06/20/19 Cocheco Times

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THE WEIRS TIMES & THE COCHECO TIMES, Thursday, June 20, 2019

A SPECIAL COCHECO VALLEY EDITION OF THE WEIRS TIMES NEWSPAPER. VOLUME 28, NO. 25

THE WEIRS, LAKE WINNIPESAUKEE, N.H., THURSDAY, JUNE 20, 2019

COMPLIMENTARY

SUMMER FUN KICKS OFF!! Fireworks Festival In Rochester

Richardson’s Farm Fresh Ice Cream Comes To Funspot (Largest Arcade In The World) over 300 years and produces some of the finest quality, farm-to-table ice cream in the country. In 1952, the same year Funspot started at Weirs Beach, NH, Ben and Hazen Richardson set out to make “One Perfect Ice Cream.” By the mid-1960s, the Richardson’s ice cream stand had become a local favorite offering over 50 delicious flavors!

Today the farm is run by the 9th generation of the Richardson family, and the ice cream business is booming. The farm has been featured in magazines and on TV shows such as Phantom Gourmet: Hidden Jewel, Great Ate, and Gourmet Greatness. Despite their notoriety, the Richardson’s have never forgotten their humble beginnings

and are always mindful that it all starts with the cows. The ice cream stand at Funspot is proud to bring this farm fresh treat to the Lakes Region. They’re open every day from 10AM-10PM for the summer season serving unbeatable flavors like Blueberry Pie, Campfire S’mores, Maple Walnut, and dozens more.

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Funspot has a rich history in the Lakes Region, and when its ice cream stand opened on Monday, June 17 it brought another New England business with a long history to the area. The stand now proudly serves Richardson’s Farm Fresh ice cream. Richardson’s is a family farm based in Middleton, MA, which has been in continuous operation for

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Funspot in the Weirs is now serving Richardson’s Farm Fresh Ice Cream at its ice cream stand. Stop by for a great summer treat. Another great summer attraction, Monkey Trunks Zipline Park, is right next door.

Rochester Main Street and the City of Rochester announced the 2nd annual Fireworks Festival event on July 3rd at the Rochester Community Center. The festival will be held 6-10pm and will again feature live music, children’s games, face painting, Wildlife Encounters, fun glow toys, food, vendors, and more. The fireworks are scheduled to begin around 9:30pm with viewing from the athletic fields of Spaulding High School. The public is invited to attend the festival and bring blankets or lawn chairs to relax while viewing. This event is pet-free, so the public is asked to leave animals at home. The public is encouraged to attend this familyfriendly event, or to support Rochester by volunteering. Any proceeds from this event go toward the sustainability and revitalization of downtown Rochester.


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THE WEIRS TIMES & THE COCHECO TIMES, Thursday, June 20, 2019

WRIGHT MUSEUM OF WORLD WAR II

NOW OPEN FOR ITS 25 SEASON !! TH

Yankee Magazine’s “Best 20th Century History Museum in New England” Among the over 14,000 items in our collection, see WWII military vehicles & weapons; a 1939-1945 Time Tunnel; a real Victory Garden, Movie Theater & Army barracks; as well as period toys, books, music, clothing… and MORE. THE RON GOODGAME & DONNA CANNEY

EDUCATION PROGRAM SERIES TUESDAYS FROM MAY THROUGH OCTOBER

Tuesday, June 25, from 7 – 8 p.m. Only In America A Concert by the woodwind quintet, Quint-Essential Winds Wolfeboro Great Hall, 86 S. Main St., Wolfeboro Tuesday, July 2, from 7 – 8 p.m. “The Enemy Within? JapaneseAmerican Interment & its Legacy” Presented by Professor Marion Dorsey. Wolfeboro Great Hall, 86 S. Main St., Wolfeboro

and Patrick K. O’Donnell Wolfeboro Great Hall, 86 S. Main St. Wolfeboro $15 non members and $10 members Tuesday, July 30, from 7 – 8 p.m. My Life as a Marine Retired Marine Major Carol Moore

Tuesday, August 13, from 5:30 – 8:30 p.m. See Here Private Hargrove, 1944, 101 minutes Donna Reed Film Festival** Tuesday, July 16, from 7 – 8 p.m. Wolfeboro Great Hall, 86 Main St, Patton’s Way: A Radical Theory Wolfeboro, NH of War A lecture and book signing by the Tuesday, August 20 at 1:00 p.m. author James Morningstar, Army Film Presentation: The Human Comedy, 1944, 117 minutes, Lt. Col. (Retired) directed by Clarence Brown Tuesday, July 23, from 1 – 5 p.m. Wright Museum Movie Theater Wright Museum of WWII Symposium Best-selling Authors Alex Kershaw

Admission $8 per person; $3 for Wright Museum members. Reservations recommended, call 603-569-1212 for more info. Doors open 1 hour before the program begins. Visit www.wrightmuseum.org for details on the entire series

SPECIAL EXHIBITS FOR 2019 EXHIBIT CLOSING SOON! RIGHTING A WRONG: Japanese Americans and World War II

On exhibit May 1 to July 7, 2019

ESQUIRE MAGAZINE: The World War II Years

On exhibit July 14 to September 8, 2019

THE LAST GOOD WAR: The Faces and Voices of World War II On exhibit September 15 to

October 31, 2019

Visit WrightMuseum.org for a complete list of events & exhibits!

MUSEUM OPEN DAILY May 1st thru Oct. 31st

Ask A Monday – Saturday, 10am-4pm • Sunday, Noon-4pm Our Anbout nua M Show AAA card for Gi embership l ADMISSION Museum Members - Free | Adults $10.00 ft Mem s 10% discount on bershi& RATES: Children (5-17) $6.00 / (4 and under) Free ps adult admission fees. All Military and Seniors (60 and over) $8.00 603-569-1212 • www.WrightMuseum.org • 77 Center Street, Wolfeboro, NH


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THE WEIRS TIMES & THE COCHECO TIMES, Thursday, June 20, 2019

F O O L NEW HAMPSHIRE A

in brendan@weirs.com

*

Live Free or Die.

*A FLATLANDER’S OBSERVATIONS ON LIFE

New England’s Largest Showroom & Workshop for hand laced braided rugs. Also an extensive collection of hand made used Braided Rugs.

Thinking Back

by Brendan Smith Weirs Times Editor

Recently the sports world turned it attention to the Triple Crown in horse racing as it is held each year. Whenever I see a horse race, it brings me back to a time in my life, long before my Flatlander days in New Hampshire, when I was involved in the sport. For a good number of years, I worked with my brother as a caretaker and trainer of Standardbred racehorses. Standardbreds are the ones where the driver sits in the sulky in the back. Not quite as prestigious as the more famous thoroughbreds. I started in the business on a whim fresh out of college with a journalism degree. I was twenty-one and the promise of spending an entire winter in West Palm Beach, Florida was more than my hormone driven mind could stand. I thought it would be for just one winter. Six years later I was still in the business. A slight detour from my initial ambitions in life, but it was a living. A hard-earned, heavy lifting, unpredictable living. Over the years I had some great adventures: I rode for twenty-six hours in the back of an eighteenwheel horse trailer from New York to Florida, a handful of two-year old horses as my traveling companions. I lived in a few different states along the East Coast. I traveled the Stakes circuit, a new racetrack every week, setting up my cot and sleep-

ing in the shed row every night,in front of the horses in my care, staying with them pretty much 24/7. I met people from all over the country with widely varied backgrounds who were, whether I liked it or not, my stablemates for the week. I watched as my horse, a 75-1 shot, won a race by three lengths at the Syracuse Fairgrounds and I didn’t have a cent to my name to bet as my paycheck hadn’t yet arrived. I worked with a guy we all called “Big Dan”. He weighed about three hundred pounds, couldn’t read or write very well, but he knew a lot more about horses than me with my college degree. “Big Dan” also had a heart of gold. Dan didn’t get his paycheck either that week, and neither of us had eaten in about twenty-four hours. I went back to the barn one afternoon in Syracuse and Dan was sitting on a tack box with a big smile on his face. He had somehow gotten his hands on a ham sandwich and he was holding out the half he saved for me. He could have eaten that sandwich (he needed it more than me) and I never would have known. I learned a lot about human kindness that day that day and it has always stayed with. One horse I trained; I will never forget. His name was “Bye Bye Everyone”. He was a tiny horse with bows and curbs on his legs that made it seem as if he would never race, but he sure did love to run. I spent most of my days focusing on his needs. I soaked his feet and put poultice on his legs. I gave him massages and rubbed his coat till it shined. I talked with him for hours on end (no one else was there). I even fell asleep with him in his stall on the hay (we were both ex-

hausted). Despite his size and ailments, he won a mile race at the Meadowland in New Jersey in 1:57 which, at the time in 1981, was pretty darn fast. He was the fastest horse I ever took care of. He taught me a lot about resiliency. I spent a few years living on a farm in New Jersey. Most mornings I was up at dawn, feeding horses and mucking stalls, exercising horses and on most afternoons bringing them to the racetrack and then back home. Many days would end around 1am and then back to it again in a few hours. (Being in my twenties then and in pretty good shape, it was tolerable.) I left the business in the early 1980s and moved the New Hampshire in 1985 and, yadda, yadda, yadda, here I am today. My brother is no longer in the business, he’s actually a banker today. My younger sister, who used to work with us, met her husband at the farm. He is still in the horse business and has had some welldeserved success. I live a pretty soft life now, and I’m not complaining. The calluses on my hands faded decades ago, I really don’t miss all the heavy lifting and endless days now that I am in my sixties. Still, I wouldn’t trade those years for anything. I learned a lot on many levels, things a college education never taught me. Every year around this time I think about all that again. Brendan is the author of “The Flatlander Chronicles” and “Best Of A F.O.O.L. In New Hampshire” available at BrendanTSmith.com. His latest book “I Only Did It For The Socks and Other Tales of Aging” will be published later this year.

Hooked Rugs, Braiding Supplies, Kits and Wool Available. Stop by for Summer Time Savings and stock up on wool from our Rem Room – only $11.95/lb! 462 West Main Street, Tilton, 2 miles west of I-93, exit 20 603-286-4511 • Open Mon-Fri 9-5, Sat 10-4

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By George Abbott & Douglass Wallop • Music & lyrics by Richard Adler & Jerry Ross

YANKEES

June 27 - July 6

Sponsored by The Mount Washington Cog Railway

FAUST MEETS BASEBALL in this devilishly clever and musically delightful send-up of love and the true American pastime. When Joe Boyd sells his soul to the devil for a chance to lead his favorite team to victory against the New York Yankees, things don’t go quite as planned. Fun, fast-paced, and irreverently witty, this winner of 7 Tony awards is a true American classic.

2019 Season Sponsor: The Haynes Family Foundation For Tickets & Special offers: 603-323-8500 www.barnstormerstheatre.org

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THE WEIRS TIMES & THE COCHECO TIMES, Thursday, June 20, 2019

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Trump & Mueller To the Editor: Having failed to protect the Washington establishment’s interests by accusing President Trump of collusion or criminality, Robert Mueller tried to redeem himself in his May 29th retirement speech. His excuse for failure contradicted his previous statements and required subsequent “clarification”/correction, and he tried to avoid a Congressional appearance (and its embarrassing questions). Robert Mueller was selected when the Washington establishment needed someone unethical enough to frame an innocent man. Mueller, who kept innocent people in prison and withheld information that should have ended the sale of American uranium to the Russians, met that criteria. An ethical person with Mueller’s conflicts of interest wouldn’t have accepted his assignment. Mueller is too conflicted to sit on a jury considering any matter concerning Trump. Mueller is friends with key witnesses, had a business dispute with Trump, and apparently wanted to replace Comey as FBI Director. With the media endlessly screaming “collusion!”; the Steele dossier; claimed proof by Congressman Schiff, Obama’s intelligence officials, and others; un-

Our Story

precedented access to Presidential personnel and records; and a team of 19 anti-Trump prosecutors and 40 FBI investigators, it was considered easy. Mueller and his team aggressively (even threatening, jailing, bribing, bankrupting innocent people) tried to uncover collusion or lawbreaking by Trump, they couldn’t. The Steele dossier was a known fraud, Schiff and others lied, the false charges were politically instigated. Although Mueller says that our judicial system demands that the indicted Russians must be considered innocent until proven guilty, he uses a Stalinist standard for Trump, claiming the need to prove Trump innocent. It’s not a prosecutor’s job to prove someone innocent, that’s essentially impossible. E.g., how could you prove that Robert Mueller isn’t a serial rapist and murderer of young girls? When prosecutors don’t have evidence to charge a crime, it’s un-American to suggest a person is nevertheless guilty. Certainly Mueller’s anti-Trump team would have charged Trump with a crime if they could. So, since their “report cannot conclude that the President committed a crime”, they produced a report with mischaracterizations, half-truths, and without exculpatory evidence to slander the

This newspaper was first published in 1883 by Mathew H. Calvert as Calvert’s Weirs Times and Tourists’ Gazette and continued until Mr. Calvert’s death in 1902. The new Weirs Times was re-established in 1992 and strives to maintain the patriotic spirit of its predecessor as well as his devotion to the interests of Lake Winnipesaukee and the Cocheco Valley area with the new Cocheco Times. Our newspaper’s masthead and the map of Lake Winnipesaukee in the center spread are elements in today’s paper which are taken from Calvert’s historic publication.

President and hide that apparently Trump is a very law-abiding Americans. The false collusion, obstruction, and now impeachment charges against Trump were and are driven by one thing: the Washington establishment can’t have someone make government work for the people rather than for the special interests. President Trump shows that, by putting the people first, government can encourage the economy so people get better jobs, higher incomes, and lower taxes; make our communities safer; enable better and less costly health insurance/care; stop subsidizing wealthy countries at the expense of American taxpayers and workers; and make the world safer. Don Ewing Meredith, NH

Much Ado About Budgets To the Editor: Gov. Sununu has pledged to keep us free of an income or sales tax. But does he realize broad-based taxes would be needed if commuter rail is installed? He needs to Veto SB 241 to stop that boondoggle in its tracks. Also, what is he doing about SB 306 which is conveniently hidden in the budget? It’s a provision to set up a 3-person See MAIL BOAT on 33

Locally owned for over 20 years, this publication is devoted to printing the stories of the people and places that make New Hampshire the best place in the world to live. No, none of the daily grind news will be found in these pages, just the good stuff. Published year round on Thursdays, we distribute 30,000 copies of the Weirs Times and Cocheco Times every week to the Lakes Region/Concord/Seacoast area, and have an estimated 66,000 people reading this newspaper. To find out how your business or service can benefit from advertising with us please call 1-888-308-8463.

PO Box 5458 Weirs, NH 03247 TheWeirsTimes.com info@weirs.com facebook.com/weirstimes 603-366-8463

©2019 WEIRS PUBLISHING COMPANY, INC.


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THE WEIRS TIMES & THE COCHECO TIMES, Thursday, June 20, 2019

Not So . . . o g A g N Lo

Exploring ThE lEgEnd & lorE of our graniTE STaTE

Gove’s 1683 NH Rebellion A Century Early

May not be combined with other discounts. Expires 6/30/19

by Robert Hanaford Smith, Sr. Contributing Writer

Edward Gove’s headstone in Hampton, New Hampshire.

See SMITH on 30

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rebellion. It has been designated to have been a “so-called rebellion ” but it certainly was not a minor incident to the man who was sentenced to a horrible death in the year 1683, almost a century before the rebellion in the 1700’s that resulted in a revolution and a new nation. At the time of the earlier “rebellion‘,so-called,’” there were but four towns in New Hampshire and , after being under the jurisdiction of Massachusetts, had become a province under the control of England in 1679. Remember that they came to the New World to escape religious persecution in England. Their Calvinistic theology was

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“To Leoline Jenkins, secretary of state, - I send you on the ship Richard, under Mr. Randolph’s care, Edward Gove, an assemblyman, who is condemned to death for raising a rebellion in this province. I intended to execute him here, for terror to the whole party, who are still mutinous, had my commission allowed it. Nine others were taken besides Gove, and on trial were convicted, but security has been taken for their appearance, and they have been respited, pending signification of the king’s pleasure. I cannot, with safety to myself and the province, keep Gove longer in custody, for, besides the great expense of guards for him, I have reason to fear that he may escape. Moreover, by my commission I am ordered to send home rebels – and if Gove escape the sentence of the law, there is an end of the king’s government in New Hampshire.” The above was writte n b y Ed wa rd C ranfield, King Charles II of England’s appointee to be the Governor of the province of New Hampshire concerning what might be called a feeble effort to change the British controlled government in the early days of the state or one man’s

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THE WEIRS TIMES & THE COCHECO TIMES, Thursday, June 20, 2019

The Media/Democrat Complex Strikes Big Tech This week, The New York Times ran a massive piece detailing the s u p p o s e d radicalization of one Caleb Cain. Cain moved from by Ben Shapiro political liberSyndicated Columnist alism toward self-ascribed “tradcon” status from watching YouTube videos. The New York Times charted this nefarious move by following those videos. The suggestion by The Times was simple: If you watch typical conservative content hosted by people like me, you will eventually end up watching material hosted by alt-right figures. The only solution, presumably, would be for YouTube to downgrade material The Times dislikes. This attitude isn’t only springing from The Times. Axios chief technology correspondent Ina Fried grilled Google CEO Sundar Pichai over the weekend, essentially demanding that YouTube do something to marginalize videos Fried dislikes. Vox ran a full-scale propaganda campaign last week to get conservative comedian Steven Crowder kicked off YouTube for the great sin of making offensive jokes about one of Vox’s columnists. Taking their cues from Democratic leaders like House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, various media outlets have spent years suggesting that Facebook’s unwillingness to censor political materials led to Hillary Clinton’s unjustifiable 2016 presidential defeat. And it’s not just targeting big tech companies. The far-left organization Media Matters for

America routinely leads boycott attempts against advertisers who deign to sponsor conservative programs -- even if those advertisers sponsor a wide variety of political programming. Pseudojournalists from organizations like Vox and Huffington Post spend their days calling advertisers for comment on various controversial statements by right-wing hosts from Tucker Carlson to Laura Ingraham to Sean Hannity. Their goal isn’t to follow the news but to generate a wave of advertiser-pullout announcements likely to do damage to those conservative hosts. Such censoriousness is rarely, if ever, practiced on the political right. YouTube and Facebook and Twitter are never targeted by conservatives over their unwillingness to shut down opposing points of view; they’re criticized for their willingness to kowtow to the political left and its demands for speech suppression. Advertisers on leftwing programming can speak freely, secure in the knowledge that conservatives won’t be calling them up to rip them for sponsoring shows like Rachel Maddow’s. That’s good. That’s how it should be. But for members of the political left, it isn’t. There are two reasons for that. The first is obvious: Those on the political left long ago abandoned the traditional liberal notion that those who disagree have a right to speak. Instead, they must be deplatformed and their advertisers punished, lest their nefarious ideas spread and metastasize. “Repressive tolerance,” in the parlance of Herbert Marcuse, has become a mainstay of left-wing thinking.

See SHAPIRO on 33

The Sacrifice To Be Free Last month people across the country celebrated Memorial Day. It is a day often celebrated with cookouts, family get-togethers, games, and by Isaac Hadam just an overall Contributing Writer fun time. Unfortunately, I fear many people are a bit quick to forget the reason this day is set aside. It is set aside, as the name suggests, as a memorial; a day to remember a special group of people. The patriotic hymn states it well. “Oh Beautiful for heroes proved in liberating strife; who more than selves their country loved.” On this Memorial Day we were to honor the men in uniform through our nation’s history who have given their lives so that we may be free. America is a truly wonderful place. We are free to say what

we want, worship God how we want, keep and bear arms, etc. We also have the benefit of a justice system that promotes the ideas that we are innocent until proven guilty, have the right to a trial by a jury of our peers, cannot face cruel and inhuman punishments, and so much more. These things that I have mentioned are all things that Americans tend to take for granted as this great freedom is merely what we have been raised by, and taught to expect. However, if we think about the rest of the world, what other place has all this liberty? Many nations like Russia, China, North Korea, and other such socialist/totalitarian governments don’t really allow any of these liberties. Under the guise of cracking down on “hate speech,” many nations in Europe have grown increasingly hostile to free speech and freedom of religion. (And they certainly don’t support the right to keep and

See HADAM on 39


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THE WEIRS TIMES & THE COCHECO TIMES, Thursday, June 20, 2019

African Sahel: “Policy Is Failing And Things Are Getting Worse” UNITED NATIONS

- Subsaharan Africa’s vast but impoverished Sahel region has been largely overlooked amidst by John J. Metzler t h e t u r m o i l Syndicated Columnist of Mid-East conflicts and East Asian regional instability. Yet this arid swath of five countries comprising what’s known as the Sahel, remains wracked by poverty, hunger, weak governance, and environmental degradation, offers a breeding ground for terrorism and expanding instability. Mark Lowcock, the UN’s Humanitarian and Relief supremo, went so far as to admit that while policy efforts on the national and international level, are “treating symptoms rather that the causes…policy is failing and things are getting worse.” The Sahel region of 135 million people, hosts some of the world’s poorest people; Mauritania, Mali, Burkina Faso, Niger and northeast Nigeria. In blunt and candid comments to the European Council on Foreign Relations in Brussels, Under Secretary-General Lowcock stated “The Jihadist group Islamic State in the Greater Sahara has expanded its footprint over recent years, swallowing smaller extremist groups. In a span of just 10 years, more than

10,000 jihadist fighters have been recruited in the Sahel.” He added that since 2012, “conflict, armed violence and inter communal clashes have displaced more than three million people within their own countries and forced more than a million more to flee to neighboring countries.” In other words, the poor population are uprooted and many of whom later fall victim to human traffickers who put them on a perilous path to Libya and then onwards to Europe. Just this year, more than 350,000 people have been displaced in Burkina Faso, Mali and Niger according to Lowcock who added, “The Sahel is now the most used and dangerous transit route for irregular migrants across the Mediterranean.” Take Mali for example, the epicenter of a widening crisis where a UN peacekeeping mission has been hard pressed to stabilize a conflict rooted in poverty and ethnic rifts, but fueled by terrorist movements. In a Security Council meeting renewing the mandate of the current peacekeeping force in Mali, a representative of the SecretaryGeneral conceded that despite, “formation of a new Government and legislation favoring economic development in northern Mali, there can be no lasting peace without improvements in the security situation.” Just last week up to 90 villag-

ers of the Dogon people, most of them Catholics, were killed by terrorists in Mali. French Ambassador Francois Delattre stated clearly, “The escalation

of violence in northern Mali calls for urgent action… especially to prevent more massacres.” South African Ambassador

See METZLER on 39

Celebrate Xenophobia! Diversity be damned. It’s time to celebrate xenophobia. It’s time to reject the “other” and accept that which is plainly evident: Not by Ken Gorrell all cultures are Contributing Columnist equal. Not all principles of human organization should be given equal respect. Some ways simply are better. Our ways are better. John Cleese, of Monty Python fame, recently riled social-justice jihadis with this Twitter post: “I think it’s legitimate to prefer one culture to another. For example, I prefer cultures that do not tolerate female genital mutilation.” As do I. As I suspect you do, too. Our ways are better than other ways humanity organizes itself outside the world we used to refer to – with common understanding and common reverence – as Western civilization. Can you name one nation founded on different principles that is able to provide the combination of legal protections, personal and community rights and freedoms, economic opportunities, and governmental stability that we take for granted here in the epicenter of modern Western civilization? Merriam-Webster defines xenophobia as “fear and hatred of strangers or foreigners or of anything that is strange or foreign.” It would seem a bad thing to celebrate. “Diversity” and “inclusion” sound so much better. Can’t we all just get along? Fear and hatred are strong emotions, yet they have their place. Without them, humans could not have survived; they are built into our fight-or-flight

response to danger. But in the post-war era, Americans developed a feeling of economic and social security that was both strong and ahistorical. History is coming back to bite us. The foundation of our society is crumbling, undermined by forces from within and without. Though it’s been happening for a while, the 2016 election made the cultural divisions between us impossible to ignore. And the crisis at the border has exposed a weakness in our sense of nation and self-determination. We are letting “the other” decide our fate, and we will not survive as a nation unless we stop it. In embracing “the other” we are losing ourselves. Andrés Manuel López Obrador, president of Mexico, recently proved himself to be “the other” we should fear. In a letter to President Trump (reprinted in the Wall Street Journal), López Obrador called for the dissolution of the United States of America. Not directly, of course. Leaders of corrupt, failed, narco-terror states are never direct. They hide their meaning in smiling phrases. But the meaning was clear. He began, “I am aware of your latest position towards Mexico... The peoples and nations we represent deserve that, whenever facing any conflict in our relations, however serious they may be, we resort to dialogue and act with prudence and responsibility.” This from the leader of a nation aiding and abetting the invasion on our shared border that includes citizens of Africa’s Democratic Republic of the Congo, currently in the grips of a major Ebola outbreak. (Hundreds are being settled in San Antonio, TX.) The leader of Mexico described

See GORRELL on 33


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THE WEIRS TIMES & THE COCHECO TIMES, Thursday, June 20, 2019

Fairways & Greens 18

“League of Our Own” News The focus of the league is having fun! Lady golfers of all skill levels play together in a non-intimidating Quota Format. Each golfer plays to improve her own golf game, while enjoying the company of a group of very friendly ladies. For those not familiar with Quota, it is based on points earned for each hole. A Double Bogey is

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worth 1 Quota Point, a Bogey 2 Points, a Par 3 Points, and so on. Every week, each golfer tries to meet or exceed her own individualized Quota Point goal. Both highhandicap and low-handicap golfers have a chance at beating their own goal. Team assignments change weekly to promote variety and to offer the opportunity to play with many different golfers during the season. A low key, Season Long Competition has begun, with Season Points earned for both individual and team performance every week. Currently, Janice Lynch is leading the race with 9 Season points, Susan Connolly is in second with 7 points, and Kelly Dobens, Pamela Ambrose and Terry Hussey are all tied for third place with 6 points each Weekly prizes are awarded after each round for various contests, for example: Closest to the Pin, Best Layup, Longest Sunk Putt, and Fewest Putts in a round. There are also Birdie and Chipin pools, and there is even See LEAGUE on 32 Clip & Save!

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WOMEN, WORLD CUP, AND WHITE HOUSE Through the wonders of modern technology and You-Tube one can easily call up wondrous sports moments and relive then at his or her leisure. Such as when “Havlicek Stole the Ball!” Perhaps my MOST favorite wondrous moment involves a Women’s World Cup quarterfinal soccer match from 2011 in Germany. Team USA was on the brink of elimination, trailing Brazil 2-1 with seconds remaining in extra time, after 122 minutes of play. Team USA was down a player, due to an earlier red card. Carli Lloyd got the ball and then passed it up the left side to Megan Rapinoe advanced it up the sideline before making a perfect long crossing pass to a streaking Abby Wambach. If you watch the YouTube replay, you’ll notice an amazing, simultaneous confluence of three vectors—Rapinoe’s cross, Wambach’s approach, and the Brazlian goalkeepers dash out to thwart the play. The keeper missed the ball by inches and Wambach’s perfect header turned Rapinoe’s perfect pass into the perfect, tying goal that kept Team USA alive. The Americans won on a penalty kick shoot-out and would later advance to the Finals against Japan. Wambach retired after Team USA’s 2015 World

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Megan Rapinoe Cup triumph but Rapinoe is back for a third FIFA Women’s World Cup Tournament—currently ongoing in France. Hopefully her recent appearance on a recent Sports Illustrated cover won’t prove to be a jinx. A free spirit, Rapinoe stirred a measure of controversy by taking a knee during several pregame National Anthems to support Colin Kaepernick’s similar gestures in the NFL. Rapinoe sought to show solidarity with the 49er quarterback while also raising awareness about LGBTQ+ rights. She’s also made it clear that she would boycott any White House events should President Trump invite then team to visit. Well. While there may be an “I” in “Rapinoe,” there is no “I” in “Team.” If a White House invite occurs, it would be nice of Megan to put her team ahead of her politics and not diminish a special celebration/event by a

personal boycott. But while I’m certainly not in synch with Rapinoe’s politics, her activism is a reminder about freedoms Americans enjoy. I hope Megan ponders the wonders of America and how women’s sports have increasingly flourished here. Perhaps she could channel some of her activism to focus attention on, say China, and how that country represses its LGBTQ+ community while producing more pollution than any other country, etc. etc. One also wonders if Rapinoe’s activism creates distractions or drama that might threaten that all important team chemistry. I hope not. Time will tell. The 13-0 USA win over Thailand in last week’s opener looked like a pretty positive harbinger. For now, American soccer fans are focusing on the action on the pitch while hoping to see the Team USA women win a See MOFFETT on 32

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10

THE WEIRS TIMES & THE COCHECO TIMES, Thursday, June 20, 2019

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11

THE WEIRS TIMES & THE COCHECO TIMES, Thursday, June 20, 2019

Kayak

Floundering by Tim Moore Contributing Writer

When I was little, flounder were plentiful and easy to catch. It was the first fish I ever caught and catching one seemed like no big deal. As a young adult though, the flounder had become overfished, and you were doing well if you could catch one per trip out. However, flounder populations along the New Hampshire coast have rebounded over the last decade thanks to better management. I was elated to once again find them in catchable numbers and when I began kayak fishing, targeting them from my kayak seemed only natural. In the spring, flounder can be found in very shallow water. I’ve watched from the seat of my kayak as they have eaten my rig in water as shallow as four feet. I prefer to drift for them rather than anchor and chum. I find that kayaks are much better suited to drifting in the close quarters of the harbors that often contain mooring fields. Any kayak will do, but a sit-on-top fishing kayak, like the Old Town Predator, is going to be much more comfortable and easier to fish from. There is more space for your gear and much more comfortable. Flounder fishing from a kayak is a pretty simple process. A light saltwater spinning setup is all you need. Two-hook flounder rigs can be purchased at most tackle shops and can be tipped with sea

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The author with a couple of handfuls of winter flounder. worms or clam strips, but earth worms will work in a pinch. Use as little weight as you can while still being able to keep your bait on the bottom. A net helps keep the second of the two hooks out of your hand or clothing and I prefer to use a catch bag rather than a stringer to keep my fish fresh. Today’s Tackle makes a great floating kayak live well that serves as a great catch bag. I prefer overcast days with light wind, and try to time my trip so that the wind and the tide are in the same direction. This makes my bait more natural to the flounder

when it drifts by. I prefer a drift of about 1MPH. Time of tide is subjective to the time of day as well as time of year, but the flounder numbers have risen to the point that there are always a few fish willing to cooperate through the end of June and sometimes into July, at which time the inshore waters warm and the flounder move to deeper water. Kayaks are easier to get to the water, usually free to launch, and put you in close contact to your quarry. Kayaks also give you access to areas out of reach of shore anglers, and too shallow See MOORE on 38


12

THE WEIRS TIMES & THE COCHECO TIMES, Thursday, June 20, 2019

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13

THE WEIRS TIMES & THE COCHECO TIMES, Thursday, June 20, 2019

JUNE Through Sat. 29th “Flora & Fauna of NH” – Art Exhibit

Lakes Region Art Association’s Art Gallery, Tanger Outlets, Suite 132, Tilton. Gallery is open Thursday through Sunday 10am-6pm. View artwork by LRAA Members that reflect New Hampshire greenery and native wildlife. Exhibit is free and open to the public.

Thurs. 13th – Sat. 22nd On Golden Pond – Directed by Ernest Thompson Winnipesaukee Playhouse, Meredith. As director, Thompson will be revisiting the celebrated play he wrote decades earlier, with the intent of deconstructing it; stripping it down to its original intent this time from the inside out. www. WinnipesaukeePlayhouse.org or 279-0333

Thurs. 13th – Sun. 30th Roald Dahl’s Musical”

“Matilda:

The

Rochester Opera House, 31 Wakefield Street, Rochester. Matilda is the story of an extraordinary girl who, armed with a vivid imagination and a sharp mind, dares to take a stand and change her own destiny. Inspired by the twisted genius of Roald Dahl, the Tony Award-winning show is a captivating masterpiece that revels in the anarchy of childhood, the power of imagination, and the inspiring story of a girl who dreams of a better life. Tickets range from $18-$22 and are available to reserve at www.

RochesterOperaHouse.com

Thursday 20th Plymouth Farmers Market

Plymouth Regional Senior Center Outside Plaza, Garden Street, Plymouth. 3pm-6pm. Rain or shine! 536-5030

Farmington Community Band First Congregational Church, 400 Main Street, Farmington. 6:30pm. The public is invited to bring chairs or blankets to sit on the green. The “Original Farmington Franks” meal will be available along with drinks and ice cream. In case of rain, the show will be moved inside the church. www.

FarmingtonCommunityBand.org Donations are gratefully accepted.

Julia Velie – Live Music Patrick’s Pub & Eatery, 18 Weirs Road, Gilford. 8pm. www.PatricksPub.com or 293-0841

2019 Tour

Moultonborough

House

This year’s tour features six properties that represent the variety of real estate available in the Lakes Region. Friends of the Moultonborough Public Library are featuring and Inn, an island, an antique, remodels and new construction. Tickets are $40 a

piece and come with directions and information describing each property. You can visit the houses in any order. Parking is available and there will be volunteers to assist you. Tickets are available at Bayswater Books, 12 Main St., Center Harbor or at the Moultonborough Public Library, 4 Holland Street. 476-8895

Thurs. 20th – Sat. 22nd Intown Concord’s 45th Annual Market Days Festival Main Street, downtown Concord. 10am-10pm each day. Along with the unique downtown shops, there will be over 150 exhibiting vendors, plenty of food and drink, multiple stages of entertainment, an arts market, Kids Zone, Touch-A-Truck, and a variety of performances and activities drawing tens of thousands of attendees to NH’s capital city over the course of three days. For more information visit

www.IntownConcord.org

Friday 21st Dueling Pianos – Matt Langley vs Gardner Berry Patrick’s Pub & Eatery, 18 Weirs Road, Gilford. 9pm. www.PatricksPub.com or 293-0841

PBVRC Spaghetti Supper feat. Gov. Chris Sununu American Legion Hall, 37 Main Street, Ashland. 5pm-7pm. Join in welcoming General Donald Bolduc and Governor Sununu to the event! Admission to the dinner is $10/adults, $5/children 5-12, special family price of $25. 536-3880

Saturday 22nd Dean Harlem – Live Music Patrick’s Pub & Eatery, 18 Weirs Road, Gilford. 9pm. www.PatricksPub.com or 293-0841

Olde Tyme Tavern Day

NH Far m Museum, 1305 White Mountain Highway, Milton. 10am3pm. Historic role-players will take you through the Museum’s Jones Tavern. Traditional food, olde fashioned games, story-telling, a sing along, and militia muster demonstrations, live music, butter making, horse drawn wagon rides and more! Free for members, $25/family, $10/adult, $5/ kids, free for kids under 4. 652-7840

109th Church Fair – Live Music & BBQ Chicken Dinner First Congregational Church, Farmington. 9am-2pm. The town of Farmington will be swinging with the sounds of live Dixieland Jazz and the sweet taste of BBQ Chicken Dinners and fresh Strawberry Shortcake. There will be historic displays and demonstrations, including a Hall of Yesteryear with items that were used in Farmington 100 years ago. The historic church will also be open for tours. www.FarmingtonNHUCC.org

Farmhouse Pillow Class – Shirley Glines League of NH Craftsmen, 279 DW Highway, Meredith. 1pm-4:30pm. Teacher/Designer, Shirley Glines of Zoe Jax Gin Designs, will guide you in sewing a unique 16” pillow that looks just like it belongs in today’s farmhouse décor. Tuition is $40 per

student with a $10 materials fee. Preregistration is required. 279-7920 or www.Meredith.NHCrafts.org for a list of materials to bring and register.

Sunday 23rd Cancer Survivor Day Celebration

NHTI’s Sweeny Hall Auditorium, Concord. Registration begins at 12:30pm, program begins at 1pm. Bring your circle of support and join the festivities including guest speaker and cancer survivor, Beverly Cotton. Other activities include educational exhibits, cooking demonstrations, gardening workshop, music, raffle and more! 227-7000 ext. 6937

Shaker Taper Weaving - Woven Footstool Class

League of NH Craftsmen, 279 DW Highway, Meredith. 1pm-4pm. Master the art of Shaker Tape Weaving in this Woven Footstool Class with instructor Jean Reed. Tuition is $120 per student and includes a handcrafted oak footstool and Shaker Taper selection. Space is limited and pre-registration is required. 279-7920.

Tuesday 25th “Only in America” – Concert by Woodwind Quintet, QuintEssential Winds The Great Hall at Wolfeboro Town Hall, Wolfeboro. 7pm-8pm. QuintEssential Winds plays works by American composers, including Aaron Copland, Eric Ewazen, Alec Wilder and others. $8pp/non-members of Wright Museum, $3pp/members.

www.WrightMuseum.org

Smith Meetinghouse Cemetery Tour

Smith Meetinghouse, Meetinghouse Road, Gilmanton. 6pm. Tour will be led by Fred Bucholz, a long time sexton of the cemetery. The earliest burials in this historic and beautiful cemetery in the center of Gilmanton date to the 1770s. Fred is an excellent storyteller and in addition to leading the pleasant walk, he will have some interesting stories to tell. Wear good walking shoes, and meet at 6pm at the main gate to the cemetery.

Wednesday 26th Austin-Healey Car Show

Funspot, 579 Endicott Street North, Weirs Beach. 1pm-4pm. See these glorious Austin-Healeys all puffed and buffed and visit with the owners. Be sure to vote for your favorite! Car show is open to the public.

Advice to the Players Concert Series – Natalia Shevchuk & Steve Poppel

The Arts Center, 12 Main Street, Sandwich. 7:30pm. Admission is choose-your-own-price and refreshments will be available by donation. 986-7827

The Enemy Within? JapaneseAmerican Internment and its Legacy On Tuesday, July 2nd from 7-8pm, The Wright Museum will present “The Enemy Within? Japanese-American Internment and its Legacy” with Professor Marion Dorsey. This program will be held in the Great Hall at Wolfeboro Town Hall. President Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s 1942 Executive Order 9066 relocated Japanese nationals legally residing in the United States and their Japanese-American children and grandchildren to internment camps in inhospitable environments far from their homes. Molly Dorsey discusses the historical and legal factors that inspired and shaped the relocation policy and the policy’s impact on America after the war. Molly Dorsey is an associate professor of history and a core faculty member in Justice Studies at the University of New Hampshire. Admission is $8 per person for non-members and $3 for Wright Museum members, unless otherwise noted. Because of limited seating, we strongly encourage you to make reservations by calling 603-569-1212.

Giant Gilford Rummage Sale Friday and Saturday, June 28 and 29 the First United Methodist Church in Gilford will be having a rummage sale from 9am until 2pm each day. The sale will include clothing, linens, household goods, and more. Donations gladly accepted from Sunday, June 23 until Wednesday, June 26. Monday – Wednesday the church will be open from 8:30am – 12 for donations. Clothing, linens, shoes, items in good condition welcomed. No electronics, appliances or computers please. The First United Methodist Church is located at 18 Wesley Way (off Rt. 11A near the 3/11 bypass) in Gilford. For more information, please call (603) 524-3289.

Tour Of The Smith Meetinghouse Cemetery Join the Gilmanton Historical Society on Tuesday evening, June 25th, beginning at 6pm for a walking tour of the historic cemetery at Smith Meetinghouse. The tour will be led by Fred Buchholz, long time sexton of the cemetery. The earliest burials in this historic and beautiful cemetery in the center of Gilmanton date to the 1770s. Fred is an excellent story teller, and in addition to leading us on a pleasant walk, will have some interesting stories to tell. Smith Meetinghouse is on Meetinghouse Road, off Route 140 east of Gilmanton Corners. Wear good walking shoes and meet at 6pm at the main gate to the cemetery. Please park along the edge of Meetinghouse Road. Tour will be held rain or shine. The Society’s 2019 program series continues on the fourth Tuesday of each month, through September, with programs featuring Gilmanton history: Doug Towle’s Antique Gilmanton Homes on July 23rd; The 12th New Hampshire Regiment During the Civil War on August 27th; and A Brief History of Gilmanton’s Churches on September 24th. The Society’s museum in Old Town Hall in Gilmanton Iron Works is open every Saturday morning, 10 am to noon, June, July and August. The programs are free and open to the public. Donations to support the work of the Society are always welcome.

Altrusa of Meredith Community Dinner Meredith Community Center, 1 Circle Drive, Meredith. Dinner is served at 5:30pm. This month’s dinner will consist of Texas hash, corn, green salad, rolls and angel food cake with toppings for dessert. The meal is free, though donations are gratefully accepted and will be used

See EVENTS on 16

List your community events FREE

online at www.weirs.com, email to info@weirs.com or mail to PO Box 5458, Weirs, NH 03247


14

THE WEIRS TIMES & THE COCHECO TIMES, Thursday, June 20, 2019

Seams To Be

What’s On Tap In Your Neighborhood??

• Professional Alterations including Original Hems on Jeans • Slipcovers • Draperies • Shades • Fabrics • Upholstery

603-934-0120 • 28 Charles Street, Franklin , NH 03235 www.seamstobe.com • julie@seamstobe.com

A listing of some of the area’s beer-centric watering holes where you can find old favorites on tap as well as some cutting edge seasonals. ACKERLY’S GRILL & GALLEY • 83 MAIN STREET, ALTON •Tuckerman - Pale Ale •Smuttynose-Myst.Haze

• 603 - Winni Amber Ale • Sebago - IPA • Great Rhythm - Pale Ale

AKERLYSGRILLANDGALLEYRESTAURANT.COM • 603.875.3383 COMPASS CAFE • LAKESIDE AVE., WEIRS BEACH

• Two Roads - Lil’ Heaven • Citizen Cider - Dirty Mayor • Concord Cft - Safe Space • Two Roads - Road 2 Ruin • Seadog - Wild Blueberry • 603- Summer Session

FACEBOOK.COM/COMPASSCAFEWB • 603.527-8214

COPPER KETTLE TAVERN AT HART’S RESTAURANT • 233 D.W. HWY, MEREDITH • Allagash White • 603 Winni Amber

• Stoneface IPA • Moat - Czech Pilsner

• Henniker - Working/Porter • Citizen Cider ... +6 More

HARTSTURKEYFARM.COM • 603.279.6212

D.A. LONG TAVERN AT FUNSPOT • 579 ENDICOTT STREET N., WEIRS • Oxbow - Space Cowboy • Fore River - Timberhitch

• Woodstock - Moody IPA • Hobbs - HiJack!

FUNSPOTNH.COM • 603.366.4377

Skelley’s Market

• Gas 24 hours a day • Fresh pizza • NH Lottery tickets • Beer and Wine • Sandwiches • Daily papers

• Bailey’s Bubble ice cream • Maps • Famous Lobster Rolls • Fish and Game OHRV Licenses

... +6 More

JOHNSON’S TAPHOUSE (AT JOHNSON’S SEAFOOD & STEAK) • 69 RT 11, NEW DURHAM • Dogfish - Flesh & Blood • New Belgium Le Terroir

• Concord Craft Safe Space • 603 Brewery - Summer • Tuckermans Summer Pils • Woodland Farms Monroe EATATJOHNSONS.COM/NEWDURHAM • 603.859.7500 ... +30 More

Whether you are a vacationer or a full time resident of the Lakes Region, Skelley's Market is the place to go for your shopping needs. Located on route

Skelley’s Market Services Include:

• Dupont - Brewers Bridge • Bell’s - Flamingo Fruit Fight

PIZZA SPECIAL 2 for $18 2 Toppings Every Sat. Night 5-9pm

Stop by Skelley’s Market today and enjoy some great food, Bailey’s Bubble ice cream, a lobster roll or anything else you may need. You will be glad you did!

Skelley’s Market 374 Governor Wentworth HWY Moultonboro, N.H. 03254

Call 603-476-8887 • F: 603-476-5176 www.skelleysmarket.com

PATRICK’S PUB • 18 WEIRS RD., GILFORD • 603 Winni Ale • Woodstock - Moody IPA

• Tuckerman - Pale Ale • Sam Adams - NE IPA

• Patrick’s Slainte’ Ale • Switchback Ale ... +6 More

• Sam Summer • Tuckerman Pale Ale

• Bud Light • Seadog blueberry

• Smuttynose - Finest Kind • Great rhythm - tropical haze

PATRICKSPUB.COM • 603.293.0841 SHIBLEYS AT THE PIER • ROUTE 11 (42 MT. MAJOR HWY), ALTON BAY SHIBLEYSATTHEPIER.COM • 603.875.3636

THE STEAKHOUSE AT CHRISTMAS ISLAND • 644 WEIRS BLVD., LACONIA • Blue Moon • Coors Light

• Bud Light • 603 IPA

• Sam Adams Seasonal

THESTEAKHOUSEATCHRISTMASISLAND.COM • 603.527.8401 THE UNION DINER • 1331 UNION AVE., LACONIA

• Kentucky Bourbon Barrel Ale • Moat Mtn - Helles • Cigar City - Maduro • Shipyard - Melonhead • Dogfish Head - Am. Beauty • Great North - IPA

THEUNIONDINER.COM • 603.524.6744

** Tap listings subject to change!


15

THE WEIRS TIMES & THE COCHECO TIMES, Thursday, June 20, 2019

Wicked BREW Review

The

Paul C. DuPont & Son BuilDing Installing Harvey Building Products

WindoWs • doors • siding

Visit HarveyBP.com

wickedbrews@weirs.com

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WHERE YOU CAN ALWAYS FIND

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T-Shirt Cannon vs Mango Maiden

by Jim MacMillan Contributing Writer

In our May 30th issue we inadvertently ran the incorrect text for this article. So here is the corrected version for all you beer lovers out there. -Ed Comparisons and pitting one against the other is what makes for great speculation and spectatorship. There is often a winner and a loser… but what if it is more like a comparison instead of a challenge? So we gander at two worthy contestants with similar ideas and opposite approaches and both arrive at the finish line with great outcomes. These two Maine brewers are really getting noticed throughout New England as gladiators of the super suds. May I

present T-Shirt Cannon and Mango Maiden. Lone Pine Brewing Company has been making great beer for New England since 2016 in the Bayside neighborhood of Portland. They have also expanded into a Gorham production facility in April of 2018, previously owned by Sebago Brewing. Owners Tom Madden and John Paul met in high school and shared a love of homebrewing. John’s strength is marketing while Tom leads the brewing efforts. With a huge variety of different recipes and limited releases, Lone Pine has established a following that both Mainers and New Englanders alike can be proud of. Concentrating on IPAs, and especially dry-hopping (the process of adding hops during fermentation for aromatic notes), Lone Pine has created delicious treats for us to enjoy. With all of their creative brewing experience, Lone Pine Brewing will be a company to keep your focus on. You can visit them

at their website at www. LonePineBrewery.com Hidden Cove Brewing Company of Wells, Maine is an amazing tale of creative genius. The brainchild of both Richard Varano and Gregg Spickler, the two were Culinary Institutes of America graduates who en joy ed h om eb r ew in g and collaborated on recipes to make great tasting beer. They soon realized that their passion would lead them into the beer market. They decided to forge an effort into this market and made plans for a brewery. They soon hired longtime friend, Kevin, to join them in that market. Kevin Glessing, head brewer, has mastered an array of great offerings for craft beer lovers to enjoy through experimentation of what works and what didn’t. His tireless efforts gives Hidden Cove beers their incredible allure. You can learn more about them at Facebook.com/ HiddenCoveBrewing First, T-Shirt Cannon IPA. By the way, a T-

See BREW on 29

Drink Good Beer with your meal ...

GET 10% OFF!

Pair any draft beer we offer with any Sandwich or Entreé and get 10% off the price of BOTH ITEMS with this coupon.

exp. 9/30/19; Cannot combine w/other offers.

OPEN Mon-Wed 6am - 3 pm • Thur & Sat 6am - 7:30pm Fri 6am - 8pm • Sunday (breakfast only) 6am to 1pm Dinner served Thurs, Fri & Sat evenings

1331 Union Ave., Laconia • 603.524.6744 • theuniondiner.com

D.A. LONG TAVERN Always Lots Of Fun On Tap! Located in a quiet corner Exceptional Craft Beer List of Funspot, steps away Specialty Cocktails from lots of fun stuff... Made to Order Pizza 20 bowling lanes, 18-hole Pool • Darts mini-golf and the largest arcade in the world including a huge collection of classic video & pinball NEW! DOLLAR DAYS! games! Wed-Thur-Fri from 4pmTAVERN HOURS 5pm $1 off all Open Every Day, year round Mon. & Tues. 5pm - 10pm draft beers, Wed. & Thur. 4pm -10pm flights and Fri. 4 - 11pm • Sat. noon - 11pm Sun. noon - 10pm small pizzas! Located Inside Funspot, Rte. 3, One Mile North Of The Weirs Beach Sign 579 Endicott Street N. • Weirs • NH • 603-366-4377 • funspotnh.com


16

THE WEIRS TIMES & THE COCHECO TIMES, Thursday, June 20, 2019

OUT on the TOWN Great Food, Libations & Good Times!

EVENTS from 13

to fund future dinners. www.

AltrusaMeredithNH.org

lani’s uok&aCoffee LIceiliCream Bar COME BY BOAT!

Relax on our deck overlooking Paugus Bay 956 Weirs Blvd. • Laconia • 603-366-9323

FRI 9PM Serious fun as YOU pick the music and join in the show.

ks tea d S • o sta afo Pa Se

Myrna s Classic Cuisine

American Independence M u s e u m ( A I M ) , E x e t e r. 12pm. According to museum Executive Director, Emma Italian & American Comfort Food Bray, this talk will be particularly meaningful, as guests will Formerly known as Nadia’s Trattoria, voted one of the top ten restaurants in NH by Boston Magazine. be able to learn about some of the findings of a recent Veal Francese and Eggplant Rollatini Small Plate Specials Tuesday - Thursday from 3-5pm project outside — Join us Tue-Thurs from 3-5 Small — with discount drafts andp.m. selectfor house winesPlate Specialsarchaeological the Ladd-Gilman House Hours: Tues. Wed. & Located theatcanopy at Plaza (c.1721). At “Unearthed at the Located under the canopy at 131under Lake Street Paugus Bay Thur 3-9pm AIM”, Jesse Cofelice, principal 131 Lake Street At Paugus Bay Plaza Hours: Tues. Wed. & Thurs. 3-9pm; Fri. & Sat. 3-9:30pm (603)527-8144 myrnascc.com Fri. & Sat. 3-9:30pm investigator at Independent Archaeological Consulting will discuss what has been found outside the museum and in other projects around the region. This is a great way to spend your lunch hour and learn something too! There is no charge to attend the event and attendees are welcome to bring their own lunch. www.

THIS WEEKEND SPECIALS

IndependenceMuseum.org

Wed. 26 – July 6 th

Get out & enjoy summer! Drinks

SAT 9PM Enjoy live music with Dean Harlem patrickspub.com • (603) 293-0841 • 18 Weirs Rd. Gilford, NH 03249

603.527.8144 myrnascc.com

Lunch & Learn Event – “Unearthed at The AIM”

& dining on our outside deck!

134 Church St • Laconia, NH • 603.524.0399

th

Ken Ludwig’s “Moon Over Buffalo” Winnipesaukee Playhouse, Meredith. Moon Over Buffalo is a fast-paced frolic and farce that delivers the uproarious fun truth that much of the drama of theatre is

OPEN Tues. - Sat. 11am - 10pm

Laconia’s Best Pizza Delivered To Your Door!

Serving Dinner Thu-Fri-Sat Nights Lunch & Breakfast Served Daily

PIZZA / CALZONES • SALADS • SUBS / SYRIANS SEAFOOD • STEAK SUBS • CHICKEN DINNERS BURGERS • ITALIAN DINNERS

302 S. Main St. Laconia 603-524-9955 • southendnh.com

—Dinner Specials—

thu Nights

Yankee Pot roast shepherds Pie

Fri Nights

Prime rib & AYCE Fresh Fried haddock

sAt Nights

PAstA sPECiAls •butternut squash ravioli w/maple cream sauce •Chicken, spinach tomato alfredo • Chicken, broccoli alfredo ... & more!

OPEN Mon-Wed 6am - 3 pm • Thur & Sat 6am - 7:30pm Fri 6am - 8pm • Sunday (breakfast only) 6am to 1pm

1331 Union Ave., Laconia • 603.524.6744

www.theuniondiner.com

China Bistro Serving the Best Crab Rangoon in the Country for over 35 years

behind the scenes. www. WinnipesaukeePlayhouse. org or 279-0333

Thursday 27th Plymouth Farmers Market

Plymouth Regional Senior Center Outside Plaza, Garden Street, Plymouth. 3pm-6pm. Rain or shine! 536-5030

Mary Fagan – Live Music Patrick’s Pub & Eatery, 18 Weirs Road, Gilford. 8pm. www.PatricksPub.com or 293-0841

Thurs. 27th – July 6th Damn Yankees Performance

Live

Bar nstor mers Theatre, Tamworth. The Barnstormers present George Abbott & Douglas Wallop’s “Damn Yankees”, with music and lyrics by Richard Adler & Jerry Ross.

www.BarnstormersTheatre. org or 323-8500

Friday 28th Dueling Pianos – Jon Lorentz vs Jim Tyrrell Patrick’s Pub & Eatery, 18 Weirs Road, Gilford. 9pm. www.PatricksPub.com or 293-0841

Saturday 29th John Irish – Live Music Patrick’s Pub & Eatery, 18 Weirs Road, Gilford. 9pm. www.PatricksPub.com or 293-0841

Pontine Theatre – Tales of New England Life, the Stories of Alice Brown

NH Far m Museum, 1305 White Mountain Highway, Milton. 3:30pm-4:30pm. In the Plummer Barn see an original stage adaptation of the short stories of Alice Brown, born in 1857 on a farm in Hampton

See EVENTS on 17

INVENTORY REDUCTION SALE GILFORD JEWELERS & PAWNBROKERS NO REASONABLE OFFER REFUSED!

TOOLS • TV’S • MISCELLANEOUS ITEMS! WE BUY, SELL, TRADE AND PAWN ALL JEWELRY COLLECTIONS

M A I- T A I PUB

NO COVER CHARGE FRI & SAT @ 8PM

KARAOKE

W/

DJ DORIEN JAYE

89 LAKE ST. (RT. 3 / WEIRS BOULEVARD) • LACONIA

www.ChinaBistroNH.com • TAKE OUT & DELIVERY 524-0008

TOP $$$ FOR DIAMONDS, GOLD, SILVER, PLATINUM & ALL COINS AND WATCHES All items weighed and tested while you watch!

1429 Lakeshore Road, Gilford (across from Walmart)

603-524-1700

Open Monday - Saturday, 10am - 5pm


17

THE WEIRS TIMES & THE COCHECO TIMES, Thursday, June 20, 2019

OUT on the TOWN Great Food, Libations & Good Times!

EVENTS from 16

Falls, NH, a community that later acted as a template for the villages depicted in her stories. Free for members, $25/families, $10/adult, $5/ kids, kids under 4 are free. 652-7840

Craft Fair & Flea Market

Moultonborough United Methodist Church, 1 0 1 8 W h i t t i e r H i g h w ay, Moultonborough. 8am-2pm. Many vendors, baked goods, used books, silent auction, indoor luncheon, and an outdoor bbq and strawberry shortcake will be featured.

Squam Community Rowing Hosts “Learn to Row” Event Squam Lakes Association, Holderness. 8am-12pm. Have you ever wanted to socialize, work out, and enjoy the beauty of our lakes at the same time? The Learn to Row event is perfect for adults who are interested in the sport. You will learn basic stroke technique, safe entry and exit in the water, and get to experience rowing on Squam Lake. The fee is $75 per student and includes three follow-up sessions with experienced rowers. www.

SquamCommunityRowing. com

Summer Reading Kick-Off Concert – Mr. Aaron Meredith Public Library, Main Street, Meredith. 11am-12pm. MPL welcomes back the spirited Mr. Aaron of Rattlebox studio in Concord, who will be there for the second summer in a row to get us moving and grooving with his lively, up-

tempo folk-pop sound! Stick around after the concert for the Ice Cream Buffet! For m o r e i n fo e m a i l John@

MeredithLibrary.org

Sat. 29th – Sun. 30th Traditional Craft Days

Canterbury Shaker Village, C a n t e r b u r y. 1 0 a m - 4 p m . Artisans demonstrating craft, hands-on activities, items for sale and tours of Canterbury Shaker Village. $12/adults, $6/ kids. See ad in paper for a $2 off coupon

FULL SERVICE CABANA BAR!

See EVENTS on 18

LOCATED AT ThE GrEEnsiDE TAvErn On KinGswOOD GOLf COursE

open 7 days 11aM To lasT Ca ll

•ThirsTy Thursdays! $4 Margaritas & $5 appetizers •Cheeseburger Mondays! $6 with side •early bird dinner speCials 4-5:30pm $12 24 Kingswood Rd | wolfeboRo | (603) 569-9869

A FULL SERVICE, SIT DOWN RESTAURANT LARGE DECK OVERLOOKING LAKE WINNIPESAUKEE Serving Lunch Signature Burgers • Homemade Ice Cream • Lobster Rolls & Dinner Craft Beer • Wine • Cocktails • Live Music 45 Endicott Street N., Weirs Beach • 603.366.7799

y FoR Read nge a a Ch iew? oF V

Come By Boat or Car & Relax By The Lakeside at akwa Marina’s

BeaCh BaR & gRiLLe

A.Y.C.E. Fish Fry Fridays Only $8.99

Breakfast Served All Day!

30 Beacon Street • Laconia

524-2366

II (Just Off Scenic Road) 95 Centenary Ave., Weirs

603-968-5533

JOIN US FOR HAPPY HOUR WEEKDAYS 2 - 5PM

DINE OUTDOORS PATIO AREA!

IN OUR

BUCK-A-SHUCK OYSTERS WEDNESDAY NIGHTS

45¢ WINGS THURSDAYS

Open Wed. thru Mon. at 11am (Closed Tuesdays)

83 Main Street • Alton • (603) 875-3383 ackerlysgrillandgalleyrestaurant.com

Gluten Free Menu ■ Happy Hour ■ Loyalty Program Outdoor Patio ■ Fire Pit ■ Private Dining Room Seasonal Specials & Cocktails ■ Catering

Asian Pan-&

Pacific Island Cuisine Reservatio ns Appreciate d! 775 South Main St. Wolfeboro, NH

603-569-1648 eastofsuez.com

110GRILL.COM

RESTAURANT | DAIRY BAR | MARKETPLACE | TAPHOUSE Open Sun - Thur 11am - 9pm Fri & Sat ‘til 10pm Serving Lunch & Dinner 7 Days A Week

JOHNSON’S TAPHOUSE Featuring

36 BEERS on Tap!

69 State Route 11, (just south of the Alton circle) New Durham, NH

603.859-7500 | EatAtJohnsons.com

■ 136 Marketplace Blvd., Rochester, NH ■ 603.948.1270

$5 OFF $25 *VALID AT 110 GRILL ROCHESTER ONLY. WITH PURCHASE OF $25 OR MORE IN FOOD AND NON-ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGES. DINE IN ONLY. MUST PRESENT ORIGINAL VOUCHER. CANNOT COMBINE WITH ANY OTHER OFFERS OR VOUCHERS. ONE PER TABLE. EXCLUDES GIFT CARDS, TAX & GRATUITY. EXPIRES 07/15/2019.


18

THE WEIRS TIMES & THE COCHECO TIMES, Thursday, June 20, 2019

OUT on the TOWN Great Food, Libations & Good Times!

EVENTS from 17

Sunday 30

th

The Steakhouse at Christmas Island THE

JOIN US FOR HAPPY HOUR WEEKDAYS 2 - 5PM

DINE OUTDOORS IN OUR PATIO AREA! BUCK-A-SHUCK OYSTERS WEDNESDAY NIGHTS

45¢ WINGS

NIGHTLYS SPECIAL

Steakhouse

OFFER G FREE POIN O L!

644 Weirs Blvd | Laconia, NH | 603-527-8401

THURSDAYS

Homemade Soups, Sandwiches & More!

(Closed Tuesdays)

83 Main Street • Alton • (603) 875-3383 ackerlysgrillandgalleyrestaurant.com

TMAN’S I P FREIGHT ROOM A unique function hall for all occasions, this former freight depot has been completely renovated with modern amenities and a large dance floor. Rustic charm and its antique furniture create a warm comfortable atmosphere.

UPCOMING LIVE PERFORMANCES

SAT 6/22 @ 7:00PM WITH SWING DANCE TICKETS- $20

ALL SHOWS B .Y.O .B .

THE TALL GRANITE BIG BAND

**FREE DANCE LESSON BEFORE THE SHOW FROM 7 – 8 PM

SAT 6/29 @ 8:00PM STUDEBAKER JOHN TICKETS- $20 AND THE HAWKS

94 New Salem Street, Laconia • 603-527-0043 www.PitmansFreightRoom.com

The Ar ts Center, 12 Main Street, Sandwich. 7:30pm. Admission is choose-yourown-price and refreshments will be available by donation. 986-7827

Strawberries on a Sunday Afternoon

OPEN THURS. - SAT. AT 4PM

Open Wed. thru Mon. at 11am

Advice to the Players Concert Series – Hiroya Tsukamoto

OPEN 7 DAYS

603-677-7132

2 Pleasant Street, Meredith, NH • lakesidenh.com

Bristol Baptist Church, 30 Summer Street, Bristol. 2pm4pm. The Church will be serving strawberries any way you like them! Strawberry S h o r t c a ke, S t raw b e r r i e s and Ice Cream, or just plain strawberries, all topped with Real Whipped Cream. $5/ adult, $2/children under 12. Prices include a beverage. 744-3885

JULY Tuesday 2nd Wildlife Encounters Meredith Community Center, 1 Circle Dr ive, Meredith. The Meredith Public Library welcomes Wildlife Encounters

with seven of their animal friends to the Community Center from 1pm to 2pm. Event is free and open to the public and appropriate for all ages. Come early for the best seats! For more information email John@

MeredithLibrary.com

Fri. 5th – Sun. 7th Arts and Crafts Festival On the Green Brewster Field, Wolfeboro. Fri. 10am-5pm, Sat. 10am5pm, Sun. 10am-4pm. Featuring over 110 Juried New England craftspeople. There will be live music, an Alpaca Exhibit and a c h a i n s aw d e m o ! www. Joycescraftshows.com or 528-4014

Wednesday 10th Ice Cream Social and Pick-a-Prize Raffle

Bow Lake Grange Hall, 569 Province Road, Strafford. 4pm-8pm. Build your own sundae from several flavors and many delicious toppings. $4/large, $3/small. Add a homemade brownie for 50 cents more. Tickets sold at the door. 664-2615

Full Belli Deli

—Since 1945

FRESHLY MADE SUBS, SANDWICHES, SOUPS & MORE! OPEN YEAR ROUND!

Mon-Fri 10:30-6 / Sat 10:30-4 15 Mill St. Wolfeboro, NH • 569-1955

55 Mt Major Hwy, Alton Bay, NH 603-875-6363 • popsclamshell.com

FRESH SEAFOOD • GRILL FAVORITES • SUBS • ROLLS Best Whole Clams on the Lake! Kids meals served fries, drink & a frisbwith ee!

NOW OPEN WEEKENDS!

The

Copper Kettle

T A V E R N

Turkey • Steaks • Prime Rib • Seafood WED: Karaoke - 7pm THUR: Trivia - 7pm FRI: Live Music 6:30pm

OPEN DAILY FOR LUNCH & DINNER

Exit 23 off I-93 • 233 Daniel Webster Hwy • Meredith Connect 603-279-6212 • HartsTurkeyFarm.com With Us!

Fri 4-8pm, Sat 11:30am-8pm & Sun 11:30am-7pm

“THE FINEST SZECHUAN & MANDARIN CUISINE IN THE LAKES REGION”

D O O F T A E R G ! S K N I R D &

Play P o Darts ol, Foosb & all!

Open Daily for Lunch & Dinner 7 Main Street, Downtown Meredith lakeview-tavern.com • (603) 677-7099

For Health Conscious People ...

SPECIAL GLUTEN FREE ITEMS & VEGETARIAN DISHES

Celebrating

20 YEARS

Serving e Lakes Regth ion!

All-Day Buffet Lunch & Dinner

Lunch: Tues. - Sun. 11:30am-4pm • Dinner: Tues. - Sun. 4pm - 8pm FULL LIQUOR LICENSE • GIFT CERTIFICATES • HOLIDAY PARTIES 331 SOUTH MAIN ST., LACONIA

603-524-4100 SHANGHAINH.COM


19

THE WEIRS TIMES & THE COCHECO TIMES, Thursday, June 20, 2019

How To Improve Your Credit Score Before Applying For A Mortgage (BPT) - In today’s world, lenders use many different types of credit scoring models. There are virtually hundreds of different models out there for lenders to choose from. Many lenders continue to use conventional models that don’t provide a score for millions of consumers. That often puts younger borrowers such as millennials at a disadvantage. Millennials are less likely to have long credit histories, and they may only have one or two credit accounts. Because young adults today carry more student loan debt, they are understandably reluctant to assume more debt. While that’s a prudent approach on the part of millennials, it can cause their score to be lower than those with deeper credit histories. Many lenders are adopting new tools that address this problem. One example is VantageScore 4.0, which scores approximately 40 million more consumers than other conventional models. Unfortunately, mortgage lenders are not able to use this model and rely on more conventional credit scoring models. Regardless of the model, there are some common things you as a consumer can do to make it easier to get your next loan.

2. Keep and use longstanding accounts. Don’t cancel an older account in an attempt to stop yourself from overspending, as the length of your credit history matters in tradi-

tional scoring methods. Use your accounts with care, and don’t charge more than you can afford. If you haven’t used an account in a long time, make a small purchase or two to keep the account active. 3. Use technology to your advantage. Many companies allow you to set up automatic payments of minimum amounts to help you avoid late fees, or will send email or text reminders when a bill is coming due. As long as you have the income to support automatic payments (and/or ready reserve at your bank or credit union just in case), go ahead and sign up. Just make sure to keep a record of the dates and amounts of future pay-

MEREDITH OFFICE: LACONIA OFFICE:

97 DANIEL WEBSTER HW Y

1921 PAR ADE ROAD

(603) 279-7046

(603) 528-0088

WWW.ROCHEREALTY.COM

MEREDITH: Lake Winnipesaukee waterfront home with a sandy beach & 70’ dock. 3-BR, 3-BA & over 3,000 sf. of living space. Level lot in a private neighborhood of fine homes. $1,350,000 #4756207

GILFORD: Winnipesaukee Waterfront Home! 3-BR home w/ an attached & detached garage. 100’ of shorefront, a dock & boathouse. There is an attached garage and detached 2-stall garage. $1,299,000 MLS# 4750486

MID WEEK OPEN HOUSES

ROLLING HILLS DR. TILTON NH

TUES. 6/25 & WED. 6/26 • 4 - 7 P.M.

Highland Ridge is a new residential community, with an eclectic mix of ranches, capes and colonial styles and affordable options for many budgets. These are brand new homes with a great location, handy to Concord and all Lakes Region amenities. Prices start at $289,000 MLS# 4729136

LACONIA: 4-BR, 5-BA South Down Shores contemporary cape home with plenty of space — 4,353 sf of living space! Master suite on 1st floor, fireplace, open concept & spa w/ steam shower, hot tub & more. $799,000 #4745277

! M OO IL S NR E TA SU D EE OR FR SK F A

1. Assess your report. Get a copy of your report from the three major credit reporting companies (Equifax, Experian and TransUnion) at www. annualcreditreport.com and make sure the information is accurate. Evaluate your issues. Do you have a short credit

history? You may need time to build it up. Is your file “thin” (fewer than four credit accounts)? Thicken it up (See No. 2). Are you using too much of your available credit? Pay down what you can on existing accounts to keep your credit utilization at 30 percent or less. Have you missed payments? Use calendar reminders or other tech solutions to help you stay on time. Getting in the habit of pulling your credit report one every 12 months is a good credit management habit.

ments to avoid unpleasant surprises. 4. Test your credit score know-how. Visit www.CreditScoreQuiz.org, created by VantageScore Solutions along with its partner, Consumer Federation of America, to see

what you know and learn ways to improve your credit score. No matter your situation, you can improve your own credit outlook by taking stock and following these tips to boost your score.


20

THE WEIRS TIMES & THE COCHECO TIMES, Thursday, June 20, 2019

Summer Fun! The Best Summer Ever Starts Right Here!

Aimee Mann Tour Stops in Plymouth The Adventure Is Open Daily • Both Locations TH ORIGINAL THE Ad d Adventure Golf

1 OFF

$ 00

with this coupon

Test your skills!

Known throughout the country for family fun!

Routee 3 • W Winnisquam i niisq in qua uam m 528-6434

Bring the camera and the family!

Route 3 • Meredith 366-5058

SALES - SERVICE - STORAGE

Starcraft Pontoon • Fishing - Runabouts Volvo - Mercruiser *Evinrude Platinum Service & Repower Center*

BOAT RENTALS

Largest & Newest Fleet on the Lake! Brand New 2019 Models Pontoons - Ski Boats *NH Temporary Boating License Agent*

603-366-4811 • www.thurstonsmarina.com

Aimee Mann performs with her band at The Flying Monkey in Plymouth on Saturday, July 6th at 7:30pm. Jonathan Coulton opens the evening. Tickets for this concert start at $49. Aimee Mann’s latest album, Mental Illness, returns to a more musically soft-spoken but still lyrically barbed approach. While she hasn’t released new music since 2017’s Mental Illness, she has been busy with her podcast with Ted Leo, The Art of the Process, where they “talk to friends across the creative spectrum to find out how they work.” Mental Illness shows off Mann’s rich, incisive and wry melancholia in an almost all-acoustic format, with a “finger-picky” style inspired by some of her favorite ‘60s and ‘70s folk-rock records, Singer/songwriter Aimee Mann will be performing at the augmented by haunting

Flying Monkey in Plymouth on Saturday, July 6th at 7:30pm strings arranged by her longtime producer, Paul Bryan. Additional players include: Jonathan Coulton on acoustic guitar and backing vocals, Jay Bellerose on drums, Jamie Edwards on piano, John Roderick as a cowriter and Ted Leo (who recently joined her in a joint side project, The Both) as a background singer. On this eleven-track album, the Oscar-nominated, Grammy-winning singer remains a student of human behavior, drawing not just on her own experiences to form the characters in the songs but tales told by friends. “I assume the brief on me is that people think that I write these really depressing songs,” Mann says. “I don’t know—people may have a different view-

point—but that’s my own interpretation of the cliché about me. So if they thought that my songs were very down-tempo, very depressing, very sad, and very acoustic, I thought I’d just give myself permission to write the saddest, slowest, most acoustic, ifthey’re-all-waltzes-sobe-it record I could…I mean, calling it Mental Illness makes me laugh, because it is true, but it’s so blunt that it’s funny.” Tickets for Aimee Mann range from $49 - $59. For more information on upcoming shows or to purchase tickets call the box office at 603536-2551 or go online at www.flyingmonkeyNH. com.


21

THE WEIRS TIMES & THE COCHECO TIMES, Thursday, June 20, 2019

Summer Fun! The Best Summer Ever Starts Right Here!

Austin Healy’s Coming To The Lakes Region Austin Healey’s are a beautiful British sports car produced in the 50’s and 60’s. From Sunday, June 23rd through Thursday the 27st you may see these Healey’s exploring the picturesque backroads around Lake Winnipesaukee. Over hundred Austin Healey enthusiasts from across New England, the Middle Atlantic States, Ontario, and Quebec will call the Margate Resort home, as the headquarters for Healeys@Winnipesaukee. “Summits” are an annual gathering of Healey enthusiasts from across the Northeast, to enjoy the Marque, which hasn’t been produced for sixty years, to explore the region, enjoy the outstanding cuisine,

see great friends, and meet new ones. HEALEY CAR SHOW AT FUNSPOT Wednesday, June 26th, 1-4PM The Austin Healey car show at Funspot is open to the public, where you can vote for your favorite Austin Healey. Please stop by the car show on Wednesday afternoon at FUNSPOT, 579 Endicott Street North, Laconia to see these glorious Austin Healeys all puffed and buffed. Owners love to show off their cars, and many will even allow children to sit inside, for their parents to take pictures. For more information on Summit 2019, look at website www. ahca-newengland. org/summit-2019. html

EXPLORING HERBAL MEDICINES & CRAFTS SERIES

with Master Herbalist Melissa Morrison

Herbal Spa Treatments Saturday, June 22 10-12 pm Herbal First Aid Kits Saturday, July 13 10-12 pm Natural Baskets Saturday, August 10 10-12:30 pm Series Continue s Through Novem ber!

928 White Oaks Road • Laconia, NH 03246 • (603) 366-5695 info@prescottfarm.org • www.prescottfarm.org

The NH Boat Museum is Now Accepting Donations for:

New England

Vintage Boat & Car July 13 • 10 AM Vintage Boats • Vintage Cars • Fiberglass Boats • Sailboats & Canoes • Memorabilia

auction@nhbm.org 603.569.4554 www.nhbm.org


22

THE WEIRS TIMES & THE COCHECO TIMES, Thursday, June 20, 2019

Summer Fun! The Best Summer Ever Starts Right Here!

Bow Riders • Deck Boats • Pontoon Boats All Boats equipped with AM/FM Stereos

Weekly Rentals Available 1258 Union Ave (right across from Mc Donalds), Laconia, NH www.anchormarine.net Reservations Encouraged • Major Credit Cards Accepted

Gilford Cinema 8 CUSTOMER APPRECIATION DAY! All Tickets All Day Tuesdays $6

*Upcharge for 3D Tickets

FOR MOVIES & SHOWTIMES

CALL 603-528-6600 CLICK yourneighborhoodtheatre.com OR SCAN this code Airport Commons Plaza • 9 Old Lake Shore Rd. • Gilford

WEIRS DRIVE-IN PLOEPTCTOHREN THEATER Experience movies under the stars! FLY!

$ 5 OFF Double Feature Shows Starting at Dusk ADMISSION

THIS AD, NOT VALID FRI, SAT OR HOLIDAYS, EXP 2019 W/

Route 3 • Weirs Beach • 603-366-4723

Gates open at 7 p.m. - visit weirsdrivein.com for showtimes

FEATURED HOMES Saturday & Sunday | June 22 & 23 Sales Center Open 10:00 AM - 4:00 PM

A Season Of “Firsts” At Barnstormers This Summer TAMWORTH - The Barnstormers is enjoying a season of firsts as each of its productions this summer will be performed for the first time ever on its stage.

The season opens with Damn Yankees, June 27 to July 6: Faust meets baseball in this devilishly clever and musically delightful send-up of love and the true American pastime. When Joe Boyd sells his soul to the devil for a chance to lead his favorite team to victory against the New York Yankees, things don’t go quite as planned. Fun, fastpaced, and irreverently witty, this play is a true American classic. Book by George Abbott & Douglass

Wallop, Lyrics & Music by Richard Adler & Jerry Ross. Sponsored by the Mount Washington Cog Railway. Laughter on the 23rd Floor, July 11 to 20: Considered Neil Simon’s funniest play, this love letter to his real-life early career as a TV writer catapults a 1950s writers’ room into a com-

edy fray. Locked in a battle with TV execs who fear the show’s humor is too sophisticated for middle America, the writers wrangle over their craft, hurling snappy one-liners while reflecting political and social issues of the times—then and now. Sponsored by The New Woodshed, and definitely slated for adult audiences. See FIRSTS on 23

Representative Image

616 SCENIC ROAD, UNIT 403 • 1,414 sq. ft. | 2 beds | 2 baths • High-End Finishes

• Garage Parking • Direct Elevator Access

• Private Lakeview Deck • Priced at $550,000

COMMUNITY AMENITIES Lake Access • Swimming Pools • Tennis Courts Fitness Center • Hiking Trails • Community Gardens Access to Southworth Clubs in the U.S., U.K. & The Bahamas 421 Endicott Street North, Laconia, NH 03246

MeredithBayNH.com | 603.524.4141

Properties offered exclusively by Meredith Bay Lighthouse Realty, LLC. The Lodges are part of Bluegill Lodge at Meredith Bay, a condominium. Elevations are representative, not to scale, and subject to change. Specific elements of the home may differ slightly from representative image shown. This is not an offer to sell property to, or solicitation of offers from, residents of NY, NJ, CT or any other state that requires prior registration of real estate. Prices and terms are subject to change without notice.

189 SOLEIL MOUNTAIN | UNDER CONSTRUCTION • 2,441 sq. ft. | 3 beds | 2.5 baths • First-Floor Master Suite

• Expansion Opportunities • Walkout Lower Level

• Spring 2020 Delivery • Priced at $779,900


THE WEIRS TIMES & THE COCHECO TIMES, Thursday, June 20, 2019

Summer Fun! The Best Summer Ever Starts Right Here!

FIRSTS from 22

The Man Who Came to Dinner, July 25 to August 3: Life as they know it will never be the same for Mr. and Mrs. Stanley once radio celebrity Sheridan Whiteside arrives for dinner. Who knew there’d be penguins in the library and convicts in the foyer—and a whole lot more? Brilliant and witty, madcap and zany, this timeless classic combines the best of comedic literature with perfectly-crafted characters for one of the wildest romps ever in American theatre. By George Kaufman and Moss Hart Spider’s Web, August 8 to 17: Clarissa sure knows how to tell a story, but when one of her darkest tales comes true in the form of murder in her living room, she finds live drama a lot harder to spin. This never-beforeseen on The Barnstormers stage thriller combines suspense and humor in equal measure, and you’ll think you know who dunnit, but Dame Agatha Christie will keep you guessing ‘til the very end. Sponsored by Chocorua Camping Village KOA & Wabanaki Lodge Things My Mother Taught Me, August 22

to 31: When Olivia and Gabe pack up their belongings and drive halfway across the country to start a new life, things don’t go exactly as planned— especially when their p a r e n t s show up unexpectedly to “help.” Full of love, laughs, worry, and wisdom, this true-to-life, sweet and funny romantic comedy will have you in tears with laughter and lovingly reminded of what matters most in the world. By Katherine DiSavino. Sponsored by Personal Mastery Programs, Inc. & The Other Store Located in New Hampshire’s scenic Tamworth Village, the 282-seat, professional, Equity, Barnstormers Theatre boasts air conditioning, a hearing assist system and is wheelchair accessibility. Tickets cost $15 - $36.50 with group rates and package discounts avail-

Stand Up Paddleboards Kayaks • Canoes

Sales Rentals Activities ECO Tours SUP Yoga

603-253-7536

wildmeadowpaddlesports.com 6 Whittier Hwy. Moultonborough “At the Lights” in Center Harbor

able. Beer, wine and soft drinks will be available during intermission. Friday night is Family Night with special prices. Check the website for other specials, where to dine and stay, and other Tamworth happenings. For more information, tickets, and a good time, visit www. BarnstormersTheatre.org, or call 603-323-8500.

23

The Loon Center & Markus Wildlife Sanctuary

The Loon’s Feather Gift Shop

Selling “all things loon” & more! Take 10% Off In the Gift Shop • Free Admission • Award-winning videos, exhibits & trails!

603-476-LOON (5666) www.loon.org Lee’s Mill Road, Moultonborough, NH

Mon. - Sat. 9am-5pm


24

THE WEIRS TIMES & THE COCHECO TIMES, Thursday, June 20, 2019


25

THE WEIRS TIMES & THE COCHECO TIMES, Thursday, June 20, 2019

“The Islands of Winnipesaukee” Featured At Lake Winnipesaukee Museum On Wednesday, June 26th at 7pm, the Lake Winnipesaukee Museum is hosting a presentation, “The Islands of Winnipesaukee”, Featuring Ron Guilmette Join author and photographer, Ron Guilmette with his wildly popular book, “The Islands of Winnipesaukee”. Listen to the paddling adventures of Jay and Ron as they paddled to all of the Islands of Winnipesaukee. The “Islands of Winnipesaukee” is a 11 x 9.5” coffee table book with color photos of all 260 islands on Lake Winnipesaukee. Ron and Jay may have been able to solve the long unanswered question of “How many islands are there on Lake Winnipesaukee?” The book also contains many interesting stories about the island and “Fun Facts” about the lake and islands. It makes a great gift and is a must for every coffee ta-

The coffee table book “The Islands Of Winnipesaukee” will be the subject of a program at the Lake Winnipesaukee Museum on Wednesday, June 26th at 7pm. Author and photographer Ron Guilmette will tell how he and Jay Leccese paddled to all the islands on the big lake to gather the photos and material for the book.

6/17 THRU 6/23

V I P’s RECEIVE 6/24 AN ADDITIONAL THRU

7/ 7

10

%

ble at the lake. The books will be available for purchase at this presentation! Ron is a retired state trooper and works as a criminology professor at a local university and at a private college. He also works as a private consultant in the law enforcement community and serves as a volunteer on a number of boards and committees. He enjoys white water rafting and golf and most of all beach days with his children and grandchildren. This event is free for Lake Winnipesaukee Historical Society members, for non members there is a $5 fee with all proceeds going to benefit the Historical Society’s ongoing renovations. Located on Route 3 in Weirs Beach, next to Funspot. Please RSVP to 366-5950 or lakewinnipesaukeemuseum@gmail.com (Reservations will be held until 6:45 the night of the program.)

7/1

THRU

7/31

OFF

EVERY CUSTOMER RECEIVES BONUS PRODUCT WITH EVERY SALE

BONU$ WITH EVERY PURCHASE MANAGER’S CHOICE

IMPORTANT! You must be 21 years old or older to purchase fireworks in the state of New Hampshire. Check with your local fire department to see if permissible fireworks are allowed in your community.

®


26

THE WEIRS TIMES & THE COCHECO TIMES, Thursday, June 20, 2019

ROCHESTER


27

THE WEIRS TIMES & THE COCHECO TIMES, Thursday, June 20, 2019

Summer Fun!

KINDRED SPIRIT FARM

—FINE FLEECE SHETLAND SHEEP—

The Best Summer Ever Starts Right Here!

5th Annual Veterans Count Lakes Region Golf Tournament On Monday, July 15th The Veterans Count Lakes Region Golf Tournament will take place at the Laconia Country Club. Veterans Count is the philanthropic arm of Easterseals NH. Since 2007, MVS has provided services,supports, and resources to more than 13,500 individuals with challenges including suicide risk,unemployment, homelessness, substance misuse, legal concerns, and mental health issues. In addition, emergency financial assistance, provided by Veterans Count, has been distributed for food, utilities, housing,transportation, fuel, vehicle repair and more. In the past 4 years, the Lakes Region Golf Tournament has raised more than $250,000 for veterans, service members and their families. To keep play moving smoothly at this patriotic and inspirational golf tournament, the field is limited. We sell out each year, so please return your payment and registration form quickly to ensure your spot. SCHEDULE OF EVENTS

Monday, July 15th Noon - Registration and lunch 1pm - Shotgun start 5pm - Dinner, awards, raffles & auction

YOUR $175 ENTRY FEE INCLUDES $65 tax deductible Greens & cart fees Lunch & dinner BRAMBLE FORMAT After the best drive is selected, all players play from that spot, but then continue playing their own ball until each has holed out. PRIZES AWARDED FOR Closest to the pin Longest drive Sponsorships TOURNAMENT SPONSOR - $10,000 $9,120 tax deductible Includes two foursomes, two tee signs, and banner to be displayed at lunch and dinner GOLF CART SPONSOR - $5,000 $4,560 tax deductible Includes a foursome, logo displayed in all golf carts, and a banner to be displayed at registration GOLD SPONSOR $3,500 $3,060 tax deductible Includes a foursome and signage displayed at the driving range SILVER SPONSOR $2,000

$1,560 tax deductible Includes a foursome, logo on all promotional materials and scorecards DINNER SPONSOR $1,000 $1,000 tax deductible Banner to be displayed at dinner TEE & GREEN SPONSORSHIP - $300 $300 tax deductible A tee sign with your company logo, and a second sign at the green “in memory/honor of” a veteran or service member or a military fact provided by Veterans Count Sponsorship Deadline July 1, 2019 Please email Ashley at asevers@eastersealsnh. org

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THE WEIRS TIMES & THE COCHECO TIMES, Thursday, June 20, 2019

Animal Crackers Sponsored by

What’s Going On Meow? Local Rescue Nominated for National Award

Live and Let Live Farm Rescue has been chosen as a finalist for the Equis Save Foundation Rescue of the year award. They received 298 nominations from throughout the United States and after carefully reviewing all the nominations, their board determined that Live and Let Live Farm Rescue is doing amazing work and deserves to be recognized. Online voting to determine the winner will run from May 15th to August 15th. Each person can vote once a day for the duration of the voting period and can double their vote with a $1 donation. The winner receives a $1000 grant and national recognition for their Rescue work. Voting is done through their website. https://equissavefoundation.org/rrp/rescue-finalist

Low Cost Spay/Neuter for Rabbits Got rabbits that need to be neutered so that they aren’t reproducing like…er….bunnies? Animal Rescue Veterinary Service in Londonderry does low cost spay and neuter for rabbits. All she does is spays and neuters so she is very good! Cost is about $200. Check out their web site for information www.ARVSonline.org

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LOOKING FOR THEIR FOREVER HOMES Meet Migi! Migi means “right”

in Japanese. Could Miss Migi be “right” for you? She was obtained by her last owner via Facebook and was surrendered because they didn’t have the time to dedicate to an active pet. She is a gorgeous 5-year-old Akita/Shepard mix who is bright, energetic and friendly. Hobbies include car rides, tug of war, working for treats and hanging with her humans. She knows many commands, is housebroken and is good with older children. She’s seeking a home where she can be the only pet. Migi comes fully vetted, spayed and microchipped. Lakes Region Humane Society 11 Old Rt. 28, Ossipee, NH (603) 539-1077 • www.lrhs.net

MIGI

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Billy Jersey can be visited on our Weekly Sunday tours at 2:30 (wear closed toe shoes) and meet all of the animals on the farm! www.liveandletlivefarm.org

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JETT

in our most recent southern cat transport. Being the oldest in the group, he is very mellow and doesn’t seek too much attention. He enjoys the occasional head and chin rub, and would enjoy a nice comfy lap to sit on. We have done some work on his teeth since he has been here, so he prefers to eat a wet food only diet. The Shelter is open from noon to 5:00 Tuesday, Thursday and Friday, and 11:00 to 4:00 on the weekends. Come meet Jett! Visit www.nhhumane.org to see all of our adoptable cats and dogs!

is a foundation to support organizations or individuals involved in the humane treatment of animals, including those in dire situations. For more information visit funds4paws.org or find them on Facebook.


THE WEIRS TIMES & THE COCHECO TIMES, Thursday, June 20, 2019 BREW from 15

shirt cannon is what they use to fire shirts into the crowd at sporting events utilizing compressed air. Like this device, Lone Pine loads a bunch of hops (Vic Secret, Mosaic, and Idaho 7) into the fermentation process to release floral and aromatic flavors. Hazy mild yellow in tone and aromas of pineapple, peach and orange peel are most apparent with taste that follows the nose. A brilliant and persistent white head stems from the flaked oatmeal used in the boil. Complex fruit will keep your tastebuds from settling on just one place here. Wonderful balanced (like every Lone Pine beer), T-Shirt Cannon aims to please and at 7.7% ABV, there is plenty to appreciate. Next, we have Mango Maiden Milk Shake IPA from Hidden Cove Brewing. This may be the first time I’ve heard the term milk shake and IPA used for a beer description. With copper orange hues and striking white fluffy head, MM has an alluring visual quality even before you get near the glass. Created within the Brewer’s Passion series, 6% Mango Maiden is brewed with lactose

(which helps the fluffiness), vanilla and mango puree. Hops used are Citra, Amarillo and Comet which brings the balance to the mango puree. Of the two beers, I like both for different reasons. Mango Maiden is silky smooth and less bitter of the two. T-Shirt Cannon is so balanced with great hop aromas and malts that it is also quite attractive. Best you try both to see which you prefer. BeerAdvocate.com officially rates T-Shirt as ‘Exceptional’ and awarding a 4.16 out of 5. Mango Maiden appears not to be judged yet by BA since it is quite new and not in the same circles as Lone Pine. But, Hidden Cove has recently upgraded their efforts to make outstanding brews which is getting them noticed around New England. Having their own canning line helps them be available in many places too. Make sure you get your four pack of 16 oz cans of either of these soon as they are rare and available at Case-n-Keg in Meredith, the one location in the state with cases on hand. Cheers!

Join us at the 5th Annual Lakes Region Golf Tournament benefitting Veterans Count Monday, July 15 | 1pm Laconia Country Club Honor a family member, or friend who has served or is currently serving our country with a tribute tee sign. Foursomes & sponsorships are still available. vetscount.org/nh Contact Kathy Flynn at 603.621.3413 for more information

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THE WEIRS TIMES & THE COCHECO TIMES, Thursday, June 20, 2019

SMITH from 5

not in keeping with that of the Church of England which put them at odds with the colonists who were loyal to the church and monarchy of their native country. To state the situation in simpler words, the inhabitants of New Hampshire in 1683

were divided in their loyalty to the King of England. Those who were not loyalists were called freemen. About the time that New Hampshire became a province the grandson of Captain John Mason, who had been granted much of the land that

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constituted New Hampshire but never set foot here, was claiming the land his grandfather was granted and asking some of the settlers to pay him lease money. The Stuart’s had regained the throne in England and, in the words of writer F. B. Sanborn, “Charles II,like his father, had no love for the Puritans.” The N.H. Council wrote a letter to King Charles II in which they wrote about their problem with John Mason’s grandson, Robert Mason: “Our great difficulty now is Mr. Mason’s pretension to proprietorship of the lands which we possess…He has not obeyed the conditions of his grant (if made to him), viz., the peopling of the place, and enlargement of your dominions, - both of which have been vigorously intended by the present inhabitants.” They went on to state that Mr. Mason was intending to be the sole

King Charles II proprietor of the property when in fact his grandfather was only a partner in a venture whose terms were not kept because the land was deserted by Mason and his agents as the result of a slighted undertaking. In May of 1682 Edward Cranfield was sent by the king to be Lieutenant Governor of New Hampshire. According to writer Sanborn in a 1902 article Governor Cranfield had difficulties in the New Hampshire assembly with getting his revenue

bills passed and Edward Gove was a leading member. The Governor in writing to his superiors in England said “I have to report one of the late assembly men for Hampton, Edward Gove, has made it his business to stir up the people in the several towns to rebellion. He gave up that he had a sword by his side and would not lay it down till he had the government in his hands. ” Apparently Gove’s rebellious act was not See SMITH on 31


THE WEIRS TIMES & THE COCHECO TIMES, Thursday, June 20, 2019

Gove memorial at Hampton, New Hampshire’s Founder’s Park. SMITH from 30

much different than others that were happening in other provinces, and, according to at least one writer, was commenced while he was under the influence of an alcoholic beverage. One local person labeled him a lunatic. But he was trying to raise a group of men to promote a change of government in the province consisting of four towns near the sea. Sanborn names the offenders, who, after being arrested, were charged with “levying war against his majesty”, as Hampton residents Edward Gove, the leader, his son, John, and his servant, William Healey. They somehow

got away from a marshal and proceeded to Exeter where persuaded eight more men to join them. Their names are Edward Smith, John Sleeper, Mark Baker, Thomas Rawlings, John Young, and three Wadleighs. The men were armed and on horseback and made their way back towards Hampton where they were arrested by soldiers. Gove’s purpose was to change government and to prevent the King of England from imposing Catholicism on New Hampshire, an act he feared and thought possible. At his trial a jury found Edward Gove guilty of high treason and Judge

— No Messy Demolition ! BEFORE

Richard Waldron, reportedly in tears, sentenced him according to that required by law: “That he be carried back to the place whence he came, and from thence be drawn to the place of execution,and there be hanged by the neck, but cut down alive, and then his entrails be taken out and burned before his face, his head cut off, his body divided into four quarters, and his head and quarters disposed of at the king’s pleasure.” As noted earlier the prisoner was taken to England for the punishment to be carried out; however, his wife and others petitioned the king not to proceed with the execution. After three years as a prisoner in the Tower of London Gove was pardoned and returned to New Hampshire where his property was restored to him and he apparently lived out his earthly life in peace. In writing of his fate Mr. Sanborn noted that before his release Gove faced death or. at least, a lifetime in prison,“but the Lord in whom he trusted gave a very different issue to his adventure.” Robert Hanaford Smith, Sr., welcomes your comments at danahillsmiths@ yahoo.com

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THE WEIRS TIMES & THE COCHECO TIMES, Thursday, June 20, 2019 MOFFETT from 9

fourth World Cup—something their male counterparts have never come close to doing. It’s hard not to bond with compelling competitors like Lloyd, Tobin Heath, or sensational midfielder Julie Johnston Ertz— wife of Philadelphia Eagle tight end Zach Ertz. And if you want a local connection, there’s forward Ally Long, niece of Manchester Hippo sports columnist Dave Long. Go Team USA. May you generate more wondrous moments for people to someday call up on YouTube! Sports Quiz Whom did Team USA beat in the finals to win the first Women’s World Cup in 1991—a team that would win the second Women’s World Cup in 1995? (Answer follows)

LEAGUE from 8

a fun prize for the Most Fashionable Golfer! The ladies will play at Ridgewood CC on June 17th at 4 PM, and then dine at Buckey’s. The following week (June 24th, at 4PM) they will play at Pheasant Ridge Country Club, at 140 Country Club Road in Gilford, with dinner at Patrick’s Pub & Eatery immediately following. For more information about this outing, or to

Born Today ... That is to say, sports standouts born on June 20 include longtime MLB catcher Andy Etchebarren (1943) and former NFL running back Darren Sproles (1983). Sports Quote “I have never once dribbled the whole field and scored a goal by myself.” — Abby Wambach, speaking about teamwork Sports Quiz Answer Norway. Mike Moffett was a Professor of Sports Management for Plymouth State University and NHTI-Concord. He co-authored the critically-acclaimed and award-winning “FAHIM SPEAKS: A Warrior-Actor’s Odyssey from Afghanistan to Hollywood and Back” (with the Marines)—which is available through Amazon.com. His e-mail address is mimoffett@comcast.net. join the League, contact Janet White at Janet223@ roadrunner.com. New Members are always welcome to join at any point during the season. Also, there is no requirement to have a formal handicap to join this League. It is “pay as you play”, so there is no season long commitment. A “League of Our Own” is an independent league and is not affiliated with Ridgewood CC or any other local course.


33

THE WEIRS TIMES & THE COCHECO TIMES, Thursday, June 20, 2019 SHAPIRO from 6

The other reason is far more cynical: Many in the media want a regeneration of the monopolistic media control of the past. They long for the days when everyone consumed mainstream product to the exclusion of alternative sources. It’s no coincidence that YouTube and Facebook have been touting their elevation of “authoritative” news in recent years -- they’re looking to appease a ravenous media eager to tear them down. The media and Democrats have picked the right target: The lords of Big Tech are eager to please and frightened of blowback. They’re political liberals who can be intimidated into censorship while being simultaneously assured that they’re making the world a better place. They aren’t. All it would take for this censorious moment to end would be a little backbone: Facebook, YouTube and Twitter announcing that they won’t censor people unless those people violate actual First Amendment principles like incitement and libel; advertisers announcing that they won’t pull their dollars based on astroturfed pressure tactics. But backbone is in short supply. And the glut of intimidation won’t relax anytime soon.

GORRELL from 7

a future when “Mexicans will not need to migrate into the United States and that migration will become optional, not compulsory.” Do the citizens of the sovereign United States of America have no say in the matter? Is Mexican “migration” into our nation something that foreigners decide, regardless of our wishes and our laws? The national dissolution begins here. It continues with the question: “How do you transform the country of fraternity for the world’s migrants into a ghetto, a closed space, where migrants are stigmatized, mistreated, persecuted, expelled and the right for justice is canceled to those who tirelessly seek to live free of misery?” The answer is that we welcome legal immigrants and have the right to reject illegal aliens. Their status does not give them a right to what we and our forefathers created, and certainly not to the fruits of our welfare system. Their status does not impose on us a responsibility to alleviate their situation. “With all due respect, even though you have

the right to express it, the slogan ‘America First’ is a fallacy because until the end of time, even over national borders, universal justice and fraternity will prevail.” He writes of values his own government can’t provide to his own people. “Universal justice” is the fallacy. The US Constitution is not a global document, and US borders are not mere lines on a map; they are marks of national sovereignty. López Obrador, President of “the other,” closed with “Nothing by force, everything by reason and Law!” I assume President Trump did not miss the irony. It is time to reject Diversity, Inc. and to rekindle a healthy sense of fear of what “the other” is trying to do to us. Equally important, it is time to confront forcefully those within our ranks who bristle at the idea of “America First” or deprecate the notion of American Exceptionalism. It is Us vs. The Other. I vote for Us. Ken Gorrell welcomes your comments at kengorrell@gmail.com

MAILBOAT from 33

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THE WEIRS TIMES & THE COCHECO TIMES, Thursday, June 20, 2019

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THE WEIRS TIMES & THE COCHECO TIMES, Thursday, June 20, 2019

Caption Contest DO YOU HAVE A CLEVER CAPTION FOR THIS PHOTO?

Sudoku

Magic Maze FIND THE COMPOSER FROM JUST CONSONANTS

Send your best caption to us within 2 weeks of publication date... (Include your name, and home town). Caption Contest, The Weirs Times, P.O. Box 5458, Weirs, NH 03247, by email to contest@weirs.com or by fax to 603-366-7301. PHOTO #756

— OUR PICK FOR BEST CAPTION ENTRY #753 — Runners Up Captions: This time instead of the grapevine, I heard it through the grapes. - Bob Watson, Bristol, NH. It’s better than a Bed of Roses! - Joanna Aldrich, Campton, NH. Rarely caught on film is the true “grape-nut”!

-David Doyon, Moultonborugh, NH.

The Grapes Of Ruth. -Kitty

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Crossword Puzzle

Puzzle Clue: THINK FAST

ACROSS 1 Advance again, as money 7 Goofs 14 German subs 20 Eritrea’s capital 21 Fudgelike candy 22 “Bachelor Father” actress Corcoran 23 Memoir or expose, e.g. 25 Beginning language course with conjugations 26 Cut -- (dance) 27 Model’s gig 29 1974 hit for Kool & the Gang 36 Trips to wildlife areas, say 37 Ending with switch 38 Ski lift variety 39 Theories 40 Huge sea wave 44 Asimov of sci-fi 46 Expatriate 52 Cask aging in a cellar 54 You, old-style 57 Certain Alaska native 58 Ortiz of “Ugly Betty” 59 Center 60 Dumbfound 62 Wraps tightly in cloth 64 Pained bark 66 “Veni,” translated 68 Biting African pest 69 Balsa floater 72 Move in a way suggested by this puzzle’s 10 longest answers 74 Past due 75 Earthlings 79 With 91-Across,

spaghetti topper 81 Many free TV ads, for short 85 Stretch out 86 Isr. neighbor 87 “You said it!” 90 Env. add-in 91 See 79-Across 92 Sea wrigglers 94 Informal pausemarking punctuation 97 Vile smiles 99 Hanker (for) 101 Of a western U.S. mountain range 102 Jekyll’s counterpart 105 British noble 107 Height: Prefix 108 More tired 113 Techie 117 Injury of a bodily band 119 Cost per unit 120 Garb 121 2013 black-comedy crime film 129 Where streets meet 130 Dan Brown’s “The -- Code” 131 Glimpsed 132 Manipulates, as dough 133 Lettering aid 134 Rents

DOWN 1 Sprinted 2 That, to Juan 3 Alphabet consonant sequence 4 Big galoot 5 Popular typeface

6 Mother-of-pearl 7 Keg feature 8 Zodiac feline 9 Tavern 10 Tavern 11 Listerine rival 12 “This is bad!” 13 Some black teas 14 Let free 15 Brag 16 Giant in lawn care 17 Alphabet vowel sequence 18 Choir part 19 Foul moods 24 Cask 28 Cable chan. for old films 29 Airplane-boarding bridge 30 Bearlike 31 Of a certain part of speech 32 Extinct 33 Stage award 34 Quaint light source 35 Radio host Flatow 39 Kant’s “I” 41 “Black-ish” network 42 Chinese chairman 43 Bother 45 Had a meal 47 Center 48 Very involved 49 Deep ravine 50 Cambodian currency unit 51 Website with handmade crafts 53 -- center 55 Letter before tee 56 Baby female sheep 61 Crying 63 -- standstill 65 Frolic about 67 Suffix of enzymes 68 Colts’ stats

70 Infuriate 71 Monk’s title 73 Membrane of hearing 75 Giant in oil 76 -- Bator 77 Pouting look 78 Letter before dee 80 Letter before upsilon 82 Hunt 83 “Master of None” star Aziz -84 Nose, in slang 86 Florence-to-Rome dir. 88 Wallach of “Sam’s Son” 89 Once surnamed 93 Caustic stuff 95 Like spud-peeling GIs 96 Pick a card 98 Stars, e.g. 100 Bother 103 Thus far 104 Really fears 106 Continental train pass name 108 Pile 109 Reveal 110 -- nous 111 Minneapolis suburb 112 Ruminated (over) 113 -- Coeur, Missouri 114 Light brown 115 TV landlady Mertz 116 Find another function for 118 “I -- your service” 122 -- Tin Tin 123 U.S. “Ltd.” 124 A fifth of MV 125 Health resort 126 “-- a pity” 127 Spike of film 128 Pub. staffers


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THE WEIRS TIMES & THE COCHECO TIMES, Thursday, June 20, 2019

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THE WEIRS TIMES & THE COCHECO TIMES, Thursday, June 20, 2019

B.C. by Parker & Hart

The Winklman Aeffect

by John Whitlock


38

THE WEIRS TIMES & THE COCHECO TIMES, Thursday, June 20, 2019

MOORE from 11

for boats. Once you get on the water, drop your rig to the bottom, keep your line tight, and feel for the telltale “tap tap tap” of a flounder. Give them a few seconds to get the hook in their mouth before setting the hook, and enjoy your next meal of delicious fresh-caught fish. If you like to eat fish, you’ll really enjoy flounder. Just remember, flounder can easily become overfished again. While we need better limits on the commercial fishing fleet, recreational anglers must do their part along the inshore waters. The days of “filling trash cans” or “five-gallon buckets” with fish are

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over, meaning there are more fish for everyone to catch. I love to catch flounder, and I love to eat them even more, but I respect my impact on the fishery and for that reason I don’t fill my freezer with flounder fillets. I do this for you as much as I do it for me. Tim Moore is a full-time licensed New Hampshire fishing guide and owner of Tim Moore Outdoors, LLC. He is a member of the New England Outdoors Writers Association and the producer of In Season Outdoors TV. Visit www.TimMooreOutdoors. com for more information.

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Discover Histo 39

THE WEIRS TIMES & THE COCHECO TIMES, Thursday, June 20, 2019 HADAM from 6

bear arms!) There are many more nations that are simply so volatile that you might be able to say what you want and/ or you can probably find guns fairly easily, but that is because of the violence in those nations; which essentially grinds their justice system into the John Wayne quote of, “Out here, due process is a bullet.” Combine all this with the fact that there is no nation that is more prosperous than America and we can only come up with the fact that we as Americans are truly blessed to be here. Sadly, this freedom and prosperity has not come cheaply. Since our founding, it is estimated that over 1.3 million men have given their lives in protection of this land. Throughout history, brave American souls have put everything on the line and paid the ultimate sacrifice. I am quite sobered at the thought that many of them would have been around my age. These were not old men who had lived long and happy lives. Many were mere boys who had their entire lives before them, or so they thought. Some would die on American soil as in the Revolutionary War or the Civil War. Others would die in previously unknown places such as Iwo Jima, the Ardennes, the Chosin Reservoir, and the Mekong Delta. Even today we have men losing their lives in the modern battlefields of Afghanistan, Iraq, and West Africa. We owe these men our liberties. I sincerely believe that without the Founding Fathers like Washington, Madison, Jefferson, and Hamilton, this nation would never have come about. But it is certain that without the countless names we will never know, we wouldn’t still have our liberties. Their names may not be known, but their graves can be found across this land, from Arlington National Cemetery to your small town USA’s local

cemetery. These brave souls are true heroes and their sacrifice must never be forgotten. When I think of the sacrifices that have been made on behalf of this country and our liberties, it only serves as a motivation for me to continue trying to preserve these same liberties the best I can. Having fun and cookouts on Memorial Day is fine and well, but may we do our best to hold those who gave all in our mind from time to time so we are encouraged to ensure that they, as Abraham Lincoln said at Gettysburg, did not died in vain. Isaac Hadam, 18, studies and writes about issues that involve the Constitution. He is the Vice-President of the Constitutional Awareness Pact, which strives to help people read an d understand the U.S. Constitution. For more info please visit constitutionalawarenesspact.webs.com. He lives in Moultonborough, NH and will be contributing editorials on the constitution from time to time.

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Jerry Mathews Matjila expressed concern over the surge in terrorist attacks, “It is disturbing that incidents of intercommunal violence are increasing, which have ravaged communities, displaced people and worsened the humanitarian situation.” Known as the awkward sounding United Nations Multi-dimensional Integrated Stabilization Mission in Mali (MINUSMA), remains the UN’s most dangerous operations with 177 peacekeepers killed in action. Though fielding a multinational force of over 15,000 military and police, the mandate covers a huge country, twice the size of Texas, but with rudimentary road transport and communications. Since 2013, France has deployed a serious counterinsurgency effort in the region. Codenamed Operation Barkhane, some 3,000 French troops are active in the region working alongside African states, with special emphasis on Mali. The American military assistance role in this conflict remains small but significant in terms of intelligence and coop-

eration. warned “Further descent But military security into conflict, insecurity alone is only one part of and chronic poverty must the solution. Humani- be prevented in the Satarian concerns remain hel. The current trajectoparamount. The UN’s ry is extremely worrying.” Lowcock adds that while humanitarian agencies John J. Metzler is a are focusing on 15 mil- United Nations corresponOpen lion people throughout dent covering 10am diplomatic - 5pm the impoverished region, and defense Closed issues. He Wed. w i t h f o o d , w a t e r a n d is the author of Divided health needs Dynamism the Diplomacy A strollservices, through our“shop you will arediscover vastly outstripping a space filled with handof Separated Nations: resources.” So far into Germany, Korea, China. made products all fromrelocal 2019, humanitarian dedicated NH craftsmen and22 women. lief has reached only percent funding. 20 Central Square • Bristol, NH T h whitemtnsmilemakers.com e UN’s Lowcock • 603-236-1377

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THE WEIRS TIMES & THE COCHECO TIMES, Thursday, June 20, 2019


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