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Regional drug bust includes search of strip club 4 women & 2 men arrested; police succeed in having details kept secret for now; more arrests expected By GAil oBer
arraigned by telephone conference in district court yesterday afternoon. Police said an “undisclosed amount of cocaine, prescription drugs, cash and a stolen firearm were seized” during the search. Three of the seven, Kyme
THE LACONIA DAILY SUN
LACONIA — Five women and two men rounded up by a number of police agencies, including during a raid at a Gilford strip club Tuesday night around 8:45 p.m., were
Lynn Locke, 37, of 19 Tremont St. in Concord, Dana Eliese Zizzo, 22, of 627 Weirs Blvd. in Laconia, and Sherry Lynn Barnhart, 21 of 39 Winterbrook Road in Campton were at the Mardi Gras North Cabaret at 15 Kimball Road when
arrested. Shauna Lyn Martin, 23, of 1203 N.H. Route 175 Apt. 1 in Holderness was arrested by Holderness Police. Justin Ainsley, 21, who last known address was 98 Mylod see Bust page 7
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Despina Kafanelis, a fourth grader at Gilford Elementary School, is selling necklaces and bracelets she’s made to raise funds for the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society. The jewelry is available at Pizza Express in Gilford. (Laconia Daily Sun photo/Adam Drapcho)
4th grader selling jewelry creations to benefit leukemia research By AdAm drApcho THE LACONIA DAILY SUN
GILFORD — The thought of other children suffering with cancer is upsetting but what can a 4th grade girl do to help? For Despina Kafanelis, the answer is to make jewelry, something she’s already been doing for years. Until she sells out, Despina’s jewelry will be sold at Pizza Express in Gilford, a business her father owns. The bracelets
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and necklaces are available by donation, with proceeds from the sale going to the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society. Despina said she first heard of the society, which helps fund research toward a cure, when she and the rest of her third grade class each attempted to fill a small box with coins to be donated to the cause. Now a fourth grader at the Elementary School, Despina thought she could collect more money by offering jewelry in exchange for donations.
“I really like making bracelets,” she said, explaining that she began the craft when she was in Kindergarten. The bracelets and necklaces for sale at Pizza Express feature a chain with a pendant, either a star, a heart or a cross. Making jewelry, she said, “is really interesting, it’s really creative,” and she’s glad to be able to put her skill to good use. “Some people need help – it’s sad just to see dEsPINa page
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Page 2 — THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Thursday, October 20, 2011
Scores of exotic animals shot in Ohio
ZANESVILLE, Ohio (AP) — Sheriff’s deputies shot nearly 50 wild animals — including 18 rare Bengal tigers and 17 lions — in a big-game hunt across the Ohio countryside Wednesday after the owner of an exotic-animal park threw their cages open and committed suicide in what may have been one last act of spite against his neighbors and police. As homeowners nervously hid indoors, officers armed with high-powered rifles and shoot-to-kill orders fanned out through fields and woods to hunt down 56 animals that had been turned loose from the Muskingum County Animal Farm by owner Terry Thompson before he shot himself to death Tuesday. After an all-night hunt that extended into Wednesday afternoon, 48 animals were killed. Six others — three leopards, a grizzly bear and two monkeys — were captured and taken to the Columbus Zoo. A wolf was later found dead, leaving a monkey as the only animal still on the loose. see EXOTIC page 9
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Anti-government rallies turn violent in Athens ATHENS, Greece (AP) — Hundreds of youths smashed and looted stores in central Athens and clashed with riot police during a massive anti-government rally against painful new austerity measures that won initial parliamentary approval in a vote Wednesday night. The rioting came on the first day of a 48-hour nationwide general strike that brought services in much of Greece to a
standstill, grounding flights for hours, leaving ferries tied up in port and shutting down customs offices, stores and banks. More than 100,000 people took to the streets of the Greek capital to demonstrate against the austerity bill, which includes new tax hikes, further pension and salary cuts, the suspension on reduced pay of 30,000 public servants and the suspension of collective labor contracts.
Creditors have demanded the meaures before they give Greece more funds from a €110 billion ($152.11 billion) package of bailout loans from other eurozone countries and the International Monetary Fund. Greece says it will run out of money in mid-November without the €8 billion ($11 billion) installment. But Greek citizens said they already are see GREECE page 11
KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) — U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton is encouraging Afghanistan’s wary leadership to keep up Taliban reconciliation efforts and boosting counterterrorism cooperation with Pakistan as the Obama administration presses ahead with troop withdrawal plans. Clinton arrived in Kabul late Wednesday on an unannounced visit and was scheduled to see President Hamid Karzai,
other top Afghan officials and civic leaders on Thursday. Her trip came after Karzai expressed frustration with attempts to woo Taliban fighters away from the insurgency amid increasing attacks by the Talibanallied, Pakistan-based Haqqani network. Clinton was also to underscore the importance of linking Afghanistan to its neighbors, a consideration for a regional conference in Istanbul in early November, U.S. officials said. The U.S. sees a political settlement with
the Taliban as key to ending the war and is pushing Karzai to lead and expand a reconciliation drive, although the Taliban has indicated no public interest in such a deal. A secret U.S. effort to spark negotiations earlier this year angered Karzai. The goal of reconciling fighters who renounce al-Qaida and violence and embrace Afghanistan’s constitution was dealt a major blow with the assassination see AFGHANISTAN page 14
LOS ANGELES (AP) — A medical expert looked jurors in the eyes Wednesday and told them that Michael Jackson’s doctor committed 17 flagrant violations of the standard of care for his famous patient and was directly responsible for the death of the King of Pop. Dr. Steven Shafer at one point called the defendant, Dr. Conrad Murray, “clueless” when it came to using the powerful anesthetic propofol and said he didn’t know what
to do when Jackson stopped breathing. Prosecutor David Walgren concluded the day’s questioning by asking Shafer: “Would it be your opinion that Conrad Murray is directly responsible for the death of Michael Jackson for his egregious violations and abandonment of Michael Jackson?” Shafer replied, “Absolutely.” Just giving Jackson the anesthetic as a sleep aid was unconscionable, Shafer testified earlier.
“We are in pharmacological never-never land here, something that was done to Michael Jackson and no one else in history to my knowledge,” he told jurors. When Murray found Jackson not breathing, there was nothing more important than calling 911, Shafer said. Asked about Murray’s failure to do so, the witness caught his breath and said, “I almost don’t know what to say. That is so see JACKSON page 12
Clinton encourages reconciliation in unannounced visit to Afghanistan
Doctor caused Michael Jackson’s death, expert witness tells jury
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THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Thursday, October 20, 2011— Page 3
ICE officer arrested for smuggling marijuana House guest says he
PHOENIX (AP) — A deportation officer with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement led Arizona state police and federal agents on a high-speed desert chase in his government vehicle, throwing bundles of marijuana out of the window as he fled, the Department of Public Safety said Wednesday. The deportation officer, identified as Jason Alistair Lowery, 34, had been under surveillance for more than month after a known smuggler who had been arrested gave authorities a tip about the officer in an effort to get lenient treatment, Department of Public Safety Officer Carrick Cook told The Associated Press. In a criminal complaint filed late Wednesday against Lowery, who also used to be a Border Patrol agent, a Department of Homeland Security investigator wrote that he got further information about Lowery through a confidential informant on Oct. 4. The informant, whose identity was protected,
said that he or she was involved with Lowery and another man in a “rip” crew in which Lowery used his status in law enforcement to help steal marijuana from illegal immigrants, wrote Brian Gamberg-Bonilla, a special agent with the DPS’s Office of Investigations. The informant agreed to call Lowery and arrange for him to pick up 500 pounds of pot in the desert on Tuesday, which is how authorities were able to follow him and begin to make their case, GambergBonilla wrote in the document. DPS and federal agents tried to pull Lowery over after he picked up the marijuana with his unmarked ICE pickup truck, Cook said. Lowery then fled, leading agents on a 45-minute chase at speeds of up to 110 mph as he threw 10 of the 14 bundles of pot that he had in the truck out of the window, he said. “He got pretty desperate,” Cook said. see SMUGGLING page 10
CONCORD, N.H. (AP) — A National Guard member will be allowed to bring her same-sex partner to a family Guard event in North Conway, N.H. Chief Warrant Officer Charlie Morgan of Rye, N.H., had been told that her civil union partner could not attend the “yellow ribbon reintegration” program this weekend. But Sen. Jeanne Shaheen said Wednesday that the Department of Defense had clarified regulations
saying that gay and lesbian service members may take advantage of a regulation that allows service members to designate any one person, regardless of relationship, to join them at a yellow ribbon event. Shaheen sent a letter to Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta Tuesday urging him to end what she called a discriminatory policy that bans same-sex spouses of returning Guard members from participating in National Guard family events.
NH Guard member allowed to bring gay partner to event
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didn’t see Celina Cass the night she disappeared
WEST STEWARTSTOWN, N.H (AP) — A guest in the house of an 11-year-old New Hampshire girl whose body was pulled from the Connecticut River in West Stewartstown in August says he didn’t see Celina Cass the night she was reported missing. Kevin Mullaney, who had moved in with the family, said the door to the duplex was open when he returned home around midnight, and that he watched TV and then went to bed around 1 a.m. The 23-year-old Mullaney told WMUR-TV (http:// bit.ly/q4bbPM ) that he left for work at 6:15 a.m. and that none of the vehicles in the driveway appeared to have moved overnight. He said Celina’s mother, Luisia Cass, was like a mother to him, and Celina was like a sister. Celina’s body was found Aug. 1, a week after she disappeared. Her death has been declared a homicide but no arrests have been made.
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Page 4 — THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Thursday, October 20, 2011
Froma Harrop
Class warfare Q&A Demands to let taxes rise for Americans topping the income charts have led to charges of “class warfare” by the usual Republican suspects. To move the conversation forward, here are some questions and answers: Question: Do you believe that only the rich should pay higher taxes? Answer: Yes. When the economy gets better, people somewhat lower down on the income scale probably should pay something more. But let’s start with the rich. Q: Is it fair that the top 1-percent pay 38-percent of all taxes? A: First, let’s correct your number. It applies only to federal income taxes. When you add in payroll taxes, federal excise taxes (gasoline, for example) and various state taxes, the bottom 20-percent paid 12.3-percent of their income in taxes last year and the wealthiest 1-percent paid 7.9-percent. Does that sound fair to you? With all these taxes in the mix, the top 1-percent paid only 21.5-percent of the total — and do note that they earned 20.3-percent of total personal income. Q: Well, what about that 51-percent of households that owed no federal income tax in 2009? Huh? A: So few Americans paid the federal income tax that year because the recession pushed many people’s earning below the taxable level. In ordinary times, households that don’t pay federal income tax range from 35-percent to 40-percent of the total. In 2007, the number was 38-percent. Bear in mind that the Bush tax cuts removed many people (who were paying very little tax to begin with) off the tax rolls. Also, 17-percent of those who paid no income tax are over 65 and probably retired. Q: Sen. Lindsey Graham defined class warfare as “when you pick one area of the economy and say we’re going to tax those people because most people are not those people.” Is it fair to let the American masses raise
taxes on a small group of rich people? A: Hmmm. I don’t recall the Republican from South Carolina complaining during the Bush years, when the top 1-percent receive an average tax cut of $34,992, while the middle 20-percent got $647. Q: President Obama keeps going on and on about asking the wealthiest among them to “pay their fair share” in taxes. What on earth does “fair share” mean? A: Beats me. Call me a technocratic bore, but I think the role of taxation is to pay for the cost of government in a way that causes the least distress. That means a progressive tax code that takes a larger percentage from those who can afford it most. Q: You want to soak the rich, don’t you? A: No. They’re already soaking — in a bathtub of Champagne. Q: You hate the rich, don’t you? A: Absolutely not. I take them one tycoon at a time. Some I like a lot. But let me say this: I especially like rich people who don’t play the martyr when asked to pay their taxes. I like Warren Buffett very much. Q: Well, if Warren Buffett wants to pay more in taxes, who’s stopping him? A: That’s very cute. By the way, Bill Gross, the head of Pimco, the investment giant in Newport Beach, Calif., recently tweeted: “Class warfare by the 99-percent? Of course, they’re fighting back after 30 years of being shot at.” I like him, too. Let me ask you a question: Are you better off than you were 11 years ago, when Bill Clinton was president, tax rates were higher and budgets balanced? A: I’ll have to get back to you on that. (A member of the Providence Journal editorial board, Froma Harrop writes a nationally syndicated column from that city. She has written for such diverse publications as The New York Times, Harper’s Bazaar and Institutional Investor.)
Raising the Medicare eligibility age is an unacceptable solution To the editor, The benefits I worked for all my life and PAID for should never be part of the patch that fixes the mess politicians made. The blame is not with us seniors and lifelong workers. Stop the costly wars by getting us off the oil umbilical cord to the Middle East. Start using the NASA money to find alternate energy. Put tariffs on foreign products. Start federal work programs and craft apprenticeships for the young and unemployed. Make big business keep manufacturing jobs here by giving them tax breaks and incentives. Forgive student loans or at least allow them to come under the bankruptcy laws. Increase the tax on the very rich, close loop holes that allow them to pay less. Support the majority of Americans who work hard
and pay the most. Social Security and Medicare are not welfare! I worked and paid into these programs for years. They are my lifeline as I get older. The should be the hope for the young. Don’t cut back government to the point it can’t function. Government is supposed to by “For the people, by the people”. Focus on that, not the 1-percent of rich that pay to have their people elected. Stop this fighting among yourselves. Get along for the good of this country, make it all work. It’s a give and take world and no group represents everyone’s concerns. Raising the Medicare eligibility age is unacceptable, and would raise out of pocket costs by $2,200 each year. David Williams Alton
LETTERS Moose photograph illustrated a way of life I grew up within To the editor, The Wednesday paper contained a letter from a reader who was/is “deeply disturbed” by the picture of a dead moose on the front page. Hello, it’s moose season in New Hampshire. I’m so sorry that Louisa’s sensitivities were offended; not really. I grew up in a hunting and fishing family, and part of hunting and fishing is that the animal has to die so you can eat the animal, kind of like the steak you finished prior to writing your article. When a grocery store runs an ad in the paper for steak, poultry, or fish, do they not print a picture of the product to lure you into the store? Does that cause you “deep disturbance”? Where do you suppose that steak came from? I see dead moose and I think steak, ya baby. In the Bible, God explains that he gave us animals for our use, and I don’t think he was referring to just riding them. As a young boy I so looked forward to the hunting season, and time in the out-
doors with my father and grandfather. They taught me how to make a clean kill, properly gut and clean the animal, how to survive in the woods, and how to cook wild game. My mother was an excellent wild game cook, and we ate everything we shot. My grandparents canned most of the birds and big game for the winter, which is what their parents and grandparents had taught them, so they wouldn’t go hungry. They had gone through the depression, and it was a big part of how they survived. If you were a card caring vegetarian, which I doubt, I would be a little more caring of your sensitivities. When you turn on the television or pick up the paper and the news is showing dead people in the streets fighting for their freedoms, do you write the paper of your “deep disturbance” from those pictures? I doubt that as well. To my brothers and sisters in the field, good hunting! Terry Martin Laconia
Photograph of dead moose could make non-hunters of us all To the editor, Yesterday, a large group of us were remarking on the poor taste The Sun showed in printing the picture of the dead moose on the front page. Our remarks were not based in any way on any non-hunting prejudice but on the picture itself, which certainly could make non-hunters of us.
Therefore I was glad to see Ms. Simpson’s well written and sensitive letter to the editor today. With all the sadness many of us are dealing with today, we do not need to have some flashed at us early in the morning, or anytime. Carolyn Sutcliffe Meredith
Daily Sun’s front page is no place for a picture of a dead moose To the editor, I wholeheartedly agree with Louise Simpson regarding displaying a huge picture of a dead moose on the front page of your paper. Very sad. I am against hunting any kind of animal but that is not going to stop man from doing so. I happen to be a lover of animals. To me, there is no challenge in
hunting moose as they are so docile and just stand there. As Louise stated, this should have been put in a hunting magazine not The Laconia Daily Sun, and especially on the front page. This really started my day off great. Shame, shame. Barbara J. Perry Moultonborough
Allowing people to die to balance the budget is a heartless act To the editor, Regarding Mr. Ewings letter on Mr. Hightower: Oops, my mistake! It seems Mr. Hightower’s podcast’s do not have the exact wording as his articles. Close but no cigar. Lesson learned. But the rest of Mr Ewings raging at the machine is the usual right wing
salad. He will be yelling till his last heartbeat. LOL. Let me repeat what I said: no time in American history has some heartless scumbag like Eric Cantor proposed cuts before we save people’s lives and properties. Get real! James Veverka Tilton
THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Thursday, October 20, 2011 — Page 5
LETTERS Private management is twice as effective as Social Security To the editor, All I could rouse from Democratic slumber with my Top 10 Democratic Myths list were two chaps. Bill Knightly from Gilford and a Jon Hoyt from Bridgewater. Bill tried to defend only unions and Social Security. He agrees with my other eight myths. Jon’s response was just an incoherent smogersboard with one central theme: “I LOVE Democrats, even when they are COMPLETE FAILURES and I drink as much purple Kool Aid as they tell me to”. Further on one my myths. I have to laugh. I am the one being demonized and I am the one trying to get a better deal for the less fortunate people In America. I am playing the Democratic role trying to double Social Security checks and these guys are knocking the merit of my intentions. The Democratic constituency are walking automatons of donkey propaganda, inculcated into them since Eden. You know the line . . . Republicans are heartless people who want to take Social Security away and throw grandma off a cliff in her rocking chair. I admit this. That approach has been highly effective in BRAIN WASHING the rank and file pawns of the Democratic Party. But it is pure 100-percent B.S., as brown as a UPS truck. I want MORE money and BETTER benefits for Social Security recipients, NOT LESS. Pillory me if you want for that. Consider my logic and ignore the political sound bites; above all, make your own decision. Don’t just accept the one from the socialist politburo. There is not a single retirement program in America that functions like Social Security because “pay as you go” programs were OUTLAWED from existence years ago by the very people who run one, government. Pay as you go has many Ponzi scheme characteristics. That is why it has been called one for decades. It is an accurate allegation. FACT: Thirty years ago, public employees in three Texas counties withdrew from conventional Social Security. A certified accountant created a private alternative to duplicate the benefits of Social Security or exceed them with contributions matching the current system. The collected money pool is bid out to insurance companies and money managers to get the best deal with a minimum return GUARANTEED. REMEMBER this approach is the same EXACT approach used by almost EVERY PUBLIC AND PRIVATE pension
fund in ALL AMERICA. Result? The people in Texas are getting TWICE AS MUCH per month as people on conventional Social Security with better death benefits and disability benefits as well. Texas retirees with average earnings of $26,000 are getting $1,826 per month, the Social Security recipient is getting $1007. Texas retirees with average earnings of $51,200 are getting $3,600 per month. The Social Security person is getting $1,826. Why the great differences? Social Security invests in ONLY Treasury instruments, which provide a very low rate of return compared to alternatives. EVERY OTHER PENSION FUND IN AMERICA INVESTS DIFFERENTLY THAN Social Security AND every one produces higher returns, WITHOUT exception. THAT IS WHY I SAY you are being RIPPED OFF and Social Security is a lousy investment BECAUSE IT COULD GENERATE double the return with prudent risk which is minimal with investment horizons that stretch decades. Two out of three people depend on Social Security for a large part of their income. The living standards of these people could be raised significantly and the outcome in Texas (over 30 years) offers some imperial evidence that what I preach is not some pipe dream. AT THE MINIMUM this approach deserves detail analysis and investigation, not an instant, Democratic, knee jerk, snapshot of granny heading toward the rocks. There is too much to gain for so many who could use more money. Why are Democrats refusing to consider helping the poor double their income when it has been demonstrated by every pension plan in America that it can be done successfully over and over again. Because they could lose pawn voters who now see the other party as having a better mousetrap and WE DO. Ready for granny falling from her chair? That picture comes next in hopes of keeping your brain from working. As I said earlier, that picture has been very effective at keeping trillions of dollars from the pockets of the poor. It is hard to get un-brainwashed. I am talking about an iPhone upgrade to Social Security and Democrats want to keep you with two tin cans connected by a hunk of copper wire. By the way both cans are insolvent. Lets tax the rich is next. . . Tony Boutin Gilford
Vaccinations should be considered with informed skepticism To the editor, What a fascinating reply by James Veverka to my cautionary note regarding vaccinations. I could list many more dozens of alternative/integrative/naturopathic doctors who recommend that people regard flu shots with an informed skepticism. They encourage all of us to educate ourselves about vaccinations. They recommend having an intelligent conversation with our doctors. They recommend that we discuss the pros and cons of vaccinations. They have amassed a mountain of evidence which shows that keeping our bodies’ immune systems healthy may
be a better option than taking a flu shot with it’s potential side effects and questionable efficacy. After all, the flu vaccine is nothing more than a scattershot approach made many months in advance of the flu season and many times they have guessed wrong rendering it useless. So yes, I could list many other docs, but Mr. Veverka would probably just assure us that everyone one of them are quacks. You don’t suppose James has frequented Stephen Barrett’s “Quackwatch site do you? That would be the site where any bogus alternasee next page
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Page 6 — THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Thursday, October 20, 2011
LETTERS Wall Street protestors should be ‘occupying’ college campuses
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To the editor, Once again I have to take issue with the left as represented by the writings of James Veverka. Good ol’ Jimmy wants everyone to believe everything he writes can be verified by independent unbiased sources. Trouble is all those blue highlighted references contained in his letters do nothing of the kind. I’ve followed up on every one of his “sources”, and readers are free to check them if they doubt me, because they lead nowhere that gives the slightest creditability to his claim. In today’s paper (Oct. 19) he would have readers believe that the Tea Party is going under and what does he use to base his opinion on? The writers in (are you ready for this?) THE NEW YORK TIMES! Well now, there’s a impeccable unbiased source, RIGHT! As for those letters applauding Mr. Veverka’s writings and asking for more, I agree. Keep them coming Jim because you and your letters expose exactly how deceitful and hate filled those on the left really are. Your “sources” are jokes and your charges are unsupportable. Speaking of jokes, have readers been following the “occupy Wall Street” gangs? In New York the arrests are up to around a thousand now. Filth abounds and I can’t recall anyone on the left decrying the many antiSemitic signs and speech seen and heard from these clowns. Ask what they want, they want MORE. More what you ask? More of other peoples money. More what? Forgive their student loans. Free education. How can I work my way through collage when tuition is $50,000 a year one dim bulb asked? Gee, who’s fault is that? Someone hold a gun to his head when he signed for the loan? And why is any collage requiring that kind of tuition
anyway? Are all those professors getting that kind of money to teach? I doubt it! So where’s the blame here? With the government? The Republicans, the Tea Party, the Democrats even? No I don’t think so, it’s with the fools who agree to the terms and the collages who look to be at least as bad and even worse then the banks giving the loans because even after students graduate these schools hound their alumni for contributions for the rest of their lives and expect even to be remembered in their wills. What a racket! No wonder these kids think their being screwed over, they are. But it’s by their colleges and professors who assure them it everyone except the schools and professors doing the screwing. Speaking of professors. Dear Professor Sandy wrote the other day that we should be more humble. Don’t take pride in ourselves, our schools, communities, our nation. We are too prideful, he assures readers sighting white pride, black pride, gay pride, on and on he goes but just a little further on he writes “it would be so nice to see white humility, the few the humble, and humble to be an American”. I know he is inferring all the others listed above these but I had to laugh because he just couldn’t bring himself to write, “black humility, gay humility”. Political correctness is so ingrained in the left. If Leo wants to hear the call for humility, it’s not far away Leo. Any church or Christian service, it’s there for you. But then the left reject and sneer at Christians and the Christian religion. In fact the left looses no opportunity to denigrate all religions but especially Christians. I wonder why that is? Steve Earle Hill
from preceding page tive therapies are meticulously ferreted out so as to alert the helpless public. Of course Mr. Veverka was so busy playing his “nanny state” fiddle that he missed the whole point of my letter. He seemingly has been so indoctrinated into leftist ideology — believing that our beloved government always knows better regarding the care of our own bodies — that he leaves no room for intelligent discussion. Yes, I have come to the conclusion that the flu shot is just not worth the risk for me personally. However, my main points were as follows: (1) folks should be in charge of their health decisions and not the government; (2)doctors know little of therapies outside of drugs and surgery, necessitating that consumers do their own research into alternatives; (3) the doctor/patient relationship needs to be a partnership rather than a dictatorship; (4) there are so many natural therapies we should enlist first before choosing potentially toxic medications; (5) we need to take responsibility for the choices we make in life and not leave it up to the government.
We are an overdosed society with more people dying from prescription drugs than from illegal drugs. We are running out of of vital antibiotics that still work because they are so overprescribed. Our bodies are breaking down prematurely because we want a magic pill to cure our ills and so we transform our bodies from well oiled machines into toxic waste dumps. Look, I have great respect for doctors, who do many things in expert fashion. It’s just that they can’t know everything and they aren’t always right. Unfortunately, they are unduly influenced by the pharmaceutical companies. Government bureaucracies have incestuous relationships with those companies. This has created another form of crony capitalism that, in my opinion, is doing tremendous harm to the physical and mental health of this country. I’m pretty sure that Mr. Veverka doesn’t like the government/ Wall Street crony capitalism which leaves me perplexed as to why he seems so enamored with government/ big pharma crony capitalism. Russ Wiles Tilton
THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Thursday, October 20, 2011— Page 7
The seven people arrested on Tuesday in connection with a lengthy, multi-agency investigation into alleged drug trafficing included (l-r) Justin Ainsley of Norwood, Mass., Sherry L. Barnhart of Campton, Kim Locke on Concord, Lhauna L. Martin of Holderness, Jessica Sargent of Franklin, Scott Tripp of Franklin and Dana E. Zizzo of Laconia. (Police photos)
BUST from page one St. in Norwood, Mass. was arrested by Tilton Police while in his summer rental for a crime he allegedly committed in Belmont. It is not known what his connection is to the others. Tilton Police declined to comment. Ainsley’s paperwork was unavailable but the media statement issued by Gilford police said he was charged with one count of marijuana sales. He was held on $250 cash bail and $30,000 in personal recognizance bail. He was prosecuted by Belknap County Attorney Melissa Guldbrandsen. His mother said she would post bail and, as of 5 p.m. yesterday, a guard at the Belknap County Jail said he is the only one of the six who appeared in court yesterday not incarcerated. The other two, Scott Tripp, 39 of 65 Prospect St. in Franklin and Jessica Sargent, 35, of 35 East Bow St. in Franklin were taken into custody by Franklin Police. Sargent is charged with one count of conspiracy to commit a sale of a controlled drug, one count of selling marijuana and one count of selling oxycodone — a powerful pain killer. She was released on personal recognizance bail and didn’t appear in court yesterday. No complaints regarding her charges were made available and Franklin police declined all comment. Arguing on Locke’s, Tripp’s and Ainsley’s behalf was Ashley Ashworth of the N.H. Public Defender’s Office. While neither Ashworth nor her office has yet been appointed as counsel for any of defendants, she
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arrived in Courtroom 2 of the Laconia’s 4th District Court in time to attempt to represent Locke, Tripp, and Ainsley on bail matters. Tripp was in court yesterday and was initially charged with five counts of selling oxycodone at three different locations — three times at the Mardi Gras, and two times at other locations in the Weirs. Gilford Prosecutor Eric Bredbury said Tripp had previous convictions for drug possession, simple assault and sexual assault, but Ashworth said they were all well into his past and, because of some medical issues, Tripp posed no danger of fleeing. Judge Carroll did not find probable cause for four of the five charges but ordered him held on $2,000 cash bail and $20,000 personal recognizance bail. Locke was initially charged with five counts of sales of cocaine, however Carroll said he didn’t find probable cause for four of the charges against her. Nevertheless, Carroll said selling cocaine was “extraordinarily dangerous” and her ordered her held on $2,000 cash and $30,000 personal recognizance bail. Complaints show the same member of the drug task force was responsible for all 10 of Locke’s and Tripp’s initial charges. Gilford police requested and received a court order to seal all of the affidavits supporting either the arrests or searches relating to the case for 120 days. While six of the seven people charged appeared in Laconia yesterday, they were arranged by telephone as Judge Jim Carroll was working in Exeter.
Ashworth had not read any of the affidavits and was not in court in time to represent Martin, Zizzo or Barnhart. Carroll said all six defendants will get a chance to have a separate bail hearing and, on Ashworth’s request, ruled the sealed affidavits could be made available to lawyers who will represent the defendants. It is not known if the public defender’s office was officially notified about the arraignment or, if not, how Ashworth learned about it. The other three women, Zizzo, Bernhart, and Martin didn’t have attorneys with them at their appearance and preceded Locke, Tripp, and Ainsley. Zizzo is charged with three separate counts of selling an undisclosed amount of marijuana for $65, each time to undercover police. She was ordered held on $5,000 cash only bail because, according to Carroll’s telephone statements, his paperwork indicates she was in violation of an order from Dover District Court to pay $192 in restitution. Carroll also ordered her held on $500 cash for alleged counts of identify fraud and fraudulent use of a credit card for charges she faces in Portsmouth District Court. When Carroll asked her if she wished to speak on her own behalf regarding bail, Zizzo acknowledged being “in a whole lot of trouble” and wanted to know that if she posted the $5,000 cash bail, would someone from Strafford County come and get her. When she learned that would probably be the case see next page
Page 8 — THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Thursday, October 20, 2011
Sentence lengths & bail conditions said adding to stress on county jail budget
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LACONIA — With the Belknap County Jail filled to capacity, Dan Ward, superintendent of the corrections department, told the county commissioners this week when he presented his 2012 budget request that pressures on space and expenses are exacerbated by sentences pronounced from the bench. The county jail has 36 individual cells, or secure units with one bed, which Ward said are always full. Another 93 beds, for a total of 129, area distributed among communal rooms, including the gymnasium where a dozen inmates are housed. The necessity of separating prisoners — men and women, minimum and maximum security, victims and perpetrators and co-defendants charged in the same crime — severely constrains the use of the limited space. As the court metes out longer sentences, a larger share of the space is occupied by inmates serving them, with more than half the beds taken by those incarcerated for a year or longer. For example, Ward told the commissioner that this week a man convicted of four misdemeanors was given consecutive sentences; that is, the sentence for each offense will follow one another instead of being served concurrently. As a result, he will spend 402 days in the county jail at a cost
of $32,160, excluding any medical expenses he might incur. In other cases, Ward questions whether the offense warrants incarceration at all. Again, this week two men found intoxicated and taken into custody were jailed in lieu of $100 cash bail, one stayed 37 days at a cost of $2,960 and the other for 47 days at a cost of $3,760, not including any medical expenses. Ward reminded the commissioners that the success of educational and counseling programs designed to reduce the number of inmates who return to jail depended on maintaining a manageable prison population. He said that currently one full-time and one part-time officer were assigned to community corrections, or managing inmates, who are not incarcerated but monitored through electronic bracelets. “One person is not enough,” he said, asking to make the part-time position a full-time position while replacing the officer who split his time with a full-time correctional officer. In approving the request, Ed Philpot, chairman of the commission, said, “If we don’t keep pouring money into programs and community corrections to manage the jail population, the budget could be up $1-million. This year, Ward said, the county budgeted for an average population of 90 inmates per day, but recommended increasing that figure to 110 in 2012,
Laconia man dies after falling off ladder LACONIA — A Hillcrest Drive man died after falling from a ladder at his home, according to police. He was found by a family member on Tuesday night, who notified emergency services. The man apparently fell from a ladder that was inside of his garage. Police who said he appeared to have
struck his head on an object in the garage during his fall. Because the death was unattended, the property was marked with yellow tape until his autopsy, performed yesterday morning, confirmed the death was accidental. The man’s name is being withheld until family notifications can be made.
from preceding page she answered, “whatever bail is at, I’m not going anywhere, anyway.” Martin was charged with one count of selling one 10 milligram pill of Suboxone — a drug similar to methadone and typically prescribed for pain killer addictions — for $20. Through her tears, she told Carroll that she has an 18-month old daughter and “that she was working at the Mardi Gras.” “I needed the money,” she said, sobbing. “This isn’t something I normally do.” She was ordered held on $328.22 cash — the amount of money she owes Plymouth District Court for some undisclosed violations — and $5,000 personal recognizance. Carroll asked her if she thought she could pay the $328.22 and she said she thought she may be able to. Bredbury asked if she forfeited bail that it goes to Plymouth to pay the fines, Carroll denied his request saying that his philosophy is that drug dealing is more serious than not paying fines
and that, as of now, the Laconia court would retain the bail if it is posted and Martin fails to show up for court. Barnhart faces five counts of selling unknown quantities of 30 milligram pills of oxycodone for varying amounts of money — anywhere from $105 to $335. Carroll ordered her held on $2,000 cash-only and $30,000 personal recognizance bail. Bredbury told Carroll that, by Barnhart’s own admission, she has previous arrests for shoplifting in Maine and Massachusetts, but otherwise and to the best of his knowledge, had no criminal record. Gilford Police said the N.H. Attorney General’s Drug Task Force, the N.H. State Police Swat Team, the Belknap County Regional Special Operations Group assisted Gilford with the raid Tuesday night. There are no charges against the above seven people for any firearms violation, but police said more arrests are forthcoming.
Local taxpayers to pay bigger share of county home expense By Michael Kitch THE LACONIA DAILY SUN
LACONIA — Property taxpayers will pay a larger share of the cost of operating the Belknap County Nursing Home in 2012 as the state contribution to the expense of providing long-term care to the needy elderly continues to shrink. Presenting his proposed budget to the Belknap County Commission yesterday, Courtney Marshall, the administrator of the nursing home, recommended a budget of $11.3-million, an increase of 0.9-percent. However, the state trimmed Medicaid payments by 25-percent, reducing nursing home revenue from $7.5-million to $7.4-million. With marginal decreases in other revenues, the contribution of county taxpayers required to balance the nursing home budget is projected to rise by more than $140,000, or 3.8-percent. The rate of increase is less than that in 2010 and 2011 when the the share of the budget shouldered by property taxpayers jumped nearly 10-percent. EXOTIC from page 2 Those destroyed included six black bears, two grizzlies, a baboon and three mountain lions. “It’s like Noah’s Ark wrecking right here in Zanesville, Ohio,” lamented Jack Hanna, TV personality and former director of the Columbus Zoo. Hanna defended the sheriff’s decision to kill the animals but said the deaths of the Bengal tigers were especially tragic. There are only about 1,400 of the endangered cats left in the world, he said. “When I heard 18 I was still in disbelief,” he said. “The most magnificent creature in the entire world, the tiger is.” As the hunt dragged on outside of Zanesville, population 25,000, schools closed in the mostly rural area of farms and widely spaced homes 55 miles east of Columbus. Parents were warned to keep children and pets indoors. And flashing signs along highways told motorists, “Caution exotic animals” and “Stay in vehicle.” Officers were ordered to kill the animals instead of trying to bring them down with tranquilizers for fear that those hit with darts would escape in the darkness before they dropped and would later regain consciousness. “These animals were on the move, they were showing aggressive behavior,” Sheriff Matt Lutz said. “Once the nightfall hit, our biggest concern was having these animals roaming.” The sheriff would not speculate why Thompson killed himself and why he left open the cages and fences at his 73-acre preserve, dooming the animals he seemed to love so much. Thompson, 62, had had repeated run-ins with the law and his neighbors. Lutz said that the sheriff’s
In an effort to boost revenues, the commissioners recommended raising the rate for private residents from $230 per day to $250 per day, which represents the average for the 11 county nursing homes in the state. “We are the best nursing home in the state,” proclaimed Ed Philpot, chairman of the commission, alluding to the most recent evaluations. “We should at least charge the average.” Finance Director Glen Waring estimated the rate increase, which applies to a small number of residents, would return about $50,000 a year, offsetting little more than a third of the increased cost to property taxpayers. But, Marshall cautioned that the higher rate would accelerate the pace at which private residents exhaust their assets and become eligible for Medicaid. The nursing home is reimbursed less than $150 per day for its residents receiving Medicaid residents. Currently there are fewer than a dozen private-pay residents while 81 are on Medicaid.
office had received numerous complaints since 2004 about animals escaping onto neighbors’ property. The sheriff’s office also said that Thompson had been charged over the years with animal cruelty, animal neglect and allowing animals to roam. He had gotten out of federal prison just last month after serving a year for possessing unregistered guns. John Ellenberger, a neighbor, speculated that Thompson freed the animals to get back at neighbors and police. “Nobody much cared for him,” Ellenberger said. Angie McElfresh, who lives in an apartment near the farm and hunkered down with her family in fear, said “it could have been an ‘f-you’ to everybody around him.” Thompson had rescued some of the animals at his preserve and purchased many others, said Columbus Zoo spokeswoman Patty Peters. It was not immediately clear how Thompson managed to support the preserve and for what purpose it was operated, since it was not open to the public. But Thompson had appeared on the “Rachael Ray Show” in 2008 as an animal handler for a zoologist guest, said show spokeswoman Lauren Nowell. The sheriff’s office started getting calls Tuesday evening that wild animals were loose just west of Zanesville. Deputies went to the animal preserve and found Thompson dead and all the cages open. Several aggressive animals were near his body and had to be shot, the sheriff said. Sheriff’s Deputy Jonathan Merry was among the first to respond Tuesday. He said he shot a number of animals, including a gray wolf and a black bear. see next page
THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Thursday, October 20, 2011— Page 9
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from preceding page He said the bear charged him and he fired his pistol, killing it with one shot when it was about 7 feet away. “All these animals have the ability to take a human out in the length of a second,” said Merry, who called himself an animal lover but said he knew he was protecting the community. “What a tragedy,” said Barb Wolfe, a veterinarian with The Wilds, a nearby zoo-sponsored wild animal preserve. She said she managed to hit a tiger with a tranquilizer dart, but the animal charged toward her and then turned and began to flee before the drug could take effect, and deputies shot the big cat. At an afternoon news conference, the sheriff said that the danger had passed and that people could move around freely again, but that the monkey would probably be shot because it was believed to be carrying a herpes disease. “It was like a war zone with all the shooting and so forth with the animals,” said Sam Kopchak, who was outside Tuesday afternoon when he saw Thompson’s horses acting up. Kopchak said he turned and saw a male lion lying down on the other side of a fence. “The fence is not going to be a fence that’s going to hold an African lion,” Kopchak said. Danielle Berkheimer said she was nervous as she drove home Tuesday night and afraid to let her two dogs out in the yard. “When it’s 300-pound cats, that’s scary,” she said. She said it had been odd Tuesday night to see no one out around town, and the signs warning drivers to stay in their cars were “surreal.” Some townspeople were saddened by the deaths. At a nearby Moose Lodge, Bill Weiser said: “It’s breaking my heart, them shooting those animals.”
Ohio has some of the nation’s weakest restrictions on exotic pets and among the highest number of injuries and deaths caused by them. At least nine people have been injured since 2005 and one person was killed, according to Born Free USA, an animal advocacy group. On Wednesday, the Humane Society of the United States criticized Gov. John Kasich for allowing a statewide ban on the buying and selling of exotic pets to expire in April. The organization urged the state to immediately issue emergency restrictions. “How many incidents must we catalog before the state takes action to crack down on private ownership of dangerous exotic animals?” Wayne Pacelle, president and CEO, said in a statement. Kasich said Wednesday during a meeting of Dix Communications editors: “Clearly, we need tougher laws. We haven’t had them in this state. Nobody’s dealt with this, and we will. And we’ll deal with it in a comprehensive way.” Barney Long, an expert at the World Wildlife Fund, noted that tigers in general are endangered. He said there appear to be fewer of them living in the wild than there are in captivity in the U.S. alone. Over the last century, the worldwide population has plunged from about 100,000 in the wild to as few as 3,200, he said. More than half are Bengal tigers, which live in isolated pockets across Nepal, Bhutan, Myanmar, India and Bangladesh, he said in a telephone interview “The tragic shooting of 18 tigers in Ohio really highlights what is happening on a daily basis to tigers in the wild throughout Asia,” Long added in an email. “Their numbers are being decimated by poaching and habitat loss, and that is the real travesty here.”
SMUGGLING from page 3 The chase began in the Vekol Valley about 45 miles south of Phoenix and ended just south of Sacaton, about 20 miles as the crow flies northwest from where the chase began. It ended when Lowery’s truck rolled over and he gave himself up. Lowery, who lives in the Phoenix suburb of Chandler, appeared in federal court in downtown Phoenix on Wednesday but did not address the court. He sat quietly awaiting the hearing and at one point looked
up at the ceiling and repeatedly shook his head. Prosecutor John Lopez argued that Lowery should be detained as his court case proceeds, saying that he poses a risk to the community and could flee the state. He also said that Lowery had a non-government-issued gun on him when he was arrested. Federal Magistrate Michelle Burns set a hearing in the matter for Tuesday. Lowery’s court-appointed attorney, Rebecca see next page
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THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Thursday, October 20, 2011— Page 11
Service for Dave Barrett will be held aboard M/S Mount Washington on Mon. In this Daily Sun file photo, N.H.’s director of Safety Services David Barrett of Gilford is seen certifying the M/S/ Mount Washington fit for cruising after the vessel’s 2011 shakedown cruise. In the background is Captain Jim Morash. Barrett died on Tuesday and a celebration of his life will appropriately be held aboard the Mount Washington, docked at Weirs Beach, on Monday, Oct. 24, from 4 to 7 p.m. A full obituary for Barrett will appear in Friday’s paper. (Adam Drapcho photo)
from preceding page Felmly, declined to comment. Lowery’s wife, who identified herself as Trina Lowery, also declined to speak to The Associated Press. Mexican drug cartels have infiltrated federal law enforcement agencies along the border for years, targeting hiring initiatives with their own people or recruiting officers. Between 2003 and early 2010, 129 U.S. customs officers and Border Patrol agents were arrested on corruption charges, according to Tom Frost, the Department of Homeland Security’s assistant inspector general for investigations. The office was not immediately able to provide an updated figured to the AP.
GREECE from page 3 reeling from more than one-and-a-half years of austerity measures. “We just can’t take it any more. There is desperation, anger and bitterness,” said Nikos Anastasopoulos, head of a workers’ union for an Athens municipality, as he joined the demonstration early in the day. The bill won initial approval in the 300-member Parliament late Wednesday, with 154 deputies voting in favor on principle and 141 against. A second vote, on the bill’s articles, is due Thursday. Only after that procedure will the bill have passed. A communist party-backed union has vowed to encircle Parliament Thursday in an attempt to prevent deputies from entering the building for the procedure. The new measures have even prompted some lawmakers from the governing Socialists to threaten not vote for at least some of the articles in the bill. But Finance Minister Evangelos Venizelos insisted there was no choice but to accept the hardship. “We have to explain to all these indignant people who see their lives changing that what the country is experiencing is not the worst stage of the crisis,” he said in Parliament. “It is an anguished and necessary effort to avoid the ultimate, deepest and harshest level of the crisis. The difference between a difficult situation and a catastrophe is immense.” Hours before Wednesday’s vote, one of Athens’ largest demonstrations in years degenerated into violence as masked and hooded youths pelted riot police outside Parliament with gasoline bombs and chunks of marble smashed from buildings, metro stops and sidewalks. Police responded with tear gas and stun grenades. Authorities said 50 police were injured in the clashes, along with at least three demonstrators, while 33 people were detained for questioning or arrested for alleged involvement in the rioting. At least three journalists covering the riots were also slightly hurt. Long after Wednesday’s demonstration was over, violence continued, with police fighting running street battles with youths setting up burning barricades along the back streets near Athens’ main Syntagma Square and near the tourist area of Monastiraki. Thick black smoke billowed from burning trash and bus-stops, and debris lay strewn along the capital’s broad avenues. A hurled gasoline bomb set fire to a sentry post used by the ceremonial presidential guard at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier outside Parliament.
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Call now to make your reservation. Make a Reservation Now For your Holiday Party . (Private Rooms Available)
www.thewoodshedrestaurant.com Hours: Tue - Sun 5pm-8:30pm Fri and Sat 5pm-9:30pm
LACONIA PUTNAM FUND presents
It’s Your Smile
The Four Freshmen
The first thing people see is your smile. It’s an expression of who you are. Compared to other costs of personal upkeep, a dazzling smile is a fraction of most beauty costs. Creative Dental Solutions helps patients achieve the smile they’ve always wanted while working within their budget. We are focused on one goal - your healthy, happy smile.
Friday, October 21 ~ 7:00 pm Laconia High School Auditorium The Four Freshmen were one of the top vocal groups of the 1950s, and formed the bridge between ‘40s ensembles like Mel-Tones and harmony-based rock & roll bands such as the Beach Boys as well as groups like Spanky & Our Gang and the Manhattan Transfer. Admission is Free ~ First Come First Seated.
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Page 12 — THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Thursday, October 20, 2011
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Adjunct professors at PSU call for union vote PLYMOUTH — Adjunct professors at Plymouth State University (PSU) announced on Tuesday they have filed for an election at the Public Employees Labor Relations Board, which is the first step in forming a collective bargaining unit. The question on the ballot is whether the faculty is for or against organizing and becoming a part of a union — The State Employees Association (SEA). If the majority of adjunct faculty members are in favor of organizing into a union, they will be able to negotiate with the administration as a unified body, rather than on an individual basis. Approximately 250 adjunct faculty members fall within this category and represent the majority of the teaching staff at the university. Adjunct faculty members do not enjoy the same compensation, benefits, and protections as full time faculty, even if they are teaching a full course load. In making the announcement, the SEA said most of the PSU adjuncts are currently living at or below the poverty line. At one time, they out-earned their peers at Keene State College. However, since the adjuncts at Keene State organized in 1993, they now earn up to $500 more per credit than adjuncts at Plymouth State. “Now is the time to achieve pay equity with our
sister institution, Keene State College,” said Lynn Chong of Sanbornton, a PSU adjunct. In addition to dissatisfaction with their compensation, many adjuncts feel they are viewed and treated as inferior to full-time faculty members. “I want a union at PSU because I believe that adjuncts are an important part of the university, and that they should be treated as such,” said Jay Knowler, an adjunct faculty member. “Students often remark that adjuncts are engaging and interesting teachers, yet many of these same adjuncts need to work second, and even third, jobs to get by, due to the relatively low pay afforded to them. Adjuncts deserve a fair compensation package because they are critical contributors to the quality of education at PSU.” If the adjuncts vote to organize, they will elect a bargaining team that will work with the administration on drafting and accepting a contract that represents the improvements adjuncts would like to see. SEA is a union that represents 12,000 public and private sector workers in N.H., including the fulltime faculty, adjunct faculty, and staff of the Community College System of NH. SEA is affiliated with Service Employees International Union (SEIU), a union of 2.2-million members in North America.
Clarification: Large food pantry donation is annual, not monthly An article in our Tuesday, Oct. 18 edition reported that the a benefactor of the Meredith Emergency Food Pantry makes a monthly four-figure donation. Paul Rowley, director of the pantry, called yesterday to clarify that the gift is made annually, not monthly. He added that the pantry greatly appreciates all
donations, which help the pantry meet a growing need for assistance. Cash donations, large or small, go especially far toward that end, he noted, because the all-volunteer organization can use the funds to buy food at an unusual discount. “I can get a better buy than the average Joe off the street.”
JACSON from page 2 completely and utterly inexcusable.” In addition, Murray was acting more like Jackson’s employee than a physician who should have rejected the singer’s requests for propofol as a sleep aid, Shafer said. “Saying yes is not what doctors do,” he testified. “A competent doctor would know you do not do this.” The Columbia University professor and researcher gave jurors a crash course on propofol, an anesthetic used in hospital settings. A video shown to jurors detailed numerous safety measures that were not employed by Murray when he administered the drug to Jackson as a sleep aid at the singer’s home, according to testimony. “The worst disasters occur in sedation and they occur when people cut corners,” Shafer said. In Jackson’s case, “virtually none of the safeguards were in place,” he added. Shafer is expected to be the last prosecution witness in the involuntary manslaughter case against Murray.
He said the fact that Murray was on his cell phone in the hours before Jackson’s death was a setup for disaster. “A patient who is about to die does not look all that different from a patient who is OK,” Shafer said, adding that doctors cannot multitask and properly monitor a patient who is sedated. Shafer, who wrote the package insert that guides doctors in the use of the anesthetic, lectured the panel as if they were in a classroom. He narrated while the silent video took jurors into an operating room to see the specialized equipment and procedures. The researcher told jurors that it appeared Murray intended to give Jackson large doses of propofol on a nightly basis. He said records showed Murray purchased 130 100ml vials of propofol in the nearly three months before Jackson’s death. Shafer said that is “an extraordinary amount to purchase to administer to a single individual.” He also told jurors that keeping records is essentially. see next page
LACONIA LODGE OF ELKS Rt 11A, Gilford Ave.
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THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Thursday, October 20, 2011 — Page 13
ily Da 0 en 6:0 Op :008
MOU LTON FARM Farm Market ~ Garden Center ~ Greenhouse Grower 279-3915 ~ Route 25, Meredith
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UPCOMING EVENTS
“The Farm Stand Is Open Until Christmas Eve” With Christmas Trees, Wreaths, Poinsettias and Other Holiday Items!
Old World Crafts Day “Free” October 22nd 11:00 am- 2:00 pm - Come See Live Demonstrations On The Following Items: Chair Caning Wet Felting - Felting - Cider Pressing - and More!
Sal’s od SeafoSaturday & Fresh , Friday
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Don’t Forget to Order Your Thanksgiving Pies, Breads, Rolls and More! “watch these tasty warm doughnuts Warm Soup Being being made right in front of you” Taking Orders For Fresh Free Served Daily! Range Thanksgiving Turkeys! Cider Bellies Doughnuts
Thursday-Sunday 8am-2pm
Executive Director Cheryl Gonzalo and President Phyllis Hamblet of the Visiting Nurses of Meredith and Center Harbor cut the ribbon that officially opens the new Waukewan offices for the organization. (Laconia Daily Sun photo/Gail Ober)
Visiting Nurses open new building in Meredith MEREDITH — About 50 people including staff, patients, volunteers, board members and state Sen. Jeanne Forrester (R-Meredith) were on hand October 14 for the grand opening of the new home of the Visiting Nurses of Meredith and Center Harbor. The agency, which provides in-home and outpatient care for about 50 to 70 people annually, has been raising money for the new building at 186 Waukewan Street for a number of years, said Treasurer Ed Touhey. “The initial costs of the land and building were the results of income and donations over a period of many years by a number of vigilant boards of directors,” Touhey said. Touhey said the agency, that has been assisting people in Meredith and Center Harbor has always leased facilities that never really gave the VNA the proper facility to serve its customers. The Visiting Nurses work collabora-
tively with doctors and families to provide in home care that enables many to remain independent. Studies have shown that people in general tend to feel more comfortable and will recover faster from many illnesses and surgeries if allowed to recover at home. The agencies also prides itself on serving people who can’t necessary pay for the services and Touhey said donations of any size are always welcome. The new office is open Monday through Friday from 9 to 10 a.m. and 1 to 2 p.m. for blood pressure checks. The agencies also depends on donations to help defray the costs of other services including foot clinics and flu shots. Touhey also said the board of directors is in the middle of another capital fund raiser. Donations may be made by going to www.mphna.org. For more information about programs and services, please call 279-6611. — Gail Ober
from preceding page While narrating the video, Shafer noted the doctor in the footage was taking copious notes. “Moment by moment, the anesthesiologist writes down everything that happens, as diligently as you are doing here,” he said as jurors scribbled in notebooks. He said the lack of record-keeping was a violation of Jackson’s rights, especially if something went wrong.
“He has a right to know what was done to him,” Shafer said. “With no medical record, the family has been denied that right.” Testimony has shown that Murray took no notes on his treatment of Jackson and didn’t record his vital signs on June 25, 2009, the day Jackson died. “The record is not just some static document,” Shafer said. “It’s fundamental to the care that is given.”
ay
Thursd
8am-6pm
Visit our website for more information on upcoming events!
www.moultonfarm.com
Kelsey’s at the Grant presents . . . . . . . . .
15 Kimball Rd. Gilford, NH (Intersection of 11B & 11C)
293-0577 ~ Always Auditioning New Entertainers ~ Tuesdays: “Two-4-Tuesday” ~ after 7pm VIP band w/paid cover Wednesdays: “Ladies Nite” and “Armed Forces Nite” (w/military ID) Thursdays: Harpoon UFO sponsors “College Nite” ~ 8-11pm (w/college ID) Fridays: Coors Lite sponsors “Weekend Kickoff” ~ 7-10pm ~ $2 Coors Lite drafts! Saturdays: Bud Lite sponsors “Bike Nite” (no cover on bike) ~ 7-11pm ~ $2 Bud Lite drafts! Sundays: “Leggs-n-Eggs” ~ 12-2pm Followed by Game Day specials
Join Us Friday for Our Weekend Kickoff Party!! Sponsored by Coors Lite
7-10pm ~ $2 Coors Lite Drafts Register to win Bruins tickets!! Drawing will be held Friday, 12-2-11. Must be present to win.
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Oct. 29 ~ 9:30-11:30pm Contests ~ Schwagg ~ Giveaways Upcoming Events! COMING UP! “Leaving Eden” - Wednesday, November 23 Cover: Sun - Tue ~ $5 after 7pm • Fri & Sat ~ $5 from 7-9pm, $10 after 9pm
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PainCare supports House Bill 332, the prescription monitoring program. It’s time to put an end to prescription drug abuse in NH. Learn more at: 800.660.4004 www.PainMD.com facebook.com/PainCare
Page 14 — THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Thursday, October 20, 2011
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La Russa’s moves pay off & St. Louis wins game 1 ST. LOUIS (AP) — Nobody plays a hunch like Tony La Russa. Not this October, anyway. The St. Louis manager once again looked like a genius, especially when Allen Craig pinch-hit for ace Chris Carpenter and delivered a go-ahead single that sent the Cardinals past the Texas Rangers 3-2 on Wednesday night in the World Series opener. Craig’s slicing hit in the sixth inning fell inches in front of sliding right fielder Nelson Cruz. Game 1 was just that tight throughout a cold, damp evening. “Man, he’s tough,” Craig said of hard-throwing reliever Alexi Ogando. “He came right at me with fastballs, and I missed the first two. Then that last one I was trying to get the barrel on it, make the defense make a play. Fortunate, kept it fair, and Cruz made a great attempt on that. It was a great play all-around.” It was a game perfectly suited for the National League style — lots of bunts, intentional walks and pitching changes. And in a postseason in which he’s made all the right moves, the 67-year-old La Russa was at the top of his game. After pulling Carpenter, La Russa coaxed three scoreless innings from his deep bullpen. Five relievers did the job, with Jason Motte closing for his fifth save of the postseason. A day earlier, Texas manager Ron Washington joked, “I don’t think I can ever live up to matching wits with Tony La Russa.” Who can, these days? The Cardinals even won without their Rally Squirrel. There were no sightings of the elusive critter still roaming Busch Stadium — good thing for the rodent, too, because La Russa probably would’ve devised a way to catch him. Game 2 is Thursday night, with Jaime Garcia starting for the Cards against Colby Lewis. Texas has not lost two straight games since August.
This was the first time Texas had ever played in St. Louis. Yet Josh Hamilton, Cruz and the big-hitting Rangers looked a lot like the team that fizzled at the plate in last year’s World Series against San Francisco. Each team wound up with six hits. The wild-card Cardinals just did more with them. Lance Berkman put St. Louis ahead with a tworun single in the fourth. Mike Napoli tied it with a two-run homer in the fifth. Carpenter earned his eighth postseason win, breaking the team record he shared with Bob Gibson. Of course, all of Gibby’s victories came in the World Series. “Carp, he did what he usually does,” Craig said. “He was our leader out there tonight. “Went out there and threw strikes, got early outs, and he led us tonight. It was great.” Carpenter helped himself with a nifty play in the first inning, diving to catch a toss from first baseman Albert Pujols and tagging the bag with his glove. He didn’t argue when La Russa removed him — all the Cards know too well to doubt La Russa’s smarts. Cardinals relievers Fernando Salas, Marc Rzepczynski, Octavio Dotel, Arthur Rhodes and Motte finished. C.J. Wilson fell to 0-5 in his last seven postseason starts, dating to last year. The Texas lefty recently spent 2½ minutes in a Dallas cryotherapy chamber, where liquid nitrogen lowered the temperature to 295 degrees below zero trying to speed body recovery. It was a bit warmer at the ballpark, at 49 degrees for the first pitch. Wilson became the first pitcher to lose an All-Star game, an AL division series game, an AL championship series game and a World Series game in the same year, STATS LLC said.
AFGHANISTAN from page 2
The U.S. official said the Obama administration is sympathetic to Karzai’s desire for Pakistan to do more and that Clinton would talk with Karzai about the need for Pakistan to put additional pressure on the Haqqani network. Over the weekend, militants tried but failed to blast their way into an American base in eastern Afghanistan, striking before dawn with rocket-propelled grenades and a car bomb. The Taliban claimed responsibility for the attack in a text message sent to The Associated Press. NATO says such spectacular strikes, many of them perpetrated by the Haqqani network, are actually down from past years. But assassinations have increased 60 percent for the same period with 131 people killed so far this year. In addition to reconciliation, Clinton will also be pressing the Afghans on reaching a binding security agreement that will govern U.S.-Afghanistan relations after American troops leave.
last month of elder statesman Burhanuddin Rabbani, who was leading Karzai’s outreach. Rabbani was killed when he greeted a suicide bomber posing as a Taliban emissary bearing a reconciliation message. A senior U.S. official said Clinton would emphasize that the U.S. remains committed to Afghan reconciliation and understands the difficulties that that process has undergone since the assassination. The official spoke on condition of anonymity to preview Clinton’s meetings. Karzai has cited the killing as a reason why peace efforts are futile. He lamented recently that although he wants to continue, neighboring Pakistan should be in the lead since the Taliban high command lives there. In addition, spectacular attacks — like one last month on the U.S. Embassy compound and the headquarters of the US-led NATO forces in Kabul — by the Haqqani network have dented enthusiasm for the push.
BUY 2 MEDIUM SPECIALTY PIZZAS AND GET 2 SMALL PIZZAS FREE (of equal or lesser value and cannot be used with other discounts or promotions) Coupon expires 10/22/11. SEPT2011
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Rt 3, Weirs Beach DARTS
King Of Pubs Pool Tournament 6 pm
POOL TABLES
FOOSBALL
NEW EXPANDED MENU heatpizza.com • 366-2110 OPEN 7 DAYS for Lunch and Dinner Homemade Dough & Homemade Sauces
THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Thursday, October 20, 2011— Page 15
OBITUARY
Georgia T. Richardson, 85 GILFORD — Georgia (Thomas) Richardson, 85, of 31 Bedford Avenue died at home on Wednesday, October 19, 2011. She was the widow of Allan C. Richardson who died in 2010. Mrs. Richardson was born January 31, 1926 in New Castle, Penn., the daughter of Arnold W. and Sophia R. (Socosky) Thomas. She graduated from Jameson Memorial Hospital School of Nursing in New Castle, Penn. as an R.N. in 1946 under the Nurse Cadet Corp. In 1946, Mrs. Richardson moved from New Castle, Penn. to Gilford and was employed as a Registered Nurse at the Laconia Hospital, now the Lakes Region General Hospital. She had lived in High Point, NC from 1960-1973 and was employed as an R.N. at High Point Memorial Hospital. In 1973 she returned to Gilford and worked at Lakes Region General Hospital retiring in 1988. Mrs. Richardson was a very active member of the United Baptist Church, Lakeport and served on many committees and was a member of the of the Church’s Ready for Service. She enjoyed reading, day trips to York Maine, riding motorcycles, gardening and her dogs. Mrs. Richardson is survived by three sons; Michael Richardson of Greensboro, North Carolina, Allan Rich-
ardson, Jr. and his wife, Teresa, of Montgomery, Alabama and Peter Richardson and his wife Bonnie, of Kernersville, North Carolina; a daughter, Gail Andy, and her husband, Gary, of Concord, N.H.; six grandchildren, Bryan and Jason Richardson, Daniel and Sam Richardson and Cory and Brian Winkelman and eight great grandchildren. There will be no calling hours. Burial will be in the family lot in Bayside Cemetery, Laconia, N. H. at 10:00 AM on Tuesday, October 25, 2011. A Memorial Service will follow the burial at 11:00AM at the United Baptist Church, 23 Park Street, Lakeport. Rev. Sharron Lamothe, Pastor of the church will officiate. In lieu of flowers, memorial donations may be made to the United Baptist Church, 23-35 Park Street, Lakeport, NH 03246 or to the New Hampshire Humane Society, PO Box 572, Laconia, N.H. 03247 or to Community Health & Hospice, Inc. 780 North Main Street, Laconia, NH 03246. Wilkinson-Beane-Simoneau-Paquette Funeral Home & Cremation Services, 164 Pleasant Street, Laconia, N. H. is assisting the family with the arrangements. For more information and to view an online memorial go to www.wilkinsonbeane.com.
Plymouth Street, Meredith
Behind Bootlegger’s At The Lights
279-4631 • www.mamesrestaurant.com
$11 Nightly Dinner Specials* Haddock Risotto • Chicken Pot Pie • BBQ Pulled Pork Homemade Cheese Lasagna *Not to be combined with offer specials or offers.
Easy Listening Music ~ Friday & Saturday, 7-10pm
NOTICE TO LACONIA WATER DEPARTMENT CUSTOMERS Fire hydrants will be flushed October 24th through October 28th, in Laconia and the Weirs. This may cause some rusty water conditions in some areas for a short time. Thank you for your understanding. LACONIA WATER DEPARTMENT
3rd annual ‘Knight for Children’ event to benefit Greater Lakes Child Advocacy Center Oct. 27 LACONIA — The Greater Lakes Child Advocacy Center will hold its 3rd annual, “A Knight for the Children,” gala on Thursday, October 27 from 6-10 p.m. at the Lake Opechee Inn and Conference Center in Laconia. All proceeds will directly benefit child abuse victims throughout Belknap County. The evening will include hors d’ oeuvres by Curt’s Catering accompanied by the light acoustic sounds of Mary and Lisa English. Dinner will be provided by Patrick’s Pub & Eatery, T-Bones & Cactus Jack’s, the Lake House Grille, Fratello’s Restaurant and O’Steaks and Seafood. Dessert will be prepared by the Laconia High School culinary department. Following the dinner, Steven Langan of the Granite State Children’s Alliance will speak about child advocacy centers and the services they offer. The all-female a cappella group, the NH Notables, and a mystery
Pleasant Street School Fall Festival Saturday
LACONIA — Pleasant Street School will hold its annual Fall Festival on Saturday, October 22 from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. There will be games, prizes and raffles along with food and a bake sale with homemade cakes and pies. Games will end at 1:30 p.m.
Story Time volunteers sought by Gilman Libary
ALTON — Story times at the Gilman Library are scheduled Wednesdays at 9:15 a.m., Thursdays at 1:45 p.m., and Fridays at 9:15 a.m. Holly Brown, libararian, thanks volunteer readers who have and are taking time from their busy schedules to share a story with young listeners. She is encouraging parents and caregivers to visit the library and check out the Story Time bulletin board and determine which Story Times they might like to attend. For more information regarding the Story Time schedule and how to take part in the fun through listening or sharing a story call 875-2550 or stop by the circulation desk. New readers and listeners are always welcome.
comedian will keep guests entertained throughout. There will also be live and silent auctions. Tickets are $40 per person or $320 to purchase a table of 8 for a business or organization, which includes advertising opportunities. The Greater Lakes Child Advocacy Center works directly with law enforcement, the Division for Children, Youth & Families, the Belknap County Attorney’s Office, New Beginnings, medical providers and mental health providers. The Center provides a safe, neutral environment for child abuse victims and support services for non-offending caregivers. For more information or to purchase tickets contact 524-5497 or e-mail Meghan Noyes at mhowe@ BMCAP-LRFC.org. For information about volunteer opportunities and the work performed by GLCAC, visit their website at www.gl-cac.org.
Plowing & Sanding Foreclosure Maintenance Caretaker Services Home & Camp Openings/Closings 616 Elm St. Laconia 603-455-5343 swpropertymanagement616@gmail.com
LACONIA LODGE OF ELKS
Rt 11A Gilford Ave.
Friday Night Fish Fry 28 0/ Fish Fry 1 rrection -October 21st CoFriday,
Fish ‘n Chips $6.00 Shrimp Cocktail $3.00 Please Call Ahead For Seating • 524-0809 Members and Guests Only The Lodge is Now Smoke-Free
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Open 7 Days A Week At 11:30am Kitchen Hours: Sun - Thurs til 9pm • Fri & Sat til 10pm Best Local Watering Hole & Grub Stop In The Lakes Region!
Half Price Dinners Are Back! Monday - Mexican Pizza Tuesday - Chimichanga Wednesday - Burrito Thursday - Enchilada Friday - Mexican Salad & Nachos (4pm - Close) 306 Lakeside Ave, Weirs Beach
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Page 16 — THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Thursday, October 20, 2011
Australia program on schedule for Kayla Harper of Meredith wins Pemi Valley Fish & Game pot-luck Mildred Beach Hospitality Scholarship HOLDERNESS — The annual fall pot-luck dinner meeting at the Pemi Fish and Game Club in Holderness will be held at the clubhouse on Friday, October 28 at 6 p.m. Winnie Oustecky will be coordinating the kitchen once again. Those who are bringing a main dish, a salad or a dessert should give her a call at 536-4129 and let her know. Those who aren’t bringing food should come anyway. The program following will be presented by members Steve and Holly
Allen, who will share their recent month-long excursion to Australia. Those who remember their presentation on their trip to Africa, climbing Mt. Kilimanjaro and their photo safaris, will know to not miss this program. They climbed the tallest peak in Australia on their trip. See the club website, www.pemi. org and click on Club Gatherings for information on the club meetings. For additional information call Fred Allen at 968-9944.
2nd annual vendor fair tfor Faith, Hope and Love foundation scheduled for Nov. 19 LACONIA — The Faith, Hope and Love Foundation of NH, a local 501c-3 nonprofit organization, will be hosting its second annual Vendor Fair on Saturday November 19 at the Belknap Mill. Proceeds from this event will go to the foundation’s grant and scholarship fund.
Vendors who would like to give the community an opportunity to shop for their products for Holiday gift giving, should email lbrusseau@faithhopeandlovefoundation.org. before Nov. 1. There is a $25 fee per vendor for a space. Tables are supplied on site. Vendors are also required to donate an item for a raffle.
MEREDITH — Kayla Harper, of Meredith was awarded the Mildred A. Beach Hospitality Scholarship at the annual meeting of the Lakes Region Tourism Association. The award has been given annually since 2001 to a student majoring in the hospitality field. Harper is a student at Lakes Region Community College, where she is president of the hospitality club. She has worked Kayla Harper, center, is awarded the Mildred A. Beach Hospitalin a variety of culinary jobs ity Scholarship at the Lakes Region Tourism Association’s annual since she was 14, and after meeting. She is flanked by Jim Morash of M/S Mount Washington she graduates in May, she Cruises and Amy Landers of the LRTA. (Courtesy photo) hopes to continue her education at Johnson & Wales University. along with Borrin’s family, are develHarper was nominated by Chef Wiloping the criteria for the scholarship, liam Walsh and Chef Patrick Hall of and the first award is expected to be the college’s Culinary Arts & Restaugiven at the 2012 annual meeting. rant Management Program. The Lakes Region Tourism AssociaThe LRTA also announced that it is tion is the official tourism board of the creating a scholarship in memory of region, representing close to 100 comMelvin “Mel” Borrin, a past president, munities and more than 380 businesses board of director and most recently in central New Hampshire, including treasurer of the association. area attractions, restaurants, retail Borrin, who passed away in Sepestablishments and accommodations. tember, spent many hours volunteerFor more information or visitors guides, ing in the tourism industry and area visit LakesRegion.org or follow on Facechambers of commerce. The LRTA, book or Twitter.
Plymouth chamber plans business after hours at Federal House Inn PLYMOUTH — The Plymouth Regional Chamber of Commerce will hold a Business After Hours on Thursday, October 27, from 5:30-7:30 p.m. at The Federal House Inn on Route 25. The historic Bed & Breakfast was built by John and Sally Adams in 1835 as a family farm. The picturesque brick home has changed families throughout the years, but one constant has remained; its open doors to weary travelers both as a private residence and an inn.
Hosts and new innkeepers, Kevin and Cassie Steinfeldt, have traveled extensively before deciding to set roots down in Plymouth. They will share the rich history associated with The Federal House and some of the families who have occupied it. For more information about the Business After Hours, or the Plymouth Regional Chamber of Commerce contact the Chamber office at 5361001, or email info@plymouthnh.org.
Lions Club holding electronic waste collection fund raiser on Saturday
GILFORD — The Laconia/Gilford Lions Club is hosting an electronic waste collection fund raiser on Saturday, Oct. 22, in the parking lot of the Lowe’s hardware store on Lakeshore Road in Gilford. The collection will run from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. For a $5 fee per item, the club will accept the following: laptops, CPU, servers, CD/DVD players, camcorders, audio-visual equipment, VCR, speakers, copiers, fazes, scanners, printers, phones, UPS systems, humidifiers. Computer monitors will cost $6 to dispose of, mice or keyboards will cost $1.
Appliances such as dehumidifiers, microwaves, air conditioners, refrigerators, freezers, washing machines, dryers, stoves or dishwashers will be accepted for a $10 fee. Televisions smaller than 32 inches will be accepted for a $20 fee; larger or wooden televisions will cost $30 to dispose of. Any other items with a cord will be accepted for a fee to be determined at the time of drop off. The collection will not accept hazardous wastes such as oil, paint, tires or fluorescent or CFL light bulbs.
THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Thursday, October 20, 2011— Page 17
2010 Ford F350 Crew Cab Lariat 4x4
Has frame and joystick, just needs a blade
6.8L Triton V10, auto, air, power sunroof, heated leather seats, factory remote start, bedliner, rear sliding window, trailer tow, loaded! silver, 58k miles, stock #7931
Special Purchase of GM Program Cars 2010 LT2 Cobalt Sedans 10 to choose from!
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2006 Dodge 1500 Laramie SLT Quad Cab 4x4
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by Mastroianni & Hart
Page 18 — THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Thursday, October 20, 2011
DAILY CROSSWORD TRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES
by Paul Gilligan
by Darby Conley
Get Fuzzy
By Holiday Mathis eat your time. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). You discover a need and fill it for fun and profit. It’s so simple for you to make money today that you wonder what held you back before. People pay you to solve a problem. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). In the span of the day, you go from being fierce and intense to reserved and mysterious. People don’t know what to expect from you, and you have a great time keeping them guessing. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). Of course you’d rather be respected than feared. However, when a person hops to attention to get a job done for you because he or she is afraid of what will happen otherwise, you can’t help but feel secretly pleased. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). You decide ahead of time that you’re going to have fun and find something to like about the people with whom you share your time. It’s easy for you to find words that are true and kind. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). You’ll meet a new person and have a strong reaction. You may feel repelled or attracted; you could convey rejection or acceptance. You’ll feel your choice in the matter and be as loving as possible. TODAY’S BIRTHDAY (Oct. 20). You’ll enjoy the attention and respect you get this year. When love is the furthest thing from your mind, it comes rushing into your life. November will challenge your old way of thinking and force you to come up with empowering new habits. Your openhearted generosity will make a difference in the world. Cancer and Gemini people adore you. Your lucky numbers are: 10, 3, 33, 29 and 16.
TUNDRA
ARIES (March 21-April 19). You’re an oracle of sorts. You can see where a situation is going and predict the outcome. Be forewarned, though: The oracle’s message is not always so welcome. TAURUS (April 20-May 20). The one who works and reworks a project is quite remarkable in your book. You appreciate the effort, as well as the selflessness involved. Humility will lead to greatness in this person and in yourself. GEMINI (May 21-June 21). You don’t always feel the need to embrace your loved ones. After all, they already know how much you love them, right? They know, but they need reminding. Each embrace fortifies the bond. CANCER (June 22-July 22). Keep in mind that the best discourse has a flow to it. Don’t let your social scene get sticky. Excessive talking is bad news for both the speaker and the listener. Know when enough is enough. Interrupt talk with action. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). Thoughts become words, words become actions, and before you know it, your thoughts have created your habits and character. Controlling them is really hard right now, but you can definitely rein them in. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). You know you’re important to another person when that person starts introducing you to family and friends. You’ll come off well in such encounters, as long as you don’t try too hard. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). You enjoy people who are good conversationalists, but not people who talk on and on about themselves and don’t ask you questions or listen to what you have to say. Avoid those types today; they will
by Chad Carpenter
HOROSCOPE
Pooch Café LOLA
Solution and tips at www.sudoku.com
1 5 10 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 22 24 25 26 29 30 34 35 36 37 38 40
ACROSS Silent Instruct 1960s stereo High point Standard car feature Very dry Snack Actor Jeremy Abounding Lures; tempts Salt lake by Jordan & Israel Very early blossom End of life Ill-suited That girl Adds liquor to the punch Segment Goal Original inhabitant Dessert choice Has high hopes TV room, often
41 43 44 45 46 47 48 50 51 54
65 66 67
Goings-on Acquire Part of the eye Adjust an alarm Supreme Being Use bad language Taunted Facial twitch Cure-all __ Bureau of Investigation; FBI Way out Shelter of vines City in Nevada Make angry Rotates Intl. military alliance Secondhand Shovel Give off, as rays
1 2 3
DOWN Horse’s neck hair Come __; find Quiz
58 59 61 62 63 64
4 5 6 7 8 9 10
11 12 13 21 23 25
26 27 28 29 31 32 33
Show; display Attempted All __; listening Hubbub Hot coal Biblical prophet Construction worker’s accessory Fleur-de-lis Small flute Notion Sever Book of maps Person with superhuman power Partial plate, often Innocently unaware Liberates Stylish Apple drink __ out; balances Common __; good judgment
35 Burro 36 Ping-Pong table divider 38 Upper room 39 __ as a beet 42 Invalidated 44 Swiss canton 46 Get ready 47 Spanish hero 49 Thrashes
50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 60
Brief; concise Lima’s nation Allies’ WWII foe Longest river __ of; keen on Enlarge a hole Opposed to Money, slangily Undergarment
Yesterday’s Answer
THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Thursday, October 20, 2011— Page 19
––––––– ALMANAC ––––––– Today is Thursday, Oct. 20, the 293rd day of 2011. There are 72 days left in the year. Today’s Highlight in History: On Oct. 20, 1944, during World War II, Gen. Douglas MacArthur stepped ashore at Leyte in the Philippines, 2 1/2 years after saying, “I shall return.” On this date: In 1740, Maria Theresa became ruler of Austria, Hungary and Bohemia upon the death of her father, Holy Roman Emperor Charles VI. In 1803, the U.S. Senate ratified the Louisiana Purchase. In 1936, Helen Keller’s teacher, Anne Sullivan, died in Forest Hills, N.Y., at age 70. In 1947, the House Un-American Activities Committee opened hearings into alleged Communist influence and infiltration in the U.S. motion picture industry. In 1964, the 31st president of the United States, Herbert Hoover, died in New York at age 90. In 1967, seven men were convicted in Meridian, Miss., of violating the civil rights of three slain civil rights workers. In 1968, former first lady Jacqueline Kennedy married Greek shipping magnate Aristotle Onassis. In 1981, a bungled armored truck robbery carried out by members of radical groups in Nanuet, N.Y., left a guard and two police officers dead. In 1986, the government of Nicaragua formally charged captured American mercenary Eugene Hasenfus with several crimes, including terrorism. (Although convicted and sentenced to prison, Hasenfus was pardoned and released by Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega.) One year ago: Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and visiting Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez hailed what they called their strong strategic relationship, saying they were united in efforts to establish a “new world order” that would eliminate Western dominance over global affairs. Today’s Birthdays: Actor William Christopher is 79. Japan’s Empress Michiko is 77. Rockabilly singer Wanda Jackson is 74. Singer Tom Petty is 61. Actor William “Rusty” Russ is 61. Actress Melanie Mayron is 59. Retired MLB All-Star Keith Hernandez is 58. Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse, D-R.I., is 56. Movie director Danny Boyle (“Slumdog Millionaire”) is 55. Labor Secretary Hilda Solis is 54. Actor Viggo Mortensen is 53. Rock musician Jim Sonefeld (Hootie & The Blowfish) is 47. Rock musician David Ryan is 47. Rock musician Doug Eldridge (Oleander) is 44. Political commentator and blogger Michelle Malkin is 41. Rapper Snoop Dogg is 40. Singer Dannii Minogue is 40. Country musician Jeff Loberg is 35. Actor Sam Witwer is 34. Actor John Krasinski is 32. Actress Katie Featherston is 29.
THURSDAY PRIME TIME 8:00
Dial
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WBZ News Late Show (N) Å With David Letterman NewsCen- Nightline ter 5 Late (N) Å (N) Å News Tonight Show With Jay Leno News Jay Leno
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WENH
The Vampire Diaries The Secret Circle Faye Matt goes to Bonnie for plots against her ex-boyhelp. (N) Å friend. (N) Å Roadside Windows to Nature Wolves and wildStories Å the Wild Å life thrive in dead zone. Å (DVS) Without a Trace A heart- Without a Trace “Hard transplant patient disap- Reset” Doctor performs pears. Å illegal abortions. Big Bang Rules Person of Interest (N)
12
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WTBS Fam. Guy
15 16 17
TTDIBI Ans: Yesterday’s
Fam. Guy
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Big Bang
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2011 World Series Texas Rangers at St. Louis Cardinals. Game Fox 25 News at 10 (N) CSPAN Capitol Hill Hearings Law Order: CI News 10 Cash Cab WBIN The Office 30 Rock
28
ESPN College Football Live
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ESPN2 MLS Soccer: Union at Red Bulls
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NESN NHL Hockey: Maple Leafs at Bruins
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LIFE Project Runway Å
35
Big Bang
7 News at 10PM on Friends Å Everybody CW56 (N) (In Stereo) Å Loves Raymond Frontline “Lost in Deten- Women, War & Peace tion” Deportations and Liberian women take on detentions. (N) dictator. (N) WBZ News The Office Seinfeld The Office “Gossip” Å “The Wait “The ConOut” Å vict” Å The Mentalist (N) Å News Letterman
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42
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Movie: ›‡ “Georgia Rule” (2007) Jane Fonda.
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CNN Anderson Cooper 360
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51 52
Bones Block party.
Tosh.0
Matchmaker
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AMC Movie: ››› “Slither” (2006) Nathan Fillion. Å
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SYFY Movie: “Hostel Part II”
Movie: ›‡ “Resident Evil” (2002, Horror) Å
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A&E The First 48 Å
The First 48 (N) Å
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HGTV House
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DISC Sons of Guns Å
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TLC
First Place House
Hunters
American Chopper
Hoarding: Buried Alive Undercover Boss Å
CSI: NY “The Ride-In”
Movie: ›‡ “Lake Placid” (1999) Bill Pullman. Border
Border
“Meat Train” The First 48 Å
Selling LA Selling NY House Auction
D. Money
Sister Wives Å
NICK Sponge.
Sponge.
’70s Show ’70s Show George
TOON Regular
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King of Hill King of Hill Amer. Dad Amer. Dad Fam. Guy
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FAM Movie: “The Goonies”
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DSN Good Luck Movie: “Return to Halloweentown”
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SHOW “Unreasonable Man”
George
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Movie: ››‡ “Hocus Pocus” (1993, Comedy) Random
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Movie: ››‡ “Red” (2010) Bruce Willis. Å
Hunters
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64
Friends
Friends Fam. Guy
The 700 Club (N) Å Good Luck Vampire Gigolos (N) Old Porn
76
HBO “Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 1”
Bored
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Person of Interest A The Mentalist A body judge known for his tough washes up on an island. sentences. (N) (N) Å Grey’s Anatomy “Poker Private Practice A Face” A patient with a woman from Cooper’s rare brain tumor. past visits. (N) Å The Office Whitney Prime Suspect “Carnivo“The Incen- “Silent rous Sheep” Jane helps tive” Treatment” Duffy with a case. The Office Whitney Prime Suspect Å
by David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek
©2011 Tribune Media Services, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
OCTOBER 20, 2011 9:30
Rules of EngageTheory (N) ment (N) Charlie’s Angels RuthWCVB less kidnappers abduct a family. (N) Å Community Parks and Recreation WCSH “Biology 101” Å Å WHDH Community Parks
The Big
WBZ Bang
THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
GITEN
9:00
Charlie Rose (N) Å
4
WGBH The Story of India
Unscramble these four Jumbles, one letter to each square, to form four ordinary words.
DYOLD
8:30
Prohibition Support for Prohibition diminishes.
2
Hung Å
Taxicab Confessions
CALENDAR TODAY’S EVENTS Fall business meeting of the Meredith Area Chamber of Commerce. 5:30 at Hart’s Turkey Farm Restaurant. Social hour followed by harvest buffet. New directors will be elected. Awards ceremony. Reservations at 279-6121. Lakes Region Chapter of the N.H. Audubon Society presentation on the endangered Common Nighthawk. 7 p.m. at the Loon Center in Moultonborough. Program on strategies to deal with attention deficit disorder problems at the college level. Noon to 1 p.m. and 4:30 to 5:30 p.m. at Lakes Region Community College in Laconia. Free presentation, featuring author and ADD/ ADHD Life Coach Rori Boyce. For more information, call 524-3207 X6727. Al-Anon Meeting at the Congregational Church Parish House (18 Veterans Square) in Laconia. 8 to 9:15 p.m. each Thursday. Al-Anon offers hope and help to families of alcoholics. No dues or fees. All are welcome. Call 645-9518. Goss Reading Room Chess Club. 2:30 to 4:30 p.m. each Thursday on Elm Street in Laconia. All ages and skill levels welcome. Will teach. Giggles & Grins playgroup at Family Resource Center in downtown Laconia (635 Main Street). Free group for parents children from birth through age 5. For more information call 524-1741. Senior exercise at the Meredith Community Center. 9 to 10 a.m. Beginning volleyball at the Meredith Community Center. 7 to 9 p.m. $1 per session. Preschool Story Time at the Meredith Public Library. 1 to 2 p.m. For age 3-5. Meet in the downstairs function room. Pumpkin Carving Time for young adults at the Meredith Public Library. 5 to 6 p.m. Library will provide he pumkins. Sign-up for ages 10 and up. Toddler Time at the Gilford Public Library. 11:30 a.m. to noon. Sign-up required. Tales For Tails at the Gilford Public Library. 3;15 to 4:30 p.m. Read a story to “Sam” and “Brandy”. Crafter’s Corner at the Gilford Public Library. 6 to 7:30 p.m. Bring your latest design. Foreign Movie Night at the Gilford Public Library. 7 p.m. “Boats Out Of Watermelon Rinds” (NR) from Turkey.
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 21 U.S. Senator Kelly Ayotte hosts Town Hall-style meeting at the Meredith Community Center. Noon. “America’s Debt Crisis and You”. Little Fright Night at the Belknap Mall on Rte. 3 in Belmont. 6 to 7:30 p.m. Come to BG Costumes store to start and go trick or treating at all the stores. Kidworks Learning Center benefit at The Mug Restaurant in Center Harbor. Open to close. A percentage of sale for the entire day will be donated to the center for the purchase of supplies and enrichment programs. Annual Fall Rummage & Flea Market Sale at the Weirs United Methodist Church. 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. 35 Tower Street at Weirs Beach. Al-Anon Meeting at the Congregational Church Parish House (18 Veterans Square) in Laconia. 9:30 to 11 a..m. each Friday. Al-Anon offers hope and help to families of alcoholics. No dues or fees. All are welcome. Call 645-9518. Giggles & Grins playgroup at Family Resource Center in downtown Laconia (635 Main Street). Free group for parents children from birth through age 5. For more information call 524-1741. Climbing wall at the Meredith Community Center. 5:30 to 7 p.m. $3/child. $5/adult. Adult (18+) dodgeball at the Meredith Community Center. 7 to 9 p.m. $1 per session. Tot Time at the Meredith Public Library. 9:30 to 10: 20 a.m. Fore ages 1-3. Snacks served.
Edward J. Engler, Editor & Publisher Adam Hirshan, Advertising Sales Manager Michael Kitch, Adam Drapcho, Gail Ober Reporters Elaine Hirshan, Office Manager Crystal Furnee, Jeanette Stewart Ad Sales Patty Johnson, Production Manager & Graphics Karin Nelson, Classifieds Now arrange the circled letters to form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon.
’ (Answers tomorrow) Jumbles: SKULL WHISK UPROAR FONDUE Answer: When a battery is completely charged, it is this — “POWER-FULL”
“Seeking the truth and printing it” THE LACONIA DAILY SUN is published Tuesday through Saturday by Lakes Region News Club, Inc. Edward Engler, Mark Guerringue, Adam Hirshan, Founders Offices: 1127 Union Ave. #1, Laconia, NH 03246 Business Office 737-2020, Newsroom 737-2026, Fax: 527-0056 News E-mail: news@laconiadailysun.com CIRCULATION: 18,000 distributed FREE Tues. through Sat. in Laconia, Weirs Beach, Gilford, Meredith, Center Harbor, Belmont, Moultonborough, Winnisquam, Sanbornton, Tilton, Gilmanton, Alton, New Hampton, Plymouth, Bristol, Ashland, Holderness.
Page 20 — THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Thursday, October 20, 2011
Advanced General Dentistry
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Raffle winner will get chance to fly away with prize: a 1966 Cessna
GILFORD — WinnAero, a federally recognized educational non-profit based at the Laconia Airport, is raffling off a refurbished 1966 Cessna 172G in a limited ticket sales format. The white, gold and maroon aircraft is equipped with a six cylinder 145 horsepower 0-300 Continental engine, a new windshield, BAS shoulder harnesses and Slick mags. It seats four. A 1966 Cessna 172G is being raffled off to benefit an educational In anticipation of the non-profit helping youth find careers in aviation and aerospace. Winn Aero raffle, the (Courtesy photo) Cessna underwent a thorough maintenance inspection win. Additional details and raffle conand updating performed by an FAA ditions are available at the WinnAero certified technician. The airframe has website; www.winnaero.org. 3,420 total hours with 445 hours since To purchase raffle tickets contact last major overhaul. It comes with all billseed@winnaero.org; 387-2123 or logbooks and passed annual inspecby fax at 524-6733. tion in this October. Mail inquiries may be sent to WinRaffle tickets are $50 each with a nAero Cessna Raffle, 65 Aviation Way, maximum of only 2,500 tickets being Gilford, NH 03249 sold. The drawing will take place at Winn Aero is the short name for the the Laconia Airport on September 29, non-profit Aviation & Aerospace Edu2012 if a minimum of 1,200 tickets are cation Center at Winnipesaukee. The sold by that date or once all 2,500 tickmission of WinnAero is to promote ets are sold. A special bonus of $ 1,200 interest in young people in Science, cash will also be given to the raffle Technology, Engineering and Math winner which can be applied against (STEM) through aviation and aeroany aircraft or personal expense. space learning-based programs and The winner need not be present to experiences.
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THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Thursday, October 20, 2011— Page 21
ANNIE’S MAILBOX
Dear Annie: Yesterday, our daughter-in-law announced that she did not want pictures of her children posted on Facebook. My wife is beside herself, saying that “Mary” has no right to do this. My wife refuses to respect the request. She has many pictures of the grandchildren that she took and has already posted on Facebook. Personally, I agree with my daughter-in-law, and as a result, my wife won’t speak to me. She accused me of not being supportive because I’m taking Mary’s side. Can you help? Should my wife take the pictures down? -- Annoyed Husband Dear Annoyed: Yes, and for several reasons. It’s one thing to post a picture of an unknown drunk at a bar. That is fair game. But when someone specifically asks you to remove a picture, it is a sign of good will to do so. Also, these are photographs of children, and parents can be highly sensitive to having those pictures plastered in a public space. Your wife should be respectful of Mary’s parental authority. But the overriding reason should be maintaining a warm and loving relationship with your daughter-in-law. By refusing this request, your wife is creating unnecessary rancor. Once the kids are posting their own pictures on Facebook, we suspect Mary will ease up. Please urge your wife to be patient. She can still display the photographs at home, in her purse or on her smartphone. Dear Annie: I go to a wonderful doctor. The only problem is, he has horrendously bad breath. I don’t understand how a health care professional can have such terrible oral hygiene. You would think he knows better. He drinks coffee constantly, so I don’t know whether that’s contributing to the odor or whether he believes it covers it up. The really perplexing thing is that he works in an office with several other people, including his wife, who is also a physician. The nurses and receptionist all carry on conversations with him
like everything is fine. I was beginning to think his breath odor was a figment of my imagination until I referred a colleague to him. After her appointment, she told me, “He was really nice. Too bad his breath smells like something crawled into his mouth and died.” I don’t have the guts to tell him, and I can’t understand why those closest to him don’t say anything. Shouldn’t a physician be on top of things like this? -- Puzzled Patient Dear Puzzled: You are assuming his halitosis is caused by poor oral hygiene, but that may not be the case. Sometimes there are underlying, even intractable reasons for bad breath, and your physician may be doing all he can to remedy the problem. If neither you nor anyone in his office is willing to speak up, we recommend you offer him a breath mint at your next visit. If you also pop one into your own mouth, it will lessen any embarrassment. Dear Annie: I know how “Widowed and Confused” feels about dating again. I was widowed suddenly at the age of 45. For months, I went to work and came home and sat on my couch until bedtime. Then a good friend took me out to a bar with a live band. When a man asked me to dance, I said yes. My children were grown when their father died, and my oldest was upset to learn I was seeing someone. I said, “Can you tell me when Dad is going to come back? If you can, I’ll sit right here and wait for him.” After a few minutes, she replied, “You’re right, Mom. He’s not coming back, and you need to live your life.” Tell “Widowed” to ask that same question of anyone who thinks she should mourn forever. If they can give her a “date of return” on her deceased husband, fine. I suspect they’ll see the simple truth and stop trying to make her feel guilty. -- Didn’t Wait Forever
Annie’s Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers column. Please e-mail your questions to: anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or write to: Annie’s Mailbox, c/o Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. Century Blvd., Ste. 700, Los Angeles, CA 90045.
$1-A-DAY CLASSIFIEDS • CALL 527-9299 DOLLAR-A-DAY: Private Party ads only (For Sale, Lost, Autos, etc.), must run ten consecutive days, 15 words max. Additional words 10¢ each per day. does not apply to yard sales. REGULAR RATE: $2 a day; 10¢ per word per day over 15 words. PREMIUMS: First word caps no charge. Additional bold, caps and 9pt type 10¢ per word per day. Centered words 10¢ (2 word minimum) TYPOS: Check your ad the first day of publication. Sorry, we will not issue credit after an ad has run once, and we do not offer refunds. DEADLINES: noon the business day prior to the day of publication. PAYMENT: All private party ads must be pre-paid. We accept checks, Visa Mastercard and Discover credit cards and of course, cash. $10 minimum order for credit cards. CORRESPONDENCE: To place your ad call our offices at 527-9299 between 9 am & 5 pm, Monday through Friday; Stop by our office or send a check or money order with ad copy to The Laconia Daily Sun,1127 Union Ave, Laconia, NH 03246. You can email ads to ads@laconiadailysun.com, we will contact you for payment. OTHER RATES: For information about display ads or other advertising options, call 527-9299.
Animals
Auctions
Autos
BOATS
AKC German Shepherd puppies ready 10/1, 1 all black female, 1 all black male, $1500/ea. 6 bi colored $1200/ea. Eilene (603)374-9257.
Public Auction Round Robin Auction
1985 Dodge Diplomat 4-door Sedan. Fair condition, $1,000/BO. 603-387-3290
FOR Sale 1987 16! Bayliner Bowrider 85 Force Outboard with trailer, fish finder, stereo, ship to shore radio, PFDs, Skis already shrunk wrap and motor fogged. $1500 or BO 968-7426
1988 Nissan 4x4 pickup, 4 cyl, 5 speed, with bedliner and cap, $600. 293-7303
DACHSHUNDS puppies boys & girl heath & temperament guaranteed. $300 to $450. (603)539-1603.
OBEDIENCE CLASSES 7-Weeks $85 Lakes Region Kennel Club Meredith Community Ctr. Tuesday AKC STAR PuppyBreed handling starts Oct. 25 Gilford Youth Center. Wednesday Rally-Beyond Puppy Starts Oct. 26 Call 848-7149 or email linsborders@comcast.net
Announcement WE Pay CA$H for GOLD and SILVER No hotels, no waiting. 603-279-0607, Thrifty Yankee, Rte. 25, Meredith, NH.
2002 F-150 XLT: 2WD, 90k miles, long bed, tow package, sliding rear windows, roof lights, (5) new tires plus studded snows, garaged. $5,500. (603)247-2098.
49-4 Orchard Hill Rd., Belmont Property will be sold to Highest Bidder above starting bid of
$37,000 Registration fee: $100
Sat. Oct. 22 & Sun. Oct. 23 from 12-3pm
2005 Suburban LT: Lots of new parts (warranty), all the goodies and more, incredible winter truck! $14,500. Call Bill, 528-0001. 91 Dodge 250 4X4 Pickup- 124K miles, good shape for the year. $3,200/BO. 455-9313
2 Bedroom ranch style condo all on one level. Light & bright unit with new updated windows
BUYING junk cars and trucks ME & NH. Call for price. Martin Towing. (603)305-4504.
Our unique BUYER FRIENDLY auction offers comprehensive buyer protections including low deposits, open house to preview, inspection allowance to confirm the house major systems are accurately represented and even a contingency for financing based on your preapproval. Agents, Investors & Brokers welcome! 3% Buyer Premium 1House.com, LLC Auctioneer: Bert Cox/NH Lic. #4016
CASH paid for unwanted or junk cars and trucks. Same day service possible. 603-231-2859.
For More information: Call Bert Cox at (603)225-8000
TOP DOLLAR PAID for junk cars & trucks. Available 7-days a week. P3 s Towing. 630-3606 TOP Dollar Paid- $150 and up for unwanted & junk vehicles. Call 934-4813
BOATS MOBILE shrink wrapping and winterization serving the Lakes Region, $10 a foot. No gimmicks. Winterization $50-100 inboard and outboard. Call John at 630-3198
Galvanized Venture Boat TrailerSingle axle for 18-21 ft. boat. Like new. $1,600. 455-9313 Loadrite 2004 Boat Trailer. New condition, good for up to 18 ft. boat, 1500 lbs. $600. 603-387-8513
WORKING MAN’S FRIEND MOBILE SHRINKWRAPPING 24 Years Experience $8-$11/ft. ~ Group Rates
For Rent
For Rent
BELMONT at the Bypass, 2 bedroom, basement storage, $865 plus utilities security and references. No dogs. 630-1296.
Laconia- 1 Bedroom, nice yard, parking & utilities included. No pets/No smoking. $700/Month. Call 630-3126
BELMONT Large Duplex, very nice 2+ Bedroom, washer/dryer hook-ups, Pets? $1,000/month + utilites, 603-393-6415.
Laconia- 2 bedroom near hospital. 1st floor, washer/dryer hook-up, gas heat, just painted. $150/week + utilities. 293-7937
CENTER Harbor House- One bedroom, year-round, propane central heat, tenant pays all utilities, tenant does all yard maintenance. No pets/Smoking. Full credit check, verified income, references. $400/Month, security. Call between 6PM-8PM 603-707-8751
Laconia- 2+ Bedrooms, 2nd floor, washer/dryer hook-up. $225/Week Heat & hot water included. References/deposit required. No pets/No smoking. 528-6205
CLEAN UPDATED studios in Tilton. Heat/Hot Water included. $590/Month. Cat okay. 603-393-9693 or 916-214-7733 Franklin-Duplex/Condo- Large 4-bedroom 1-bath, deck, newly renovated, washer/dryer hook-up, 4-season porch, 2-car parking. Security & references required. No smoking/pets. $1,050/Mo. + utilities. 978-290-0801 GILFORD 3 bedroom waterfront winter rental. Dock, washer & dryer. Available through May 31st. $900/mo. + Utilities. Oil heat. No pets. (603) 778-9515 GILFORD- Only $850/month. No security deposit necessary, lease optional. 3-bedroom, 1-bath. Great deal, won!t last long! Call Cindy 707-6662 GILFORD: 1-2 bedroom apartments from $175/Week includes heat & utilities. Pets considered. Security/References. 556-7098. GILFORD: Large 3 + bedroom 2 bath HOUSE, nice yard: quiet location washer/dryer hook-ups. Pets o k with approval. $980/Month. 566-6815 GILFORD: Newly renovated 2 bedroom house, applianced kitchen. Sun porch, basement with washer/dryer hookups, heat/hot water included, walking distance to shopping. No pets/smoking, one month security deposit, $1,050.00/month. Call 527-9221. Gilmanton- 3 bedroom log home. Less than 20 minutes to Laconia & Concord. $1,295/Month + Security. Utilities not included. 520-0652
HEAT INCLUDED! 2-bedroom unit, 2nd floor $800/Month. Security deposit required. Newly painted, quiet location. 387-8664
581-4847 (previously 527-0032)
Laconia 2/3 Bedroom Apartment. Includes heat/hot water. References & deposit. $215/Week. 524-9665
Serving the Lakes Region
Business Opportunities
Laconia 3-4 Bedroom. Huge enclosed porch, washer/dryer hook-up. No pets. First + Security. $950/Month. 387-6810
LACONIA Pizza- Deli -Market. 25 years, same owners. Business & Real Estate. N. Main St. $475,000. 293-2111
LACONIA waterfront condo rental, 1-BR next to Naswa, private beach, no dogs. $675/mo. 978-855-2112
Employment Wanted
LACONIA, Clean, 1 Bedroom Apartment, First Floor, Small Porch, Walking Distance to Library, No Smoking, $695/mo., Includes heat. 524-2507
COMPASSIONATE LNA/Care Giver. 30 years experience. Great references. Will travel, do overnight. 603-875-1232
For Rent Alton 2-bedroom- Large living room, fireplace, island kitchen, deck, garage, laundry area. $950/Month, includes heat, hot water, metered water. No smoking/Pets. Call 603-875-7182 APARTMENT to share. Central Laconia own room, bath $100/wk includes all. Ask about reduced rent program. 393-1325. APARTMENTS, mobile homes. If you need a rental at a fair price, call DRM Corp. Over 40 years in rentals. We treat you better! 524-0348 or visit M-W-F, 12-5, at
LACONIA, Large 1-bedroom, $160/week. Includes parking, heat and hot water. No pets. References & security. 455-6662.
LACONIA2-Bedroom. $850/Month, heat/hot water included. Close to schools and downtown. Storage and parking. 455-5352 Laconia- 20 X 40 Heated garageInside/outside storage. $350/Month. 603-528-8005 LACONIA- 3 bedroom house, across Street from Leavitt Park, close to school & beach. Efficient heat with new windows. Covered parking with lockable storage. Security & references. required. Pet considered. $1200. per month + utilities. 937-0157 LACONIA. Very nice one bedroom apt. Clean, secure downtown location. Spacious, just repainted, heat hot water and elec. included, $175/ week. 524-3892 or 630-4771. LACONIA 2-Bedroom; Family neighborhood. Large, clean & bright, washer/dryer hook-ups, parking, porch. Ref. & deposit required. 603-318-5931 LACONIA: 1 bedroom, 2nd floor, near hospital. $180/week including heat, electric & hot water. 524-1234 LACONIA: 2 bedroom, 2 story apartment with access to basement and attic. $230/week, including heat, electric & hot water. 524-1234. LACONIA: Beautiful, large 1BR, large living room, hardwood floors, modern kitchen & bath, washer/dryer, Pleasant St. Heat & hot water inlcuded. $775/Month. 528-6885. LACONIA: Duplex, near downtown, 2-Bedrooms, $750 +utilities. References & deposit required. Available10/1/11. 387-3864. LACONIA: Duplex, near downtown, 2-Bedrooms, $750 +utilities. References & deposit required. Available10/1/11. 387-3864. LACONIA: Efficiency apartment, $135/week, includes heat and hot water. References and deposit. 524-9665. LACONIA: Single family, freshly painted, 3BR, cozy cape near hospital. Non-smokers. No pets. 1st and last month s rent. References. $1,100/month. Available November 1st. Call Bill at 528-3789. LACONIA: Gilbert Apartments. Call for available apartments. 524-4428 LAKE Winnipesaukee, Laconia, NH. Water View. 3+ bedroom, 2 .5 bath condo (duplex) in South Down Shores. Boat club & private beach. Central air, gas fireplace, master suite on 1st floor. Washer/Dryer hookup, Sun room. 11 miles to Gunstock Ski Area. $1,400 per month, plus utilities. Security deposit & references required. Call Sharon at 603-420-8254.
New Franklin Apartments, LLC Elderly and Disabled Housing Now Accepting Applications for Project-Based Section 8 Subsidized Apartments HUD Income Limits Apply One & Two Bedroom Units Available Located in Tilton, Franklin & West Franklin
Apartments Available Now For more information, please contact 603-286-4111 Or TTY 1-800-735-2964
Page 22 — THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Thursday, October 20, 2011
For Rent
For Sale
Lakeport- 1-bedroom 1st floor apartment with dining washer/dryer hook-up heat/hot water included. No smoking or pets. Off street parking $ 700. First/Last/Security. 603-630-4539
BRAND NEW 3-Position Pride Lift Chair GL-358M with warranty. Asking $650. Retails $1,000. Gilford. (410)280-8976.
Lakeport-4 room 2 bedroom 2nd floor, lake view. Includes washer/dryer, snow removal, landscaping, off street parking. $180/week. No dogs/No Utilities/No Smoking. References & credit check a must. Call Rob 617-529-1838 MEREDITH BAY Full view of bay and town, executive quality, first floor, one bedroom. Big deck, repainted huge rooms, modern oak kitchen, laundry hookup, new carpets, no pets. $895/Month + deposit. Includes heat, hot water & parking. 603-279-3133 or 603-867-8678 MEREDITH One bedroom apartment on second floor. Open concept, cathedral ceiling, very elegant and rustic. Plowing, parking and dumpster included, Pets? $850/month 455-5660.
Custom Glazed Kitchen Cabinets. Solid maple, never installed. May add/subtract to fit kitchen. Cost $6,000 sacrifice $1,750. 833-8278 Dremel Jig Saw $100. Receiver hitch platform w/chock & ramp $125. Summit Viper climbing tree stand $125. $279 New. 340-7066 ELECTRIC Wheelchair: Never used, many extras, $1,500. 524-2877. GE Refrigerator- White. $150. 3-piece lighted entertainment center w/book shelves $75. 524-6653
MOULTONBOROUGH: 3BR, 1.5BA house. Walk to Ctr. Harbor proper. Garage, wood & oil heat, w/d hookups. No smoking. No pets. Credit ref. & sec. dep. $1150/month plus utilities. 603-253-9446.
LENNON Hearth Product 20,000 BTU, direct vent propane fireplace. Beautiful unit. Must sell! $450 or B.O. 934-4447
PREFERRED RENTALS Long term and winter rentals available in the towns of Moultonboro, Meredith, Center Harbor, Sandwich, Gilford, Laconia and Sanbornton. Starting at $650/ month. Please call for list of inventory at 603-253-7811 or visit our website at www.preferredrentals.com
Masterfly Tying Set. 524-1961 NEW, 48 inch, cherry vanity, granite top and backsplash, with mirror. It cost $2700. Make me an offer 603-707-9293. Sears Arc Welder $75. Horizontal/Vertical milling machine, R-8 Spindle, collet, cutters. $400. 524-3603 Side Loading Woodburning stove with glass front. $200/OBO. Round wooden pedestal table $50/OBO. 238-2584
Steel Buildings Reduced Factory Inventory 30x36 – Reg $15,850 Now $12,600. 36x58– Reg $21,900 Now $18,800. Source# 1IB, 866-609-4321 Treadmill- Image Model 150R $150. 1950’s Hamilton Greyhound wagon. $100. 393-9693 UNIVERSAL 3-Way Angle Vise; 90-360-45 degrees of movement. Un-used, a $375 value. $95 Firm. 366-5775
SANBORNTON - 3 acre farmhouse overlooking Winnisquam. 2 minutes to winnisquam market, 2 bay garage with tool room. $1,200/Month, no utilities. Gas & oil heat with fireplace. References & deposit required. Responsible renters only. 524-9011
WANTED TO BUY Gold, (scrap rings, jewelry, etc.) Silver, (coins, flatware, etc. )
Antiques & Unusual Items Call 279-3087 or Stop In at
Waukewan Antiques 55 Main St. Meredith
For Rent-Commercial Furniture
Laconia-O’Shea Industrial Park 72 Primrose Drive •10,000 Sq, Ft. WarehouseManufacturing. $5,800.00 • 3,000 Sq. Ft. Office Space $2,800.00 • 3,340 Sq. Ft. WarehouseManufacturing $1,800.00
FHA Heat/AC 3 Phase Power 72 Primrose Drive, Laconia
(603)476-8933
100 year old 58” cherry rolltop desk, in very good condition, $900; Cherry table w/4 chairs, $200; Cherry chest of drawers, unique, $250. All best offer. Call Bill, 528-0001.
AMAZING! Beautiful Queen or Full-size mattress set, Luxury Firm European Pillow-top style, Fabulous back & hip support, Factory sealed-new 10Yr. warranty. Cost $1095, sell $249. Can deliver
Help Wanted
Instruction
Work for an American Legend!
Fireplace Installer needed immediately MUST HAVE NH GAS LICENSE We are looking for installer with NH gas license to install fireplaces both wood and gas,carpentry experience helpful. M-F work week with benefits including , Health Dental,Life, Disbility,FSA ,Vacation Holidays and 401k Pay based on experience. Must have valid NH drivers License and pass both background and drug test. Apply in person to :Quality Insulation, 1 PeaseRd. Meredith, NH 03253
Harley-Davidson at the Tilton Outlets has immediate openings for 3rd Key Team Leaders. Please apply at laconiaharley.com for interview consideration.
Tutor: Retired teacher will tutor French, English, and study skills. 366-4704.
SHOWROOM SALES
Howard Miller Grandfathers Clock. 80 inches tall. Purchased 1994 paid $1,000. Asking $400. Call 875-2847 HP Printer, print, copy, scan, fax, ex. condition, USB connect computer, I had motherboard fry. $50 527-0063 2-10 PM
Help Wanted Quality Insulation of Meredith
Fast paced stove shop is looking for a motivated salesperson to join our team. Weekend availability a must. Email resumes to info@fireNstone.net
HOT tub cover (new) round 6! diameter tan paid $289 sell for $150. 524-7525
Meredith- 1 bedroom apartment. Oil forced hot water, 1.5 bath, washer/dryer hook-up, nice yard. No smoking/pets. $750/Month 279-8247 Jim
NORTHFIELD: Trailers for rent in small park with on-site laundromat. Small 2 bedroom $195/week, larger 2 bedroom $225/week, 3 bedroom $235/week. All including heat, electric & hot water. 524-1234, www.whitemtrentals.com.
Help Wanted
JCS Hiring 2nd shift 4:15-10pm Sun-Fri we are looking for highly motivated individuals with great attitude. No exp. required. This is a high paying, commission based, appointment scheduling position; top performers make $19-$25 per hour. For interview call Christina Pagliarulo at 603-581-2452 EOE LaChance's Village Store (Citgo) in Tilton is now hiring for part time. Must have open availability. We open at 5:00am and close at 11:00pm. See Clem or Kate for an application today.
SUMMIT RESORT Now Hiring Part-Time Housekeepers Flexible hours & competitive wages. (Saturdays a must).
MEDICAL Assistant positions available in a busy medical office that offers a variety of opportunities. Medical office experience preferred. Must be professional, pleasant and flexible. Send resume to medofficeconway@yahoo.com.
Apply Today! 177 Mentor Ave. Laconia, NH 03246 No Phone Calls Please
30 inch ventless stove hood $75, 455-1524
NEW mattresses ...always a great deal! Starting; King set complete $395, queen set $249. 603-524-1430.
AMAZING! Beautiful pillowtop matress sets, twin $169, full or queen $249, king $399. See AD under
SOFA- Klaussner, like new, neu-
New 14’ Wides
Instruction
From $25,995. or $1,300 down 240 @ $195 Apr 7%
BALLROOM DANCE
Double Wides From $49,995 Modular Cape $62,995 2 Story $83,995
Private lessons, couples only. Professional Instruction, reasonable rates. 279-1329.
KARATE STORMWATER Pollution Protection Plan Monitor/Inspector: Must be a Certified Erosion Sediment and Stormwater Inspector (CESSWI) with at least 2yrs experience in Highway/Bridge or General Construction projects. Must have valid driver!s license and be willing to travel throughout NH. Must Be familiar with OSHA rules and regs. Will be responsible for reporting and monitoring per local/state/federal regulations. Full Time with Benefits, Equal Opportunity Employer. Send resume to aneville@ajcolman.com
Adult and Children's Karate (Ages 4+) classes held in Laconia, Gilford, Meredith and Moultonborough. Improves balance, coordination, focus, strength and flexibility.
524-4780
Over 15 homes on display, worth the trip! WWW.CM-H.Com Open Daily & Sunday
Camelot Homes Rt. 3 Tilton, NH
TAI CHI Experience the gentle art of Tai Chi. Improves balance, joint health, coordination, bone density, blood pressure, strength and flexibility. Ongoing classes held in Laconia, Gilford, Meredith and Moultonborough. All ages welcome.
524-4780
Motorcycles 1995 Harley Davidson Ultra-New Motor, Less than 2,000/miles, Great shape! $6,000. 603-848-0014 2000 Harley Davidson, Ultra Classic, metallic green & black, new motor, many accessories, asking $7950 Paul 603-752-5519.
Rowell's Sewer & Drain
is looking for 1 full-time Technician/Laborer. Candidate must be self motivated, professional and avail. to work O/T. Must have CDL Class B and be in good physical condition. Benefits include a competitive salary, 8 paid holidays and retirement plan. Forward Resumes to: mandiehagan@yahoo.com Call 934-4145
Diesel Mechanic Alvin J. Coleman & Son Inc. is actively seeking a qualified and experienced mechanic to perform repair and preventative maintenance on a fleet of heavy trucks and equipment. Position is full time, year round, and available today. Health Benefits and 401k Available. Stop in or call Jim Drouin Alvin J Coleman & Son, Inc. Rt. 16, Conway, NH 603-447-5936 EOE
Varsity Ice Hockey Coach This coaching position is for the 2011-2012 season Interested candidates please send letter of interest and application to or for more information contact:
James Chase, Athletic Director Laconia High School 345 Union Avenue Laconia NH 03246 Telephone: 603-524-3350
For Sale
YARD HELP WANTED for Gilford Home Center Apply in Person 32 Gilford East Dr.
Mobile Homes FOR Sale new double wide, full factory warranty 28! x 56!. 2 br, 2 full baths, family room and morning room, many upgrades. Beach rights to Winnipesaukee. 303 Old Lakeshore Road, Gilford, N.H, Lot #G6. Call 603-888-0661 or 603-566-0727.
Applications are available at the high school or online at www.laconiaschools.org/personnel EOE
LACONIA SCHOOL DISTRICT is seeking Middle School Site Director to work with youth in the Laconia Project EXTRA! Program. Approximately 30 hours per week. This position coordinates enrichment activities for the after school program, supervises enrichment leaders, and oversees all aspects of the Middle School Extended Learning Program. Please contact:
Martina Green, Program Director Project EXTRA! Laconia School District 39 Harvard Street Laconia, NH 03246
Or email to: mgreenaconia.k12.nh.us" mgreen@laconia.k12.nh.us
Call 603-524-5710 For more information Please visit our website for information about the Laconia Schools at: www.laconia.org
THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Thursday, October 20, 2011— Page 23
Delta Kappa Gamma chapter awards four scholarships to students LACONIA — Theta Chapter of Delta Kappa Gamma (Key Women Teachers) has a membership of 40 active and retired educators from the Laconia-Meredith-Gilford area. Most of their projects promote education and community service in many ways. During this past year Theta Chapter has honored four New Hampshire students with grants to help them advance their education: Amy Cass, Brenna Cass, Deborah Gallant, and Rheanna Mable. Amy and Brenna Cass are twin daughters of Colleen and Michael Cass and granddaughters of Nancy Gibbons of Laconia. Amy is in her first year at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia, majoring in Foreign Service. Brenna is in her first year at Boston
Recreation Vehicles
Services
College, majoring in Spanish. Both girls graduated from Laconia High School in June 2011. Deborah Gallant, daughter of Jane and Michael Gallant of Gilford, will receive her teaching certification in December from Plymouth State University. At the moment she is student teaching at Gilford High School in the English Department. She comes to PSU with a B. S. degree from Colby Sawyer and a Ph.D. in creative writing from the University of St. Andrews in Scotland. Rheanna Mable is the daughter of Cindy Arieta of Auburn and Marc Mable of Goffstown and granddaughter of Sheila and Duane Mable of Penacook. Rheanna graduated from Memorial High School
Services
1993 24 ft. Komfort camper with 1 slideout. $1,300 or best offer. 293-2878
Services
in Manchester and is in her third year at the University of New Hampshire in Durham, majoring in social work. Each year Theta Chapter holds a yard sale in Laconia and also candy sales to help fund the scholarship and grants. Besides helping students who have connections with their members, Also, Theta Chapter arranges monthly or bimonthly visits to the Belknap County Nursing Home. Tiffany Dube chairs the Intergenerational Committee that organizes and leads these visits. Ann Hart, Nancy Gibbons, Bev Jones, Pam Clark, and Brenda Walker are among the Theta members that help her.
Services
Services
HANDYMAN SERVICES Small Jobs Are My Speciality
Real Estate
Rick Drouin 520-5642 or 744-6277
FOR Sale By Owner: 2-Bedroom house, 1-1/4 bath. 180 Mechanic Street, Laconia. 524-8142.
Services $20 Traditional Japanese Bodywork Treatments Please come and enjoy the therapeutic and relaxing benefits of traditional Japanese body work known as Shiatsu. Each treatment is performed fully clothed on a comfortable floor mat and takes about an hour. Treatments are performed at the Sachem Shiatsu office at the Fitness Edge building in Meredith. Please call Sensei Jones at 603-524-4780 to make an appointment.
PIPER ROOFING Quality Work Reasonable Rates Free Estimates Metal Roofs • Shingle Roofs
Our Customers Don!t get Soaked!
COMMERCIAL/RESIDENTIAL
528-3531
Experienced ~ Reasonable Reliable ~ Insured
Major credit cards accepted CALL Mike for fall clean-ups, scrapping, light hauling, snowblowing. Very reasonably priced. 603-455-0214 CHIMNEY Installation/Repairs: Masonry, metal-bestos, flashing, fireplaces, woodstove installations, liners, caps, inspections, cleanings. Insured, references. (603)523-7806.
Snowmobiles
SNOWPLOWING
455-2801
Snowmobile, ATV, new & used parts. Complete line of accessories, service. Pre-owned sleds. Lake City Cat House 524-5954
BLUE RIBBON PAINTING CO.
Storage Space
Interior/Exterior EXPERIENCED Greenskeeper for Lakes Region 9-hole golf course. 2012 season. Chemical licenses preferred. jntlzbth@yahoo.com.
Since 1982 ~ Fully Insured
3 Garage Bays for rent. Cars, boats, etc. Each bay 25ft. deep 11ft. wide. For storage only. $55 per month each space. Call Dave 528-2872
Powerwashing
279-5755 630-8333 Bus.
Cell
SNOWPLOWING MEREDITH AREA Reliable & Insured
Become a Weatherization Installer Technician Today Help reduce homeowners’ energy costs while doing a job you enjoy at Lakes Region Community College’s Weatherization Installer Technician course. Learn how to install air sealing and insulation, become BPI certified and more. The next course begins Nov. 10 in Plymouth, NH. Discounted tuition.
Call (603) 524-3207 for more information.
Gilford School District Substitute Nurses Gilford School District is currently taking applications for substitute nurses for elementary, middle and high school. Salary is $196.70 per day. Please call the Gilford School District Office 527-9215 for an application, or download from www.gilford.k12.nh.us
JAYNE ’ S PAINTING is now Ruel ’s Painting ...Same great service! Jason Ruel, customer satisfaction guaranteed! 393-0976
SPAS
Summit Spas (603)733-7101. Service & maintance.
Michael Percy
677-2540
ALTON/GILFORD Garage 40X60ft. 16ft. high ceilings. Two 14X14ft. doors, insulated, water, electric, can be heated. $1,500./Month 293-7770 STORE your car-boat-motorcycle before the snow in a clean and secure brick building. Low prices. (603)524-1430 WINTER Storage- 12X28 $50/ month. 2oX24X12 high, $100/month. 344-4504
Yard Sale 28 Village Court, Laconia: Off Old North Main Street, Saturday, 10/22, 8am-1pm. Furniture, old records, bottles and tools. Lots of clothes, pocketbooks, golf clubs and many more items. No early birds.
Estate Sale Sat & Sun Oct. 22-23 12 - 3:00 pm 162 Intervale Rd. Rte. 11B, Gilford Livingroom set, oriental rug, trundle bed, kitchen set
RUMMAGE SALE FLEA MARKET First United Methodist Church
Rte 11A Gilford near Bypass Fri & Sat Oct 21 & 22 9am - 2pm Clothes, linens, housewares, furniture and more.
Page 24 — THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Thursday, October 20, 2011
CANTIN’S HAS BUICKS FOR LESS! 2011 Lucerne CXL
2011 Buick Regal
Certified with 12 Month / 12,000 Mile Bumper to Bumper Warranty
Certified with 12 Month / 12,000 Mile Bumper to Bumper Warranty
#10139PA
#10117PA
Loaded! Tilt, Cruise, Heated Leather, Alloys, Power Locks, Windows & Seats, XM Stereo, All New Tires!
$23,900
Loaded! 2.4L Turbo, Tilt, Cruise, Alloys, Heated Leather, Power Locks, Windows & Seats!
$25,900
C E RTI F I E D S ? C A NTI N C A N ! !
#11427A / #10136PB
#10128PA / #10127PA
#10129PA / #10130PA
2010 Chevy Cobalt LT1
2010 Chevy Cobalt LT2
Auto, Power Locks, Windows & Seat, A/C, Tilt, Cruise.
Auto, Power Locks, Windows & Seat, A/C, Tilt, Cruise, Alloys.
$12,900 or $179/Mo*
$13,500 or $190/Mo*
2008 Chevy Suburban 1500 4WD
2008 Toyota RAV4 4WD
8-Passenger! Auto, Leather, Power Windows, Locks & Seats, Alloys, A/C, Cruise, Tilt, On*Star, CD, Keyless Entry, ABS, Trailer Towing Package, 78k Miles.
4-Cylinder Auto, A/C, Cruise, Tilt, Power Locks & Windows, Keyless Entry, ABS, CD, 1-Owner,Only 49k Miles!
$26,900
2011 Chevy Impala LTZ Auto, Heated Leather, Power Locks, Windows, Seats & Moonroof, A/C, On*Star, Bose Stereo w/CD, Keyless Entry, Rear Spoiler, Dual Climate Zones, Cruise, Tilt, ABS, Alloys.
$16,900 or $233/Mo*
SUV’s
$18,995 #10123PA
#10110PA
#10119PA / #10137PA
2009 Chevy Malibu 2LT 4-Cylinder Auto, Power Windows, Locks & Seat, Alloys, On*Star, Cruise, Tilt, A/C, Keyless Entry, CD, Heated Seats, ABS.
$24,900 or $395/Mo*
2009 Kia Borrego LX 4WD
2006 Ford Expedition 4WD
Auto, Power Windows & Locks, Tilt, Cruise, CD, Alloys, A/C, Keyless Entry, ABS, Only 19k Miles!
Eddie Bauer Edition, Fully Loaded! Heated Leather, Alloys, Power Windows, Locks & Seats, Dual Heat/AC, Tilt, Cruise.
#11385A
$17,637
$21,995
#10073PB
AFFORDABLE VEHICLES 2003 Chevy Malibu
2004 Buick LeSabre
Auto, Alloys, A/C, Power Windows, Locks & Seat, Tilt, ABS, CD, Only 63k Miles!
Auto, A/C, Cruise, Tilt, Power Locks, Windows & Driver’s Seat, Keyless Entry, CD, ABS, Alloys, 1-Owner, Only 72k Miles!
#11426SB
#12023A
$7,995
$7,995
2002 Chevy Tracker LT 4WD Auto, A/C, Cruise, Tilt, Power Locks & Windows, Keyless Entry, CD, ABS, Alloys, Only 86k Miles!
$7,995 #10107PA
2007 Chevy Malibu LS Certified with 12 Month / 12,000 Mile Bumper to Bumper Warranty
4-Cylinder Auto, Power Locks, Windows & Driver’s Seat, A/C, Keyless Entry, CD, ABS, Alloys, Tilt, Cruise, 1-Owner.
#11345SA
$12,995 $179/Mo*
View Our Website For Complete Inventory: www.cantins.com 623 Union Avenue, Laconia, NH 603-524-0770 or 1-800-226-8467 “When other dealers can’t ... Cantin can!”
SHOWROOM HOURS: Mon., Tues., Wed. & Fri. 8:00-7:00pm Thursday - 8:00-8:00pm • Saturday: 8:00-5:00pm
*Payment based on 60 months at 2.9% APR, with $3,000 cash or trade equity down payment, subject to credit approval. Photos for illustration purposes only. Not responsible for typographical errors.