The Laconia Daily Sun, December 7, 2011

Page 1

Fate of middle class at stake? President Obama strikes populist re-election theme — Page 2

Wednesday, december 7, 2011

wednesday

VOL. 12 nO. 133

LacOnIa, n.H.

527-9299

Free

WLNH Children’s Auction • Day 2

38-year-old man taken into custody for ‘huffing’ 3 times in 1 day

Live on 98.3 FM & LRPA TV Channel 25 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. and 6 to 10 p.m.

Day 1 Total: $32,958

By Gail OBer

THE LACONIA DAILY SUN

LACONIA - A local man ran afoul of the police three times in one day for allegedly “huffing” — inhaling chemicals from aerosol cans. Police said Keith Lemire, 38, of 153 Old Prescott Hill Road was initially placed into protective custody at 1:13 p.m. Friday when someone called to report he was inhaling toxic chemicals from an aerosol can at his home. Police took him into protective custody and, because of the very short-term effects of inhalants, within minutes he was sober. Inhaling chemicals from aerosol cans is a violation but must be witnessed by a police officer to merit a citation. At 7:15 p.m. police and fire returned to 153 Prescott Hill Road and because Lemire had removed the telephone cord from the wall of his home to prevent the home owner from calling police, he was placed into protective custody for a second time and charged with a B-level misdemeanor of obstructing the reporting of a crime. see HUFFInG page 11

Four-year-old Brendan Schofield of Belmont came to the WLNH Childrens’ Auction at the Lake Opechee Inn & Spa Conference Center with his grandmother, Bev Leclerc on Tuesday to donate a large lot of stuffed animals. Many more items are needed to bring the week to a successful conclusion. To donate call 527-5700. (Alan MacRae/for the Laconia Daily Sun)

Santa & Mrs. Claus stolen from Laconia front yard

LACONIA — City police are investigating the theft of a large Christmas ornament of Mr. and Mrs. Santa Clause sitting in a swinging chair. The motorized item measured 3-feet by 4-feet and was anchored to the front lawn of 194 Garfield St. by several stakes with plastic ties. Police said the ties were cut and the ornament was taken sometime between 8:30 p.m. Sunday evening and 10 a.m. Fuel Oil OIL & PROPANE CO., INC. Monday. 10 day cash price* Laconia 524-1421 subject to change see sanTa page 11

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Police to team up with Huot Center to offer course on law enforcement careers By Gail OBer

THE LACONIA DAILY SUN

LACONIA — The Huot Regional Technical Education Center is looking to partner with local law enforcement and offer a senior-level class in law enforcement. Huot Director Scott Davis, who recently graduated from the Citizen’s Police Academy, said he and retired Laconia Police Chief Mike Moyer had talked about a possible program last

spring before Moyer’s retirement and have worked together to develop a curriculum that would be acceptable to the N.H. Department of Education. He said he had continued to develop the curriculum with work with Moyer and current Laconia Police Chief Chris Adams. Davis told the School Board last night that the class would be taught by Moyer and Lt. Matt Canfield at the Police see POLICe CLass page 8


Page 2 — THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Wednesday, December 7, 2011

Back to the future: Chrysler to call Fiat-based compact the Dart

Obama sets campaign theme: middle class at stake

DETROIT (AP) — The Dodge Dart, a 1960s compact car that gearheads turned into street racers, is making a comeback. Chrysler said Tuesday that it will use the Dart name for a new compact car based on Italian technology that it will introduce in the U.S. next year. The Dart, which is expected to get 40 miles per gallon of gas on the highway, is an extremely important car for Chrysler Group LLC, which currently has outdated offerings in the fast-growing compact car market. Young buyers in the U.S. generally pick compacts as their first new cars, and research shows they’ll stick with a brand if they like their first vehicle. The new car is based on the Alfa Romeo Giulietta, a compact sold in Europe, but will be wider and longer to handle Americans’ need for more space. Chrysler said in a statement that the four-door sedan will perform well and be efficient. It’s the first car sold by Chrysler dealers that is based on Fiat underpinnings. The Dart, due in showrooms during the first half of next year, will replace the Dodge Caliber, a slow-selling compact SUV that is based on a Spartan design from Chrysler’s lean years before bankruptcy protection. Two other compact SUVs, the Jeep Compass and Patriot, will still be sold. The Dart also is important to Fiat because the Italian company will get another 5 percent stake in Chrysler once it starts making a car in the U.S. that gets 40 mpg. see DART page 4

OSAWATOMIE, Kan. (AP) — Declaring the American middle class in jeopardy, President Barack Obama on Tuesday outlined a populist economic vision that will drive his re-election bid, insisting the United States must reclaim its standing as a country in which everyone can prosper if provided “a fair shot and a fair share.” While never making an overt plea for a second term, Obama’s offered his most comprehensive lines of attack against the candidates seeking to take his job, only a month before Republican voters begin choosing a presidential nominee. He also sought to inject some of the long-overshadowed hope that

energized his 2008 campaign, saying: “I believe America is on its way up.” In small-town Osawatomie, in a high school gym where patriotic bunting lined the bleachers, Obama presented himself as the one fighting for shared sacrifice and success against those who would gut government and let people fend for themselves. He did so knowing the nation is riven over the question of whether economic opportunity for all is evaporating. “Throughout the country, it’s sparked protests and political movements, from the tea party to the people who’ve been occupying the streets of New York and other cities,” Obama said.

“This is the defining issue of our time,” he said in echoing President Theodore Roosevelt’s famous speech here in 1910. “This is a make-or-break moment for the middle class and all those who are fighting to get into the middle class,” Obama said. “At stake is whether this will be a country where working people can earn enough to raise a family, build a modest savings, own a home and secure their retirement.” For Obama, saddled with a weak national economic recovery, the speech was a chance to break away from Washington’s incremental battles and see OBAMA page 8

STATE COLLEGE, Pa. (AP) — A 19-year-old man has filed a complaint with state police alleging he was sexually abused by Jerry Sandusky after the former coach gave him liquor on the Penn State campus in 2004, the accuser’s lawyer said Tuesday. Charles Schmidt said the client, whom he did not identify, went to his law firm about three weeks ago, after Sandusky was charged with sexually abusing eight boys over a 15-year period. “He suffered one incident of abuse, to use the legal term — involuntary deviate sexual intercourse — allegedly at

the hands of Mr. Sandusky,” Schmidt said. “That occurred on the Penn State campus, we believe in the area of the football facilities.” Sandusky’s lawyer, Joseph Amendola, said he was unfamiliar with the allegations Schmidt was making. The new claim came the day a lawyer for another young man who accused Sandusky of sexual abuse said he expects his client and at least five other accusers to testify at a preliminary hearing next week. The lawyer said he has information that the six young men whose testimony before a grand jury contrib-

uted to a report detailing allegations against Sandusky will be called to testify next Tuesday. The attorney spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because he said he is trying to ensure his client’s identity isn’t revealed publicly. Sandusky is charged with 40 counts of child sex abuse, and prosecutors allege he met his victims through a charity he founded in 1977 to help atrisk children, The Second Mile. Sandusky, 67, denies being a pedophile and has vowed to fight the charges. In interviews with NBC and The New see PENN STATE page 11

KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) — In Afghanistan’s first major sectarian assault since the fall of the Taliban regime a decade ago, a suicide bomber slaughtered 56 Shiite worshippers and wounded more than 160 others Tuesday outside a Shiite shrine in the capital. The body of a woman, clutching a dead child in each arm, was sprawled along a dirt road littered with shoes, bloodstained clothing, hats and body

parts after the blast, which took place as a bombing killed four Shiites in the northern city of Mazar-i-Sharif. A loudspeaker at the shrine blasted a recitation of the Quran as ambulances with loud sirens rushed in to carry away the dead and wounded. Outside a hospital in Kabul, a man sobbing with other relatives cried out “Mother! My mother!” The Taliban condemned the attack, which was reminiscent of the wave of

sectarian bloodshed that shook Iraq during the height of the war there. Suspicion centered on militant groups based in neighboring Pakistan where Sunni attacks on minority Shiites are common. A man who claimed to be from Lashkar-e-Jhangvi, a Pakistan-based group that has carried out attacks against Shiite Muslims, called various media see AFGHANISTAN page 4

Lawyer says another Sandusky accuser has stepped forward

Suicide bomber in Kabul slaughters 56 Shiite worshippers

More than 40% of back and neck injuries are a result of a motor vehicle accident.

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Birthday Remembrance

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IN LOVING MEMORY

Mark S. Torres December 7, 1966-January 28, 2011 Love, Mom, Dad (late), AnnMarie (wife), Sue and Bill, Jim and Cheryl, Rick and Cathy, Mike and Marie, Chris, Ann and Tom, Lisa and Kirk, Mary and Steve, nieces, nephews, friends and family.


THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Wednesday, December 7, 2011— Page 3

Carroll County jail escapee who vowed revenge captured in Rochester CONCORD (AP) — A burglary suspect who escaped from a New Hampshire jail and vowed revenge on two people in Maine was caught Tuesday after five days on the lam, police said. David Glenn Hobson was captured Tuesday evening by U.S. marshals near a grocery store in Rochester, N.H., where he’d been picked up in a vehicle by a friend, Maine state police spokesman Steve McCausland said. He did not have a gun, like authorities had suspected, and was arrested without incident, McCausland said. “He was quickly taken into custody,” said McCausland, who said police had gotten a tip late in the afternoon. Hobson, 33, was in custody Tuesday evening and couldn’t be reached for comment. His family has declined to talk. Hobson escaped from an Ossipee, N.H., jail, about 35 miles away from where he was captured, on Dec. 1 by scaling a razor-wire fence in the recreation yard, authorities said. Police believed he had a gun and appeared to hold a grudge against two people with whom he once had a personal relationship. U.S. Marshal Noel March said the two were aware of the threats and were “in a safe place.”

N.H. agrees to repay $35M in hospital aid to Uncle Sam

CONCORD (AP) — New Hampshire will return $35 million in Medicaid payments for failure to comply with Medicaid requirements in 2004. The New Hampshire Attorney General’s Office Tuesday released a repayment schedule calling for quarterly payments in excess of $4 million each year over the next two fiscal years. The funds were used in 2004 to help 26 hospitals in the state offset costs of treating their most vulnerable patients. The funds went to hospitals that serve a disproportionate share of low income or uninsured patients. The state appealed a federal ruling that it must repay the funds and recently lost a motion for reconsideration of the adverse ruling. The money will be repaid to the federal health department’s Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. CMS disqualified the $35 million in 2009.

Hobson, whose criminal record includes a series of burglary convictions, wasn’t going after past victims, March said before the capture. But one of those burglary victims said she had lived in fear of Hobson since he ransacked her home several times in 2005 looking for pain medication she takes for a disability. Hobson pleaded guilty in 2006 to more than a dozen burglaries, including one at the home of Lynne Mansur of Alfred, Maine. He went to Alfred after his escape and bought clothes there, authorities said. Mansur told The Associated Press earlier on Tuesday that the most valuable thing Hobson stole from her was her sense of security. “I’m scared and shaking and sleeping with all sorts of things around me,” Mansur said, adding that she keeps knives, tear gas and an air horn near her bed. “I’m really thinking I just need to leave my house, and that’s not right.” Mansur said she had been reassured by authorities that she wasn’t one of the people Hobson was after. She was contacted by a victim advocate for the York County district attorney’s office soon after Hobson’s escape. “It doesn’t protect me, but it makes me feel like

I’m not totally alone,” Mansur said. March vowed earlier Tuesday that Hobson would be caught but that law enforcement officials would prefer he turn himself in so no one gets hurt. “David Glenn Hobson is not Houdini and he’s not Whitey Bulger,” March said before the capture, referring to the famous escape artist and the notorious Boston mob boss who was on the lam for more than 16 years. “It’s important to point out this is not the manhunt of the century.” March had implored Hobson to turn himself in to end the stress on his family “and the anxiety he is causing the community at large.” Homes belonging to Hobson’s relatives in the greater Alfred and Sanford areas in southern Maine, about 30 miles away from where he was captured, were searched and were watched closely by law enforcement officials, Noel said. Relatives were interviewed multiple times, he said. Hobson’s father was arrested Friday and was charged with hindering apprehension after being accused of leaving supplies for Hobson outside his Alfred home. Police said the package included food, water, medical supplies, blankets and clothing. see ESCAPE page 11

Enjoy Sunday banking and dinner on us! Enjoy the convenience of full service banking on Sundays with the lobby and drive up open from 8am – 1pm every Sunday. Northway’s Tilton Banking Center has the most extensive hours of any bank in the region. To celebrate, we’ve teamed up with a popular local restaurant to bring you this amazing deal:

Open a new checking account on a Sunday, and get a $25 Tilton House of Pizza gift certificate!* 298 Main Street Tilton, NH 03276

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Don’t hesitate to take advantage of this exclusive offer! *Valid on Sundays only at the Tilton Banking Center. Customer will receive a $25 Tilton House of Pizza gift certificate at account opening. New personal checking accounts only. All personal checking accounts require $0 minimum deposit to open. Annual percentage yields (APY) stated are valid as of 10/24/11 and will vary depending on account selected. Peak Checking does not earn interest. True Rewards Checking pays 0.05% APY on balances over $1,000. TrueNorth Checking pays 0.35% APY on all balances over $0. Rate may change after account opening. Fees may reduce earnings. Other terms and conditions may apply depending on account selected. New accounts only. Limit one per household. We may report to the IRS the value of any premium. Offer expires 12/31/11. See banking center for details.

Stop by our Tilton Banking Center on Sundays to take advantage of this special offer or call us at (603) 286-4344 for more information. For banking that can fit into your schedule, choose Northway: The most convenient bank in your community.

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Page 4 — THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Wednesday, December 7, 2011

5th grader Renee Corriveau speaks at D.A.R.E. graduation event “It is illegal to smoke under age 18. Why would you? It makes you smell gross,” said Pleasant Street School fifth grader Renee Corriveau, one of three first place essay winners honored at the D.A.R.E. graduation on Friday afternoon. Corriveau is shown here with Laconia D.A.R.E. officer Michelle Cardinal. Other essay champions were Abigail Bailey and Riley Grant, who said about Cardinal, “You’re amazingly cool.” Cardinal led fifth graders at all three of the city’s public elementary schools through the ten-week program, which educates children against the dangers of drug abuse and violence. (Laconia Daily Sun photo/Adam Drapcho)

AFGHANISTAN from page 2 outlets in Pakistan to claim responsibility for the bombing in Kabul. The validity of the claim could not be determined. Until now, the decade-long Afghan war has largely been spared sectarian violence, where civilians are targeted simply for their membership in a particular religious group. Tuesday’s attack suggests that at least some militant groups may have shifted tactics, taking aim at ethnic minorities such as the Hazara who are largely Shiite and support the Afghan government and its Western partners. The Afghan Taliban, who are mostly ethnic Pashtuns and nearly all Sunni Muslims, had been attempting to diversify their ranks, expanding to areas outside their southern homeland, recruiting

some Tajiks and others and forging an alliance with Uzbek militants in the north in an attempt to present themselves as a national resistance movement. Unlike some Iraqi militant groups — who consider anybody from the rival community a legitimate target — the Taliban have generally refrained from mass attacks against purely civilian targets. They usually focus instead on the U.S.-led coalition, Afghan forces or government offices, although recently the Taliban have been responsible for a rising number of civilian deaths in smaller attacks, according to a U.N. report. Tuesday’s powerful explosion in Kabul was the deadliest attack in the capital since July 7, 2008, when a suicide car bombing at the gates of the Indian Embassy killed more than 60 people.

DART from page one The Dart will be produced at the Chrysler assembly plant in Belvidere, Ill., where the company is investing $600 million. Chrysler said the Dart, to be formally introduced in January at the Detroit auto show, will offer three choices for a four-cylinder engine. It has a 1.4-liter turbocharged engine that also goes in the high-performance Fiat 500, a 2-liter four and a larger 2.4liter engine. The Dart comes at a critical time for Chrysler, with strong growth projected in the compact car segment. Compacts could unseat midsize cars this year as the largest U.S. market segment for the first time in at least two decades, according to J.D. Power and Associates, a marketing information firm. Rebecca Lindland, senior analyst for the IHS Automotive consulting firm, said growth in compacts will continue as the segment attracts young first-time buyers as well as baby boomers who are downsizing their cars. General Motors has taken advantage of the growth with the Chevrolet Cruze, the company’s first decent small car in recent years, she said. The Cruze, which was just introduced last year, is among the top-selling compacts in the nation through November. She said the Dart will have to be really good because competition in the segment is fierce. “You’ve got to have your best game face,” Lindland said. Chrysler nearly ran out of cash in 2008 and needed a $12.5 billion government bailout to survive bankruptcy protection. In exchange for management expertise and technology, the government gave Fiat SpA control of Chrysler and a 20 percent stake in the company. Under Fiat CEO Sergio Marchionne, who now leads both automakers, Chrysler repaid its government loans, and Fiat bought the government’s stock in Chrysler. The government will lose $1.3 billion of its original $12.5 billion bailout. Fiat now controls Chrysler with a 53.3 percent stake in the company. Under a 2009 deal with the government, Fiat got a 20 percent stake after Chrysler exited bankruptcy protection. Fiat gradually raised its stake and gained a majority share in July, when it bought the U.S. Treasury’s remaining shares.

W

hat’s a terrifically handsome Husky puppy doing at New Hampshire Humane Society when he should be laying in the collective laps of a new family? Stormy was born in a shelter in Alabama, not brought to the shelter, not found in the back woods and transported, Born in a kennel in a high kill shelter. What a stressful start to life for this lovely creature. Lucky for Stormy and his entire litter, they travelled to New Hampshire where dogs find homes every day. The granite state is a dog loving state for sure. With just a little luck and help from his friends, Stormy can find a ‘Husky savvy” home. Folks, just take a breath and a step back before rushing to our adoption center on Meredith Center Road: ask “Can I provide the exercise this dog needs?” and “Can I continue with strong pack leadership, and lessons staff are already instituting at NHHS?” Puppy classes are required as part of Stormy’s adoption contract to ensure he continues

to blossom and flourish as a well rounded boy. Ideal home, energetic folks with older children. Stormy hopes he’ll be home for the holidays with his own stocking full of treats to play with

on Christmas morning. For the more information call 524-3252 and ask for one of our canine adoption counselors, or come and visit during usual open hours. Check www.nhhumane. org for details.


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Blagojevich’s lawyer admits former governor’s guilt, asks court for leniency CHICAGO (AP) — After all his claims of innocence and facing years in prison, Rod Blagojevich let his lawyers make an admission that he has so far avoided making — that he was, in fact, guilty of public corruption. The former Illinois governor will get a chance to do the same Wednesday, when he is scheduled to address the judge who will decide his fate. Judge James Zagel signaled on Tuesday, however, that he may be prepared to impose a stiff prison sentence, saying he thinks Blagojevich lied when he told jurors that he never tried to sell or trade an appointment to President Barack Obama’s vacated Senate seat for campaign cash or a top job. Throughout the first day of his two-day sentencing hearing, the impeached executive-turned-reality TV star known for his jocular personality was somber and ill-at-ease, starting down at the floor. His wife sobbed when a letter from their daughter begged Zagel not to send him to prison. The hearing was a stark contrast to the circus atmosphere around Blagojevich’s trial on multiple counts of corruption. The conciliatory tone came as something of a sur-

prise — just days after defense filings that, as many times before, stridently declared Blagojevich’s innocence and said that he had been duped by aides but never intended to cross any lines into illegality. Attorney Sheldon Sorosky told Zagel that it was illegal for Blagojevich to ask for a job for himself in exchange for his naming of the replacement. “There’s no doubt this is a crime to do this in relation to the Senate seat, we accept that,” he said. “I am just saying that does not call for a 15- to 20-year jail” term as prosecutors have requested. Sorosky made the same argument when he talked about the other crimes for which Blagojevich was convicted — shaking down a racetrack executive and a hospital executive, as well as lying to the FBI. But he said none of Blagojevich’s actions merit the sentence recommended by prosecutors. Blagojevich, who sat at a defense table in a dark pinstripe suit, was expected to address Zagel on Wednesday. Legal experts have said he needs to display some remorse. At the hearing, Blagojevich ringed his hands and pulled nervously at his fingers — pausing occasion-

Correction: Jan. 9 hearing in Belmont will also cover $1.5M sewer upgrade

The January 9 public hearing for Belmont residents is to provide information and opinions concerns the borrowing of a proposed $1.5-million to improve and or replace five of the sewer pump stations in town. The second portion of the public hearing is for residents to weigh in on how they

feel about a pay-as-you-throw garbage system and whether or not the residents would like to include curb-side pickup for their recyclables. There purpose of the public hearings were incorrectly reported in a story that ran on Page 8 in Tuesday’s paper.

ally to sip on a plastic bottle of Cherry Coke. As defense attorney Aaron Goldstein began reading a letter to the judge from his older daughter, 15-year-old Amy, the former governor suddenly seemed to fight to maintain his composer, fidgeting with a pen, biting on his lip. An attorney turned to gently pat his shoulder. Zagel also seemed more engaged in what Goldstein was saying as he described Blagojevich — the father. Blagojevich’s wife Patti also began sobbing — tears streaming down her cheeks, then dabbing her reddened face with a tissue. Patti Blagojevich closed her eyes tight, tears still rolling down her face, when Goldstein played a tape recording of a giddy Blagojevich calling his youngest daughter and putting on a high baby-like voice, saying — “Hey Annie!” Zagel, who has said he’ll pronounce a sentence Wednesday, said earlier that Blagojevich was clearly the ringleader of the schemes for which he was convicted, and that he lied about his actions on the witness stand. In comments that could signal a lengthy prison sentence, Zagel made it clear that he did not believe a suggestion made by defense attorneys that Blagojevich was duped by aides and advisers. “There is no question from his tone of voice that he was demanding,” Zagel said of Blagojevich’s comments on phone conversations secretly recorded by the FBI. “His role as leader is clearly shown by his actions.” And in a harsh assessment of Blagojevich’s performance on the witness stand, Zagel said the former governor was lying when he testified that he planned to appoint the state’s attorney general to Obama’s seat in a legal political deal.

Thank You

To all those that came out to Patrick’s on November 20th, to show their support

and to all those that couldn’t make it but showed your support through donations and well words, I will never be able to express just how grateful I am to all of you. Over 100 items were donated for the live and silent auction that was held that evening. The items ranged from: homemade jewelry, hats and paintings, trips, personal services, gift cards, gift baskets, services to use at local businesses--the list goes on and on. To all those that gave a little piece of themselves to help me; thank you so much from the bottom of my heart. I had no expectations for that night and when the night was through I was speechless and in disbelief of the outcome. Everyone chipped in and gave so much--- if only I could find a way to repay you all… I guess just know I would do the exact same for each one of you in a heartbeat.

I

have to give special thanks to Patrick’s for allowing us to have the auction there. Without your restaurant I do not know if any of this would have been possible. Also, your contributing a generous donation from the food sales that night was not necessary given all that you had already done but it was very appreciated!

I

have to give the biggest thank you to my Father, Randy Annis and my Stepmother, Mia Annis. Without them this would never happened. They worked so hard to make this a successful event and it ended up being more successful than anyone could have ever imagined. I love you both very much.

I

also would like to thank my Sisters, Samantha Hawkins and Lydia Bartlett for all your support and keeping the auction in order. To all my Aunts that helped get the auction organized and to my mother, Anne Bartlett and Stepfather, Andy Bartlett for being their showing your love and support.

A

nd a special thanks to my husband, David Colby for loving me more each day, for always supporting me, and always standing by my side reminding me that we will get through this together and that I will never have to fight this battle alone.

T

he success of that evening was above and beyond what anyone could have imagined. I will never forget that night and what so many people did for me. I will be forever grateful to all of you. If I could give anything back to all of you it will be that I will be the 1 out of hundreds who has and beats cancer-- I will take all of it so you guys will never have to know its misery.

O

ne day they will find a cure for Breast Cancer but until then we can never give up the fight. Love, Amy Elizabeth Colby


Page 6 — THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Wednesday, December 7, 2011

Pat Buchanan

Did FDR provoke Pearl Harbor? On Dec. 8, 1941, Franklin Roosevelt took the rostrum before a joint session of Congress to ask for a declaration of war on Japan. A day earlier, at dawn, carrier-based Japanese aircraft had launched a sneak attack devastating the U.S. battle fleet at Pearl Harbor. Said ex-President Herbert Hoover, Republican statesman of the day, “We have only one job to do now, and that is to defeat Japan.” But to friends, he sent another message: “You and I know that this continuous putting pins in rattlesnakes finally got this country bit.” Today, 70 years after Pearl Harbor, a remarkable secret history, written from 1943 to 1963, has come to light. It is Hoover’s explanation of what happened before, during and after the world war that may prove yet the death knell of the West. Edited by historian George Nash, “Freedom Betrayed: Herbert Hoover’s History of the Second World War and Its Aftermath” is a searing indictment of FDR and the men around him as politicians who lied prodigiously about their desire to keep America out of war, even as they took one deliberate step after another to take us into war. Yet the book is no polemic. The 50-page run-up to the war in the Pacific uses memoirs and documents from all sides to prove Hoover’s indictment. And perhaps the best way to show the power of this book is the way Hoover does it — chronologically, painstakingly, week by week. Consider Japan’s situation in the summer of 1941. Bogged down in a four year war in China she could neither win nor end, having moved into French Indochina, Japan saw herself as near the end of her tether. Inside the government was a powerful faction led by Prime Minister Prince Fumimaro Konoye that desperately did not want a war with the United States. The pro-Anglo-Saxon camp included the navy, whose officers had fought alongside the U.S. and Royal navies in World War I, while the war party was centered on the army, Gen. Hideki Tojo and Foreign Minister Yosuke Matsuoka, a bitter anti-American. On July 18, 1941, Konoye ousted Matsuoka, replacing him with the pro-Anglo-Saxon Adm. Teijiro Toyoda. The U.S. response: On July 25, we froze all Japanese assets in the United States, ending all exports and imports, and denying Japan the oil upon which the nation and empire depended. Stunned, Konoye still pursued his peace policy by winning secret support from the navy and army to meet FDR on the U.S. side of the Pacific to hear and respond to U.S. demands. U.S. Ambassador Joseph Grew implored Washington not to ignore Konoye’s offer, that the prince had convinced

him an agreement could be reached on Japanese withdrawal from Indochina and South and Central China. Out of fear of Mao’s armies and Stalin’s Russia, Tokyo wanted to hold a buffer in North China. On Aug. 28, Japan’s ambassador in Washington presented FDR a personal letter from Konoye imploring him to meet. Tokyo begged us to keep Konoye’s offer secret, as the revelation of a Japanese prime minister’s offering to cross the Pacific to talk to an American president could imperil his government. On Sept. 3, the Konoye letter was leaked to the Herald-Tribune. On Sept. 6, Konoye met again at a three-hour dinner with Grew to tell him Japan now agreed with the four principles the Americans were demanding as the basis for peace. No response. On Sept. 29, Grew sent what Hoover describes as a “prayer” to the president not to let this chance for peace pass by. On Sept. 30, Grew wrote Washington, “Konoye’s warship is ready waiting to take him to Honolulu, Alaska or anyplace designated by the president.” No response. On Oct. 16, Konoye’s cabinet fell. In November, the U.S. intercepted two new offers from Tokyo: a Plan A for an end to the China war and occupation of Indochina and, if that were rejected, a Plan B, a modus vivendi where neither side would make any new move. When presented, these, too, were rejected out of hand. At a Nov. 25 meeting of FDR’s war council, Secretary of War Henry Stimson’s notes speak of the prevailing consensus: “The question was how we should maneuver them (the Japanese) into ... firing the first shot without allowing too much danger to ourselves.” “We can wipe the Japanese off the map in three months,” wrote Navy Secretary Frank Knox. As Grew had predicted, Japan, a hara-kiri nation, proved more likely to fling herself into national suicide for honor than to allow herself to be humiliated. Out of the war that arose from the refusal to meet Prince Konoye came scores of thousands of U.S. dead, Hiroshima, Nagasaki, the fall of China to Mao Zedong, U.S. wars in Korea and Vietnam, and the rise of a new arrogant China that shows little respect for the great superpower of yesterday. If you would know the history that made our world, spend a week with Mr. Hoover’s book. (Syndicated columnist Pat Buchanan has been a senior advisor to three presidents, twice a candidate for the Republican presidential nomination and the presidential nominee of the Reform Party in 2000. He won the New Hampshire Republican Primary in 1996.)

LETTERS Rep. Tobin’s conduct in ‘birther’ protest showed lack of judgement To the editor, I have thought long and hard and slept on what I would write about an amicable exchange with Representative Bill Tobin outside the Sanbornton Historical Society Lane Tavern last Saturday during its Christmas Wreath Sale. I approached Bill during a quiet moment when only my husband and I were there to share greetings of the season. I then asked him to explain his support of the “Birthers,” which had been documented in local papers. Bill’s response was to refer to the public meeting of the Ballot Law Commission on November 18, to which he said “clearly, I was in the wrong place at the wrong time”. He reported that he and his wife had been in the Statehouse on that ill reputed day and went to sit in on the public hearing in the Legislative Office Building to observe what was going on. He stated that he had nothing to do with the outrage of some of his fellow representatives and that he was only seeking more information. He encouraged me to watch the video clips on You Tube to support his statements. As Bill suggested, I went on line and saw him on two video clips watching closely but not speaking at the meeting. Further research took me from You Tube to the website of Dr. Orly Taitz (“birther Queen of California”) and into the Office of the Secretary of State. I was also able to track down

the Additional Complainants document with Bill Tobin’s signing on as a supporter of the Taitz complaint that challenges President Obama’s right to be on the 2012 ballot on the basis of having a fraudulent Social Security number and birth certificate. Whatever the reason for Bill Tobin to put his signature on the Additional Complainant document supporting Dr. Taitz does not bode well for his constituents. Bill was elected on the basis of job creation and cutting expenditures in the budget. His behavior in this situation shows lack of judgment which has marginalized him from the Republican Party leadership which has already denounced the complaint in the strongest language and those who support it. Bill will be less effective with the decision makers in Concord at a time when all small towns need strong representation. When we elect our public officials we can not always anticipate the events and initiatives that they will be forced to deal with at the Legislature. Consequently, its really important that we elect those with experience and good judgment that will help them make the right decisions on our behalf. In 2012, let’s make sure we all get to know our candidates and do our own “litmus” test on their judgment and understanding of their roles in Concord. Elizabeth “Liz” Merry Laconia

Please support the Inter-Lakes High School After-Prom Party To the editor, The parents of Inter-Lakes High School Class of 2012 are planning a “Chemical-Free After-Prom Party” for the graduating seniors following their Prom on May 19th, 2012. At After-Prom, we would like to be able to provide a wide variety of activities, refreshments, breakfast and prizes/ gifts throughout the night to make this a special and memorable event. While we are conducting several fund-raisers to accomplish this goal, we are also asking for your kind support. We need your support in the form of financial contributions from parents and/or your business or organization. Financial donations can be made

After-Prom Party” and mailed to: Inter-Lakes 2012 After-Prom Party, Inter-Lakes High School, 1 Laker Lane, Meredith, NH 03253. If you have any questions or need further information, please contact Linda Karageorges (279-9929) or e-mail the After-Prom Committee at zewski1@yahoo.com. Please note that your donation is tax deductible (FIN: 02-6002425). With your sponsorship, we hope to provide a fun, memorable and safe celebration for the class of 2012. All donors will receive public recognition and a huge thank you from the class of 2012 and their parents. The Inter-Lakes Class of 2012


THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Wednesday, December 7, 2011 — Page 7

LETTERS Keynesian strategies brought us out of economic troubles 6X

Maybe we should look at curtailing our appetite for government

To the editor, The first thing that struck me in Marc Abear’s “Loss of freedom is implicit with carrying too much debt” was his statement “in the long run, the market is absolutely rational”. To me that is like saying “in the long run humans are absolutely rational. Neither are guaranteed. This belief is an article of faith in the religion of so-called free market. There is no such thing as a completely free market that is rational because of human nature. Keynes criticized the Hayek/Mises economic model because it ignored the elephant in the room he called “Animal Spirits”. IT IS US! Because of human irrationality, manic speculation, mood swings, emotional instabilities, and zealous avarice, there can never be a free market without regulations of the “animal spirits”. Just as we humans need rules and regulations in a free society, so does the market which we operate with our wills. Its never “free”. Free market solutions have never brought us out of deep recessions or depressions in a timely fashion. In the last century, the chosen method has been the Keynesian method, whether it be conservative or liberal versions of such. Furthermore, economic turmoil has usually been caused by these “animal spirits”. Industrial leaders, moneychangers and politicians sequester the nation’s wealth through corporate political methods. This is how the gulf between the rich and the poor increases. The most insidious is the corruption resulting from corporate buyouts of politicians. This truly destructive alliance creates laws and the lack of them whereby there is a massive redistribution of wealth upward to a corporate monarchy. In the last 30 years, wages for working class families have been almost flat. while the income of the top 1-percent has grown almost 300-percent. Back in the 1970s a CEO made about 70 times as much as his workers. Now he makes several hundred times as much. If one looks at a typical chart of the last 30-50 years you will see middle class wages are fairly stagnant but the line designating top earner’s pay looks like a steep mountain climb! If the trickled-down supply sider model worked you would see in charts a corresponding rise in the wealth of the middle class. Its absent. The reason why the wealth of the nation is being heavily redistributed to the very top is that they own the politicians who make the laws. Chart after chart provides powerful evidence that supply-

To the editor, The last night of November, the U. S. Senate, with Republican support, adopted by voice vote an amendment introduced by Oregon Democrat Jeff Merkley calling on President Obama to speed up U.S. military withdrawal from Afghanistan. Republicans Mike Lee and Rand Paul were among 21 sponsors of that amendment. Presidential candidate Congressman Ron Paul that Wednesday night was in a packed hotel ballroom in Portsmouth. Our first three spontaneous rounds of applause came with his voicing “stop the wars” or “bring home the troops.” He’d also start closing expensive military bases that are remnants, really, of postWWII needs. Why do we need military in Germany and Japan? Then on Thursday night at Laconia’s Belknap Mill (standing-room-only crowd), Ron Paul said we should run foreign policy according to the Golden Rule. He spoke against the dehumanizing term “collateral damage” when our unmanned drones and other bombs kill civilians. We should not do in other countries what we would not want done to us. On troop withdrawals from Iraq, “Romney, Gingrich (Gingrich was for it before he was against it), and other Republican candidates — not Ron Paul — slammed President Obama for withdrawing U.S. troops in compliance with President Bush’s Status of Forces Agreement. But 63-percent of Republicans told CBS that they agreed with President Obama’s decision.” (Robert Naimin in “War-Weary Republicans Rebuke Romney on Afghanistan”) I’ve thought about Ron Paul’s plan to

Serving in Congress should be honor, not a career with pension time, exempt themselves; their golden health and pension plans are but two. In summary, it states that “if you conducted your affairs (no pun intended) the way Congress conducts the nation’s, you would probably go to prison”. I also agree that it makes no difference which party that you elect. They are, for the most part, not there to work for the good of the country, their first priority is to keep getting elected and ride the gravy train until there is nothing left. The Citizen editorial of December 1 see next page

s

To the editor, I read with interest, The Citizen’s guest editorial dated November 29. I agree with it’s statement that “most members of Congress act as if they are entitled to slop at the public trough”. It goes on to point out some examples such as the 60 Minutes report that some members appear to be using non-public information to make stock market trades. This is totally illegal for we, the unwashed masses, but apparently not so for the elite members of Congress. It goes on to point out some of the many

close some D.C. bureaucracies. Our Congress won’t fund our U. S. Dept. of Education’s pricey mandates? Stop the charade, close that bureaucracy, and let the “top” thinking on education come from our state education departments. It will work for us in N.H. I’m not so sure about Arkansas and Mississippi, for example. We may see a pendulum swing, and after a federal bureaucracy is closed, it may later be needed again, with more thoughtful commitment to it. This year the Environmental Protection Agency tried to reinstate a sciencebased higher standard to decrease air pollution. Pres. Obama caved to pressure from industries that see that as “regulation,” so didn’t want it. We have the lower standard of Bush-Cheney days. We still have secrecy surrounding chemicals pushed into aquifers and groundwater by the fracking industry, permission for that secrecy granted by Bush-Cheney. So the EPA is an ineffective, hands-tied agency. Let it go. It’s only 1-percent of our federal budget, compared to 60-percent for defense, war, veterans affairs and nuclear weapons, but! (One Minute for Peace at afsc.org) Once people realize we really are not protected regarding our basic water/ air needs, we may pay attention and do a better job electing policy makers. Ron Paul in Portsmouth said, “People need to change their appetite for government,” a statement worth studying, since other of our appetites are proving unsustainable. Ron Paul may appeal successfully to both Tea Party voters and Occupy supporters, our new critics of the status quo. Lynn Rudmin Chong Sanbornton

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side corporatism is a road to serfdom; a world where we all work for lower wages. The richest job creators are setting the agenda of their servants in Congress and you are paying for it in every one of your paychecks. Let me ask a simple question. Have you become a slacker? Do you produce less and less each year? Of course not. And have the top earner’s work ethics and productivity gone into cosmic overdrive? Of course not. Its the corporatist sleazery that has exploded. Nothing has changed in how we all work. The reason why the data show such a discrepancy in income rise that refutes the trickle down model is that politicians are in the pay of powerful lobbyists and their corporations. This is not a free market; its a rigged market fashioned by corporatists who consider themselves America’s Monarchy. We are all Walmart employees to the Koch Brothers! When income is adjusted for the cost of living, some of you are making LESS than you made 20 years ago. Not so for the folks who have bought the politicians and set their agendas. While the job-creator’s wealth has exploded, they seem to have forgotten to create jobs. Contrary to Mr Abear’s claim that Keynes was constricted, the years 1945-1975 were called “The Age of Keynes”. Keynesian strategies brought us out of the economic troubles of 1945, 1948-1949, 1952-1953, 1958, and the early 1960s. The recession of 1990-1992 is another example of successful Keynesian applications. Demand-side tax cuts, benefit extensions and jobs programs worked in every case just they did in the mid1930s. Cuts never help in hard times which leads me to this: Mr Abear wants us to employ failed strategies; he not once brings up raising revenues to lower the debt when it is the most practical method when joined with prudent cuts. As long as GOP prohibits raising revenues, rebuilding America, and other jobs programs, we will move out of these hard times at a snail’s pace — which was their plan all along. Ending the Bush tax cuts for top earners would pump a minimum of ten trillion dollars into the economy in a decade. They were supposed to expire so let ‘em! “BUT NO!” say the politicians, “we must babysit and protect the rich at all costs because they own us! They are the job creators!” I say then, where are the jobs? James Veverka Tilton

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Page 8 — THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Wednesday, December 7, 2011

POLICE CLASS from page one Department with the assistance of other officers. It would be funded through a grant program for technical education. In a telephone interview last night, Moyer said the program would be very similar to a very successful one in Burlington, Vt. and that he and Davis have used its curriculum as a prototype to be submitted to the DOE for approval. Davis said many of his students have expressed a great deal of interest in either a future in law enforcement and/or the military and this program would be a prelude to either the police academy, the military, or a post-high school career path in criminal justice and law. For the initial pilot program, Davis said he and Adams would have a vetting program similar to the one used for the Citizen’s Police Academy. In addition, the program would initially be restricted to second semester seniors who are, for the most part,

18-years-old and older. Classes would focus on police ethics, motor vehicle and criminal code studies, U.S and N.H. Supreme Court Decisions, community policing, DWI enforcement, policing the mentally ill, domestic violence and legal studies. Students would be able to participate at some level in crime scene investigations, witness taking procedures, processing crime scenes, firearms safety and handling, live court testimony with mock trials, and defensive tactics. Davis said so far he has 18 students who have expressed an interest should the DOE authorize the curriculum. He also said many of the students he has spoken with come from sending districts that would not cost the city taxpayers any additional money. He said he expects the DOE to make a decision within three weeks and hopes, with approval, the first class would begin in February.

OBAMA from page 2 his own small-scale executive actions. He offered a sweeping indictment of economic inequality and unleashed his own brand of prairie populism. He spoke for nearly an hour to a supportive audience, reselling his ideas under the framework of “building a nation where we’re all better off.” Billed as an important address that would put today’s economic debates in context, Obama’s speech seemed a bit like two packaged into one. The first was that of the campaigner, full of loft and reclamation of American values. The second was the governing Obama, who recited his familiar jobs agenda, his feud with Congress over extending a Social Security tax cut, even his fight to get his consumer watchdog confirmed. Obama tied himself to Roosevelt, the president and reformer who came to this town in eastern Kansas and called for a “square deal” for regular Americans. Roosevelt said then the fight for progress was a conflict “between the men who possess more than they have earned and the men who have earned more than they possess.” It is a theme Obama is embracing in a mounting fight for re-election against Republicans who, regardless of the nominee, will attack his stewardship of the economy. One of the leading contenders for the GOP nomination, Mitt Romney, ridiculed Obama for comparing himself to Roosevelt. Obama “said that he is like Teddy Roosevelt,” Romney said at a campaign event in Paradise Valley, Ariz. “And I thought, ‘In what way is he like Teddy Roosevelt?’ Teddy Roosevelt of course founded the Bull Moose Party. One of those words applies.” Kirsten Kukowski, spokeswoman for the Republican National Committee, said, “Maybe instead of trying to be like other presidents, Obama should try being president.” Obama took aim at the Republicans, saying they would only return the same structures that led to America’s economic downturn. “Their philosophy is simple: We are better off when everyone is left to fend for themselves and play by their own rules,” Obama said. “I’m here to say they are wrong.” The president conceded that the country is in the midst of a consuming re-examination on his watch, prompting national movements against both government spending and an economy that many feel disproportionately favors the elite. from preceding page continues on with more examples of the uselessness of the current Congress, and the many that preceded it. It ends with the observation that many people are feeling angry and helpless and ready to force change. The final question is, “change to what?”. Perhaps the power of this newspaper could start something positive by considering the following information. This brings to mind some words of wisdom from Warren Buffett during a July 7, 2011 interview with, Becky Quick, on CNBC. He stated that he “could end the deficit in five minutes”. “You could just pass a law that anytime the deficit is more than 3-percent, all sitting members of Congress are ineligible for re-election”. Big talk and since the Congress would have to pass this law, the proverbial Snowball in Hell has a better chance of surviving. There are some additional suggestions on the Internet for a 28th amendment to the Constitution that sound pretty good. The e-mail attributes them to Buffett, but Snopes says the origin is unknown. By now, you should know that Snopes is just a husband and wife team working out of their home, so are not actually the experts on everything that some think they are, so who knows? In a nutshell, the seven items require the members of Congress to act pretty much like the rest of us. Working for salary, no tenure, no pension. Contribute to Social Security, fund their own retirement plan, can’t vote themselves a raise, be on the same health plans as the rest of us, void all existing golden plans that they have voted for themselves, etc. You get the idea and such an amendment is not impossible. The people just have to demand it and I think that time has come. Serving in Congress should be an honor, not a career. Donald Lockwood


New Christmas tree farm owners will continue to grow exotic varieties BY ROGER AMSDEN FOR THE LACONIA DAILY SUN

SANBORNTON — The new owners of Willow Pond Farm will continue its tradition of growing exotic Christmas tree species, much to the delight of the its loyal customers, who over the last 20 years have been able to choose from more than 20 varieties of trees from all over the world. “We’re going to have the same range of trees and continue it the same way Bob did’’ says Nick Fox, who along with his wife, Denise, and two children moved into the late 18th century house at the farm on Upper Bay Road in June. The Bob he refers to is Bob Girardin, a retired Gilford High School math teacher who has gained an international reputation as a pioneer in growing exotic Christmas trees, many with European and Oriental origins, over the last 20 years. The Christmas trees at New owners of Willow Pond Farm in Sanbornton, Denise and Nick the farm are unique, with Fox, center, with their children, Emily, left, and James, right, and some 19 available exotic their five-month old Bloodhound, Mercy. (Roger Amsden photo for species, ranging from the Laconia Daily Sun) Turkish Fir and Meyer Spruce from China to Korean Fir and month to have their trees cut and take Nova Scotia Balsam, all the prodthem home with them and says that ucts of years of research and effort by it’s going to be a joyful experience for Girardin to develop new and better him and his family to share the holiChristmas trees. day spirit with so many local families, Girardin, who at one time had 68 who will share hot cider and goodies different species among the 13,000 in the warming hut during the tree trees that he was taking care of at the harvest weekends. farm, has been the editor of “Exotic It will also mark the first time in Conifer News”, a semi-annual newsmany years that he’ll see snow on the letter which shares the experiences ground for the Christmas season. For of growers of exotic conifers from all the last 11 years he and his family over the world. He has also written have lived in Orange County, Califorcolumns for Christmas Trees Magania. zine and The Christmas Tree News “This reminds me of home. We got and served as president of the Exotic a lot of snow there and it snows a Conifer Cooperative, which serves the lot of snow here. We’re going to like northeast and eastern Canada. that,’’ says Fox, who says that he and “As far as I know there’s a greater his wife prayed a lot about the move variety of trees available here than at to New Hampshire and feel that the any other Christmas tree farm in the move was an answer to their prayers. state,’’ says Girardin. Fox says that he and his wife found Fox says it’s going to be a learnout about the property, which has ing experience with lots of work in it been for sale for more than two years, for him, but also lots of fun. A native via the Internet and came to see it of Colorado who has worked in the earlier this year. financial services industry all of his “We fell in love with it right away adult life, Fox has no experience as a and knew it was right for us. When farmer of tree grower, and is learning the realtor asked if we wanted to see everything from the ground up under another property, we said ‘No, we’ve Girardin’s tutelage. found what we want’ recalls Fox. “He helped us plant 600 new trees “You could say that the Lord brought this summer and is showing me how to us here. It’s just right for us, what we take care of the trees and prune them had been looking for,”’ says Fox. “We so they’ll have the ideal shape,’’ says love Christmas because it’s all about Fox, who also inherited Girardin’s the birth of Jesus and he’s the reason mailing list and got a good response for the season,’’ says Fox, who notes to his mailing inviting long-time custhat one new feature of the warming tomers to show up in November to hut this year will be a prayer box. pick out their trees and tag them for Customers will also find something cutting in December. new outside of the warming hut this He’s looking forward to seeing the year, a doctor’s sleigh, that is more see next page invitation-only customers return this

Christmas

THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Wednesday, December 7, 2011 — Page 9

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Drivers survive head-on collision in Gilford Two women appeared to have escaped without severe injuries after a head-on collision just east of the intersection of Cherry Valley Road (Rte. 11-A) and Intervale Road in Gilford around noon yesterday. Police have yet to identify the drivers of the two vehicles — a red Toyota Prius and silver Hyundai Elantra — both of whom were able to get out of their cars by the time emergency personnel reached the scene. The accident is under investigation by the Gilford Police and Belknap County Accident Reconstruction Team. (Laconia Daily Sun photo/ Michael Kitch).

from preceding page than 100 years old and will provide a nostalgic touch for family photos with the freshly harvested Christmas tree. He says that after the start of the new year he and his wife will be starting a Saturday night Bible study group at their home and will be inviting new people to join with them. The Fox’s homeschool their children, Emily, 13, and James, 11, using a Christian-based curriculum. And they feel blessed to have been so welcomed by their new neighbors in this community. “People are really wonderful here, so friendly and supportive,” says Fox. Emily is equally emphatic about her new home. “We love it here. There’s a lot more stuff to do than where we used to live,” she says, offering her teen

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524-5016

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THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Wednesday, December 7, 2011— Page 11

ESCAPE from page 3 Behind the house, police also found discarded clothing and a receipt showing where Hobson bought a change of clothes and supplies. Hobson stole a car in Wakefield, N.H., after escaping from jail, police said. The vehicle was found abandoned on a logging road in Alfred, and blood inside added to investigators’ suspicion that Hobson was seriously injured. “You can clearly consider him desperate by virtue of his own actions — a very concerted effort he undertook to escape from the Carroll County House of Corrections, injuring himself in the process — coupled with his own statements he has intentions

to harm others,” March said. Law enforcement officials wouldn’t say how they learned of Hobson’s threats except to say their concerns were based on statements he had made. Hobson’s police record dates back to a criminal mischief conviction in 1996. He was sentenced to two days in jail. Hobson’s brother-in-law, Richard Lane, said Tuesday that no one in the family wanted to speak to reporters. While Hobson was loose, aircraft buzzed over the greater Sanford area, and dozens of heavily armed state troopers, deputy U.S. marshals and members of a violent-fugitive task force searched on the ground.

PENN STATE from page 2 York Times, he has said he showered and horsed around with boys but never sexually abused them. The existence of Schmidt’s client was first reported by WHP-TV in Harrisburg. Schmidt told the AP that his client was 12 years old, dealing with the death of his mother and suffering emotional issues at the time of the campus incident. The lawyer said the two met through The Second Mile and his client claims Sandusky gave

him liquor while in the office on campus. The grand jury report did not allege any instances of Sandusky giving boys alcohol. Schmidt said his law firm is conducting its own investigation into the client’s claims. “We hope to have it wrapped up within another week. We believe him to be credible,” Schmidt said. “Everything that we’ve been able to unearth since has corroborated what he told us, but we’ll continue to do our due diligence.” The preliminary hearing, at which a judge would determine if prosecutors have enough evidence to take the case to trial, could last a day or more since the defense has the right to cross-examine the state’s witnesses. The state attorney general’s office would not comment on the evidence authorities plan to offer to show probable cause the crimes occurred. Amendola said Tuesday that a police officer witness should not be able to testify in the place of the accusers, based on evidentiary rules that pertain to hearsay.

SANTA from page one This is the second Grinch attack in the city since this Christmas season began. On Thanksgiving Day, someone stole about 20 Christmas trees from a lot on Court Street. Police said the ornament is of great sentimental value to the family and ask that if you have any information contact city police at 524-5257 or the greater Laconia Crime Line at 524-1717. — Gail Ober

HUFF from page one Again, within minutes he was sober and police released him at 8:30 p.m. on $1,000 personal recognizance bail. He was given a court date. Around 10 p.m. Laconia Police got a report of a man, later identified as Lemire, who was sitting in Dunkin’ Donuts on South Main Street inhaling fumes from a aerosol can. Police took Lemire into custody, charged him with violating the terms of his earlier release which included “no huffing.” He refused bail and was held over the weekend in Belknap County Jail. Lemire appeared Monday before 4th Circuit Court Judge Jim Carroll who ordered him held on $5,000 cash-only bail. Carroll said the cash-only provision could be waived if Lemire is accepted into a residential treatment program. Should Lemire post bail, he was ordered to report to city police daily and refrain from all use of alcohol or non-prescribed drugs.

NEW!

Scott Krauchunas, O.D. PH.D. Now Offering Sports Vision to Train the Eyes!

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603.527.2035 Belknap Mall | 96 DW Highway | Belmont, NH

LOCAL EXPERIENCED BANKRUPTCY ATTORNEY

Atty. Stanley Robinson is designated as a Federal Relief Agency by an act of Congress & has proudly assisted consumers seeking debt relief under the US Bankruptcy code for over 30 years. 603-286-2019 • shrlawoffice@gmail.com WEIRS BEACH

LOBSTER POUND Route 3, Weirs Beach ~ 366-2255 www.wb-lp.com

GIFT CERTIFICATES 10% BONUS Keith Lemire (Laconia Police photo)

For Each Gift Certificate Purchased by December 20th!

Voted #1 in the Lakes Region for 10 years!

BAYVIEW AUTO BODY the COLLISION SPECIALIST

Serving the Lakes Region & Beyond since 1971

26 Artisan Court Laconia, NH 03246

Windows • Roofing • Siding • Patio Rooms

Partial Waiver of Insurance Deductible

www.frenchhomeimprovements.com

528-4323

Your Family Furniture Stores Yesterday, Today & Tomorrow!

Call Jim at 524-8888

24 Hour Towing ~ Free Estimates

MR. FIX IT • Repairs A-Z • Light Carpentry • Interior & Exterior • Painting & Staining • Sheet Rock & Plaster • Repairs QUALITY WORK GUARANTEED OVER 35 YEARS EXPERIENCE “All Calls Guaranteed Returned within 24 Hours”

Call 603-726-4830 or 603-677-6288

We Now Offer ON LINE BOOKIN G www.lrairportshuttle. com Toll Free

1-888-386-8181

Help Us Celebrate our 10th Anniversary with a donation to our Food Drive Please call or email and we will pick up now through Jan. 31.

LACONIA: 524-7447 PLYMOUTH: 536-1422 CHICHESTER: 798-5607 WWW.HARRISFAMILYFURNITURE.COM


Page 12 — THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Wednesday, December 7, 2011

Holiday Guide The Lakes Region

Christmas 2011 -- Birth of a New Tradition As the holidays approach, the giant Asian factories are kicking into high gear to provide Americans with monstrous piles of cheaply produced goods -- merchandise that has been produced at the expense of American labor. This year will be different. This year Americans will give the gift of genuine concern for other Americans. There is no longer an excuse that, at gift giving time, nothing can be found that is produced by American hands. Yes there is! It’s time to think outside the box, people. Who says a gift needs to fit in a shirt box, wrapped in Chinese produced wrapping paper? Everyone -- yes EVERYONE gets their hair cut. How about gift certificates from your local American hair salon or barber? Gym membership? It’s appropriate for all ages who are thinking about some health improvement. Who wouldn’t appreciate getting their car detailed? Small, American owned detail shops and car washes would love to sell you a gift certificate or a book of gift certificates. Are you one of those extravagant givers who think nothing of plonking down the Benjamines on a Chinese made flat-screen? Perhaps that grateful gift receiver would like his driveway sealed, or lawn mowed for the summer, or Lose up to 30 pounds in 30 days

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1 hour $45

offer expires 12/24/11

order online at www.leeannfayellis.com or call 393-9120

driveway plowed all winter, or games at the local golf course. There are a bazillion owner-run restaurants -- all offering gift certificates. And, if your intended isn’t the fancy eatery sort, what about a half dozen breakfasts at the local breakfast joint. Remember, folks this isn’t about big National chains -- this is about supporting your home town Americans with their financial lives on the line to keep their doors open. How many people couldn’t use an oil change for their car, truck or motorcycle, done at a shop run by the American working guy? Thinking about a heartfelt gift for mom? Mom would LOVE the services of a local cleaning lady for a day. My computer could use a tune-up, and I KNOW I can find some young guy who is struggling to get his repair business up and running. OK, you were looking for something more personal. Local crafts people spin their own wool and knit them into scarves. They make jewelry, and pottery and beautiful wooden boxes. Plan your holiday outings at local, owner operated restaurants and leave your server a nice tip. And, how about going out to see a play or ballet at your hometown theatre. Musicians need love too, so find a venue

LAKE SIDE ANIMAL HOSPITAL (603) 524-2553

www.happyjacks.com • Mon-Sat 9-5:30

Order Your Holiday P ies 524-4144

Taste the Difference

141 Water Street, Downtown Laconia • 603-524-4144

www.water-street-cafe.com www.facebook.com/waterstcafe

The Thrifty Yankee New and Used Goods

Do you Need Cash for Christmas?

PLEASE FEEL FREE TO GIVE US A CALL WITH YOUR ANIMAL CARE NEEDS. Hours: Mon. & Wed. 8am-6pm; Tues., Thurs. & Fri. 8am-5pm Every other Sat. 9am-12pm.

552 Laconia Road ~ Tilton, NH

Friday, Saturday, and Sunday December 9, 10, and 11th

71 Church St., Laconia 528-4092

Open: Mon-Thur & Sat, 6am-2pm Fri, 6am-8pm & Sun, 7am-1pm

Specials Vary Daily • Children’s Menu Full Liquor License

from the Doctors and Team of

Join Us For Our

or Let Us Help You Customize Your Own Premium Cigar Sampler!

“Off the Beaten Path, But Worth Finding!”

Happy Holidays

Annual Holiday Open House

Cigar Sampler Gift Sets

showcasing local bands. Honestly, people, do you REALLY need to buy another ten thousand Chinese lights for the house? When you buy a five dollar string of light, about fifty cents stays in the community. If you have those kinds of bucks to burn, leave the mailman, trash guy or babysitter a nice BIG tip. You see, Christmas is no longer about draining American pockets so that China can build another glittering city. Christmas is now about caring about US, encouraging American small businesses to keep plugging away to follow their dreams. And, when we care about other Americans, we care about our communities, and the benefits come back to us in ways we couldn’t imagine. THIS is the new American Christmas tradition. This is a revolution of caring about each other, and isn’t that what Christmas is about?

Lakes Region Party & Gifts For All Your Holiday Needs • Ornaments • Candles • Cards

• Fine Gifts • Salmon Falls Pottery • Willow Tree Angels

Custom Designed Gourmet Food Baskets Carry Out, Delivered or Shipped

10% OFF STOREWIDE WITH THIS AD Free Gift Wrapping With Purchase 292 Court St, Laconia, NH • 603-528-4489

Y ER E LIV BL DE AILA AV

MAGGY D’S

GARDEN CENTER

263 Court St., Laconia (next to Bob’s Lock & Key)

Browse, shop and sample our gourmet food. Sign Up For Our Blue Ribbon Basket Drawing

• Party Supplies • Stocking Stuffers • Gift Certificates

Clean out your jewelry box and bring us your old gold, silver and coins to trade in for CASH. Offering Highest Prices Paid in the Lakes Region. a FREE necklace Across from Interlakes High School, with every on Rte. 25 just 1/2 mile east of the lights purchase in beautiful downtown Meredith over $25 121 Rte. 25 #4, Meredith • 279-0607

LDS

PREMIUM CHRISTMAS TREES WREATHS TREES 3 FT TO 12 FT WREATHS 12” TO 60” 24”(OD) WREATHS $8 Wreaths Decorated by Maggy on Weekends

SUPPORT YOUR LOCAL BUSINESS


THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Wednesday, December 7, 2011— Page 13

$$ NEED EXTRA CASH FOR THE HOLIDAYS $$

Repairs Expert Batteries h Top Dollar Guaranteed! for your Unwanted Jewelry & Watc .99 $4 TLC Jewelry • 279 Main St Tilton • 603 286-7000 • tlcjewels.net

George’s Diner George’s Diner was purchased in 1991 from “George.” We expanded the menu from Breakfast and Lunch to include Dinner, operating with the purpose of serving “Just Good Food.” The recipes for our homemade food come from family and friends. Our customers come from near and far. Please join us for Breakfast, Lunch and Dinner while out for your Thanksgiving, Christmas and Holiday activities. Gift certificates available, along with hats, t-shirts and mugs. For every $25 gift certificate purchased, you get a free mug!

TLC Jewelry

Shalimar Resort

At TLC Jewelry we can help you choose the perfect jewelry gift, create a personalized picture pendant or design a custom jewelry piece. You can even trade your old, unwanted jewelry, broken or not for something new because we buy, sell and trade jewelry and pay top dollar on the spot. We have no minimum down on layaways for Christmas. We do expert jewelry repairs and replace watch batteries for just $4.99. 279 Main St., Tilton, NH, 603-286-7000 or tlcjewels.net.

The Lobster House Restaurant at Shalimar Resort features the freshest seafood in town, live lobsters, and $10.00 dinner specials. Join us for AYCE Sunday Brunch 9-1 with homemade desserts, donuts, chef carved roast beef, jumbo shrimp, eggs benedict, omelet station and much more! Wednesdays 5-8pm we have our AYCE Fresh Tossed Pasta Buffet. Your choice of pasta, toppings and sauces, homemade soup, salad, bread dipping station , 2 hot entrees! $12.00 pp (check out our buy one get one free coupon in today’s paper makes it $6pp). Live entertainment every weekend! Book your holiday party with us, no room charge, $10.00 menu available. 524-1984 www. shalimar-resort.com for coupons!

League of NH Craftsmen The Woodshed Restaurant For a unique shopping experience, visit the League of NH Craftsmen Gallery. Featuring hand crafted home decor, jewelry, pottery, prints, glass and more. Don’t miss our 2011 ltd. edition ornament Natures Adornment, a truly beautiful pewter pinecone made by Walker Boyle. Walker will demonstrate how he creates these stunning ornaments on Dec. 3 from 11 to 1:00. Also featured throughout the month of Dec. the fabulous paper mache work of Kathy Marx. Kathy will demonstrate on Sat. Dec. 10, 11am-1pm.

Kirk Daniels welcomes you to dine at one of the Lakes Region’s most treasured restaurants. Enjoy the charm of an authentic 19th century farmhouse and barn along quaint country roads surrounded by open pastures, orchards, and mountain vistas. The atmosphere will capture your attention and the evening will be long remembered. The Woodshed Restaurant, 128 Lee Road, Moultonborough, N.H.

31 Canal St. | Laconia, NH

Call 528-7651

www.fratescreates.com • For the “Fine Art of Giving” • Art & Dance Classes • Caricatures • Gift Certificates Available

Art Supply Shop Open to Serve You

GILFORD GIFT OUTLET

Celebrating Our 25th Anniversary! by Marcy Yerkes

Pet Portraits for Christmas! Prices Start at $125 Bring in this ad and receive a 10% discount!

OPEN HOUSE Saturday, December 10th 3-5pm

At our Gallery at 50 Canal Street in Laconia Mon-Sat. 10am-5pm H. 603- 528-2548 C. 603-520-6570 www.southernaccentdesigns.com Visit us on Facebook tofindamuralist.com 35 Years Experience

25% Off

Any One Item with Coupon

No Restrictions!* *Expires 12/24/11. One coupon per customer, per visit.

Quality Greeting Cards, Gift Wrap & Bags 1/2 Off Everyday! • Yankee Candles (we accept Yankee coupons) • Willow Tree • Scarves • Boxed Christmas Cards - 1/2 Off • 16-Month Calendars - 1/2 Off

Enter drawing for a

FREE Willow Tree “The Christmas Story” nativity figurine set! ($80 value) Drawing to be held 12/19/11. Do not need to be present to win.

Next to Patrick’s & the Liquor Store Open 7 Days • 293-0338


Page 14 — THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Wednesday, December 7, 2011

Mardi Gras North

NAPA

Mardi Gras North is open!!! Check out our nightly homemade dinner specials for $5 OR LESS! During football season, we also offer 1/2 price apps and chowda/soup specials during the games. When the Bruins win this hockey season, join us for FREE PIZZA SLICES immediately following game! Sunday nights we also offer BOGO pizza for our dine-in customers and BOGO $5 for carry-out. We have a lot of great giveaways this holiday season and also have great bands lined up! Our new menu is available for take-out any night we are open, 293-0577. Our gift certificates make great stocking stuffers and every Saturday nite, bring a non-perishable food or pet item for 1/2 our cover ... New this year, receive VIP band w/donation also!

NAPA AUTO PARTS in Laconia, N.H. was established in 1989. In 1995 a second store in Meredith was opened. NAPA is your one stop for all your automotive needs. It doesn’t stop at cars and light trucks. NAPA carries a full line of heavy duty truck parts and accessories. NAPA also offers towing accessories. We also carry RV parts and accessories, ATV parts and accessories, antique auto parts small engine parts and a complete line of marine parts. We also carry many household paper products and cleaners. Stop by and take a look. 580 Union Avenue, Laconia, N.H. 528-6500 331 D W Highway, Meredith, N.H. 279-4824.

Great Stocking Stuffers Custom Holiday Trays Gift Baskets

Crazy Gringo Take the stress out of your holiday shopping & follow the Weirs Beach sign right to the Crazy Gringo! Easy to find and plenty of parking. After fighting the holiday shopping crowds, stop in for a tasty Mexican dish or one of our non-Mexican daily specials ... along with a relaxing beverage of your choice. Mingle with your friends, old and new, at the Best Adult Day Care in the Lakes Region! Crazy Gringo Gift Certificates available.

Just Good! Food

GEORGE’S DINER Plymouth Street, Meredith • 279-8723

NIGHTLY SPECIALS

MONDAY

All U Can Eat Fried Chicken Chef Special

THURSDAY

December 1-10 10% OFF GIFT CARDS

Chicken Pot Pie NE Boiled Dinner Chef Special

SUNDAY

Organic Coffees & Teas 62 Canal Street, Laconia 524-1201

Chicken Pot Pie Country Fried Steak & Pork Baked Ham & Beans All U Can Eat Fish Fry

TUESDAY

Roast Turkey Dinner Roast Beef Dinner Meatloaf

FRIDAY

All U Can Eat Fish Fry Fresh Seafood Fried or Broiled

WEDNESDAY

All U Can Eat Spaghetti Roast Pork Dinner Chef Special

SATURDAY

Prime Rib Shrimp Scampi Chef Special

Daily Blackboard Breakfast & Lunch Specials Open Daily 6am- 8pm

*** BREAKFAST ALL DAY ***

$10 OFF* Brunch for Two

All You Can Eat Gourmet Brunch with Over 50 Items! Adults ~ $15 • Children ~ $8 The Best Sunday Brunch The Lakes Region Has Ever Seen!

* With this ad. Must be two guests per coupon. Not to be combined with any other offers. Limit 2 coupons per table. Expires 12/31/11. LDS

Buy One, Get One Free

Wednesdays 5-8pm ~ All You Can Eat Fresh Tossed Pasta Buffet

Featuring Chef Tossed Pasta, Homemade Sauces, Soups, Salads & More!

$12 pp or $6 pp wi th Coupon!

* $12 value. Expires 12/31/11. Limit 2 coupons per table. With coupon. Does not include tax and gratuity. LDS

Buy One, Get One Free

Thursdays ~ Buy any entreé on the regular menu & receive one entreé of equal or lesser value FREE! Includes Lobster! * Expires 12/31/11. With coupon. Not to be combined with other offers. Does not include tax and gratuity. LDS

Route 3, Winnisquam • www.shalimar-resort.com • 524-1984 Kelsey’s at the Grant presents . . . . . . . . .

15 Kimball Rd. Gilford, NH (Intersection of 11B & 11C)

293-0577 ~ Always Auditioning New Entertainers ~ Tuesdays: “FB Friends Appreciation Nite” Check FB for Details & Appreciation Specials! Wednesdays: “Wing Ur Way Over” Wind Down Hour - 10pm-Midnight ~ $3 Domestics Show us that evening’s $30+ dinner receipt from ANY LOCAL restaurant & get reduced cover & $5 off VIP bands! Thursdays: Harpoon UFO sponsors “College Nite” $2 Harpoon 7-11pm ~ $2 cover w/college ID Saturdays: 1/2 Off Cover & VIP Band with Non-Perishable Food Item or Pet Item Donation Sundays: Weekend Wind Down! No cover Sunday Nites! “Sunday Funday” with Leggs-n-Eggs til 4pm BOGO Pizza (dine in only), BOGO $5 (carry-out)

COMING SOON!

Join Us Friday for Our Weekend Kickoff Party!! Sponsored by Coors Lite

7-10pm ~ $2 Coors Lite Draughts No Cover til 9pm ~ $5 Cover 9-11pm

Holiday Party ~ 12/16 “Touch 2 Much”

AC/DC Tribute Band - Live at 9:30 Buffet with all the fixins AND Giveaways & Bruins tickets!! Upcoming “Silent Season” -Events! January 20th

Cover: Sun - Wed ~ $5 after 7pm • Fri & Sat ~ $5 from 7-9pm, $10 after 9pm

HOURS: Tuesday, 4pm - 1am ~ Wednesday-Sunday, Noon-1am

In Meredith In Laconia

PRL Inc. RJL Inc.

331 DW Hwy...................279-4824 580 Union Ave................528-6500


THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Wednesday, December 7, 2011— Page 15

Floor Show A family owned and operated business since 1979. We have the largest selection of carpet and vinyl rolls and remnants. Bound over rugs, oriental rugs, runners and laminated wood floors. “We buy by the MILE so ours customers can save by the FOOT!” Shaw, Mohawk, Beaulieu, Mannington, and Congoleum. We also provide custom carpet binding and experienced floor installation. Floor Show Route 3, Tilton, N.H. 5242242.

Top of the Town A warm and friendly staff will greet you at this unique restaurant owned and operated by Kathy Holiday. Serving affordable lunches and dinners Tuesday Thru Saturday with early bird dinners nightly staring at 4pm, offering great food including Prime Rib, T Bone steaks, Roast Duck, Fresh Seafood. Homemade soup or salad offered with entrees at no charge. Join us during the holidays for your Christmas Party. Treat someone you love with a gift certificate that will be remembered for many years. Stop by and enjoy the food and the atmosphere. Top Of The Town 88 Ladd Hill Road, Belmont, N.H. 528-3244.

Too Good to Be Threw Too Good To Be Threw is a hidden jewel, tucked away in a historic corner of Laconia on the Winnipesaukee River at 84 Union Ave. What once housed a sewing mill is now the lakes region’s largest consignment furniture and home décor store with 6,000 square feet. The store has been open for 5 years now and is currently accepting your items to sell. Make some money on your unwanted furniture, collectibles, kitchen items and home décor or come in and shop our large selection. Please call us at 5241175 with any questions. Store hours are Tuesday-Saturday 10-5, closed Sundays and Mondays by chance.

Paying to much for a car wash? $6 $8 $10 Be Clean and Save!!!!

Gilford

Mart

Rte. 11 Gilford, NH • 524-8014 (across from Lowe’s)

Merrimack Valley Occupational Health Nancy Lake, APRN graduated from the UMass Lowell Nursing program with her BSN and earned her Nurse Practitioner degree from UMass Lowell with an MS in Family and Community Health Nursing in 1990. her areas of expertise are urgent care, and internal medicine with an additional subspecialty of endocrinology. Nancy has transitioned into the occupational health care field focusing on the development of the effective return-to-work strategies for injured workers. She was awarded the Boston Globe Nurse of the Year Award in 2005. Merrimack Valley Occupational Health is a full service occupational health provider, located at 614 Laconia Road, Route 3, Unit 2, in Tilton. To schedule your appointment, call 717-7020.

Dion’s Plant Place Please visit us in Moultonborough for your holiday decorating and gift giving needs. We have an assortment of fresh indoor and outdoor arrangements and lovely holiday décor for your home or office. We feature wreaths, NH Christmas trees, unique gifts, beautiful silk holiday arrangements, and gift certificates. We also have stocking stuffers and teacher’s gifts. We are open Friday, Saturday and Sunday After Thanksgiving, from 10-5pm. Dionsplantplace.com, 63 Whittier Highway, Moultonborough, 2537111.

Frates Creative Arts Center The Frates Creative Arts Center is the Lakes Region’s only Arts Center dedicated to providing you with the most comprehensive classes in Art, Dance, and Theater Education. In addition, our Art Supply Shop stocks a wide range of quality materials and tools at reasonable prices. Master Classes, Demonstrations, and Lectures can be presented on site or at your location. Theme Birthday Parties and Entertainment for your next family or corporate event are individually planned and can include Magic Shows, Illustrated Storytelling, Puppet Shows, and Caricatures. Our instructors hold degrees, certificates, and licenses in their respective professional disciplines to insure that you receive the highest quality of services.

Miami Hair Salon Make MIAMI HAIR SALON your health and beauty consultants. We are the only board certified hair colorists in the Lakes Region. We know how to make you look your best-with a natural looking hair color, the latest hair styles, tanning and waxing. We also offer the best weight loss program in America-Take Shape For Life. Visit us for a FREE consultation. Start planning now to make your New Year’s resolution to look and feel your best. 78 Whittier Highway, Moultonboro, N.H., 03254, 603-253-6550.

“Christmas Shop With Us”

Music Continues At The Crazy Gringo On Friday Nights!

Friday, 12/9 - 8-11pm “Two Bricks Short” Soul Acoustics & Oldies Open 7 Days A Week At 11:30am

Kitchen Hours: Sun-Tue til 8pm • Wed-Thur til 9pm Fri & Sat til 10pm Best Local Watering Hole & Grub Stop In The Lakes Region! 306 Lakeside Ave, Weirs Beach

366-4411

Gift Certificates Available

UNIQUE GIFTS:

Red Neck Wine Goblets Lake Girl Clothing Cool Hats Hunter and Texting Gloves Handwarmer Mugs Chocolate Hostess Trays and much more... Great Stocking Stuffers too! Imagine the things you can do with a Gift Certificate from Kellerhaus! Ice Cream trips, Chocolates, Toys and Gifts. Everything from Soup to Nuts for all Ages and Budgets! 366-4466 • Rte. 3, Weirs Beach www.kellerhaus.com


Page 16 — THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Wednesday, December 7, 2011

Sawyers Jewelry

Gilford Gift Outlet

Sawyers Jewelry is your OFFICIAL ROLEX JEWELER for new watches and factory service. We remind our visitors, the NH advantage is NO sales tax. Sawyers Jewelry has the new SEIKO SOLAR quartz watches for men and women...powered by light they never need batteries. Every Seiko from Sawyers comes with a 3 year warranty. Designer jewelry for you? See the Cordova collection by Ron Rosen, Suna gold & diamonds or Peter Storm creations. The Sawyers staff has the knowledge and experience to help you choose the perfect gift. Price, value, and service for more than 65 years. Sawyers Jewelry, 520 Main Street, Laconia or www.SawyersJewelry.com.

Celebrating 25 Successful Years ... Gilford Gift Outlet is proud to have been meeting its customers’ card and gift needs for over 25 years. We carry quality greeting cards from Designer Greetings at 1/2 OFF everyday! We carry an extensive display of Yankee Candle products (and yes, we accept Yankee coupons). We carry a large assortment of Willow Tree angels and figurines, as well as scarves, jewelry & much more ... something for everyone on your shopping list! We would like to thank you for allowing us to be your source for all your card and gift needs for over 25 years. Gilford Gift Outlet is located next to Patricks and the Liquor Store in Gilford. 293-0338.

Maggy D’s Garden Center Maggy D’s is a small, locally owned business located at 263 Court St. In Laconia. We offer friendly, personal service. Visit us for your freshly cut Christmas trees and plain or decorated wreaths in all sizes! Maggy D’s knowledgeable staff is always available to make your Holiday shopping experience special!

SPECIALS ~ Weekly ~

Wednesdays & Sundays: Prime Rib - $14.99* Thursdays: Burgers - $5.99* Fridays: Fish Fry - $10.99* Open: 10 Railroad Avenue, Tue-Thur at 5pm, Lakeport at 4:30pm, 524-0823 Fri-Sat Sun at 4pm *Dine-in only. Can not be combined with any other offers. Some restrictions apply.

Center for Therapeutic Massage Center for Therapeutic Massage & CR500 Diet Consultants for 20 years, LeeAnn FayEllis has been caring for the Lakes Region with therapeutic massage and now weight loss coaching for CR500. Specializing in treating tired sore muscles, injuries, headaches or stress reduction. A MASSAGE GIFT CERTIFICATE is the perfect gift of health! 2012 is fast approaching and many have set goals to shed the pounds in 2011. There is still time with CR500 to drop up to 30 pounds in 30 days! The CR500 program can be the simplest, fastest way to lose weight EVER! Call 603-393-9120.

Carpets Area Rugs Laminate Vinyl Runners Remnants and Much More

Beautify Your Home for the Holidays Gift Certficates Available Left Of Exit 20, Rt 3, Tilton, NH 524-2242

Hours: M-F 9-5, Sat 9-2

Serving the Area over 30 years

Credit Cards Accepted Professional Installation Available!

Largest Furniture Consignment Outlet in the Lakes Region over 6,000 sq. ft.

84 Union Ave. Laconia

just steps from Rotary Park and the Belknap Mill

LOOK FOR THE BIG SIGN

524-1175

Invites you to its 2nd Annual Chamilia Event Weekend

Friday, December 9th - Sunday, December 11th During the weekend, fill out a wish list and enter to WIN a beautiful Chamilia necklace with your choice of 2 Sterling Beads or a fun filled basket overflowing with goodies, including a sterling silver bracelet and bead. On Saturday, December 10th, be one of the first twenty people to purchase three beads and receive a $65 Sterling Silver snap bracelet FREE. See our many new “Limited Edition” Holiday Beads and hundreds of others which have arrived just for this event. Everyone eligible* who fills out a Sawyers wish list between December 1st and December 11th will be entered to WIN a $3,000 Peter Storm custom designed 18kt white gold diamond bracelet. *Drawing rules are posted at Sawyers.

CHAMILIA

®

YOUR LIFE, YOUR STYLE.

520 Main Street, Laconia • www.SawyersJewelry.com


THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Wednesday, December 7, 2011— Page 17

Working Class Music & Minerals Working Class Music & Minerasl is a very interesting place! Store owner, Greg Walsh, has taken both his passions of music and lapidary artistry, put them together, and created a wondrous store. The jewelry side is aglow with handcrafted custom-made and many preset jewelry pieces, specializing in Australian Opals and local seaglass. Also, on display, are crystals, minerals, gemstones and many unique gift ideas . The music side is stocked with electric and acoustic guitars, amps, accessories, PA gear and everything you need to start rocking’!!! From the beginner to the pro .... Working Class is where to go and we service what we sell! 73 Main Street (across from the Post Office), Meredith, NH. 603-677-7083.

Mame’s Take advantage of Mame’s Gift Cards Bonus ... Pay for four and get five $25.00 Gift Cards. $125.00 worth of gifts for $100.00! Mame’s Dinner Gift Cards make a great gift for friends, family, employees and a special thank you for those you want to remember. There are still a few dates available for private holiday Christmas parties. Call to reserve your room, 279-4631. Looking to get away from the Holiday stress, join us for some easy listening music and a bite to eat every Friday and Saturday evening from 7 – 9:30. Dr. Phil and Jan, Julia Vellie, Lil Penny, and Kyle Nickerson all bring a great variety of talent for your enjoyment. Located on Plymouth Street in Meredith, behind Bootlegger’s, at the light.

Give the G if t of F itness

50 days r fo for $50 ts Studen

Gift Certificates Available

6 Month Special $299 (Offer Expires 12/31/2011)

WE OFFER: Zumba—Spin—Yoga—Body Sculpting—Tabata TRX—Boot Camp—Step—Cardio Boxing and More Childcare, Personal Training, Ballroom Dancing And Tanning For An Additional Fee.

169 Daniel Webster Highway Meredith, NH • 603-279-0411 We also have a Moultonboro location. Call for more info.

CJ Avery’s

Water Street Cafe

C.J. Avery’s has proudly been serving dinner in the Lakes Region for 28 years. We specialize in serving the freshest quality foods including slowly Roasted Prime Rib, Steaks, fresh Swordfish, Haddock, Scallops and a variety of Pasta and Chicken dishes. Nightly specials are created by Chef Brendan Connelly and his staff. We offer a large selection of Appetizers, Sandwiches and Lighter Fare Selections. Catch your favorite Team in our lounge with six Big Screen TVs and the Soundog individual sound system. Dinner is served Tuesday through Thursday at 5:00, Friday & Saturday at 4:30 and Sunday at 4:00. We are booking Christmas Parties and accepting reservations for New Year’s Eve. Call 5240823 for more details.

Join us at the Water Street Cafe during the holidays. Enjoy our pleasant warm inviting atmosphere, with delicious meals cooked the way you like. Sample some of our delicious homemade savory holiday pies like our Pork or Salmon Pie, or the traditional apple, pumpkin, chocolate cream & coconut cream pie. Make your holidays easy and pick up gift certificates for friends and co workers. Book your holiday party or we can cater to your home or office. Water Street Cafe......”off the beaten path, but DEFINITELY worth finding.”

The Thrifty Yankee The Thrifty Yankee is a small, eclectic store in Meredith with a huge selection of collectibles, antiques, jewelry, small furniture and over 200 handbags to choose from. New items are arriving everyday so whenever you come into the store it is always a different experience. They feature new and used fishing, camping and hunting gear for your favorite outdoor enthusiast. The owner’s motto is “No reasonable offer will be refused” and they will also buy your gold, silver and coins to help you finance the rest of your holiday shopping! Open until 6:00 pm Fridays through Christmas and Wednesday through Sunday 10 am - 4 pm. Located on Rte. 25, 1/2 mile east of the lights in Meredith across from Interlakes High School.

Gilford Mobil Mart We have been in business for 22 years and are family owned and operated. We offer our customers a quality car wash with the lowest prices. Our convenience store has a full range of items that include cold beer and wine. We are a well lit store with clean pumps and restrooms. We always make sure the customer receives friendly and courteous service. Our site also has Dunkin’ Donuts. We are open 6 am to midnight 365 days a year. Route 11, Gilford, NH (across from Lowe’s), 524-8014. Closed Mondays

ICE 1/2 PR * DINNER

WOODBURNER’S DINNER SPECIAL Bottomless Cup of Soup with Lunch! Bring in a piece of fire wood, or this coupon and get the second dinner entrée 1/2 Price!* 8 Plymouth Street, Meredith, NH 279-4631 • www.mamesrestaurant.com

* Not valid with other promotions, $11 entree specials, or on holidays. Expires 12/30/11. Maximum party of six. One coupon or piece of wood per 2 guests. LDS

Easy Listening…Live Music, Every Friday & Saturday.

Join Us for Our

Holiday Open House Saturday, December 10th 10am-5pm

10% OFF ALL GIFT ITEMS! Enjoy Refreshments and enter to win in our Raffle!

Unique Gift Ideas Fresh and Silk Arrangements NH Grown Trees • Centerpieces Fresh Wreaths • Holiday Decor Hostess Gifts Stop in and visit, you are sure to find something for everyone!!

253-7111• dionsplantplace.com 63 Whittier Hwy Moultonboro


Page 18 — THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Wednesday, December 7, 2011

Awakenings Espresso Cafe

ABE’S AWESOME ARMAMENTS

Awakenings Espresso Cafe in Downtown Laconia has been happily serving people for eight years. We have all your holiday needs! Treat yourself to one of your favorite seasonal flavored beverages, meet friends for lunch, or even get some of your holiday shopping done! We carry gift cards, a variety of gift items including Fair Trade and Organic coffee and tea. We are happy to provide you with pre-made or custom gift baskets made to order. Order your pies, cakes, cookies, or other baked goods for your celebration, with plenty of sugarfree and gluten-free options! And, just in time, our handmade chocolates are back in stock! You’ll be sure to find something for everyone. Let us make your holidays a little sweeter! Stop by today or call: (603) 5241201.

PLUS THE UNIQUE TO THE UNSUAL

Happy Jack’s Cigar Pipe & Tobacco Shop With more than 60 years in the cigar, pipe & tobacco business, we are dedicated to Cigar, Pipe & Tobacco enthusiasts in central New Hampshire. We have more than 100 premium handmade cigar brands with more than 425 sizes to choose from. Save 10% when you buy cigars by the box. We also have more than 250 fine pipes, and 150 pipe tobacco blends available, we can find the blend that’s right for you. Happy Jack’s also does expert pipe repairs. 71 Church Street, Laconia, N.H. 528-4092.

Tilton Inn and Onions Pub & Restaurant

Tilton Inn and Onions Pub and Restaurant under new ownership for the past year and a half is a full service restaurant serving lunch and dinner daily from 12 noon till 9pm. All meals are made fresh and to order with the best ingredients available. We pride ourselves in our quality and versatility. Come and enjoy a family gathering in the pub by the fire or in the dining room where you will not be rushed and you can relax while enjoying a glass of wine or cold beer from our selection of drafts. Open throughout the holidays except Christmas day and now taking reservations for New Year’s Eve where we have stay and dine packages, so you do not have to drive. Give us a call at 603-286-7774 and like us on Facebook, to be up with all the latest happenings “Tilton Inn and Onions Pub and Restaurant”

KNIVES • SWORDS • FIREARMS BOUGHT • SOLD • TRADED 583 NH RT 104

Rt 93 North to Exit 23, East onRoute 104, 1.5 miles on right

New Hampton, NH 744-3786 Gift s icate E-mail: abesaa@metrocast.net Certifilable Ava www.abesaa.com Over 25 Years In Business

Working Class Music & Minerals Holiday Guitar Packages Starting at $99 • Amps • Accessories • Service Custom & Pre-Set Jewelry at Holiday Prices 73 Main St., Meredith, NH (across from P.O.) 677-7082 www.workingclassmusic.com www.customblackopals.com

edrestau www.thewoodsh

rant.com

Make a R eservation NOW for your Holiday Party (private rooms available)

128 Lee Road, Moultonborough, NH 603-476-2311 Hours: Tue - Sun 5 pm - 8:30 pm Fri and Sat 5 pm - 9:30 pm

Open Daily from 12 Noon till 9pm Serving Lunch & Dinner

PRIME RIB SPECIAL Friday and Saturday Nights from 5pm .... First Come, First Served. Dinner Reservations 286-7774 255 Main Street, Tilton, NH 03276

20% OFF Gift Certificates In December Available by Phone

HURRY! Book Your Christmas Party! Now Taking Reservations! New Year’s Eve

528-3244 ~ 88 Ladd Hill, Belmont ~ Serving Lunch & Dinner Daily MERRIMACK VALLEY Flu Shot Clinics Still Available

OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH

Nancy Lake, APRN 614 Laconia Road, Route 3, Unit 2 • Tilton, NH Ph: (603)717-7020 • Fax: (603)717-7011

Occupational Health Services Physicals & Evaluations • Worker’s Comp. Injuries Immunizations • DOT Physicals • Drug Testing • Sports Physicals

99 year-old man to receive Boston Post Cane

MOULTONBOROUGH — The Moultonborough Historical Society will end the year on a festive note on Monday evening, December 12, when Moultonborough Academy music students, accompanied by Music Director Harmony Markey, will present a Holiday Music Fest. In the tradition of the Boston Post Cane, the Historical Society presents the “Moultonborough Post Cane” to the town’s oldest resident, and on Monday evening, prior to the holiday music program, the cane will be presented to Moultonborough resident John Learned, who is 99 years young. The program will be at the Moultonborough Public Library meting room at 7 p.m., and will include the society’s annual meeting and election of officers. Those attending are asked to bring a donation of nonperishable food, which will be passed along to the local food pantries.

25tth annual MIX 94.1FM Cash-N-Cans broadcast schedule set

FRANKLIN — Mix 94.1fm’s 25th annual CashN-Cans Money and Food Drive for the Holidays’ broadcast schedule is set for Cash-N-Cans Week, December 12-16. Mix 94.1fm’s Fred Caruso, who has been at the microphone for every Cash-N-Cans broadcast since the program’s inception in 1987, will broadcast live from 18 different central New Hampshire locations, accepting monetary and food donations which will benefit eight local non-profit organizations this holiday season. Beneficiaries include the Twin Rivers Interfaith Food Pantry; Franklin Police Toys for Tots; Tilton/Northfield/Sanbornton Christmas Fund; Bread & Roses Soup Kitchen; The Santa Fund of the Greater Lakes Region; CAP’s Cupboard at the Community Action Program; Belmont Police Explorers Santa’s Little Helpers and the food pantry at St. Joseph’s Church in Belmont. People can make donations in person at the following locations and times: Monday, December 12 — 5:30-10 a.m., Tiffany’s Beauty Salon, Franklin; 11 a.m.-1 p.m., Tanger Outlet Center, Tilton; 2-5 p.m., Lakes Region Jewelers/Sal’s Pizza, Belknap Mall, Belmont. Tuesday, December 13 — 5:30-10 a.m., McDonalds in Tilton; 11 a.m.-1 p.m., HK Powersports Laconia; 1-3 p.m., The Wine’ing Butcher, Gilford; 3:30-6 p.m., Belknap Subaru, Tilton. Wednesday, December 14 — 5:30-10 a.m., Lachance’s Village Store, Tilton; 11 a.m.-1:30 p.m., Franklin Savings Bank/Kramer & Hall Goldsmiths/ Prescott’s Florist, Laconia; 2-4 p.m., Irwin Motors, Laconia; 5-8 p.m., Spaghetti Dinner to benefit CashN-Cans at the Tilt’n Diner, Exit 20. Thursday, December 15 — 5:30-10 a.m., ParkN-Go Market, Northfield; 11 a.m.-1 p.m., T-Bones, Laconia; 2-5 p.m., Franklin Savings Bank, Upper Central Street, Franklin; 5-7 p.m., Mulligan’s Restaurant, Northfield. Friday, December 16 — 5:30-10 a.m., McDonald’s in Franklin; 11 a.m.-2 p.m., Benson Auto West Franklin; 3-6 p.m., Grevior Furniture, Downtown Franklin. Donations can also be made by mail. Make checks payable to Mix Cash-N-Cans and mail to Mix CashN-Cans, PO Box 941, Franklin, NH 03235.

Holiday Open House at The Studio December 10

LACONIA — The Studio Holiday Open House scheduled for Saturday, December 10 from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. promises to be bigger than ever. The shop will be stocked with goodies especially for the occasion. The Studio is the only shop in New Hampshire’s Lakes Region carrying Flying Wish see next page


THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Wednesday, December 7, 2011 — Page 19

Volunteers help lay WOW Trail bricks

At the Elm Street entrance to the WOW Trail, a Belknap Landscape Company (BLC) jobsite, volunteers assist BLC crews with landscape enhancements. Here employees from both the Tilton and Gilford Lowes Home Improvement Centers set bricks into a patio area, donating labor on their own time. From left to right are: Matt Laduke, Laurie Hutchinson, Melanie Thibault, Bronwyn Jenna, and Mike Giovanditto, along with BLC stonemason Geoff Nixon. Not shown are Brenda Ganong, Diana Ford and Dave Libby. Many of the bricks are engraved, part of an ongoing fundraising effort. Further, the two stores combined their resources to purchase and donate over $2,000 in lumber and materials for a footbridge linking the parking lot to the new granite stairway. (Courtesy photo)

Lakes Region economic development strategy will be discussed December 15 LACONIA — The Lakes Region Comprehensive Economic Development Strategy Committee will be meeting on Thursday, December 15 at 4 p.m. in the downstairs conference room of the Belknap County Economic Development Council (BCEDC), located at One Mill Plaza. The Strategy Committee is responsible for overseeing the development and implementation of the Lakes Region Plan for Sustainable Development, the first CEDS for the Lakes Region. The agenda for this meeting will include a review of past projects in the

CEDS, updates of committee activities, the composition of the CEDS committee, as well as the possibility of creating an economic development district for the Lakes Region. Funding for the CEDS has been provided, in part, from the US Economic Development Administration, the NH Office of Energy and Planning, NH Electric Co-op, and the Lakes Region Planning Commission. For additional information, contact the Lakes Region Planning Commission at 279-8171. All CEDS meetings are open to the public.

Cookbook fundraiser aids hospital scholarship fund, patient services PLYMOUTH — Just in time for gift giving season, Speare Memorial Hospital has released its 2011 Community Cookbook, “New Classics, Old Favorites”, with recipes from medical staff, employees and volunteers at Speare. Cookbooks are $7 each and proceeds go the the SMH Scholarship Fund supporting students pursuing health careers, as well as enhancing patient services. “The seeds of an idea for doing a cookbook were planted last spring as the annual volunteer recognition luncheon was being planned,” explains Speare’s Student and Volunteer Services Coordinator Jennifer Oldenburg. “Our theme for our celebration was volunteers are a key ingredient in the hospital’s suc-

cess. Just as a recipe won’t come out successfully if just one ingredient is missing, the Speare patient care experience depends on everyone at the hospital to meet our patients’ needs. Our 2011 cookbook is symbolic of everyone coming together, united in a common goal. Not to mention the book is full of really good recipes.” Cookbooks can be purchased Monday through Friday between 9 a.m. and 3 p.m. at the front desk in the Hospital’s main lobby. Volunteer Services will also accept phone orders using a valid credit card. To order by phone contact Jen Oldenburg directly at 238-6460. For other questions or inquiries email info@spearehospital. com

from preceding page Paper, which makes a great stocking stuffer, hostess gift idea, Secret Santa gift...or New Year’s ritual. Works of several new artists will be available along with dozens of handcrafted items. For bacon lovers Vermont artist Jesse Lundberg has made a series of bacon paintings and bacon eggs that are available only at The

Studio. Local Etsy seller Lovely Squid is bringing some of her vibrant, comfy and 100% up-cycled Infinity Scarves, and there will also be car organizers by Zooziis. Owner Melissa McCarthy says there will be refreshments and laughter and music as well as people shop local small businesses in downtown Laconia.

S A N T A ‘ S L I S T

The Laconia Rod and Gun 37th Annual Santa Jam 358 So. Main S. 524-9824

Help Santa make wishes come true! December 10th

2pm to Midnight

Auction - Bands - Bake Sale

December 11th

Breakfast with Santa 9am to Noon

Pancake & Sausage Adults $4 KIDS EAT FREE


Page 20 — THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Wednesday, December 7, 2011

OBITUARIES

$1,000 Reward For any information leading to the arrest and conviction of the person or persons that shot up my equipment over Thanksgiving weekend behind the asphalt plant off Route 140 in Northfield. All replies strictly confidential. Kip Cormier 455-5810

Residential/Commercial

Winnipesaukee STEEL

ROOFING

603.581.8238

Free Estimates Fully Insured Quality Work at Affordable Prices!

293-0841 www.patrickspub.com Jct. Rts 11 & 11B Gilford

Holiday Gift Card and Merchandise Sale Buy One Item at Full Price Get a 2nd Item at

20% Off

Elaine E. Karras, 79

LOUDON — Elaine Evangelou Karras, 79, passed away at her home on Wednesday, November 30, 2011. Elaine was born November 3, 1932 in Newport, N.H., the daughter of the late George and Mary (Charas) Karras. Elaine lived most of her life in Concord and Merrimack before moving to Loudon a few years ago. Elaine was employed for many years with the Concord School District and Allen Bradley Corporation. Elaine cherished spending time with her grandchildren which were her greatest joy. She could often be found volunteering at the cooperative market, sharing her latest tip for a healthier lifestyle, riding her bike or driving her beloved Volvo. Elaine’s favorite time was spent relaxing along the

shores of Lake Winnipesaukee. Survivors include her son, James Evangelou of Lexington, Kentucky; a daughter, Leni and her husband Mark Gangi of Gilford, N.H.; three grandchildren, Christina and Philip Gangi, both of Gilford and Derek Evangelou of Londonderry; and a sister, Evelyn Saggiotes of Concord. There will be no calling hours. A Celebration of her Life will be held in the spring 2012. Wilkinson-Beane-Simoneau-Paquette Funeral Home & Cremation Services, 164 Pleasant Street, Laconia, N.H. is assisting the family. For more information and to view an online memorial go to www.wilkinsonbeane.com.

GILFORD — Raul Arizmendi Sr. Passed away from natural causes on December 3, 2011 in Laconia NH Born August 17, 1972 in Brownsville, Texas, a resident of 15 yrs in Belmont, NH, Raul Sr. was self- employed. He previously worked for NH Fiberglass and Sherkanowski Drywall for many years. Raul Sr. enjoyed fishing with his oldest son, Raul Jr. and cooking Mexican food with his youngest son, Domanick. He also enjoyed swimming on hot summer days and the family’s annual camping trip every summer. Raul Sr.’s favorite holiday was Christmas because he loved to give and spend the day with his family. One of his fondest times was bringing his sons to different wrestling events and getting to meet “Jake The Snake”. Raul leaves behind many friends and family members including his lifelong friend and wife, Jennifer Lyn Arizmendi; his daughter, Stephanie Arizmendi; two sons, Raul Arizmendi. Jr. and Domanick Arizmendi; his mother and father, Marylou and Ernesto Torres; his brothers, Ernesto Jr., Nicaso, Enieda,

Vicki, and Glady Torres; his grandson, Elijah Rivera, mother and father in-law, Katrina & Robert Goodwin and motherin-law and father-in-law, Linda & Herman Hafford; sisters- in-law, Lisa Brousseau, Nicole Tusi, Monique Tusi, Teasia Kramer and Jennifer Morrill; brothers-in-law, Matthew and Adam Tusi, Robert Mack, James Kramer, Jordan Johnson, Jeramie Johnson and David Morrill. He will also be missed by many nieces and nephews, and Lots of Life Long Friends. Rudy will be gone but never forgotten. Calling Hours will be held on Thursday, December 8, 2011 from 1 to 2 p.m. at the Wilkinson-Beane-Simoneau-Paquette Funeral Home, 164 Pleasant St., Laconia, NH using the Whipple Avenue entrance. A Time of Remembrance will follow at 2 p.m. also at the Funeral Home. Wilkinson-Beane-Simoneau-Paquette Funeral Home & Cremation Services, 164 Pleasant Street, Laconia, NH, 03246 is assisting the family with arrangements. For more information and to view an online memorial go to www.wilkinsonbeane.com

Raul Arizmendi, Sr., 39

Congressman Guinta nominates students for academies Complete Eye Exams, Phaco-Small Incision Cataract Surgery, Crystalens, Multifocal Lens, Diseases of the Eye, Laser Surgery, Intraocular Lens Implant, Glaucoma, Contact Lenses, LASIK: Refractive Surgery EYE PHYSICIAN & SURGEON

P.K. SHETTY, M.D.

WASHINGTON — New Hampshire First District Congressman Frank Guinta has announced his nominees for appointment to the national military service academies, with studies to begin in the fall of 2012. Guinta’s nomination doesn’t guarantee admission. The nominees will compete for space in the various classes of 2016. Final decisions are made by the service academies. Guinta’s list of nominees to the United States

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Naval Academy at Annapolis include Robert A. Vachon of Laconia High School and Dana K. Goss of Moultonborough Academy. Allen Olmsted of Barnstead, a senior at Prospect Mountain High School, has been nominated for appointment to the United States Air Force Academy at Colorado Springs. Duncan Richards of Moultonborough Academy received the same honor.

1084 Union Avenue, Laconia ~ 524-1601

VFW Post 1670

Dinner Dance Dance to the Country Rock sounds of Fairgame Saturday, December 10th Dinner 7pm-Close Band 8pm-Midnight

$5 - Bring a dish VFW 143 Court St. Laconia

Call for class times and availability.

Robert J. Kozlow, D.D.S, PLLC 14 Plymouth Street | P.O. Box 204 Meredith, NH 03253 (603)279-7138 Office Hours by Appointment Only

New Patients Always Welcome


B.C.

by Dickenson & Clark

Fill in the grid so that every row, every column, and every 3x3 box contains the digits 1 thru 9.

by Mastroianni & Hart

THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Wednesday, December 7, 2011— Page 21

DAILY CROSSWORD TRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES

by Paul Gilligan

by Darby Conley

Get Fuzzy

By Holiday Mathis SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). Someone will check in with you on a subject of great import. Don’t worry. You won’t be expected to come up with all the answers. For now, it’s enough that you are open to hearing what the questions are. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). You feel confident that you don’t have to control a relationship in order for it to move in a direction that will please you. You’ve chosen the right partners and allies so your common interests will drive the action. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). You have something important to impart. You feel that if you touch even one person with your message, it will have been worthwhile. The reality is that you’ll touch many. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). You are someone on whom nothing is lost. You don’t always act on what you see. In fact, you usually don’t feel the need. You’ll log today’s observations and wait for the right moment to act on them. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). Unexpected encounters will get you all charged up. You may run into the one who makes your heart skip a beat or the one who secretly adores you from afar. TODAY’S BIRTHDAY (Dec. 7). You’ll accomplish a physical goal and take actions toward optimum health over the next 10 weeks. In May, you’ll act on something you read or hear and will be wildly successful. Look for opportunities to expand your business, enterprises and/or education in June. The summer will make family memories. Aries and Sagittarius people adore you. Your lucky numbers are: 16, 3, 11, 40 and 19.

TUNDRA

ARIES (March 21-April 19). Maybe you used to give your love so that you could receive love back, but now you give love just because it comes so naturally for you. It’s the easiest thing for you to do. TAURUS (April 20-May 20). You’ll experience a heightened, joyful feeling, and the best part is that it will be effortless to maintain. It will come over you like the sun and warm you through and through. GEMINI (May 21-June 21). Do people choose one another, or are they meant for one another? You’re not sure if you believe in romantic destiny, but in certain moments today, it will seem plausible. CANCER (June 22-July 22). You’ll be ultra-observant today, and exactitude will be your forte. Peruse important documents, financial statements and contracts for errors. You could catch a mistake in time to save the day. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). Wherever possible, you’ll use the resources that you encounter to create opportunities. But you won’t push. Things have to happen naturally for you to be excited about them. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). You’ll tap into an extra jolt of power and will apply it to improving your physical performance, work and/or male relationships. A father figure may have a stronger influence than usual. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). You’ll be motivated by a timeline. Make sure you also know what the rewards are for sticking to each deadline. You’re internally driven, but it also helps to have obvious external accountability and rewards.

by Chad Carpenter

HOROSCOPE

Pooch Café LOLA

Solution and tips at www.sudoku.com

1 6 10 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 22 24 25 26 29 30 31 33

ACROSS Lawn border trimming tool Grand __; bridge coup Upper area in a barn Poem stanza Lima’s nation Finished Gives off, as rays Sowing one’s wild __ “The __ Ranger” Turning motion Unite two wires Fish __; aquarium Ridiculed Spain’s dollar before the euro Flower from Holland “Much __ About Nothing” Follow Trenches around castles

37 39 41 42 44 46 47 49 51 54 55 56 60 61 63 64 65 66 67 68 69

Actress Bonet Our planet Entreaty Short & stocky Tiny map in a larger map Choke Football team’s attempts Recapture __ for Humanity; home-building group Flying insect Gives a speech Mosque towers Metric weight Head covering Cheese-topped tortilla chip Drug addict Miscalculates Theater guide Disarray Fender blemish Glowed DOWN

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 21 23 25 26 27 28 29 32 34 35 36 38

At any time Aspiring singer’s tape Sandy residue Country villa Say again Ghost Slender Mr. Linkletter Clam Sucker Egg-shaped Barrier Cornered Senseless Overly proper Songs for two Buddies Blue-pencil Mediocre Revolves Holy one Seaweed Wood used for boat decks Wise Financial book

reviewers 40 Wading bird 43 Carry 45 __ shot; wound victim’s need 48 Bathed 50 Beat soundly 51 Nonsense 52 Get up 53 Hay bundles

54 In the __ of; among 56 Dawn 57 Resound 58 Now and __; occasionally 59 Painful to the touch 62 Mine car load

Yesterday’s Answer


Page 22 — THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Wednesday, December 7, 2011

––––––– ALMANAC ––––––– Today is Wednesday, Dec. 7, the 341st day of 2011. There are 24 days left in the year. Today’s Highlight in History: On Dec. 7, 1941, the Imperial Japanese navy launched a surprise attack on the U.S. Navy base at Pearl Harbor in Hawaii as part of a plan to preempt any American military response to Japan’s planned conquest of Southeast Asian territories; the raid, which claimed some 2,400 American lives, prompted the United States to declare war against Japan the next day. On this date: In 1787, Delaware became the first state to ratify the U.S. Constitution. In 1796, electors chose John Adams to be the second president of the United States. In 1808, electors chose James Madison to be the fourth president of the United States. In 1836, Martin Van Buren was elected the eighth president of the United States. In 1909, chemist Leo H. Baekeland received a U.S. patent for Bakelite (BAY’kuh-lyt), the first synthetic plastic. In 1911, China abolished the requirement that men wear their hair in a queue, or ponytail. In 1946, fire broke out at the Winecoff (WYN’-kahf) Hotel in Atlanta; the blaze killed 119 people, including hotel founder W. Frank Winecoff. In 1972, America’s last moon mission to date was launched as Apollo 17 blasted off from Cape Canaveral. In 1987, 43 people were killed after a gunman aboard a Pacific Southwest Airlines jetliner in California apparently opened fire on a fellow passenger, the pilots and himself, causing the plane to crash. In 1993, gunman Colin Ferguson opened fire on a Long Island Rail Road commuter train, killing six people and wounding 19. (Ferguson was later sentenced to a minimum of 200 years in prison.) One year ago: Elizabeth Edwards, the estranged wife of former U.S. Sen. John Edwards, died at her home in Chapel Hill, N.C., at 61 after fighting breast cancer. Today’s Birthdays: Actor Eli Wallach is 96. Bluegrass singer Bobby Osborne is 80. Actress Ellen Burstyn is 79. Broadcast journalist Carole Simpson is 71. Baseball Hall of Famer Johnny Bench is 64. Actor-director-producer James Keach is 64. Country singer Gary Morris is 63. Singer-songwriter Tom Waits is 62. Basketball Hall of Famer Larry Bird is 55. Actress Priscilla Barnes is 54. Former “Tonight Show” announcer Edd Hall is 53. Rock musician Tim Butler is 53. Actor Jeffrey Wright is 46. Actor C. Thomas Howell is 45. Producer-director Jason Winer is 39. NFL player Terrell Owens is 38. Pop singer Nicole Appleton is 36. Country singer Sunny Sweeney is 35. Actress Shiri Appleby is 33. Pop-rock singer/celebrity judge Sara Bareilles is 32. Singer Aaron Carter is 24.

WEDNESDAY PRIME TIME 8:00

Dial 2

SCYOKT

8

WMTW The Middle Suburg.

Family

Happy

Revenge “Loyalty” (N)

News

Nightline

9

WMUR The Middle Suburg.

Family

Happy

Revenge “Loyalty” (N)

News

Nightline

6

13

7 News at 10PM on Friends (In Everybody CW56 (N) (In Stereo) Å Stereo) Å Loves Raymond Human Nature Sings Motown With Journey Special Guest Smokey Robinson (In of the UniStereo) Å verse Burn Notice “Pilot” A Burn Notice “Pilot” A WBZ News The Office Seinfeld (In The Office “Sabre” Å Stereo) Å “Goodbye, WSBK former spy helps people former spy helps people in need. Å in need. Å Toby” CSI: Crime Scene News Letterman WGME Survivor: South Pacific Criminal Minds (N)

14

WTBS Fam. Guy

15

WFXT maining finalists perform. (N) (Live)

16

CSPAN Capitol Hill Hearings

10

11

12

America’s Next Top America’s Next Top WLVI Model The contestants Model The judges write a fashion blog. choose the winner. (N) Celtic Woman -- Believe Classic Irish songs and WENH pop anthems. (In Stereo) Å

Fam. Guy

Fam. Guy

Big Bang

The X Factor “Performance” The re-

I Hate My Teenage Daughter

Fox 25 News at 10 (N) Å Fox 25 News at 11 (N)

TMZ (N) (In Stereo) Å

Fam. Guy

Big Bang

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WBIN The Office 30 Rock

Law Order: CI

28

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College Basketball Xavier at Butler. (N) (Live)

SportsCenter (N) Å

29

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College Basketball St. Bonaventure at Illinois.

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30

CSNE Patriots Wednesday

MLB Winter Meetings

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32

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33

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17

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MSNBC The Ed Show (N)

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The Ed Show

Piers Morgan Tonight

Erin Burnett OutFront

Anderson Cooper 360

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Psych (N) Å

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51

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52

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53

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UFC Unleashed

UFC Unleashed (N)

54

Burn Notice Å

BRAVO Top Chef: Texas

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UFC Unleashed Top Chef: Texas

55

AMC Movie: ›› “A Christmas Carol” (1984) George C. Scott.

56

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Ghost Hunters (N)

Ghost Hunters Å

Ghost Hunters Å

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A&E Storage

Storage

Storage

Storage

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Hoggers

59

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60

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61

TLC

Toddlers & Tiaras

Hoggers

Property Brothers

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Toddlers & Tiaras

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Toddlers & Tiaras

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TOON Tom & Jerry: Nutc.

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66

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›› “National Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation”

67

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65

75

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64

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Friends Fam. Guy

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76

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Boardwalk Empire

77

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Movie: ››› “Cedar Rapids” (2011)

Enlighten

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CALENDAR TODAY’S EVENTS Pemigewasset Choral Society concert at St. Charles Borromeo Catholic Church in Meredith. 7:30 p.m. Open to the public. Admission by donation. Christmas Carol Sing hosted by Laconia Recreation Department. Meet at the Community Center on Union Ave. at 7 p.m. Carolers will prceed to the Taylor Home. Free hot cocoa. SCORE Lakes Region workshop on social and mobile marketing. 5 to 8 p.m. in the Busiel Community Room at One Mill Plaza in Laconia (next to City Hall). For more information call 524-0137. $30 registration fee at the door. Program on History of Gunstock Mountain Resort hosted by the Meredith Public Library. 6:30 p.m. Featuring Gilford author Carol Anderson. Brown Bag Luncheon Seminar on Social Media (part 2) hosted by the Plymouth Regional Chamber of Commerce. Noon to 1 p.m. No charge. Call 536-1001 for more information. Public Flu Shot Clinic hosted by the Visiting Nurses of Meredith and Center Harbor. 9 a.m. to noon at the Meredith Bay Colony Club (One Mile Point Drive). Separated/Divorced Persons Support Group meeting. 7 to 8:30 p.m. each Wednesday at St. Joseph Catholic Church in Belmont. Compassion, shared learning and confidentiality. For more information call the rectory at 2678174 or Ginny Timmons at 286-7066. Overeaters Anonymous offers a program of recovery from compulsive eating using the Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions of OA. Wednesday nights at 5:30 p.m. at St Joseph Church in Belmont. Call and leave a message for Elizabeth at 630-9969 for more information. TOPS (Taking Off Pounds Sensibly) group meeting. 5:30 p.m. at the First Congregational Church in Meredith. Free community meal of hot soup and bread at Trinity Episcopal Church on Main Street in downtown Tilton. 4:30 to 5:30 p.m. every Wednesday. For more call Pastor Mark at 286-3120 or e-mail at markk@trinitytilton.org. Free knitting and crochet lessons. Drop in on Wednesdays any time between 10 a.m. and 3 p.m. at Baby Threads workshop at 668 Main Street in Laconia (same building as Village Bakery). 998-4012. Laconia Elders Friendship Club meeting. 1:30 p.m. at the Leavitt Park Clubhouse. People 55 and older meet each Wednesday for fun, entertainment and education. Meetings provide an opportunity for older citizens to to meet for pure social enjoyment and the club helps the community with philanthropic work. Duplicate bridge at the Weirs Beach Community Center. 7:15 p.m. All levels welcome. Snacks. Check out a computer expert at the Gilford Public Library. 9:15 to 11 a.m. First-come, first-served service for library cardholders only. 20 minute max if others are waiting. Write Now writer’s group meeting at the Gilford Public Library. 3:30 to 5:30 p.m. Open to all library cardholders. Writers of all levels invited to join. Fold It! Origami with Anne LaVin at the Gilford Public Library. 3:30 to 4:30 p.m. Teens and tweens in grades five and up and invited for this lesson. Space limited. Sign-up. Preschool Story Time at the Meredith Public Library. 10 to 11 a.m. Meet downstairs in the Function Room.

THURSDAY, DECEMBER 8 “Little Shop of Horrors” presented by the Winni Playhouse Teen Ensemble. 7 p.m. at the Weirs Beach theater. Tickets at 366-7377. Brazilian singer Eliana Marcia at N.H. Jazz Center at Pitman’s Freight Room in Laconia. 8 p.m. $10. BYOB. Annual Rev. Ray Wixson Senior Dinner hosted by the Gilford Rotary Club. 6:15 p.m. at the Gilford Community Church. Free of charge for town residents 62 or older. Reservations recommended. Call 524-6057.

see next page

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.

Ans: Yesterday’s

Charlie Rose (N) Å

7

5

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DECEMBER 7, 2011 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 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

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

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

9:30

Member Favorites

WBZ A family reunion; a new

by David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek

AETBA

9:00

Survivor: South Pacific Criminal Minds Investi- CSI: Crime Scene Ingating an apparent mass vestigation The death of alliance. (N) Å suicide. (N) a ballistics expert. The Middle Suburga- Modern Happy End- Revenge “Loyalty” ings (N) Å Nolan’s loyalty is quesWCVB “A Christ- tory (N) Å Family mas Gift” (N) Å tioned. (N) Å Up All Up All Harry’s Law “Purple Law & Order: Special Night Å Hearts” Harry defends an Victims Unit “Spiraling WCSH Night Å accused baby killer. Down” (N) Å Law & Order: SVU WHDH All Night All Night Harry’s Law (N) Å

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THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

IMGOZ

8:30

WGBH Human Nature Sings Motown

(Answers tomorrow) Jumbles: TWICE REBEL DREDGE FLYING Answer: When Lou Ferrigno found out he’d be playing the Hulk on TV, he thought it was this — INCREDIBLE

“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.


MacDougall, Wetherbee signing books Saturday at Bayswater in Center Harbor

CENTER HARBOR — New Hampshire authors Ruth Doan MacDougall and Fritz Wetherbee will be signing books Saturday at Bayswater Book Company on Saturday, December 10. A Laconia native, MacDougall has lived in Center Sandwich for 35 years, and is the author of more than a dozen novels. She will be signing copies of “A Born Maniac, or Puddles’ Progress,’’ which is her fourth sequel to “The Cheerleader”, which was first published in 1973. The book signing will run from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. and will take place in the book store’s new location in Senter’s Marketplace located between Keepsake Quilting and Heath’s Supermarket. Fritz Wetherbee will be signing his sixth and newest book, “New Hampshire Rocks” from 1-3 p.m. This latest volume is a collection of what publisher George Geers calls “the little nuggets of life” that Fred Minot Wetherbee II presents as a ninth generation Yankee. Written first for WMUR-TV’s New

Hampshire Chronicle television show, the stories are now published in this Wethrbee series. On Sunday, December 18 from 5:30-7 p.m. Bayswater Book Company will present “Kyle Carey & Owen Marshall”. Carey’s songs range from the hills of Appalachia, to the shores of Cape Breton, to the Highlands of Scotland. Her musical journey began while working as a waitress at Caffe Lena, America’s most prestigious folk venue, where she was able to listen, every weekend to the best in folk, and culminated this past year in western Ireland, where she recorded her debut album. She will be joined by musical artist, Owen Marshall. Vogue magazine calls multi instrumentalist Marshall “A guitar/mandolin/banjo player rivaled in character only by the occasional three-pronged carrot”. Suggested cover charge $15. For more information call 253-8858.

GILFORD — The Living Nativity will be presented on Sunday, December 11 at 2 p.m.in the center of Gilford Village. The Three Wise Men will start their journey from in front of the Grange (across from the Village Store) and proceed the short distance to the stable (actually the 1834 Meetinghouse) where they will knock on the door and be invited in, along with the rest of us, to enjoy the pageant This has been a tradition that has been enjoyed by all in the Lakes Region for many years. The Methodist Church

in Gilford, the Gilford Community Church, and the Gilford Historical Society together present the Living Nativity. The program is presented with narration, the singing of carols by all who wish to sing, and with members acting the parts, sometimes even with a live baby. The young and young at heart enjoy petting the oxen and sheep after the pageant After the pageant, all are invited to enjoy hot cider and refreshments. There will be a brief business meeting open to all members of the Gilford Historical Society.

LACONIA — The Laconia Historical and Museum Society, in conjunction with the Laconia Public Library, will present a “Winter Welcome” program at the library on Monday, December 12 at 7 p.m. The program will feature Jane Wilcox Hively, a Celtic harpist and vocalist from North Conway who performs regularly and teaches singing and the Celtic harp. Hively has performed at a number of prestigious venues, come of which include the Queen Mother’s Christmas Party at Buckingham Palace where she

was the guest performer, the Cape Cod Series, the New Hampshire Music Festival, the Mt. Washington Hotel Concert Series, The Old North Church of Boston, the Boston Museum of Science and two New Hampshire gubernatorial inaugurations. Festive adornments will be provided by the Belknap Landscape Company and Appletree Nursery. This presentation is free with donations appreciated. For more information, call 527-1278 or write to lhmslpl@metrocast.net

Living nativity in Gilford on Sunday

Welcome winter with harp and song 12/7

CALENDAR from preceding page

THURSDAY, DEC. 8 Art Walk of six galleries in Meredith Village. 4:30 to 7 p.m. Music, refreshments and a special raffle to benefit the Meredith Emergency Food Pantry. Includes lakes gallery at chi-lin, The Fine Carpet and Asian Antique Gllery, The Hodecker-George Gallery, Vynn-Art (Art Supply Store) and Oglethorpe Fine Arts & Crafts. Free 2-hour Debt Triage workshop hosted by Laconia Area Community Land Trust and Franklin Savings Bank. 6 p.m. at the Laconia Police Department Community Room. To register call Debra Drake at 524-0747. Workshop for new and beginning farmers. 9 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. at the Mouultonborough Library. Hosted by UNH Cooperative Extension. Registration requeted at 447-3834. 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. Chess Club at the Goss Reading Room (188 Elm Street) in Laconia. 2:30 to 4:30 p.m. each Thursday. All ages and skill levels welcome. We will teach. Giggles & Grins playgroup at Family Resource Center in downtown Laconia (635 Main Street). Mystery Book Group meeting at the Meredith Public Library. 10:30 a.m. to noon. “Dart Tort” by Dianne Mott Davidson. Refreshments. Books can be picked up at the main desk. Preschool Story Time at the Meredith Public Library. 1 to 2 p.m. Meet downstairs in the Function Room. Book discussion at the Gilford Public Library. 12:30 to 1:30 p.m. and again from 6:30 to 7:30 p.m. “Hotel On The Corner of the Bitter & Sweet” by Jamie Ford. Refreshments. Books available at the Circulation Desk. Crafters’ Corner at the Gilford Public Library. 6 to 7:30 p.m. Bring young latest needlework design.

THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Wednesday, December 7, 2011 — Page 23

Registration open for Prescott Farm’s ‘WildQuest Holiday Camp’

LACONIA — Prescott Farm’s WildQuest Holiday Camp starts on Tuesday, December 27 and will run for four days from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. The camp is for children ages 6-12, and extended care is available. Camp includes nature activities, animal and plant identification, arts and crafts, quests and handson learning and will enhance children’s ecological awareness and provide fun learning Outdoor activities highlight Prescott Farm’s WildQuest Holiday opportunities in a com- Camp which starts December 27. (Courtesy photo) munity-minded and noncompetitive atmosphere. Most of the Quest Holiday Camp will be held at day is spent outdoors, and all children Prescott Farm Environmental Edumust be dressed appropriately for the cation Center, 928 White Oaks Road, weather and time of year. Extended Laconia, NH. care provides supervised playtime For more information or to register before and after regular camp hours. for WildQuest Holiday Camp, visit People can register by the day or for www.prescottconservancy.org, call the whole 4-day week. Kimberly Drouin at 366-5695 or send Spaces are limited, so make sure an e-mail to info@prescottconserto reserve a by December 20. Wildvancy.org. • Buyer Representation • Seller Representation • Residential Listings • Waterfront Properties • First Time Home Buyers • Short Sale Properties • Foreclosure Properties • Boat Slips

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Page 24 — THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Wednesday, December 7, 2011

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Members of the Greater Plymouth and Greater Franklin- Bristol Medical Reserve Corps were honored for donating their time in support of the NH School Flu Vaccine Initiative 2011. (Courtesy photo)

Local medical reserve corps volunteers honored for service

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PLYMOUTH — The Greater Plymouth and Greater-Franklin Bristol Medical Reserve Corps (MRC) hosted an appreciation dinner on November 30 at the Whole Village Resource Center in Plymouth to honor the hard work and dedication of their volunteers in lending support to the School Based Clinic Initiative. Unit Directors James Richardson and Donna Quinn were joined by state and regional officials to express their thanks: Marcella Bobinsky, Section Chief NH Immunization Bureau; Curtis Metzger, NH State MRC Coordinator; Jennifer Frenette, New England Region 1 MRC Coordinator; Richard Silverberg, Managing Director of CCNTR; and Sharon Beaty, CEO Mid-State Health Center. School based clinics were developed to increase vaccination rates among school-age children for seasonal flu vaccine. This initiative offers students an opportunity to receive a free flu vaccine during the school day, therefore parents are not missing work to take their children to the physician’s office for this service. Says Richardson, “This was the first time the regional MRC units were asked to participate in the school based clinic initiative. Doing so enabled our volunteers to work closely with the schools and our local visiting nurses association, and increase their visibility within the community. The MRC volunteers were a key component in

allowing for over 800 students to receive a free flu vaccine. Collectively the two units provided in excess of 175 volunteers hours to support this effort. According to the web-site www.volunteeringinamerica.gov the hours volunteered are equivalent to $3750.25. Medical Reserve Corp units, which is a federal program under the Office of the Surgeon General, are community-based, and function as a way to locally organize and utilize volunteers’ time and expertise to prepare for and respond to emergencies, as well as promote healthy living throughout the year. MRC volunteers supplement existing emergency and public health resources. MRC volunteers include medical and public health professionals such as physicians, nurses, pharmacists, dentists, veterinarians, and epidemiologists. Many community members—interpreters, chaplains, office workers, legal advisors, and others—also fill key support positions. As Quinn notes, these units were initiated to support and partner with the regional Public Health Networks that exist throughout the state to asses, develop and respond to public health needs and coordinate emergency preparedness at the local level . As the Greater Plymouth and Greater Franklin-Bristol Public Health Networks are the least populated, the unit directors signed a memorandum of agreement to share resources. As a result the units have collaborated on many emergency and non-emergency requests for service. For more information about the Greater Plymouth and Greater Franklin-Bristol Medical Reserve Corps, or how to volunteer, contact Donna Quinn at 536-4000 X 1390 or visit online at www.gfbcertmrc.com.

Fritz Wetherbee at Innisfree Bookshop Sat.

Griffin - Meredith, NH

MEREDITH — Fritz Wetherbee will be at Innisfree Bookshop from 2-4 p.m. on Sunday, December 11 to tell stories, answer questions, sign books, and talk about his life growing up in New Hampshire. His seventh book, New Hampshire Rocks, a collection of stories he has written for WMUR-TV’s New Hampshire Chronicle, has just been released. “With this latest book I will have published 850 stories about New Hampshire,” says Wetherbee. “Two more books and I’ll have over a thousand stories.” Wetherbee calls himself a “proud provincial”, who has spent almost all his life in the Granite State, Born in 1936, he grew up in Milford the oldest of five children. Over the years he has worked at everything from tree climbing to being the creative director in an ad agency. For ten years he was the host of New Hampshire Crossroads on New Hampshire Public Television. For the past eight years he has written and presented a different nightly story on New Hampshire Chronicle. He lives with his “better half”’, Laura, in a 216-yearold home in Acworth. On his library shelves are dozens of state books plus five Emmys and a bobble-head doll which he was honored with for throwing out the first pitch at a Fisher Cats Game a couple years back.


THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Wednesday, December 7, 2011— Page 25

ANNIE’S MAILBOX

Dear Annie: I am 57 years old and divorced. I am now engaged to a woman who is 29 years my junior. “Carla” is everything I ever wanted. I never intended to fall in love with her, but I needed a friend, and there she was. She feels the same way. Here is the problem: Even though we are engaged, Carla’s parents do not know I exist. For the past four years, she’s been trying to figure out a way to tell them about us. Her father is a minister. Both parents are of the opinion that an older man and a younger woman do not make a biblically proper couple. I have read my Bible from front to back, and nowhere does it say this. Carla says we should elope and then she will find the right time and the right words to tell her parents. But for four years, I’ve been hearing that we will “elope this year,” and it has yet to happen. What do I do when I love a woman so much, but she doesn’t have the inner strength to disappoint her parents? -- Hurting Deeply Dear Hurting: Carla is too young for you -- not because of the age difference, but because she is immature. As daunting as it is to confront disapproving parents, someone who is truly committed to the relationship would have been willing to stand up for her choice of mate after four years and an engagement. Sorry to say, we do not have a great deal of confidence in your future together. Dear Annie: I could have written that letter from “Sick of It,” who doesn’t want her husband to approach her for sex. Combine post-menopausal me with my husband’s health problems and medications, and you could have a dreary sex life, except for one thing: I love my husband so much that even though sex is not as magical as it used to be, I cherish every moment of closeness we have together. Even though I don’t always feel like it, I jump at the

chance to be intimate. Love is about the other person, not yourself. Sex should not be an obligation, but a fulfillment of the promise made by a husband and a wife. -- Bring It On Dear Bring: We wish more women would emulate your attitude, although we know it can be difficult. And too many women wrote to insist that having sex when you aren’t in the mood is akin to rape. It is NOT. Read on for more: From California: I was outraged by your answer to “Sick of It.” I have a husband 12 years my senior with heart and impotency problems. That did not stop him from wanting to play with all the bells and whistles, push all the buttons and then say, “Oops, that’s all.” Meanwhile, I was hot and bothered with no relief. Finally, I made him understand that all that groping was not welcome. True intimacy at our age comes from love and tenderness. Now we cuddle. He is sad that sex has disappeared, but love is full of compromises. Florida: A lot of women think the lack of sex in their marriage is perfectly fine. They decide they don’t need it anymore, so their husbands don’t need it, either. I wonder how many of those women would like to have their husbands visiting prostitutes, watching porn or having affairs. Intimacy is part of marriage, and if they aren’t willing to participate, they shouldn’t get upset when the husband finds someone else. Kentucky: I don’t get why a man insists on continuing to attempt something his body is clearly no longer up to. He gets embarrassed and frustrated. I get groped and bored. I want him to stop pestering me. Tennessee: Historically, women were not destined to live into old age. We would have died in childbirth at some point, and our husbands would have found younger wives.

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.

For Rent Belmont- 2 bedroom, 1 bath duplex. New carpet/paint. Washer/Dryer hookups, porch, deck. Private $850/Month. 617-909-9892 CENTER Harbor House- One bedroom, year-round, propane central heat, tenant pays all utilities, tenant does all yard maintenance. No pets/Smoking. credit report required, verified income, references. $400/Month, security. Call between 5PM-8PM 603-253-6924. GILFORD Small year-round wa terview cottage. Beautifully furnished, perfect for one or two people. 2 minute walk to marina, and possible boat slip available. 603-293-8590 or 603-630-1459. GILFORD, 2-Bedroom, 2-Bath, Balconies, no smoking/pets, $950/month plus utilities, Security deposit and references, 603-455-6662 GILFORD. 3 bedroom home for Lease/ option to buy, Owner financing available. Big yard, oversized garage. 603-393-5756. GILMANTON ranch, 2/3 Bedroom with garage and lake and beach access. $1,250 a month. 630-9929 LACONIA 1 Bedroom- Washer/ dryer hookup, storage, no pets. Security Deposit & references. $600/month + utilities. 520-4353

$1-A-DAY CLASSIFIEDS • CALL 527-9299

LACONIA 1-Bedroom Apartment. Includes Heat. Hot Water, Electric. Nice location., No pets/ No smoking. $650/month 630-4198

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.

2 bedroom 1 1/2 bath apartment with deck & nice view of Paugus Bay. No pets. Lowered rent for qualified tennant with good credit.

Animals

Autos

Autos

Child Care

AKC Registered West Highlands: 7 weeks, white, m/f, intelligent, affectionate, paper trained, $850. 524-4294.

1995 Ford F-350 Dump- 4X4, plow, good condition. $5,000. 455-6225 Laconia

1999 Mercury Grand Marquis-Like new condition. White with blue cloth interior. 87,000 original miles. Remote start & 6-CD player. New tires & battery. Best used car you will find. Must be seen. Books for $4,600. Negotiable. Laconia. Cell 387-7293

MEREDITH grandmother offering childcare in my child-friendly home. Will transport to and from school. 393-9079

RED Bone Coon Hound PuppiesPurebred, ready for December 17th. Reserve yours now. $200. 528-5057

ROTTWEILER Pups, AKC Champion Pedigree, tails, shots done, parents on premises, $500-600. 340-6219

Siberian Huskies- 4-6 month old pups. Price reduced. Shots. 856-7423 kryskasibes@gmail.com

Announcement

1996 Dodge Dakota ext cab 4x4, looks and runs good, $1000/or best reasonable offer. 527-8620. 1996 GMC Jimmy- Well maintained. $1,100 or best offer 387-4511

2002 Pontiac Grand Am SE: V6, auto, 119k, new tires, like new, inspected, $3,450. 991-9969.

1996 GMC Sonoma 4x2 Pickup Long Bed: V6, auto, AC, 139k, runs great, $1,850. 991-9969.

BUYING junk cars and trucks ME & NH. Call for price. Martin Towing. (603)305-4504.

1997 Lincoln Mark 8: 112k, V8, auto, leather, buckets, loaded, very sporty, inspected, $2,950. 991-9969.

CASH paid for unwanted or junk cars and trucks. Same day service possible. 603-231-2859.

1998 Saturn SL2: 4-door, automatic, AC, CD, all power, inspected, runs excellent, $1,850. 991-9969. 1999 Chevy Prizm. 68,000 miles. California car. Excellent condition. No rust. $3000. (603)733-6801. 1999 Mazda 626 LX: 4-door, 4-cylinder, 5-speed, moonroof, all power, new tires, inspected, $2,950. 991-9969. 2000 Ford Taurus SES: 4-door, leather, buckets, moonroof, rear spoiler, 24-valve, loaded, inspected, $2,750. 991-9969.

EXHAUST system taken off a 2011 Ford F-15O. OEM sticker still on it. Like new, $195. 603-930-5222 PRICE Reduced! 2002 Audi A-4 Quantra. Excellent condition. $5,500. 569-9615 TOP DOLLAR PAID for junk cars & trucks. Available 7-days a week. P3 s Towing. 630-3606

For Rent

Laconia

For Rent Laconia 3 bedroom 2 bath apartment with deck & single car garage. Quiet area with big yard near hospital. No pets. $1,050/Month, plus utilities

630-2883 LACONIA FIRST FLOOR Large 3Bedroom 2-bath apartment. Storage, deck, parking, washer/dryer hookup, No pets/No smokers, security deposit and references required. $900/Month plus utilities. 875-2292

LACONIA House for Rent Spacious 3 bedroom 1 1/2 bath with washer/dryer. Completely rebuilt, new everything. Near park & beach. Available mid-December, rent starts Jan. 1st.

$1,300/Month + Utilities

(603) 630-2882 LACONIA One bedroom, 2nd floor apartment. Private setting with front porch. Large living room with eat-in kitchen. $750/Month, includes heat. No smoking, security deposit required. 455-5253 LACONIA Province St. 4 bedroom apartment. Private parking, laundry, bright & clean, no pets. $1,000/Month + Utilities. 508-423-0479. LACONIA, Clean, 1 Bedroom Apartment, First Floor, Small Porch, Walking Distance to Library, No Smoking, $695/Month, Includes heat. 524-2507 LACONIA- 3 bedroom house. $1,000/Month + utilities. Pets considered, references & deposit. 524-9665

630-2883

Laconia- Furnished 1 bedroom. Heat, electric, cable included. $175/Week. 556-9522

LACONIA 2 Bedroom. $800/Month plus utilities, no pets. Security Deposit Required. 520-4353

LACONIA- Large Rooms for rent. Private bath, heat/hot water, electric, cable, parking included. Free WiFi Internet. $145/week, 603-781-6294

New Franklin Apartments, LLC

Alton Housemate- Private suite w/use of common rooms in quiet country setting. No drinking/No smoking. $450/Month includes utilities. Available 12/15 or 1/1/12. 875-6875

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, 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 373 Court Street, Laconia.

Apartments Available Now For more information, please contact 603-286-4111 Or TTY 1-800-735-2964

At Weirs Beach- Newly remodeled first floor Two 2-Bedrooms Nice, washer/dryer hook-ups. $900/Month, Heat/hot water included, $500/security Call 279-3141. CLEAN UPDATED studio and one bedroom in Tilton. Heat/Hot Water included. $620-640/Month. 603-393-9693 or 916-214-7733

Give Yourself a True Gift with Affordable Housing APARTMENTS AVAILABLE NOW! at PRINCE HAVEN APARTMENTS All utilities included Plymouth, N.H. (Prince Haven has an elderly preference) If you are 62, disabled or handicapped, (regardless of age), and meet annual income guidelines, you may qualify for our one-bedroom apts.

Call today to see if you qualify. 603-224-9221 TDD # 1-800-545-1833 Ext. 118

or Download an application at www.hodgescompanies.com Housing@hodgescompanies.com 40% of our vacancies will be rented to applicants with Extremely Low Income. Rent is based on your household size and income. An Equal Opportunity Housing Agent


Page 26 — THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Wednesday, December 7, 2011

For Rent

For Rent

For Rent

For Rent-Commercial

For Sale

LACONIA- VERY nice 1-bedroom apartment in clean, quiet, secure downtown building. Recently renovated. $175/Week. includes, heat, hot water & electric. 524-3892 or 630-4771

LACONIA: Large 3-bedroom apartment. First floor, parking. $850/mo + utilities, security/backgound check required. 603-781-6294.

Meredith- 2 bedroom 1st floor, nice apartment. Walk to docks/village. Washer/dryer hookups, Non-smoking, unitlites not included. $750. 279-7887 or 781-862-0123

LACONIA Prime Union Ave Loca tion. 2 room office suite, ground floor. All utilities. included, except phone. Rent Negotiable. 603-524-0753

Nordic Track A2250- Paid $900 Asking $150/best offer. Professional duty, can fold up. Moving. 524-3613

Laconia-2 bedroom & 3bedroom Townhouses for rent. $825/$875. Washer/Dryer hookups. Private yard, full basement, dishwasher & A/C in convenient Laconia location. Heat & hot water included. Call us today at 603-524-4363. EHO, FHO. LACONIA- STUNNING 2 bedroom 2nd floor. Totally redone: Hardwood floors, tin ceilings, new kitchen, dining room, living room, sun room, storage. Walk to downtown. $900/Month, includes heat, hot water & parking. 494-4346. LACONIA: 3 Bedroom Apartment, $1,050/month, heat & hot water included. Parking provided. Washer/Dryer hookup available for stack unit. Section 8 approved. No dogs. References & security required. 603-387-2600. LACONIA: 1-bedroom for rent, heat/HW/electric included, no smoking, no pets, security deposit required. $750/month. 528-1685. LACONIA: Gail Avenue, 3rd floor, 1BR heat and h/w included, no pets, no smoking. $725. 524-5837. LACONIA: Gilbert Apartments. Call for available apartments. 524-4428 LACONIA: HUGE first floor, 8 room apartment. 4 bedroom, Heat/Hot Water included. Updated, New Hardwood floors, new bathroom, Washer/Dryer hookups, $1,250/Month. 566-6815

LACONIA: Newer 3 bedroom 1.5 bath duplex on Valley St. Effecient natural gas heat. No pets. Sec dep and reference. $1,000 month plus utilities. Available 12/1. Call Mark 387-7349. LACONIA: NICE 3 bedroom apartment. Clean, quiet, newly renovated, near park, short walk to town and schools. $1,000/month. Heat & hot water, snow removal included. Washer & Dryer hookups, pets welcome. Call 524-0703. LAKEPORT- Freshly painted, big 5-room, 2-bedroom apartment with lake view. Includes washer/dryer, hardwood floors, cabinet kitchen, 2 car parking, plowing and landscaping. Huge, bright and sunny master bedroom overlooking lake. $185/Week + 4-week security deposit. No utilities, no dogs, no smoking. Proper I.D., credit check and background check required. Showings on Friday only. Call Rob, 617-529-1838 MEREDITH 1-bedroom apartment. Main St., convenient to all. Private entrance and parking. $700/Month plus utilities. No Smoking/No pets. 279-6108 between 6 and 9 pm. MEREDITH One bedroom apartment on second floor. 16X22 ft. deck, Open concept, cathedral ceiling, very elegant and rustic. Plowing, parking, dumpster & utilities included, $850/month. 455-5660 MEREDITH Room for Rent- Quiet, beautiful home. Laundry, kitchen, cable TV, porch. $125/Week. 603-689-8683

MOULTONBOROUGH- Spacious 1 Bedroom $775/month; Includes heat, hot water, electricity, on-site laundry. Security & references required, no pets. 393-8245 NEW HAMPTON: 2-bedroom apartment. Close to Rt. 93. Heat & Hot water included. $750/mo. 279-5577. NORTHFIELD: 1 room efficiency cottage with kitchenette & private bath, plus additional storage space & access to coin-op laundry. $140/week including heat, electric & hot water. 524-1234. NORTHFIELD: 2 bedroom, 2nd floor, coin-op laundry & storage in basement, $215/week including heat, electric & hot water, 524-1234, www.whitemtrentals.com. NORTHFIELD: 2 bedroom trailer in small park with coin-op laundry on site, $225/week including heat, electric & hot water, 524-1234, www.whitemtrentals.com. LACONIA- ONE bedroom apt. 2nd floor, South Main St. $650/month includes heat and hot water. Call 267-5228 Evenings are better. Leave name and phone number if no answer.

PREFERRED RENTALS Long term rental available in the towns of Moultonboro from $650/ mo, Meredith from $1000/mo, Laconia from $1000/mo, Gilford from $1150/mo, West Alton from $1600/mo. Winter rentals also available. Please visit our website at www.preferredrentals.com for a current list of inventory or call 603-253-7811.

WAREHOUSE/SPACE Up to 4,000 sq. ft. available with on-site office on busy Rte. 3 in Tilton. Seasonal or long term. Relocate your business or rent a spot for your toys. 603-387-6827

For Sale 1996 3' Annalee Reindeer $250, Hand quilting frame queen size $175, 40” Drafting/Art Table $75, Humidifier $50, Company C Rug Ginkgo Patten 6’ X9 ’ Reg. $1,160/Sell $300. Double sided print rack display stand $65, Mitsubishi TV 36” & 9 ” TV Free. 528-1444

TILTON: 1 bedroom, 1st floor, $195/week including heat, electric & hot water. 524-1234. UNFURNISHED 3+bedroom, 2.5 bath condo. Central A/C, Master on 1st floor. Washer/dryer hookup. Water view. $1,200/month plus utilities. Sharon 603-420-8254. WAREHOUSE/SPACE Up to 4,000 sq. ft. available with on-site office on busy Rte. 3 in Tilton. Seasonal or long term. Relocate your business or rent a spot for your toys. 603-387-6827 WINNISQUAM: Small efficiency and a cottage including heat, hot water & lights. $150-$175/week. $400 deposit. No pets. 387-3864.

WINTER RENTAL CEDAR LODGE Weirs Beach, Open Year Round ... Studios, 1-bedroom or 2-bedroom condos starting at $575 per month. Please call Wendy at 366-4316.

For Rent-Commercial 1700 sq. ft space, residential/commerical storage, Belmont. Perfect for boat, auto or construction.

TENTERS or Tailgaters Christmas- Stainless campers kitchen. Lantern, pans, cook tools & stove. $250 253-4850 Used Andersen Windows. Hot water heater & other miscellaneous items. Cheap! Call Dave 630-3986

BUYING

BAKERS RACK, entertainment center, living room chairs, coffee tables, fabric rocking chair, kitchen furniture, love seat & more! 279-0641

Call 279-3087 or Stop In at

Brand New Harvey Majesty 3-Lite Casement Window with Double Low-E glass and argon gas. All pine inside-Aluminum clad outside. Size 88 1/2” wide X 54 1/4” High with nailing fin. Retails for $2,100, asking $850. Must sell. Call 224-9213 CHRISTMAS TREES & wreaths. Now open! Union Avenue across from Belknap Tire. Jim Waldron 279-8066 GREEN FIREWOOD: CUT not split $140, cut & split $185/cord. Seasoned firewood $250. 1/2 cords available. Also, logging, landclearing & tree work (All phases). 393-8416

LIFT Chair- paid $800. Only used for 3 months. Still under warranty. Asking $500. 527-0459

TAMWORTH- raised ranch 3 bedroom, 2 bath, $1200 plus security, references required. Tenant pays heat and utilities. One mile Village, great School K-8. Owner (603)323-7065.

Polar Express tickets available for North Conway, NH Contact lcampbell@purityspring.com for details.

Gold, (scrap rings, jewelry, etc.) Silver, (coins, flatware, etc. )

Ice Fishing Equipment- sled can be hauled by hand or dragged by snow machine or 4-wheeler. W/Extras, $50. Call 524-6755 Leave message.

MEREDITH: Room for Rent,. $125/Week, utilities included. Smoking OK. Contact 707-9794

PLAYBOY magazines approximately 75; from 70s and 80s. Make an offer. 524-1583.

AMAZING! Beautiful pillowtop matress sets, twin $169, full or queen $249, king $399. See AD under “Furniture”.

Baldwin Piano with humidifier unit & bench. $850. Easily accessible. 253-4850

LOOKING to start your own salon? Beautiful furniture, everything you need. 15,000 or BRO. Call Jared, 520-6425.

Help Wanted

Antiques & Unusual Items Waukewan Antiques 55 Main St. Meredith

WOOD-BLIND: 2” slats, natural stain, brand new, 48 1/8” wide x 38” long, $30. 293-7682.

Furniture AMAZING! Beautiful Queen or Full-size mattress set. Luxury Firm European Pillow-top style. Fabulous back & hip support. Factory sealed - new 10-Yr. warranty. Cost $1095, sell $249. Can deliver 603-305-9763.

Free 26" Sanyo TV: Has a horizontal line through the center. If you know how to fix it, you can have it. You pick it up. 455-3686. T&B Appliance Removal. Appliances & AC’s removed free of charge if outside. Please call (603)986-5506.

Help Wanted BEYOND the Fringe Salon is looking for 1-2 booth renters with strong client base. 20+ hours/week. Please call 528-7735, leave message.

SHOOTERS Tavern is hiring an experienced line cook for full time employment. Apply in person. 190 D.W. Highway, Belmont. No phone calls please.

WINTER/ FALL RUSH

Permanent and holiday season help. Start immediately. Due to fall/ holiday season our company is experiencing a massive product demand opening various positions in all departments and must be filled this week. No experience required. Must be at least 18. Positions available: Customer Service/ set up and display/ appointment setting/ sales and marketing. Call today for immediate interview (603)822-0219. Or text anytime (603)930-8450.

Lost LOST Female small Tabby Cat named Rosie. Last seen 11/30 at 11am, Near Exit 20 in Tilton. $100 Reward. 603-738-4431

Motorcycles Buy • Sell • Trade www.motoworks.biz

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

Real Estate HOUSE FOR SALE-White Oaks Rd., Laconia. Very well maintained, 3-bedroom. 1 car garage, potential in-home business options. Reduced, $145,000/OBO. By Appointment only, 524-3613


THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Wednesday, December 7, 2011 — Page 27

Two NH wineries receive silver medals in national wine competition SANBORNTON — Hermit Woods Winery’s “Three Honey Wine” and Candia Vineyards, “Ice Storm” both came away with silver medal’s at the American Wine Society’s (AWS) Commercial Wine Competition held on November 8-10 in Rochester, NY. In addition, Candia Vineyards won a bronze medal for their “Black Ice”. Considering thousands of wines were submitted from all over the United States, this is no small achievement for two small New Hampshire winer-

Roommate Wanted

ies. Ken Hardcastle, the wine maker at Hermit Woods was particularly please as this was the first and only wine he has ever submitted for competition and his firstmedal. Hardcastle had this to say: “I am honored to have our wine represented among some of the great wines from all over the country and to be awarded a medal in our first competition.” Although Bob Dabrowski, the wine maker from Candia Vineyard’s, has

Services

Services

MATURE person to share single family home. Close to downtown Laconia. Non-smoker, references. $500/Month, utilities included. 603-491-3535 leave message. MEREDITH ROOMMATE: Sunny, clean, spacious, walk to town. Includes washer/dryer. $350/Month. Call 481-0762.

Services

TILE INSTALLATIONS

Buy your tile from the box stores but have me install it for much less. Mark (603)452-8181 or for pictures visit myspace.com/aptile.

Snowmobiles SALES, SERVICE, performance parts. New & used parts, complete line of accessories for Snowmobiles & ATV!s. Pre-owned sleds. Lake City Cat House, 283 White Oaks Rd., Laconia. Open 7 days a week. 524-5954.

PIPER ROOFING Quality Work Reasonable Rates Free Estimates Metal Roofs • Shingle Roofs

Our Customers Don t get Soaked!

528-3531 Major credit cards accepted M.A. SMITH ELECTRIC: Quality work for any size electrical job. Licensed-Insured, Free estimates/ 603-455-5607

MR. Junk. Attics, cellars, garages cleaned out. Free estimate. Insured. 455-6296 PROFESSIONAL painter seeking homeowners and landlords who are considering a paint renovation. Free estimates, and reasonable rates. 1-802-780-9040 CALL THE HUNGRY PAINTER: Painting, small tree work, dump runs, odd jobs, water damage/drywall repairs. 455-6296.

Storage Space Clean, dry, secure storage for your cars, motorcycles, boats, household items.24/7 access.Call 527-9229.

Wanted To Buy GUNS and ammunition of any type, make or model: 603-930-5222.

been making award-wining wine for many years, he was no less pleased with his two medals. Dabrowski said “I never take lightly having my wines judged against some of the finest wines in the country, there are an awful lot of great wines out there and to have mine selected to receive recognition among them is always an honor”. Hermit Woods Winery Hermit Woods Winery owners Chuck Lawrence, Ken Hardcastle is in their first year of and Bob Manley celebrate the success of their winery. (Courtesy operation. People can photo) taste their wine in their tasting room in the spring, summer, entering its 44th year, and is the oldest and fall, or by appointment during the and largest consumer based wine edurest of the year or at scheduled tastcation organization in North America. ings. Their wine can also be purchased AWS’s competition for commercial at numerous wine stores throughout winemakers has been held for over New Hampshire. Visit their website to 25 years. This esteemed competition learn more at www.hermitwoods.com. is renowned and respected throughCandia Vineyards has been making out North America and is recognized wine since 2006 and is open by by many wine makers as one of the appointment on almost all days of most import competitions in the US. the year, call 867-9751 or visit their AWS Commercial Wine Competition website www.candiavineyards.com to requires the strictest of criteria and learn more. Their wines can also be the certified judges who have participurchased at stores throughout New pated in this competition have comHampshire. pleted a rigorous 3 level course over a The American Wine Society, AWS, is minimum of 4-year period of time.

‘See for Yourself’ Toyota Camry and Prius event set for December 12

LACONIA — With its sophisticated new design, the reinvented 2012 Toyota Camry is heading north from the Kentucky factory to one of New Hampshire’s largest Toyota dealers, Irwin Toyota. In celebration, Irwin Automotive Group is hosting a “See For Yourself Event” for Toyota fans on Monday, December 12 from 5-6 p.m. at the 59 Bisson Avenue Toyota dealership. “Since 1997, the Camry has been the best selling car in America every year but one (2001). The unveiling of the 2012 Camry is exciting news for Irwin Toyota”, commented Chris Irwin, vice president of Irwin Automotive Group. “This will be the first chance fans will have to sit behind the wheel and check out the acclaimed upscale interior and state-of-the-art electronics and

new connectivity features. The Camry is also receiving high marks for its smoother and quieter ride, increased safety features and savings at the pumps, with 25 city and 35 highway miles per gallon ratings.” Irwin Toyota will also be unveiling the new 44 mpg Toyota Prius v, the “v” standing for versatility. Prius fans can check out the expanded interior and reclining fold down rear seats of the 2012 design that delivers 50% more space than the original Prius. Everyone is invited to Irwin’s “See For Yourself 2012 Event” on December 12, try their luck at winning a door prize and enjoy refreshments compliments of Irwin Automotive Group. Directions to Irwin Toyota can be found online at www.irwinzone. com or call (800) 639-6700.

Online searches help Lakes Region Gymnastics Booster club raise funds LACONIA — The Lakes Region Gymnastics Academy Boosters Club has teamed up with GoodSearch.com and GoodShop.com to raise funds through the Internet and shopping online to help children enrolled in the program to become gymnasts. With GoodShop.com, consumers are helping their favorite causes by shopping at more than 1,600 well known retailers including Amazon, Target, Apple, Macy’s, Best Buy, Orbitz, Staples and others. The shopping experience and the prices are exactly the same as going to the retailer directly, but by going through GoodShop, up

to 30 percent of the purchase price is donated the user’s favorite cause. In addition, for every search conducted on the Yahoo and Bing-powered GoodSearch.com search engine, approximately one penny is donated to the user’s favorite charity. Use it exactly like any other search engine, but with GoodSearch, the pennies add up quickly. Lakes Region Gymnastics Academy Boosters Club plans on using the money raised from these programs to help pay for gymnastics meets, uniforms and other expenses.


Page 28 — THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Wednesday, December 7, 2011

$1,000

Irwin Zone Voucher on top of manufacturers rebates to use however you want! • GET MORE FOR YOUR TRADE • INCREASE YOUR DOWN PAYMENT • HELP LOWER YOUR MONTHLY PAYMENT

603-524-4922 | www.irwinzone.com Bisson & Union Avenues Laconia, NH SALES HOURS: MON-FRI 8am - 7pm & SAT 8am - 5pm

0%

35

AVAIL AB 60 Mo LE s

MPG

30 COROLLA’S AVAILABLE

STK# BJC774

0%

51

20 PRIUS’ AVAILABLE

STK# BJC859

0%

34

35

AVAIL AB 60 Mo LE s

MPG

AVAIL AB 60 Mo LE s

MPG

MPG 30 CAMRY’S AVAILABLE

STK# CJC113

30 RAV4’S AVAILABLE

STK# BJT655

BRAND NEW 2011 TOYOTA

BRAND NEW 2011 TOYOTA

BRAND NEW 2012 TOYOTA

BRAND NEW 2011 TOYOTA

MSRP........................................ $18,560 Irwin Discount........................... $1,663 MFG Rebate.................................. $500 Cash or Trade Equity................ $2,995

MSRP........................................ $24,616 Irwin Discount........................... $1,902 Cash or Trade Equity................ $2,995

MSRP........................................ $23,899 Irwin Discount........................... $2,907 Cash or Trade Equity................ $2,995

MSRP........................................ $25,223 Irwin Discount........................... $2,555 MFG Rebate.................................. $500 Cash or Trade Equity................ $2,995

COROLLA LE

$

96

PER MONTH

$

PRIUS II

$

SALE PRICE

13,402

159

PER MONTH

Save $2,163 off MSRP

SALE PRICE

$

CAMRY LE

$

19,719

Save $1,902 off MSRP

139

PER MONTH

RAV4 4X4

$

SALE PRICE

$

17,997

129

PER MONTH

Save $2,907 off MSRP

SALE PRICE

$

19,673

Save $3,055 off MSP

LEASE FOR 36 MONTHS WITH 12,000 MILES PER YEAR. $.20 PER MILE THEREAFTER. $2,995 CASH OR TRADE EQUITY, $650 ACQUISITION FEE PLUS 1ST PAYMENT AND $299 TITLE AND DOCUMENTATION FEE DUE AT SIGNING. $0 SECURITY DEPOSIT WITH APPROVED CREDIT. NO SALES TAX FOR NH RESIDENTS. *0% FINANCING AVAILABLE WITH APPROVED CREDIT. SALE PRICE REFLECTS $2,995 CASH OR TRADE EQUITY. EXPIRES 12-31-2011

603-524-4922 | www.irwinzone.com Bisson & Union Avenues Laconia, NH SALES HOURS: MON-FRI 8am - 7pm & SAT 8am - 5pm

0 AV %

38

AIL AB

LE

MPG

20 FOCUS’ AVAILABLE

STK# CFC075

0 AV %

33

AIL AB 60 Mo LE s

MPG

8 FUSION’S AVAILABLE

STK# CFC081

0%

27

10 ESCAPE’S AVAILABLE

STK# CFT353

BRAND NEW 2012 FORD

BRAND NEW 2012 FORD

BRAND NEW 2012 FORD

MSRP........................................ $19,290 Irwin Discount........................... $1,455 MFG Rebate............................... $1,000 Cash or Trade Equity................ $2,995

MSRP........................................ $23,625 Irwin Discount........................... $1,995 MFG Rebate............................... $2,500 Cash or Trade Equity................ $2,995

MSRP........................................ $27,030 Irwin Discount........................... $2,336 MFG Rebate............................... $2,500 Cash or Trade Equity................ $2,995

FOCUS 4-DOOR SE

$

86

PER MONTH

$

FUSION 4-DOOR SE

$

SALE PRICE

13,840

139

PER MONTH

Save $2,455 off MSRP

$

SALE PRICE

186

PER MONTH

20 F-150’S AVAILABLE

STK# BFT743

F-150 SUPERCAB 4X4 XLT MSRP........................................ $39,125 Irwin Discount........................... $5,559 MFG Rebate............................... $3,000 Cash or Trade Equity................ $2,995

$

SALE PRICE

$

AVAIL AB 60 Mo LE s

BRAND NEW 2011 FORD

ESCAPE XLT FWD

$

16,136

Save $4,495 off MSRP

0%

AVAIL AB 60 Mo LE s

MPG

19,199

225

PER MONTH

Save $4,836 off MSRP

SALE PRICE

$

27,571

Save $8,559 off MSRP

LEASE FOR 27 MONTHS WITH 10,500 MILES PER YEAR. $.20 PER MILE THEREAFTER. $2,995 CASH OR TRADE EQUITY, $595 ACQUISITION FEE PLUS 1ST PAYMENT AND $299 TITLE AND DOCUMENTATION FEE DUE AT SIGNING. $0 SECURITY DEPOSIT WITH APPROVED CREDIT. NO SALES TAX FOR NH RESIDENTS. *0% FINANCING AVAILABLE WITH APPROVED CREDIT. SALE PRICE REFLECTS $2,995 CASH OR TRADE EQUITY. F.M.C.C. FINANCING MAY BE REQUIRED. F150 REBATE/SALE PRICE REFLECTS FORD $1,000 TRADE ASSISTANCE. EXPIRES 12-31-2011

603-581-7133 | www.irwinzone.com 93 DW Highway Belmont, NH

SALES HOURS: MON-THUR 8am - 7pm FRI 8am - 6pm SAT 8am - 5pm & SUN 11am - 3pm

1 .9% AV

40

AIL AB

LE

MPG

9 AVAILABLE

STK# HCC573

1 .9% AV

40

AIL AB

LE

MPG

15 AVAILABLE

STK# HCC640

1 .9% AV

35

AIL AB

LE

MPG

19 AVAILABLE

STK# HCC585

1 .9% AV

28

AIL AB

LE

MPG

13 AVAILABLE

STK# HCT421

BRAND NEW 2012 HYUNDAI

BRAND NEW 2012 HYUNDAI

BRAND NEW 2012 HYUNDAI

BRAND NEW 2012 HYUNDAI

MSRP........................................ $17,600 Irwin Discount.............................. $904 Cash or Trade Equity................ $2,995

MSRP........................................ $19,085 Irwin Discount.............................. $590 Cash or Trade Equity................ $2,995

MSRP........................................ $21,815 Irwin Discount........................... $1,865 Cash or Trade Equity................ $2,995

MSRP........................................ $24,980 Irwin Discount........................... $2,985 Cash or Trade Equity................ $2,995

ACCENT GLS

85 PER MONTH $

SALE PRICE

$

13,701

Save $904 off MSRP

ELANTRA GLS

99 PER MONTH $

$

SALE PRICE

15,500

Save $590 off MSRP

SONATA GLS

138 PER MONTH $

$

SALE PRICE

16,955

Save $1,865 off MSRP

SANTA FE GLS AWD

199 PER MONTH $

$

SALE PRICE

19,000

Save $2,985 off MSRP

LEASE FOR 36 MONTHS WITH 12,000 MILES PER YEAR. $.20 PER MILE THEREAFTER. $2,995 CASH OR TRADE EQUITY, $595 ACQUISITION FEE PLUS 1ST PAYMENT AND $299 TITLE AND DOCUMENTATION FEE DUE AT SIGNING. $0 SECURITY DEPOSIT WITH APPROVED CREDIT. NO SALES TAX FOR NH RESIDENTS. SALE PRICE REFLECTS $2,995 CASH OR TRADE EQUITY. *1.9% FINANCING AVAILABLE WITH APPROVED CREDIT. MANUFACTURERS PROGRAMS ARE SUBJECT TO CHANGE WITHOUT NOTICE. EXPIRES 12-31-2011


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