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September / October l 2016 | Vol. 2 | No. 9

where the divided highway ends and the mountains meet the lakes

Shop, Play, Dine and Stay Along Route 16 September / October 2016 SWEET 16 Page 1


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September /October 2016

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September / October 2016

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Wonalancet Out Door Club “Caring for the Sandwich Range Since 1892” By Barbara Neville Wilson Photos courtesy Wonalancet Out Door Club Take a look at the tagline of the Wonalancet Out Door Club. It doesn’t say the Club is “Maintaining the Sandwich Range” or “Supervising” it. No, the carefully chosen word is “Caring,” and my dictionary says “caring” means “oversight with a view to protection, preservation or guidance.” In its incorporation papers, the Wonalancet Out Door Club (WODC) proclaims its mission to provide and care for “paths, trails and other facilities for persons visiting the White Mountain National Forest and other mountain and forest lands...” to promote conservation and laws of protection, as well as communication and education for land owners and the public. Made up of more than 100 members, many of whom have no other tie to one another but a desire to let the public have natural use of the Sandwich Mountains, the WODC includes year round residents of the Tamworth area, second home owners, and others who have grown a kinship with the trails through the years. Wonalancet is an unincorporated village situated in the four towns of Tamworth, Sandwich, Albany and Waterville Valley. It became a beloved summer destination in the late 19th century, and hiking became a favorite activity of the tourists. Club member Doug McVicar explained in the April 2016 WODC newsletter, “In the early 1890s, inns were blooming all over Wonalancet. They offered city folks an agricultural setting, farm-fresh food, and, of course, mountain air and scenery. Mountain air and scenery, yes, plenty of it. But actual mountain climbing… not so much. The problem was there weren’t any trails. To build the extensive and varied trail system we enjoy today took years of labor… “Mount Whiteface looks so inviting—and so close—from the Intervale, but in those days anyone who wanted to go there was facing a minimum trek of eight miles, 16 miles round trip…By 1895, though, local innkeeper Thomas S. Wiggin was leading hiking parties up a new route that he discovered, which cut the distance from Wonalancet to the summit by half…”

Trail crew clearing the Sleeper Trail after an incredibly dense blow down in 2013: Fred Lavigne, David White, Tyler Keniston, Dave Giampietro and Doug McVicar, (photo courtesy Doug McVicar). Immediately upon its opening, however, it was disparaged as a “Fire Escape,” and declared too hard. Soon an alternative route, the Blueberry Ledge Trail, was cut into the forest. Interestingly, more than a century later, despite the universal dislike of it, the Tom Wiggin Trail is still on the map and cared for. The Club provides it a badge of shame, however. “Tom Wiggin Trail: Not Recommended/ Steep and Loose” states the sign at its trailhead. Since the use of any motorized transportation or tools is prohibited in any Wilderness area, the WODC performs trail maintenance in the Sandwich Range Wilderness Area with hand tools only. Pictures on the group’s website (www.wodc.org) show men and women working and posing with big-toothed, cross-cut saws longer than they are tall. Chain saws are permitted and used by WODC in the White Mountain National Forest outside of the Wilderness. The WODC partnered with the U. S. Forest Service on a new project in the 1970s: the White Mountain National Forest Adopt-A-Trail program. Individuals and groups committed to maintaining particular WODC trails. Today, it is these adopters who do much of the maintenance on the Club’s trail system. Although we casual hikers may take clear, safe trails for granted, in truth, an unmaintained trail is not only hazardous to hikers, but it also endangers the surrounding environment. When hikers come across a fallen tree or too much

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mud, they often create a new path of lesser resistance and wreck the landscape, cause erosion and harm vegetation and wildlife habitat. As hiking’s popularity has grown and trail use increased, the WODC, the U.S. Forest Service and others have sought to reduce wear and tear by creating the Sandwich Range Conservation Association cooperative trail crew. The crew works on several projects in the area throughout the summer with at least two weeks spent on a specific WODC project. While WODC volunteers often clock a thousand or more hours of trail maintenance each year, demand has increased in recent summers to the point that an 11-week full-time trail crew has also been hired and managed by WODC volunteers. Certainly the views are gorgeous,

and fresh air is bracing, but what makes this group of ordinary people take such time and effort on trails they may use just once a year when they perform trail maintenance? For some it’s the actual act of using near-forgotten tools like axes and root mattocks, and crosscut saws. For others, it’s the chance to tame nature, if just for a season. For many, though, it’s the enjoyment they take from seeing others’ joy in nature. In the group’s April newsletter, Denney Morton talked about the favorite Brook Trail. “I remember bringing 25 high school students on the Brook Path…to rescue and reset the bridge. There is nothing quite as satisfying as a chore which needs 25 sets of arms and backs, and gets done really fast, followed by a mass splash... “I remember new Afghan refugee friends who came over from Portland, conservatively dressed in head scarves and full length robes tying up their dresses and pants so their seven children could romp in the stream, and the oldest son cradling the crystal clear water in his hands, telling me, ‘This is like our stream in Jalalabad!’” Truly, members of the Wonalancet Out Door Club find truth in soil conservationist Hugh Hammond Bennett’s words, “Take care of the land, and the land will take care of you.” The WODC sponsors five group trail work days each year. The next will be on National Public Lands Day, Saturday, September 24. For more information, contact WODC Trails Chair Jack Waldron at 603-323-8913, jackw@g4com.com or Fred at 603284-6919.

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September /October 2016

Naturally Curious - A Naturalist’s Journey Tin Mountain to Host Author & Naturalist Mary Holland Tin Mountain Conservation Center in Albany is pleased to present author and naturalist Mary Holland giving a talk titled Naturally Curious - A Naturalists Journey Through 12 Months of the Year on Saturday, Sept 17 at 7 pm. Holland, an acclaimed naturalist, will take you on a visual journey through the 12 months of the year, as she highlights the natural events that take place during the different seasons in New England in a Powerpoint presentation. From the call of spring peepers in March to the migration of broad-winged hawks in the fall, Naturally Curious introduces audiences of all ages to the natural events that occur on an annual basis. This interactive presentation includes images and information about amphibians, reptiles, birds, mammals, insects and spiders, and plants. A substantial natural history collection consisting of skins, skulls,

scat, feathers, nests and many more animal artifacts accompanies this 45-minute program. Holland is a naturalist, wildlife photographer, columnist and author residing in Hartland, Vermont. Her work in environmental education includes directing the state-wide Environmental Learning for the Future (ELF) program for the Vermont Institute of Natural Science (VINS) for eight years, working as a resource naturalist for the Massachusetts Audubon Society, designing and presenting her own hands-on KneeHigh Nature Programs for libraries and elementary schools throughout Vermont and compiling Vermont’s Rare Bird Alert for five years for the Vermont Center for Ecostudies. Mary currently photographs and writes for various publications, and has a natural history blog on which she posts a photograph and accompanying information five days a week at www.

naturallycuriouswithmaryholland. wordpress.com. Mary has written and photographed five children’s books: Milkweed Visitors, about insects that visit milkweed patches; Ferdinand Fox’s First Summer, which follows the life of a red fox kit one summer; A Beaver’s Busy Life, which follows the activities of beavers through the seasons; Animal Eyes, Animal Mouths, and Animal Feet & Legs, in a series of books on animal adaptations. A children’s book entitled Otis the Owl, about a young Barred Owl, is due out this coming February. The Naturally Curious program is based on Naturally Curious: A Photographic Field Guide and Monthby-Month Journey Through the Fields, Woods and Marshes of New England, which won the National Outdoor Book Award in 2011. A second adult book, Naturally Curious Day by Day, is due out this fall. Reservations for the event are

Author and Naturalist Mary Holland. required by calling Tin Mountain at 603-447-6991.

De-Coding Espionage at the Wright Museum The Wright Museum, located on Center Street in Wolfeboro, will host the 17th session of the “Ron Goodgame and Donna Canney 2016 Educational Programming” on Tuesday, September 20 at 7 pm; doors open at 5 pm. Douglas Wheeler’s intriguing slide-and-lecture presentation, titled De-coding Espionage in World War II, features four pivotal World War

II espionage and intelligence cases, all presented within their historical context. The cases are Britain’s “Double XX system” (MI-5); the “Ultra secret”; the Pearl Harbor surprise attack; and the course and consequences of Soviet espionage on the American A-bomb project, the Manhattan Project. Wheeler has been a member of the

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history faculty at the University of New Hampshire, Durham, since 1965. He also lectures for the New Hampshire Humanities Council and has authored many articles and chapters and nine books. Wheeler served in U.S. Army Intelligence (1963 to 1965) and has published historical studies in The Intelligencer, which is the journal of the Association of Former Intelligence

Officers. Admission is $8.00 per person and free for Wright Museum members. Space is limited; RSVPs are strongly recommended to ensure sufficient seating for all lecture attendees. Call 603-569-1212 to reserve your seat today.

A Poet and His Press at Wolfeboro Public Library On Thursday, September 22 at 6:30 pm, the Wolfeboro Public Library will host Ben Moeller-Gaa: A Poet and His Press. The program will include poet Ben Moeller-Gaa discussing and reading from two haiku chapbooks, Wasp Shadows from Folded Word (2014) and Blowing on a Hot Soup Spoon from poor metaphor design (2014). His full-length collection, The Here and There of Fireflies, will be published by Folded Word in 2017. Accompanying Moeller-Gaa will be Jessi Graustein, Editor in Chief of the Meredith-based press, Folded Word. Ben Moeller-Gaa is a Pushcart nominated haiku poet whose poems, reviews and essays have appeared in over 30 journals worldwide includingAcorn, Modern Haiku, Simply Haiku, A Hundred Gourds, The Heron’s Nest, Frogpond, Shamrock, and World Haiku Review, as well as in the Red Moon Press’s yearly

“best of” anthologies, The Haiku Foundation’s mobile haiku app, Haiku 21 an anthology of the English language haiku from the first decade of the 21st century, among others. He has received a degree in Creative Writing from Knox College, is a contributing editor to River Styx literary magazine, and has led writing workshops for Studio STL, the St. Louis Poetry Center, and at Missouri Baptist University. Jessi Graustein is Editor-in-Chief of Folded Word Press based in Meredith, New Hampshire. Folded Word is a literary press specializing in collected short works and regional voices. Folded Word has authors on four continents,. The event will be in the library’s meeting room, which is handicapped accessible. Please call 569-2428 with any questions or visit www. wolfeborolibrary.org.

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September / October 2016

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The 1932 Air Speed World Record Got Started Right Here Story and photos by Barbara Neville Wilson Take a few minutes. Sit back in a chair, relax, and imagine yourself as one of them, one of the 500 or so residents of Madison, NH in September of 1932. You’re in the middle of the worst financial times ever. There were far fewer summer tourists in Silver Lake this summer than in the good times of the 1920s; the lead mine hasn’t operated in years; and the back-breaking work of farming and surviving winter isn’t getting much easier as the years go on. There is no television, certainly no Internet, and news doesn’t always arrive quickly, but word does finally reach you: Major James H. [Jimmy] Doolittle, the dashing-est pilot in the world, has set a new speed record, 296 mph at the National Air Race in Cleveland, Ohio. He took the prize in an unlikely looking, snub-nosed, barrel-shaped plane called the R-1 built by the Granville Brothers Aircraft company. You hear people say there were some scary moments during the race, moments when more than 50,000 spectators were on tenterhooks, as they watched the competing planes dip and lean, jockeying for position in the 10lap closed course race. But facts are facts. Jimmy Doolittle has broken the record, and, perhaps best of all, he broke it in a plane that got its start right in your hometown of Madison, NH. Yes, in a few days you’ll see front page headlines from The Springfield [MA] Union, “Doolittle Wins Thompson Trophy Race…Gee Bee Ship Wins Classic for Second Consecutive Year…Springfield Again Takes Highest Honors in America’s Chief Air Speed Event,” but you know that though Springfield has a legitimate claim on Gee Bee airplanes, none of this would have happened if it weren’t for Madison. It all started right here on

Maple Grove Road where Will and Bell Granville raised their seven children. The first of those children, born just 31 years before his plane took the world record, is Zantford. He’s known to everyone around as “Granny,” and not because of any elderly attributes. No, sir. He was a boy with lots of curiosity and energy, too. He’s the one who got the Granville boys started with airplanes in the first place, after he learned the value of hard work on the family farm, graduated eighth grade from the Madison School, invented a mechanical adding machine and inquired about patenting it when he was 15, worked with a traveling saw mill, and automated a local lead mine that produced bullets for battle in World War I. Granny wasn’t the only clever son, though. You probably aren’t surprised to hear that all the Granville boys had a hand in developing such a crackerjack contraption. They’re all inventive. Remember the doll carriage Mark made for littlest sister Gladys’ fifth birthday? Were you a little jealous when Tom saved his sisters hours of labor when he built that machine to cut beans to length for canning? And that water wheel Ed made for the brook

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was a pretty thing, wasn’t it? Now grown up, Zantford is the designer and supervisor, Robert is the business manager, Mark is in charge of engines, Edward, the welder, and Thomas, the master woodworker. It’s not just because they’re Granvilles, though. There sure are some good teachers up to the Madison School. Of course, most all children are smart, but it’s the Jones’ boys, Tom and Hiram, and three others from Madison who Granny asked to join them at Granville Brothers Aircraft in Massachusetts. People say the Madison boys were just as involved as anyone else in the design and crafting of the R-1 Jimmy Doolittle just beat the record with. Take a minute to wonder: here the Granville brothers have built a plane that breaks the world record, and they only got an eighth grade education.

The girls, Pearle and Gladys, are both getting university degrees. Isn’t that something? It’s kind of an interesting story how the boys and Jimmy Doolittle got together. You may have heard somewhere that the Granville Brothers did really well at the 1931 National Air Races in Cleveland. It’s a nine-day contest, you know. They took 11 prizes in nine events with three different models of their aircraft flown by four pilots, two of them women. (You might wonder if that’s Pearle and Gladys’ influence there.) In some races, Gee Bee planes flew against each other and both took awards. Altogether, of the 11 prizes won by Gee Bee planes, eight were for first place. Isn’t that something? Ever since 1922, when he was the first to fly coast to coast, Major Doolittle has been traveling the country, capturing flying accolades. 1931 was his year to win the cross-country Bendix Cup race, but this year that victory was trumped by Jimmy Haizlip. Doolittle then set his sights on the Thompson Trophy prize, but in a fit of bad luck, the Laird Super Solution he was flying suffered mechanical failure and had to be grounded when a forced landing caused damage irreparable before the flying of the Thompson. Or was it a fit of good luck for him? In sort of an interesting coincidence, Russell Boardman, the Granville

• 1932 Air Speed Record Continued on page 15 La Ne rg w e E Ex st ng pe Ch la ri ris nd en t ’s ce ma s

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September /October 2016

Life on the Volcanic Edge By Barbara Neville Wilson

Moultonboro claims Olympians. Ossipee? The first snowmobile. Sandwich: birth of the League of NH Craftsmen. And Wolfeboro? The oldest summer resort in America. But for years the most universally prominent signifier for the region has been largely ignored. The Ossipee Mountain Range has been taken for granted, hardly populated, admired for its nature, but mostly unrecognized for its properties unique in the world. You have probably heard people rave about the views from Castle in the Clouds, the hilltop estate created by 20th century millionaire Thomas Gustave Plant. Its 5,381 acres, now managed by the Lakes Region Conservation Trust, feature 28 miles of hiking trails, many through areas with natural stone formations that look like a master stonemason carved them. And you may be aware that the private auto speedway, Club Motorsports, was chosen to offer 250-ft. of elevation change and spectacular views on its course slated to open in Tamworth this fall. You may be intrigued by the ski history of Mount Whittier whose tramway used to cross Route 16 in West Ossipee, or the Ossipee Ski Area tucked in Moultonboro. Perhaps you’ve heard legends that no depth can be recorded in the subterranean passageways of Tuftonboro’s Dan Hole Pond. What do all these local features have in common? They exist because of the

Ossipee ring-dike photo courtesy of Ossipee.org. unique geological formation of the Ossipee Mountains, a range 40 miles around, nine miles across, of 40,000 largely uninhabited acres. Rising to an elevation of 2,975 feet at Mount Shaw, and sinking to a depth of 130-ft. in Dan Hole Pond, the area is accessed by only three roads, none of which crosses the Range diameter. The Range feeds into watersheds of Lake Winnipesaukee, the Bearcamp River and Ossipee Lake, which in turn feed other watersheds

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and on to the sea. It gives refuge to wildlife and supports a vast and valuable eco-system. A near-perfect circle of mountains, the Ossipees are renowned among geologists for being, perhaps, the earth’s best example of a ring dike created, in layman’s terms, when an ancient volcano sank. Scientists hypothesize that 100,000,000 years ago, a mountain loomed over the central New Hampshire landscape. Resembling Mt. Fuji or Mt. Vesuvius, it rose 10,000 or more feet above sea level. When tectonic plates shifted, hot magma under the earth’s surface sought an outlet, and the mountain blew its top, not once, but three times. In the second eruption the ring dike was formed. MaryAnn McGarry of NH’s Plymouth State University records in the online Volcanoes in New Hampshire, “One hundred million years ago, there was a fracture in the volcano and an eruption occurred, forcing molten magma to the surface. As the magma emerged, circular sections collapsed into the empty magma chamber. The molten magma cooled forming the type of igneous rock called Conway granite. The second eruption took place around ten million years after the first eruption. Magma was forced up along the edges of the earlier plug, ringing the plug with more eruptions. Dikes of molten magma intruded the earlier Conway granite, and formed the ring-dike that

is seen today. This ring-dike is famous with geologists world-wide due to its almost perfect completeness.” You can still see evidence of the volcanic activity at Dan Hole Pond on the Ossipee/Tuftonboro line and Conner Pond in Ossipee. Deep water ponds, they are what’s left of gas vents on the volcano. Legend has long held that Dan Hole, particularly, is marked by labyrinthine passages on the pond bottom that cannot be negotiated by even the most seasoned divers, but modern bathymetry (the measure of water depth) has determined a final depth of 130 ft. Other legends once told at Camp Sentinel, one of two camps on the shore of Dan Hole, refer to whirlpools stirred mysteriously, some so strong they held boaters captive for 15 minutes at a time. Were such occurrences due to continued electro-magnetic forces dormant in the diminished volcanic cone? Peter Champoux, who wrote the Gaia Matrix, might think so. In his book, he contends the Ossipee Mountain Range is a stargate of immense spiritual significance. On the other side of the mountain, partway up the Bald Knob Connector Trail off the Shannon Brook carriage road at Castle in the Clouds, are more tangible signs of the power exerted by the Ossipee Mountains. Off the trail, seemingly neatly stacked by a giant, are great columns of rock that look like they were cut by a master stone mason. Basalt is rock created by lava flow. As the lava cools, it shrinks and cracks, most often in six-sided columns. These basalt columns were carved by naturally occurring geo-thermal forces. The division between ring dike and caldera, or sunken mouth of the volcano, is clearly visible in two places: at Cold Brook off Route 25 in South Tamworth, and at the entrance of Canaan Valley into Dan Hole Pond in Tuftonboro. The charm of the Ossipees has drawn visitors through the centuries, some for recreation, others, like Thomas Plant, to set down roots. Together, we live life on the edge. To learn more about the Ossipee Ring Dike, visit the site of MaryAnn McGarry’s from Plymouth State University, “Volcanoes in New Hampshire.” “Exploring the Great Ring Dike Volcano” is a YouTube video tour of aspects of the ring dike by historian John Hartog and filmmaker Joe Bradley.

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September / October 2016

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September Art Exhibit at Gafney Library on portraits and Portraits of Scarlett uses oil, pencil, Johansson, Grace Kelly, charcoal and Audrey Hepburn, Lana Del Rey – just to name pastels as her a few well-known peomedium. She ple line the walls of the says, “I especially enjoy Audrey Gafney Library in SanHepburn and bornville during Septemspend a lot of ber. The works have been time focusing on created by 24-year old eyes.” Wakefield artist, Emma Emma is Royle. This is her first looking forward art exhibit. Other interesting titles are “Two for to meeting and greeting people the Road,” “Paris When it at her reception Sizzles,” “How to Steal a Million” and “Kalei- Original artwork of Audrey Hepburn o n S a t u r d a y September doscope.” Most of the by Wakefield artist Emma Royle. 17 from 10 to pieces are for sale, but 11 am. The library is open Tuesday, some pieces mean too much to Emma Wednesday, Thursday from 1 to 7 pm to part with. and Friday and Saturday from 9 am to Emma credits her grandfather, wellknown local artist Norman Royle, 12:30 pm. For more information, call the library at 603-522-3401. YouTube and the Internet for helping develop her skills. She mainly focuses

Fall at the Gafney Library Offers Something for Everyone If you are looking for some great programs for the whole family, look no further than the Gafney Library at 14 High Street in Sanbornville. Stay and Play for birth to preschoolers is held on the second Friday of each month; it is a great chance for little ones to meet other children, hear a story, play with learning toys and enjoy doing a craft. The event takes place at 10:15 am. Music Together for ages 1 to 5 years is held on the fourth Wednesday of each month at 10:15 am. In each class, children are taught the connection between music, movement and language through songs and rhymes. Storytime Jamboree for ages 2 to 5 years takes place at 4:15 pm the first and third Fridays of each month with storytime, songs and activities. The Lego Club is geared to school age kids and is held on the second Tuesday of the month at 4:15 pm. The Teen Advisory Board for grades

7 to 12 meets the first and third Tuesdays of the month at 5:30 pm with book discussions, programs, music, movies and more. Special events for the fall include an Author Visit on October 18 at 5:30 pm at the Town Hall Conference Room; Music & Movement with Mr. Steve on October 21 at 10:15 am; Boo-APa-Looza on October 20 at 4:30 pm; Trick-or-Treat on October 27 from 1 to 7 pm and on Oct. 28 and 29 from 9 am to 12:30 pm; all are encouraged to come in costume! An Autumn Light workshop takes place on November 1 at 5:30 pm for grades 7 to 12; also for that age group is a Cupcake Challenge workshop on December 6 at 5:30 pm. The beloved book The Polar Express will be read on December 10 at 10 am; treats and a craft also are planned. For information and to pre-register for workshops, call the Gafney Library at 522-3401 or 522-9735.

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where the divided highway ends and the mountains meet the lakes

Your Guide to What’s Happening on the Route 16 Corridor

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• UPCOMING EVENTS • June 18: Summerfest: 4:30-7: Music, Beer/Wine and our Extensive Bean Supper; Tickets For Sale July 2-4: Colonial Re-enactment & More... Open 10 am to 5 pm | July 1 - Columbus Day | Closed Tuesday & Wednesday 70 Elm Street | Newfield, ME | 207-793-2784 |willowbrookmuseum.org

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SWEET 16

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Sept. 16, Lakes Region Humane Society Golf Tournament, 8:30 am, Kingswood Golf Club, Wolfeboro, info: 569-3524. Sept. 16, Music in the Pub with Jill Ducsai, 6:30 pm, Corner House Inn, 22 Main St. Sandwich, 284-6219. Sept. 16, Play Fore the Pets Golf Tournament, 7:30 am-2 pm, Kingswood Golf Club, Wolfeboro, 569-3569.

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Sept. 17, Fencing on the Farm, 10 am-3 pm, NH Farm Museum, Rt. 125, Milton, 652-7840, www.farmmuseum.org. Sept. 17, Painted Pony Party, Dinner, Silent Auction and Music, 19th Century Willowbrook Village, Newfield Village, ME, 207-793-2784, www. willowbrookmuseum.org. Sept. 16, Lakes Region Humane Society Golf Tournament, 8:30 am, Kingswood Golf Club, Wolfeboro, info: 569-3524.

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Sept. 16, Music in the Pub with Jill Ducsai, 6:30 pm, Corner House Inn, 22 Main St. Sandwich, 284-6219. Seot, 16, NE Utopia: Transcendental Communities, 7 pm, Effingham Historical Society, Pontine Movement Theatre, free, public welcome, info: 539-9078. Sept. 16, Wolfeboro Friends of Music present John Jorgenson Bluegrass Band, 7:30 pm, Anderson Hall, Brewster Academy, 2055 S. Main St., Wolfeboro, tickets/info: 569-2151, www.wfriendsofmusic.org. Sept. 17, Art Exhibit Reception, artist Emma Royle displays her work, 10 – 11 am, Gafney Library, 14 High St., Sanbornville, 522-3401. Sept. 17, John Jorgenson Bluegrass Band, 7:30 pm, Anderson Hall, Brewster Academy, Wolfeboro, Wolfeboro Friends of Music, tickets/info: www. wfriendsofmusic.org, 569-2151. Sept. 17-18, 8th Annual Hampton Falls Craft Festival, Town Common, 4 Lincoln Ave. (Rt. 1), free admission, outdoor event, Sat.: 10 am-5 pm; Sun.: 10 am-4 pm, Castleberry Fairs, www.castleberryfairs.com, 332-2616. Sept. 17-18, Pow Wow, 10 am – 5:30 pm, Mother Earth’s Creation, Ossipee, www.motherearthscreation.com, 323-8181. Sept. 18, Bearcamp Valley Garden Club, “tasting” of vegetables from local members’ gardens, 12 pm, Doris L. Benz Community Center, 18 Heard Rd., Sandwich, info: epaulfs@gmail.com. Sept. 20, De-Coding Espionage in WWII, talk by Dr. Douglas Wheeler, 7 pm, Wright Museum, Center St., Wolfeboro, pre-register: 569-1212.

Sept. 20, 9-Hole Golf Social and Business After Hours, 5:30 pm, the Links at Outlook Golf Course, Rochester Chamber of Commerce, 332-5080.

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Sept. 21, First, Second or Third in the Nation: The Importance of NH and the Juggling of the Primary Schedule, presented by Andy Smith of UNH, NH Humanities, free, Town Hall, Elm St., Freedom (hosted by Freedom Historical Society), 539-5799. Sept. 22, Poetry Reading, 6:30 pm, Wolfeboro Public Library, S. Main St., Wolfeboro, free, public welcome, 569-2428. Sept. 23, Music at Mead Base, 7 pm, Diamond Ledge Rd., Sandwich, tickets/ info: 284-6550. Sept. 23, Music in the Pub with Cindy Duchin & Friends, 6:30 pm, Corner House Inn, 22 Main St. Sandwich, 284-6219. Sept. 24, Antique Car & Boat Rendezvous, 9 am – 3 pm, Wolfeboro Town Docks, Wolfeboro, food, music, awards, hosted by New England Chapter of Antique & Classic Boat Society Inc., necacbs.org.

Where Service Makes The Material Difference!

Sept. 24, Community Contra Dance, G.A.L.A., Wolfeboro Town Hall, 84 S. Main St., Wolfeboro, 7 – 10 pm, info: 539-6460, contact@galacommunity.org. Sept. 24, Fall Festival, horse-drawn wagon rides, pumpkin painting, bake sale and more. Settler’s Green, N. Conway, 888-667-9636.

298 NORTH MAIN ST • ROCHESTER, NH 03867 Mon. - Fri. 6:30 am - 6:00 pm; Sat. 7:00 am - 5:00 pm

Sept. 24, Milton Farmer’s Market, NH Farm Museum, White Mt. Highway, Milton, 652-7840, www.farmmuseum.org.

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Sept. 24, Moose Mountain Dixie Land Jazz Band with Lance MacLean concert, 7 pm, Wakefield Opera House, 2 High St., Sanbornville, tickets: 5220126.


September / October 2016

SWEET 16

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indianmoundgc.com Teaching Professional Julie Rivers-603-986-1840 Route 16B • Center Ossipee Sept. 24, 100 Acre Challenge, 5K obstacle and kids mini challenge, 9 am, 100 Acre Wood, 41 Observatory Way, Intervale, www.believeinbooks.org Sept. 24, Smithsonian Magazine Museum Day Live, free admission to the museum, 10 am – 4 pm, Wright Museum, Center St., Wolfeboro, 569-1212.

Sept. 24 & 25, Indigo, Shibori & Clay Resist Dyeing, 10 am – 5 pm, learn the ancient art of clay resist dyeing. League of NH Craftsmen/Sandwich Home Industries, Main St., Sandwich, info/pre-register: 284-6831.

Mon-Thurs 18-holes

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Sept. 25, Bark for Life, 10 am, bring your canine friend for fun activities to benefit fight against cancer, New Durham Ball Field, Smitty’s Way, New Durham, free, info: 380-2544. Sept. 25, Great NH Pie Festival Fundraiser, noon-4 pm, NH Farm Museum, White Mt. Highway, Milton, 652-7840, www.farmmuseum.org. Sept. 25, Indigo and Shibori one-day class, 10 am – 5 pm, learn the ancient art of Japanese resist and natural indigo dyeing. League of NH Craftsmen/Sandwich Home Industries, Main St., Sandwich, info/pre-register: 284-6831. Sept. 27, Examination of the Attack on Pearl Harbor, talk by Dr. Douglas Wheeler, 7 pm, Wright Museum, Center St., Wolfeboro, $8 p/p, limited seating; pre-register: 5691212.

Sept. 27, Travel the World Lunch Film Series, Quebec, Canada, bring a bag lunch, library provides dessert, 30 minute travel film, free, noon, public welcome, Wolfeboro Public Library, S. Main St., Wolfeboro, info: 569-2428. Sept. 28, NH’s Long Love-Hate Relationship with its Agricultural Fairs, 7 – 8 pm, talk on the history and ups and downs of NH’s fairs, Cook Memorial Library, Main St., Tamworth, 323-8510, public welcome, free.

Edward Tobin, Realtor Vacation Home Specialist 603-662-4356 Come see me at our new office in Wolfeboro. No teams, just quality one-on-one service. I show every property I list! Call Ed, 603-662-4356 EXIT REALTY LEADERS 94A Center Street Wolfeboro, NH 03894 Office - 603-569-4419

Sept. 30, Music in the Pub with Peter Heimlich, 6:30 pm, Corner House Inn, 22 Main St. Sandwich, 284-6219. Oct. 1, Harvest Day, 10 am-3 pm, NH Farm Museum, White Mt. Highway, Milton, 652-7840, www.farmmuseum.org. Oct. 1, Making Insulated Roman Shades Workshop, 10 am – 3 pm, Global Awareness Local Action workshop held at Kingswood Youth Center, 565 Center St., Wolfeboro, info: 539-6460, contact@galacommunity.org. Oct. 1, Sandwich Apple Project, apple identification, cider pressing, 1-5 pm, Range View Farm, 342 Vittum Rd., Sandwich, appleproject@sandwichfarmersmarket. org.

SANDWICH

Oct. 2, Ash Sunday (White Ash Tree Woodcraft Day), 19th Century Willowbrook Village, Newfield Village, ME, 207-793-2784, www.willowbrookmuseum.org.

NEW HAMPSHIRE

A FAMILY TRADITION!

Oct. 2, Meet the Artist – Sussy-Rose Shields, noon – 2 pm, silversmith artist, League of NH Craftsmen Sandwich Gallery, 32 Main St., Center Sandwich, 2846831.

SATURDA Y ONLY

Oxen Pulling is back at the fair! MO

Wolfeboro, $8 p/p, limited seating; pre-register: 569-1212.

~ M on da y ~

Say goodbye to Art Harriman

Oct. 7, Music in the Pub with the Sweetbloods, 6:30 pm, Corner House Inn, 22 Main St. Sandwich, 284-6219. Oct. 8, Apple Day, 10 am-3 pm, NH Farm Museum, White Mt. Highway, Milton, 652-7840, www.farmmuseum.org.

Monday Eve n Kids Scaven ts for the Family: ger The W omen’s Hunt Skillet Toss Pickup Truck T he Gentlemen ’s Pull Keg Toss

Oct. 8, Oktoberfest, 19th Century Willowbrook Village, Newfield Village, ME, 207-793-2784, www.willowbrookmuseum.org.

OCTOBER

Oct. 8-10, Lakes Region Home Builders Assoc. Parade of Homes, open house of fine homes all over Lakes Region, info/tickets: www.lakesregionparadeofhomes. com.

www.thesandwichfair.com

Oct. 13, Spain: A Magic Mystery Tour with John Chaston, 7 pm, travel program series, Great Hall, Wolfeboro Town Hall, free, public welcome, 5692428. Oct. 14, Music in the Pub with Paul Hubert, 6:30 pm, Corner House Inn, 22 Main St. Sandwich, 284-6219. Oct. 15, Old Tools Day, 10 am-3 pm, NH Farm Museum, White Mt. Highway, Milton, 652-7840, www.farmmuseum.org.

th

NDAY ON LY

Oct. 4, Quint-Essential Winds music concert, 7 pm, Wright Museum, Center St.,

Oct. 8-10, Sandwich Fair, rides, crafts, midway, demos, farm animals, art exhibit, live music, food & more, 7 Wentworth Hill Rd., Rt. 109, Sandwich, 284-6112,

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SWEET 16

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September /October 2016

Family Camping in a Farm Setting on the Swift River ~ Upcoming Events ~

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Oct 4-11: Fryeburg Fair, in Fryeburg, Maine Oct 7-10: Columbus Day Weekend Last three-day holiday of the season Oct 8-10: Sandwich Fair in Sandwich, NH Last fair of the season

Waterfront Sites for Tents & RVs • Pets & Big Rigs Welcome Spacious and Level with Wooded and Open Sites: Water, Sewer, 30 & 50 amp & Some Cable

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Ossipee Concerned Citizens Senior Center

Promoting the Health & Welfare of the Residents of Ossipee & Vicinity Senior Nutrition Congregate Meals (Age 60+ Up) Sandwich: Wednesday

Ossipee: Monday - Friday Ossipee Crossings 12-1 Tamworth: Monday Tamworth Town House 12-1 Moultonboro: Monday-Thursday Lions Club at Noon

Benz Center at Noon Home Delivered (Age 60+ Up and Qualifying Disabled Persons) Serving the towns of: Ossipee, Effingham, Freedom, Moultonboro, Sandwich, Tamworth and Wakefield

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Ages 13 months-12 years | Mon-Fri | 6:30am-5pm Before and After School, Licensed Preschool Ask About Special Discounts 603.539.6772 Elderly Nutrition, Child Care & Referral Services for Southern Carroll County 603.539.6851 | 3 Dore Street | PO Box 426 | Center Ossipee, NH 03814

Oct. 15-16, Leaf Peeper’s Craft Fair, North Conway Community Center, 2628 White Mountain Hwy, North Conway, (Rt. 16 next to Scenic Railroad), Sat.: 10-5; Sunday:10-4, 75 exhibitors, crafts including fine jewelry, wearable art, wooden crafts, quilts and quilted home decor, gourmet foods, glass art, floral arrangements, & lots more. Free admission; rain or shine under canopies & indoors; email: joyceendee@gmail.com, 528-4014. Oct. 18, Author visit with NH writer Layne Case, 5:30 pm, Town Hall Conference Room, for tweens, teens and adults, info: Gafney Library, Sanbornville, Preregistration required, 522-3401. Oct. 19, Poor Houses and Town Farms: the Hard Row for Paupers, presented by Steve Taylor, NH Humanities, free, Town Hall, Elm St., Freedom (hosted by Freedom Historical Society), 539-5799. Oct. 20, Boo-a-Palooza, all ages, 4:30 - 5:30 pm, family Halloween fun, Gafney Library, Sanbornville, pre-registration required, 522-3401. Oct. 21, Music & Movement with Mr. Steve, ages birth-5 years, 10:15 - 11 am, Wakefield Opera House, info: Gafney Library, Sanbornville, 522-3401. Oct. 21, Music in the Pub with Jill Ducsai, 6:30 pm, Corner House Inn, 22 Main St. Sandwich, 284-6219. Oct. 21-23, Intro. to Timber Framing workshop, 9 am – 4 pm, Sweet Clover Farm, Eaton, Global Awareness Local Action, pre-register/info: 539-6460, www. galacommunity.org. Oct. 22, Ed Gerhard, guitar concert, 7 pm, Wakefield Opera House, 2 High St., Sanbornville, tickets: 522-0126. Oct. 22, Pumpkin Party, 10 am-3 pm, NH Farm Museum, White Mt. Highway, Milton, 652-7840, www.farmmuseum.org. Oct. 25, Travel the World Lunch Film Series, Western Scotland, bring a bag lunch, library provides dessert, 30 minute travel film, free, noon, public welcome, Wolfeboro Public Library, S. Main St., Wolfeboro, info: 569-2428. Oct. 27, Trick-or-Treat, 1 – 7 pm, stop in for a treat, costumes welcome, Gafney Library, Sanbornville, 522-3401. Oct. 28, Music in the Pub with Doug Hazard, 6:30 pm, Corner House Inn, 22 Main St. Sandwich, 284-6219. Oct. 28, Trick-or-Treat, 9 am – 12:30 pm, stop in for a treat, costumes welcome, Gafney Library, Sanbornville, 522-3401. Oct. 29, Carpe Diem String Quartet, 7:30 pm, Anderson Hall, Brewster Academy, Wolfeboro, Wolfeboro Friends of Music, tickets/info: www.wfriendsofmusic.org, 569-2151. Oct. 29, Double Feature: The Mummy and Dracula, 7 pm, Village Players, 51 Glendon St., Wolfeboro, movie on the big screen, 569-9656, www.village-players. com. Oct. 29, Dracula, 7 pm, Northeastern Ballet Theatre (NBT) original production, Kingswood Arts Center, Wolfeboro. Beautiful dancing, choreography and Ongoing Arts Walk, last Saturday of each month, 5-8 pm, self guided tour of galleries and arts locations in Wolfeboro, 569-2762, hosted by Governor Wentworth Arts Council, www.wolfeboroarts.org.

Quality Rentals, Personal Attention, Inspired Results Tents • Tables & Farm Tables•Chairs Linens • China • Dance Floors Lighting • Vintage & Rustic Rentals Event Planning & More. 173 Lake Shore Drive Moultonborough, NH 603-986-5525 • ShowcaseNH.com

Benz Center Senior Meals, Sandwich, each Wednesday at noon. Well-balanced and delicious meal. Ages 60 and older are targeted, small donation requested, 284-7211, www.benzcommunitycenter.webs.com. Book Sale, first Sat. of each month, Cook Memorial Library, Tamworth, 10 amnoon, 323-8510. Crafty Kninjas, meets Friday afternoons, 3:30-5 pm, Milton Free Public Library, 13 Main St., Milton Mills, 473-8535. Knitters and crafty people gather. Fiber Gatherings, first Thursday of the month and third Wednesday of the month, 7-9 pm, fiber enthusiasts gather at Benz Center, Sandwich village. Knitting, crocheting, spinning, weaving, needle felting, embroidery, crewel, rug hooking, quilting, sewing- no formal lessons provided but if you need help with a project, there is sure to be someone who can give you some pointers. Monthly suggested donation of $5 per participant requested by the Benz Center to help defray the cost of heat and lights. Drop your donation in the donation box at the end of the night. Info/questions: Jen Elliott at lupineblossoms@gmail.com.


September / October 2016

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where the divided highway ends and the mountains meet the lakes

Forgotten Arts: Fiber Arts Group. Meets every other Tuesday, 9:30 amnoon. Fiber artists and/or interested onlookers welcome to join Happy Weavers & Friends group to learn the historic art of weaving, spinning, sewing, quilting, and more. Bring a project to work on, if desired. Group meets monthly on an every other Tuesday schedule at Remick Museum & Farm, Tamworth Village. Free. (Does not include access to the Museum.) 323-7591. History of Fashion, through Sept. 20, “From Fifth Avenue to Town House Road: Fashion and Accessories in Effingham,” free, public welcome, by Effingham Historical Society, exhibit at County Courthouse, Courthouse Square, Ossipee, call for a viewing (allow 24 hr. notice): 539-4071. Lakes Region Genealogy Interest Group, meets last Thursday of the month; weekly morning classes on Wednesday from 10 – 11:30 am at Wolfeboro Public Library, for more info call Cindy Scott: 569-2428. Libby Museum, a museum of natural history, Tuesday-Saturday 10 am – 4 pm, Sunday noon – 4 pm, Route 109, Wolfeboro, for more information: 569-5709, www.thelibbymuseum.org.

Your Guide to What’s Happening on the Route 16 Corridor

Sweet 16

Betty Schneider’s

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Cardamom Raisin Bread - Almond Cake - Muffins, Cookies & More! Open Tuesday through Saturday 7am - 4pm; Closed Sunday & Monday 603-323-2021 or 603-662-6047

en re Op A e W ar! All Ye

kbschneidernh@roadrunner.com www.scandinavianbakingnh.com Route 113 East, Deer Hill Road, Chocorua

History lives just around the bend.

Masonic Breakfast, First Sunday of each month, 7-11:30 am, 35 Trotting Track Road, Wolfeboro. Fresh fruit, omelets made to order, scrambled eggs, hash browns, cereal etc.

H Historic Homestead H Working Farm H Guided Tours Seasonal Activities H Crafts Demos H Exhibits H Animals Picnic Spots H MORE!

Movie Night, Rochester Public Library, Wednesdays at 6 pm, 65 S. Main St., Rochester, public welcome, www.rpl.lib.nh.us, 332-1428. New Hampshire Boat Museum, “We’ve Got You Covered: Art From MotorBoating Magazine Covers 1914-1935, an exhibit of boating magazine covers, runs from May 28-Oct. 10, 399 Center St., Wolfeboro, info: 569-4554, wwwnhbm.org.

5 | Ages 4 & under, FREE | Lunch for sale Tu. & We. OPEN YEAR-ROUND

$

North Conway Farmer’s Market, Saturdays June 11-Columbus Day, 9 am-noon, Conway Community Center, 817-8316; email: northconwayfarmersmarket@ gmail.com; www.nocofarmersmarket.org.

58 Cleveland Hill Rd. Tamworth Village, NH 603-323-7591 l 800-686-6117

www.remickmuseum.org

Ossipee Knit/Crochet meets at the Ossipee Public Library on the second and fourth Friday of each month, 1:30-3 pm. Plein Air Painters, artists paint at variety of places in Mount Washington Valley/N. Conway area on Fridays from May-Sept., Mt. Washington Valley Art Assoc., for schedule of locations: www.mwvarts.org. Radio-Controlled Sailing on Back Bay, Bridge-Falls Path, Wolfeboro. Onemeter Solings compete 1 pm Tuesdays, US12’s compete 1 pm Thursdays, both sessions weather permitting. Free-sailing Footy’s available for youngsters to try on Tuesday. More information at nhbm.org. Railroad Museum, 1 Chapel St., Union, visit the restored 1911 Boston & Maine Railroad Station housing railroad artifacts, tour the 1903 Railroad Snowplow, and view the 1909 era Boston & Maine Model Railroad in the restored 1875 Freight House. Heritage Park Railroad Museum is open Saturdays and Sundays noon to 4 pm. Admission is free. www.historicwakefieldnh.com. Remick Country Doctor Museum & Farm, 58 Cleveland Hill Rd., Tamworth Village. Activities and tours, exhibits, workshops, Capt. Enoch Remick House and farm stand. Call for hours 323-7591 or 800-686-6117, www.remickmuseum.org. Sandwich Farmer’s Market, Corner House Parking Lot, Center Sandwich, Saturdays 9 – 11:30 am.

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Tamworth Summer Farmer’s Market, (May 14-Oct. 22), parking lot of Unitarian Universalist Fellowship, 30 Tamworth Rd. Tamworth Tamworth, 9 am-1 pm, info: www.tamworthfarmersmarket.org. Tamworth Writers’ Group, meets second Tuesday of each month, 5 pm, Cook Memorial Library, downtown Tamworth. Led by Ed Martinez, (starts June 14), aboutwritingtamworth@gmail.com, 730-4482. Wolfeboro Farmer’s Market, June 2-Oct. 6, takes Thursdays from 12:30-4:30 pm. Cate Park, Wolfeboro, info: www.wolfeboroareafarmersmarket.com. Wolfeboro Inn Special Events, Sushi Night, every Tues., 4-9 pm; every other Thur. Date Night with free babysitting, 5-9pm; Sun. Brunch, every Sun. 10 am-2 pm; Wolfe’s Tavern, Wolfeboro Inn, 90 N. Main St., Wolfeboro, 569-3016, www. wolfeboroinn.com. Wolfeboro Rotary Club Meeting, Mondays, 5:30 pm, 1812 Room at Wolfeboro Inn, Wolfeboro, light dinner, guest speaker on various topics of interest, for more info: www.wolfebororotary.org.

CHOCORUA – This great 1793 cape has much to offer: exposed beams, fireplace, wide board floors, unique wood stove/fireplace that dates back to pre-electric days and a large storage room could be made into more living space. Located in the heart of Chocorua Village. MLS# 4501801 $149,500

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LAND CHOCORUA - 2.53 Acres in Chocorua Meadows set on a quiet cul-de-sac. Access to heated pool and tennis courts. MLS# 4502597 $29,900

603-323-7803 Fax: 603-323-2314 admin@ldre.com • www.ldre.com

Route 16, Chocorua, NH


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September /October 2016

Learn about the Transcendental Movement in New England! Join the Effingham Historical Society at the Effingham Public Library located at 30 Town House Road in Center Effingham on Friday, September 16 at 7 pm for a presentation by the Pontine Theatre entitled, “New England Utopia: Transcendental Communities.” Staged by Co-Artistic Directors Marguerite Mathews and Greg Gathers, the program includes scenes from their original production exploring New England Transcendentalism and audience discussion centered around Ralph Waldo Emerson and the community at Concord, Massachusetts and the utopian experiments led by Bronson Alcott at Fruitlands and by George Ripley at Brook Farm. New England Utopia explores the New England Transcendentalist movement of the 1830s and 1840s, which is often called the first American school of philosophy. The works by its disciples, Ralph Waldo Emerson and Henry David Thoreau, are still widely read today. In compiling the original script, the company drew exclusively from primary historical sources, including essays and poetry by the transcendentalists themselves, as well as excerpts from their personal correspondence and journal entries. Despite failures in practical application, the ideas of the Transcendentalists continue to inspire readers and thinkers. They speak to many concerns at the forefront of current social debate: environmentalism,

industrialization and capitalism, to name but a few. The Transcendentalists celebrated the American experiment of individualism and self-reliance. They took progressive stands on women’s rights, abolition, reform, and education. They criticized government, organized religion, laws, social institutions, and industrialization. They honored the American “state of mind” through their faith that all would be well, because humans could transcend limits and reach astonishing heights. Since 1977, Pontine Theatre has been an active participant in the development of actor-based theatre, creating work that is engaging, innovative and original. Pontine’s work is founded on the concept that

where the divided highway ends and the mountains meet the lakes

the actor should function as a creative (rather than interpretive) artist, and that the actor dictates action (movement) as a primary tool. Co-Artistic Director, M. Marguerite Mathews and Gregory Gathers have produced over 50 original works. Creating and performing these works, Pontine has introduced their unique form of theatre to audiences throughout New England, transforming audience interest in mime, puppetry, literature, and history into enthusiasm for this distinctive synthesis of forms. The program, which is made possible by a Humanities to Go! grant from the New Hampshire Humanities Council, is free and open the public. A questionand-answer period, refreshments, and the Effingham Historical Society

monthly business meeting will follow the presentation. Founded in 1953, the Effingham Historical Society (EHS) seeks to furnish an opportunity for united thought, study and action in collecting and preserving articles of historic interest to the Town of Effingham; to select, protect, arrange, and record documents and artifacts; and to show handiwork, home furnishings, and habits of the life of our forefathers in order to communicate the historical values of the town and to provide present and future access to our cultural past. The EHS is a privately funded nonprofit organization located at 1014 Province Lake Road in Effingham. The EHS presents a humanities-related program on the third Friday of each month, at 7 pm, unless otherwise announced, followed by refreshments and the business meeting. Programs are free and open to the public unless otherwise indicated. The EHS Museum is open prior to each month’s meeting and by appointment. For more information on the Effingham Historical Society, call Alfred Levesque, President, at 603- 539-9078.

where the divided highway ends and the mountains meet the lakes

Around the Sweet 16 Towns

Your Guide to What’s Happening on the Route 16 Corridor Aardvark Woodworking

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Windy Fields Farm

O

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Every Saturday 10 am -1 pm July 16 thru September Fresh Veggies, Jams and Jellies, Home Baked Goods, Craft Items. Always Something New Appearing! 15 Moultonville Rd., Ctr. Ossipee

at Park Adjacent to Ossipee Main Street Building

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Across 1. Adagio and allegro 6. To lay in the sun 10. Bully 13. Concentrated, in a way 14. “The Faerie Queene” division 15. Bauxite, e.g. 16. Sends electromagnetic waves for radio 18. Propel, in a way 19. Alone 20. Multiple individuals 22. 007, for one 24. Bit 26. “___ here” 27. One of the five W’s 28. Regarding this point 30. Car accessory 32. Neigh-ers 34. Condensation of water droplets 37. Aquatic mammal 38. Flipper 39. Designating the style of an earlier time 40. Room at a spa (2 wds.) 42. To withstand 43. Congratulations, of a sort 44. Voters’ problem 46. ___ deferens 47. Adam’s apple spot 49. “Malcolm X” director 50. “Hold on a ___!” 51. Series of sharp taps 53. Whimper 55. Frozen water 56. Transforms energy 62. “___ Ng” (They Might Be Giants song) 63. Like “The X-Files” 64. Cliffside dwelling 65. Basic monetary unit of Romania 66. Cattail, e.g. 67. Cover, in a way

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Down 1. “For shame!” 2. “To ___ is human ...” 3. “Dilbert” cartoonist Scott Adams has one: Abbr. 4. Wuss 5. Acad. 6. Dracula, at times 7. Queen, maybe 8. Son by second marriage 9. “M*A*S*H” setting 10. Helpful; teamwork 11. Face-to-face exam 12. “As you ___” 14. Humidor item 17. Partners 21. French for shading 22. Fired into the sky 23. Large trunk or suitcase 25. Point 27. Hit hard 28. Frau’s partner 29. Elephant’s weight, maybe 31. A balloon, in a sense 33. Beethoven work in E flat 35. Deuce topper 36. Gobs 38. Coxcomb 41. Not a maple or elm 42. Watery discharge from mucous membranes of eyes 45. Crow’s home 48. Escapade 50. Break off 51. 100 dinars 52. Clearasil target 54. Amount of work 57. Anger 58. ___-Atlantic 59. Victorian, for one 60. Cheat, slangily 61. “Comprende?”

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Afford Aimed Anger April Arose Array Asked Buried Characteristic Cheap Clubs Cords Deals Dismay

Encyclopedia Enter Essay Fatty Fence Funnel Knife Major Mound Muscle Musical Myself Nines Ninth

Office Others Prince Ratio Razor Roars Sandy Seaweed Sister Smacks Square Stool Store Strike

Styles Thirst Tiles Tones Upset Waits Wrapped You’ll Yo-yos

CryptoQuiz Each of the following cryptograms is a clue to the identity of a sports legend. Using the hints X=A and Z=R, decipher the clues to name the athlete.

1

HLPH ________________________________

2

NXCUNXJJ ________________________________

3

YPRWLUZ ________________________________

4

YUZOUWR BXQU ________________________________

5

XEXZV ________________________________

This athlete remains at the top of the leader board with 511 wins: _______________________________________ Answers: 1) Ohio, 2) Baseball, 3) Pitcher 4) Perfect Game, 5) Award, Cy Young

September / October 2016


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September /October 2016

Foot Tapping Jazz with Moose Mountain at Wakefield Opera House On Saturday, September 24, the Wakefield Opera House Performing Arts Committee will host the Moose Mountain Dixieland Jazz Band with Lance MacLean. The rollicking good show starts at 7 pm; tickets are $15 per person at door; $12 in advance from Ed Morrison (603-522-0126); Angie Nichols, Wakefield Tax Office; Sharper Image Salon and Woodman’s Barber Shop in East Wakefield or Lovell Market in Sanbornville. The Moose Mountain Jazz Band got started in the Brookfield/Wakefield area in August of 2001 when Lance Maclean was asked to put together a small threepiece group for a “Dixieland Night” at the Wakefield Historical Society’s Red School House. The event was a complete success and many in the audience asked, “Where can we hear you play again”? Organizer Ed Morrison worked with Lance and several area musicians that wanted to get together and play Dixieland Jazz on a regular basis, to schedule a series of “Jazz parties.” The first event in January of 2002 was supposed to be just a “casual affair” where the band would play some and the people who came, could talk and visit with everyone including the band, just like a party. It turned out that most people wanted to just listen to the band! Given the enormous response received from the audience to the soldout first event, The Moose Mountain Jazz Band was formed in February of 2002 shortly after that first “Jazz Party.” The band has been very active since, playing at least once a month

The Moose Mountain Dixieland Jazz Band will perform Saturday, September 24 at the Wakefield Opera House. throughout the year at concerts, private parties, parades, and fundraising events and in area schools. The music called Dixieland Jazz has its roots in American history, drawing primarily on African and European sources. It is an ever-changing art form, created just for the listener at the moment in time when the music is played. Thought is an all-important ingredient in this kind of music because improvisation plays a major roll. After an introductory ensemble chorus, band members in turn “solo” on the tune by following the chord pattern and melody line, and in doing so create their own melody to go along with the original structure of the song. As the audience

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is thinking of the tune’s melody, they listen to a jazz solo being played which is not the familiar melody, but rather something close to it. The result is a new variation of the song every time. The other musicians, particularly the rhythm section (piano, bass and drum) will “back them up” until it is their turn to do the same thing. This is the typical jazz format. There are different combinations of instruments at one time throughout the piece, depending on the arrangement being played. Sometimes, there is no set arrangement, and all the musicians will watch and listen, as not to get in the way of each other, but to blend, and give the soloist the proper chord foundation for their solo. It is important to realize that all play according to a set of musical “rules,” following the chord structure of the song being played, and being careful not to “step on the toes” of the soloist. This format is universal to all experienced musicians, and is strictly followed, in this type of music. The

result from the listener’s perspective is a blend of instruments, and solos that appear to be well rehearsed. The incredible thing about jazz is that a lot of it is not rehearsed or written out, which makes every performance fresh and interesting to both the musicians and the listeners. Come listen to the Moose Mountain Jazz Band at the Wakefield Opera House. Their music is happy, foottapping, rambunctious party jazz. It is music for everyone who feels his blood running faster when listening to a great Dixie beat. It is music for everyone who loves the sound and rhythms born in New Orleans that people the world over have come to love and call Dixieland.

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September / October 2016 •1932 Air Speed Record Continued from page 5 pilot planning to take the GeeBee R-1 through its paces in Cleveland, had an unfortunate accident that hurt his back too badly for him to race. A world class pilot and a world class plane were both stranded; that is, until Granny contacted Major Doolittle and asked him if he’d be interested in flying the R-1 in the Thompson. It wasn’t much later that the Major showed up at the Granville Springfield headquarters and got in the cockpit of the red and white, black-piped barrelshaped plane. Newspapermen call it the “Flying Silo.” The Major and the Granvilles exchanged a few words and then the plane headed down the runway. Onlookers watched until they could no longer see the red 11s and the “5” and “6” dice emblazoned on the plane. The next thing anyone heard from Doolittle was a telegram from Cleveland saying, “Landed in Cleveland O.K., Jim.” The R-1 was built for speed. Jimmy described it as “all engine with minuscule wings and a bomb like fuselage.” In Cleveland he learned “She’s got plenty of stuff. I gave her the gun for just a few seconds and she hit 260 like a bullet without any change for momentum and without diving for speed, and she had plenty of reserve miles in her when I shut her down” but “I didn’t trust this little monster. It was fast, but it was like balancing a pencil or an ice cream cone on the tip of your finger. You couldn’t let your hand off the stick for an instant.” The Thompson Trophy race is a 10lap race flown in front of the 50,000 seat

the year’s Indianapolis 500 was only 104 mph. You shake your head and look out the window where leaves are starting to color up, and fall’s final harvest waits. Life in Madison can be predictable, but the world is changing, no small thanks to those Granville boys up to Maple Grove Road. The Madison Historical Society, www.madisonnhhistoricalsociety.org carries Farmers Take Flight by Tom Granville’s daughter J.I. Granville, and www.donhollway.com posts the 1994 Aviation History magazine story “The Gee Bee.” Both were indispensable in the writing of this story. Cleveland grandstand built specially for aero races. It’s built for 50,000, but everyone says folks were overflowing way beyond the seats. This was a race not to be missed. In designing the planes for speed, maneuverability is often sacrificed and crashes get pretty common. It’s gory, but true. Like boxing matches, a lot of people seem to come out for the blood. The ambulance chasers were disappointed in 1932, though. There were close calls but no crashes. At one point the Major’s plane was trailing black smoke, but there was no fire. His engine was just running rich. The staggered start had the R-1 playing catch-up most of the race, but Jimmy Doolittle played it cool and reeled ’em in. The straightaways were the airplane’s strong suit, but the veteran flyer’s skill and instinct got him around the pylons at the curves. The speed was astounding. Doolittle

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hit an average of 296 mph in the trials and registered 252.6 in the race itself. You can hardly start to imagine that kind of speed. The B & M train to Silver Lake doesn’t go near that fast, and the world record train speed set in Germany in 1931 was just 143 miles

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September /October 2016

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in consumption or fuel prices canPRE-BUY: affect your monthly payment the season outcome of TRADITIONAL BUDGET: Make payments without a locked-in price BUDGET ASSURANCE CAP: Take comfort in changes spreading your estimatBUDGET Spread out yourand/or heating costs over even your budgeting results. To participate in an Eastern Budget Assurance CAP, Fixed Price Budget or Pre-Buy Plan you must enter into an Agreement with Eastern. The Agreement is a legal easy and manageable. Spread your annual fuel costs over even month- ed fuel costs over even monthly payments. Never pay more than your monthly payments while locking in the price per gallon for your expected contract and sets forth the terms and conditions of your participation in the Plan. Please read the carefully as it will be a binding contract. Under the Pre-Buy Plan, you will be required ly payments. Automatically receive your prompt pay discount as part of capped rate for your anticipated fuel needs, noAgreement matter how high prices fuel pre-purchased needs for the by period of October 1, 2016 to aMay 31, 2017. to take delivery of all product you May 31, 2017 to avoid paying shortage fee. First payFIXED PRICE BUDGET: Take comfort in spreading your estimated fuel costs over monthly budget payments. First payment is due at more time of than enrollment. When costsanticipated areNH below • your cap, you pay theMA lower price. First ment is due at time purchase. even monthly payments. Never pay rate forfuel your fuel Eastern Propane &your Oilfixed • rise. Claremont, Danvers, • Franklin, MA • ofHudson, NH needs, no matter how high prices rise. First payment is due at time of enrollment. payment is due at time of enrollment. PRSRT STD ASSURANCE Take comfort in spreading your • estimated fuel US Postage NH • Loudon, NH Rochester, NH • Tamworth, NH • Winchendon, MA FIXEDBUDGET PRICE BUDGET: TakeLebanon, comfort CAP: in spreading your estimated fuel PAID costs over even monthly payments. Never pay more than your capped rate for your For current plan details please visit eastern.com Manchester, NH costs anticipated over even monthly Never pay more your fixed rate FULL SEASON PRE-BUY: Lock inyour the price per gallon by making a one fuel payments. needs, no matter howthan high prices rise. When fuel costs are below Permit No. 724 For current pricing call our cap, you pay the lower price. First payment is due at time of enrollment. 800.523.5237 eastern.com PO Box of 1800 for your anticipated fuel needs, no matter how high prices rise. First pay- time purchase of your expected fuel|needs for the period October 1, Rochester, NH 03866-1800 Customer Care Department at 800.523.5237 SEASON PRE-BUY: Lock in the price per gallon by making a one time ment FULL is due at time of enrollment. 2016 to May 31, 2017. Payment in full is due at time of purchase. purchase of your expected fuel needs for the period of September 1, 2016 to

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