The Laconia Daily Sun, September 9, 2011

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Friday, September 9, 2011

friday

Taming Jewett Brook

Studies point to measures which could end flooding of busy Corner

VOL. 12 NO. 71

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Shaker Board hears pleas to save after-school activities

Stipends, paid to teachers advising the clubs, were cut in face of anticipated budget deficits By gAil oBeR

THE LACONIA DAILY SUN

BELMONT - After getting an earful from a standing room only crowd of voters and students upset about cutting the stipends for after-school or co-curricular activities, the Shaker Regional School Board asked administrators to review the budget in preparation for a special board meeting Monday night.

Residents from Belmont and Canterbury packed last night’s board meeting, most with hopes of restoring the stipends paid to teachers for advising after-school activities. One by one they stood in the Belmont High School library and told the school board that their children’s education and futures could be irreversibly damaged by a lack of after school activities such as drama, chorus, robotics, honor society, and

math club. There was also some debate about whether teachers should advise the clubs without pay and discussion of unsubstantiated rumors that the teachers’ union was encouraging its teachers not to volunteer. “But our teachers are professionals,” said one woman. “No one else works for free.” High School junior Katie Tarr led the stusee SHaKEr page 11

Local orchards loaded with fruit as pick-your-own season arrives

By michAel Kitch THE LACONIA DAILY SUN

LACONIA — Although a “hydrologic and hydraulic analysis” and a “geomorphic assessment” and are not conventional box office draws, more than two dozen local residents and public officials see BrOOK page 8

By RogeR Amsden FOR THE LACONIA DAILY SUN

Samantha Batchelder, 4, of Plymouth, picked apples last weekend with her two-year-old sister Madison at the Surowiec Farm in Sanbornton. (Roger Amsden photo for the Laconia Daily Sun)

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SANBORTON — Local apple orchards are filled with ripe early season apples as the pick-your-own season arrives. The third annual New England Apple Day was celebrated across the region on Wednesday but some people have already made their annual visit to orchards around the Lakes Region, many of which have already opened. Among the first to open was the Surowiec Farm on Perley Hill here, where Matthew and Abigail Batchelder of Plymouth arrived just before noon on Sunday with their two daughters, Samantha, 4, and Madison, 2, to pick some Paula Reds, which along with Ginger Golds are now ready to pick. “It’s an old-fashioned family activity that we want to make into a tradition with our children,” says Matthew, a programmer at Plymouth State University and the grandson of former State Supreme Court justice William Batchelder. Steve Surowiec says that his six acre orchard has a good crop and was hardly touched by Hurricane Irene. He said that by the weekend or early next week Macintosh apples will be ready. In addition to the early varieties, he also offers Cortland, Macoun, Empire and Honey Crisp, the latter of which is one of his favorites. “It’s a great apple for eating. Great flavor,” says Surowiec. see U-PiCK page

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Page 2 — THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Friday, September 9, 2011

Ben & Jerry’s reveals new flavor: Schweddy Balls

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MONTPELIER, Vt. (AP) — Ben & Jerry’s has Schweddy Balls. Would you like a taste? Chill out, it’s only the name of their new flavor. Schweddy Balls ice cream is an homage to a 13-year-old “Saturday Night Live” skit featuring Alec Baldwin as bakery owner Pete Schweddy, whose unique holiday offerings included a delicacy called Schweddy balls. The company’s not worried about offending people with the name, said spokesman Sean Greenwood. “We’re the caring company,” Greenwood said Thursday. “We never want to do anything that is upsetting for people. We think it’s congruent with our values, in terms of having fun. One of our principles is ‘If it’s not fun, why do it?’” Other flavors with edgy names — like Karamel Sutra and Half Baked — were irreverent double-entendres, too, he said. True. But Schweddy Balls? The new flavor, which was unveiled Wednesday and is being offered in a “limited batch,” consists of vanilla ice cream, a hint of rum, fudgecovered rum balls and milk chocolate malt balls. It’s being sold in Ben & Jerry’s Scoop Shops and supermarkets. The “SNL” skit, which first aired Dec. 12, 1998, starred Molly Shannon and Ana Gasteyer as hosts of “Delicious Dish,” a National Public Radio program interviewing Baldwin’s Pete Schweddy character.

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Obama asks $450B to lift economy, mostly tax cuts WASHINGTON (AP) — Confronting an economy in peril, President Barack Obama unveiled a larger-than-expected $450 billion plan Thursday night to boost jobs and put cash in the pockets of dispirited Americans, urging Republican skeptics to embrace an approach heavy on the tax cuts they traditionally love. With millions of voters watching and skeptical of Washington, Obama repeatedly challenged Congress to act swiftly. The newest and boldest element of Obama’s plan would slash the Social Security payroll tax both for tens of millions of workers and for employers, too. For individuals, that tax

has been shaved from 6.2 percent to 4.2 percent for this year but is to go back up again without action by Congress. Obama wants to deepen the cut to 3.1 percent for workers. “This plan is the right thing to do right now,” Obama said after a divided body rose in warm unison to greet him. “You should pass it. And I intend to take that message to every corner of this country.” In his televised address to Congress, Obama sought to provide a jolt for the economy, still staggering on his watch, and for his own standing at one of the lowest marks of his presidency. He put forth a jobs plan that he hopes can get bipartisan support and spur

hiring in a nation where 14 million people remain out of work and the jobless rate is stuck at 9.1 percent. Public confidence in his stewardship of the economy is eroding. Obama did not venture an estimate as to how many jobs his plan would create. He promised repeatedly that his plan would be paid for, but never said how, pledging to release those details soon. The president also would apply the Social Security payroll tax cut to employers, halving their taxes to 3.1 percent on their first $5 million in payroll. Businesses that hire new workers or give raises to see JOBS page 12

WASHINGTON (AP) — President Barack Obama’s promise Thursday that everything in his jobs plan will be paid for rests on highly iffy propositions. It will only be paid for if a committee he can’t control does his bidding, if Congress puts that into law and if leaders in the future — the ones who will feel the fiscal pinch of his proposals — don’t roll it back.

Underscoring the gravity of the nation’s high employment rate, Obama chose a joint session of Congress, normally reserved for a state of the union speech, to lay out his proposals. But if the moment was extraordinary, the plan he presented was conventional Washington rhetoric in one respect: It employs sleight-of-hand accounting. A look at some of Obama’s claims and

how they compare with the facts: OBAMA: “Everything in this bill will be paid for. Everything.” THE FACTS: Obama did not spell out exactly how he would pay for the measures contained in his nearly $450 billion American Jobs Act, but said he would send his proposed specifics in a week to the new see next page

Fact check: Obama’s jobs plan paid for? Seems iffy at best

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Kuwait may host US Iraq backup force

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Obama administration is considering staging American troops in Kuwait next year as a backup or rotational training force for Iraq, after the Pentagon completes the scheduled withdrawal of its current 45,000-strong force from Iraq in December, U.S. officials said. The proposal, not yet publicly announced, is among a number of options the administration is considering for extending its military training role in still-violent Iraq, whose divided government has been reluctant to directly ask Washington to keep troops on its soil beyond this year. All troops are to depart Iraq by Dec. 31 under a 2008 security agreement, but senior U.S. officials are concerned that without more training the Iraqi forces may squander hard-won security gains. The Iraqi army, for example, is only now taking delivery of U.S. battle tanks, on which they have yet to be trained. Iraq’s security forces are improving but still lack the capability to fully defend Iraqi air space, borders and territorial waters, U.S. military officers say. “There are some gaps in their military capabilities, their security capabilities, that we believe we could offer some assistance with,” Navy Capt. John Kirby, a spokesman for the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said Thursday. Discussions with the Iraqis on this are in an early stage, Kirby added. The Obama administration favors a proposal that would leave 3,000 to 5,000 U.S. troops in Iraq next year to train Iraqi forces, U.S. officials said this week. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because Iraq has not yet asked for any extension of forces. It has not previously been reported that staging U.S. forces in Kuwait as a part of that training mission — or possibly in addition to that mission — is under consideration. One of the U.S. officials said the administration would foresee the Kuwait arrangement lasting for three years, starting in 2012, with troops rotating into Iraq for six-month stints. No decisions have been made, and it was not clear whether direct talks with the Kuwaiti government have begun. from preceding page congressional supercommittee charged with finding budget savings. White House aides suggested that new deficit spending in the near-term to try to promote job creation would be paid for in the future — the “out years,” in legislative jargon — but they did not specify what would be cut or what revenues they would use. Essentially, the jobs plan is an IOU from a president and lawmakers who may not even be in office down the road when the bills come due. Today’s Congress cannot bind a later one for future spending. A future Congress could simply reverse it. Currently, roughly all federal taxes and other revenues are consumed in spending on various federal benefit programs, including Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, veterans’ benefits, food stamps, farm subsidies and other social-assistance programs and payments on the national debt. Pretty much everything else is done on credit with borrowed money. So there is no guarantee that programs that clearly will increase annual deficits in the near term will be paid for in the long term. OBAMA: “Everything in here is the kind of proposal that’s been supported by both Democrats and Republicans, including many who sit here tonight.” THE FACTS: Obama’s proposed cut in the Social Security payroll tax does seem likely to garner significant GOP support. But there are a lot of other proposals that already have generated stiff Republican opposition. For instance, Obama makes a pitch anew to end Bush-era tax cuts for the wealthiest Americans, which he has defined as couples earning over $250,000 a year or individuals earning over $200,000 a year. Republicans have adamantly blocked what they view as new taxes. As recently as last month, House Republicans refused to go along with any deal to raise the government’s borrowing authority that included new revenues, or taxes.

THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Friday, September 9, 2011— Page 3

NH lawmakers urge landowners to be patient, leave property open while liability legislation is developed CONCORD, N.H. (AP) — New Hampshire lawmakers urged nervous landowners Thursday to leave their properties open to recreation while they work to improve their liability protections. State Rep. Gene Chandler, a Bartlett Republican, and state Sen. Andy Sanborn, a Henniker Republican, are heading up a group working on legislation to ensure as much of New Hampshire’s private lands remain open to recreation as possible. Many landowners fear legal liability if they keep their land open to bird-watchers, hikers, hunters and sporting vehicles. State law limits landowners’ liability as a way to encourage them to keep their land accessible. The law does not require them to keep the land safe for use or to give warnings of hazardous conditions or structures. Landowners and lawmakers, however, are con-

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cerned of a possible chilling effect from a lawsuit brought by William Jasmin, a 51-year-old Manchester hunter who fell about 20 feet when a tree stand collapsed. Jasmin was severely injured; his lawsuit was first reported by the Concord Monitor. “We just want the landowners to know we take this action very seriously,” said Chandler said at a Thursday news conference. The lawsuit centers on whether the landowner gave Jasmin permission to hunt in exchange for killing as many coyotes as possible and told him about the tree stand. Sanborn and Chandler said the law isn’t clear on whether landowners are protected from liability when they get something in return for allowing people onto the property. “Giving someone a gallon of maple syrup could be compensation,” said Sanborn.


Page 4 — THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Friday, September 9, 2011

Michael Barone

The audacity of weakness I can’t remember a more stunning rebuke of a president by a congressional leader than House Speaker John Boehner’s refusal to agree to President Barack Obama’s demand — er, request — that he summon a joint session of Congress to hear the president’s latest speech on the economy at 8 p.m. EDT on Wednesday, Sept. 7. Obama’s request was regarded as a clever move by some wiseguys in the left blogosphere because that was the exact time of a long-scheduled Republican presidential candidate debate at the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library. Take that, you guys! But Boehner smoothly responded that with Congress reconvening late that afternoon, the security sweep necessary for a presidential visit would be impossible and invited the president to speak Thursday. White House officials quickly agreed, scheduling the speech at 7 p.m. EDT to avoid overlap with the first game of the National Football League season. Not such a big deal, some people are saying. I disagree. I think it illustrates several of the weaknesses of this presidency. One is a lack of regard for the Constitution. Congress is a separate branch of government, set up by Article 1 of the Constitution, which is not about the executive branch as Joe Biden said in the 2008 vice presidential debate. (Media outfits that dispatched dozens of investigative reporters to Alaska were apparently incapable of discovering this obvious error.) Before last week, presidents and congressional leaders always agreed privately on scheduling presidential addresses to joint sessions before any public announcement was made. But it appears that no such agreement was made here, just a brusque announcement that had to be retracted. Another weakness on display was contempt for public opinion. White House press secretary Jay Carney said it was just “coincidental” that the president wanted to speak at the same time as the debate. It was just “one debate of many that’s on one channel of many.” But those with memories that go back beyond last week may recall that in May 2009, Obama scrambled to find a venue for a speech at exactly the same time as former Vice President Dick Cheney was scheduled to speak at the American Enterprise Institute on detainee questioning issues. Cheney coolly watched Obama on television and then delivered his

own speech. Ham-handedly trying to bigfoot the opposition is a habit with this president, not a coincidence. A third Obama weakness is his propensity to charge his political opponents with playing politics when he is doing exactly that himself. In previewing this latest jobsand-the-economy speech, Carney said that Obama will make the case “that politics is broken and that politics is getting in the way of the very necessary things we need to do.” This from the president who has brushed aside one bipartisan initiative after another, from the health care initiative of Sens. Ron Wyden and Bob Bennett to the recommendations of his own deficit commission, headed by Erskine Bowles and Alan Simpson. Instead, he has taken a purely partisan course on one issue after another — and heaped blame on Republicans. He invited House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan to his speech at George Washington University and then lambasted him harshly. Obama has been so consistently blaming Republicans in recent months for not approving the free trade agreements with South Korea, Colombia and Panama that it came as an utter surprise to his deputy press secretary, Josh Earnest, that he hasn’t sent them to Congress yet. The fourth weakness is failure to come up with policies that address situations appropriately. Press briefings suggest that Obama next week will call for an extension of the payroll tax holiday and of unemployment benefits. A case can be made for both, but neither has invigorated the economy yet. We also hear that he may call for more infrastructure spending. But as the president himself told us, laughing, there aren’t actually any shovel-ready projects. The New York Times reports he may call for “school repairs and retrofitting buildings for energy efficiency.” This sounds suspiciously like the weatherization program under which Seattle got $20-million and produced just 14 jobs. Democrats have criticized Obama on the speech-scheduling flap. James Carville said he was “out of bounds.” Salon.com’s Cenk Uygur sensed “the audacity of weakness.” It reminds me of a phrase describing a character in the 1980s TV series “Dallas” — “blustering, opportunistic, craven and hopelessly ineffective all at once.”

send your letters to: news@laconiadailysun.com

LETTERS Male WASPS benefitted from institutions of racism & sexism To the editor, I never wrote or implied that Jack Stephenson was a “racist” or a bigot. If I wrote something that led him to think that, I apologize. I do not know his heart. He seems like a nice guy. Moreover, I believe Mr. Stephenson when he writes that he has never personally exercised power over another group to exploit them. A lot of us male WASPS that are like that; we are “nice” white people. On the other hand, we male WASPS have benefited from our group historically exercising political, social, and economic power over other groups in America. We have benefited from racism just as we have benefited from sexism. While we may not be sexist, racist or bigoted on a personal level, we have certainly benefited from racism and gender inequality and so are we not at least partially “part of the problem” even if only indirectly so? Racist systems can be highly profitable to a ruling group. Sowing hatred of other groups can reap huge dividends for opportunist politicians who can focus popular anger off themselves and on the “they” group. Racism can also reap hefty financial rewards for the “we” group. First there was slavery, followed by the (just as oppres-

sive) sharecropping and crop lien systems. Even Northern whites were “racist” in that they benefited from the system. After all, where were the mills that spun and wove the cotton grown by Southern slaves and sharecroppers? Where were the slave cargo ships built? While racism against African-Americans is the most glaring example, let us remember that other groups were victimized. Native Americans, Hispanics, Asians, “poor whites,” Irish, Jews, Italians, French Canadians and others have all suffered from discrimination and even “racist” economic exploitation. On the other hand, there is a difference. I can usually tell if you are Asian or Black. If your ancestry is European and I do not know your name or heritage, I do not know whether your background is German, French, English, Irish, French, Italian, Polish, Russian, Dutch, Norwegian, or Finnish! Blacks and some other groups experience instant prejudice based on skin color and other differences in phenotype. As I wrote earlier, the Emancipation Proclamation did not end racism in this country. We still have a long way to go. E. Scott Cracraft Gilford

Elevating the standards of a minority does little for character To the editor, America has always been a history of minorities.The French in the 1500s and English in the 1600s. The Swedes, Scotts, Germans, Irish, Dutch and others included. Of course there was tensions and discrimination. Yet they fought side by side in the Revolutionary War.I t is from these brave souls we claim our ancestry. We adjusted and assimilated into one people. There were others who came later and faced discrimination yet persevered and contributed to the cause of America. The Japanese and Chinese faced discrimination, they stayed and endured as domestics, field workers, railroad workers and conitinued to show patience while they sent their children to school. By about 1940 they had become

attacked Pearl Harbor. FDR ordered the Japanese Americans to be sent to consentration camps in the Rocky Mountains. J. Edgar Hoover protested as well as many in Congress, none could sway the presidents order and it stood. Instead of being bitter and teaching their children to follow suit, they sent their sons to join the armed forces. These Japanese American units became the most decorated units in the military. The sons who whent off to war while their parents were held in concentration camps came home as heroes and honored by those who imprisoned their parents. Not long after the war the state of California was represented in the Senate by a Japanese American. There were others who sought a different path. By the 1960s, Marxist


THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Friday, September 9, 2011 — Page 5

LETTERS The country’s future belongs to ‘barbarians’ at the gate – like me To the editor, “I am a barbaric SOB!” There, I’ve said it. My declaration doesn’t have the cachet or strength of “I am Spartacus,” but it’s all I can think of to say in response to the Labor Day vitriol of Vice President Biden and Teamsters’ Union President Jimmy Hoffa, Jr. I’m one of the “barbarians” at the gate, according to the Vice President of the United States. I’m one of the “sons of b—s” to be “taken out” according to union boss Hoffa. Why? Apparently because my vision of this country aligns with the Founders’ vision of a republic with a central government of limited, enumerated powers given to it by We the People. Or maybe it’s because I believe in a worker’s right to represent his interests in the labor market without being forced to pay a tithe to support fat cat union bosses. (In 2009, Hoffa received more than $360,000 in compensation, just one of 120 Teamster officials who raked in more than $150,000 in salary. They gave themselves generous raises at a time of falling membership and shrinking dues payments.) My other “barbaric” beliefs include the idea that governments must live within the means of the people, must put the general interest ahead of special interests, and must maintain a long-term outlook. So when I read of unfunded public worker pension liabilities exceeding a trillion dollars and growing faster than revenues reasonably could, of chronic and systemic underfunding based on investment revenue projections that can’t possibly be achieved, I wonder why Bernie Madoff isn’t surrounded by a host of former government officials

and public pension fund managers. Why is a pyramid-scheme legal when the government runs the game? Maybe today’s 20-somethings will be asking themselves that question a couple of decades from now when more of their tax dollars are supporting retired workers than paying for their schools, roads, and safety services. Maybe I’m an SOB for asking that question today. By any reasonable fiscal or social measure, our nation is off-track. Record high spending, record high debt, and record high unemployment, coupled with record low academic achievement, record low confidence in our elected federal officials, and record low consumer and employer confidence: Even a barbaric SOB knows that we continue in this direction at our peril. Too many Americans have been terribly damaged by the progressive policies pushed on us these past two years by an administration and a Congress intent on radically re-writing the nation’s social compact. The progressives know this, which explains their recent temper tantrums. Instead of a record of accomplishment, they can give us only the rhetoric of acrimony. Biden and Hoffa can name-call and threaten, but they are fighting a losing battle with reality, and time is not on their side. The primary season is upon us, and we Granite Staters again have an out-sized opportunity to influence the national debate. The path to America’s resurgence lies in a different direction, and I hope we barbarians are numerous enough to correct the Great Mistake of 2008. Ken Gorrell Northfield

Iraqis suffered gravely for the sins of those responsible for 9/11 To the editor, A definitive breakdown of fatalities in the Iraqi war as reported by Lancet, a medical journal of some repute, follows: Violent deaths attributed to the war are; coalition forces, 186,000, to others 144,000, unknown, 276,000. The total deaths due to the war would be around 600,000. These numbers have been disputed by others, but one source estimates over 1-million died as a direct result of the war. The fact that many deaths cannot be traced, does not alter the fact that coalition forces were mainly responsible for most of the vio-

lence! Although car bombing deaths are included in this number, it still accounts for only about 100,000 fatalities, at the most. We bombed Iraq before the military invasion but most deaths came from gunshot wounds inflicted by ground troops. It is a very sad and disgraceful episode in our recent history. The horrific numbers cannot be denied. Iraq suffered gravely for the sins of others: Retaliation for 9/11? I hope this answers any questions for SE. Leon R. Albushies Gilford

from preceding page influence had infiltrated black neighborhoods.Eldridge Cleaver was trained in Marxist philosophy and tactics. The plan was to create chaos and violence. Many black communities were destroyed by their own people. in 1967 he became the Minister of Information for the Black Panthers. The plan was to destroy the the whole economic and social structure of the United States that a communist regime could take over. In 1968 over 100 American cities were burned, soon they realized they were destroying their own homes. Eldrdge Cleaver left the country in exhile to communist countries for eight years. After his return he exclaimed that he was wrong and blacks have the same equal rights as Ford or Rockefeller, “ The Education

of Eldridge Cleaver,’ Readers Digest, Sept. 1976, pp. 65-72. Booker T. Washington was born a slave on April 5, 1856. As a young boy he worked in mines, yet he rose to become the principal of the famous Tuskegee Institute in Tuskagee,Alalabama, where he taught self reliance and job training to Black Americans. He emphasized “no race that has anything to contribute to the markets of the world is long in any degree ostracized”. The World War 2 Famous Tuskagee Air Men were first trained and educated at the Tukagee Institute. The elevation of lower standards does little for the character of man. Does nothing to strengthen a nation. Gene F. Danforth Danbury

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Page 6 — THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Friday, September 9, 2011

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t’s a tough life for cats in New Hampshire, often left to fend for themselves, which no house cat can ever endure for long. Just so the case with the now named Mrs. Bugle, a petite little tabby cat found alone and scared in Laconia, arriving at New Hampshire Humane Society under police escort, back in February. Half a year later, Mrs. Bugle wonders when she will ever enjoy the comfort of a cozy home again? With 160 cats waiting homes at the shelter how can we illuminate her plight above the rest? Must we simply say.. she deserves a loving home, one that won’t leave her destitute and lonely. Ms. Bugle would very much like the warmth of human arms and the security of a permanent lap to while away her time, purring loudly. She has one small requirement,

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LETTER Only way out of this hole is to spend no more than we take in To the editor, The talking heads are telling us that the world economy is in much worse shape today than it was only a few weeks ago. They would have us believe that growth has slowed sharply in America, Europe and the emerging world. Global share prices have dropped by around 15-percent since early July. Consumer confidence has slumped. Well maybe… but it seems more likely that nothing changed but the political reality. There haves been no recent precipitous changes. The amount of debt has not gone up or down dramatically. Things have been crappy (that’s the technical term for one in five people are out of work and even those still working aren’t spending much) in the economy for a long while. What happened is that the economists and analysts reassessed the data and decided that the financial crisis we experienced was worse than we were told. They discovered that the subsequent recovery was less robust than we were told. They have concluded that our prospects going forward are not as rosy as we had been led to believe. It was a stunning revelation. Not that the economy has been worse than the talking heads were saying but that they were waking up to that fact. So, the question becomes; were they lying the first time they told the story or are you lying now? Either way, they can’t be trusted. It is stunning that all the political leadership and the investigative reporters were hoodwinked for years. With all those IQ points, sharp tongues and ambitions they appear to have had not a lick of common sense. The politicians demonstrated no grasp of the situation. The talking heads seem to have demonstrated no curiosity about the facts and no thirst for the truth. Heck, there has not even been a hint that something might not be as it was being spoon fed to them. Why was that? The announcement of the reassessment of the financial data has led to some minor hand wringing. Now the media types seem to be recognizing a new, heretofore unrecognized grim reality. Suddenly, reassessment of growth prospects is in order. Forecasts for 2012 are being slashed. The odds of a double-dip recession are reportedly rising. Hello. We are already in a recession. Shakespeare said, “A rose by any other name would smell as…” in this case maybe sweet is the wrong word. When you owe $14.5-trillion, more or less, and are spending at a rate 50-percent greater than the rate you are taking in revenue, you are not headed in the right direction. Hello. Are you listening? We are in a recession and we aren’t getting out of it until we pay down the debt significantly. Don’t be fooled. The financial affairs of America are an embarrassment. We are broke. We can’t seem to stop spending. We don’t even recognize that we should. We can’t even admit we are in trouble. Here’s a hint: just because somebody else owes more

lots of debt is a good idea. What we have is a crisis of integrity in our leadership. The political leadership of both parties has simply not told us what the situation is… for a long time and we the voters have allowed it. Common sense should tell them and us that we are so deeply in debt that action is required. It is not indicated; it is required and it is required now. But now they have absolutely no idea what to do to get us out of it. You see the polls tell them we want a free ride. That is what the polls have said for years and likely will continue to say. That is who America has become. It has been going on for decades. But we are broke. Have you got that? We got no money, no scratch, no greenbacks, no moolah, and no dinero. We are broke. We don’t even have milk money. You may think you are entitled to more from the public coffers… but the coffers are empty except for the IOU’s. There is no easy way out of the hole we dug for ourselves. To do so we have to stop spending more than we are taking in. Period. To do that we have to elect people who are willing and able to do the right thing and take the heat for it. We have to stop the spending and that will be painful. It means people are going to lose things they feel entitled to. We better get used to the idea. We’ve been voting for the wimpy plan for decades and … well, it is now Tuesday. The truth is that time and again we have elected the politician who promised us the most from the public coffers. We ate all the hamburgers for all these years. Now the time to pay for what we ate has arrived and we are figuring out that there is no money to pay bill. What’s worse, we have to increase what we are taking in and put that additional money towards debt reduction. That’s right we have to raise taxes. We have to raise taxes and get nothing but debt reduction in return. Unfortunately, there is only one way to get out of debt. You have to pay the money back. If some smart person tells you that we can get out of the mess some other way you better put two hands on your wallet and turn and run. The truth is that things will not get better, probably for decades. It takes a long time to pay back $14.5-trillion ($14,500,000,000,000). Do the math. We spend nearly half of all the revenue the government takes in just to pay the interest on what we owe. Assuming we cut spending to a level equal to the current level of tax revenue (that is a stretch politically) and assuming that we then raised taxes by 10-percent (that is an even greater stretch politically) and assuming that all the money raised is applied to debt reduction (and that is all but beyond possible politically) it would take more than 60 years to pay off the debt. Until we pay down the debt things will not get better. Growth is unlikely to return to the economy. New programs are out of the question. Maintaining what we have will be problematic. These things will remain true until we can get a handle on America’s debt. We are not going to grow our way out of debt and we should not even con-


In ‘Japanese Wife,’ woman tells her story

THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Friday, September 9, 2011 — Page 7

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Kazuko Okubo will be one of the many area immigrants featured in Laconia’s Multicultural Day celebration in downtown Laconia on Saturday. Kazuko will have a table that will feature some of her art work and her recent memoir “Japanese Wife.” (Laconia Daily Sun photo/Adam Drapcho)

By Gail OBer

LACONIA - At 67, Kazuko Okubo, seems relaxed and at ease at she sits on a stool in one of Larry Frates Creative Arts Center rooms on Canal Street. In rapid but nearly perfect English, the tiny Japanese author and artist begins her story - one that begins in post-World War II Japan and takes her through the dark tunnels of American poverty and a 1970s Japanese-American culture clash. Like many stories of single parenthood and poverty, Kazuko’s book “Japanese Wife” begins with a man: an American engineer who promised a budding Osaka dressmaker the promise of love and opportunity on the other side of the Pacific Ocean. A man who instead dragged her to virtual isolation and servitude in southernmost Florida. Left alone with his family for weeks at a time while her husband cavorted

with his girlfriend, a pregnant Kazuko was made to cook and clean for his three children and his mother. She baby sat for his sister’s children while her sisterin-law drank beer and stole the things her mother sent her from home. Fed nothing but peanut butter sandwiches, a year after the birth of her son she escaped with the assistance of a kindly neighbor and an alert cab driver. Kazuko’s book “Japanese Wife” chronicles her trip from Florida to Massachusetts, from Massachusetts to Japan and her return back to Massachusetts. She writes of being a person without a country. From Japan. A place she called home but felt she was no longer welcome and where she tried to return but was shunned by her upper middle-class Samurai society for having an halfAmerican child and no husband. And her return to Massachusetts a place where she was welcomed but see next page

from preceding page sider trying to inflate our way out of debt. The problem is the debt. The fix is the budget. The deficit must go away and a surplus must created that will be applied to debt reduction. No the world economy is not in much worse shape than it was only a few weeks ago. Growth has not slowed sharply in America, Europe and the emerging world. The truth is somewhat different than what the talking

heads would have you believe. Share prices having dropped by around 15-percent since early July and consumer confidence has slumped may be valid observations… but maybe nothing changed but the political reality. There has been no recent precipitous change except, I hope in your level of awareness. Vote early, vote often. Just my honest opinion. Marc Abear Meredith

THE LACONIA DAILY SUN

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Page 8 — THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Friday, September 9, 2011

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High School library ceiling to be mended by Monday LACONIA - School District Business Administrator Ed Emond said the high school library should be back in operation by Monday of next week. He said school maintenance staff is performing the majority of the repair work to fix the damage caused when part of the old forced plaster ceiling collapsed. An electrician and a ceiling specialist are assisting the maintenance personnel. “We’re just grateful this didn’t happen while students were in the school,” Emond said, adding that Rist-Frost-Shumway, the contractor hired to engineer the Huot Technical Center expansion, has checked the rest of the plaster ceilings to ensure their stability and safety. Emond said the forced plaster ceiling was installed in 1922. As part of a 1974 renovation, drop ceilings

were installed, hiding the old forced plaster. He said a portion of the heavy, old plaster collapsed sometime Monday and was noticed that evening when some internet technology staff members went into the space to install a printer. He said the library doesn’t have a sprinkler system and there was no water damage. There wasn’t enough dust to trigger the fire alarms. Emond said an environmental company evaluated the debris and found no contaminants so it’s just a matter of reinstalling the ceiling, lights and electrical wiring damaged during the collapse. He said the school district insurance company was called. Emond estimated the repairs will cost between $12,000 and $15,000.

BROOK from page one gathered at City Hall last night to learn what can be done to tame Jewett Brook, which has a history of flooding Normandin Square and private properties. Matt Murawski of Dubois & King, Inc., consulting engineers, presented the findings of the analysis and assessment, undertaken for the city and the Army Corps of Engineers with federal funding. He explained that the hydrologic and hydraulic analysis of the lower reach of Jewett Brook and the geomorphic assessment of the entire watershed identified the conditions that contribute to the flooding and recommended measures for mitigating it. The final stage of the project will be a plan for the watershed. Jewett Brook rises in Gilford, not far south of Swain Road, and flows northward to Liberty Hill Road, where it is fed by a tributary meandering southwest from Saltmarsh Pond. Paralleling Liberty Hill Road, the brook passes beneath County Club Road and the Route 3 and 11 Bypass and crosses the Lakes Business Park. At Hounsell Avenue, just south of the northern entrance to the park on Gilford Avenue, the main stem of the brook is joined

by its major tributary that originates to the northeast, on the north side of Route 11-A about halfway between the bypass and Hoyt Road. From there the brook runs westward, roughly parallel to Gilford Avenue, skirts Tardiff Park and runs under Highland Street and Union Avenue before passing under the Normandin Square Apartments and Davis Place from where it empties into the Winnipesaukee River some 250 yards above the Avery Dam. The brook, along with its major and minor tributaries, stretches for about five miles, with the main stem and its major tributary representing 3.5 miles. Less than a mile of the brook flows through the city while the rest runs through Gilford. Likewise, the watershed of Jewett Brook spreads across 5.4 square miles, extending from downtown Laconia in the west to Hoyt Road in the east and north of Route 11-A south to the Belmont town line. Only a small fraction of the watershed lies within the city limits and all the rest in Gilford. Murawski explained that hydrologic and hydraulic analysis, measuring the slope, width, depth and capacity of the channel, was confined to the lower reach of the brook, from the bridge on Union Avenue to the mouth at the Winnipesaukee River, where he said “there is a long history of flooding.” Luke Powell, assistant director of public works, said that water topped the bridge, filled Normandin Square and raced down Davis Place in 2005, 2006 and several times in 2007. Murawski said the peak flow at the Union Avenue bridge was computed at 394 cubic feet per second (cfs) for 10-year storms, 970 cfs for 50-year storms and 1190 cfs for 100-year storms, noting that municipal bridges should be designed to carry a 50-year flow with a foot to spare. The bridge is 18 feet wide and the channel is lined with up to two feet of sediment. As a result, the bridge can carry just 450 cfs before the water tops the bridge and spills into the road. “The bridge is the kink in the system,” Murawski said. see next page

from preceding page where she could barely speak English and where she experienced poverty unimaginable for a woman raised in strict Japanese fashion to be, above all else, the perfect Japanese wife. While Kazuko survived and ultimately thrived in her new country – she is remarried and lives in Center Harbor — her early story is one of desperation and determination and is not to be missed. Kazuko’s book “Japanese Wife” as well as some of her art work will be featured as part of Laconia’s Multicultural Day to be held all day Saturday in downtown Laconia. Her art work will appear in Frates Creative Arts gallery on Canal Street during the weeks following Multicultural Day.

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“The bridge is the kink in the system” – Matt Murawski

THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Friday, September 9, 2011— Page 9

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The lower reach of Jewett Brook as it flows beneath Union Avenue, where, in the past, high water from heavy rainfall has spilled onto the roadway and flooded Normandin Square. (Laconia Daily Sun photo/Michael Kitch)

from preceding page The report proposes either dredging the channel or widening the bridge. Dredging would increase the capacity of the brook at the bridge by 60-percent, to 720 cfs, which Murawski said would address a 25-year storm, but not a 50-year event. On the other hand, widening the bridge ten feet would increase its capacity by only 20-percent, to 540 cfs, which Murawski said would not be cost effective. He estimated that both dredging the channel and widening the bridge would still not provide sufficient capacity for the flow of a 50-year storm. With limited options, the report recommends acknowledging that the lower reach of the brook, with its flat floodplain, low roadway and shallow slope, “is inherently prone to flooding.” It suggests dredging, which will raise the capacity of the brook and lessen the frequency of flooding, as the preferable alternative, but adds that it must be repeated as fresh sediment washes into the channel. Finally, the report proposes taking steps to protect and restore the upstream stretches of the brook to reduce the volume of sediment.

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Conditions upstream of the Union Avenue bridge are the subject of the “geomorphic assessment,” prepared by Bear Creek Environmental, LLC of Middlesex, Vermont. First the general physical configuration and characteristics of the watershed are described using topographical maps, aerial photographs and previous studies. Then the main stem and major tributary of the brook, a length of 3.5 miles, were divided into seven “reaches.” The team walked each reach. The course, dimensions and slope of the brook were measured. Natural and man-made features of the corridor were mapped. And conditions like erosion of the banks and sedimentation of the streambed were recorded. Murawski explained that given the particular characteristics of a specific landscape, a stream will take a predictable course and shape, called a “reference stream type.” A “geomorphic assessment” effectively measures the extent to which an actual stream departs from the “reference,” or norm. For example, the channel may be lowered by scouring, raised by sedimentation or widened by erosion. see next page

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surowiecfarm.com or follow us on facebook ALTON PLANNING BOARD NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARINGS September 20, 2011 The Alton Planning Board will consider the following application on Tuesday, September 20, 2011, at a meeting to be held commencing at 6:00 p.m. at the Alton Town Hall (second floor). If applications are accepted, Public Hearings may then follow. Public Hearings may be held regarding any of the continued applications. The applications listed in this notice are in no particular order. P11-27 Map 58 Lot 10 & Map 59 Lot 1-A Design Review Two-Lot Subdivision Richard Park Wallsten Trust 16 Wallsten Road

On behalf of Richard Park Wallsten Trust, James M. Hambrook, LLS is submitting a Design Review for a two-lot subdivision of Tax Map 59 Lot 1-A and a boundary adjustment with Tax Map 58 Lot 10. This is located in the Lakeshore Residential Zone.


Page 10 — THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Friday, September 9, 2011

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No Wake Zone declared on Lake Winona CENTER HARBOR & NEW HAMPTON — On the recommendation of the New Hampshire Marine Patrol, Commissioner of Safety John Barthelmes yesterday designated Lake Winona a “no wake zone” as an emergency measure in response to the high water levels following the recent rainfall. The rule requires all boaters

to operate at headway or “no wake” speed throughout the lake at all times. The restriction will remain in effect until the water level recedes to a level at which operation above headway speed no longer jeopardizes the safety of individuals or threatens damage to property.

from preceding page The assessment found that the condition of the main stem of the brook east of bypass is “good,” but rated the condition of the main stem between the bypass and the river, through the city, and the major tributary along Route 11-A only as “fair.” However, Murawski remarked that “fair” should be read as “poor.” Restoring the brook, Murawski said, includes measures to reduce the rate of sedimentation, which contributes to the flooding of its lower reach, as well as to improve water quality and wildlife habitat. The report suggests some 30 restoration projects, including conservation easement to protect the corridor, replacing undersized culverts, expanding vegetative buffers along the brook and improvements in managing and treating stormwater. Murawski said that since the aim of the project is lessening the risk of downstream flooding, measures to reduce the sedimentation should take priority over steps to improve water quality and wildlife habitat. These could include removing or reducing man-made constraints on the meander, floodplains and banks of the brook, together with expanding and extending vegetative buffers along its length. Designating Jewett Brook a “fluvial erosion hazard zone,” a corridor defined by the lateral extent of the meander of the brook, the report suggests, would minimize property

damage and loss by restricting land uses that are incompatible with the optimal flow and course of the brook. The report also recommends improving stormwater management to increase the base flow while decreasing the peak flows, which will reduce both the amount of pollutants carried by the brook along with the degradation its channel and erosion of its banks. Finally, efforts should be undertaken to remove trash and debris from the brook in order to ease the flow and enhance the quality of water. Asked what residents could do to protect their property from erosion, Murawski advised against “patchwork” measures, emphasizing that changes to one section of the brook would have adverse effects downstream. In particular, he discouraged residents from lining or armoring the banks, which he said was prohibited by state law. Instead, Murawski said that a comprehensive approach to restoring the brook was in the best interest of all those with property alongside it. Powell said that the success of this project has encouraged him to seek funding for assessments of Langley Brook, which flows into Paugus Bay near Christmas Island, and Durkee Brook, which flows past Union Cemetery and empties into Lake Winnisquam at the Petro-Mart on Court Street. Murawski said that he anticipated a plan for addressing the watershed would be complete by the end of the year.

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Gilford Budget Committee again pursues detailed financial reports from town, school district BY MICHAEL KITCH GILFORD — The Budget Committee last night decided to renew its request for detailed financial information from both the town and the school district, which the Board of Selectmen refused in a strongly worded letter in July. In May the committee discussed requests for data by several members and decided reasonable requests should be forwarded the town or the school district. In July, Chairman Dick Hickok passed a request from Skip Murphy to Geoff Ruggles, the town’s finance director, and Scott Isabelle, assistant superintendent for business for the school district. Murphy asked for the aggregated cost of utilities and personnel for the past ten years as well as the hourly cost of municipal services and per student cost of educational services. He also sought data on free and reduced lunches offered by the school district, including the eligibility requirements and cost of breakfast, lunch and dinners. From the welfare department, he asked to know how much was spent for monthly cable television service. In addition, the town and school district were asked to report the cost of unfunded mandates from the county, state and federal governments. Finally, he requested an inventory of gifts made to the town and school district during the past five years and an accounting of any costs associated with them. In a letter to Hickok, the selectmen expressed concern that Murphy’s request could prompt similar requests from other members of the committee that would place heavy demands on town employees. “We are troubled by the voluminous nature of the information of the information being requested,” wrote the selectmen, who also noted the “dubious value” of the data, which they said would be denied under the Right-to-Know law. Noting that “this particular request may not truly reflect the ‘pertinent information’ needs of the Budget Committee as a whole,” the board directed the committee to take a formal vote

on such requests by its members and submit the request as a committee. Hickok opened the discussion by remarking of the letter “I thought it was out of line and disrespectful.” Murphy insisted that the Budget Committee “decides what data is required and in what format” and, referring to state statute, claimed that the selectmen have no authority to tell the committee how to conduct its proceedings. In particular, Murphy drew on RSA 32:22, which reads “Upon request by the budget committee, the governing body of the town or district, or the town manager or other administrative official, shall forthwith submit to the budget committee a comparative statement of all appropriations and all expenditures by them made in such detail as the budget committee may require.” Echoing the selectmen’s letter, Scott Dunn, the town administrator, told the committee that the town’s annual telephone bill was about $25,000 and asked “what is the point of spending lots of time on $25,000 in an $11-million budget?” Reminding Dunn that he worked in the private sector, Murphy explained that the committee required data on the trend of unit costs in order to identify and address those expenses that were rising and manage the budget. The committee did not have a copy of Murphy’s original request for information at hand. Although the chairman or members remembered discussing the requests, none could recall if the committee endorsed some or all of them or if a formal vote was ever taken. After much discussion of these issues, Dunn retrieved a copy of Murphy’s request, which he distributed to the committee. Members agreed that the requests could be worded with more precision and, with encouragement from Selectman Gus Benavides, adopted a motion to submit separate requests to the town and the school district, each seeking well-defined information “if it is available.”

SHAKER from page one dents charge by saying that the decision to eliminate the stipends “crushed a lot of kids.” “I just don’t think it’s right,” she said, saying she felt somewhat marginalized by a school board that places more emphasis on sports than academics. Over the summer, the school board, faced with what it thought was at least a $300,000 2011-2012 budget deficit largely due to the changes in the district contributions to the state retirement system, chose to eliminate, among other things, the $57,000 paid in stipends for advisers of nearly 50 after-school activities. “The board’s focus was to keep the teachers in the classroom,” said Chair Preston Tuthill who noted the board was forced to reduce a number of activities, expenses and some non-teaching staff to “keep a full faculty.” As of last night, Tuthill said the unexpended

funds available to the district was estimated to be about $60,000 to $70,000. When the Laconia Daily Sun story ran last week about parents reaction to the after school program stipend cuts, school district business administrator Debbie Thompson had estimated the number to be around $127,000 but said it is a moving target. Not all who were at last night’s meeting spoke in favor of restoring the stipends. Some, like former Budget Committee member Ken Knowlton, said while the cuts were regrettable, the federal and state mandated education components that are increasingly not being funded by the federal and state government, have fallen on the shoulders of ordinary taxpayers who just can’t take much more. “The fact is we are living in bad economic times,” he said. “Bad cuts will have to be made.” see next page

THE LACONIA DAILY SUN

THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Friday, September 9, 2011— Page 11

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FairPoint to lay off 400 workers, including 190 in NH

PORTLAND, Maine (AP) — Telecommunications company FairPoint Communications is cutting 400 jobs, or about 10 percent of its work force, as it continues to struggle financially after emerging from bankruptcy. Company officials notified employees Thursday that about 130 people will lose their jobs in Maine, 190 in New Hampshire and 55 in Vermont in the coming months. Another 25 jobs are being cut in the other 15 states where FairPoint operates. “We’re matching our work force to our workload,” said FairPoint Maine President Mike Reed. “We’re under pretty heavy competition and everyone knows we’ve lost some access lines.” FairPoint is based in Charlotte, N.C., and provides telephone and high-speed Internet services in 18 states, with nearly 1.4 million access lines. The company filed for bankruptcy in the fall of 2009, 18 months after buying Verizon’s northern New England landline telephone and Internet operations for $2.3 billion. It has continued to struggle since emerging from bankruptcy in January. In its last earnings report, FairPoint reported

losing $27.1 million for the April-June period while seeing the number of its access lines decline 6.4 percent from a year ago. Its stock price has fallen from over $24 a share after emerging from bankruptcy to about $6, where it was trading Thursday afternoon. The jobs now being cut include about 100 management positions and 300 union-represented jobs. All eligible employees will receive severance packages expected to total between $7 and $13 million. The smaller work force will result in annual savings of about $34 million, FairPoint said. The job cuts show the company still hasn’t worked out its problems, said Peter McLaughlin, chairman of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers council overseeing locals in Maine, New Hampshire and Vermont. “We just barely have the people now to get done what we have to do and now they’re going to cut another 400 heads,” McLaughlin said. “Our residential customers, our business customers and our wholesale customers are going to suffer. And that’s going to drive the company into the ground even further.”

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JOBS from page 2 those they already employ would get an even bigger benefit: On payroll increases up to $50 million they would pay no Social Security tax. Obama also proposed spending to fix schools and roads, hire local teachers and police and to extend unemployment benefits. He proposed a tax credit for businesses that hire people out of work for six months or longer, plus other tax relief aimed at winning bipartisan support in a time of divided government. Under soaring expectations for results, Obama sought to put himself on the side of voters who he said could not care less about the political consequences of his speech. “The question is whether, in the face of an ongoing national crisis, we can stop the political circus and actually do something to help the economy,” Obama said. His aim Thursday night was to put pressure on Congress to act — and to share the responsibility for fixing the economic mess that is sure to figure in next year’s elections. For every time he told lawmakers to “pass the bill” — and he said over and over — Democrats cheered while Republicans sat in silence. Tax cuts amounted to the broadest part of Obama’s proposal — in essence, a challenge by the Democratic president to congressional Republicans to get behind him on one of their own cherished economic principles or risk the wrath of voters for inaction. The tax cuts alone would amount to roughly $250 billion. The president said deepening the payroll tax cut would save an average family making $50,000 a year about $1,500 compared to what they would if Congress did not extend the current tax cut. “I know some of you have sworn oaths to never raise any taxes on anyone for as long as you live,” Obama said, a reference to the conservative tea party influence on many House Republicans. “Now is not the time to carve out an exception and raise-middle class taxes, which is why you should pass this bill right away.” from preceding page He noted that many of the same people made the same objections when the school tried to eliminate some sports programs and that, with a finite pool of money, they were just going to end up fighting among themselves about what is more valuable. Overwhelmingly, those who were at last night’s meeting wanted to see the programs restored, either through volunteerism, paid stipends or a combination of both. One young fourth grader was reduced to tears when she recounted her feelings when she returned to school and realized her after-school activities had been slashed. Many parents said their child’s ability to be accepted into college or university without showing extra-curricular activities in their backgrounds will be hampered. A Canterbury parent said that the entire school population benefits from these activities, including those students who choose not to participate in them, and that for some students they are the carrots that lead them to learning about different subjects. “You’re taking away a key component,” she said. Yet another parent read aloud the mission statement from the district’s strategic plan and noted that the elimination of the co-curricular activities ran contrary to the district’s averred goals. Following the meeting, Tuthill said that the school board will meet Monday night at 6 p.m. in the SAU offices after administrators have reviewed the budget.

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PLYMOUTH — A town-wide community yard sale this Saturday will help support Voices Against Violence, an organization formed in 1981 when a small group of women joined together and provided shelter for victims of domestic violence. The organization has grown significantly over the years to support victims to domestic violence, sexual assault and stalking in 18 surrounding towns. Voices currently has four full time staff members, one part time, and 10 volunteers who operate an emergency

shelter, 24/7 hotline, and provide court, hospital, and police department accompaniment. The yard sale will be held from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. at over 100 locations. Maps listing the locations will be sold for $2 at the Meredith Village Savings Bank’s offices, the Plymouth Region Chamber of Commerce office (across from the PSU’s new Ice Arena), NH Electric Co-op and Lakes Region Community Services on the Tenney Mountain highway.

GILFORD — Edgewater Academy of Dance begins its 13th season Monday, September 12. The academy offers classes in Kindersteps, Boy’s Agility Jam, Preballet, Pretap, Ballet, Pointe, Tap,

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the left-hander turned his luck around in this one, allowing three runs and five hits in 6 2-3 innings. He walked three and struck out seven. Romero has lost just once since July 21, dropping a 6-4 decision at Yankee Stadium on Sept. 3. Casey Janssen worked 1 1-3 innings and Frank Francisco pitched around Jason Varitek’s leadoff homer in the ninth to finish it. A two-out error by Kelly Johnson and a base hit by Marco Scutaro brought Dustin Pedroia to the plate as the tying run, but Francisco struck him out to end it. Toronto opened the scoring with four in the second against left-hander Andrew Miller (6-3). Johnson reached on an infield single, advanced to third on Brett Lawrie’s base hit to right and scored on a single by David Cooper. Arencibia followed with a drive into the third deck in left, his 22nd and second in as many days.

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TORONTO (AP) — Ricky Romero won for the seventh time in nine starts, J.P. Arencibia hit a three-run homer and the Toronto Blue Jays beat the Boston Red Sox 7-4 on Thursday night. Edwin Encarnacion and Eric Thames added solo shots as the Blue Jays won back-to-back games for the first time since Aug. 31 and Sept. 1 at Baltimore. Rookie David Cooper went 3 for 4 and had two RBIs as Toronto evened its record at 72-72. Boston lost for the fourth time in five games and failed to gain ground on the first place New York Yankees, who lost 5-4 in 10 innings to Baltimore earlier in the day. The Red Sox are 2 1/2 games behind New York with 19 left to play. Romero (14-10) came in 2-6 with an 8.08 ERA in 11 career starts against the Red Sox, including an 0-3 record and 10.62 ERA in five home starts. But

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are sold at non-profit venues in the United States. A new sewing school building was built in 2005 to house the expanding program. The items available will include purses and tote bags of various sizes, children’s back packs, and tablecloths and are of quality workmanship. very colorful and unique in design. The local Zonta Club is part of Zonta International, a global organization of executives and professionals working together to advance the status of women worldwide through service and advocacy. With more than 31,000 members belonging to more than 1,200 Zonta Clubs in 64 countries and geographic areas, Zontians all over the world volunteer their time, talents and support to local and international service projects, as well as scholarship programs aimed at fulfilling Zonta’s mission and objectives. For more information on Zonta International, go to www.zonta.org. For more information on the

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LACONIA — Members of the Zonta Club of the Lakes Region will continue their annual participation in the upcoming Multicultural Market Day in downtown Laconia on September 10 with a booth devoted to the sale of woven items made in Cambodia. All proceeds from the sale will go back to the Sharing Foundation, whose mission is to help meet the physical, emotional, educational and medical needs of orphaned and seriously disadvantaged children in Cambodia. Items for sale at the Zonta booth are from the Roteang Orphanage in Cambodia where the sewing program provides training for young women so they can get supervisory jobs in the garment industry or work in the foundation’s local shop, providing good income for their families. The women produce school uniforms, which are donated to needy children throughout Cambodia, as well as silk handbags that

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Maps for town-wide yard sale in Plymouth on Saturday are available at several locations

THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Friday, September 9, 2011— Page 13

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Starts at LACONIA VFW, Court St., Laconia Join us for coffee and doughnuts at 10 am Kickstands up at 11 am to return at 1 pm Cost $15 or Equivalent Toy or Both Door Prizes, 50/50 Raffle, Main Raffle Live Band: TWILIGHT GYPSIES Cash Bar, Public Welcome, Cars come at 1pm Food & Drink (Donations welcome for food) Remember Santa rides a painted pony (or a Harley) For info call 483-2835 or 630-4757 SPONSORED BY NATIVE AMERICAN TOY FUND & NH CHAPTER 5/II COMBAT VETS MOTORCYCLE ASSOC.


Page 14 — THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Friday, September 9, 2011

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Paul A. Fournier, 69 LACONIA — Paul A. Fournier, 69, of 250 Mechanic Street, Lakeport died at the Lakes Regional General Hospital, Laconia on Tuesday, September 6, 2011. Mr. Fournier was born March 28, 1942 in Concord, NH, the son of A. Armand and Blanche H. (Roulier) Fournier. Mr. Fournier was a lifelong resident of Laconia. He was a graduate of Laconia High School and had been employed at Aavid Engineering, Belknap Tire Co. as well as Salta Tire Company. Mr. Fournier was a communicant of Our Lady of the Lakes Church, Lakeport. He enjoyed fishing, biking, bowling and the annual family camping trip to Hermit Island. He was an avid Red Sox Fan and Patriots Fan. He had the gift of gab and never met a lobster he didn’t like. Survivors include three sons, Paul A. Fournier, Jr., Jerry “Jay” Robert Freeman, Jr., Michael J. Fournier; two daughters, Jennifer A. Calvin and Tammy McKenna ; seven grandchildren, Jessica Freeman, Jeremiah Freeman, Joshua L. Fournier, Zachary Q.

Freeman, Rebecca M. Freeman, Morgaen T. Nicodemus and Malachi J. Nicodemus; a great granddaughter, Nina Freeman; three brothers, Richard Fournier, Alec Fournier and Armand Fournier; a sister, Helen Hemeon, and several nephews, nieces and cousins. There will be no calling hours. A Celebration of his life will be held at the Beane Conference Center (www.beanecenter.com) 35 Blueberry Lane, Laconia, N.H. on Sunday, September 11, 2011 at 3 p.m. Burial will be in the family lot in Sacred Heart Cemetery, Laconia, N.H. For those who wish, the family suggests that memorial donations be made to the Epilepsy Foundation of Mass., R.I., N.H. & ME, 540 Gallivan Blvd , Second Floor, Boston, MA 02124. 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.

Norma L. Batchelder, 77 HOLDERNESS — Norma Leila Batchelder, 77, of Prospect Ridge Road, died September 8, 2011 at her home, after a long battle with cancer. Born in Plymouth on September 25, 1933, she was the daughter of Harold and Pearl Elizabeth [Veasey] Burtt. Norma grew up in the Plymouth area and graduated from Plymouth High School. She resided in Wolfeboro for over ten years and has resided in Holderness many years. She worked in the food and hospitality business for many years including, owning and operating the Deep Six Seafood Market in Wolfeboro. In her later years, she worked in the home health care field as a care giver for the elderly. She was predeceased by her husbands, Earl Eldon Westover, who died in 1958, Dr. Rockwood Mason

Batchelder, who died in 1993, son, Gary Westover, who died in March of 1998, and sister, Delva J. Gauthier, who died in May of 2011. Norma is survived by her son, James H. Westover of Holderness, grandson, Earl E. Westover of Tamworth, brother, Floyd Burtt of Rumney, sister, Euna McCormack, of Campton, half sister, Joan Milton of Adam’s Way, SC, many nieces and nephews. A graveside service will be held in the Blair Cemetery, Campton, on Sunday at 1pm. The Rev. Edward J. Charest, pastor of the Plymouth United Methodist Church, will officiate. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to the Pemi-Baker Home Health and Hospice, 101 Boulder Point, Plymouth, NH. 03264. The Mayhew Funeral Homes and Crematorium, in Plymouth and Meredith, are in charge of the arrangements.

Virginia E. Sylvia, 83 LACONIA – Virginia E. Sylvia, 83, of Pleasant Street, died Wednesday, September 7, 2011 in her home after a long illness. She was born in Boston, Mass. on March 3, 1928. Virginia worked for several years as a clerk for the Department of Health for the State of Massachusetts. She loved to knit and do puzzles. She also enjoyed drinking tea and talking with friends. She was loved by all who knew her. She was predeceased by her husband, Mack Sylvia and one son, Howard Sylvia. She is survived by three sons; Phillip Sylvia Sr.,

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Lawrence Sylvia and Andrew Sylvia, one brother, Robert McMichael, many grandchildren and greatgrandchildren. There will be no calling hours. A private graveside service will be held in Union Cemetery in Laconia. Wilkinson-Beane-Simoneau-Paquette Funeral Home & Cremation Services, 164 Pleasant Street, Laconia, N.H. is assisting the family with the arrangements. For more information and to view an online memorial go to www.wilkinsonbeane.com.

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THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Friday, September 9, 2011— Page 15

9/11 Remembrance at ‘The Soloist,’ free film showing Sept 12 in Laconia Laconia Baptist church LACONIA — Sunday, September 11, is the tenth anniversary of the terrorist attacks on New York and Washington. In honor of those who died that day, the Evangelical Baptist Church will have a time of remembrance and honor as part of its Sunday morning service. The entire service will focus on “How do we deal with 9/11 ten years later?” In addition to remembering those who died on 9/11, protective services personnel in Laconia will be recognized and honored for the vital role they play in keeping the community safe. Pastor Andrew Matthews says, “These men and women identify with the fire fighters and police officers who died trying to save lives in New York City that day. Laconia’s protective service people are the ones that go into dangerous situations when the rest of us are getting out. They put their lives on the line for us every day and we want to honor them this Sunday.” In addition to fire and police personnel, anyone serving in the Armed Services from the area is invited to attend in uniform for one of the services. The general public is also invited to attend one of the Sunday morning services at Evangelical Baptist Church, at 8:45 a.m. or 10:30 a.m. For more information, call 524-2277 or visit www.ebclaconia.com.

Playgroup opens Monday at Meredith Community Center

MEREDITH — A play group for young children will be held from 10 a.m. to noon on Mondays starting September 12 at the Meredith Community Center Activity Center. Parents are responsible for supervising their children and toys and equipment will be made available. Cost for the entire program, which runs through Nov. 21, is $10 for residents plus $3 per sibling and $15 plus $3 per sibling for non-residents. For more information call 279-8197.

LACONIA — The Laconia Human Relations Committee in cooperation with the Laconia Public Library, is presenting a series of international films depicting different societal dynamics on the domestic and international front. The next film to be featured is “The Soloist” which will be shown Monday, September 12 at 6:30 p.m. at the Laconia Public Library. “The Soloist” features the true-life story of Nathaniel Ayers, a Julliard-trained cello prodigy who is homeless and befriended by a Los Angeles journalist. These two Los Angeles men, from differ-

ent socio-economic backgrounds, face the hard realities of personal struggles and social injustice. Jamie Foxx and Robert Downey, Jr. star in the film. It is 117 minutes long and rated PG-13. Lovinia Ellsworth, film series coordinator, says,“This film series aims to enlarge the vision for different cultures and to give background for the changes and processes happening through-out the world and here in the U.S.” For more information contact Carol Pierce at newdynam@aol.com or Lovinia Ellsworth at Lovinia. Ellsworth@yahoo.com.


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By Holiday Mathis there are some you can’t see until you land in them. When you hit one, it’s best to get back up immediately and keep marching on. The only way to lose is by giving up. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). One way to change your destiny is to change the cast of characters around you. You’ll thrive among people who can understand, challenge and contribute to your interests. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). While someone else tries to persuade, cajole and manipulate people for status, you’ll show your social brilliance by taking a different approach. You’ll win friends with a smile and a listening ear. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). Speak up, even if you know very little about the people or topic at hand. You may stumble clumsily into a conversation, but you express yourself from a pure place in your heart, and others will feel this and accept you. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). You’ll dream boldly and differently. You’ll ask for what you really want, instead of asking for what you think you should want. Your wishes may not be granted, but this kind of asking will make you stand out and be admired. TODAY’S BIRTHDAY (Sept. 9). You’re a true original, and you’ll express your uniqueness in a special project. You’ll do what no one has ever done before, and it will work for you. In November, you’ll have a challenger, and this person will push you to deliver your peak performance. Lucrative business comes in January. May brings healing. Libra and Scorpio people adore you. Your lucky numbers are: 9, 41, 5, 33 and 17.

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ARIES (March 21-April 19). Check your drawers, closets, garage, barn, shed and attic to find usable and reusable possessions. You’ll find items to give away and items to make you smile and reminisce. TAURUS (April 20-May 20). Someone will try to use an old catalyst to elicit a reaction from you. Little does this person know how much you have grown. You will be impervious to this person’s emotional stimuli. GEMINI (May 21-June 21). You’ll lend your wit to a conversation and win both approval and disapproval. Those who disapprove are clearly jealous. And those who approve may fall in love with you. CANCER (June 22-July 22). You have been delivering a consistent performance, giving a high level of support to those who depend on you and doing an overall commendable job. Therefore, you deserve the respect that’s coming to you. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). If you are angry, use it to embolden your mission. Your audacity will separate you from the herd. Your force will be a wakeup call to others. The element of surprise will work in your favor. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). You’ll benefit from subtle self-promotion. In your charming way, you’ll keep others informed of who you are, what you do and what you want and need in order to make your dream happen. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). Do not be afraid to accept help -- the more someone helps you the greater his or her investment will be in your relationship. Relationships become bonded in this kind of sharing. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). As much as you try to avoid life’s potholes,

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by Mastroianni & Hart

Page 16 — THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Friday, September 9, 2011

ACROSS 1 Mr. Disney 5 Under 10 Wooden float 14 Once more 15 Cognizant 16 Singer Guthrie 17 Vanished __ thin air 18 Redundancy 20 Plump, and then some 21 Goofs up 22 Raised strip 23 Roof edges 25 Was victorious 26 Flower bed 28 Actress Rogers 31 Detest 32 Tattles 34 Evergreen with red berries 36 Foot digits 37 Carried 38 Former Attorney General Janet 39 Zsa Zsa’s sister

40 41 42 44 45 46 47 50 51 54 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 1 2 3

Segment Beer Brother of JFK Didn’t succeed Rush Money, slangily TV’s “Perry __” Hanks & Cruise Jacuzzi Air around the Earth Druggie Perched upon Burr or Spelling Veal or venison Three biblical kings Period of time spent at a job Inquires

4 5

DOWN Homeless child Actress Paquin Feature at the top of business stationery

28 29 30 32 33 35

6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 19 21 24 25 26 27

Duo Like desolate, fruitless land Water holders Drinks like Fido Calif.’s northern neighbor Moist PG-13 or R, for example Dry Whip Muscle quality Actor Jeremy “...lived happily __ after.” Hubbubs Untamed Fence opening __ suspicion; irreproachable Delight Spectacles __ Zellweger __ the line; obeyed And so forth: abbr. Dictionary entry

37 Grow weary 38 Train track piece 40 Take __; put forth effort 41 Asian nation 43 Ms. Goldberg 44 Rouse; incite 46 Ignoramus 47 “Yes, __”; polite response

48 “__ boy!”; encouraging comment 49 Air pollution 50 Hatcher or Garr 52 Mountaintop 53 __ and crafts 55 Faux __; gaffe 56 Sombrero, e.g. 57 Ms. Thurman

Yesterday’s Answer


THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Friday, September 9, 2011— Page 17

––––––– ALMANAC ––––––– Today is Friday, Sept. 9, the 252nd day of 2011. There are 113 days left in the year. Today’s Highlight in History: On Sept. 9, 1971, prisoners seized control of the maximum-security Attica Correctional Facility near Buffalo, N.Y., beginning a siege that ended up claiming 43 lives. On this date: In 1776, the second Continental Congress made the term “United States” official, replacing “United Colonies.” In 1830, Charles Durant flew a balloon from New York City across the Hudson River to Perth Amboy, N.J. In 1850, California became the 31st state of the union. In 1919, some 1,100 members of Boston’s 1,500-man police force went on strike. (The strike was broken by Massachusetts Gov. Calvin Coolidge, who brought in replacement officers.) In 1926, the National Broadcasting Co. (NBC) was incorporated by the Radio Corp. of America. In 1957, President Dwight D. Eisenhower signed the first civil rights bill to pass Congress since Reconstruction. In 1986, Frank Reed, director of a private school in Lebanon, was taken hostage; he was released 44 months later. In 1991, boxer Mike Tyson was indicted in Indianapolis on a charge of raping Desiree Washington, a beauty pageant contestant. (Tyson was convicted and ended up serving three years of a six-year prison sentence.) One year ago: A natural gas pipeline explosion killed eight people and destroyed dozens of homes in the San Francisco suburb of San Bruno, Calif. Iran said it would free Sarah Shourd, one of three American hikers held for more than 13 months on spying accusations, as an act of clemency to mark the end of the Islamic holy month of Ramadan. (Shane Bauer and Josh Fattal were sentenced in August 2011 to eight years in prison.) Today’s Birthdays: Actor Cliff Robertson is 88. Actress Sylvia Miles is 77. Actor Topol is 76. Rhythm-and-blues singer Luther Simmons is 69. Singer Inez Foxx is 69. Singer Dee Dee Sharp is 66. Rock singer-musician Doug Ingle is 65. Country singer Freddy Weller is 64. College Football Hall of Famer and former NFL player Joe Theismann is 62. Rock musician John McFee (The Doobie Brothers) is 61. Actor Tom Wopat is 60. Actress Angela Cartwright is 59. Musicianproducer Dave Stewart is 59. Actor Hugh Grant is 51. Actress Constance Marie is 46. Actor David Bennent is 45. Actor Adam Sandler is 45. Rock singer Paul Durham (Black Lab) is 43. Model Rachel Hunter is 42. Actor Eric Stonestreet (TV: “Modern Family”) is 40. Actor Goran Visnjic (VEEZ’-nihch) is 39. Pop-jazz singer Michael Buble’ (boo-BLAY’) is 36. Country singer Joey Martin (Joey + Rory) is 36. Latin singer Maria Rita is 34.

FRIDAY PRIME TIME 8:00

Dial 2 4

WGBH Wash.

48 Hours Mystery (In

WBZ Stereo) Å

TEERPW CTOONY

Charlie Rose (N) Å

CSI: NY “Life Sentence” Blue Bloods “Cellar Boy” WBZ News Gunfire tears through the Suspicion falls on an ad- (N) Å crime lab. dict for murder. Karaoke Battle USA 20/20 (In Stereo) Å NewsCenContestants perform in ter 5 Late the semifinals. (N) Å (N) Å Dateline NBC Remembering Sept. 11, 2001. (N) News (In Stereo) Å

Late Show With David Letterman Nightline (N) Å

News

Tonight Show With Jay Leno Jay Leno

8

WMTW Shark Tank Å

Karaoke Battle USA (N) 20/20 (In Stereo) Å

News

Nightline

9

WMUR Shark Tank Å

Karaoke Battle USA (N) 20/20 (In Stereo) Å

News

Nightline

10

WLVI

11

WENH

Nikita “Pandora” Percy tries to take over the CIA. (In Stereo) Å Priceless Antiques Antiques Roadshow Roadshow Å The Insider Entertain(N) Å ment Tonight (N) 48 Hours Mystery Å

12

WSBK

13

WGME

14

WTBS Fam. Guy

15 16 17

Fam. Guy

Kitchen Nightmares WFXT A struggling California restaurant. Å CSPAN Politics & Public Policy WBIN Monk (In Stereo) Å

Supernatural The fight for heaven comes to a head. (In Stereo) Å History Detectives A 1775 Almanac; exercise guru. (N) Å WBZ News Community (N) Auditions CSI: NY Å

7 News at 10PM on Friends (In Everybody CW56 (N) (In Stereo) Å Stereo) Å Loves Raymond NOVA “Engineering POV “Better This World” Ground Zero” One World Bradley Crowder and Trade Center. David McKay. The Office The Office Seinfeld Curb Your “Goodbye, “The Dun- “The Old EnthusiToby” dies” Å Man” asm Å Blue Bloods Å News Letterman

Movie: ››‡ “What Women Want” (2000) Mel Gibson. Å

Fox 25 News at 10 (N) Å Fox 25 TMZ (In News at Stereo) Å 11 (N) Politics & Public Policy Today

Monk (In Stereo) Å

Law & Order: SVU

ESPN College Football

Score

29

ESPN2 NASCAR Racing

Baseball Tonight (N)

30

CSNE Tailgate

32

NESN MLB Baseball: Red Sox at Rays

33

LIFE Reba Å

35 38 42 43 45 50

E!

Sex-City

Patriots

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Sports

SportsNet Patriots

Innings

Red Sox

Daily

Sports Outdoors

Reba Å

Reba Å

Roseanne Roseanne Against the Wall Å

Sex-City

Sex-City

Sex-City

The Soup

Jersey Shore Å

The O’Reilly Factor (N) Hannity (N)

MSNBC The Last Word CNN Anderson Cooper 360 TNT

Quick

’70s Show Punk’d

College Football

Reba Å

MTV Jersey Shore Å FNC

What Wm

Fringe “The Last Sam Weiss” Olivia teams up with Sam Weiss. Å The Contenders

28

Fashion

Chelsea

E! News

Movie: ›‡ “Billy Madison” (1995, Comedy) 9/11: Timeline

The O’Reilly Factor

Rachel Maddow Show MSNBC Documentary

MSNBC Documentary

Piers Morgan Tonight

Beyond 911

Movie: ››› “Hitch” (2005) Will Smith. Å

Anderson Cooper 360

Movie: ››› “Hitch” (2005) Will Smith. Å

51

USA NCIS “Requiem” Å

NCIS “Stakeout” Å

CSI: Crime Scene

CSI: Crime Scene

52

COM Tosh.0

Billy Gardell: Halftime

Jeff Foxworthy

Comedy

53

SPIKE Gangland Å

UFC Unleashed

UFC Unleashed (In Stereo)

54

BRAVO Movie: ››› “The School of Rock” (2003) Jack Black.

Tosh.0

Comedy Unleash

Movie: ››› “The School of Rock”

55

AMC Movie: ››‡ “King Arthur” (2004) Clive Owen. Premiere.

56

SYFY WWE Friday Night SmackDown! (N) Å

Haven “Lockdown” (N)

Paranormal Witness

57

A&E Storage

Storage

Storage

Storage

Storage

Storage

Storage

Storage

59

HGTV Hunters

Hunters

Hunters

Hunters

Hunters

Hunters

Hunters

Hunters

60

DISC Man, Woman, Wild

61

TLC

Say Yes

Say Yes

Movie: ››‡ “King Arthur” (2004)

Man, Woman, Wild (N) One Man Army (N)

Man, Woman, Wild

Say Yes

Say Yes

Four Weddings (N)

Say Yes

Say Yes

Friends

Friends

Friends

Friends

64

NICK The Penguins

Friends

65

TOON Star Wars

King of Hill King of Hill Amer. Dad Amer. Dad Fam. Guy

66 67 75

Thundr.

Friends

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FAM Funniest Home Videos Funniest Home Videos Funniest Home Videos The 700 Club (N) Å DSN Movie: ›››‡ “Up” SHOW Peters

Phineas

Random

Vampire

Good Luck Wizards

Movie: “Glorious 39” (2009) Romola Garai. iTV Premiere. Mel Brooks

76

HBO “Our Family Wedding”

77

MAX Movie: ››‡ “The Book of Eli” (2010) Å

Wizards

Boxing

Movie: ››‡ “Dinner for Schmucks” (2010) Strike Back (N) Å

Chemistry Skin-Max

CALENDAR TODAY’S EVENTS “A Little Princess” presented by the Just Love to Sing classical singers. 7 p.m. at Farmington Town Hall. A musical based on the story by Frances Hodgson Burnett. Dinner style format with light sandwiches and salads, dessert and beverages. For tickets call 781-5695. “Bud Burst” concert by Tributary Dance hosted by the Plymouth State University Department of Music, Theatre and Dance. 7 p.m. in the Studio Theatre at the Silver Center for the Arts. Bringing together professional dancers from across New England to create multimedia performances inspired by New England living. For tickets call 535-2787. Al-Anon Meeting at the Congregational Church Parish House (18 Veterans Square) in Laconia. 9:30 to 11 a.m. each Friday. Al-Anon offers hope and help to families of alcoholics. No dues or fees. All are welcome. Call 645-9518. Gilmanton Farmers Market. 3 to 6 p.m. at the Academy building on Rte. 107. Giggles & Grins playgroup at Family Resource Center in downtown Laconia (635 Main Street). Free group for parents children from birth through age 5. For more information call 524-1741. Sanbornton Farmers’ Market. 3 to 6 p.m. every Friday through Oct. 7 at 520 Sanborn Road (Rte. 132) in Sanbornton Square. Knit Wits gathering at the Gilford Public Library. 1:30 to 2:30 p.m. All knitters welcome. Tot Time at the Meredith Public Library. 9:30 to 10:20 a.m. Stories, songs and crafts for ages 1-3. ‘The Guys’ performed by Winni Players. The two-person play is set in the aftermath of September 11, 2001 and may not be suitable for children. 7:30 p.m. See www.winniplayhouse.com or call 366-7377 for more information. Social Security and Medicare, myths and facts and what they mean for today’s senior citizens, will be discussed at meeting of the Belknap County Area Committee on Aging. 10 a.m. at the Wesley Woods Community Room, located behind hte First United Methodist Church in Gilford. Call 528-2555 for more information. The committee’s meetings are open to the public.

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 10 “A Little Princess” presented by the Just Love to Sing classical singers. 3 p.m. at Farmington Town Hall. A musical based on the story by Frances Hodgson Burnett. Dinner style format with light sandwiches and salads, dessert and beverages. For tickets call 781-5695. “Bud Burst” concert by Tributary Dance hosted by the Plymouth State University Department of Music, Theatre and Dance. 2 p.m. matinee and again at 7 p.m. in the Studio Theatre at the Silver Center for the Arts. Bringing together professional dancers from across New England to create multimedia performances inspired by New England living. For tickets call 535-2787. Hal Graham and the BRATTS trail maintenance work party on the Blue Trail. Meet at the top of Carriage Road in Gilford at 8:30 a.m. Bring gloves and lunch, tools provided. New volunteers always welcome. Contact Hal Graham at halpeg76@metrocast.net or call 286-3506. 15th Annual New England Homebrewer’s Jamboree. Branch Brook Campground in Campton. Gates open at 10 a.m. Day tickets are $10. Family entertainment and music throughout the day. Proceeds to Make A Wish Foundation. “Man of One Book: The Life of John Wesley” presented by the Wesley Players. 7 p.m. at the First United Methodist Church in Gilford. Donations gratefully accepted. 524-3289. Raptor Day at the Squam Lake Natural Science Center in Holderness. A day designed to educate the public about all types of raptors, including hawks, eagles, falcons and ospreys. Live animal presentations throughout the day. Regular trail admission. $15/adult. $12/senior $10/ child. www.nhnature.org.

see CALENDAR page 22

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.

Answer: Yesterday’s

10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 MI-5 “The Special”

Dateline NBC Remembering Sept. 11, 2001. (N)

6

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

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

KIYRS

9:30

7

5

by David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek

BGYRU

SEPTEMBER 9, 2011

9:00

Shark Tank PreventWCVB ing cancer in pets. (In Stereo) Å Friends Friends WCSH With Ben- With Benefits (N) efits (N) Friends WHDH Friends

THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

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

8:30

McL’ghlin MI-5 “The Special”

(Answers tomorrow) Jumbles: ADMIT SLANT ATTEND EMBARK Answer: He was one of the most-liked pool players due to his good — TABLE MANNERS

“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: 65 Water St., Laconia, NH 03246 Business Office 737-2020, Newsroom 737-2026, Fax: 527-0056 News E-mail: news@laconiadailysun.com CIRCULATION: 18,000 distributed FREE Tues. through Sat. in Laconia, Weirs Beach, Gilford, Meredith, Center Harbor, Belmont, Moultonborough, Winnisquam, Sanbornton, Tilton, Gilmanton, Alton, New Hampton, Plymouth, Bristol, Ashland, Holderness.


Page 18 — THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Friday, September 9, 2011

ANNIE’S MAILBOX

Dear Annie: My wife and I have been married for 20 years. I was laid off recently for the second time. While reviewing our finances, I noticed that our cellphone usage had substantially increased. I asked my wife about it, and she explained that she was catching up with friends. I normally do not look at her phone, but I decided to see who she was yakking with. It turns out she was calling and texting a former male co-worker. I then found a naked photo of the man on her phone. She tried to pass it off as a joke and then said he’d been drinking when he sent it. Additional investigation led me to discover there were plenty of late-night texts and calls, and that she was also sending intimate photos of herself to him. I feel betrayed and cheated on. We have talked and are working through this situation. I want to ask my cellphone provider for transcripts of their texts just to see if there is more to the situation than she is admitting. Do you think this is a wise choice? -- Feeling Cheated On Dear Cheated On: No. If you find nothing, you still have to deal with the problem at hand. And if you discover more pictures or evidence of an affair, you will feel worse, and those words and images will stick in your head for a long time. Your wife has betrayed your trust, whether or not she slept with the guy. Please get counseling. A third party can help you find the best way to get past this. Dear Annie: I once invited my 60-year-old next-door neighbor to swim in our pool. She then informed me that she would come over daily after dinner and didn’t plan to phone first. As she put it, “It’s not convenient to call every day.” I tried to tell her politely that the pool is visible from our living room and it is not appropriate for her to use it without our knowledge. We are concerned with our privacy and her

safety, not to mention our liability should anything happen to her. She was furious and stopped speaking to me. I thought it was common sense and established social decorum that one should not swim in a neighbor’s pool without an invitation. Am I correct? How do I mend our relationship? -- Confused Pool Owner Dear Confused: You are correct. Your neighbor doesn’t understand boundaries and has limited social acumen. She also has a short fuse. We don’t know why you want to mend fences with someone who apparently only values you for your swim facilities. If you apologize for upsetting her, she will expect to have complete access to the pool again. The best you can do is smile and say hello when you see her, and hope for the best. Dear Annie: I am writing in response to the letters about school lunches. I have been in the student nutrition profession for more than 20 years. Our school offers a wide variety of fresh fruits and vegetables every day, along with salads and meatless options. All of our pasta, rice, bread and pizza crusts are whole grain. We no longer have fries every day, and nothing is deep-fried. We even offer a grilled chicken sandwich. People don’t realize all the regulations we must follow to comply with the National School Lunch Program. Many districts don’t have the money for fresh produce. We encourage the students to eat more fruits and vegetables, but if they don’t have them at home, it is a struggle. We need the help of parents. The public rarely hears the positive side. Please help us out. -- Proud “Lunch Lady” from Minnesota Dear Minnesota: Consider it done. It’s good to know that some schools are doing their best to provide healthy choices for our kids.

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.

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. 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. DEADLINES: NOON TWO BUSINESS DAYS PRIOR THE DAY OF PUBLICATION. PAYMENT: ALL PRIVATE PARTY ADS MUST BE PRE-PAID. WE ACCEPT CHECKS, VISA AND MASTERCARD CREDIT CARDS AND OF COURSE CASH. THERE IS A $10 MINIMUM ORDER FOR CREDIT CARDS. CORRESPONDENCE: TO PLACE YOUR AD CALL OUR OFFICES 9 A.M. TO 5 P.M., MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY, 527-9299; SEND A CHECK OR MONEY ORDER WITH AD COPY TO THE LACONIA DAILY SUN,65 WATER STREET, LACONIA, NH 03246 OR STOP IN AT OUR OFFICES ON 65 WATER STREET IN LACONIA. OTHER RATES: FOR INFORMATION ABOUT CLASSIFIED DISPLAY ADS CALL 527-9299.

Animals

Animals

AKC German Shepherd puppies ready 10/15, 1 all black female, 1 all black male, $1500/ea. 6 bi colored $1200/ea. Eilene (603)374-9257.

DACHSHUNDS puppies boys & girl heath & temperament guaranteed. $350 to $450. (603)539-1603.

DESIGNER

CUTE as a Button AKC Sheltie Pups. 1st shots & worming. Ready to go now. 630-1712

AKC. Incredible chocolate and yellow pups, bred for quality and temperament. In home raised. (603)664-2828.

LABRADOR RETRIEVER PUPPIES

PUPPIES Very small, well socialized, healthy. Ready to go!

603-520-8393

Animals MISSING: Grey, female, multi cat, from Weirs Boulevard, 2-years old, short hair, lovable, answers to “Cokie”. (617)835-1042.

We have collected some great finds from area homes to be sold at public auction. Artwork, lots of ephemera, bamboo rods, postcards, orientalia, DM glove, coins, sev bayonets, swords,15 cameras, books, 2 violins, memory quilt Franklin,N.H., 1930 NH census map, Sawyers, Nuttings, glass & china, toys, early Judo uniforms & photos, tons more!!

N.H. Lic. #3047 603-279-3087 or 603-253-6303

BOATS

1969 Dodge power wagon with snow plow. $1,850 or best offer. 524-6603 after 5pm. 1987 Chevy Caprice: White, 4-Door, 5-Liter, V8, Loaded with all 1987 extras. Less than 40k original miles. $4,000 or BO. 524-6099. 1992 Ford F150 Super Cab- Long bed, 6-cylinder, manual, 102K, Some rust. Blue Book $1,055/Make offer. 603-279-0972 2000 Ford Windstar- Excellent condition, one owner. A/C, CD, cruise, all power, ABS, new tires/battery. 152K. $3,400. 455-3581 2000 ML-320 Merc SUV immaculate condition, 101K original owner, all maintenance records, $9,900. 603-279-0623. 2001 FORD Explorer- 4-Wheel drive, 4-door, immaculate interior, body excellent condition, AC, 71,000 miles. $5,900. 603-476-5017

2006 Pontiac G6, 6 cyl, 4D sedan sunroof, loaded, 69K miles, $9000. Call (603)520-5198 BUYING junk cars and trucks ME & NH. Call for price. Martin Towing. (603)305-4504. CASH FOR junk cars & trucks.

Top Dollar Paid. Available 7 days a week. 630-3606 CASH paid for unwanted or junk cars and trucks. Same day service possible. 603-231-2859.

1985 Formula 242LS twin 350s, 95% restored, must see, must sell, health issues. $11,400. 293-4129. BOAT SLIP 2012 For Rent: Paugus Bay, 10ft x unlimited. unlimited length. $1,600/season. 941-730-3111.

MOBILE BOAT SHRINK WRAPPING & WINTERIZATION 24 Years Experience Earlybird September Special

$10/ft. for most boats Call 527-0032 or 581-4847

Serving the Lakes Region

Child Care CHILDREN S Garden Childcare: Year-round, reliable, clean, structured, pre-K environment, one acre yard, central location. 528-1857.

Employment Wanted COMPASSIONATE LNA/Care Giver. 30 years experience. Great references. Will travel, do overnight. 603-875-1232

For Rent 2 bedroom, newly painted . $750/month plus utilities. No smoking no pets. Grange Road, Tilton, N.H. 527-6283 A STUDIO in Tilton, town parking $15/year, updated, close to everything/park. $560/month. 916-214-7733.

* * * OPENING NOVEMBER-DECEMBER 2011* * * 24 new apartment homes Section 8 Welcome 6 Buildings comprised of only four (4) units each EnergyStar washer and dryer supplied in each unit

Log on to: www.auctionzip.com ID#5134, for 300 photos

Antique Furniture and lots more… Listing and Photos at: WaukewanAuctionService.com or Auctionzip.com

WE buy junk cars and trucks! Open 7 days a week 717-6340

Wolfeboro, N.H.

ANTIQUES & COLLECTIBLES AUCTION

ON-SITE ESTATES AUCTION 28 James Lane Hebron, NH Sun. Sept. 11, 2011 10:00 a.m.

Autos

TOP Dollar Paid- $150 and up for unwanted & junk vehicles. Call 934-4813

HARRIMAN HILL Located on Pine Hill Road (route 109A)

Monday, September 12, 2011 @ 6pm • Preview at 4pm

Lic # 2975, buyers premium, cash, checks, credit cards.

WE Pay CA$H for GOLD and SILVER No hotels, no waiting. 603-279-0607, Thrifty Yankee, Rte. 25, Meredith, NH.

REGISTERED Siberian HuskiesWorking or pet. Shots/HC. Price reduced. 892-3917

KEN BARRETT AUCTIONS

Auction Held at 274 Main St. Tilton, N.H. • 603-286-2028 kenbarrettauctions@netzero.net

Autos GET Cash for your unwanted vehicles. Plus we will take all unwanted metals. 603-455-5713 or 603-455-4533

2001 VW Jetta- 4-cylinder, auto, all power, moon roof, leather, CD/Cassette, 151K, Silver, Great Shape! $3,995. 603-279-0972

$1-A-DAY CLASSIFIEDS • CALL 527-9299

Animals

Announcement CLOTHING bag sale. Fill a shopping bag for $5, Sept. 13, 14, and 15th ONLY. The Thrifty Yankee, Rte. 25, Meredith 279-0607. Open 9am-6pm.

BARGE FOR SALE Fiberglass 27 ft. 9ft-8in wide, landing door opens on front, 150 horsepower, 10,000 lb. capacity. $10,500. 603-279-7144

2-Two bedroom fully wheelchair accessible units 2-Two bedroom handicapped adaptable units 8-Two bedroom townhouse style units 4-Three bedroom townhouse style units 8-One bedroom units (4-second floor & 4-townhouse style) Refrigerator, Stove and Dishwasher

Townhouse style units have 1 and 1/2 baths Income limits Apply NO PETS PLEASE THIS IS A NON-SMOKING PROPERTY CONTACT US TODAY FOR MORE INFO! 1-800-742-4686

The Hodges Companies 201 Loudon Road Concord, NH 03301

Proudly owned by Eastern Lakes Region Housing Coalition


THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Friday, September 9, 2011— Page 19

For Rent

For Rent

For Rent

For Rent

For Rent

For Sale

ALTON Room: Separate entrance, bath and heat. Between Alton and Wolfeboro. $450. 875-6875.

GILFORD 3 bedroom waterfront winter rental. Dock, washer & dryer. Available through May 31st. $900/mo. + Utilities. Oil heat. No pets. (603) 778-9515

LACONIA 2 bedroom duplex

LACONIA: 1 bedroom with porch, new paint, $145/week includes heat & hot water. 603-528-0024.

2008 Aero Light 18-ft. Camper: Great condition! Asking $12,000. Call 267-6668.

Enclosed porch, large yard, laundry hook-up, basement with walkout. No smoking/ No pets.

LACONIA: 1 bedroom, 2nd floor, near hospital. $185/week including heat, electric & hot water. 524-1234

TILTON: 3-bedroom spacious apt., convenient location, no pets. $900/mo. plus utilities, heat. Security deposit, references. 286-8200

Available 10/22 $775/Mo. + Utilities.

LACONIA: Close to downtown, small 2-bedroom, first floor, freshly painted and newly carpeted. Includes deck, grassy yard, 2-car parking, washer/dryer, plowing and landscaping. $170/week. 4-week security deposit. No utilities. No dogs. No smoking. Leave message for Bob at 781-283-0783.

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. BELMONT at the Bypass, 2 bedroom, outstanding screened porch, basement storage, $865 plus utilities security and references. No dogs. 630-1296.

GILFORD 5 rooms, 2 bedrooms, 1-1/2 baths, attached one car garage, excellent condition, $1200/ month plus utilities. No smoking, no pets. Available Oct. 1st. 603-387-7177.

BELMONT Large Duplex, very nice 2+ Bedroom, Pets? $1,000/month + utilites, 603-393-6415.

GILFORD Condo, quiet country setting, 2 bedrms, 2 baths, 2 balconies with view of Gunstock Mountain, large livingroom with fireplace and large master bedrm, washer & dryer. Ideal for responsible adult, non-smoker, no pets. $900/ month plus utilities. Call 455-9719.

BELMONT-1 bedroom, heat, hot water, cable included. $175/week. no pets, security, references. (603)520-5132

GILFORD STUDIO/ 1 bedroom, private entrance nice setting $600 includes heat and electric, no smoking no pets. 293-4081.

BELMONT-new 2 bedroom mobile home with front porch, new appliances, washer/dryer hookup. Located in a 55+ park - no pets, first + security and references. $900/Month + utilities 528-1463 or email-lad1@woldpath.net.

GILFORD: Fully furnished condo, master bedroom, livingroom, diningroom, kitchen, water view. Heat, hot water, electric, cable tv, internet included. Short term lease available. $850/month. (860)614-5866.

CLEAN UPDATED 1-bedroom and studio apartments in Tilton. Heat/Hot Water included. $560-$660/Month. No pets. 603-393-9693 or 916-214-7733 Laconia: Single Occupancy Furnished Rooms $107/wk

Quiet riverside location in downtown Laconia. Shared kitchens and bathrooms. Make Riverbank Rooms your home.

524-1884 or 934-3287

GILFORD: Spacious Stonewall Village Condominium, 1,800 sq.ft., 3-bedroom, 2-bath, laundry hookup, no smoking/pets. $1,600/month. 603-475-5140. Gilmanton 4-Corners, 1 bedroom in nice neighborhood. Wireless internet and hot water included, propane heat and electricity separate. Coin-op laundry, parking, backyard. Security deposit and lease req'd. No smoking or dogs. $710/month 267-1711.

Franklin 5-bedroom home. $255/week. Utilities not included. Garage, washer-dryer hook-up. No dogs. 520-1229

GILMANTON: 2-bedroom, 1-bath house, in private lake community. Bring your ATV, snowmobile & boat. Easy commute to Concord and Laconia. $1,100/month, Includes utilities. 603-267-8970.

FRANKLIN: Quiet modern 2BR w/carport. 1st-floor, starting at $765/Month, includes heat/hot water. Security deposit & references required. No pets. 286-4845.

Two 2-bedroom units $800/Month. Security deposit required. Newly painted, quiet location. 387-8664

Gilford- 4 bedroom house for rent. $1,500/Month. First & last security. No pets. 387-7543

Call 491-6695 LACONIA 3 bedroom homeShore Dr. $1,100/Month. First & Last security. No pets. 387-7543 LACONIA Pleasant St. 1-Bedroom, $750. Studio apartment $650. Heat/hot water included, no pets/smoking. 524-5837 LACONIA Province St. One bedrm $500+/month and 2 bedrm $750+/month, private parking, laundry, bright and clean, no pets. 508-423-0479. LACONIA Very nice 2 bedroom apt on Pleasant St. in stately Victorian. Hardwood floors, many extras. Private sundeck, $900/ month includes heat and hot water, 524-3892 or 630-4771. LACONIA waterfront condo rental, 1-BR next to Naswa, private beach, no pets $800/mo. 978-855-2112 Laconia Weirs Beach- 4 bedroom, 1 1/2 bath, washer/dryer included. $1,200/Month + utilities. Security & references required. Long-term rental. 781-775-6864 LACONIA, 1 Bedroom, 1st Floor apartment. Heat included, private deck, dead end street. $185/week 528-0118. LACONIA, Large 1-bedroom, $175/week. Includes parking, heat and hot water. No pets. References & security. 455-6662.

HEAT INCLUDED!

LACONIA 1-Bedroom - Washer/ dryer hookup, storage, no pets. Security Deposit & references. $600/month + utilities. 520-4353

New Franklin Apartments, LLC Elderly and Disabled Housing Now Accepting Applications for Project-Based Section 8 Subsidized Apartments HUD Income Limits Apply One & Two Bedroom Units Available Located in Tilton, Franklin & West Franklin

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

LACONIA- 1bedroom 1st floor w/private fenced in yard for $728. 3 bedroom townhouse for $875. W/D 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- 1st floor 1 bedroom. $165/Week, utilities included. 118 Court St. 524-7218 or 832-3535 Laconia- 20 X 40 Heated garageInside/outside storage. $400/Month. 603-528-8005

LEDGEWOOD ESTATES • Spacious units with a lot of storage area • Low utility costs • On-Site Laundry & Parking • Easy access to I-93 • 24-hour maintenance provided • 2 bedrooms with a 2 person minimum per unit. Rent is based upon 30% of your adjusted income. Hurry and call today to see if you qualify, or download an application at:

www.hodgescompanies.com Housing@hodgescompanies.com 603-224-9221 TDD # 1-800-545-1833 Ext. 118 An Equal Opportunity Housing Agent

LACONIA: Gilbert Apartments. Call for available apartments. 524-4428 LACONIA: 1-2 Bedrooms starting at $700/month. Most include Heat/Hot Water & Electric. No dogs. 496-8667 or 545-9510. LACONIA:NEWLY REMODELED 2BR, 2BA fully furnished condo, $750/month, no utilities, no pets. Available now. 978-423-2310 LAKE Winnisquam waterfront, Sanbornton, cozy cottage for 1-2 people beautiful views, no utilities, no pets no smoking, unfurnished, $750/ month. 524-1583. Lakeport- 1 bedroom in-law apartment. Eat-in kitchen, hardwood floors, private entrance/driveway. Includes heat, cable & Internet. Washer/dryer hookup. Newly renovated. $195/Week. No Pets/No Smoking. Carolyn 630-0232

MEREDITH In Town - Fully Renovated 2 Bedroom 1.5 bath Condo with Garage. Quite location, Energy efficient. $1,095 + utilities No pets No smokers.

Rick (781)-389-2355 MEREDITH One bedroom apartment on second floor. Open concept, cathedral ceiling, very elegant and rustic. Plowing, parking and dumpster included, Pets? $850/month 455-5660.

LACONIA- 3 bedroom house. $1,000/Month + utilities. No pets, references & deposit. 524-9665

MEREDITH-JENNESS Hill 1-bedroom 1-bath house. $625/Month + utilities. 1 Month security deposit. Available mid-September. 279-5674

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

Nice 2-Bedroom in the Weirs washer/dryer hook-up. $855/Month + $500/security. Heat/hot water included. Call 494-3232.

LACONIA- Spacious 3 bedroom, off-street parking. Laundry-hookups, 2 porches. No pets. $900/month + Utilities. 455-0874.

Rental Assistance Available Apply Now At

LACONIA: Large, clean one bedroom apartment, nice neighborhood, two Bathrooms, breakfast bar, office. Prefer no smoking no dogs. $650.00. 566-6815

LACONIASpacious, newly renovated and energy efficient units with washer/dryer hookups. 2 Bedroom $825/Month, 3 Bedroom $1,100/Month. BELMONT2 Bedroom $725/Month; washer/dryer hookup. Call GCE @267-8023 LACONIA -Ideal 1-bedroom, large living room, hardwood floors, modern kitchen & bath, washer/dryer, Pleasant St. Heat & Hot water inlcuded.. $750/Month 528-6885

NORTHFIELD Are you tired of living in run down, dirty housing, then call us we have the absolute best, spotlessly clean and everything works. We include heat & hot water and all appliances, Townhouses & apartments, in Northfield one block from I-93 Call 630-3700 for affordable Clean living. NORTHFIELD: Small 2 bedroom trailer in 11 unit trailer park with coin-op laundry on site. $200/week including heat, electric & hot water, 524-1234. www.whitemtrentals.com.

LACONIA-SUNNY large Victorian, 2 bedroom, kitchen, livingroom, diningroom and den, hardwood floors, tin ceilings, beautiful, $850/ month including heat, 494-4346.

ROOM - Meredith includes all utilities, laundry, cable TV, kitchen, parking $125/ week 603-689-8683.

LACONIA. Very nice one bedroom apt. Clean, secure downtown location. Spacious, just repainted, heat hot water and elec. included, $175/ week. 524-3892 or 630-4771.

MEREDITH: Room for Rent, quiet country setting, shared living/ kitchen, electric/hw/heat/gas cooking included. Smoking ok. References required. $125/week or $500/month. Contact 707-9794.

LACONIA 1-bedroom on quiet dead-end street near $650/Month. All utilities included,

Tilton- Downtown. Large room for rent in large 3-bedroom apartment. $150/week includes all

WATERFRONT Townhouse Southdown Shores. 2 bedroom, 2-1/2 bath, $1,150/ month, + Utilities. (617) 254-3395.

32-FT. Travel Trailer: Sleeps 4, $900. 603-998-0835. Call 5-7pm. 4X8 Utility Trailer- 2 ft. sides w/tie down cleats. Spare tire & crank tongue wheel. $595. Call 707-1851 55 GALLON heavy plastic drums. $2 each. Call Clara 520-1742 ALTIMAX (1) New 215/70R15, $65; (2) Snow tires, 205/70R15, $55/both; Ventvisor, new in package for Chevy S-10, Blazer, GMC Jimmy, Sonoma, Isuzu Hombre, $20. More info, 524-9778.

For Rent-Commercial COMMERCIAL Units: 2,000 sq. ft. light industrial / warehouse / storage. 3-phase power, loading dock. $700/month plus utilities. Additional 1,500 sq. ft. unit cold storage with loading dock, $375/month. Two units can be combined for total of 3,500 sq. ft. Just off Route 3 in Laconia. Kevin Sullivan, Coldwell Banker Commercial, 630-3276.

For Sale 2008 150cc 4 stroke scooter. 1400 miles, 55 MPH, $695 OBO. Scooter platform w/wheel chock, 2 in. receiver hitch & ramp. $200 OBO. Summit Tree Stand $100. 603-340-3561

AMAZING! Beautiful pillowtop matress sets, twin $169, full or queen $249, king $399. See AD under “Furniture”. CUISINART Cookware complete 14 piece set, stainless steel with copper disc bottoms. $200/ obo. 528-5202. FIREWOOD, Cut, split & delivered. 2 years dry, $265/Cord $140 1/2 Cord. John Peverly 528-2803. No calls after 8 pm please. FRIGIDAIRE front loading electric washer $425, Maytag Performer Electric Dryer $325, Call Bill 603-293-0228 MAPLE dining set, drop leaf table, 4 ladderback chairs, $100 for set. 603-293-4561.


Page 20 — THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Friday, September 9, 2011

For Sale

For Sale

Help Wanted

ELI'S ATTIC

Sub-woofer 50 watt, excellent condition $50. Season one of Mission Impossible. Box never opened $25. 267-8017

CARE AND COMFORT NURSING

355 CENTRAL ST, FRANKLIN (603) 630-9664 All your family needs, Clean gently used clothing, Household Items, furniture, and baby stuff galore, with prices that are hard to beat. Mon, Thurs, Fri 10-6 Sat, Sun 10-4. HODGMAN Quality Hip Waders. Women!s Size 9. Cushion insoles, fully guaranteed. New in box, never worn. $25/BO. 677-6528 Jett III-Ultra Power Wheelchair with oxygen carrier. Like new. $2,250. Many power tools. 744-6107 MISSION oak chairs, green, 2 armchairs, one side chair, caned seats, $40 each. 603-293-4561. MOBILE Home 14x70, Gilford quiet park. 2 bedrooms, 1-3/4 baths. Carport, porch, storage room, shed, generator. $15,000. 293-8155 or 520-2477.

THREE 4 ft. X 6 ft. 3-panel slider windows. Low E argon glass. $100/each. Call 267-6198 TIRES with rims: LT225/75 R16, 2-regular, 2-snow, 235/70 R15, $25 each. Laconia, 491-8674. USED FIREWOOD EquipmentSaws, splitters, chains, accessories. All about 1-year old. 1/2 price. 998-7337 Wood Stove: Englander, brick lined, glass front. 26X16X28 high, like new. $169. 603-279-7958.

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.

Immediate opening for LNA a Call 528-5020 or fax resume to 528-0352. GIUSEPPE S Pizzeria & Ristorante is seeking Sautee Cooks, Line Cooks and Pizza Makers. Please apply in person, or send inquiry for interview to giuseppes@metrocast.net.

IPM Technician Belknap Landscape Co, Inc. is a full service, year round landscape company with an immediate career opportunity for a safety conscious, team oriented, motivated individual. Qualified applicant must be willing to learn Integrated Pest Management skills. CDL, G-1 or G-2 certification a plus, but not required. Competitive wages and benefits to qualified individuals.

E-mail resume to:

rblackey@belknaplandscape.com

Fax (603) 528-2799

Instruction

PAINTING CO. Interior/Exterior Since 1982 ~ Fully Insured

279-5755 630-8333

KARATE

LOW PRICE ~ QUALITY WORK

Adult and Children's Karate (Ages 4+) classes held in Laconia, Gilford, Meredith and Moultonborough. Improves balance, coordination, focus, strength and flexibility.

Rightway Plumbing and Heating

Powerwashing Bus.

Over 20 Years Experience

Call 393-4949

PIPER ROOFING

TAI CHI Experience the gentle art of Tai Chi. Improves balance, joint health, coordination, bone density, blood pressure, strength and flexibility. Ongoing classes held in Laconia, Gilford, Meredith and Moultonborough. All ages welcome.

Free

Land

FREE Pickup for your unwanted, useful item garages, automobiles, etc. estates cleaned out and yardsale items. . (603)930-5222.

BELMONT: 3 acres of dry land with good gravel soils. Surveyed, soil tested for septic system, driveway permit, $59,900. Owner/broker, 524-1234.

SOLID Oak Entertainment Center, glass front doors, holds 27-32” TV, excellent condition, new $1000, asking $150/ obo. (603)366-4637.

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

GILFORD: New to the market, 1 1/4 acre building lots, Cotton Hill area. Level, dry, surveyed & soil tested. Two available, $79,900 each. Owner/broker, 524-1234.

Quality Work Reasonable Rates Free Estimates Metal Roofs • Shingle Roofs

Our Customers Don t get Soaked!

528-3531

Storage Space WINTER/ All Year Storage, in up scale radiant heated 1500 sq. ft. unit. (Located at 41 Glendale Pl., Gilford.) Less than 5 minutes from town of Gilford, Glendale Docks. Four 10ftx10ft overhead doors, security system, completely finished interior/ floor, lighting. $1000/ month, annual lease available. 603-293-8338.

Yard Sale BOSCAWEN: Corner of Upper Queen Street, to Blue Bird Lane. MOVING / GARAGE SALE. SATURDAY ONLY. 7am-3pm. Last weekend. Everything $1 and under! Lots of items! CONCORD Flea Market & Antique Sale. September 10th, 9am-3pm. Everett Area 15 Loudon Rd. Admission $2 Children Free. Vendor space available. 648-2727

Motorcycles

Medical and dental plans available. Paid holidays, vacations and 401k.

Apply in person to Peter Fullerton at Profile Motors, Inc., Rt. 16 & 112, Conway, NH, Serious inquiries only 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.

SIMPLY Decks and More. Free estimates. Fully Insured. No job too big. Call Steve. 603-393-8503.

Major credit cards accepted

GILMANTON: 2-acre lots, on paved Sawyer Lake Road, $40,000- $50,000. Owner financing available. 267-1258.

Applicants must possess a positive attitude and be able to work with others as a team. Experience and inspection certificate required. Strong diagnostic skills a plus. Must be willing to learn. Own tools required.

Cell

Fully Insured. License #3647

524-4780

524-4780

Knowledgeable and dependable automotive technicians needed for our service department.

Services BLUE RIBBON

Driver Education Classes- Sept. 7 & Nov. 2. Sign up now. In our 39th year. Granite State Auto School. 524-7994

PORTABLE generator 3500 watts, excellent condition, $350. 476-2271 or 508-243-0349

Motorcycle Ramps- 8 ft. Oxlite arched. Cost $500, sell $295. Call 603-707-1851

Services

BALLROOM DANCE Private lessons, couples only. Professional Instruction, reasonable rates. 279-1329.

1982 Yamaha Virago 750Inspected, great shape. New tires, battery & starter. $1,200. 279-7495 2001 Honda Reflex Scooter, low mileage, like new $3,000. Call (603)520-5198.

Buy • Sell • Trade www.motoworks.biz

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

Recreation Vehicles PICKUP Truck Camper- Very well arranged. Refrigerator, some repairs needed, $350. 524-6603 after 5pm.

Real Estate

GILFORD YARD SALE

3 bedroom, 2 bath doublewide in upscale Laconia Park. Private back deck, storage shed, new roof. Reduced for quick sale. 603-387-0237.

Saturday, September 10th. 9am-1pm. 84 David Lewis Rd. Furniture, household items, toys, dryer and more!

FOR Sale By Owner: 2-Bedroom house, 1-11/4 bath. 180 Mechanic Street, Laconia. 524-8142. MOBILE Home 14x70, Gilford quiet park. 2 bedrooms, 1-3/4 baths. Carport, porch, storage room, shed, generator. $15,000. 293-8155 or 520-2477.

Services

HANDYMAN SERVICES Small Jobs Are My Speciality

Rick Drouin 520-5642 or 744-6277 HOUSEKEEPING: Light housekeeping done for you weekly. Reasonable rate. Excellent references. Call 832-3279. M.A. SMITH ELECTRIC: Quality work for any size electrical job. Licensed-Insured, Free estimates/ 603-455-5607 BOOKKEEPER:

Retired book-

SPARKLY Clean. We make your house, business or commercial job sparkly clean. Best rates

GILFORD Moving/Garage SaleHousehold items, dishes, electronics, holiday decorations, tools, Harley Davidson helmets, exhaust pipes HD. All must go! Friday, September 9 and Saturday, September 10, 8:30-2:00. 24 Linda Lane (Off Belknap Mountain Road). 527-0828 Gilford- 3 Family Inside Yard Sale. Saturday, 8am-2pm. 256 Saltmarsh Pond Rd.

Laconia 146 Baldwin Street Saturday, 9/10 8am-1pm Tools, leaf blower, weed eater, snow thrower, garden tools, housewares, crafts & more! Laconia- 55 Morningside Dr. Saturday,8-12, (Rain Cancels). Baby stroller/high chair, high chair, accessories, toddler electric


THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Friday, September 9, 2011— Page 21

Water Ceremony Sunday marks start of Youth and teen auditions for church year for Unitarian Universalists Winni Playhouse start Monday LACONIA — A “Water Ceremony” will mark the start of the church year on Sunday, Sept. 11 for the Unitarian Universalist Society of Laconia and the Unitarian Universalist Congregation of Franklin. Kent McKusick minister of both congregations, says the ceremony originated in the 1980’s as a liberating, powerful, and deeply moving ritual of simplicity and inclusivity. In Michigan, Carolyn McDade and Lucile Longview brought a small circle of women together in a living room to create sacred space with the circle gathering, a simple bowl and the mingling of water samples brought by the women. The ritual honored nature and the interconnection of people to each other and the world. The shared water samples symbolized birth waters, the cycles of moon, tides and women, and all the waters of this small blue planet. It was a spiritually significant moment for Unitarian Universalism. “Thirty years later, the inclusion of this water ceremony still speaks to people of every religious background,

culture, race, gender identification and orientation; environmental issues; the social justice of inclusion for marginalized populations; and a deepening awareness of people in the world who lack the most basic and precious resources in life,” says McKusick. Member and non-member participants of all ages are invited to bring a small sample of “living waters” from close to home or from far away. The water may come from a lake, a river, an ocean, or the kitchen faucet. Symbolic water is available for those who do not have a water sample. Each container of water represents a journey or moment of transformation, whether that transformation is small or large. In a communal ritual, the water samples are collected in a common bowl as each person comes forward and briefly shares an individual blessing, life passage, memory or transformation represented by the water being poured into the common bowl. After the service, the gathered water is sterilized and used throughout the year for other religious ceremonies, rituals and rites of passage.

LACONIA — A favorite folk legend and a man-eating plant are the stars of the two productions kids and teens will be performing at The Winnipesaukee Playhouse this Fall. Auditions are now being held for the youth ensemble (ages 8-12) production of “The Somewhat True Tales of Robin Hood” and the teen (12-18) production of “Little Shop of Horrors”. The Somewhat True Tales of Robin Hood is a Monty Python-esque take on the classic tale of Robin Hood and his Merry Men. There are parts of all sizes for boys and girls. Auditions will take place on Monday, Sept. 12 and Wednesday, Sept. 14 at 4 p.m. Rehearsals will take place in Meredith on Sundays from 3-5 p.m. and Mondays and Wednesdays from 4-6 p.m. Not all participants will be needed at all rehearsals. Performances will be held November

Camelot Homes

24-hour POW/MIA vigil starts Saturday LACONIA — Wilkins-Smith Post #1 American Legion will conduct its annual POW/MIA Vigil on Saturday, September 10 starting at 11 a.m. for a 24 hour observation with closing ceremonies on Sunday at 11 a.m.

Yard Sale

603-286-4624

$72,995

Yard Sale

Rain or Shine Thursday, 9/8 ~ 4 -7pm Friday, 9/9 ~ 9am - 7pm Saturday, 9/10 ~ 8am - 2pm

23 Needle Eye Rd. Off Rt. 3 Household items, furniture, children s accessories & clothes, womens clothes.

Furniture, Bric-A-Brac, Dishes Also HO Scale Model Railroad Engines, Cars, Parts for Sale.

MOVING Sale. Sat & Sun 8am -3pm. 34 Deer Run Lane, Gilford. Hot Tub, dog pen and house, furniture, tools, paint, doors, planks, landscape pond and many other household items. 455-4469

Call 603-524-6487 Ask for Mike 23 Massachusetts Avenue (off Elm Street), Laconia No Reasonable Offer Refused

WWW.CM-H.Com

14 Wide $26,995 Double Wides $49,995

MEREDITH Multi-Family Estate Sale Saturday 9am-3pm

INDOOR ESTATE SALE

JACOB Road (off Lancaster Hill Road) Tilton, Sat 9/10 and Sund 9/11 8 am - 2 pm.

O PEN Daily & Sunday Rt. 3 (Exit 20 off Rt. 93) Tilton, NH

All members of the American Legion family are invited to stand a 15 minute watch to honor and remember these servicemen and women. The public is invited to the vigil as well.

Yard Sale

17-20 at the Playhouse in the Weirs. Little Shop of Horrors, a musical about a down-on-his-luck florist who discovers an amazing plant which is sure to make him rich – if it doesn’t eat him first! Auditions will be held Monday, Sept. 19 and Wednesday, Sept 21 at 6:30 p.m. Rehearsals will be held Mondays, Wednesdays and Sundays from 6:30-8:30pm in Meredith and the show performs December 8-11 in Weirs Beach. Auditions for both plays will be held at the Education Building on the Playhouse’s Meredith Campus at 50 Reservoir Road. Auditioners need only attend one of the audition sessions. For both productions, the auditions will consist of readings from the script. Those who would like to look them over in advance can find them on the auditions page at www.winniplayhouse.org.

Modular 2 Story 34x28 $84,995

SATURDAY September 10 9-3pm, Carroll County Stamp and Coin Show at Moultonboro Lions Club, 139 Old Rt109. FMI Barbara Savary 603-447-5461 or Warren Gold, 603-569-8678. Free admission.

MOULTONBORO Moving Sale-Saturday & Sunday 9/10 & 9/11, 9am-3pm. Furniture, lamps, three season room furniture, household items, 12 canoe and more!

60x28 $99,995

15 Single, Double And Mods On Display.

We don’t just list your property…we sell it!! 208 DW Highway, Meredith, NH 603-279-0079 423 Main Street, Laconia, NH 603-527-8200

www.baysidenh.net

Room for everyone in this newly built 5+ bedroom, 4 bath home. 3 levels with a gorgeous 2 BR in-law suite, open-concept living/kitchen, 1st floor master w/bath, 2 levels of decking, and a great location near downtown in a small neighborhood. Two bonus rooms could be 2 more Bedrooms. $299,000 Bronwen Donnelly 630-2776

Investor opportunity! 2 buildings with 9 residential and 2 commercial units including a PENTHOUSE unit. City water/sewer, dumpster, 11 parking spaces and a great rental history. Much work already done. Priced well below assessment at $479,000 Chris Kelly 677-2182

Enjoy low Alton taxes! Spacious 1,700 sq.ft., 3 BR home in a 1.5 acre setting minutes from town. A warm homey feel with stunning cathedral ceilings, oak flooring, garden windows, and many more extras. Partially finished walk out basement. Great location for commuting north or south. $194,900 Travis P. Cole 455-0855

Cute house on almost 2 acres is in the Business District of Route 3. This snug property is close to town and is a wonderful opportunity for first time homeowners, down sizers or anyone interested in operating a business from an affordable Meredith location. Just $115,000 Sandy Mucci 630-5710

Can’t beat the exposure! Attractive street side retail/office building on the busiest street in the city at a lighted intersection. Terrific traffic flow, ample on-street parking, overhead door, ideal for retail or restaurant, could be 2 units. Tenants pays most utilities. $250,000 Boib Gunter 387-8664

Stunning 3 BR, 2 bath home with outstanding craftsmanship on a landscaped 6.4 acre parcel with a paved circular drive and underground utilities. Sunroom, barn, woodshed, stone walls, fruit trees, perennials, a spring fed pond and your own root cellar built into the hillside. $220,560 Debbie Tarlentino 491-5404


Page 22 — THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Friday, September 9, 2011

Wavemakers practices Gilford Fire Department plans 9/11 ceremony start Monday LACONIA — Lakes Region Wavemakers swim team practices start Monday, Sept. 12 at the Laconia Athletic and Swim Club. For the past 30 years, the Wavemakers swim team, an independent, non-profit, parent run organization has supported the growth of competitive swimming among the youth of the Lakes Region. Swimmers range in age from 5 to 18, with ability levels from novice to New England Championship level. The continued success of the program has enabled many Wavemakers to swim at the collegiate level. All members of the coaching staff are USA Swimming certified and offer differing styles which allow them to reach the athletes in a variety of ways, thus keeping practice fresh and interesting. There are flexible practices several times a week, which offers partricipants to choose what works best for their schedule. For more information and registration materials, visit lakesregionwavemakers.com, or call at 5288608.

Public oPEN HouSE

Saturday 9/10, 12:00 - 2:00 pm 10 Prides Point, Laconia PricE $389,900 MlS# 4081751

Come see this spacious open concept home with great views of Lake Winnipesaukee! www.RocheRealty.com (603) 528-0088 (603) 279-7046

GILFORD — The Gilford Fire-Rescue Department invites all emergency responders and civilians alike to join its members in remembering all the victims of the tragedy on 9/11/2001 in a ceremony in front of the fire station on Sunday, September 11. All participants will assemble at the firehouse by 9:45 a.m. the with the the ringing of the 5-5-5-5 Bell at 9:59 a.m., the time of the collapse of the South CALENDAR from page 17

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 10 38th Laconia Farmers’ Market. Every Saturday morning from 8 a.m. to noon in the City Hall parking lot. www. laconiafarmersmarket.com Al-Anon Meeting at the Lakes Region General Hospital in Laconia. 8 to 9:15 p.m. each Saturday in the firstfloor conference room. Al-Anon offers hope and help to families of alcoholics. No dues or fees. All are welcome. Call 645-9518. Open Door Dinners offer free weekly meal in Tilton. 4:30 to 6 p.m. An outreach housed at Trinity Episcopal Church on Main Street, downtown. provides a free hot meal open to all members of the community. All are welcome to eat and all are welcome to help out. For more information, especially about volunteering, please call Pastor Mark at 286-3120 or e-mail him at mark@trinitytilton.org. “The Guys” performed by Winni Players. The twoperson play is set in the aftermath of September 11, 2001 and may not be suitable for children. 7:30 p.m. See www. winniplayhouse.com or call 366-7377 for more information. 10th Annual Laconia Multicultural Market Day. 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., followed by a concert with food service at 6 p.m. Displays and performances will represent traditions from around the world. See www.laconiamulticulturalmarketday. org for more information. Lake Winnipesaukee Historical Society hosting Civil War lecture. 11 a.m. Featured speaker will be Steven Closs, author of “Willing Sacrifice: Granite State Valor during the

Tower of the World Trade Canter, There will be a reading of the names of the 343 firefighters who lost their lives that day and attendees will be invited to reflect on all of the lives lost on September 11. Following the ceremony participants are invited for coffee, refreshments and firehouse tours. For more information call Chief John Beland at 527-4758. American Civil War 1861-1865”. The lecture is free and will be located at the society’s museum on Route 3 in The Weirs, near Funspot. Call 366-5950 for more information. All-you-can-eat spaghetti supper hosted by PemiBaker Valley Republican Committee. 5 to 7:30 p.m. at the American Leagion Hall in Ashland. $10 per person, $5 for children between 5 and 12, free for children younger than 5. Nonperishable food items will be collected for a local food pantry. 15th Annual Plymouth Town Wide Yard Sale. 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. More than 100 locations participating. Maps will be available for $2, proceeds from the sale of which will benefit a non-profit organization assisting victims of domestic and sexual violence. For more information call Beth at 5368228. 1986 time capsule to be unearthed at Center Harbor library. 11 a.m. Capsule was created 25 years ago by children participating in Parks and Recreation Departmetn summer activities. The public is welcome to attend the capsule’s unearthing, or to later view the contents on display at the town hall. Geology talk at summit of Mount Major. 10 a.m. Jay Long, author of “Stepping Stones Across New Hampshire: a Geological Story of the Belknap Mountains” will speak. There is no charge for this weather-dependant event, sponsored by the Belknap Range Conservation Coalition. See www.belknaprange.org if the weather is questionable. 2nd Annual Fox Trot 6K Trail Run/Walk, pig roast and chicken barbecue at the Fox Country Smokehouse on Briar Bush Road in Canterbury. See shakerfund.org or call 783-9893 for more information.

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Salvation Army holding community remembrance prayer service 9/11 LACONIA — On Sunday, September 11 at 11 a.m. The Salvation Army will be hosting a service to remember those families and friends who lost loved ones at 9/11 and salute all those who served in the aftermath. The public is invited to join in this observance. Captain Stephen and Sally Warren, Salvation Army Corps officers and pastors, will lead the observance and say that the public is invited. The Salvation Army was the first relief agency to reach Ground Zero, reporting within a half-hour following the first plane crash at the World Trade Center site. With support from its mobile canteens, counselors and thousands of volunteers, The Salvation Army served relief workers at the WTC site for over nine months; leaving only when operations at Ground Zero officially concluded in May, 2002. In the course of the relief effort, dubbed “Operation Compassion Under Fire,” The Salvation Army was granted

full control of the feeding operation at Ground Zero and also distributed other essential items to relief workers. Perhaps most importantly, Salvation Army counselors provided emotional and spiritual support to rescue and recovery personnel working under incredibly difficult conditions. In all 3.2 million meals were served, 39,000 Salvation Army officers, volunteers and staff provided assistance with 1 million volunteer hours provided and $90 million donated. The Salvation Army, an evangelical part of the universal Christian church established in London in 1865, has been supporting those in need without discrimination for 130 years in the United States. Nearly 30 million Americans receive assistance from The Salvation Army each year through the broadest array of social services that range from providing food for the hungry, relief for disaster victims, assistance for the disabled, outreach to the elderly and ill, clothing and shelter to the homeless.

LACONIA — On Sunday, September 11, the Greater Laconia Ministerial Association is sponsoring an Interfaith Service of Remembrance for the 10th Anniversary of September 11. The service will be held at Good Shepherd Lutheran Church on Parade Road at 7 p.m. The service will include

a time of prayer, and candle lighting. The speaker for the service will be Gilford Fire Chief John Beland, who will speak about the Lakes Region 9/11 respite program which provided respite to approximately 500 families after September 11. The Fellowship Committee will be providing refreshments after the service.

THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Friday, September 9, 2011— Page 23

Center Harbor Office 32 Whittier Hwy Center Harbor, NH 03226 (603) 253-4345

Laconia Office 348 Court St Laconia, NH 03246 (603) 524-2255

www.NewEnglandMoves.com

OPEN HOUSE

Sunday, Sept. 11th 12-2 Pine Gardens, 21 Circle Dr. Belmont $44,900 MLS#4083425 Directions: Rte 140 to Scenic Dr to Circle Dr on left to #21.

Kim Bertholet 581-2872

Gilmanton - $229,900

Quality built contemporary just minutes from Crystal Lake. Large walkout basement w/ french doors, turn-key. #4091060

Liz Widmer: 603-253-4345

Gilford $1,250,000

The perfect Winnipesaukee package! Live in the renovated main waterfront house and rent out the guest house. 2 docks! #4057056

Judy McShane 581-2800

Laconia - $219,900

Completely remodeled tri-level home. Open floor plan. 400’ shared sandy WF on Winnisquam. Heated 2-car garage. #4090489

Ellen Mulligan: 603-253-4345

Sandwich - $399,000

Stunning colonial on 2.5 acres. Open & airy interior. Seasonal guest cottage on large landscaped yard. #4090694

Kath Blake: 603-253-4345

Gilford $219,000

Comfortable & well maintained Samoset condo w/ open concept main level. Economical monitor heat & great amenities. #4073542

Susan Bradley 581-2810

Interfaith 9/11 service Sunday evening

Laconia $209,000

Meticulously cared for Bungalow Craftsman style home w/ gas FP in breakfast nook, large bright kitchen & stone fireplace. #4090625

Rose Cook 581-2854

Laconia $199,999

Reduced!!! Enjoy boating from this 3 BR condo w/ deeded unlimited length dock! Unit completely updated! #4077609

Cynthia Lennon 581-2822

Laconia $142,500

Cozy and quaint describe this 2 BR completely remodeled home located on a dead end w/ fenced yard & beautiful gardens. #4090077

Jaynee Middlemiss 581-2846

©2010 Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. Coldwell Banker is a registered trademark licensed to Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. An Equal Opportunity Employer. Owned and operated by NRT, LLC

LEASE OR SALE 95 Daniel Webster Highway, Belmont Across from the Belknap Mall

524-6565 Fax: 524-6810

E-mail: cummins@metrocast.net 61 Liscomb Circle, Gilford, NH 03249

10,400 Sq. Ft. with a 2,000 Sq. Ft. Showroom!

VISIT OUR NEW WEBSITE AT: www.cumminsre.com

Public Open House Sat 9/10…12pm-2pm

Over 3 Acres of Parking or Display Area. Stop Light at Entrance & Exit. Daily Traffic Count - Over 40,000 Cars a Day. Former Automobile Dealership. Present tenant, Belknap Subaru, is moving to Tilton, Exit 20.

90 SUMMER ST LACONIA

70 PRESCOTT AVE LACONIA (BEHIND XMAS ISLAND)

GREAT BUY

Brand New Price..Now $159,900..Seller Is Relocating And Must Leave This Recently Renovated 1700 Sf New England Home. Four Bedrooms, 1.5 Baths 2 Decks, Sunroom, Patio And Garage. Great Condition….

Big Reduction!! Now $499,000…Close To The Waters Edge And Built In 2004.. Spacious Waterfront Contemporary..8 Rms, 4 Brs And 3 Baths. 69’ Of Sandy Shorefront, Beach And 30’ Dock. Sweeping Views.

Dir; Union Ave Or Highland St To Summer (At Top)

Dir;Union Ave To Weirs Blvd..Follow Towards Weirs Beach. Turn At Christmas Island And Follow Prescott Ave

Agent: Mitch Hamel

A Great Buy At Wildwood Village Laconia. Deeded Beach Rights On Lake Winnisquam And Tennis Too!! Very Nice 8 Room Unit Offers 3 Brs 2bas, New Windows, Sunroom ,Updated Kitchen And Attached Garage. Asking $185,000

JUST REDUCED

NEWLY LISTED

GREAT PRICE

Antique Cape On 2.2 Commercial Acres..Has Just Been Reduced To $190,000!! 500’ Of Road Frontage On Rt#106..The Cape Offers 2000+sf With Room To Finish The Second Floor. Attached Barn..Tons Of Potential!!

Newly Listed And Remodeled In Meredith. The Paint Has Barely Dried And The Flooring Is Brand New!! Situated On A Corner Lot Surrounded By 1.4 Acres. Nine Rms, 5 Bedrms, 2 Baths, 2 Fireplaced And 2 Car Garage. 34x8 Enclosed Screened Deck, Fenced Yard And Newly Vinyl Sided. $259,000

Great Price $109,000..Beacon Street Factory Conversion Condo..The Warmth Of Brick, Exposed Beams, 2 Levels, 1 Bedrm, Loft, 1.5 Baths, Hardwood Floors, Covered Parking, Weight Room, Kayak Racks And Its On The River. Charming!!

Agent; Mitch Hamel

AVAILABLE OCTOBER 2011 CALL FOR PRICING OWNER - DAN FITZGERALD

603-387-2311


Page 24 — THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Friday, September 9, 2011

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