The Conway Daily Sun, Tuesday, June 14, 2011

Page 1

Friends of the Blend rock and roll. Page 13

TUESDAY, JUNE 14, 2011

TUESDAY

VOL. 23 NO. 101

CONWAY, N.H.

MT. WASHINGTON VALLEY’S DAILY NEWSPAPER

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Motor club developer in violation of wetlands ordinance, report says

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Motorcyclist tour the strip in North Conway Monday. Bike Week is in full swing, and Rally in the Valley has many more events throughout the week. A full schedule can be found at www.rallyinthevalley.net. (JAMIE GEMMITI PHOTO)

TAMWORTH — Club Motorsports Inc. repeatedly violated the town’s wetlands ordinance in the construction of a driving-themed country club, alleges a soil scientist hired by the town. However, CMI contends that the scientist’s report is inaccurate. Selectmen are scheduled to review the report at their next meeting on June 16. The report was produced by Gregory Howard of North Country Soil Services. His report is dated June 1. “There were seven apparent violations of the Tamworth Wetlands Conservation Ordinance (TWCO) observed on the project site,” writes Howard. see CMI page 8

Pawlenty: 'No more bailouts, carve-outs or handouts'

Approximately 75 attend house party for GOP presidential candidate BY ERIK EISELE THE CONWAY DAILY SUN

CONWAY — Tim Pawlenty promised to tell Americans the hard truth if elected president when he stopped by Birch Hill on Saturday. “We’ve got a country in great trouble,” he told a crowd of 75 at a Republican house party, “and we don’t have a long time to fix it.” “Every Republican is going to come to events like this and say many of the same

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The Conway Daily Sun

things,” he said, but voters have a key question to ask: Who is this person? Do they live the values they espouse? The party host, Ray Shakir, introduced the former Minnesota governor with a few examples of Pawlenty’s candor. Pawlenty went to Iowa, Shakir said, the heart of corn country, and said he would not support federal ethanol subsidies, and he has been willing to admit when see PAWLENTY page 10 Watch for up-to-the-minute breaking news, local photos, community events and much more! And you can share your comments and concerns with us and the rest of our ‘fans’.

Tim Pawlenty chats with fellow Republicans. (ERIK EISELE PHOTO)


Page 2 — THE CONWAY DAILY SUN, Tuesday, June 14, 2011

India seeks good hangman MEERUT, India (NY Times) — India has 1.2 billion people, among them bankers, gurus, rag pickers, billionaires, snake charmers, software engineers, lentil farmers, rickshaw drivers, Maoist rebels, Bollywood movie stars and Vedic scholars, to name a few. Humanity runneth over. Except in one profession: India is searching for a hangman. Usually, India would not need one, given the rarity of executions. The last was in 2004. But in May, India’s president unexpectedly rejected a last-chance mercy petition from a convicted murderer in the Himalayan state of Assam. Prison officials, compelled to act, issued a call for a hangman. The nation’s handful of known hangmen had either died, retired or disappeared. The situation was not too surprising, given the ambivalence within the Indian criminal justice system about executions. Capital punishment was codified during British rule, with hanging as the chosen method, but recent decades of litigating and legislating limited the actual practice to “the rarest of rare cases.” Magazines and newspapers published stories that read like macabre helpwanted ads: Large nation searching for someone willing to slip the noose around the neck of a murderer.

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Every guilty person is his own hangman.” —Lucius Annaeus Seneca

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In Reversal, three Democratic Senators will back gay marriage ALBANY (NY Times) — Three wavering Democratic lawmakers in the State Senate on Monday announced that they now support the legalization of same-sex marriage in New York, marking a potential turning point for the longdebated measure. Within an hour of the announcement by the three Democrats, a Republican senator said that he, too, is open to supporting same-sex marriage. “If the bill comes to the floor the way that I would like to see it, I will support it,” Senator James S. Alesi, a Monroe County Republican, said before going into a meeting with Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo. Mr. Alesi did not elaborate.

The three Democratic senators — Joseph P. Addabbo Jr. and Shirley L. Huntley of Queens and Carl Kruger of Brooklyn — all voted against the measure in 2009, when it failed by a wide margin. Their switch to the yes column leaves all but one Senate Democrat supporting same-sex marriage — and the fate of the legislation in the hands of the Republican majority in the chamber. “I believe that votes will be there for marriage equality if the vote happens,” said Mr. Cuomo, a first-term Democrat who has made same-sex marriage a top priority, told reporters at the Capitol Monday afternoon.

Germany recognizes Libyan rebel government BERLIN (NY Times) — Germany, which declined to participate in the NATO air campaign against Libya, on Monday recognized the opposition National Transitional Council as the legitimate representative of Libya, Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle said during a visit to the rebel capital of Benghazi.

German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle in Benghazi, Libya, on Monday, as Germany recognized Libya’s rebel council as the legitimate representative of the Libyan people. The announcement by Mr. Westerwelle comes after weeks of hesitation by Germany over which rebel leaders or movements, if any, it should recog-

nize as an alternative to the government of Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi. “The Transitional Council is the legitimate representation of the Libyan people,” Mr. Westerwelle said on landing in Benghazi. “With this council, we want to support the building of a democratic and lawabiding Libya.”

Clinton presses African leaders to abandon Qaddafi

ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia (NY Times) — Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton bluntly warned African leaders on Monday that authoritarian governments ruled by aging despots were “no longer acceptable,” saying that those who refused democratic reforms would find themselves “on the wrong side of history.” She also urged the African Union to end its lingering relations with Libya’s leader, Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi. American officials have been deeply frustrated by the African Union’s efforts to mediate on behalf of Colonel Qaddafi, who for decades lavished support on African leaders — many of them autocratic — and led the group two years ago. She also called for a peaceful resolution of the fighting that has flared in Sudan ahead of the planned declaration of independence by South Sudan on July 9.

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Milfoil study shows state not paying a lot to fight problem in Lakes Region THE CONWAY DAILY SUN, Tuesday, June 14, 2011— Page 3

BY LARISSA MULKERN THE UNION LEADER

FREEDOM — A newly released study shows that lakefront towns and associations pick up most of the tab for milfoil control efforts. The study — Funding of Milfoil Treatment in New Hampshire’s Waterbodies: A Snapshot of Money Raised and Spent in 2009-2010 — was prepared by Bianco Professional Association for the Ossipee Lake Alliance. The Alliance released the study during its biennial Lakes Representatives meeting held Saturday at the Calumet Conference Center. About 50 people attended the threehour forum, including state representatives from area towns, municipal

officials and members of lake associations from Wolfeboro, Ossipee, Freedom, Effingham and Silver Lake. Ossipee Lake Alliance Executive Director David Smith led the meeting. For the study, researchers collected data from April 1 to May 15 and obtained information through phone and e-mail interviews, Internet research, town records, news articles and lake association websites. Of the 63 lakes groups contacted for the survey, 49 responded, or 78 percent. The results of the survey showed that in 2009, the state provided $59,985; municipalities spent $84,685; and private-sector associations paid $105,022 to fight the milfoil problem. The disparity between public and private funding grew in 2010, according to the survey,

which showed that state funding was $89,958, municipal funding grew to $401,740 ($200,000 came from a Moultonborough warrant article), and private funding totaled $253,196. Despite the increase in the state’s contribution, it amounted to just 12 percent of the total, the study said. “The state owns the lakes, but the state has not been able to come forward and fully and effectively manage the milfoil infestation problem we have on our lakes and rivers,” said Ossipee Lakes Alliance Director Bob Reynolds. “There’s some variation in numbers, but 73 lakes and rivers have become infested with milfoil. The New Hampshire DES has a very good program to focus on education and prevention, but the state has only been able to fund 10 to

20 percent of the cost we’re spending to control and eradicate it. Somehow that doesn’t seem quite right,” said Reynolds. The study revealed that the DES was able to fund 13 projects in 2009 and 16 projects in 2010; nine of the 29 total projects funded by the state were on Lake Winnipesaukee. Amy Smagula, limnologist and exotic species coordinator with the Department of Environmental Services, was unable to attend the meeting, but submitted a PowerPoint presentation on the topic. One slide estimated a five-year milfoil control plan at $7.2 million, including $2.6 million for herbicides, nearly $3.4 million for contracted diver assisted suction harvesting; $500,000 for staffing full-time seasonal divers; and $114,000 for equipment, materials and supplies.

Dartmouth students get star-studded send-off HANOVER — Former President George H.W. Bush spent his 87th birthday in the Granite State Sunday at Dartmouth College’s graduation ceremony. “George Herbert Walker Bush, in recognition of your fearless contributions to the military effort during World War II, and your tangible impact on a post-cold war Europe, Dartmouth proudly

awards you the honorary degree: doctor of laws,” said Dartmouth president Jim Yong Kim, in front of thousands. Boston-native talk show host Conan O’Brien also received an honorary degree from Dartmouth before giving the commencement speech. “Though some of you may see me as a celebrity, you should know I once sat where you sit. Literally.

Late last night I snuck in and sat in every seat. I did it to prove a point: I’m not bright and I have a lot of free time,” O’Brien said jokingly. Sunday’s graduation ceremony had plenty of laughter and light-hearted moments, even as students prepare to enter a workforce highlighted by an unemployment rate near 9 percent. —Courtesy of WMUR

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Page 4 — THE CONWAY DAILY SUN, Tuesday, June 14, 2011

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TUESDAY, JUNE 14 Flag Day Program. Remick Museum and Farm offers a free Flag Day program, beginning at 11 a.m. Salute the flag, learn all about flag etiquette, including display and proper flag folding during this program. Treat yourself to a farmfresh bag lunch, $6 per adult and $3 per child and meet and greet local veterans. This program is open to the public and free to attend. For more information call (603) 323-7591 or toll free 1 (800) 686-6117. The Remick Museum is located at 58 Cleveland Hill Road in Tamworth. For more information visit www.remickmuseum.org. Talk on Bringing Medical Services to Remote Areas of Ethiopia. The June program of the Conway Historical society will be “Bringing Medical Services to Remote Areas of Ethiopia,” with Jon Martinson of Doctors Without Borders. The meeting will be at 7 p.m. in the Salyards Center For The Arts, lower (rear) level. There will be a potluck dinner at 6 p.m. followed by the speaker. Guest Speaker At Charlotte Hobbs Library. Fryeburg Academy biology teacher Joel Rhymer and his students have travelled to Vietnam, Costa Rica, Puerto Rico, south Florida, and Louisiana’s Gulf Coast to to help in scientific research and assist in community service projects. They will discuss their travels and share photos and stories about their work at 7 p.m. at Charlotte Hobbs Library. Friends Of Bartlett Public Library Annual Meeting. The Friends of the Bartlett Public Library will hold their annual meeting at 6:30 p.m. at the library followed by the monthly book discussion. This month’s discussion will be facilitated by Frumie Selchen of the N.H. Humainties Council, who will lead the discussion of “The Daughter of Time,” by Josephine Tey.

WEDNESDAY, JUNE 15 Veterans Walk In Visits. Veterans will be able to “walk in” and speak with the chief pharmacist regarding any medication issue on a first-come, first-serve basis from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the Conway Community-Based Outpatient Clinic. A scheduled appointment is not required for this consultation.

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THURSDAY, JUNE 16 Parenting Piece by Piece Series. UNH Cooperative Extension offers a free five-part education series for parents of young and school-age children, on Thursdays, June 2, 9 and 16, from 6:30 – 8:30 p.m. at UNH Cooperative Extension, 73 Main Street, Conway. Book Fair/Writer’s Workshop. The book fair/writer’s workshop will take place today at the Northern Forest Heritage Park in Berlin is still accepting reservations for display areas for those who would like to display and sell their books or other publications. There will be no charge for the reservation, but the Park asks for 10 percent of the displayer’s sales, not to exceed $25 and this will be on the honor system. For more information contact Dick Conway at 449-2558. Carroll County United Annual Community Forum. Carroll County United will hold its annual community forum from 6 to 8 p.m. at K.A. Brett School. There will be a light dinner at 5:30 p.m. Volunteer teams working on school readiness, balancing economic development and environmental stewardship, health and wellness and economic development will report on their progress and seek public comments. For more information visit wwwcarrollcountyunited.org. RSVP by calling 323-8139 or emailing cyndi@lruw.org. High Tunnel Twilight Meeting. University of New Hampshire Cooperative Extension will hold a free high tunnel twilight meeting from 3 to 7 p.m., at Ledgewood Farm, 132 Old Mountain Road, Moultonborough. For more information or to register, contact Betty Lou Canty at 447-3834 or email you name, mailing address, and daytime telephone number to bettylou.canty@unh.edu. ‘Talley’s Folly.’ M&D Productions is presenting the third show of their 2011 Mainstage Season with “Talley’s Folly” at 2 and 7 p.m. at Your Theatre in North Conway. Ticket prices are normally $25 for nonmembers, $18 for members. “Tal-

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ley’s Folly” won the Pulitzer Prize for drama and Drama Critics’ Circle Award in 1980. The play is a two-person romantic comedy. This one-act love story takes place in a dilapidated boathouse on the Talley farm in Lebanon, Miss. Call the box office at 662-7591.

TUESDAYS Mineral Springs Cafe. Mineral Springs Cafe, a student run cafe at Kennett High School, is open Tuesday through Thursday from 11 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. when school is in session. For more information call 356-4370. Mount Washington Valley Band Practice. The Mount Washington Valley Band meets to practice for the summer season at the Kennett High School in Conway. Band musicians who would like to play with this fun group are welcome to join. The band is preparing for playing in several parades in the area as well as Sunday night concerts at the North Conway Gazebo. All band instrumentalists from high school age and up are welcome. Call Russell Gage, director at 356-0724 for more information and/or directions to the High School band room. Rotary Club. The Rotary Club of The Fryeburg Area meets every Tuesday morning at 7:30 a.m. at the St. Elizabeth Ann Seton Church in Fryeburg. For more information contact Judy Raymond (207) 935-2155 or visit the website at www.fryeburgarearotary.org. 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 Café. 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, Saturday, and Sunday, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Please Call (603) 447-5605 for more information. American Legion Post-95 Meeting. Meetings are at 7 p.m. on the second and forth Tuesdays of the month at 116 Kearsage Street in North Conway. For more information contact Dave Haskell, adjutant, at 323-8775 or wskrs40@yahoo.com. see next page

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THE CONWAY DAILY SUN, Tuesday, June 14, 2011— Page 5

from preceding page Community Steel Band. The Conway Area Community steel band meets every Tuesday from 7 to 8:30 p.m. at Ajaja Music at 903 West Side Road. New members are always welcome. No prior musical experience is necessary. Everyone is welcome to come. For more information contact 4475107 or mango@ajajamusic.com. Hershey Track and Field. Ossipee Recreation offers a Hershey Track and Field program for youth ages 9 to 14 (as of Dec. 31, 2011), on Tuesday afternoons from 3:30 to 5 p.m. and Saturday mornings from 9 to 10:30 a.m. starting May 17. The cost is $10 and a birth certificate is required. There will be a few local meets in the area as well as the N.H. Regional and NH State meets later in the summer. Some youth may qualify for the National Finals in August in Hershey, Pa. For more information contact Ossipee Recreation Department at 539-1307. Soccer. Ossipee Recreation Department will offer a soccer program for youth in grades one through six on Tuesday afternoons from 3:30 to 5 p.m. through the month of May at Constitution Park. Children should register by April 26. There is no cost. Spring Story Time For 2 Year Olds. The Conway Public Library offers snowflake story time for 2 year olds at 10:30 a.m. “Buds and Bunnies” is fun stories, songs and action rhymes for little ones. nine sessions run through Tuesday, May 24. No registration necessary. All welcome. For more information call the library at 447-5552. Mountain Top Music Classes for Kids. Pre-School Music, 11 to 11:45 a.m.($8). Kids ages 305 use folk songs to learn principles of rhythm and pitch. Through singing, dancing, and the playing of rhythm instruments children lay the foundation for further music study. Call 447-4737 to register. Prayer and Scripture Group Meeting. Every Tuesday at 7 p.m. there will be a prayer and scripture group meeting at First Church of Christ, Congregational at 2503 White Mountain Highway in North Conway. All are welcomed. For more information call 356-2324. Breadbasket Food Pantry. The Breadbasket Food Pantry will be open from 4 to 6 p.m. on the second Tuesday of each month. The food pantry, sponsored by the River Church at 2600 East Maine Street in Center Conway, serves people needing food assistance in the Mount Washington Valley. It is located across from McSherry’s Nursery. For more information, call (603) 447-6633. Genealogy Aid. Ossipee Public Library offers help with genealogy every Tuesday from 3 to 5 p.m. Other times a volunteer will be available by appointment only. For more information, about this free service, please call the library at 539-6390. Strength, Balance and Stretch. Bobbi

Brome leads this exercise program, Tuesday and Friday at 9:30 a.m. at the Gibson Center for Senior Services. For more information call 356-3231. Lunch And Games. The Gibson Center for Senior Services in North Conway sponsors lunch and games at Silver Lake Landing. Lunch is at noon every Tuesday, and is followed by games, or a movie. For more information call 356-3231. Primary Care Social Work Services. Primary Care Social Work Services will be available at the Conway Community-Based Outpatient Clinic on the second Tuesday of each month from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. beginning in April 12. A Primary Care Social Worker can assist Veterans experiencing economic instability, help with supportive services, provide assistance with understanding VA benefits and services they may be eligible for, and referrals to VA and community based programs. Additionally a Primary Care Social Worker can assist with the completion of advanced directives, referrals for Social Security and advice for long term care nursing home placement. Appointments are desired but not required and interested Veterans should speak with their Primary Care Provider. Affordable Health Care. Ossipee Family Planning provides gynecological and reproductive health care and HIV/STD testing services from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. by appointment. Sliding fee scale and same day appointments available. For more information call 539-7552. Overeaters Anonymous. Overeaters Anonymous meets every Tuesday from 5:30 to 6:30 p.m. at Ossipee Valley Church on Route 16. Overeaters Anonymous is a 12-Step program for people who struggle with their relationship with food. For more information, call Carol Ann, 539-4471. TOPS (Take Off Pounds Sensibly) NH Number 129 in Conway. TOPS meets every Tuesday at the Conway Methodist Church on Main St, Conway Village. Weigh-ins start at 5:15 p.m.; meetings start at 6:30 p.m. Co-Dependents Anonymous Meeting. Co-Dependents Anonymous (CoDA) meets every Tuesday at 7 p.m. in the Gibson Suite at the Eastern Slope Inn in North Conway. CoDA is a 12-step fellowship of men and women whose common purpose is recovery from co-dependence and the development and maintenance of healthy relationships. For more information contact (207) 283-3267. Alcoholics Anonymous Meetings in Carroll County. Every Tuesday, Alcoholics Anonymous meets at the Conway Methodist Church Hall on Main Street in Conway Village from 11 a.m. to noon; at the Gibson Center in North Conway from 8 to 9 p.m.; and in the activities room at Mountain View Nursing Home, 10 County Farm Road, in Ossipee (enter through the main entrance)from 7:30 to 9 p.m.

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–––––––––––––––––––––– LETTERS ––––––––––––––––––––––

Medicare cuts will lead to refusing patients To the editor: While I do not care to get involved with a long back and forth, I have to comment on Erik Corbett’s response to my previous letter. I just want to make a few points. It is the Democrats and Obamacare that will, even in the short run slash Medicare by $575 billion and eliminate the Medicare Advantage plan so many of the elderly have depended upon. The huge cut in payments to Medicare providers will result in many of them refusing Medicare patients or just leaving their professions due to inadequate compensation. The Ryan plan is a proposal, the only thing the Democrats have put forward is a definite. The “major health care reform bill” Barack Obama got passed was done against the wishes of a large majority of American voters and the Democrats paid the price for that last year. If it is not repealed it will prove disastrous to a health care system that despite its imperfections is still the greatest in the world. Turning the system over to the federal government, the ultimate and stated goal of the Democrats, will ruin it, not fix it. To correct Mr. Corbett on another point, Paul Krugman is not a liberal, he is a socialist and Fox News’ Juan Williams is a devout liberal. Mr. Corbett takes the common approach of implying that working at Fox News automatically makes someone conservative. People who actually watch Fox News know better than that, as there are numerous liberals working for the network. Mr. Corbett comes up with what he must think is a very innovative approach to shoring up Medicare and Social Security, raising the cap on income taxes. The only problem is that it is not innovative at all. The cap has already been raised numerous times and I haven’t noticed

Medicare and Social Security becoming more solvent as a result. The Democrats simply take the additional tax revenue and spend it on anything they would like to, particularly things that will get them more votes, leaving Medicare and Social Security bankrupt. The Democrats’ objection to any degree of privatization of these plans has nothing to do with the well-being of the elderly. They just could not stand to see the money under the control of individuals instead of in their hands. As far as death panels are concerned, Obamacare includes an IPAB, Independent Payment Advisory Board that will make recommendations on expense restraints. This does raise the very real specter of government deciding to withhold certain life-saving services from the elderly when the expenditures may be deemed imprudent. President Obama himself answered a question at a town hall meeting implying that government may decide that a woman’s 95-year-old grandmother who still enjoyed life does not merit a life-saving operation. I wouldn’t compare that to a Paul Ryan look-alike dumping an elderly woman over a cliff, particularly when Ryan’s plan would not affect that old woman. One last point for Mr. Corbett is that history consistently shows that whenever government interferes with or raises taxes on the evil Big Oil, Big Pharma and Big Insurance, it only results in higher costs and fewer vital products for the American people. Instead of using the age-old tactic of finding imaginary enemies to demonize, Mr. Corbett and the Democrats should actually find some real and productive solutions to the country’s problems. Mark Winters Hale’s Location

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

William Marvel

Strivers and Slackers

At the mob scene that passed for our as the popular standard for educational annual school meeting last March, I asked excellence, the Ivy League hardly holds how many of Kennett High School’s 2010 any monopoly on it, but it’s encouraging, graduates had gone on to Ivy League colevery now and then, to see a local student leges. Consistent with the ill-mannered meet their expectations. Judging by the spirit of that meeting, someone behind me challenges our 2009 Kennett alumna has shouted “Two.” It turns out that he was encountered there, our own state univermistaken — to be charitable about it. The sity appears to be relatively rigorous, too. latest SAU 9 report card lists all of the A large proportion of local graduates wind post-secondary destinations of the class of up there, and from our UNH junior we 2010, from Boston College to the Empire hear about enough of her Kennett classBeauty School, and no Ivy League institumates who have “bombed out” at Durham tion appears on that to deduce that the acalist. Perhaps my heckdemic standards there ler just didn’t know the Meanwhile, new studies reveal that col- must be higher than names of the eight Ivy at the expensive priLeague colleges and lege students are learning less than ever vate school her brother before, despite soaring tuition. universities, and supchose. posed that any campus After final exams with brick buildings that even he characand a little Virginia terized as “easy,” that creeper would do. brother graduated last month with dim Thanks to the press releases that conjob prospects and upwards of $100,000 in stitute our school district’s only response debt, despite having arrived at college with to public criticism, we know that the valea sizable grubstake. The interest alone dictorian of the class of 2011 will be going on his college loans will amount to about to Harvard, and the salutatorian is bound $4000 a year, and his best hope of avoiding for Johns Hopkins. Both warrant warm bankruptcy is to marry well. That seems to congratulations. Before our administrabe his plan. tors take all the credit, however, it’s worth Meanwhile, new studies reveal that college noting that neither of the top two students students are learning less than ever before, this year was educated exclusively within despite soaring tuition. Two researchers the Conway School District. I know that at found that almost half of American college least one of them also benefits from parstudents learn little or nothing by the end of ents whose involvement in their children’s the sophomore year, while more than a third education has been close and constant, showed little evidence of having learned and has produced another scholar who is anything after four years. The same study already winning his own academic laurels. indicates that the demands on college stuAs politicians have learned, the pressdents have diminished sharply: they spend release response to criticism makes it only half as much time studying as students easier to avoid answering more difficult did 50 years ago, and they play three times and embarrassing questions. For instance, as much as they study. Few courses require we will likely see no press releases explainmore than 40 pages of reading a week, or 20 ing how three Kennett students were able pages of writing all semester. to skip school and entertain themselves in Many students enter college expecting a manner that got them arrested for bursuch undemanding coursework, having been glary and other crimes. It seems fair to told from kindergarten that they are spewonder how that happened, considering cial and their work is wonderful, no matter that we hired a new staff person mainly how little sweat they invest in it. As our best to check up on student whereabouts. That students illustrate, however, effort is more person once called here when one of our crucial to success than opportunity, since kids stayed home from school, sick. Apparit can overcome weaknesses in the instituently because of miscommunication within tion. Unfortunately, the self-esteem movethe system, though, he more often called ment convinced most of a generation that when one was absent on some school-sancaccomplishment is no longer necessary for an ample sense of self-worth. Inflated grades tioned event, like the All State band or are the norm in that utopia, and imposing chorus performances. consequences for a lack of effort amounts to Still, it was good to read that Kennett abuse. could finally claim another National Merit Scholar, and send another graduate to William Marvel lives in South Conway. Harvard. As much as it continues to serve

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Thanks for generous donation of items for Hippomaniacs 4H club To the editor: The Hippomaniacs 4H Club would like to send a sincere thank you out to Bill Deyesso and the Mountain Grainery for their generous donation of horsey items valued at almost $1,300. These items will go a long way towards supporting the 4H horse programs in Carroll County. Some items are being used for silent auction items to benefit the county 4H horse program

while others will be given out as awards to children at various equine 4H events over the next couple of years. Anyone interested in helping with the 4H programs in Carroll County should contact our local UNH Cooperative Extension Office at (603 447-3834. Many thank yous to the Mountain Grainery! Sandy Brown Hippomaniacs Leader Madison


THE CONWAY DAILY SUN, Tuesday, June 14, 2011— Page 7

Tele-Talk

How great do you think the need is for additional workforce housing? There were 24 responses to this week’s Tele-Talk question: “How great do you think the need is for additional workforce housing?” If you would give the jobs to locals and pay decent money so that they can afford to work and pay for childcare and rent and food and everything else they need, car repairs and so on and so forth, we wouldn’t have to worry about bringing other people into the area to work. The valley needs to get with the times and think outside the box and stop thinking about how much money can be made for big corporate officers and what they’re going to pay folks to work so they can continue to have a business and make money. Here’s a news flash for Mrs. Kennett: The only way you can have a reliable workforce is to have jobs. What haven’t the people in the Mount Washington Valley figured out? They came up with this great thing a few years ago; it’s called work. And I for one am damn sick of giving everybody a free ride. Get off your butt and work. Yes, I think there’s a need for a cheaper housing. The price of these houses didn’t seem too cheap to me. So, I think we stop using O.P.M. — other people’s money — to subsidize the workforce when there are other houses available at a cheaper rate and the housing market’s going to get slower and slower and the cost is going down and down, so we’ll see what happens. The problem with worker housing is its cheap construction. The builders sooner or later bail out, mostly sooner, when repairs become necessary. The new owners are then saddled with extensive and expensive repairs. They also tend to attract lots of undesirables and bring neighborhoods down, especially the valley of adjoining property. A better solution would be to have less businesses with their low-paying wages. All these enterprises cost Conway a lot of money, including new roads and a large police force, while their profits go elsewhere — out of state, even out of country. Conway is no longer a nice country town and is heading for the plight of the cities people had hoped to escape. We don’t need that many tourists if we didn’t have so many businesses with low pay. When we saw the headline about workforce housing, we got all excited thinking it’s going to be a great thing. And sure enough it’s overpriced. We can’t afford it working on the strip. We’re working these places on the strip and it’s impossible. Sliding scale? I can see us falling through the cracks. You’ve got to have a half a dozen kids or something. Those rents need to be, instead of $650 for one-bedroom apartment, they need to be $400 and scaled accordingly. Put it near the bottom of Kennett High School’s drive. There’s already a light there and plenty of storage within walking distance plus easy access to the North-South Road. There may be a need, but the location they’ve picked out is stupid; it’s a terrible idea. Traffic will back up when there’s a crossing light, an additional light, when that’s put up. The location is terrible; the need may be there, but not there. I don’t think there’s any need for addi-

tional workforce housing. As a young man I lived in a car for six months; I lived in a school bus for a year and I was very comfortable in southern California. If I was going to live in a school bus up here I’d insulate it first and I’d use a sleeping bag. I don’t think that providing government-sponsored housing is a good idea. Section 8 housing, as we learned a few months ago, is a rip-off. People would not pay $1,800 for a studio apartment unless the government was subsidizing that apartment, so I’m completely against any form of government housing. And if the do-gooders, such as Mrs. Kennett, are interested in housing for the poor, then they can build the housing with their own funds. Theresa Kennett doesn’t get it and rarely does. Affordable (aka workforce) housing more often than not translates to quasi-slum housing. All she need do is visit any town in New Hampshire, Maine, or Massachusetts that has it and ask the first person she sees, “Where is the worse place to live in town?” The answer will be “at the affordable housing place.” Kennett also conveniently fails to realize the negative tax implications of putting up this monstrosity, nor does she understand that the “definition” of affordable housing cannot be subject to social engineering. Affordable housing is simply what a person can afford-whether it’s a trailer, condo, rental, or house — nothing more and nothing less. This pathetic effort will result in just another expensive blight along Route 16 and we can thank Kennett, Seybold, and other naïve and sanctimonious “do gooders” for it. Conway. Workforce housing is an economic necessity in Mount Washington Valley. The majority of wage earners are burdened by housing costs or live outside the valley, paying less in rent but more in transportation costs. Quality, workforce housing is a cornerstone of economic and personal well being. Mount Washington Valley employers need a stable workforce, and employees need adequate, affordable housing located near jobs. The Mount Washington Valley Housing Coalition is partnering with community and business leaders to develop strategies to provide affordable housing for the valley’s workforce. If you would like more information about workforce housing in Mount Washington Valley, call Theresa Kennett at (603) 452-7414 or go to www.mwvhc-NH.org. These “projects” will eventually become a huge burden on the taxpayers. The renters will stay in the workforce long enough to qualify and establish residency, after which they will decide they no longer care to work. They will then be on the public dole. Have you ever tried to evict someone? They know how to work the system. This is Ralph in Eaton. Imperative! Affordable quality workforce housing is virtually unavailable in the Mount Washington Valley. Housing that meets both criteria is always occupied and clung to like a treasure. Affordable units are often either too small for a family or in substandard condition. Quality housing for the two income couples with one or more children is priced out of their reach. Affordable quality workforce housing will help stabilize the valley’s employee base by providing

an affordable home for our young couples who want to call the valley home. It will also put a roof over the heads of middle age families who are priced out of the single family home market, and it will offer a home to retirees who desire the comfort of a good home in the place that they have long called home but find unaffordable on fixed incomes. Will one new workforce housing complex answer all the valley’s needs? No way, but consider the idea that, by adding more quality affordable residences, we are creating more competition for those landlords who now enjoy a corner on the market of rental housing. Do these landlords have a right to charge whatever the market will bear for units that are always in demand? Of course they do. However, in order to compete with new units in the market, will they be motivated to reinvest excess rental revenue in improvements to their existing stock of workforce rental units? No doubt they will, and that upgrading will improve the rental housing inventory while it assures the owner of higher occupancy of their apartments. The Conway Pines workforce housing project is not the sole answer to our community’s need for better housing for our neighbors who want to improve their quality of life. It is, however, a major accomplishment for the volunteer committees that have taken the lead in bringing a valuable asset to the valley and for the municipal government boards which have recognized the need and created the regulatory environment that makes affordable quality workforce housing a reality. Carroll County is on the path to becoming overwhelmingly occupied by people over 65. The elderly will need the help of a younger workforce. Helping them stay here to live and work (and recreate) is important and that starts with affordable housing. Therefore, if we are to keep our young people here in the valley, there are two necessities; good jobs and reasonable cost housing. Dorothy Solomon. Creation of workforce housing may always be a critical need here in the valley. With a diverse workforce at many different income levels, of course we need a broad variety of housing types and prices. However, available homes are often very expensive to rent or buy, and those lands remaining undeveloped are often on steep slopes or in other less-accessible areas. Is our available housing affordable to our police, our hospital nurses and other staff, our teachers, our dental hygienists, our fire and ambulance crews, and so many others who are vital to the well-being of us all? Often, we know, it is not affordable even to our children. Only by having a variety of housing costs will we keep the vibrant community, young and old, collaborating on ideas and efforts to improve the valley. Great Bridge Properties is putting forth a solid start on the problem; what’s next? New Hampshire’s Workforce Housing Law encourages towns to create opportunities for market forces to build workforce housing. Let’s encourage area towns and developers to collaborate on creating good quality, attractive, and desirable workforce housing here, now and in the future. Betsey Harding from Jackson.

The following Tele-Talk responses were posted on The Conway Daily Sun’s Facebook page. Yes! My question is why start it late summer? The need is very great. I think businesses will thrive with a better work force ... I think they missed the point of affordable housing! The retail/hospitality workforce they supposedly are building for can’t afford $645 for a singe bedroom or $795 for a two bedroom! After taxes and deductions, that’s more than 50 percent of takehome pay not including utilities/insurance. Banks recommend no more then 30 percent of pay to housing costs! I think what this town needs to focus some time on is other sources of money other than tourism — year-round jobs similar to Green Mountain Rifle Barrel. I think this will be great; just wish someone would hire my fiance. He is a great worker; loves to work. The undertone here is that lower paying retail employment is the only game in town for many folks. Diversification of employment, the Tech Village and thinking outside of the retail box has not been working as advertised. Workforce housing is needed, but great point on the percentage of wages. Workers earning $16 an hour for a 40-hour week might afford the rent at 30 percent. Seems one way to make housing cheaper is having non-profit builders do the work. If there even is such a builder in northern N.H. Dave Robinson, Kearsarge I’m sure the units will fill up fast! Fortunately, it is for the working people which are the backbone of this valley. I think the “working middle class people” of this area certainly need more affordable housing, and this area needs to stop “catering” to the people who continue to live off of the state. Speaking for myself and what my family and I have been through in the 10 years that we’ve lived in the valley, the need is dire at best. So many places in the valley are just so far out of reach price-wise, and only affordable for the rich and well-off. I personally cannot afford to pay $1,200 or more for a nice place to live. (I won’t go into the reasons why they’re so high, but they are.) In the past 10 years, there have been several “committees” formed to study workforce housing, but it’s all talk, no action. Instead of forming committees to study the problem, like Congress does at a waste of the taxpayers money, just do something. Invite more developers in to build more housing units, so that people can afford to live here in the valley. There were many places built by Bob Bahre where we came from, and many families benefitted from that. The valley needs someone like him to do this here. I don’t think 32 units is even close to what is needed around here. With many jobs in the valley paying minimum wage and not much more, it is a struggle to survive. No one should have to make a choice between paying rent or eating.


Page 8 — THE CONWAY DAILY SUN, Tuesday, June 14, 2011

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CMI from page one

“A number of other deficiencies were noted on the site that if left uncorrected will likely result in impacts to wetland areas, surface waters and the 25 foot buffers creating additional violations of the TWCO.” The ordinance calls for a 25-foot buffer for all water bodies and wetlands. No construction activity was supposed to take place in the buffer without a special use permit from the town, according to Howard. To date, CMI does not have this permit. However, Howard finds that CMI violated the ordinance several times by disturbing the buffer in the pursuit of building roadways and multiple temporary bridges. The report also describes deficiencies in erosion control and storm water detention systems. CMI vice president Jim Hoenscheid reacted to Howard’s report on Monday afternoon in a strongly worded e-mail. “The report contains numerous errors,” said Hoenscheid. “The basis of the report is wrong. CMI has not violated any wetland regulations including the Tamworth Wetland Ordinance (TWO). CMI has not dredged or filled a wetland or impacted a water body nor has CMI encroached on the 25-foot wetland buffer. The 25-foot buffer only applies to wetlands and not water bodies.” Hoenscheid continued that town officials have seen the bridges during site walks and never complained that they violated the wetland ordinance. Then one of the buffer violations that Howard cited was actually an access road that was built over 50 years ago. CMI has maintained that road using best management practices. The first phase of the project was completed last summer. That work was done under the authority of the Alteration of Terrain permit that was issued by the state’s depart-

“The report contains numerous errors,” said Hoenscheid. “The basis of the report is wrong. CMI has not violated any wetland regulations including the Tamworth Wetland Ordinance (TWO). CMI has not dredged or filled a wetland or impacted a water body nor has CMI encroached on the 25-foot wetland buffer. The 25-foot buffer only applies to wetlands and not water bodies.” ment of environmental services, said Hoenscheid. He refuted Howard’s report which said CMI didn’t have an Alteration of Terrain permit. “The majority of Mr. Howard’s ‘noted deficiencies’ far exceed the scope of the TWO and fall under the jurisdiction of the AOT,” said Hoenscheid. “CMI appreciates Mr. Howard’s suggestions and will implement those suggestions that we feel are warranted and will improve our current erosion control measures and storm water management system.” What happens next is up to the selectmen, said Focus: Tamworth’s Kate Vachon. The meeting will be selectmen’s first chance to react to the report. Vachon hopes selectmen will choose to enforce the ordinance. According to Focus, the selectmen would have several options including seeking a cease-and-desist order from a district court judge. That would mean CMI would have to remove the work that’s been done and pay fines. Selectmen could also seek an injunction in Superior Court. Selectman Bob Abraham confirmed CMI would be on the next agenda. He couldn’t comment about what would happen since that would be a board decision.

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Fryeburg fire chief facing cut in hours BY ERIK EISELE THE CONWAY DAILY SUN

FRYEBURG — What’s the impact of cutting the hours and pay of the man in charge of fire fighting for the town? It certainly doesn’t make him happy. “I’m going to be making less now than when I started,” said Fryeburg fire chief Ozzie Sheaf, who has been the chief for seven years. He is the only full-time employee at the Fryeburg Fire Department, which has a $124,000 budget. He’s getting cut from 40 hours per week to 32, resulting in a cut in pay between $7,500 and $8,500. He is slated to lose $7,500 if a 3 percent raise the Fryeburg selectmen are proposing makes it past the voters. If not, he’ll lose $8,500. He’d prefer to keep his hours instead of get the 3 percent raise, but that doesn’t seem to be the way things are going. Even with the cut in hours, he points out, the proposed budget is up almost $145,000 over last year. “It’s not going to make that big a difference as compared to the tax rate,” he said. “We’re still going to be a higher budget than it was.” The town will just be spending in other places, he said. The fire department work, meanwhile, still needs to get done. “There’s a lot to it,” he said. “I put in way more than 40 hours now.” He oversees department operations and 36 firefighters. Whenever the volunteers show up to take care of things, he said, he feels like he should help out. But now he intends to watch his hours more closely to ensure he

THE CONWAY DAILY SUN, Tuesday, June 14, 2011— Page 9

“I’m going to be making less now than when I started,” said Fryeburg fire chief Ozzie Sheaf, who has been the chief for seven years. He’s getting cut from 40 hours per week to 32, resulting in a cut in pay between $7,500 and $8,500. doesn’t exceed the new limits. He won’t show up for extra assignments, he said. “Other than calls, no.” The entire experience has left a sour taste in his mouth. The paid chief position was originally proposed as full time “so the fire chief would be available to the town,” he said, instead of at work. “But that’s not going to happen.” He’s going to have to find something to supplement the lost income, he said, a part time job of some sort. And that won’t be a good thing for Fryeburg, he said, which has a lot more infrastructure than other towns of similar size. Between the multiple gas stations, the airport, the fairgrounds, the river, bulk propane filling stations and Route 302, one of the largest points of entry into the state, he said, the Fryeburg Fire Department gets more than its fair share of calls. They had 107 calls in 2010, according to the town report, eight fewer than in 2009. There have been a number of serious fires recently, from the old Saunders Brothers mill to house fires. Having a couple major fires, however, doesn’t change things for Sheaf: “I don’t know of any good time to cut it.”

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Tim Pawlenty speaking at the Ray Shakir house party. (ERIK EISELE PHOTO) PAWLENTY from page one

his past policy positions were a mistake. “You’re here to celebrate the next president of the United States,” Shakir said, making clear which candidate he was backing at this early stage of the race. Pawlenty took the floor dressed like it was a normal Saturday afternoon, wearing a blue button-down and jeans. His Midwest accent peeked through as he talked and answered questions for more than an hour. He trumpeted what he’s been pushing since he launched his 2012 campaign: “No more bailouts, no more carve-outs, no more handouts.” “I’m running for president because the United States of America is facing great challenges,” he said. “We’ve got to tell the American people the truth.” He did it in Minnesota, he said, a state with a long history of liberal politics. “To put it in your parlance,” he said, “being a conservative governor in Minnesota is like having a conservative governor in Vermont.” But he moved the state further right, he said. “I will do the same thing for America.” His solution? “Grow the economy by shrinking government.”

“It may not be easy,” he said, “but it’s not complex.” The crowd was looking to get to know the former governor better and asked a lot of questions. How do you feel about the second amendment, one person asked, which protects the right to bear arms. “I’m the only governor in the country who signed concealed carry into law twice,” he said, once before the law was overturned, and then again afterward. What about military spending? a man asked. “When America goes to war, America needs to win,” Pawlenty answered. The military would have to tools they need under a Pawlenty administration so aggressors “don’t dare mess with us.” Energy? “Drill in ANWR.,” he said, referring to the the Alaska National Wildlife Refuge, and “deep-water drilling has served us well.” Entitlements? “You can’t solve this problem with little nibbles,” he said. “We can do better,” with Medicare, he said. “We’ll have our own Medicare plan out later.” The retirement age has to go up, he said, something he said in Florida even though it wasn’t popular. see next page

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THE CONWAY DAILY SUN, Tuesday, June 14, 2011— Page 11

Defending champion withdraws from this year's Mount Washington Road PINKHAM NOTCH — Defending champion and course record-holder Shewarge Amare has withdrawn from this year’s Mount Washington Road Race. Amare, the 24-year-old Ethiopian woman who last year smashed the course record by running up the 7.6mile Mount Washington Auto Road in 1 hour, 8 minutes, 20.4 seconds, reportedly lost her passport and other papers on a recent trip to race in Brazil. The problems of reinstating her travel and residence status have occupied so much of her time that she could not be sure of being able to travel or compete in the U.S. this month, and she has conveyed her regrets to the race organizers. The race to the 6,288-foot summit of the highest peak in the northeastern U.S. will take place this year on Saturday, June 18, without either the women’s or the men’s defending champion. Chris Siemers, of Arvada, Colo., who last year won a wire-to-wire duel with two-time former winner Eric Blake, of New Britain, Conn., determined several weeks ago that he must have surgery

from preceding page

The next president is going to have to make tough decisions, he said. “In Minnesota I did.” Furthermore, he said, the Republican Party has become a big tent party, with social conservatives, fiscal conservatives, Tea Party conservatives, defense conservatives and more. “We’re going to have to find a candidate who authentically and genuinely appeals to all of that.” Most other candidates can’t because of some policy position in the past or some lifestyle choice, he said, but he can. But Pawlenty is not well known, either in New Hampshire or nationally. Recent polls put him far behind the current front-runner, former Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney, although Romney has some significant political baggage that is tough for some Republicans to swallow.

Northland

to correct a persistent hip injury he sustained last winter. Men’s Field Blake, who won the race in 2006 and 2008, will return this year, along with 2009 winner Rickey Gates of Boulder, Colo.; three-time Mount Washington champion (2002, 2003, 2005) Simon Gutierrez of Alamosa, Colo.; Matt Byrne of Scranton, Penn. (6th in 2008, 4th in 2009); and Tommy Manning of Colorado Springs (7th in 2009, 6th last year). Women’s Field With Amare out, the presumed women’s favorite is two-time winner (2008, 2009) Brandy Erholtz of Bailey, Colo., who was third last year and whose other recent successes include winning the 2010 Vail Hillclimb. Her strongest competition should come from Kasie Enman of Huntington, Vt. (2nd in 2008); Amber Ferreira of Concord, N.H. (7th last year); Jennifer Campbell, of Newmarket, N.H. (3rd in 2009, 9th last year); and Camille Herron of Lafayette,

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Pawlenty has some time, however, to raise his profile in New Hampshire in the hopes that coverage here will lead to coverage elsewhere. Several other GOP hopefuls, like former New Mexico governor Gary Johnson and former Utah governor and Ambassador John Huntsman, are hoping to use the state as a springboard into the national sphere. Pawlenty has greater name recognition than either Huntsman or Johnson, and with more than six months left before the New Hampshire primary he is acting like his main opponent is President Obama, not other GOP contenders. The president made 10 or 15 promises when he took office, he said. “He’s broken almost all of them.” “They’ve got a government run amok,” he said. “I don’t think the American people want to be duped twice.”

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Page 12 — THE CONWAY DAILY SUN, Tuesday, June 14, 2011

ROAD RACE from page 11

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Indiana, who placed 6th here in 2008 and who, following a period of injury, has won four marathons in the past six months – Dallas, Birmingham (Alabama), Napa Valley and Fargo. Extreme athletes While some of the top entrants at Mount Washington are widely accomplished road-racers, others are better known for accomplishments in different endurance sports. One notable example is Amber Ferreira, who last winter won the Granite State snowshoe racing series and then went on to win the senior women’s race at the Snowshoe National championship. Two more are brothers Justin Freeman and Kris Freeman, both of whom have competed on the U.S. Olympic cross-country ski team. Kris, of Thornton, N.H., finished 15th in the 2010 Mount Washington Road Race, two places ahead of older brother Justin, who lives in New Hampton, N.H. Kris is also the first person with Type 1 diabetes to earn a place on the U.S. Nordic team. Uphill backward Frequently the Mount Washington Road Race includes an entrant or two who are simultaneously running the race and publicizing a worthy cause, usually related to health. This year, Don Davis of Reading, Mass., plans to make the ascent by running up the Auto Road backward, as part of an effort to qualify for the Guinness Book of World Records. At the same time, he’ll be striving to raise awareness of Donate Life New England, a non-profit organization based in Waltham, Mass., that promotes organ and tissue donation. Hall of Fame On Friday, June 17, at the pre-race gathering at the foot of the Auto Road, the Mount Washington Hall of Fame will induct three new members, all former champions in the “Race with Only One Hill.” These include Mike Gallagher of Vermont, who competed on three U.S. Olympic cross-country ski teams and won the Mount Washington Road Race four consecutive years (1968-1971); former New Zealand Olympic mara-

thoner Derek Froude, who in 1990 became the first person to run up Mt. Washington in under one hour (59:17); and Kenyan mountain runner Daniel Kihara, who set a then-course record of 58:21 in his 1996 Mt. Washington debut and won again in 1999, 2000 and 2001. Froude, who now lives in Tampa, and Gallagher will be present for the induction ceremony. Kihara will be inducted in absentia. The Friday evening presentation begins at 6 p.m. in the big tent next to the starting area of the race, just off Route 16 between Jackson and Gorham, N.H. Sponsor and adversaries The principal sponsor of the Mount Washington Road Race is Northeast Delta Dental, which this year is celebrating its 50th anniversary, just as the Auto Road is celebrating its 150th. In recognition of the occasion — and to see whether or not he can improve on his time from last year’s race — Northeast Delta Dental CEO Tom Raffio will run on Saturday wearing race number 50. Race director Mary Power and Auto Road general manager Howie Wemyss will present Raffio’s number to him as part of the Friday evening festivities. The Mount Washington Road Race pits 1,000 runners against one of the most challenging obstacles in roadracing anywhere in the world. In its 7.6 miles, the Mount Washington Auto Road gains 4,727 feet in altitude with no downhill break. The final 70 yards rises at a 22 percent grade to the finish line beside the old weather station, where a wind speed of 231 mph was recorded in 1934. (The average wind speed at the summit is 35 mph.) The race has attracted Olympic athletes, Boston marathon champions, and the best mountain running specialists in the world, along with numerous other runners from across the United States and from 18 other countries. For a colorful description of running the race, see Todd Balf’s article “Because It’s Steep” in the June 2011 issue of Runner’s World. This year’s Mount Washington Road Race will start at 9 a.m. – an hour earlier than in previous years.

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The best way to get to know us is to come and visit us! P.O. Box 1069 • Conway, New Hampshire 03818 603.447.3168 • WhiteMountainWaldorf.org


THE CONWAY DAILY SUN, Tuesday, June 14, 2011— Page 13

WEEKEND WRAP

Rocking out with Steve Dore and friends BY TOM EASTMAN THE CONWAY DAILY SUN

FRYEBURG, Maine — To borrow a few Blend song titles, the legions of “Friend of the Blend” fans got their “Anytime Delight,” and “All I [They] Need”-ed at the Steve Dore and Friends Coming Home, almost Blend performance at the jam-packed Forestry Building of the Fryeburg Fairgrounds on a rainy Saturday night. The rain outside did little to dampen anyone’s enthusiasm in the flag-decorated indoor forestry center. “It wasn’t that everyone just got to be young again for a night — I felt that the feeling was like when you were a kid, and you were able to come home again, where everything was safe and good,” said show organizer and longtime Friend of the Blend Ellen Guilford. Guilford said the show exceeded expectations. “Everyone — including some former members of the Blend — thought we would only get 200 tickets. We sold over 500,” said an enthused Guilford. Proceeds from the June 11 show benefited the Shawn Smith for Kids Foundation, the Friends of Conway Recreation, the Bryson Herlihy Fund, the Rusty Rocket Fund and the Friends of Fryeburg Recreation. The show featured former Blend lead singer and co-songwriter Steve Dore, now of Texas, on electric piano and guitar, joined by former bandmates Skip Smith of Fryeburg on drums and Ken Holt of Florida on bass. For the Blend sets, they were joined by Ron Perrow on guitar. Joining Dore in the opening act were Perrow; Dore’s daughter, vocalist Molly Dore; bassist Damon Bolduc; Jon Whitney on keyboards; drummer Jill Ohlson; lead guitarist Simon Crawford; and Devonsquare’s Alana MacDonald.

Ace Tarberry (left) and Olympian Leanne Smith, both of Conway, celebrated at the Damon O’Neal Scholarship Gala at cranmore Mountain Resort June 11 with 1972 local Olympian and former pro ski racer Tyler Palmer. Tarberry — a Dartmouth student — was named to the U.S. Ski Team’s C Team this week. (TOM EASTMAN PHOTO)

A solo performer known as Wally opened the show with an acoustic set of Dylan tunes. The band performed several songs from Dore’s solo career, including “Coming Home (Fryeburg, Maine),” the piano tune that he recently wrote about growing up in Fryeburg. Then the Blend members came out, joined by Perrow. The forestry barn rocked to the sound of Blend classics. And then some, with Dore — a 1964 Fryeburg Academy grad — dancing like an electronic, revved up marionette. “I was like a kid at Christmas, waiting for them to come out. When I turned around and saw that sea of faces — it was a night of smiles everywhere you turned,” said Guilford, mother of the late Shawn Smith, after whom the youth foundation is named. Will it return next year? Stay tuned, says Guilford, who once saw the Blend open for the Who at the old Boston Garden in 1977 during the height of the band’s career from the 1970s until their breakup in 1982. “It will be bigger and better than ever,” said Guilford. The band last held a reunion in 2001 at the Fryeburg Fairgrounds. Guitarist J.D. Drown died from cancer in 2002, and keyboardist Donnie Pomber has also passed. Without those two founding members, Dore has always stressed in the years since that there can never be a Blend reunion. But the spirit was definitely there in the music at the fairgrounds Saturday night. If you missed this past weekend’s show, the annual Rusty Rocket Music Foundation concert, named in Drown’s honor, is set for Saturday, June 18, at Jimmy the Greek’s in Old Orchard Beach, featuring Dore, Smith, Holt and several other musicians. For more information, go to www.rustyrocket.com.

Guitarist Steve Dore and bassist Ken Holt, two original members of the Blend, performing Saturday at the forestry building of the Fryeburg Fair. (TOM EASTMAN PHOTO)

From left, Ron Perrow, Steve Dore, Ken Holt, Skip Smith and Jon Whitney take a bow following Saturday’s benefit concert. (TOM EASTMAN PHOTO)

Local ski luminaries celebrate at O’Neal scholarship gala BY TOM EASTMAN THE CONWAY DAILY SUN

CONWAY — It was raining, but the stars were definitely out at the base of Cranmore Mountain Resort in North Conway Saturday night for the Damon O’Neal Scholarship Gala. Several local current and past Olympic ski legends were on hand at the event, which was held at the Eating House.

The event served as a fund-raiser for the Damon O’Neal Scholarship Fund. That Kennett High scholarship is named after O’Neal, a promising skier who was killed at age 16 during a practice run 52 years ago at Sugarloaf Mountain in Kingfield, Maine. Among the skiing celebrities who staffed the autograph tables as part of the night’s festivities were Cransee GALA page 15


Page 14 — THE CONWAY DAILY SUN, Tuesday, June 14, 2011

Fifteen teams swatted more than just black flies this past showery Saturday morning, June 11, in the second annual World’s Largest Mini-Golf Tourney, played on the grounds of the North Conway Community Center. Proceeds benefited local charitable organizations, with representatives of each non-profit volunteering to man holes on the 18-course layout, according to tourney organizer Rich Moulton. Top team was captained by Det. Alan Broyer of the Conway Police Department, with their selected charity of choice being the Mother Seton House in Fryeburg, Maine. Costumes were encouraged, with the Black Flies deemed the winner. Shown above are the Mad Hatters, sponsored by M&D ProductionS. The tourney was founded by Moulton several years ago at Story Land, and was brought back last year by Moutlon for local charities. (TOM EASTMAN PHOTO)

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O’Neal Trophy and scholarship to be awarded Thursday night GALA from page 13

more skimeister Herbert Schneider, and local former Olympians Penny Pitou, Tyler Palmer, Abbi Fisher, Carl Swenson, Jack Lufkin, and U.S. Ski Team member and Olympian Leanne Smith. Also on hand were Pitou’s former teammate, 1960 Olympian Joan Hannah of Franconia; Devin Delaney of North Conway; Dartmouth standout Ace Tarberry of North Conway; and first Damon O’Neal Scholarship recipient Michael Larson, who recently completed his freshman year at the University of Connecticut. Tarberry celebrated his latest news at the event — he was named to the U.S. Ski Team’s C team this past week. Smith, meanwhile, got to share stories with Pitou, the double silver-medalist from the 1960 Olympics in Squaw Valley in downhill and giant slalom. “Leanne really had a nice evening of speaking with Penny, And, it was great to see Tyler [Palmer] there with Herbert [Schneider]. It was truly a great evening, and I believe it will help us go over the top of reaching our goal of establishing our goal set two years ago of $50,000, which will allow us to make the scholarship self-sustaining,” said committee memberTed Kramer, who praised the Valley Originals and event co-organizer Stefi Reed Hastings for their work. Several members of O’Neal’s family were on hand, including his brother, Roly O’Neal. Among the memorabilia auctioned off was a 2010 Sports Illustrated copy showing members of the U.S. Ski Team, signed by Bode Miller of Franconia. This year’s O’Neal Trophy and scholarship will be awarded at the Kennett High Scholarship Awards Night, set for 6 p.m. June 16 at Kennett High’s Lloynd Auditorium.

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THE CONWAY DAILY SUN, Tuesday, June 14, 2011— Page 15


Page 16 — THE CONWAY DAILY SUN, Tuesday, June 14, 2011

Freedom Town Column

Lisa Wheeler wheelersinfreedom@roadrunner.com

Baked bean supper with silent auction June 18

The First Christian Church of Freedom is holding a traditional baked bean supper with silent auction on Saturday, June 18, at 5:30 p.m. at the town hall. Menu for the meal is baked beans, ham, hot dogs, rolls, potato salad, cake and beverage. Tickets will be available at the door and are $8 per adult and $4 per child under age 10. Family prices are $20 for two adults and two children under 10. Silent auction items included quilted items, home-made jam, jewelry, decorative painting, theorem painting, gift certificate, and much more. Proceeds will benefit the First Christian Church of Freedom. Freedom is having a barn raising party. The barn will be for fire storage next to Mill Pond. This project is being built and completed by Freedom residents and their friends. With the thought to keep our tax base low we will do all the building as volunteers. The materials will be purchased with town warrant article funds and there have been donations of items. Everyone is invited to come and work with their neighbors to complete this project, come spend the day or just an hour. Participants do not need to be handy as all levels of help are need. Come watch if you would like as we will be raising walls and this will be used as a teaching opportunity. There will be a work party on June 18 at 8:30 a.m. (rain date June 19) will all ages welcome. Participant will begin painting the siding for the new front section of the barn. Please bring 3-4 inch paint brush and paint bucket. There will be some brushes to loan. On June 25 and 26 the work begins at 8 a.m. and only for those ages 16 and above. On this day we will be building the

walls, siding and putting up the roof. Bring hammers, tall step ladders, chop saws and nail guns. Tools will be available to loan if needed. There will be more work parties to complete the inside, so watch for dates. Call Michael Gaudette at 539-3278 for more information. The Old Home Week Committee is gearing up for this year’s events. We are happy to announce that the prize money for the rubber ducky day race has doubled! Tickets will be sold at the transfer station, and outside the post office. You can also purchase your tickets at the Freedom Village Store or contact Bill Elliott 539-7758. Anyone interested in participating in the parade, should contact Sylvia Carney 539-5799. The theme this year is "Growing with Freedom". It’s time to get working on your cardboard boat for the big race on July 30, the competition will be strong this year. Our updated website is filled with information about all our events, please visit us at freedomoldhomeweek.org. The Ladies Guild will be displaying quilts and crafts in the church during Rubber Ducky Day July 2 as well as during the Freedom parade. Raffle tickets will also be sold on the quilt which will be raffled in November. The Guild will also be having a table at the Community Club sale at Freedom Elementary School. The Freedom Historical Society is looking for one or two high school students who would like to do a four to five day internship at the Allard House and Works Museum during the week of July 18. Tasks include rewriting faded labels for artifacts, transferring recorded conversations from cassette to CD a, learning how to give a tour through the museum

and giving one tour with guidance from a society member. If you are interested contact Scott Cunningham at 539-4924. The Freedom Historical Society presents "Thomas Edison Living History Presentation" on Tuesday, June 21 at 7 p.m. at the Town Hall. Learn about the world’s most famous inventor from Jonathan Hively, who will portray him in period costume and dialogue. Jonathan has studied the life of Thomas Edison extensively and has an large collection of antique phonographs, light bulbs and Edisoniana. Jon graduated from Thomas Edison College and has visited Edison’s birthplace in Milan, Ohio, Edison’s laboratory in Menlo Park, N.J., his winter home in Fort Meyers and even explored the intricate details about Edison’s travels in the White Mountains of New Hampshire. Refreshments will be served. For more information call 301-1107. News from Camp Cody: Carroll County Lodge Mason breakfast buffet is open to the public July 2 at 7 a.m. at the Carroll Mason Lodge (next to town office). There will be Pancakes bacon, eggs, and sausage and more Begins. Your donation will benefit Carroll Lodge's Charity Fund. If you miss this the first time or if you enjoy it so much you want more, come again on July 30 same time, same place, same menu. Aug. 4 is the ice cream social put on by the Carroll Mason Lodge and open to the public. Located at the Carroll Lodge while the music and festivities are going on at the band at band-stand during Old Home Week. To benefit Carroll Lodge's Charity Fund. Aug. 20 Huge Yard Sale put on the Carroll Mason Lodge. Starts at 9 a.m. Location to be announced.

Camp Canine is presented by A.C.T.S., a local non-profit organization that trains service dogs. Each camper will work for one week with one of our puppies in training. Campers will learn about the role of assistance dogs, the principles of positive training, basic dog obedience, clicker training, general dog care and grooming, socialization of Assistance Dogs, and how to train Service Dog tasks. During each camp session there will be a busy schedule of dog training sessions, games, demonstrations, craft projects, and one field trip with the dogs. Tuition is $350 a session. Space is limited. For more information visit the A.C.T.S. website at www.assistancecanine.org or contact Cathy Burke at 986-6600. Missing trivia night at the Freedom Village Store? Well Heidi and Peter Adams are back and are organizing one for Saturday, June 25 at the store, starting at 6 p.m. Also at the Freedom Village Store are blood pressure clinics. They are being put on by some of Freedom’s nurses on Tuesdays from 10 a.m. to 11 a.m. Store manager, Jeannie Kestner has now got the store’s web site set up so that if you need a gift, and don’t have time to get to the Freedom Village Store, you can now go to the website freedomvillagestore.org and click on the picture of the store and start shopping. With the warmer weather and flowers coming into bloom, the Flower Lady, aka Sue Stamm, is again doing her thing keeping the store decorated in flowers inside and out. Don’t forget that during the month of June the artistry of Bonnie Burroughs is being celebrated at the store with a reception on Friday, June 24. Winner of last week’s 50/50 raffle was Lee Allison.

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(entering grades 7, 8, or 9) NOW ENROLLING: • CONSTRUCTION TRADES WEEK - July 18th - 22nd • ORGANIC FARMING WEEK - July 25th - 29th Each week-long program costs $90 with limited scholarships available. Interested students must fill out an application form available from their school guidance counselors or online at www.mwvschooltocareer.com. Deadline for applications is June 17th . For more information contact Corinne Reidy at director@mwvschooltocareer.com or call 447-2350.

St. Vincent de Paul Thrift Shop 153 Grafton St., Berlin, NH 752-2902 Come shop our thrift shop where everyday is a bargain day! Summer hours: Upstairs: Clothing and flea market. Tues. thought Fri. 10-4 • Basement: Wed. 8-2 Furniture, computers, appliances and Christmas decorations For your shopping convenience the entire Thrift Shop will be open until 6 p.m. on Wed. June 15th Spread the word and bring a friend!


THE CONWAY DAILY SUN, Tuesday, June 14, 2011— Page 17

–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– OBITUARIES ––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––

Barbara (Drinkwater) 'Bunny' Eldridge

Barbara (Drinkwater) "Bunny" Eldridge, 86, of Center Ossipee, passed away Sunday, June 12, 2011 at Mountain View Nursing Home in Ossipee. She was born July 3, 1924 in Taunton, MA the daughter of the late Clyde B. and Alma (Briggs) Drinkwater. She had lived in Center Ossipee for most of her life and had worked for Ossipee Insurance Company in Ossipee for 21 years. She was the widow of the late Austin M. Eldridge. Bunny is survived by her son C. Brayton Eldridge, of Standish, Maine; her daughter, Brenda Emerson, of Gilford, two grandsons, David Emerson, of Meredith, and Gary Emerson, of Littleton; two great-grandchildren, Hunter

and Sydne Emerson, both of Littleton. She was predeceased by her sisters Beatrice Hobbs and Natalie Lawton, and her son- in-law Alan

Leon V. Foster Jr.

Leon V. Foster Jr., 78, of Englewood, Fla. and previously of Freedom, passed away June 8, 2011 at Venice Regional Hospital. He was born on Nov. 7, 1932 in Rochester, N.Y. to Leon V. Foster Sr. and Ruth Dorothy (Humphry) Foster. He graduated from Irondiquoit High School; Canton ATC and Michigan State University. He was married in 1954 to Alberta (Caswell) Foster and they had 3 children. He was a veteran of the U.S. Navy and was a pilot on the USS Saratoga. Mr. Foster worked in Veterinary Medicine for Hess and Clark, and then American Cyanmid and retired in 1994. He loved flying and took his family on many plane rides; he also enjoyed boating, taking friends and family in his boat for trips on Ossipee Lake. He is survived by his wife,

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Emerson. The family would like to also thank the nurses and staff at Mountain View as well as her good friend and roommate Mary Cotton, for their loving care, support and compassion given to Bunny for the past two years. Calling hours will be Saturday, June 18, from 4 to 8 p.m. at Lord Funeral Home at 50 Moultonville Road in Center Ossipee. Graveside services will be held Sunday, July 3, at 2 p.m. at Lakeview Cemetery in Freedom. Donations in her memory may be made to Friends of Mountain View, a non-profit organization dedicated to bettering the lives of those who reside at Mountain View Nursing Home, P.O. Box 674, Ossipee, NH, 03864.

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Page 18 — THE CONWAY DAILY SUN, Tuesday, June 14, 2011

Self Serve Save $$$ and do it yourself. Dog Wash No appointment, everything

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www.karlaspets.com

Eaton Town Column

Nancy Williams 447-5635

Little White Church’s monthly service June 19 It seems like absolutely everyone I know here in the valley came to the Steve Dore Homecoming concert last Saturday held at Fryeburg Fair. The combination of dynamite music, reminiscing with friends, dancing to the beat, hailing people from across the table was no less than perfect. A huge thank you to Steve, Skip, Ken, Molly, Damon, Simon, and all the other fabulous musicians who kept the hall rocking for four hours. It was surely a blast from the past, mixed up with who we are now, and making us feel like teenagers again. You must do this at least once a year. Steve thought they wouldn’t sell 150 ticket. There were at least 600 people there loving every minute, singing and dancing up a storm. Thanks so much to Ellen Guilford and everyone who contributed to this awesome reunion. What a blast. The Eaton crew, 13 of us, came in a van from town, so we started having fun even before we got there. Every one of us had a great time rocking with the crowd and visiting with friends, and the ride back was so much fun, too. Thanks Pam. Thanks to Alana, Johnny, Sandy, Sandy, Judy, Karen, David, Kim, Terry, Sherm, Pam, Jackie, and Fred for joining me in one of the most fun nights ever. We still can rock. Next Sunday, June 19, will be this month’s Little White Church Sunday service, starting at 5 p.m. Dana Cunningham will be leading what she describes as an emergent, present-moment-directed hour of music — both sung and instrumental, as well as poetry, silence, and the spoken word. The content of the time together is offered with the intention of creating space for stillness, gratitude, and increased awareness of what needs our attention most. All are welcome, regardless of belief system or lack thereof. Candace Maher will be joining us on her flute, Joanna Wiley will help us sing, and Anne Garland will be offering sign language for the poetry and songs. <span></span>Actually, you can spend a lot of your day Sunday, June 19th in our Little White Church. Julia Hendrickson will be performing from 10:00 a.m. until 12:30 p.m. Julia’s music is always lovely. Then after the Church service at 5:00 p.m., Judy

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Herrick will be giving a recital starting at 7 p.m. that evening. Plan a whole day of wonderful music. Enjoy! Now about the welcome summer party — it seems that I ran some lines together from the invitation to make it seem that the Eaton Community Circle was providing all the food, in which case they have informed me that indeed I, myself, will be providing all the food. No, that’s not going to happen. This is a potluck affair with every family bringing something to share with everyone else, like appetizers, entrees, salads, and desserts. The Eaton Community Circle will be providing soft drinks or you can bring your own beverage. This awesome party will begin on Monday, June 20, at 6 p.m. at the Lake House at Cass’ Point. Since the road into the house is very narrow and rutty, there will be someone in a car at the entrance to the road (just beyond the Camp Waukeela beach) to receive goodies and bus (car?) them in. You can also be shuttled in from the entrance to the Lake House, or you can walk in, or you can arrive by boat like I did last year. Don’t miss this super get-together with family, friends, and neighbors. The rain date is Tuesday, June 21. The Eaton Town Beach is up and running with Sheriff Sandy and Deputy Maggie in charge. If you are a year round resident of Eaton, you will receive two stickers per household and one guest pass. Renters need to provide proof of rental from their landlord to get their stickers. The town puts a lot of work and money into keeping our beach pristine, and we need you all to continue this policy. No dogs. No bottles. No glass. No rudeness. No lippy mouths. Sandy and Maggie are in charge and they are not supposed to know everyone in town. You must display your sticker on your car or have a guest pass to get onto the beach. Period. We love our beach so much and enjoy the swimming, the wonderful picnics and barbecues, and we are very lucky to have it. Please abide by the rules. If you pack it in, pack it see next page

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THE CONWAY DAILY SUN, Tuesday, June 14, 2011— Page 19

–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– OBITUARIES ––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––

Lorraine D. Long (Heath) Scheuchzer

Lorraine D. Long (Heath) Scheuchzer, 77, of Freeport, Maine, formerly of Portland, Maine, died Monday, May 24, 2011 after an illness. Born Jan. 19, 1934, the daughter of Leona (Toni) Sorrell and stepdaughter to Urban Heath. She was raised first in Ashland, until her family moved to Conway where Lorraine attended Conway schools . She was the oldest of four girls. She loved country music and was a selftaught guitar player. She enjoyed singing in the church youth choir. After she attended high school, Lorraine went to live with Persis Berry and worked helping her in the library. She then worked as a chamber-maid at Russells Cottages in North Conway and then at Forrest Glenn Inn. Lorraine moved to Portland, Maine in 1959 to pursue her music interest. There she met and married

Gene Scheuchzer, who played the accordion under the stage name “Gene Bennett.” Lorraine took a stage name of “Laney Scott” and played in a band with Richard Secord and Kathleen Gardner called the Country Troubadours. They played at Scarborough

from preceding page

out. Clean up your tables and the sand around you. We should all have a great summer. See you there. Now, speaking of the beach, make plans to attend our absolutely terrific July 4th Barbecue. July 4 is on a Monday, this year, so Ralph will need volunteers to set up the tables at 5 p.m. on Sunday, July 3. Everyone brings hors d’oeuvres, salads and desserts to share. Hamburgers and hot dogs will be supplied, cooked up by our organizers, Sunni and Ralph Wilkewitz, and all the condiments, plates, napkins, utensils will be at your disposal. This is always a huge event for the Town and their families and neighbors and friends, too. Ralph’s 50/50 raffle is a big hit. Definitely plan on being there. It starts around noon and the food goes fast so don’t be too late. Eaton swim lessons will begin July 5 and run

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Downs and other places and Lorraine and Kathy would sing and yodel “Cowboy Sweetheart” among other favorites. Lorraine was also a song writer. Lorraine is survived by her sisters, Helen Heath, of Conway; June Goyette and her husband, Michael, of Hollis, Maine; Diana Sorrell and her husband, Wes, of Portales, N.M.; a son, Eugene Scheuchzer, Jr., of Portland; and a daughter, Debra Ryan and her husband, David, and grandson, Jacob, of Buxton, Maine. A memorial service for friends and family will be on Friday, June 17, at 11 a.m. at the Bar Mills Community Church at 13 Hermit Thrush Drive, off Portland Road in Buxton. Internment will be at a later date in Center Conway. Arrangements are by the Hobbs Funeral Home in South Portland, Maine. Visit www.hobbsfuneralhome.com for more information.

through July 29. Classes will be Monday through Friday starting at 3 p.m. for half hour sessions. Registration will be Sunday, June 26, at the beach from 10 to 11 a.m. Forms will be available at the Eaton Village Store, the beach, and at the town hall, and you can also mail them in. Many thanks to Suzanne Raiche for this timely information. The Ossipee Valley Bible Church invites all of us to their Community Fair and Garden Show on Saturday, June 25, from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. This is all free, the speakers and the refreshments. They will have three great speakers, Guy Guinta about lilacs and wildflowers, CJ Fote about houseplants and will supply samples, and Jim Wilfong about agricultural needs and the water crisis. You are encouraged to bring flowers and vegetables to leave or pick up later. For more information, please call Wayne Feuerborn at 323-8212.

SCREENED LOAM $21 per yard • 15 yd. min. Delivered within 10 miles Gordon T. Burke & Sons, Inc. Call (603) 662-8202

Happy Birthday Marcella & Mia! We you

ANDY CUTTS Illustrated by KATHERINE ROY

Now available in independent bookstores and at www.readthepenny.com. Find us on Facebook.

Mommy, Daddy and Ava

Congratulations to Mandie King who graduated Summa Cum Laude from the University of New Hampshire with a Bachelor of Science in Family Studies.

In the fall, Mandie will continue her studies at UNH in pursuit of a Masters Degree in Elementary Education.


DAILY CROSSWORD TRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES

by Lynn Johnston

DILBERT

by Scott Adams

By Holiday Mathis SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). Everyone gets angry from time to time. It’s how you handle the emotion that matters. You will guide your aggressive impulses in extremely productive ways. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). You have a strong social sense now. You know when it’s important to blend with the group and also when it’s better to stand out in the crowd. You’ll advance your interests as you apply this social savvy. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). You are so focused on your task that you do not waste any time worrying or even noticing whether people like you. Well, they do. And the smarter they are the more they appreciate you. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). Include as many people as possible. Your collaborative efforts will be the springboard that takes you to new places -- places you would not reach otherwise. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). You probably don’t realize how much your loved ones need your approval and support, and they don’t realize it, either. But events today will prove that your loving gaze is a healing balm. TODAY’S BIRTHDAY (June 14). You deeply appreciate the small joys that loved ones bring to your life, and you will therefore be favored with a gigantic stroke of luck -- a birthday present from the universe. August brings a remarkable and unexpected turn of events. Your personal life sparkles with the addition of new friends. You share a special connection with Capricorn and Virgo people. Your lucky numbers are: 40, 1, 13, 37 and 12.

Cul de Sac

ARIES (March 21-April 19). You will succeed in your quest if it is a very simple one. Things have a way of getting overly complicated unless you are vigilant in your efforts to stay focused. TAURUS (April 20-May 20). You don’t always have to be the center of attention, which is why friends and family so thoroughly enjoy your presence. You have the perfect balance of give and take. GEMINI (May 21-June 21). An effort to save money could lead to the opposite occurrence. There is no point to being wise with your pennies if it causes you to be foolish with your dollars later on. Think of the big picture. CANCER (June 22-July 22). If you want to get to know someone, the onus is on you to make the first move. Don’t think too much about your approach. Work up the courage, and break the ice -- everything will flow naturally from there. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). You don’t like to talk about your personal boundaries because you are generous. But you do have limits, and if you don’t let others know what they are, someone is likely to take advantage. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). You will be helpful to someone who is going through difficult times. This person would rather be silent than talk about his or her feelings. Your presence is comforting because you understand. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). You remember the process of achieving maturity and are therefore compassionate with someone who is coming of age. You also recognize that each person has to learn in his or her own way.

by Richard Thompson

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 20 — THE CONWAY DAILY SUN, Tuesday, June 14, 2011

ACROSS 1 __ fide; genuine 5 Thin soup 10 Shower alternative 14 Throat-clearing sound 15 India’s dollar 16 Farmland unit 17 New York __ 18 Each other 20 __ cross buns 21 Related 22 Bullock 23 Fine tablecloth material 25 Highest card 26 British actress Merle __ 28 Sidestepped 31 Firebug’s crime 32 Natural talent 34 Sweet potato 36 In just a bit 37 Bizarre 38 “__ grip!”; advice to the hysterical

39 40 41 42 44 45 46 47 50 51 54 57 58 59 60 61 62 63

1 2

Actor Hanks Despises Canary homes Lower in status Erects __ Wednesday; Lent opener Terra-__; outdoor vase material Characteristic Theater box Jacuzzi Coldest period Drug addict Opening bet Easily offended Do an usher’s job Slip sideways on the road Minds Inquires DOWN Johann Sebastian __ Cincinnati, __

3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 19 21 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 32 33

Irritating Jimmy Carter’s daughter Shattered Altercation Golf tournament Earl Grey drink Egg layer Took one’s turn at the plate Prolonged pain Pine or palm Frau’s husband Movie award Abbr. following many poems Press clothes Enthusiastic Tobacco kiln __ about; mull over gloomily All __; listening Spectacles Went out with Celebration Recline

35 37 38 40 41 43

Church service Do the laundry Trot or canter Speediness __ as a button Prepared a fishing hook 44 Scores of one stroke over par 46 Snug and cozy

47 48 49 50 52 53 55 56 57

It was, to a poet Skating oval Opposed to __ jacket; buoyant vest Mountaintop __ and crafts Fraternity letter Bather’s spot U.N. member

Saturday’s Answer


THE CONWAY DAILY SUN, Tuesday, June 14, 2011— Page 21

Today is Tuesday, June 14, the 165th day of 2011. There are 200 days left in the year. This is Flag Day. Today’s Highlight in History: On June 14, 1777, the Continental Congress in Philadelphia adopted the Stars and Stripes as the national flag. On this date: In 1775, the Continental Army, forerunner of the United States Army, was created. In 1801, former American Revolutionary War General and notorious turncoat Benedict Arnold died in London. In 1811, Harriet Beecher Stowe, author of “Uncle Tom’s Cabin,” was born in Litchfield, Conn. In 1911, the British ocean liner RMS Olympic set out on its maiden voyage for New York, arriving one week later. In 1940, German troops entered Paris during World War II; the same day, the Nazis began transporting prisoners to the Auschwitz (OWSH’-vitz) concentration camp in German-occupied Poland. In 1943, the Supreme Court, in West Virginia State Board of Education vs. Barnette, ruled that children in public schools could not be forced to salute the flag of the United States. In 1954, the words “under God” were added to the Pledge of Allegiance. In 1967, the space probe Mariner 5 was launched from Cape Kennedy on a flight that took it past Venus. In 1985, the 17-day hijack ordeal of TWA Flight 847 began as a pair of Lebanese Shiite Muslim extremists seized the jetliner shortly after takeoff from Athens, Greece. In 1986, death claimed Broadway librettist Alan Jay Lerner in New York at age 67; and “Wild Kingdom” host Marlin Perkins in suburban St. Louis at age 81. One year ago: During his latest visit to the Gulf Coast, President Barack Obama promised that “things are going to return to normal” and that the region’s fouled waters would be in even better shape than before the catastrophic BP oil spill. Today’s Birthdays: Actress Marla Gibbs is 80. House Minority Whip Steny Hoyer, D-Md., is 72. Writer Peter Mayle is 72. Actor Jack Bannon is 71. Country-rock musician Spooner Oldham is 68. Rock singer Rod Argent is 66. Real estate mogul and TV personality Donald Trump is 65. Singer Janet Lennon (The Lennon Sisters) is 65. Rock musician Barry Melton is 64. Rock musician Alan White (Yes) is 62. Actor Eddie Mekka is 59. Actor Will Patton is 57. Olympic goldmedal speed skater Eric Heiden (HY’-dun) is 53. Singer Boy George is 50. Rock musician Chris DeGarmo is 48. Actress Traylor Howard is 45. Actress Yasmine Bleeth is 43. Actor Faizon Love is 43. Tennis player Steffi Graf is 42. Screenwriter Diablo Cody (Film: “Juno”) is 33. Actor-singer Kevin McHale (TV: “Glee”) is 23. Actress Lucy Hale is 22.

TUESDAY PRIME TIME 8:00

Dial

8:30

JUNE 14, 2011

9:00

9:30

12

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24

CNN

In the Arena (N)

2 4 5

6

WCSH

7

WHDH

8

WMTW

9

WMUR

11

WENH

27 28 31

MSNBC The Last Word FNC

NFL Live

Charlie Rose (N) (In Stereo) Å WBZ News Late Show (N) Å Letterman Star Trek: The Next Generation “Qpid” (In Stereo) Å News Tonight Show With Jay Leno 7 News at Jay Leno 11PM (N) News 8 Nightline WMTW at (N) Å 11PM (N) News 9 To- Nightline night (N) (N) Å The Red Globe Green Trekker (In Show Stereo) Extra (N) Punk’d (In (In Stereo) Stereo) Å Å WGME Late Show News 13 at With David 11:00 Letterman Frasier “Fa- According ther of the to Jim Å Bride” SportsNet SportsNet

Piers Morgan Tonight

Anderson Cooper 360 (N) Å

Rachel Maddow Show

The Ed Show (N)

The O’Reilly Factor (N) Hannity (N)

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Greta Van Susteren

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Raymond

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48

USA

Law & Order: SVU

White Collar (N) Å

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49

TNT

Law & Order

Memphis Beat (N)

HawthoRNe (N) Å

Memphis Beat Å

51

SYFY Movie: ›› “Silent Hill”

Movie: ›› “The Amityville Horror” (2005) Å

52

FX

Movie: ›› “The Day the Earth Stood Still” (2008)

53

TLC

Spouse vs. House (N)

19 Kids

19 Kids

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HIST Larry the Cable Guy

Larry the Cable Guy

How the States

Brad Meltzer’s Dec.

DISC Deadliest Catch Å

Deadliest Catch (N)

After the Catch (N)

HGTV First Place First Place Estate

Deadliest Catch Å First Place First Place

58

AP

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Planet Earth Å

House

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TRAV Bizarre Foods

Bizarre Foods

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SPIKE Auction

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67

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Auction

Housewives/NJ

TCM Movie: ›››‡ “Trio” (1950) HALL Little House on Prairie Frasier

Now arrange the circled letters to form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon.

Answer: (Answers tomorrow) Jumbles: DECAY HABIT CELERY BEHIND Answer: Having one helped the tightrope walker stay in shape — BALANCED DIET

Argyle Sweater

The by Scott Hilburn

Repo

Love Handles: Couples How I Met How I Met Ice-Coco

Kardas

AMC Movie: ›››‡ “The Matrix” (1999, Science Fiction) Keanu Reeves. Å BRAVO Housewives/OC

SEOTRY

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60

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56

Property

©2011 Tribune Media Services, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

ARSFC

›› “The Day the Earth Stood Still” Couple Spouse vs. House

55

54

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Dennis

Raymond

43

by David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek

Unscramble these four Jumbles, one letter to each square, to form four ordinary words.

Saturday’s

The Last Word

34

45

THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30

Nova scienceNOW SurWCBB viving a trip to Mars. NCIS A seaman’s death WBZ may be one in a series. Are You Are You WPME Smarter? Smarter?

Sign Up for the IAFLOFCI (OFFICIAL) Jumble Facebook fan club

––––––– ALMANAC –––––––

Chelsea

E! News

Movie: “The Matrix”

Decorators

Decorators

Movie: ››› “So Long at the Fair” (1950) Å

Adam

Frasier

Frasier

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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 6 9 14 15 16 17 19 20 21 23 24 26 28 31 33 36 38

ACROSS Supports Swiss peak Son of Abraham Saint James or Sarandon Carnival city, for short Rene of “Get Shorty” Publishings Maxwell and Schiaparelli Having too much stem __ Moines, IA Slug or song ender Stem-to-stern beam Remove sticky stuff Sm. runway aircraft High crag Some sports cars Fails to win Pitiful artwork?

40 D-Day craft 41 Amer. protection grp. 44 Sprint competition 45 Seeps 46 Kuwaiti currency 47 Spanish rice entree 49 Ready-go separator 51 Fairy-tale fiend 52 Pop 54 Lacking legal force 56 Unruly kid 58 Take a chair 60 Prejudices 64 Great reviews 66 Indispensable 68 Folk of Limerick 69 CD predecessors 70 Concentrated 71 Easily irritated 72 Spring forward syst. 73 Out of kilter 1

DOWN Trident-shaped

2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 18 22 25 27 28 29 30 32 34

letters Oxidation Peak in Greece “Twittering Machine” artist Slithering hisser Bowlike shape Distorted the truth Struck a stance Ferocity Gunpowder ingredient Gathering together Gray and Candler Expense Kremlin refusal Seven of Siena Jennifer of “The Wedding Planner” Night watchman Slow period Cavaradossi’s love Ruby Dee’s husband Sacred ceremonies Hollywood’s big award

35 Cubic meter 37 Reprimand 39 German industrial city 42 Highways 43 Desecrates 48 Right up-to-date 50 Piccadilly subway 53 Rate of return 55 Singer Ronstadt

56 Man from Manchester 57 Lightly cooked 59 Cooking meas. 61 Submerge 62 Palliate 63 Offed 65 Diffident 67 Booming jet

Yesterday’s Answer


Page 22 — THE CONWAY DAILY SUN, Tuesday, June 14, 2011

Adoption

$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 offi ces on Seavey Street in North Conway village. OTHER RATES: For information about the professional directory or classifi ed display ads call Jamie or Hannah at 356-2999.

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207-462-2524

Paul Butters Ctr. Conway •

603-356-9058 603-726-6897

SEAL COATING

R.M. Remodeling

& Crack Filling

AJ’s 207-925-8022 Licensed/Insured • Free Estimates

EE Computer Services

JONES MASONRY FREE ESTIMATES www.jonesbrickandstone.com 323-7182

603-733-6451 eecomputerservices.com

603-356-9255

EAST BRANCH TIMBERWORKS Tree Removal Bucket Truck

MASONRY

Property Enhancement Services Rates as low as $15/hr

Expert Tree Removal

603-986-4096

www.sacotreeworks.com

603-520-8272

CUSTOM CARPENTRY

Insured • 603-539-6902 • 978-808-8315

Pop’s Painting

Snow blowers, lawn mowers, ride-ons Free local pickup and delivery Ctr. Ossipee • Perm-A-Pave LLC Fully Insured Free Estimates

447-5895

All Work Guaranteed Reasonable Rates

603-356-6667 • 800-564-5527

Plumbing & Heating LLC

603-662-8687

Commercial & Residential Fully Insured Call Carl & Dixie at 447-3711

AND MORE!

Credit Cards Accepted, Licensed, Insured, Background Checked

DREW & SON BUILDERS ROOFING DECKING SIDING Call Rick 603-539-1978

Residential Electrical Specialist • Licensed • Fully Insured

4’x13”x7” Step Mailbox Post 8”x8” Lamp Post

TAMWORTH GRANITE division of Windy Ridge Corp.

Route 25, Tamworth, NH

$124.00 $170.00 $275.00

Est. 1980 - Fully Insured

ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN • •

1-800-639-2021

(603) 447-5900

JACK’S ROOFING EPDM Rubber Roofing. Metal and Asphalt Shingles. Free Estimates - Fully Insured or

Stump Grinding

Brush Removal / Brush Hogging

662-6079

Tony Horman

Ossipee Valley SEALCOAT Crack Filling Commercial/residential

603-677-2552

AFFORDABLE ROOFING & SIDING

HIGHEST QUALITY CRAFTSMANSHIP Fully Insured 603-730-2521 rockybranchbuilders@gmail.com

Serving the Valley Since 1990

FLOORING C.R. Schneider Hardwood Floors

3d modeling drafting graphics

Ian T. Blue, M.Arch

447-1007

www.synteserendering.com

ROOF

Installed • Sanded • Finished Fully Insured • Call Chris 539-4015 • Cell: 781-953-8058

Acorn Roofing • 447-5912

Alpine Pro Painting

PROPERTY SERVICES

Interior • Exterior • Power Washing References • Insured • Free Estimates

603-986-6874

SO

G IN Dwight LUT OF & Sons ION O S 603-662-5567 R Lakes & Mountain Carpet & Furniture Cleaning & Restoration Quality Service Since 1975 603-973-1667

Steven Gagne ELECTRIC

603-447-3375

Residential & Commercial Insured • Master NH/ME

RODD

ARTIE’S ELECTRIC Granite Steps & Posts

Auto Repairs, State Inspections, Rust Repair

CERTIFIED & INSURED

CLEANING

FIRST RESPONSE

Licensed & Insured Call Timothy 603-447-4923

Anmar PLASTERING

603-356-2155 - Fully Insured

FULLY INSURED • FREE ESTIMATES

Boyce Heating & Cooling

Full Property Management Services Ext. 2

www.popspaintingnh.com

MATT CHRISTIAN TREE CARE

GAS PIPING HVAC

Mountain & Vale Realty

CHIMNEY CLEANING Safety Sweep

603-986-5143 • 207-935-5030

TREE WORK STUMP GRINDING

Reasonable Rates

LLC

DAVE GAGNE DRYWALL CO.

Home Repairs, Plaster & Ceiling Repairs, Drywall, Insulation, Int/Ext Painting, Texture Removal & Wallpaper Res.

447-5895

All Work Guaranteed

603-356-6889

LEGACY PAINTING and Remodeling

603-447-6643

JOHN GAMMON, JR. 29 Yrs. Exp. 603-539-2782

Fully Insured Free Estimates

Quality & Service Since 1976

HOWARD TREE

MARK BERNARD

TREE REMOVAL

Difficult Removals • Pruning Chipping • Stump Grinding

Albany Auto Tire & Transmission

Commercial, Residential, Industrial

Conway Office 603-493-7527 Dave Duval

Fully Ins., 30 Yrs. Exp. Freedom • 539-4232

Damon’s Tree Removal

Where Quality Prevails. Interior/Exterior. Fully Insured. Reasonable Rates. Cell 662-9292 HANIBAL

(603)733-4758

Reasonable Rates, Flexible Options, Firewood, Timber Buyer, Most Phases of Property Maintenance Free Estimates • Fully Insured

Generator Hookups New Homes Remodeling

Home Repairs, Decks, Additions, Siding, Painting, Flooring

hireahoney.com

Free Estimates Call John Morris 603-539-6736

DUVAL ELECTRICAL Contractor

Licensed and Insured MasterCard/Visa Accepted

ROOFING “Servicing the Area for 80 Years” Specialized Roofing System www.roddroffing.com • 1-800-331-7663

TREES CUT DOWN

JIM CLINE

603-284-6475 • 207-625-4273

Animals #1 A Petlovers Service who Let The Dogs Out?

PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY

RANIT

OUR hearts reach out to you. Happily married, loving, secure couple wishes to adopt and cherish your newborn. Expenses paid. Jen & Paul 1-866-934-2616.

RWN

Your Solution Provider rwnpropertyservices.com

(603) 356-4759

Hurd Contractors Roofing • Siding • Flooring

Roofing MW Valley since 1984 North Conway 447-3011

Granite Tree Service House lots cleared.Trees taken down & removed. Chipping, Pruning. Buying standing timber, excellent prices. Fully Insured, Free Estimates

539-6917 • cell: 986-0482

HORSMAN BUILDERS New Construction • Renovations Remodeling & Finish Work Insured • Free Estimates

603-340-0111

Tim DiPietro RESIDENTIAL & COMMERCIAL MASTER LICENSE - INSURED

603-356-2248

Master Electrician ME & NH License Fully Insured

Kitties too! Pet sitters/ Pet taxi. Bonded and insured. Barbara Hogan. 383-9463.

#1 Animal Care Resort Karla's Pet Rendezvous

"Where your Pet is on Vacation too!" Overnight Care, Doggie Daycare, Bathing & Styling Salon, & Self Service Dog Wash! www.karlaspets.com 603-447-3435. AKC German Shepherd puppies, cute extra large quality. Born 4/17/2011. Parents and grandfather. $1200. (603)539-7727. AKC Golden Retriever puppies. Vet checked, 1st shots, ready to go 6/25. (207)625-7560, (207)636-0126. AKC Saint Bernard puppies come with dewclaws removed, worming, 1st shot and full AKC registration. 2 females, 1 male available. CFMI (603)662-8153. AKC Yellow Labs. First shots, AKC papers, vet health certificate. Ready now. Conway (603)726-6273. ANIMAL Rescue League of NHNorth- Cats, kittens, dogs, and pups looking for a second chance. 603-447-5955 conwayshelter.org.

AUNTIE CINDY'S ALBANY PET CARE

Newly remodeled salon and pet care center. Grooming, daycare and doggie bed and breakfast in a fun, clean, happy environment at prices you can afford. Call Auntie Cindy @ 447-5614.

AUNTIE MARY’S PET SITTING

Provides in-home pet care in the Conways, Tamworth, Albany, Madison, Eaton, Freedom and Fryeburg, ME. Insured and bonded. Call Auntie Mary at 986-6192 or 447-3556. BLUE Tick Walker puppies. Big ears, good pets or hunters. Wormed, vet checked and all shots UTD, $250. Only 2 left. (207)935-4570.

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.

COMING WHEN CALLED CLASS

June 28th in Fryeburg. Cost is $25. For information go to www.TellingTailsTraining.com or call 207-642-3693.

CONFORMATION PRESENTATION CLASS

Whether you are a beginner or have shown dogs before, this class is for those interested in showing dogs in conformation shows. Class starts June 20th. FMI go to www.TellingTailsTraining.com/events or call 207-642-3693. COONDOLLS- Designer kittens, Maine Coon & Ragdoll- Sweet little fluffy balls of fur. Hand raised, underfoot with kids and dogs $100. Call (207)890-2246. DO YOU NEED FINANCIAL HELP spaying and altering your dog or cat? 603-224-1361, before 2pm.

DOG TRAINING CLASSES- FRYEBURG

For all ages and abilities. For information go to www.TellingTailsTraining.com or call 207-642-3693. KITTENS- free to good homes. Call (207)890-2246.

Animals 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. HARVEST Hills Thrift Shop. Open daily, closed Thursday, new hours. 10am-3pm.

Low Cost Spay/ Neuter Cats & dogs Rozzie May Animal Alliance 603-447-1373

...ONE DOG AT A TIME Obedience training and problem solving. Free consultation. Call Dave Norton, Certified Dog Trainer, (603)986-6803. SHIH Tzu puppies for sale. 10 weeks old handsome puppies. 2 blacks, 2 white & black. Up to date on shots. $300 each, parents on premises. Call after 4:30pm weekdays. Any time weekends: (603)539-7225.

Announcement IF YOU USED TYPE 2 DIABETES DRUG AVANDIA between 1999present and suffered a stroke or heart attack you may be entitled to compensation. Attorney Charles Johnson 1-800-535-5727.

Auctions HUGE Auction household and estate liquidations Saturday June 18th 5pm by Gary Wallace Auctioneers Inc. Rt16 Ossipee Gallery building- see www.wallaceauctions.com Antiques- furniture- art- household- preview 3pm. call 603-539-5276 lic# 2735.

Autos $799 TO $4999 Cars, trucks, vans, SUVs, 4x4. No hassle prices. Many to choose from. (603)539-9553. $2500/OBO1985 Mercedes 300B turbo diesel, 28mpg, new tires state inspected, solid car. (603)730-2260. 1986 SS Monte Carlo- New carb and tires. White. Excellent condition. Asking $5000. (603)539-6274. 1989 Fleetwood Cadillac. 88k original owner miles. New tires, brakes, tune-up, new sticker. $2000/obo. (603)447-1755. 1998 Chevy K1500 Cheyenne 6 cyl., 4 wd, extended cab, 14,000 miles on new crate motor, 174,000 actual miles, new fuel pump, new fuel tank, cap and bed liner. Asking $3950. Call (603)356-9038 for details. 1998 Buick Century Sedan. Blue, 115,000 miles, excellent running condition. Few cosmetic flaws. $2000. Contact Stephanie (207)420-6473. 2000 Dodge Neon, new tires, runs good, 194k miles. $1895. (603)356-3551. 2000 Saab Convertible Turbo, auto, white with blue top, power top does not always work $2500. 1992 VW Cabriole Convertible, color green, $1200 (603)662-3021. 2001 Chevy Blazer 2 door, 4x4, 160K, runs great, well maintained. Call for details. $3500/obo. Harry (603)651-6544. 2001 Ford Focus SZT 4 door, 136k miles, leather, good tires $3500 (603)387-6779.


THE CONWAY DAILY SUN, Tuesday, June 14, 2011— Page 23

Autos

Business Opportunities

For Rent

For Rent

For Rent

For Rent-Vacation

2002 Chevy Avalanche. Great condition, 137k miles. Asking $9000/obo. Please call (603)520-7695.

MAGGIO Hair Studio would like you to join their team of stylists. We are looking for an energetic positive stylist who is excited about making more money and working less. Aside from your favorite tools, everything you’ll need is right here. With a low monthly rate you’ll see your business grown in a short time. If this interests you stop by 85 Main St. Conway (603)447-2553.

BARTLETT3 bdrm, 1 bath home, w/d hook-up, basement, deck, large yard with mtn views. $1,200/mo plus utilities. Call (603)986-6451.

FRYEBURG Center: Maintained large luxury 2 bedroom, 2 bath townhouse. Finished basement deck w/d hook-up, no pets, good credit, $900/mo plus (207)935-3241.

NORTH Conway- Completely renovated spacious absolutely gorgeous 2 bdrm apts gleaming hardwood floors. Washer/ dryer, plenty of parking, nonsmoking, Reference required $795/mo. plus utilities. (781)953-9693.

FRYEBURG 4 bedroom plus. Minutes to North Conway, lakes, rivers & hiking. Available weeks or weekends. Call Larry (978)302-9621.

2002 Honda Civic LX, 118k, original owner, maintained, very good condition, mounted snows. $5000. (603)447-4328. 2004 GMC Envoy XUV, loaded, leather, sunroof, 98k miles, $9500. (603)447-1091. 2007 Pontiac Vibe 63K miles, excellent condition, stabilitrak, 34mpg, auto trans, a/c, $11,200/obo (603)539-2803. HERMANSON!S AUTO WAREHOUSE, LTD Auto Sales & Repair Eastern Spaces Warehouse East Conway Road Hermansonsautowarehouse.com 04 Chevy Trailblazer, 4x4, 6cyl, auto, blue.............................$6,900 04 GMC Yukon, 4x4, 8cyl, auto, black....................................$7,450 04 Jeep Gr Cherokee, 4x4, 8cyl, auto, tan ..............................$7,500 03 Chevy Impala, 6cyl, auto, black....................................$4,450 03 Dodge Durango, 4x4, 8cyl, auto, grey............................$5,900 02 Chevy Trailblazer, 4x4, 6cyl, auto, pewter ........................$6,250 02 Ford Explorer, 4x4, 6cyl, auto, green ...................................$5,450 02 GMC Envoy, 4x4, 6cyl, auto, maroon ................................$5,900 02 GMC Yukon XL, 4x4, 8cyl, auto pewter .................................$6,750 02 GMC Yukon, 4x4, 8cyl, auto, pewter .................................$5,900 02 Jeep Liberty, 4x4, 6cyl, auto, white....................................$5,900 01 Dodge Durango, 4x4, 8cyl, auto, green ..........................$5,950 01 Nissan Altima, 4xyl, auto, blue......................................$4,900 01 Nissan Xterra, 4x4, 6cyl, auto, silverr...................................$6,250 01 Pontiac Gran Prix, 6xyl, auto, black....................................$5,900 00 Chevy Blazer, 4x4, 6cyl, auto, white....................................$4,750 00 Ford F150, 4x4, 8cyl, auto, ex cab, maroon ........................$6,450 00 Jeep Gr Cherokee, 4x4, 6cyl, auto, blue.............................$6,250 00 Jeep Gr Cherokee, 4x4, 8cyl, auto, gold.............................$6,250 00 VW Cabrio, 4cyl, 5spd, conv. blue......................................$4,900 99 Chevy Tahoe, 4x4, 8cyl, auto, redl ......................................$4,900 99 Jeep Gr Cherokee, 4x4, 6cyl, auto, pewter ........................$4,750 Our vehicles are guaranteed to pass inspection and come with a 20 day plate and 30 day mechanical warranty. In house financing with 50% down payment and a minimum $200/month payment at 0% APR for 12-18 month term. Please call Sales at 356-5117.

RICKER Auto Salvage- Buying complete junk vehicles and light iron over the scale. Buying aluminum, brass, copper, lead radiators. 323-7363. 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. No junk. Call (603)387-7766.

$$ NEED CASH $$ We buy junk cars. Top dollar paid. (207)355-1969.

Boats 15FT 2001 Terhi Nordic with Bimini and Mooring cover. 2006 Suzuki DF40 motor with warranty. 2002 Load Rite trailer and accessories included. $5000. Call 603-986-1488 or email: lazychef@roadrunner.com. 2002 Pontoon boat, 20’ Bennington w/ Vanguard trailer, 50hp merc. engine. Excellent shape. $9000. (603)356-9875. BOAT Slip rental at Ossipee Lake Marina, Freedom, NH for the 2011 season. $1500. (603)539-7884.

Child Care LISA’S HOUSE Licensed child care home. Cared for over 50 children in valley over 28yrs. Accepting 6wk to 8yr old children. Accept State Scholarship Program. Fun themed days including Summer Annual Olympics. Call FMI (603)383-6851, Lisa LaBarre-Kurz. NANNY, with over ten years of early childhood and elementary school experience, is looking for a family to care for. I have familiarity with children aged newborn to 10 years old. In your home, your children will be loved, safe and have a lot of fun! In addition to caring for your children, I am willing to cook for the children, run errands and do light housework. My availability is full time, Monday through Friday, September to June. Please email nanny_03847@yahoo.com for more information.

Employment Wanted PRINCETON University B.A. Comparative Literature Highest Honors. Located in Intervale, seeks employment. (603)998-4831.

Flea Market COMMUNITY Flea Market, Frye burg Fair Ground, Sunday 7am-2pm. Antiques, collectibles, tools, general merchandise. Inside & outside spaces available. For info call 603-447-2679.

For Rent 2-4 bedroom long term and seasonal. Starting at $750 call 603-383-8000, anne@fgpm.com. AIRPORT Pines 2+ bedrooms, 1 bath, furnished $800/mo + utilities, pets considered. Mountain & Vale (603)356-3300 x1. RENTALS Looking to rent in Wolfeboro, Ossipee, Tamworth, Effingham, Wakefield or Alton? We have the largest selection of houses, studios, 1BR, 2BR, 3BR apartments, Luxury Townhouses, mobile homes, offices and store fronts. We can fit your budget. Short or long term rentals. No pets Please! Duco Property Services (603)539-5577 Mon.-Fri. 9-5

ducoproperties@myfairpoint.net

BARTLETT 2 bedroom cape, 2 bath, finished basement, large living room and kitchen. Dishwasher, washer and dryer. At the base of Attitash. Available immediately $950/mo. plus utilities. 374-6660 Bartlett- 3 bed, 2 bath Glen Ledge saltbox in small cul-de-sac. No smoking, pets negotiable. $1100/month plus utilities. Deposit required. 603-785-7751.

BOAT slip rental at Ossipee Lake Marina, Freedom, NH for 2011 season. Call Linda (603)475-8940.

BARTLETT Village 3rd floor, modern, 2 bedroom apartment, completely furnished, all utilities except cable included. No pets, security deposit. $750/mo. (617)968-0468, (781)279-4662.

LASER II sloop rigged 14.5’ sailboat equipped with main sail and jib all in excellent condition. Call 603-447-8436 for photo. $1595.

BARTLETT Village- 3rd floor sunny efficiency apartment for rent. Available now. $475/mo plus utilities and security deposit. (603)387-5724.

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. BRIDGTON, waterfront 1 bed room plus loft. $850/mo plus utilities. Year lease. Contact Robyn at Exit Realty. 207-461-0792. CENTER Conway motel rooms. Fridge, microwave, cable TV, Wi-Fi, $160/wk. (603)447-3720. CENTER Conway- 3 bd, 3 bath, 3000 s.f. home, 2 car garage, very rural setting, big views to Mt. Washington. $1500/mo + utilities, non-smoking, no pets. Call Jim Doucette, (603)986-6555. Bean Group. Center Conway- Two, 2/bdrm refurbish mobile homes. $725/mo plus utilities each. Security deposit required. (603)730-2260. CONWAY (two) 2 bedroom mobile homes in a park. From $550 - $650 plus security deposit and utilities. No dogs. Call (603)960-1441. CONWAY Rt. 16 efficiency cabins. Single room w/ kitchenette and bath. Compact/ convenient. Starting at $425/mo. plus utilities. No Pets, no smoking. Credit/ security deposit required. Call 603-447-3815. CONWAY Village sunny & spacious non-smoking apt with large kitchen, dining room, living room downstairs & 1.5 bedroom upstairs. Private entrance & deck. $725/mo includes heat, hot water, sewer, plowing & off-street parking. Call 888-445-5372 x2013 or 603-502-9965 and leave a message. CONWAY- 1 bedroom, second floor apt, $450/mo includes trash, hot water, basic cable, wi-fi. Tom (603)986-9843. CONWAY- 2 bedroom, 1 bath ranch, end of street. $850, no pets, no smokers. Call Jim Doucette. (603)986-6555. Bean Group. CONWAY- 3 bedroom, 1 bath house. Renovated- Central location, off-street parking, nice yard, basement with w/d hookups. Low oil heat costs, includes all maintenance and yard work. $950/mo plus utilities. References required, 1st, security deposit (negotiable) & lease. (603)447-2420. CONWAY- House for rent. 3 bedroom, gas heat, gas stove no pets. $1000/mo. plus utilities. 1 mo. + security deposit. (603)387-8147. CONWAY- Immaculate small cottage, refrigerator, stove, heat and hot water included. No smoking. Small pet considered. Security deposit plus first months rent. $500/mo. Call (603)447-5365. SPACIOUS 3 bedroom apt. Conway Village, walk to beach, library, schools, shops. W/D hook-up, no smoking. Cats ok. $900/mo. Please call (603)662-9292. EFFINGHAM Lakes Region home! 4 bedrooms 3 full baths, garage, mountain views. Minutes to RT16 & 28. Pets considered! $1450/mo. Call: 603-548-9051. FRYEBURG $800/mo plus. 2 bedroom, 1.5 bath townhouse, new tile and carpet throughout, full basement, w/d hook-up, private deck and stoarge shed, no pets. 1st and security. Available July 1st. (978)580-9607.

FRYEBURG2 bedroom, 1st floor apt. $800. Security deposit, 6 month lease. Plowing included. Fryeburg Academy school system. (207)671-2578. FRYEBURG- 3 Bedroom, 2 bath house on private lot. Washer, dryer, large yard. $850/month plus utilities. $850 deposit (negotiable). Available July 1st. Call for details 603-662-7582. FURNISHED small 1 bedroom apt., Conway. Great neighborhood, gas heat, non-smokers only, no pets. $500. (603)447-3810. GLEN- 3+ bedrooms/ 2 baths, house near Attitash, Bartlett School, on 1 acre, $1200/mo, available now, no smoking, pets negotiable. (480)296-5030. GORHAM, NH Large 1 and 2 bedroom apts $650/mo +, furnlished optional, heat/ hot water included. Security deposit, references. Long or short term lease (800)944-2038. INTERVALE Eagle Ridge two bedroom- two bath main level condo with fabulous views- gas heat- washer dryer- woodstoveprivacy- pool- tennis- $900/mo plus utilities. Call Jim Drummond Remax Presidential (986)8060. 16A Intervale- Spacious & sunny 1 bedroom apt. with a bonus room access thru bedroom. Built-ins & closets galore. 1.5 bath- w/d, decks on both floors. 1 car garage. Mtn views, non-smoking, no dogs. $750/mo plus utilities. Ref. & sec. dep. Call (603)383-4911. INTERVALE cozy chalet in-law apt. 1 bedroom, living room, bathroom, private entrance, shared kitchen upstairs. Month-to-moth $500. Including Internet/ cable. Dogs welcomed. July 1st (603)662-3806. INTERVALE near PO, 1 bedroom condo apt. partly furnished, no smoke/ pets, references, credit, 1st & security. $600/mo. inclusive plus heat. (978)768-1114. INTERVALE private rooms: 1-2 beds, TV, fridge, Internet, utilities. Kitchen, phones, computers, laundry. $495-695/month (603)383-9779. JACKSON, 3 bed, 2 bath in like new condition $1300/mo plus utils. No pets, no smokers and credit & refs a must. Call Jeana at Re/Max Presidential 603-520-1793 or jeana@mwvhomes.com. KEARSARGE 1 bedroom apt. with bath, kitchen & livingroom, in nice neighborhood $700/month with heat. Electric not included, 1 year lease with security deposit (603)986-9069. MADISON 2 bedroom 1 bath mobile home, unfurnished, 1 year lease, $725/mo. plus utilities. Security deposit and credit check. Pets considered. Rich Johnson, Select RE (603)447-3813. MADISON 4 bedroom house, access to private beaches, pellet wood stove, new construction, large yard, w/d, private road. Pets negotiable $1250/mo. (603)356-0444. MADISON1 bedroom, furnished, lakeside lower level cozy apartment. Background check, lease negotiable. Includes plowing & cable, $400 security $600/mo (603)367-8091. N. Conway 3 bed, 2 bath home. $975 plus utilities. Security deposit/reference check. Annual 772-341-4767. IN-TOWN North Conway one bedroom apartments for rent, $525- $600/mo plus utilities. First month & security required. No smoking or pets. (603)452-5153, leave message.

NO. Conway, Kearsarge Rd, 1 bedroom w/ deck. Propane heat. No smoking/ pets. Laundry on property. S.D. & ref. required. $625/month. Call (603)356-2514. NORTH Conway 2 bedroom condo for rent, no animals, $725/mo plus utilities. (603)939-2462 Vicki. NORTH Conway furnished 2 bdrm, 2 bath, 1st floor condo. 1 year lease, no pet/ smoking. $800/mo plus utilities. Security deposit & credit check. Good credit required. Rich Johnson Select Real Estate (603)447-3813. NORTH conway- 1 bedroom, great views of Peaked, Cranmore, utilities included available 7/1/11, $850/mo. (520)444-7217 after 11am. NORTH Conway: 2 BD/ 2 BA apartment with balcony. In town location. Completely renovated. $800/mo. Theresa 603-986-5286. NORTH Conway: 3 BR 2 bath luxury carriage house apartment, garage, $1250/mo includes heat and snowplowing. References and credit. Dan Jones, RE/MAX Presidential (603)356-9444, (603)986-6099. SACO Woods– available immediately. 2 bedroom condo unit, private screened in deck. W/d. No pets. $900/mo plus utilities. One year lease. One month plus security deposit. References required. Call Mountain & Vale Realty 603-356-3300 x1. SWEDEN- 2 bd, 1 bath mobile home. W/d, deck, fireplace, security deposit, credit check. MSAD 72 district. $650/mo. +. Call Robyn at Exit Realty Leaders. (207)461-0792. rrcela@fairpoint.net.

TAMWORTH $160/WK OR $675/MO

Well maintained 1 bedroom apt. on 1st floor, includes heat, electric, hot water, dishwasher, central vac, snow/ trash removal, coin-op w/d. (603)476-5487. TAMWORTH- furnished 3 bedroom 2 bathroom house. Fireplace, living room, garage, non-smoking, no pets $1000/mo. (603)323-7276. TAMWORTH- Avail. 6/3: 2 bdrm apt, large yard, w/d hookup, attic for storage, one car garage, dishwasher, $750/mos. plus utilities. Pets negotiable, lease. 603-229-7121. TAMWORTHnicely done 2 bedroom home, 1/2 trailer 1/2 framed, large bath, carport, private yard. $900/mo plus. References and deposit required. (603)323-7497, (603)986-5764. TAMWORTH- one bedroom apt. $500/mo all utilities included. No dogs, Mountain views, trash included, laundry facility on site. (603)249-5230.

For Rent-Vacation AWESOME vacation rental in Bartlett, sleeps 12, near shops, restaurants, Story Land, hiking, river. Call (603)522-5251. BARTLETT- 2 bdrm, sleeps 8, convenient location for shopping and Story Land. Computer and cable. Deck patio, pond & fire pit. $700+ weekly. 978-360-6599. CONWAY Lake front 3 bed rooms, sandy beach $1395/wk, see wilsoncabins.com for details and availability. (206)303-8399. COTTAGE for rent on Leavitt Bay, Effingham. Sleeps 6. (603)539-6631. Beautiful sandy beach! No pets!.

OSSIPEE lakefront rental, sleeps 4, sandy beach, wknd/ wkly $100/night. Call (603)539-6509. SEASONAL- prime locations 1-4 BR properties. Some slopeside units 603-383-8000, email anne@fgpm.com. SILVER LAKE- Waterfront 2 bedroom cottage. Private sandy beach, screen porch, fireplace. Weekly rental starting at $900, June- Sept. no smoking. Call (603)367-4725.

For Rent-Commercial 48'X48' garage, 2 large overhead doors, 2 post automotive lift, bathroom w/ shower, office space, 230V power, ideal for car sales/ repair. East Conway Rd. 603-860-6608. AAA warehouse space up to 4000sf radiant heat, loading docks 14’ doors, Rt41. FMI 603-520-1645. ALBANY, 29 RT113, near RT16, next to Coleman's in Leonard Builders building, conditioned office and warehouse spaces available, up to 10,000sf, excellent condition throughout. Paved parking. Outdoor storage available. Call 603-651-7041 or 603-651-6980.

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

COMMERCIAL Space, 1200 sq.ft. Electric, alarm, overhead door, excellent location. Call for more information (603)356-6329. CONWAY- Professional office building, 45 Washington St. Conway has a 3 room a/c office suite (680sf) on 2nd floor, $595/mo., including heat and electricity. Call Jerry (603)447-2763. FOR year round lease: Attrac tively updated log commercial building in dynamite Bartlett location with 500’ frontage on Route 16 between Story Land and Jackson. Potential professional offices, retail shop, restaurant. 1598 sf. $1,800/m. E-mail interest and references to pinkham@pinkhamrealestate.com. Broker interest. FRYEBURG- Commercial space available on Main St. Attractive 1250 s.f. Energy efficient with central air conditioning. Great signage and parking. $1450/mo. Call today! (207)890-9192. HIGH visibility location, between North Conway/ Bretton Woods, Route 302 West Glen. 3 story, multi use 2800 sq.ft. approx. 10 rooms, 3 bath, 60 ft covered farmers porch. Along Ellis River, ample parking $1500/month with water and plowing. 781-724-7741. INTERVALE, NH Rt. 16A/302See Johnsoncpa.com, “Office space for rent”. (207)636-7606. NORTH Conway Village- now available 400 to 1275 sq.ft. premium office space. Includes three office suite with private break room and rest rooms. 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.


Page 24 — THE CONWAY DAILY SUN, Tuesday, June 14, 2011

by Abigail Van Buren

NATIONAL ANTHEM DESERVES YOUR HAND AND YOUR HEART

DEAR ABBY: I was criticized recently for placing my right hand over my heart while the U.S. flag was flown and “The Star-Spangled Banner” was being sung. I was told that the hand over the heart is for the Pledge of Allegiance only, when the flag is present. Is that true, and what is the proper procedure? -- ST. LOUIS PATRIOT DEAR PATRIOT: No, it is not true. Whoever criticized you was ignorant of the Flag Code, as amended by the 94th Congress and approved July 7, 1976. According to the code, “During the rendition of the national anthem when the flag is displayed, all present ... shall stand at attention facing the flag with the right hand over the heart. ... When the flag is not displayed, those present should face toward the music and act in the manner they would if the flag were displayed there.” And by the way, happy Flag Day to all my readers out there. DEAR ABBY: I’m a 25-year-old male who, for the most part, has figured out what I want to do with my life. I’m currently working, and I am also considering entering the military to boost my character and resume. I want to eventually become a lawyer so I can help people. Something that irritates my family is my refusal to date. I suffer from anxiety attacks just at the thought of talking to a woman or asking for a date. My older sister asks me when I will marry, and my dad claims I’d be a great father. How can I get my family to understand that I’m not interested in marriage and children? -- LOVELESS IN THE SOUTHWEST

DEAR LOVELESS: I respect your desire to enter the military, boost your character and resume and earn a law degree. But please don’t use the military as a way to escape dealing with your inability to be comfortable with half the human race. If and when you enlist, you will be in a work environment where there are females and situations in which you may be required to work as a team. That’s why I strongly suggest that you talk to a mental health professional about your anxiety about women BEFORE enlisting. Marriage and children are not for everyone -- and you may be one of those men who should be a confirmed bachelor. But not because you’re afraid of women. DEAR ABBY: My father has been dead for more than 15 years. Any time my mother sees people she hasn’t seen since Dad’s death, she makes a point of telling them how happy she is now that he’s dead! She doesn’t care how loudly she declares it or how she says it. At my son’s recent wedding reception, I overheard her having this conversation with my brother-in-law. He made eye contact with me to see if I could hear what she was saying, then shook his head like he couldn’t believe what she was saying. Abby, it’s embarrassing that she does this all the time. If I say anything, I know she’ll get mad at me. Any suggestions? -- CAN’T TAKE HER ANYWHERE DEAR CAN’T TAKE HER ANYWHERE: Yes. Ignore her. Obviously your parents’ marriage wasn’t made in heaven -but her widowhood is.

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 Sale

Free

LYMANOIL.COM

FREE 5’X10’ tree house (in tree). Redwood and treated lumber. 447-5086.

Now offering propane sales and service. Call or visit www.LymanOil.com Jesse E Lyman, North Conway (603)356-2411. NORTRAC Bulldozer, new, hardly used, never have anytime to use it $15,500/firm (603)522-6467. OLD Flywheel engine. 1.5hp Stewart Chicago Flexible Shaft Co. $600. (603)452-5169. PLAYER piano with case of rolls $400; Whyte wood boiler 35.5” tall, 28.25” wide, 23.5” deep $300; Overhead speed heater w/ motor, great for garage or work space $75; 4 legged clawfoot old fashioned tub $100; Wood display case w/ sliding glass front doors 63” wide, 22.5” deep, 40” tall, ideal trophy or retail display case $200; Blue cobra golf bag $50; Brand new Nike white golf shoes 8.5 $50. Call 752-5250. PORTER cable router table, fence, floor stand $60. Craftsman bench top jointer planer $60 (603)733-5142. PR 225/70R15 American Prospector SUV tires, on Ranger rims, used less than 5k. $125 (603)284-6142. PRESSURE washer $250. Wood and coal stove $150. SkidsteerBobcat $2500. Snowblower $800. Sit-down lawn tractor $400/obo. (603)733-8201.

13’ ocean kayak, fishing model, olive green. Seat, paddle, tackle box, rod holders. Excellent condition. $675. 772-559-9107.

BRAND new York 100,000 BTU and 60,000 BTU heating systems with 95.5% efficiency and LP conversion kits. York R410A two- ton A/C coil and R410A four- ton A/C coil, RinnaiR75LSI on demand hot water heater w/ termination vent kit. Five ceiling defusers, two dampers, drip pan for 60K BT. 603-986-3057, 603-452-5164. $3,000/obo.

1948 Ford 8N tractor 99% original. Runs & goes. $2500. (603)662-5818. 20,000 gallon split fuel tank, 9 years old, 21 years left on warranty, $15,000. 603-447-8979, 603-447-2617. A/C, new, $95. Kipor 6000 gen erator, paid $1500 sell for $650. Splendid washer/ dryer, new $850. Samsung dutch door fridge paid $1700, sell for $1100. Microwave $50. Ice maker $125. Bike Doggie stroller $125. (603)383-6333. AMAZING! Beautiful queen or full pillow top mattress set $249, king $399. See ad under “furniture”.

BOW HUNTER EDUCATION

Starts June 14th at the Carroll County Fish & Game Shooting Club. Rt. 113, Madison. To register, go to www.wildlife.state.nh.us/ For more information call (603)662-7590. DINING Room Set. Nice Thomasville cherry set includes: Table w/ leaf & protective pads, 6 chairs, buffet, low boy, $975/obo. Call (603)520-4491 leave message.

CARROLL COUNTY OIL Cash discount, senior citizen discount, prompt deliveries, pre-buy programs. 539-8332.

CANOE: 14’ Fiberglass Old Town canoe. Accessories included. Asking $600. Call (603)539-6274.

DRY FIREWOOD $250/cord, 2 cord min. $300/cord 1 cord. Cut, split 12+ months. Immediate delivery. (603)323-8658. ELLEN Eppelsheimer Silkscreen signed, numbered and framed. $400. For photos email agraniello78@gmail.com. EVERGREEN Energy is now offering for sale & installation of wood boilers. Different models for different budgets. Call today & see how you can save money on your heating bills this winter. 603-356-7478. FIREWOOD cut, spit and delivered. 16”, 18”, 20”, 22” $225/cord. 12”, 14” also available (603)356-5923. FORGE w/ steel & coal $300. Full size living room sofa, natural color w/ blue & rose print $200. Snowblower- Yardman $500. (603)356-3480.

For Sale

For Sale

FIREWOOD

HOT Tub Brand new 5-person, all options, led lighting, cover and warranty, cost $5900, sell $2500. Can deliver 603-235-5218.

Green Firewood $185/cord Minimum 2 cord delivery

207-925-1138

westernmainetimberlands.com FIREWOOD- Cut, split, delivered. Green $170- $200, dry $225 & up. Milt Seavey, Brownfield. (207)935-3101.

GREAT FATHER'S DAY GIFT

Full size dart board cabinet, lighted with storage drawer on bottom. Bonus: Full size professional Boar Bristle dart board (new in box). Will sacrifice all for $75. 603-662-9107 Green firewood $175/cord, 16-24”. Free tree removal, 10 trees or more. (603)374-2391. 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.

HUSQVARNA model 450 $350. Guns for sale, handguns, AK47, 12 guage with slug barrel and scope, reloading supplies, 2 Macaw parrots with 3 cages, must go as a pair. Call for prices (603)842-2028. INDIAN truck cap for small pickup, in good shape, white. $200/obo. (207)935-1042. KENMORE Top mount refrigerator/ freezer. Size 18 cu.ft; color: white; Internal Ice maker, adjustable shelves. it’s in great shape. Price $125. Contact Greg & Maureen Anthony. Call between 9am-4pm. Phone (603)941-0627. Note: Buyer must be able to pick it up. KITCHEN cabinets, solid Maple glaze, dovetail drawers, never installed, cost $6000, sell $1600. 603-235-1695.

Rug hooking supplies: 1 Rigby cloth cutter; lots of wool, acid dyes, “Rug Hooking” back issues, holder/ braider; pattern books; frame; burlap; hooks, tools etc. Call for details. $100 for all. Eaton 367-8270

LEAP-FROG. My First LeapPad with book/ game “Leap's Big Day” $10. Additional LeapPad games “I Know My ABCs”, “Bear in the Big Blue House”, “Thomas & Friends” $5.00/ea. LeapFrog ClickStart: My First Computer $35 includes 3 games, “Cars”, “Finding Nemo”, “Bob the Builder”. 603-356-9108.

HORSE and cow manure mix, great garden enhancer, loaded on your pickup $25. (207)935-3197.

NEED Cash? Sell your stuff on Ebay. We do the work. You get cash! 10 years experience. ABCybersell (207)925-3135 Mike.

HOOKERS WANTED

T&B Appliance Removal. Appliances & AC’s removed free of charge if outside. Please call (603)986-5506.

Heavy Equipment 70 JD 450 bulldozer, v. good condition, good undercarriage, runs great, new clutches & brakes. $8500 (603)662-5818.

Help Wanted A traditional co-ed nondenominational summer camp is looking for a horseback riding instructor that is 21 years or older to instruct the campers. Please contact office@cody.org if interested in the position!

$ AT SACO VALLEY $ CANOE

from soil tested fertilized fields. $4/bale in wagon/ ready now. Bickford Farm (603)284-6487. SPRING Special: Screened Loam $25/yard delivered within 10 miles of Glen, beyond area available. (603)374-2391.

AVON! Reps needed all States. Sign up on-line. For details: avonnh@aol.com or 1-800-258-1815.

SUPPORT your local logger and heat with carbon neutral wood or wood pellets. Purchase a Central Boiler outdoor wood furnace on sale EPA qualified to 97% efficient. (603)447-2282.

AVON: Earnings great! No door to door necessary. Choose your own hours. For information call 323-7361.

QUALITY BALED HAY

WOOD chest, desk, chairs and tables, rocking chair, wheelbarrow, lawnmower. Call for prices. Stoneham. (207)595-1417.

For Sale

$$ NEED CASH $$ We buy junk cars. Top dollar paid. Also paying above scrap prices for 2001 & newer. (207)355-1969.

is seeking part/ full time van drivers summer 2011. Must enjoy working with the public. Some weekends and physical activity required. Fun job, competitive wages. Bonuses available. Call 447-2444 for interview/ application.

Used 16 cubic foot refrigerator good condition $80. 447-2033.

For Sale

FREE removal of unwanted metals. No matter how messy inside or outside. Immediate pickup. Please call 986-8075 Ken.

WORK top freezer 2 door, Stainless exterior, 30”X48” $500/obo. Call Rick (207)462-5216.

Found

BLUEBERRY Muffin is looking to hire a hostess, line cook, dishwasher, and prep cook. Please apply in person between 10-2. Ask for Laurie.

Brandli’s Pizza Grille located at Settlers’ Green is now hiring full & part-time counter people and experienced pizza makers. Apply in person. BUNGALOW Styles looking for a booth renter or full time employee. Call 356-2544.

FOUND keys at Fish & Game Club. Call (603)733-7773. May be Landon Leach’s.

Furniture AMAZING!

Beautiful Queen or Full Mattress Set. Luxury firm European pillow-top. New in plastic, costs $1,095, sell $249. Can deliver. 603-305-9763 ASHLEY kitchen table with 4 chairs. Paid $600, sell for $250/obo. (603)340-6914. CASH & Carry blow out sale! Chairs $5, sofas from $40 at the Glen Warehouse. 383-6665.

MATTRESS AND FURNITURE OVERSTOCKS! Twin $199. Full $249, Queen $299, King $449. Memory foam or latex $399-$999! Free bed frame or $20 off! Recliners $299! Sofas $499! Wood platform beds $199-$399! Daybed with mattress $499! NH made shaker dining & bedroom 20% off! Free local delivery, lots more!! Call Jay 603-662-9066 or Email: Jayw100@yahoo.com for other specials & details!

Free RICKER Auto Salvage- Buying complete junk vehicles and light iron over the scale. Buying aluminum, brass, copper, lead radiators. 323-7363.

CNC Operators Experienced & Entry Level 2nd Shift

We are looking for hard working individuals to be part of our team. Be part of the production process of barrels that are well known all over the world. Some heavy lifting required. Full benefits after 90 days. 2 weeks paid vacation after 1 year service. EOE

Apply in person to: Green Mountain Rifle Barrel Co. 153 West Main St., Conway

COUNTER HELP Join our dedicated, seasoned team. Perm. P/T counter help including Sunday. Must be dependable.

Apply in person at Bagels Plus 2988 WM Hwy


THE CONWAY DAILY SUN, Tuesday, June 14, 2011— Page 25

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

MARGARITA GRILL

We Are Expanding Our Team. The Colonial Motel is currently seeking full-time, year round front desk staff and seasonal housekeepers. Candidates must be friendly, outgoing, organized and full of hospitality. Flexible schedule is a must including day, night and weekend shifts. Apply in person. Colonial Motel, 2431 White Mt. Hwy., North Conway, NH.

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

COLONIAL MOTEL

Accepting applications for experienced Line Cooks and Dishwashers. Full & Part-time. Stop by for application Rt. 302, Glen, NH

383-6556 CHEQUERS Villa, in Tamworth, now hiring waitstaff and dishwasher. Experience necessary, weekends a must. apply in person after 4pm. CHILDREN and Youth Program Director- The Unitarian Universalist Fellowship of the Eastern Slopes, UUFES, in Tamworth, NH is seeking a part time (approximately 8 hours per week) director for its Children and Youth program. This position involves working directly with children as well as planning Sunday morning activities and communicating with others in the Fellowship community. This position requires the ability to lead activities with a multiage group of children (ages 5-14) with energy, flexibility and creativity. Qualified applicants should embrace the Unitarian Universalist values of respect, responsibility and tolerance. Please send a letter of interest and your resume to UUFES, PO Box 474, Tamworth, NH 03886.

Crawford Notch General Store & Campground

is seeking motivated, self sufficient individuals to perform a verity of grounds and housekeeping duties. Duties includes, cabin housekeeping, campsite pickup, daily restroom cleaning, and more. We have a great environment and friendly staff. $10/hr Seasonal position, full & part-time. Call 603-374-2779 for details. DECADES Steakhouse is currently accepting applications for bartenders, waitstaff & bussers. Please apply in person after 4pm., 32 Seavey St., N.Conway. EXPERIENCED chef wanted for the Darby Field Inn & Restaurant. We are seeking a responsible, organized, creative individual. Duties include inventory, ordering, prep cooking, line cooking and maintaining a clean and organized kitchen. Afternoon/ evening hours fluctuate seasonally. Interested applicants may submit resume and sample menu to: marc@darbyfield.com. Questions may be directed to Marc 447-2181.

Line Cook, Prep Cook, Kitchen Help Wanted IMMEDIATE opening for the following position:

Front Desk

Weekends a MUST Applications accepted at the Front Desk 1515 White Mt. Hwy., North Conway, NH NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE

Lucy Hardware, PO Box 810, Intervale, NH 03845 Lucy Hardware is looking for the right person to be a part of our store team. Someone who enjoys retail and helping customers. This position would require front desk skills, product ordering, retail merchandising, plant care, some lifting and a “smiling” attitude. This is a 35-40 hr a week position and has an immediate start date. No phone calls please. Please fill out an application or send a resume to: Lucy Hardware PO Box 810, Intervale, NH 03845 Attn: Jess Spaulding

HVAC TECHNICIAN POSITION

The Red Jacket Mountain View Resort and Fox Ridge Resort are now hiring for the Summer Season:

* Water Park Supervisors * Come work in a fun and fast paced environment! • Candidate will possess a great attitude and must be a team player with great organizational skills. • Flexible schedule needed-nights/weekends/holidays. • Lifeguard training provided by the resort.

Federal Piping Company, Inc., is a full service company; we are now expanding the heating division to include A/C & Refrigeration. We are seeking an experienced full time individual who can service and install heating and A/C refrigeration equipment, this individual will have to be on the on-call rotation. Pay is very good with pension, benefits are optional. Applicant to call and have resume available upon interview. License requirements - valid driving, Natural and LP Gas, Oil NORA EPA. This position is for an experienced, service orientated, customer friendly person. FPI is a drug free workplace. E.O.E. Service area includes NH and Southern ME.

* Part Time Pool Maintenance Position * • Part time 20 hour/week position. • Candidate will possess electrical and plumbing experience. • Outgoing personality with a team player attitude please!

* Lounge Food and Beverage Server * • Year round position • Excellent guest service experience • High energy with a great team player attitude • Flexible schedule Please stop in either resort for an application or email resumes to: slambert@redjacketmountainview.com

Please call Federal Piping Company Inc. at 1-800-924-5826 Monday - Friday, 8:00AM to 4:30PM

HOUSING COORDINATOR TEMPORARY FULL TIME The City of Berlin is accepting applications for the position of Housing Coordinator. This position will be of a temporary full time nature reporting to the City Manager for an undetermined length of time. The pay is up to $45,000 per year. There will be no benefits associated with this position. The primary function of this position will be to continue to address the issue of surplus substandard or blighted housing within the City of Berlin. Doing this involves competing for local, state and federal funds, obtaining and dealing with hazardous substance remediation funds via grant writing, managing any funds received, writing and administering various types of contracts, work with other City departments concerning housing issues and assist the Finance Director with tax deeded properties and manage the sale or demolition of these properties as determined appropriate. Educational requirements include a college degree in fields such as engineering, project management or equivalent. Must possess and maintain a valid passenger motor vehicle operator license. Significant experience in project management and in writing plans, proposals and grants. The minimum requirements listed above may be satisfied by having any equivalent combination of education and experience which demonstrates possession of the required knowledge, skills and abilities. Job description is available at the City Manager’s Office (603-752-7532), Berlin City Hall, 168 Main Street, Berlin, NH 03570, Monday thru Friday between the hours of 8:30 am and 4:30 pm or on the City website www.berlinnh.gov. Letters of interest and resumes must be received at the City Manager's Office by Tuesday June 21, 2011 The City of Berlin is an Equal Opportunity Employer M/F/Hc.

Start Immediately. Apply in person at Priscilla’s Country Kitchen, North Conway.

Full Time Community Integrator in Wolfeboro - Works directly with individuals with developmental disabilities. Provides support and training for employment, volunteer jobs, routine community activities and skill acquisition in areas as diverse as building social skills, learning how to handle money or even snow shoeing. A primary goal is to promote relationship building in order to help individuals become a valued and respected member of their community. Good communication skills necessary. Knowledge of “Gentle Teaching” principles preferred. To apply, send your resume with cover letter to: Northern Human Services, Attn.: Wendy Turner, Program Coordinator, 70 Bay Street, Wolfeboro NH 03894 or email to: wturner@northernhs.org. Home Care Providers - Northern Human Services is looking for community members to open their homes and share their lives as a Home Care Providers. We are assisting people that require assistance and encouragement, to continue to develop life skills that will enhance their sense of independence and their quality of life. They are looking forward to having a home to grow in, to discover new things and to develop new relationships. This is an exciting opportunity to life share and to make a difference in people’s lives! This sub- contracted position is available to NH residents only. For more information regarding this position please contact: Shanon Mason, Director of Housing at Northern Human Services, 356-6921 X 1030. Email: smason@northernhs.org 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.


Page 26 — THE CONWAY DAILY SUN, Tuesday, June 14, 2011

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

FINISH Carpenter/ Woodworker to work on small crew doing high quality, custom work. Minimum 10 years experience. (603)447-6113.

FRIENDLY energetic part time Desk Clerk needed at the Yankee Clipper Inn. Must be customer serice oriented and available weekends and holidays. Approximately 20hrs/ week. Please stop by for an application.

FLORAL MERCHANDISER

NH based service company looking for a part time individual, for our North Conway location (average 20-22hrs per week), Must be self motivated, high energy and results oriented to handle the merchandising of floral products. Work entails handling of perishable product; lifting; bending; cleaning; watering; displaying; paperwork; etc. Must possess good communication; organizational & time management skills; have an “eye” for detail, and handle fast paced environment. Must work well independently and handle minimal weekend work hours as well as extended work hours during holidays. Prior retail merchandising a plus. Email resumes to mejobs@keyfloral.com, fax to 603-626-1728 or fill out an application at www.keyfloral.com FRAMERS- 5+ years, reliable, fast paced, non smokers. Liability insurance. (603)662-6353.

St. Judes - $5

FRONT DESK Nordic Village Resort in Jackson, NH has a par-time seasonal position at the front desk. Shift is 11pm-7am. Computer skills needed, no previous front desk experience needed. Please stop in and fill out an application.

FT/ PT LINE COOK The Red Fox Bar & Grille has both full and part time positions for an experienced line cook. Flexible schedule with excellent wages and great benefits. Located 1.5 miles north of Story Land in Jackson Village. Call Paul at (603)383-9233 or send confidential resume to: paul@redfoxbarandgrille.com.

WAITSTAFF NEEDED Experienced, for busy summer season. Weekends necessary. Apply in person any day at Glen Junction Restaurant, Junction of Rte.16 and 302 Glen.

Help Wanted Hampton Inn & Suites seeks year round

Night Auditor

to join our team. Part time opportunity that could lead into full time. Prior experience required. Full time includes full benefit package.

Please forward resume to: lori.deiter@hilton.com

HELP wanted with general labor/ maintenance, carpentry. Must be reliable, self-motivated person with license. FMI (603)960-1441. HOUSEKEEPER needed, part time weekdays and Saturdays. Experience preferred please call Melissa (603)662-5841.

HOUSEKEEPING FT & PT YEAR ROUND

Interviewing for year round position in a high end, quiet, adult Inn. Experience and references required. We enjoy a small, efficient, reliable staff. Apply in person at the Snowflake Inn, Jackson Village.

LEAGUE OF NH CRAFTSMEN GALLERY

Seeking positive person with sales experience and background in Art. 14- 22 hrs/wk + studio opportunities. Please call 603-356-2441 to apply.

SCHOOL ADMINISTRATIVE UNIT #13 has an opening for a

PART TIME RECEPTIONIST/ OFFICE ASSISTANT 5 days per week, 260 days per year. Application deadline: June 24, 2011 Interested candidates please submit a resume, letter of intent and 3 references to: Jay McIntire, Superintendent of Schools SAU #13 881A Tamworth Road, Tamworth, NH 03886 (603)323-5088 EOE

Attitash has openings in the following positions: If you are at least 16 years old, we welcome you to apply for the following positions (full and part time): Alpine Slide Attendant* Buddy Bear Pool Attendants Water Park Attendant, CPO Mountain Coaster Attendants* Health Club Attendant Ticket Sellers Eurobungy & Climbing Wall Attendents

Dining Car Waitstaff Dining Car Line Cook Hotel Housekeeping Cafeteria Grill Cook Front Desk Agent Bell/Valet*

*Must be 18 years old For additional information, please visit our website at www.attitash.com or contact Human Resources at (603) 374-2625 or 2646. EOE.

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

PART-TIME Brochure Distributor. Enjoyable independent work distributing tourist brochures to displays in restaurants, motels & retail outlets along Routes 16 & 302 this summer. Work from Conway Storage. 10- 18 hrs/wk. flex. Create your own schedule. Hatchback ideal. Retirees and other encourage to apply. For application & info e-mail: info@hereswhereinc.com or call: (603)964-4033.

UBERBLAST Management Position

POOL ATTENDANT Nordic Village Resort in Jackson, NH has a part-time seasonal position available for a pool attendant/ cashier. Customer Service experience required. Please stop in and fill out an application. RWN Property Services, Inc. needs foreman for basement waterproofing division. Knowledge of all phases of building construction, CDL preferred and 3 years experience a must. Pay DOE (603)356-4759 email:

Immediate Openings for Medical Claims Examiners.

donnam@nahgaclaims.com

1-207-803-2609

LINE COOK FT/ PT for busy breakfast/ lunch shifts. Minimum three years experience. Weekends necessary. Apply in person any day at Glen Junction Restaurant, Junction Rte.16 and 302 Glen. LOOKING for Carpenters (not Laborers). Looking for experience not a know-it-all For Information (603)539-7009, call after 6pm.

MAINTENANCE Part-time all around experienced maintenance man. Must be flexible. Send resume to: Dearborn Bortec, Inc., PO Box 310, Fryeburg, ME 04037.

Now Hiring

for 2011 Season Landscape Construction 5 yrs. minimum exp. Driver’s license required.

RWN Property Services, Inc. seeking experienced landscape and lawn services personnel. Valid drivers license and 3 years experience a must. Pay DOE (603)356-4759 email:

SACO CANOE RENTAL COMPANY

Summer reservations/ front office staff. Must enjoy working with people in fast paced environment. Great position for college students or teachers. Flexible hours. Apply within. 326 White Mountain Highway, Conway (603)447 4275.

SALES & MERCHANDISING

Ft. position for experienced, enthusiastic, sales professional with extensive sale and merchandising experience. Competitive pay, with ample room for growth. Benefits include paid holidays, vacation, health insurance & retirement plan. Stop in for an application, ask for Cort or Rob. Ragged Mt. Equipment, Inc., Rt.16-302, Intervale, NH. (603)356-3042.

SAU # 64 Serving Wakefield & Milton School Districts has openings for the 2011/12 School Year:

Is accepting applications for the position of

General Manager This individual must have experience and managerial skills in the same or a related industry. Excellent people skills are a must. A package of vacation, sick and personal days, as well as health insurance benefits are included. Applicants with resort/hotel management degrees will be carefully considered but a degree is not a prerequisite. This is a salaried position and would be competitive and commensurate with referral and experience. Interested applicants should send their resume to:

Seasons at Attitash, Attn: Board of Directors PO Box 415, Rt302, Bartlett, NH 03812 Or email oa@seasonsnh.com

PART TIME D ISPATCHER needed at the Mt Washington Auto Road for Fri-Sun. through October. Join the fun during this historic 150th year at an attraction that is dedicated to guest service. Stop by for an application or call 603 466-3988

PT/ ft housekeeper/ yard maintenance. $9/hr. J1 students, yes. Through 10/11. Call Bartlett Inn (603)374-2353.

For further info or to apply please call Kimberly Hotarek at 383-4346 ext 11 or email kim@puzzlemaps.com

WHITNEY’S Inn now accepting applications for Housekeepers. Stop by at Whitney’s Inn or call 603-383-8916.

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.

Affordable Handyman Senior discounts, interior/ exterior painting, windows, sheetrock, carpentry. Insured. Gary (603)356-3301.

AM BUILDERS Full service contractor. All types roofing, siding, decks, remodeling, new homes and garages. (603)323-7519 View our website: www.AddisonMasonBuilders.com

Applications may be picked up at the SAU office. Please mail a resume to: SAU #64 18 Commerce Way, Unit 1 Milton, NH 03851 EOE

Professional -installation- 20 yrs. experience. Excellent references. Weiler Building Services, (603)986-4045.

TECH WANTED

A Resort Condominium

for busy full service repair shop applicant should be neat, clean responsible, must have own tools. ASE certificates preferred, pay commensurate with experience, should apply in person, Haig or Rita, Midas Auto Service, 2234 WMHwy. TERRIFIC capable caregiver de sired to support activities of daily living for female wheelchair user. Center Conway 603-447-5253.

The Red Fox Bar & Grille is now accepting applications for experienced, servers. Must be able to work a flexible schedule. Apply in person between 10-3pm. Or send an email inquiry to: paul@redfoxbarandgrille.com Jackson, NH (603)383-4949.

ROOF WORK

Instruction FLYFISHING CLASSES Licensed guide. Casting, fly tying, guided trips with lessons. www.reelnorthllc.com. 603-8584103.

FLYFISHING LESSONS on private trout pond. FFF certified casting instructor. Gift cert. available. (603)356-6240. www.mountainviewflyfishing.c om

GUITAR LESSONS With Mike Stockbridge- Berklee, UMaine All styles, levels, and ages. www.mikestockbridge.com (603)733-9070.

League of NH Craftsmen Summer Craft Classes

White Mountain Puzzles in Jackson NH is seeking a part time responsible retail specialist for its new retail store opening in July. Year round work, weekends and some Holidays a must.

FT & PT Bus Drivers CDLB license and School Bus Certification Clean driving record. Be able to obtain a medical card. Competitive Benefits and Wages. Training will be provided.

Call Shawn • 356-4104

Seasons at Attitash

VITO Marchello’s Italian Bistro now hiring experienced full and part time Line Cooks, Wait Staff and Dishwashers. Apply in person before 4pm. No phone calls please. Ask for Shawn. Now in North Conway Village!

robert@rwnpropertyservices.com

robert@rwnpropertyservices.com

Join out fast-growing company! Good attention to detail and strong customer service skills required. CPT/ICD9 coding and medical terminology preferred. Competitive salary and benefits package. Submit resumes to:

for Family Entertainment Center in N. Conway. This enthusiastic individual must have sales, marketing and management experience. Must be customer service oriented, friendly and outgoing. Must like to work with families and children. Some kitchen experience helpful. Flexible schedule including nights and weekends. We will train the right person. Apply in person Mon- Fri 11-3 or call 356-5655 ask for Maria. Rt. 16, N. Conway, across from Friendly's.

Home Improvements All aspects of roof repair! Entire roofs to small leaks, shingles, steel or flat roofs. Call Mike Lyons, a fully insured professional, serving MWV (603)370-7769.

Pottery, glassblowing, jewelry-making classes for kids & adults! www.nhcraftsmen.org 603-356-2441. STAINED Glass Workshop Wednesdays 7/6-8/10 6-8pm. North Conway Community Center. For details 603-296-5418. SUMMER reading & writing program for all ages by certified Maine English Teacher. Stoneham. (207)595-1417.

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.

5.3 +- ACRES FOR SALE ON CONWAY LAKE

1000'+/- waterfront for sale on on of NH most pristine lakes NHDES shore land permitting completed. 3 BR septic design construction permit issued. Deeded 10'x30' aluminum dock. Secluded wooded lot with private peninsula buffer. No waiting, ready to build immediately! $525,000. Call Rick 603-833-9983 or Dorothy 603-733-8807 or email redepropertiesllc@hotmail.com for more information. 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 $85,000 radiof075@hotmail.com (978)468-4627.

HARDWOOD FLOORING DUST FREE SANDING

FRYEBURG- Belaire Estates- .69 acre lot, 2010 valuation $41,600. Includes septic, electric, water. Ready for building. $27,000. (207)452-3001.

ERIC J. Holden Interior/ Exterior Painting. Carpentry, drywall, water damage, free estimates, great rates. (603)452-8032, (207)452-8825.

2-3 BR house in/ near Conway needed immediately. Dog must be OK. Non-smoker. Furnished is ideal, but not necessary. References avail. (603)662-2836.

Looking To Rent

Experienced Carpenter

Mobile Homes

Repairs remodels, new construction. Reasonable rates, free estimates. Call Dave (603)520-4543.

LOOKING for used home in great shape to put on my land in North Conway. Call 986-3991.

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. MASONRY- Custom stonework, fireplaces, brick, block, patios, repairs. Ph: 603-726-8679.

MOVE your home to our park in central North Conway. Walk to shopping, trails, restaurants. $300 per month, no dogs. Good credit. (603)986-3991.

Motorcycles 2001 Yamaha V Star Classic. 5375 miles, $3500. Bags, windshield and lots of extras. Call after 4:30pm (603)539-7225. 2008 Suzuki Boulevard S50, 805cc v-twin, black, windshield, cover, only 610 miles, excellent condition. Eaton, $4250. (603)367-8033.


THE CONWAY DAILY SUN, Tuesday, June 14, 2011— Page 27

PUBLIC NOTICE

To all Conway Village Fire District customers from south of Gemini Signs including Haven Lane, Bald Hill, Chadbourne, Fairview, Thorne Hill and West Main Street Ext. this is to notify you that as part of the Phase IA project Water Service will be turned off for about four hours on Thursday, June 16, 2011 starting at 7:00 pm. We regret the interruption of your service but it is vital for the improvements at the southern end of town. Any questions please contact the District office at 447-5470. Gregg Quint, Superintendent

PUBLIC NOTICE REQUEST FOR PROPOSAL SACO PINES CONDOMINIUM ASSOCIATION

2011 BUILDING 3 EXTERIOR PAINTING Saco Pines Condominium Association will accept bids for exterior painting of building 3 (6 units) until noon on June 24, 2011. Bids shall be delivered in a sealed envelope to Betty Rogers, Saco Pines unit 12. You may obtain a copy of the specifications by calling Betty at 447-4905.

Motorcycles

Real Estate

Roommate Wanted

Services

Services

Storage Space

2003 Harley Davidson Ultra Glide Ultra Classic 100th Anniversary Edition. 42850 miles. Excellent condition, black, stereo/cd, luggage rack on trunk, with Vance Hines exhaust. $11,000/obro. Call Rob at 603-723-6129.

BY owner, 2 bedroom remodeled home, mostly furnished. Pellet stove, sundeck, enclosed porch, 2 car heated garage, with lean-to for 3 ATVs. On 2.5 acres; vegetable garden, 2 tool sheds. Ossipee $158,000. (603)539-7082.

TAMWORTH

COACH G ARDEN GNOME

TOTAL FLOOR CARE

SUMMER SPECIAL

Room for rent in private home with all utilities included. Sorry, no pets. FMI call (603)923-3054.

Professional Installation, sanding, refinishing and repair of wood floors. 447-1723.

Rent any unit for 2 months and get the third month free! 10x20 only $110, 12x24 only 125. Alternative Storage, East Conway Rd. 603-860-6608.

2009 Harely Davidson Softail Deluxe, sunglow red, excellent condition, 7400 miles, $15,500. (603)986-0220.

CONWAY owner financing: 3 br./ 3 ba. house w/ studio. $297,500 MLS#2822336. $20,000 down. L. Davis NH Broker/ Owner (603)447-1329.

Custom education how to maintain your landscape! Learn tips, tricks and trade secrets on how to have stunning gardens with minimal care. I work by your side teaching you how to create and maintain the lawn / garden of your dreams. Naomi Buckman, Cert. Horticulturist, 603-858-4103 www.CoachGardenGnome.com

Buy • Sell • Trade www.motoworks.biz

(603)447-1198. Olson’s Moto Works, RT16 Albany, NH.

DOUBLE Dip Recession Pricing at Land Tech. Land surveys, site designs, land use permits, perc tests. Call 603-539-4900.

Recreation Vehicles

STOW ME: Rustic camp. Call for details. (207)697-2012.

1988 Coachmen travel trailer. Excellent shape, sleeps 6, $3000/obo. Located in Madison. Call Linda (603)733-8737.

Real Estate, Time Share FOR Sale deluxe one bedroom condo, week 42, at the Suites at Attitash Mountain Village, 1200 sq.ft. $11,000. By owner (207)251-4595. STUDIO apartment at Eastern Slope Inn, prime February vacation week. $5000/obo. (239)261-6693, (239)249-4225.

2007 Pleasureway Excel T-D Motorhome. Generator, built-in TV, microwave. 20,600 miles. Excellent condition $47,000. Cell (239)246-4496. CLASS C Motorhome. 2005 Four Winds Chateau 31P. 10,909 miles. $43,500. (603)387-2950 or jeff_and_tracy@yahoo.com. RV Add A Room screened in porch. $495. (603)383-6333.

Real Estate ABUTTING BALSAMS RESORT

Original Balsams farmhouse abuts 8000 acres of the Balsams resort, it’s golf course, hotel and all amenities. Two horse barns, paddox, 5.5 acres. Spectacular panoramic views. $249,000 www.newenglandridinganddriving.com (207)731-6888. FRYEBURG owner financing: Two 3 bedroom mobile homes w/ 1.7 acres $99,500. MLS#2822351. $5000 down. L. Davis ME Broker/ Owner (603)447-1329.

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 CONWAY: camper for the sum mer, electric included. $60/wk (603)960-1447. FRYEBURG, $125/wk, includes utilities, Direct TV, internet, W/D, nice yard. Call 603-387-8215 or email kizmen@roadrunner.com. FULLY furnished bedroom, everything included. $395/mo. No smoking, drinking, or pets. in lovely Jackson. (603)383-7007. NORTH Conway- room in private home. Male, no smoking/ drinking, cable, all util., $350/mo. 662-6571. ROOMMATE wanted, 2 bedroom house, near Diana’s Bath. $600. Call for more details (603)986-5025.

2541 White Mountain Highway North Conway Front Unit 1500 sq. ft. Available June 1st. Call Roger at (603)452-8888 Great Value! Great location!

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

FRANK’S Carpentry- All types carpentry, specialize in mobile home repairs, decks, replacement windows, doors (603)447-6538. HYPNOSIS for habit change, stress, regression. Michael Hathaway, DCH, certified hypnotherapist. Madison 367-8851. www.whitemountainhypnosiscenter.com.

LAWN SERVICE

Senior discounts, interior/ exterior painting, windows, sheetrock, carpentry. Insured. Gary (603)356-3301.

Student Pro. UNH student providing quality lawn care at resonable rates (603)770-7669.

AMERICAN ASPHALT

MOWING

Commercial, residential. Driveways, reclamation, seal coating, and gravel work. Free estimates. Licensed, insured. With integrity and pride since 1992. (207)894-4163.

Flexible hours, excellent references. 16 plus yrs experience. FMI call (603)986-4891.

Storage Space BROWNFIELD Self Storage. 10x10, 10x15, 10x20,10x30. Prepay 6 months- 7th month free! Call for prices. (207)625-8390.

NATURAL MULCH

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.

BIZEE B EE HOME SERVICES Professional housecleaning services, laundry, trash removal, window cleaning & routine property care. Specializing in residential & vacation homes. Serving the valley since 2006. www.bizeebeeservices.com (603)447-5233

Mowing, de-thatching and aerating. Spring clean-ups and mulching. Lot sweeping. Professional and Insured. Call (603)723-6990.

Northern Dreamscapes

FREE UHAUL TRUCK 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.

PAINT & Stain- Interior/ exte rior- all applications, pressure washing. Lash- Conway, NH, since 1998 (603)960-2175.

FREEDOM Storage. 5x5, 5x10, 10X10, 10X20, 20X25. We rent for less, Rte. 25. 603-651-7476.

PAY LESS PLUMBING

Storage, household, autos, motorcycles, RVs, snowmobiles. Discounted Penske Truck rentals (603)383-6665 www.valleyauto.us

25 years experience. Residential & commercial. Affordable rates. Licensed & insured. (603)706-5183.

Vacation Rentals Private Homes Offices 24/7 Windows

PERSONAL care assistant, respite care, full-time, part-time days, nights, and fill-in. 25 years experience. 207-807-1011.

Carl & Dixie Lea 447- 3711 ~ credit cards accepted ~ ~ Est 1990 ~

Maintenance, Equipment, Liners, Openings, 22 years. 603-785-8305.

Excavator/ Skid Steer

Spring cleaning, windows, carpets, rental cleaning, condos, janitorial services, commercial, residential. Insured. (603)356-6098.

POOL SERVICE

PROCLEAN SERVICES

Digging, Trenching, Test Pits, Clearing, Equipment Hauling, York Raking, Loader Work, Etc. Insured. Small Jobs Encouraged. (603)986-1084. www.cooklineboring.com

Situation Wanted IN-HOME 24 HR HEALTHCARE SERVICES

COMMERCIAL storage units, centrally located in North Conway, ideal for small business. Call Roger (603)452-8888.

$37/yard. Free delivery with 4 yard purchase in immediate area. RWN Property Services. www.rwnpropertyservices.com (603)356-4759.

Cleaning & More

YARD Birds. Complete yard and lawn maintenance, improvements and upgrades. Free estimates. Fully insured. (603)662-4254, (207)625-8840.

Trees, brush, painting, year round maintenance. Bartlett & Conway area. Do-list Property Maintenance. (603)452-8575.

BISSON’S Family Lawn Care: No jobs too small. Landscaping, mowing, etc. Free estimates. Dennis (603)723-3393.

CARPENTRY, handyman, property maintenance, no job too small. Call Dennis Bisson, 723-3393, free estimates.

WILL care for elderly loved one in your home. Days, nights, weekends. Call (603)923-3054, ask for Doreen.

ROTOTILLING Mowing, clean-ups, landscaping, brush clearing, dump runs. Call 447-3045. Reasonable rates. Cell (603)733-6656

Mow, Weeding, Garden

THE HANDYMAN

One Girl Crew does it all! Low prices. (603)733-7511.

No job too small! Call George at (603)986-5284, Conway, NH.

GLEN WAREHOUSE

JB Self Storage- Rt5 Lovell, 10x20, 10x24, 10x30, secure, dry, 24hr access. (207)925-3045. MOUNTAIN Valley Self StorageConvenient Intervale location, minutes from NConway and Bartlett villages, affordable prices, many sizes available. Modern secure facility, call (603)356-3773. 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. 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.

Wanted BUYER of beer & soda cans. Copper, brass, car batteries, etc. 1-603-730-2590.

CASH For Gold!

Highest Price Paid Ever!

VALLEY JEWELERS

142 Main Street Conway, NH

603-447-3611

Wanted To Buy CASH for antiques, gold, silver, coins, furniture, etc. Conway Village Pawn, 150 Main St. Conway, (603)447-2255.

GOLD OVER $1,500/0Z.! 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. Call Roger (603)356-9922 or www.hartmannrr.com. MARLIN Glenfield model 60 or similar semi-automatic 22 caliber rifle in excellent condition. 752-4818.

WE BUY GOLD & SILVER FOR CASH

Bring in: chains, bracelets, charms, ring, watches, digital gold, coins and bars, sterling flatware/ tea sets, worn and broken items. Conway Auction Hall & Gold Buyers, Rt.16, 2 miles south of the Village (603)447-3422.

Yard Sale SELLING COUNTRY COLLECTIBLES & PRIMITIVE ANTIQUES

Sat. June 18th, Sun. June 19th. 9am-5pm, 96 Elm St., Effing ham, NH. Selling entire contents of home. FMI (603)986-0243.


Page 28 — THE CONWAY DAILY SUN, Tuesday, June 14, 2011

485 Main Street (Route 16) Gorham, NH

(888) 838-0993

2008 Chevy Aveo LS

2000 Honda Accord LX 4-Cylinder 5-Spd Manual Cloth Interior 60k Miles (Stk#1B15106B)

$6,595 2006 VW Beetle GLS 5-Cylinder 5-Spd Manual Keyless Entry 52k Miles (Stk1B3063A)

6-Cylinder Automatic Keyless Entry 62k Miles (Stk#1B1293B)

4-Cylinder Automatic Keyless Entry 51k Miles (Stk#1B15300C)

$11,992 2006 Subaru Impreza

6-Cylinder Automatic Trailer Hitch 64k Miles (Stk#1B40146B)

$12,991

4-Cylinder Automatic All Wheel Drive 33k Miles (Stk#1B20153A)

$12,995 2008 Jeep Liberty Sport 4X4

4-Cylinder Automatic Keyless Entry 21k Miles (Stk#1C5021A)

$13,991 2008 Honda CR-V LX 4X4

6-Cylinder Automatic Power Windows 43k Miles (Stk#1B1257A)

$16,991

4-Cylinder Automatic Power Windows 54k Miles (Stk#1B15298A)

$17,955 2009 Honda CR-V LX 4X4

$17,992 2008 Dodge Ram SLT 4X4

6-Cylinder Automatic Keyless Entry 70k Miles (Stk#1T40481A)

4-Cylinder Automatic Keyless Entry 38k Miles (Stk#1B15250A)

8-Cylinder Automatic Crew Cab 71k Miles (Stk#1B10107A)

$18,395

$18,995

$21,991

Berlin City Auto Group S H OW R O O M Mon-Fri 8 am-7pm | Sat 8 am-6pm | Sun 11am-5pm PA R T S & SERVICE Mon-Fri 7:30am-5 :30pm | Sat 8 am-5 pm | Closed Sunday Offers ends June 21, 2011

$8,495 2005 Toyota Camry LE 4-Cylinder Automatic Power Windows 77k Miles (Stk#1B40363A)

$10,495 2007 Ford Fusion SE

5-Cylinder Automatic Leather Seats 63k Miles (Stk#2H151A)

$10,992 2007 Chevy Equinox LS AWD

2007 Toyota FJ Cruiser 4X4

$9,991 2006 VW Jetta GLS

6-Cylinder Automatic Power Sunroof 65k Miles (Stk#1B15301A)

$10,551

2010 Dodge Avenger SXT

6-Cylinder Automatic Power Sunroof 54k Miles (Stk#1B10101A)

$8,995 2004 Ford Explorer XLT 4X4

4-Cylinder 5-Spd Manual Regular Cab 58k Miles (Stk#1T40474B)

$7,991 2004 Pontiac Grand Am GT

6-Cylinder Automatic Power Windows Roof Rack (Stk#1B20116A)

$8,995

2008 Toyota Yaris

4-Cylinder 5-Spd Manual Cloth Interior 71k Miles (Stk#1B40387A)

$6,991 2002 Jeep Liberty 4X4

2006 Ford Taurus SE

2007 Chevy Colorado LS

2005 Pontiac Sunfi re

4-Cylinder Automatic Power Windows Cruise Control (Stk#XB3029A)

4-Cylinder Automatic Keyless Entry 72k Miles (Stk#1B1066A)

$11,993 2006 Ford Freestyle AWD 6-Cylinder Automatic Leather Seats 60k Miles (Stk#XB50105A)

$14,495 2008 Toyota Tacoma 4X4 6-Cylinder 5-Spd Manual Extended Cab 75k Miles (Stk#1B12116A)

$17,995 2009 Nissan Murano AWD 6-Cylinder Automatic Keyless Entry 51k Miles (Stk#1B3084A)

$23,395


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