allotsego 3-8-13

6
By LIBBY CUDMORE SCHENEVUS ome people make scrap- books, slide- shows or websites of family photographs and letters. Mary Wirchansky hand-stitches quilts. “It’s like those old paint-by- numbers kits, but with fabric,” she said mod- estly. A portrait quilt of her grandfather, Joseph Kader Bryan Sr., titled “Waiting for the Mail,” took the People’s Choice prize at the 22nd annual Fenimore Quilt Club Show, which closed Sunday, Feb. 24, at the Cooperstown Art Association. The quilt was in the making for three years, on and off. And on Thanks- giving 2011, Wirchansky realized that if she was going to finish it, she was going to have to devote herself to it. “I got up at 4:30 in the morning, when it was quiet,” she said. “And there were times I got really stuck, and I just prayed for a way out – and I got one.” The quilt depicts Mary’s granddad wait- ing with his dog, Queen, in front of the house he built in Kenansville, N.C. The mailbox is the only detail the Schen- evus woman will admit she fudged. “I didn’t have his mailbox,” she said. “So I used my neighbor’s.” Her mother saved letters her father sent in the 1930s and ’40s, and Wirchansky used ex- cerpts from those letters – as well as fabric copies of the stamps on the envelopes – to make up parts of the quilt’s sky. “I traced the letters,” she said. “It’s his handwrit- ing.” On the back of the quilt is a scrapbook photograph of aunts, cousins and her grand- mother copied onto fabric. There’s also an article about him, and his obituary. “He died a few months before I was born,” she said. “But I had cousins who remembered him, and I wanted to make this as a tribute to him … I was intrigued by the letters he wrote her during the Depression – it was such a hard time, but he was such a strong person.” One such excerpt, printed in the sky of the quilt, reads, “The Lord will provide – one time we were down to 10 cents, but by the end of the night, we had $20 on hand.” While pleased to win the latest accolade, Mary Wirchansky – and her quilts – are no strangers to awards and honors. Please See QUILT, B3 THURSDAY-FRIDAY, MARCH 7-8, 2013 PAGE B-1 All O TSEGO.seniority THE FREEMAN’S JOURNAL • HOMETOWN ONEONTA • www.allotsego.com • @allotsegonews EVERY HOUSEHOLD, EVERY WEEK IN ONEONTA, WEST ONEONTA AND COOPERSTOWN WEEKEND’S BEST BETS Rusted Root To Rock, Roll At Foothills P ennsylvania rockers Rusted Root, known for the hit, “Send Me On My Way” celebrate their 20th anniversary. Gold, $25, Silver, $18. 8 p.m. Friday, March 8. Foothills Perform- ing Arts Center 24 Market St., Oneonta. Info, (607) 431-2080. FINALS FEVER: The state tourna- ment begins for the Lady Yellowjack- ets at 4 p.m. Saturday, March 9, v. Utica Notre Dame at On- ondaga CC, and for the Lady Redskins at 1 p.m. that same afternoon v. Harpursville at SUNY Oneonta. GO FOR BAROQUE: The Oneonta Concert As- sociation presents Pittsburgh ensemble Chatham Baroque, with dance from 17th and 18th century Spain and Italy, featuring period instruments and costumes. 7:30 p.m. Friday, March 8. $20 gen- eral, $6 students. Oneonta Theatre. SHAKESPEARE: “As You Like It.” SUNY free, $5 for all others. 8 p.m. Friday- Saturday March 8-9, 2 p.m. Sunday, March 10. SUNY Oneonta, Fine Arts Building, Hamblin Theater, 108 Ra- vine Pkwy., Oneonta. Info, (607) 436-3500. MUSICAL MADNESS: The 4th annual March Musi- cal Madness lets children to play, construct instruments and try out technology. $5 per child. 10 a.m.-noon Saturday, March 9. Hartwick College, Anderson Hall, 1 Hartwick Dr., Oneonta. Info, (607) 431-8543, oneonta- worldoflearning.org. COIN OF REALM: Otsego Numismatic Associ- ation’s 23rd annual Coins, Cards & Collectibles Show is 10-3 Sunday, March 10, at the Oneonta Elks Club. BROOKWOOD PLANS: Future of Brookwood public meeting, 11 a.m. Saturday, March 9, Templeton Hall, Cooperstown. Briefing by Otsego Land Trust chair Harry Levine. Info, call Marcie Forster, 547-2366. The “Send Me On My Way” hitmakers bring their blend of rock, folk and world music to Foothills. Renovations Highlight City Hall’s Classical Charms Ian Austin/ AllOTSEGO.seniority Oneonta City Manager Mike Long points out dam- age to City Hall’s lobby ceiling now under repair. City Hall, Oneonta’s former post office, is 100 this year. At 100, Oneonta Main Street Landmark Still A Beloved Icon By LIBBY CUDMORE ONEONTA F or its 100th birthday, City Hall is getting a little work done. A metal front door in place of the usual solid oak ones, and scaffolding in the 1913 Classical Revival lobby are the tip-offs. “I like saving old buildings,” said City Manager Mike Long. “It’s a lot less expensive to repair than to replace.” Two “small-scale” projects are under- way in the former post office, the first being the restoration of the front doors, which have been part of the building since it was built. “They’re large doors, but over time, the elements have gotten to them,” Long said. “The varnish wore off, exposing the wood, which was starting to deterio- rate.” Then there are repairs in progress on the ceiling of the lobby, which contains fairly high-style ele- Please See ICON, A3 HE HAPPENED UPON HOBBY. NOW, HER QUILTS HERALDED EVERYWHERE Ian Austin/ AllOTSEGO.seniority Mary Wirchansky’s portrain quilt of her grandfather won the 22nd annual Fenimore Quilt Show in Coopertown, but her creations have been heralded far and wide.

Upload: all-otsego-news-of-oneonta-cooperstown-otsego-county-ny

Post on 11-Mar-2016

214 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

All otsego

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: ALLOTSEGO 3-8-13

By LIBBY CUDMORE

SCHENEVUS

ome people make scrap-books, slide-

shows or websites of family photographs and letters.

Mary Wirchansky hand-stitches quilts. “It’s like those old paint-by-numbers kits, but with fabric,” she said mod-estly.

A portrait quilt of her grandfather, Joseph Kader Bryan Sr., titled “Waiting for the Mail,” took the People’s Choice prize at the 22nd annual Fenimore Quilt Club Show, which closed Sunday, Feb. 24, at the Cooperstown Art Association.

The quilt was in the making for three years, on and off. And on Thanks-giving 2011, Wirchansky realized that if she was going to finish it, she was going to have to devote herself to it. “I got up at 4:30 in the morning, when it was quiet,” she said. “And there were times I got really stuck, and I just prayed for a way out – and I got one.”

The quilt depicts Mary’s granddad wait-ing with his dog, Queen,

in front of the house he built in Kenansville, N.C. The mailbox is the only detail the Schen-evus woman will admit she fudged. “I didn’t have his mailbox,” she said. “So I used my neighbor’s.”

Her mother saved letters her father sent in the 1930s and ’40s, and Wirchansky used ex-cerpts from those letters – as well as fabric copies of the stamps on the envelopes – to make up parts of the quilt’s sky. “I traced the letters,” she said. “It’s his handwrit-ing.”

On the back of the quilt is a scrapbook photograph of aunts, cousins and her grand-mother copied onto fabric. There’s also an article about him, and his obituary. “He died a few months before I was born,” she said. “But I had cousins who remembered him, and I wanted to make this as a tribute to him … I was intrigued by the letters he wrote her during the Depression – it was such a hard time, but he was such a strong person.”

One such excerpt, printed in the sky of the quilt, reads, “The Lord will provide – one time we were down to 10 cents, but by the end of the night, we had $20 on hand.”

While pleased to win the latest accolade, Mary Wirchansky – and her quilts – are no strangers to awards and honors.

Please See QUILT, B3

THURSDAY-FRIDAY, MARCH 7-8, 2013 PAGE B-1

AllOTSEGO.seniority

THE FREEMAN’S JOURNAL • HOMETOWN ONEONTA • www.allotsego.com • @allotsegonewsEVERY HOUSEHOLD, EVERY WEEK IN ONEONTA, WEST ONEONTA AND COOPERSTOWN

WEEKEND’S

BEST BETS

Rusted RootTo Rock, RollAt Foothills

Pennsylvania rockers Rusted Root, known for the hit, “Send Me

On My Way” celebrate their 20th anniversary. Gold, $25, Silver, $18. 8 p.m. Friday, March 8. Foothills Perform-ing Arts Center 24 Market St., Oneonta. Info, (607) 431-2080.

FINALS FEVER: The state tourna-ment begins for the Lady Yellowjack-ets at 4 p.m. Saturday, March 9, v. Utica Notre Dame at On-ondaga CC, and for the Lady Redskins at 1 p.m. that same afternoon v. Harpursville at SUNY Oneonta.

GO FOR BAROQUE: The Oneonta Concert As-sociation presents Pittsburgh ensemble Chatham Baroque, with dance from 17th and 18th century Spain and Italy, featuring period instruments and costumes. 7:30 p.m. Friday, March 8. $20 gen-eral, $6 students. Oneonta Theatre.

SHAKESPEARE: “As You Like It.” SUNY free, $5 for all others. 8 p.m. Friday-Saturday March 8-9, 2 p.m. Sunday, March 10. SUNY Oneonta, Fine Arts Building, Hamblin Theater, 108 Ra-vine Pkwy., Oneonta. Info, (607) 436-3500.

MUSICAL MADNESS: The 4th annual March Musi-cal Madness lets children to play, construct instruments and try out technology. $5 per child. 10 a.m.-noon Saturday, March 9. Hartwick College, Anderson Hall, 1 Hartwick Dr., Oneonta. Info, (607) 431-8543, oneonta-worldoflearning.org.

COIN OF REALM: Otsego Numismatic Associ-ation’s 23rd annual Coins, Cards & Collectibles Show is 10-3 Sunday, March 10, at the Oneonta Elks Club.

BROOKWOOD PLANS: Future of Brookwood public meeting, 11 a.m. Saturday, March 9, Templeton Hall, Cooperstown. Briefing by Otsego Land Trust chair Harry Levine. Info, call Marcie Forster, 547-2366.

The “Send Me On My Way” hitmakers bring their blend of rock, folk and world music to Foothills.

Renovations Highlight City Hall’s Classical Charms

Ian Austin/AllOTSEGO.seniorityOneonta City Manager Mike Long points out dam-age to City Hall’s lobby ceiling now under repair.City Hall, Oneonta’s former

post office, is 100 this year.

At 100, Oneonta Main Street Landmark Still A Beloved Icon

By LIBBY CUDMORE

ONEONTA

For its 100th birthday, City Hall is getting a little work done.

A metal front door in place of the usual solid oak ones, and scaffolding in the 1913 Classical Revival lobby are the tip-offs.

“I like saving old buildings,” said City Manager Mike Long. “It’s a lot less expensive to repair than to replace.”

Two “small-scale” projects are under-way in the former post office, the first being the restoration of the front doors, which have been part of the building since it was built.

“They’re large doors, but over time, the elements have gotten to them,” Long

said. “The varnish wore off, exposing the wood, which was starting to deterio-rate.”

Then there are repairs in progresson the ceiling of the lobby, which contains fairly high-style ele-

Please See ICON, A3

HE HAPPENED UPON HOBBY. NOW,HER QUILTS HERALDED EVERYWHERE

Ian Austin/AllOTSEGO.seniority

Mary Wirchansky’s portrain quilt of her

grandfather won the 22nd annual

Fenimore Quilt Show in Coopertown, but her creations have been heralded far

and wide.

Page 2: ALLOTSEGO 3-8-13

B-2 AllOTSEGO.life THURSDAY-FRIDAY, MARCH 7-8, 2013

Monday March 11 through Friday March 15Call now to avoid waiting!It’s all FREE!

Miracle-Ear Hearing Aid Center440A Main Street, Oneonta

Visit us online at miracle-ear-oneonta.com

Miracle-Ear Hearing Aid Service Center

6078 Route 12, NorwichBy Appointment Only

Miracle-Ear Hearing Aid Service Center

29 Pioneer Street, CooperstownToll free: 1-855-258-9368 By Appointment Only

Call us toll free at 1-888-387-3068

Offer Valid on Model ME2150 – 6 Channel100% Digital and 100% Programmable.

Limit one aid at the promotional price.May not be combined with other offers, and does not apply to prior sales.

Cash value 1/20 of 1 cent. Offer expires 3/15/13.

5 Days Only!

Blue Cross Blue Shield Federal Insurance paystotal cost of 2 Miracle-Ear Audiotone Pro Series aids.

Page 3: ALLOTSEGO 3-8-13

AllOTSEGO.life B-3THURSDAY-FRIDAY, MARCH 7-8, 2013

AllOTSEGO.dining & entertainment

celebrate St. Patrick’s day with Dinner at

Morey’s

$895Corned beef and cabbage dinner

$695Corned beef sandwich and

choice of coleslaw or potato salad

34 years of homecooking Morey’s Family RestaurantRoute 7 (East End) Exit 16 off I-88Oneonta, NY 607-432-6664Monday thru Saturday 7 am to 8 pm • Sunday 7 am to 7 pm

No Preparation needed - Music will be provided - Cold readings from the

script - Please wear comfortable clothing and shoes suitable for dancing!

*Chihuahua & English Bulldog Needed (please call 432-1800 to schedule dogs)

24 Market Street Oneonta

Our 43rd season!

The STeel WheelSAn Americana band that blends blues, bluegrass,

sing-alongs and foot-stompin’ fiddle tunes!

Cooperstown Concert Series programs are made possible with public funds from the New York State Council on the Arts, a state agency. Other support provided by

The Scriven Foundation, The Otesaga Resort Hotel, and Sound Performance.

Tickets: 607-547-1812, Church & Scott Pharmacy or the Fly Creek General Store.

www.cooperstownconcertseries.org

Ticket prices are $20 for adults, $15 for senior citizens and college students with current ID, $8 for students 13-18 and children 12 and under free

when accompanied by an adult.

Saturday, March 9 7:30 p.m.

The Otesaga Resort HotelPlease call the Otesaga’s Hawkeye

Grill at 607-547-9931 for dinner reservations before the show

Celebrating 43 Years of Providing Premier Live Entertainment!

Postcard & Paper Ephemera Show & SaleSat., March 24th • 10 am - 3:30 pm

Greater Oneonta Historical Society’s

St. James Episcopal Church Great HallLower Elm off Main Street • Oneonta

$200 admissionMore info call John Carney 432-5360

10% off coupon at Autumn Cafe with admission!

ICON/From B1ments you may have never noticed.

A leak in the roof was repaired last summer, but not before damage was done to two sections of the lobby ceiling.

A second leak in the upstairs men’s room plumb-ing over the winter further

deteriorated the large plaster frieze on the wall above the stairs, causing pieces to crack off and crumble to the floor.

Samples of the plaster were removed to Domer Construction in Lancaster, outside Buffalo, where they are being used as casts for replacement parts.

A new frieze will be made for the wall, and “little rosettes” are being made for the ceiling tiles.

A local contractor was sought, but this work is specialized. “That’s what (Domer’s) known for,” said Long, who anticipates the work will be done by mid-March.

The building’s Classi-cal style was popular in the early 19th century, said

Tania Werbizky, the state Preservation League’s direc-tor of technical services. “All those fine details, the columns, details that reflect Greek temples or ancient Rome,” she said.

The building functioned as the city’s post office until 1967, when the new one was built three blocks to the east. It then sat empty until 1973, when it was purchased for a new City Hall.

Instead of completely redoing the floor plan, the classic post office windows were preserved, and today front the city clerk’s and finance offices. “The whole concept of historic preserva-tion is to ‘adaptively re-use’,” said Long. “You keep the important aspects and try to use them as sensitively as you can.”

And preservation doesn’t stop with the doors and the ceiling. While “crawling around” in the attic, Long happened upon the build-ing’s old lights. “I want to restore them to their original places,” he said. “The globe lights are too ’80s – I just need to find some photo-graphs of where they had them before.”

In 1985, the Preservation League presented the city with a Historic Civic Build-ing Award for the building, which is also on the Na-tional Register of Historic Places. “This kind of public building is meant to be inspirational,” said Werbi-zky. “It’s wonderful to hear that the community is taking such pride in this project.”

QUILT/From B1“Waiting for the Mail” also won

“Best Pictorial” at the Vermont Quilt Festival at the Champlain Valley Expo-sition in Essex Junction, and “Best of Country” for the U.S. at the World Quilt Show in Manchester, Vt., last August.

She jokes that she “grew up with scraps” from a mother who quilted, but she didn’t take up the hobby until the mid ’80s, when she took an adult-ed class. “I made a chair seat with a ruffle,” she said. “And I thought, ‘I can do this’.”

She started doing landscapes, including one of the James Pearsall Cemetery in Dupin County, N.C., where four generations of grandpar-ents are buried. Though raised outside of Schenectady, she visited family in North Carolina every year, and many of her quilts pay tribute to the land-scape, the family and the faces she knew.

Her first person – an elderly lady with a lace shawl that she said was a composite of the elderly women she

knew in N.C - appeared on a quilt she made in 1996 that became part of the Tactile Architecture Quilt exhibit in Austria.

But her first photo-real pictorial quilt was of her great-grandmother, Susan Ann Pearsall-Bryan. “She was amazing,” she said. “She had seven children, and only my grandfather survived – two died in childbirth, the others died of TB in their 20s. My grandfather was 15 when his dad died of TB. She was one tough lady.”

That quilt, titled “Words Remem-bered,” features excerpts from a diary her grandmother kept from 1869, when she was 16, to 1875; the original is in the archives of the University of North Carolina at Greensboro.

“Words Remembered” was also a 2005 Viewer’s Choice at the Fenimore Quilt Show and was featured on the cover of Quilting Quarterly magazine in 2008.

Though she doesn’t yet have plans for her next quilt, she feels “blessed” for the talent. “I really love to bring all the history together,” she said.

Renovations Reveal City Hall Charms

Quiltmaker Inspired By Respect For Family History

AllOTSEGO.seniorityMary Wirchansky happened to take an adult-ed course, and discovered she had a profound talent for quilting.

Page 4: ALLOTSEGO 3-8-13

B-4 AllOTSEGO.life THURSDAY-FRIDAY, MARCH 7-8, 2013

LegaLLegaL LegaL LegaL LegaLLegaL LegaL LegaLLegaL

LegaL notice

NOTICE OF PU-BICATION

Notice is hereby given that a change in class license, number 2179114 for a seasonal on prem-ise liquor license has been applied for by the under-signed to sell beer, wine and liquor at retail in a pizza and grill restau-rant establishment under the Alcohol Beverage Control law at 4551 State Highway 28, Mil-ford, NY 13807.

Brockmann Barn, LLC d/b/aMaskots Pizza & Grill4551 State High-way 28Milford, NY 138072LegalMar14

LegaL notice Notice of forma-tion of Limited Liability Com-pany, (LLC)Name: Redneck Bar-B-Que, LLCArticles of Or-ganization filed with Secretary of State ofNew Yorlc (SSNY) on 1/15/2013.Office Location: Otsego County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom pro-cessagainst it may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to 4938 State I-Iighway 28,Cooperstown N.Y. 13326. Purpose. Any lawful pur-

pose.6LegalMar7

LegaL notice NOTICE OF

FORMATION of OPERA LAKE HOUSE LLC

Arts. of Org. filed with the Sec’y of State of NY (SSNY) on 01/14/2013. Office Location: Otsego County. SSNY desig-nated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: 75 West 126th Street, New York, New York 10027. Pur-pose: Any lawful activity. 6LegalMar7

LegaL notice Notice of Quali-fication of 700 MILFORD HOLDINGS LLC. Author-ity filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 01/25/13. Of-fice location: Otsego County. LLC formed in Delaware (DE) on 11/28/12. Princ. office of LLC: 780 Third Ave., 25th Fl., NY, NY 10017. SSNY des-ignated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to c/o Corporation Service Co., 80 State St., Albany, NY 12207-2543, regd. agent upon whom and at which process

may be served. DE addr. of LLC: 2711 Centerville Rd., Ste. 400, Wilmington, DE 19808. Arts. of Org. filed with DE Secy. of State, Federal & Duke of York St., Dover, DE 19901. Purpose: Any law-ful activity. 6LegalMar14

LegaL notice Notice of For-mation of a NY Limited Liability Company. Name: JustLeanBack LLC. Articles of Organization filing date with Secretary of State (SSNY) was Nov 16 2012. Office location: Otsego County. SSNY has been desig-nated as agent of JustLeanBack LLC upon whom process against it may be served and SSNY shall mail copy of pro-cess to PO Box 1410 Richfield Springs, NY 13439. Purpose is to engage in any and all business activities permit-ted under NYS laws.6LegalMar14

LegaL notice King Preserva-tion Club 8, LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with SSNY on 01/16/13. Off. Loc.: Otsego Co. SSNY desig. as agt. upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: The LLC, 176 Barlow Rd.,

Oneonta, NY 13820. General Purposes.6LegalMar14

LegaL notice Notice

of Formation of Limited Liability Company (LLC)

Name: MUDDY RIVER DAIRY, LLC. Articles of Organization filed with Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on January 30, 2013. Office Location: Otsego County. SSNY desig-nated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to 63 Main St., Otego, NY 13825. Purpose: to en-gage in any and all business for which LLCs may be formed under the New York LLC Law.6LegalMar14

LegaL notice NOTICE OF FORMATION of Limited Liability Company (LLC)Name: Triple Crown Baseball Factory, LLC. Articles of Or-ganization filed w/Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 12/31/12. Office location: Otsego County. SSNY desig-nated as agent for service of process. SSNY shall mail process to PO Box 1043, Oneonta, NY 13820.

Purpose: Pur-pose: to engage in any and all busi-ness for which LLCs may be formed under the New York LLC Law.6LegalMar14

LegaL notice Notice of Forma-tion of Limited Liability Com-pany (LLC)Name: INGLE-SIDE RENTAL L.L.C.Articles of Or-ganization filed with Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 9/5/2012Office Location: Otsego County, SSNY designated as agent of L.L.C. upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to: Law Office of Robert J. Poulson, Jr., 29 Pioneer St. Ste. 301, Cooperstown, NY 13326. Purpose: Any lawful Pur-pose.6legalMar21

LegaL notice NOTICE OF FORMATION

of Limited Liability Company (LLC)

The name of the LLC is BTP Cooperstown LLC. Articles of Organization were filed with the Sec-retary of State of New York on Feb-ruary 15, 2013. The purpose for which the LLC has been formed

is to engage in any lawful act or activity. The County within the State of New York in which the principal office of the LLC is to be located is Otsego. The Secretary of State is des-ignated as agent of the LLC upon whom service of process against the LLC may be served. The Secretary of State shall mail a copy of any process to the LLC, 626 Vanderlyn Lane, Slingerlands, NY 12159.6LegalApr4

LegaL notice NOTICE TO THE DEFENDANTS, THE ESTATE OF PATRICIA NIGRO BOOK-HOUT, REBEC-CA BOOKHOUT AND RACHEL BOOKHOUT

Nature of this ac-tion: foreclosure action involving real property com-monly known as 15 Park Avenue, Oneonta, New York 13820 seek-ing a judgment of foreclosure and sale for the amount due and owing to the Plaintiff, NBT Bank, National Association, under the Note and Mortgage with a current principal balance of Seventy Two Thousand Twelve and 98/100 Dol-lars ($72,012.98) together with interest, late fees

and other charges.

STATE OF NEW YORKSUPREME

COURT COUNTY OF

OTSEGO __________________________________________

NBT BANK, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION,

Plaintiff,

SUMMONS

-against-

Index No.: 2012-1034

Date Filed: 11/20/2012THE ESTATE OF PATRICIA NIGRO BOOKHOUT; REBECCA BOOKHOUT; RACHEL BOOK-HOUT; and JOHN DOE and MARY ROE, said individuals being fictitious and in-tended as possible occupants of thepremises which are the subject matter of this ac-tion, and whose identity is un-known, Defendants.__________________________________________

TO THE ABOVENAMED DEFENDANTS:

YOU ARE HEREBY SUM-MONED to answer the Com-plaint in the above action and serve a copy of your

Answer on the plaintiff’s attorney within twenty (20) days after service of this Summons, exclusive of the day of service, or if the service of the Summons is made by any means other than by personal delivery to you within the State of New York, within thirty (30) days after such ser-vice is complete. In case of your failure to appear or Answer thereto, judgment will be taken against you by default for the relief demanded in the Complaint. The United States of America, if designated as a defendant in this action, may Answer or appear within sixty (60) days of service hereof.

Otsego County is designated as the place of trial, the basis of venue in this action is the location of the mortgaged premises.

NOTICE

YOU ARE IN DANGER OF LOSING YOUR

HOME If you do not respond to this summons and complaint by serving a copy of the answer on the attorney for the mortgage company who filed this foreclo-sure proceeding against you and filing the answer

with the court, a default judgment may be entered and you can lose your home.

Speak to an at-torney or go to the court where your case is pending for further infor-mation on how to answer the sum-mons and protect your property.

Sending a pay-ment to your mortgage com-pany will not stop this foreclosure action.

YOU MUST RESPOND BY SERVING A COPY OF THE ANSWER ON THE ATTOR-NEY FOR THE PLAINTIFF (MORTGAGE COMPANY) AND FILING THE ANSWER WITH THE COURT.

Dated: November 19, 2012 Clifton Park,New York BURGESS & AS-SOCIATES P.C.___________________________

Melissa H. Pugliese, Esq.Attorneys for PlaintiffOffice and P.O. Address646 Plank Road, Suite 103 Clifton Park, New York 12065 (518) 371-00524LegalMar7

LegaLS

AllOTSEGO.business&services

CAN-DO BUILDING- All Aspects of Carpentry -• Big Jobs • Small Jobs• Odd Jobs • Sub-Work• Property Maintenance“Quality Work at Reasonable Rates”- Matt Wheeler -46 East StreetEdmeston, N.Y, 13335 607-437-2102

Audio & Visual for Home & Auto

Stereo LabSoundtrAck Hi-fi inc.

318 cHeStnut Street • oneontA • 607-433-2288

Time to Travel 105 Oneida Street, Oneonta

www.timetotravel.net • 607-433-6775

Come see the world with us!Think You Can’t Afford It?We’ve Got Payment Plans

ReGIStRY · PAYment PlAnSPeRSOnAlIzed COnCIeRGe SeRvICeS

All YOuR tRAvel needS!

Move in Before The Snow Flies….And get the 3rd month FREE!

Live Life Fully!Call now for more information!Pat Breuer, Executive Director

607-432-6171 • hampshirehouseacf.com

1846 County Highway 48 • Oneonta

Winter is here at the Hampshire House Come join us for a swim, a vacation, and learn about our daycare program!

Live Life Fully!

Call now for more information!

607-432-6171 • hampshirehouseacf.com

1846 County Highway 48 Oneonta

Quality, Comfort, Dignity... Products

For Your Life! 174 Roundhouse Road, Oneonta

www.symphonymedicalsupply.com

607-643-0257

Offering A Full Line of Medical Supplies &

Equipment For All Your Health Care Needs! Medicare

& Medicaid AcceptedLocal Delivery

CosmiC Combo musiC serviCes

– DJ/Karaoke & Live Bands –

Affordable Music Services For Any Occasion

Full “Light Show” and Pro Sound Systems

Call Gerry or Laura607-434-3702

[email protected]

Now Booking Weddings, Birthdays, Anniversary Parties,

Corporate Events, Sweet 16’s and School Dances

PJ’s PaintingInterior and Exterior

Fully Insured and Free Estimates

PO Box 321Springfield, NY 13468

Peter Sciallo607-547-2185607-437-4851 cell

For answers to this week’s crossword, go to allotsego.com

madisonvinyl.com Ph. 607-967-4323

Page 5: ALLOTSEGO 3-8-13

AllOTSEGO.life B-7THURSDAY-FRIDAY, MARCH 7-8, 2013 AllOTSEGO.automart

2013 Tiguan 2.0T S, auto transmission. $199 per month lease. MSRP $25,835. Lease for 36 months and 12,000 miles per year, $199 per month with $2,999 due at signing. $750 Regular VCI Bonus Enhancement. Excludes, tax, title, license, and other fees. Subject to VW Credit approval. 2013 Passat 2.5L S w/ Appearance, auto transmission . MSRP $23,740. Lease for 36 months and 12,000 miles per year, $199 per month with $2,349 due at signing. Excludes tax, title, license, and other fees. Subject to VW Credit approval. 2013 Jetta 2.0L S, manual transmission. MSRP $17,470. Lease for 36 months and 12,000 miles per year, $159 per month with $1,999 due at signing. Excludes tax, title, license and other fees. Subject to VW Credit approval. 2013 Beetle 2.5L, manual transmission. MSRP $20,790. Lease for 36 months and 12,000 miles per year, $199 per month with $2,349 due at signing. Excludes tax, title, license, and other fees. Subject to VW Credit approval. Offer expires 04/1/13. The Volkswagen Carefree Maintenance Program covers the vehicles scheduled maintenance for three years or 36,000 miles, whichever occurs Þrst, on all new 2009 or newer models. Coverage is during the term of the new vehicle warranty at no additional charge. Some limitations apply. The Touareg 2 TDI program covers the vehicleÕs 5K, 15K, 25k and 35K AdBlue reÞlls. The Routan Program covers 6k, 12k, 18k, 24k, 30k, and 36k scheduled maintenance. Does not include routine wear and tear on parts such as breaks, tires, wipers, blades, light bulbs, etc. See dealer or vehicle maintenance program booklet for details.

607-432-8100 • 800-351-8166Monday to Thursday 8 - 8, Friday 8 - 6, Saturday 9 - 4:30, Sunday 1 - 4

www.vwoneonta.com • 7517 State Hwy 23, Oneonta, NY 13820 • www.vwoneonta.com

Find out what hundreds of your Otsego County neighbors have discovered:The all new Steet Toyota, in a state-of-the-art 34,000 square foot facility,

just down the road and ready to talk about your next Toyota.

See how it’s so easy to do business at Steet Toyota!Only 45 minutes from Cooperstown and less than an hour from Oneonta!

4991 COmmerCial Drive, YOrkville, NY 13495 • 315-736-8241 • TOll-Free 888-836-1655 • www.STeeTTOYOTa.COm

we have over 300 new Toyotas available!PlUS we have a large number of Toyota Certified Used Cars in stock…alwaYS!

Page 6: ALLOTSEGO 3-8-13

B-8 AllOTSEGO.life THURSDAY-FRIDAY, MARCH 7-8, 2013

CHECK www..AllOTSEGO.com DAILY FOR BREAKING NEWS OF OTSEGO COUNTY

AllOTSEGO.automart