PM. Both held at the Turning Point Center in the Marbleworks, Middlebury.

ALCOHOLICS ANONY-­MOUS MIDDLEBURY MEETINGS TUESDAY: 11th Step Meeting Noon-­1:00 PM. ALTEEN Group. Both held at Turning Point, 228 Maple Street. 12 Step Meet-­ing Noon-­1:00 PM. 12 Step Meeting 7:30-­8:30 PM. Both held at the Turning Point Center in the Marbleworks, Middlebury.

ALCOHOLICS ANONY-­MOUS MIDDLEBURY MEETINGS WEDNESDAY: Big Book Meeting 7:15-­8:15 AM is held at the Middlebury United Methodist Church on N. Pleasant Street. Discus-­sion Meeting Noon-­1:00 PM. Women’s Meeting 5:30-­6:30 PM. Both held at The Turning Point Center in the Marble-­works, Middlebury.

ALCOHOLICS ANONY-­MOUS MIDDLEBURY MEETINGS THURSDAY: Big Book Meeting Noon-­1:00 PM at the Turning Point Center in the Marbleworks, Middlebury. Speaker Meeting 7:30-­8:30 PM at St. Stephen’s Church, Main St.(On the Green).

ALCOHOLICS ANONY-­MOUS MIDDLEBURY MEETINGS FRIDAY: Discus-­sion Meeting Noon-­1:00 PM at the Turning Point in the Marbleworks, Middlebury.

ALCOHOLICS ANONY-­MOUS MIDDLEBURY MEETINGS SATURDAYD i s c u s s i o n Mee t i n g 9:00-­10:00 AM at the Mid-­dlebury United Methodist Church. Discussion Meeting 10:00-­11:00 AM. Women’s Meeting Noon-­1:00 PM. Be-­ginners Meeting 6:30-­7:30 PM. These three meetings are held at the Turning Point Center in the Marbleworks, Middlebury.

ARE YOU BOTHERED by someone’s drinking? What-­ever your problems, there are those of us who have had them too. We invite you to our Opening Our Hearts Women’s Al-­Anon group, meeting every Wednes-­day at 7:15 pm upstairs at St.Stephen’s on the Green in Middlebury.

BIBLICAL RECOVERY GROUP Meeting, Mondays 6:30-­7:30pm at Grace Bap-­tist Church, Merchants Row, Middlebury. psalm62minis-­tries.org .

OVEREATERS ANONY-­MOUS: SATURDAYS at Lawrence Memorial Li-­brary, 1:00pm. 40 North Street, Bristol. For info cal l : 802-­453-­2368 or 802-­388-­7081.

OVEREATERS ANONY-­MOUS: TUESDAYS at Turn-­ing Point Center, 5:15pm. Marble Works, Middlebury. For info call: 802-­352-­4525 or 802-­388-­7081.

Services

4 PAWS SAKE Pet Services: All Species In-­ House Vis-­its For: Walks, Play dates, Behavior Counseling, Pri-­vate Obedience, Medica-­tion Dispersal & Love. Rates by day / wk / month. Over 35 years experience. Call 802-­352-­4448 for a quote.

C&I DRYWALL. Hanging, taping and skim coat plas-­tering. Also tile. Call Joe 802-­234-­5545.

CHAIN SAW SHARPENING 802-­759-­2095.

CONSTRUCTION: ADDI-­TIONS, RENOVATIONS, new construction, drywall, carpentry, painting, floor-­ing, roofing. All aspects of construction, also property maintenance. Steven Fifield 802-­989-­0009.

FREELANCE GRAPHIC DESIGNER offering reason-­able rates for work in Adobe Photoshop and InDesign, Custom Clip Art, Logos and Artwork. Basic tutorial in pho-­toshop and indesign. Great references. $15 / hour or by contract. No job too small. Email: [email protected] or call 483-­6428.

HANDYMAN SERVICES. Carpentry jobs and repairs, inside and outside. Con-­crete stair and sidewalk repair. New construction of sidewalks, stairs and small concrete slabs. Lawn mow-­ing, hedge trimming, brush trimming, power washing, yard work and cleanups. Light trucking. Gene’s Prop-­erty Management, Leicester. Fully insured. 802-­349-­6579.

MELISSA’S QUALITY CLEANING Services. Resi-­dential and commercial. Fully insured. Great rates. Reli-­able and thorough cleaning. 802-­345-­6257.

LAMP REPAIR

skilled, reasonably pricedHomestead Candle

& Wreath Shop

Free

FREE RABB IT MA-­NURE! Please call Mo at 802-­349-­8040.

Lost/Found

LOST: 2 GOLD necklaces, 1 with diamond pendant. Lost December 18 near Little City Family Practice inVergennes. Reward. Call 802-­877-­6229.

Help Wanted

ADMINISTRATIVE ASSIS-­TANT: Ilsley Public Library, 20 hrs / wk, excellent organi-­zational, interpersonal, and computer skills. Job descrip-­tion on website. Cover letter and resume to: [email protected] .

BANKRUPTCY: Call to find out if bankruptcy can help you. Kathleen Walls, Esq. 388-­1156.

BRANDON, DOWNSTAIRS 2 bedroom apartment. With-­out utilities. $600 / month. 802-­247-­5280.

DRIVERS: CDL-­B: Great Pay, Hometime! No-­Forced Dispatch! New singles from Plattsburgh, NY. Passport / Enhanced License req. www.t ruckmovers.com 888-­567-­4861.

FIRE AND ICE is accepting application for waitstaff and bartenders, apply in person. 26 Seymour St., Middlebury.

CLASSIFIEDSAddison Independent

DEADLINES: Thurs. noon for Mon. paperMon. 5 p.m. for Thurs. paper

CLASSIFIED ORDER FORMAddison Independent

Cash in on our 4-for-3 rates! Pay for 3 issues, get 4th issue free! Example: A 20-word ad is just $5.50. An ad placed for consecutive issues (Mondays & Thursdays) is run 4th time free! Cost is $16.50 for 4 issues plus $2.00 internet charge.

PLEASE PRINT YOUR AD...

The Independent assumes no financial re-sponsibility for errors in ads, but will rerun classified ad in which the error occurred. No refunds will be possible. Advertiser will please notify us of any errors which may occur after first publication.

Number of words:Cost:# of runs:Spotlight Charge:Internet Listing: $2.00TOTAL:

ADDISON INDEPENDENTP.O. Box 31, Middlebury, VT 05753

802-388-4944email: classifieds@addisonindependent.

RATE

S

Opportunities, Real Estate, Wood heat, Attn. Farmers, For Rent & Help WantedNoticesCard of ThanksPersonalsServicesFree**Lost ’N Found**Garage Sales Lawn & GardenOpportunities

Work WantedHelp WantedFor SalePublic Meetings**For RentWant to RentWood HeatReal EstateAnimals

Att. FarmersMotorcyclesCarsTrucksSUVsSnowmobilesBoatsWantedReal Estate WantedVacation Rentals

Name:

Address:

Spotlight with large $2 ** no charge for these ads

The Volunteer Center, a

collaboration of RSVP

and the United Way of

Addison County, posts

dozens of volunteer

opportunities on the

Web. Go to www.

unitedwayaddisoncounty

.org/VolunteerDonate

and click on

VOLUNTEER NOW!

Loc a l age nc ie s c an pos t t he i r vo lun te e r ne e ds w i t h The

Vo lun te e r Ce n te r by c a l l i ng RSVP at 388-7044.

Friendly VisitorsThe Lodge at Otter Creek is seeking volun-

teers to serve as friendly visitors: reading

books, playing games, crafting or baking.

Musicians, artists and individuals who have

taken their dogs through the pet-therapy

training course are also welcome! Come

share your time, your talents and your

tenderness with the elderly residents at the

call 388-7044 for more information.

Asha Bougor, of Shoreham, helped supervise the children at

the Addison County Parent Child

Center during the United Way Days of Caring. She has expe-­rience volunteering at Sunshine

Day Care and at the Otter Creek

Child Care Center, and has weed-­

ed the gardens at the elementary

school in Shoreham. Asha ex-­

plains that “…volunteering is

fun! Everybody should do it!”

Thanks so much, Asha!

Find that perfect job or exceptional employee in our

wwww.addisonindependent.comor call 388-4944

A Good Deal.

HELP WANTED

WORK WANTED

Shoreham Service Centeris becoming a

Now hiring for all positionsFull and part-time.

Full-time positions with benefits.

Apply in person atShoreham Service CenterRte. 22A, Shoreham, VT

EOE

Facility Services Director

Cook — Part-­‐Time — 40 hours every two weeks

some weekend and holiday availability.

!This part-time position is 16-24 hours a week primarily during the evenings. Applicants must be willing to work every other weekend and holidays.!

For more information about EastView at Middlebury, go to:

www.eastviewmiddlebury.com

Interested candidates please email:

[email protected]

Or send resume with cover letter to:

EastView at Middlebury

EOE

Resident Centered, Locally Governed

Public Meetings

Services

Public Meetings

Services

Services

Help Wanted

Services

Services

Help Wanted

Services Services

Help Wanted

Services

Help Wanted Help Wanted

Page 6: Jan. 10, 2013, B section

PAGE 6B — Addison Independent, Thursday, January 10, 2013

D I R E C T O R Y

Business Service

Heidi Brousseau

ACCOUNTING

SERVICES

Located in Addison , VT

Specializing in...

802-­343-­3609

Cell: 802-989-5231Office: 802-453-2007

LOCAL CONTRACTOR

GENERAL CARPENTRYHOME IMPROVEMENTS

WINNER of “Best Local Contractor” forTHREE CONSECUTIVE YEARS by READERS CHOICE AWARDS!

MIDDLEBURY, VERMONT

MARK TRUDEAUMARK TRUDEAU

802.388.0860802.388.0860

Quaker Village

CARPENTRY

Siding, Windows, Garages, Decks & PorchesNew Construction, Renovations and Repairs

Maurice Plouffe

802-545-22511736 Quaker Village Road

Weybridge, VT 05753Insurance Approved discounts

Desabrais Means Glass & Affordable Service

ALLEN’S FLOOR &

CARPET CARE

877-9285PROFESSIONAL SERVICE SERVING OUR CUSTOMERS SINCE 1992

RESIDENTIAL & COMMERCIAL

RESTORE & REFINISH ALL WOOD FLOORS

CLEANING OF CARPETS AND UPHOLSTERY

TILE & OTHER FLOORS

FREE ESTIMATES ULLY INSURED

Renovator

Stripping - Waxing - BuffingCarpet Cleaning & Water Removal

802-759-2706phone or fax

or

802-349-6050cell phone

email: [email protected] Jersey St S Addison, VT 05491

See more CONTRACTORS

listed under HANDYMAN

www.brownswelding.com

275 South 116, Bristol, Vermont 05443

40 TYPES OF RENTAL EQUIPMENT TO CHOOSE FROM

Chimney Service

INSURED

Now Offering Firewood to

Addison County$50 stacking feewithin 15’ for 1 cordwww.centralvermontchimneysweeping.com

(802) 558-­4336

Blacksmith

RESIDENTIAL WIRING & TROUBLE SHOOTINGTERRY BLAIRLICENSED & INSURED 388-6869

Electrician

Equipment Rentals

Dentistry

Field Automotive Inc.

Preventive Maintenance

62 Meigs Rd., Vergennes877-­9222

Over 30 yrs. experience

Automotive

Handyman

SMALL JOBSSMALL JOBS

453-­5611

HANDYMAN SERVICES~AND~MUCH MORE

Mike DeverHonest Dependable

DELIVERY AVAILABLELocated at the corners of Route 116 & 17 in Bristol

www.livingstonfarmlandscape.com

VISIT US ON FACEBOOK

CREDIT CARDS ACCEPTED

Healthcare

CLOVER STATEWINDOW & SIDING CO., INC

Waste Management – Roll-off container service

Fast, friendly, reliable service & competitive rates.802-­877-­2102 Toll Free: 888-­433-­0962

[email protected]

THE PC MEDIC OF VERMONTGET YOUR COMPUTER RUNNING LIKE NEW AGAIN !

[email protected]

“We try our best to give superior

quality and comfort.

Our team cares about your

dental health.”

Thomas A. Coleman, D.D.S.Ayrshire Professional Building

(802) 247-­3336www.drtomcoleman.com

- An Established Vermont Business with Over 25 Years of Experience -

54 Daigneault Hill RoadOrwell, Vermont 05760 802-948-2004

Specializing in Hardwood & Softwood Floors

Commercial Oil and Waterborne FinishesQuailty Workmanship - Competitive Pricing

Floor Care

Insulation

CSI: ComputerSpecialists Inc.

388-­1444www.computersvt.com

Rte 7 So., Middlebury (across from A&W)

Your LOCAL PC Specialist

Floor Care

802-388-7828 End of S. Munger St. Middlebury

Rough

Lumber

Pine

Siding

Open

most nights

& weekends

Long

Beams

Native

Vermonter

Lumber

DAVID PETERS MASONRY & CONSTRUCTION, LTD.

CELL: 802 349 9795 HOME: 802 352 4749WWW.VERMONTHOMEANDHEARTH.COM

[email protected]

Stone...everlasting...a balance of logic, strength and scale... a framework for

nature’s enduring beauty.

Stone & BrickMasonry

Masonry

Happy to work nights, weekends and holidays.

References available.

Melissa Raymond 631-708-7435 or 802-989-8457

EXPERIENCED, ATTENTIVE, LOVING ELDERCARE

in your home

Page 7: Jan. 10, 2013, B section

Addison Independent, Thursday, January 10, 2013 — PAGE 7B

Property Management

B. Michael Paul L.S., P.P.

Land Surveyor & Professional Planner

On-Time, Cost E!ective, ProfessionalLand Surveying & Planning Services

802-453-6000 ~ [email protected]

Renewable Energy

DUNDON'S

Plumbing &Heating

Pressure Washing

VERMONT PRESSURE WASHING

!802" 558#4336!802" 558#2966

SWEEPS

BRISTOL ELECTRONICS

802-­453-­2500

Soak Up The Sun!Don’t spend your hard-­earned money making the hot water or electricity that you use today–

SOLAR IS MORE AFFORDABLE THAN EVER!

Go Green with us – www.bristolelectronicsvt.com

We’ve been here for you for 40 years – Let us help you with your solar projects today.

The #1 Solar Hot Water Systems Installerin the state of Vermont for 2011.

Call for a FREE on-­site evaluation

RENTAL MANAGEMENTARE YOU TIRED OF TRYING TO FIND THE PERFECT TENANT?

Let us handle everything from advertising to collecting your rent.

Contact us to !nd out how we can help you.

802-377-8202VERMONTwelcomesYOU.com

Coldwell Banker Bill Beck Real Estate

NEW HAVEN

SELF STORAGE

Storage Units Available!We also now have

Boat, Car & R.V.

storage!

2877 ETHAN ALLEN HWY. (RT.7)

Now owned by Mike’s Auto & Towing

Under new management!

Painting

BUY PHOTOS ONLINE AT

WWW.ADDISONINDEPENDENT.COM

ROOFING

DAVID PETERS MASONRY & CONSTRUCTION, LTD.

CELL: (802) 349-9795HOME: (802) 352-4749

Standing Seam, Asphalt & Slate Roofing & Roof Repair

WWW.VERMONTHOMEANDHEARTH.COM [email protected]

Serving all your plumbing and heating needs.Owned and operated by:

Bill Heffernan, Jim & David Whitcomb

Installation & Service

125 Monkton RoadBristol, VT 05443802-­453-­2325

Fuel

185 Exchange StreetMiddlebury, VT 05753

802-­388-­4975

Business Service D I R E C T O R Y&

CREDIT CARDS ACCEPTED

453-2226winter products

Winter Products

LAROSE SURVEYS, P.C.Ronald L. LaRose, L.S. • Kevin R. LaRose, L.S.

Land Surveying/Septic Design“We will take you through the

permitting process!”

25 West St. • PO Box 388Bristol, VT 05443

Telephone: 802-453-3818Fax: 802- 329-2138

[email protected]

SHORT SURVEYING, INC.Serving Addison County Since 1991

Timothy L. Short, L.S.

Rodney Orvis, L.S.

388-­3511 [email protected]

FIND IT HERE!

Washington St. Ext.Middlebury

www.middleburyah.com

388-2691Thomas L. Munschauer, D.V.M.

Scott Sutor, D.V.M.Tracy A. Winters, V.M.D.

Mark C. Doran, V.M.D.

Veterinary Services

STORAGE4 Sizes ~ Self-locking unitsHardscrabble Rd., Bristol

Monthly prices6’x12’ $30 8’x12’ $45

10’x12’ $55 12’x21’ $75

VISIT US ON

FACEBOOK www.livingstonfarmlandscape.comCREDIT CARDS ACCEPTED

FOR SEPTIC TANK PUMPING & DRAIN CLEANING SERVICE,

Rely on the professionals.PORTABLE RESTROOMS

Rt. 22A, Orwell948-2082

388-2705

DUNDON'S

Plumbing &Heating

Phone (802) 537-3555

roofi ngMichael DoranAs seen at Addison County Field Days!

Septic

Medical Supplies

Marble Works, Middlebury, VT

Medical Equipmentand Oxygen

SALES & RENTALKnowledgable Staff Personalized Service

388-9801 Fax:388-4146

Sewing

PINS & NEEDLESLynda Wetmore Bushman

802-388-7423

Septic & Water

AIRPORT AUTO

44 School House Hill Road, E. Middlebury

Kevin R. LaRose, L.S., E.I.Site Technician

Email: [email protected]

163 Revell RoadLincoln, VT 05443

(802) 453-4384FAX (802) 453-5399

Celebrating 28 YearsSteve Revell CPG-­CST

Toll-­Free: 800-­477-­4384802-­453-­4384

www.lagvt.com

Stamps

All Seasons Painting

382-1644Established in 1990

Interior/ExteriorCommercial

Free Estimates All work professionally done & guaranteed

Available at the Addison Independent

in the Marble Works, Middlebury

388-4944

MADE TOORDER

Self Inking &

Hand Stamps

Page 8: Jan. 10, 2013, B section

PAGE 8B — Addison Independent, Thursday, January 10, 2013

FULL-­TIME AUTOMOTIVE Technician wanted for fast paced automotive center. Knowledge of all makes and models necessary. Ideal can-­didate must have own tools, experience and be customer oriented with strong customer service skills. Clean, valid drivers license required. Send resume to Blind Box D, Po Box 31 Middlebury, VT 05753.

HIRING CARE GIVERS for 11pm-­7am shift. Email your resume and references to [email protected] .

JACK OR JANE of all trades. ND’s, Bristol. Assistant / prep cook, dishwasher and wait-­staff needed. Please contact Nina, 363-­7486 or Dave, 343-­8939.

SHEA MOTOR COMPANY in Middlebury offering Chevrolet cars and trucks, is currently accepting applications for an outgoing professional to expand our sales team. This is your opportunity to join a winning team and maximize your earning potential! The ideals candidate must be a positive self-­starter with ex-­cellent communication and organizational skills, as well as being goal oriented and possess a strong work ethic. Sales experience is not nec-­essary but is preferred. If you feel that a sales career with unlimited earning potential is for you, please send resume to: Shea Motor Company, PO BOX 747, Middlebury, VT 05753 Attn: Mark Stacey or e-­mail [email protected] .

Medical Billing/Front Desk

Representative:Responsibilities

include but are not limited to; daily depos-its, accounting, quick

books, insurance follow-up, import-ing into EMR and

reception duties as needed. Experience:

strong computer skills, accounting, medical billing experience, excellent customer service/phone skills and analytical skills.

Please submit cover letter and resume

attention to: mhalnon@

mountainhealthcenter.com

LOCAL FOOD SERVICE Company seeking drivers for our VT, Boston and CT routes on a flexible schedule from Thursday through Monday. CDL is not required. Clean driving record required. Driv-­ing experience a plus. Must be capable of loading and unloading bins up to 40 lbs. with good customer service skills. Problem solving ability and attention to detail critical. Email resume and references to: [email protected] .

MIDDLEBURY NATURAL FOODS Co-­op seeks an As-­sistant Bookkeeper to take the lead on all aspects of accounts payable and a wide range of administrative tasks. Ideal candidate has several years experience work-­ing with accounts payable, money handling, Excel, and QuickBooks. Must be detail oriented, able to work well with others, provide excellent customer service and cashier as needed. Full-­time with ex-­cellent benefit package. To apply, complete application (available in our store at www.middleburycoop.com) and send it with a letter of interest to: Middlebury Natural Foods Co-­op, 1 Washington St., Middlebury, VT 05753.

OTTER CREEK CHILD Center is looking for an en-­thusiastic, flexible, and en-­ergetic individual to join our child care team. Must enjoy spending time with infants up to preschool age children. This is a permanent part-­time position, 12:00pm to 5:30pm. Monday through Friday. Indi-­vidual must have a minimum of a CDA. Please send re-­sume with three references to OCCC, 150 Weybridge Street, Middlebury, VT 05753. Or [email protected] .

SHARED LIVING PROVID-­ER: Young man with devel-­opmental disability in his 30s seeking a home in Bristol. Ideal would be a couple with no children or older children. He enjoys listening to music, going out for coffee, lunch, social activities. Needs sup-­port in learning independent skills. He would benefit from structured home environment. Behavioral management skills a plus. Generous tax-­free stipend of approx $28,000 plus room and board payment of $8300, as well as a respite budget. Call Rocky Fucile at Community Associates at 802-­388-­4021.

STAFFED LIVING: Residen-­tial Instructor sought for a home in Middlebury, support-­ing a 30 year ols woman with mild developmental disability. Suppose needed in build-­ing friendships, developing interests outside the home, self-­regulation and improving communication. Most impor-­tant skill is the ability to main-­tain firm personal boundaries. Experience in some type of human services is helpful. Full-­time with comprehen-­sive benefits. 36 hours with one overnight, 3 days off a week. Respond to CSAC HR, 89 Main Street, VT 05753. 802-­388-­6751 ext. 425, or visit www.csac-­vt.org .

THE BURLINGTON FREE Press is looking for indepen-­dent contractors to deliver our newspaper in the towns of Bridport, Monkton, Starks-­boro. Must be available early mornings (done by 6 am). Must have reliable vehicle with proof of license and in-­surance. If interested, contact Monique at 316-­7194.

For Sale

26” LG TV: New Panasonic DVD player. $150 for the pair. Call 802-­377-­7590.

4 STUDDED TIRES General Altimax Arctic 215/60/16. Only 4 months use. $300. 948-­2615.

BULK SALT AND salted sand; loaded or delivered. Livingston Farm Landscape. 802-­453-­2226.

MO’S COUNTRY RAB-­BITS: Fresh Rabbit Meat for sale. Average weight: 4-­5 lbs. Charging $14.00 per rabbit. Also selling live adult rabbits, as well as baby rabbits for negotiable price. Many different breeds includ-­ing “Giants”. May be seen by appointment. Call Mo O’Keefe at 802-­349-­8040. Great Meat. Great Pets. Great Prices.

THE BARREL MAN: 55 gal-­lon Plastic and Metal barrels. Several types: 55 gallon rain barrels with faucets, Food grade with removable locking covers, plastic food grade with spin-­on covers (pickle barrels). Many types of bar-­rels including 275 gallon food grade totes. 55 gallon salt / sand barrels PT legs. Deliv-­ery available. 802-­453-­4235.

VERMONT ANTIQUE GUN / KNIFE SHOW: January 19-­20. South Burlington, Holiday Inn. 802-­875-­4540.

Vacation Rentals

1, 2 AND 3 BEDROOM rentals on Lake Dunmore, Nicely furnished. Most with drilled wells, satellite, internet, washer / dryer. All non-­smoking, most no pets. 2-­6 people max. Weekend or weekly starting at $500. 802-­352-­6678.

FALKENBURY FARM Guest house. Nightly rentals. You rent the whole house. 30 minutes from Middlebury. www.falkenburyfarm.com or call 802-­537-­2979.

For Rent

2 BEDROOM UPSTAIRS apartment. $1145 / mo. In-­cludes electricity, hot wa-­ter, heat, rubbish removal. No pets. Security deposit. 802-­453-­4037.

2400 SQ. FT. AVAILABLE for short or long term. Two loading dock doors on Rt. 7 in Middlebury make it ideal for storage and distribu-­tion. Opportunity for addi-­tional space in May. Call 802-­247-­3658 for more in-­formation.

4000 SQUARE FEET or less. Professional Office space in Middlebury, multi-­ room, receptionist desk. Ground level, parking, handi-­capped-­accessible. Available now. 802-­558-­6092.

ARTIST SEEKING STU-­DIO space to rent in Bristol / Middlebury area. Printer / Painter working with non-­tox-­ic materials and no heavy equipment. Contact email preferred, barkingbee@gma-­vt.net or call 802-­453-­4648.

BRANDON 2 BR $650 + utilities. 802-­773-­9107 www.thefuccicompany.com .

BRANDON 3BR APART-­MENT Private entryway, full bath, carpetted bedrooms, laundry hook-­up, basement / storage, desirable parking. $940, heat, w&s included. 802-­352-­4700.

BRANDON SUNNY 1 Bed-­room, Second floor, pets welcome. $400 / month. 203-­253-­4389.

BRANDON, DOWNSTAIRS 2 Bedroom apartment. With-­out utilities. $600 / month. 802-­247-­5280.

BRANDON: 55 & OLDER. First floor, 1 bd unit in a secured building (Tamarak Building). Country setting yet close to town. Rent is $680 plus tenant pays electricity. Heat is included in rent. Coin operated laundry room and elevator on site. 24 hour emergency maintenance available. For an applica-­tion, call Patty Howard at EP Management, Corp at 802-­775-­1100. EHO.

BRIDPORT; 1 BEDROOM, bath and 4-­room apartment with porch / lawn. Washer / dry-­er, heat / hot water included. No smoking, no pets. Ref-­erences. $775 / month plus security deposit. Only living unit in building. For more info, David 802-­758-­2546.

BRISTOL 1 BEDROOM h e a t e d a p a r t m e n t . Lease, references, credit check. No pets. $585 / mo. 802-­453-­3712 .

BRISTOL 2 BEDROOM bungalow. $1100 / month, heat included, radiant floor heating. Parking for 2 cars. 802-­453-­2009.

BRISTOL COTTAGE HOUSEMATE: Charming! Fully furnished. Private bed-­room with attached living room. No pets, non-­smoking. $700 / month. Share utilities. 1 mile from village. Call 802-­363-­4789.

BRISTOL LARGE ONE bed-­room apartment. Walking distance to town. No pets. No smoking. $700 / month and utilities and deposit. Call 802-­388-­0730.

BRISTOL MOBILE HOME in Bristol Notch. $700 per month. Deposit required. 802-­363-­3341.

BRISTOL, LARGE ONE / PLUS Bedroom Apt. Efficient gas heat, includes water and sewer, no pets / smoking, $700 plus electric and heat, call Tom at Wallace Realty. 802-­453-­4670.

BRISTOL: 2 BEDROOM, quiet building. Lease, refer-­ences, credit check. No pets. $625 / mo. 802-­453-­3712.

BRISTOL; 2 BEDROOM apartment, ready for oc-­cupancy. 3 miles from village stop light in nice community neighborhood. Call 802-­453-­4207, Reg or Brenda.

BRISTOL; 3 BEDROOM Apartment, 1-­1/2 baths. Includes heat, water / hot water, lawn care, snow re-­moval, appliances, garage. $1050 / month plus security. 802-­453-­2566.

BRISTOL; IN SMALL, clean park: 2 bedroom mobile home and nice 4 bedroom doublewide home. Call for more info, 802-­453-­4207 Reg or Brenda.

CORNWALL: LARGE ROOM (15’ x 15’) in 200 Year Old Farmhouse. Full use of kitchen, all utilities included. Rented by the month. Call 802-­349-­6811 for more details.

FERRISBURGH APART-­MENT, 1000+ sq.ft., 2 bed-­rooms, office. Rent includes: water, electricity, w/d, trash and snow removal. No pets. Must have referenc-­es. $950 / mo. plus deposit. Available February 1. Call 802-­384-­3311.

HOUSE; $850 / MONTH. 1 bedroom plus loft. Includes: stove, refrigerator, w/d hook-­up. Located 2 miles north of Middlebury. Deposit required. No pets. No smok-­ing. 802-­349-­7557.

LAKE DUNMORE 2 Bed-­room unfurnished year round home. Includes all appli-­ances, mowing and snow plowing. $1000 / month. No pets, no smoking, no utili-­ties included. First, Last and Security deposit required. Application and references required. 802-­438-­5385.

LAKE DUNMORE LOVELY two bedroom winterized lake front cottage. Available Jan-­uary-­June, 2013. 10 miles to Middlebury or Brandon. Rates start at $720 / month plus heat and utilities. Plow-­ing, trash collection, satellite tv and wi-­fi included. Call 802-­352-­4236 or email [email protected] .

MIDDLEBURY 1 BED-­ROOM apartment near downtown. Appliances, lease, security deposit. No pets. Real-­Net Management, Inc. 802-­388-­4994.

MIDDLEBURY 1 BED-­ROOM Second floor apart-­ment on Court St., includes parking, heat, water, recycle. Wood floors, walk in closets, eat in kitchen. $775 / month, One year lease, first, last, security. Steep inside stairs. Not pets or smoking. Credit / Criminal check required. 802-­349-­4288.

MIDDLEBURY 2BR APART-­MENT, all new, close to college. Heat, water, and electric included. Washer and dryer. $1400 / month. 388-­4831.

MIDDLEBURY 4 BED-­ROOM house available with Washer / Dryer. Electric included. $1100 / month plus heat. To inquire, mail to P.O. Box 702, East Middlebury, VT 05740.

MIDDLEBURY NEAT 2 bedroom apartment by Pulp Mill Covered Bridge. $1200 / month includes utilities. Security deposit. Available now. Call 802-­388-­2446 or 802-­989-­1751.

MIDDLEBURY OFFICE SPACE: Ground floor Court St. location. Off street park-­ing. 600 to 2,000 sq. ft. Re-­al-­Net Management, Inc. 802-­388-­4994.

MIDDLEBURY-­ 2 BED-­ROOM apartment with small porch, available as soon as February 15. Walk-­ing distance to downtown. Heat, hot water, garbage, and snow plowing included in monthly rent amount of $880. Non-­smoking apart-­ment. Sorry, no pets. Ref-­erences and deposit re-­quired. 802-­545-­2508 or 802-­233-­5178.

MIDDLEBURY: 4 BED-­ROOM House. $1400 / month plus utilities. Great Green Mountain view. Please no smoking, no pets. 802-­388-­6363.

CLASSIFIEDSAddison Independent

It’s against the law to discriminate when advertising housing related activities.

Particularly on sites like Craigslist.

And it’s easier to break the law than you might

think. You can’t say “no children” or “adults only.”

There is lots you can’t say. The federal government

is watching for such discrimination.

Let us help you sift through the complexities of the Fair

Housing Law. Stay legal. Stay on the right side of the

nation’s Fair Housing Law.

Call the Addison Independent at (802) 388-­4944.Talk to our sales professionals.

Classified Ads (Published: 5/5/11)

For Rent

1 BEDROOM APARTMENT

Main Street, Middlebury, newly refurbished. Close to college.

$750/month, includes heat. 000-­0000.

1 BEDROOM APARTMENT,

upstairs, includes heat, electric, rubbish, 1 mile north of Middlebury

on Route 7. Available immediately, $595/month plus deposit. 000-­0000.

2 BEDROOM MOBILE home

in Salisbury. Private lot. $650/mo. plus utilities. Deposit and reference

required. 000-­0000.

2 BEDROOM TOWNHOUSE/CONDO

Country Commons, Vergennes. Garage and basement. References required.

$1,000/mo. excluding utilities and heat. No pets. 000-­0000.

2 BEDROOM, MODERN, completely

furnished Lake Dunmore house. Hi-­speed internet, satellite, washer,

dryer, screened porch, drilled well, 85’ lake frontage. Very energy

efficient. For 10 month rental; starting August 29, 2009 through June

26, 2010. Non-­smoking. Pets negotiable. $1,000/mo. plus utilities. 802-­352-­6678.

Employment Opportunity

(Part-­Time / Full-­Time)Operations Support Specialist

Apply in person, Tuesday or Thursday 9:00AM to 1:00PM

1396 Route 7 South (across from Greystone Motel)

802-­388-­3838

The Town of Middlebury seek a friendly, pleasant

candidate with outstanding customer service skills

for the position of Accounting Clerk. Knowledge

of basic accounting functions with a minimum of

two years’ payroll, A/P, and billing experience.

Associate’s Degree in business, accounting or a

package offered.

Complete job description and application may be

obtained at the Municipal Building, by calling 802-­

388-­8100, ext 203 or on-­line at www.middlebury.

Interested candidates should forward application

and cover letter to:

Jacqueline Sullivan

Accounting Services Manager

Middlebury Municipal Building

94 Main St., Middlebury, VT 05753 or

[email protected].

To ensure consideration for this position,

interested candidates should apply immediately.

EOE

TOWN OF MIDDLEBURY

Accounting Clerk

CITY OF VERGENNES

FULL-­TIME EMPLOYMENT

DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC WORKS

person to work full-­time with the Public Works Department. Commercial Driver’s License is

Compensation: $15.00 to $16.50 per hour with

05491. For more information contact Public

Please apply in person1137 Rte 7 North, Middlebury, VT

(802)388-­4482

Mountain View Equipment of Middlebury, LLCLooking for

Service Technicians1 plus years experience in agricultural equipment.

Clean driver’s license. Tools required.

BRANDON - Prime Downtown Rental Spaces

available now. 2 units, each over 1000sq. ft., or can be converted to one large unit.

$800/$700 plus electric. Excellent visibility and parking. Bright and sunny. Call 802-989-4875

Check the Classifieds twice a week in the

Addison Independent.

There’s always something!

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Help Wanted For Sale

For Rent

Help Wanted

For Sale

For RentFor Sale

For Rent

Help Wanted

For Rent

For Rent

For Rent

For Rent

For Rent

Page 9: Jan. 10, 2013, B section

Addison Independent, Thursday, January 10, 2013 — PAGE 9B

MIDDLEBURY: BEAUTI-­FUL, BRIGHT, Furnished second floor apartment with private entrance. One bed-­room with queen bed, full shower / bath. Living room / kitchen with futon. There are no other tenants in this recently restored farmhouse which is on two acres, sur-­rounded by woods and trails. One mile from Middlebury and the college. Rent in-­cludes all utilities: electric, heat, hot water, cable tv, wi-­fi, microwave, linens, trash / re-­cycling, washer / dryer, snow plowing. No pets, no smok-­ing. Security deposit and references required. $950 / month. Flexible lease terms. 802-­382-­9467.

MIDDLEBURY; 61 COURT STREET. 1 bedroom apart-­ment. Completely furnished. All inclusive. 802-­388-­4831.

NEW HAVEN: $825 / MO. 2 bedrooms. Includes ap-­pliances, heat, hot water, trash / snow removal, Dish TV. Green Mountain views, very quiet. No smoking, no pets. no W/D. References required. 802-­453-­7487.

NEW HAVEN: 2 BEDROOM with all appliances, washer / dryer, heat and rubbish pick-­up. No pets. No smoking. $775 / mo. $825 deposit. Em-­ployment and rental history required. Call 802-­453-­2275.

NEW HAVEN; 1 bedroom apartment. Utilities and heat included. No pets. $830 / mo. plus security. 802-­453-­3870.

OFFICE SPACE AVAIL-­ABLE. 5 separate rooms, conference room, reception area. Large parking lot. Ex-­change Street, Middlebury. $700 / mo. 802-­388-­4831.

OFFICE SPACE. 61 Court Street, Middlebury. Newly renovated, 1000 sq.ft. All inclusive. $1200 / mo. 802-­388-­4831.

RIPTON TWO bedroom second floor apartment with deck, 600s.f. $650 / month plus utilities. No pets. No smoking. Call 382-­8567.

RV, BOAT AND HEATED MOTORCYCLE STOR-­AGE Ava i l ab le . Ca l l 802-­453-­5563.

SELF-­STORAGE, 8X10 units. Your lock and key, $50 / month. Middlebury. 802-­558-­6092.

TWO & THREE BEDROOM apartments, carpet / tile, w/d hookups plus onsite laundry. Ample parking and storage. Includes trash, lawn care, snow removal, professional management and 24 hour maintenance. Efficient gas heat / hot water. In quiet Middlebury neighborhood. References required. Please call (802) 472-­5016 for more information, rental prices, and to obtain an application. Equal Housing Opportunity.

TWO-­ BAY GARAGE, de-­posit, references. Middle-­bury. 802-­558-­6092.

UP TO 7500 SQ.FT. avail-­able for food processing or light manufacturing. Ex-­change Street, Middlebury. 802-­388-­4831.

VERGENNES 3BR washer / dryer hookup. $900 / mo. Pets negotiable. On Monkton Road across from Vergennes Variety. 240-­281-­1508. Avail-­able Jan. 15. [email protected].

VERGENNES: NICE TWO bedroom unit available Janu-­ary 1 at Willow Apartments. Must be 55 or older. Rent is $765 per month plus all utilities. Located on a quiet dead end street with nice lawn space. Coin operated laundry room. For an ap-­plication call Patty Howard at EP Management, Crop at 802-­775-­1100 or patty-­[email protected]. EHO.

WEYBRIDGE 1 BEDROOM furnished cottage 2 miles from Middlebury. Great view, screened porch, washer, dryer, dishwasher. Pets ok. $850 / month plus utilities. References, deposit. ihwash-­[email protected] .

Wood Heat

CORNWALL, VT: WELL Seasoned 3”x5” diameter, 16 inch length firewood. Mostly hardhack. $300. per cord. You pick up $245 cash. Get it while it lasts. 802-­462-­3313.

DRY FIREWOOD. ALL hard-­wood. $250 / cord; cut, split, delivered. 802-­352-­1034, 802-­349-­5457.

DRY FIREWOOD. CUT, split and delivered. $275 / cord. 802-­388-­7300.

FIREWOOD, cut, split and delivered. Green or sea-­soned. Call Tom Shepard at 453-­4285.

LOOKING FOR A low impact logging / wood job. 802-­453-­2673.

MOUNTAIN ROAD FIRE-­WOOD: 50 cords dry hard-­wood for sale. Call for price. 802-­759-­2095.

SABOURIN FIREWOOD: Top Quality. Dry. $250 per cord. Delivered. Call Ge-­rard, 802-­989-­1371 or 802-­897-­2697.

SEASONED FIREWOOD, CLEAN de-­barked, mixed hard woods. $250 / cord, delivery available. Phone orders and credit cards ac-­cepted. 802-­453-­2226.

Real Estate

4 ACRE CORNWALL Hill-­top building site with expan-­sive view-­ Camel’s Hump to Killington. Approved septic design. All permits on file. 220 acres also available. www.landwoodwater.com 619-­208-­2939. [email protected] .

6.8 ACRES HILLSIDE land in Salisbury. Beautiful southwesterly exposures and sunsets. Secluded site. Right of way to land in place; includes water and power easements. New town assessment $36,900. Cash price $25,000. Seri-­ous inquiries only please. 802-­352-­6678.

Att. Farmers

145 ACRES AVAILABLE for five year lease. Organic preferred. $5500 per year. First and last year rent paid at signing of contract. 619-­208-­2939. www.land-­woodwater.com .

DAIRY FARM FOR RENT in Addison. freestall & milk-­ing parlor, along with 400+ acres. 300 Tillable. Serious inquiries only. Email first at [email protected] and 802-­735-­4725.

HAY FOR SALE: Small square bales. First cut, second cut, and mulch. Delivery available. Call for pricing. 802-­453-­4481, 8 0 2 -­ 3 4 9 -­ 9 2 8 1 , o r 802-­989-­1004.

HAY FOR SALE; first and second cut. Call 352-­4686.

SAWDUST; STORED AND undercover. Large tandem silage truck $600, delivered. Large single axle dump $250, deliv-­ered. Single axle dump $185, delivered. Pick up also available. Phone order and credit cards accepted. 802-­453-­2226.

WHITNEY’S CUSTOM FARM WORK Pond agi-­tating, liquid manure haul-­ing, mouldboard plowing. 462-­2755, John Whitney.

Cars

FREE JUNK CAR RE-­MOVAL. Cash paid for some complete cars. Call 388-­0432 or 388-­2209.

SUVs

2003 JEEP LIBERTY: Green, 105,508 miles. Re-­cently refurbished. $3500 OBO. 802-­349-­6874.

Wanted

WANTED TO BUY 1 item or houseful. Also old books. Call Blue Willow Antiques. 802-­247-­5333.

CLASSIFIEDSAddison Independent

TOWN OF FERRISBURGHAMENDMENT TO FERRISBURGH’S ORDINANCE TO

REGULATE MOTOR VEHICLES ON STAGE ROAD F/K/A LONG POINT ROAD WITHIN THE TOWN OF FERRISBURGHWHEREAS, the Selectboard for the Town of Ferrisburgh desires to enact a local speed

limit on and along Stage Road (continuation of Town Highway #1) within the Town of Fer-­risburgh as further described below.

NOW THEREFORE, the Ferrisburgh Selectboard hereby resolves by authority of 24 V.S.A. §1971 et.seq. and 23 V.S.A. §1007(f) that Section 1 of its existing Ordinance to Regulate Motor Vehicle Speed adopted by the Ferrisburgh Selectboard on December 5, 2000, as amended, be further amended by adding or replacing the following subsections as follows:

Point Road, (Town Highway #1) from the intersection of Greenbush Road (Town Highway

miles west to the end of Long Point Road.(n) Stage Road: A speed not in excess of forty (40) miles per hour for the entire length of

Stage Road (Town Highway #1) from the intersection of Greenbush Road (Town Highway #6) east to the interesction of U.S. Route 7.

This ordinance amendment shall become effective sixty (60) days after its adoption

statute will govern the effective date of this ordinance amendment.All other provisions of the Town of Ferrisburgh Ordinance to Regulate Motor Vehicle

Speed dated December 5, 2000, as amended, shall remain in full force and effect.Adopted by the Ferrisburgh Selectboard at a regular meeting dated this day of January,

2013. Signed, Ferrisburgh Selectboard Loretta Lawrence, Chair, John DeVos, Sally Torrey, James Warden, James Benoit.

24 V.S.A.§1973. Permissive referendum§ 1973. Permissive referendum(a) An ordinance or rule adopted by a municipality may be disapproved by a vote of a

special meeting duly warned for the purpose, pursuant to a petition signed and submitted in accordance with subsection (b) of this section.

(b) A petition for a vote on the question of disapproving an ordinance or rule shall be -­

sented to the legislatiave body of the clerk of the municipality within 44 days following the date of the adoption of the ordinance or rule by the legislative body.

(c) When a petition is submitted in accordance with subsection (b) of this section, the legislative body shall call a special meeting within 60 days from the date of receipt of the petition, or include an article in the warning for the next annual meeting of the municipality if the annual meeting falls within the 60-­day period, to determine whether the voters will disapprove the ordinance or rule

(d) Not less than two copies of the ordinance or rule shall be posted at each polling place during the hours of voting, and copies thereof made available to voters at the polls

(e) If a petition for an annual or a special meeting is duly submitted in accordance with this section, to determine whether an ordinace or rule shall be disapproved by the voters of the municipality, the ordinance or rule shall take effect on the conclusion of the meeting, or

voters voting on the question at the meeting vote to disapprove the ordinance or rule in which event it shall not take effect.

W A R N I N GVERGENNES UNION HIGH SCHOOL DISTRICT NO. 5

February 5, 2013 The legal voters of Vergennes Union High School District No. 5, being the legal voters of the

Towns of Addison, Ferrisburgh, Panton, and Waltham and the City of Vergennes, are hereby

Article 1: Shall the bonds of Vergennes Union High School District No. 5, a union high

school district of Addison County, Vermont, in an amount not to exceed Four Million Two

Article 2:District No. 5, a union high school district of Addison County, Vermont, in an amount not to

State funds are not currently available for this project. It is unknown whether any state construction aid will be available for this project in the future. If funds do become available (which we do not anticipate), they will be used to offset bonded indebtedness on the project or the payment of debt service thereon. The school district assumes responsibility for all costs incurred in connection with all temporary and permanent borrowing for the project. The legal voters of the District may vote in the respective municipalities of their residences at the polling places and during the hours listed below:

Polls Close Location

Vergennes Union High School District No. 5.th th

records of Vergennes Union High School District No. 5.

Vergennes Union High School District No. 5 Board of Directors

Karrie Beebe, Chris Cousineau, Neil Kamman

PROBATE DIVISIONDOCKET NO. 15719

SUPERIOR COURTADDISON UNIT

IN RE THE ESTATE OFARLENE E. CRAMLATE OF EAST MIDDLEBURY, VERMONT

ORDER AND NOTICE OF HEARING BY PUBLICATION

Whereas, a Petition to Open Testate Estate

has been made to the Probate Division of the

Addison Unit;; and

Whereas, the court has assigned the 17th day of January, 2013, at the Probate Division, Addison Unit at 9:30 a.m. at the Mahady Courthouse in Middlebury, Vermont, to hear and decide said petition, and ordered that notice thereof be given

by publishing this notice in the Addison Independent, a newspaper in circulation in Addison County.

appear before said Court, at the time and

place assigned, to make objections if you

proceeding. If you wish to receive notice of

future events in this matter you must formally

enter your appearance with the court.

Dated at Middlebury, Vermont this 11th day

of December, 2012.

Eleanor W. Smith

Probate Judge

Mahady Courthouse

(802) 388-­2612

Name of Newspaper: Addison IndependentPublication Date: Jan. 10, 2013

1/10

W A R N I N GVERGENNES UNION HIGH SCHOOL DISTRICT NO. 5(Addison, Ferrisburgh, Panton, Vergennes, Waltham)

NOTICE OF PUBLIC INFORMATION MEETINGNotice is hereby given that the Board of School Directors of Vergennes Union High

School District No. 5 will hold a public information hearing on January 31, 2013, at 7:00 p.m. at Vergennes Union High School, in Vergennes, Vermont.

This will be a public information hearing on the District’s proposal, to be voted on February 5, 2013, to incur bonded indebtedness for the purpose of funding the cost of repairs and improvements to the Vergennes Union High School.

All persons interested in this question are invited to attend.Dated at Vergennes, Vermont this 10th day of December, 2012. Vergennes Union High School District No. 5 Board of Directors Kristin Bristow, Don Jochum, Laurie Gutowski, Kurt Haigis Karrie Beebe, Chris Cousineau, Neil Kamman 1/10, 17, 24, 31

STATE OF VERMONT SUPERIOR COURT CIVIL DIVISIONADDISON UNIT DOCKET NO: 134-­6-­12 Ancv

Plaintiff

Jeffrey W. Case and Lynn M. Case

YOU MUST RESPOND TO EACH CLAIM.

YOU WILL LOSE YOUR CASE IF YOU DO NOT GIVE YOUR WRITTEN ANSWER TO THE COURT.

YOU MUST MAKE ANY CLAIMS AGAINST THE PLAINTIFF IN YOUR REPLY.

LEGAL ASSISTANCE. Even if you cannot get legal help, you must still give the Court a written

Answer to protect your rights or you may lose the case.

Jeffrey W. Case and Lynn M. Case, , in the ,

st

Vermont utilities maintain electric line rights-­of-­way with several methods, including the selective use of herbicides on trees and brush. They also encourage low-­growing shrubs and trees which will crowd tall growing species and, thus, minimize the use of herbicides. The application of herbicides may start as early as April 1.

The Public Service Board requires Vermont utilities to carry out vegetation management techniques which allow maintenance of electrical systems in a cost-­efficient manner.

The types of herbicide treatment used to keep utility lines clear are: stump, injection, basal, soil and foliar. These are the common methods used, although they may not all be used by the utility in your town. Landowners have the options of requesting herbicide treatment on cut stumps only, or that no herbicide be used at all. In the latter case, an administrative fee would have to be paid to the utility. Only electric utility rights-­of-­way which have tall-­growing tree species with the potential of threatening the electric utility system are treated.

Utilities advertise by radio and newspaper prior to herbicide applications on all lines. Lines usually are treated only once in a four-­to-­six year period depending on the specific management cycle of the utility. Please check with your utility regarding the cycle of a particular line.

Some utilities use metal letters and numbers on distribution and transmission line poles. Others use them only on transmission lines. The letters, such as V.E.C. (Vermont Electric Co-­operative), or V.E.L.C.O. (Vermont Electric Power Company), are not found on every pole. A check of several poles on a line should aid you in determining whether poles are marked and which utility is the owner.

The landowner or resident is responsible for contacting the utility, in writing, to request placement on the mailing list. The utility should be provided with sufficient information as to the exact location of the residence and land. It is the duty of each landowner or resident to make the utility aware of the location of any potentially affected water supply, and any environmentally sensitive areas where herbicide application ought to be avoided.

If you have further questions or concerns contact:Plant Industry Division, Agency of Agriculture Consumer Affairs & Public InformationPhil Benedict, Director Dept. of Public Service116 State St., Montpelier, VT 05602 112 State St., Montpelier, VT 056201-­802-­828-­2431 1-­800-­622-­4496 or 1-­802-­828-­2811

Name Town/City of Affected Property

Street Address Telephone # (Home)

Town (Work)

State Zip Code OK to use Work Number: Yes o No o

Electric Account Number Best Time to Call

Property of Concern: o Year Round Residence o Summer Residence o Commercial Property o Water Supply o Land o Other

Line and Pole Identification: Utility Initials Numbers

We need all of this information in order to determine if you qualify for personal notification. If information is unobtainable, please state why. Use an extra sheet of paper if you need more space.

VELC008VELCO12

Agency of Agriculture

James Leland

116 State St., Montpelier, VT 05602

1-­802-­828-­2431

and trees which will crowd tall-­growing species and, thus, minimize the use of herbicides.

2332

CORNWALL NOTICE OF TAX SALEThe resident and non-­resident owners, lienholders and mortgagees of the real estate in the

real estate taxes assessed by the Town of Cornwall for the years 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010 and

2011 remain, either in whole or in part, unpaid upon the following described real estate in the

Town of Cornwall, Vermont as indicated below, to wit:

Steven Belanus: 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010 and 2011 Property Taxes

Being .40 acres of land, more or less, with improvements thereon, located at Route 74, and

being all and the same lands and premises conveyed to Steven Belanus by Warranty Deed

of Lawrence Senecal dated October 1, 2001 and recorded in the Cornwall Land Records in

Book 52 at Page 299.

Donna J. Dalley: 2007, 2008, 2009, and 2011 Property Taxes

Being 1.00 acres of land, more or less, with dwelling and improvements thereon, located at

2462 Route 74, and being all and the same lands and premises conveyed to Donna J. Dalley

by Warranty Deed of Lena M. Plouffe dated August 24, 1999 and recorded in the Cornwall

Land Records in book 48 at Page 264.

And so much of said real estate will be sold at public auction at the Cornwall Town Clerk’s

forenoon, as shall be requisite to discharge such taxes with costs and fees, unless previously

paid.

Any questions or inquiries regarding the above-­referenced sale should be directed to the

following address:

English, Carroll & Boe, PC, ATTN: James F. Carroll, Esq. or Wanda M. Murray, Paralegal

64 Court Street,

as to the marketability of the titles to any of the above-­referenced properties as held by the

current owner/taxpayer.

Dated at Middlebury, Vermont this 5th day of December, 2012.

Rodney Cadoret, Town of Cornwall

Delinquent Tax Collector

WARNING: ANNUAL MEETING, FIRE DISTRICT #1EAST MIDDLEBURY, VERMONT

The legal voters of Fire District #1 in the Town of Middlebury are hereby warned and

Addison Independent

Check out the Public Notices

every Mon. & Thurs. in the

Public Notices IndexAddison (1)

Addison County Probate Court (3)

Addison County Superior Court (1)

Cornwall (1)

Ferrisburgh (1)

Fire District #1 – East Middlebury (1)

Middlebury (1)

Republican Committees – Addison,

Ferrisburgh, Vergennes (1)

Vergennes (1)

Vergennes Union High School District

#5 (2)

Vermont Building and General

Services (1)

Vermont Electric Power Company (1)

Public notices for the following can be found in this ADDISON INDEPENDENT on Pages 9B & 10B.

For Rent For Rent

Page 10: Jan. 10, 2013, B section

PAGE 10B — Addison Independent, Thursday, January 10, 2012

PUBLIC NOTICE

TOWN OF ADDISONThe Addison Development Review

Board will re-­convene a public hearing on Monday, January 28, 2013 at 7:00 p.m. at the Addison Central School, to consider the following application:

1. A request from Barbara Ernst and Barbara Supeno to hear new evidence and testimony and to reconsider the

Barbara Ernst and Barbara Supeno’s application # 12-­05 appealing the

Linda Carrigan that was issued on August 6, 2012.

landowner with his brothers David & Thomas Spencer, (Application # 13-­02), a 2-­lot subdivision, property located VT RTE 22A North of Old Stone House Road, East Addison. Plan is to divide 11.24 acres from 88.0 acres. Present & proposed use of property is Agriculture/Residential.

The application is available for

or to be heard at the hearing may do so in person, or may be represented by an agent or an attorney. Communications

in writing with the Board either before or during the hearings.

N.B.: Participation in a hearing is necessary to establish status as an “interested person” and the right to appeal a decision rendered in that hearing, according to the provisions of 24 V.S.A. 117 S.S.4464 (a) (1) (C), 4465(b) and 4471 (a). Participation consists of offering, through oral or written testimony, evidence or a statement of concern directly related to the subject of the hearing. The 2-­lot subdivision must meet all of the requirements according to the Subdivision Regulations.

Respectively Submitted,

Starr Phillips, Secretary

1/10

JCT. 22A & 125BRIDPORT, VERMONTSUNDAY – JANUARY 13

9:00/9:30 A.M. 9:00/9:30 A.M. 9:00/9:30 A.M.We have been commissioned to sell the following at Public

Auction………Diamond Dye Cabinet (15 x 24) – 4 sectional oak stacking bookcase

– 6 drawer graduated chest – marble top parlor stand – early Edison cylinder phonograph w/horn – Victor talking machine and others – jugs and crocks including some blue – weather vane – 2 door glass bookcase – oak Morse chairs – Windsor side chairs – variety of Mulberry china – oak sideboard – RR and carriage lanterns – several commodes – Singer Featherweight sewing machine – WW1 bugle – variety of military buttons – Gen. McCollum saddle – Cannon ball – costume jewelry – 14 K gold pocket watch – misc. sterling – oak wardrobe – Ridgeway Grandfather’s style clock – Seth Thomas Eight day Y clock, school house, shelf clocks and more – Rockingham spittoon – early ice skates – Flexible Flyer sleds – Dewey Campaign literature and more – nice violin and bow – military uniforms -­ Shaft and sleigh bells – Oak Larkin drop

rockers – early molding planes – early door latches – animal traps –

alarm – drop leaf table – wall oil lamp bracket (complete) and others – variety of oak stands – nice 4 drawer oak dresser w/mirror – early oak double bed (Complete) – 5 drawer oak chest – Saratoga Spring water bottle – K+Eco compass – Brunlow pocket transit – Washbowl and

lamp – maple 4 drawer /glass door bookcase –large 1857 Rockingham, NH wall map – 1856 Strafford – 1858 Chesier county – 1857 Addison County, VT map (as found) 4’ x 6’ Bay View Farm (Lake Champlain) sign – early seed display box – variety of quilts – round oak coffee

– blue plaid sofa – Turin Co. Shriners hat – 16” x 70” curio cabinet – 9 x 12 oriental style rug – variety of baskets – sheet music – Farhi numbered print – framed portraits – game prints – silhouettes – Dearth etching and more – small early Horner accordion – variety of 45 records

dresser with mirror – iron bank – 24 School house style ceiling globes – Dinette table w/4 chairs and more….

COINS –

Confederate paper currency $10, $20 and $100 bills – silver dollars – Indian head pennies, Lincoln penny album – variety of foreign silver and more….

Terms: Cash, good check, MC/Visa Sale inside – Chairs provided

FOOD BY BRIDPORT GRANGE

Auctioneer: Tom Broughton Jct. 22A & 125 Bridport, Vermont 802-­758-­2494

AUCTIONEERS NOTE:Preview 8:00 a.m. day of sale – Partial listing only –

All items sold as is – where is – with no implied warranty … 10% Buyer’s Premium with cash or good check – 13% Buyer’s premium with credit card.

www.tombroughtonauctions.com

ABSOLUTE AUCTION -­ NO RESERVES

SATURDAY – JANUARY 19th, 2013 STARTING @ 10:00 AM.

For Townline Equipment and other area equipment dealers at the Connecticut ValleyAuto Auction facility located at 1567 RT 14 in White River Jct., VT. 05001

SELLING CONSTRUCTION EQUIPMENT, FARM TRACTORS, COMPACT TRACTORS,EQUIPMENT, TOOLS AND ATTACHMENTS

EXCAVATORS2008 Kubota KX121 w/CHA angle blade,

hyd thumb very nice 1053 hrs2007 Cat 304CCR w/CHA, Cat hyd thumb,

blade, very nice 2500 hrs2007 Komatsu PC35-­MR2 excavator w/

erops, hyd thumb2006 Komatsu PC35-­MR2 excavator w/

erops, hyd thumbHitachi EX100M-­3 excavator, aux hyd, w/

bodine thumbSKIDSTEERS

2007 Komatsu SK815 skidsteer w/erops2007 ASV RC60 compact track loader,

1037 hrs, erops2006 Case 445CT compact track loader

735 hrs, new tracks2004 Cat 236 skid steer 2200 hrs, eropsNew Holland L555 deluxe skidsteer 1900

hrs, eropsCase 1838 skid steer

BACKHOES2012 Kubota L45 TLB 400 hrs2004 Kubota L4630 TLB 485 hrsKubota L48 TLB

LAWN & GARDEN TRACTORS2006 JD Z425 zero turn mower w/bagger

199 hrs2005 JD LX280 w/mower deckJD L110 lawn tractorJD 48 commercial walk behind mower2-­Kubota ZD21 zero turn mowerNew Gravely Pro Master 260H Zero Turn

mower w/snow blower attacSimplicity 7112 w/mower, snowblower, cabCub Cadet 127

TRACTORS2010 New Holland T1510 4WD w/loader, 276

hrs2009 Mahindra 6000 w/loader 1655 hrs2008 JD 2320 4WD w/loader & mower deck

700 hrs2005 Kubota M6800 HD w/loader 1614 hrs2004 Kubota BX2230D w/cab, blower 131 hrs2003 JD 4610 4WD w/loader2003 Kubota L3830 GST w/loader 1247 hrsJD 6410 w/cabJD 420 w/loader, cab, front pump, reverserLong 610Kubota BX1500 w/loader, snowblowerKubota B1700 w/mower, blade

SUPPORT EQUIPMENTWacker BP3545 reversible plate compactorStanley MB3570 hyd hammer w/quik attachThomas PA40 hyd auger w/quik attachWB 30”

hyd tilt bucket 2 sets of forks quik attachWildkat 66” hyd brush grapple BKT Q/ANew Leading 6800W diesel welder/generator2012 Versatech 72” hyd brush mower Q/ANew Wood splitters

RECREATION/UTILITY VEHICLESNew 2011 JD 550 XUV 4WD gator2009 JD 620I XUV 4WD gator 66 hrs, like new2005 Kubota RTV900

DUMP TRUCKS1995 Mack RD688 Tri-­axle dump truck

w/new 17’ Beau-­Roc body, Mack 350 engine, 8LL trans

1988 Ford LTL 9000 tri-­axle dump truck 425 Cat, 8LL transFARM EQUIPMENT & ATTACHMENTS

2012 Allied Stanley H6000 20”x24” plate compactor skidsteer mount

York 72” rock rake w/wheels2007 Harley M6H rakeMcConnel PA9058 3pth mower2011 Landpride RCR 1542 42” mower

Landpride FDR2572 mowerTW-­PI woodsplitterJD 920 Mo-­Co mower conditioner 2010 Sweepster 205725M hyd sweeper w/

bucket, like newNew SEC hyd grapple (Ext100-­120-­JD 490)

CHIPPERS & BOOM LIFTS2004 Genie TZ-­34 boom lift 400 hrs2006 Vermeer 625A chipper2004 Vermeer 625A chipperToyota FC30 propane warehouse forklift

TRAILERS2012 Sure-­Trac 6x10 tandem dump trailer

like new2010 Hudson 7T 2008 PJ 20’ hyd tilt equip 1997 Hudson 4T

ONLINE BIDDING AVAILABLEfor details

www.cwgrayonline.com

LUNCH BY RHONDA’S SNACK SHACK

EAST THETFORD, VT

Email address: [email protected] Web address: www.cwgray.com Also: www.auctionzip.com

This is a very nice selection of used late model equipment with low hours to be offered at auction, due to the large volumeof sales and trades in the late fall and early winter. There will be many more items included in this sale.

NOTES: Starting sale at 10:00 AM, selling quantity of new tools & support equipment as air/hyd jacks, wrenches,socket sets, air compressors, porta powers, laser transit, pressure washer, alum headache racks, air impacts, generator,

diamond cutoff blades, elec winches, torch set and much more.

REPUBLICAN COMMITTEES

NOTICE

The Addison, Ferrisburgh and Vergennes

Town Republican Committees will hold

a Special Meeting on Thursday, January

17, 2013 at 7:00 PM in the Otter Creek

Room of Bixby Library in Vergennes

for the purpose of selecting up to three

persons to recommend to the Governor

Representative for the Addison-­3 District.

The meeting is open to all but voting will be

limited to registered committee members in

the organized towns.

Marge Elmore, Town Chair-­ Addison

Warren Van Wyck, Town Chair-­ Ferrisburgh

Patricia Ganson, Town Chair-­ Vergennes1/10

STATE OF VERMONT

WANTED TO LEASEThe State of Vermont, wishes to enter

into a lease for approximately 1,500 to 2,000 Square Feet of “ADA” handicapped

program, space in the Middlebury area.This space will house up to 10 staff and

require on-­site parking for a minimum of 15 cars.

Preference shall be given to sites located within downtown areas.

All questions should be directed to;Allen Palmer

Property Management Specialist4 Governor Aiken Ave.

Montpelier, VT 05633-­7001802-­828-­1424

Responses should be received no later than 3:00 p.m. on Wednesday January 30, 2013 by:

BGS Property Management4 Governor Aiken Ave.

Montpelier, VT 05633-­7001Attention: Allen Palmer/Middlebury DOC

1/10

CITY OF VERGENNES – PUBLIC NOTICE

The annual City Elections will be held on Tuesday, March 5, 2013. Nominating petitions

term.

MARKET REPORT

ADDISON COUNTY

COMMISSION SALES

Costs BEEF Lbs. per lb Dollars

Costs CALVES Lbs. per lb Dollars

TOWN OF MIDDLEBURYPUBLIC HEARING NOTICE

The Middlebury Development Review Board will hold a public hearing on Mon-­day, January 28, 2013 beginning at 7:00

1. -­

Gregory George and Richard Wilder for

Road.

of 1804 Three Mile Bridge Road. and additional information re-­

1/10

PROBATE COURTDOCKET NO. 15718

STATE OF VERMONTDISTRICT OF ADDISON, SS.

IN RE THE ESTATE OFGERALDINE EMILOLATE OF MIDDLEBURY, VERMONT

NOTICE TO CREDITORSTo the creditors of the estate of Geraldine Emilo late of Middlebury, Vermont.I have been appointed a personal representative of the above named estate. All creditors having claims against the estate must present their claims in writing within 4

this notice. The claim must be presented to me at the address listed below, with a copy

The claim will be forever barred if it is not presented as described above within the four month deadline.Dated: Jan. 3, 2013

Richard Emilo21 Gorham Lane

Middlebury, VT 05753(802) 388-­2930

Addison Independent

057531/10

PROBATE COURTDOCKET NO. 15726

STATE OF VERMONTDISTRICT OF ADDISON, SS.

IN RE THE ESTATE OFSTEVEN M. SABOURINLATE OF ORWELL, VERMONT

NOTICE TO CREDITORSTo the creditors of the estate of Steven M. Sabourin late of Orwell, Vermont.I have been appointed a personal representative of the above named estate. All creditors having claims against the estate must present their claims in writing within 4

this notice. The claim must be presented to me at the address listed below, with a copy

The claim will be forever barred if it is not presented as described above within the four month deadline.Dated: Jan. 7, 2013

Gary Rogers

Hydeville, VT 05750(802) 265-­8604

Addison Independent

VT 057531/10

AUCTIONS

MONKTON — The Monkton auditors are starting to work on the 2012 Town Report. All town offi-­cers who are to submit a report for the booklet are asked to get their reports to the auditors by Jan. 18, 2013. You may drop it off at the town hall or put it in the outside drop box. Please note on the enve-­lope that it is for the auditors. If you wish to e-­mail your submis-­sion, please contact Town Clerk Sharon Gomez at 453-­3800. The auditors wish to thank you all in advance for your promptness to this request.There are some great new books

at the Russell Memorial Library. Visit the library during regular hours to check them out. The hours are 3-­8 p.m. on Tuesday, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Friday and 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. on Saturday.Story Hour at the Russell

Memorial Library has changed. The new time is from 11 a.m. to noon, two times a month on the second and last Friday each month.

All are welcome to join in for songs, stories and crafts.If you did not get a 4-­by-­6-­inch

stick flag at Monkton’s 250th founding celebration, you may pick up a free one at the Monkton Town Hall next to the histori-­cal society’s display. These flags are compliments of the Monkton Museum and Historical Society per president Gill Coates.Instead of focusing on organiz-­

ing more community events, the Monkton Community Coffeehouse is hoping to create more neighborly opportunities in 2013 for people to meet one another in town. They will be hosting potluck dinners every four to six weeks. The committee asks that you bring your dinner to share with others, but there is no need to cook for several people. The next potluck gathering is scheduled for Thursday, Jan. 17. Contact Becky Logan at beckylo-­[email protected] for more informa-­tion. It is suggested to put “potluck dinner” in the subject line.

SALISBURY — The Salisbury

remind people of certain items that cannot be recycled at this time. No Styrofoam items, no used paper towels or napkins, no card-­board circles from pizza boxes, no Styrofoam peanuts used in packag-­ing, no clementine boxes (they are wooden) and no plastic shopping bags from stores can be recycled.Styrofoam peanuts may be bagged

and accepted for future use. Plastic shopping bags may be taken to

Shaw’s and Hannaford’s stores or to HOPE;; the stores have bins for the bags and HOPE can use clean bags for items purchased there. The rest of these items must be put in your trash bags. All cardboard boxes should be broken down and all items should be clean.Petitions for articles and elected

positions are being circulated.

Thursday, Jan. 24. Petitions for

Monday, Jan. 28. Positions up for election this year include a two-­year selectboard;; a three-­year selectboard, a three-­year lister, a two-­year school director, a three-­year school direc-­tor, and a three-­year UD-­3 director. Also a moderator, a grand juror, a delinquent tax collector, a town agent and a constable;; all these positions are one-­year terms. For a petition and more information contact Ann

The conservation commission invites everyone interested in

climate change to attend a talk by Dr. Alan Betts at the community school library on Thursday, Jan. 17, at 7 p.m. Dr. Betts is Vermont’s lead-­ing climate change researcher.Jim Andrews of the Vermont

Reptile and Amphibian Atlas Project has announced that their poster prices have been reduced by half. These posters include descrip-­tions and photos of all reptiles and amphibians native to Vermont along with distribution maps. Visit the website www.vtherpatlas.org or e-­mail Jim at jandrews@middle-­bury.edu or call him at 352-­4734 to order the posters.A DVD is now available that

covers the reptile and amphibians of New England. Jim and Vince Franks of Peregrine Production teamed up to produce a DVD with over three hours of information on all reptiles and amphibians known to breed in New England. More information is available at www.rpsdvd.com. These posters and DVDs are wonderful educational tools for classrooms and libraries as well as naturalists.

SalisburyHave a news tip?

Call Mary Burchard at 352-4541

NEWS NEWS

MonktonHave a news tip?

Call Liz Pecor

at 453-2180

Page 11: Jan. 10, 2013, B section

Addison Independent, Thursday, January 10, 2013 — PAGE 11B

ACBOR Business Mixer

Warm up with your local REALTORS!

Join the Addison County REALTORS as we say ‘thank you’ to

you and many other folks that we interact with daily throughout

our real estate transactions.

Not only is this a time of appreciation, but we would like to

a few minutes at this event to discuss why this group may be a

being meeting new people that connect with home owners on a

daily basis as well as strengthening your relationships with your

local REALTORS.

Where: Rosie’s Restaurant

Route 7 South, Middlebury, Vermont 05753

When: Thursday, January 24, 2013, 5:00 PM -­ 7:00 PM

RSVP

Please RSVP by Tuesday, January 15, 2013. Send an email to

[email protected]

Snow Plan

If, by chance, the weather does not allow us to host this gather-­

ing, we will be in touch via email. If the weather is questionable,

please call, email or text Bonnie Gridley, ACBOR President, to be

sure the party is still on! 802-­349-­8646 or [email protected].

Don’t Miss Out On Exciting Door Prizes!

WEYBRIDGECustom built cape with pastoral & Green Mtn views. Over-sized screened porch,

well-planned kitchen with brick fireplace & hearth. Three-stall horse barn—

convenience, quality & comfort!$749,900 MLS# 4176497

MIDDLEBURY EAST Lovely two bedroom, two bath updated

condo with a garage and beautiful views to the Adirondack Mountains.

Convenient to transportation, town and trails!

$169,900 MLS# 4194743

MiddleburySuper opportunity for you to build a new home without the guesswork of site development costs for the driveway, well, power and septic--it’s all in place! This nicely sited, 6.8 acre lot provides the new owner with privacy, yet is just minutes from the center of town. Land is mostly wooded with a good sized clearing of open yard space. 2200 square ft house is on a foundation and will require removal or major overhaul. Sold AS IS. $135,000

Chipman ParkTastefully restored & decorated, 1920s style English/Nantucket cottage & carriage house in one of Middlebury’s most desired neighborhoods - includes fireplace, cozy library, sun-drenched screen porch, & custom kitchen. $595,000

South Ridge - MiddleburyBe at home in beautiful South Ridge. Come live, play and make memories in a new home in a glorious landscape, all within sight and walking distance to Middlebury Union schools. This energy efficient home was constructed using conventional framing methods and premium quality materials. Priced turn-key, there are some buyer options possible. The interior can

be completed to accommodate a standard closing timeline. This is the best of all worlds! $329,500

Ingrid Punderson Jackson Real Estate44 Main StreetMiddlebury, VT 05753802-­388-­4242

www.middvermontrealestate.com

Cornwall Subdivision Potential -­ Survey completed & state approval granted.Beautiful private setting on a quiet road in Cornwall. Shingle style home on 10.07 +/- acres overlooks a pond and has 4 bedrooms and 2 baths. The recently completed barn is full of potential! First floor of barn includes horse stalls that lead to the back pasture and a full heated shop space with room for vehicles, boat building and many

other uses! Second floor of barn is perfect for a home office or studio, and includes a bath and possible kitchenette. Must see to appreciate! $449,000

NEW

LISTING!

721 Halladay Road, MiddleburyThis renovated, 4 bedroom farm house is just minutes from downtown Middlebury. Spacious kitchen features cherry cabinets, maple flooring and a breakfast nook, and adjoins a cozy sitting room. Wood paneled living room with woodstove opens to a screened porch. Formal dining room completes the well designed layout of this home; 2 car garage and 4+ acres of land add to its appeal and versatility. $330,000

Brandon2+ acre parcel with a 3 bedroom, 2 bath home that has been recently renovated, yet retains some original charm. Wide plank floors, updated kitchen with breakfast nook, a formal dining room & a huge living room with incredible mountain views. Mature landscaping includes classic VT stone walls and sugar maples. Simple, single-level living only minutes to the center of historic Brandon with a taste of the country. $198,000

Ingrid Punderson Jackson Real Estate44 Main StreetMiddlebury, VT 05753802-388-4242

SHOREHAMA charming, 4 bedroom cape on

6 acres with beautiful Lake Champlain views!

! $249,900 MLS# 4002471

NEW HAVEN Privately sited, four bedroom home on 96 acres of land with incredible

views. Great property for comfortable living, animals, home business, shop,

storage…you name it. $649,000 MLS# 4145933

www.middvermontrealestate.com

WEYBRIDGEImpressive 4 bedroom home on 10+ acres with a horse barn, mountain views. Located just a stone’s throw

to the Otter Creek & a short drive to Middlebury. Custom designed with a

fabulous kitchen, covered porches & 2 fireplaces! $665,000 MLS# 4180736

www.LMSRE.com

Vermont: Greater Burlington, St. Albans,Middlebury, Vergennes, Fairlee, Londonderry,

Lyndonville, Manchester, Norwich, Rutland, WoodstockNew Hampshire: Hanover, West Lebanon, Grantham

For More Information on !ese and Other Properties, Scan the

QR Code on the Right with Your Smart Phone

Lang McLaughry Spera MiddleburyVergennes O!ce

268 Main StreetVergennes, Vermont 05491

802-877-3232800-577-3232

802-877-2227 (fax)

Middlebury O!ce66 Court Street

Middlebury, Vermont 05753802-388-1000800-856-7585

802-388-7115 (fax)

MIDDLEBURYWell maintained Cape with full shed dormer on large village lot.

Location allows some commercial uses. Large deck and back yard.

Walk-out basement.$235,000 MLS 4174610

MIDDLEBURYNearly new mobile home with

several extras. Entry porch, built-in hutch in living room, ample

cabinet space in kitchen, master bedroom with bath, storage shed.

$34,900 MLS 4195592

BRISTOLCountry setting only 8 miles to

Middlebury. Many custom features including oak wainscoting,

cabinetry, built-ins, concrete siding, standing seam roof.

$535,000 MLS 4179644

LINCOLNContemporary home with

mountain views built in 2006 along Beaver Meadow Brook.

Main level master bedroom with bath. Laundry hook-ups on all

three !oors.$295,600 MLS 4155445

ORWELLNewer home o"ering amazing

views to the west. 11’ x 40’ deck, #rst !oor master suite with

Jacuzzi tub, walk-out basement with lots of natural light.$259,000 MLS 4174547

FERRISBURGHTruly special spot on the shore of Lake Champlain with 262’ of frontage. Custom built quality

home with open !oor plan, two covered porches and garage.

$1,700,000 MLS 4066337

VERGENNESExceptional brand new

contemporary home with high-end #nishes and energy e$cient details.

Private location with views of Otter Creek and the Adirondacks.

$249,000 MLS 4188473

LAKEFR

ONTTHE ADDISON COUNTY BOARD OF REALTORS wishes to inform the

appreciates your business.

NOTICE FROM REALTORS

-­eral Fair Housing Act of 1968 as

This newspaper will not know-­

on an equal opportunity basis. To

Toll-­free at 1-­800-­669-­9777.

EQUAL HOUSINGOPPORTUNITY

CONTACT GOV. PETER SHUMLIN

REAL ESTATE

Wedding Invitations

Announcements

Business Cards

Hand Stamps

Notary Seals

The Addison Independent

More than your newspaper

Page 12: Jan. 10, 2013, B section

PAGE 12B — Addison Independent, Thursday, January 10, 2013

Frozen

Groceries

Give us a ring: 802-­388-­2162

Ask for Jeff, James or Tabitha.

Or email us at: [email protected]

Let us do the cooking.

9OZ. BEST YET

Cheese Puffs

Seafo

od FRESH

SCROD FILETS

$699lb.

Produce

ICEBERG

Lettuce

$129 $149

5LB. BAG IDAHO

Potatoes

2/$5

FRESH

Blueberries

2/$5

6.38OZ.

Pringles

4LB. BAG. CAL. NAVEL

Oranges

$299

USDA LOIN BONELESS

Sirloin Steak

lb.$399

USDA BONELESS CHUCK SHOULDER

London Broil

FRESH BONELESS CENTER CUT

Pork Chops

USDA BONELESS BEEF

Bottom Round Roast

lb.$329

lb.$279

FRESH HOUSE OF RAEFORD

BONELESS SKINLESS

Chicken Breasts

lb.$199

USDA BONELESS BEEF LOIN

NY Strip Steak

lb.$699

FRESH MOUNTAIRE

Roasting ChickensFRESH MOUNTAIRE

BONELESS SKINLESS

Chicken Thighs

lb.$129

lb.$189

lb.$209

lb.$189

lb.$249

lb.$299

FRESH BONELESS PORK SIRLOIN

Chops or RoastsFRESH BONELESS COUNTRY STYLE

SpareribsFRESH WHOLE BONELESS CENTER CUT

Pork Loins

3LB. BAG

Clementines

$399hd.

2/$3

FRESH

Broccoli

RED

Grapefruit

2/$1

5LB. BAG MAC & EMPIRE

Apples

$549

LOCAL

lb.

Deli Specials

lb.

SMOKEHOUSE

Ham

$529

10% Members Save

Every Wednesday

9-12OZ. HOT OR LEAN

Pockets

2/$4

GREG’S Meat MarketWhere Quality and Service Come First!

MeatUSDA BONELESS BEEF ROUND

Cubed Steak orStew Meat

lb.$399

9-­11 lb. avg. cut to order at no extra charge.

$199lb.

RED

Peppers

Wine

$1299750ML

lb.$399

24OZ. PREGO

Pasta Sauce

2/$4 2/$3 2/$3

Dairy

SAVE$400

Spend $300 in Greg’s during JANUARY and

get a $25 Gift Card* good for use in FEBRUARY!

lb. lb.$349

1LB. PKG. BAR-S JUMBO

Meat Franks

5/$5

20OZ. PKG. KAYEM ORIGINAL

BratwurstGWALTNEY ABERDEEN

Sliced Bacon

$399 $299lb.

Reg. $4.29

Reg. $3.89

2/$6

59OZ. FLORIDA NATURAL

Orange Juice

10/$6

6OZ. YOPLAIT

Yogurts

48OZ. HOOD

Ice Cream

2/$6

CAMPBELL'S TOMATO & CHICKEN NOODLE

Soups

10/$10 2/$6

18OZ.

Peanut Butter

12.25OZ. HONEY NUT

Cheerios

2/$5

lb.$399

MAPLE

Turkey

$459

GENOA

SalamiAmerican

CheeseTURKEY

Pastrami

$359lb.

CLINECashmere &Pinot Noir

on their purchases

at Gregs!

2LB. BAG

Carrots

Tangerines

4/$1

CAL. LARGE NAVEL

Oranges

2/$1

6-7OZ. HORMEL PILLOW PACK REG. OR TURKEY

Pepperoni

$299

COOK'S CENTER CUT

Ham Steaks

Reg. 79¢ ea.