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THE WEIRS TIMES & THE COCHECO TIMES, Thursday, July 4, 2013
Presorted Standard U.S. Postage
PAID CONCORD, NH 03301 Permit No. 177
VOLUME 22, NO. 27
THE WEIRS, LAKE WINNIPESAUKEE, N.H., THURSDAY, july 4, 2013
COMPLIMENTARY
Zombies Come To Plymouth
For the Love of Ursus Americanus: Living Close to New Hampshire’s Black Bears by Roberta Baker Contributing Writer
vation officer brought him a sickly cub. His father, Lawrence Kilham, a virologist at Dartmouth Medical School, had studied birds as an amateur and written about avian behavior. Kilham had grown up around animals in the wild, and originally planned to study carnivores such as bobcats, fishers, or coyotes; but bears, the largest and
smartest carnivore of all, seemed the natural subject. “My main fascination in life is figuring out how things work, whether mechanical things or the behavior of animals,” Kilham says. “I had it in my blood to do this. When the opportunity came for me to study bears, I took it.” Since then Kilham has See kilham on 20
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Every morning Benjamin Kilham mashes corn into dog food and scatters it in the 8-acre wooded enclosure behind his house. It’s breakfast for the 29 black bears that he and his sister, Phoebe, care for on Kilham’s property in Lyme. Kilham is a bear reha-
bilitator, known as far as Szechuan, China, for his expertise at introducing orphaned cubs back into the wild. A custom gunsmith who first studied wildlife biology at the University of New Hampshire, he trained as a gunsmith when dyslexia prevented him from completing graduate school, then began working with bears 20 years ago when a conser-
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Ben Kilham is a bear rehabilitator, known as far away as Szechuan, China, for his expertise at introducing orphaned cubs back into the wild from his property in Lyme, NH. boston globe photo
At 7:30pm on Saturday, July 6th, The Flying Monkey in Plymouth presents The Zombies. Known as one of the most influential classic rock bands of the 60’s British Invasion, some of their biggest hits like “Tell Her No,” “She’s Not There,” and “Time of the Season” are staples on American radio to this day. London’s Et Tu Bruce’ will open the night. Tickets for this concert start at $45. Though remembered primarily here in the U.S. for a handful of hit singles, English rock legends, The Zombies, deserve to be spoken of in the same breath as their contemporaries, The Kinks and The Beatles. Early hits “Tell Her No” and “She’s Not There” are snappy British Invasion classics, but the final song on their 1968 classic Odessey and Oracle has proven to be their most enduring. For more information on upcoming shows or to purchase tickets call the box office at 603536-2551 or go online at www.flyingmonkeyNH.com.
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THE WEIRS TIMES & THE COCHECO TIMES, Thursday, July 4, 2013
July
Wed. 3rd – Sat. 13th Sherlock Holmes: The Final Adventure by Steven Dietz
The Winnipesaukee Playhouse, 50 Reservoir Road, Meredith. Show recommended for ages 12 and up. www.winniplayhouse.org 279-0333
Through Sun. 14th Dreamgirls
Interlakes Summer Theatre, InterLakes Community Auditorium, Meredith. 1-888-245-6374 or www. interlakestheatre.com
Thursday 4th Ashland Old Home Day
Pancake breakfast at the Common Man in Ashland 7am-9am. Parade at 10am. Following the parade the fun begins at Noon at the ballpark with games and crafts for children ages
2 and up. Food will be available for purchase or bring your own picnic. Free snow cones and cotton candy for the children. 536-1343
Laconia Main Street Outdoor Marketplace
Municipal Parking lot between Main and Pleasant Street, downtown Laconia. 3-7pm. Rain or shine. 5288541
Friday 5
th
North Shore Acapella
The Inn on Main, 200 North Main Street, Wolfeboro. 7:30pm. $25. 5697710
New Horizons Band
Sanbornton Town Hall, Sanbornton Square. 7pm. Refreshments will be available. Free concert. 286-4526
The Traveling Wolfeburys
Cate Park, Main Street, Wolfeboro. 7pm. Free of charge, however, tips for the musicians are greatly appreciated. 515-1003
The Little Mermaid – Children’s Theatre
Inter-Lakes Community Auditorium, Meredith. 11am. $10pp. 1-888-2456374
Saturday 6
th
Flea Market
Masonic Building, 410 West Main Street, Tilton. 8am-2pm.
The Zombies with Et Tu Bruce
The Flying Monkey, Plymouth. 5362551. www.flyingmonkeynh.com
Scenic Cruises Daily from Weirs Beach
Sunday Brunch
From Weirs Beach 10 & 12:30 From Alton Bay 11:15
Dinner Dance Cruises
Rock ’n’ Roll Sat. Night June 29 - Weirs Beach - 7 PM
Swing to The Tunes of The Good Old Days Mondays
Tribute to Elvis, July 15 $10 OFF FOR ADULTS 60+ From Weirs Beach 6–9 PM
Family Party Night Wednesdays CHILDREN CRUISE FREE (limits apply) From Weirs Beach 6–8 PM
Summer Lobsterfest Friday July 5 From Weirs Beach 7 PM From Meredith 7:30 PM Schedule on line:
www.cruiseNH.com 603-366-5531
Pops Orchestra Concert
Silver Center for the Arts, Main Street, Plymouth. 8pm. $20pp. 535-2787. www.nhmf.org
Badfish! A Tribute to Sublime
Hampton Beach Casino Ballroom, Hampton Beach. 8pm. 929-4100
Flea Market Craft Fair
The Center Harbor Congregational Church, UCC, 52 Main Street, Center Harbor. 8am-2pm. Rebecca L. Matthews will also be on hand signing copies of her book “The Light Within”. 253-7698
“Aquatic Critters” – Kids Program
New Hampshire Boat Museum, 399 Center Street, Wolfeboro Falls. 10amnoon. Staff from the Squam Lakes Science Center will bring several live animals and teach kids how aquatic critters are essential for all life on our planet. Hands-on program for kids 5-12 (children under age 8 must be accompanied by an adult). Prereservation is required. 569-4554
NH Music Festival Pops Series – Journey Across America
Silver Center for the Arts, Plymouth State University, Plymouth. 8pm. www. nhmf.org
David Wax Museum
The Colonial Theatre, Bethlehem. 8pm. $15pp. 869-5603.
The Little Mermaid – Children’s Theatre
Inter-Lakes Community Auditorium, Meredith. 11am. $10pp. 1-888-2456374
Sunday 7th Art Show Opening Reception
The Libby Museum, Wolfeboro. 1-3pm. Fine artist DJ Geribo is the featured artist of the month. Public welcome. www.DJGeribo.com
Tuesday 9th “Conspiracy of One” – Summer Lecture Series
The Wright Museum, 77 Center Street, Wolfeboro. 7pm. Tyler Kent’s Secret Plot Against FDR, Churchill and the Allied War Effort. Presented by Peter Rand. $7pp and free for members. 569-1212
NH Music Festival Chamber Music Series
Smith Recital Hall, Plymouth State University, Plymouth. 8pm. www.nhmf. org
Wednesday 10th Julie & Brownie’s Streamlined Double Decker Bus
Rochester Opera House, 31 Wakefield Street, Rochester. 10am. $20pp. 3351992
Strafford Women’s Club Annual Ice Cream Social
Bow Lake Grange Hall, 569 Province Road, at the Bow Lake Dam. 4-8pm. Make your own ice cream sundae. Large $3.50, Small $2.50. Add a homemade brownie for .50 cents.
Justin Townes Earle
Prescott Park Art’s Festival, Portsmouth. www.prescottpark.org
Thursday 11th Art Night Out
River Run Deli, Alton. 5:30-7:30pm. Local artist and teacher will walk you through the steps necessary to complete your own masterpiece in 2 hours.$30pp, food included. BYOB. 875-1000
“Loons – The Call of the Wild” – Nature Talk Series
The Loon Center, Lee’s Mill Road, Moultonborough. 7:30pm. Free admission, donations appreciated. 476-5666. www.loon.org
Rummage Sale
Holderness Community Church, 923 US Route 3, Holderness. 9am-6pm. 968-7643
Laconia Main Street Outdoor Marketplace
Municipal Parking lot between Main and Pleasant Street, downtown Laconia. 3-7pm. Rain or shine. 5288541
B.B. King
Hampton Beach Casino Ballroom, Hampton Beach. 8pm. 929-4100
NH Music Festival Orchestra Series
Hanaway Theatre, Plymouth State University, Plymouth. 8pm. www.nhmf. org
Mount Washington Cog Railway Photo Workshop The Mount Washington Cog Railway, famous for climbing the highest peak in the Northeast, is holding a photo workshop tour, part of a season series, on Monday, July 8, open to all levels and abilities. This full day excursion includes a round trip ticket to the summit, instructional sessions with a professional photographer and free admission to the Mount Washington Observatory Museum. Opportunities abound at the base, from the train and around the summit to shoot everything from dramatic landscapes to passing trains to rare alpine flowers. The instructor will tailor the workshop to cover the interests of those attending. “We expect these workshops to be very popular, because they give people who love taking pictures an opportunity to experience a part of Mount Washington that is truly unique” said Cathy Bedor, one of the owners of the Cog. Limited space is available for all tours. Additional tours will be offered on August 26, and September 9. For event details, please visit thecog.com. For inquiries, contact Cog Railway events at 603.278.2255 or email media@thecog.com. Please book in advance by calling 800.922.8825 or 603.278.5404. The Mount Washington Cog Railway is located on Base Station Road, Marshfield Station, NH.
Moultonborough Public Library Annual Book Sale The Moultonborough Public Library Annual Book Sale will be held on on Saturday, and Sunday, July 6 and 7, from 9am until 5pm or maybe even later if folks are still in the mood to buy books. It will be under two large tents in the library parking lot at 4 Holland Street, Moultonborough, rain or shine. Hardcover books, and games and puzzles are priced at $1.00 each, and paperbacks, children’s books, and VHS and cassette tapes fifty cents, and if that’s not enough of a bargain, everything will be marked down to 25 cents on Sunday, the final day of the sale. There will also be a bake sale by the Moultonborough Women’s Club on Saturday, July 6, with coffee and donuts, sandwiches, cold drinks, and baked goodies to take home.
On The Green Arts and Crafts Festival Friday through Sunday, July 5-7 the On The Green I Arts & Crafts Festival will be held at Brewster Academy, 80 Academy Drive, Wolfeboro (Rte 28 next to downtown Wolfeboro). Hours are Fri 11am to 6pm, Sat 10am to 5pm, & Sun 10am to 4pm. There will be over 130 fabulous exhibitors with American Made Arts & Crafts. Don’t miss this wonderful event including handmade pottery, antler art, unique chainsaw wood carvings, beautiful quilted jackets, handpainted scarves, scarf slides, metal, glass, fine jewelry, ribbon belts, gourmet foods, cedar furniture, handmade clothing, Ben’s NH maple syrups and more. Music by Tim Janis Music. Free admission held rain or shine under a canopy. www.joycescraftshows.com - Info Joyce (603)528-4014
Friday 12th Boat Auction Preview Party
The New Hampshire Boat Museum, Wolfeboro. 6pm. Fun evening under the auction tent. Sample hors d’oeuvres and beverages while getting a chance
See events on 12
List your community events FREE
online at www.weirs.com, email to info@weirs.com or mail to PO Box 5458, Weirs, NH 03247
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THE WEIRS TIMES & THE COCHECO TIMES, Thursday, July 4, 2013
$2.00 off The Works! Use Code: 12348
Two Convenient Locations!
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1181 Union Ave
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Cannot combine offers. Expires: 10/1/2013
July 5-7 FRI 11-6 SAT 10-5 SUN 10-4
Yours Truly and Kris happy to be in Nyon, France. We rode our bicycles over the Pont Roman that has been in use for 600 years and cars are permitted to cross the bridge. Our flight left Boston at 10pm and by 1pm we were riding the high speed train, the TVG, away from the ParisCharles de Gualle airport. We picked up our red Renault diesel economy car at the train station in Lyon just after 3pm. Kris followed the rental agencies directions and gave me orders that surprisingly led us out of France’s third largest city unharmed. We arrived at our friend’s campsite in Valreas by 6pm. Phew, we made it to the south of France in time for supper! Paris is 6 hours ahead of Boston. I managed a solid 5 hours of sleep on the plane and a quick nap on the train. We weren’t overtired and we managed to avoid the negative effects of jetlag. After a simple supper of cheeses, meats and bread our friends surprised us
by supplying bicycles for us to ride. Kris claimed Silvi’s very nice second bicycle and I was happy to have her mountain bike. Dieter put our pedals on the cranks and we were ready to ride in the morning. The weather in Europe has been a lot like ours: rainy. Our friends follow the sunshine and
since it is not peak holiday season they have no trouble finding nice campgrounds surrounded by vineyards and rose bushes. Since they did not tell us where we’d meet until the day we left we did not have any room reservations. But no worries, they found a B&B just 3 miles away in town See patenaude on 42
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THE WEIRS TIMES & THE COCHECO TIMES, Thursday, July 4, 2013
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SUMMER SANDALS
Our Story
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.
See mail boat on 40
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 PO Box 5458 be found in these pages, just the good stuff. Weirs, NH 03247 Published year round on Thursdays, we distribute 32,000 copies of the Weirs Times TheWeirsTimes.com and Cocheco Times weekly to the Lakes info@weirs.com Region/Concord/Seacoast area. An independent circulation audit estimates facebook.com/weirstimes that over 66,000 people read our @weirstimes newspaper every week. To find out how your business or service can 603-366-8463 benefit from advertising with us please call Fax 603-366-7301 1-888-308-8463. Š2013 Weirs Publishing Company, Inc.
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THE WEIRS TIMES & THE COCHECO TIMES, Thursday, July 4, 2013
in brendan@weirs.com
THE
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*A FLATLANDER’S OBSERVATIONS ON LIFE
Summer Scenes
by Brendan Smith Weirs Times Editor
There is this scene in the movie “Jaws� where, when the residents of Amity are told there will be a $10,000 reward to anyone who kills the Great White Shark that has been terrorizing the beach, everyone with anything that floats, takes to the water in an attempt to capture the bounty. Since there is only one Great White and dozens of people looking to capture it, the waters become a landscape of confusion and chaos as the boaters, armed with fishing poles, spears and rifles, try to outdo the others. Boats are going every which way, no one is giving an inch, safety is ignored and near misses and accidents occur with regularity. The only thing missing is the shark and the “dumdum-dum-dum� soundrack. I haven’t seen “Jaws� for awhile, but I do see a smaller version of this scene on a regular basis on a sunny summer afternoon walking across the Weirs Beach bridge and looking out onto Lake Winnipesaukee on a sunny summer weekend.. There are usually dozens of boats going every which way, jet skis looking for holes in between and those experienced boaters looking for a path through the madness to get clear and out into safer, less crowded waters. It is, to me, one of the first real scenes of summer here in the Lakes Region.
There are other scenes showing that summer is fully ensconced and not all of them are outdoors. Inside the local supermarkets, there is always a bigger crowd than usual. Business is good. As I wend my way through the chaotic movement of shopping carts – are these the same folks that I will spy later out on the water of Winnipesauke as I walk across the Weirs Beach bridge – I see a pattern. I play a game in my head to see who is on vacation and who is not. Shopping carts full of hot dogs, hamburger meat, rolls and beer are always a dead giveaway. Still, there could be some locals in this category, just preparing for one of the few barbecues they will have this summer. It is then that I look for the real giveaway. Those wearing “I Love New Hampshire� and “Lake Winnipesaukee� sweatshirts, usually give it away. You’ll never see a local with one of those on. I am also great at picking out a good nasally New York accent; Long Island being my specialty, since that is where I grew up. I still have a twinge of it myself after a few beers, but it quickly goes away. I am also starting to get the hang of distinguishing a South Boston tongue as well as other Massachusetts dialects. Even Rosetta Stone can’t help with this one. Brand new sneakers are usually a sure giveaway to a tourist. Still, locals have those as well, so if they are combined with a pair of new shorts with the creases still in them, I’d bet money. Vacationers also have some embarrassing ways to give up their identities. I remember, all too clearly, last summer a very disturbing scenario: A man in the supermarket with no
shirt on. This wasn’t a yong guy, but a guy who was at least in his 50s. Being softer than he thought he was around the middle and hairier than anyone had the right to witness, he strolled through the supermarket not seeming to care while at the same time setting up a sight that will, I am sure, for years to come, haunt the dreams of young children and adults alike. He, was, for lack o a better term, more frightening than the shark in “Jaws.� I can only suggest to him, and those like him,that you do the rest of us a favor and throw on a “I Love New Hampshire� or “Lake Winnipesaukee� sweatshirt the next time, if there must be one. Some scenes of summer are more subtle: harder to get a seat at the restaurant; easier to get a lobster roll. Harder to get a tee time; easier to find a mini-golf course. Easier to find fresh blueberries, harder to find a pumpkin (our state fruit, in case you didn’t know.) From a business standpoint, summer is a short eight week season. From the selfish viewpoint of some locals, it’s way too long. Year round residents are quick to criticize, complain and give loud sighs when they become frustrated as their way of life is interrupted for a couple of months. That’s a true sign of summer as well. Before you know it, traffic will diminish, attractions will close, supermarkets will be quieter and there won’t be much to do. Wait, here come the Leaf Peppers. “Dum-dum-dum-dum.� Look for Brendan’s new book “The Flatlander Chronicles� coming this summer. Also, after a small hiatus, his tongue-incheek detective serial “The Case of The Missing Flatlander� will return next week at www.foolinnh.com.
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AUDI, VOLKSWAGEN & BMW SERVICE Members of the Tea Party gathered in Washington, D.C. in mid-June. Many in this crowd recall promises made in the 1980’s amnesty deal. We’re still waiting for the federal government to build the entire border fence and police it. Speakers today ask, “Do you believe they will secure it this time?� The crowd roars, “NO.� A nearby sign message cuts to the heart of the matter for many of us here, “Amnesty = Cheap Votes + Cheap Labor.� We the People don’t buy that Amnesty II is good for what’s left of our middle class. “Follow the money� are the words on many lips.� On June 18, Senator Jeff Sessions pointed out the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) report claiming passage of the immigration bill would cut the deficit was based on only a 10-year budget window, thus not reflecting costs expected to kick in later. A 40-year budget window, he noted, would reveal higher
actual costs. Sessions sounded an alarm we share, “This bill guarantees three things, amnesty, increased welfare costs and lower wages for the U.S. workforce. It would be the biggest setback for poor and middle class Americans of any legislation Congress has considered in decades.� In 21st-century America, speaking the truth is a high calling. Senators such as Sessions, Rand Paul, Ted Cruz and Mike Lee have earned our respect by denouncing policies that are destructive to We the People. At today’s events, applause spikes when these individuals as well as Representatives, Steve King, Louis Gohmert and Michelle Bachmann approach the microphone. The fierce hunger citizen patriots have for real leaders -- those of conviction -- is measurable here today. As author and talk show host Glenn Beck See smith on 46
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are here attending a Tea Party Patriots “Audit the IRS� Rally as well as a press conference designed to truly open debate to We the People about proposed immigration “reform.� Three patriots from Maine and I traveled here on the overnight train from Boston. At South Station, representatives of a 100-strong liberty group in central Mass., showed up to give us a rousing send off. Unable to take time off from their jobs, they armed us with extra signs and call sheets. In their spare time, these patriots are calling key senators around the U.S., urging them to kill Senate Bill 744 (aka., Amnesty II). Sign s here reflect a building frustration with a rogue central government, unresponsive to the will of the people. As Big Government continues to strangle individual liberty and free enterprise initiative, black humor abounds. Some here joke that they prefer congressional gridlock to passage of another massive horror show of a bill that was created behind closed doors by a “Gang of 8.� A nearby sign says it all, “Americans Want Border Control. U.S. Senate Wants A Banana Republic.� Sign messages are more biting than others I’ve seen during previous trips here to protest burgeoning and reckless government. One sign, decorated with an image of the capital building, proclaims, “Home of Tyranny.� The words “District of Cronyism� loom out on another. The sentiment “Let Lois Lerhner Line Dance In Jail� attests to citizen disgust with unelected officials ruling over them with Stalin-like tactics.
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THE WEIRS TIMES & THE COCHECO TIMES, Thursday, July 4, 2013
From The State House House Bill Mania Common Sense Anyone? Wednesday, June 26, was a busy day at our State House as the House voted on dozens of bills which the Senate sent back to the House via Comby Rep. Jane mittees of ConCormier ference. Within Belknap District 8 this plethora of legislation, the House of Representatives had to vote on the important NH budget bills HB 1-A and HB 2-FN-A-L. HB 1 dealt with making appropriations for the expenses of certain departments of the state for fiscal years ending June 30, 2014 and June 30, 2015. HB 2 was relative to state fees, funds, revenues, and expenditures. (This is known as the trailer bill and supports HB 1 and also makes statutory revisions for the
budget bill.) Now, this is my first “budget process” in our State House and it has been an eye-opening experience to say the least. And I absolutely cannot claim to be 100% up to snuff about all this but, basically from a Republican point of view, this budget could have been MUCH worse. The House, (with a Democratic majority), passed a number of fees and taxes including a monster 65% increase with the gas tax this session. Fortunately, the Republican-majority Senate killed all new taxes and fees for this budget. (Yes!) Unfortunately, the budget is also up 6.5% going from 10.2 billion to 10.7 billion. For sure, I can tell you, most families did not receive any increase in their revenues. For a small government gal, this forced me to cast my vote on HB 1 - NAY. Spending in this bill goes in the wrong direction, even
See cormier on 26
Played Out: the Liberal Racists’ “Uncle Tom” Card Meet Ryan Patrick Winkler. He’s a 37-year-old liberal Minnesota state legislator with a B.A. in history from Harvard by Michelle Malkin University and a J.D. from the Syndicated Columnist University of Minnesota Law School. He’s also a coward, a bigot, a liar and a textbook example of plantation progressivism. On Tuesday, Winkler took to Twitter to rant about the Supreme Court’s decision to strike down an onerous section of the Voting Rights Act. The 5-4 ruling overturned an unconstitutional requirement that states win federal preclearance approval of any changes to their election laws and procedures. Winkler fumed: “VRA majority is four accomplices to race discrimination and one Uncle Thomas.” This Ivy League-trained public official and attorney relied on smug bigotry to make his case against a Supreme Court justice who happens to be black. “Uncle Thomas” wasn’t a typo. Denigration was the goal, not an accident. It was a knowing, deliberate smear. After being called out by conservative social media users for his cheap attack on Clarence Thomas, Winkler then revealed his true color: yellow. He deleted the tweet (captured for posterity at my Twitter curation site, twitchy.com) and pleaded ignorance. “I did not understand ‘Uncle Tom’ as a racist term, and there seems to be some debate about it. I do apologize for it, however,” he sniveled. “I didn’t think it was offensive to suggest that Justice Thomas should be even more con-
cerned about racial discrimination than colleagues,” he protested. Holding a black man to a different intellectual standard based on his skin color. Accusing a nonwhite conservative of collectivist race traitorism. Employing one of the most infamous, overused epithets against minority conservatives in the Democratic lexicon. “Apologizing,” but disclaiming responsibility. Sorry ... that he got caught. Just another day at the left-wing racist office. Rabid liberal elitists expect and demand that we swallow their leftwing political orthodoxy whole and never question. When we don’t yield, their racist and sexist diatribes against us are unmatched. My IQ, free will, skin color, eye shape, name, authenticity and integrity have been routinely ridiculed or questioned for more than two decades because I happen to be an unapologetic brown female free-market conservative. My Twitter account biography jokingly includes the moniker “Oriental Auntie-Tom” -- just one of thousands of slurs hurled at me by libs allergic to diversity of thought -- for a reason. It’s a way to hold up an unflinching mirror at the holier-than-thou NoH8 haters and laugh. We conservatives “of color” are way past anger about the Uncle Tom/Aunt Tomasina attacks. We’re reviled by the left for our “betrayal” of our supposed tribes -- accused of being Uncle Toms, Aunt Tomasinas, House Niggas, puppets of the White Man, Oreos, Sambos, lawn jockeys, coconuts, bananas, sellouts and whores. This is how the left’s racial and ethnic tribalists have always rolled. But their insults are not bullets. They are badges of honor.
See malkin on 29
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THE WEIRS TIMES & THE COCHECO TIMES, Thursday, July 4, 2013
Prague’s Golden Haze PRAGUE— Arriving in Prague’s Vaclav Havel airport, one is immediately swept into the present; not just a refurbished by John J. Metzler terminal but Syndicated Columnist a new look where people actually smile, immigration officials don’t grimace, and police speed about on segways. The post-communist transformation emerges wider in driving from the airport into Prague. This former Ladaland of exhaust belching Russian cars and retro-Skodas, and is now congested traffic where streetcar-trams, Mercedes, new Skodas, and Audis vie for space and place. Welcome to Golden Prague now nearly a quarter century since its liberation from the Soviet stranglehold in 1989! Having been to the Czech Republic just after the opening and once later, the changes are now stunningly obvious; Prague’s magnificent baroque and Art Nouveau architecture once grey and worn, has been scrubbed and buffed. After all, pollution, slipshod new construction and sloppy standards were all an intrinsic part of the Czechoslovak Socialist Republic as much as the government’s unswerving allegiance to Big Brother back in Moscow. Today Prague’s landmark buildings mostly glisten, churches are repaired and open, and the magnificent Castle/St. Vitas Cathedral which overlooks the city helps evoke the name Golden Prague. New shops and restaurants abound. Fashion stores seen in New York, Paris and Los Angeles all have their outlets in Prague, though commercialization in some places such as the central Wesnsclaus Square sadly borders on garish while most other parts of the historic Czech capital present architectural gems. So has the Czech Republic rejoined history as I once confidently postulated twenty years ago? In other words, have the Czechs (former Czechoslovakia until the velvet divorce in 1993), regained the positions they once had until 1938 when a prosperous and politically democratic country was
first “annexed” by Nazi Germany and later “liberated” by the Soviets? Has one of Europe’s more advanced countries before WWII, with developed auto, aviation and machine tool industries, regained its position and place in the world of the 21st century? Largely so, for the Czech Republic’s 10.5 million people. Following the 1989 “velvet revolution” where dissident playwright Vaclav Havel brought democracy to old Czechoslovakia, the political discourse at first experienced a gush of freedom and liberty. Naturally politics matured and governments of the center right and center left have since ebbed and flowed through free elections. Sadly, recent political developments have lapsed into laughable and lamentable corruption scandals worthy of a P J O’Rourke novel. Significantly both the Czech Republic and Slovakia as well, are respected members of the European Union (EU) and NATO, thus offering the Prague government the ultimate insurance policy; membership in a democratic Europe as well as security guaranteed by the Atlantic Alliance. Who would have imagined that this once stalwart member of the old Soviet bloc, would today be a staunch friend of the USA and a supporter of global human rights from Cuba to Tibet? Economically the Czech Republic has prospered under freedom with one of Central Europe’s strongest and sophisticated economies. Since 1993, over $100 billion in direct foreign investment has flowed into the country. Firms like Hyundai, Toyota and VW are in the flourishing automotive sector which now produces one million passenger cars annually. Naturally the global recession has taken its toll with GDP growth rates now anemic. East Asian investment plays a prominent role with Japan, South Korea and Taiwan companies among those in the auto, electronics, and the computer sector. American business is strongly represented with the who’s who of U.S. firms based and operating in the Czech Republic. Importantly, two-way U.S./Czech trade has surged too from about $500 million in 1993 to $5.7 billion in 2012.
In recent years, American college students and British larger louts have turned Prague into a party hub for fun and frolic, largely attracted by the amazingly good Czech beers and affordable lifestyle. Though seemingly less
interested in the architectural wonders which abound, they are attracted by an open Bohemian atmosphere which was simply unimaginable as late as the 1980’s. Viewing Prague through the
See Metzler on 29
Random Thoughts R a n d o m thoughts on the passing scene: E d m u n d Burke said, “There is no safety for honest men, but by believing all possible evil of by Thomas Sowell evil men.” Evil Syndicated Columnist men do not always snarl. Some smile charmingly. Those are the most dangerous. If you don’t think the mainstream media slants the news, keep track of how often they tell you that the Arctic ice pack is shrinking and how seldom they tell you that the Antarctic ice pack is expanding. The latter news would not fit the “global warming” scenario that so many in the media are promoting. Someone has referred to Vice President Biden as President Obama’s “impeachment insurance.” Even critics who are totally opposed to Barack Obama’s policies do not want anything to cut short his presidency, with Joe
Biden as his successor. People who refuse to accept unpleasant truths have no right to complain about politicians who lie to them. What other kind of candidates would such people elect? Given the shortage of articulate Republican leaders, it will be a real loss -- to the country, not just to the Republicans -- if Senator Marco Rubio discredits himself, early in his career, by supporting “comprehensive” immigration reform that amounts to just another amnesty, with false promises to secure the border. Ever since I learned, as a teenager, that the “Saturday Evening Post” magazine was actually published on Wednesday mornings, I have been very skeptical about words. “Gun control” laws do not control guns, “rent control” laws do not control rent and government “stimulus” spending does not stimulate the economy. It is hard to think of two people with more different personalities than New York’s Mayor Michael Bloomberg and President Barack Obama. But they are soul mates See Sowell on 40
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THE WEIRS TIMES & THE COCHECO TIMES, Thursday, July 4, 2013
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THE WEIRS TIMES & THE COCHECO TIMES, Thursday, July 4, 2013
Ayotte & Rubio: Big Mistake! I (we) Won’t Forget in 2016 “While I believe the text of the immigration legislation passed by the US Senate is poor and totally fails by Niel Young Advocates Columnist to achieve the policy goals its sponsors claim it does, I stand behind Sen. Kelly Ayotte. She is my 80% friend, not my 20% enemy. Let us hope the US House of Representatives will do much better and that Sen. Ayotte will be involved in the process between the House and Senate that will hopefully result in actual and effective immigration reform and border security.� As I was leaving to do radio Friday morning I checked my emails, and reading the first sentence the thought of losing my friend who sent the email was entering that poor judgment zone. But alas, these are the words of DJ Bettencourt (Facebook). MY FRIEND: “This is the kind of bull you get from those who care more about the Republican Party than the damage this disastrous bill will wreak across our country. The only ‘good’ solution to this from the House is tabling the bill and leaving it there for good or writing a whole new bill that deals with nothing other than border security with a ‘promise’ included in the bill to return to the other issues only AFTER the border has been secured. And it certainly shouldn’t be someone like Janet Napolitano that verifies the status if it’s secure, it should be the governors and legislators of those states. “How is that amnesty bill good for NH? My son will NEVER be able to find a job if this bill goes through the US House. I’m so an-
gry, Niel, that I can’t even think straight and I can’t even finish what I started to write.� I don’t Twit, Tweet, or Facebook, so here are some comments to DJ’s words, the old fashioned way. My issues are not 20% or 80% approval. Those issues are weighted. For example what Kelly does with Jeanne Shaheen doesn’t mean beans to me. Allowing criminals from other countries to break into our country to murder, rape, rob, and use our tax dollars IS important! To slap the good people in the face who are waiting to become citizens is un-American. But Marco, Kelly, Lindsay, and McCain are not interested in folks who are ready to be productive and good citizens. LOL: they think they can capture the votes of criminals. DJ, the future of this country for my children and grandchildren is what is important – not an amoeba political party! The GOP leadership would never say the following. Barack Hussein Obama has shown that his goals are promoting the Gay Agenda, protecting the right to murder UNBORN and just born babies, growing welfare (dependent on government), building the national debt to the point we cannot recover, and a civil war so he becomes a Dictator. It is not enough that he has turned our country into one of moral decay. Now BHO is in Africa promoting same sex marriage and homosexuality in Senegal. Homosexuality is a crime. THE DAILY CALLER: “Senegalese President Macky Sall rebuffed Obama’s urging by saying that although his country is ‘very tolerant,’ it is not ready to decriminalize homosexuality.� Interesting; in Obama’s country we have lost the First Amend-
ment to express our feelings on this issue, while Barack is in another country advocating homosexual behavior. ******** Meanwhile back in Obama Land, Jeb Bush: “Former Secretary Clinton has dedicated her life to serving and engaging people across the world in democracy,� the former Florida governor said in a statement announcing the award. “These efforts as a citizen, an activist, and a leader have earned Secretary Clinton this year’s Liberty Medal.� The ceremony takes place Sept. 10, The Hill reported. Bush is chairman of the National Constitution Center, which is honoring the former first lady for her career in public service and her advocacy efforts on behalf of women, The Hill reported. A nice touch would be having Gennifer Flowers, Paula Jones, Monica Lewinsky and Kathleen Willey on stage with Hillary to exhibit a show of tolerance and love. ******** Just for your records here are the 14 republicans who were willing to kill America by releasing millions of law breaking illegals: John McCain, Marco Rubio, Jeff Flake (Arizona), Lindsay Graham, Lamar Alexander (Tenn.), Kelly Ayotte (N.H.), Jeff Chiesa (N.J.), Susan Collins (Maine), Bob Corker (Tenn.), Orrin Hatch (Utah), Dean Heller (Nev.), John Hoeven (N.D.), Mark Kirk (Ill.), and Lisa Murkowski (Alaska). ******** AMERICAN HEROES HAVE FOUGHT FOR CENTURIES TO PRESERVE OUR FREEDOM. BE SURE THEY DID NOT DIE IN VAIN! It’s the Fourth of July. Don’t let this be the last one we celebrate.
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THE WEIRS TIMES & THE COCHECO TIMES, Thursday, July 4, 2013
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&!-),9 &2)%.$,9 s !-%2)#!. -%.5 4/0 /& 4(% -/5.4!). 30)2)43 #2!&4 ,/#!, "%%23 /. $2!&4 WEDNESDAY, JULY 10TH 7PM-9PM ROGER “HURRICANE� WILSON will be performing live as part of his Northeast Tour!! ,OCATED AT (OMESTEAD 0LACE !T !LTON 4RAFlC #IRCLE !LTON .( Tue - Thu: 11:00 am - 9:00 pm Fri - Sat: 11:00 am - 10:30 pm Sun: 10:00 am - 2:00 pm
Johnny A & Gary Hoey
GREAT FOOD FAST Rt 3, at the Weirs Bridge Weirs Beach, NH
366-5996
On the Weirs Channel ALL MENU ITEMS AVAILABLE FOR TAKE OUT
Welcome Friends! Homemade Biscuits and Sausage Gravy, Homemade Soup & Sandwich, Kids Menu.
WEEKLY DINING SPECIALS
Rummage Sale
Hampton Beach Ballroom, Hampton 8pm. 929-4100
Kingswood Arts Center, Wolfeboro. Tickets range from $22-$65. 569-7710. www. greatwaters.org
Saturday 13
th
Old Fashion Bean Supper
Sanbornton Second Baptist Church, 322 Upper Bay Road, Sanbornton. 4:30-6:30pm. There will be a free will offering of which 100% will go to the Oklahoma Tornado Victims.
2013 Nickfest
Monument Field, Wolfeboro. 10am-2pm. Bring your family to this fun, exciting event! Climbing wall, 4-way bungee trampolines, vertical rush, wrecking ball, bounce house,
special performances
Wed 7/3 Don Bergeron -Guitar & Vocals 6-9 pm Thurs 7/4 Jim Tyrrell - Piano & Vocals 6-9 pm Sat 7/6 David Lockwood -Piano & Vocals 6-9 pm Sat 7/6 DJ Frankie downstairs in “The Grotto� 6-9 pm Wed. 7/10 Mary Fagan -Guitar & Vocals 6-9 pm Thurs. 7/11 Paul Luff -Guitar & Vocals 6-9 pm Sat. 7/13 Putnam Pirozzoli Guitar Duo 6-9 pm Sat. 7/13 DJ Frankie downstairs in “The Grotto� 10 pm
Mondays: Katie’s famous Sicilian Meatloaf... $10. Tuesdays: Fish and Chips... $10. Wednesdays: Prime Rib... $12.
Very Musical. Very Italian. And Very Good!
Holderness Community Church, 923 US Route 3, Holderness. 9am-2pm. 9687643
Juston McKinney
The Flying Monkey, Plymouth. 536-2551. www. flyingmonkeynh.com
Dreamgirls Dessert Party
Courtyard adjacent to InterLakes High School, Meredith. 6-7:15pm. $30 includes the Dessert Party and that evening’s performance of Interlakes Summer Theatre production, Dreamgirls. 2539275 ext. 3
Bill Burr
Hampton Beach Ballroom, Hampton 8pm. 929-4100
Casino Beach.
Annual Strawberry Festival
St. Mary’s Church, Chestnut Street, Tilton. Turkey dinner with all the trimmings followed
TOP of the TOWN
Starting at 4pm Gift Certificates Available
88 LADD HILL ROAD, BELMONT, NH s 528-3244
AF TER
Christmas in July Craft Fair
Harriman-Hale American Legion Hall, 142 Center Street, Wolfeboro. 9am-3pm. 5694296
Awesome Blossoms!
Opechee Garden Club’s Tour, Luncheon, Boutique and Raffle. 9am-3pm. Tickets for the self-guided tour of seven gardens and luncheon are $25pp. Tickets are available on tour day at Gilford Community Church, Potter Hill Road, Gilford and the Laconia Public Library, 695 Main Street, Laconia. 630-9219. www. opecheegardenclub.com
Regional Night of Worship
Alton Bay Christian Conference Center, Alton Bay. 7-9pm. Worship leader Glen Boardman will assemble a stellar group of local singers and musicians to joyously usher us in to the presence of the Lord in the Tabernacle setting. Free admission. 875-6161
Spinning Demonstration
Holderness Historical Building, US Route 3, Holderness. 10am-Noon. Demonstration by Beverlee Carpenter. Bristol Baptist Church, 30 Summer Street, Bristol. 5:307pm. $8/adult, $3.50/kids or $25/family of 4. Take outs available. 744-3885 Sat. 13th – Sun. 14th
Prime Rib #1 with our patrons Baked Coconut Haddock Lazy-Man Lobster Roast Duckling
Early-Bird Specials
by strawberry shortcake. $10pp. $4/children. 286-7166
BBQ Chicken Supper
Specialties of the House
Additional Parking in Back
Call For Reservations Take-Out or Delivery
Casino Beach.
Hillyer Festival Orchestra with Special Guest Rebecca Robbins
The Best Breakfast in the Lakes Region and Great Lunches, Too!
Live Musical Entertainment Every Night
the regulars MONDAYS: Lou Porrazzo 6-9pm TUESDAYS: Michael Bourgeois 6-9pm THURSDAYS: Karaoke 10pm FRIDAYS: Michael Bourgeois 6:30pm FRIDAYS IN THE GROTTO: DJ & Dancing 10pm SUNDAYS: Open Stage 7-11pm
Stryper
Open 6 a.m. to 2 p.m. Daily Lunch 11 a.m. - 2 p.m. Daily
603-855-2012
PIZZERIA
dunk tank, food vendors, traveling petting zoo and more. $10pp, children under 2 yrs. free. Parking available at Brewster Academy for $2. Rain date is Sunday, July 14th, 102pm. 569-1909
Nothin’ Could Be Finer Than Donna Jean’s Diner In The Morning!
Giuseppe’s 603-279-3313 SHOW TIME
Center in Moultonborough at 8am. Choose between the 2.5 mile or the 4.6 mile course or both! Rent a kayak, paddle and lifejacket for $20. Registration is $10pp and includes lunch. 476-LOON
14th Annual Intertribal Powwow
Offering a Full Menu Lunch & Dinner
Mt. Kearsarge Indian Museum, Warner. Gates open at 10am each day. Grand Entry of all the dancers and honoring
Enjoy a Round of Golf at Lakeview Golf And Lunch at Top of the Town! Live Music Friday & Saturday
See events on 13
MILE ,ADD (ILL 2DnACROSS FROM "ELKNAP -ALL NEXT TO ,AKEVIEW 'OLF
est . 1994
19
YE AR S
ALL WE OVERLO O K IS WO LFEBO RO BAY! ining “BestoDlfeboro� in W agazine ~ NH M
WOLFEBORO, NH
Many New items Including: Tuscan Chicken, Smoked Spare Ribs & Mussels Marniere scan code for updated events
Mill Falls Marketplace • Meredith, NH • www.GiuseppesNH.com
Regular Jo Cards Now Available - Good For 20% Off Your Meal Open daily from 11am to 9pm • 569-8668
Overlooking the town docks• GPS: 27 S. Main Street • jogreensgardencafe.com
A CALIFORNIA CAFE WITH YANKEE INGENUITY Every Friday is Smokehouse BBQ Night - Specially Prepared House Smoked "ABY "ACK 2IBS s 2OADHOUSE 0OTATO 3ALAD "AkED "EANS #OLESLaw and More!
13
THE WEIRS TIMES & THE COCHECO TIMES, Thursday, July 4, 2013
OUT on the TOWN Great Food, Libations & Good Times!
events from 12
of veterans is at noon. Free for members and Native Americans, $8.50/adult, $6.50/ children or $26 per family. 4562600. Tuesday 16th
“Railroad Transportation During World War II” – Summer Lecture Series
The Wright Museum, 77 Center Street, Wolfeboro. 7pm. Presented by Nelson Kennedy. $7pp and free for members. 569-1212
Doobie Brothers
Hampton Beach Ballroom, Hampton 8pm. 929-4100
Casino Beach.
Lakes Region Republican Women Meeting
The Olde Ways Mustard Seed Farm, 288 Haines Hill Road, Wolfeboro. 6:30pm. If you are a conservative woman, please attend to join with like-minded women to make a difference in our community. Call Julie Fergus 828-7606
Thursday 18th
Eat Like A Caveman
The Retreat at Golden View, Meredith. 6pm. Cooking class in cooperation with Moulton Farm’s chef, Jonathan Diola. Space is limited. 279-8111
Art Night Out
River Run Deli, Alton. 5:307:30pm. Local artist and teacher will walk you through the steps necessary to complete your own masterpiece in 2 hours.$30pp, food included. BYOB. 875-1000
“Butterflies that Flutter By” – Nature Talk Series
Road, Moultonborough. 7:30pm. Free admission, donations appreciated. 4765666. www.loon.org
Kenny Wayne Shepherd
The Flying Monkey, Plymouth. 536-2551. www. flyingmonkeynh.com
Laconia Main Street Outdoor Marketplace
Municipal Parking lot between Main and Pleasant Street, downtown Laconia. 3-7pm. Rain or shine. 528-8541
Alien Invasive Plant Species Program
The Loon Center, Lee’s Mill
Wednesday 17th Carolina Chocolate Drops
Prescott Park Art’s Festival, Portsmouth.www.prescottpark. org
Lyle Lovett & His Acoustic Group Hampton Beach Ballroom, Hampton 8pm. 929-4100
Casino Beach.
Free Foreclosure Legal Clinic
Lakes Region Community College, Laconia. 2-4pm. Hosted by the NH Foreclosure Relief Project. Seating is limited, pre-registration is required. 715-3255
A Landmark for Great Food, Fun and Entertainment!
OD T FO ING A E N GR R DI NT O O E D OUT ERTAINM IA ENT IC TRIV MUS
LaconiaMiddle School, Laconia. 6-8pm. Meeting includes a
for complete schedule
293.0841 patrickspub.com Jct of Rts 11 & 11B Gilford
Happy Hour in Our New Bar • Monday-Friday, 8pm-Close
Half Price Appetizers • Drink Specials • Shuck for a Buck Oysters
Lakeside Avenue Laconia NH
JOIN US FOR DINNER
603-366-9101
Breakfast Served All Day
Thu., Fri. & Sat. Nights!
Dine In or Take Out
NH Music Festival Chamber Music Series
Smith Recital Hall, Plymouth State University, Plymouth. 8pm. www.nhmf.org
presentation from the NH Department of Environmental Services, training on how to identify the plants of concern, the techniques and tools for monitoring them and information on how to become a volunteer with the Lakes Region New Hampshire Rivers Council River Runners. Meeting attendees are encouraged to bring samples of any water plants you are curious or concerned about. Free to attend but preregistration is required by going to http:riverrunnerslaconia. eventbrite.com
l Eat in an origina r! g Ca Worcester Dinin
Single Lobster Dinner
12.95
— FRIDAY NIGHTS — Prime Rib AYCE Fresh Fried Haddock New England microbrews as well as wine, light cocktails & THE BEST
Availabledailyat this price for a limited time.
Bloody Marys on the Planet!
Wicked Cheap Twins
14.95
Twin lobster dinner Thursdays only for a limited time.
GREA
No coupons accepted on this special offer.
TRY OUR
Double·Stuffed
Buy One Get One Half Price
Lobster Roll $19.95
Second entree of equal or lesser value at half price with coupon. May not be duplicated, used for Thursday Wicked Cheap Twin Lobsters, Double Stuffed Lobster Roll, nor combined with any other discount offer. WT One coupon per table. No cash value. Valid through 7/14/13.
Price Bu$ter LUNCH SPECIAL!
Delicious Food • Exotic Drinks • Quality Service
Thursday & Saturday Nig
hts:
CHOICE OF 10 ENTREES
Senior Discount* for 55+ / Show your Badge or I.D. for Military/Police/Fire Discount* *breakfast & lunch only - cannot be used for alcohol
***discounts do not apply to any specials
To
E GREENSID S BREAKFA T
— And Don’t Forget Our BENEDICTS!
mcloud@weathervaneseafoods.com Phone 207-439-5628
64 Whittier Highway CHOICE OF207-282-4377 10 ITEMS SODA Moultonboro, NH Thur. - Sat. 11:30am to 9pm Fred O’Neil at O’Neil Associates Inc. foneil@maine.rr.com Phone www.lemongrassnh.com
Breakfast In
Casual Dining • Open Year Round
Serving dinner Fornights Layout/Prepress 7 a week Issues Contact: FOR ONLY $6.95! W/
253-8100
www.TheUnionDiner.com
The BEST wn!
Half price appetizers, sushi trio of your choice for $25, $3 draft Marketing/Media Contact: & Weathervane full liquor menu available
Sun. & Mon. 11:30 to 8pm Tues. & Wed. 5pm to 8pm
!
The Greenside Restaurant
Times Where Healthy Weirs Meets Delicious!
Meg Cloud
N TAP
1331 Union Ave., Laconia • 603.524.6744
Limited Time Offer While Supplies Last
July 4 Daily Happy Hourx 5” 3 Cols from 3-5pm (bar only) ads@laconiadailysun.com
WS O
Mon-Wed 6am - 3 pm • Thur-Sat 6am - 8pm • Sun (breakfast only) 6am to 1pm
THURSDAYS ONLY
Asian Fusion Cuisine
T BRE
FOR $10.95
Featuring items such as Prime Rib!
Friday Nights:
HADDOCK
FEAST
FOR JUST $12.95 STILL HUNGRY?
SECONDS ARE ON US!
Call for Hours 528-7888 ext. 2 • 360 Laconia Rd., Rte. 3, Tilton, NH • 1.5 miles from I-93 exit 20.
14
THE WEIRS TIMES & THE COCHECO TIMES, Thursday, July 4, 2013
ANIMAL CRACKERS The Latest Rescue From Live And Let Live Farm
Senter’s Market • Center Harbor • 253-3800 Shurfine Marketplace • Conway • 447-3400 www.PetParadeNH.com
Starting January 1st we will be open 7 days per week!
We have also extended our weekend hours and will be open from 8 am - 5 pm on both Saturday and Sunday. If your pet needs Urgent Care, we are here for you. Please call us to schedule an appointment. XXX #SPBEWJFX7FU DPN t 'JOE 6T PO 'BDFCPPL Mooney, who is a 20 year old, liver chestnut Saddlebred mare who was an awardwinning dressage horse. She needs an experienced rider, since she really knows what she is doing! It would be great to see her matched up with a dressage rider. She may be older, but you’d never know it to see her in action. She still has lots of energy and enthusiasm for being on the move. Call or email the farm for more info. We also have goats, potbelly pigs, and of course, many other horses looking for their forever homes! PET OF THE WEEK
M AC DONALD VETERINARY SERVICES
CHINA What’s a pretty little thing like China doing, waiting at New Hampshire Humane Society for so long, when ordinarily dogs that look like her are snapped up in an instant! China is a little Bassett Hound mix, note the short stocky legs and slightly elongated back, but where Bassett hounds have droopy eyes and long ears- and perhaps do not like water, China is a true By The Lake kind of girl. She loves to swim, play fetch, and generally wrestle around poolside. She will happily jump into your lap for a cuddle when play time is over. China enjoys the company of dogs she has meet here at the shelter, and truly is a friend to all she meets. A family with children over 12, would be ideal. Call 524-3252 or check www.nhhumane.org
A locally-owned, family business — Robert MacDonald, DVM
Cat Spay/Neuter Day WED., JULY 10 TH
Prices discounted, space is limited Dental special through August 1, 2013
FREE DENTAL HEALTH EXAM!
—Call 524-8900 to book today!
Like us on Facebook
Mon, Tue, Fri: 8:30am - 5pm Thu: 8:30am - 7:00pm Sat: 8:30am - 1:00pm
43 Gilford East Drive, Gilford, NH 03249 603-524-8900 • www.macdonaldveterinaryservices.com
Do you need financial help w/spaying or altering of your dog or cat?
Call 224-1361 today.
THE WEIRS TIMES & THE COCHECO TIMES, Thursday, July 4, 2013
15
DAWN On T h e FARM
with Dawn Dawn Thomson with Thomson
“Be Careful What You Ask For..� by Dawn Thomson
a garden center at our home. As our business grew and our first child People often ask me how turned one, I needed a we came about owning the flexible job to accommorescue farm we call “Reu- date my schedule at the ben’s Rescue Ranchâ€?. My garden center and allow answer lies in the words me to spend time with my best friend often told my daughter. Since I was me while I was growing missing my connection up: “Be careful what you with animals, I thought ask for‌you just might pet-sitting would be the get it.â€? perfect fit. Well, maybe I inherited I started my own busiit, or maybe it was some- ness, taking care of anithing I learned, but as far mals in their homes, and back as I can remember my daughter went with I’ve had a passion for res- me most of the time. Our cuing animals‌stray cats, favorite account was a hurt birds, lost dogs‌you farm that had horses, name it. At age twelve, I goats and mini donkeys. began volunteering at a Working there was like local veterinary clinic, and throwing gasoline on the all through high school I fire of my dreams‌so I worked there, every week- began pitching my husend and holiday, doing band on the idea of havkennel work. There was a ing farm animals at our rescue shelter in the same garden center. building, and I would visit My husband wasn’t the homeless animals af- overly fond of the idea of ter every one of my shifts. having plant-eating aniAlthough I worked in the mals around his precious hospital, it was the rescue greenery, but after much side of things that called persistence on my part, out to me the most. At the he eventually gave in. He clinic, we inherited many drew me sketches of runabandoned animals with ins and small sheds that behavioral issues, and I he proposed to build‌all made it my personal mis- of which I nixed. “Not big sion to rehabilitate and enoughâ€? was my quick teach them good behavior, response. He started to to better their chances of get nervous. He drew adoption from the shel- me plans for a 2-stall (Set in Dom Casual, or someter. barn. “Still too small,â€? was thing similar if possible) Since I lived in the sub- my answer. He began to urbs, my experience was panic. Finally, he caved, limited to small animals, and presented me with but I longed to work with a 3-dimensional paper us on Facebook horses and farmVisit critters. model of a 3 ½ stall barn, Back then I hoped to be- complete with tack room, come a veterinarian, but and walk-up hay loft for my life took a few different 400 plus bales of hay. turns, and it never came “Perfect!â€? was my elated to pass. response. My persistence However, life often has a had paid off! way of calling us back to Then Tom got to work on what we are meant to do. building it. Have you ever In 1994, my husband, heard the saying from that Tom and I moved to Dan- famous baseball movie bury, NH, and opened “Field of Dreamsâ€?â€Śâ€œIf you
Contributing Writer
build it, they will come?â€? ‌ Well, come they did‌the animals that is. My husband likes to tell the story that I filled the loft with hay, before the barn roof was on, added goats before we had any fencing up, and brought in three donkeys and a horse (“Reubenâ€?, of course), before the stalls were finished. Tom says: “I knew once I started building, there’d be no stopping her.â€? And he was right! But while Tom may have fought the idea at first, he’s gotten into the whole rescue cause as much as me now. When you
PET OF THE WEEK
Paco is a Sulfur Crested Cockatoo who just arrived at the shelter. He is about 25 years old and is looking for a low-stress home where he can receive lots of attention and out-of-cage time. He has been easy to handle and is happiest when he is with someone. Paco would do best as the only bird in his new home. We would like to ďŹ nd Paco a forever home as soon as possible as the shelter is a stressful environment for him. His adoption fee is $350 and includes his cage. His previous family left us a lot of great information about him (too much to share here) - stop by the shelter or give us a call at 603749-5322 to learn more about this beautiful bird!
Age: 25 Years • Sex: M • Sulfur Crested Cockatoo
See dawn on 26
A Friendly, Fiber Farm ... In Center Sandwich, N.H.
Shetland Sheep • Fiber • Handcrafted Gifts • Angora Goats • Fresh Eggs 284-7277 Open by appointment
www.Kindredspiritfarmnh.com visit us on facebook
Reuben’s Rescue Ranch OPEN FOR VISITORS: Saturdays, 9am-5pm, May - October
Bring the kids to feed the goats, pet the donkeys or meet our special horses Reuben, Tiny, Mr. Beans & Eternity Free for All, but Donations are Welcome, or Purchase Something from our Thrift Shop to Help Support the Animals.
/) 3PVUF %BOCVSZ /) t t 7JTU VT PO 'BDFCPPL
16
THE WEIRS TIMES & THE COCHECO TIMES, Thursday, July 4, 2013
— 603-515-1512 —
www.GreatImpressionsStaging.com V
Cottage Surroundings
V
Cabin & Lake House Furnishings.
Check Out Our Own Custom Hickory & Cottage Furniture Made Here In NH.
68 Center St. (Across from the Wright Museum) Wolfeboro V
603.569.0005 • Shop Online: Cottagesurroundings.com
V
17
THE WEIRS TIMES & THE COCHECO TIMES, Thursday, July 4, 2013
Miss Winnipesaukee & Miss Weirs Beach Organization Accepting Applications for 89th Annual Pageant The Miss Winnipesaukee & Miss Weirs Beach local chapter of the Miss America Organization is now accepting applications for the 89th annual Miss Winnipesaukee & Miss Weirs Beach Scholarship Program, which is scheduled for 7:00pm Friday, July 12, 2013 at the Gunstock Ski Area in Gilford, NH. Doors open at 6:30pm for the pageant. The deadline to return a completed application is 3pm Monday July 8, 2013. The Miss Winnipesaukee & Miss Weirs Beach pageant is a preliminary to the annual Miss New Hampshire Scholarship Program. In turn, Miss New Hampshire is the official state preliminary to the Miss America Program. The Miss Winnipesaukee Pageant is one of the oldest, continuously running local pageants in the Miss America Organization having run since 1925. The program will award over $10,000.00 in scholarship money this year with the titles of Miss Winnipesaukee and Miss Weirs Beach each receiving $3,500.00. First runner up will receive $1,000.00 and second runner up will receive $750.00. All other entrants will receive $150.00 each. Karen Price, daughter of Miss W i n n i p esaukee 1944, Marilyn Dearborn, has also generously provided a $150 interview winner award in memory of her mother. The Scholarship program is open to full-time employees, full-time students or residents of the following New Hampshire counties: Belknap, Carroll, Grafton, Merrimack, Hillsborough and Strafford. Eligibility re-
Seeking Past Winners The Miss Winnipesaukee & Miss Weirs Beach local chapter of the Miss America Organization is searching for past winners of the two titles to be their special guests at the 89th annual Miss Winnipesaukee & Miss Weirs Beach Scholarship Pageant. The title of Miss Winnipesaukee dates back to 1925 when the first pageant was held at the former Irwin’s Winnipesaukee Gardens dance hall located on the pier in Weirs Beach, NH. The pageant was held at Irwin’s for many decades until Bob Lawton, owner of Funspot, saved it from extinction in the late 1960s. Lawton had many fond memories of the pageant, working at Irwin’s as a young boy. When interest for the pageant waned, he moved the pageant to Funspot in 1969 and held it onsite for close to 30 years. During the period from the 1930’s through the 1950’s there were many local pageants held in the lakes region. “As I researched the history of the Miss Winnipesaukee pageant, there were many others I discovered while looking through endless amounts of microfilm at the Laconia Public Library” says Gary Vincent, Miss Winnipesaukee historian, “One of the past titles was Miss Weirs Beach which was held back in the 1940’s and 1950’s before ending.” The Miss Winnipesaukee Scholarship Program resurrected the Miss Weirs Beach title in 2007 and runs it as a second crown in their program. Past titleholders or anyone with information or historical documentation regarding either pageant is encouraged to contact the office. Doors open at 6:30pm for this year’s pageant at the Gunstock Ski Area in Gilford, NH. Further information for the Miss Winnipesaukee & Miss Weirs Beach Scholarship Programs and applications for the 2013 pageant may be obtained by emailing MissWinniPageant@yahoo.com or calling co-Executive Director, Tina Gebhard at (603) 3870271. Visit the Miss Winnipesaukee and Miss Weirs Beach programs at www.MissWinnipesaukee.org or on Facebook.
Uncommon CLAMBAKES On the Patio at the Chase House at Mill Falls Wednesdays 6–8 p.m. July 10, 17, 24 and August 14, 21, 28
Clambake Menu
Field Green Salad, New England Clam Chowder, Steamed Mussels, Maine Lobster (one per person), BBQ Chicken, Steamed Corn on the Cob, Boiled Red Bliss Potatoes, Corn Bread and Sliced Watermelon Adults $45, Children under 12 $20 (Full menu except lobster) Prices exclude gratuity. Reservations are required*. Please call Camp at (603) 279-3003
300 Daniel Webster Highway, Meredith, NH • (603) 279-3003 • theCman.com
Reservations must be made before 5 p.m. on the Monday preceding each Clambake. Cancellations will not be allowed after 5 p.m. on the Monday preceding the Clambake for which reservations have been secured. There is a 20 guest minimum to hold Clambakes. If that minimum is not met by 5 p.m. on the Monday preceding the Clambake, guests with reservations will be contacted by Camp. *
Camp is a proud member of NH’s Common Man Family!
quirements for the scholarship program may be found on the Miss New Hampshire website www. missnh.org. Further information for the Miss Winnipesaukee & Miss Weirs Beach Scholarship Programs and applications for the pageant may be obtained by emailing MissWinniPageant@yahoo.com or calling co-Executive Director, Tina Gebhard at (603) 387-0271.
AMERICA’S #1 SELLING BRAND OF DUCTLESS mitsubishicomfort.com ©2013 Mitsubishi Electric
HOME ENERGY PRODUCTS 170 Daniel Webster Highway, Belmont, NH
www.HomeEnergyProducts.net • 603-524-2308
18
THE WEIRS TIMES & THE COCHECO TIMES, Thursday, July 4, 2013
Roche Realty Group Welcomes Two To Meredith Team MEREDITH - Frank Roche, President of Roche Realty Group, Inc., with offices in Meredith and Laconia, NH, has announced that Gus Benavides of Gilford and Alan Silberberg of Alton Bay, have recently joined the real estate firm. They will be a part of the Meredith office’s team located at 97 Daniel Webster Highway. Gus was born in Salem, MA and attended Salem State University, majoring in business with a concentration in finance. Gus and his wife Colleen are proud parents of three children all whom attend or attended the
We’ve Been Selling The Lakes Region For Over 40 Years! Gus Benavides
STEP OUT YOUR FRONT DOOR, CROSS THE STREET...AND YOU”RE AT YOUR BEACH!! That’s right and this home is priced at just $199,000!! There is an inlaw apt and all of the mechanics have been updated in the last 7 yrs...LR w/brick fireplace, 2 bedrms plus 2 bedrms, screen porch and garage under. Seasonal water views..Listen to the loons... summer fun at Lakewood Beach on Winnisquam.!!
SPECTACULAR VIEW FILLED Gilford Contemporary. Attention to architectural detail with no expense spared...The heated driveway leads to this gorgeous home with BIG lake views. Fireplaced LR w/fireplace &vaulted ceiling...a wall of glass looks out to Lake Winnipesaukee and airport views..Elegant dining w/tray ceiling. Granite & cherry kitchen.. Perfect for entertaining..it’s all open! 2-3 BR’S and 2.5 baths.BIG deck w/hot tub and heated lap pool. 2 car garage...AND THERE’S MORE!!! $525,800
NEWLY LISTED!! SHIP AHOY CONDO... Full Lake Winnipesaukee water view...it’s in the front!! 2 bedrooms, newly appl’d kitchen, small but tidy!! 24’ dock, waterside patio and Lake Winnipesaukee playground!! Can be used Yearround..come join the party!! $159,000
DREAM OF OWNING A WATERFRONT HOME?... but just don’t want to pay those taxes..Here’s the best of both worlds!! This Pristine home sits 30’ away from your deeded neighborhood beach on beautiful Lake Opechee!! This picture was taken from the corner of the deck..the home is beautiful and offers 3200 SF of living space on 2 levels..enclosed porch, deck, fireplace...Bring your swimsuits, towels and sunscreen!! $329,000
BRICKS & BEAMS!! City styled 2000SF Factory Condo... this one is now available!! Soaring ceilings and big windows..walls of brick and exposed beams only add to the ambiance of the Dramatic condo. 3 levels of living space, 2 bedrms, 3 baths, 3rd floor family rm w/roof top balcony overlooking the Winnipesaukee River. 810’ of river front, kayak racks, workout rm, central air....NOW...$215,000
BEACH RIGHTS!! BEACH VIEW!! MALLARD COVE LACONIA... On the shores of Lake Opechee..2 sandy beaches, tennis court and this unit has a water view!! Freestanding condo unit offers a 1st floor master suite, vaulted ceiling LR w/fireplace & lake view, dining, sunroom, walkout family rm, 2 BR’S w/room for a 3rd. Attached 1 car garage... BEAUTIFUL!! $249,000
61 Liscomb Circle, Gilford,NH 603-524-6565 • www.cumminsre.com
Gilford School System. As a twenty year resident of Gilford, Benavides has worked in the customer service industry for over 25 years with one of New England’s largest companies. He is a three-term selectman for the Town of Gilford (currently serving), a representative to the Budget Committee, the Laconia Airport Authority, and the Historic District in Gilford. Gus was also a member of the Gilford Rotary Club and is a member Grace Capital Church in Laconia. Additionally, he is a member of the Winnipesaukee Yacht Club and is an avid boater on Lake Winnipesaukee. Frank Roche commented, “we are very pleased to have Gus affiliated with our real estate organization. He adheres to
strong ethical standards, has a 25-year background in the customer service industry where he knows the importance of listening, to follow up with clients’ specific needs. Additionally, he is one of the hardest working guys you’ll find, and he gives back so much of his time to the Town of Gilford in his capacity as Selectman and serving on various committees. Gus is determined to be one of the best REALTORS® out there in the Lakes Region, and I’m sure he will accomplish his goals.” Alan is a native of Manchester, NH and a graduate of Manchester West High School in 1971. He then attended the University of New Hampshire, where he majored in Business AdministraSee roche on 19
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THE WEIRS TIMES & THE COCHECO TIMES, Thursday, July 4, 2013
In 1990, Silberberg opened Lakes Jeep Eagle which evolved over the years to Lakes Chrysler Jeep LTD. in the Laconia area. He owned and operated the business for 20 years, selling and servicing thousands of new Jeeps and Chryslers which resulted in the company acquiring Chrysler’s 5 Star Status in their first year. The real estate business has always been an interest of Mr. Silberberg and he’s now looking forward to becoming
part of the Roche Realty Group, Inc. team. One of the premier companies in the region, offering residential and commercial properties throughout central New Hampshire. Mr. Silberberg is a past member of the New Hampshire Auto Dealers Association, Chrysler’s 5-Star Dealer, and the New England Jeep Dealers Advertising Association. His hobbies include motorsports, boating, and snowmobiling. Frank Roche commented, “Alan will be a great addition to our team with
his vast business experience in the automotive field during the past 20 years. He has tremendous experience in all levels of customer service, having dealt with so many consumers in the auto industry over the years. He knows the Lakes Region intimately and has a great understanding of the local business community. I would welcome all of Al’s past clients and friends to call him at 603-279-7046 for any of their future real estate needs.�
Combined Realty • 603-528-4950 Alan Silberberg roche from 18
tion. He was a brother of Pi Kappa Alpha, and met his wife Valerie Landry of Laconia, NH while attending UNH. Alan started in the automotive business in 1994 in Portsmouth, NH, taking the weekends to vacation in the Lakes ReHOLDERNESS Gorgeous mountain views & total privacy! This Contemporary home sits on 16.8 acres w/ cathedral ceilings, gourmet kitchen & 2 stone fireplaces. Inground pool too!
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gion and Lake Winnipesaukee area. The couple built their home in Alton Bay in 1987, where they continue to live now. They feel so fortunate to live in such a beautiful location next to Lake Winnipesaukee, where they can enjoy boating from their own dock. MOULTONBOROUGH Salmon Meadow Cove residence in quiet, private, low-tax Krainewood Shores. Winni’s main waters are easily reached from this 3Bd, 3Ba cape; a boater’s joy. Convenient to everything.
$458,900 (4233669) Call 253-9360
WOLFEBORO Fabulous 2,600 sqft Bungalow Style Cape. 4 bedroom, 3 bath, 1st floor Master Bedroom and 2 car garage. Minutes to downtown. 1 yr. home warranty. To be built.
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WOLFEBORO Historic 4 Bd, 4 Ba home spanning three centuries features recent renovations & additions including 1st flr master suite with private sunroom and lovely, mature landscaping.
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ALTON Beautiful 2008 cape home with 3.4 acres, quality construction, energy efficient, hwd floors, granite countertops, 1st flr master bdrm, central A/C, attached garage, inviting farmer’s porch.
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WOLFEBORO Comfortable raised ranch on level lot. Quiet setting, minutes to town, open kitchen, dining & living room, large windows looking out to a nice wooded lot.
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Center Harbor 3 bedroom Views. $449,900 “A House On a Hill� Sweeping mountain views from every level of this Post & Beam Home on 3.88 acres with a large open living area, warm wood floors, a country kitchen with granite counters, wonderful wood accents and beautiful floor-to-ceiling fieldstone hearth. 4 car garage.
Gilford Two houses on 26 Acres $429,900 ... Estate like Setting Private location on a dead end street easy access to everywhere. Main house has over 2300 sf of living space with Stone Fireplace living room, and attached sunroom with multiple decks, walkout basement. Second house (Guest or In-law) has over 960sf of one floor Living space with 2 car basement garages. A second detached 4 car garage made for car enthusiast.
Lake Winnisquam 4 Bedrm Waterfront $474,900 Convenient Waterfront Location. .... all the ingredients one would want in a lake house. 132’ of waterfront, southern exp., beach, boat docks and jet ski docks. Finished lower level walkout to waterfront.
Gilford 3 bedrm Water access Dockham Shores Est. $324,900 ... Lake Winnipesaukee beach and boating access. Country Cape with farmer porch attached two car garage with office space over garage. Open concept with cathedral ceiling over fireplace living room and kitchen. First floor master bedroom suite. Sliders off family room to larger deck overlooking your large above ground pool. This home has everything for comfortable living in the lakes region.
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written two books: “Among the Bears: Raising Orphan Cubs in the Wild,� was published in 2002 by Henry Holt & Co. “Out on a Limb,�scheduled for release this fall, is about how bears think and act. “People need to learn more about them,� Kilham says. “We carry ancestral fears about bears in our genome. In reality they’re nowhere near as dangerous as people perceive them. We live in a forested state, and wherever there is forest, there is bear habitat, and bears are a fact of life. So there’s nothing unusual about a bear coming into your yard. On the other hand, we don’t need to encourage them by leaving bird feeders, garbage, and a food source outside� to attract them. There are currently about 5,000 black bears in the granite state – a population that has remained stable through licensed hunting, despite fluctuations in weather, which bears are accustomed to, says Andy Timmins, bear specialist for New Hampshire Fish and Game. Last year, a strangely warm spring coupled with a significant drought reduced the amount of berries, nuts, and vegetation avail-
New Hampshire Now!
Cub bears feeding in their winter den. able for them to eat. At the same time record numbers of cubs were born as a result of plentiful food in 2011. Mother bears under pressure to scavenge for their offspring began foraging closer to humans. Lured by the intoxicating and far-traveling scent of rotting garbage and the availability of bird seed and grain, they wandered into backyards and farmyards to ransack birdfeeders, chicken coops and grain stores in barns. Last year, New Hampshire Fish and Game officials received 1100 calls from residents complaining about bears too close to home, Timmins says. Roughly 800 were killed. Homeowners were ter-
boston globe Photo
rified by the presence of large, hungry carnivores, Kilham explains. “When the response to a bear is emotional, people are much more likely to grab a gun. But it would be nice if they didn’t shoot first. The mother bear’s just acting naturally, and is not a bear that has to be removed from the population,� says Kilham. Kilham typically takes in three or four cubs during the winter months. Last year calls poured in from conservation officials, residents, and people who worked in wildlife rescue. Of the 29 bears Kilham currently cares for, 16 arrived as orphans after their mothers were shot See kilham on 21
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THE WEIRS TIMES & THE COCHECO TIMES, Thursday, July 4, 2013
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6’5” Ben Kilham wriggles out of Yoda’s den after inspecting it after she and her cubs had left it in the spring. Over the winter while visiting, Yoda took Ben’s gloves for additional bedding which he exchanged for his fleece pullover and baseball hat. boston globe Photo
boston globe Photo
kilham from 20
See kilham on 22
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in 2012. “We have situations where people believe they’re defending their property, and want to shoot the bear to get rid of it, when all they have to do is lock up their garbage, remove their bird feeder, or put some electric fence around the chicken coop, and the bears are not going to be hanging around,“ explains Nancy Comeau, bear specialist for the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s wildlife division in New Hampshire. “If people see bears they should just appreciate them,” Comeau says. “They should get rid of the attracting food supply, and just enjoy the sighting. Bears in New Hampshire are definitely not aggressive. They’re not coming into our communities to
eat our children. They want to eat our garbage.” Comeau works out of the Fish and Game office in Lancaster, NH. Most of the state’s bears are located in the forested region comprising the White Mountains, and areas just to the north and south, including the Lakes Region. “People think it’s really unusual if a bear’s out in the day time,” says Comeau. “but bears are opportunistic carnivores searching for food anywhere they can find it. If they find food outside, they make that area part of their home range.” Comeau fields calls from residents who experience uncomfortably close encounters, which can peak in June and July when bears are looking for food. Sometimes she visits homes to see what
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Phoebe Kilham plays with a baby cub.
exactly is luring them, and provides temporary loans of electric fence to secure a chicken coop too close to the woods. She also gives advice: Don’t put garbage out the night before; wait until morning just before pick up. Sprinkle it with ammonia to mask the scent, and freeze meat scraps before putting them in. Use dumpsters with metal, not plastic tops. Take bird feeders down between April 1 and December 1, and make sure no bird
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THE WEIRS TIMES & THE COCHECO TIMES, Thursday, July 4, 2013
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seed has spilled on the ground. Enclose chicken coops with electric fence. Smear the top wire with peanut butter or bacon grease; once a bear gets zapped it will avoid the fence. “If you have chickens or livestock, plug a radio in near the barn,� Comeau adds. “A little bit of noise can help keep predators away.� Kilham is considered one of the world’s foremost and successful bear advocates. Chinese zoologists working to preserve and expand the panda population have hired him as a consultant to help them reintroduce orphaned pandas back into the wild. Most of what Kilham knows has been learned from firsthand, ongoing exposure, not published scientific research. When he first looked into studying bears, he found that surprisingly little had been written about them. The scientific community and general public assumed that bears were essentially loners that came together during mating See kilham on 23
23
THE WEIRS TIMES & THE COCHECO TIMES, Thursday, July 4, 2013
Ben Kilham observes a baby cub on his property in Lyme, NH.
Baby cubs climbing in tree enclosure. kilham from 22
season then dispersed to wander in search of food. The reality is that bears are highly social creatures, Kilham explains, “reciprocal altruists� that will consider the needs of unrelated individuals if they have extra food on hand. They also form complex matriarchal groups. When
boston globe Photo
a mother bear weans her daughters at 18 months, she sends them out to secure additional territory that becomes the young females’ responsibility to defend. She punishes them severely for dereliction of duty, and is frequently harsher with her daughters than with strangers wandering into her ter-
ritory. If there is ample food in the forest, she has no problem sharing with young males who wander in temporarily in search of nuts and berries, Kilham says. Only the dominant, strongest and heaviest males, roughly 10 to 15 percent of the male bear population, actually get to mate; the others are resigned to lives of relative celibacy and frequently form groups to roam, scavenging meals wherever they can find them. It’s
not uncommon for males to travel 250 miles from where they were born. After a UNH graduate student put GPS collars on some of Kilham’s bears released into the wild, he learned that one male wandered from Lyme, NH to Maine then Quebec and back again. The small, fluctuating population that Kilham maintains live for the most part as bears do in the forest; their enclosure incudes woods, swamp, and a pond. The breakfast and
JULY FOURTH
Skelley’s Market
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 109 in beautiful Moultonboro, New Hampshire, we are very easy to find. t (BT IPVST B EBZ t 'SFTI QJ[[B t /) -PUUFSZ UJDLFUT t #FFS BOE 8JOF t 4BOEXJDIFT t %BJMZ QBQFST
dinner the Kilhams serve is only a modest supplement to the berries, nuts, grubs, and leaves the animals forage themselves. Some of the sickly orphaned cubs need extra nutrition, however; Kilham currently feeds one cub four times a day by syringe. Kilham has kept Squirty, a 185-lb. female for 17 years, since she arrived as a seven-week-old orphan weighing three pounds. Since then she’s had eight litters of cubs. “I have to bribe her with cookies but I still have access to her,� Kilham says. “Because I raised her she actually treats me like a bear, and I have to be careful not to break the bear rules. Bears bite when they punish and they hurt,� he adds. “When she does bite me she reconciles. She goes into a soft repetitive moan, saying ‘I’m sorry but that was necessary.’ If I interfere with what she’s doing, she gives me a bite. She’s got me pretty well trained at this point.�
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THE WEIRS TIMES & THE COCHECO TIMES, Thursday, July 4, 2013
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THE WEIRS TIMES & THE COCHECO TIMES, Thursday, July 4, 2013
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drive by our farm, he’s the one you see in the paddock cuddling his favorite chicken or kissing the horses and donkeys‌ in fact the animals get more kisses than I do! Go figure‌ A lot has happened at Reuben’s Rescue Ranch since 1994. We no longer have the garden center, but we are still committed to the rescue farm and all its eclectic residents. Since then, we’ve taken in among other critters, a lonely llama, a stray donkey, a retired race horse, rejected dogs, and several chickens and ducks. Tom has built an addition onto the barn, and added chicken coops and rabbit hutches in response to the never-ending supply of animals that find
cormier from 8
without new taxes/fees. Just because the bill could have been worse, this didn’t mean I could vote for it. It is interesting to note, though, the demonized budget of the last legislature posted a revenue surplus for this year’s budget. Of course, this money was immediately spent in the new budget. The trend of spending within our means, was alas, not repeated with this year’s budget proposal. At least, due to our Republican majority in the
their way through our barn doors. Remember my best friend’s words: “Be careful what you ask for‌you just might get it?â€? Well, those words sure rang true in this case‌my dream turned into reality, quicker than I ever could have imagined! Our goal is to provide a permanent sanctuary to as many animals friends as we are financially able to support. And although we can’t offer a permanent home to all the furry critters that come our way, we do provide a resource for connecting animalsin-need with people who are looking to adopt. To help support the cause, Reuben’s Rescue Ranch is open for visitors most Saturdays from 9am-5pm. The farm is free for all, but donations are
gratefully accepted. Farm fresh eggs are available for sale, plus you can browse through our unique farm thrift shop‌all purchases directly help to support the animals. Hope to see you Dawn on the Farm!
Senate, this budget did not incur any new taxes and fees on taxpayers. We ALL have to learn to live within our means. Government included or should I say, especially? Within HB 2, there was portion of the bill which delayed NH Medicaid expansion, taking time to see the real impact of what this subsidy could mean for our state. Taking governmental “FREE� money is easy to do. But, in this case, I believe it was a fiscally sound decision to take
time before grabbing that golden ring. This federal money to expand Medicaid may be touted as “freeâ€?, but we know there are always tentacles connected to taking governmental money. Mind you, it is not really free either – it belongs to the American taxpayer. Money doesn’t just magically appear for the government to spend. The “freebiesâ€? are paid by our taxes. Just keep saying over and over, “It is NOT free – It is NOT free‌â€? I believe it is best to step very carefully before expanding Medicaid in the state of New Hampshire. One other important bill was passed at this session. HB 595 relative to photo identification of voters passed 231/121. This bill just kills me. It expands the list of allowable ID’s, allowing election officials to accept any ID they like (!) and eliminates the requirement to photograph people registering without an ID. Heck, you need a photo ID to buy a beer, but not to vote? UGH. Such is the world of politics. Sometimes I feel like screaming, “Where is common sense here?â€? So far, there hasn’t been any answer. But, you can bet, we will keep asking the question!
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Tickets, In Advance: Appletree Nursery, Beans & Greens, Cackleberries, Kitchen Cravings, Petal Pushers, Sawyer’s Dairy Bar, Gilford Library, Laconia Library
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Dawn Thomson is an independent columnist, who with the help of her husband and two children, runs Reuben’s Rescue Ranch, located at 161 NH Route 104, Danbury, NH 03230. For more information, call 768-3779. You can also like them on Facebook or visit their website at: www.reubensrescueranch.weebly.com. Future installments of “Dawn on the Farm� column will appear in the first issue of every month of the Weirs and Cocheco Times.
27
THE WEIRS TIMES & THE COCHECO TIMES, Thursday, July 4, 2013
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DEAR TIM: I have a problem. I need a new front door, but I’m being told that I have to have an expensive custom door made. I simply can’t afford that right now. My home is brick veneer, and the width between the brick is 45 inches. The height of the opening between the limestone sill and the brick angle iron that passes over the door is a little taller than 84 inches. Is it true that I need a custom door? The frame walls on the other side of the brick are just normal 2-by-4s. Is the contractor just trying to trick me? What are my options? --Karen G., Valparaiso, Ind. DEAR KAREN: I can’t pass judgment on the intentions of the contractor who said you need a custom door. It’s possible he’s dishonest, but it’s possible he simply doesn’t know how to solve your problem. Believe me, I’ve seen plenty of situations in older homes where the front door was an odd size. I’ve worked on older homes where it was vitally important to preserve the architectural integrity, and a custom door was the only solution. Frequently the issue is the width of the door jamb. Modern homes -- by which I mean those build from the late 1960s to the present -- tend to have door jambs with fairly common exterior widths. They’ll usually be 4 9/16 inches or 6 9/16 inches. This jamb width matches the measured wall thickness, including the exterior wall sheathing, the wall framing
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A standard-sized door can be used to replace this existing door. stud and the interior wall covering. Houses that were built prior to World War II typically had thicker wall studs, 3/4-inch exterior sheathing, and plaster and lath interior wall covering. I frequently had to order door jambs that measured 5 1/4 inches to deal with these situations. Here’s the good news. When it comes to brick veneer homes and replacement doors, it’s always better for the masonry opening to be slightly larger than too small. It’s really easy to fill the extra space with wood that can be made to look perfectly normal. It’s expensive to enlarge a masonry opening and make it look like nothing was touched. In fact, it’s nearly impossible to do.
In your case, I feel you can use a standard exterior door with no issues whatsoever. Most exterior doors are 36 inches in width. By the time you add in the spacing between the door and the jamb and the thickness of the jamb you have a unit dimension of 38 inches or so. Add 4 more inches for the standard brick molding and you’ll be pretty close to 42 or 43 inches in total width. Your masonry opening height also allows you to easily fit in a standard exterior door that comes with factory-applied brick mold trim. My guess is the contractor just looked at an existing door at a home center and saw there would be a large gap between the See builder on 29
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THE WEIRS TIMES & THE COCHECO TIMES, Thursday, July 4, 2013
Summer Fun!
Your Dream Dock Starts Here!
The Best Summer Ever Starts Right Here!
NEW HAMPSHIRE MUSIC FESTIVAL
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SYMPHONY POPS / BIG BAND FAMILY CONCERTS CHORUS CHAMBER MUSIC PERFORMANCES IN PLYMOUTH GILFORD WOLFEBORO CONCORD
MUSIC DIRECTOR DONATO CABRERA
ORCHESTRA CONCERT
THURSDAY, JULY 11TH AT 8PM
Silver Center, Main St., Plymouth Preceded by 7pm lecture Classical Conversations with Music Director Donato Cabrera Mendelssohn Hebrides Overture Mozart Concerto No.4 Malcolm Stewart, violin soloist Tickets silver.plymouth.edu or 603-535-2787
CHAMBER MUSIC SERIES ... Intimate musical experiences performed by members of the Festival Orchestra at Smith Recital Hall, Plymouth State University. Tuesday evenings at 8pm from July 9th through August 13th. POPS SERIES ... JOURNEY ACROSS AMERICA Sat., July 6, 8pm at Silver Center for the Arts, Plymouth State University. With Matt Catingub, Festival Pops Conductor.
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July 4th, 5th, 6th & 7th 12 – 4pm
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29
THE WEIRS TIMES & THE COCHECO TIMES, Thursday, July 4, 2013 builder from 27
factory-applied brick mold and your brick. Guess what? You can easily remove the brick mold trim that comes from the factory and install different trim. You can also leave on the brick mold trim and add additional trim boards between your new door and the brick. With a small amount of skill, these added boards can be made to be quite decorative and add additional character to your door opening. You have other options as well. If you don’t want to layer all of these additional trim boards you can have custom brick mold trim made at a local lumber mill. In fact, you can actually design what the profile of this molding will be if you have a creative flair! The lumber mill will carve a shaping knife that fits into a milling machine that transforms a rectangular piece of lumber into an exquisite piece of molding with a profiled face. The cost to create this custom knife may only be about $100. If it were me, I’d probably not have custom trim made. I’m convinced that if you visit a traditional lumber yard that has many different moldings available, you’ll be able to use two or three different moldings to create a stunning stepped casing for the exterior of your new door. Once these are stained or painted, they will look like they were the original moldings. The best part about this is that your door will have a distinctive flair that sets it apart from all of your neighbors’ doors that have the standard blah
brick mold trim. Making the door fit inside is much less of an issue. You can probably reuse your existing interior trim molding. You may have to just install two new pieces of baseboard and do some minor drywall patching and painting. It’s not that hard to do for an experienced contractor. Visit a local lumberyard or a company that sells new exterior doors. They’ll have several contractors you can call that absolutely have the needed experience and skills to install a standard, affordable door in your opening. Let me know how it turns out! Want free home-improvement information? Go to www.AsktheBuilder.com and sign up for Tim’s free newsletter. Have a question for Tim? Just click the Ask Tim link on any page of the website. c)2013, TIM CARTER DISTRIBUTED BY Tribune Media Services
metzler from 9
golden haze of history has its drawbacks. Despite good times today, the city and country has undergone a social and political trauma which only ended a generation ago. This nightmare seems nearly forgotten or unknown especially by the younger generation. Still, the Czechs seem back in stride and have proudly regained their place in a free Europe. John J. Metzler is a United Nations correspondent covering diplomatic and defense issues. He is the author of Transatlantic Divide; USA/Euroland Rift (University Press, 2010)
Announcing New Expanded Office Hours in Meredith!
malkin from 8
The Uncle Tom card has been played out. Of course Winkler didn’t think it was offensive. Smarty-pants liberal racists never think they’re being racist. In their own sanctimonious minds, progressives of pallor can never be guilty of bigotry toward minority conservatives. Ignorance is strength. Slurs are compliments. Intolerance is tolerance. And when all else fails, left-wing prejudice is always just a well-intended joke. (PBS commentator Julianne Malveaux’s death wish for Justice Thomas set the standard: “I hope his wife feeds him lots of eggs and butter and he dies early like many black men do, of heart disease. ... He is an absolutely reprehensible person.�) Back in her day, before the advent of democratizing social media, Malveaux and her elitist PBS friends could get away with such vile bile. But liberal crabs in the bucket, viciously trying to drag dissenters “of color� down, can no longer engage in hit-and-run with impunity. Conservatives on Twitter have changed the dynamic in an underappreciated, revolutionary way. The pushback against liberal political bigotry is bigger, stronger and swifter than it’s ever been. You can delete, but you cannot hide. Michelle Malkin is the author of “Culture of Corruption: Obama and his Team of Tax Cheats, Crooks and Cronies� (Regnery 2010). Her e-mail address is malkinblog@gmail.com. Dr. Jeffrey L. Davis, Dr. Thomas H. Detwiller, Dr. William N. McCann & Dr. David Biss
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THE WEIRS TIMES & THE COCHECO TIMES, Thursday, July 4, 2013
Summer Fun! The Best Summer Ever Starts Right Here!
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31
THE WEIRS TIMES & THE COCHECO TIMES, Thursday, July 4, 2013
Summer Fun!
Family camping in a farm setting on the Swift River Daily • Weekly • Monthly • Seasonal On-site trailer rentals from Mid May - Columbus Day
The Best Summer Ever Starts Right Here!
Family Oriented Free Baseball Event at Robbie Mills Sports Complex Belknap Landscape Co, Inc. (BLC) has chosen Friday, July 5th their 4rd Annual Area Appreciation Night at the Robbie Mills Memorial Stadium. This Independence Week event is a show of appreciation for the community’s patronage over BLC’s 25 years of landcare service. The company’s silver anniversary brings a new association with LandOpt. BLC remains independently owned and operated, now with access to a nationwide network of successful landscape service providers who share knowledge. The LandOpt Network provides continuous education, enabling BLC to provide improved client service levels. All attendees will not only receive FREE parking and admission to the game through Belknap Landscape’s website, Facebook page or coupons in area papers but, will enjoy host fun activities for the whole family. The Laconia Muskrats will be up against the New Bedford Bay Sox - game time is 6:30PM. Prizes, games, terrific prices on good food, all at a perfect local sports stadium will be enjoyed by those who attend. Those who know BLC Owner Hayden McLaughlin will see if he can still hit the mark with the ceremonial 1st pitch. BLC’s own stonemason Geoffrey Nixon will sing the National Anthem and later lead the crowd in “Take Me Out To The Ballpark”. The Belknap Landscape equipment fleet will be on display beyond the fence, becoming popular targets for Muskrat batters. BLC marketing manager Dale Squires said “Come to the July 5th Muskrats
194 Depot Rd. Tamworth, NH 800-274-8031 www.tamworthcamping.com
CALL NOW TO RESERVE YOUR CAMPSITE FOR FOURTH OF JULY WEEKEND!!
Town Parade, Family Day & Fireworks!
BBQ sauce for when taste matters... ...and taste
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Available locally at these fine businesses: MEREDITH: Meredith Center Store; So Little Thyme (Main St.); Divine Inspirations (Rt. 3) CENTER HARBOR: EM Heaths Supermarket MOULTONBORO: Old Country Store PLYMOUTH: Chase Street Market
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h c i w d n r a i a S F e h T
game for terrific baseball and bonus chances to win some terrific landscape related prizes, from beach buckets to BLC t-shirts to hemlock trees. Squires asked that attendees look for the “The Belknap Dugout”, a pop-up tent, for entry forms and raffle tickets for such prizes, including sports memorabilia from Green Monster Sports in Tanger Outlets-Tilton. Squires added “Folks need to stay close by the home team stands, as all the valuable prizes will be awarded at the game. Plus, fans will see the enormous Green Monster replica scoreboard, built with donated labor by members of the Lakes Region Builders & Remodelers Association (LRBRA) with support from Belknap Landscape, an LRBRA Member company.” Adding, “It’s a bit of Fenway conveniently
located at the heart of the Lakes Region.” Let the kids loose in the safe, brightly lit adjacent soccer fields, chase foul balls and enjoy airfilled bouncy houses. Enjoy discounted “Belknap Burritos” from Laconia’s Burrito Me and enjoy watching competitive collegiate level baseball as the Muskrats play New Bedford Bay Sox. The home games are played at Robbie Mills Field on Meredith Center Road in Laconia. Belknap Landscape Company is a Lakes Region family owned ecofriendly business, providing landcare services since 1988. Call 524 2798 for details on the Laconia Muskrats. To find out more about Belknap Landscape Company, please visit belknaplandscape.com or contact Dale Squires at 603- 455-1594.
October 12th, 13th & 14th Columbus Day Weekend!
of Route 113 & 109 - Center Sandwich, NH For more Junction information call (603) 284-7062 and visit our website at
www.thesandwichfair.com
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THE WEIRS TIMES & THE COCHECO TIMES, Thursday, July 4, 2013
Celebrating our 40th Year!
ery In the Laconia City Hall Parking Lot Open Ev AY Local Farmers & Producers • Unique Gifts • Organics SATURD ON Homemade Baked Goods • Meats • Seafood • Bread • Eggs •Herbs • Crafts • Bath Products • Dog Treats • Candles & 8AM - NO • Honey & Maple Syrup • Pies • Jams & Jellies Now mthbreur Incense We Accept SNAP / EBT & Credit Cards te p Se www.laconiafarmersmarket.com
Summer Fun! The Best Summer Ever Starts Right Here!
New Hampshire Boat Museum Hosts Kids’ First Programs July 6th
WOLFEBORO - The New Hampshire Boat Museum is offering a series of programs for kids the first Saturday in July and August. The next Kids’ First Program will be on Saturday July 6th with “Aquatic Critters” from 10 am-noon. The cost to participate is $3 for members’ children and grandchildren; $5 for non-members’ children and grandchildren. This “Pay One Price” hands-on program is for July 11th - 14th, 2013 at the gate for kids ages 5-12 (children Midway by under age 8 must be acadmission & rides Kavanaugh Amusements companied by an adult). each day Class size is limited, so Novelty events including Entertainment Nightly pre-reservation is reegg toss, pie eating, watermelon Thurs, Fri, & Sat quired. Call the Museum seed spitting, etc. and Sun at 10am ............................................ at 569-4554 or sign up ................................. horse and oxen pulling on-line at www.nhbm. Staff from the Squam Lake Natural Science Center will lead New this year — A GRAND PARADE • farmer org under Programs and a program at the NH Boat Museum Thursday July 11th olympics • pig calling • 4-H events Events. Big Rig Show & Shine and exhibits • car and truck show • Kids can spend a fun- critters are essential for open daily to the pub4X4 RACING • tractor pulls followed by filled morning at the NH all life on our planet. lic for the 2013 season Touch-a-Truck judging GREAT FOOD! Boat Museum learning Following the presen- through Monday, Octofor the little ones! midway rides & games a b o u t a n i m a l s f o u n d tation, kids will go on ber 14. Hours are 10amGordon “Doc” Carpenter Memorial along New Hampshire’s a scavenger hunt with 4pm Monday through Horseshoe Tournament at 10 a.m. Saturday l a k e s . S t a f f f r o m t h e staff looking for signs of Saturday, and Sundays South Hiram Rd., South Hiram, Maine Squam Lake Natural Sci- animals along the town 12noon-4pm. The MuJust minutes from Rt. 16 on Rt. 25... Follow signs for Kezar Falls ence Center will bring hiking path behind the seum is a not-for-profit several live animals and Museum. Visit www.OssipeeValleyFair.com for Schedule & Directions focusing on New Hampwill teach how aquatic Museum Director, Lisa shire’s boating and fresh S i m p s o n L u t t s s a y s , water heritage. It is locat“This program will be a ed at 399 Center Street, fun way for kids to learn Wolfeboro Falls, 2 miles about the wide variety from downtown Wolfeof aquatic life in New boro in the former Allen Hampshire. We’re thrilled “A” Resort dance hall/ to be teaming up with the theater building, For furDESIGN ▪ PERMIT ▪ CONSTRUCT Squam Lake staff on this ther information contact kid-friendly program that the Museum at 603-569SEASONAL DOCKS will teach youngsters 4554, museum@nhbm. HEWITT DOCKS GREAT NORTHERN DOCK® how to be good stewards org, www.nhbm.org or CRANK-UP DOCKS of nature.” via Facebook. Looking ahead, the MuPERMANENT DOCKS seum will offer “Let’s Go Fishing”, Friday August CUSTOM SOLUTIONS 2 from 5 pm-8 pm and DOCK ACCESSORIES Saturday August 3 from 8 am-4 pm; and Let’s Go DOCK HARDWARE Fishing for Young Ones, Saturday, August 3 from 10 am - Noon. WE’VE MOVED! Stop by our new location 1 Mile North of Funspot. For further information call the New Hampshire 25 Daniel Webster Highway, Meredith, NH Boat Museum at 569603.293.4000 docksource.com 4554. The New Hampshire Boat Museum is
Enjoy Your Waterfront!
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THE WEIRS TIMES & THE COCHECO TIMES, Thursday, July 4, 2013
Summer Fun!
Scenic Vintage Boat Rides on lake Winnipesaukee
The Best Summer Ever Starts Right Here!
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Area Appreciation Night July 5th BLC will be taking over the Robie Mills Stadium with our employees and families, clients and vendor guests! Come join us and see the Muskrats take on the New Bedford Bay Sox!
Bring in this ad for your
FREE TICKET!
Unbelievable Prizes Go od F The r o F From Green Monster s e Grea ood At Gam Family t Pric e Sports at Tanger Outlet es Whol
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Join us for some INCREDIBLE BASEBALL ACTION! Admit ALL!
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We Turn Dreamscapes into Landscapes Muskrats! www.belknaplandscape.com •1-800-928-2798
Wright Museum of WWII History
NOW OPEN FOR THE 2013 SEASON!! Preserving and Sharing the Stories of America’s Greatest Generation for Generations to Come... Engaging exhibits illustrating
Preserving & Sharing The Stories of America’s Greatest Generation For Generations to Come... 1940s home life and a vast
collection of fully operational military vehicles bring to life the American World War II experience.
One (1) Free Admission with From the Home Front •••• To The Front Lines One (1) Paying Adult or Senior Bring This Coupon And Recieve
Open 7 Days a Week May 1- October 31 Open Sundays February - April Mon-Sat 10am-4pm • Sun Noon-4pm
Open Every Day For The Season
77 Center Street, Wolfeboro, NH UPCOMING SPECIAL EVENTS AT THE MUSEUM WTBG Monday – Saturday, 10am-4pm receive free admission to the TUESDAY NIGHT AT THE CRUISE INTO THE WRIGHT – museum. Visit our website or WRIGHT LECTURE SERIES Aug. 24th from 10am to 2pm Sunday, Noon-4pm
603-569-1212
77 Center Street, Wolfeboro, NH • www.WrightMuseum.org ADMISSION RATES:
Museum Members - Free Adults $10.00 • Children (5-17) $6.00 / (4 and under) Free All Military and Seniors (60 and over) $8.00 There is a 10% AAA discount available on normal admission fees. Please present AAA Card for discount.
begins June 11th and continues every Tues. through August 13th. Doors open at 6pm, lectures begin at 7pm. BLUE STAR MUSEUM PROGRAM - May 27th through September 2nd • Active Duty and Reservists and up to 5 family members
www.arts.gov/bluestarmuseums
FATHER’S DAY – June 16th • Dad’s attend free when accompanied by a paying family member! FAMILY DAY – July 14th from 11am to 3pm. • Rides in authentic WWII vehicles – Live music – Cookout
• Antique and Classic Automobile Cruise-In • Featuring food available for purchase by MacDaddy’s Rollin’ Smoke BBQ
www.macdaddysrollinsmokebbq.com
ANNUAL FALL GOLF TOURNAMENT – September 24th at Bald Peak
603-569-1212 • www.WrightMuseum.org • 77 Center Street, Wolfeboro, NH
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THE WEIRS TIMES & THE COCHECO TIMES, Thursday, July 4, 2013
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THE WEIRS TIMES & THE COCHECO TIMES, Thursday, July 4, 2013
Summer Fun! The Best Summer Ever Starts Right Here!
Loon Preservation Committee to Host 2nd Annual “Yakking for Loons” Kayak-a-thon The Barnstormers Professional Summer Theatre
8 Shows in 8 Weeks • Tamworth, NH A New Hampshire Tradition since 1931
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contact Lin O’Bara at lobara@loon.org or by calling 603-476-LOON. We look forward to seeing you on the water! The Loon Preservation Committee, a non-profit organization, works to preserve loons and their habitats in New Hampshire through monitoring, research, management and education.
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under 18 years of age must be accompanied by an adult. Registration deadline is July 9th. Co-chairing the event are LPC members and neighbors on Lake Winnipesaukee, Linda Allen and Joanne Chesley. Their love for paddling and their resident loons prompted them to approach LPC with this great event and we are thrilled to add it to our summer schedule. For more information about “Yakking for Loons”
July 9~13 Book by
Terrence McNally Music & Lyrics by
David Yazbek
M
Dust off your kayak and join the Loon Preservation Committee (LPC) for the 2nd Annual “Yakking for Loons” kayak-a-thon to be held on Friday, July 12th. Paddlers will meet at Lee’s Mill Landing, just down the road from The Loon Center on Lake Winnipesaukee, at 8:00 a.m. Choose between the 2.5 mile “Ganzy” course or the 4.6 mile “Green’s Basin” course, or do BOTH! Don’t have a kayak? You can rent one along with a paddle and lifejacket for only $20, courtesy of Wild Meadow Canoes and Kayaks. Sponsoring this year’s event are Curt’s Caterers and Irving Oil. Registration is $10/person and includes a lunch generously prepared and donated by Curt’s Caterers. Yakkers can solicit additional sponsors, if they choose, with all proceeds benefiting the Loon Preservation Committee. Paddlers who raise $50 or more will receive an LPC “Yakking for Loons” long-sleeved t-shirt, and there’s a prize for most funds raised. Registration and pledge forms can be downloaded from LPC’s website: www.loon.org/ yakking.php. Children
Y
t Show! O u r Firs
L What does it take to take L U it all off? Desperation, guts, and
T
F a little help from your friends. This E H modern, crowd-pleasing musical gives
the guys a chance to be the sex objects.
Sponsored on behalf of the Tamworth Farmers Market
miss . . . t ’ n o A nd d
July 16~20
by Marc Camoletti Three girlfriends? Air hostesses who come and go? Nice work if you can get it, but sometimes ‘nice work’ turns out to be more than you bargained for . . . A hilarious tour de farce.
Sponsored by Meredith Bay Colony Club CURTAIN: 7:30 PM Tues – Thurs, 8:00 PM Fri & Sat Saturday Matinee 2 PM
Friday Night is Family Night Half-price tickets for family groups (one person 18 or under) purchased on the day of the show. For more information, please contact the Box Office.
For tickets, call the Box Office: 603-323-8500 or order online: www.barnstormerstheatre.org
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THE WEIRS TIMES & THE COCHECO TIMES, Thursday, July 4, 2013
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Summer Fun! The Best Summer Ever Starts Right Here!
Artist’s Name Artist’s Name
League of NH Craftsmen Meredith Retail Gallery ĂœĂœĂœÂ°Â˜Â…VĂ€>vĂŒĂƒÂ°ÂœĂ€}É iĂ€i`ÂˆĂŒÂ…ĂŠUĂŠĂˆĂ¤ĂŽÂ‡Ă“Ă‡Â™Â‡Ă‡Â™Ă“Ă¤ League of NH Craftsmen Meredith Retail Gallery ĂœĂœĂœÂ°Â˜Â…VĂ€>vĂŒĂƒÂ°ÂœĂ€}É iĂ€i`ÂˆĂŒÂ…ĂŠUĂŠĂˆĂ¤ĂŽÂ‡Ă“Ă‡Â™Â‡Ă‡Â™Ă“Ă¤
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Lake Winnipesaukee’s Premier Marina & Beach Club
Come by Boat or Car to the new Akwa Marina Beach Bar! Open 11am - 10pm • 95 Centenary Ave., Weirs Beach, N.H.
603.231.6002 • 603.968.5533 • www.akwamarina.com
37
THE WEIRS TIMES & THE COCHECO TIMES, Thursday, July 4, 2013
Summer Fun!
+6-: Ĺż "26"5*$ $3*55&34 ,*%4Ĺš 803,4)01 Ĺż ". 1.
The Best Summer Ever Starts Right Here!
Saturday Art Workshops For Ages 8 and Up At VynnArt in Meredith Explore a New and Interesting Topic Each Week with Kimberly J.B. Smith
Art Educator Kimberly J. B. Smith, also known as “Art Girl� in the Weirs Times and Cocheco Times, is presenting a series of art classes for students ages 8 and up at VynnArt Gallery in Meredith, Saturdays from 1-3pm. Each week will offer a new and interesting topic that students can explore. “I am very excited about this opportunity to bring these programs to VynnArt,� said Kimberly, a resident of Laconia. “You don’t have to be an artist to be an artist and these programs will give everyone an opportunity to truly express themselves. I welcome anyone from age 8 to 98.� The first class will be on Saturday, July 13th with “Surrealist Paper Puppets� where you can find inspiration from Surrealism and artists like DaVinci and Picasso while creating a collage puppet with moving parts. Kimberly recently published an article in “Arts and Activities,� the nations’s leading art education magazine, on how she teaches others in making these puppets. The cost for the classes will be $30 and will include supplies. Each class will be limited to eight students so it is suggested that you register early. All students will also receive a 20% discount on supplies at VynnArt. Kimberly’s other classes this summer will be: Saturday, July 20th – “Nature Mandala – Local Floral and Fauna.� Using a radical design theme and local inspiration, make a mandala and add color using a variety of media.
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Kimberly J.B. Smith, aka “Art Girl� will be teaching a series of fun and innovative art classes at VynnArt in Meredith on Saturdays from 1-3pm. Saturday, August 10th – “Gyotaku (Japanese Fish Prints) & Story In A Story.� Illustrate a Russian Folk Tale, The Golden Fish, using mixed media and a Gyotaku print of the golden fish too! Saturday, August 17th – “Altered Books and Collage.� Give life to a new discarded book! Add collage, paint, printing, windows, doors, literature and more to your very own altered books using collage, frottage and more. Saturday, August 24th – “Surrealism Techniques.� Creativity runs amok with surrealistic juxtapositions, mind expanding games like Exquisite Corpse and more! Create one or more surrealistic works of art. These classes run from 1-3pm. To sign up for a class call Vynnie Hale at VynnArt at 603-279-0557. Email to info@vynnart.com. VynnArt is located at 30 Main Street in Meredith, NH.
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THE WEIRS TIMES & THE COCHECO TIMES, Thursday, July 4, 2013
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NH Music Festival Concerts Returns To Celebrate Old Favorites, Recent Works Thursday Night Programs Start July 11th PLYMOUTH - T h e N e w Hampshire Music Festival’s Orchestral Concerts begin on Thursday, July 11, giving audiences the chance to experience selections from both wellloved repertoire and engaging recent works. This season, the first under Music Director Donato Cabrera, the Orchestral Series will draw upon programs from the early days of the Festival and celebrate the anniversaries of Britten and Wagner. The Festival Orchestra will also perform works by Mozart, Beethoven, Handel and Vivaldi, alongside pieces by Stravinsky, de Falla, and an East Coast premiere by American composer Mark Volkert. The Festival also wel-
comes back its Conductor Laureate Paul Polivnick and Director of Choirs Joel Johnson, who, along with several Orchestra members, are celebrating their 50th summer season with the Festival. “I am really looking forward to continuing the Festival’s tradition of great classical music in New Hampshire,” said Cabrera. “I truly believe the Festival can be a place to enjoy music you know and a place to challenge yourself, perhaps hearing something you like that you’ve never heard before.” Concerts are held in the Hanaway Theatre at the Silver Center for the Arts at Plymouth State University in Plymouth,
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DROP IN LEAGUE is open to all bowlers, adults & kids ages 12 & up. Bowl 3 games. $10. Averages will be kept. Not required to bowl every week. Relax and have fun!
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NH. The Thursday, July 11 concert will include: Mendelssohn - Hebrides Overture; Mozart - Violin Concerto No. 4, Malcolm Stewart, violin; Stravinsky - Dumbarton Oaks and Haydn Symphony No. 85. The Thursday, July 18 concert will include: Verdi String Quartet (arranged for String Orchestra by Drew); Britten - Variations on a Theme of Frank Bridge and Tchaikovsky - Serenade for Strings. For a complete schedule of the New Hampshire Music Festival’s 2013 season, visit www. nhmf.org. Tickets for all Plymouth performances are on sale now and are available at www.silver. plymouth.edu or by calling (603) 535-3300.
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THE WEIRS TIMES & THE COCHECO TIMES, Thursday, July 4, 2013
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THE WEIRS TIMES & THE COCHECO TIMES, Thursday, July 4, 2013
sowell from 9
when it comes to thinking that they ought to take a whole spectrum of decisions out of citizens’ hands, and impose the government’s decisions on them. Maybe the reason for the New York Yankees’ low batting averages has something to do with the fact that so many of their batters seem to be swinging for the fences, even when a single would score the winning run. President Obama’s denial of knowledge about the various scandals in his administration that are starting to come to light suggests that his titles should now include Innocent-Bystander-in-Chief. It has long been my belief that the sight of a goodlooking woman lowers a man’s IQ by at least 20 points. A man who doesn’t happen to have 20 points he can spare can be in big trouble. When Attorney General Eric Holder argued that a “path to citizenship” for
illegal immigrants was a “civil right” and a “human right,” that epitomized the contempt for the public’s intelligence which has characterized so much of what has been said and done by the Obama administration. You know you are old when waitresses call you “dear.” Although many people have been surprised and disappointed by Barack Obama, it is hard to think of a president whose policies were more predictable from his history, however radically different those policies are from his rhetoric. When any two groups have different behavior or performance, that plain fact can be turned upside down and twisted to say that whatever criterion revealed those differences has had a “disparate impact” on one of the groups. In other words, the criterion is blamed for an injustice to those who failed to meet the standard. Have you heard any gun control advocate even try
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to produce hard evidence that tighter gun control laws reduce murder rates? Does anyone seriously believe that people who are prepared to defy the laws against murder are going to obey laws against owning guns or large capacity magazines? I may be among the few people who want Attorney General Eric Holder to keep his job -- at least until the 2014 elections. Holder epitomizes what is wrong with the Obama administration. He is essentially Barack Obama without the charm, so it should be easier for the voters to see through his lies and corruption. Despite political differences, it is hard not to feel sorry for White House press secretary Jay Carney, for all the absurdities his job requires him to say with a straight face. What is he going to do when this administration is over? Wear a disguise, change his name or be put into a witness protection program?
Thomas Sowell is a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305. His website is www.tsowell.com. mail boat from 4
malities. Sanger would undoubtedly be pleased if she could visit our modern world from whatever netherworld she inhabits, to learn that the abortion of African American babies is taking place at the rate of four times that of whites. Adolf Hitler also embraced eugenics and his views led to the murder of millions of Jews, gypsies and countless others whom he deemed unfit to live. Dr Gosnell, himself an African American, allegedly served a disproportionate number of clients who are African American or other minorities. In a recent speech, in which he addressed Planned Parenthood, our first African American president included the words “God bless Planned Parenthood.” How ironic. Why does abortion take
place anyway? The short answer is that unwanted unborn, almost born, and in a few cases ,just born babies are disposed of for a variety of reasons, the main ones being that children are a big inconvenience to some mothers who would prefer to work, pursue education, prevent their boyfriends from rejecting them, resent the expense of raising a child. Liberal thinking tells us that in making the choice to kill your unborn child you are merely exercising your “reproductive freedom “and controlling your own body”. All of us should thank our mothers for not making that “choice”. The surviving Boston Bomber, when asked about the deaths caused by the recent terrorist event said that they were ‘collateral damage.’ I assume that those are the beliefs of Margaret Sanger, Adolf Hitler, Planned Parenthood , the pro aborts and our president. Ann McGarity Tamworth, NH.
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THE WEIRS TIMES & THE COCHECO TIMES, Thursday, July 4, 2013
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42 patenaude from 3
that would take us. Les Ecureuils is a beautiful B&B run by Mike and Chantal. Chantal was born in Valreas and her 91 year old mother still resides in the family home. Chantal married Mike and they raised their children and lived in London until Mike retired from the police. Mike told Chantal if she lived in London with him until he retired he would give her the rest of her life in France. A lovely story and silently we were counting our blessings that we had found a wonderful place to stay where the owners spoke English. After a decent night’s sleep we enjoyed Chantal’s coffee and the won-
THE WEIRS TIMES & THE COCHECO TIMES, Thursday, July 4, 2013
derful spread of her homemade jams and bread and we lingered long at breakfast. This was our routine every morning before meeting our friends to ride. Silvi, Dieter, Martin and Gabbi are my ski friends from Germany. They spend their June holiday cycling in France. They tow their caravans behind their cars from Germany to France and stay at the nicest campgrounds. This is the second time Kris and I have joined them. They like cycling in France best because there are many small roads with little to no car traffic on them and yes the landscape is beautiful too. Our first ride was to the medieval town of Nyon
Mount Ventoux, not far in the distance. Our last evening, we invited our friends to have dinner with us at Les Ecureuils. Chantal prepared us a fabulous meal featuring veal and fresh string beans while Mike poured wine from their favorite local vineyard. We shared stories and much laughter late into the evening. While our friends packed up their caravans to move west to Saint Jean to ride the Silvi with more lavender, more vineyards and another fine C e v e n n e s M o u n t a i n s , Kris and I took off early view of Mount Ventoux. to be tourists. We visited where there is a Roman bridge that spans the river Eygues. Amazingly. this high bridge opened in 1409 (yes, 604 years ago) and I watched a car
Silvi, Kris, Gabbi and Dieter admire the soap and lavender for sale at the market day in Nyon, France. go over it before I rode my bicycle across. We enjoyed Nyon’s market day. Such great fun seeing the local fresh food and wares displayed out in the open air. I bought lavender soap. Kris bought an olive dish. The city is high above the river and we rode downhill while following the river up stream for many miles. We pedaled past vineyards, olive trees and many small villages. Everywhere roses were in bloom. The lavender was just starting to have a hint of color, we were a few weeks too early to see it in full bloom. For three days we cycled in the area, riding about 50 miles each day. Our routes took us over mountains and through lush fields and vineyards. We could see the Giant of Provence,
the town of Orange; after finding a free parking space on a side street we walked everywhere. We visited the Theatre Antique d’Orange, a well preserved Roman Theater and took in the panoramic view from the top of the hill and down into the theater. Concerts are still performed in the theater. We also trekked to the Triumphal Arch and marveled at its heroic battles themes. These monuments are a recognized World Heritage Site. We continued our driving adventure swinging through Chateauneufdu-Pape (super wine country), a crazy detour over a hydro-electric dam due to a bridge closure and a wild ride on a narrow twisty road where we passed more cyclists See patenaude on 43
43
THE WEIRS TIMES & THE COCHECO TIMES, Thursday, July 4, 2013
Kris and Gabbi, Parc National des Cevennes, Col l’Asclier elevation 906 meters, the Robert Louis Stevenson Trail crosses here by the statue of a shepard holding a small lamb. Martin, Kris and Gabbi riding up another pretty hill. up it). Kris and I happily followed Gabbi and Martin over hilly routes reaching elevations just under 1000 meters. Oh, what landscapes! Mountaintops dyed bright yellow by flower blossoms, grassy hill sides where goats and sheep grazed and gorgeous old stone farmhouses that people still inhabit. Roses clung to the sides of the houses. The old forests have red pines, oak and chestnut trees. We often found
Valreas, France, Yours Truly in front of Olive trees that are hundreds of years old. patenuade from 42
than cars from the center of Ales to our destination in Saint Jean. Our friends once again were set up at a beautiful campsite this time next to a river. The next three nights we spent at the Hotel Les Bellugues and during the day we cycled routes around and over the Cevennes Mountains. We crossed the Robert Louis Stevenson Trail that follows his 1878 walk that he chronicled in his book, “Travels with a Donkey in the Cevennes.” The Cevennes National Park has many mountains and its highest is Mount Aigoual, 1565 meters (Silvi and Dieter rode
fountains with potable water next to old stone churches. We passed small vineyards. At the end of the hot day of riding we swam in the river. Paradise! Time travels too quickly and soon we had a plane to catch. Thankfully, the drive back to Lyon was uneventful except for the insanity of trying to find the way into the rental car return lot. The clerk at the desk clearly couldn’t believe I was returning the car undamaged. We rode the TVG and took the shuttle to
our airport hotel. At 8pm, instead of settling into our room we took a cab into Paris. We walked from the Notre Dame Cathedral all the way to L’Arc de Triomphe and then we took a boat ride on the River Seine to enjoy the lights of the city and of the Eiffel Tower. Don’t tell anyone but we stayed out until two in the morning. Have Fun!
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44
THE WEIRS TIMES & THE COCHECO TIMES, Thursday, July 4, 2013
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Apartment Rentals Adult Living
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THE WEIRS TIMES & THE COCHECO TIMES, Thursday, July 4, 2013
Sudoku
Magic Maze LINKED TOGETHER
Do you have a clever caption for this photograph? Send your captions with your name, phone number and home town to us by mail to: Attn: Caption This, The Weirs Times, P.O. Box 5458, Weirs, NH 03247, online at www.TheWeirsTimes.com or by email to contest@weirs.com or by fax to 603-3667301. Weekly winners will be chosen by our editorial staff and will be entered into a prize drawing for a new Digital Camera courtesy of Spectrum Photo. For all your digital photo needs stop by their store in Wolfeboro, call phone 877-FILM PRO or visit them online at www.SpectrumPhotoOnline.com. The prize winner for the 07/04/13-12/26/13 contest period will be selected by random drawing. All captions become property of The Weirs Times and may be used for marketing and promotional purposes. Photo #445 - 07/04/13 - entry deadline 07/18/13
Salome’s Stars Horoscope ARIES (March 21 to April 19) Don’t be Sheepish about asking questions and demanding answers. You not only gain needed information, but also respect for your steadfast search for the truth. TAURUS (April 20 to May 20) A money problem that shows up early in the week is expeditiously resolved by savvy Bovines who know how to turn a momentary financial lapse into a monetary gain. GEMINI (May 21 to June 20) It’s a good time to shed negative energy-draining forces and develop a positive approach to handling current, as well as upcoming, personal and/or professional situations. CANCER (June 21 to July 22) Your urge to do your best on a current task is commendable. But don’t let it become all-consuming. Spend some spiritually restorative time with those who love you. LEO (July 23 to August 22) This could be a good time for all you Leos and Leonas to
ACROSS 1 Oklahoma tribe 4 Placed in position 9 Restrict 14 Hair hides it 19 Sing barbershopstyle 21 Make - for (run to) 22 Threesome 23 Large tanks for marine life 24 Death, in Venice 25 Jul. 4 cookout 26 Los Angeles tourist draw 29 Blvd. crosser 30 Eternally, to bards 31 Fleur-de- 32 Cushy class 35 Military bigwig’s garb 44 Early Beatle Sutcliffe 45 “Get - writing” 47 Maui necklace 48 “L.A. Confidential” novelist James 49 Gossip sheet 55 Carl Sagan’s sci. 56 “Born Free” feline 57 Nike rival 58 Rejuvenation location 59 “There’s - Out Tonight” 60 Eye part 62 Grant, Tan, and Carter 64 Letters after zetas 66 Hunters’ gp. 67 The Best Picture is its culmination 72 Diary writer Anais 74 Lead-in for byte or hertz 75 Shuttle org.
take your bows for your recent achievements and then go off to enjoy some fun times with your prides and joys. VIRGO (August 23 to September 22) A negative response to a well-intentioned suggestion could communicate a sense of distrust you might later find hard to refute. Think carefully before reacting.
some to decidedly troublesome.
AQUARIUS (January 20 to February 18) A bid to use your workplace dispute-settling skills in another situation is tempting. But be careful: You might not have all the facts you’ll need if you agree to do it.
SCORPIO (October 23 to November 21) Your curiosity might be resented by some. But those who know you will support your penchant for never settling for less than the truth. So stay with it.
PISCES (February 19 to March 20) That sense of self-doubt is so untypical of you, you should have no qualms in shaking it off. Remind yourself of all you’ve done and can do, and then do it again.
SAGITTARIUS (November 22 to December 21) A pesky situation from the past recurs, albeit in an altered form. Deal with it promptly before it can go from merely irk-
BORN THIS WEEK: Your ability to charm others without sacrificing sincerity is what makes people want to follow your leadership.
DOWN 1 “Pick me! Pick me!” 2 Gordita kin 3 Sportscaster Hershiser 4 MacBook Air alternative
OUR PICK FOR BEST CAPTION ENTRY...
CAPRICORN (December 22 to January 19) Don’t wait too long to submit your proposals after giving them a last look-over. If necessary, you should be able to defend any portion called into question.
LIBRA (September 23 to October 22) Your loving attention comforts a family member who is feeling a bit out of sorts. But be careful to prioritize your time so you don’t neglect your work duties.
76 Cosmetician Rubinstein 79 Bone: Prefix 81 “Walk- - welcome” 83 Rescind 86 Toward shelter, to a sailor 87 Israel’s Golda 88 June 14 “honoree” 91 Nautical chart 93 Feel lousy 94 Protein-rich bean, to a Brit 95 Wallach of film 96 Loose celestial grouping 101 Misplaces 103 Rocker Petty 104 Rebuffing responses 105 Cool, in the 1940s 106 Theme of this puzzle 116 Western holler 118 Bring down 119 Exact same 120 Soup utensil 121 Warning 122 1981-89, politically 123 Schmoes 124 Prescription bottle data 125 Old-style fax 126 Glistening grass stuff
Photo #442 Winning Captions:
5 Bedazzled 6 Beginner: Var. 7 Basso Pinza 8 Anesthetize 9 Hedy of “Algiers” 10 Major celeb 11 Author Twain 12 Analogy part 13 Viral illness 14 Fourth-cen. Greek prelate called “the Great” 15 Pack tight 16 Million or billion suffix 17 Test facility 18 “Stat!” 20 Indian Ocean archipelago 27 Teeny-tiny 28 Less coarse 32 Oleate, e.g. 33 “... - told by an idiot” 34 Not trivial 35 Literature Nobelist AndrŽ 36 Feminizing suffix 37 Swiss mountain 38 Rural tracts 39 Didn’t guzzle 40 “The Flim- - Man” (1967 film) 41 “Citizen Kane” director 42 Helicopter part 43 Loy of films 46 Angry lecture 50 Not of the clergy 51 Auction Web site 52 Grown girl 53 To the heavens 54 Partakes of 59 Tennis pro Arthur 61 Western mil. alliance 63 Postpaid encls.
65 Mary-Kate Olsen’s twin 68 Land o’ Blarney 69 Raving type 70 Captivated 71 Royal name of Norway 72 Chinese menu notice 73 “- Dark Stranger” (1946 spy film) 77 1960 Wimbledon winner Fraser 78 Sponsorship 80 Writer Bombeck 82 Clic - (Bic pen brand) 84 Make lighter 85 - below cost 88 Author Sinclair 89 July third? 90 Store receipt add-on 92 Not merely words 97 “That pleases me” 98 Takes guns from, e.g. 99 Souse 100 Casual cotton top 102 Decide to join 105 Neolithic British Isles monument 106 Hammer-wielding god 107 Fish piercer 108 Unaided 109 “- ever thus” 110 “Take one” 111 “Zip- - -Doo-Dah” 112 Cutlet meat 113 Got 100 on 114 Hard to find 115 Picnic dish 116 Financial daily, briefly 117 Gibbon, e.g.
Runners Up Captions: The Farkle sisters show off what they found in the sand with their new metal detector. -David Barth, Laconia, NH. The twins weren’t in love with Oscar, but kept him around as their trophy boyfriend. -Rick Kaufman, Dover, NH.
In a last minute edit to The Wizard of Oz, the scene where the Tin Man gets a second wish was deleted. -Carl Gunderson, Wrentham, MA.
With the island populated only with healthy women, TinMan had no problem getting dates. -Paul Oman, Pittsfield, NH.
Contest Sponsored by Spectrum Photo, downtown Wolfeboro, NH 1-877-FILM PRO
www.SpectrumPhotoOnline.com
Puzzle Clue: LUMINARIES ACROSS
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THE WEIRS TIMES & THE COCHECO TIMES, Thursday, July 4, 2013 smith from 7
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approaches the stage, a palpable wave of appreciation sweeps toward him. For some time, he has sounded the alarm of encroaching tyranny. The crowd listens attentively, reflecting on the words of a common man who continues to march resolutely to a different drummer. Today, individuals such as Beck and author and talk show host Mark Levin fill Revere-like roles. Levin has called upon all of us to become Paul and Paulette Reveres. The calling of our generation is to save our republic. If you are alarmed by growing federal contempt for the Constitution, states rights and the rule of law, join with the Democrats, Republicans, Independents, Libertarian and recently politically-born citizens in ourLiberty Movement. Help us fight to replace this massive Amnesty II bill with legislation mandating enforcement of the border control measures called for under our current law. Then, work with us to ensure that generous time is given (no more emergencies) to examining other measures, such as ending the anchor baby policy, which compounds the problem of illegal immigration. Demand that our representatives commit to addressing only one or two key issues in each bill.
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THE WEIRS TIMES & THE COCHECO TIMES, Thursday, July 4, 2013
B.C.
by Parker & Hart
48
THE WEIRS TIMES & THE COCHECO TIMES, Thursday, July 4, 2013
Hillyer Festival Orchestra & Guest Artist Rebecca Robbins In Wolfeboro Great Waters Music Festival is pleased to announce that the Hillyer Festival Orchestra, conducted by Dirk Hillyer with guest artist Rebecca Robbins, will be performing a Broadway Spectacular Pops concert on Friday evening, July 12 ,at 8pm at the Kingswood Arts Center. This will be a fun-filled evening with something for everyone including music from such shows as Music Man, Cats, Annie, Chicago, Hello Dolly, and Phantom of the Opera amongst others. Rebecca Robbins is a singer, actress, and, most importantly, a cancer survivor. A mere four months after making her Broadway debut, Rebecca was diagnosed with stage II Hodgkin’s Lymphoma. She underwent months of treatment and is currently cancer free and enjoying every second of her life on stage and off. Classically trained, Rebecca studied voice at The Curtis Institute of Music in Philadelphia under the direction of Mikael Eliasen. She also received her Bachelor of Arts degree from the University of Charleston where she studied voice with her friend and mentor, Renay Conlin.
This past fall Rebecca joined the Broadway cast of The Phantom of the Opera. The Hillyer Festival orchestra (HFO) was founded in 1998 by (then) Mayor Peter Torrigan of Peabody, Massachusetts. Through his generous support and kind tutelage, the orchestra was commissioned to perform one Spring Pops Concert and one Holiday Concert each year. Since then the December Holiday concerts have extended to three sold-out evenings. Dirk Hillyer has been putting together musical groups since he was 12 years old. His various configurations consisted of folk singing groups, rock groups, children’s theater accompaniment and a very popular “Tijuana Brass” style band. He also joined a local classical orchestra when he was 13 years old which began a life’s interest in serious music along with pop. He has performed for Keith Lockhart, Carol Channing, Luciano Pavarotti, Anthony Newley, Bobby Vinton among others. To purchase tickets call 603-5697710 or go online to www.greatwaters.org.
ALL WEBER GRILLS Dirk Hillyer and his orchestra, ON along SALE! with Rebecca Robbins will OVER 30inMODELS be at the Kingswood Art Center Wolfeboro on Friday July 12th at 8pm.
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