SATURDAY, OCTOBER 22, 2011
17th Annual Howl-o-Ween Pet Costume Party Sunday, Oct. 23 at noon! PRIZES FOR: • Best Pet in Costume • Best Pet w/ Child in Costume • Best Pet w/ Adult in Costume
Don’t Forget Your Pets... • Pets Welcome! • Halloween Treats, Costumes & Toys for Pets! • Halloween & Fall Treats from our Pet Bakery! • Winter Coats & Hoodies! • Gifts for Pets & Pet Lovers! • Lupine Guaranteed Collars & Leads and Pet ID Tags! • Full Line of Pet Supplies! • Blaze Orange Reflective Pet Safety Wear
VOL. 23 NO. 194
CONWAY, N.H.
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Page 2 — THE CONWAY DAILY SUN, Saturday, October 22, 2011
Occupying Boston and beyond, with tent libraries
–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– DIGEST––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
THEMARKET
3DAYFORECAST
Sunday High: 54 Low: 38 Sunrise: 7:09 a.m. Sunset: 5:48 p.m. Monday High: 58 Low: 44
Saturday High: 53 Record: 82 (1979) Sunrise: 7:08 a.m. Saturday night Low: 35 Record: 20 (1974) Sunset: 5:50 p.m.
BOSTON (NY Times) — This city, home to the nation’s first large public library, has a new and somewhat grittier venue for reading. Housed in a green military tent, the library at the Occupy Boston encampment is overflowing with scholarly tomes that have no due dates or late fees. The growing collection includes more than 500 books, sorted by genre — consumerism, gender, activism/organizing — and overseen by a bookstore owner and a number of librarians supporting the movement, including some from a group calling themselves the Radical Reference librarians. It has a simple checkout system, an expanding archive of Occupy Boston’s meeting notes and proposals and a nascent program of speakers and writing workshops. John Ford, 30, who owns the Metacomet alternative bookstore in Plymouth, Mass., said the library was intended to help protesters learn about systems they find frustrating and explore possible alternatives. “I hope, at the very least, it just makes people more inclined to be thoughtful about what they’re doing here,” said Ford
DOW JONES 267.01 to 11,808.79 NASDAQ 38.84 to 2,637.46 S&P 22.86 to 1,238.25
records are from 3/1/74 to present
TODAY’SJOKE
loll
“I got pulled over by a bicycle cop in L.A. — not a motorcycle cop, a bicycle cop. And I’m in my car, and he gets out — he’s sweating, he’s got these little shorts on. ‘You know how fast you were going?’ ‘Yeah, a lot faster than that bike.’” — Damon Wayans
Obama: U.S. troops to leave Iraq by year’s end
TODAY’SWORD
verb; 1. To recline or lean in a relaxed, lazy, or indolent manner; lounge. 2. To hang loosely; dangle. noun: 1. The act of lolling. 2. A person or thing that lolls.
— courtesy dictionary.com
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– WORLD/NATION–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
WASHINGTON (NY Times) — President Obama said Friday that the last American soldier would leave Iraq by the end of the year, bringing to an end a nearly nine-year military engagement that cost the lives of 4,400 troops and more than $1 trillion, divided
the American public, and came to define America’s role in the world. Obama said that as of Jan. 1, 2012, the United States and Iraq would begin “a normal relationship between two sovereign nations, and equal partnership based on mutual interest and mutual respect.”
In a videoconference on Friday morning with Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki, Obama told him of the administration’s decision, which grows out of an inability of the United States and Iraq to come to an agreement on leaving a few thousand military trainers in the country.
Libyan leaders differ over Qaddafi burial MISURATA, Libya (NY Times) — Euphoria in Libya over the death of Col. Muammar elQaddafi was tempered on Friday by frictions and confusion over where and when to bury the former strongman, as well as rising pressure from abroad for a fuller accounting by the interim government of the final moments before his violent, messy demise while in the custody of the fighters who captured him. The United Nations and Amnesty International called for a thorough investigation into precisely how Colonel Qaddafi -- shown in viral
SAYWHAT...
“
A person who won’t read has no advantage over one who can’t read.” —Mark Twain
Internet cell-phone videos bleeding and heaving as screaming fighters dragged him from a drain pipe hideout in Surt — wound up dead, with multiple bullet wounds in his head and torso. One of those videos was receiving heightened scrutiny on Friday because it showed a conscious Colonel Qaddafi wiping blood off the left side of his face, revealing no bullet wound. Later videos of his corpse showed a bullet wound in the same spot — undercutting the interim government’s official explanation that he was accidentally killed during a shootout with Qaddafi loyalists.
Puerto Rico’s plan for natural gas pipeline has many critics
PORTUGUES, P.R. (NY Times) — It is his retirement refuge, a tiny house in the Central Mountain Chain, surrounded by banana and orange trees, coffee bushes and the melody of coquí frogs. “I like the peace and tranquillity after so much time spent working and sacrificing,” said Luis Rodriguez Cruz, 59, who bought his home, nestled in the center of the island, for $10,000 a few years ago, after a lifetime of factory work. “We came here for peace. Now we have to worry whether this thing will explode next to our house.” The pipeline, which has provoked demonstrations and widespread opposition over environmental and safety concerns, would run 92 miles from Peñuelas in the south, across the mountains to the island’s northern coast, then east to San Juan. For Gov. Luis G. Fortuño, who has made the pipeline a centerpiece of his first term, the project represents one of the island’s best attempts at revving up its flailing economy, by reducing stratospheric electricity costs.
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THE CONWAY DAILY SUN, Saturday, October 22, 2011— Page 3
North Conway, NH 356-0401
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There are an estimated 5,000 moose in New Hampshire. (TOM EASTMAN PHOTO)
A successful season so far for moose hunters BY TOM EASTMAN THE CONWAY DAILY SUN
BERLIN — New Hampshire Fish and Game reports that hunters are achieving a 57 percent success rate as of Thursday night for the nine-day permit only hunt, which got under way Oct. 15 and continues through 23. “As of last night, we were at a 57 percent success rate, which is pretty typical compared to other years. That count is down from last year, but last
year was perfect weather for moose hunting,” said Kristine Rines, N.H. Fish and Game moose biologist, in an interview from the state Berlin Fish Hatchery moose check-in station Friday afternoon. She said the statewide moose kill as of Thursday night was 71 cows and 160 bulls. The largest taken so far this season is a 930-pound bull, dressed weight, which alive would
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Page 4 — THE CONWAY DAILY SUN, Saturday, October 22, 2011
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SATURDAY, OCTOBER 22 Caravanserai Concert. The Arts Alliance of Northern New Hampshire presents “Caravanserai: A place where cultures meet,” at 7:30 p.m. in the Loynd Auditorium, at Kennett High School, 409 Eagles Way, North Conway. Tickets ($15 adults, $10 seniors, $5 students, $30 families) on sale in advance, online at www.aannh.org, and at the door. Caravanserai is a program designed to establish greater understanding between American and Muslim societies by showcasing the diversity of Islamic art and culture. Featured in the concert are Qawal Najmuddin Saifuddin & Brothers, renowned torch-bearers of more than 700 years of a mystical singing tradition, on their first U.S. tour, and the Tari Khan Ensemble, which will delight audiences with their diverse styles and contemporary rhythms of percussion from across the globe. For details visit www.caravanserai-arts.org/. ‘Misery’s Child.’ M&D Productions presents “Misery’s Child” at 7:30 p.m. at Your Theater, at 1857 White Mountain Highway in North Conway. For more information visit www.yourtheater.com. Adam Ezra Group Concert. Adam Ezra Group performs at 7:30 p.m. at Theater in the Wood in Intervale. For tickets call (603) 3569980. Artisan Fair. The Spook-Tacular Artisan Fair will be held from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the Salyards Center for the Arts in Conway. Artists and craftsmen from New Hampshire, Maine and other New England states are selected for fine workmanship, quality of product and excellent value with an emphasis on variety. There will be demonstrations of different crafts throughout the day. For directions to the show or for more information, visit www.magneticmoon.com or call 539-9090. Jessica Kinney Book Signing. “The Pig Scramble” book signing with author Jessica Kinney from 2 to 4 p.m. at the Leura Hill Eastman Performing Arts Center at Fryeburg Academy, in Fryeburg, Maine. For ticket information call (207) 935-9232. Ghoullog. Cranmore Mountain holds its Ghoullog Mountain Top Haunt. Visitors board the quad for a night-time ride to the summit for this haunted mountain-top tour. Call 1-800-SUN-NSKI or visit the complete Ghoullog website at www.cranmore. com/ghoullog for details. Writing Workshop. The Charlotte Hobbs Library in Lovell hosts Joan Lee Hunter’s writer’s workshop from 9 a.m. to noon. Learn a simple method for exploring and expressing yourself through writing in this hands-on session with Hunter. Participants are asked to sign up for this workshop before Friday, Oct. 21 at noon. For more information call (207) 925-3177. Griffin Clayworks Open Studio. Griffin Clayworks Open Studio and Pottery Sale will be held at the Griffin Clayworks studio at 2362 Eaton Road, in Eaton, on Saturday, Oct. 22 and Sunday,
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Oct. 23 from 9 a.m. until 3 p.m. on both days. The event was originally scheduled for Columbus Day weekend but due to a family emergency the sale has been moved. The studio is located on the second floor of the big barn just south of the Inn at Crystal Lake on Route 153 in Eaton. For more information contact Beth at (603) 662-5084 or email griffinclayworks@gmail.com. The Haunting. The fifth annual “The Haunting” at Parsonsfield Seminary in Parsonsfield, Maine, is open from 6:30 to 9:30 p.m. This year’s theme is Seminary Hotel. Join the Friends of Parsem to travel through the 42-room dormitory and campus and experience hotel “vivitors” as they rest from their various journeys. Beware of Room 13! The cost is $10 for adults and $5 for children 12 and under. For details call: (603)539-5233 or (207)793-8825. So You Think You Know North Conway? Trivia Footrace. The North Conway Community Center hosts the third annual So You Think You Know North Conway? trivia footrace from 1 to 4 p.m. Proceeds from this fun filled fundraiser go directly to the center. Quickly decipher clues and hurry from one village location to the next. Includes five beverage stops. Must be 21 or older to participate. Register in advance or stop by at 1 p.m. with a team of four to join the fun. Halloween Town. The Laura Foundation for Autism and Epilepsy presents Halloween Town, offering elementary and middle school children the chance to enjoy a “traditional” Halloween experience with the ability to walk around a “neighborhood” while visiting houses in trick-or-treat style, on the grounds of Camp Tohkomeupog, next to King Pine Ski Area on Route 153 in East Madison, beginning at 5 p.m. Overall festivities start at 3 p.m. with a kid carnival for children ages 4 and up. The event will take place, rain or shine, and participants should dress accordingly. Costumes are not required, but are appropriate. Trick-or-treat trail and admission to the carnival are free. Parking at King Pine Ski Area with a shuttle up to Halloween Town. For more information pertaining to the event, or the Laura Foundation, please head to www.thelaurafoundation.org or call Steve Harding at Halloween Town Headquarters: (603) 367-4010. Lake Kezar Country Club ‘Turkey Shoot’ Scramble. Win a Thanksgiving turkey or turkey dinners at area restaurants by playing golf in the Lake Kezar Country Club “Turkey Shoot” Scramble. Four-player teams participate in a scramble format. Call for more information and registration at (207)925-2462. ‘Little Shop of Horrors.’ Village Players are presenting “Little Shop Of Horrors” at the Village Players Theater on Glendon Street Theater in Wolfeboro at 8 p.m Tickets are available online at www. village-players.com, at Black’s Gift Shop and Paper Store in Wolfeboro or at the door. Halloween Events in Ossipee. Ossipee Recreation Department hosts its annual Halloween party and family “Monster Mash”
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dance. The day will begin with the Halloween Party for ages 4Grade 4 will be from 1 to 2:30 p.m.; admission is $2. There will be prizes to win at various games, raffle prizes and food. Costumes are optional. The day will end with a family “Monster Mash” dance from 7 to 9 p.m. Admission is $5 per family. There will be food, raffle prizes, and prizes for the best family costume and the best individual costume. Helpers are needed for both activities. Contact the department at 539-1307 or at ossrec@gmail.com. Moultonborough Free Day. The Castle in the Clouds will end its regular season on with Moultonborough Free Day. Residents with valid ID showing a Moultonborough address will be admitted free to the Castle property, including the self guided tour of the Lucknow mansion itself. For more information visit the web site at www.castleintheclouds.org. Carroll County Democrats Summit. Carroll County Democrats gather at Runnels Hall in Chocorua from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. to get updates on national and state races and chart a course for the 2012 campaign. The county summit is open to all Carroll County registered Democrats at no charge. Participants should bring their own lunch. Bean And Casserole Dinner. The Center Conway United Methodist Church will hold its final bean and casserole dinner of the season. Come and enjoy beans, casseroles, hot dogs, pie, fellowship and a great time with friends and family. Dinner starts at 5:30 p.m. As a “thank you” for support over the summer, there will be a free will offering to support the church’s community fund. Also available now is “A Taste of Heaven,” the Center Conway United Methodist Church Cookbook, which is being sold to benefit the the church’s Volunteer In Mission Fund. Cookbooks are available at the church, the UPS Store and Leavitt’s Bakery for $12. Dollar-A-Bag Sale. The Thrift Shop of the Lovell United Church of Christ on Route 5 in Center Lovell, Maine will be hold a dollara-bag sale until Nov. 5. Shop hours are Mondays, Wednesdays, Saturdays from 10 a.m. to noon.
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 23 Mountain Top Music Center Concert. Mountain Top Music Center Orchestra, with Chris Nourse conducting, will present a program of Antonin Dvorak at 4 p.m. at Red Fox Tavern on Route 16 in Jackson. There is a $10 suggested donation. ‘Christmas Carol’ Auditions. M&D Productions’ Your Theatre in North Conway is auditions for “A Christmas Carol” at 2 p.m. Parts Available for five to eight males three to six woman and one young boy plus a non-speaking chorus. Show opens Dec. 8. Call
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THE CONWAY DAILY SUN, Saturday, October 22, 2011— Page 5
from preceding page 662-7591 with questions. All directors request that you know which part you are auditioning for and have an idea what the play is about. Dewey Mark Red Parka Scholarship Benefit Breakfast. There will be a Mason’s breakfast to benefit the Dewey Mark Red Parka Scholarship from 8 to 11 a.m. at the Masonic Hall in North Conway Village (over the movie theater, across from Schouler Park. A full breakfast is offered for a donation to scholarship fund. The Masons also collect donations of non-perishable food items for the food pantry. Bring an item for the food pantry and get a free raffle ticket. ‘Little Shop of Horrors.’ Village Players are presenting “Little Shop Of Horrors” at the Village Players Theater on Glendon Street Theater in Wolfeboro at 2 p.m Tickets are available online at www.village-players.com, at Black’s Gift Shop and Paper Store in Wolfeboro or at the door. Benefit for Matt and Freja. There will be a benefit for Matt Wallace and Freja Folce from 2 p.m. to 11 p.m. at Flatbreads in North Conway. Wallace and Folce, former residents of North Conway who are now living in Maine, were involved in a serious motor vehicle accident Sept. 29. There will be live music, silent auction and raffle. A portion of every pizza and every Tuckerman’s Beer sold will be added to the fund. For donations or more information contact Staci Blair at 356-4470 or staciblair@flatbreadcompany.com. Carroll County Retired and Senior Volunteer Program Fall Auction. The 34th annual Carroll County RSVP fall auction will be held at the Red jacket Mountain View Resort, Route 16, in North Conway. The preview is at 12:30 p.m. and auctioneer, Rob Clark will bang the gravel at 1 p.m. There will also be a silent auction and penny sale. A lunch menu will be provided by the Red Jacket. For more information or a bidders list call the Carroll County RSVP office at (603) 356-9331. Howl-o-ween Pet Costume Party. Four Your Paws Only will host a Howl-o-ween Pet Costume Party from noon to 2 p.m. at the shop on Route 16 in North Conway. Prizes awarded
to best pet in costume, best child with pet in costume and best adult with pet in costume. The costume contests begins at 12:30 p.m. Susan Brinker Voice Studio Recital. There will be a Susan Brinker Voice Studio recital from 2:30 to 4 p.m. at Jackson Community Church in Jackson. There will be seven students performing many song styles including classical, folk, Broadway, blues, pop and jazz. There is no charge. Judy Herrick will be accompanying on the piano. The participating students are Dick Altenbern, Kathleen Mulkern, Jenn Sias, Kate Thompson, Sarah Kimball, Cathy Dowling and Jim Sitomer.
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MONDAY, OCTOBER 24 ‘Christmas Carol’ Auditions. M&D Productions’ Your Theatre in North Conway is auditions for “A Christmas Carol” at 6 p.m. Parts Available for five to eight males three to six woman and one young boy plus a non-speaking chorus. Show opens Dec. 8. Call 662-7591 with questions. All directors request that you know which part you are auditioning for and have an idea what the play is about. Mountain Storytellers Guild Meeting. The Conway Public Library hosts the monthly meeting of the Mountain Storytellers Guild at 6:30 p.m. Potluck refreshments. Tellers and listeners are welcome. For details call 447-5552.
SATURDAYS Conway Contra Dance. Conway contra dance season opens Sept. 17 in Tin Mountain Conservation Center’s hall on Bald Hill Road in Albany. There will be a potluck supper at 6:30 p.m., followed by the dance starting promptly at 7:30 p.m. and running through 9:30 p.m. Admission will remain at $7 for adults, $3 for children under 12, and $15 for families. All dances are taught. Music will be provided for this dance by Puckerbrush, with Eric Rollnick calling. Dances will be scheduled third Saturdays of the month, September through May. Call (603) 447-2295 or (207) 625-3334 for more information.
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Page 6 — THE CONWAY DAILY SUN, Saturday, October 22, 2011
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Kids Tree House and History Tree. The Mount Washington Valley Childrens Museum located on Route 16 in North Conway has a safe indoor tree house for kids to play in with near by History Tree exhibit for children to learn about history. Hours of entertainment in the other exhibits as well. Free admission with Healthy Kids Gold card. Hours are 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. For more information call 356-2992 or visit www.mwvchildrensmuseum.org. Thrift Shop. The thrift shop at Christ Episcopal Church, on Pine and Main Streets in North Conway is open on Saturday, 10 a.m. to 12:30 p.m., and Wednesday and Friday from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Resale Shops To Benefit Animals At Conway Shelter. Retails Boutique features upscale clothing and accessories and is located in Norcross Place across from the Courtyard Cafe. ReTails is open Tues. through Sat. 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. The Harrison House is located at 223 East Main Street at the driveway entrance to the shelter and features household goods and much more. The Harrison House is open Tuesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Please Call (603) 4475605 for more information. Indoor Yard Sale. The Brownfield Community Center has an indoor yard sale the third Saturday of every month from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Rent a space for only $5. Thrift Shops In Lovell And Fryeburg. The thrift shop of the Lovell United Church of Christ on Route 5 in Center Lovell, Maine is open Mondays, Wednesdays, Saturdays from 10 a.m. to noon. For more information call Peg at (207) 935-7528. The thrift shop at the First Congregational Church on Main Street in Fryburg, Maine is open from 9 a.m. to noon. Puppy Playground. Join Four Your Paws Only on Route 16 in North Conway every Saturday morning for puppy or dog socialization and playtime from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. For more information call 3567297. Alcoholics Anonymous. Alcoholics Anonymous is meeting at the Gibson Center in North Conway from 8 to 9 p.m. Al-anon. Al-anon Family Group meets every Saturday from 8 to 9:15 p.m. at St. Andrew’s Church on Whittier Road in Tamworth.
SUNDAYS Brownfield Community Church Sunday School. Brownfield Community Church Sunday School has opened for the season as of Oct. 23. The same experienced teachers are welcoming 5 to 8 year olds at 10 a.m. on Sunday mornings. Thomas The Tank. The Mount Washington Valley Childrens Museum located on Main St in North Conway has an handson exhibit for all ages with their miniature
Thomas Train Set. Hours are 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Admission is $5 for non-members. For more information call 356-2992 or visit www.mwvchildrensmuseum.org. Little Green Closet Thrift Store. The Thrift Store is now open for discounted children/maternity clothes. Located in the Mount Washington Valley Children’s Museum on Route 16 North Conway next to Stan and Dan Sports. Hours 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. For more information call 356-2992 or visit www.mwvchildrensmuseum.org. Gym Flyers. An indoor radio control model flying activity every Sunday from 4 to 7 p.m. at the Ossipee Town Hall gym. For all age groups. Children under 12 years with family adult supervision. This is hosted by the Mount Washington Valley Radio Control Club. The cost is $2. Flyers under 12 are free. For more information call 520-0944. Zen Meditation. Zen meditation takes place at Creative Sole Studio, 175 Main Street, Conway, with silent sitting and walking meditation from 8 to 9 a.m. and Zen reading and discussion from 9 to 10 a.m. This is a new location; Creative Sole Studio is located above the laundromat across from Kennett Middle School, beginning April 3. The entrance is on the end of the building closest to the post office. Open to the public; $5 donation suggested. For information or questions, contact Terry Leavitt, 452-8821. Alcoholics Anonymous Beginners. Alcoholics Anonymous beginners meetings are every Sunday at Memorial Hospital in the walk-in clinic from 3 to 4 p.m. Alcoholics Anonymous. Alcoholics Anonymous is meeting at the Gibson Center in North Conway from 10 to 11:15 a.m. and at the Conway Village Congregational Church on Main Street in Conway Village, from 7 to 8 p.m.
MONDAYS Preschool Storytime. Charlotte Hobbs Memorial Library in Lovell offers preschool storytime with Miss Liz Mondays from 10 to 11 a.m. Each session includes picture book stories, finger rhymes and a craft. Storytime helps promote a life-long love of reading and can be a great place to make friends. Children under age 3 1/2 should be accompanied by an adult caregiver. The program follows the MSAD72 school calendar. Call 925-3177 if you have any questions. Mouse Paint Storytime. Charlotte Hobbs Memorial Library in Lovell offers Mouse Paint Storytime with Miss Liz Mondays from 2:45 to 4 p.m., for kindergarten through grade 2. Each session will include stories, games, songs, a craft and snack. The program follows the MSAD72 school calendar. Call 925-3177 if you have any questions. Conway Dinner Bell. A full-course home-cooked community dinner is served every Monday from 5 to 6 p.m. at
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the Brown Church in Conway Village. The dinner is open to all. To volunteer or for more information call 447-8407 or e-mail mcpond1@hotmail.com. ‘The Breakfast Club’ Meeting. M&D Productions would like to invite all executive directors, marketing directors and event coordinators to a special meeting called “The Breakfast Club,” a monthly gathering set for the first Monday of each month at 9 a.m. at M&D Productions’ Your Theatre. The meeting will speak to the need to creating a uniform structure of collaboration in the Mount Washington Valley. Call 662-7591 to reserve a seat. Open Stage. Charlotte Hobbs Memorial Library in Lovell’s monthly open stage night is every third Monday of the month through October. Hosting the open stage will be singer/songwriter Davy Sturtevant in the Tabitha and Stephen King Community Room. Come one and all to share talents and to encourage others as they do the same. For more information call the library at (207) 925-3177. Rotary Pub Club. The Rotary Club of Ossipee Valley is becoming a “Rotary Pub Club” meeting on Monday nights from 5:30 to 6:30 p.m. at Indian Mound Golf Course. Anyone who would like to learn more about Rotary International is welcome. Square Dancing. The Mount Washington Valley Stompers Square Dancing Club are holding a workshop every Monday from 6:45 p.m. to 9 p.m. at the Conway American Legion on Tasker Hill Road. Singles welcome. These workshops begin Sept. 12 and end the last Monday in May. White Mountain Horse Association. Group meets on the second Monday of each month at 6:30 p.m. Locations may vary. The association’s mission is to develop and grow a horse community in the White Mountain area of New Hampshire and western Maine, to enhance communication and involvement between horse owners and those with an interest in horses, and to provide the community with equine related resources, education, and social opportunities to be enjoyed by everyone with and without horses. To join or for more information call Debbie Shade 383-4302 or dmshade51@hotmail.com or Trish Ashworth 356-4438 or tashworth@ roadrunner.com. Freedom Church Ladies Guild. The Freedom Christian Church ladies guild meets every Monday from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. The ladies are busy making charity quilts and other items. Drop in any Monday and bring a bag lunch. For more information call Myrtle 539-5831 or Polly 539-8479. Alcoholics Anonymous. Every Monday, Alcoholics Anonymous meets at the Conway Methodist Church Hall on Main Street in Conway Village from noon to 1 p.m., the Women’s group meets at First Church of Christ, North Conway, from 6:30 to 7:30 p.m. and at the Gibson Center in North Conway from 8 to 9 p.m.
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THE CONWAY DAILY SUN, Saturday, October 22, 2011— Page 7
IN REVIEW
Week
Oct. 15-21, 2011
DIGEST OF STORIES IN THE SUN THIS WEEK
Tele-Talk Why is it important for New Hampshire to hold on to its first-in-the-nation primary status? New Hampshire’s tradition of being the first state in the nation to hold a presidential primary is once again being challenged. In 1975, the first-in-the-nation status was even put into state law, requiring that the New Hampshire primary be held at least seven days “before similar elections that would challenge our traditional position,” says Secretary of State Bill Gardner. With other states moving their caucus and primary dates up, New Hampshire is now looking at the possibility of a December primary. Whatever the date, Gardner is determined to keep New Hampshire first. “For nearly 100 years, the New Hampshire first-in-the-nation presidential primary has had meaning and relevance to American politics,” Gardner said. “Ours is the first event where voters go into the privacy of the voting booth to make a choice for a candidate on the ballot. It tells the nation something about their support.” This week’s Tele-Talk: Why is it important for New Hampshire to hold on to its first-in-the-nation primary status? Call 733-5822 Saturday and Sunday and leave your comments on our machine. You may fax your responses to 356-8360 or e-mail them to news@conwaydailysun.com. Comments can also be posted on The Conway Daily Sun’s Facebook page. Results will be published Tuesday.
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Saturday, Oct. 15 * People of all ages will participate in the 19th annual Making Strides Against Breast Cancer Walk on Sunday to raise money for the American Cancer Society.* * Two-time breast cancer survivor Janice Crawford, who is executive director of the Mount Washington Valley Chamber of Commerce, is selling the 2011-2012 Heroes of Hope Breast Cancer Research Calendars to benefit three organizations. * Snowflake Inn's "Gulliver in the Lilliputian Hamlet of Jackson" is the judges' pick for the top Pumpkin People display in Jackson. * Former Utah governor Jon Huntsman, a Republican candidate for president, says he will boycott a scheduled debate in Nevada to protest the state's effort to usurp New Hampshire's first-in-the-nation primary status. * Members of the Kennett High Class of 2012 are the first holders of the newly created Art Walker Homecoming Cup, and principal Neal Moylan declares that this year's homecoming may have been the most successful in the school's history. Tuesday, Oct. 18 * Flooding from Tropical Storm Irene has "changed" the Saco River, says Conway Village fire chief Steve Solomon, and has made the river more prone to flooding. "It's now flooding at a lower level," Solomon said. "What was moderate flooding before will now be severe flooding." * More than 400 participants raise $56,000 for American Cancer Society in the 19th annual Making Strides Against Breast Cancer Walk in North Conway. * Ed Furlong, owner of Lil' Man Snowmobile and Abenaki Cabin Rentals in Bartlett Village, is already campaigning for the 2012 Bartlett selectman's seat. Furlong wants the seat the currently belongs to Doug Garland. * Relief groups responding to Tropical Storm Irene are preparing for increased needs now that the weather has begun to turn cold. "Winter's coming," says Steffani Adaska, of the Mount Washington Valley Hurricane Irene Relief Fund, "and these people are going to need help with heating and housing." see DIGEST page 8
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Page 8 — THE CONWAY DAILY SUN, Saturday, October 22, 2011
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Fire on Monday night destroyed an East Conway meat business. (JAMIE GEMMITI PHOTO) DIGEST from page 7
Wednesday, Oct. 19 * Investigators are blaming grease for a fire that destroyed a local meat business on East Conway Road Monday night. Meat from 120 pigs was lost in the fire, along with a $30,000 slicer, $20,000 grinder and 10 compressors. "We put a lot of money into this place," said owner Darrell Robinson. * Tamworth Wireless is making progress in its efforts to provide broadband Internet access to people in town. * SAU 13 will need up to $8,000 for its search for a new superintendent to replace Jay McIntire, who is leaving at the end of the 2012 school year. * Joan Lanoie, Howie Wemyss, state Department of Transportation and the late David Emerison are recipients of the Mount Washington Valley Chamber of Commerce's White Mountain Treasures Award. Thursday, Oct. 20 * A committee recommends that cutting athletes from Kennett High sports teams should be done at the discretion of coaches. * Some $260,000 that had been set aside earlier this summer to cover possible shortfalls to the state retire-
ment system will not be needed for that purpose and instead will be used for technology and other programs and services originally approved by voters in the spring. * Conway Budget Committee meets to begin preparing for the 2011-12 budget season. * County representatives and residents get a chance to comment on what the political map for the next decade should look like at a meeting on House redistricting. Friday, Oct. 21 * A new lice policy proposed by the Freedom School Board provokes powerful emotions from community members and even the principal at a recent board meeting. * To the dismay of Conway police officials, selectmen agree to add a clause to the non-precinct fire agreement stipulating that the town will provide dispatch services through the police department to fire coverage providers outside the precincts. * Volunteers, working in conjunction with the U.S. Forest Service, will be working to repair some of the Tuckerman Ravine trails damaged by Tropical Storm Irene. * An Ossipee woman who went missing during walk in the Pine River State Forest Tuesday is found cold and wet, but otherwise OK.
Members of the Fryeburg cross-country team try out the new Fryeburg Rail Trail. (JAMIE GEMMITI PHOTO)
THE CONWAY DAILY SUN, Saturday, October 22, 2011— Page 9
IN REVIEW NATIONAL PERSPECTIVE
The Rise and Fall of William Shirer It sat there on your parents' shelf, or maybe your grandparents', alongside the six volumes of Winston Churchill's chronicle of World War II and the 11 volumes of Will and Ariel Durant's "The Story of Civilization." It had two distinctions. One was the menacing swastika on the spine of the book. The other was that it was the only one of those 18 volumes that anyone in your family ever actually opened. It is William L. Shirer's "The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich," and more than a million people did more than buy it or open it. They read it. It may be, aside from the Bible, the biggest book ever read by a big audience, and that audience devoured it, discussed it and was shaped by it. A generation of Americans formed their view of the horrors of Nazi Germany between 1933 and 1945 from its pages or from elders or teachers who themselves read it and were molded by it. No other book of history in the last century — not Charles Beard on the Constitution, not C. Vann Woodward on the South, not Doris Kearns Goodwin on Roosevelt and Lincoln, nor David McCullough on Harry Truman and John Adams — remotely approaches its reach, influence and significance. That is a remarkable achievement, even more so because this work of history was undertaken by a journalist — one whose career flared and flamed out, one whose work was questioned if not pilloried, one who wrote the book because he needed the money, much as U.S. Grant wrote his remarkable personal memoirs to pay for his own funeral and assure the financial security of his wife and children. The six volumes of Churchill on World War II are a great read, better than you expect — all the better, in fact, because they are so one-sided and self-serving. I have no idea whether the Durants' civilization series is any good because I have never opened a single volume, even though it has rested on my shelf for more than three decades. But Shirer's volume is one of the great reading experiences, and now it has been reissued in a new edition commemorating the 50th anniversary of its selection for the National Book Award. Nowhere except between the covers of that book have so many read so much about, for example, the three Reichstag elections held within five months in 1932 — and much more. So important a cultural force was "Rise and Fall" that Time magazine listed it as one of the eight best nonfiction books written since 1923, when the magazine was founded. It was, as Ron Rosenbaum writes in an introduction prepared for the commemorative edition, "a kind of a leap from eyewitness war correspondent to archival historian." Shirer was, as Dean Acheson would say in a different context, present at the creation (though not at the destruction), but he sought, as Mr. Rosenbaum put it, to write like "the kind of historian, who, like Thucydides, had firsthand experience of war and then sought to adopt the analytic distance of the historian." That almost never works for journalists; piles of campaign books, forgotten weeks after they are
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published, provide sad testimony to that. In fact, the only exceptions I can think of are Theodore H. White's "Making of the President" volumes for 1960 and 1964 (but not 1968 or 1972) and maybe "Ten Days that Shook the World," about the Russian Revolution, by John Reed, or "Scum of the Earth," about the fall of France, by Arthur Koestler. (Drop me a line if you can think of another one.) Like no other book of the period, Shirer's possesses the gravitas of the archives as well as the grit of the streets. Shirer himself had a rise and fall — a rise from Cedar Rapids, Iowa, to the world stage, where he intersected with Hitler and Gandhi, representatives of the two extremes of 20th century history, and then a fall from grace when, as the original of the fabled "Murrow Boys" at CBS, he fell afoul of Edward R. Murrow and William S. Paley and fell into near penury, in part as a result of his name appearing on a list of media leftists. "To keep the family afloat, his only option was to dream up another book idea," Steve Wick wrote in "The Long Night," published earlier this year, a chronicle of Shirer's life covering Germany. The plan: Use captured German documents as the basis for an authoritative account of Hitler's ascent and decline. It won him a $10,000 advance from Simon and Schuster. No one thought Shirer would ever earn back that advance. Including Shirer: "I began to see that soon I would be back to where I had been for the last dozen years: struggling to make ends meet and not quite making it," he wrote in "A Native's Return." I met Shirer on a morning 17 years after the publication of "Rise and Fall," in a second-floor study of his New England farmhouse, where he wrote on a battered Royal typewriter. He was wearing a blue denim outfit with droopy back pockets and rolled-up cuffs, and had been reading Balzac and Stendhal, Pushkin and Chekhov, in front of a brick fireplace. He was bald on the front of his skull but two huge white earmuffs of hair rested on either side of his head. He had no patience for the book's academic critics, who dismissed it as mere journalism. "I had more time to write than history teachers," he said. "I had no classes to teach." Yet Shirer's book still has lessons. Jonathan Steinberg, who teaches modern European history at the University of Pennsylvania, considers "Rise and Fall" a vital primary source. "He was there," Mr. Steinberg says. "It has a direct vividness of the eyewitness that other books lack." The book was the first serious swipe at digesting 485 tons of confidential documents in the archives of the German government, and it shaped like no other force the way Nazism was remembered in the 1960s and the way it is interpreted in 2011. But that may not be its ultimate significance. William Shirer died 18 years ago. But his book — indeed, the book as an art form, even if it isn't always in book form — is far from dead. David M. Shribman is executive editor of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. He can be reached at dshribman@ post-gazette.com. The Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist has a vacation home in Kearsarge.
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Page 10 — THE CONWAY DAILY SUN, Saturday, October 22, 2011
–––––––––––––––––––––– LETTERS ––––––––––––––––––––––
Thanks for Jen’s Friends benefit breakfast To the editor: On behalf of Jen’s Friend Cancer Foundation, we would like to give a huge thank you to Dan and Deb Fitzpatrick and the Mount Washington Valley Masons for hosting another terrific breakfast on our behalf. The energy and enthusiasm that they bring to their bi-monthly breakfasts is unsurpassed. They graciously offer their time and hard work to benefit many of our valley’s nonprofit organizations. Their support and the support of all those who attended is so appreciated. One hundred
percent of the money raised will go towards helping cancer patients right here within the Mount Washington Valley. The Masons are hosting their November breakfasts on Nov. 13 to benefit Angels and Elves and on Nov. 27 breakfast with Santa to benefit Bartlett Recreation. Please plan your Sundays around these terrific and delicious opportunities to help out your neighbors. As Jen’s Friends says, “You can never have too many friends.” Jill MacMillan, board member Jen’s Friends Cancer Foundation
Thanks for support of Autumn Express To the editor: Last Sunday, the Mount Washington Valley Kiwanis hosted the fourth annual Autumn Express excursion to Crawford Notch aboard the Conway Scenic Railroad. I would like to take this opportunity to publicly thank those individuals and businesses that provided support for this greatly successful endeavor. The event raised significant funds for our club’s ongoing support of the many children’s projects and needs here in the valley. The Conway Scenic Railroad has provided us this venue for the fourth time. A big thank you goes out to Russ Seybold and the staff at the railroad who assisted us with advertising, reservations, advice, and of course operating the train. Thanks also to: The Conway Daily Sun for again supporting us in advertising; WPKQ and Magic 104 for their on air promotion; the Minuteman Press for print support; the Chef’s Market for meal support; Mount Washington Graph-FX and
Residence Inn by Marriott for additional print and advertising assistance; Bob and Nancy Marquis for photographic equipment, and Sandy Hall and the Kennett High Art Department for painting the sign on the photo arbor. Thanks, of course, to the Kiwanis Autumn Express Committee members who donated many hours in the planning, preparation and execution of the myriad of functions required to make the day a success. Thanks to all the Kiwanis members, family and friends who helped aboard the train hosting the guests, serving food and making passengers feel at home. Thank you to the five members of the Kennett Key Club who enthusiastically ran about the train delivering souvenir photographs and helping with fund raising. And finally, heartfelt thanks to the over 300 passengers who joined us for this unique and fun day on the rails. Jeff Bailey, chair Kiwanis Autumn Express Committee
Mt. Washington Valley’s DAILY Newspaper Mark Guerringue Publisher Adam Hirshan Editor Bart Bachman Managing Editor Lloyd Jones Sports/Education Editor Alec Kerr Wire/Entertainment Editor Jamie Gemmiti Photography Editor Terry Leavitt Opinion Page/Community Editor Tom Eastman, Erik Eisele, Daymond Steer Reporters Joyce Brothers Operations Manager Frank Haddy Pressroom Manager Darcy Gautreau Graphics Manager Rick Luksza Display Advertising Sales Manager Heather Baillargeon, Frank DiFruscio Sales Representatives Jamie Brothers, Hannah Russell, Louise Head Classifieds Robert Struble Jr., Priscilla Ellis, Patty Tilton Graphic Artists Roxanne Holt Insert Manager Larry Perry Press Assistant “Seeking the truth and printing it” THE CONWAY DAILY SUN is published Tuesday through Saturday by Country News Club, Inc. Dave Danforth, Mark Guerringue, Adam Hirshan Founders Offices and Printing Plant: 64 Seavey St., North Conway, NH Box 1940, North Conway, NH 03860 (603) 356-2999 Newsroom Fax: 356-8360, Advertising Fax 356-8774 Website: http://www.mountwashingtonvalley.com E-mail: news@conwaydailysun.com CIRCULATION: 16,100 distributed Tuesday through Saturday FREE throughout Mount Washington Valley
Nicholas Howe
In The Trees When my paternal great-grandmother them inside and examined Betty and Barney bought the Moody farm in Jackson, the grazquite carefully, they probed their navels ing animals kept most of the land clear all the and seemed particularly interested in their way to the top of the Black Mountain ridge. teeth, one of them could take their teeth out Then, as I understand it, my Aunt Harriet and the other one couldn’t. called in the New Hampshire state forester Barney seemed frightened by all this, to plant several acres with evergreen trees, but Betty was very interested in what was which she thought would grow large enough going on. Then the crew finished their studso the wood could be harvested and pay for ies and Betty asked the person who seemed her older son’s college to be second in comeducation. mand if she could have Aunt Harriet, howsomething, a souvenir to Then my eyes were distracted by a ever, had misjudged her show her friends when metallic glint at the top of one of the she own character. got home, and he She was the one who trees, a novelty that would not promise gave her what seemed to didn’t like to put screens be a simple kind of map. success as heat. on the windows in sumThere was a heavy line mertime because they’d connecting two places make it more difficult for the mosquitoes to and he said those were their home base and get out, and the same benevolent instincts the place they visited most often, a colony of discouraged her from converting any of the some kind. The thinner lines connected the trees to college tuition and they kept growhome base to other places, and she was told ing for another fifty years. that those were routes they used less often, Then earlier this fall I was studying the and dotted lines indicated the most distant tops of those grown-up trees to see which routes, the ones they were just beginning to of them were losing their leaves first, signs explore. that would tell me they were preparing for Betty asked if she could have the map and their new job making winter heat in my the crewman gave it to her, but as she was cabin. Then my eyes were distracted by a saying goodbye to the commander he said metallic glint at the top of one of the trees, she’d better not keep it. He said people from a novelty that would not promise success as his home base visited earth from time to heat. Thinking quickly now, I wondered why time and the people they talked to found the the wood in one of the trees was turning to memories difficult to explain even to themmetal, something I would not have expected selves, so they’d developed a way to make at any stage in nature’s well-rehearsed it easier for them. He said the first tapping march from seedlings to BTUs in my cabin. they heard was their memory being turned This led to my binocular collection and I off and they’d hear it again when they were went right to the maximum, I brought out back in their car. That was their memory my 20x60s and they revealed a round silvery coming back on. This meant that they thing with colors in varying patterns on the wouldn’t know where the map came from. surface and a flattened shape that looked Betty and Barney realized that they had like (dare I say it?) two saucers held rim to to get all this straightened out and they went rim. to a hypnotherapist who treated them sepaUnexpected things in the tree tops had rately, and during the first round of studies surprised me once before. That came when nothing significant was found. The hypnoI was thinning the woods on my place fifty therapist dug into the next lower level of the miles west of Jackson and one of the top unconscious mind and then the next and the branches on a tree had apparently snagged next and during one session Betty sketched a balloon with a note sealed in a plastic enveher recollection of the diagram that had been lope. It explained that the balloon had been given to her and then taken away. Finally the therapist came to what was believed to launched as part of a project to study wind be the lowest possible level, and he found currents, and would whoever finds it please exactly the same story in Barney. By now the send it to the address provided here. case was rather well known and the profesWhen I spotted the silvery balloon it made sionals who were involved understood that a bee-line in my mind to the experience of an experience found in one person during Betty and Barney Hill, who lived in the deep hypnosis could not be transferred to another south of New Hampshire and were going person, they’d only know about it if they’d home after one of Barney’s business trips to had the same experience. the north. They made this trip quite often Later on, a man who worked in radio and they knew almost to the minute how astronomy saw the map and he recognized long it should take. Then, without warning the pattern of the lines. He said the heaviest or explanation, they were startled to realize ones connected sources of the strongest radio that the last trip took more than twice as signals coming from space and the thinlong as usual. They decided that they’d probner lines connected progressively weaker ably stopped to take a nap. sources, but there were also very thin lines It wasn’t that easy. Barney began to feel connecting sources that he didn’t recognize. anxious in a diffuse sort of way. Then it got worse, then it became dominant, and he Finally a radio astronomer found those finally went to a psychiatrist to get it all two other sources just where they were sorted out. This man did his work with deep on Betty’s sketch, but I haven’t heard any hypnosis and he worked on both Barney and mention of shiny brightly-decorated objects his wife Betty separately and he kept digthat a crewman might have lost, something ging until he came to the same event in both that might be caught in the top of a tree in of them. They remembered a tapping on the New Hampshire. In fact, I haven’t decided top of their car when they were near Indian whether I want to or not. Head at the south end of Franconia Notch, the engine of their car died, and they saw Nicholas Howe is a writer from Jackson. a space craft parked nearby. The crew took E-mail him at nickhowe@ncia.net.
THE CONWAY DAILY SUN, Saturday, October 22, 2011— Page 11
Eye on the Valley
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‘Everything I imagined, times a hundred’ Page 12 — THE CONWAY DAILY SUN, Saturday, October 22, 2011
Jeff Locke reflects on his introduction to the big leagues BY LLOYD JONES THE CONWAY DAILY SUN
CONWAY — Dreams do come true if you work hard enough. Jeff Locke, the son of Pam and Alan Locke and grandson of Greta Locke, all of Redstone, saw his dream become a reality earlier this fall when he made his Major League debut for the Pittsburgh Pirates. The 23-year-old left-handed pitcher said it was 100 times better than he ever imagined the experience to be, and he described the Majors as, quite simply, "The Men's League." It was an incredible summer for Locke, who went from Class AA to Class AAA and onto the Major Leagues in the span of a few weeks. He lost almost 50 pounds in the process, dropping from 221 in February to 175 at the end of the season. "It was just another day in AA in August and here comes my 36 or 37th start and I'm still in AA," he said during a visit last week to The Conway Daily Sun. "I was like, 'I've got to pitch better or do something,' and then when it did happen it happened really fast. I was in AAA for less than four weeks and then in September I find myself in Pittsburgh for the last month of the season. "Things clicked at AAA," Locke continued. "Maybe it was just a different setting, sometimes a different place makes a difference. When I got to AA the first time it was, 'Oh my gosh, I'm two steps away, one if we skip (AAA). I'm that close.' You start to taste it a little bit more. When I actually got to Pittsburgh I didn't know what to expect, I had no clue. There's no manual." Locke got the news of his call-up following what he thought was his last start for the AAA Indianapolis Indians. He got called into the manager's office with a few other players. "Four of us got called in and told, 'You sit down, you sit down, you go over there,'" he said. "They told us, 'You're going up, you're going up for the first time and you're going back up again.' It was cool, almost surreal. There were a lot of guys who were rehabbing on that team like Ryan Ludwick was there, a Major League guy, and Chase d'Arnaud and Alex Presley. When they got got called back they knew they were going. I didn't have a clue. We talked about hoping it would happen. I knew that I'd thrown a lot of innings. I was really happy obviously with the decision. "They told me before how this was going to happen," Locke said. "You're going to try to explain it to people how great it is but you can't. It's everything I ever imagined but times a hundred. I can't really compare it to any other moment I've ever had. Not one thing stood out, not one at-bat, not one game or anything like that. The time that I was up there was so special and no one can ever take it away. If I never went back I'll remember it pretty clearly." There's a huge difference between AA and AAA to the big leagues. For one thing, there are no more long bus rides. "So many things are so convenient," Locke said. "Everyone (in the Majors) is treated so well with the utmost respect. It costs a lot of money to be a Major Leaguer, I'm realizing that. It costs a lot of money every day. It's $85 per day to the clubhouse guy. You have to pay for them to do all your laundry; get your uniform ready; and put on a buffet with a chef and an assistant. They clean my cleats three or four times a day." Locke arrived in Pittsburgh and sat in the dugout when the Pirates hosted the Houston Astros on a rain-soaked evening. "First day in the big leagues and it was pouring," he said. "There wasn't a thousand people at the ball game. I was like, 'Where is everybody?'" His first start came in Pittsburgh against the Florida Marlins in front of a sellout crowd.
Jeff Locke stopped by The Conway Daily Sun office to share stories of his time in the Major League. (JAMIE GEMMITI PHOTO)
"I had a lot of guys from my legion team in Plymouth come," Locke said. "It was really good to see those guys come out. They would be there for my first one and they all showed up. I was happy that Todd (Frechette, a friend and former teammate at Kennett) was able to be there. He's caught me in the off-season and thrown with me, helping me get to where I've gotten. Obviously, the family being there was huge." Locke said he received plenty of advice from his new teammates, but nothing really prepares you for that
first time you step out on the mound in PNC Park. "It was just weird, especially the first game," he said. "I get pretty nervous for all games when I'm pitching until they start and I settle in. It was actually unfortunate that my family was there for my first start (in the Majors); it was bad because it throws everything off. When they come into town, it's like, 'OK, I've got to go and make sure they get in OK.' There were people from all over the place coming to this game and it's see LOCKE page 20
THE CONWAY DAILY SUN, Saturday, October 22, 2011— Page 13
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The glove was almost bigger than Jeff Locke in 1996, but he always had Major League aspirations.
Jeff Locke’s journey to the Majors BY LLOYD JONES THE CONWAY DAILY SUN
Jeff Locke has arrived in the Major Leagues, but he enjoyed quite a journey to The Show. His baseball career began in earnest as a school boy attending John Fuller School when he was drafted by the Conway Royals, the worst team in Mount Washington Valley Little League at the time. "We were bad even for a Little League team," Locke said, laughing. "We were terrible. It's kind of a neat story. I grew up close to Winfield Jones and Ryan Garrette and all three of us wanted was to play on the same Little League team. I got picked by the Royals; Winfield went to the A's; and Ryan was picked by North Conway Rotary. Almost every game we ended up playing against each other." Locke pitched and played shortstop — yes, a left-hander. After a rough first year, the team went undefeated the following season and won the championship. Locke continued to move up the local baseball ladder playing on various teams, including All Star teams coached by Paul Ray and playing Babe Ruth League for Tee Enterprise and Abbott's Dairy with coaches Todd Gallagher and Brian Day, respectively. He arrived at Kennett High in 2003
and had an immediate impact on the baseball team, helping the Eagles reach the Elite 8 that year. The following are some milestones along the way for the Redstone Rocket: June 4, 2004 — Second seeded Kennett opens the Class I playoffs by topping visiting Coe-Brown Academy 11-1 in six innings (the game was called due to the 10-run mercy rule). Locke, a sophomore, strikes out 10. July 2005 — Locke is selected as the New Hampshire Player of the Year by the Manchester Union Leader. Locke, who compiled a record of 28-2 in three years for the Eagles, is the first player from Conway to receive such an honor. "He's not a secret anymore. I don't think he has to worry about going to tryouts; the scouts will come looking for him," Bob Burns, head baseball coach for Kennett High said. According to Burns, in three years Locke averaged more than 12 strikeouts and just one walk a game for the Class I Eagles. In 2005, Locke threw a perfect game, striking out every batter he faced, in a five-inning contest shortened under the 10-run mercy rule. Even when he wasn't pitching, Locke stood out among the Eagles, batting .434 with eight home runs, and playing a sterling outfield when he wasn't on the mound. see JOURNEY page 15
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Page 14 — THE CONWAY DAILY SUN, Saturday, October 22, 2011
(Clockwise) Jeff Locke poses in front of an Atlanta Braves mural during spring training in Orlando, Fla., in 2006; Jeff Locke made his first Major League start on Sept. 10 against the Florida Marlins in front of 40,000 fans; Summer 2010, Jeff Locke put things together as he anchored the Altoona Curves starting rotation; Jeff Locke is all smiles as the Atlanta Braves management informs him he’s their pick in the second round of the 2006 draft; Jeff Locke got to visit Dodgers Stadium where he made his second Major League start in Los Angeles. It marked the first time he’d left the eastern time zone; Jeff Locke loved pitching for the Kennett High Eagles and was dominant every time he took to the mound.
Locke through the years
THE CONWAY DAILY SUN, Saturday, October 22, 2011— Page 15
Jeff Locke clocked 94 miles per hour on radar guns during his first start his senior year at Kennett in 2006.
Not only could Jeff Locke pitch, he was also a very good hitter as a youngster, routinely batting third for his teams.
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Burns said Locke had all sorts of potential. "You can teach a kid a curve ball or a change-up but you can't teach throwing hard fortunately, he's already got that down." Summer 2005 — Not only did Locke help Kennett reach the Final Four, he also enjoyed another 40 games of summer ball helping the Plymouth American Legion team reach the state championship game. After helping Plymouth to the title game, Locke was asked to play in several tournaments around New England. In late August he played in a four-team tournament in Lynn, Mass., and started the All Star game. The game attracted scouts from 14 Major League teams. "A lot of the scouts have lists of players who they specifically came to see," Locke said. "There were people who traveled from all over and I was the only player on a couple of their lists. It makes you feel good that they know who you are." Locke struck out four and didn't allow a run in the All Star game. He received an offer to go to North Carolina to represent the Red Sox, but it conflicted with his American Legion team's schedule. At the end of August, he was invited by the New York Yankees to go to Yankee Stadium for a tryout, but again, scheduling conflicts got in the way. University of Connecticut called. Lamar University, a perennial top 25 power in Texas, also showed interest, as did St. John's University in New York. "I'm just taking it all in; every day something else exciting happens," Locke said at the time. "I hope I get drafted, playing pro ball has been a dream for so long, but college is another good option. Maybe some team see next page
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will see something in me. For now, the most important thing is for me to stay healthy and in good shape." April 12, 2006 — A record crowd of over 500 turned out to watch Kennett Eagles top Hollis-Brookline 2-1 in the season opener. All eyes were on Locke and he didn't disappoint. The talented left-hander struck out 12, scattered three hits and walked four in seven innings of work. He was also 3-4 at the plate, scoring the winning run after lacing a double and coming home on a two-base throwing error. With scouts from just about every Major League team on hand and each armed with a radar gun, one might have thought there was no end of pressure on Locke, but he was more than up for the task. He was routinely clocked at 90 miles per hour and reached 94 a couple of times. "It was fun to watch all of the scouts with the radar guns, it was sort of like watching synchronized swimming," athletic director Steve Mello said, laughing. Locke agreed. "When I pitched in Florida the scouts were there to see everyone," he said. "Today it looked like an army with all of those guns. I'd been waiting for this day for so long, it was even better than I thought it would be. It was what I wanted it to be and more. I'm just so pleased we won and proud of the way we played." June 1, 2006 — Locke is regarded as the best prospect to come out of the Granite State since Chris Carpenter, the ace of the St. Louis Cardinals staff and the current National League Cy Young Award winner. Carpenter, who attended Trinity High in Manchester, was the Toronto Blue Jays' first-round pick in 1993 Locke was 6-0 on the season with a 0.49 earned run average with 71 strikeouts in 37 innings heading into the opening round of the Class I playoffs. June 6, 2006 — Locke is selected by the Atlanta Braves in the second round of the Major League baseball draft. He was the 51st player picked in the country (college and high school combined). "It's an incredible day," Locke said from his Redstone home where he spent the day surrounded by family with phones ringing off the hook. "I can't believe it. To be taken with the fourth or fifth pick in the second round and No. 51 in the country is such an honor, especially to go to a team as successful as Atlanta." Locke received a $675,000 signing bonus from the Braves. Other prominent names taken in that draft include Evan Longoria, No. 3 by Rays; Clayton Kershaw, No. 7 by the Dodgers; Tim Lincecum, No. 10 by the Giants; Ian Kennedy, No. 21 by the Yankees; Daniel Bard, No. 28 by the Red Sox; Joba Chamberlain, No. 41 by the Yankees; Brett Anderson, No. 55 by the Diamondbacks; Trevor Cahill, No. 66 by the A's; Justin Masterson, No. 71 by the Red Sox; Jon Jay, No. 74 by the Cardinals; Andrew Bailey, No. 188 by the A's; Doug Fister, No.
201 by the Mariners; Ryan Kalish, No. 283 by the Red Sox; Desmond Jennings, No. 289 by the Rays; Matt Latos, No. 333 by the Pardes; Daniel Murphy, No. 394 by the Mets; Matt LaPorta, No. 433 by the Red Sox; and Dave Robertson, No. 524 by the Yankees. School yearbooks came out and, although Locke wasn't voted Most Likely to Succeed, he received the senior superlative for Best Smile. The player capsule on Locke read: "Jeffrey Locke, LHP, second round: Pitching in New Hampshire, Locke isn't as advanced as many other high school pitchers. But his 94 mph fastball has led some to compare him to Billy Wagner. The Braves believe he has a real high ceiling." Locke compiled impressive numbers during the season, going 8-0 through 61 innings, with an earned run average of 0.68, seven complete games, 116 strikeouts, 20 hits and 12 walks. June 11, 2006 — Kennett High earns a trip to the state baseball championship game, and Locke makes his final high school start. He pitched a three-hit gem, walking none while striking out 15, including six in a row to start the game. The only run he gave up was unearned. "It was a nice feeling to have Jeff (Locke) go out and crank the way he did," Coach Burns said. "I think he threw more fastballs the last two innings than he did at any other point in the game. He did a masterful job; he's like a pro." June 13, 2006 — Kennett loses to ConVal, 5-3, in the Class I state championship game in Manchester. "They were better than us when they had to be," Locke, who went 1-2 with a pair of walks from the designated hitter spot, said. "I'd love to play them again. We didn't deserve to win, we made too many errors." Locke, 37-2 in his high school career, went 9-0 for the season, with an earned run average of 0.40, eight complete games, 129 strikeouts, 22 hits and 12 walks. Locke is a unanimous choice as the New Hampshire Player of the Year, becoming the first athlete to win the prestigious award twice. September 8, 2006 — Locke wraps up his first summer with the Braves, playing in the Gulf Coast League in Florida. He led the team in wins with four and was selected as the player of month for August. His season started out rocky, but by the end of the 50-game schedule, he was on Baseball America's hot list. Locke led the team in wins with four and was second on the club in strikeouts with 38. The Braves, the youngest team in the league, went 23-27 in the 50-game schedule to finish third in the Northern Division, missing post-season play. Locke appeared in 10 games, starting five while posting a 4-3 record with an earned run average of 4.24 while allowing 38 hits in 32 innings of work while walking five and striking out 38. "Don't let his numbers fool you (even though they are still impressive), but Locke is the cream of the crop here," writes the administra-
tor for Bravesbeat.com. "Not only does he sport a nifty 7.6 K/BB ratio, but if you take away his first couple of outings (where he got shelled) he was arguably the most dominating pitcher in the GCL." June 2007 — Locke opens his second professional season with the Braves' Danville, Va. team in the Appalachian League and is given the honor of starting opening day before an estimated crowd of 3,000. July 30, 2007 — Locke is named the Appalachian League's Pitcher of the Week. His numbers for the week: 2-0, 0.00 ERA, 11 innings pitched, 6 hits, 0 runs, 0 earned runs, 2 walks, and 10 strikeouts. September 2007 — Locke is named the Appalachian League's Left-Handed Pitcher of the Year, and he is also named to the league's first-time All-Star squad. Locke took his lumps once during the summer, losing on opening night in June,but went on to log a 7-1 record (along with one save) and post a 2.64 earned run average. In Locke's final 10 starts during the regular season, he crafted a 6-0 record with a minuscule ERA of 1.74. Locke closed the book on the regular season on Aug. 27 when he won his seventh straight decision and struck out a career-high 11 in a 6-1 win over the Johnson City Cardinals. In his longest outing of the season, Locke went 6 2/3 innings before leaving to a standing ovation. The 11 strikeouts gave him 74 on the year, which put him second in the league. Later in the month, Locke was flown to Turner Field in Atlanta where he was recognized as the Danville Braves Pitcher of the Year. "Every year the Braves like to reward one of their minor league managers by letting them spend the rest of the season up with the big league club," Locke said. "This year it was my manager Paul Rungee, and who was the first person I saw when I walked through the tunnel out to the field, it was Paul Rungee. He gave me a big hug and congratulated me on the season again. After that we met all of the coaches, and Bobby Cox (Braves manager) came over the spoke with us. He was really nice. He said, 'Come on boys, take off your jackets and watch BP (batting practice).' There I was in back of the batting cage an arm's length away from Chipper (Jones) and Andruw (Jones). John Smoltz came out and congratulated us. He's got to be the nicest guy in baseball." April 2008 — The Redstone Rocket takes the next step up the ladder to Major League baseball, pitching for the Rome (Ga.) Braves on opening night against Charlestown River Dogs (New York Yankees affiliate) in the Class A South Atlantic League. August 2008 — Locke went 5-12 with a 4.06 ERA in 25 games (24 starts) for Class A Rome this summer. "That stat line, in and of itself, is not all that exciting, especially when you consider the 2006 second-rounder was 11-4 with a 3.19 ERA in 23 career appearsee next page
THE CONWAY DAILY SUN, Saturday, October 22, 2011— Page 17
from preceding page
ances heading into this season," states minorbaseball,com. "But Locke rebounded nicely from a 1-7 start to go 4-5 with a 3.84 ERA over his final 11 outings. His strikeout-to-walk ratio (113-to-38) remained solid, though not nearly as good as the 112-to-13 that he brought into this season in 93 career innings." April 2009 — Locke takes to the mound on opening night for the Myrtle Beach Pelicans in the Class A Carolina League. He's now regarded as the No. 3 pitching prospect in the Braves organization. June 3, 2009 — The Braves trade Locke to the Pittsburgh Pirates along with Charlie Morton and Gorkys Hernández in exchange for Nate McLouth. The Pirates assigned Locke to their Class A Advanced affiliate, the Lynchburg Hillcats. "I didn't see it coming, no one did," Locke said. Locke said he was surprised to see the attention the trade made on ESPN where his name appeared on the bottom of the scroll through the evening and then was talked about on Baseball Tonight. "I was in a restaurant and (former major league player and manager) Buck Martinez (now an ESPN analyst) was talking about me," Locke said. "I walked up to the television to listen to what he was saying and a guy in the restaurant asked if I was a Braves' fan. I said, 'No, I just got traded,' and walked away." September 2009 — Locke and the Lynchburg Hillcats complete their magical run through the Carolina League playoffs winning their third Mills Cup title (the minor league equivalent of the World Series), wrapping up a threegame sweep of the host Salem Red Sox with an 8-7 victory. Locke made 27 starts in 2009 (17 for the Hillcats and 10 for Myrtle Beach), posting a 4.49 earned run average in 127.1 innings pitched; allowing 145 hits, walking 44; and striking out 99. Over his final 10 starts for the Hillcats, Locke was 3-1 with a 3.31 ERA, walking just nine in 49 innings and striking out 37. In his final regular season start Sept. 6, Locke beat the Salem Red Sox 1-0, scattering four hits over 6.2 innings while fanning six and walking none. April 2010 — Locke starts his fourth professional baseball season in the Florida State League with the newly created Bradenton Mauraders.
June 2010 — Locke is selected to play in the 2010 Florida State League MidSeason All-Star Game in Viera, Fla. He is 5-3 with a 3.99 earned run average in 58.2 innings. He allowed 57 hits; 33 runs (26 earned); 11 walks; and struck out 55 (11th best in the league). Locke had carried an ERA of 2.50 through his first nine starts, but saw it balloon with a pair of rough outings. July 14, 2010 — The Redstone Rocket is cleared for takeoff from Florida and lands in Altoona, Pa. Locke, who was leading the Florida State League in wins (9-3 for the Bradenton Marauders), was promoted from High Class A to Double AA, and had 72 hours to report to his new team — the Altoona Curve. Locke made his debut for the Curve at the Harrisburg Senators, an affiliate of the Washington Nationals. With the promotion to AA came an opportunity for the people of Mount Washington Valley to see Locke pitch close to home. Altoona is on the Portland Sea Dogs' schedule. August 18, 2010 — A perfect night for baseball turned into a perfect evening for Jeff Locke, his family and friends — anywhere between 800 to 1,300 from Mount Washington Valley — at Hadlock Field. For Locke it was the closest thing to a home game in his four-year professional career and it just happened to be against the Portland Sea Dogs, the Class AA minor league affiliate of the Boston Red Sox, his favorite team growing up. Locke was sensational for the Curve, tossing seven shutout innings while scattering three hits (all doubles), walking one and striking out eight in the 1-0 win. On the night, the Redstone Rocket was economical needing just 79 pitches, of which 55 were strikes, to get through seven innings against a talented Portland squad. "It was everything I thought it would be, for the most part," Locke said in the locker room just minutes after his club closed out the victory. "I'm super happy." September 2010 — Locke made sure his final start of the season was one of his best. He gave up one earned run while striking out eight over seven innings to help Altoona even the best-offive Eastern League (AA) championship series at a game apiece with the Trenton Thunder (New York Yankees). The Curve went on to win the series, marking the second consecutive championship for Locke. For the season, with stops between Bradenton, Fla. and Altoona, Locke once again stayed injury free. He made
27 starts, posted a 12-5 regular season record — tops in the Pirates organization — with an overall earned run average of 3.56; 144 innings pitched; 139 hits; 66 runs (57 were earned); 26 walks; struck out 139; and help opposing hitters to a .239 batting average. Locke was added to the Pirates' 40-man roster at the end of the season. March 2011 — Locke attends his first Major League spring training camp. "Every day you walk into Major League camp, you're met by a chef and he asks you what you want for breakfast," Locke said, laughing. "You name it and they make it from scratch for you. There's everything you can imagine, it really is the Major League treatment. The other big difference is instead of having teammates my age (23), I've now got guys who are 37 years old as teammates. If I never, ever get to play in the Major Leagues, if I could do spring training every year, I'd be thrilled. "I've met so many different people this spring, it's been amazing," he said. "I met Roy Halladay (Cy Young winner for the Philadelphia Phillies), David Price (ace of the Tampa Bay Rays pitching staff), and Manny Ramirez (former Boston Red Sox slugger). I've been in this game long enough now to meet people who know other people and I got introduced to these guys, it's so cool. The best way I can say it is I'm living every kids' dream right now. Every kid has the dream to play in the Major Leagues and I've been able to do it and, yet, I don't feel like I didn't belong here." Locke pitched nine innings for the Pirates before being sent to the minor league complex as expected. He posted an earned run average of 3.00 from those starts. "The first batter I ever faced in my Major League career was Vladimir Guerrero (nine-time All-Star outfielder)," Locke said. "He got into the batter's box and he just looked like Vladimir Guerrero and I had to realize I'm the guy pitching to him. The first pitch I threw him was a called strike. The next one I threw was hard and off the plate. I thought it was going to hit him in the belly-button but he just flicked it over the first baseman's head for a single and and he looked at me the whole way as he ran down toward first base almost as if to say, 'That's right, I'm Vladimir Guerrero.'" April 2011 — Locke opens the season in Class AA Altoona. July 11, 2011 — Locke is an All Star for the fourth time in his five-year pro
career. In each of his stops up baseball's professional ladder, he has been selected to play in that league's Summer Classic. Locke was the star among 47 others at the Eastern League AA All Star Game at Northeast Delta Dental Stadium in Manchester Wednesday. Before a soldout crowd of 7,152, the lone player with New Hampshire ties received the loudest and longest ovations of the night. He pitched a scoreless third inning, registering 94 mph four times on the stadium's radar gun. July 29, 2011 — Locke returns to Hadlock Field to face the Sea Dogs. Locke said he didn't have his best fast ball on the night, but he was still effective, pitching five innings, scattering six hits while allowing three runs (only two were earned), striking out four and walking one. He threw 79 pitches, and 51 of those were for strikes. Locke left after the fifth inning with the game deadlocked at 3-3. Altoona scored a pair of runs in the seventh and eighth innings on the way to a 7-4 victory. August 14, 2011 — Locke gets promoted to Class AAA and makes a superb debut for the Indianapolis Indians against the Louisville Bats (Cincinnati Reds affiliate). He pitched 5 2/3 scoreless innings and even had a hit in his first at-bat and left with a 1-0 lead only to see the Tribe's bullpen squander the lead by allowing four runs in the bottom of the eighth. Locke was 7-8 at Double A Altoona, making 22 starts, working 125 innings while allowing 118 hits; 68 runs (56 earned runs); walking 46 while striking out 114 and compiling a 4.03 earned run average. He didn't allow more than three runs in any of his last six starts, posting an ERA of 2.82 over that period. September 4, 2011 — Jeff Locke's lifelong dream becomes a reality. Locke, 23, is promoted to the Major Leagues. The Pirates had kept their September call-ups quiet and Locke didn't know what was in the cards for him, especially since he had already pitched a careerhigh in innings this season. "They were pretty hush-hush about who was going up and who was going to the instructional league (in Florida) or the fall league (in Arizona)," Locke said. "I didn't know what was going on. I really felt like I might not be going anywhere this off-season. I thought they might tell me just to go home get some rest because I was closing in on 160 innings pitched." Little did Locke know that the Pirates had other plans.
Page 18 — THE CONWAY DAILY SUN, Saturday, October 22, 2011
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weigh 1,358 pounds. It was taken in A-2 region near Pittsburg, Rines said Due to the recovery of the moose population, New Hampshire has had an annual moose hunt by permit only through a lottery system since 1988. This year, nearly 14,000 people entered the moose hunt lottery for a chance to win one of the 395 permits drawn for the New Hampshire moose hunt. There are an estimated 5,000 moose in the state, according to Rines. She said the opening weekend was rainy and cold. More than a quarter of New Hampshire’s moose hunters were successful during the first two days of this year's season, achieving a 27 percent success rate. On Saturday and Sunday (Oct. 15-16), a total of 111 moose were taken by moose hunters statewide — 75 bulls and 36 cows. The success rate was down from 37 percent during opening weekend in 2010.
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and rows of children, his two drums resting before him in fabric rings. They rung out every time he touched them, and he looked to the kids to clap their hands every time he got going. “Artist have to involve the audience,” he said. “If the audience is not involved it means they are not a good artist.” But entertaining wasn’t his only task. see next page
Moose season ‘Quick Facts’ *Average dressed weight of all yearling bulls taken in 2010 was 417 pounds. The average dressed weight of all bulls aged 5.5 and older in 2010 was 670 pounds. *The largest bull moose ever taken in N.H. weighed in at 1,040 pounds, dressed weight, taken in 1993. Live weight of this moose would have been approximately 1,400 pounds. The largest cow ever taken dressed at 815 pounds. These two animals came from Zone A2 and both were taken in 1993. *Greatest antler spread measurement for moose taken in New Hampshire is 68.5 inches, taken in A-2 in 2010 by Jack Middleton. *Moose have been taken with the use of conventional firearms and archery, handguns, muzzle loaders (including flintlocks) and the longbow. In 2010, 96 percent of hunters took their moose using conventional firearms (rifle or shotgun). *64 percent of the harvest occurred in the first three days of the 2010 season.
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THE CONWAY DAILY SUN, Saturday, October 22, 2011— Page 19
from preceding page
“Music is like a bridge,” he said. He was there to introduce the children to a cultural experience they might never experience otherwise. Khan was in the Mount Washington Valley as part of Caravanserai, a program funded by the Doris Duke Foundation for Islamic Art, aimed at introducing people to artists from the Muslim world. Most people in northern New Hampshire never get a chance to hear Sufi drummers, said Frumie Selchen, executive director of the Arts Alliance of Northern New Hampshire, which hosted Khan and a number of other musicians for their tour of the region, but this program makes it possible. Earlier in the day Khan and his ensemble were at Kennett High. The day before they were in Berlin along with Qawal Najmuddin Saifuddin and his brothers, who are all traditional Pakistani singers. The program name, Caravanserai, Selchen said, comes from the old Silk Road. They were roadside inns where
Sufi master tabla drummer, Tari Khan gives an inter-gernerational workshop at the Gibson Center for Senior Services Thursday evening. The Arts Alliance of Northern New Hampshire will present Tari Khan Ensemble as well as the Pakistani singing group Qawal Najmuddin Saifuddin and Brothers in Kennett's Loynd Auditorium Saturday, Oct. 22, at 7:30 p.m. (JAMIE GEMMITI PHOTO)
travelers stopped and rested, often sharing ideas, music and culture. That is the goal of these programs, she said, to share music and culture. The students at Josiah Bartlett were certainly in a sharing state of mind. When Khan asked for a volunteer to help him up front, more than 30 kids jumped at the chance. He sat on the floor, the students fanned out next to him, challenging them to chant faster than he could play. Several tried, but no one could outpace his fingers.
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NORTH CONWAY WATER PRECINCT PUBLIC NOTICE The North Conway Water Precinct will be flushing hydrants during the week of October 24, 2011 through October 28, 2011 from 5:00 a.m. – 3:30 p.m. on the Northern half of the system. This area is from Artist Falls Road to Route 16A including the Intervale and Kearsarge areas. You may note some discolored water however it will be temporary. Should you experience discolored water let your faucet run for several minutes. Should you have any questions please contact the Precinct Office at 356-5382.
That’s not surprising considering how long see MUSIC page 23
Page 20 — THE CONWAY DAILY SUN, Saturday, October 22, 2011
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tough to try to see everybody and still worry about doing your job. I got to the park that day and of course there's a bunch of 35-year-old guys who kept coming up to me and saying, 'Are you nervous kid, you nervous?' "I got to sit down with a few of the guys before the game and they want to explain to you what a debut is all about. I thought it was, 'Na, it's just the first game,' but it's way more than just the first game. Start two was Dodgers Stadium, no nerves, nothing. Game one could have been against the little league team in town but as long as it was going to be at PNC Park it was going to be nerve-wracking. The first time you walk out onto the field it was unreal. I'm used to 5,000 fans max for like a fireworks night, not 40,000. "You're doing something you worked your entire life to do and it's happening right now," Locke continued. "Like for the first time ever, right now. You try to harness those emotions and kind of understand what's going on. A couple of the guys said, and I didn't think of it, but it would have helped, they said for the first inning only don't look anywhere else except the catcher's mitt. Don't even look around, don't even take a deep breath, just look at the catcher's mitt the whole time and everything will be fine. A lot of guys do that the first time out and it's fine. I hadn't even thrown the first pitch yet and I was like, 'Wow, this is great' looking all over the place. "Anyone who says they can't hear the crowd, they're lying. I promise you, you hear everything. You have so many emotions. You're happy because from the time you could walk this is where you wanted to be some day and that day is today. It flashes through your head look how far you've had to come and it's all happening now — while you're throwing pitches! I can't believe I'm here and I'm looking over there and all over the place at people. In warm-ups, it's like, 'I can't believe this is happening, I'm here.'"
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Locke quickly adapted to a new routine. "Talking to guys in the Major Leagues who have been there awhile, it's way different then you assume it would be," he said. "From the time you get up, it's a full day, it's a like real job. And when you go to the field, there's so much media there all the time. It's a big difference from the the minor leagues where there was nobody there covering your games ever. Maybe there'd be like one guy there saying, 'You didn't have your best stuff tonight.' Now, there's 50 people reaching hands in. They don't care if you do good, bad, fair, they're going to get in your face and try to make you say something terrible. It doesn't bother me. "The media made a really big deal about me pitching, like a much bigger deal than I thought they would," Locke said. "The media was good and nice, they were like, 'So how do you feel today,' and it was three days before the game. I felt fine. "The feeling I'll never forget is being on the mound and looking around and seeing Derek Lee on first base and Neil Walker, the Pittsburgh kid, was at second. It was like, 'Oh my gosh, this kid's from Pittsburgh, they go crazy when he stands up. The fans were so great." Locke says ballplayers are a different breed. "I'm learning that," he said with a big grin. "Guys who have been doing it for around 20 years are just wired different. They get to wake up every day and put on a costume and run around on the grass. They're married and bring their kids out on the field. It's so much different than having to get up and go into work every day to desk job. These guys are like 12 years old. They just tell you to never take it for granted." Locke said Milwaukee is the loudest place he's ever pitched. He got the ball for the final game of the season in Miller Park before a vocal sellout crowd of 41,900.
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THE CONWAY DAILY SUN, Saturday, October 22, 2011— Page 21
from preceding page
"It's a very different stadium," he said. "The roof is always open during the day. With it getting colder when I pitched, the roof was closed and the ball just flies, it goes. I couldn't believe all three (home runs) went out, because the week before (at home against the Cincinnati Reds) I was just was throwing balls that they were hitting to the warning track that (center fielder Andrew) McCutchen was just hauling in. Clint (Hurdle, Pirates manager) said to me in the dugout then, 'Man, Locke, you sure haven't been here very long, but you know how big this field is, you know exactly where to throw 'em.'" Locke has nothing but praise for Hurdle. "Clint is just a fantastic manager with a story for every situation," he said. "He's never in a situation that he hasn't been in before. He told us right before our last game (in Milwaukee), 'Watch (the Brewers) faces; listen to what the winning team says at the end of the year — we had a great group of guys and we all came together. They're not making it up, you have to work as a team in every aspect.' We get together right after we get off
the plane. We get to the hotel, unload our bags and then everyone gets together real quick to do something together even for half an hour, try to build from within. It's definitely a very young team, but we're gaining." Locke said pitchers Charlie Morton and Jason Grilli took him under their wings and helped show him the ropes. He also immediately became a huge video watcher, soaking up as much as possible about opposing hitters. He's a quick study because he knew right away what Reds' second baseman Brandon Phillips was going to do, both at the plate and one base. Locke picked him off first base in the first inning. "I watched so much film on him, you just know," he said. "You watch so much. He swung a change-up that never even reached the plate but I knew he was going to swing. He wants to swing the bat. If he sees a pitch coming out good, he's going to swing, he's one of those guys. He's also one of those guys who you can't make a mistake to. "Look at the day I threw against the Brewers and Cory Hart didn't make contact with a pitch," Locke continued. "And then, he hits a curve ball that was down and away out to the opposite field. These guys are good. It's so easy
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for these guys. They know how to hit it and what to do with each pitch. This is a men's league right here. That's why aside from a few people, you don't see a lot of 24- or 25-year-old guys making a huge impact. You look at guys like (Albert) Pujols, he's 31, and Matt Kemp, he's 27, we come out early and watch them taking batting practice and the ball just sounds different coming off their bats. They just look different, I don't know how to explain it. "Triple A is not even comparable to the Major Leagues, nothing is. Every single pitch you better know exactly what you're doing, you better not give anything away. You better not even move your glove a little bit, the hitters are that good." The Majors are everything Locke thought they would be and more. "It's just a great place," he said with a wide smile. "You never get tired. Nothing is ever sore. It's just different, the stage is bigger, the lights are brighter, mistakes get taken advantage of. It's very professional up there. It's everything I've worked for and I wanted but I had no idea what it would be like until I got there." Locke threw a record number of innings this season with 170 total
between AA and the Majors. "For me, I've never gone that high before," he said. "You definitely know. I know what my arm feels like in August, I know what it feels like in May. You start to know yourself." Having gotten a taste of the big leagues, Locke said there's no doubt in his mind he belongs. "I know how close it is," he said. "I know I shouldn't say this, but it's easy for me to get from where I am to where I need to be. It's not like I need to change my mechanics. I'm not going to throw the ball different. I'm not going to drop down side-arm. It's just this much (holding his fingers an inch apart), that's it, that's all that separates it. A lot of it has to do with when you realize it's not that big of a deal anymore. Like the game against Cincinnati. I was like, I've already pitched two games. I got roughed up in L.A., I just want to go out there and do what I can. "Sometimes I think I check myself out of innings before they're over a lot of times," Locke continued. "That's something that I think every pitcher does. They look at the situation playing out. I'll have a man on first and I'll see next page
Page 22 — THE CONWAY DAILY SUN, Saturday, October 22, 2011
from preceding page
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be thinking about a double play which I haven't even gotten yet. I'm thinking about the fourth inning when I'm still in the third. You've got to take it one pitch at a time or the next thing you know you're backing up all of the bases and guys are just turning left until they get back to where they started." Hurdle praised Locke for his willingness to pitch inside and challenge hitters. "That's one thing that I know that I did really well and I know that I did more than anyone else on the team and that was pitch inside," Locke said. Locke already has a few collectibles from his first stint in the Majors. "It was definitely very cool after the first game," he said. "I was able to get the official scorecard, the one that hangs in the dugout that Clint writes out. It's got the Pirates and Marlins logos faded into the back. It lists the roster one through nine and your bench players for both teams. After the game, MLB has to come by and put the official sticker of authenticity on it so you know it's real. They gave me six baseballs. One from my first pitch; my first out; my first strikeout, things like that. Every single ball has a number on it. When it comes out of the game, they put a sticker on it and how it came out of the game. Like my strikeout, they record it on the computer, put a sticker on the ball, give it to me or my family and if I take that number and punch it up on the Internet, it'll tell me exactly what that ball did in its lifetime." Locke said the game plan for next
season is a simple one. He'll head to Florida in early February, report to Major League camp with the Pirates in Bradenton and then… "Go win a spot (on the Pirates' roster), go win a spot, that's got to be the goal," he said. "I feel as though it doesn't matter if I went up to Pittsburgh this past fall and I just crushed it or if I went there and struggled or did some things well and some things not so well. They wanted to see me and wanted to get lots of things out of the way. This could all be just talk, but I feel like they got me ready for next season, instead of having to be nervous all over again. You're still going to be nervous, but you've gotten the major jitters out of the way because you've been there before. "I learned a lot, everything from pitch selection to pitch sequence," Locke, who will earn the Major League minimum salary of $414,000 if he's with the Pirates for the season, said. "If the guy is giving me anything at the plate. Not the ump, but the hitter, is he giving me an available location or is he giving anything away or is he just setting me up to think he can't get to that ball and that's really where he wants it? These guys are like magicians. Pujols gets up there and just looks at you and sticks his tongue out. He's just messing with you. He's got a timing, he's got his foot lifted up and back down, one, two, he's got timing. He doesn't like you to call time out and have to start all over again. I'm telling you that's what the greatest hitter of our time when all is said and done, that's what he does. Everybody can do damage. These guys are that good."
THE CONWAY DAILY SUN, Saturday, October 22, 2011— Page 23
Heartbreaking loss in field hockey playoffs
Kennett’s Monica Andreani throws her arm around Amanda Nusbaum moments after the Kennett field hockey team lost to Conval in sudden death overtime 1-0 in the first round of the Division II state championship tournament Friday. (JAMIE GEMMITI PHOTO)
MUSIC from page 19
Khan has been playing. Khan is a renown international musician who plays all over the world. “I was 7 or 6 years old when I started the tabla,” he said. “I learned from a great master.” It is a rare opportunity to get musicians of this genre here, Selchin said, and this caliber rarer still. Khan has one more showing, Saturday night at 7:30 p.m. at Kennett High’s
Loynd Auditorium, along with Abid Hussain and Abdul Rasheed from his ensemble and the Qawali singers. “The community concert is a unique performance by some of the world's greatest traditional musicians,” the Arts Alliance said in its performance announcement. Tickets cost $15 for adults, $10 for seniors, $5 for students and $30 for families. “Anyone unable to afford tickets is also welcome to attend," says the Arts Alliance.
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Page 24 — THE CONWAY DAILY SUN, Saturday, October 22, 2011
DAVID EASTMAN
Country Ecology: Rufous hummingbird The widest ranging of all Hummingbirds do not North American hummingform pair bonds; they come birds is the ruby-throated. together only to mate. It is the only likely species Males therefore set up terto be seen east of the Missisritories with ample food sippi River. It loves reddish resources, where they will colored flowers to probe into encounter many females, with its long, thin bill, and while these claim territoneeds a lot of them with its ries with good nesting sites. high metabolism. A backThese reproductive areas yard feeder filled with sugar can range in size from only David Eastman water is most helpful, but a hundred square yards to you should look into gardenseveral thousand. Males ing with preferred flowering plants to only occupy such territories as long provide nectar for these high energy as they attract females; otherwise birds over summer. Except for shrews, they move on. this warm-blooded invertebrate has In the fall months, all hummingthe highest metabolism in the world. birds migrate back to the tropics, of Small insects like gnats, ants, course. Our ruby-throat humps over aphids, mosquitoes, and wasps must the Gulf of Mexico to the Yucatan be added to its diet to survive, adding peninsula, and I often wonder if it critical protein to the hummingbirds’ takes a break on the numerous oil diet. They may gorge on spider eggs rigs as some of the other neotropical and young. It is said that small spimigrants are known to. One of my ders and beetles attracted to a yellowhelicopter buddies that is now retired bellied sapsucker’s drilled holes may from that job of ferrying oil workers help these small birds as they drink in to those conspicuous platforms has the sap weeping out of this woodpeckreported having seen Peregrine faler’s “wells” in bark. Hummingbirds cons perched there. may even trap-line feed at sapsucker It is in the autumn that one might wells. Each spring I await the arrival also see a second species of humof iridescent hummingbirds coinciding mingbird on the east coast. Rufous with the yellow-bellied sapsucker’s, hummingbirds commonly breed from along with the synchronous opening northern California to Alaska, and of the flowering quince’s coral blosthus nest farther north than any soms. Early on, there is not too much other species of hummers in the world. available for these feathered mites to Their global population, according to feed on; more flowers will come later. the Cornell Lab of Ornithology, is an
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fly southeast in summer. They have completely different routes in each of these two seasons, and this is the reason we might see them. Moving out from their alpine meadows means more flowers around snow patches might be available to them on this return route. They have excellent memory for location in these annual travels, which assists them to find flowers from day to day, even from year to year. Cornell states that some birds have remembered where feeders are from previous migrations and showed up, even if the hanging feeder has been taken in. Bandings show they have remarkable fidelity to routes. They may appear at our sugar water feeders in fall, and have been noted in Hollis just after Columbus Day. ASNH keeps such observations in its quarterly New Hampshire Bird Records that you can subscribe to. Rufous hummingbirds are becoming more common each year, and are less of a shock for birdwatchers to incur as a result. Some are even overwintering in the Southeast USA.
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estimated 6.5 million. The bright copper-colored males are said to glow like new pennies. They are rusty with a white breast, and a flaming gorget that is orangered. The female has rusty plumage on flanks and tail. The wings of the stocky male are reported producing a high-pitched trill in flight. They swarm around alpine wildflowers, and may be the most common nesting birds on a mountain hillside. The nest is a cup of plant down, moss, and bark, and decorated with flakes of lichen for camouflage. Hummers pilfer sticky spider web to glue their nest together, which is not without risk, as they can get stuck in the web due to their small size. It is constructed from 5 to 50 feet high, above ground in a forest opening tree or shrub, and contains two white eggs, incubated only by the female. David Sibley says in his Guide to Bird Life & Behavior that a rufous hummingbird made a dozen sallies into a swarm of tiny aphids over 20 minutes, and may have gathered up much prey in his 130 individual attempts. In midsummer, they may start their return migration from mountainous areas like Montana and western Washington to their overwintering grounds in Mexico. They have flown northwest in late winter along the moderate Pacific coast where spring’s flowers may be abundant, but will
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Last trout of the season
THE CONWAY DAILY SUN, Saturday, October 22, 2011— Page 25
Last Saturday another swing of things. We were trout season came to an still catching “dink” bass end. On the whole I would right up to the end. have to say this past season Bass are a great game has been pretty darn good fish and I do hold them although it did not end Bill Thompson in high regard. However, with the same promise in the case of this once that it started with. lovely trout pond they are nothing Lots of rain and high water kept more than a nuisance and should be us off of the rivers for most of Octoeradicated. ber. For the most part that is not a As the numbers of bass have gone problem as Janet and I usually stick up and the trout population gone to our favorite trout pond in Freedown so has the number of anglers dom the last few days of the season. who frequent the pond. Not that This year the pond, for one reason or long ago there would have been 20 another, just never turned on. to 30 fishermen on a fall day fishing I think I have been fishing that for trout here. When you consider pond for 30 years and I have never that this pond is fly-fishing only seen a year as bad as this one. Sevwater that is a lot of fishermen for eral years ago the pond was illegally one small pond. It truly saddens me stocked with smallmouth bass and when I fish there now. the pond has been going down hill Nonetheless it has been a tradiever since. I say that the pond was tion of ours to begin and end the illegally stocked although there are season at this pond. Last Saturday those that hold to the theory that evening we gathered with a few old loons and other birds of prey may friends who love the place as much have brought in the unwanted speas we do, to end the season. This cies. As for the bass in this pond we year there were only five of us. When did spend a couple of weeks fishing Janet and I pulled in, around 6 p.m., for them waiting for the water to there was no one fishing. We rigged cool down. The water did cool down, up and headed down to the water. but the trout never quite got into the The few who were there were sitting
Valley Angler –––––
on a bench talking. We stopped for a moment to ask if anyone had caught anything and one fellow did say that he had caught one that afternoon, but that was it for the day. Undaunted Janet and I waded in and began to cast. Over the years the regular group has staked out favorite spots along the shore. Janet usually fishes right off the beach and I head over to the right side, where once a lovely willow tree stood. The willow was cut down not long ago. If you fish this pond regularly and know the others who do, you can almost tell who they are from the spots they fish from, even in the dark. I cast for a while and finally hooked a small bass. I walked back over to be with Janet. I asked her if she would like to try a new Orvis line I was trying out and we swapped rods. I watched her cast for a few minutes when I noticed what I thought was a rise off to the left. I was sure it was just another bass, but I thought “Oh, what the heck might as well give it a try”. It was almost dark now and the fish rose again. I flicked the fly to him and he struck. You guessed it; it was a trout. As luck would have it the trout took the fly deep
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and I had to cut the fly off in order to release him. By now the other fellows, awakened by the sudden action waded in. I rummaged in my box and came up with the same fly that Janet had on; it was the last one I had and I struggled to tie it on in the near darkness. Once the fly was secured I quickly handed the rod back to Janet and reeled in my line. I said that they were still rising just off to her left. She replied that she knew. One of the other fellows hooked up and landed a second trout. The few trout that there were, abruptly stopped rising. Everyone made a few more half hearted casts before reeling in. Janet was the last to leave the water. I am not sure if I have been forgiven yet. We all walked back to the bench and talked for a bit. The scotch came out and the end of another year was toasted and as usual we all promised to meet there once again next year on the Fourth Saturday of April. See you on the river.
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Page 26 — THE CONWAY DAILY SUN, Saturday, October 22, 2011
Jonathon’s Seafood RESTAURANT & FISH MARKET
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Mount Paugus: An unusual peak
Looking west along the Sandwich Range from the South Ledges of Mount Paugus. (ED PARSONS PHOTO)
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Hiking –––––
My habitual patterns can lancet Outdoor Club in take unusual turns. For 1898, and is maintained example, I usually climb today by the Chocorua Ed Parsons Mountain Club. This is Mount Paugus (3,198 feet) just before a storm. At least an attractive and rugged the last couple times. trail, first gently ascending along This is an unusual peak, lying side Whitten Brook, then climbing between the more classically drasteeply through a jumbled ravine matic peaks Mount Chocorua and and scrambling up the bumpy ridge Mount Passaconaway in the Sandto the south summit. wich Range. More like a big pile of Few hikers go to the higher north jumbled rock covered with trees, it summit, which has no view, and is was called Old Shag by the 19th cenreached by an extremely scratchy tury naturalist/writer Frank Bolles. 0.3 mile bushwhack. The attraction Seen from the southwest, the on the lower south summit is the mountain has an interesting feacomfortable balcony of the south ture. Surrounded by forest is a subledges, with a great view west. stantial scar of rotten granite — a A few years ago, during the “silly slope in motion — that is seen from season” of November, on a day with numerous vantage points in that mixed precipitation forecast for early direction, though not from valley of evening, I did a 6.8 mile loop after Wonolancet just below, as the low lunch up the Old Paugus Trail, down ridge of Mount Mexico is in the way. the steep Beeline Trail to the narrow The trails are interesting too. From valley between Mount Paugus and the west, the Lawrence Trail was Mount Chocorua, and back to my car built by the AMC in 1907. It climbed on the flat Bolles Trail. A few hunsome exciting ledges on the ridge dred feet before my car, it started just west of Mount Paugus. Recently sleeting. these became loose and dangerous, This Wednesday, rain was forecast and a safer alternative trail has for late afternoon, and heavy rain been built around that section. for the next day. Those who could get From the east the original trail outside Tuesday morning were wise up the mountain, the 2.8 mile Old to. I know a few hikers who did. Paugus Trail, was built by the Wonosee next page
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THE CONWAY DAILY SUN, Saturday, October 22, 2011— Page 27
from preceding page
Being a creature of habit, I guess, I headed out in the cloudy predawn darkness for my pre-storm loop hike up Mount Paugus. Heading south on Route 16 from Conway, I turned right on the dirt Chocorua Lake Road and immediately crossed the famous wooden bridge with its view north over the lake to Mount Chocorua. That morning, the sharp summit was unobstructed by smooth clouds that covered the heavens at a much higher altitude. They would conveniently stay that way. Continuing around the lake past Loring Road, I bore left and connected with Fowlers Mill Road, finally reaching the Paugus Road on the right, with its substantial trailhead parking lot at the end. I headed out on the old logging roads, following signs and bearing left. For the crossing over the wide Paugus Brook, I had to walk a short way upstream and hold onto a small tree that was leaning over the brook to get across to some smooth rocks. With dry feet I continued, and soon took a left on the Old Paugus Trail. It’s the quick and interesting ascent and descent that attracts me to this hike on such days. After an enjoyable ramble up Whitten Brook, I bore right and started up the mountain, after a while approaching the steep and dramatic step in the ridge, with its gray cliffs. The trail started up a jumbled ravine to get above the step, then in the middle of it, bore right into the forest to avoid scrambling up the steep narrow gap at the top of the ravine. I knew where the trail was above, and decided to continue up the ravine through the gap, and reconnect with the trail on the flat ridge top above. I reached the ridge top and entered a spruce/fir forest that had been literally blown down sometime last spring. Tall trees lay in disarray like a pile of wooden matches. I easily found the trail in this mess. It was cleared. The Chocorua Mountain Club had had a work day early last summer, and cut blow downs on this trail, and also on the Beeline Trail, which would be my descent route later. A hearty thank you to them. I continued up the interesting trail, passing another step in the ridge, and the site of the previous
Old Shag Shelter. Since the Sandwich Range became a Wilderness Area in 1984, such shelters have been dismantled as they deteriorated. Old Shag Shelter was one of the first to go. After some challenging steep wet ledges on the trail, I reached the first lookout over the Bearcamp Valley. Then I finally I reached the top of the south peak, and strolled 50 feet down to the South Ledges, pushing through scrub on the last few feet of the trail. What a spot. The extensive view west was dominated by the peaks of the Sandwich Range, with the nearby triangular peak of Mount Passaconaway being the most dramatic. Above it were rippled dark clouds. It must be nice on a warm sunny day here, I thought. Many years before I had climbed up to this point on the Lawrence Trail (before it was improved). From the South Ledges, I bushwhacked through thick spruce directly down to the big scar of rotten granite on the peak and carefully descended that, leaving foot prints in the rotten granite, down to the Whitten Brook valley. It had rained the previous day, but was going to clear. I had counted on the sun drying out the forest. But clouds lingered, and by the time I got down to the Whitten Brook valley, I was wet and cold, and it was still cloudy. Later I took the Big Rock Cave Trail back to my car. A hot shower that night was greatly appreciated. On Wednesday, it was fairly mild, and I enjoyed a comfortable lunch on the South Ledges, then took off. I retraced my steps down the Old Paugus Trail for 0.7 miles and took a left on the Beeline Trail. What a joy that was. Unlike the rock and root laden Old Paugus Trail, the steep Beeline Trail is mostly a trough of smooth soil, and winds like a snake directly down to the valley of Paugus Brook. Once there, the Beeline Trail actually continues up Mount Chocorua on the other side. But I took a right on the flat Beeline Cutoff, and soon connected with the Bolles Trail. After a relaxing flat walk accompanied by the sound of Paugus Brook, I passed the start of the Old Paugus Trail, completing a loop. Sure enough, it started raining 100 feet from my car.
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at Whitney’s Inn next to Black Mt. • www.shovelhandlepub.com
Merriam Vineyards Wine Dinner with VIP Guest & Speaker Peter Merriam
Saturday, November 5, 2011 Pre-Dinner Cocktail Reception in the Echo Ballroom 6:00 – 6:30 PM Five Course Dinner and Wine Pairing at 6:30 with a “New England” theme using local and Sustainable New England products Cost is $79 per person, reservations required payment due at time of reservation Go to www.whitemountainhotel.com for a listing of the full menu West Side Road at Hale’s Location North Conway, NH
603-356-7100
Page 28 — THE CONWAY DAILY SUN, Saturday, October 22, 2011
Monster Mash Bash Weekend
— 3 GREAT PARTIES — Saturday, October 29
Costume Party with a $35 1st Prize and a $30 2nd Prize for Best Costume
Scary-Oke & DJ Sunday $50 1st Prize For Winning Performer!
Monday, Oct. 31st The Valley’s BEST Costume Party! $50 1st Prize/$20 2nd Prize For The Best Costume D ance Into The W itching H ou r W ith O u r D J’s
The Valleyʼs BEST Entertainment! Toute 16 Between 7-11 and Comfort Inn • 356-7807 for details
Last call Biking –––––
Brisk temperatures and Association members winds are reminders that make the trip to the North the cycling season is windShore of Massachusetts Marty Basch for the The Wicked Ride ing down. Riders of course pedal to their own interof the East in North Andonal calendar so there are those who ver's Harold Parker State Forest and will cycle through the entire year. its rolling singletrack. The day-long But for those who are dreaming of October 30 party features group rides, powder, fresh tracks and corduroy, it's self-guided spins , raffles, cider, venlast call for spinning those wheels. dors and a barbecue. Wear a costume Open to all whether members or and get free chili. not, the Mount Washington Valley Cyclocross lovers have had to travel Velo Club is holding its end of season a bit further this season for their steeget-together at the Red Parka Pub in plechase fix. Glen, Tuesday Oct. 25, beginning at The New Hampshire Cyclocross 5:30 p.m. Championships are being held on the The festivities tend to include a seacoast again, at Applecrest Farm cocktail hour and appetizers followed in Hampton Falls Oct. 30. On the fun by a club meeting. Since it's close to side, there is a costume race, a shorter Halloween, costumes are welcome version of the main races. New this though not mandatory, and those who year is the culmination of the six-race dress for the occasion should include Zanconato Single-Speed series. As if at least one piece of cycling apparel. cyclocross isn't challenging enough, Best costume gets a prize. these people do it a single speed rig. The club is still hosting SaturGo figure. day morning road rides. Tomorrow's Pineland Farms in New Gloucester, planned ride is the Snowville Loop in Maine is probably under the radar of reverse leaving from the bank parkmost valley cyclists but there are 12 ing lot in Conway village next to the to 15 foot wide trails for mountain physical therapy center at 9:30 a.m. biking, accessible with a $5 day pass There's also a planned ride Oct. 29, a from the welcome center. About 60 40-mile Bear Notch Loop pedal done miles from North Conway, the netclockwise. The ride leaves behind work is hosting the 2011 Downeast Eastern Slope Inn at 9 a.m. and could Cyclocross Weekend Saturday and be the final group spin of the season. Sunday. Though online registration is Downhillers can still get in some closed, the two days of competitions action at Highland Mountain Bike with pros, masters and category 3 and Park. The Northfield lift-serviced 4 racers proves to be a good choice for area's fall hours are Friday 10 a.m. to spectators wanting to watch racers 5 p.m. and from 9 a.m. on weekends. wind through the course leaping over The plan is to stay open until Novemobstacles. Admission is free. Bring ber 12 when it holds its annual Sender those cowbells. C'mon, the Patriots Bash that includes a video contest are off Sunday. Go. where entrants should off all the sick For those of you who want to ride riding they've done during the season. into November and have a passion for The two and a half to three minute microbrews, you might want to convideo is all about mountain biking and sider the Paradise Cross Frenzy in can be uploaded by Nov. 7 to vitalmtb. Windsor, Vermont (over the Cornishcom. Windsor Covered Bridge in the ConThinking of making one more trip necticut River Valley) on Nov. 12. The to Kingdom Trails in East Burke, Verraces are at the Paradise Sports Shop mont? There's still some time. Last site, which is, and this is grand, next day for mountain biking this season is to Harpoon Brewery. Guess that's why Oct. 31. The CircumBurke Challenge they call it paradise. held rain, snow or shine is Oct. 23. In its third year, the Paradise Sports Many New England Mountain Bike see next page
Most folks say we have “ best food in town...” others haven’t been here yet!
Serving Dinner Wed-Sun from 5:30 Closed Mondays & Tuesdays
Casual Fine Dining Full Bar • Catering Non-smoking Rts. 16/16A Jackson • 383-9341
It’s never too early to plan your holiday gathering.
Mountain Top Community Orchestra performs music of Dvorak Sunday JACKSON — Mountain Top Music Center’s community orchestra, led by conductor Christopher Nourse, presents an entire program of Antonin Dvorak on Sunday, Oct. 23, at 4 p.m. at the Red Fox Tavern in Jackson. The group will play many lesser-known gems from this romantic composer’s pen. Soloist Larry Blaine, violin, will share a suite of Bible Songs and an aria,
Song to the Moon, from the opera Russalka. A set of pieces called “Drobnosti,� and two waltzes show off Dvorak’s ability to gracefully weave together very tuneful elements, woven with exquisite romantic harmonies. Some famous melodies—from Humoresque and from a Slavonic Dance provide the audience with tunes to hum all the way home. The community orchestra is
a group of amateur musicians who meet each Wednesday evening to rehearse classical music. The group is always looking for more string players. The orchestra presents four concerts a year. Joining forces with the Mount Washington Valley Choral Society, the group will present part of Handel’s Messiah in December. The suggested donation is $10. For more information call 447-4737.
Wolfeboro movie series features horror classics WOLFEBORO — The Wolfeboro Public Library continues its monthly classic film series with three nights of horror films in October:�The Bride of Frankenstein,� Oct. 25, “The Wolf
from preceding page
Shop Cross Frenzy is rapidly becoming one of New England's premier cyclo-cross events," said shop owner Rich Thomas. "Attracting both world and nationally ranked riders as well
Man� Oct. 26 and “Night of the Demon� Oct. 27. All three movies will begin at 7 p.m. Host Bill Morrison will give a short presentation on each film prior to the screening.
Popcorn and refreshments will be served; costumes are optional. For more information call the Wolfeboro Public Library at 569-2428.
as top local and regional riders, The Paradise Cross Frenzy is held on a challenging course... along the shores of the Connecticut River." The Frenzy is part of a new Vermont Cyclocross Weekend that is followed by the 21st annual West
Hill Shop Cyclocross Race (and Vermont State Championships) in Putney, maybe 40 minutes away along Interstate-91. So get in a few more rides before making the switch or a wonderful wave of Indian Summer passes through.
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Stone Mountain Arts Center Coming Up! The Stone Mountain Arts Center brings national acts to the foothills of the White Mountains to perform in an intimate timberframe setting, serving dinner and fine wines and beer before selected shows.
H o t P ic k o f th e W e e k ... Thursday, Oct. 27
Martin Sexton Great Pop Singer
Th e R e s t o f th e S e a s o n ... Oct. 28 Nov. 3 Nov. 4 Nov. 5 Nov. 10 Nov. 12
Fall Is Here And So Are Our Famous Pumpkin Pancakes!
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“On e of the 15 bes t view s in the wor ld from a hot el or inn�
“Best Place to Eat in North Conway� “AMAZING VALUE� Enjoy northern New England’s best dining experience. Exceptional Food & Service and Spectacular Views.
Open Every Day 7:00am-3:00pm Take Out 383-9660 At Glen Corner, Jct Rts 16 & 302 Glen www.glenjunction.com
Open Every Night for Romatic Dining and Lodging. Reservations 356-9025 • Gift Certificates
met Diners Society, • Recommended by Gour Gourmet, etc. Bon Appetit, Wine Spectator, nal Awards Natio al • Winner of sever 2 miles north of North Conway on Route 16
Don Campbell Band - Country Natalie MacMaster & Donnell Leahy - Master Canadian Fiddlers Comedian Bob Marley ..........................................................SOLD OUT! Harry Manx - Blues, Sitar / Guitar Dave Alvin and the Guilty Ones - Former Blasters Frontman Carol Noonan and the Stone Mountain Boys host Stone Mountain LIVE! Maine’s Own Musical Jamboree Show with special guests Tim O’Brien and Michael Doucet Nov. 13 Bela Fleck and the Flecktones - Up Close and Personal Nov. 18 Jonathan Edwards - Hit Singer Songwriter Nov. 19 Suzy Bogguss - Country Star Nov. 20 Waltzing’s for Dreamers Free Music Series with Carpenter and May Acoustic................................................................................Just Added! Nov. 22 Brett Dennen - Solo Acoustic Nov. 26 Wine Dine and Diva... a musical wine dinner Stone Mountain style Dec. 2 A Rockabilly Barn Burner with the Roy Sludge Trio to benefit the Brownfield Library.............................................................Just Added! Dec. 4 Stone Mountain Annual Christmas Craft Fair and Open House Dec. 4 Raul Malo Christmas Show - Lead Singer of the Mavericks. .Just Added! Dec. 9,10,11,16,17 Stone Mountain LIVE Christmas Shows
2 0 12 S e a s o n ... Jan. 20 Jan. 21 Feb. 4 Feb. 9 Feb. 24 Feb. 26 March 3 March 8 March 9,10 March 17 March 30 May 4 May 31
Marc Cohn- Singer Songwriter ...........................................Just Added! Livingston Taylor to Benefit the Sacopee Valley Health Center Catie Curtis - Singer Songwriter ........................................Just Added! David Sanborn - Jazz Sax ...................................................Just Added! The Cottars - Canadian Celtic ............................................Just Added! Suzanne Vega ......................................................................Just Added! Lori McKenna - Singer Songwriter......................................Just Added! Waltzing’s for Dreamers FREE Music Series w/The Nields. . . .Just Added! Carolina Chocolate Drops - Soulful Traditional Folks and Jugband Carol Noonan & the Stone Mountain Boys host Stone Mountain LIVE for St. Paddy’s Day! Maine’s Own Musical Jamboree Show . .Just Added! A Barn Burner with the The Sweetback Sisters ................Just Added! Judy Collins - Up Close and Personal.................................Just Added! Nitty Gritty Dirt Band - Iconic Country Folk Rock
For tickets and more info about our events go to:
www.stonemountainartscenter.com
Stone Mountain Arts Center 695 Dugway Road Brownfield, ME 207-935-7292
Page 30 — THE CONWAY DAILY SUN, Saturday, October 22, 2011
First Congregational Church of Ossipee 8:45 & 10:30 am - Contemporary Worship Service Christ-centered, Biblical teaching Visit www.firstossipee.org for more info.
50 Rt 16B, Center Ossipee • (603) 539-6003
CHATHAM CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH “GOD’S STORY, OUR STORIES”
WORSHIP & Sunday School 10am • NURSERY CARE
Route 113B, Chatham, NH
Sunday Service 9:00am • April 24th - Oct. 30th The perfect summer church experience.
Rev. Dr. Donald F. Derse
CHOCORUA COMMUNITY CHURCH 10 am Worship & Baptism Come and share God’s Spirit
GLEN COMMUNITY BAPTIST CHURCH Route 302, PO Box 279, Glen, NH 03838 gcbc9@yahoo.com
“Living Our Baptism”
Jesus Is Coming Again. Are You Ready? Acts 4:12 Rev. William B. Rose, Jr.
SUNDAY: 9:45am Sunday School 11:00am Morning Worship 7:00pm Evening Service
Rev. Kent Schneider 662-6046 Located on Rt. 113 East near Rt. 16 www.chocoruachurch.org
85 PLEASANT STREET, CONWAY • 447-2404
Rev. Jeffrey W. Monroe, M.M., Rector Tracy Gardner, Organist and Choir Director
HOLY SCRIPTURE - TRADITIONAL WORSHIP
SUNDAYS: Holy Communion; 9:30 am
All Are Welcome!
Healing Service 1st Thursday Monthly 12:00 pm
AN ORTHODOX ANGLICAN PARISH FAMILY
Unitarian Universalist Fellowship of the Eastern Slopes
“A Welcoming Congregation”
Sunday, October 23:
“Come Anyway!” Rev. Mary Edes
To see a brief video about Unitarian Universalism, go to: www.uufes.org Sunday Service 10am • Religious Education at 10am Nursery Care for Infants and Toddlers The Reverend Mary Giles Edes, Minister 603.323.8585 • 30 Tamworth Rd, Tamworth
St. Elizabeth Ann Seton Catholic Church Route 5, Fryeburg, Maine
WEDNESDAY 7:00pm Prayer Meeting
River Church
THE
St. Margaret’s Anglican Church
Sunday Celebration Service 10am Wednesday Evening Service 6:30pm
3rd Tuesday: Free Community Dinner— 5-6pm Thursdays: Symphony of Prayer— 6:30pm at the church Breadbasket Food Pantry: Second Tuesday of every month from 4-6pm and by app’t at 447-6633. Children’s Ministries available during Sunday morning service.
Rev. Henry Snyder, Pastor
Please join us!
2600 East Main St., Ctr. Conway, NH • 603-447-6686 Across from McSherry’s Nursery
FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST CONGREGATIONAL All are welcome to attend Thursday: Adoration 5:30pm; Mass 6:30pm
Sunday Mass 8:00am
Eucharistic Ministry for the Homebound 207-697-3438 Religious Education & Youth Ministry 207-697-2277 Rev. Joseph Koury 207-647-2334
bartlettchurch.net Bartlett Union Congregational Church Albany Ave/Bear Notch at US 302 Phone: 603-374-2795
EVERY SUNDAY Upbeat Sermons packed with humor and lifeaffirming help to live your life to the fullest Music you’ll be humming all week Laughter to lift your soul
10 a.m. Worship and Children Activities Sunday, October 23: Steve Wright, speaker Ellen Hayes, music ministry Handicap Access - Side Entrance Lift takes you to Church Sanctuary
YOU’RE WELCOME HERE
No Matter Who You Are or Where You Are On Your Life Journey
The Conway Village Congregational Church United Church of Christ (The Little Brown Church)
Rev. Martell Spagnolo
Roger Miklos, Minister of Music
“The Little Brown Church” Welcomes You!
WORSHIP SERVICE & SUNDAY SCHOOL 10:00 AM FELLOWSHIP HOUR FOLLOWS... ALL WELCOME! CHILDCARE PROVIDED WEDNESDAY MORNING COMMUNION SERVICE 8:00 AM • AIR CONDITIONED •
Pastor: Rev. Gilman E. Healy
Sermon:
“Love with Legs” Favorite Gospel Hymn:
Higher Ground
(Tune: HIGHER GROUND) Organist: Floyd W. Corson Choral Director: Richard P. Goss III 2521 Main St., No. Conway • 356-2324 firstchurchnc@firstbridge.net
The Valley Christian Church A Bible Based Church
SUNDAYS 10:00 am- Morning Worship Jr Church after praise & worship Nursery available
Sermon Title: “All You Need Is Love”
MONDAY NIGHTS Men’s Bible Study 6:30 pm. Women’s Bible Study 6:30 pm.
This week’s readings include: Psalm 1; Deuteronomy 34:1-12; Matthew 22:34-46
Come join us as we worship Jesus the Christ!
132 Main Street, Conway, NH 03818 603-447-3851• www.thebrownchurch.org
230 E. Conway Rd. Located in front of Abbott’s Dairy 603-356-2730 • www.vcc4jesus.org Interim Pastor John Leonard
Worship Services & Sunday School 10 am • Child Care
Sweden Community Emergency Fund sponsors holiday fund-raiser SWEDEN, Maine — To bring the joy of music and a festive introduction to the holiday season, a community concert and dessert event will be held Dec. 3 at the Sweden Town Meeting House at 7 p.m. Tickets for Holiday Harmonies and Decadent Desserts will be available by calling Jane Gibbons at (207) 647-3987. Tickets are $15 for adults, $10 for children under 12. Proceeds will go to the Sweden Community Emergency Fund. The Holiday Harmonies program is led by professional songwriter and musician Davy Sturtevant, with Birds on a Wire (Greg and Jenny Huang-Dale and Janine Loubier) and Blue Side’s Ken and Laurie Turley already signed on
as featured musicians. Classical, gospel, country and a holiday singalong will be in the mix. Decadent desserts will include chocolate fondue, yule logs, a gingerbread house and more. A raffle of lovely craft creations by Sweden residents will be held as well. Sweden residents who find themselves in an emergency situation have benefited from the Community Emergency Fund for the last three years. Residents faced with insufficient income have sought emergency assistance to pay medical bills, childcare costs, home and auto costs, fuel bills and other emergencies. The Community Emergency
Fund is managed by the pastor of the Sweden Community Church, with funds donated by community-minded Sweden residents. With government cutbacks in funding for human services and a winter of hardship anticipated by several residents, the fund needs to be replenished. To make a contribution to the Sweden Emergency Fund, make out a check to “Sweden Community Church” and write “Community Emergency Fund” on the bottom line. Send it to Sweden Community Fund, 12 Chase Place, Sweden, ME 04040. If you are a resident of Sweden and need assistance, please call Kim Marie, the church pastor, at 925-2526.
The Riverside United Methodist Church in Kezar Falls is celebrating the 130th anniversary of the church with a festival Saturday, Oct. 22, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., with antique cars, scarecrow decorating, painting pumpkins, festival food for sale, cupcake deco-
rating, memory moments, music, games for the kids, history events, old time photos, church booth and more. On Sunday, Oct. 23, starting at 9:15 a.m., there will be a rededication of the building, blessing of community 130 items project. Worship will include interviews
from lifelong church goers, then a church group photo followed by a free potluck. For more information, call Pastor Shannon Keeney at (207) 625-4436 or visit the website at http://riversideumc.yolasite. com. The church is located at 5 School Street in Porter, Maine.
Riverside United Methodist Church celebrates130th anniversary of the church
THE CONWAY DAILY SUN, Saturday, October 22, 2011— Page 31
South Tamworth United Methodist Church 8:30 AM Traditional Worship & Sunday School It is our mission to bring others to know the love, joy and peace that is found in Jesus Christ.
Come join us this Sunday; Minister: Murray Nickerson, Rte 25 in S. Tamworth Village
Mt. Washington Valley Jewish Community Chavurat HeHarim * Fellowship in the Mountains
We have a worship service the last Friday night of each month. We usually gather the last weekend for a Shabbat potluck. Inquire about children’s and adult ed. For info call (603)694-3058
East Fryeburg Church of Christ
(Bible Only) Route 302, East Fryeburg (207) 935-4337
SERVICES:
Sunday: 9:30 AM - Bible School 10:30 AM - Church Thursday Nights 7 PM - Bible Prayer Meeting
Baha’i Faith
The purpose for which mortal men have, from utter nothingness, stepped into the realm of being, is that they may work for the betterment of the world and live together in concord and harmony. - Baha’u’llah
1-800-22-UNITE, (207)935-1005, (603)447-5654
TAM W ORTH C ON GRE GATION AL C H URC H W eekly Sun day W orship at6 pm Su n d ay,October 23rd
Thisw eek’sm essage is: “Lights2” Reveren d D r.D avid K em per
R
Allare w elcom e. 28 Cleveland H illRoad,Tam w orth Village United Church ofChrist • w w w.tam w orthcc.org
Saint Andrew’s-in-the-Valley The Episcopal Church of Tamworth and the Ossipee Valley The Rev. Heidi Frantz-Dale, Rector
Sunday Worship Services at 8 and 10 AM Followed by coffee hour with guest priest The Rev. Susan Ackley An open and inclusive community • Handicap accessible 678 Whittier Rd. (Old Rte. 25) Tamworth 323-8515
All Are Welcome!
First Baptist Church Sunday Services
Sunday School...................................9:30 A.M. Morning Worship.............................10:45 A.M. Evening Service..................................6:30 P.M.
Wednesday Prayer, Praise, and Bible Study..........6:30 P.M.
Location: Main Street, North Conway Village across from the North Conway Scenic Railroad.
— Independent, Fundamental —
Church: (603) 356-6066 • Rev. Laurence Brown firstbaptistnorthconway.org When in North Conway Village, listen to our broadcast ministry at 91.1 FM
Fryeburg Assembly of God Fryeburg, Maine Services: Sunday 10 am & 6 pm Wednesday Evening: 6 pm
Pastor Jim Warnock
207-935-3129
located on 8 Drift Road, just behind Main Street Mobil Station
Since 1879 at 12 Oxford St. (behind Norway Savings Bank) 207-935-3413 • FryeburgNewChurch.org 9:00 am Sunday School • 10:00 am Family Worship (free child care provided)
“All people who live good lives, no matter what their religion, have a place in Heaven.” - Emanuel Swedenborg
Rev. Sage Currie • Choir Dir., Greg Huang Dale
“That in all things Jesus Christ might have the pre-eminence”
Faith Bible Church Independent * Non-Denominational
Meets each Sunday at 10:00 am
Located at Rt 16A and Dundee Road in Intervale Pastor Bob Novak • 383-8981 • Nursery Provided
You Are Invited FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST 35 Portland Street • Fryeburg, Maine
Sunday Service & Sunday School~ 10:00 am Wednesday Meeting~ 7:30pm Childcare provided for each service
Holy Epiphany Liberal Catholic Church 15 Washington St, Conway, NH (The Echo Building)
Mass: Monday to Friday 9:00am Sundays 11:00 am Bp. Jason Sanderson, Pastor • (603)-733-6000
“You Are Welcome!”
DAILY CROSSWORD TRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES
by Lynn Johnston by Scott Adams
DILBERT
By Holiday Mathis SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). You are emboldened by distance. That’s why email is so dangerous: You can write things you wouldn’t say in person, especially if you knew you would soon be seeing the other person. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). Life is too short to overreact to the parts of it you can’t control. Knowing this, you will spend your time in traffic or waiting in line doing something more productive than stewing. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). A strange old feeling comes back around, signaling that it is finally time to give yourself the warmhearted attention you did not get years ago when you really needed it. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). You’ll solve problems by first of all believing that it is possible to solve them. Giving up hope too soon is a danger. Consider taking a temporary break (instead of quitting altogether) and coming back to the issue later. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). You’ll work on expressing yourself with clarity and simplicity. You may not reach the goal, but adopting an effective communication style gives you the best chance. TODAY’S BIRTHDAY (Oct. 22). Your talent for uniting and organizing others will be put to good use this year. You’ll generously help friends and worthy causes and will enjoy a windfall when others return the favor. A project takes off in November. Advertise in January. You’ll make an extremely fortuitous commitment in March. July brings travel. Leo and Sagittarius people adore you. Your lucky numbers are: 3, 14, 39, 22 and 1.
Get Fuzzy
ARIES (March 21-April 19). Be careful not to mix up the nonessentials with the essentials. Things like proper rest and a good haircut are not frivolous at all, nor is anything that helps you feel good and attract the best in life. TAURUS (April 20-May 20). You can have the goods, but you also have to know how to present them, or no one will buy in. Avoid working completely alone. Gather impressions from others. A partner or mentor can help you home in on a strategy. GEMINI (May 21-June 21). You respond well to positive feedback. When you know you’re being heard, cared about and accepted, you will form an immediate bond with the one who offers you this acceptance. CANCER (June 22-July 22). When you are willing to interpret events in a very positive way, magic happens. What at first seems like a mistake will turn out to be the best part of a process or the most brilliant aspect of the end result. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). You want life to be simple, and yet nothing is one way. Work and relationships are multifaceted. Discounting the evidence that doesn’t support your initial belief about a person or situation would be unwise. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). The one who keeps everything inside forces you to pretend you’re a mind reader. If you have to guess what another person is thinking, try to guess something positive. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). Certain thoughts have a gravitational pull, leading you down a spiral of untruths. But if you can resist believing the first one in the series, you’ll skip over the black hole and dance in the light.
by Darby Conley
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 32 — THE CONWAY DAILY SUN, Saturday, October 22, 2011
1 5 10 14 15 16 17 18 20 21 22 23 25 26 28 31 32 34 36 37 38 39
ACROSS __ a one; none Puts money aside Credit card Resound Fraternity letter __ the Red; Viking explorer Goatee’s place Assume total control of Barbie’s beau Border on Valentine’s Day gift, perhaps Avid Greek “T” Reply Gasoline, in Great Britain Palm tree fruits In a __; quickly Cow’s remark Tumults Miami __, FL Door handle Sixty secs.
40 Be situated on both sides of 41 Peal 42 Save; rescue 44 Admirably graceful; stylish 45 Unrefined 46 France’s dollar before the euro 47 __ Day; treeplanting event 50 Pleased 51 Annoy 54 Chow mein ingredient 57 Lowly worker 58 On __; jittery 59 Mailman’s beat 60 Opening bet 61 Throw 62 Aquatic mammal 63 One-dish meal 1 2
DOWN Least popular chicken piece Cramp
3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 19 21 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 32
Colorless imitation gem Hither and __; here and there Serious; dismal Love, in Paris Express one’s frustration Subject for Freud Maple tree secretion Plush fabric Fleur-de-lis S, M, L or XL Highest cards Give a speech Gets older Fills with holy wonder Abbr. in some school names Genesis man Low point Choose All-knowing Weavers’ frames Angels or Reds
33 35 37 38 40 41 43 44 46
Raced Toe the line __ it; failed Genghis or Kublai Apprehensions __ in; wearing Male bees Moon cavity Wind instrument
47 48 49 50 52 53 55 56 57
Aid in crime Make over Sacks Joint disease Memorization Recognized Expert Go bad Faux __; boner
Yesterday’s Answer
THE CONWAY DAILY SUN, Saturday, October 22, 2011— Page 33
Today is Saturday, Oct. 22, the 295th day of 2011. There are 70 days left in the year. Today’s Highlight in History: On Oct. 22, 1811, composer and piano virtuoso Franz Liszt was born in the Hungarian town of Raiding in present-day Austria. On this date: In 1746, Princeton University was first chartered as the College of New Jersey. In 1797, French balloonist Andre-Jacques Garnerin made the first parachute descent, landing safely from a height of about 3,000 feet over Paris. In 1836, Sam Houston was inaugurated as the first constitutionally elected president of the Republic of Texas. In 1883, the original Metropolitan Opera House in New York held its grand opening with a performance of Gounod’s “Faust.” In 1928, Republican presidential nominee Herbert Hoover spoke of the “American system of rugged individualism” in a speech at New York’s Madison Square Garden. In 1934, bank robber Charles “Pretty Boy” Floyd was shot to death by federal agents at a farm in East Liverpool, Ohio. In 1962, President John F. Kennedy announced a quarantine of all offensive military equipment shipped to Cuba, following the discovery of Soviet-built missile bases on the island. In 1979, the U.S. government allowed the deposed Shah of Iran to travel to New York for medical treatment — a decision that precipitated the Iran hostage crisis. French conductor and music teacher Nadia Boulanger died in Paris. In 1981, the Professional Air Traffic Controllers Organization was decertified by the federal government for its strike the previous August. In 1986, President Ronald Reagan signed into law sweeping tax-overhaul legislation. One year ago: WikiLeaks released 391,831 purported Iraq war logs that suggested more than 100,000 Iraqi civilians had died in the conflict. Today’s Birthdays: Actress Joan Fontaine is 94. Actor Christopher Lloyd is 73. Actor Derek Jacobi is 73. Actor Tony Roberts is 72. Actress Annette Funicello is 69. Actress Catherine Deneuve is 68. Rock musician Leslie West (Mountain) is 66. Actor Jeff Goldblum is 59. Movie director Bill Condon is 56. Actor Luis Guzman is 54. Actor-writerproducer Todd Graff is 52. Rock musician Cris Kirkwood is 51. Actor-comedian Bob Odenkirk is 49. Olympic gold medal figure skater Brian Boitano is 48. Actress Valeria Golino is 45. Comedian Carlos Mencia is 44. Country singer Shelby Lynne is 43. Actress Saffron Burrows is 39. Actor Jesse Tyler Ferguson is 36. Actor Michael Fishman is 30. Talk show host Michael Essany is 29. Rock musician Zac Hanson is 26. Actor Jonathan Lipnicki is 21. Actress Sofia Vassilieva is 19.
SATURDAY PRIME TIME 8:00
Dial
8:30
OCTOBER 22, 2011
9:00
9:30
THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30
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WPFO
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Red Green Show The Insider (N) Everybody Loves Raymond Saturday Night Live Å College Football USC at Notre Dame. (N) (In Stereo Live) Å 7 News at Saturday 11PM (N) Night Live College Football Teams TBA. (N) (Live) News 8 WMTW at 11 (N) College Football Teams TBA. (N) (Live) News 9 Tonight (N) Poirot “Yellow Iris” Sec- Masterpiece Mystery! “Case Histories: Episode 1” The Red Globe ond chance to solve a Jackson Brodie takes on a cold case. (N) (In Stereo) Green Trekker (In murder. Å (PA) Å (DVS) Show Stereo) Family Family Community Kickstart Nite Show It’s Always It’s Always Futurama Guy Å Guy Å Auditions with Danny Sunny in Sunny in (In Stereo) Cashman Phila. Phila. Å Two and a How to Be Hawaii Five-0 “Kai e’e” 48 Hours Mystery A WGME Ring of Half Men Å a Gentle- Tsunami Warning head movie connected to a kill- News 13 at Honor man (N) disappears. Å ing spree. (N) Å 11:00 Wrestling 2011 World Series St. Louis Cardinals at Texas Rangers. Game MLB Post- News 13 on Hell’s 3. From Rangers Ballpark in Arlington, Texas. (N) (In Stereo game FOX (N) Kitchen Å Live) Å NECN Sat. NECN Sat. NECN Sat. NECN Sat. The Boss NECN Sat. SportsNet SportsNet
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CNN
CNN Presents Å
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As Time Keeping Up Doc Martin Portwenn Movie: ›››› “The Third Man” (1949, WCBB Goes By Suspense) Orson Welles. Players Dance. Å Two and a Be-Gentle- Hawaii Five-0 “Kai e’e” 48 Hours Mystery “The WBZ News WBZ Half Men man (In Stereo) Å Killing Fields” (N) Å (N) Å Criminal Minds “The The Unit “Misled & Mis- Law & Order “Indiffer- Sports guided” Team tries to raid ence” Investigation of Legend WPME Fox” A killer preys on families. Å anthrax lab. preschooler’s death. College Football USC at Notre Dame. (N) (In Stereo Live) Å News WCSH
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WHDH
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WMTW
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WMUR
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WENH
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WPXT
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WGME
27 28 31
MSNBC Lockup: San Quentin FNC
Huckabee (N)
Piers Morgan Tonight
CNN Newsroom (N)
CNN Presents Å
Lockup Tampa
Lockup: San Quentin
Lockup: San Quentin
Justice With Jeanine
Stossel
ESPN College Football Teams TBA. (N) (Live)
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NESN NHL Hockey: Sharks at Bruins
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OXYG Movie: ››› “Freaky Friday” (2003) Å
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TVLND Married
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Bruins
Raymond
Raymond
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44
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ANT Farm ANT Farm PrankStars Phineas
Movie: ›› “Men in Black II” (2002) Will Smith Law & Order: SVU
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TNT
Movie: ››‡ “The Longest Yard” (2005) Adam Sandler.
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SYFY “Jeepers Creepers 2”
FOX News
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TLC
Dateline: Real Life
Dirty Raymond Friends
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House League
Dateline: Real Life
Dateline: Real Life
Dateline: Real Life
HIST American Pickers Å
American Pickers Å
American Pickers Å
American Pickers Å
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DISC Area 51 Military base.
Monsters in Alaska
Alaska: Most Extreme
Monsters in Alaska
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HGTV Halloween Block Party Grt Rooms Novogratz Dina Party Donna Dec Hunters
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Puppies vs. Babies
TRAV The Dead Files Å
The Dead Files Å SPIKE Movie: ›››‡ “The Fugitive” (1993) COM “Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby”
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A&E
Storage
70
LIFE
Movie: “The Alphabet Killer” (2008) Premiere.
71 72 73 74 75
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Real Housewives
Hunters
Puppies vs. Babies (N) Puppies vs. Babies The Dead Files Å
The Dead Files Å Movie: ›› “Fighting” (2009) Channing Tatum.
Movie: ››‡ “Extract” (2009) Jason Bateman. Storage Storage Hoggers Hoggers Movie: “The Hunt for the I-5 Killer” (2011) Å
Movie: ››‡ “Pirates of the Caribbean: At World’s End” (2007) Johnny Depp.
AMC Movie: ›› “From Dusk Till Dawn” (1996) Å BRAVO Housewives/NJ
(Answers Monday) Jumbles: OOMPH ABIDE FIGURE GRIMLY Answer: Frasier Crane’s success as a TV character was due in part to this — GOOD “GRAMMER”
Movie: ›› “Get Smart” (2008) Å
Movie: ›‡ “Halloween” (2007, Horror) Malcolm McDowell. Movie: ›› “Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen” (2009) Shia LaBeouf. League
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Print your answer here:
ANT Farm ANT Farm
FX
60
Now arrange the circled letters to form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon.
Boondocks Boondocks
52
Dogs 101 (N)
NEWRIN
Movie: ››‡ “The Fast and the Furious” Law & Order: SVU Movie: “Duplicity” Å
TBS USA
AP
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Movie: ››‡ “Addams Family Values” (1993)
48
Law & Order: SVU
Raymond
’70s Show ’70s Show Friends
47
58
©2011 Tribune Media Services, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
EKOLY
SportsCenter (N) (Live) Å Daily
King of Hill King of Hill Fam. Guy
Movie: ››‡ “The Addams Family” (1991)
45
Yesterday’s
VOSEH
Movie: ››› “Freaky Friday” (2003) Å
43
Oblongs
Jour.
by David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek
Unscramble these four Jumbles, one letter to each square, to form four ordinary words. Find us on Facebook http://www.facebook.com/jumble
––––––– ALMANAC –––––––
Chelsea
“From Dusk Till Dawn 2: Texas Blood Money” Real Housewives
Law Order: CI
Movie: ››‡ “Illegal” (1955) My Name TCM Movie: ›››› “An American in Paris” (1951) Movie: “Oliver’s Ghost” (2011) Martin Mull. Å “Oliver’s Ghost” (2011) HALL ›› “The Shaggy Dog”
3: Valley Vision, 10: QVC, 16: RSN TV16 North Conway, 17: C-Span. 18: C-Span2, 20: HSN, 25: Headline News, 26: CNBC, 32: ESPN2, 36: Court TV, 37: TV Guide, 38: EWTN, 57: Food Network
DAILY CROSSWORD BY WAYNE ROBERT WILLIAMS
1
10 15 16 17 18 19 20 22 24 25 26 28 30 33 36 37 39 41
ACROSS What is something which the more one takes the more one will leave behind? Brilliant success Return to the scabbard Outline Inclining upward Busch Gardens’ location Back-comb Philanderers Rigorous Carnivore’s meal Puppy’s bite Put to sea Tex-Mex Step up to the plate Flung weapon Tussle Covered with soot Tales on a grand scale One twixt 12 and 20
42 Inexpensive 44 Alter a skirt’s length 46 Some on the Somme 47 Religious recluse 49 Slight of build 51 Ex of Mickey, Artie and Frank 52 Stylish and attractive 55 All-purpose and self-rising for two 59 Flamboyant confetti-flinging comic 62 Tennessee __ Ford 63 Foreign 64 Unoriginal 66 Shoe grip 67 Renounced 68 “Demian” author 69 Unsteady elderly walkers
1 2
DOWN Noteworthy acts Start
3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 21 23 27 29 30 31 32 34
Grouchiest Muppet Student’s dissertation One of the Five Nations Smidgen List add-on __ Penh, Cambodia Seven of Siena Stuff of wills Cleaning woman in London Composed of bonded layers Presidential pick Recipe quantities Hedda’s topper Useful hints Cordelia’s father Jacuzzi nozzle “Magic Moments” composer Biltmore Mansion location Treatments for disabilities Birthday figure
35 Bleacher cheers 38 Edible tuber 40 Kind of help or service 43 Tex-Mex sauce 45 Travel allowance 48 Old-fashioned pronoun 50 Portable cannon 53 Homer’s Trojan War story
54 Jazz group 56 Join together 57 Canadian or Merrimack 58 Burpee selection 60 Herbal drinks 61 Brie covering 65 TV reporter Koppel
Yesterday’s Answer
Page 34 — THE CONWAY DAILY SUN, Saturday, October 22, 2011
Animals
Announcement
PUPPIES small mixed breed. See website for more details: www.mainelypuppies.com (207)539-1520.
PRAYER TO THE BLESSED VIRGIN (Not known to fail)
PRAYER TO THE BLESSED VIRGIN (Not known to fail)
O most beautiful flower of Mount Carmel, fruitful vine, splendor of Heaven, Blessed Mother of the Son of God. Im maculate Virgin, assist me in my necessity. O Star of the Sea, help me and show me here you are my mother. O Holy Mary, Mother of God, Queen of Heaven and Earth, I humbly beseech you from the bottom of my heart to succor me in my necessity (make request). There are none that can withstand your power. O Mary conceived without sin pray for us who have recourse to thee (3 times). Holy Mary, I place this cause in your hands (3 times). Say this prayer for 3 consecutive days and then you must publish and it will be granted to you.
O most beautiful flower of Mount Carmel, fruitful vine, splendor of Heaven, Blessed Mother of the Son of God. Im maculate Virgin, assist me in my necessity. O Star of the Sea, help me and show me here you are my mother. O Holy Mary, Mother of God, Queen of Heaven and Earth, I humbly beseech you from the bottom of my heart to succor me in my necessity (make request). There are none that can withstand your power. O Mary conceived without sin pray for us who have recourse to thee (3 times). Holy Mary, I place this cause in your hands (3 times). Say this prayer for 3 consecutive days and then you must publish and it will be granted to you.
L.J.K.
S.
$1-A-DAY CLASSIFIEDS • CALL 356-2999 DOLLAR-A-DAY NON-COMMERCIAL: Ad must run a minimum of 6 consecutive days. Ads over 15 words add 10¢ per word per day. COMMERCIAL 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, one business day prior to the day of publication. 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 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday, 356-2999; send a check or money order with ad copy to The Conway Daily Sun, P.O. Box 1940, North Conway, N.H. 03860, email ad to classified@conwaydailysun.com or stop in at our offices on Seavey Street in North Conway village. OTHER RATES: For information about the professional directory or classified display ads call Jamie or Hannah at 356-2999.
Animals
Animals
Animals
#1 A Petlovers Service Who Let The Dogs Out?
AUNTIE CINDY'S Albany Pet Care Center
DO YOU NEED FINANCIAL HELP spaying and altering your dog or cat? 603-224-1361, before 2pm.
Kitties too! Pet sitters/ Pet taxi. Bonded and insured. Barbara Hogan. 383-9463. ADORABLE St. Bernard Lab puppies born 9/19. Taking $100 deposits. Ready to go 11/14. $350. (207)890-1224. AKC German Shepherd puppies ready 10/1, 1 all black female, 1 all black male, $1500/ea. 6 bi colored $1200/ea. Eilene (603)374-9257. AKC Labrador Retrievers, 4 black British males. OFA & eye certified. Pet or hunt dog. Windswept Farm Labrador Retrievers. $1000. (802)684-3465 mylabs@myfairpoint.net. ANIMAL Rescue League of NHNorth has cats, kittens, dogs and puppies looking for a second chance. (603)447-5955 or visit online- conwayshelter.org ANIMAL Rescue League of NH-North is scheduling monthly low cost spay/ neuter clinics for both cats and dogs. Call (603)447-1830 for information and to schedule.
Affordable, Quality care for your "Kids". Stress free Grooming, Cage free Boarding and sandy Play Yards, Daycare. Open 6am-6pm. (603)447-5614. BLUE and gold Macaw, large vocabulary, in perfect feather, beautiful. $450 with cage. (603)539-7727. BOARDING/ Grooming is now being offered by Classic Retrievers. Located on 6 Broadway Ave., Naples ME, off from Cooks Mills Rd. FMI contact Sandra (207)899-5822, classicretrievers@gmail.com. Get a classic look for your dog today. Call or email for pricing & availability.
Cats Only Neuter Clinic First Saturday of each month for low income families. Please call Harvest Hills Animal Shelter, between 10-3 Tues thru Friday 207-935-4358. DACHSHUNDS puppies boys & girl heath & temperament guaranteed. $300 to $450. (603)539-1603. HARVEST Hills Thrift Shop. Open daily, closed Thursday, new hours. 10am-3pm.
DOG TRAINING CLASSES- FRYEBURG
For all ages and abilities. Go to www.TellingTailsTraining.com or call 207-642-3693 for information.
DOGGIE PLAYGROUP at Four Your Paws Only on Rte. 16 in N. Conway. New changes for 2011. 11-12 is for smaller, quieter dogs and puppies. 12-1 is for larger more active dogs and puppies. Playgroups are Free and run every Saturday. All dogs must be on a leash & utd on vaccinations. call 603-356-7297 fmi or Visit www.fouryourpawsonly.com. HARVEST Hills Animal Shelter, 5 miles east of Fryeburg, 1389 Bridgton Rd. Rte.302. 207-935-4358. 30 loving dogs and kittens and cats available. All inoculations, neutered. 10am-6pm, Mon. & Fri., 10am-3pm, Tue., Wed., Sat., Sun., closed Thursdays.
Low Cost Spay/ Neuter Cats & dogs Rozzie May Animal Alliance www.rozziemay.org 603-447-1373
PUPPIES: Female, small terrier, black & white, up to 15 lbs. when grown, $350, 508-868-2417, 508-756-7937.
REACTIVE DOG CLASS FRYEBURG
Is your dog reactive to other dogs or people? Class starts Nov. 2nd. Go to www.TellingTailsTraining.com or call 207-642-3693 to reserve your space. SILKY Terrier pups, just like little Yorkies, $350 (603)487-2418. WANTED small male rabbit for a companion for my small lop eared male rabbit (603)539-8436.
Announcement
YOU’VE GOT IT.
Announcement ST. JUDE'S NOVENA
May the Sacred Heart of Jesus be adored, glorified, loved and preserved throughout the world now and forever. Sacred Heart of Jesus, have mercy on us. St. Jude, worker for miracles, pray for us. St. Jude, helper of the hopeless, pray for us. Say this prayer 9 times a day. By the eighth day your prayer will be answered. Say it for 9 days. It has never been known to fail. Publication must be promised Thank you St. Jude. L.J.K.
SOMEBODY ELSE WANTS IT! Got something special you no longer use? Sell it in the Classifieds. It may just be the perfect item to fill somebody else’s need. Call us today!
PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY
DAVE GAGNE DRYWALL CO.
603-356-6667 • 800-564-5527
Home Repairs, Plaster & Ceiling Repairs, Drywall, Insulation, Int/Ext Painting, Texture Removal & Wallpaper Res.
603-986-5143 • 207-935-5030
Mountain & Vale Realty Full Property Management Services Ext. 2
Est. 1980 - Fully Insured
SPAS
Anmar PLASTERING
Summit Spas • 603-733-7101 Service & Maintenance
Quality & Service Since 1976
HEATING SYSTEMS
SMALL ENGINE REPAIR
R.M. Remodeling
Licensed & Insured Call Timothy 603-447-4923
Woodman’s Forge & Fireplace Wakefield, NH • 603-522-3028
Boyce Heating & Cooling
RODD ROOFING “Servicing the Area for 80 Years” Specialized Roofing System www.roddroffing.com • 1-800-331-7663
DREW & SON BUILDERS ROOFING DECKING SIDING Call Rick 603-539-1978
KARLA’S PET RENDEZVOUS
PET BOARDING • DOG DAYCARE GROOMING • SELF-SERVE DOG WASH 603-447-3435 www.karlaspets.com
SMALL ENGINES REPAIRS • ODD JOBS Can Repair On Site
(207) 697-3443 • (207) 272-9755 AFFORDABLE ROOFING & SIDING
HIGHEST QUALITY CRAFTSMANSHIP Fully Insured 603-730-2521 rockybranchbuilders@gmail.com
ALL BRANDS
Dealers for Husqvarna, Troy Bilt & DR
MR. KNOW IT ALL For All Your Home Renovations and Repair
603-356-6889
Home Repairs, Decks, Additions, Siding, Painting, Flooring Fully Ins., 30 Yrs. Exp. Freedom • 539-4232
Damon’s Tree Removal Difficult Removals • Pruning Chipping • Stump Grinding
Honest Rates, Ref., Lead Lic., Insured
Scott Richard, Conway 662-5760
GRANITE COUNTERS A QUALITY JOB AT A QUALITY PRICE
Quality Marble & Granite
603-662-8447 Perm-A-Pave LLC Fully Insured Free Estimates
447-5895
All Work Guaranteed Reasonable Rates
Animal Rescue League of NH Cats, Kittens, Dogs, Pups and Other Small Critters looking for a second chance.
603-447-5955
AFFORDABLE SNOW PLOWING & SHOVELING
CONWAY TO JACKSON
Fully Insured 603-730-2521 rockybranchbuilders@gmail.com
ALEXANDER PAINTING & REPAIR Over 25 years experience
BILL ALEXANDER, Owner Ctr. Ossipee, NH • 662-5465 alexanderpaintingandrepair@gmail.com
LEGACY PAINTING and Remodeling Where Quality Prevails. Interior/Exterior. Fully Insured. Reasonable Rates. Cell 662-9292 HANIBAL
CHIMNEY CLEANING Safety Sweep Serving the Valley Since 1990
QUICKBOOKS BOOKKEEPER (603) 323-3399
FIRST RESPONSE
Alpine Pro Painting
Plumbing & Heating LLC
Credit Cards Accepted, Licensed, Insured, Background Checked
603-662-8687
G SO IN Dwight LUT
Interior • Exterior • Power Washing References • Insured • Free Estimates
603-986-6874
Perm-A-Pave LLC Fully Insured Free Estimates
447-5895
All Work Guaranteed Reasonable Rates
ROGER MIKLOS
JACK’S ROOFING
PAINTING & WALLPAPER 10% OFF Labor for jobs booked from 1/01/12 to 4/30/12
EPDM Rubber Roofing. Metal and Asphalt Shingles. Free Estimates - Fully Insured or
Hurd Contractors
JOHN GAMMON, JR.
TREE WORK STUMP GRINDING
Roofing MW Valley since 1984 North Conway 447-3011
29 Yrs. Exp. 603-539-2782
FULLY INSURED • FREE ESTIMATES
Granite Tree Service
Sunshine Yoga
Free Est. • Insured • Horsehair Plaster Restoration 603-986-1153 EPA Certified
Roofing • Siding • Flooring
got a business?
it pays to advertise.
356-3456
MATT CHRISTIAN TREE CARE
House lots cleared.Trees taken down & removed. Chipping, Pruning. Buying standing timber, excellent prices. Fully Insured, Free Estimates
539-6917 • cell: 986-0482
Community Alliance & Massage
726-6955
ROOF
HORSMAN BUILDERS
TREE REMOVAL
603-340-0111
www.sacotreeworks.com
Acorn Roofing • 447-5912
PULEO ROOFING & Construction
Fall Cleanups Tetreault Property Management
North Country Metal Roofing
New Construction • Renovations Remodeling & Finish Work Insured • Free Estimates
~ All Types ~
Fully Insured. Highly Recommended
603-738-4626
Damon’s Snow Removal
Commercial, Residential, Industrial
Call Damon’s Tree Removal 603-662-3445 • 603-447-4336
Licensed and Insured MasterCard/Visa Accepted
EAST BRANCH TIMBERWORKS Tree Removal Bucket Truck
IO & Sons N 603-662-5567 S RCERTIFIED & INSURED
F OO
603-356-2155 - Fully Insured For your residential & light commercial needs • Plowing • Roofs • Etc. Now quoting 2011-2012 winter season MC/VISA accepted
603-356-9255
603-356-9058 603-726-6897
DUVAL ELECTRICAL Contractor
Generator Hookups New Homes Remodeling
Conway Office 603-493-7527 Dave Duval
603-986-4096
Commercial & Residential
(603) 447-9011
Visa/MC Accepted
Pop’s Painting LLC
603-447-6643
www.popspaintingnh.com
Free Estimates, Variety of Colors, Quality Workmanship Fully Insured
603-651-8510
Steven Gagne ELECTRIC
603-447-3375
Residential & Commercial Insured • Master NH/ME
THE CONWAY DAILY SUN, Saturday, October 22, 2011— Page 35
Auctions
Autos
Autos
For Rent
For Rent
For Rent
AUCTION Saturday October 4pm By Gary Wallace Auctioneers #2735 Ossipee NH-see wallaceauctions.com. Note our earlier start time- This auction will include firearms which will be auctioned off starting @ 4pmFurniture: Paine Furniture oak sideboard, dining table & chairs, antique pine bureau, Empire coffee table, Boston rockers, antique wicker arm chair, side tables, Thumb-back chairs, caned seat chairs, painted dropleaf table. Rugs: Oriental rugs including room-size, hooked rugs. Firearms/ Ammo/ Knives: There will also be several ammunition lots, knives, bayonetts, Winchester print, small game traps, gun related books, etc. Preview Friday 10am-2:30pm. Preview Saturday, 2pm-4pm tel 603-539-5276- firearms agent present day of sale.
2002 Hyundai Santa Fe V6, awd, “one owner”, auto a/c, clean, 71k, leather $5200/obo (603)387-7766. 2003 Dodge 1500 pickup, 4x4, 8’ bed, 5 spd, great condition. $5400. (603)387-6779.
PAY $250 minimum for your junk car/ truck picked up. Also buying junk vehicles, light iron, heavy iron over the scales. We also buy copper, brass, wire, aluminum, batteries and much more. Call for scale (603)323-7363.
BARTLETT, Kearsage St. Newly renovated house. 2 bdrm, 2 full baths, dishwasher, washer dryer. $1000/mo. plus utilities. References & deposit. (603)662-5567.
JACKSON: 2 bdrm ranch style house. 1 bath, 1 small office, easy basement access. No pets, no smoking. References, sec dep., lease. $900/mo (603)466-5841.
2003 Nissan Frontier XE, 4x4, V6, automatic, extended bed, 150k miles, $5900. (603)387-6779.
WE buy used and junk Subaru’s for parts. We also repair and sell Subaru’s. Call Shawn’s Auto (603)539-3571.
CONWAY Village- Beautiful, convenient one bedroom w/ hot tub, deck off bdrm with view. Open spacious area, 14' bar in kitchen/ living room, doublehead shower in bathroom. Free wifi/ cable 6 months, efficient heat $750 available asap (603)616-8816.
2004 GMC Savana cargo van. Books at $5500, sell $4500. Excel. cond. guarantee. Matt (603)986-5805.
Boats
Autos 1996 Ford Taurus. Runs. $750/obo. Call Aryanna (603)662-9820 or Debbie (603)662-9720. CONVERTIBLE- 1998 Saab 900 new clutch and paint, runs great $3500 (207)935-3175. 1999 Ford F250 LXT superduty reg cab truck, minute mount 8’ plow. $4500 firm. (603)730-2260. 2000 Honda Accord LX, auto, sunroof, new Michellin tires, very clean, dependable. $4950 (603)730-2260. 2001 Chevy Malibu- 4 door, auto, inspected until 8/2012 150k, $2500/obo (603)969-3717. 2001 Jeep Cherokee Sport 4x4, 6cyl, automatic, 4 door, A/C, luggage rack, trailer hitch, auto remote starter, like new condition, runs perfect, only 70k miles! $6900. (603)447-6522. 2002 CHEVY Z71 extended cab pickup with Fisher Minute Mount plow. Loaded truck with high mileage. New tires. Runs great. $5000/firm. (603)522-6570 2002 PT Cruiser Limited. $3450/obo. Call for details. (207)935-1146.
1970- Accessories for a Sunfish Sail Boat
2005 Ford E250 cargo van, white, only 70k miles, new tires, runs great, professionally maintained. $9995. Call (603)356-3133, days.
(everything but the boat). Trailer, sail, center board and rudder. $100 Fryeburg. 603-289-5858.
2005 Jeep Grand Cherokee Laredo. Well maintained and in excellent condition. 123,000 miles. $6400. (603)356-6764.
CLASSIC 1977 16’ Old Town Canoe, yellow, parquet floor, 1000lb. load limit, good condition- $500. 978-273-8190.
2007 GMC Serria SLE, 2500HD, 4wd, 94k, loaded, $17,500. (207)256-9133.
PELICAN pedal boat, seats 5, two adjustable seats, canopy, good condition $350. (978)273-8190.
ATTENTION CASH REWARD
To anyone having information leading to the arrest and conviction of any person or persons involved in the unauthorized driving & illegal parts swapping/ stealing, off of my 1993 Chevy Corvette, black on black in color. The vehicle is from an O'Keefe's Circle, North Conway address. Crime committed is possibly from Sept. 2010 to present. Please help me catch these cowards. Please notify Detective Mattie of the Conway Police Department 603-356-5715. Thank you for your concerns in this matter, the owner. BUYING junk cars and trucks ME & NH. Call for price. Martin Towing. (603)305-4504. BUYING Junk vehicles, paying cash. Contact Joe (207)712-6910. I buy cars, trucks, SUV, foreign or domestic. 2000 or newer. Call (603)387-7766.
SHRINK WRAP Still only $11/foot, and winterize also available, at your home or camp. We also haul out pontoon boats (603)539-7597, (603)986-2235.
2-Two bedroom handicapped adaptable units 8-Two bedroom townhouse style units 4-Three bedroom townhouse style units 8-One bedroom units (4-second floor & 4-townhouse style) Refrigerator, Stove and Dishwasher
Townhouse style units have 1 and 1/2 baths Income limits Apply NO PETS PLEASE THIS IS A NON-SMOKING PROPERTY CONTACT US TODAY FOR MORE INFO! 1-800-742-4686
The Hodges Companies 201 Loudon Road Concord, NH 03301
Proudly owned by Eastern Lakes Region Housing Coalition And the Laconia Area Community Land Trust
BARTLETTSeasonal rental available 10/15- 4/15/12. Renovated 2 bedroom, 1.5 bath home, minutes to Attitash. $6500 + utilities for the season. Alex Drummond, RE/Max Presidential, 603-356-9444 x240. BARTLETT- Spacious, 3 bed, 2 bath, duplex. Partially furnished. w/d, large deck, peacefully wooded setting complete with babbling brook. Water/ sewer/ plowing included. Affordable heat. Pets considered. No smoking. $795/mo. plus utilities. Available 11/1. Call (603)986-3391. BROWNFIELD 3 bedroom, 2 bath, fireplace, rural location, garden spot, available immediately, references required $875/mo plus utilities (207)935-3799.
Child Care BABYSITTER. Fee negotiable. (207)890-8818. BEARCAMP Valley School & Children’s Center- Early Learning Center- Accepting enrollments. Open 6-6pm, ages 23 mos. -12 yrs. Innovative Pre-school, Pre-K, K, before and after school care, kindergarten option for working parents. Freedom to learn in an experienced based curriculum. Foresee adding 18 mos. program. Please call 603-323-8300. EFFINGHAM Daycare in business for 20 years has 2 openings, lots of TLC, playtime and learning. Meals and snacks included. Title 20 accepted. Call Elaine FMI (603)539-7574.
For Rent
HARRIMAN HILL Located on Pine Hill Road (route 109A) Wolfeboro, N.H. * * * OPENING JANUARY 2012* * * 24 new apartment homes Section 8 Welcome 6 Buildings comprised of only four (4) units each EnergyStar washer and dryer supplied in each unit 2-Two bedroom fully wheelchair accessible units
BARTLETT- Beautiful 2 bedroom, 2 bath duplex. 2200sf, open, updated kitchen, ample closet space and more. Secluded location. W/d hookup, hot water heat, nonsmoking, $900/mo plus utilities. Year round, unfurnished. William (603)387-5392.
• 2 bdr, 1 ba condo in Conway. Unfurnished, recently updated. Sparkling. W/D, Car Port, screened porch. $795/mo + utilities. NO PETS/S MOKE! • 1 bdr furnished condo in Kearsarge. Deck, screened porch, water views. $925/mo INCLUDES heat. • 3 bdr/1 ba house in the Village of NC- walk to most everything. Furnished. W/D. $1,200/mo + util. • 2 bdr, 2 bath unfurnished condo in Ctr. Conway. 1st floor. River access, pool & tennis. $850/mo + Utilities. No Pets/ Smoke. • 3 bdr, 2.5 bath beautifully furnished high end home in Conway. Waterfront, spectacular Mtn. views, detached garage and so MUCH more. $2,200/month + utilities. No Pets/Smoke.
Please contact Brett at brett@badgerrealty.com or (603)356-5757 ext 334
2-4 bedroom long term and seasonal. Starting at $750 call 603-383-8000, anne@fgpm.com. NEW! 2 bedroom ranch, completely remodeled, Bartlett Village. Garage, w/d, pets considered. No smokers please. $925/mo with credit check and deposit required. Call (603)986-1144 for 11/1 occupancy. BARTLETT large one bedroom, hot water, trash included, w/d onsite. No pets/ smoking. $560/month 986-5919(c). BARTLETT Village small 1 bedroom apt, porch, w/d on site. Credit check. No pets, no smoking. $525/mo plus security deposit. Call (603)986-5012.
We have the rental property you are looking for! Look at our full page ad in the real estate section for listings.
CABINS +
ROOMS Off Season Rentals (603)447-3858 CENTER Conway- Duplex 6 years old, 2 bedroom, 1.5 bath w/d hookup, wood floors, stainless aplliances, full basement, efficient heat, peacefully wooded setting, references, no smoking/ pets. $900/mo plus utilities, first and security. (603)662-3700. CHRISTMAS Mountain, Glen- 2 bedroom, 2 bath, fantastic Mt. Washington views, w/d. Unfurnished. Pet friendly. First floor level. $850 + utilities. First month and security. Mountain & Vale Realty. 356-3300. References required. CONWAY 3 bedroom, 2 bath house $1200 plus utilities. Call Anne at (603)383-8000 or anne@fgpm.com NEW 4 bedroom home, close to Conway. 3 baths, rear deck, efficient heat, full basement large yard, jacuzzi in master bedroom, stainless appliances, $1400/mo Call 447-3361 ask for Emma. CONWAY unfurnished 3 bdrm, 2 bath, 1st floor condo. 1 year lease, $900/mo. plus utilities. Security & credit check. Good credit required. Rich Johnson Select RE (603)447-3813. CONWAY Village 2 bedroom apt. newly renovated, 1st floor, yard, includes heat and plowing lease, security. No smoking or pets $725. (603)447-6033. CONWAY Village 2 bedroom house, w/d, plowing. Owner on premises. Pets considered. Credit check and security. $850 + utilities. (603)447-5313. EAST Conway Duplex- 3 bedroom, 2 bath, gas heat, finished basement, 5 appliances, garage, screen house, nice yard. 5 miles from Fryeburg. Purchase option. No pets or smokers. References. $1000/mo. 603-662-7865.
CONWAY- Duplex, 2 bedrooms, w/d, yard, credit check. $750/mo. Bill Crowley Remax, (603)387-3784. CONWAYRooms for rentFridge, microwave, wifi, cable, phone, $150$175/wk. (603)447-5366. CONWAY: Saco Woods Condo. 2 bedrooms, w/d. Includes heat $850. No pets. 1st month & security. Available Nov. 1st. Call (603)986-2458.
FREE CABLE Conway- 3 bdrm, 2 bath duplex, w/d hook-up, woodstove, shed. $925. + security. (207)647-3051, (603)662-8163. FREEDOM: 3 bdrm, 2 bath house, garage, w/d, water access, no smoking, ref. & sec. dep. req., $900/mo plus utilities. (603)236-2307. FRYEBURG 1st floor one bedroom efficiency, new paint, carpentry and appliances. No smoking and no pets. Snow plowing and trash included, $400+ utilities. Security deposit. (207)935-2638 evenings. 1 month free rent! Fryeburg near schools. Nice 3 bed 2 bath, woodstove, deck. Security deposit $875/mo plus. 207-935-3241. FRYEBURG Village- 1 bedroom apartment with deck. Walk to all town amenities. References. $550/mo. (207)256-0077. FRYEBURG- 3 bedroom ranch with sun porch, nice setting overlooking field. Last month & security deposit. References. $850/mo. Non smokers, no pets. (207)256-0077. 1 month free rent! Fryeburglovely 4 bedroom, 2 bath, a/c, w/d hook-up, deck, $1000/mo plus. No pets 207-935-3241. FRYEBURG: 1 + bdrm apt. in village for $600/mo. Gas heat. Call Margie at Re/Max Presidential (603)520-0718. FRYEBURG: 2 bdrm apt. in village for $650/mo. Gas heat. Call Margie at Re/Max Presidential 603-520-0718. GLEN Ledge- 2 BR apt $750/mo plus utilities includes plowing. Call (603)986-6451. GLEN spectacular views from this 3 br, 2 ba, 2 level duplex, sunny passive solar, very inexpensive to heat, washer and dryer in unit, dishwasher, storage, yard. $875 call Paul 781-608-8855. INTERVALE 1 bedroom for rent. Furnished, great location. Rent $500 plus utilities. Call Jim (857)919-0907. 1 bedroom townhouse, Inter vale. Yard, deck, 2 stories $650/month (603)356-0444. INTERVALE large remodeled 1 BR @ scenic Overlook, 2nd floor, great views, pool, h/w included, low utilities, no pets/ no smoking. Avail Now. $725/mo. + sec. dep. (603)356-7489. JACKSON 3 bedroom, 3 bath house, views $1200/mo. plus security, available 12/1. Credit check, Bill Crowley, Re/Max 387-3784. JACKSON Large 1st floor apt. modern kitchen, w/d, snowplowing, $600/yr for heat and hot water $775/mo rent (781)789-9069. JACKSON- 3 bedroom, 2 bath home, $1200/mo. Call Margie at Remax 520-0718.
MADISON 1 bedroom efficiency, new appliances, parking, plowing included, $350/mo. plus utilities. Available Nov.1st. (401)578-1427. MADISON 2 bedroom apt., close to Conway Village. Deck, no smoking/ pets, $700/mo plus utilities. 367-9270. MADISON, great 3 bedroom 2 bath home, w/d hook-up, 2 car garage, non smoking, pets neg. $950 (603)447-3977. MADISON, Rt16- 2 bedroom mobile home with storage shed. $700/mo plus security deposit. Available 10/15, plowing and trash included (603)447-6524, (603)986-4061. MADISON, small 3 bdrm home on silver lake. Carport, oil heat, $850/mo plus utilities. Call Paul Wheeler Re/Max Presidential 603-356-9444 ext. 206. N Conway, House, sought after location. Worry free living. 3 bedroom 2 bath, kitchen very large family room. Very comfortable family home. available 12/1/11. Please call to view (603)356-2009. NORTH Conway- Completely renovated spacious, 2 bdrm apts gleaming hardwood floors. Washer/ dryer, plenty of parking, nonsmoking. Reference required $795/mo. plus utilities. (781)953-9693. NORTH Conway 2 bdrm house, full basement, views, $850/mo. Credit check. Bill Crowley Re/Max (603)387-3784. NORTH Conway 2 bedroom, 2 bath, deck, condo, non smoker, pets neg. $750 (603)447-3977. NORTH Conway 3 BR, 2 bath house furnished, $600/mo + sec. dep. (774)218-9908. NORTH Conway 3- 4 bdrms, 1.5 bath house. Base of Cathedral Ledge with views, w/d, woodstove. No pets, no smoking. Credit check. $1000/mo (603)609-5858. NORTH Conway Apts: Whitehorse 1 bedroom, 700sf for $590 and a 2 bedroom, 940sf, with deck for $825. Ledgeview 1 bedroom, 555sf for $650. Viewpoint Studio, 368sf. for $495. All with w/d available: year lease, references needed. No pets. Call Jenn at 356-6321 x6902 or Sheila x6469. NORTH Conway Kearsarge Rd. 2 bedroom, 2 bath apt. Newer kitchen, w/d in unit, sunroom, deck, oil heat. $895/mo plus utilities. No smoking or pets. Credit check, 1st & security. Call Pauline at Select RE 603-340-1011. NORTH Conway Kearsarge Rd. Cozy 1 bedroom apt. Big deck overlooking brook. Propane heat. $600/mo plus utilities. No smoking, 1 small pet considered. Credit check, 1st & security. Call Pauline at Select RE 603-340-1011. NORTH Conway room for rent: Small inn, near Cranmore. Mountain stream and waterfall on property, private porch. All utilities, heat, WiFi included. Non-smoking, no pets. (603)986-5418. NORTH Conway short term rental, beautiful, extra large furnished studio. Main Street. From $550/mo. plus utilities. 1 bedroom from $650/mo plus utilities. No pets, nonsmokers. (603)356-3836. NORTH Conway Village, Newly renovated 2 br apartment, fireplace, radiant heat, new carpeting. 1 year lease, references required. Security deposit, 1st month, $850/mo plus utilities. (207)632-2815.
Page 36 — THE CONWAY DAILY SUN, Saturday, October 22, 2011
by Abigail Van Buren
UNCLE NEEDLING NIECE DESERVES A TASTE OF HIS OWN MEDICINE
DEAR ABBY: I am a woman in my early 20s. I have an uncle in his late 30s who keeps asking me invasive questions about my relationship status. Every time I see “Uncle Roger” at family gatherings he asks if I have a boyfriend yet, why I’m not seeing anyone or what I’m doing single. He assumes it’s because I don’t want to put up with the boyfriend drama. Uncle Roger makes me feel bad about not being interested in a relationship or dating at the moment. I have told him to back off, without success. He just laughs it off and then the questions continue. Yet, this man has never been in any stable relationship himself. Is there something wrong with me because I haven’t met the right person? Am I supposed to force relationships to happen? What can I say to Uncle Roger to make him stop? -- BEYOND ANNOYED IN OAKLAND, CALIF. DEAR BEYOND ANNOYED: Uncle Roger may think he’s being funny by relentlessly asking why you’re not involved with anyone. Because you have asked him to stop and he presses on, you have two choices: Avoid and ignore him, or turn the tables. When he asks you about your love life, instead of becoming defensive, answer his question with a question: “Why aren’t YOU involved with anyone, Uncle Roger? Why are you still single at your age? Can’t you find anyone who’ll say yes?” And be sure to laugh right back at him. As long as you let him know he’s getting to you, he will continue. Sometimes the best defense is a strong offense. DEAR ABBY: My dad died recently. He and Mom were married 60 years. Apparently, Mom hid her anger at him well, because she now says she couldn’t stand him. None of us kids can bring up any stories or memories about Dad because Mom will say things like, “He was a nar-
cissist,” or “He was no fun,” etc. We remember him as a great provider and a decent, beloved person. Do you have any suggestions on how we can approach the subject with my mother? It’s so hurtful that we can’t talk about our father anymore now that she feels “free” and happy. -- MISSING OUR DAD DEAR MISSING: Yes. Tell your mother that you and your siblings prefer to remember your father as the decent, beloved, great provider he was to all of you. Tell her that you’re glad she’s “free” and “happy,” but the comments she’s making are unwelcome. And if she continues to make them, walk away or share your loving memories of your father when she’s not present. DEAR ABBY: I’m a 27-year-old single woman. I have been hanging out with a guy (“Connor”) for a few months. I enjoy his company, but I don’t have more than platonic feelings for him. I’m reading a book that says women my age are too picky and need to compromise. My question is, how long should I wait until I feel something more or that compromising just won’t work with this one? Am I too picky or do I need to realize I won’t be feeling anything more? -- SINGLE AND CONFUSED IN MINNESOTA DEAR CONFUSED: If you have nothing more than platonic feelings for Connor after seeing him for a few months, those feelings are not likely to change because the chemistry just isn’t there. What you need to do is be more selective about the authors whose books you choose, because someone who would advise women sight unseen that they’re “too picky” is speaking in dangerous generalities. Caveat emptor.
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-Commercial
STOW, ME 3 bedroom, 2 bath, 2 car garage, w/d, $700 plus utilities and plowing. Deb Phaneuf, Re/Max (603)986-0335, (603)356-9444.
INTERVALE, NH Rt. 16A/302“Office space for rent” Single/ multiple rooms. For available rooms and rental price list see Johnsoncpa.com (207)636-7606.
For Rent-Vacation
NORTH Conway Village- 400 to 1450 sq.ft. Premium office/ retail space. Convenient in-town location (next to TD Bank). Newly renovated, great visibility and access from Main Street or North/ South Road, ample parking. Call Roger (603)452-8888.
BARTLETTSeasonal rental available 10/15- 4/15/12. Renovated 2 bedroom, 1.5 bath home, minutes to Attitash. $6500 + utilities for the season. Alex Drummond, RE/Max Presidential, 603-356-9444 x240. CONWAY seasonal Dec-Mar, spacious 3 bedroom, 2 bath home. Fireplace, minutes to 5 ski areas. $3200 plus utilities (401)284-0116. SEASONAL- prime locations 1-4 BR properties. Some slopeside units 603-383-8000, email anne@fgpm.com. SEASONAL: Bartlett, 2 bdrm, 1 bath, chalet. Sleeps 6 to 8, gas heat, parking, deck. Includes plowing, cable, Wi-Fi, $950/mo 978-360-6599. STAY at this Family Fun Cape house next to King Pine. Hike, bike, ski, snowshoe. Seasonal (sleeps 8) pet friendly, weekends & vacation weeks. Great price (603)447-1824. TRADE our coastal Maine house, excellent harbor views, 10 minutes from Popham Beach in Phippsburg, close to Bath; or our Mount Washington Valley home in Albany for 7-10 days in your warm weather, water accessable home, houseboat, etc. Mid March- mid April. We are flexible on the timing of both of our locations. Dave (603)447-6643 or (603)986-5070.
For Rent-Commercial AUTO/ Truck/ RV repair shop on East Conway RD. 2400sf 12' overhead doors, lift and more. For pictures check Craigslist NH, Office/ Commercial listing #2620005446. North Conway.
RETAIL & OFFICE SPACE
NORTH CONWAY VILLAGE Options from 255sf up to 8000sf Call or email for pricing Sheila 356-6321 x 6469 sheiladuane@attitashrealty.com
For Rent
For Rent
For Rent
For Rent
North Conway, 280 Thompson. 3 bed, 2 bath 1400 s.f., electric/ wood heat, no pets $900/mo. (603)423-0313 ext. 3701. bfortin@citysidecorp.com.
North Conway- 2 Bedroom 1 bath house with nice yard in the heart of North Conway Village. N/S, N/P. $800+. Call Josh at Pinkham Real Estate 603-356-5425 or 986-4210.
NORTH Conway- Very well maintained 2 bedroom, 2 bath condo in a great location. Walk to Echo Lake just down the street or drive 5 minutes to the heart of North Conway Village. New windows and sliders. Efficient forced hot air heat. N/S, N/P. $750+. Call Josh at Pinkham Real Estate 603-356-5425 or 986-4210.
OSSIPEE- 3 bedroom, 1.5 bath house, full basement, large yard, $850/mo plus utilities. (603)651-8176, Mike.
NORTH Conway, walk to outlets. Why rent when you can buy! Center of North Conway, 2 bedroom, 1 bath mobile in park. Just completely remodeled. New appliances, new carpet, nice sunny deck, new roof, new furnace, new hot water heater. Great for 2nd home. Owner financing, down payment, good credit. Call owner 603-986-3991. NORTH Conway- 1 Bdrm + loft, w/d, no pets, non-smoker, $650/mo + utilities. Avail 11/1/11. (978)420-5831.
NORTH Conway- Unit 32 Settlers’ Green, 3 bedroom, 2 bath, fireplace, w/d hookup, electric heat. No pets. $800/mo. (603)423-0313 ext. 3701. bfortin@citysidecorp.com. NORTHBROOK 2 BR/ 2 BA, furnished or un-furnished, woodstove, washer/ dryer. Outdoor pool and tennis, views to Cranmore. No pets. $950/month plus utilities. First month and security. References required. Mountain & Vale Realty 356-3300.
TWO OFFICES AVAILABLE OFFICE SPACE IN BERLIN Spacious second-floor corner office in downtown Berlin. Known as the Sheridan Building, this classic revival structure built in 1905 and renovated in the 1980s and 1990s is located next to City Hall. Ceilings are high and windows are plentiful in this corner which includes one large room, one medium sized, and a private bathroom. $450 a month, and includes heat. Second floor, corner office, two rooms with shared bathroom. $350.
For a video tour go to: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DcX8mKIu01Q For more information call Mark 603-356-3456.
NORTH Fryeburg/ Chatham- 3 bedroom, 1.5 bath cottage. Partially furnished. Wood/ electric heat. Association property. Private road. Beach rights. Dogs okay, no smoking. $1000/mo plus utilities. (603)662-6318, leave message. NORTHBROOK Condominium. 2 BR w/ den, 2 bath. Outdoor pool and tennis. W/d, woodstove, views to Cranmore. Attached bath off master bedroom. $900/mo plus utilities. Furnished or unfurnished. Available immediately. No pets. First month and security. References required. Mountain & Vale Realty 356-3300. OSSIPEE, 3 bedroom mobile home with 2 bay gambrel garage on its own land. $950/mo. plus security deposit. (603)540-0307, (603)539-5698. OSSIPEE, Water Village Rd. 14’x70’ mobile home on its own property $850/mo, security deposit. 603-539-5698, (603)540-0307.
REDSTONE- 2 BR apt, screen porch, many updates $725/mo plus utilities, plowing & trash included, no pets. Available immediately. (603)986-6451.
RENTALS Wolfeboro, Ossipee, Tamworth, Effingham, Wakefield and Alton Largest selection of houses, apartments, office space, store fronts, storage units and mobile homes. Short or long term. No pets please. See our website for details. DuCo Property Services, (603)539-5577 Mon-Fri 9-5pm.
ducoproperties@myfairpoint.net,
ducopropertyservices.webnode.com
SACO Woods– available immediately. 2 bedroom condo unit, private screened in deck. W/d. No pets. $800/mo plus utilities. One year lease. One month plus security deposit. References required. Call Mountain & Vale Realty 603-356-3300 x1. SILVER Lake- 1/4 mile to beach and boat launch. Large, 1 bedroom, propane heat, deck, garage. $725/mo (603)367-8822.
COMMERCIAL Space, 1200 sq.ft. Electric, alarm, overhead door, excellent location. Call for more information (603)356-6329. COMMERCIAL spaces, many options, retail space, woodworking shop, auto body or repair shop, offices. Great sunny commercial location, Lovell Village. From $250-$650/mo plus utilities. (603)828-3661. CONWAY- Professional office building, 45 Washington St. Conway has a 3 room a/c office suite (680sf), $595/mo. on 2nd floor, includes heat and electricity. Call Jerry (603)447-2763. GROW YOUR BUSINESS HERE! Garden shop & Landscaping? Christmas Trees? Winter equipment sales? Antiques? Crafts? Art Gallery? Insurance? Engineering? Food Service? Ice Cream? Retail? Lawyer? Ski Shop? Accountant? What ever you do, a new, highly visible location in the most affluent section of the Valley offers Opportunity! Attractively updated log commercial building in dynamite Bartlett location has 500’ frontage on Route 16 between Story Land and Jackson. 1598 SF. Lease for $1,500/mo. plus utilities. Rent-to-own? Or purchase now for $219,500 ($22,000+ under assessed value) E-mail interest and references to pinkham@pinkhamrealestate.com
Broker interest. Or call Peter at Pinkham Real Estate 603-356-5425.
ROUTE 16 Ossipee renovated commercial space with major signage almost 2000sf available for lease asking $1700/mo net. Area of thriving companies and franchises- lots of charm with spectacular views right on Route 16- north side, over 200’ of frontage and ample parking. Contact- Gary-603-539-5276.
For Sale 1.5 year old laying hens $1.50 each. (603)383-4329. 100,000 BTU Dayton Torp. heater w/ tstat $100 (774)218-9908. 2004 E350 box truck, dually, aluminum ramp, air, cruise, tilt, etc. Well maintained. Value $14,000, asking $9,500/obro. (603)356-9982. 4 new 5 bolt Dodge rims 16in. with center caps & lug nuts. Great for snow tires $300. Call (603)367-9943. 4 new Jeep Liberty rims with studded snow tires 15in. with center caps. Tires have about 8k miles on them $400. Call (603)367-9943. ALL like new- drop leaf table with 2 chairs, matching piece with 2 doors and 1 drawer, bookcases, 2 end tables, plus wood rocking chair. (207)730-1129. AMAZING! Beautiful pillowtop matress sets, twin $169, full or queen $249, king $399. See AD under “Furniture”. B.O.B. trailer for bicycle with all attachments $200/obo. (603)447-5371. BEAUTIFUL oak roll top desk, 57”wide x 33”deep. Great condition, $500/obo. Call Dottie (603)374-2303. BEEF $2.70 hanging weight cut to your spec. No drugs or antibiotics. Davis Farm (603)383-4329.
BIG TARP SALE TED’S DISCOUNT
6x8 $1.95, 10x12 $4.80, 12x16 $6.40, 10x20 $8.00, 20x30 $24.00, 20x40 $32.00. (603)539-8005.
CARROLL COUNTY OIL Cash discount, senior citizen discount, prompt deliveries, pre-buy programs. 539-8332. COMMERCIAL Nuova Simonelli Appia espresso maker. No special wring required. $2500/obro. (603)662-3310. CUB Cadet 2544 heavy duty lawn tractor. 42” 3 blade cutting deck. 42” gear driven snow thrower. 3 bag grass catcher. 5 years old. Used 2 years. Excellent condition. $5500 new, will sell $3500/obo. (603)986-5918. Custom Glazed Kitchen Cabinets. Solid maple, never installed. May add/subtract to fit kitchen. Cost $6,000 sacrifice $1,750. 833-8278
D&D OIL Fuel oil and Kerosene, great prices. Call (207)935-3834. or visit: dndoil.com. DRAFTING desks, full size professional drafting tables with tilt tops, and 2 drawers underneath. Great for contractors, crafters, artists or home office. $85.00 603-860-6608 FIREWOOD cut, spit and delivered. 16”, 18”, 20”, 22” $250/cord. 12”, 14” also available (603)356-5923.
THE CONWAY DAILY SUN, Saturday, October 22, 2011— Page 37
For Sale
For Sale
DRY FIREWOOD
PILATES Aero exercise $100, LTT lateral thigh trainer $25, dog bath 2x3 with legs $100, dog grooming supplies $50, 20gal fish aquarium $50, pool table cues and items, Corona 23DK heater $50, flooring nailer $75, Duwalt fold out saw bench $50, (603)662-8349.
$300/cord, 2 cord min. $325/cord 1 cord. Cut, split 12+ months. Immediate delivery. (603)323-8658. EDISON upright antique phono graph. Victrola Sonora. Pitch control. All original, works, very good condition. Needle and records not included. $800/obo North Conway. (603)986-1500. Electric stove, like new $150. (603)730-2590. FIREWOOD and more $185/cord, Ossipee area. Clean, green. Portable saw mill, logging. Snowplowing Ossipee area. Honest, reliable, great reputation. (603)539-9550. FIREWOOD for sale: $150/cord. Call (603)986-8075 - Ken.
PINE lumber aprox 50 pieces; 12”x10’, 10”x8’ etc $175/obo. Also antique 1878 wood plainer, great shape $400/obo. CFMI (603)662-3799. PORTABLE air compressor and 4kw generator, both for $100. (603)447-5371. SEARS/ Kenmore electric range/ oven, 22cf refrigerator (freezer on top), matching (full-size) washer and dryer. White. Excellent condition. 4 years old. North Conway. $250/ea; $750 for all. (603)986-1500
Furniture AMAZING! 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
CASH & Carry blow out sale! Chairs $5, sofas from $40 at the Glen Warehouse. 383-6665. ENGLISH/ Lazyboy soft, comfy full-size sofa, forest green suede w/ ottoman ($450), and matching loveseat w/ ottoman ($350). Excellent condition. North Conway. (603)986-1500.
Free FURNITURE: side dressers, low tables, office/ home bookcases, Salamader low-boy mahogany/ black modular audio video racks, secretarial chair, 2 drawer file. North Conway. (603)986-1500. HIGHEST cash price paid for your junk cars, farm equipment and scrap metal. Free removal, no job too big. (207)393-7318. PAY $250 minimum for your junk car/ truck picked up. Also buying junk vehicles, light iron, heavy iron over the scales. We also buy copper, brass, wire, aluminum, batteries and much more. Call for scale (603)323-7363. T&B Appliance Removal. Appliances & AC’s removed free of charge if outside. Please call (603)986-5506.
Help Wanted
We offer competitive salaries and an excellent benefits package! Please check our website for specific details on each position.
• RN- Full-time in OR • RN/Case Manager- Full-time. Long Term Care. A completed Application is required to apply for all positions Website: www.memorialhospitalnh.org. Contact: Human Resources, Memorial Hospital, an EOE PO Box 5001, No. Conway, NH 03860. Phone: (603)356-5461 • Fax: (603)356-9121
Children Unlimited, Inc. is looking for a:
Family Support Provider - Full time position
Steel Buildings
• Degree in social work, counseling or a related field • At least two years experience working with families • Must have a valid driver’s license, insured vehicle Meet with families in their home or community to assess their needs, identify strengths, and assist them in acquiring appropriate resources in a developing a concrete treatment plan to resolve the issues they have identified. Pay commensurate with experience. Please email or fax resume to: Family Connections Resource Center Children Unlimited, Inc., Barbara Ross, Coordinator PO Box 986, Conway, NH 03818 Tel: (603) 447-6356 • Fax: (603) 447-1114 Email: bross@childrenunlimitedinc.org
FLOTECH water pump with faucet and pressure gauge, 1/2hp, electric hook-up, never used $300/obo (603)383-9240. Ralph 4-8pm.
Reduced Factory Inventory 30x36 – Reg $15,850 Now $12,600. 36x58– Reg $21,900 Now $18,800. Source# 1IB, 866-609-4321
MIDDLE LEVEL GIRLS’ BASKETBALL COACH GRADES 7-8
GARAGE doors, better prices, better doors, guaranteed. Starting @ $487. Installed. Call (603)356-6766. Alphaoverheaddoor.com
SUBMERSIBLE pump system. Well- xetrol tank, all fittings, control, p.gage Pumpco pump, Franklin elec. motor $475 (603)383-4417.
GREEN Firewood, 16” & 18” $180/cord. Fryeburg area. (207)935-1089.
SUN Lite cab over camper, col lapsible. Asking $2200/obo. FMI (603)447-4254.
GUNS, Guns, Guns. I trade, swap, exchange. I do not sell guns. This is a hobby. Please call if you want to trade. Please no junk. Tel. (603)367-8589.
THULE sidekick carrier $100. White 5qt KitchenAid mixer $100 (603)986-9909 after 3pm.
Contact Kerry Brooks, Brett School Athletic Director (603)323-7271 ext 303
TOYOTA RAV4 original equipment, 16 inch wheels, 4 for $70 (603)447-5372.
This Position Open Until filled The Tamworth School District is an Equal Opportunity Employer All employees of the Tamworth School District are required to submit to a standard criminal record check.
FIREWOOD Green Firewood $185/cord Minimum 2 cord delivery
207-925-1138
westernmainetimberlands.com FIREWOOD- seasoned or dry, $275/cord. (207)925-6127. FIREWOOD: Bone dry firewood 8 cords of beach & maple. $300/cord. (603)730-2260
HAMMOND Cadette Organ, very good condition (603)323-8082. HAY, horse hay $5/bale, mulch hay $3/bale. 383-8917. INDUSTRIAL gauge wire racks for displays tool hangers and storage, and door & window security. Large quantity in excellent condition, new $800, asking $400/obo Call for details (603)383-9240 Ralph 4-8pm. KENMORE Elite high capacity washer/dryer. Black with pedestals. Excellent condition. $575. (603)986-5831. KENMORE frostless 22 c.f. refrigerator with ice maker, side-by-side, off white. $200. (603)520-8613. LIFECYCLE LifeStep 9100 professional club version stairclimber. 110v Excellent condition. Orig.$5000, $950/obo. (603)986-1500.
LYMANOIL.COM
SNAP-ON Solus Pro Diagnostic Scan tool. EESC316. 10.2 Update. European bundle. All attachments w/ case. $2500. No trades. (860)944-6237 SOLID pecan bureau $175. Antique oak round table, chairs $500. Wood cook stove $600. Landscape timbers $1.50 ea. Maple padded chairs $40 ea. (603)356-2028.
TROTTER 640 Treadmill. Professional club version weighs 700 lbs. 220v. Excellent condition. Orig: $6000. Best offer. (603)986-1500. USED Ideal Clarion Wood Stove. $150/obo. (603)447-2833. USED Ondura roofing appx 900sf. Includes nails & closure strips. Brick red color. Center Ossipee. $250/obo. 603-553-3587. UTILITY trailer 4’x8’ w/ ramp good for riding mower/snowmobile $350/obo. Tonneau cover fits 96’ Dodge 8’ bed $200/obo. Truck cap fits 8’ bed $150/obo. (207)647-3051, (603)662-8163. VERMONT Castings Intrepid II woodstove $300. Call (603)367-9943.
WOOD HEAT
Now offering propane sales and service. Call or visit www.LymanOil.com Jesse E Lyman, North Conway (603)356-2411.
Vigas Gasification Wood Boilers
MILWAUKIE sawsall $100, new Viking pool cue $75, kerosene heater $65, undercabinet microwave $50. (603)356-6378.
Call today for information & to see a live demonstration!
MOVING sale: 4 jeep tires new 235/70/R16 $100. Carpet, laying equip., furn., stereo, TV. Too much to list. Matt (603)986-5805.
Alternative Heating of Mt. Washington Valley
NEED Cash? Sell your stuff on Ebay. We do the work. You get cash! 10 years experience. ABCybersell (207)925-3135 Mike. NORDIC-TRACK Audio Strider. Stereo speakers, fan, bottle holder. $800 new, used 2x. Asking $500/obro. (603)356-9017. PACIFICA tanning bed, 2 years old, only 1750 hours, fan, radio. Call 356-2544 or 986-5793. Will finance.
603 387-0553 YAMAHA Clabinova piano with stool, like new, $500, must sell. Two seater sofabed, coco brown, used once, $400, 603-466-2293
Found FOUND wrist watch on the Saco at Fryeburg. Email with description to: pobauto@yahoo.com.
Free
Help Wanted
FREE removal of absolutely all unwanted metals. No matter how messy inside or outside. Immediate pickup. Please call 986-8075 Ken.
Experienced tech needed. Must have tools and references. ASE a plus. Call (603)447-3873 or stop by Importech.
Automotive Technician
Kenneth A Brett School, Tamworth, NH Mid-November through End of January/Beginning of February Stipend - $1,200 Prior experience coaching middle level students preferred Should be familiar with safe physical training techniques Background in first aid and CPR Must be available for 2-3 practices &/or games per week Practices 3:15-5:00, Home Games 3:15-6:00, Away Games 1:30-7:30
Page 38 — THE CONWAY DAILY SUN, Saturday, October 22, 2011
Help Wanted Housekeeping F/T or P/T Year Round Positions. Health benefits available.
Fax resume at 374-2414 or apply in person Seasons Condominium Resort Route 302, Bartlett, NH * 374-2361
Statistical Analyst Position with growing analytic software company in Conway, NH. Degree in statistics, math and/or economics required. Position involves sales presentations, training, customer support, and analytic consulting services. Experience in data analysis, predictive modeling and ad hoc reporting preferred. Must have excellent communication skills. Some travel. Salary & benefits commensurate with experience. Send resume and cover letter to jobs@rapidinsightinc.com
DINING ROOM MANAGER The ideal applicant should have prior managerial and fine dining experience, possess a good knowledge of wines and have the ability to manage our restaurant reputation on-line. This is a full time, year round position with a very competitive compensation package and a comfortable working environment. Please call Ellie or Irina at 603-383-9700 to schedule an interview, mail your resume to Box M, Jackson, NH 03846, e-mail your application to ellie@thewentworth.com or apply on-line at www.thewentworth.com under career opportunities.
WANT TO MAKE A DIFFERENCE?? Join our dedicated staff of highly trained professionals. Offering an excellent benefit package and competitive salary, the Carroll County Complex located in Ossipee, New Hampshire is currently accepting applications for the following positions.
MOUNTAIN VIEW COMMUNITY LNA’s- Part-time- 3pm-11pm, 11pm-7am Consulting Licensed Dietitian- 8 hours per week Send resume and references to: Robin Reade, Human Resources Director Carroll County, PO Box 152, Ossipee NH 03864 Tel: 603-539-1721 Fax: 603-539-4287 rreade@carrollcountynh.net EOE
Help Wanted
Help Wanted
Help Wanted
Help Wanted
ACADEMIC COACH
Bookkeeper/ Accountant
Fantastic opportunity for qualified and experienced Academic Coach at Granite State College. Position is 80% time and fully benefited. Go to www.granite.edu/about/jobs.php for detailed requirements and position duties.
Absolute PowerSports has an immediate opening for an experienced bookkeeper/ accountant. This position is responsible for all bookkeeping, accounting and office functions in a fast paced retail environment. Candidates must have a minimum of 3-5 years accounting experience. 2 or 4 year degree preferred. Retail experience a plus. Absolute PowerSports is the North County’s largest powersports dealer. We offer competitive salary and benefits including health insurance and vacation. For more information please call us at 603-466-5454. Resumes can be sent to Absolute PowerSports NH, 461 Main St, Gorham NH 03581 or e-mailed to sales@absolutepowersportsnh. com.
ATTITASH Race Team is seeking a qualified J4 level coach and J5 level coach for the upcoming 2011/12 season. Job requirements include: Strong skiing/ racing skills, outgoing/ positive personality, USSA and/ or PSIA certifications preferred, communicating with coaches, Program Co-ordinator, parents and athletes. Must be available to work weekends and school holidays. Travel is involved but mileage is reimbursed! USSA and NHARA fees are also reimbursed. Come work with the best and ski with the big guns! Contact: Dave Laidman, davelaidman@hotmail.com, (508)954-0886
AVON: Earnings great! No door to door necessary. Choose your own hours. For information call 323-7361.
• Experienced CNC Setup Positions • Quality Control Supervisor Looking for some well rounded CNC setup people and a Quality Control Supervisor 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 ESTIMATOR: For Residential Construction and Remodeling Projects. Leonard Builders 603-447-6980
Head Maintenance Person Local estate needs full time salaried person. Duties include: Plowing, shoveling, use of chainsaw, mowing, yard work, basic electrical plumbing, mechanical, painting & carpentry. All equipment near new. All interior work areas heated. If you are a person of many talents, please respond with description of your skills, references and salary needs. Some benefits included. Mail Resume to:
Head Maintenance Person, PO Box 1940 North Conway, NH 03860
CDL B DRIVER WITH TANK ENDORSEMENT
Looking for an energetic individual willing to learn the drain & septic business. Must have current medical card and good driving record. Please call 603-539-5826. Federal Piping Company, Inc.
BLUEBERRY MUFFIN RESTAURANT needs
Part Time Waitress Weekends and holidays a must. Please apply between 12-2pm. EXPERIENCED Restaurant Manager for the Shovel Handle Pub at Whitney’s Inn, Jackson, NH. Call (603)383-8916 for details or stop by Whitney’s Inn with resume. FAMOUS Footwear Outlet: Hiring Part time Assistant Manager, year round position. Apply at www.qhire.net/brown. HAIRDRESSER wanted- Bungalow Styles is looking for an employee or booth renter to join their team. Please call 356-2544 or 986-5793 for details.
HAIRSTYLIST WANTED Busy salon located in North Conway Village is looking for an experienced hairstylist for booth rental position. Offering a unique opportunity to help get you started. Fun and friendly atmosphere! FMI call Steph @ (603)356-6122 or (603)662-4076.
HOUSEKEEPER YEAR ROUND
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. JOURNEYMAN Plumber. Full time. Must be licensed. Driver’s license in good standing. must be able to pass background and drug test. Flexible hours. Pay comm. with experience. 603-447-8308.
Karla’s Pet Rendezvous Seeking experienced, highly qualified pet groomer with excellent references. Apply online www.karlaspets.com. NEED extra Income? Become an Avon Team Member. Advancement opportunity. Fore more info call Gina (603)323-2390.
Diesel Mechanic Alvin J. Coleman & Son Inc. is actively seeking a qualified and experienced mechanic to perform repair and preventative maintenance on a fleet of heavy trucks and equipment. Position is full time, year round, and available today. Health Benefits and 401k Available. Stop in or call Jim Drouin Alvin J Coleman & Son, Inc. Rt. 16, Conway, NH 603-447-5936 EOE
Village District of Eidelweiss PO Box 299; 1680 Conway Road Madison, NH 03849 603-367-9022
Full Time Highway Laborer Applications are invited for the position of full time Highway Laborer with primary responsibilities for maintaining the roads. Requires a CDL-B license, experience in the construction, maintenance and repair of roads, both asphalt and gravel, drainage ditches and the operation and remedial maintenance of vehicles and equipment. Thorough knowledge and operation of snowplowing equipment is also required. Very attractive wages and benefits offered. Contact the District Office at 603-367-9022 for an application.
Northern Human Services is looking for someone to provide residential supports in your home for a young woman. This young lady loves being active in her community. She is interested in activities such watching the Red Sox, weaving, spending time with friends and her family, loves to go to concerts, plays, sporting events, etc. She would like assistance with learning how to become more independent while being provided an emotionally and mentally stimulating home and social life. She would prefer to live in the Central Carroll County area. Compensation for this contracted position is tax free and available to NH residents only. For more information regarding this position or other Home Care Provider opportunities please contact: Shanon Mason, Director of Housing 356-6921 x1030. Email smason@northernhs.org (1015). All positions require a valid driver’s license, proof of adequate auto insurance, completion of driver’s and criminal background checks. NHS is an EOE. Programs of NHS do not discriminate based on race, color, national origin, age, sex or disability.
THE CONWAY DAILY SUN, Saturday, October 22, 2011— Page 39
Help Wanted PART-TIME temporary work outside general labor, roughly 2 weeks, good pay, good hours. Call (603)662-9596. PERSONAL Care attendant full or part time, experience required. Contact Donna at (603)410-6556. SELF motivated, conscientious, dedicated individual for tire changing position in a busy, family owned tire and repair shop. Truck tire knowledge a plus, however would train the right person. Good work ethics and a positive attitude a must! Benefits include paid vacation, paid holidays. Call Justin or Evan for an appt. 447-2647 or 447-3502.
The Red Fox Bar & Grille is now accepting applications for part time experienced, Servers. Must be able to work weekends. Apply in person between 10-3pm. Or send an email inquiry to: paul@redfoxbarandgrille.com Jackson, NH (603)383-4949.
Vito Marcello’s Italian Bistro Now hiring experienced full and part time Line Cooks (starting at $10/hr & up), Bartenders, Host, Waitstaff, Dishwashers. Apply in person before 4pm. No phone calls please. Ask for Dave or Janet. Now in North Conway Village! WEB Designer: Earn $14.40 to $18.60 DOE creating business web sites in our Berlin, NH office. CrackerJax Marketing, 603-326-3327.
WINTER/ FALL RUSH Permanent and holiday season help. Start immediately. Due to fall/ holiday season our company is experiencing a massive product demand opening various positions in all departments and must be filled this week. No experience required. Must be at least 18. Positions available: Customer Service/ set up and display/ appointment setting/ sales and marketing. Call today for immediate interview (603)822-0219. Or text anytime (603)930-8450.
Home Improvements 1 CALL DOES IT ALL Ken Karpowich Plumbing and Remodeling. Licensed and insured in ME and NH. Repairs, installations, demo to finish remodeling. Call for a free estimate. I will call you back. 800-356-0315, 207-925-1423.
AM BUILDERS Full service contractor. All types roofing, siding, decks, remodeling, new homes and garages. (603)323-7519 View our website: www.AddisonMasonBuilders.com
GRANITE COUNTERS A quality job for a quality price. Quality Marble and Granite, (603)662-8447.
Home Works Remodelers
All phases of construction, from repairs to complete homes. www.sites.google.com/site/home worksremodelers/ (603)455-7115, (603)447-2402, homwrksrem@yahoo.com. NEW Homes Garages Decks Remodeling, Roofing, Interior/ Exterior Painting & Siding. 30yrs experience, fully insured. Jeff (207)583-6577, cell (207)890-7022.
PAINTING Professional quality work. Attention to detail! 20% discount on labor booked thru 12/1/2011. References, free estimates, insured. Chris (603)662-6117.
Instruction
Motorcycles
Services
Services
GUITAR LESSONS
2007 Harley Davidson 1200 Custom. Extra seat, extra equipment. $8500 firm. (603)301-1177.
Snowmobile Services
FREE UHAUL TRUCK
Cleaning & More
Full sled tune-up including ski alignment, track tension, grease, fluid check, carburetor, clutch, and filter cleaning. Detailing also available. No need to trailer, door-to-door service. $100 per machine. Call Kris (207)890-1314.
With move in. Climate Control Storage available. 5x5s all the way up to 10x30s for all your storage needs. Visit East Conway Self Storage 819 East Conway Road. (603)356-8493.
With Mike Stockbridge- Berklee, UMaine All styles, levels, and ages. www.mikestockbridge.com (603)733-9070.
League of NH Craftsmen Fall Craft Classes
Pottery and Glassblowing Classes begin Nov. 1! www.nhcraftsmen.org 603-356-2441. OIL Painting Classes. Beginners and advances. Robert Gordon Gallery, Conway, NH (603)447-2853.
Land 2 lots: Panoramic view from Cranmore to Pleasant Mountain. Near National forest at foot of Evans Notch. Frontage on 113 north. $50,000 each. Call Jim Layne (207)935-3777. CENTER Conway- Robinwood Acres. Saco River access. 3 lots. (603)867-7933. CENTER Conway. Location, Location, Location! Jct. of 302 and 113. 78 acres. $299,000. 603-367-8054. CONWAY, NH 1.89 acres on Applecroft Lane on Saco River $74,900/firm (978)468-4627. radiof075@hotmail.com DENMARK Maine- Motivated Seller- owner says sell- make an offer on beautiful 1.3 acre lot. Perked, mobile friendly, minutes to Moose Pond & Shawnee. MLS 937986. Cell: Exit Realty Leaders, (207)890-5872, Photos at www.davesellsmaine.com FRYEBURG- Belaire Estates- .69 acre lot, 2010 valuation $41,600. Includes septic, electric, water. Ready for building. $22,999. (207)452-3001. HOUSE lot on Passaconaway Road directly across from Red Eagle Pond, view of Moat Mountain, borders White Mountain Forest. Approved 3 bedroom house lot, has driveway, well, appletree, middle of Paradise $45,000/obo (207)404-0912.
MOUNTAIN VIEWS
Buy • Sell • Trade www.motoworks.biz
Vacation Rentals Private Homes Offices 24/7 Windows
Personals
Carl & Dixie Lea 447- 3711 ~ credit cards accepted ~ ~ Est 1990 ~
(603)447-1198. Olson’s Moto Works, RT16 Albany, NH.
REAL woman needs a real man. Sandy (603)662-4825.
Recreation Vehicles 35’ 5th wheel camper 1989 Travel Villa. Excellent condition. $4000/obo. Call for more info (603)447-8887.
Real Estate 1ST floor condo in Conway for sale in excellent condition. 2 bedrooms, 1 bath. $79,900. Call for information 603-651-9491. 9 acres, commercial, Rt.16 Ossipee. 5,500 s.f. building, 3 exits, good retail history. $150,000. tdwrt16@netzero.net. INVERNESS, Florida: 2 bedroom, 1 bath block home for sale with a Florida room, carport and a block shed, very nice cond. Have pics to share. Ready to move in or a great get away. Very low maintenance, completely furnished with all appliances. $55,000/ obro (603)986-5424. NORTH Conway, quiet park, walk to outlets, river, trails. Completely remodeled: New roof, new furnace, new hot water heater. Great for ski get away, can't beat the location! Call for more info, owner financing with good credit. Call 603-986-3991
Rentals Wanted LOOKING to rent your vacation property for the season or long term. Call Anne @ (603)383-8000 or anne@fgpm.com.
Roommate Wanted
Eaton, 2 acre corner lot w/ views, town road, surveyed, soils, 15 min. to Conway, private town beach on Crystal Lake, $48,500. Call Mary Beth @ Northern Exposure RE. 603-344-0927 or email mbhertel@northernexp.com
SMOKE-FREE home- Effingham, share home- utilities included. $100/wk. Art, (603)539-5699.
Lost
MATURE male looking for roommate to share expenses in Conway. No smoking. Call (603)986-6882.
LOST Cat- Bartlett Village, gray altered male. Reward. (603)986-7936.
Mobile Homes 1959 Elcar mobile home. 55’x10’, pitched roof, 20x8 addition (enclosed porch), well, septic system, 8x10 shed on own 50x100 land lot, located on 2 Chickville rd. Center Ossipee. $35,000. (386)846-6502. 2004 14x80 mobile home, 3 bed, 2 bath, cathedral ceiling, 2 decks, excellent condition. Located in Lamplighter Park $24,900 (603)447-6033. NORTH Conway center, walk to grocery, outlets. Clean, quiet park. Great for 2nd home, or working local shops. Beautifully remodeled including NEW appliances, new carpet, paint, new roof, furnace and much more! Sunny deck, 2 car parking. Call owner for viewing 603-986-3991. Financing with down payment & good credit.
Motorcycles 2000 Harley Davidson, Ultra Classic, metallic green & black, new motor, many accessories, asking $7950 Paul 603-752-5519. 2000 HD FSXT only 24,000 miles, lots of chrome call. Carl for more info (603)662-6093.
INTERVALE- room for rent. Non drinker/ non smoker. Mature, responsible and reliable. $325/mo plus shared utilities. (603)730-2663.
Services #1 SANDY'S CLEANING Private, seasonal homes, rentals, commercial, construction cleaning. Security checks, maintenance. 30 years serving the valley. (603)383-9342.
Affordable Handyman Senior discounts, interior/ exterior painting, windows, sheetrock, carpentry. Insured. Gary (603)356-3301. C&P Heating. Fully licensed & Insured. Cleanings $74.95. Services & Installations (603)515-6012. CAN or can not small engine repair shop. Contact Levi or Ken, Ossipee NH. (603)539-4376. CARPENTER available to Contractors or Homeowners 30+ years experience in residential construction. Mike (603)447-2883, (603)499-0234.
Custom Saw Milling Custom Planing Custom Kiln Drying Call for details Home Grown Lumber (603)447-3800.
SNOWPLOWING Dependable service, plowing/ sanding. North Conway, Kearsarge, Glen, Intervale Bartlett. (603)383-6466.
SNOWPLOWING EXPERIENCED care giver for home care, available days, references available, (603)383-6106.
FALL CLEANUP 1 ton dump truck for hire. Haul leaves, wood, dump runs, etc. (603)447-3045, (603)733-6656. HOMESCHOOL Tutor/ Consultant- Regular and special ed. Highly qualified teacher available to consult you in your program, instruct, assess or do group lessons. Ossipee, lynnclarke.com (407)429-5953. HYPNOSIS for habit change, stress, regression. Michael Hathaway, DCH, certified hypnotherapist. Madison 367-8851. www.whitemountainhypnosiscenter.com.
J-N-R LANDSCAPING Fall clean-ups, senior discounts. Will do dump runs. Free estimates. Cell: (603)730-7701 Russell.
KEN'S PLOWING Affordable rates. Ossipee & Madison area. (603)733-7751.
MAPLE LEAF Oil burner tune-up $79.99. Includes: Efficiency check/ adjustment. New: Oil filter, oil pump screen, nozzle and combustion chamber/ heat exchanger cleaning. David (603)733-7058. www.MapleLeafCorp.com
Metal & Asphalt Roofs Vinyl siding w/ insulation, replacement windows. Also home repairs. Alstate Siding & Roofing since 1971. (603)367-1055, (207)631-5518.
MOTIVATION WORKS Landscaping, remodeling/light painting, winter shoveling, low rates. Contact Chris Bellen (603)960-4104. Email: chrisbellen27@yahoo.com. PERSONAL care assistant, respite care, full-time, part-time days, nights, and fill-in. 25 years experience. 207-807-1011.
POOL CLOSINGS Winter Covers, Service, Maintenance, Equipment, Liners, 22 years. 603-785-8305.
PROCLEAN SERVICES Fall cleaning, windows, carpets, rental cleaning, condos, janitorial services, commercial, residential. Insured. (603)356-6098.
Property Maintenance Snow removal, plowing, shoveling. Interior, exterior maintenance & renovations, property checks. Serving the Bartlett/ Glen area. A licensed & insured contractor since 1993. Carr Contracting. 603-383-4334.
“QUALITY” CLEANING Local family business. Office store, home, camp. Great references. John’s Cleaning. (207)393-7285.
Real McCoy Painting Serving the MWV and surrounding areas. Residential and commercial. Interior/ exterior. Green products & winter rates available. Insured. Call today for a free estimate. (603)733-5008. SHAWN’S Services- Plowing for Conway and Center Conway. Also Firewood $200/cord. (603)662-5385.
Eidelweiss to Conway to Hales Estates. Free estimates www.vandynecarpentry.com 603-662-7388.
SNOWPLOWING Fall Clean-ups and tree work in Ossipee and surrounding towns. JJS Property Service. (603)539-7868, (603)651-7313.
THE HANDYMAN No job too small. Plus house painting interior & exterior. Reasonable rates. Conway and Freedom area. Call George (603)986-5284.
TOTAL FLOOR CARE Professional Installation, sanding, refinishing and repair of wood floors. 447-1723.
TRIPLE CLEAN CLEANING SERVICES
Serving MWV for over 15 years. We do it all! Fred & Melanie Peabody. (603)539-5679, cell: 733-7814.
Wayne’s Light Trucking Specializing in real estate clean out, property cleanout, demolition of old structures, roof shoveling, etc. (603)730-2590. WEB sites, internet marketing, brochures, newsletters, press releases, corporate branding, CrackerJax Marketing, 326-3327.
Storage Space
FREEDOM Storage. 5x5, 5x10, 10X10, 10X20, 20X25. We rent for less, Rte. 25. 603-651-7476.
GLEN WAREHOUSE Storage, household, autos, motorcycles, RVs, snowmobiles. Discounted Penske Truck rentals (603)383-6665 www.valleyauto.us NORTH Conway Storage; 24 hour access; secure, dry. $35 special 4’x10’ units. Climate controlled units. Larger units available also. Discounted Budget Truck Rentals Call Rachael at (603)383-6665.
RV STORAGE Outside storage. Space 1/4 mile north of Story Land. Low rates. Call (603)383-4000. STORAGE trailers for rent, 27 to 45’. Good clean dry units. Call D. Rock. 1-800-433-7625.
U-STORE-IT Seasonal Storage Available. Great rates. 5x10- $39/month; 10x15$89/month Call U-Store-It (603)447-5508.
Winter Auto Storage
Wood floors, car covers, battery maintenance, must be in before snow. (603)323-7982.
Wanted $250 & up for unwanted cars & trucks. Call Ricker Auto Salvage (603)323-7363.
WET BASEMENTS, cracked walls, buckling wall? Straighten with no digging, 603-356-4759 rwnpropertyservices.com.
Situation Wanted WRITER wants to caretake property starting November 1st. Work barter possible. Call (603)986-6882.
Snowmobiles SNOWMOBILE Package: Arctic Cat ZL600 EFI and ZL550 ESR w/ Triton clamshell trailer. Both under 900 miles, like new. $6000. firm. Call (603)398-1388.
Storage Space All your storage needs in the heart of the valley. Modern, clean, dry and secure. Mountain Valley Self Storage (603)356-3773. www.mvselfstorage.com.
AUTO STORAGE October to May for only $600. 10x20 Self storage unit. 603-860-6608 BROWNFIELD Self Storage. 10x10, 10x15, 10x20,10x30. Prepay 6 months- 7th month free! Call for prices. (207)625-8390. COMMERCIAL Storage Units, centrally located in North Conway, 200 sq.ft. and up. Ideal for small businesses. Call Roger (603)452-8888. EAST Wakefield- Rt153- Located close to both Belleau and Province Lakes. Self storage units available 5x10, 10x10, & 10x25. 24 hour easy access. Call (603)539-5577.
FREE MOVING TRAILER use with 2 month rental of any unit at Alternative Storage. 32' low deck enclosed moving trailer brought to you, then towed to storage facility. Units filling fast, call now. 603-860-6608 Center Conway.
Wanted To Buy CASH for antiques, gold, silver, coins, furniture, etc. Conway Village Pawn, 150 Main St. Conway, (603)447-2255.
EAST COAST ART & ANTIQUE BUYERS Art, collections, furnishings, books, etc. Professional, discrete. Marc (603)986-8235.
GOLD OVER $1,600/0Z.! WE BUY DIAMONDS, GOLD, SILVER, COINS,
Platinum, Jewelry, Watches & Antiques. Free estimates. North Country Fair Jewelers. Established 1969. 2448 Main St., North Conway (603)356-5819. LOOKING for trains, cars, boats, planes, teddy bears, thimbles, stamps. Hartmann Museum. Roger (603)356-9922 www.hartmannrr.com.
WE BUY GOLD & SILVER
That’s what we do! Paying more cash daily than ever before. 2 miles south of Conway on Rt.16. Conway Auctions & Gold buyers (603)447-3422.
Yard Sale ESTATE SALE 126 Simon Hill Rd., (off Circuit Rd.), Ossipee. Antiques, tools, furniture, etc. Each day till done, starting at 10am. FMI (603)923-8903.
Page 40 — THE CONWAY DAILY SUN, Saturday, October 22, 2011
Classifieds Continued Yard Sale
Yard Sale
ESTATE SALE SAT/ SUN Held indoors & outdoors. Household full. 3 large original prints signed & numbered by E. Sietz $300 each. Beautiful large dining set, glass top, 6 chairs silk, 2 display cabinets with light. Art, tables, lamps, many collectibles, much more. 86 Adam Circle, off Old Mill Rd., near Conway Lake. Directions to sale: Take Rt. 113 toward Fryeburg. Turn right at Mill Street (Veteran’s Triangle), pass lake, 1st street turn left. Next street on right will be Adam Circle. No signs. 8am-4pm. (603)730-7442. FREE, free, free. Yard sale left overs. Moving and need everything gone. Sat., Oct. 22nd. 9am-2pm & Sun., Oct. 23rd. 9am-2pm. 8 Rainbow Drive, Ossipee, NH 03864. GARAGE/ Yard Sale, 208 Bridgton Rd, Fryeburg, red house across from Vet on 302, Fri/ Sat/ Sun Oct 21-23, 100 + items, antique grain processor, tools, air compressor, dishes, stuffed animals, exercise equip, chandelier, bicycles, Nascar, sporting goods, stereo equip. (207)216-0220. HUGE Annual Indoor Yard Sale Fundraiser f/b/o Madison Preschool. Sat. 10/22 8am–1pm & Sun. 10/23 8am–noon, Madison Elementary School Gym, Rte 113, Madison. Furniture, kitchen stuff, books, videos, clothes, toys, baby goods, holiday, much more. SAT. 10/22 Garage Sale, 9am-2pm. Hurricane Mtn.. Road across from Kearsage trail head, North Conway.
Our
24th Year!
INDOOR MOVING SALE Basement to bedrooms and everything in between. Lots of furniture and much more! Sat. 10/22 9am-5pm, Sun. 10/23, 9am-3pm. Rt. 302, Bridgton, ME, across from elementary school (48 Portland Rd.). INDOOR yard sale- October 22, 8am-3pm, at the Former Lenox store just north of the Green Granite Inn on Rt.16, North Conway. Lots of furniture, appliances, and building material (including free paint). Proceeds to benefit MWV Habitat for Humanity. INDOOR/ Outdoor Yard Sale Saturdays 9-3pm through October. Hundreds of items. Cross Road, Tamworth, off Ossipee Lake Road, Gray warehouse. MOVING Sale, indoors. Funiture, tools, etc. At Hattie Pike Rd, Fryeburg, ME, off of Rt.5/113. 10am-3pm. 207-890-2880. Sale starting Oct. 20th thru Nov. 15th or everything sold. All must go! NEW & not: houseware, tools, collectables, clothes, sports, art, books, magazines. 30 Hamsphire Road, Freedom. 9am-2pm, 10/20. YARD Sale Sat., Oct. 22nd. Lots of good stuff. Household items, Halloween decorations, etc. 545 Eastman Rd. (Across from Time Warner Cable) Redstone. 9am-3pm.
Bar tlet t Ser vice 302, Bar tlet t Cent er Rt e. 374-6039
Your Trailer Sales and Service Center Over 20 Trailers in stock from 6’ long to 18’ long
Prices
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ALNOR POWER EQUIPMENT 159 E. Conway Road • 356-2500 GENERAL REPAIRS FOR ALL MAKES OF POWER EQUIPMENT
Benefit for Folces Oct. 23
Former North Conway residents injured in motor vehicle accident Sept. 29 CONWAY — There will be a benefit for Matt Wallace and Freja Folce from 2 p.m. to 11 p.m. at Flatbreads in North Conway. Wallace and Folce, former residents of North Conway who are now living in Maine, were involved in a serious motor vehicle acci-
Effingham Town Column
dent Sept. 29. There will be live music, silent auction and raffle. A portion of every pizza and every Tuckerman’s Beer sold will be added to the fund. For donations or more information contact Staci Blair at 356-4470 or staciblair@flatbreadcompany.com.
Henry Spencer 539-4964
How to deal with debt workshop Oct. 26
Our Effingham parent-teacher organization will be sponsoring their very successful "Trunk or Treat" on Friday, Oct. 28, from 6 to 8 p.m., held in the school parking lot. For those un-familiar with how this works: on its simplest level all you have to do is show up with costumed kids in tow and walk from one amazingly decorated car to the next in the lot for the kids to collect their boodle; for those with a somewhat more developed sense of participation you can decorate your vehicle in suitable seasonal spooky themes, load it up with candy and goodies to hand out and wait for the parade of short witches, goblins and current kid’s characters to pass by and relieve you of said treats. Past years have proven this to be a wonderful safe way for your in house Halloween beasties to load up healthy sugars and food colorings; definitely one of childhood’s greatest pleasures. A word of advice to parents, bring your camera: past years have proven to be way more than slightly photogenic, there is just something wonderful about the look on the smallest children’s faces as the begin to discover that all they have to do is mosey up to some car and the funny looking folks around it will just hand over candy by the bag full. Ain’t life a wonder? A reminder that the White Mountain Waldorf School will be holding its annual Walk Through the
STUMP GRINDING Brush Removal
Grades on Nov. 1 from 8 to 9:30 a.m. Offering a quality choice in education for 27 years to its surrounding community the White Mountain Waldorf School hopes those with elementary and middle school aged children will be able to stop by and see what it is all about. For more information447-3168 or info@ WhiteMountainWaldorf.org Co-op Extension Service will be offering a workshop on the dangers of debt and how to deal with them on Oct. 26 from 3:30 to 5 p.m. The workshop is free and will cover the dangers inherent in assuming credit card debt and how to start dealing with the problem if it already exists in your family’s budget. The meeting will be held at Memorial Hospital Conference room in North Conway. For more information, pre-register by calling Ms. O’Coyne at 356-5461 ext. 2384. This will be the first of two weekends worth of fright, fear, and trepidation at Par Sem’s wonderful haunted house. The doors open at 6:30 p.m. and continue to entice all fools for fear until 9:30 on both Friday and Saturday nights for this and next weekend. This isn’t about candy, it’s about setting yourself up for a bit ‘o’ fright, and possibly, for the willing, a good solid scare. see EFFINGHAM page 43
ROCKY BRANCH BUILDERS
Affordable Home Solutions
Asphalt Roofing System starting at $2/sf Metal Roofing starting at $3/sf Vinyl Siding starting at $1.60/sf Pressure Treated Decks starting at $9/sf
Brush Hogging 603-662-6079 Tony Horman
603-730-2521 rockybranchbuilders@gmail.com PO Box 693 Glen, NH 03838
Restaurant
Hood Cleaning Call The Boys in the Hood CLEANING AND MORE
447-3711
Inc.
Complete Landscape & Property Services 383-6466
Fall Clean-up, Leaf Pile Pick-up Drainage Work - House & Driveway
SNOW PLOWING
Mulch, Compost, etc. - Delivered and/or Installed Tree Work, Brush Hogging, Brush Cutting & Chipping, Light Excavation, Home Repairs, etc.
CREMATION An Affordable Alternative. 1-800-539-3450 www.baker-gagnefuneralhomes.com
Baker-Gagne Funeral Home
Rt 16 West Ossipee, NH 539-3301 Mill Street Wolfeboro. NH 569-1339 F. Rick Gagne, Funeral Director
603-356-8997 northcountrycottage.com M ain Street N orth C onw ay V illage next to H andcrafter’s B arn
Sun 9-5,M on-T hurs 9-6, Fri & Sat 9-7
Tim Murphy Proprietor 8 Normand Avenue Gorham, NH 03581
Master Lic. #4428 Cell: 603-723-3777 Home: 603-466-1079
THE CONWAY DAILY SUN, Saturday, October 22, 2011— Page 41
Gibson Gleanings
Barbara Ray
Caregivers support group starting Nov. 2
I use to work at a local “hometown” bank back in the 1980s as a customer service rep. On day an elderly lady sat down at my station and asked me what the current rate for a savings account was. “Five percent,” I said. Her eyes widened and in a thoroughly disgusted voice she retorted, “Five percent! At that rate I might as well stuff my money in a mattress.” Hmmmm. I can’t imagine what she would say today. For any caregivers out there, we will be holding a leader facilitated support group program every Wednesday from 12:30-2:30 p.m., starting Nov. 2. It is a six-week course. You will receive healthy information to build self care into your life as well as support to sustain this self-care plan. This program is co-sponsored with the Carroll County Visiting Nurses and is free and open to the public. Be sure to check the calendar below for other activities taking place this week. Have a great week & pray for our troops. Monday, Oct. 24: Chair exercise class begins at 10:30 a.m. in the activity room. The Met video tours begin at 12:30 p.m. in the activity room. Leave for bowling at 12:30 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 25: Strength, balance and stretch classes begin at 10 a.m. in the activity room. The care-giver support group will meet in the pool room this week at 10 a.m. Lunch will be served at noon at our Silver Lake meal site today. Melcher & Prescott will offer their Medicare programs at 12:30 p.m. in the activity room. This is a paid presentation. Wednesday, Oct. 26: AARP Safe Driving course will be held at Silver Lake Landing from 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. Wii games are available from 10:30 to 11:30 a.m. and 12:30 to 1:30 p.m. in the pool room. Game day begins at 12:30 p.m. in the activity room. North Conway Ambulance will offer free blood pressure screenings in the dining room at 11:45 a.m. Thursday, Oct. 27: Belly dance class begins at 9 a.m. in the activity room. Chair exercise class begins at 10:30 a.m. in the activity room. Medicare counsel-
ing is available in the dining room from noon to 1 p.m. today. The New York City trip slideshow will be held in the activity room at 12:30. A scone tea will begin at 2:30 p.m. in the dining room. A Belly Dance Hafle will be held in the activity room at 6:30 p.m. Friday, Oct. 28: Strength, balance and stretch class begins at 10 a.m. in the activity room. A fleece crafting bee will begin at 12:30 in the activity room.
Upcoming Programs Blood Pressure Clinics: on the last Wednesday of each month from 11:45 a.m. to 12:45 p.m. and the second Tuesday of each month from 11 a.m. to noon. Exercise Groups: Chair Exercise are offered Mondays and Thursdays at 10:30 a.m.; Strength, balance and stretch class is available Tuesdays and Fridays at 10 a.m. and belly dance classes is offered Thursdays at 9 a.m. One-on-One Computer Labs: on the first and third Thursday of each month. Call 356-3231 to reserve a spot. Caregivers Support group with Jane Galloway every Tuesday morning at 10:30 a.m. Autumn Teas : Scones and tea will be offered Oct. 27, Nov. 22 and Dec. 20 at 2:30 p.m. Cost is $5. Care for the Caregiver: a theory guided, leader facilitated support group will meet Wednesdays from 12:30 to 2:30 p.m. for six weeks starting Nov. 2. Upcoming trips need sign ups as soon as possible so that we can purchase tickets. Call 356-3231 to reserve a spot. Portland Pirates: Wednesday, Jan. 18, 2012. The cost is $35, including a ticket, transportation and a box lunch. Pop’s Concerts: Dinner out and great concerts at the Merrill Auditorium, Feb. 26, 2012 is a Benny Goodman tribute, afternoon concert for $55. Menu: Monday: roast pork Eisenhower, Tuesday: spinach lasagna; Wednesday: ham casserole; Thursday: Canadian meat pie; Friday: beef stew Bourguignon.
GIANT INDOOR YARD SALE Saturday, October 22nd 8:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. (rain or shine) Former Lenox Store, Rt. 16 just north of Green Granite Inn
FURNITURE: Couches, Sleep Sofas, Chairs, Dining Sets, Lamps, Tables, Headboards and Bed Frames, Chests, etc. APPLIANCES: Cook Top, Wall Ovens, Refrigerators, Stoves, Washers and Dryers BUILDING MATERIAL: Sinks, Vanities, Toilets, Doors, Windows, Power Tools, Light Fixtures, Various Hardware Items and Free Paint. From 2-3pm, remaining merchandise will be given free to Irene Storm Victims. – PROCEEDS TO BENEFIT MWV HABITAT FOR HUMANITY –
—FULL SERVICE BAKERY—
Rt. 16 • Conway, NH
447-2218
Open Mon-Sat 4am-5pm; Sun 4am-Noon
Pumpkin Donuts & Whoopie Pies
Halloween Goodies • Shortbread Cookies • Cupcakes • Halloween Decorated Cakes
325
Breakfast Sandwich & Medium Coffee $ Ham, Bacon or Sausage, with Egg and Cheese, on a Bagel, Croissant or English Muffin
PUMPKIN BREAD • FRUIT BREADS
+tax
The Valley’s Best Downeast Coffee
Handcut Donuts
75¢ ea • 1/2 dzn $3.75 • dzn $6.95
1
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Where Folks Who Drink Real Coffee Go! 16 oz.
NANCY’S ALTERATIONS AND
YARN SHOP
Mark Scribner Propane Service Furnace Cleaning •Water Heaters
Rinnai Specials Call For A FREE Quote! Licensed In ME & NH Fully Insured • 30 Years Experience (603) 452-5090 - Cell (603) 662-6138
Frechette Oil & Backhoe Service Let us • Home heating oil • K-1 Kerosene • Premium Diesel • 10-day cash discount • Bulk delivery (call for details) • Automatic Delivery
• Excavation • Septic • Site Work • Clearing • Water Lines • Foundations • Free Estimates
Call for
current protect your home pricing against Winter Freeze-Up with the Scul-Tel Home Monitor. Call today! 24 hr Burner Service.
356-5342
West Side Road, North Conway We now accept VISA & MasterCard
DOOR PRIZES!
Sunday, Oct. 30th
Receive 20% OFF ALL Yarn Purchases & Selected Merchandise If You Wear A Costume!
FALL KNITTING CLASSES
• SWEATERS - Tuesdays, 6-8pm • THE KNITTING DOCTOR IS IN! Wednesdays, 1-3pm Beginners— Bring in your problems! • CLASSES: Sundays - Fair Isle Mittens with Cindy 12noon-2pm Monday - Crochet with Martha 1-3pm -Learn how to make Christmas stockings! 16 Norcross Circle, North Conway Village Mon-Fri 8-4:30, Sat 8-4, Sun 10-2
(6 0 3 ) 3 5 6 - 73 4 4 • 9 8 6 - 19 0 0
Page 42 — THE CONWAY DAILY SUN, Saturday, October 22, 2011
–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– OBITUARIES ––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
Kenneth Alfred Wiggin
Mount Washington Valley
SK ATING CLUB Winter Session I Skating Lessons Group Lessons in: • Figure Skating • Learn to skate for Hockey • Lessons for all ages and abilities offered on SUNDAYS, TUESDAYS & THURSDAYS
CLASSES START
OCT 30TH
All lessons taught by club coaches and junior coaches at Ham Arena. FMI visit: www.mwvsc.org Also Register for Holiday Ice Show!
Mount Washington Valley
SKATING CLUB
PO Box 1961 Conway, NH 03818 603-986-1650 In Maine 207-925-1090
Kenneth Alfred Wiggin, 67, passed away on Monday, Sept. 5, 2011, in Boston, Mass., of complications following heart surgery. He and his wife, Karen Lawsing, lived in Jericho, Vt. Ken was born in North Conway on April 28, 1944, to Lillian Demers Wiggin and Kenneth E. Wiggin, both deceased. He was also predeceased by an infant daughter, Lynn Elizabeth; his first wife, Lea Bushway, of Lebanon; his daughter, Elizabeth "Boo"; and his sister, Linda L. Wiggin. Ken spent his childhood in Tamworth He grew up hiking, hunting, fishing and loving the great outdoors. He had a vast knowledge of outdoor lore and felt much satisfaction sharing his experiences with his son, Kenny. So much joy was found in tramping the hills and streams of Vermont and New Hampshire with his father, Uncle Harold and Kenny. To this day, Ken, Uncle Harold and Kenny swap stories and jokes amid much laughter, tears and loving embraces. Ken graduated from Kennett High School in Conway where he was on the cross-country team in the fall so he could get into shape for the ski team in the winter. He was also active in student government. Ken was the first Kennett High graduate to major in engineering at the University of New Hampshire. He graduated with a bachelor's of science in electrical engineering and began working at IBM Burlington a few days later. During his 43 and a half years at IBM as a semiconductor engineer, he worked as a manager, team leader, project leader and go-to guy. Ken established protocols and believed the task should be done in a scientific manner to validate and protect the process and the results. Guessing and hit/miss decision-making brought out the bear in him; he could be fearsome in defense of the integrity of the work product. He was made senior engineer in 1993 and was proud of his tenure at IBM, both in his role, the people he worked with and the products they all helped develop. He found being on the cutting edge of semi-conductor technology to be stimulating and fun. He loved his job and the people he worked with. A humble man, he praised others and thought himself lucky to be associated with, "the finest minds I know." He retired in July 2010, when he realized the Lord had just sent the third boat and he needed
to climb aboard. In January 2002, IBMers noted Ken walking with a bounce in his step, a smile on his face, and a gleam in his eye. They attributed his light heartedness to the "buzz" from his new BMW M5, named Barbie; actually, it was the "buzz" from his new romance. On Feb. 8, 2003, Ken married the love of his life, Karen Sue Lawsing. They embarked on a honeymoon that never ended, yet each felt they were already married forever. Ken and Karen were blissfully happy in their world, working, laughing, playing, singing, dancing, holding hands and loving together. Each had married their best friend and soul mate. Ken and Karen were active in Calvary Episcopal Church where they found fellowship, spiritual guidance and opportunities to help their neighbors and community. Ken spearheaded the monthly "Soup and Bread Suppers" for hungry people. He became the Senior Warden and guided the congregation through some difficult times. Ken had a fragile body and a mighty mind and spirit. Physically he suffered from several debilitating diseases. He was single-minded in his determination to hold their ravages at bay with diet, exercise, lifestyle and medication. Ken is admired as an honest, kind man who gave unsparingly of his time, energy, knowledge and experience. He was always willing to help a neighbor or those in need. Ken believed the task should be done to the best of his ability. Ken leaves behind his wife, Karen; his son, Kenneth A. Wiggin II, of Starksboro, Vt.; his stepchildren, Julia and Jesse Arbogast; his beloved sister, Neurine E. Wiggin, of Glencoe, Ill.; and his brother, Gary Wiggin, of Chocorua. Ken was much beloved by his family and friends and he will be deeply missed. Ken made the world a better place. May those of us touched by his spirit, cherish the legacy he gave us and follow his path. Visiting hours were on Saturday, Sept. 10, at Calvary Episcopal Church in Jericho. A funeral service followed in the church. Contributions in Ken's memory may be made to the Elizabeth Lynn Wiggin Memorial Fund, c/o The Merchants Bank, P.O. Box 1009, Burlington, VT, 05402. Arrangements are by Boucher and Pritchard Funeral Directors.
?
Window Cleaning
Cleaning and More 447-3711
STEEL ROOFS
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SEWER CONNECTIONS ...... COMMERCIAL SNOW PLOWING Septic Systems • Roads Site Work • Water Lines
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THE CONWAY DAILY SUN, Saturday, October 22, 2011— Page 43
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– OBITUARY –––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
Katherine Colleen Nunnelly
Katherine Colleen Nunnelly, 63, of Kansas City, Mo. passed away Sept. 29, 2011, with family at her side. Colleen was born April 12, 1948, in Schenectady, N.Y., to Howard Davault and Emily Louise Cardwell Nunnelly. She grew up in bucolic New Florence, Mo. Colleen graduated from Montgomery County R-2 High School and the University of Missouri, Phi Beta Kappa. She served two years in the Teacher Corps. Colleen was a member of the first class of Antioch Law School, where she graduated with a doctorate of jurisprudence in 1975. The Legal Aid Society of Western Missouri employed Colleen until 1984. She was then hired as managing attorney for UAW Legal Services for three offices in the Kansas City area. Colleen retired in May of 2010. She served on the Board of Directors of Unicorn Theater, volunteered as an instructor for English as a Second Language, and served as Missouri State Chairman for the National Organization of Bankruptcy Attorneys. Colleen had a deep appreciation for the natural calm of Lovell, Maine, where she vacationed almost every summer since law school. She bought a cabin there in 1987. EFFINGHAM from page 40
Early perusal by your reporter of the site proves again that the folks at ParSem do not do anything by half measure. Tickets are $10 and $5 for those 12 and under. Rain or shine. Your reporter will be lurking around somewhere looking for you. The tax collector’s office in Effingham
She is survived by her mother; her two sisters, Cherie Bledsoe-Sutton and Robin Nunnelly; Robin’s husband Stephen Chappell; niece, Kama Bledsoe and her husband, Michael Owen; nephew, Timothy Davault Chappell; niece, Cortnee Smith; Cortnee’s husband, Brian; great-niece, Isabelle Owen; great-nephew, Will Owen, greatniece, Audrey Smith, and great-niece Noelle Smith. Her memorial will be on Oct. 29. Visitation is at 3:30 p.m. and memorial services are at 4:30 p.m. at New Florence United Methodist Church at 209 West Mortimer Street in New Florence, Mo. Memorial contributions are welcomed at: Legal Aid of Western Missouri Endowment, whose mission, providing legal representation to those unable to afford it, Colleen strongly believed in. 1125 Grand Blvd., #1900, Kansas City, Mo., 64106. Colleen’s hometown church, New Florence United Methodist Church, PO Box 15, New Florence, Mo., 63363. The Greater Lovell Land Trust, which seeks to preserve the beauty and peace of Lovell, Maine, which Colleen loved so much, PO Box 181, Center Lovell, Maine, 04016. will be closed through Monday, Oct. 24, and re-opening Tuesday, Oct. 25. Your reporter offers his apologies for not getting this little bit of information to you sooner but it seems to have slipped through the cracks. A small correction: re. Freedom Food Pantry, the correct number to call if you are interested in seeing how you may help out is 539-5453, ask for Judy.
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Page 44 — THE CONWAY DAILY SUN, Saturday, October 22, 2011
–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– OBITUARIES –––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
CONWAY — Bruce Walton Bedford, 65, of North Conway died Thursday, Sept. 22, 2011 in North Conway. He was born June 12, 1946 in Weymouth, Mass., to Martha T. and William A. Bedford, Jr., and was raised in Hingham and North Scituate, Mass., and Bow Mar (Littleton), Colo. He graduated Littleton High School, in Littleton, Colo. in 1965 and attended Marlboro College in Marlboro, Vt., graduating in 1969, with a bachelor’s degree in anthropology and a minor in theater. Moving to New Hampshire after college, Bruce was a wellknown photographer for the Carroll County Independent in Ossipee for many years from the 1970s into the early 1990s, and later was a photographer for the Conway Daily Sun. He was particularly known for his photographs of country life, featured weekly as “This is Carroll County” in the Carroll County Independent and in the popu-
Bruce Walton Bedford
ity, enjoyed life, and the beauty of it. He was creative and artistic, and loved all animals. Bruce was his own person. You never knew exactly what he was going to do or where he might turn up. Once, while traveling on his 10-speed bicycle on Loveland Pass in Colorado, he was given a ticket for speeding. He is survived by a half brother, William A Bedford, III, a sister Patricia Bedford Taylor and brother-in-law Stephen B. Taylor. He was the grandson of Ruth Dunbar Tolman, the nephew of Elizabeth B. Tolman and Peter H. Tolman, and great great nephew of Bonnie Dunbar, all deceased. There will be a celebration of Bruce’s life at the Furber & White Funeral Home at 7 p.m. on Thursday, Oct. 27, 2011. This is a time to remember a friend and a brother for having the pleasure of knowing him and his camera. The service will be conducted by Rev. Martell of the Congregational Church (Little Brown Church) in Conway.
lar “This is Carroll County” calendar, published by the same newspaper. He won many news photography awards over the years, including New England Press Association Photographer of the Year. He was also very active with The Barnstormers. Bruce was an eclectic personal-
Estate Planning with Pets in Mind Oct. 25
Toy Fund helps Maine children at Christmas BRIDGTON — Bruce Roberts Toy Fund applications are now available at the Bridgton Community Center. The deadline to submit an application is Nov. 4. The fund gives toy packages to needy children, aged infant to 18, of all ethnic backgrounds.
Milton R. Prouty
Milton R. Prouty, 79, of Bridgton, Maine, died Thursday, Oct. 20, at Maine Medical Center. He was born in Alston, Mass. on March 30, 1932 the son of William and Alma Prouty. He graduated from high school in Cambridge, Mass.. and served in the U.S. Army. He married Catherine Maron. He was a retired police officer and detective for the Cambridge Police Department. He worked at Camp Wildwood, was an artist and an avid sportsman. He is survived by his wife of Bridgton; his children, Karen O’Shea and her husband, Thomas, of North Hampton, Robert and his wife, Teresa, of Fryeburg, Maine, Stephen and his wife, Susan, of Providence, R.I., and Paul M. and his wife, Judith, of Brownfield, Maine; 12 grandchildren, Kristen, Eric, Christopher, Erin, Kevin, Craig, Cassie Tiffeny, Hayden, Nicholas, Desiree and Gibson; seven great grandchildren; a brother, James A. and his wife, Ellie, of Roswell, Ga.; a special niece, Elaine; and an honorary son, Bob McHattan and his wife, Deb, of Bridgton. At Mr. Prouty’s request a celebration of his life will be held at a later date. Donations in his memory can be made to the American Heart Association, 51 US Route 1, Suite M, Scarborough, ME, 04074. Arrangements are under the direction of Chandler Funeral Homes and Cremation Service at 8 Elm Street in Bridgton. Online condolences may be shared with his family at www.chandlerfunerals. com.
Children from York, Cumberland, Sagadahoc, Lincoln and Knox Counties in Maine are served. Applications will not be processed after Nov. 4. For more information contact Lorraine or Carmen at the Bridgton Community Center 647-3116.
CONWAY — Animal Rescue League North will hold a workshop with Attorney Pamela Smillie and financial advisor David Brochu regarding Estate Planning with Pets in Mind from 5:30 to 6:30 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 25, at the Animal Rescue League of NH-North.
They will discuss and answer questions on ways to provide financial support for pets and how to ensure the caring and nurturing of homeless animals long into the future. Space is limited; RSVP to Virginia at (603) 447-5605.
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THE CONWAY DAILY SUN, Saturday, October 22, 2011— Page 45
HOME OF THE WEEK
REAL ESTATE CORNER
Lending lingo lexicon BY JASON ROBIE As I mentioned last week, a close friend is currently wading through the paperwork and inherent challenges of the home-buying process. When I first got started in real estate, it quickly became clear that those in the industry had a language all their own. A few weeks ago, we talked about some of those terms and acronyms and hopefully shed a little light on the subject for those of you dipping your toe in the market. Now that my friends are spending far more time with their mortgage broker than they are in the world of actual real estate, I think it is time to dig a little bit into the world of mortgage vocabulary. The only difference here is you can’t cheat with those little plastic red rulers! (Was that just me?) It goes without saying that you should never sign a contract without reading it fully. Signing a mortgage without having a good working knowledge of the terms and what everything means can be detrimental to your finances, your credit and even future investments. Before you sign on the dotted line, make sure that you know these terms and how they will apply to you. * Interest rate. The interest rate is the percentage of your loan that is added on every month. The percentage will vary according to the economy and will make a significant difference in your payments. Right now we are enjoying amazingly low interest rates and it is a great time to be getting financed. That said, let’s talk about the two different rates that you can choose from when getting your loan. * Fixed rate. A fixed rate will be an interest rate that stays at the same percentage throughout the entire period of your loan. These rates tend to be a smidgen higher than the variable rates, but you are given the peace of mind that the rate will never change. * Variable rate. A variable rate will change according to the overall economy. When the economy is on an upswing, investors demand higher yields, forcing lenders to raise mortgage rates. In a market downturn, rates tend to drop for consumers because of increased investor demand. A variable rate usually changes every year and adjusts according to a specific given range of percentages. Typically the lender will guarantee that the rate cannot change more than “X” percent at any given time. They will also only adjust your rate at certain intervals such as every three or five years. These options will all vary depending on the lender and their policies. * Principal. The principal is the actual amount of the loan. If you borrow $150,000, that is your principal. This is important to note since the amount of your monthly payment that will go toward your principal will vary greatly as your mortgage goes along. If your payment is $1,000, your first payment might apply $200.00 towards your principal and the rest towards interest. At that point, your principal is $149,800. * Escrow. This is similar to a savings account of your loan. Whatever you put in escrow will accumulate without paying directly into the loan. This is basically a safe-holding place for see ROBIE page 46
Character and charm Today’s Home of the Week, built in 1750, is a 16-room farmhouse with attached garage, set on five acres in Fryeburg.
FRYEBURG — "A very special property with loads of character, modernized with the comforts of today while preserving the ambiance and antique charm of yesterday." That's how listing agents Linda Walker and Bernadette Friberg, of Badger Realty, describe this Home of the Week. "Just think, George Washington was only 18 when this home was built," they add. Located 3.4 miles from Fryeburg Village and set on five peaceful acres on a country back road, the six-bedroom home has a spacious layout of rambling rooms all appointed with a relaxing decor of warm, soothing colors and attention to details that highlight the personality of each. A living room with fireplace and woodstove insert opens to a first-floor master and a dining room large enough for family and friends. The first floor also consists of a bright country kitchen, den, game room, laundry room, sun room, sauna room and a private picket-fenced backyard patio filled with sunlight and flowers. Upstairs are four additional bedrooms including full baths, a second kitchen and a new space that can be a private home office or apartment with separate entrance. see HOME page 48
The living room features a fireplace and woodstove insert.
Page 46 — THE CONWAY DAILY SUN, Saturday, October 22, 2011
Survey reveals home-buying differences between older and younger baby boomers
Bartlett • Jackson • The Conway’s Fabulous 1.6 Acre Lot Located On Cobb Farm Road In Bartlett. Just over the Saco River outside of the Village. Walk to the river in two minutes and hike up Cave Mt. right outside your door. Close to school and skiing. Perfect spot for a new home, it just doesn’t get any better. $89,900 (MLS 4046387) Call listing agent Tony Rocco anytime 387-5249.
Well-Maintained Like New
uced ce Red
This 3-bedroom home offers a gourmet kitchen, a large living room with gleaming hardwood floors, accented by a soaring stone fireplace; a MBR on main level. A/C and 2-car garage are a nice plus. On 6+ acres abutting the Nat’l Forest. Great value at $348,000. MLS #4090282
Family Vacation Townhouse This 4BR/3.5 bathroom end unit offers a terrific Jackson location--esp. for Wildcat and Jackson XC skiers. Phenomenal private swimming hole on the Ellis River, plus tennis courts. The spectacular Presidentials just up the road! $140,000 (MLS 4061362)
Nestled Between Attitash & Bear Peak this nice, level building lot, with 3BR septic approval, can become your “base camp” for skiing, hiking, mountain and road biking, plus whitewater kayaking and canoeing. $79,000 (MLS 4069110)
PARSIPPANY, N.J. – A new survey from Coldwell Banker Real Estate finds that 87 percent of 1,300 agents and brokers polled agree that the economy is delaying baby boomers’ plans to sell their homes. That said, the desire to purchase
ROBIE from page 45
money that you will eventually owe as part of your loan. Most banks will put money for taxes and insurance into an escrow account so they are more comfortable that those bills will get paid. * Title. A title will be what you get to your home after it is officially yours, stating that the property belongs to you. The reason the bank insists on doing a “title search” before closing, is to ensure that the property you are buying actually belongs to the person you are buying it from. Clearly an important detail! * Deed. The deed is a description of the property or “real estate” that you are buying or own. This will outline the exact dimensions of your land and any associated buildings or “improvements." The deed will also include any liens, encumbrances or right-of-ways that are included with the property. These items are vitally important to detail if you own or “share” a driveway and play important roles in property line disputes. * Equity. Equity is the amount of value your home has that is above the amount of your outstanding mortgage or “principal." If you have paid
and own a home, or more than one home, remains strong in this demographic cohort, especially so in the investment market segment. Another 87 percent of respondents see next page
off half of your mortgage (from above), all other things notwithstanding, you would have $75,000 worth of equity built up in your home. Factors like market shifts, pre-payments, home improvements, etc., all take steps towards increasing your equity. * Appraisal. An appraisal is an estimated value of what the home is worth according to the bank. In general there are three distinct values associated with your home. The assessment is the price that your town values your home. The appraisal is the price that your lender values your home. And the market value is what your real estate broker can likely sell your home for. Very often these three values are misunderstood. Unfortunately, the amount that you and I feel our homes are worth does not carry a whole lot of weight. I promise there will not be a test on these terms, but I am confident you will be better suited to make your way through the home buying process with a better understanding of them. Jason Robie is a staff writer for Badger Realty on Main Street in North Conway. Phone number is (603) 356-5757.
Attractively Upgraded,
this 3-bedroom home in Jackson enjoys a country setting with a nice yard and view of Eagle Mountain. Spacious kitchen/ dining area leads to a sunny living room. Plus a good-sized garage/ workshop. A very nice primary or vacation home. $247,000 (MLS 4087962)
Raymond
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THE CONWAY DAILY SUN, Saturday, October 22, 2011— Page 47
from preceding page
said they have baby boomer clients who already own or are looking to own an investment property, including 22 percent of agents who report that at least half of their boomer clients either own or are looking to own such properties. “The baby boomer generation has driven the U.S. economy for years, and like many Americans, they may be anxious about their next real estate decision,” said Jim Gillespie, CEO of Coldwell Banker Real Estate. “I know baby boomers are a very diverse group and cannot be described in generalities, but our survey clearly indicates that those boomers who are financially secure are actively seeking to buy their retirement home, or a second home, and they are taking advantage of the opportunities and value available in today’s market.” The survey also underscored that by dividing boomers, which account for 79 million Americans, into two age categories, a more dynamic picture of the real estate market emerges. Here are the additional findings: Second Homes Younger Baby Boomers (ages 47-55): More than one-third (34 percent) of agents say younger baby boomers (ages 47-55) are interested in purchasing a second home. Older Baby Boomers (ages 56-64): 22 percent say older baby boomers (ages 56-64) are interested in purchasing a second home. Looking For Larger 31 percent of respondents say that younger baby boomer clients are selling their current homes and looking for larger homes. 22 percent say older baby boomers (ages 56-64) are interested in purchasing a second home. Downsizing 80 percent of agents say that older baby boomers are more likely to want
“I know baby boomers are a very diverse group and cannot be described in generalities, but our survey clearly indicates that those boomers who are financially secure are actively seeking to buy their retirement home, or a second home, and they are taking advantage of the opportunities and value available in today’s market.” to downsize than younger baby boomers (52 percent). Although the economy has impacted boomers, the reason for downsizing is not only about the desire to save money. According to the survey, 49 percent of agents say the primary reason boomers want to downsize is because they desire a simpler lifestyle, while only 28 percent said the leading reason boomers are downsizing is to save money. Single Family Home or Other Options Younger baby boomers are much more likely to prefer a single-family home than older baby boomers. For the older baby boomers, agents say about half are (47 percent) are looking for a townhome or condo. 27 percent of agents say their older boomer clients prefer an active adult community. Submitted by Karl Seibel of Coldwell Banker Wright Realty in Conway. Survey methodology: Coldwell Banker Real Estate conducted an online survey among 1,333 Coldwell Banker real estate professionals across the United States about housings trends for baby boomers. The survey was done between Sept. 6-15, 2011.
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269 Lamplighter Dr., Conway
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144 Blake Hill Road, Conway
$24,900
$29,500
$44,900
MLS#4067336 Bank Owned Large home with 1,232 SF Bright & spacious w/hardwd flrs
MLS#4096936 Upgraded mobile home with gas fireplace, some wood floors, open living area, detached shed.
MLS 4083266 Immaculate home with 1,180 SF each br has its own bath, attached 1 car garage, & 3 season porch
Log in to to view this and all our homes.
www.wrightrealty.com
Coldwell Banker Wright Realty 603-447-2117 • 800-447-2120 481 White Mountain Highway, Conway NH
Or check all of the listings on our site with your phone!
Page 48 — THE CONWAY DAILY SUN, Saturday, October 22, 2011
Lamplighter Mobile Home Park
Affordable Housing from $23,900 to $69,900! New & Used Homes
22 TRAILER AVENUE - New Home for Sale. 3 Bedroom/ 2 Bath 16’x76’ 2008 Commodore Home. $37,500 288 LAMPLIGHTER DRIVE - New Home for Sale. 3 Bedroom/ 1 Bath 14’x60’ Handicap Accessible 2005 Patriot Home. $24,900 Home ownership is possible! For easy living in a community atmosphere. With multiple venues for fun in the sun or snow. Check out Lamplighter Mobile Home Park!
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duced Price Re
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VILLAGE HOME with 3 bdrms, 1 3/4 baths, dining room with built-in china cabinet and full attic for expansion or storage, plus an attached garage. Sunny rooms will delight new owners and the screened porch will offer quiet privacy. $149,900 (4061396) A QUIET WOODED SETTING sets this two bedroom, 2 1/2 bath, four level townhouse apart. A partially finished basement, unique loft and a large sunny deck overlooking a small brook. Agent interest. $159,900 (4071245)
Box 286, Rt. 16, Chocorua, NH • 603-323-7803 • www.ldre.com
The home has six bedrooms and 4,369 square feet of space. HOME from page 45
An attached barn and two-car garage provide extra room for storage while the new systems of the house provide efficient and economical utilities. "This is a perfect home for large family gatherings or
B&B potential," say the listing agents. Price is $459,000. The home could be sold with a furniture package for an additional fee. Contact Linda Walker and Bernadette Friberg, of Badger Realty, at (603) 356-5757 for additional details or a tour.
Year Round • Vacation • Waterfront • Condos • Residential • Commercial
SPECTACULAR MOUNTAIN VIEWS – LUXURY FEATURES. This custom built tri level mountain top home is a great way to maximize your hard-earned real estate dollar! With magnificent view of Mt Washington and the Presidential Range, 5 decks, 2 balconies, 2 year round sunrooms, an indoor lap pool, a sauna and whirlpool, a huge oversized master bedroom suite, eat in kitchen, huge formal dining room, And so much more - There’s even a roughed in and wired space for an elevator! MLS#4022528 $399,900
445 White Mtn Hwy Conway, NH
WHAT A BEAUTIFUL, QUIET SUBURBAN STREET! This 3 bedroom, 2 bath double wide home in Tamworth Pines Mobile Home Park is on a cul de sac and there is nothing behind the home but trees! Master bedroom (big enough for a king size bed) with walk in closet, large screened porch, high ceilings, large kitchen, separate laundry room, and a spacious living area. A must see! MLS#4079796 $54,000
“ALMOST” WATERFRONT PROPERTY? Come take a look at this 2 bedroom home and see for yourself! Cozy and welcoming, with many recent renovations including a maple kitchen, carpet, 2 propane stoves, beautiful landscaping, a new shed and so much more. To top it all off you are just a 3 minute walk from a fabulous association beach on Big Pea Porridge Pond and a short drive to skiing, hiking, shopping and dining. Offered mostly furnished and it’s priced to sell. MLS#4054415 $115,000
Real Estate
HAVEN’T YOU EARNED IT? More quality time to escape and recreate with family & friends will be just one of the perks of owning this affordable North Conway townhouse. Enjoy one of the best valley locations at Stonehurst Manor. Roomy tri-level condominium with 3 Bedrooms and 2.5 Baths provide privacy and room to entertain. Comfortably sized living-dining area with fireplace and an ideal floor plan for vacation or everyday living. Amenities include outdoor pool and tennis. MLS#4065817 $197,900
CLASSIC CHALET IN CONWAY WITH BEACH RIGHTS! This 4 bedroom classic Chalet is neat & bright, ready to enjoy with family & friends and it has many recent updates; including a new furnace, hot water heater, windows, decks, doors, slider, carpet, tile & paint. Even the electrical and plumbing systems have been updated. Enjoy the fireplace that will keep you warm on cold winter nights. Access to a spectacular beach & close to everything North Conway has to offer. A great value, and easy to see. MLS#2805711 $134,900
603-447-3813 selectrealestate.com
GREAT AMENITIES, GREAT LOCATION... The amenities at Ski and Beach are superb - a great private beach, 40 acres of snowmobiling and riding trails, tennis courts, playgrounds and only 15 min to North Conway and skiing. 3 bedrooms, and so much more the property even goes to a covered bridge! MLS#4096223 $129,000
Plan for next summer’s vacation now and save! It’s easy...explore the great opportunities at selectrealestate.com Open Every Day to serve you better!
THE CONWAY DAILY SUN, Saturday, October 22, 2011— Page 49
Existing-home sales off in September but higher than a year ago WASHINGTON — Existing-home sales were down in September on the heels of a strong gain in August, but remain well above a year ago, according to the National Association of Realtors. Total existing-home sales, which are completed transactions that include single-family, townhomes, condominiums and co-ops, declined 3.0 percent to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 4.91 million in September from an upwardly revised 5.06 million in August, but are 11.3 percent above the 4.41 million unit pace in September 2010. Lawrence Yun, chief economist for National Association of Realtors, said the market has been stable although at low levels, and there is plenty of room for improvement. “Existing-home sales have bounced around this year, staying relatively close to the current level in most months,” he said. “The irony is affordability conditions have improved to historic highs and more credit-worthy borrowers are trying to purchase homes, but the share of contract failures is double the level of September 2010. Even so, the volume of successful buyers is higher than a year ago and is remaining fairly stable – this speaks to an unfulfilled demand.” According to Freddie Mac, the national average commitment rate for a 30-year, conventional, fixed-
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BEAUTIFUL HOME INSIDE AND OUT - A special location. Quality built and tastefully appointed. Flexible floor plan, three season porch. Spacious kitchen with a granite island. Harwood floors all through out the house. 3 plus bedroom, 31/2 baths, attached 2 car garage. 3 Acre homesite in a gated community with a beach & marina on Silver Lake. MLS# 4065982......................................................................................................................$569,300
LOOK DOWN AT CONWAY LAKE and watch the sunset over Mt Chocorua from this 4 bedroom home with a two car garage on 10 acres located on a less travelled road. The bright and spacious kitchen flows into the dining room and living room and is the focal point for family and entertaining. Picturesque setting with perennial flower and vegetable gardens and fruit trees. MLS# 4061516........................................................$439,500
— LAND —
WATERFRONT LOT with community water hook up available. Swim & kayak from your own waterfront lot. MLS# 4080055....................................................................................$32,500 OVER 31 ACRES with a field and good views. This is a combination of three buildable lots at the end on a Cul de Sac. This property is next to Tin Mt.Conservation Land. Let this be your private getaway. MLS# 4079154.............................................................................$237,700
We need to remove the roadblocks to a housing recovery – not place more obstacles in the way of financially qualified buyers.” rate mortgage fell to a record low 4.11 percent in September, down from 4.27 percent in August; the rate was 4.35 percent in September 2010. Contract failures were reported by 18 percent of National Association of Realtors members in September, unchanged from August; they were 9 percent in September 2010. Contract failures are cancellations caused by declined mortgage applications, failures in loan underwriting from appraised values coming in below the negotiated price, or other problems including home inspections and employment losses. National Association of Realtors president Ron Phipps, broker-president of Phipps Realty in Warwick, R.I., said access to credit is unbalanced. “All year we’ve been discussing the fact that many credit-worthy home buyers are being denied mortgages,” he said. “On top of that, loan limits have been lowered, which means buyers of higher Open House Saturday, Oct. 2 • Noon to 3PM
Open House Saturday, Oct. 2 • Noon to 3PM
priced homes, including many in more expensive housing markets, now have to pay a higher interest rate for a jumbo mortgage than buyers who can qualify for a conventional loan. We need to remove the roadblocks to a housing recovery – not place more obstacles in the way of financially qualified buyers.” All-cash sales accounted for 30 percent of purchase activity in September, up from 29 percent in August and 29 percent also in September 2010; investors make up the bulk of cash purchases. Investors purchased 19 percent of homes in September, down from 22 percent in August; they were 18 percent in September 2010. First-time buyers accounted for 32 percent of transactions in September, unchanged from August; they were also 32 percent in September 2010. The national median existing-home price for all housing types was $165,400 in September, down 3.5 percent from September 2010. Distressed homes — foreclosures and short sales typically sold at deep discounts — accounted for 30 percent of sales in September (18 percent were foreclosures and 12 percent were short sales), down from 31 percent in August and 35 percent in September 2010. see SALES page 50
Page 50 — THE CONWAY DAILY SUN, Saturday, October 22, 2011
SALES from page 49
Nubi Duncan and Bill Barbin congratulate David and Fran Grant on their recent transaction
Call Nubi Duncan
“the country living specialist” Main St., PO Box 750, No. Conway, NH 03860 356-5757 • nubi@BadgerRealty.com
Total housing inventory at the end of September declined 2.0 percent to 3.48 million existing homes available for sale, which represents an 8.5month supply at the current sales pace, compared with an 8.4-month supply in August. Single-family home sales fell 3.6 percent to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 4.33 million in September from 4.49 million in August, but are 12.2 percent above the 3.86 million-unit level in September 2010. The median existing single-family home price was $165,600 in September, down 3.9 percent from a year ago. Existing condominium and co-op sales rose 1.8 percent a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 580,000 in September from 570,000 in August, and are 5.6 percent above the 549,000-unit pace one year ago. The median existing condo price was $163,800 in September, which is 1.0 percent below September 2010. Regionally, existing-home sales in the Northeast rose 2.6 percent to an annual level of 790,000 in September and are 6.8 percent above a year ago. The median price in the Northeast was $229,400, down 3.3 percent from September 2010. Existing-home sales in the Midwest slipped 0.9 percent in September to a pace of 1.09 million but are 17.2 percent higher than September 2010. The median price in the Midwest was $137,400, which is 1.4 percent below a year ago. In the South, existing-home sales declined 2.6 percent to an annual level of 1.89 million in Sep-
Regionally, existing-home sales in the Northeast rose 2.6 percent to an annual level of 790,000 in September and are 6.8 percent above a year ago. tember but are 10.5 percent above a year ago. The median price in the South was $144,400, down 3.0 percent from September 2010. Existing-home sales in the West fell 8.8 percent to an annual pace of 1.14 million in September but are 10.7 percent higher than September 2010. The median price in the West was $207,400, which is 4.5 percent below a year ago. “The falloff in Western sales from a surge in August was expected because many lenders had lowered mortgage loan limits over concerns that sales wouldn’t close before the higher loan limits expired at the end of the September,” Yun said. “Given the concentration of higher cost housing in the West, particularly in California, many buyers were motivated to close in the months leading up to the changeover while they could still get low interest rates on conventional mortgages. Unless Congress reinstates the higher limits, the overall housing market recovery will be slower than it otherwise could be, and will hold back the broader economic recovery.” The National Association of Realtors is America’s largest trade association, representing 1.1 million members involved in all aspects of the residential and commercial real estate industries.
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THE CONWAY DAILY SUN, Saturday, October 22, 2011— Page 51
Page 52 — THE CONWAY DAILY SUN, Saturday, October 22, 2011
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