WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 2011
VOL. 20 NO. 136
BERLIN, N.H.
Berlin 2011 Election Results Ward I
Ward II
Ward III
Ward IV
Total votes
752-5858
Election brings new faces to council and school baord BY BARBARA TETREAULT THE BERLIN DAILY SUN
City Council Russell Otis
244
Lucie Remillard
255
Tom McCue Denise Morgan-Allain
64 260
Dori Ducharme Richard Lafleur
170 155
Peter Higbee David Moore
BERLIN -- There will be two new faces on both the city council and school board as a result of last night’s municipal elections. For the first time in Berlin history, there will be four women on the city council. In Ward II, where there were two contested council seats, incumbent Councilor Dori Ducharme won a close race for reelection, defeating former Councilor Richard Lafleur by 15 votes. Denise Morgan Allain had an easier time in her bid, beating incumbent Councilor Tom McCue by a 260-64 margin. Both Ducharme and Allain were endorsed by Mayor Paul Grenier, who ran unopposed for a second term. In the other contested council race, Peter Higbee defeated David Moore for the open Ward III seat. In all, seven of the eight seats on the city council were up for grabs.
223 168
Diana Nelson
222
Roland Theberge
245
Mayor Paul Grenier
272
288
380
247
1187
93 171 187 123 98 95
80 189 236 152 101 124
104 240 273 209 155 163
75 148 167 99 95 76
352 748 863 583 449 458
School Board Mark Evans Nathan Morin Nicole Plourde Ken Proulx Bobby Rodrigue Tricia Walsh
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Only the seat of Ward III Councilor Mike Rozek was not up for election. In addition to the three contested races, four incumbents ran unopposed. In Ward I, incumbents Lucie Remillard and Russell Otis were unopposed for the two and four year positions respectively. In Ward IV, incumbents Roland Theberge and Diana Nelson were unopposed for the two and four year positions respectively. Grenier said he was pleased with the election results. He said he thought the public recognized the effort put forward by his team and the dividends it has produced. “The easy part is over now, the hard part begins,” he added. Grenier said the redevelopment of the northern section of Main Street will be the top priority of his second term. He said the buildings owned by Rite Aid will be see ELECTION page 13
NC rest areas closed until late spring BY BARBARA TETREAULT THE BERLIN DAILY SUN
SHELBURNE -- Motorists stopping at one of the four state rest areas in northern New Hampshire will find the facility closed for the winter months. State rest areas/welcome centers on Route 2 in Shelburne, Route 3 in Colebrook, Interstate 93 in Littleton, and Interstate 89 in Lebanon fell victim to
state budget cuts and closed on Halloween. They are scheduled to reopen on May 15. State Senator John Gallus, R-Berlin, is not happy about the closures. “We’re suppose to be a welcoming place for tourists,” said Gallus. Furthermore, the state senator noted the rest area on Interstate 93 at Sanbornsee REST AREAS page 7
Campaigning yesterday out front of the Ward II polling site at Berlin Junior High School, council candidates Dori Ducharme (l) and Denise Morgan-Allain talked to voter Mary Jane Gagne (ri) (BARBARA TETREAULT PHOTO).
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Page 2 — THE BERLIN DAILY SUN, Wednesday, November 9, 2011
Stroke surgery found ineffective (NY Times) — An operation that doctors hoped would prevent strokes in people with poor circulation to the brain does not work, researchers are reporting. A $20 million study, paid for by the government, was cut short when it became apparent that the surgery was not helping patients who had complete blockages in one of their two carotid arteries, which run up either side of the neck and feed 80 percent of the brain. The surgery was a bypass that connected a scalp artery to a deeper vessel to improve blood flow to the brain. The new study, published on Wednesday in The Journal of the American Medical Association, is the second in recent months to find that a costly treatment, one that doctors had high hopes for, did not prevent strokes. Both the stents and the bypass operation seemed to make sense medically, and doctors thought they should work. Their failure highlights the peril of assuming that an apparent improvement on a lab test or X-ray, like better blood flow or a wider artery, will translate into something that actually helps patients, warned an editorial that accompanied the new findings. Only rigorous studies can tell for sure.
SAYWHAT...
“
Doctors will have more lives to answer for in the next world than even we generals.” —Napoleon Bonaparte
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THEMARKET
3DAYFORECAST Today High: 57 Record: 72 (1938) Sunrise: 6:32 a.m. Tonight Low: 44 Record: 14 (1967) Sunset: 4:24 p.m.
Tomorrow High: 56 Low: 39 Sunrise: 6:34 a.m. Sunset: 4:23 p.m. Friday High: 45 Low: 27
TODAY’SJOKE “I believe that every paper in the country should have one headline that when you read it, you laugh so hard you can’t stand it...What about a headline like this: ‘Hippo Eats Dwarf’? How good is that?” — Lewis Black
DOW JONES 101.79 to 12,170.18 NASDAQ 32.34 to 2,727.49 S&P 14.80 to 1,275.92
records are from 1886 to present
TODAY’SWORD plebiscite noun;
1. A direct vote of the qualified voters of a state in regard to some important public question. 2. The vote by which the people of a political unit determine autonomy or affiliation with another country. — courtesy dictionary.com
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Votes today may be barometer for 2012 election (NY Times) — Voters headed to the polls on Tuesday to render their judgments on mayoral candidates in some of the nation’s largest cities and on contentious ballot measures that affect workers’ rights, reproductive rights and voting rights. While the issues are disparate, they could give an indication of the mood of the electorate ahead of the 2012 presidential race. But if turnout is low, as expected, it would give these votes limited value in
forecasting the results a year from now. One of the fiercest Election Day battles, with national repercussions, will be in Ohio, where organized labor is pushing to repeal a law limiting collective bargaining rights for public employees, including police officers and firefighters. The anti-union law, Senate Bill 5, was the signal achievement of Gov. John R. Kasich and his Republican-led Legislature. If voters overturn the law, they could revive Democratic hopes for 2012 in
that vital swing state. Supporters see the law as an important reform in curbing labor costs in an era of budget deficits. The fight over the measure has become a proxy for a fight about the economy and whether Republicans like Mr. Kasich and Gov. Scott Walker of Wisconsin — who made an antibargaining law the centerpiece of his legislative package — have gone too far in clamping down on spending and have actually prevented a rebound.
U.N. finds signs of work by Greeks said to choose new Iran toward nuclear device leader, but talks hit hurdles (NY Times) — United Nations weapons inspectors released a trove of new evidence on Tuesday that they say makes a “credible” case that “Iran has carried out activities relevant to the development of a nuclear device” and that the project may still be under way. The long-awaited report relies on evidence of far greater scope and depth than any the International Atomic Energy Agency has made public before, and represents the harshest judgment the agency has ever issued in its decade-long struggle to pierce the secrecy sur-
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rounding the Iranian program. The findings have already rekindled a debate among the Western allies and Israel about whether increased diplomatic pressure, sanctions, sabotage or military action could stop Iran’s program. The report offered no estimate of how long it would take for Iran to be able to produce a nuclear weapon. But it laid out the case that Iran had moved far beyond the blackboard to create computer models of nuclear explosions in 2008 and 2009 and conducted experiments on nuclear triggers.
ATHENS (NY Times) — Lucas Papademos, a respected economist, seemed on the verge Tuesday night of being named Greece’s next prime minister, Greek news outlets reported, but party leaders were still engaged in a bitter and drawn-out fight over the make-up of his cabinet. And by late afternoon, Greece seemed to face yet a new set of troubles as Antonis Samaras, the leader of the main opposition party New Democracy, balked at a demand by Eurogroup, the European Union’s group of finance ministers, that several top Greek leaders give a written commitment to the terms of an expanded bailout hammered out with Europe’s leaders last month. “There is such a thing as national dignity,” said Mr. Samaras in a statement. “I have repeatedly explained that, in order to protect the Greek economy and the euro, the implementation of the October 26 agreement is inevitable.”
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THE BERLIN DAILY SUN, Wednesday, November 9, 2011— Page 3
Convicted murderer seeks new trial LANCASTER — Convicted killer Seth Bader asked Tuesday that his murder conviction be overturned and that he be granted a new trial. In two petitions argued Tuesday at the Coos County Superior Court, Bader claimed that the state failed to provide his defense team with information about a key witness and at least one juror acted
inappropriately during deliberations. Bader was convicted in 1998 of the first-degree murder of his ex-wife, Vicki Bader, and is serving a life sentence without the possibility of parole. Bader claimed that his son, Joseph, a key witness for the state during trial, had some “minor trouble at Hampton Beach” recorded in a con-
tact log. Bader said that log was never turned over to his defense team. Bader also said that the fact that his girlfriend at the time, Mary Jean Martin, refused to testify on Fifth Amendment grounds, which was considered by at least one juror during deliberations, violated his right to a fair trial. Prosecutors said all discovery was
turned over to Bader’s defense team, and there was no evidence of juror misconduct. Bader has filed several appeals in various courts, and prosecutors said the issues have already been decided. The judge took the matter under advisement. —Courtesy of WMUR
Knieriem, Groguen honored by Friends of Tuckerman BY TOM EASTMAN THE CONWAY DAILY SUN
JACKSON — Friends of Tuckerman Ravine presented the third annual Steve Eastman Distinguished Service Award at the non-profit group's second annual gala awards dinner at the Red Fox Pub and Grille in Jackson Saturday. Mount Washington volunteer snow patrol director John Knieriem of Manchester was presented the award by Friends of Tuckerman Ravine board member, and good friend of the late Steve Eastman, John Gorman and Eastman's widow, Sarah Eastman, and siblings and Friends of Tuckerman board members Tom Eastman and Jeanie Eastman Ryan, and brother David Eastman. Knieriem is a charter lifetime member of Friends of Tuckerman and was an aerospace engineer before obtaining his nursing degree at age 61. The Eastman Distinguished Service Award recognizes individuals who have made significant contributions to the preservation, history and safety of the ravine. The award is named in honor of the late Steve Eastman (1949-2008), former publisher and founding co-editor of the Mountain Ear newspaper of Conway. He exemplified a volunteer team spirit and leadership of events that bettered the quality of life in Mount Washington Valley. He was a strong supporter of Friends of Tuckerman Ravine and its conservation goals. Past winners include longtime ski race official Ted Sutton of Lincoln and Jeff Leich, executive director of the New England Ski Museum. Receiving the the executive director's Friends of Tuckerman “Go the
Extra Mile” Award” was tireless volunteer Ron Groguen of southern New Hampshire, who was accompanied by his wife, Robin. “He is there volunteering for us at every Friends of Tuckerman event. He's my right-hand man,” said executive director Al Risch of Madison. Also recognized at the event was Roger Damon, an avalanche expert and former Friends of Tuckerman Ravine board member who recently marked his 65th year as a National Ski Patrol member. Longtime volunteer Sheldon Perry of Tamworth was also lauded by Risch for his service to the non-profit organization. A silent auction was held, offering ski lift tickets donated by New England ski resorts and other items donated by local businesses. Guest speakers at the event were U.S. Forest Service lead snow ranger Chris Joosen, and esteemed climber and writer Mark Synnott of Jackson. Due to anticipated budget cuts, Joosen noted that “friends” groups such as Friends of Tuckerman Ravine will be of great help to the snow rangers as they do their jobs. ••• Friends of Tuckerman is a nonprofit, member-supported organization dedicated to the preservation and protection of the historic recreational uses of New Hampshire's Tuckerman Ravine and Mount Washington, working in conjunction with the U.S. Forest Service. The group annually hosts trail work weekends in the ravine, and every April also presents the demanding Friends of Tuckerman Pentathlon (consisting of a run-kayak-bicyclehike-ski race) and the Wildcat Wildfire Pentathlon, held concurrently but on an easier course.
Friends of Tuckerman Ravine presented the third annual Steve Eastman Distinguished Service Award at the non-profit group's annual gala awards dinner at the Red Fox Pub and Grille in Jackson Nov. 5. Mount Washington volunteer snow patrol director John Knieriem was presented the award by Friends of Tuckerman Ravine board member, and good friend of the late Steve Eastman, John Gorman (left) and Steve Eastman's siblings, Friends of Tuckerman Ravine board members Tom Eastman and Jeanie Eastman Ryan. (JAKE RISCH PHOTO)
Through its fund-raising efforts, Friends of Tuckerman Ravine over the past decade has been able to assist the U.S. Forest Service in buying radio communications equipment, replenishing first aid caches, support funding for a pedestrian foot bridge along Route 16 in Pinkham Notch, and build a potable water supply in the ravine. The group assisted the U.S. Forest Service at three work weekends in
October to help repair trail and bridge damage caused by Tropical Storm Irene in late summer. Friends of Tuckerman will next attend the annual Boston Globe BEWI Snowsports Expo in Boston, Nov. 10-13. For more information, call 367-4417, visit www.friendsoftuckerman.org or e-mail to info@friendsoftuckerman. org. Follow Friends of Tuckerman on Facebook.
Family of deceased SNHU student shares their memories RUTLAND, Mass. — The family of a Southern New Hampshire University student found dead in her Washington Hall dorm room over the weekend shared memories of her Tuesday morning. Jamie Lee Cruz was the youngest of seven children in a large and loving family that has lived on Turkey Hill Pond in Rutland for 16 years. She wanted to be a teacher and told her parents SNHU in Manchester was her dream school to study education. “Jamie loved life. She wanted to be a
teacher. She loved children. That was her goal,” said Cyndi Cruz, her mother. Jamie Lee Cruz’s parents said SNHU was her top choice to study education. “That was her No. 1 college. She got accepted to it. That’s where she wanted to go,” said her father, Juan Cruz. She has five brothers, and three have served in the armed forces in Afghanistan and Iraq. She also has a sister who attends college at Johnson and Wales.Her boyfriend of one year, Tom
Fontaine, lives and works in Worcester. Fontaine said the last time he saw Cruz was two weeks ago. The family described her as the emotional bright light who kept everyone close. Her parents said she loved SNHU and called every night with updates about her classes and friends. Juan Cruz said during the last conversation he had with his daughter, she asked him for money to buy clothes because she loved to dress up. Police are still investigating the cir-
cumstances surrounding her unexpected death. An autopsy did not determine how she died. A preliminary investigation shows no foul play and no evidence of drug or alcohol abuse, according to the school president. The Attorney General’s Office said it is not involved in the case. Those close to the case are now waiting to see if toxicology results provide insight into how Cruz died. “As soon as they find out something, they will let us know,” said Juan Cruz. —Courtesy of WMUR
Page 4 — THE BERLIN DAILY SUN, Wednesday, November 9, 2011
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Ask our local Walmart for ‘Wall of Honor’ To the editor: Friday is Veterans Day. It is a day in which we remember our veterans and active military personnel. Some of us choose to honor the service and sacrifices of these men and women with parades and speeches. Some of us proudly display our flags at home or work, while others quietly display our blue or gold stars in our windows silently saying “thank you God” every time another service person makes it back home alive. We personally enjoy seeing the recognition from the business community. Do you know corporate Walmart has a policy in which they allow and encourage each store to have a “Wall of Honor”? This is a special display located in the front of each store to recognize our service men and women, past and present. Some stores choose to have month long displays, others have beautiful permanent displays. Those who have month long displays cover the months of May (leading up to Memorial Day) and November (to cover Veterans Day.) According to the corporate office, it is up the local management to determine the logistics of this display. Yes, that is what they said – “it is up to local management.” Now if you have seen this ‘display’ in our local Walmart, you already know it stays up for a week or less if we even have one. It usually consists of a few photos stuck up on the wall
with little to no explanation. There is plenty of room for an honorable display but that doesn’t seem to happen. Are you paying attention Walmart management? This is a direct reflection on you! If you aren’t sure of what to do, you can contact the home office in Bentonville or other Walmart locations for their ideas. We have pictures of Walmart displays we’ll be happy to share. We know that Walmart management is aware of the holidays in advance because they always seem to come up with a big sale based on some holiday. We all remember to get the hot dogs, paper plates and BBQ grills on sale on Memorial Day, right? There was a sale flyer in today’s paper just before – hmm, could it be – Veterans Day. The local people have spent thousands of local dollars at the local Walmart, paying local salaries. Is it too much to ask for a public display honoring our military, if not all year, at least two months out of the year? We are asking for all active duty, reserves, veterans, friends, families, and anyone else who cares to please tell our local Walmart management, you want to see the “Wall of Honor” proudly displayed at our Walmart. Carol Walker Mike Young, Gold star parents of PFC Benjamin G. Young
We welcome your ideas and opinions on all topics and consider every signed letter for publication in Letters to the Editor. Limit letters to 300 words and include your address. Please provide a phone number for verification purposes. Limit thank you letters to 150 words. Longer letters will only be published as space allows and may be edited. Anonymous letters, letter without full names and generic letters will not be published. Please send your letters to: The Berlin Daily Sun, 164 Main Street, Berlin, NH 03570 or fax to 1-866-475-4429 or email to bds@berlindailysun.com.
by Frank Bruni The New York Times
The Molestor Next Door The longest, most exhaustively researched article I ever wrote for a newspaper or magazine was about a child molester who had sexually abused a little boy living down the street. The abuse went on for more than two years, beginning when the boy was 10. This molester had a job. A house. A wife. Two kids of his own. And he gained access to his victim not through brute force but through patience, play and gifts: help with his homework, computer games, a new bike. To neighborhood observers, including the victim’s parents, the molester’s attentiveness passed for kindness, at least for a while. A molester’s behavior very often does. The arrest on Saturday of a former Penn State University assistant football coach — who is accused of sexually abusing eight pre-adolescent, adolescent and teenage boys — brought this all back to me. I wonder if people who know the coach and saw him working with kids will comment on how genuinely nurturing he seemed and how this surely prevented or discouraged suspicions about him. This is something that has come up repeatedly over decades — I wrote that article back in 1991, for The Detroit Free Press — but that remains tough to accept: the predator to watch out for is less likely to don a trench coat and lurk behind a bush than to wear a clerical collar and stand near the altar or to hold a stopwatch and walk the sidelines. And he (or, for that matter, she) works with children as a function of being drawn to them for reasons beyond their welfare. The former Penn State assistant coach, Jerry Sandusky, 67, founded and ran a charity program for disadvantaged boys. That’s one of the ways he got to know and interact so extensively with kids, some of whom received special favors related to his college-football connections. His alleged abuse of them is said to have occurred over a 15-year period ending in 2009. He maintains his innocence of the charges against him. That’s important to note, because sexual abuse of children is a crime so rightly enraging that the specter of it has prompted unfair rushes to judgment in the past. But true or not, the accusations against Sandusky, spelled out in great detail in a 23-page grand jury report, bring to mind many proven cases in which a molester occupied a position of trust, identified and gravitated to children who were especially vulnerable, made them feel special and was by all outward appearances their champion,
which many molesters indeed believe themselves to be. In their own minds these molesters aren’t predators. They’re people whose affinity for children just happens to have a sexual element, the satisfaction of which they’ve convinced themselves isn’t such a big, harmful deal. Parents face a tricky challenge. They need to be watchful but not paranoid, because most clergy members, scout leaders, camp counselors and coaches aren’t abusers in waiting and are improving children’s lives. They deserve the opportunity to. But parents should also remain conscious of an additional lesson suggested by the Penn State story. Institutions do an awful job of policing themselves. That has been true of the Boy Scouts, which has paid out tens of million of dollars in response to lawsuits by former scouts molested by adults who continued to work in the organization despite complaints or questions about their behavior. That has been true of the Roman Catholic Church, whose diocesan heads and bishops repeatedly transferred abusive priests from one parish to another rather than report them to law enforcement authorities. This cover-up spanned decades and went all the way up the hierarchy of the church. Many factors explain it, including a fear of scandal and desire to protect the church’s image. The Boy Scouts, too, didn’t want messiness exposed. Was that a dynamic at Penn State as well? Two university officials have been indicted for not contacting the police after being alerted many years ago to the possibility that Sandusky was abusing boys from his charity on university premises. And there are lingering questions about whether the university’s renowned head football coach, Joe Paterno, was irresponsible. According to an account in the indictment that he hasn’t disputed, a graduate assistant in 2002 told him of inappropriate activity in a university shower between a boy and Sandusky, who had already retired from his longtime job as the coordinator of the football team’s defense. Coach Paterno relayed that to a university official, then apparently moved on. And Sandusky continued to interact with troubled boys. Paterno absolutely should have followed up. Maybe he just couldn’t envision someone like Sandusky — a distinguished professional, a seeming do-gooder — as a molester. But it’s important that we all do.
Help make sure that everyone deployed receives a holiday box Rose Dodge, Managing Editor Rita Dube, Office Manager Theresa Johnson, Advertising Sales Representative Barbara Tetreault, Reporter Melissa Grima Reporter Jean LeBlanc, Sports John Walsh, Contributor “Seeking the truth and printing it” Mark Guerringue, Publisher Adam Hirshan, Editor THE BERLIN DAILY SUN is published Tuesday through Friday by Country News Club, Inc. Dave Danforth, Mark Guerringue, Adam Hirshan, Founders Offices and mailing address: 164 Main Street, Berlin, NH 03570 E-Mail: bds@berlindailysun.com Tel.: (603) 752-5858 FAX: (1-866) 475-4429 CIRCULATION: 8,925 distributed FREE throughout the Berlin-Gorham area. For delivery call 752-1005
To the editor: Time is drawing near for Gorham American Legion Auxiliary Unit #82 to send our holiday boxes to our local soldiers abroad. Do you have a son, daughter, husband, wife, or any one you know serving at this time. We are looking for community support in filling those boxes with suggested box packing items: Candy canes, hot chocolate, packaged cookies (no home baked items). Some other suggestions would be new pens and new writing paper/cards. New white tube socks. Individually wrapped hard candies, gum, mints, granola bars, dried fruit, Power
bars, Slim Jims, Life Savers, hand warmers, feet warmers, playing cards, puzzle books, dominos or small games or a card or letter with a supportive message. If you are interested in making a financial donation it will be used to defray the cost associated with the mailing of the boxes. If you know of a local soldier abroad please forward their address to dbouthot@ne.rr.com. All donations can be dropped off at Peggy Qualls house or the American Legion Post # 82 at 6 Androscoggin St., Gorham, NH 03581 see HOLIDAY page 5
THE BERLIN DAILY SUN, Wednesday, November 9, 2011— Page 5
Miss Berlin-Gorham Scholarship Program set for November 12 GORHAM - The three contestants competing to become Miss Berlin-Gorham on Saturday, November 12, will share more than $2,500 in scholarships available at this year’s competition. The Sixth Annual Miss Berlin-Gorham Scholarship Program will begin at 4 p.m. at the Gorham A u d i t o rium located within the beautifully renovated Gorham Town Hall. The program is the local prelimiLinda Montminy nary for the next Miss New Hampshire Scholarship Program to be held on April 22, 2012. The public is invited to attend the event and to enjoy the evening’s entertainment. Miss NH 2011, Regan Hartley, and Miss NH’s Outstanding Teen, Lauren Percy, will be performing. Jennifer Clements, Miss BerlinGorham 2011 will also be there for the entertainment. Tickets will be sold at the door at $10 each, $5 for senior citiStephanie Iacuzio zens and $5 for students. The winner of the November 12 competition will receive a $2,000 scholarship, the first runner-up will receive $250, and the second runner-up will receive $150. These scholarships are made possible by the generous support of the program’s sponsors: AutoNorth Pre-Owned Superstore, Inc., Northway Bank, Yokohama Restaurant, The Vac Shop, Rob Bolash Custom
Builders, Gorham House Florist, Clermont Trucking, DBG Golf, Presidential Pest Control, Ed Reichert, Town and County Motor Inn, Story Land, American Legion Auxiliary - Post 82, Great Glen Trails, Mount Washington Auto Road, Attitash, Berlin IGA Foodliner, AV Country Club, and Betty Dee Fashions. The contestants for Miss BerlinGorham are Mallory Coulombe, 19, freshman at Southern NH University and daughter of Ron and Lorraine Coulombe of Gorham; Stephanie Iacuzio, a freshman at Plymouth State University and daughter of Gennaro and Kim Iacuzio of Derry; and Linda Montminy, 19, freshman at ColbySawyer College and daughter of Paul and Lisa Montminy of Gorham & Barnstead. The Third Annual Miss Berlin-Gorham’s Outstanding Teen Program will also begin at 4 p.m. at the Gorham Auditorium. The program is the local preliminary into the Miss New Hampshire’s Outstanding Teen Scholarship Program to be held in January, 2012 at Pinkerton Mallory Coulombe Academy in Derry. The current Miss Berlin-Gorham’s Outstanding Teen, Hailey Bowie, will be performing as well. The contestants for Miss BerlinGorham’s Outstanding Teen competition are Elizabeth Thagouras, 17, the daughter of Sotirios Thagouras and the late Karen Thagouras of Berlin; Miranda Chouinard, 14, the daughter of Kendra and Randall Chouinard of Berlin; and Angelica Eastman, 16, the daughter of Jessica Berwick of Berlin. The winner will be awarded a $100 scholarship.
Bells to toll for all our veterans GORHAM -- The bells of the Gorham Congregational Church/ UCC will be tolling in honor of all our veterans this Friday, at eleven a.m. They will be rung to recognize the end of World War I, originally called the Great War. There will be a series of three tolls – each tolling will be eleven times. The first to represent the eleventh month, the second to represent the eleventh day, HOLIDAY from page 4
Saturday after 3 p.m. or feel free to call if you are unable to drop off and we will send someone over to pick up your donation. We need all items at the post by Nov. 20. Please feel free to contact Peggy Qualls at 466-2239 at any time or Diane Bouthot at 4662623 after 4 p.m. We are a non-profit volunteer
and the third to represent the eleventh hour when the armistice was signed ending the war. The church sanctuary will be open at 10:45 a.m. until the end of the bell tolling for anyone who would like to come by and offer a silent prayer for either our current veterans or in memory of veterans who gave so much to our country. For more information call 466-3496. organization whose mission is to send care packages to members of our Armed Services. We want to make sure that everyone that has been deployed receives a holiday box. With your help we will be able to. American Legion Auxiliary Gorham Unit #82 National Security Committee
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N.H. OHRV SAFETY COURSE Friday, Nov. 11 • 8am–4pm Sign-up 7:30am Ages 12 & up at Royalty Inn, Gorham $10 donation Pre -registration Required Call 466-5211 Sponsored by: Androscoggin Valley Cancer Fund Motorcycle Snowmobile Service Royalty Inn, Mr. Pizza Presidential OHRV Club
FREE SEMINAR ON NEW HAMPSHIRE & MAINE PERSONAL INJURY, WORKERS’ COMPENSATION AND SOCIAL SECURITY Date: Time: Cost: Location:
Thursday, Nov. 10, 2011 5:30 - 7:30pm FREE Town & Country Motor Inn Rte. 2 Shelburne, NH 03581 Presented by: Christopher E. Grant, Esquire - Partner Boynton, Waldron, 82 Court Street, Portsmouth, NH 03801
This seminar will tell you what you need to know about personal injury cases, your rights and benefits under the workers’ compensation system and social security. There will be a question-and-answer period following the seminar. Attorney Grant’s practice includes personal injury, workers’ compensation, social security and employment law Refreshments served. Call Pam at (800) 333-3073 to reserve your seat.
Page 6 — THE BERLIN DAILY SUN, Wednesday, November 9, 2011
North Country writers to gather at White North Country Anthology wins top honors at NH Literary Awards Mountain Café and Bookstore for ‘Beyond the Notches’ booksigning event
North Country Anthology takes top honors at NH Literary Awards event MANCHESTER, NH--Four years in the making, Beyond the Notches: Stories of Place in New Hampshire’s North Country received the 2011 award for Outstanding Work of Nonfiction at the N.H. Writers’ Project New Hampshire Literary Awards event held Nov. 4 in Manchester. Editors John R. Harris, Kay Morgan and Mike Dickerman were on hand to receive the award on behalf of all the contributors to the book. The award was presented by N.H. Writers’ Project vice president Mary Jo Alibrio, whose remarks included some of the comments made by the judge in the nonfiction category, Art Winslow, former literary editor and executive editor of The Nation and frequent contributor to the Los Angeles Times and Chicago Tribune Book Forum. About Beyond the Notches, Winslow wrote: “the symbiotic relationship between the land and its people is the great throbbing heart of Beyond the Notches, rendered close and dear on virtually every page, and without shyness or rancor it engages difficult questions with open-ended answers.” Designed as a project to collect and celebrate essays “with dirt under their fingernails” by North Country writers, Beyond the Notches “manages to wed together historicism and contemporary affairs relatively seamlessly, in a continuum of consideration that balances questions of stewardship, economic necessity and communal responsibility,” according to Winslow. The book, a compendium of fiftyone original essays by an equal mix of noted New Hampshire writers and new voices from the North Country, brings together the past and present and looks to the future of this unique region. Howard Frank Mosher, noted fiction writer from Vermont’s Northeast Kingdom, has called it “the best anthology of a distinctive American region I have ever read.” In his foreword to the book, Richard Ober, president of the N.H. Charitable
Foundation wrote, “It’s not sentimental about the region’s stunning beauty, and it doesn’t flinch from the reality of a boom-and-bust economy. It is, in short, a collection worthy of the singular place it chronicles so well.” In addition to stunning cover art and five specially commissioned paintings by Bethlehem resident Amy Delventhal, the book is lavishly illustrated by historic and contemporary photos, maps, and art by the White Mountain School of nineteenth century artists. “Receiving this award is especially gratifying and it is a great tribute to all who had a hand in making this book a reality, from my fellow co-editors to the more than 40 individual writers who contributed their excellent essays. This award belongs to all of them,” said Dickerman. The anthology project was funded by grants and donations from Jane’s Trust, the Neil and Louise Tillotson Fund, Franklin Pierce University, the New Hampshire Humanities Council, and numerous family foundations and individual donors. Copies of the book, which are available in both softcover and hardcover formats, may be found in bookstores and gift shops throughout the state, and directly from www. northcountrynhstories.org or the book’s publisher, Bondcliff Books of Littleton, NH (www.bondcliffbooks. com).
Corrections In yesterday’s story on Gorham’s tax rate, we were provided with the incorrect number of full time employees the town has on the payroll. The town employs 42 full-time positions, not 52 as was previously reported. Corrections to the obituary printed in the Berlin Daily Sun: 1. Mary is sur-
vived by one brother Norman Murphy of Cross, South Carolina and there were two misspellings: Marion Coffee should have been Marion Coffey and Meagan Berry Should have been Maegan Berry. We at Fleury-Patry Funeral Home appologize for the error.
GORHAM -- A number of the North Country’s best writers will gather at the White Mountain Café and Bookstore, 212 Main Street in Gorham, on Sunday, November 13, at 2 pm. The writers, contributors to the recently released anthology, “Beyond the Notches: Stories of Place in New Hampshire’s North Country”, will be on hand to celebrate the publication of this impressive and delightful anthology. In addition to meeting this remarkable group of writers, the event will be a rare chance to have the anthology signed by those present, making for a unique gift or keepsake. “Beyond the Notches” is perhaps the most important collection of writings about Northern New Hampshire ever assembled in one volume. This past weekend, the collection won the prestigious New Hampshire Writers Project Award for the Outstanding Nonfiction Book of 2011. “Beyond the Notches” is destined to become a classic and should be in the home of every resident interested in the rich heritage of our region. One of the New England’s best-known authors, writer Howard Frank Mosher, called “Beyond the Notches”, “The best anthology of a distinctive American region I’ve ever read.” “Beyond the Notches” features 400 pages of nonfiction writing by authors with an intimate knowledge of our region, as well as breathtaking photos, original artwork and historic maps. Organized into five sections — First Stories, Transformation and Change, Working the Land, Conservation and Recreation, and Competing Visions — the volume includes new work by area residents and writers John Harrigan, Barbara Tetreault, Peter Crane, Rebecca Brown, Steve Smith, Edie Clark, Fran Lavoie, Ernest Hebert, Tom Eastman, and Jack McEnany,
For the Sunday event, the White Mountain Café and Bookstore is pleased to present a number of notable contributors, including Sally Manikian, Peter Crane, Barb Tetreault, Susan Zizza and Jeff Woodburn. Manikian spent almost a decade working in the backcountry of the White Mountains, in all four seasons. Peter Crane has spent the last twenty years working for the Mount Washington Observatory, and has worked for both the Appalachian Mountain Club and the US Forest Service. Tetreault, a North Country native, has been a newspaper reporter in Coos County for more than 30 years. A freelance writer and photographer, Zizza has won numerous awards. Woodburn is also well known to area residents, as a local writer, businessman and legislator. The White Mountain Café and Bookstore will have plenty of copies of “Beyond the Notches” on hand for purchase, which can be autographed by the contributors who will be present. Anyone present can also enter a raffle for an autographed copy of “Beyond the Notches”. Located at 212 Main Street, the White Mountain Café and Bookstore is Coos County’s only independent bookstore. A frequent Best of New Hampshire winner, the cafe features a variety of handmade muffins, scones, desserts along with soups, sandwiches, paninis and the best coffees and teas in the North Country. For more information on the “Beyond the Notches” event, call the White Mountain Café and Bookstore at 4662511.
Tickets abound as parking ban begins BERLIN — One week into the winter parking ban, most people are comply with the rule. Some, however, had to be reminded that the city is serious about the winter ban. Berlin Police issued 57 parking tickets in the four hours between midnight on Nov. 1 and 4 a.m. on Nov. 2. That was the first night the city’s winter parking ban took effect, but many motorists left their vehicles on the street and are now having to pay the $15 fine.Fines for parking on the street overnight during the winter increase as the number of offenses increases, so, it should not be
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among others. Amy Delventhal, Bethlehem artist created the cover art and five paintings for the interior of the book.
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surprising that the number of tickets went down dramatically the next night to just six. For the rest of the week, the police log shows that almost no parking tickets were issued until the early morning hours on Monday, Nov. 7. Another half-dozen unlucky motorists had their vehicles ticketed for parking on the city streets during the ban. Parking fines go up from $15 to $30 and then to $50, for subsequent offenses. Ultimately, police say, they can and will use a parking boot for those who make a habit of parking on the street overnight during the winter months.
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THE BERLIN DAILY SUN, Wednesday, November 9, 2011— Page 7
REST AREAS from page one
ton has been reduced to operating three days a week. The rest of the week there are port-a-potties available for the public’s use. Gallus said the Sanbornton rest area is heavily used by North Country residents traveling south and he stops on his trips to the state capital to check on its condition. He said frequently the port-a-potties are overflowing and unclean. “It’s really tragic,” he said. “We’re suppose to be a tourist state and we can’t keep our facilities clean.” Gov.John Lynch proposed closing half the state’s rest areas in his fiscal budget this spring as a way to cut $800,000 from the budget. All four rest areas in the North Country were included in the closures. At the same time, management of the state’s rest areas was transferred from the Department of Transportation to the Department of Resources and Economic Development which includes the Division of Travel and Tourism. The department uses brochure counts to gauge visitor numbers for its rest areas. Last year, the counts were 34,038 for Colebrook, 63,469 for Shelburne, 74,134 for Littleton, 93,285 for Lebanon. Gallus said he was able to get $200,000 reinstated in the budget to operate the four North Country rest areas for the full year. He said his idea was to keep the rest areas operating while allowing time to explore partnerships and ways to generate revenues that would enable the facilities to stay open. He said one idea to generate revenue is to allow businesses to advertise inside the rest areas for a fee. Former Director of Travel and Tourism Alice DeSouza worked on the issue for DRED. She said the $200,000 was not sufficient to run the four centers for a year. DRED spokeswoman Amy Bassett said the total cost to run the four centers full time year around is approximately $375,000. With not enough money to keep the four northern rest areas open year around, DeSouza said the decision was made to close the facilities from Oct. 31 until May 15. She said operating costs are higher in the winter months and the majority of travel occurs during the spring, summer, and fall seasons. Because the $200,000 appropriation secured by Gallus did not cover the Sanbornton rest area, the division reduced hours at other rest areas to keep it open three days a week. At the September meeting of the Coos County Commissioners, Coos County Treasurer Fred King proposed using some funds the county has designated for economic development to help keep the Colebrook and Shelburne rest areas open full-time. He proposed the county work with the local chambers of commerce to operate the facilities. King followed up at the October meeting with a request for $5,000 from the county on behalf of the North Country Chamber of Commerce. He explained the chamber, which was located in the rest area, had put together a proposal to operate the rest area through the winter in partnership with DRED. The commission rejected the request because there was no provision to operate the Shelburne rest area. Commissioners said it would be unfair to fund one of the two facilities since both are in Coos County. Commissioner Tom Brady, who had met with DRED officials, said he also could not support the Colebrook proposal because the chamber was not required to pay rent to use the building. The North Country Chamber has since moved into a building in downtown Colebrook. Androscoggin Valley Chamber of Commerce Vice President Mark Belanger said his chamber is concerned about the closing of the Shelburne rest area
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and see it as a major portal for the region. He said a group of chamber leaders met with DRED officials to talk about the facility. But Belanger said the chamber’s resources to help out are limited. He said the chamber does not the financial or staffing capacity to provide much support. Belanger noted the chamber was in tough shape just a few years ago and said it has since worked hard to become stable and build up partnerships. Unlike the North Country Chamber which was located in the Colebrook facility, he pointed out the Androscoggin Valley Chamber office is approximately 20 miles from the Shelburne rest area. Belanger said the chamber is willing to help out in any way it can without overexerting its own organization. He said one approach may be to charge mem-
bers to advertise in the rest area, “We don’t know what our role can be,” Belanger said. While the facilities are closed for the winter, DeSouza said the plan is to reopen them this spring. “In the spring it is our intention to open the four gateway welcome centers full-time through October 31,” she said. DeSouza said the division is still looking at ways to keep the facilities open long term. Gallus said he also is not willing to give up on keeping the rest areas open full-time and has plans to set up a meeting with DRED officials, himself, and state Senate Finance Committee Chair Chuck Morse. “It’s not dead by a long shot yet,” he said. RE/MAX Northern Edge Realty sponsored the RE/MAX Hot Air Balloon during this years Riverfire and raised $250 for the Berlin Main Street Program. During their weekly office meeting the sales associates decided to match the amount raised and donated a total of $500 to the Berlin Main Street Program. On hand to receive the donation were Sylvia Poulin, Paula Kinney and Tom McCue. Front row, (l-r) Jennifer Stewart, Sylvia Poulin, Paula Kinney, Matt Martel and Roxanne Mailhot. Back row (l-r) Steve Grone, Tom McCue, Chris Lunn, Wayne Micucci and Carl Mercier. The RE/ MAX Hot Air Balloon is a great fundraiser and can be used year round. For more information contact RE/MAX at 752-0003. RE/MAX Northern Edge Realty is located on 232 Glen Avenue Berlin NH. Visit them online at TEAMNER.COM & REMAX.COM
Page 8 — THE BERLIN DAILY SUN, Wednesday, November 9, 2011
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NH Banking Department Representative, Richard Arcand, draws a name from the entries collected by area banks during Roll Your Change Week. The savings drive is coordinated by the Family Resource Center in Gorham with collaboration from area banks. Acting as master of ceremonies at the event finale on Wednesday was former program coordinator Judy Woodward, center, who has recently left the FRC to take a position at White Mountains Community College. Miranda Bergmeier, right, has filled the position left by Woodward. (MELISSA GRIMA PHOTO)
Loose change leads to $1,000 BY MELISSA GRIMA THE BERLIN DAILY SUN
GORHAM — North Country residents socked away nearly $50,000 last week and that was just in change. In addition to adding to their net worth in silver and copper, 25 lucky savers won $100 each, and three won the trio of grand prizes of $1,000 savings bonds. Nine banks and credit unions with 24 branches around the North Country encouraged all ages to participate in the Family Resource Center’s Roll Your Change Week. As a result, 18 new savings accounts were opened and 516 savers deposited $47,768.04 in spare change they collected throughout the year. That number is down from last year, organizers said, a drop they attribute to some banks withdrawing their participation and the economically tough climate. Those who participated, however, were entered into a drawing to win one of three $1,000 series EE savings bonds. This year’s winners, drawn on Wednesday, Nov. 2, by NH Banking Department Representative Richard Arcand, were Chris Turgeon of Gorham, Cheryl White of Milan and Carol Titus of Bethlehem. Titus was one of the participants who opened new accounts, while Turgeon and White each deposited less than $3 in change for their winning entry. Outgoing Family Resource Center program coordinator Judy Woodward used their small deposits to point out that any amount could be a winner during Roll Your Change Week. She issued a challenge to those who see little value in those loose coins to hold on to all their change for just one week and see how much it adds up to. According to information provided by the bank branches, which recorded their largest deposits of change during the week, some participants rolled hundreds and even thousands of dollars worth of coins. One depositor in Conway banked $1,100, while Berlin and Gorham branches saw deposits in the $700
and $800 ranges. The annual Roll Your Change Week event started in the Androscoggin Valley in 2007, after Woodward heard about a similar savings program at a conference. She and stakeholders from the area’s financial institutions recognized a need for financial education in the area and collaborated to devise this fun, community-wide event, that highlights financial saving. The kids are brought in on the action as well, with participants in the After-School Program and some high schoolers volunteering to roll change for people at an annual “Rock and Roll” night. The youngsters rolled around $1,000 worth of change this year. Woodward explained that during the inaugural Roll Your Change in 2007, with just the banks and credit unions in the Berlin-Gorham area participating, $18,175 in rolled coins was deposited. The following year that grew to $19,895. The project expanded in 2009 to include Lancaster, Littleton and Whitefield areas and the total savings in rolled change expanded as well, to $35,183. That same year, Franklin’s Family Resource Center organized a similar event in the lakes region and those savers banked $43,973 worth of coins. The program continued to grow in 2010, Woodward explained with the Concord and Seacoast areas joining Franklin and the North Country — which now had stretched to include the Colebrook area. Last year, statewide, Roll Your Change Week resulted in deposits of more than half a million dollars in coins. Granite staters banked $519,000, with the North Country responsible for $67,691 of that total. Financial institutions taking part in Roll Your Change Week, which ran from Oct. 24-29, included: First Colebrook Bank, Woodlands Credit Union, Laconia Savings Bank, Northway Bank, Citizens Bank, Gropaco Federal Credit Union, Guardian Angel Credit Union, Passumpsic Savings Bank, and Union Bank.
THE BERLIN DAILY SUN, Wednesday, November 9, 2011— Page 9
Page 10 — THE BERLIN DAILY SUN, Wednesday, November 9, 2011
Berlin Mills Variety -$25 Gift Certificate ...................... $25.00 Berlin Recreation & Parks - 1 In-House Program ........ $35.00 Berlin Recreation & Parks - 1 In-House Program ........ $35.00 Betty Dee Fashions - Matching Necklace and Earring Set ....... .................................................................................. $25.00 Bisson’s Sugar House - Anniversary Bottle of Maple Syrup ..... .................................................................................. $15.00 Bisson’s Sugar House - Anniversary Bottle of Maple Syrup ..... .................................................................................. $15.00 Bond Auto - Performance Tool 19� Tool Box ............... $33.89 Clark’s Trading Post & Wht. Mtn. Central Railroad - 1 Pass for 2 Admissions for 2012 Season ($36 value) ............ $36.00 Colonial Fort Inn Hikers Paradise - Gift Certificate for Breakfast for 2 ($15 value)...................................... $15.00 Colonial Fort Inn Hikers Paradise - Gift Certificate for Breakfast for 2 ($15 value)...................................... $15.00 Cooper, Cargill, Chant Attorneys at Law - 4 Tickets to a 2012 Regular Season Portland Sea Dogs Game ............. $48.00 CSP Awards - $25 Gift Card for Photo’s to Gifts............ $25.00 CSP Awards - $25 Gift Card for Photo’s to Gift ............. $25.00 CSP Awards - XL Gorham Moose Tour t-shirt ............. $10.00 CSP Awards - Large Gorham Moose Tour t-shirt ......... $10.00 CSP Awards - XL Gorham Moose Tour Hooded Sweatshirt .... .................................................................................. $25.00 CSP Awards - 3XL Gorham Moose Tour Hooded Sweatshirt .. .................................................................................. $28.00 CSP Awards - Small Gorham Moose Tour Crew Sweatshirt .... .................................................................................. $22.00 CSP Awards - Medium Gorham Moose Tour Crew Sweatshirt ................................................................ $22.00 Curves - 1 FREE month ................................................. $29.00 Eastern Depot - $25 Gift Certificate .............................. $25.00 Edward Jones - BBQ Grill Master Grill Set ................... $25.75 Fagin’s Pub - $20 Gift Certificate.................................... $20.00 Floral Designs by Raegan - Wall Sconce with Candle .. $42.00 Gold House Pizza - 1 Large Pepperoni & 1 Large Works Pizza ......................................................................... $30.00 Gorham House of Pizza - $15 Gift Certificate ............... $15.00 Granite State North-Bob Gauthier - Chinese Vase ....... $25.00 Granite State North-Bob Gauthier - Set of 4 Christmas Plates1981,82,83,84........................................................... $20.00 Great Glen Trails - 2-One Day Trail Passes-Summer/Winter .. .................................................................................. $36.00 Great Glen Trails - 2-One Day Trail Passes-Summer/Winter .. .................................................................................. $36.00 Hair by Dena - $25 Gift Certificate Services with Dena Only .. .................................................................................. $25.00 Hair Improvements - $25 Gift Certificate ..................... $25.00 Hair Improvements - $25 Gift Certificate ..................... $25.00 Icy Gulch Smokehouse Bar-N-Grill & Meat Market - $25 Gift Card .......................................................................... $25.00
Icy Gulch Smokehouse Bar-N-Grill & Meat Market - $25 Gift Card .......................................................................... $25.00 Jackson Ski Touring Foundation - Learn To Ski Package ($45 value)........................................................................ $45.00 Jay’s Quick Lube - $25 Gift Card .................................... $25.00 Jericho Motor Sports - Team Arctic Skull T-shirt ......... $29.95 Laconia Savings Bank - $25 Gift Certificate to Valley Creek Eatery ....................................................................... $25.00 Lucinda Bragg - Gift Basket with 4 Etched CafÊ Glasses, Coffee & Grinder ................................................................. $40.00 Lucinda Bragg - Beaded Necklace ................................. $25.00 Lucy Hardware - 2 30x72 Wooden Blinds ..................... $43.96 Lupine, Inc. - Spring Fling Collar & Leash set w/ matching Key Ring................................................................... $25.00
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Lupine, Inc. - Wet Paint Collar & Leash set w/ matching Key Ring .......................................................................... $29.00 Lupine, Inc. - Wet Paint Collar & Leash set w/ matching Key Ring .......................................................................... $29.00 Lydia’s Golden Touch Hair & Tanning Salon - Eyebrow and Lip Wax with Lydia ................................................. $20.00 Lydia’s Golden Touch Hair & Tanning Salon - Bag of Hair Care Supplies .................................................................... $40.00 Lynda M. Roberts & Associates - Norton Antivirus 2012 with Spyware .................................................................... $29.95 Lynda M. Roberts & Associates - Norton Antivirus 2012 with Spyware .................................................................... $29.95 Morin Shoe Store - Shoe Horn and Shoe Accessories .. $25.00 Mr. Auto LLC - $25 Gift Certificate ............................... $25.00 Mr. Pizza - $25 Gift Certificate ....................................... $25.00 Mr. Pizza - $25 Gift Certificate ....................................... $25.00 Mt. Washington Auto Road - 1 Self Guided Auto Road Pass ... .................................................................................. $49.00 NES Fire & Safety - 1 5lb Fire Extinguisher .................. $50.00 New England Mountain Sports - 2 Baseball Hats and 2 Water Bottles ...................................................................... $49.88
North Woods Acupuncture - $35 Gift Certificate for a Massage.................................................................... $35.00 Northland Restaurant & Dairy Bar - $35 Gift Certificate ........ .................................................................................. $35.00 Peebles - $25 Gift Card ................................................... $25.00 Ragged Mountain Equipment, Inc. - Attitash Vest-Medium ... .................................................................................. $47.00 RavenWood Curio Shoppe - Handmade Earrings ........ $29.00 RavenWood Curio Shoppe - Handmade Necklace ....... $39.00 Ray’s Electric - $25 Gift Certificate to Valley Creek Eatery ...... .................................................................................. $25.00 Ray’s Electric - $25 Gift Certificate to Valley Creek Eatery ...... .................................................................................. $25.00 Riverside Wellness Center - Chiroflow Premium Water Based Pillow ....................................................................... $72.00 Rumorz Boutique - Airport Tan Scarf ............................. $9.99 Scoggins General Store - Pig Webkinz .......................... $13.99 Seventh Street Graphics - Photo Gift: mug, puzzle, mousepad or holiday ornament ............................................... $20.00 Shovel Handle Pub - $25 Gift Certificate....................... $25.00 Ski & Snowboard Outlet - Zeal Goggles ........................ $40.00 Ski & Snowboard Outlet - Tooks Hat............................. $40.00 Subway - Sandwich Platter ............................................. $30.00 Subway - Cookie Platter ................................................. $11.99 Subway - Cookie Platter ................................................. $11.99 Subway - 3 Ft. Sub ........................................................... $39.99 The Beauty Room at 101 - Certificate for a Manicure .. $15.00 The Beauty Room at 101 - Certificate for a Shampoo, Cut & Style .......................................................................... $24.00 The Beauty Room at 101 - Gift Set Eufora Pure Indulgence .... .................................................................................. $39.95 The Inner Glimpse - AngelStar Mirror .......................... $49.95 The Naked Bohemian - $20 Gift Certificate .................. $20.00 The Sudbury Inn - $25 Gift Certificate .......................... $25.00 The White Mountain Hotel and Resort - Gift Certificate for Brunch for Two........................................................ $34.00 Town & Country Inn and Resort - 3 Month Health Club Membership........................................................... $110.00 Town & Country Inn and Resort - 2 Month Health Club Membership............................................................. $80.00 Town of Gorham - 2 Adult Moose Tour Admissions.... $50.00 Toy Chest - $15 Gift Card ............................................... $15.00 Ursula’s Snack Stand - Certificate for (1) Handmade Christmas Wreath...................................................................... $20.00 Valley Creek Eatery - $20 Gift Certificate...................... $20.00 Waterwheel Breakfast & Gift House - $25 Gift Certificate ....... .................................................................................. $25.00 White Mountain CafÊ & Bookstore - Gift Certificate for Lunch for 2 .......................................................................... $14.00 Yokohama Restaurant, Inc. - $25 Gift Certificate ......... $25.00
4*-&/5 "6$5*0/ QN QN A & A Auto Repair - Gift Certificate for 1 Front end Alignment ($60 value) ........................................$60.00 A & A Auto Repair - Gift Certificate for 1 Front end Alignment ($60 value) ........................................$60.00 A. V. Home Care Services - Indulgence Spa Basket w/ 3 Hour Housecleaning Certificate .......................$150.00 Androscoggin Valley Country Club - 5-Play Card..$135.00 Androscoggin Valley Hospital Auxillary - Granite Paver Engraved Impressions of Care Walkway..........$500.00 Androscoggin Valley Hospital Valley Birthplace - Gift Basket ...................................................................$50.00 Applachian Mountain Club - 1 Night Stay for 2 at Joe Dodge Lodge..................................................................$185.00 Arbonne Independent Consultant-Anne Labonte - Gift Basket Arbonne Serum and Lotion ...................$97.00 Attitash Grand Summit Hotel - 1 Night Stay with Breakfast for 2 ....................................................................$150.00
AVH Sunny Corner Gift Shop - Gift Basket ............$100.00 Berlin Bowling Center - Captain America 8lb Bowling Ball ............................................................................$119.00 Berlin City Dealership - Complete Recon Package.$100.00 Berlin City Dealership - Complete Recon Package.$100.00 Berlin Fire Department - Smoke/Carbon Monoxide Alarm ..............................................................................$49.00 Berlin Fire Department - Fire Extinguisher..............$44.99 Berlin High School - 3 Athletic Passes ....................$105.00 Berlin IGA Foodliner -$50 Gift Card .........................$50.00 Berlin IGA Foodliner -$50 Gift Card .........................$50.00 Berlin IGA Foodliner -$50 Gift Card .........................$50.00 Berlin IGA Foodliner -$50 Gift Card .........................$50.00 Bestunes (Ski Tuning)- Bethel Maine - Certificate good towards all goods & services ..............................$80.00 Bisson’s Sugar House - Anniversary Bottle of Maple Syrup ..............................................................................$15.00
Bisson’s Sugar House - Anniversary Bottle of Maple Syrup ..............................................................................$15.00 Castle in the Clouds Stables - Horseback Ride for Two....... ............................................................................$100.00 Colorworks, Inc. - 5x8 Print Area Rug ....................$170.00 Colorworks, Inc. - 6 Double Rolls of Wallpaper(no exchange) ..........................................................$150.00 Cooper, Cargill, Chant Attorneys at Law - 4 Tickets to a 2012 Regular Season Portland Sea Dogs Game .......... ..............................................................................$48.00 Coos County Chropractic - Chiropractic Pillow and 2 tubes Biofreeze Gel ........................................................$55.00 Coos Eye Care -$100 Gift Certificate .......................$100.00 Coulombe Real Estate -$250 Coupon Towards Purchase or Sale of a Home ...................................................$250.00 Coulombe Real Estate -$250 Coupon Towards Purchase or Sale of a Home ...................................................$250.00
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THE BERLIN DAILY SUN, Wednesday, November 9, 2011â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Page 11
Coulombe Real Estate -$250 Coupon Towards Purchase or Sale of a Home ...................................................$250.00 Coulombe Real Estate -$250 Coupon Towards Purchase or Sale of a Home ...................................................$250.00 Cranmore Mountain Resort - 2 Adult Anytime Lift Ticket(s) 2011-12 ..............................................................$118.00 Cross Machine Inc. -$50 Gift Card to Labonville .....$50.00 Croteau Insurance Agency - Fire Extinguisher & Carbon Monoxide/Smoke Detector .................................$72.98 Croteau Insurance Agency - Fire Extinguisher & Carbon Monoxide/Smoke Detector .................................$72.98 CSP Awards -$50 Gift Card for Photoâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s to Gifts.........$50.00 Dana Place Inn -$100 Gift Certificate ......................$100.00 Dr. Richard A. Kay -$150 Gift Certificate towards eye exam & eye glasses ......................................................$150.00 Eternal Machines Inc. -$50 Gift Certificate...............$50.00 Faginâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Pub -$20 Gift Certificate.................................$20.00 GDC Concrete & Garden Center -$50 Gift Certificate ........ ..............................................................................$50.00 Gorham Family Dentistry, PA - Gift Certificate for$100 of Dental Services ..................................................$100.00 Gorham Hardware - Complete Cortland Fly Rod Kit......... ............................................................................$129.95 Gorham House Florist - Fall Silk Flower Arrangement ...... ..............................................................................$65.00 Great Glen Trails - Learn To Ski Package ($45 value) ......... ..............................................................................$45.00 Great Glen Trails - 2-One Day Trail Passes-Summer/ Winter ..................................................................$36.00 Great Northern Moose Lodge - Certificate for a 2 night stay .....................................................................$170.00 Hair Zone - Paul Mitchell Hair Care Products & 25% Off Any Product.........................................................$85.00 Hallkeen Management - Duraflame Electraheat 1500 watt Ceramic Tower Heater ........................................$60.00 Hershey Ice Cream - 1 Tub of Ice Cream ...................$35.00 Jackson Area of Commerce - 2 Jingle Bell Chocolate Tour Tickets ..................................................................$40.00 Jackson Ski Touring Foundation - Learn To Ski Package ($45 value) ...........................................................$45.00 Jâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Corner Restaurant & Lounge -$25 Gift Certificate ......... ..............................................................................$25.00 Keene Medical - Home Blood Pressure Monitor Kit$92.00 L.L. Cote - Black Star Park Designs Lamp.................$39.99 La Bottega Saladino Italian Market - Italian Gift Basket..... ............................................................................$100.00 Labonville Inc. -$100 Gift Card................................$100.00 Lost River Gorge & Boulder Caves - 2 Adult and 2 Child Admission tickets ($56 value) ...........................$56.00 Lydiaâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Golden Touch - Man or Woman Haircut with Lydia ..............................................................................$20.00 Lynda M. Roberts & Associates - Norton Antivirus 2012 with Spyware .......................................................$29.95 Lynda M. Roberts & Associates - Norton Antivirus 2012 with Spyware .......................................................$29.95 Maureenâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Boutique - 12 Tanning Sessions & Bottle of Intensifying Tanning Oil .....................................$54.99 Middle Earth - Flute 28â&#x20AC;? x 17â&#x20AC;? Corregated Paper Vase Contemporary & Light......................................$129.00 Mountain Valley Recreational, Inc -$50 Gift Certificate ..... ..............................................................................$50.00 Mountain Valley Recreational, Inc -$50 Gift Certificate ..... ..............................................................................$50.00 Mr. Auto LLC -$25 Gift Certificate ............................$25.00 Mr. Pizza -$25 Gift Certificate....................................$25.00 Mr. Pizza -$25 Gift Certificate....................................$25.00 Mt. Washington Auto Road - 1 Self Guided Auto Road Pass.......................................................................$49.00 Mt. Washington Auto Road - 2 Guided tour Auto Road Passes ...................................................................$60.00 Mt. Washington Auto Road - 2 Guided tour Auto Road Passes ...................................................................$60.00 Mt. Washington Auto Road - Snow Coach for 2 .......$90.00 Mt. Washington Valley Originals -$25 Gift Certificate to Thompson House Eatery.....................................$25.00
Mt. Washington Valley Originals -$25 Gift Certificate to White Mountain Cider ........................................$25.00 Mt. Washington Valley Originals -$25 Gift Certificate to J-Town Deli ..........................................................$25.00 Mt. Washington Valley Originals -$25 Gift Certificate to Wildcat Tavern ....................................................$25.00 NES Fire & Safety - 1 5lb Fire Extinguisher ..............$50.00 Nestlenook Farm Resort - One Horse Private Sleigh Ride for Two ...............................................................$125.00 NH Employment Security/Mark Belanger - Hand Carved Walking Stick .......................................................$75.00 Nikiâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Hair Fashions - Gift Basket of Beauty Products ........ ..............................................................................$50.00 Noella Beausejour Tax Service -$50 Gift Certificate to Sinibaldiâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Restaurant..........................................$50.00 North Country Dental - Philips Sonicare FlexCare+ Rechargeable Sonic Toothbrush.........................$99.00 North Country Speech & Language - Stats 18-1 Game Table ...................................................................$149.99 North Woods Acupunture -$75 Gift Certificate for Acupuncture Treatment......................................$75.00
New England Picture Assorted Sports Memorabilia â&#x20AC;&#x153;Photosâ&#x20AC;?
Many available! BID ON ONE OR MORE! North Woods Rafting - Certificate- canoe/kayak rental up to 4 people- 2012 season ...................................$100.00 North Woods Rafting - Certificate- canoe/kayak rental up to 4 people- 2012 season ...................................$100.00 North Woods Rafting - Certificate- 1/2 day weekend rafting trip-2 people-2012 season ................................$120.00 Northland Restaurant & Dairy Bar -$35 Gift Certificate .... ..............................................................................$35.00 Osmosis -$100 Gift Certificate .................................$100.00 Patâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Auto Sales LLC -$50 Gift Certificate..................$50.00 Patâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Auto Sales LLC -$50 Gift Certificate..................$50.00 Patâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Auto Sales LLC -$50 Gift Certificate..................$50.00 Presidential Pest Control - Spring Exterior Residual Spray Service ($275 value) ..........................................$275.00 Pro Quip Rental & Sales Inc. - 1 Day rental 3000 PSI Cold Water Pressure Washer .......................................$60.00 Pyrofax Energy - 20 lb LP Tank with Gift Certificate for Free Purge and Fill ..............................................$50.00 Pyrofax Energy - 20 lb LP Tank with Gift Certificate for Free Purge and Fill ..............................................$50.00 Rayâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Electric -$25 Gift Certificate to Valley Creek Eatery .. ..............................................................................$25.00 Rayâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Electric -$25 Gift Certificate to Valley Creek Eatery .. ..............................................................................$25.00 Razorâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Edge - Gift Basket of Hair Care Products ...$200.00 Red Jacket Mountain View Kahuna Lounge - 4 Day Passes ($160 value) .......................................................$160.00 ReMax Realty -$50 Gift Certificate to Soup er Sub...$50.00 Rob Bolash Custom Builder LLC -$150 Gift Certificate to White Mountain Lumber Company.................$150.00 Route 12V - XM Snap SiriusXM in-vehicle Radio....$90.00 Royalty Inn & Athletic Club - 1 Month Individual Membership.........................................................$59.00 Royalty Inn & Athletic Club - 1 Month Couple Membership.........................................................$91.00 Sanel Auto Parts - 1 Case 5W20 Parts Plus Motor Oil......... ..............................................................................$72.00
Sanel Auto Parts - 1 Case 5W30 Parts Plus Motor Oil......... ..............................................................................$72.00 Sanel Auto Parts - 1 Case 10W30 Parts Plus Motor Oil....... ..............................................................................$72.00 Santaâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Village - 1 Pass for 2 Admissions $52 value ..$52.00 Seventh Street Graphics - 250 Full Color Business Cards ... ..............................................................................$35.00 Seventh Street Graphics - 1000 Full Color Business Cards . ..............................................................................$89.00 Seventh Street Graphics - Full Color Vehicle Magnet ......... ..............................................................................$80.00 Seventh Street Graphics -$100 Coupon towards Window Tinting: Home, Office, or Auto .........................$100.00 Seventh Street Graphics - 500 Full Color Business Cards ... ..............................................................................$55.00 Sherwin Williams - Complete Kitchen Set..............$205.00 Shovel Handle Pub -$25 Gift Certificate....................$25.00 Shovel Handle Pub -$25 Gift Certificate....................$25.00 Shovel Handle Pub -$25 Gift Certificate....................$25.00 Sinibaldiâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Restaurant & Millyard Lounge LLC -$50 Gift Certificate.............................................................$50.00 Ski & Snowboard Outlet - Zeal Goggles ....................$40.00 Skinplicity - Ultra sonic Facial ...................................$70.00 Smith & Town Printers LLC - 1 Case of Laser Copy Paper . ..............................................................................$35.00 Smith & Town Printers LLC - Gift Certificate for 2 Vehicle Magnets (12x20) .................................................$85.00 Smith & Town Printers LLC - Gift Certificate for 1 Banner (45x80) ...............................................................$140.00 Smith & Town Printers LLC - Gift Certificate for Business Cards, Color and UV Coated ..............................$95.00 Stonehurst Manor - 2 Free Gourmet Pizzas ($28 value) ..... ..............................................................................$28.00 Story Land - 2 Day Passes ($55.98 value) .................$55.98 Story Land - 2 Day Passes ($55.98 value) .................$55.98 Story Land - 2 Day Passes ($55.98 value) .................$55.98 Sunday River Brew Pub -$50 Gift Card .....................$50.00 Suzanneâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Partnership For Health - Certificate for a 1 hour massage ................................................................$60.00 Suzanneâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Partnership For Health - Certificate for (2) 1/2 massages $35 each...............................................$70.00 Sweet Mamaâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Bakery - Basket of Goodies ................$75.00 Tech Pros - Laptop Special Accessory Bundle w/software . ............................................................................$230.00 The Bethel Resort - Gift Certificate for a Midweek Round of Golf for 2 ............................................................$100.00 The Market Place at 101 - Gift Basket of Kitchen, Dining, & Handcrafted Decorative Items..........................$200.00 Thomas F. McCue - Will-Living Trust-Advance Directives .........................................................................$1,500.00 Town & Country Inn and Resort - 3 Month Health Club Membership.......................................................$110.00 Town & Country Inn and Resort - 2 Month Health Club Membership.........................................................$80.00 Tremaine Opticians - Ray-Ban Sunglasses, Black Frame, Large...................................................................$140.00 Tremaine Opticians - Ray-Ban Sunglasses, Gold Frame, Small ..................................................................$130.00 Vaillancourt & Woodward Inc. - 2 10lb Fire Extinguishers ............................................................................$166.00 Village Deli & General Store - Certificate for resident to register 1 snowmobile or ATV ...........................$61.00 Waterwheel Breakfast & Gift House -$25 Gift Certificate ... ..............................................................................$25.00 White Mountain Wireless-US Cellular -$50 Gift Card ........ ..............................................................................$50.00 White Mountains Community College - Six Culinary Luncheons............................................................$60.00 Wild Things LLC - Wild Things Guide Back Pack ..$175.00 Windshield World - Windshield Replacement up to a $250.00 value .....................................................$250.00 Woodlands Credit Union - Series EE Savings Bond$100.00 Woodlands Credit Union - Series EE Savings Bond$100.00
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SILENT AUCTION 6pm-8pm
4BUVSEBZ /PW t 8IJUF .PVOUBJO $IBMFU
Page 12 â&#x20AC;&#x201D; THE BERLIN DAILY SUN, Wednesday, November 9, 2011
-*7& "6$5*0/ 4UBSUT BU QN
Spotlight Items Aubuchon Hardware - Digital Safe . $229.00 Aubuchon Hardware - Infra-Red Heater..... ................................................. $249.99 AutoNorth Pre-Owned Superstore Complete Interior & Exterior Vehicle Reconditioning ....................... $225.00 Berlin Reporter-Salmon Press - 1/4 pg. ad-3 papers-Reporter-Democrat-Courier-4 continuous wks.................... $1,849.00 Caron Building Center - Serious Energy Double Hung White Vinyl Serious 8 Glass ........................................ $314.00 Catello & Son Music - Fender Acoustic left handed guitar Model CD100 $225.00 CrackerJax Marketing - $600 Credit Towards a Full Color Banner Ad on DirectoryNH.com .................. $600.00 Great North Woods Container Service Dumpster & Fees up to $200 value .... ................................................. $200.00
Greetings Jewelers - 16â&#x20AC;? Pearl Cluster Necklace .................................. $160.00 Guardian Angel Credit Union - Napa Wheeled Battery Charger 6/12V ........ ................................................. $396.98 John Gallus - $250 Gift Certificate towards the purchase of home heating oil at Pyrofax Energy ....................... $250.00 Kelleyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Auto Parts, Inc. - Solor 3000 amp. Heavy Duty Portable Power Source/ Car Start .................................. $401.00 Mark & Katie Kelley - Fender Squire Mini Electric Guitar w/stand .......... $190.00 Mountain Valley Recreational, Inc - Gift Certificate for $300 towards a Hot Tub........................................... $300.00 Mr. Auto - Remote Car Starter ........ $300.00 Nordic Village Resort - 2 Night Stay in a One Bedroom ................................. $600.00
Northern Forest Heritage Park - Private Party Riverboat Tour ($225 value) ..... ................................................. $225.00 Northland Restaurant & Dairy Bar - 1 Pie per Month for 1 Year .............. $225.00 SaVoir Flare - BCBG Maxazria Handbag w/ 10% Off Coupon ..................... $248.00 Snowflake Inn - One Night Midweek Getaway................................... $240.00 Tea Birds CafĂŠ & Restaurant - Loaf of Bread a day for 6 Months - GREAT FOR A FAMILY!! ................................ $640.50 Top Furniture - Samsung 26â&#x20AC;? Flat Screen TV............................................ $399.00 White Mountain Lumber Company - Vinyl Sliding Window Thermopane R+ Glass 53 1/2â&#x20AC;?x54 1/2â&#x20AC;? ............. $500.00 Wildcat Mountain - Ski Lift Riblet Triple Chair - â&#x20AC;&#x153;Erected in 1973â&#x20AC;? Collectorâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Item! ........................................ $200.00
EVENING FESTIVITES 6pm - 11pm s 0ER 0ERSON s (ORS D /EUVRES s 3ILENT !UCTION PM PM s ,IVE !UCTION "EGINS AT PM ~ ~ ~ Sports Memorabilia ~ ~ ~
s -EET THE .EWLY #ROWNED -ISS "ERLIN 'ORHAM LIVE BAND
PLAN B 7pm - 11pm WHITE MOUNTAIN DISTRIBUTORS BREW CREW 6pm - 8pm
GIVING PRIZES AND SAMPLES 4BUVSEBZ /PW t 8IJUF .PVOUBJO $IBMFU
THE BERLIN DAILY SUN, Wednesday, November 9, 2011— Page 13
Potato Barn Antiques holds open house NORTHUMBERLAND -- Potato barn Antiques on Route 3 is celebrating it’s 23rd annual Christmas Open House and Sale on Saturday, December 3,and Sunday December 4, with a “ Toys for Tots “ toy drive to benefit out local Lancaster based Toys for Tots program. With your donation of new, unopened toys you will be eligible to win a $25 gift certificate to Potato Barn Antiques. Potato Barn Antiques offers it’s customers a real old fashion open house experience with homemade cookies and hot mulled cider. You are also eligible to win a balsam fir wreath just for stopping in.Along with their goodies everything in the store is on sale. If your looking for a one of a kind , unique Christmas gift you can’t miss this sale. If you haven’t been in recently check out their new line of lamps, lighting, replacement parts and glass and fabric shades. Mark is also doing lamp repair and custom lamp restoration. Again this year they have local balsam fir wreaths and greens and will ship a wreath anywhere in the continental US for $28.95. Mark and Kellyann are hoping to see familiar and new faces this year and ask you to
Family Fun Night is Nov. 11 BERLIN -- The Salvation Army is invites everyone for a night of Family Fun on Friday, November 11, from 4 to 6:30 p.m. We will be viewing the movie “Enchanted”; we will also have open gym time, and fun for the whole family. We do ask that children remain accompanied by an adult. The Salvation Army is located at 15 Cole St. in Berlin. For more info please call 752-1644.
please support “Toys for Tots” and keep the true meaning for Christmas alive. Early toy drop offs will still enter you in the drawing. Potato Barn Antiques is open 5 days 9a.m. to 5 p.m., closed Tuesday and Wednesday and you can reach them at (603) 636-2611.
ELECTION from page one
demolished within the next two months and he wants to see that area redeveloped and back on the tax rolls as soon a possible. On the school board side, six people ran for the three two-year positions open. Incumbents Nicole Plourde and Nathan Morin were both re-elected by strong margins. Plourde said she is looking forward to an exciting time on the board with the recent public openness to looking at a regional approach to education. She said the goal is to do what is best for the young people of the area.
Kenneth Proulx, who retired last year after 39 years as a teacher and guidance counselor with the school district, won the third seat. “I’m looking forward to working with the present members of the school board,” Proulx said. Louise Valliere ran unopposed for the four year term on the school board, replacing longtime board member Martha Laflamme who chose not to run. Turnout was low with 28 percent of registered voters casting their votes. City Clerk Debra Patrick said the turnout for the last election in 2009 was 40 percent.
OPEN HOUSE November 7 through November 23 Lend us you ears and take part in our hearing aid field studies, free testing procedures, and complimentary hearing aid comparison programs.
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You may qualify for a $3000 Hearing Aid Benefit! NH State Law requires most health insurance to cover a minimum of $3000 on a pair of hearing aids. Call us at 800-755-6460 to have us check your eligibility.
Hearing Enhancement Centers has reached agreement to support special pricing and benefits, up to $3000, for all Medicare recipients even though Medicare is not mandated by state law. We will help you get all funding, rebates, and discounts that are available. Our professional staff will assist you at no charge or obligation. Hearing Enhancement Centers is awarded a top honor by Bill Austin, CEO of NuEar and founder of The Starkey Hearing Foundation.
Voted Best Hearing Center in the 2011 Citizens Reader Choice Awards HEAR THE DIFFERENCE! If you presently use hearing aids such as Oticon, Phonak, Resound, Beltone, Siemens, Miracle Ear, Starkey, or Widex you may directly compare your hearing aids to the NuEar LOOK speech clarification technology. Hearing is believing! Call for a demonstration today.
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DAILY CROSSWORD TRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES
by Lynn Johnston by Scott Adams
DILBERT
By Holiday Mathis a leader who has the knowledge and experience to teach you well. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). The best reactions to the unexpected twists and turns of this day will be either calm and collected or humorous. If you have enough rest and a positive attitude, it won’t be hard to do. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). Remember when you made believe you were a fireman, superhero, animal doctor or princess? Now you’ll pretend you’re something very close to what you already are, and by pretending, you’ll make it so. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). You won’t always agree with what a loved one wants to do. However, if you find one or two points on which you can at least partially agree, you can work things out. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). Your time is precious, and you won’t be willing to spend even 20 minutes doing what you don’t want to be doing. This may mean you have to exit a situation before its natural ending, but so be it. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). You’ll nurture the ties that keep you socially connected. In the weeks to come, you’ll call on your network to help you deal with the practical matters of life. TODAY’S BIRTHDAY (Nov. 9). The power of unconditional love will motivate you to accomplish great things. Make a key move in the next three weeks. New resources will open up to you. You’ll accept an important responsibility in December. February brings a decision that affects your financial life. Do your research, and go slowly into deals. Capricorn and Aries people adore you. Your lucky numbers are: 3, 19, 20, 49 and 15.
by Darby Conley
ARIES (March 21-April 19). It might feel like you’re getting nothing done because the entire morning is spent en route, on the Internet or with the phone glued to your head. The reality is that this is how most of your business will be accomplished. TAURUS (April 20-May 20). If you resent a person who puts more emphasis on finding pleasure than you do, it could be a sign that you need to enjoy yourself more. Bottom line: You can’t expect yourself to be happy if you never make time for fun. GEMINI (May 21-June 21). You’ll come across someone who is interested in the same things as you, and you’ll exchange excellent information. It’s the start of something good. Follow up in three days for best results. CANCER (June 22-July 22). You’ll notice that lately a certain friendship has affected how you feel about yourself in a consistently negative way. A little distance will be healthy for both of you. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). You will be distracted, but not by unimportant or irrelevant matters. You’ll get creative in investigating where these distractions lead. They have such validity that following them will be critical to your success. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). Another person’s privilege reminds you of what you don’t have -- or perhaps alerts you to this for the first time. Rest assured, there are benefits to being without this perk, and you can probably imagine what they are. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). You won’t tolerate being dominated by a person who feels entitled to lead for no good reason. However, you will follow
Get Fuzzy
HOROSCOPE
by Chad Carpenter
Solution and tips at www.sudoku.com
TUNDRA
Fill in the grid so that every row, every column, and every 3x3 box contains the digits 1 thru 9.
For Better or Worse
Page 14 — THE BERLIN DAILY SUN, Wednesday, November 9, 2011
1 4 9
13 15 16 17 18 19 20 22 23 24 26 29 34 35 36 37
ACROSS Gobbled up Hindu teacher “__ the night before Christmas...” Consommé or chowder Home of logs Acting part Throw Beverly __, CA Goad; egg on Theodore or Franklin __ West of TV’s “Batman” Heavy book Actor McKellen __ of Liberty Make a hole in Smarter Twist or tango Prefix for fat or sense Surrounded by
38 Understood, but not spoken 39 Horse used for breeding 40 Scarlet or ruby 41 Baby hooter 42 Elevate 43 Gloomier 45 __ in for; replaced temporarily 46 Hairstyling goo 47 Circus covering 48 Calendar square 51 About to occur 56 Cooking chamber 57 Melon or squash 58 Close at hand 60 Element mixed with copper to make brass 61 Steed 62 1967 Montreal event 63 Singer/actor Nelson __
64 Cornered 65 Actor Danson DOWN 1 Bit of soot 2 Sightseeing trip 3 Franc replacer 4 Crafty plan 5 Give up, as one’s rights 6 Qualified 7 Pepper holder 8 Gut feeling 9 One playing hooky 10 Dictionary entry 11 Seaweed 12 Appear 14 Conspired 21 Bitter 25 Top card 26 Grass-covered stretch of land 27 Stopwatch 28 Put __; shelve 29 Indiana hoopster 30 Military division 31 Up to the time that
32 33 35 38 39 41 42 44
Awaken Concluded Valley Early evening Soda cracker Mine car load Orange peel Office where a temp applies 45 __ off; repelled
47 48 49 50 52 53 54 55
Rudely brief Fall asleep Enthusiastic Take care of Anchor a boat Immaculate Teller’s cry Stare openmouthed 59 Curtain holder
Yesterday’s Answer
THE BERLIN DAILY SUN, Wednesday, November 9, 2011— Page 15
––––––––––––––––– DAILY CALENDAR ––––––––––––––––– Wednesday, November 9 Shelburne Neighbor’s Club: Meeting 1 p.m., Wendy Williams home, 350 North Road. Making of wreaths, $5 donations for materials. Coos County Commissioners Meeting: Wednesday, November 9, 9 a.m., North Country Resource Center, Lancaster. Free Medicare Counseling: ServiceLink representative available to offer free, confidential Medicare counseling to beneficiaries, 10 a.m. to 12 p.m. in the AVH Mt. Adams conference room. No appointment needed. FMI, call Gisele McKenzie, AVH customer service manager, at 326-5660 or Paul Robitaille of ServiceLink at 752-6407. Friday, November 11 Men’s Breakfast Group. Topic: “Veterans helping veterans”. Presenter: Rev. David Canter, Vietnam veteran. Meeting Gorham Congregational/ UCC Church, Main Street, Gorham. Women are welcome. Breakfast 7 a.m., presentation 7:30 a.m. A free will offering will be taken at breakfast for the Ecumenical Food Pantry. All men welcome. FMI: 466-3496. Saturday, November 12 Craft Fair: Ed Fenn School in Gorham, 9 a.m. to 2: p.m. Thirtythree crafters vendors will be present offering a variety of goods for sale! NCD will be selling homemade soups, beans, baked goods, rolls and desserts. Proceeds raised by NCD will be donated to The Relay of Life/ American Cancer Society. Harvest Market: 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., Bickford Place in Berlin. Craft Sale: 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., at the St. Vincent de Paul Rehab & Nursing Center. Come and shop their knitted items, handmade crafts, huge yard sale tables, home baked pastries/donuts, candies and assorted raffles.
WEDNESDAY PRIME TIME 8:00
News
News 13 on FOX (N)
The Office The Office
ABC 5 WMUR The 45th Annual CMA Awards Honoring excellence in country music. (N) NBC 6 WCSH All Night
Harry’s Law (N) Å
Law & Order: SVU
Camelot (N) (In Stereo) National
CBC 9 CKSH Les Enfants de la télé
Karma
Tout moi
TJ
Letterman
News
Nightline
News
Jay Leno
Stroumboulopoulos Sport
PBS 10 WCBB Nature “Jungle Eagle”
NOVA (N) Å (DVS)
NOVA Å (DVS)
PBS 11 WENH Antiques Roadshow
Antiques Roadshow
Kiwis/hommes Charlie Rose (N) Å
Battle of Midway Å
The Last Ridge Å
CBS 13 WGME Survivor: South Pacific Criminal Minds (N)
CSI: Crime Scene
News
IND 14 WTBS Fam. Guy
Big Bang
Conan (N)
Fam. Guy
IND 16 WPME Burn Notice Å
Fam. Guy
Fam. Guy
Big Bang
Burn Notice Å
Law Order: CI Saints
1
EWTN Live
Saint
CNN
24
Anderson Cooper 360
Piers Morgan Tonight
LIFE
30
Unsolved Mysteries
Movie: “The Client List” (2010) Å
ESPN
31
College Football Miami (Ohio) at Temple. (N) (Live)
ESPN2
32
College Basketball
College Basketball: 2K Sports Classic
CSNE
33
Pacquiao
Patriots Wednesday
NESN
34
OXY
39
TVLND
42
Roseanne Roseanne Raymond
NICK
43
Sponge.
Kung Fu
’70s Show ’70s Show George
TOON
44
Hole/Wall
MAD
King of Hill King of Hill Amer. Dad Amer. Dad Fam. Guy
FAM
45
Movie: ››› “Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone” (2001, Fantasy)
DISN
46
Phineas
USA
48
NCIS “Power Down”
NCIS “Kill Screen”
Psych (N) Å
TNT
49
The Mentalist Å
The Mentalist Å
Movie: ›››› “Saving Private Ryan” (1998)
GAC
50
Backstory
Day Jobs
Born to Drive
SYFY
51
Ghost Hunters Å
Ghost Hunters (N)
Fact or Faked
Ghost Hunters Å
TLC
53
Long Island Medium
Secretly Pregnant
Extreme
Secretly Pregnant
HIST
54
Vietnam in HD Å
Vietnam in HD The massive Tet Offensive. (N)
DISC
55
MythBusters Å
MythBusters
Penn & Teller
MythBusters
HGTV
56
House
Income
Property Brothers (N)
Property Brothers
A-P
Sticks
Rosary
Letterman
Our Homes Cops Å
EWTN
The Saints Faith
Anderson Cooper 360
Women of
Erin Burnett OutFront Cold Case Files Å SportsCenter (N) Å Charismatic (N)
Sports
SportsNet Sports
English Premier League Soccer Teams TBA.
Daily
Red Sox
Law Order: CI
Law Order: CI
Law Order: CI
Raymond
Raymond
King
George
Friends
Law Order: CI Raymond
Movie: ››‡ “16 Wishes” (2010)
Hunters
Kitchen
River Monsters Å
Shake It
Daily
Sticks Dennis
King Friends Fam. Guy
The 700 Club (N) Å
Good Luck Phineas
Phineas
Burn Notice Å
Extreme
River Monsters Å
GAC Late Shift
Modern Marvels Å
58
River Monsters
TRAV
59
Man, Food Man, Food Man v Fd
NGC
60
Finding Atlantis
SPIKE
61
MTV
63
VH1
64
Celebrity Scandals
COM
67
Chappelle Chappelle South Park South Park South Park Swardson Daily Show Colbert
A&E
68
Storage
Hoggers
Hoggers
Hoggers
E!
71
Movie: ››‡ “The Girl Next Door” (2004) Emile Hirsch.
Kendra
Chelsea
E! News
AMC
72
Movie: ››‡ “Mission: Impossible” (1996) Tom Cruise.
Movie: “Mission: Impossible” Å
TCM
105 Movie: ›››‡ “Born Yesterday” (1950) Å
Man v Fd
Man v Fd
Man v Fd
River Monsters Man, Food Man, Food
Tomb of Genghis Khan Witch Doctor
Finding Atlantis
UFC Unleashed
UFC Unleashed
The Ultimate Fighter
BlueMount BlueMount
Chelsea
The Real World Å
The Real World (N)
Chelsea
Storage
YOUTO 110 LOL Pets! HBO
201 Ring Life
SHOW
221 Homeland Å
Movie: ›› “Honey” (2003) Jessica Alba. Storage
Storage
The X-Files Å REAL Sports Gumbel
America
Inside the NFL (N)
231 Movie: ›‡ “How to Rob a Bank”
ENC
248 Movie: › “The Hot Chick” (2002, Comedy) Å
Now arrange the circled letters to form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon.
Print answer here: A (Answers tomorrow) Jumbles: MUSIC AWARD DENOTE BETTOR Answer: His prize-winning sourdough was the — TOAST OF THE TOWN
Hoggers
Real World Real World Tough Love: Miami
Movie: ›››‡ “The Solid Gold Cadillac”
TMC
ORRWUB
Yesterday’s
All Night
CBC 7 CBMT Dragons’ Den (N) Å
Find us on Facebook http://www.facebook.com/jumble
SOLISF
10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 CSI: Crime Scene
by David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek
©2011 Tribune Media Services, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
9:30
FOX 4 WPFO The X Factor “Live Performance” (N) (Live)
THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
NEYDE
9:00
CBS 3 WCAX Survivor: South Pacific Criminal Minds (N)
Unscramble these four Jumbles, one letter to each square, to form four ordinary words.
THAPC
8:30
NOVEMBER 9, 2011
The Green Hornet
Batman (Part 1 of 2)
Boardwalk Empire
Real Time/Bill Maher
NASCAR
Inside the NFL Å
Teller
Movie: “The Job” (2009) Å
Movie: “Triggermen”
Movie: ›› “Death at a Funeral”
TWC - 23, CNN2 - 30, C-SPAN - 99, PAY-PER-VIEW - 59, 60, 61, 62
Law
––––––––––––––– ONGOING CALENDAR –––––––––––––– Wednesday Cholesterol Clinic: Monday through Friday, Berlin Health Dept., city hall. By appointment only, Call 752-1272. All area residents welcome. Fee $15. Carving Club: Meeting every Wednesday, 5 p.m., E&S Rental, 29 Bridge St, Berlin. All welcome, prior experience not necessary. Open to all. Instructions to those new to carving. We hope to provide a wide range of carving experiences. FMI call Ed at 752-3625. Harvest Christian Fellowship Soup Kitchen: Free community dinner every Wednesday night, 219 Willow St., Berlin. Doors open 4 p.m., dinner 5-6 p.m. FMI 348-1757. PAC Meeting. Child addicted to drugs? You’re not alone. Join us for the PAC (Parent of Addicted Children) meeting, 6 p.m., 151 Main Street, Berlin. FMI call 603-723-4949 or e-mail @ shjam@ne.rr.com. Bible Study: 6 to 7 p.m., Seventh Day Adventist Church, Mt. Forist St., Berlin. Weight Watcher’s Meeting at the Salvation Army, Berlin—9 a.m. meeting, 8:30 a.m. weigh-in Senior Meals: Guardian Angel School, MondayThursday Noon, Friday 8 a.m.-10 a.m. Suggested donations for 60 and over $3; under 60 $6. All are welcome. (FMI 752-2545). Gorham Public Library: Open M-F: 10am6pm, Saturdays: 10am-Noon. Children’s Story Time: Fridays, 1:30pm. View On-line Catalog at https:// gorham.biblionix.com/ . FMI call 466-2525 or email gorhampubliclibrary@ne.rr.com. Artisan Gift Shop: 961 Main St., Berlin. Open Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Reiki Sharing Gathering: Third Wednesday of each month, 7 to 9 p.m., Pathways for Thursday’s Child Ltd., 3 Washington Street, Gorham. Open to anyone who has at least first-level Reiki training. No charge. (FMI 466-5564) Awana Children’s Club - 6:00 PM - 7:30 PM. Grades K-6th. Games, Worship, Bible Lessons, Workbook Time, Prizes, Fun. Community Bible Church. 595 Sullivan Street, Berlin. Call 752-4315 with any questions. AA Meetings: 12 to 1 p.m., Discussion Meeting, St. Barnabas Church, corner of Main and High Streets, Berlin. Step Book/Discussion Meeting, Tri-County CAP, Step I, 7:30 to 8:30 p.m., 361 School St., Berlin. Women’s Relationship Support Group: CCFHS sponsoring. Group meets 6:30 to 8 p.m. every Tuesday. CCFHS will provide transportation as needed. Limited space available. Call Carolyn at 752-5679 for more information. Milan Public Library: Monday, 1:30 to 7:30 p.m.; Tuesday and Wednesday’s 11:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. VFW Post 2520: Monthly meeting third Wednesday of every month. VFW Ladies Auxiliary: Meets every third Wednesday of the month, 7 p.m., post home, 1107 Main St., Berlin. All members encouraged to attend. Foot Clinics: Every second and fourth Wednesdays of the month, Berlin Health Department, Berlin City Hall, 8:30 a.m. to 12 noon and 1 to 3:30 p.m. By appointment only. Call 752-1272. All area residents welcome. Fee: $15. Al-Anon Meeting, 7 p.m., Salvation Army, 15 Cole St., Berlin. Serenity Steps Peer Support Center: 567 Main St. Berlin, Providing peer support services to local area residents challenged by emotional or mental difficulties. Open Monday through Wednesday 11-4; Thursday and Friday 11-7 p.m. FMI 752-8111. Thursday Community Bible Church Free Meal: Doors open 4 p.m. for coffee and conversation, Dinner at 5 p.m., close up around 630. There is live music and complimentary Dunkin Donuts coffee for all. Anyone wishing to make a donation to this service can contact aprilmasiero@gmail.com Developmental Play-Group: FCESS, 9:30 to 11 a.m. every Thursday, St. Barnabas Episcopal Church. Contact person is Sheri Goyette at 603-6622331 or email sgoyette@northernhs.org. TOPS NH 0057 Gorham: Meet every Thursday, 5:30 p.m., meeting room of the Gorham Public Library on Railroad Street, Gorham. FMI Call Carolyn at 348-1416.
Page 16 — THE BERLIN DAILY SUN, Wednesday, November 9, 2011
by Abigail Van Buren
NOISE FROM GUEST BEDROOM LEAVES HOSTS SPEECHLESS DEAR ABBY: My son invited two friends to our home for the weekend. We had never met them before, but they seemed nice. At bedtime, the young man was on the couch and the girl was in our spare bedroom. In the middle of the night, I was awakened to loud lovemaking noises. They grew louder and louder, and the headboard was banging against our bedroom wall. My husband and I were mortified. Finally, I banged on the wall and it stopped. We couldn’t believe these kids would act that way in someone’s home. They left before breakfast, so we didn’t have to face them in the morning. What was proper here? Would it have been appropriate to knock on the bedroom door and ask the guy -- or both of them -- to leave? I told my son about it the next day. He was embarrassed and apologized for his friends. What should we do if this ever happens again? -- RED-FACED IN MICHIGAN DEAR RED-FACED: Unless you first required your son’s friends to sign an abstinence pledge before bedding down at your place, you were right not to have evicted them before morning. Next time, keep this from happening by having your son tip them off at bedtime that you’re light sleepers and prefer not to be awakened by “nocturnal whoopee.” DEAR ABBY: When I’m reading a book, my husband chooses that moment to begin a conversation. If I don’t immediately put it down and give him my full attention, he gets upset and says I’m being rude to continue reading and not talk to him. I think it’s rude of HIM to interrupt me when I’m reading. These aren’t important conversations or even questions
he needs immediate answers to. They are conversations we could easily share over dinner, or later when I’m not reading. I love to read, but as a busy mom I rarely have the time. Being interrupted during those rare moments drives me crazy and makes me feel even crazier when I’m accused of being rude if I don’t want to chat right then. Who’s right and who’s rude? -- TRYING TO FINISH MY BOOK DEAR TRYING TO FINISH: Frankly, I think your husband is right. He may not need the answer to his question as much as he needs your companionship at the time he’s reaching out. If finishing a chapter is so important that you can’t take a few minutes and talk with him, then suggest that in 15 to 20 minutes you can give him the rest of the evening to talk. If my husband is involved in a project, or I am, that’s what we do, and it works for us. DEAR ABBY: How do you handle a relative who seems to think your house is her own personal garage sale site? She rifles through my closets, brings out clothing, and then asks, “What can I pay you for this?” She also looks around our garage for items that are being stored and asks the same question. She would never act this way at a friend’s home, but somehow it’s different with me. By the way, she’s my sister. -- NO SALE IN AUSTIN DEAR NO SALE: Because it’s your sister and not some nervy acquaintance, be light-handed in your response. Smile and say, “I’m not ready to let it go, but when I am, you’ll be the first to know.” Then get her out of your closet or garage and direct the conversation elsewhere.
Dear Abby is written by Abigail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was founded by her mother, Pauline Phillips. Write Dear Abby at: Dear Abby, c/o The Conway Daily Sun, PO Box 1940, North Conway, NH 03860
Doonesbury
by Gary Trudeau
For Rent
For Rent
BEAUTIFUL, one bedroom, big back, nice neighborhood, yard, frig, stove, heat, h/w, w/d, hook-up paking, no pets, sec. deposit, references, $525, 723-3856.
NEWLY renovated apartments, hot water included, electric heat, HUD approved: 3 bedroom $650; Large 2 bedroom, $500; 2 bedroom $450; 2 studios $375/each, no dogs allowed, call Rich 326-3499.
BERLIN large 1 bed 3rd floor apt. Refrigerator, stove, hot water, shed inc. Inexpensive monitor heat. $395/mo plus security. 717 2nd Ave. (207)571-4001. BERLIN large 2 bdrm apt. 2nd floor. Heat, hot water, appliances & shed inc. $595/mo plus security. 717 2nd Ave. 207-571-4001. BERLIN- Spacious 2 bedroom 1st floor of duplex w/ heat, hw, w/d hookups; yard & garage; stove & frig incl., no pets; $700 + sec dep. 560-3481. BERLIN: 1 bedroom, $450/mo. heat, h/w included, security, f.m.i. call 348-0016. BERLIN: 1, 2, 4 bedroom apts., heat, h/w, wd hook-ups, first & security, HUD accepted, 752-2607, 723-4161. BERLIN: 2 & 3 bedroom apt: spacious, w/d hook-ups, storage, garage, heat, hot water, sun porches, centrally located (must see) 752-5034, 387-4066. BERLIN: 2 bedroom house, plus utilities, $700, security, references, 603-817-4398. BERLIN: 2 bedroom, heat, h/w included, HUD accepted, $550/mo. 802-388-6904. BERLIN: 3 bedroom, heat, h/w, stove, refrigerator, w/d $725/mo. 723-2807. BERLIN: 3 bedroom, w/ heat, 1st. floor, laundry room, off street parking, all appliances and dishwasher, porches, $750/mo. 603-247-0471. BERLIN: 5 rooms, 2nd. floor, heated, h/w, 752-3765. BERLIN: First floor, 2 bedroom, heat, h/w, included, large storage included, w/d hookups, $650/mo. small dog O.K., no cats, 603-348-5186.
$1-A-DAY CLASSIFIEDS • CALL 752-5858 DOLLAR-A-DAY: Ad must run a minimum of 5 consecutive days. Ads over 15 words add 10¢ per word per day. REGULAR RATE: $2 a day; 10¢ per word per day over 15 words. PREMIUMS: First word caps no charge. Additional caps 10¢ per word per day. Centered bold heading: 9 pt. caps 40¢ per line, per day (2 lines maximum) TYPOS: Check your ad the first day of publication. Sorry, we will not issue credit after an ad has run once. DEADLINES: noon two days prior the day of publication except for Monday’s paper when the deadline is Thursday, 11 a.m. PAYMENT: All private party ads must be pre-paid. We accept checks, Visa and Mastercard credit cards and of course cash. There is a $10 minimum order for credit cards. CORRESPONDENCE: To place your ad call our offices 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday, 752-5858; send a check or money order with ad copy to The Berlin Daily Sun, 164 Main Street, Berlin, NH 03570 or stop in at our offices on Main Street in Berlin. OTHER RATES: For information about the professional directory or classified display ads call 752-5858.
Animals
Autos
Low Cost Spay/ Neuter
1994 GMC Jimmy 4x4, 4dr, new tires, exhaust and more $2200 (603)466-2427.
Cats & dogs Rozzie May Animal Alliance www.rozziemay.org 603-447-1373 PUPPIES small mixed breed. See website for more details: www.mainelypuppies.com (207)539-1520.
1995 F-150 XLT $4195 auto, 4X4, 752-4443.
Autos
For Rent
Junk Car Removal Best Local Prices
A+ pickarent.com apartments of all sizes, homes and commercial rentals. Your one stop shop for rentals, call 348-2000.
ROY'S TOWING
1997 Ford Expedition, 276k miles, many new parts, asking $1500, Colebrook, 237-5087.
348-3403.
Antiques
1998 Subaru wagon, all wheel drive, 5 speed, great winter car! Inspected, $2000, 752-9838.
BUYING junk cars and trucks ME & NH. Call for price. Martin Towing. (603)305-4504.
ANTIQUES, glass, furniture, & collectibles of all kinds wanted by Bob Gauthier, 449-2542. Specializing in Estate and Business liquidation. Bonded.
2000 Toyota Camry, aut., 4 cyl., 4 door, studded snows on, passed inspection, $4300, 752-9838.
Announcement FORGIVE someone today. Make God happy! GOT a problem? Pray the Rosary. THANKS life.
Mom, for choosing
2001 Monte Carlo SS. Auto, 6cyl, fwd, 130k, power everything. BRO. 603-723-6928. 2006 Ford Focus ZX3 5spd, 95k miles, white, new tires, 4 extra wheels, Thule with roof rack, clean. $5295. (603)466-5911.
Child Care LOCAL Mom, w/ home daycare has opening for kids 1 & up, M-F, 7:30-5:30, Sat. 7:30-12:30, meals incl. 342-9120.
For Rent
BUYING JUNK CARS
3 room apartment, $400. Utili ties included. Room owner’s residence- $50; Shihtsu puppy, all shots! 603-348-5317.
and trucks. Paying in cash. Honest pricing. No gimmicks. Kelley’s Towing (603)723-9216.
BERLIN 1st floor, 2 bedroom apt. heated. Call 978-609-4010.
Are you visiting/ working in the area or working on the Laidlaw Biomass Project and need a room by the night, week or month? Stay at DuBee Our Guest B&B in Milan, eight miles north of project. Fully furnished, including paper goods, full use of kitchen, wireless internet, Direct TV, barbecue grill and cleaning service. $35/night, or $140/week. Owners have separate living quarters.
FMI call 603-449-2140 or 603-723-8722. BERLIN (2) 4 room 2 bedroom apartments heated. Call (978)609-4010.
For Rent-Commercial COMMERCIAL: Berlin downtown, 1st. floor, commercial space, 1000 s.f. excellent location, only $495/mo. 723-3042.
For Sale AMAZING! Beautiful pillowtop matress sets, twin $169, full or queen $249, king $399. See AD under “Furniture”. APPLIANCES: 2 gas ranges, both self clean. Side-by-side electric refrigerator with water & ice in door. Washer & dryer. Moving, must sell. (603)466-2878. Custom Glazed Kitchen Cabinets. Solid maple, never installed. May add/subtract to fit kitchen. Cost $6,000 sacrifice $1,750. 833-8278 FOUR Snow tires w/rims, 185/85R14 off a Mazda, 800/miles, $145, FMI 752-1779. FOUR studded snow tires, 205/55 R16, $125; Craftsman tools, 3/4 H.P. reciprocating saw, $60; all-in-one cutting tool, $65. (603)466-5099.
Steel Buildings Reduced Factory Inventory 30x36 – Reg $15,850 Now $12,600. 36x58– Reg $21,900 Now $18,800. Source# 1IB, 866-609-4321 VEGAS Casino, full size video poker machine, plays quarters. Fun at home, $395/BO, 723-6276, 752-6276. WE have all types of ammo on special. Along with other gun accessories. Visit us at The North Country Gun Shop, 161 Main Street, Gorham, 466-1140. WOODSTOVE: 1/4 diamond plate, $275/obro, FMI, 752-4443.
BERLIN: One bedroom, bath, excellent location, real modern, great view, only $495, 723-3042.
Furniture
BERLIN: one bedroom, first floor, $600/mo.; studio, first floor, $500/mo. includes electriciy, heat, h/w, 603-723-4724.
AMAZING!
BERLIN: Spacious 3 bedroom, 2 bath, 2nd floor, recently renovated, w/d hook-up. 50% heat included, pets considered, no smoking, references required, $695. plus security, 603-986-5264. COMPLETELY renovated 3 bedroom & 1 bedroom apartments. Call H&R Block, great landlord (603)752-2372. ERROL 2 bedroom 1.5 bath. Ap pliances, private yard newly renovated. Ref. (603)482-3402.
GORHAM HOUSE 3 bedroom, $795 completely remodeled, no utilities included, 84 Lancaster Road, 466-5933, 915-6216. GORHAM: 13 Exchange St, (white bldg w/ black trim) 2 br, first floor, fridge & stove, h/ hw, w/d hookup, w/ shed, parking spaces, no pets. Sec. dep. Call: 466-3378 (8am-4pm, M-F or leave a message). GORHAM: 2 bedroom, heat, h/w, newly renovated, off street parking, snow removal, 723-6310. GREAT, 3rd, floor, 2 bedroom, dining room, deck, storage, off street parking, $500, includes heat, first, last references, 508-888-7869, 508-274-5945. MILAN: Mobile home trailer, 2 bedroom, own lot, FMI, 752-1871. MILAN: One bedroom house, no pets, heated. $650. FMI, 449-2229.
Beautiful Queen or Full-size mattress set, Luxury Firm European Pillow-top style, Fabulous back & hip support, Factory sealed-new 10Yr. warranty. Cost $1095, sell $249. Can deliver
Free T&B Appliance Removal. Appliances & AC’s removed free of charge if outside. Please call (603)986-5506.
Help Wanted LOOKING for a flexible, dependable and creative team player to provide PT personal care assistance with activities and personal care for a young student in the Berlin/Gorham area. 10 hrs/week. Experience working with individuals with developmental disabilities preferred. Send resume plus three letters of reference to Mary Ellen Cade, Northern Human Services, 87 Washington St., Conway, NH 03818 or mecade@northernhs.org EOE Position requires valid driver’s license, proof of adequate auto insurance, and driver’s and criminal background checks. (036) THE Wentworth, Jackson NHAM & PM Wait Staff. Full time year round for our AAA four diamond rated restaurant. Please call 383-9700 and speak with Ellie or Irina, stop by to fill out an application or apply online www.thewentworth.com
THE BERLIN DAILY SUN, Wednesday, November 9, 2011— Page 17
Theatre North holding auditions for annual dinner theatre at Northland Dairy Bar BERLIN -- Theatre North Holding Auditions for Annual Dinner Theatre at Northland Dairy Bar Theatre North is holding auditions for the annual dinner theatre production “Death of A Doornail” on Wednesday, November 16, at 6 p.m. at the Gorham Town Hall. Auditions open for those people 16 years of age and up. The show will be held at the Northland Dairy Bar in Berlin during the first two weeks in February. If you are unable to make auditions that day and still want to audition, please contact Drea at 723-3736. Eccentric Millionaire, Albert Doornale has
Help Wanted
Help Wanted
BARTENDERS, COOKS, SERVERS
HOUSEKEEPER YEAR ROUND
The Wildcat Inn & Tavern in Jackson is looking to fill full and part time year round positions for experienced Bartenders, Line Cooks and Servers. Please apply in person. The Wildcat Inn & Tavern, 94 Main Street, Jackson, NH (603)383-4245.
Friendly, energetic person to assist with housekeeping at 21 room Jackson inn. Weekends required. Attention to detail, immaculate housekeeping, dependability and team spirit are musts. Inn at Ellis River. 383-9339.
Gorham Paper and Tissue, LLC EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES Come grow with us! Both positions offer great opportunities to be part of the future of a mill with an historic past. Accountant - Seeking a candidate with accounting experience to handle a wide range of accounting responsibilities and functions. Will report directly to the Controller. Clerk (Temporary, Full-Time) - Will be dedicated to managing a variety of tasks related to the new tissue machine project. Most desirable candidate will be detail-oriented, capable of multi-tasking in a team environment, possess strong organizational skills and positive attitude. Compensation will be commensurate with qualifications and experience, and an attractive benefits package is offered. If interested, forward resumes to: Human Resources Manager Gorham Paper and Tissue, LLC 72 Cascade Flats, Gorham, NH 03581 Fax: (603) 342-3648 e-mail: zanita.morin@gorhampt.com An Equal Opportunity Employer
invited all of his close friends to his estate; including his ex-wife Abigail, his current fiancé Candy Bombay, and his childhood friend from the lower East Side, Salvatore Carbone. Everyone arrives at the estate greeted by the grumpy Butler and cutlery carrying cook. The only problem is, Albert is not there, no one has seen him. Not his nerdy Nephew or his socially spoiled daughter. None of the guest have any idea why they are there or what happened to their host. That is until blood is found in the upstairs bathroom. Was Albert killed and carried away? In the nick of time, Inspector Bukowski arrives on the
Help Wanted
Home Improvements
Recreation Vehicles
Services
FORTIER HOME REPAIR
CHINOOKA classic motorhome. 21’, timeless design. Sleeps 2. Garaged, nearly mint. 58,600 miles. Photos and info at: RVonline.com under “1991 Chinook”. $12,250. (603)367-8753.
TECHPROS- COMPUTER SALES & SERVICE
Old & New- One call, We do it All! (603)752-1224.
Instruction • Experienced CNC Setup Positions • Quality Control Supervisor • Machine Operators Looking for some well rounded CNC setup people, a Quality Control Supervisor and entry level Machine Operators to come join our team producing top quality gun barrels. Full benefits after 90 days. Two weeks paid vacation after 1 year service EOE
Apply in person to: Green Mountain Rifle Barrel Co. 153 West Main St., Conway
P/T Assistant driver, must be dependable; P/T Mechanic, flexible hours. Apply to: C&S Vending, 595 Main St. Gorham.
PART TIME peer support staff. Personal experience with mental illness required; clean driving record a plus. Serenity steps, 567 Main Street, Berlin, FMI (603)752-8111.
scene. A murder investigation will begin, as soon as a body is found. It may be a long wait. Since 1976, the purpose of Theatre North has been to promote and foster the literary, theatrical and cultural betterment of Coos County, New Hampshire’s community by sponsoring and promoting theatrical performances of literary value in which the community shall participate in the acting and production staff. For more information find us on Facebook as The Official Theatre North Facebook Page, or contact the Northland Dairy Bar to reserve your tickets.
FRENCH TUTORING Experience certified/ MA teacher seeks to tutor French. For rates and FMI (603)466-1138.
Mobile Homes GORHAM: 4 bedroom, Gateway Trailer Park, asking $15,000/BO, FMI, 603-723-1480. TWO homes to choose from in central North Conway park. New 2012 model Skyline, 14x72, two bedroom, 2 bath, workshop/ shed, gas heat, big lot $49,900. 1994 Astro, 14x56, two bedroom, 1 bath, washer dryer, new appliances, new furnace, new roof, new hot water heater $24,900. Both homes ready to be lived in! No dogs. Financing available, affordable living right in North Conway. Walk to shops, outlets, trails, river. Call 603-986-3991.
Motorcycles 2000 Harley Davidson, Ultra Classic, metallic green & black, new motor, many accessories, asking $7950 Paul 603-752-5519.
BUY • SELL • T RADE www.motoworks.biz (603)447-1198. Olson’s Moto Works, RT16 Albany, NH.
PART-TIME RESIDENTIAL COMMUNITY POSITION: We are currently seeking an energetic, patient person to provide residential support to individuals in their apartments. Duties will include providing instruction and assistance with household tasks and participation in community activities. A flexible schedule is desirable. The rate of pay is $10.18 per hour with additional mileage reimbursement. The position is presently 24 hours per week. Minimum Requirements include: High School diploma or GED, valid driver’s license and proof of auto insurance, completion of driver’s and criminal background checks. Applicants may send in a resume or pick up an application at: Northern Human Services, Community Services Center, c/o Housing Coordinator, 69 Willard St., Berlin, NH 03570
HOMECARE PROVIDER OPENING Interested in working from your home? We are currently accepting applications from people interested in becoming a homecare provider for a woman who is interested in returning to the Berlin/Gorham area. This woman is a friendly, social person who will thrive in a caring and nurturing environment. She requires 24 hour supports including assistance with her personal care needs. Applicants who are caring, patient, kind, have a willingness to be a team member and who show a genuine connection with this woman are considered qualified for the position. This is a contracted position and payment will be negotiated. If you are interested, please contact Cindy Lapointe, Housing Coordinator at (603)752-1005. Applications are available at the: Northern Human Services, Community Services Center, 69 Willard St. Berlin, NH 03570 Please request returned applications be submitted to the Housing Coordinator. EOE
Real Estate HOUSE: Private well & septic, 9 rooms, 2 full baths, 466-5087. WE buy houses, any place, con dition, price, 978-870-6438, rsuccess@juno.com
Services
18+ years experience! On-site computer repair, upgrades, wireless setup, virus removal, & more! (603)723-0918 www.TechProsNH.com ZIMMER Snowplowing, driveways, also shoveling, walkways, decks, free estimates, call 723-1252.
Snowmobiles
$75 Furnace Cleaning
1999 Ski Doo MXZ 670 HO 6635 miles, very well maintained, cover inc. $1500, 603-203-6584.
Special: Reliable, dependable for all your furnace needs. Repairs, cleaning and service. Call today for an appointment, 723-0729.
NEED to sell your snowmobile or ATV? Appraisals and consignment sales, 466-5211.
Andy's Electric Residential/Commercial Licensed and Fully Insured
603-466-2584 603-723-4888
VINTAGE original 1978 Polaris Cobra 340. Recently serviced. 1 owner, stored indoors. FMI (603)723-6061. $1200.
Wanted
HYPNOSIS for habit change, stress, regression. Michael Hathaway, DCH, certified hypnotherapist. Madison michaelhathaway.com (603)367-8851.
AFFORDABLE ROOFING & SIDING SOLUTIONS. Highest quality craftsmanship. Fully Insured. Lowest prices guaranteed. FMI (603)730-2521. rockybranchbuilders@gmail.com CARPENTRY, handyman, property maintenance, no job too small. Call Dennis Bisson, 723-3393, free estimates. HANDYMAN Services, property maintenance, snow plowing, roof shoveling, ect. call Rick 915-0755. HOME or small office cleaning services, 30 years exp. local references available, reasonable rates, 752-3950. LAUNDRY service. Available 7 days wk 7am-7pm Same day service. Pick-up/ drop-off available 603-348-5442.
MOWER MEDIC Snowblower tune-up special $40 in shop, $45 on-site, $50 picked up (Berlin prices). (603)723-7103. PAINTING: Top quality, interior, exterior, reasonable rates, free estimates, references, Don Guerin, contractor, 915-6119. SNOW shoveling, driveways, walkways, roofs, sanding, salting, available, reasonable rates, 603-723-3145.
REMODELING kitchen? Throw ing out old cabinets, recycle by calling 603-466-3972 for pick-up.
Wanted To Buy ANTIQUES, individual pieces and complete estates. Call Ted and Wanda Lacasse, 752-3515.
BUYING JUNK CARS AND TRUCKS Paying in cash Honest pricing No gimmicks Kelley’s Towing (603)723-9216. PAYING CASH: for all old paper money from the Berlin National Banks for private collection. May purchase other non-Berlin currency, 603-723-1461.
SNOWPLOWING reasonable rates, Berlin, Gorham, Milan, Dummer, Shelburne, 348-3403.
Yard Sale
SNOWPLOWING: Gorham, residential, only. Dependable, reliable, and affordable. Discounts for neighbors and referrals, 915-1012.
INDOOR Moving sale: 58 Village Road, Shelburne, Sat. 11/12, 10-1 p.m. Wide variety of items from attic to cellar.
Page 18 — THE BERLIN DAILY SUN, Wednesday, November 9, 2011
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– SPORTS –––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
The Salvation Army Food Pantry is empty and we would like to help them out so drop off your non perishable food at Pyrofax from Nov. 1st thru the 30th
440 Glen Ave., Berlin, NH 03570 (603)752-5510 • (800)284-6701 Fax (603)752-5050
T he Cod Fa ther S ea food M a rket 3 6 0 M a in S t.,G orha m
formerly Seafood Delight
6 0 3 -9 1 5 -1 7 3 8
“Offering qua lity s ea food you ca n’t refus e” N OW OPEN ....fea turing fres h s ea food, s hellfis h a nd live lobs ters G ood Va riety ofCooked Ta keout Ava ila ble OPEN DAILY:Sun 1 1 a m -6 pm , M on 1 0 a m -6 pm , Tues .1 2 noon-6 pm ,W ed-Sa t 1 0 a m -6 pm Com e m eet Ba rb & Da ve Boucher
You are invited to attend a FREE Men’s Seminar: Morice Dennery MD Androscoggin Valley Hospital Surgical Associates Topic: Date: Time: Place: Address:
Presentation on Treatment Options for ED Thursday, December 1, 2011 6 p.m. Town and Country Inn & Resort 20 State Rt. 2, Gorham/Shelburne, NH 03581
When drug therapy or other treatments for erectile dysfunction (ED) aren’t effective, there’s no need to give up hope for a satisfying sex life. A prosthetic penile implant may provide a permanent solution to restore your quality of life and your most intimate relationships.
Berlin Bowling Center league results BERLIN/GORHAM--Tuesday, October 4 Commercial League: Top teams#1 IGA Foodliner 16-4, #2 Double K Trucking 12.5-7.5, #3 Sherwin Williams 11-9, high game- Barb Anderson 243, Scott Valliere 234, Peter Laflamme- 226, high series- Anderson 592, Norm Small 559, Laflamme 558, Most over average- Laflamme- +97, Valliere +83, most over average seriesLaflamme +171, Anderson +94. Friday, October 7th Couples League: Top Teams- #1 The New Crew 13-7, #2 Hot Rodder 12-8, #3 In The Bar 11-9, high game menGary Pinette 248, Josh Poisson 215, Guy Labens 211, high series- Pinette 647, Labens 532, Al Host505, high game women-Tina Host 205, AnnMarie Choquette 203, Liz Host 200, high series- T Host 588, Choquette 516, L Host 507. Sunday, October 9th Couples League: Top teams- #1 Spares 13-7, #2 Ballbusters 11-9, #3 Mike’s Handicaps and The 4 C’s both at 9.5-10.5, high game men- Jay Williams 210, Mike Chapman 191, high series- Chapman 536, Williams 518, most over average- JWilliams +47, Chapman +28, most over average series- Chapman +47, Williams +29. High game women- Karen Gagne and Louise Tyler both at 182, high seriesTyler 510, Lisa Williams 491, most over average- Helen Fauteux +50, Heather Canning, +49, most over average series- Fauteux +60, Pauline Coulombe +53. Monday, October 10th Women’s League: Top teams- #1 AWDY 14-6, #2 Girl’s Nite Out 12-8, #3 3 of a Kind and C-A-D both at 10-10, high game- Tina Host 233, Lisa Williams 223, Louise Tyler 201, high series- Host 618, Williams 561, Chris Lavigne 524. Wednesday, October 12th Olympians and Friends: Top teams#1 Bruins and Pittsburg Penguins 9-3, #3No Names 8.5-3.5, high game- Tom Sweeney 184, Travis Roy 172, high series- Sweeney 342, Roy - 327, most over average- Sweeney +39, Joey Martinelli +37, most over average seriesSweeney +52, Dominic Morse +42. Thursday, October 13th Early Bird League: Top teams- #1 Larks 15.5-8.5, #2 Flamingos 15-9, high game- Helen Fauteux 165, Lori Penney 162, high series- Fauteux 433, Penney 429. Men’s North Country League: Top team round #1- Pine Tree Power 17-7, high game- Dave Osgood 242, and 236, high series Osgood 636, Bob Miller 547. Saturday, October 15th Kid’s League: Top teams- #1 Chill Town and Time to Spare both at 8-4, #3 Taylor Gang and Fireballs both at 7-5, high game- Zach Host 176, high series- Tanner Cote 312, most over average- Host +62, most over average series- Host +80. Wednesday, October 19th Senior League: Game 1 “No Tap Winners”- Norm Bouchard and AnnMarie Choquette 241, Game 2 “Predict Your Score”- Norm Bouchard, “Splits, 9’s,X’s”- Norm Bouchard and Roger Poulin 217, Game 4 “Poker Bowling”-
Don Springer, Lucky Ticket winnerRoger Poulin. Tuesday, October 11th Commercial League: Top teams#1 IGA Foodliner 17-7, #2 Double K Trucking 15.5-8.5, #3 Sherwin Williams 14-10, high game- Dave Osgood 268, Nick Fournier 245, Luc Perreault 224, high series- Osgood- 626, Cari Gosselin 579, Nick Fournier 561, most over average- Perreault +103, Osgood +91, most over average series- Perreault +118, Paul Godin +99. Friday, October 14th Couples League: Top teams- #1 The New Crew 16-8, In The Bar 14-10, #3 Hot Rodder 13-11, high game menGary Pinett 248, Josh Poisson 215, Guy Labens 211, high series- Pinette 647, Labens 532, Al Host 505, high game women- Tina Host 205, AnnMarie Choquette 203, Liz Host 200, high series- T Host 588, Choquette 516, L Host 507. Sunday, October 16th Couples League: Top teams- #1 Spares 17-7, #2 The 3 C’s 13.5-10.5, #3 Taz 13-11, high game men- Rollie Baillargeon 219, Mitch Couture 192, high series- Couture 538, Baillargeon 531, most over average men- Baillargeon +58, Luc Perreault +55, most over average series- Ricky Wheelock +125, Perreault +88, high game womenLouise Tyler 202, Cari Gosselin 192, high series- Tyler 531, Gosselin 518. Monday, October 17th Women’s League: Top teams- #1 AWDY 18-6, #2 Girls’ Nite Out, C-A-D, and 3 of A Kind all at 13-11, high game- Liz Host 192, Lori Penney 184, Tina Host 181, high series- Penney 494, Lisa Williams 482, L Host 477. Wednesday, October 19 Olympians & Friends: Top Teams#1 Bruins 12-3, #2 Space Invaders 10-5, #3 No Names 9.5-5.5, high gameChris Lamar 181, Tom Sweeney 146, high series- Lamar 284, Sweeney 255, most over average- Lamar +65, Gary Fecteau +36, most over average seriesLamar +52, Chrissy St Germaine +47. Thursday, October 20th Early Bird League: Top teams- #1 Larks 18.5-9.5, #2 Flamingos 16-12, high game- Anita Valliere 199, Lori Penney 184, high series- Valliere 502, Penney 485. Men’s North Country League: Top teams- #1 Pine Tree Power 20-8, #2 M&D Music 19-9, #3 White Mtn. Lumber and Creative Threads both at 17-11, high game- Mike Chapman 255, Dave Moore 216, high seriesChapman 609, Larry Ramsey 574. Saturday, October 22 Kid’s League: Top teams- #1 Chilltown and Taylor Gang both at 10-5, #3 Time to Spare 9-6, high gameTanner Cote 190, high sseries- 339, most over average- Triston Poirier and Tanner Cote both at +53, most over average series- Cote +65. Wednesday, October 26th Senior League: Game #1 “No Tap Winners”- Norm Bouchard and Lorraine Martin 243, Game #2 “Predict Your Score”- Lil Boulanger, Game #3 “ Splits, 9’s, X’s”- Norm Bouchard and Lorraine Flibotte 187, Game # 4 Poker Bowling”- AnnMarie Choquette, Lucky Ticket winner- Don Springer.
THE BERLIN DAILY SUN, Wednesday, November 9, 2011— Page 19
NC Hockey League game results BERLIN-- The Pub 4 Perreault & Naves/BCF Scoring: 1st period- Pub @ 3:40 Ryan Lavigne from Tyler Martin and Ryan Smith, P &N/BCF @ 7:00 Matt Gauthier from Devon Fauteux. 2nd period- P&N/BCF @ 1:52 Josh Cascadden from Jeff Lane and Gauthier, The Pub @ 5:32 Steve Riendeau from Eric Benjamin and Martin, The Pub @ 9:34 Lavigne from Brian Cloutier and Smith. 3rd Period- The Pub @ 3:54 Riendeau from Lavigne and Martin. Saves: P&N/BCF Zach Cascadden 6+7+11=24, The Pub Brian Middleton 7+2+11=20. The Town & Country 6 Pro-Shop 3 Scoring: 1st period- T&C @ 1:18 Brian Desilets from Gary Langlois and Alan Halle, @ 5:24 Gary Lamontagne from Marcel Couture and Matt Voisine. 2nd period- Pro Shop @ 8:01 Dan Mackin from Tom Bisson, @ 8:56 Andy Doyon (unassisted), @ 9:10 Mackin from Owen Mackin and Matt Doyon, T&C @ 1:42 Voisine from Jeremy Eafrati and Couture. 3rd Period- T&C @ 0:23 Eafrati from Couture, @ 00:56 Bob Hill from Langlois and Halle, @ 10:20 Hill from Desilets
and Langlois. Saves: T&C Scott Labnon3+3+6=12, Pro Shop- Matt Barrett 5+8+6=19. Mr Pizza 5 Twin Maple Farms/Bud 3 Scoring: 1st period- Mr. Pizza @ 1:40 Rich Vargus (unassisted), @ 6:10 Jesse Tabor from Todd Frechette and Pete Anderson, @ 9:36 T Frechette from Tabor and Anderson, TMF @ 6:35 Scott Blanchette from Josh Fortier and Ben Hall. 2nd period- Mr Pizza@ 3:24 Brian Frechett from Dave Woodbury and Vargus, @ 10:02 Tabor from B Frechette and Gary Tilton. 3rd period- TMF @ 1:48 Hall from Joel Carrier and Brian Middleton, @ 3:32 Chris Frenette from Rollie Poirier and Norm Fortier. Saves: TMF/Bud Brian Middleton 5+2+4=11, Mr Pizza Chad Poulin 3+3+6=12. League Standings: Mr Pizza 2-0 Twin Maple Farms/Bud 1-1 Perreault & Naves/BCF 1-1 Fagin’s Pub 1-1 Town & Country 1-1 Gorham Hardware/Pro Shop 0-2
Volunteers working to collect 300 gifts for needy kids this Christmas MILAN, N.H. —While many Milan families are busy with holiday activities, a group of local volunteers is focused on filling empty shoe boxes with school supplies, toys, hygiene items and notes of encouragement for needy kids overseas. Milan families are participating in the world’s largest Christmas project of its kind, Operation Christmas Child, an effort that has hand-delivered 86 million gifts to kids worldwide since 1993. This year-round project of Samaritan’s Purse is coming to its peak, as local businesses, churches and schools prepare to collect gift-filled shoe boxes during National Collection Week, Nov. 14-21. Volunteers can drop off their shoe box gifts at a bustling location in the area to help kids in 100 countries know they are loved and not forgotten. The local collection site is the Milan Community Methodist Church, 763 Milan Road, Milan, NH, 03588. Operating hours are: Mon: 3:30 p.m. - 5:30 p.m. Tues: 3:30 p.m. - 5:30 p.m. Wed: 3:30 p.m. - 5:30 p.m. Thurs: 4 p.m. - 6
p.m. Fri: 4 p.m. - 6 p.m. Sat: 4 p.m. 6 p.m. Sun: 11 a.m. - 1 p.m. Mon: Not Collecting Operation Christmas Child, a project of international Christian relief and evangelism organization Samaritan’s Purse, uses whatever means necessary to reach suffering children around the world with these gifts of hope, including sea containers, trucks, trains, airplanes, boats, camels and dog sleds. Tracking technology also allows donors to “follow” their box to the destination country where it will be handdelivered to a child in need. To register shoe box gifts and find out the destination country, use the Follow Your Box donation form found at www.samaritanspurse.org/occ. For more information on how to participate in Operation Christmas Child, call (518) 357-2284 or visit www. samaritanspurse.org/occ. National Collection Week for gift-filled shoe boxes is Nov. 14-21; however, shoe box gifts are collected all year at the Samaritan’s Purse headquarters in Boone, N.C.
Scouting for Food Drive is this Saturday BERLIN -- Food pantries throughout the state are struggling, especially as these cold days of November bring us closer to the holidays. The Berlin and Gorham Boy Scout Troops and cub scout packs are hoping to restock the pantries’ shelves during their annual “Scouting for Food” food drive, this Saturday, November 12. The scouts are asking all local residents to donate what they can this Saturday. The bags of donated foods will then be divided among the community’s three food pantries: Tri-County Cap ( 7523248), Salvation Army (752-1644),
the Ecumenical Food Pantry (Grafton Street) and also St. Vincent de Paul for Christmas Baskets. Simply leave your food items in a bag or box (labeled “scouting for food”) on your front porch or where it can easily be seen. Scouts and Friends will begin collecting around the streets of Gorham and Berlin by 9:00am. If your donation has not been collected by afternoon, please contact one of the food pantries mentioned above. Last year, the troops collected 1308 bags of food. This year they hope to surpass this amount.
Donate a coat... and you’ll feel warm all over, too. We are accepting children’s coats, hats, mittens, ski pants, and boots.
Drop off your donation at Pyrofax Energy from Nov. 1st thru Nov. 30th 440 Glen Ave., Berlin, NH 03570 (603)752-5510 • (800)284-6701 • Fax (603)752-5050
Join Tea Birds for their Weekly Dinner Specials Wednesday Night Is Pasta Night All You Can Eat Pasta $10.95
Thursday Night Is Dinner For 2 Includes 1 Appetizer and choose from Entrees on our Special Menu. Includes a Chef’s Special Dessert $29.95 For 2
Friday And Saturday Best Breakfast in the North Country! Gluten Free Available
752-4419 151 Main St. Berlin, NH Smaller Portions Available Upon Request
Fresh Maine Seafood • Great Steaks •House Specials
Sunday Night 4-6pm Early Birds Specials Includes Choice Of Entree From Our Early Bird Menu $12.95
Don’t Miss Breakfast... The Most Important Meal Of The Day!
We will be at the Harvest Market Saturday, November 12th
from 10:00am to 2:00pm at the Bickford Place.
Mix and Match Snowballs (coconut) Muddyballs (crushed Oreos) Whoopie Pies 4 for $6 or 1 dozen for $15 Also all our other goodies that we carried this summer. Fresh Breads • Smoked Items • Lizzy’s Comfort Cozys
Page 20 — THE BERLIN DAILY SUN, Wednesday, November 9, 2011
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––POLICE LOG –––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
Berlin police log Monday, Oct. 31 9:43 a.m. A Goebel Street resident reported being threatened by a neighbor. 3:41 p.m. A caller reported that their car had been keyed while parked on First Avenue. 4:53 p.m. A caller reported a box spring and mattress on the sidewalk on High Street. 5:37 p.m. A caller on Granite Street reported juveniles vandalizing a snowman. 5:39 p.m. A caller reported that someone near the intersection of Madison Avenue and Dewey Street was swearing loudly while kids were Trick-or-Treating. 5:59 p.m. A woman reported being assaulted by her sister. 6:08 p.m. A two vehicle accident was reported in Milan. No injuries were reported. 7:59 p.m. A motorist reported being involved in an accident in the parking lot at AVH. They were given a state accident form to fill out. 8:09 p.m. A caller reported juveniles throwing rocks on State Garage Road. Tuesday, Nov. 1
9:06 a.m. A minor two vehicle accident was reported at the corner of Mason Street and Main Street. No injuries were reported. 11:42 a.m. A caller on Coos Street reported their vehicle was egged. 3:13 p.m. A caller on Coos Street reported that two of the tires on their vehicle had been slashed. 3:17 p.m. A caller on Madison Avenue reported that a tire on their vehicle had been slashed. 6:40 p.m. A caller on Main Street reported a “scruffy” man going behind a business. 7:37 p.m. A third party reported a verbal altercation at a residence on Rockingham Street. Wednesday, Nov. 2 3:07 a.m. The officer on patrol checked on someone loading items into a pickup truck on Guilmette Street. The person thanked the officer for checking, noting that his residence had been robbed previously. 10:56 a.m. A caller reported a minor accident in the White Mountains Community College parking lot. 12:50 p.m. A man went in to the police station to
report that his wife had committed adultery. 1:55 p.m. Robert Metz, 52, of North Conway was issued a citation for non-inspection. 7:17 p.m. A caller reported that an ice cream cone trash can and tables had been tipped over at Ingy’s on Hutchins Street.
Gorham police log Thursday, Oct. 27 12:24 p.m. A Bethlehem resident, whose wallet was reportedly stolen in Lancaster, reported that their credit card had been used at KFC in Gorham. Friday, Oct. 28 12:26 p.m. An employee at McDonald’s reported that a coworker had poisoned her medication. The incident is under investigation. Saturday, Oct. 29 12:25 p.m. A caller on Elm Street reported that their vehicle had been egged overnight. 4:55 p.m. A motorist on North Main Street reported plastic bottles falling out of a black pick up truck. 6:47 p.m. Eric Burns, 27, of Gorham, was issued a summons for operating after revocation or suspension. He is scheduled to appear in court on Dec. 9. Sunday, Oct. 30 2:33 p.m. A caller on Jewell Street reported that their neighbor had plowed snow onto their property. 6:29 p.m. A motorist on Gorham Hill Road reported another vehicle drifting over the yellow line. The driver was located and given a verbal warning. Monday, Oct. 31 10:05 a.m. A minor two-vehicle accident was reported in the parking lot at Wal-Mart. No injuries were reported. 10:20 a.m. Police received a report that a garage door was open at a normally unoccupied residence on Fieldstone Road. Police secured the building. 12:45 p.m. An accident was reported on North Main Street, after a vehicle swerved into the next lane and struck the rear of a tractor trailer unit. One person was treated at the scene for minor injuries. Mitchell Young, 26, of Berlin, was issued a summons for negligent driving. He was also arrested on two outstanding warrants dating back to 2006, on charges of writing bad checks. He was released on $750 personal recognizance bail and is scheduled to appear in court on Dec. 9. 8:32 p.m. Michael Overman, 46, of Durand, Mich., was issued a citation for driving an unregistered vehicle. 8:57 p.m. An accident was reported in the parking lot at Wal-Mart. A vehicle struck a light pole causing minor damage. No injuries were reported. Tuesday, Nov. 1 7:44 a.m. A burglary was reported at Albrite Signs. Three rifles were reported stolen during the overnight hours. 8:30 p.m. Miguel Martinez, 37, of Gorham, was arrested and charged with violating a protective order and contempt of court. He was held pending a Nov. 2 bail hearing. Wednesday, Nov. 2 10:50 a.m. A caller reported possible drug dealing going on in a motel room on Main Street. The incident is under investigation.
Send Us Your Business News: bds@ berlindailysun.com
THE BERLIN DAILY SUN, Wednesday, November 9, 2011— Page 21
City seal back on council agenda Patrick, Flum engaged to wed BY BARBARA TETREAULT THE BERLIN DAILY SUN
BERLIN -- The city seal was back on the council agenda Monday night. Three years ago, then Mayor David Bertrand and the council voted to redesign the city seal to remove the smoke stack and present a new image of the city to the world. Then-Councilor David Poulin said the smoke stack perpetuated the city’s image as a smelly mill town and he proposed focusing more on the city’s forest heritage. The decision to change the seal was strongly opposed by Mayor Paul Grenier who called it a repudiation of the city’s heritage. He made restoring the original city seal part of his campaign platform back in 2009. Grenier brought the issue up at one of his first council meetings but failed to get the votes needed to reconsider the previous council’s decision. The issue had remained dormant until this week when Councilor Mark Evans asked to have it put on the work session agenda. Evans explained that when he voted in favor of changing the seal, he thought it was simply a matter of changing the city’s letterhead. Since then, he said he has realized that it is a bigger undertaking and requires changing uniform patches and the decals on city vehicles. Evans also noted that since the vote, the Burgess BioPower plant has been approved and is under construction. He said a smoke stack will remain part of the city’s landscape for the foreseeable future. In light of those facts, Evans said he was proposing the council reconsider its earlier decision and readopt the original city seal. Grenier said the city had a large inventory of decals and the council had voted to use up old letterhead, envelopes, and decals before ordering material with the new seal. As a result, he said City Clerk Debra Patrick reported the city has only spent $2,063 on material with the new seal. Furthermore, while the city had a stamp made with the new seal, Patrick kept the original stamp. Grenier said Patrick recommended that whatever the current council decides, it also consider amending the city charter to stipulate the city seal can only be changed by a vote of the public. The mayor said Patrick is concerned that the design of the city seal is becoming a political football every time there is a change in the city council. Grenier said he agrees with Patrick that
changing the city seal should require public approval through either a charter amendment or a charter revision commission. “The city seal should be about community identity and not a political football,” he said. Councilor Tom McCue said the council spent a lot of time discussing the city seal before it acted to change it three years ago. He asked that notes of the earlier meetings on the matter be distributed to all the councilors. Councilor Lucie Remillard said there was a lot of discussion but said she also felt it had become a political issue at the time. She said the council did not delve deeply into the cost. She said getting rid of the smokestack was the prime focus. Councilor Mike Rozek said he considers himself a traditionalist and would like to go back to the original seal. Councilor Diana Nelson said she also prefers the original seal over the new seal. “To me, it just doesn’t represent us,” Nelson said, of the new seal. With only McCue opposed, the council agreed to go forward with changing back to the original seal with a resolution on the next council meeting agenda for a first reading and future public hearing.
BERLIN – Mr. and Mrs. Rodney Patrick, Berlin, are pleased to announce the engagement of their daughter, Heather Marie Patrick, to Erik Robert Flum. Erik is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Flum of St. Johnsbury, Vt. The bride-to-be is a 2007 graduate of Berlin High School and has completed two years at Masters Commission USA certified in youth ministry and community outreach (first year in Phoenix, Arizona, and second year in Dallas, Texas). Heather worked for one year as an AmeriCorps volunteer serving LifeBridge Youth Mentoring in Littleton, NH, and is currently employed at Fabyan’s in Bretton Woods while pursuing a Bachelor Degree at West Coast Bible College and Seminary. Erik is a 2003 graduate of St. Johnsbury Academy and obtained his Bachelor’s Degree in 2007 in Electromechanical Engineering at Vermont Technical College. He is currently employed as Design Engineer at New England Wire Technologies Corp. in Lisbon, NH, and has worked there for the past three years. Heather continues to work with local youth in many capacities, and the couple is very involved at White Moun-
Heather Patrick and Erik Flum
tain Christian Church (WMCC) and The Bridge Outreach Center, both in Littleton, NH: leaders of Catalyst Youth Group and volunteers at the Teen Center. Erik just recently purchased a home in Littleton, where the couple will soon reside. A January 7, 2012 wedding is planned at Harvest Christian Fellowship in Berlin with WMCC Pastor Jim Anan officiating; reception will be held at the Town & Country Motor Inn.
Page 22 — THE BERLIN DAILY SUN, Wednesday, November 9, 2011
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Men’s Breakfast Group recognizes ‘Vet – to Vet’ GORHAM -- Pastor David Canter is a disabled Vietnam War Veteran. He served with the 101st Airborne Division as a staff sergeant in a combat infantry unit in 1968 and 1969, until wounded on May 11, 1969 while on patrol in the Ashau Valley (not far from the DMZ). Pastor Canter is all too familiar with the difficulties of coming home and trying to resume a state of normalcy after a tour of duty in a war zone. In recent months Dave has worked together with several folks in the North Country Veterans Committee to help form a Vet-to-Vet program for the this area. This is a group of veterans from World War II up through the present conflicts in Afghanistan and Iraq, who want to help other veterans sort through the issues
Come to the AVH Auxiliary Christmas Fair Nov. 19 BERLIN -- The AVH Auxiliary will hold its annual Christmas Fair on Saturday, November 19, from 10 a.m.to 2 p.m. at Androscoggin Valley Hospital. All are welcome to attend this fund-raiser to help enhance patient care at AVH. The fair will showcase new and returning artisans selling their latest handmade crafts. The Sunny Corner Gift Shop at AVH will be open and offering customers a 10 percent discount off of their purchases (excluding AVH logo wear, flowers, cards and candy). In addition, AVH Auxilians will be selling their fresh,
• Courteous, Professional Service • Conveniently located in downtown Berlin 148 Main Street • Independent Optician – the owner’s in the store! • “Nous Parlons Francais”
BERLIN -- The Berlin High School Key Club* will be hosting a Pie Auction along with their annual member induction ceremony on Thursday, November 17, 2011 at 6:00pm in the Berlin High School Cafeteria. The event is free to the public and everyone is encouraged to attend. Refreshments will be served. All proceeds from the pie auction are used to
W ill be seeing patients w ith derm atology problem s at the A ndroscoggin V alley H ospital Surgical C enter (St. L uke’s B uilding)
Friday,N ovem ber 18th FO R A P P O IN T M E N T S C A L L B A R B A R A O R SU E A T
1-413-774-3077 WE DELIVER! 466-5573
Fresh Sea
food!
Main Street, Gorham
Mr. Pizza will be closed on Wednesday November 9th for Fall cleaning & renovations. We apologize to our loyal customers for the inconvenience and will reopen Thursday at 11am as usual.
Quality Eyewear 148 Main St., Berlin, NH 03570 • 752-3382
home-baked pastries, holding a 50/50 raffle, and raffling off several beautiful items. Christmas Memory Tree forms will be available for those interested in making a $5 donation in memory of deceased loved ones who will be remembered during a Christmas Memory Tree Ceremony on Thursday, December 8, at 6 p.m. in the hospital cafeteria. For more information or to reserve a craft table at the Fair, please call Linda Morris, AVH auxiliary president and fair chairperson, at 326-5678. Visit AVH online at www.avhnh.org.
Berlin High Key Club to hold pie auction Nov. 17
R obert W . A verill M .D . Call Today For An Appointment 72 High St., Berlin • 752-1212 32 Exchange St., Gorham • 466-2221 www.fleury-patry.com
of life that sometimes becomes overwhelming or confusing. This very promising outreach program, “Vet-toVet”, will be David’s topic for the Men’s Breakfast Group on Nov. 11, at the Gorham Congregational/ UCC on Main Street, Gorham. This meeting is also open to women, because of their contributions, both as veterans themselves or as the partners, spouses and family members who were there for our veterans, whether they were wounded emotionally, physically or spiritually. Breakfast is served at 7 a.m., with a free will donation to benefit the Ecumenical Food Pantry in Berlin. The program will begin at 7:30 a.m. All are welcome. For more information call 466-3496.
Visit us at www.mrpizzanh.com
fund community service projects. Come and support eh Berlin high School Key club by bidding on our delicious, fresh-baked pies. *Key Club is the largest student-led organization dedicated to providing service to others in need. Our motto is “Caring: Our Way of Life”. To learn more, visit www.keyclub.org.
Notre Dame Arena 15 Hillside Ave., Berlin
752-4100
NO Public Skating Friday, Nov. 12th Resuming Friday, Nov. 19th
THE BERLIN DAILY SUN, Wednesday, November 9, 2011— Page 23
COÖS COUNTY DELEGATION Quarterly Meeting Monday, November 14, 2011 at 10:00 a.m. North Country Resource Center Lancaster, NH
Town of Gorham Notice to Gorham Residents
Berlin High School Family, Career and Community Leaders of America recently attended their annual Fall Rally. Those who attended were from l-r: Katelyn Edwards, Kelsey L’Heureux, Megan Cote, Ashley L’Heureux, Veronica Mitchell, Jessica Tupick and Amanda Shute. (RITA DUBE PHOTO)
In observance of Veteran’s Day, the Public Works Dept./Transfer Station will be closed on Friday, November 11th. There will be no garbage or recycling collection. Garbage collection for that day will take place on Monday, November 14th and recycling will take place on your next regularly scheduled day.
Berlin High FCCLA attends fall rally BERLIN -- On Friday, October 21, the Berlin High Family, Career and Community Leaders of America (FCCLA) attended their annual fall rally. This years’ theme was “Investigate FCCLA”. Members of the chapter enjoyed the many activities and workshops that were planned for that event. Many schools from all over the state enjoyed interacting with each other doing these activities. There were also contests that chapter members entered. A poster contest entered by Veronica Mitchell won three Gold Stars. The name tag contest entered by member Megan Cote, won two Silver Stars and the Creed contest entered by Katelyn Edwards received two Silver Stars. The chapter also received a scholarship for having an increased mem-
Attention Berlin Residents There will be no Cardboard Recycling on Friday, November 11, 2011. All collections for that day will be on Thursday, November 10, 2011
bership. The chapters attending the rally were given information on the National Outreach Project that has been chosen for the chapters to support. This years’ national Outreach Project is “Share our Strength”. Share our Strength, is a national nonprofit, ending childhood hunger in America by connecting children with the nutritious food they need to lead healthy active lives. Share our Strength, ensures that children in need are enrolled in effective federal nutrition programs; it invests in community organizations fighting hunger; it teaches families how to cook healthy, affordable meals; and builds public-private partnerships to end hunger, nationally at the state and city level.
Locksmith 603-915-1162 Ron Mulaire Berlin, NH
ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS PEABODY RIVER BANK STABILIZATION CONTRACTS #1-#3 TOWN OF GORHAM, NH The Town of Gorham will receive sealed Bids for the Peabody River Bank Stabilization project, until 2 p.m., November 18, 2011, at H.E. Bergeron Engineers, Inc. (2605 White Mountain Highway, North Conway, NH). The project includes three contracts. Contract 1 (White Birch Lane South) is the construction of a 450foot-long berm along the Peabody River adjacent to the White Birch Lane cul-de-sac. Contract 2 (White Birch Lane North) is to stabilize 200 feet of eroded slope adjacent to White Birch Lane by installing riprap with (2) boulder deflectors and a boulder wedge. Contract 3 (Libby Field) is to stabilize 250 feet of eroded slope adjacent to Libby Field by installing riprap with (5) boulder deflectors and (5) tree clumps. A copy of the Bidding documents may be examined and obtained from H.E. Bergeron Engineers, Inc., 2605 White Mtn. Hwy., PO Box 440, North Conway, NH 03860 (603)-356-6936, upon a non-refundable payment of $85 per set ($15 for regular postage and $30 for US Postal Service overnight postage). A Pre-Bid conference will be held at White Birch Lane in Gorham on Thursday, November 10, 2011, at 2 p.m. All potential Bidders are encouraged to attend.
PUBLIC NOTICE Starting on Monday, November 7th and continuing during the week, Brookfield Power plans to gradually raise the Shelburne Dam pond elevation after repairing damage from Hurricane Irene. For your safety, please be aware of the changing water surface elevation if you’re on the river or shorelines in Shelburne. For further information contact (603) 479-3566.
CITY OF BERLIN New Hampshire Contract # 2011-20 ASBESTOS ABATEMENT SERVICES
INVITATION TO BID Sealed Bids for Contract # 2011-20 for the abatement and removal of asbestos materials found in an asbestos survey for 246 Grafton Street will be received by the City of Berlin at the City Manager’s Office at Berlin City Hall, 168 Main Street, Berlin, NH 03570 until 2:00 pm prevailing time Thursday November 17, 2011. Bids will be publicly opened and read aloud at 3:00 pm in any available office or conference room at the City Offices, City Hall, 168 Main Street, Berlin, NH. The City Manager reserves the right to waive defects in form and minor irregularities and to reject any or all bids as determined to be in the best interest of the City. Contract documents are available at no charge at the City Manager’s Office (603-752-7532), Berlin City Hall, 168 Main Street, Berlin, NH 03570, Monday thru Friday between the hours of 8:30 am and 4:30 pm or on the City website http:// www.berlinnh.gov Bidders may further acquaint themselves with the work to be done by attending an onsite pre-bid meeting at 246 Grafton Street on Wednesday November 9, 2011 at 2:00 pm. Any contract or contracts awarded under this Advertisement for Bids are expected to be funded in part by an Economic Development Initiative Special Projects under the Department of housing and Urban renewal (HUD). Federal compliance requirements include Civil Rights, Affirmative Action, Etc. This is an equal opportunity/affirmative action agency. All qualified proposals will receive consideration without regard to race, color, religion, creed, age, sex, or national origin.
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