The laconia daily sun, august 28, 2013

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U.S. ready to bomb Syria?

White House viewed as building the case for a military strike — Page 2

Wednesday, august 28, 2013

wednesday

Another possible drug overdose death being investigated, this one in Gilford

VOL. 14 nO. 60

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LRPA TV looks to give public broadcasting biz model a try By RogeR Amsden FOR THE LACONIA DAILY SUN

LACONIA — Lakes Region Public Access television will have a new look in the future — based on the Public Broadcasting model, relying on sponsorships, grants and even membership dues, rather than

fees assessed for each member community. Dale Eddy of Gilford, a member of the board of directors of LRPA, last night described the new model as fee for service and said it will greatly reduce the fees paid by member communities, many of whom have

opted to handle their own videotaping of public meetings. Eddy said the board is grappling with a number of changes, including those being negotiated in a new 10-year contract with MetroCast Cablevision, which will include a direct public access channel for each community. The

new contract will go into effect in January of 2014. LRPA is the public, educational and government (PEG) cable station serving central New Hampshire broadcast by MetroCast on channels 24, 25 and 26. It is a nonprofit see TV page 11

Back to school in Laconia

By gAil oBeR

THE LACONIA DAILY SUN

GILFORD — Police are investigating what could be the second drug-related death in town and fifth in the Lakes Region this year. Police said Adam P. Andrews, 30, formerly of 9 Sergeant Place #66 died sometime late Saturday night or early Sunday morning. “There is reason to believe this is a drug overdose and will be handled as such,” said Det. Sgt. Christopher Jacques, yesterday. He said Gilford Police and Fire Rescue personnel were called at 1:22 a.m. to the home for a report of man who was not conscious and not breathing. He said the caller noted that blood was coming from the victim’s mouth and CPR was in progress. Jacques said he couldn’t comments on any other specifics regarding Andrews’ death but said at a matter of policy all unexpected or unattended deaths are investigated. He said detectives see deaTH page 13

Elm Street School third graders Brenden (green shirt) and Joseph practice multiplication skills with Cuisenaire Rods under the direction of his teacher, Mr. Mercer, on the first day of school in Laconia on Tuesday. (Karen Bobotas/for the Laconia Daily Sun)

State tells Belmont that Gale School has historical significance By gAil oBeR

THE LACONIA DAILY SUN

CANTERBURY — Apparently, the empty Gale School is historically significant — at least to the state of New Hampshire’s Division of Historical Resources. According to a letter sent to the town on

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Page 2 — THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Wednesday, August 28, 2013

Facing death penalty, Fort Hood gunman won’t call witnesses or testify

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FORT HOOD, Texas (AP) — The Army psychiatrist who fatally shot 13 people at Fort Hood decided not to present any evidence during his trial’s penalty phase on Tuesday even though jurors are deciding whether to sentence him to death. Maj. Nidal Hasan rested his case without calling witnesses or testifying to counter the emotional testimony from victims’ relatives, who talked of eerily quiet homes, lost futures, alcoholism and the unmatched fear of hearing a knock on their front door. Prosecutors hope the testimony helps convince jurors to hand down a rare military death sentence against Hasan, who was convicted last week for the 2009 attack that also wounded more than 30 people at the Texas military base. The judge dismissed jurors after Hasan declined to put up a defense. But she then asked Hasan more than two dozen questions in rapid fire, affirming see FORT HOOD page 13

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U.S. readies rationale for possible strike against Syria WASHINGTON (AP) — The Obama administration tried to bolster its case Tuesday for possible military action against Syria within days, with intelligence agencies preparing to release intercepted communications aimed at proving Bashar Assad perpetrated a large-scale chemical weapons attack on civilians. “There’s no doubt who is responsible for this heinous use of chemical weapons in Syria: the Syrian regime,” Vice President Joe Biden said. The U.S. and international partners were unlikely to undertake military action before Thursday. That’s when British Prime Minister David Cameron will convene an emergency meeting of Parliament where lawmakers are expected to vote on a motion clearing the way for a British response to the alleged chemical weapons

attack. Obama and Cameron conferred on response plans Tuesday, their second known conversation in recent days. Administration officials argued that Assad’s actions posed a direct threat to U.S. national security, providing President Barack Obama with a potential legal justification for launching a strike without authorization from the United Nations or Congress. However, officials did not detail how the U.S. was directly threatened by an attack contained within Syria’s borders. Nor did they present concrete proof that Assad was responsible. “Allowing the use of chemical weapons on a significant scale to take place without a response would present a significant challenge to, threat to the United States’ national security,” White House spokes-

man Jay Carney said. Assad has denied using chemical weapons, calling the allegations “preposterous.” Obama is weighing a response focused narrowly on punishing Assad for violating international agreements that ban the use of chemical weapons, an act the president repeatedly has said would cross a “red line.” Officials said the goal was not to drive the Syrian leader from power or impact the broader trajectory of Syria’s bloody civil war, which is now in its third year. “The options we are considering are not about regime change,” Carney told reporters. According to U.S. officials, the most likely operation would be largely sea-based, with the strikes coming primarily from Navy warships in the Mediterranean Sea. Fighter jets often are deployed to monisee SYRIA page 9

CONCORD (AP) — Hospitals, nurses, doctors and other medical providers urged New Hampshire on Tuesday to expand Medicaid to an estimated 49,000 poor adults under the federal health care overhaul law. They told a special commission charged with making a recommendation to the Legislature by Oct. 15 that they are already treating many of the same people who would gain health insurance through expansion. Many go to hospital emergency rooms because they have no alternative now, they added.

“We see it both as a public health and economic imperative for our state,” said Henry Lipman, speaking for the New Hampshire Hospital Association. Lipman said a Lewin Group study done for the state last year used old information when it estimated hospitals would be better off financially if New Hampshire did not expand Medicaid. Americans for Prosperity, which opposes Medicaid expansion, had called attention to an analysis based on the Lewin study showing the providers would see a $45 million loss in net income if expansion is approved.

The providers said that expanding Medicaid would result in more cost-effective care to the poor. Dr. David Green of Concord Hospital said when people don’t have insurance they are more likely to wait until their illness is an emergency and seek costly emergency room care. The urology specialist said he may see a patient with an infection that could have been treated much sooner and for a fraction of the cost by a primary physician. Tess Kuenning, president and chief executive officer of Bi-State Primary Care see MEDICAID page 3

Medical providers urge expansion of Medicaid in N.H.

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THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Wednesday, August 28, 2013 — Page 3

Newly released photos show Marathon bomb suspect climbing out of hiding place BOSTON (AP) — Dramatic new photos show the Boston Marathon bombing suspect, his face bloodied, climbing out of a boat in a suburban backyard as heavily armed police officers wait for him to drop to the ground. The images were among those a state police officer provided last month to Boston Magazine, which published some then and more on Tuesday. Sgt. Sean Murphy took photos the April night police cornered Dzhokhar

Tsarnaev in a dry-docked boat in Watertown, just outside Boston. He wasn’t authorized to release the photos but said he was angry about a Rolling Stone magazine cover he felt glamorized Tsarnaev. The new photos include more shots of Tsarnaev coming out of the boat, his head bloody and a red laser trained on his head. They also show him dropping to the ground, where officers and medical personnel rushed to treat

from preceding page

under 18, pregnant women, senior citizens and people with disabilities. The expansion would add anyone under age 65 who earns up to 138 percent of federal poverty guidelines, which is about $15,000 for a single adult. States can choose to expand Medicaid as part of the new federal law, which will be implemented starting Jan. 1. That’s when an estimated $2.4 billion in federal funding the state would get over seven years would kick in. If New Hampshire were to expand the program, the federal government would pick up the full cost for the first three years and 90 percent over the long haul. States can withdraw from covering adults at any time without penalty. The commission was established as a compromise in the budget debate. Democratic Gov. Maggie Hassan and the Democratic-led House wanted to authorize Medicaid expansion in the budget bill, but the Republican-led Senate insisted on establishing a commission to study the issue first.

Association, estimated 35,000 of the 122,000 patients seen by the association’s community health centers are uninsured. Expanding Medicaid won’t tax the health care system as some fear by adding patients to doctors’ appointment calendars, she said. “These patients will not magically appear. Most are already in the system,” she said. State Rep. Jack Flanagan, a Republican from Brookline, sounded a note of caution. Flanagan said he understood peoples’ concerns, but he was not sure expanding Medicaid was the solution. He also said eventually New Hampshire taxpayers will have to pick up more of the cost. “I don’t know where we’re going to come up with the money. This may be the camel’s nose under the tent to an income tax,” he said. New Hampshire does not have a personal income tax. New Hampshire’s current Medicaid program covers low-income children, parents with nondisabled children

him. Other photos show tense federal, state and local police officials meeting in a command center and SWAT teams gathering in the streets earlier in the day. The surgeon who treated Tsarnaev after his capture said he had been shot through the face and had a fractured skull, among other injuries. Tsarnaev was wounded during a confrontation

with police a day after authorities released photos of him and his older brother as suspects in the deadly April 15 marathon bombing. Tsarnaev has pleaded not guilty to charges in the bombing, which killed three people and injured more than 260 others. His older brother, Tamerlan Tsarnaev, was killed following a gunbattle with police.

2 women injured in Laconia accident Two older women were taken to Lakes Region General Hospital yesterday afternoon after the driver lost control of her car and hit this telephone pole on Strafford Street in Laconia. Fire officials said the injuries appeared to be non life-threatening. (Laconia Daily Sun photo/Gail Ober)

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Page 4 — THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Wednesday, August 28, 2013

Pat Buchanan

Congress should veto Obama’s war plans “Congress doesn’t have a whole lot of core responsibilities,” said Barack Obama last week in an astonishing remark. For in the Constitution, Congress appears as the first branch of government. And among its enumerated powers are the power to tax, coin money, create courts, provide for the common defense, raise and support an army, maintain a navy and declare war. But, then, perhaps Obama’s contempt is justified. For consider Congress’ broad assent to news that Obama has decided to attack Syria, a nation that has not attacked us and against which Congress has never authorized a war. Why is Obama making plans to launch cruise missiles on Syria? According to a “senior administration official ... who insisted on anonymity,” President Bashar al-Assad used chemical weapons on his own people last week in the two-yearold Syrian civil war. But who deputized the United States to walk the streets of the world pistol-whipping bad actors. Where does our imperial president come off drawing “red lines” and ordering nations not to cross them? Neither the Security Council nor Congress nor NATO nor the Arab League has authorized war on Syria. Who made Barack Obama the Wyatt Earp of the Global Village? Moreover, where is the evidence that WMDs were used and that it had to be Assad who ordered them? Such an attack makes no sense. Firing a few shells of gas at Syrian civilians was not going to advance Assad’s cause but, rather, was certain to bring universal condemnation on his regime and deal cards to the War Party which wants a U.S. war on Syria as the back door to war on Iran. Why did the United States so swiftly dismiss Assad’s offer to have U.N. inspectors — already in Damascus investigating old charges he or the rebels used poison gas — go to the site of the latest incident? Do we not want to know the truth? Are we fearful the facts may turn out, as did the facts on the ground in Iraq, to contradict our latest claims about WMDs? Are we afraid that it was rebel elements or rogue Syrian soldiers who fired the gas shells to stampede us into fighting this war? With U.S. ships moving toward Syria’s coast and the McCainiacs assuring us we can smash Syria from offshore without serious injury to ourselves, why has Congress not come back to debate war? Lest we forget, Ronald Reagan was sold the same bill of goods the War Party is selling today — that we can intervene decisively in a Mideast civil war at little or no cost to ourselves. Reagan listened and ordered our

Marines into the middle of Lebanon’s civil war. And he was there when they brought home the 241 dead from the Beirut barracks and our dead diplomats from the Beirut embassy. The only thing we learn from history is that we do not learn from history. Congress should cut short its five-week vacation, come back, debate and decide by recorded vote whether Obama can take us into yet another Middle East war. The questions to which Congress needs answers: — Do we have incontrovertible proof that Bashar Assad ordered chemical weapons be used on his own people? And if he did not, who did? — What kind of reprisals might we expect if we launch cruise missiles at Syria, which is allied with Hezbollah and Iran? — If we attack, and Syria or its allies attack U.S. military or diplomatic missions in the Middle East or here in the United States, are we prepared for the wider war we will have started? — Assuming Syria responds with a counterstrike, how far are we prepared to go up the escalator to regional war? If we intervene, are we prepared for the possible defeat of the side we have chosen, which would then be seen as a strategic defeat for the United States? — If stung and bleeding from retaliation, are we prepared to go all the way, boots on the ground, to bring down Assad? Are we prepared to occupy Syria to prevent its falling to the Al-Nusra Front, which it may if Assad falls and we do not intervene? The basic question that needs to be asked about this horrific attack on civilians, which appears to be gas related, is: Cui bono? To whose benefit would the use of nerve gas on Syrian women and children redound? Certainly not Assad’s, as we can see from the furor and threats against him that the use of gas has produced. The sole beneficiary of this apparent use of poison gas against civilians in rebel-held territory appears to be the rebels, who have long sought to have us come in and fight their war. Perhaps Congress cannot defund Obamacare. But at least they can come back to Washington and tell Obama, sinking poll numbers aside, he has no authority to drag us into another war. His Libyan adventure, which gave us the Benghazi massacre and cover-up, was his last hurrah as war president. (Syndicated columnist Pat Buchanan has been a senior advisor to three presidents, twice a candidate for the Republican presidential nomination and the presidential nominee of the Reform Party in 2000. He won the New Hampshire Republican Primary in 1996.)

LETTERS Once, we were not a people who needed to brag on ourselves To The Daily Sun, Can patriotism be treason? Contemporary concepts of American Exceptionalism imply it can. If we apply those concepts to end our planet’s romance with self-government, Brazilian, Russian, Indian and Chinese historians may well report it was. The concept of American exceptionalism originated with Alexis de Tocqueville in his sentinel two-volume thesis “Democracy in America.” In 1831, the French government sent him to study American prisons. For nine months, the young man (he was 25) traveled extensively studying American economics, sociology and political institutions. He did not use the word “exceptionalism.” The American Communist Party brought the word to the lexicon in the 1920s. Tocqueville thought America was “exceptional” because it had not evolved as European nations had. Born from revolution, America, in Tocqueville’s estimation, was the world’s first “new nation.” Its nature grew from a unique ideology of liberty, individualism and equality. European communists in the early 20th century believed the collapse of western capitalism and revolt of the working class were imminent. American communists, however, thought an exceptionalism principle applied to the United States. Its industrial might, abundance of natural resources and absence of class distinction would hold collapse and revolt at bay for an extended period. (We might note none of these exceptions is true today.) In our time, “exceptionalism” has come a long way from meaning different or fortunate. We clearly mean better. Would-be officeholders cannot enter political competition without explicitly acknowledging American superiority. Concepts and utterances such as “American decline” or “end of empire” are taboos in the political dialogue. Few, if any, politicians or pundits dare suggest promotion of American exceptionalism is akin to treason. Perhaps it is time they (and we) considered that proposition. The Constitution defines treason very narrowly. Even in times of shooting war, it is not always clear if a par-

ticular act is treason. The more we bicker among ourselves, the more we are coming to view one another as enemy. As we become our own enemy, do our definitional concepts of treason become clearer or more muddled? Flag waving may have its place, but when we substitute it for problemsolving, are we patriots or fools? We worry our kids are among the worst educated in the developed world; but when common sense is the measure of things, does it matter? If we embrace or reject science as it compliments or diminishes our personal beliefs and druthers, is the Age of Enlightenment still in our rear view? Many, if not most philosophers would say the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution (particularly the Bill of Rights) are crowning jewels from the Age of Enlightenment. If exceptionalism requires we ignore the wisdom of Enlightenment — that reason is supreme and everything is open to criticism — do we really think patriotism based in exceptionalism and dogmatically driven “common sense” provides sufficient guidance for decision-making in an era of constant change, competition and danger? There was a time when we were less occupied with our omnipotence and grandeur. We thought our republic was an experiment, a great one to be sure, but an experiment nonetheless. It would not always meet our expectations, but we would make it better next time. We still take pride in the belief our republic is self-correcting. At one time that meant we were willing to work on problems and deficiencies. The proposition the nation will mystically heal itself if only government ignores problems would seem strange to the pragmatic people who founded and built this country. We were not a people who felt the need to brag on ourselves or to have our ideals of superiority constantly reinforced by politicians. We could accept our nation was imperfect but clung to the proposition it was on an endless journey to “a more perfect union.” A constant stream of objective measures paints a portrait of fading greatness. We can ignore data or we can respond. We can push government away and expect unrestrained capisee next page


THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Wednesday, August 28, 2013 — Page 5

LETTERS Are you going to vote your self interest or follow the Teapublicans? To The Daily Sun, During times of economic hardship, the nation’s corporations become “grassroots activists” claiming they are on your side and care only about your “freedoms.” Historically in New Hampshire, the political right has been very successful at convincing many middle class and indeed, low income voters that their own interests are in line with the corporate “fat cats.” Let me share a few examples that might ring a bell with you. Everyday, we hear of the financial problems caused by Social Security, Medicare, food stamps, and unemployment insurance. If your life, or that of your family is made better by any of these government programs, you are simply the cause of the problem. Corporate pundits and lobbyists have even coined a word that summarizes your crime — you are getting “entitlements” which implies that these are benefits you did not earn, when in fact you did. We all paid our payroll or SSI tax with every paycheck. Even unemployment insurance is something that you paid into, even if you never collected. To correct your irresponsible behavior, the “Teapublicans” are trying to persuade you into signing onto having your Social Security cut along with your health benefits and everything else. Many Republicans in Congress are pushing to reduce your benefits by weakening Social Security and Medicare, while curtailing food stamps, even for families of active armed

forces personnel. Perhaps, an even greater outrage is to hold the American people hostage by trying to force the president to defund Obamacare, the Affordable Care Law. This law, already passed by Congress and approved by the Supreme Court not only provides health care for 32 million uninsured Americans, but prevents insurance companies from refusing to cover all citizens no matter what their health history. One example, before the law, an innocent little baby born with a pre-natal condition could never get insurance coverage, during his lifetime. How can people who say they care about family values want to return to this injustice? If President Obama does not agree to defund the law, the Teapublicans want to shut down the government and refuse to pass an increase in the national debt, preventing the U.S. from paying its obligations. This will make our money worthless and destroy our credit in the rest of the world. And the Republicans call everyone else “financially irresponsible?” It is your choice, for we live in a democracy. Are you going to vote your self-interest and conscience or give the people who are philosophically against necessary programs the power to run your government? The choice is clear. Nick Vazzana Sandwich

Architects of war sail into their golden years with no scrutiny To The Daily Sun, Then-President Bush and his hawk/ oil-magnate partner, V.P. Cheney, in March 2003 launched their “shock and awe” destruction of Baghdad, using the ruse of weapons-of-mass-destruction. A year later we saw Bush unfurl his famous banner, “mission accomplished,” on a military vessel off California. Much later in 2013, we witness spreading war in that U.S.-invaded Middle East with ever more violence including in Iraq’s ruins, but I’ve just heard BBC news announce five-month-high oil prices—- related to the sad, mad mess in the Middle East. Somewhere, no guilt impeding, Dick Cheney is rubbing his hands over that more money, I am willing to bet. Are Americans following that Inder Comar, “a San Francisco attorney, filed suit in March 2013 against Bush, Cheney, Rumsfeld, Rice, Wolfowitz and Powell, alleging that the Bush Administration violated both international and domestic law in planning and waging the Iraq War?”(witnessiraq.com). California media, on Aug. 20, 2013, reported that “in court papers filed today, the United States Department of Justice

requested that George W. Bush, Richard Cheney, Donald Rumsfeld, Colin Powell, Condoleeza Rice and Paul Wolfowitz be granted procedural immunity in a case alleging that they planned and waged the Iraq War in violation of international law.” The architects of a war spreading its flames for more and more war should be excused? As if they are good children at the end of a civilized meal? Bales, Hassan, Manning, Snowden — murderers and whistleblowers — have had our attention in legal proceedings (Snowden’s still pending). All have in common that their lives were drastically impacted by BushCheney’s wars. Yet the architects of war should go on into their golden years with no scrutiny and possible legal repercussions for their actions? How just is this to those who are now dead, maimed, or refugee families? A next generation of children have become desperate and with their chances at education minimal or gone. A big “no” to our U.S. Department of Justice. Real justice must prevail. Lynn Rudmin Chong Sanbornton

from preceding page talism to create an equitable society for ourselves and our kids, or we can push government into the fray to “promote the general welfare and secure the blessings of liberty to ourselves and our posterity. . . .” If exceptionalism were just feel-

good ideology promoting optimism and encouraging us to face down hard times with confidence, it would serve us well. It is not. It undermines our will to face reality and make the collective sacrifices that are greatness. Robert Moran Meredith

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Page 6 — THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Wednesday, August 28, 2013

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LETTERS Is this the America that Mr. Siden envisions for our children? To The Daily Sun, My, my! Here in Friday’s paper I find L.J. Siden is again dropping road apples on us, or me in particular. Well L.J., I must say we agree on what we desire as the core principals of and from our country but it seem we strongly disagree on how to achieve it. You are looking for center-right conservatives to work with, well I am one of those. I’m a fiscal conservative and a social moderate. But still we two are very far apart on our views, why is that? Well for one thing you view Obama as good for America and I not good at all. You defend everything the man does and says and attack those of us who level questions or criticisms toward him. To you the progressives can do no wrong and conservatives no right. Today’s letter of yours you once again referred to real or “imagined” scandals. Nothing imaginary about any of those I noted in my letter that so offends you. It would be great if we could agree on a way to improve the economy and increase middle class wages but as long as Obama and progressives shove job killing socialists programs down our nations throat that won’t happen. Small business, big business, all are holding back on hiring because they don’t trust the future course Obama has laid out, simple as that. Socialism is a poor substitute for free enterprise. I’m not aware of any major socialist nation which was ever able to stand alone on it’s economy. The USSR staggered about for a three decades until in WW2 it conquered eastern Europe and scavenged and gutted

those nations for the next five decades then still collapsed. China still struggles today and exists by exploiting the great masses of it’s own poor and the stupid trade policies we in the U.S. provide them with. Western Europe was subsidized by U.S. from 1945 onward. Americans worked 50 weeks a year Europeans 46, while we defended them from envious eyes of the USSR. Now many of them are coming to grips with the reality that they are running out of other peoples money. L.J. wants conservatives to move “outside our comfort zone”, whatever that means? I suspect he wants us to concede to progressive socialist demands for ever more spending, more and more growth of the federal government along with the growing power therein. History has shown what happens when to much power is concentrated in big central governments. We are seeing what happens when big government under Obama get the bit between it’s teeth. Government scandals (not imagined) violation of the civil rights of citizens by the IRS, BATF, OSHA, DOJ, then the cover-ups and stonewalling. Is this the America L.J. envisions for our children? Compare that to what progressives call the radical right. The much maligned Tea Party wants our federal government to reduce the national debt, follow constitutional law, live within our means, lower taxes, reduce excessive federal regulations, stop waist and corruption and have an open, honest government. Now, how radical is that L.J.? Steve Earle Hill

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To The Daily Sun, Why don’t you guys get a life? Your negative diatribes are boring, and do not add anything to anyone’s well being. Can’t you find anything to be positive about? Have you ever done anything to help people whom you don’t know to have a better life? Have you ever served on a committee that works to make our county, state or nation a better place for those without much money to live on? Your ill-informed attacks on the United Nations and all regulatory authorities are stupid. Regulations to protect us from pollution and rapacious billionaire business owners such as the Koch brothers are badly needed to

deal with their ability to control our government with their wealth. Have you ever volunteered for, or supported: Habitat for Humanity, Scouts, Soup Kitchens, Got Lunch, Boys and Girls Club, Hospital, Caregivers, Meals on Wheels, Mentoring programs, Saint Vincent DePaul, Food Pantry, Belknap County Nursing Home, or any of many other local organizations devoted to helping make our communities better places to live. Get off your pity potties and do something positive for a change, and give us all break from your tiresome letters. Kent Warner Center Harbor

Thanks for all your support of Faith, Hope & Love Foundation To The Daily Sun, The Faith Hope and Love Foundation would like to thank the Lakes Region for your continued support over the past seven years! Time and time again we are reminded of your generosity and compassion. A recent example of support comes from two local Lakes Region women now entering their senior year at Plymouth State University. Suzanna Derynioski, and Kelsey Piper organized a dance show fundraiser where all proceeds from the show went to the Faith Hope and Love Foundation. The mission of FHL is to bring relief to children and youth suffering from poverty, hunger or

homelessness and to bring them hope through faith and love, so they may accomplish all of their dreams. All proceeds from this dance show fundraiser will be going back out directly to the community to help those in need! Derynioski and Piper planned and implemented the fundraiser for FHL with the help of local dancers Abby Bennett, Jessie Byram, Hannah Crosby, Suzanna Derynioski, Sarah Dubois, Jacqui Galea, Becky Gregoire, Ashley (White) Halsey, Paige Halsey, Bailey Hildrith, Kaitlyn Marcella, Rene Martinez, Nicole Newman, Kelsey Piper, Laura Scribner, Hannah Sullivan, Kira Szalma, Maggie see next page


Inter-Lakes may be asked to add lacrosse as high school sport By Mike Mortensen FOR THE LACONIA DAILY SUN

MEREDITH — Inter-Lakes High School students could have a chance play competitive lacrosse, perhaps as early as next spring, but the proposal to add yet another school sport has some school officials worried. The suggestion which was discussed at last night’s school board meeting prompted considerable discussion among administrators and board members, but no decision was made. Inter-Lakes High School Athletic Director Jeff Cloos said that the potential for student participation in the sport appeared strong based on the turnout at a local lacrosse clinic held during the summer vacation. He said 32 boys and girls had participated in the clinic. He noted that most attending the clinic were younger children, but added that high school students were more likely to be working at summer jobs, and so would have been less able to work the camp sessions into their schedules. Superintendent Mary Ellen Ormond had concerns about the lacrosse proposal. She said she was worried about the availability of fields to accommodate the games. In addition she said she was troubled that adding lacrosse could lower student participation in those sports which the school already offers. “Because we have a small student population ... I think it would eat into” the number of students who now go out for other sports, she said. Some worried that participation in track and softball might suffer.

Ormond remarked that if lacrosse were to be offered it might appropriate to organize a team made up players from Inter-Lakes and Moultonborough Academy. She also wondered if the home games could be played on Moultonborough fields. The two schools currently jointly field football and ice hockey teams. In noting the concerns, board member Mark Billings said, “If (lacrosse) is where kids are finding their passion we have to recognize that.” Board member Lisa Merrill thought the proposal had merit. “The parents are really and truly involved,” she said, and she note that the objections that a new sport would undercut existing ones sounded like those raised several years ago by those who objected to adding football. After the meeting adjourned Ormond said that she would speak with Cloos and others to determine whether it was feasibility to organize a lacrosse team as a club sport and if it appeared ample support existed she would make a formal proposal to the board. In other business, district Special Education Director Chuck DiCecca told the board that the cost of sending certain special education students private schools is now projected to be $65,000 more than the $178,000 earmarked in the budget. DiCecca said six more students required out-of-district placement than was anticipated when the budget was drawn up. Three of those students, however, have since been able to come back to classes at see next page

from preceding page higher learning. With our Gowns for Girls event you our amazing commuWalker, Hannah Weller, Jessica White and Jackie Wright. nity have donated hundreds of prom We also wanted to thank the followdresses to help girls in need be able to attend prom. Over 600 girls have ing local businesses for sponsoring the show: Charles and Donna Hildrith, attended our event and gone to prom Attractive Landscapes, R.M. Piper, because of your donations! Thank you for your continued supInc. and The Cote Corporation. We are so blessed to live in such a port of our organization and we look forward to seeing you all at our fashgreat community where people pull ion show fundraiser on October 19th together to help those in need! Since 2006 we have been able to give out in Gilford! The Faith Hope and Love Foundation almost $20,000 to local children and youth survival and enrichunicyclefor sun basic ad_Layout 1 8/20/13 3:11 PM Page 1 Co-Founders ment needs as well as scholarships for Laura Brusseau & Jessica Dutille

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N.H. Governor Maggie Hassan signs SB-89 into law yesterday at the Loon Center in Moultonborough. Standing over her left shoulder is State Senator Jeanie Forrester of Meredith, who sponsored the legislation that bans the sale and use of lead sinkers and jigs, even those under 1 ounce in weight, in the fresh waters of the state as of June 1, 2016. (Laconia Daily Sun photo/Michael Kitch)

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At Loon Center, Hassan signs lead sinker ban into law By Michael Kitch THE LACONIA DAILY SUN

MOULTONBOROUGH — Nearly 100 people crowded the Loon Center yesterday when the Loon Preservation Committee celebrated a victory ending a legislative struggle lasting two decades by hosting Governor Maggie Hassan, who signed a bill prohibiting the use and sale of lead sinkers and jigs in the fresh waters of the state. Sponsored by Senator Jeanie Forrester (R-Meredith), Senate Bill 89 closed the remaining loophole in the law prohibiting the use of lead tackle by including jigs weighing less than an ounce. The prohibition, which takes effect on June 1, 2016, does not from preceding page Inter-Lakes High. He said the $65,000 will either need to be found elsewhere in the budget or taken from a special trust fund. NOTES: Ormond said that the first-day enrollment in Inter-Lakes schools totaled 1,101, a slight increase of last year’s enrollment of 1,095. She said that the enrollment in kindergarten and first Route 3, Winnisquam 603-524-1984 Live Entertainment Fridays & Saturdays in Peter’s Pub!

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extend to other fishing gear like lines, spoons, poppers, plugs or flies. “We have accomplished a great thing,” declared Harry Vogel, executive director of the Loon Preservation Committee. Lead fishing tackle, he said, is by far the leading cause of loon deaths and lead jigs have been found in more than half the adult birds killed by ingesting lead. Vogel explained that although long-lived, loons do not begin reproducing until they are six and then breeding pairs raise on average half-a-chick a year. To sustain a robust population, he stressed,”we must keep adults alive.” The first bill to ban lead tackle was introduced in see next page

grade are both up. At Sandwich Central School there are 12 youngsters in kindergarten and seven in first grade, she noted. . . . . . Inter-Lakes Senior Bob Euiler attended his first meeting at the board’s student representative. He said that he wanted to share with the board what the students at InterLakes High School, and especially the members of the Student Council, think about certain issues.


THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Wednesday, August 28, 2013— Page 9

M’borough officials propose steep hike in fines for violating construction protocols By Michael Kitch THE LACONIA DAILY SUN

MOULTONBOROUGH — At a workshop last week, the Board of Selectmen considered a proposal prepared by Code Enforcement Office Don Cahoon and Planning Director Bruce Woodruff that would stiffen the penalties on those who build without the requisite permits and approvals. The proposal follows on the heels of the construction of an observation tower on Red Hill, which was approved after the fact by the Planning Board in a controversial decision that prompted the selectmen to initiate removal proceedings against two members of the Planning Board. Earlier this year Bob and Cathy Williams, doing business as Bear’s Nest Trail, LLC. built the 900square foot lookout tower, with an average height of 27 feet, around 1,200 feet up the east flank of Red Hill without obtaining a building permit, variance from the Zoning board of Adjustment (ZBA) and conSYRIA from page 2 tor the area and protect the ships, but Syria’s robust air defense system makes air strikes more difficult and risky. Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel said military forces stand ready to strike Syria immediately if the commander in chief gives the order. The Navy has four destroyers in the eastern Mediterranean within range of targets inside Syria and also has warplanes in the region. “We are ready to go,” Hagel said during a television interview while traveling in Asia. Ahead of any strike, the U.S. also plans to release additional intelligence it says will directly link Assad to the Aug. 21 attack in the Damascus suburbs. Syrian activists say hundreds of people were killed in the attack. A U.S. official said the intelligence report is expected to include “signals intelligence” — information gathered from intercepted communications. All of the officials insisted on anonymity because they were not authorized to publicly discuss the internal deliberations. Even before releasing that information, U.S. officials said they had very little doubt that Assad was culpable in the attack based on witness reports, information on the number of victims and the symptoms of those killed or injured, and intelligence showing the Syrian government has not lost control of its chemical weapons stockpiles. from preceding page 1994 and six years later New Hampshire became the first state to restrict, but not entirely forbid, the use of lead tackle. “Twenty years is not that long for legislation,” Hassan remarked. “Well, a little long.” She thanked all those from the Loon Preservation Committee and New Hampshire Lakes Association as well as the bill’s sponsors and advocates for shepherding the legislation through the process and ensuring a unanimous vote in the Senate and convincing majority in the House. The governor recalled that when she was first elected to the State Senate she served on the Environment Committee, chaired by the late Carl Johnson of Meredith, a mainstay of the Loon Preservation Committee who pressed to close the loophole throughout his seven terms in the Senate. “What Carl taught me, among other things,” said Hassan, “was that it’s not just about the loons, but about the health of our natural environment.” She said that he also led her to understand that protecting the loons was essential to the state’s character as a tourist destination and venue for outdoor recreation. “Senate Bill 89,” she said, “is the culmination of that work.” Representative Ben Lefebvre (D-Grantham), who steered the bill through the House, said to the roomful of volunteers and well-wishers “the real thanks should go to you folks — the boots on the ground — who sat there for five or six hours and listened to some crazy stuff.” That, Hassan noted, was “democracy, regular citizens letting their voices be heard.”

ditional use permit from the Planning Board. Cahoon told the selectmen that along with two decks, it was the third case of its kind this year, compared to four or five during his first 14 years on the job. Cahoon and Woodruff proposed a schedule of escalating fines. The current penalty for building without a permit is a fine equal to twice the permit fee plus the fee. The draft would raise the fine to five times the permit fee plus the fee itself. In addition, the fine would double for each subsequent violation of the zoning ordinance. For example, the 30-foot by 30-foot observation tower would be liable for a fine of $2,970, calculated as follows. At 11 cents per-square-foot for an unheated structure of that size, the building permit fee would by $99 and the fine $495 for a total of $594. The fine would double for each further violation. Thus, the failure to obtain a variance and a conditional use permit would each result in fines of $1,188. Altogether the three violations would incur

a total fine of $2,970. Moreover, the application fee would be tripled for violators seeking approvals for project after they were constructed. Town Administrator Carter Terenzini said that the selectmen asked Cahoon and Woodruff to draft a formal ordinance which would be presented to the Selectboard along with the ZBA and Planning Board. The selectmen will meet with the land use boards in workshop, perhaps as early as next month, to agree on a proposal that would be presented to a public hearing. Terenzini said that the Selectboard can adopt an ordinance by majority vote. Meanwhile, despite the controversy aroused by the decision of the selectmen to hold a public hearing to determine of there is cause to remove there Josh Bartlett and Judy Ryerson from the Planning Board for “inefficiency, neglect of duty or malfeasance in office,” there is no indication that they intend to halt the proceedings. The public hearing is scheduled for Monday, September 9, beginning at 1 p.m.

Other administration officials echoed Biden’s comments, which marked a subtle shift in the administration’s rhetoric on who bears responsibility for the attack. Earlier in the week officials would say only that there was “very little doubt” Assad was responsible. Obama, Biden and other senior administration officials have spent much of the week seeking to rally international support for an aggressive response to the chemical weapons attack. The president spoke Tuesday with Prime Minister Stephen Harper of Canada, a NATO ally, and has also talked to French

President Francois Hollande and Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd. Along with Britain, France appears poised to back the U.S. response. In Paris, Hollande said Tuesday that France was “ready to punish those who took the heinous decision to gas innocents.” The Arab League, a 22-member body dominated by Saudi Arabia and Qatar, also called for justice, laying blame for the attack on the Syrian government. Italy, meanwhile, was insisting that any strike should be authorized by the U.N. Security Council.

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Page 10 — THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Wednesday, August 28, 2013

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most about school. She urged students to seek help from their teachers and friends when a subject seemed difficult and to ‘’keep at it and work hard’’ to improve their understanding of subject matter, telling them that by applying themselves they were preparing themselves for good jobs and being able to make a difference in their community. Students ventured their own descriptions of the governor’s job, which ranged from ‘’helping people’’ to ‘’running the state’’ and questioned Hassan on how much paperwork was involved in her job. ‘’There’s a lot of paperwork but most of my job is working with people. I have the best job in the world because I get to talk with people from all over and work with them to solve problems,’’ said Hassan. Her visit to Laconia followed one earlier in the day at Nashua High School South where she greeted incoming freshman and was billed by her office as part of an effort to highlight the need for a strong public education system in New Hampshire.

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THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Wednesday, August 28, 2013— Page 11

Former cop who failed fitness test sues Barnstead for gender & age discrimination BY GAIL OBER

THE LACONIA DAILY SUN

BARNSTEAD — A former full-time police officer who was discharged because he couldn’t pass the physical fitness test filed a civil suit on July 26 in Belknap County Superior Court against the town, the state, and the state of New Hampshire. David Scott has asked for his reinstatement as a full-time police officer, for back-pay with interest, for his certification as a full-time police officer, and for TV from page one corporation with an annual operating budget of approximately $126,000 funded by contracting municipalities, grants and sponsorships. The station’s studio is located at Laconia High School. The station is perhaps best know for its annual live broadcasts of the WLNH Children’s Auction, which have been widely credited with taking the financial results of that 5-day event into the stratosphere, starting in 2000. Denise Beauchaine, director of LRPA, said that the station’s programming, via MetroCast, reaches 21 municipalities in four counties — Belknap, Merrimack, Grafton and Rockingham — encompassing more than 50,000 households. MetroCast bills its subscribers a franchise fee, which it then disburses to the municipalities in return for being able to operate a monopoly public service within their boundaries. But there is no direct legal connection between the franchise fees and LRPA-TV. Meanwhile, LRPA bills its contracting municipalities for services rendered. Beauchaine said that prior to the recent recession, 13 municipalities, including the 11 in Belknap County, contracted with LRPA and paid their agreed upon share the station’s overhead. However, the number of contracting municipalities has shrunk to a half-dozen — Alton, Belmont, Gilford, Meredith, Laconia and Northwood — which Beauchaine said share less than a third of the franchise fees they collect from MetroCast with LRPA. Eddy said that the old business model no longer works and the new model is designed to produce enough revenue to keep LRPTV in the black and enable it to fulfill its original mission. ‘’It’s far more sustainable than what we have now and it will far more palatable to the communities we serve,’’ said Eddy. He and Tilton Selectman Joe Jesseman, who repsee next page

pain and suffering. The amount is unspecified. He has also asked a court to order the all of the defendants to create and enforce policies and practices that provide equal opportunity for all potential police officers. His primary argument for the lawsuit is that N.H. Police Standards and Training established basic minimum physical standards for men that differ from those of women — or, reverse discrimination — and he claims he was fired from his full-time position because of those standards. This is Scott’s second lawsuit concerning his dismissal from the Barnstead Police Department for being unable to pass the running portion of the fitness test. His first suit, filed in U.S. District Court, District of New Hampshire against N.H. Police Standards and Training, or the police academy, was dismissed in March of 2013 by a Judge Paul Barbadoro who ruled that Scott was suing the wrong party because he was not employed by them. In his ruling Barbadoro agreed with the Police Academy who successfully argued that Scott’s claim should be against his employer — the town of Barnstead — and not them. Barbadoro did not address the merits of Scott’s suit. Scott failed the running portion of his test by 11 seconds and claims that women have two minutes longer to complete the same test. His full-time employment in Barnstead was conditional upon his

certification from N.H.P.S.T., which is the only police certification agency in New Hampshire. On May 5, 2011 N.H. P.S.T ordered Barnstead Police Chief Kenneth Borgia to reduce Scott’s status from full to part-time. Scott appealed to the N.H.P.S.T. Commission for a waiver in December of 2011 but it was denied. According to his pleadings, Scott attended the fulltime academy in late 2009 after being employed as a part-time officer in Barnstead for about two years. He said he tried 10 times to complete the 1 1/2 mile run in under 14 minutes and 44 seconds but his best time was 11 seconds off the mark. His status as a full-time officer was reduced back to part-time and part-time police officers are limited by statute and state rules to working no more than 1,300 hours annually. His latest suit claims the standards set by New Hampshire are arbitrary and discriminatory based on age — Scott is 52 — and gender. Police standards and training adheres to the physical standards established by Cooper Institute of Aerobics and has done so since 1992. In their motion to dismiss Scott’s federal suit, N.H.P.T.S. said Scott is one of four officers who has failed the test in the past five years. Scott is representing himself. None of the respondents have yet filed responses to the Belknap County suit.

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Page 12 — THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Wednesday, August 28, 2013

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It’s Friday, so this must be Hawaii Empire Beauty School students Jay Hunter, Danielle Steed and Andrea Culprit go “Hawaiian” on Friday afternoon as part of Spirit Week at the downtown Laconia school. Each day of last week students dressed to a different theme. (Karen Bobotas/for the Laconia Daily Sun)

from preceding page resents Tilton on the board of directors, recently gave a presentation to the Belmont board of selectmen on the new business plan, which both said was well received. Eddy said that as only four of the eight board members were present at last night’s meeting that the full board will need to more thoroughly review the new model at its next meeting and be prepared to look at the revenue side of the new plan. ‘’We have the basic outline but need to flesh out the details,’’ said Eddy. LRPA Board Chairman Ken Curley of Northwood said that the name brand of the new model will be Channel 25, which will continue to air its currently scheduled programs which have a regional focus, while Channel 24, the educational channel will

be airing community bulletin board material and Channel 26 will become the local government channel for each community which chooses to broadcast its own meetings. He said that there has been some discussion of how Channel 26 can default to the regional programs on Channel 25, such as Belknap County commission and convention meetings, rather than continue to repeat the same local government programs unique to each community. The board also discussed a request from the Belknap Economic Development Council to shoot footage of its Business Resource Fair which will be held at the Taylor Home Woodside building on Sept. 11 from 7:45 a.m. to 3 p.m. The board voted to approve the request and bill BEDC half of its production costs.

GALE SCHOOL from page one stand the Corner Meeting House, and the library as well as the Belmont Mill. The Gale School belongs to the Shaker Regional School District but was briefly inspected by the town’s code enforcement officer in June as part of a town-wide project that evaluated all of the publicowned property. In his report presented on July 15, Code Enforcement Officer Steve Paquin reported to selectmen that the Building Assessment Committee said it was decayed to the point that it was likely not economically viable to be rehabilitated. The committee

report also said it would likely fall down if it were to be moved and because of its size would be nearly physically impossible to relocate it in one piece. Paquin also told selectmen that while it had sentimental value to the people of Belmont, it had no historical or architectural value. Last night the School Board accepted the letter from the state for what it was and said they would be willing to wait until an ad hoc group of people in Belmont — comprised of Conservation Commission Chair Ken Knowlton, former School Board Chair Pret Tuthill, and Diane Marden — make a presensee next page

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THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Wednesday, August 28, 2013— Page 13

Smith Track is open for public use again, for a while LACONIA — The running track at Opechee Park received a new asphalt base layer late last week and is now, temporarily, again available for public use. The Parks and Recreation Department has announced that the final-layer resurfacing at Smith Track is slated for sometime this fall, at which time access will be closed for one to two weeks.

Officials remind residents and visitors that spikes, cleats, pets, bikes, rollerblades, rollerskates, strollers, carriages and motor vehicles of any kind are not allowed on the track. People needing additional information are encouraged to call 524-5046.

FORT HOOD from page 2 that he knew what he was doing. His answers were succinct and just as rapid. “It is my personal decision,” he said. “It is free and voluntary.” The judge, Col. Tara Osborn, then read aloud several court opinions to back up her decision not to introduce evidence in Hasan’s favor on her own. “In other words, Maj. Hasan, you are the captain of your own ship,” Osborn said. Closing arguments are scheduled for Wednesday, but whether jurors will hear from Hasan remains unclear. He has been acting as his own attorney but has put up nearly no defense since his trial began three weeks ago. The trial’s penalty phase, however, is Hasan’s last chance to tell jurors what he’s spent the last four years telling the military, judges and journalists: that he believes the killing of unarmed American soldiers preparing to deploy to Iraq and Afghanistan was necessary to protect Muslim insurgents. He was barred ahead of trial of making such a defense. Hasan rested his case shortly after more than a

dozen widows, mothers, fathers, children and other relatives of those killed, along with soldiers wounded during the shooting rampage, testified about their lives since Nov. 5, 2009. Sheryll Pearson sobbed when shown a photo of her son, Pfc. Michael Pearson, hugging her during his graduation. “We always wanted to see who he was going to become. Now that was taken away from us,” she said. Teena Nemelka lost the youngest of her four children, Pfc. Aaron Nemelka, whom she called, “my baby.” She talked about her frantic searches for information in the moments after learning about the shooting and about her fear of hearing a knock at the front door of her home. “You just freeze,” she said. “You don’t want to open that door.” But the knock came, with “the worst news you could ever hear.”

Correction: Air dryers will be used to remove excess moisture from WRMS In a story about the mold at the Winnisquam Regional Middle School that was published on Tuesday, RFP building specialist Dennis Francoeur was incorrectly quoted as recommending the use of negative ion generators. In fact, large air dryers are going to be used to remove excess moisture from the building. from preceding page tation about how to possibly save the school. When reached for comment in July, Knowlton said his group was working on a plan but wasn’t ready to release any details. While the state cannot compel an owner to preserve a building, it recommends and encourages the reuse of them. The N.H. Division of Historical Resources said they offer resources than can assist municipal and private developers for rehabilitation of historic properties.

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DEATH from page one were called to the home that night by the responding officers. Jacques said an autopsy has been completed by the N.H. Medical Examiner’s Office, however the toxicology tests that will identify the cause of death could take six to eight weeks to complete. So far this year, two people in Laconia have died from apparent drug overdoses — including one last month. Last week, Meredith Police charged a local man for selling heroin to a Moultonborough resident who died from a heroin overdose while he was in Meredith. The most recent death of 20-year-old Lance Reason in Laconia triggered Police Chief Chris Adams to issue a bulletin about the recent spate of heroin use in Laconia. Police in surrounding communities echoed Adams by saying they have also seen an uptick in the use what is fairly powerful heroin in the area.

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OBITUARY

David T. Barry, 84 MEREDITH — David Thomas Barry, 84, of Meredith, passed away on Monday, August 26, 2013 at Golden View Health Care Center, after a lengthy illness. Born on September 13, 1928, in Providence, RI, he was the son of Philip C. and Celeste (Cinq-Mars) Barry. David was raised in Providence, attending local schools. After graduating high school he joined the U.S. Navy and served with honor and courage during World War II. Upon returning from the war he entered Brown University and graduated with a Bachelor’s Degree in Engineering. Throughout his career, David worked in a variety of positions primarily on the design and testing of weapons systems, particularly those associated with nuclear submarines. He worked for the Ordinance Research Lab at Penn State University, the Federal Product Company, of RI, the Naval Underwater Systems Center, in Newport, RI, the Geosciences Department at Texas Instruments, in Dallas, he ran a small defense contracting firm, and worked for Martin Marietta’s Navy Systems Department, in Baltimore. He retired in 1991 to Houston, TX with his wife Ruth and oldest son. In 1996, they moved to Bandera, TX where he resided until 2007. With the passing of his son Philip, and his deteriorating health, David was forced to move to Meredith to be closer to his surviving family members. David was an avid reader of history, politics, military strategy and tactics,

and he liked to research genealogy. He is predeceased by his beloved wife of 29 years, Ruth E. (Tullgren), in January, 1997; his son Philip, in 2007, and his daughter, Pamela, in 2013. David is survived by his six children, Susan Black and her husband Doug, of Coos Bay, OR, Allison, of Cranston, RI, Theodore and his wife Patty, of Milford, NH, Dennis and his wife Janet, of Newport News, VA, Christine of Chesapeake, VA, and Jonathan and his wife Ann, of Meredith, NH; 11 grandchildren, Adrienne, Sam, Patrick, Kyle, Derek, Samantha, Donovan, Patrick, Jessica, Elizabeth, and Victoria, and four great-grandchildren. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made in David’s memory to the Wounded Warrior Project: www. woundedwarriorproject.org, or to Central NH VNA & Hospice, 780 N. Main St., Laconia, 03246. Calling Hours will be held at Mayhew Funeral Home (Rtes. 3&104), Meredith, on Saturday, August 31, 2013 from 10 a.m. to noon. A prayer service with military honors will be held in the funeral home at 10 a.m. Rev. Edward J. Charest, Pastor Emeritus of the Plymouth United Methodist Church will officiate. Relatives and friends are respectfully invited to attend. Mayhew Funeral Homes & Crematorium of Meredith and Plymouth are handling the arrangements. For David’s Book of Memories: www.mayhewfuneralhomes.com

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LACONIA — The Belknap Mill has a series of three ‘awareness’ programs for NH people who are interested in learning history through original sources. All programs will be held at the Belknap Mill in downtown Laconia. The first will be on September 17 when Jo Radner, a professional storyteller, author and retired literature professor, will present the program: Family Stories: How and Why To Remember and Tell Them. The second will be on October 15 with Martha Andrews Donovan and Maura MacNeil, both from New England College. Their topic will be: Family, Memory, Place: Writing Family Stories. Lastly, the popular Rebecca Rule will present a program in November. Rebecca is a well-known author, speaker and host of NH Authors Series on NHPTV. That Reminds Me of a Story is the title of her program. “We first became aware of the public’s interest in telling and writing

family stories when Laconia resident Judith Buswell presented ‘I Have Been Busy All Day’ at the Mill last January,” said Paquette, interim executive director of the Belknap Mill. “The program was a play/musical evening based on the journals of a relative of Judith’s husband. Judith was fascinated by the old journals and based her play on the day-to-day life of a Victorian housewife. The event was extremely well attended and we wanted to keep the momentum going and offer a way for people to write down family stories.” The NH Humanities Council has presented a Humanities To Go Grant to the Belknap Mill Society Board of Directors to work jointly with the Laconia Historical and Museum Society. This grant has allowed the three program series to take place. Pre-registration is recommended but walk-ins are welcome. To register call 524-8813. Visit www.belknapmill. org for more information or for a complete list of Belknap Mill events.


THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Wednesday, August 28, 2013— Page 15

OBITUARIES

Adam P. Andrews, 30 GILFORD — Adam P. Andrews, 30, of Gilford, died on Saturday, August 24, 2013. He was born November 20, 1982, in Concord, NH., the middle son of Phil and Sharon (Barker) Andrews. He was raised in Lochmere with his siblings and attended the schools of Winnisquam Regional School District. He was employed by Lakes Region Heating & Air Conditioning and also worked for Puckett Heating & Cooling. Adam enjoyed fishing, and was an avid sports fan, attending many Red Sox & Bruin’s games and also was at the infamous, “Snow-Bowl,” at Foxboro Stadium, Patriots – Raiders, January 2002. He loved annual camping trips on the Saco River with his best friend Kevin. Adam also loved teaching his nieces Alyzabeth and Molly how to hone their softball skills. Adam was quick witted, full of energy, always willing to help anyone. He had an infectious smile and sense of humor that did include pranks. His greatest enjoyment came from being with his family and best friends or just petting a dog. Adam took great pride in his family and had a devoted circle of friends. Adam is survived by his parents, Phil and Sharon Andrews of Gilford, NH., fiancee’ Katie LaPlante

of Lochmere, daughters, Kalina and Alyna. Sisters; Susan Andrews and Kevin O’Connell, their children, Alyzabeth, Molly and Maximus of Gilford. Allison and Ryan Constant and their son Ryan of Dover, Carol McIntyre of Diamond Bar, CA. Brothers; Craig Andrews of Ohio and his children, Seth Decato of Canterbury, Kailey Andrews of FL. and Matthew Andrews of Gilford. He is also survived by many aunts and uncles and his grandmother Nicky Stavros Barker of Concord. Adam has taken his final journey to join with his departed family and catch the “Big one” with his grampa, Robert Barker, Sr. You’ll be in our heart forever and missed so very much. We will see you again, our precious son. Calling hours are Thursday, August 29, 2013 from 4 to 7 p.m. in the Carriage House of the WilkinsonBeane-Simoneau-Paquette Funeral Home, 164 Pleasant St, Laconia, NH. Bring a favorite memory to share. There will be no funeral service. Wilkinson-Beane-Simoneau-Paquette Funeral Home & Cremation Services, 164 Pleasant Street, Laconia, N.H. is assisting the family with the arrangements. For more information and to view an online memorial go to www.wilkinsonbeane.com.

BEDFORD — Jeannine C. (Dutil) Dutile, 79, of 17 Privet Hedge Lane, formerly of 36 Rowell Street, Laconia, died peacefully at her home on Tuesday, August 27, 2013 after a period of declining health. Jeannine was born May 12, 1934 in Lewiston, Maine, the daughter of the late Emile and Generia (Gilbert) Dutil. Jeannine was raised in Lewiston and graduated from St. Mary’s General Hospital School of Nursing. She had been a longtime resident of Laconia before moving to Bedford six years ago. Jeannine was a registered nurse for over forty years and had been employed at Lakes Region General Hospital and at Lakes Region OB-GYN Professional Association, retiring in 2001. Jeannine was a communicant of Sacred Heart Church and was a former member of the Ladies Guild of Sacred Heart. She was also a member of the Graduate Nurses’ Association of Lakes Region General Hospital. Jeannine loved and enjoyed being with her grandchildren and family gatherings. She enjoyed flower gardening, reading and keeping up with new developments in nursing and medicine. Survivors include her husband of 58 years, J. Norman Dutile, of Bedford; three sons, David Dutile and his wife Kathleen of Greenville, SC , Donald Dutile and his wife Noreen of Merrimack and Thomas Dutile and his wife Linda of Manchester; a daughter, Deborah Plante, and her husband, John, of Barre, VT; six grandchildren, Matthew, Kevin, Michael, Emily and Rebecca Dutile and

Monika Plante; a brother, Maurice Dutil and his wife, Monique, of Lewiston, ME ; three nieces and six nephews. In addition to her parents, Mrs. Dutile was predeceased by a son, Michael Dutile, in 1965. Visiting hours will be held on Friday, August 30, 2013 from 9 to 10:30 a.m. at the Wilkinson-BeaneSimoneau-Paquette Funeral Home, 164 Pleasant Street, Laconia using the Carriage House entrance. Following the visiting hours, a Mass of Christian Burial will be celebrated at 11 a.m. at St. Andre Bessette Parish at Sacred Heart Church, 291 Union Avenue, Laconia, N.H. Burial will follow in the family lot in Sacred Heart Cemetery, Laconia. For those who wish, the family suggests that memorial donations be made to the Manchester VNA/Hospice, 1070 Holt Avenue, Suite 1400, Manchester, NH 03109. Wilkinson-Beane-Simoneau-Paquette Funeral Home & Cremation Services, 164 Pleasant Street, Laconia, N.H. is assisting the family of Jeannine. For more information and to view an online memorial please visit www.wilkinsonbeane.com.

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Page 16 — THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Wednesday, August 28, 2013

Mushroom hunt at Castle in the Clouds Sept. 2 MOULTONBOROUGH — It is mushroom time again at Castle in the Clouds as Rick van de Poll leads foragers on a hunt for the edible, the inedible and the incredible in the world of mushrooms on Monday, September 2 starting at 10 a.m. at the Carriage House. There is a $5 fee for the walk, free for Friends of the Castle. Reservations are required and may be made by calling 476-5900 x 500. Entrance by Ossipee Park Road. Walks and Talks are sponsored by Mill Falls at the Lake.

Rick van de Poll leads foragers on a hunt for the edible, the inedible and the incredible in the world of mushrooms on Monday, September 2. (Courtesy photo)

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The first week in September is the last week of regular music nights at Castle in the Clouds. Chad Porter will bring his contemporary acoustic music to the Carriage House Terrance on September 2 and Jazz at Sunset has its last night on September 5. Both start at 5:30 with light meals from the Carriage House Cafe and cash bar available. It’s harvest season in New Hampshire, a perfect time for the Castle in the Clouds final Art Show of the season, Food for Thought. Apples a plenty, and peaches, berries, fish, even an abundant food market are subjects of the fine paintings at the Carriage House Art Gallery from now until the end of the see next page

Labor Day Weekend Fun Jade Trace Golf Laconia, NH Free clinic Sundays at 2:00 pm. Limited to six golfers per clinic. After attending this clinic, you can book private lessons or attend other clinics. Golf Skills Group Clinics 3:00 pm Thursday and Saturday, or 4:00 pm Sunday. Reservations required. Call 5283057. Lochmere Golf & Country Club Tilton, NH Play 18 holes Friday, Saturday and Sunday with a power

cart for $35 per person. Present your Laconia Daily Sun coupon for discount. Call 528-4653 or 5287888 for tee times. Ridgewood Country Club Moultonborough, NH Join Ridgewood Country Club this fall and as a new member you can play the rest of the 2013 season for free. Call 476-5930 for more information.

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THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Wednesday, August 28, 2013— Page 17

The Gallery Space hosting exhibit of photographs by Karen Bobotas LACONIA — The Gallery Space at 27 Canal Street in Downtown Laconia is hosting a photography exhibition by Karen Bobotas of Gilford for the month of September. Bobotas is a freelance photographer based in the Lakes Region. Her interest and passion for photography started at a young age while her pursuit as a freelance photographer has been within the past decade. Prior to her photography career she worked with Penny

Pitou Travel of Laconia and says that she ‘’continues that same sense of adventure while out shooting pictures that I enjoyed while planning my clients’ travels around the globe.’’ She said, “I embrace all aspects of photography from community events on editorial assignments with the Laconia Daily Sun — sports moments of athletes on our local fields and mountains — or trekking around the region with camera in hand sharing the many

Karaoke at Meredith Legion Post on Saturday MEREDITH — The American Legion Post 33 is hosting a Karaoke event on Saturday, August 31, 2013 at 7:30 p.m. at 6 Plymouth Street in Meredith. The event is sponsored by the American Legion. All interested people are invited to come sing and watch others sing and have fun. There is no smoking at this event. A $5 donation is requested. from preceding page season, October 27. This special show features paintings of food that will give a new definition to the expression a feast for the eyes. Sponsored by Subway Sandwiches of Moultonborough and Meredith and brought to the Castle by guest curators Sam and Sheila Robbins, the exhibit is free to visitors with normal Castle admission. Time to plan ahead for the Volksbahn Car Show on Sunday, September 8. Spend the day by Shannon Pond admiring a collection of Volkswagen and Audi automobiles, $5 per person, $15 for car registration (Lucknow Tour discount with Car Show admission). Castle in the Clouds, with the historic house museum Lucknow, off Route 171 (455 Old Mountain Road), Moultonborough, is open every day through October 27. The main gate is open from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Buildings close at 5:30 p.m. and grounds at 6 p.m., except for special events and programs. Visit the web site (www.castleintheclouds.org) or call 4765900 x500 for directions, information on admissions and on the Friends of the Castle membership, giving discounts on some special events. The Castle in the Clouds is a 501(c)3 not for profit corporation and all revenue, after expenses, benefits the Castle Preservation Society and its work to restore the historic Lucknow mansion and estate.

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scenic vistas and lifestyle events.” Part of what she enjoys most about her job is the constantly changing canvas I get to work with every day. “Not having all my ducks in a row makes each day a new adventure. I strive to bring my eye’s view of the world to you through my photography whether it’s a twinkle in someone’s eye or a moment that tells a story,” she added. Her work can also be viewed at www.karenbobotas.com. For more information about Gallery Space hours call 528-7651 or visit www. fratescreates.com

Photographer, Karen Bobotas will exhibit her work at the Gallery Space at 27 Canal Street in Downtown Laconia for the month of September. Her works include personal views of life on the “big lake.” as seen in this photo entitled Eagle. (Courtesy photo)


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Page 18 — THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Wednesday, August 28, 2013

DAILY CROSSWORD TRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES

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Get Fuzzy

Today’s Birthdays: Actor Sonny Shroyer is 78. Actor Ken Jenkins is 73. Actor David Soul is 70. Actress Barbara Bach is 67. Actress Debra Mooney is 66. Singer Wayne Osmond (The Osmonds) is 62. Actor Daniel Stern is 56. Olympic gold medal figure skater Scott Hamilton is 55. Actor John Allen Nelson is 54. Actress Emma Samms is 53. Actress Jennifer Coolidge is 52. Movie director David Fincher is 51. Actress Amanda Tapping is 48. Country singer Shania Twain is 48. Actor Billy Boyd is 45. Actor Jack Black is 44. Actor Jason Priestley is 44. Rock singer-musician Max Collins (Eve 6) is 35. Actress Carly Pope is 33. Country singer Jake Owen is 32. Country singer LeAnn Rimes is 31. Actor Michael Galeota is 29. Actress Sarah Roemer is 29. Actor Armie Hammer is 27. Rock singer Florence Welch is 27. Actor/singer Samuel Larsen is 22. Actor Kyle Massey is 22. Actress Quvenzhane Wallis (Film: “Beasts of the Southern Wild”) is 10.

by Chad Carpenter

By Holiday Mathis

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). What you’ve learned seems irrelevant to the events of the day. It’s like you’re being forced to learn a new way to solve a problem. Note: It might be faster to invent your own way. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). Don’t allow those who are close to you to get away with being less than they could be. Self-pity is a dangerous dynamic. Helplessness is a poor substitute for self-love. Hold your dear ones to a higher standard. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). People without integrity are dangerous. When someone shows a lack of integrity in a small way, consider it a preview of coming attractions and react accordingly. TODAY’S BIRTHDAY (Aug. 28). You’ll entertain many this year. In September, you’ll make a sale, as well as forward a personal interest. October brings you face to face with someone you’ve long wanted to know. You’ll handle a rush of business in December and go into the new year richer. March interests lead you to a fun group of friends. Aquarius and Sagittarius people adore you. Your lucky numbers are: 40, 42, 6, 13 and 28.

TUNDRA

HOROSCOPE ARIES (March 21-April 19). Unlike the country song that suggests it’s possible to say it best by saying nothing at all, today’s situation requires that something eloquent and truthful be said. Silence won’t cut it. TAURUS (April 20-May 20). The people who are closest to you know how to set off your emotional triggers and will do so in both good and bad ways. Knowing how to create a sense of calm inside yourself is a skill worth developing. GEMINI (May 21-June 21). Something didn’t go the way you wanted it to go, but it’s only as big of a deal as you make it. Letting yourself feel tormented by events is always an option, though you usually prefer to make a new plan and try again. CANCER (June 22-July 22). You and a loved one are not on the same page at the start of the day, but you sync up after several hours of doing a task together. The task could be absolutely anything, including driving, cleaning or just watching television. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). You can provide assistance, but you’re not sure you should. You realize that people don’t appreciate what is handed to them unless they believe they deserve it. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). Material gains will come of emotional and spiritual work. Your faith will be key, so keep believing it will all work out, and stop worrying about how. You can’t predict that part. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). There is real personality to everything you do, and that’s why you can’t really do things anonymously. Your work will be recognized and lauded whether or not you claim it. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). It will be wise to avoid controversy, especially the kind that is likely to occur just because people don’t have anything better to entertain themselves with. While you’re at it, avoid bored people, too. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). The person who is good and has never been bad is sweet and will require protection today. The person who has been bad and now chooses to be good will be the best one for the job.

Pooch Café LOLA

Solution and tips at www.sudoku.com

1 4 9 13 15 16 17 18 19 20 22 23 24 26 29 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41

ACROSS eBay offer Burn with liquid Murdered Secondhand Midafternoon hour Mount St. Helens’ output Delight Sand ridges Vase-shaped jug Wipe out Travelers’ stops Secure with a key Old cloth Take Snide remarks Be generous Window glasses Pale Joints closest to the waist Cooked in oil Smart Go wrong Roaring beasts

42 Famous Italian poet 43 Tangiest 45 No __; not any more 46 Japan’s dollar 47 Shortly 48 Amphibian 51 Advanced degree 56 Pork cut 57 Creek 58 Cots and cribs 60 Qualified 61 Range 62 Thus 63 Nuisance 64 Remained optimistic 65 Fellows

1 2 3 4 5

DOWN Annoy __ of Wight Doe or buck No-nonsense Credit card

6 7 8 9 10 11 12 14 21 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33

alternative __ code; phone number’s start Departed Abandoned Santa’s vehicle Grassy plot Tied, as a score Armed conflicts Blackjack table employees Idiot Burro Family of late Arthur of tennis Bird call Resort isle near Naples Apply a fresh coat to a house Change for a fivedollar bill __ to; because of One of the five senses Derisive smile

35 __ and cons 38 Wicked; cruel 39 Aspirant; one with a dream 41 Whopper 42 Entryway 44 Young swan 45 Plundered 47 Martin or Allen 48 Tent opening

49 Regal vestment 50 Norman Rockwell paintings 52 Hold __; save 53 Clippety-__ 54 Semester or quarter 55 Rim 59 Male child

Yesterday’s Answer


THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Wednesday, August 28, 2013— Page 19

––––––– ALMANAC ––––––– Today is Wednesday, Aug. 28, the 240th day of 2013. There are 125 days left in the year. Today’s Highlight in History: On August 28, 1963, more than 200,000 people listened as the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. delivered his “I Have a Dream” speech in front of the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, D.C. On this date: In 1609, English sea explorer Henry Hudson and his ship, the Half Moon, reached present-day Delaware Bay. In 1862, the Second Battle of Bull Run (also known as Second Manassas) began in Prince William County, Va., during the Civil War; the result was a Confederate victory. In 1922, the first-ever radio commercial aired on station WEAF in New York City; the 10-minute advertisement was for the Queensboro Realty Co., which had paid a fee of $100. In 1945, the Allies began occupying Japan at the end of World War II. In 1947, legendary bullfighter Manolete (manoh-LEH’-tay) died after being gored during a fight in Linares, Spain; he was 30. In 1955, Emmett Till, a black teenager from Chicago, was abducted from his uncle’s home in Money, Miss., by two white men after he had supposedly whistled at a white woman; he was found brutally slain three days later. In 1968, police and anti-war demonstrators clashed in the streets of Chicago as the Democratic National Convention nominated Hubert H. Humphrey for president. In 1972, Mark Spitz of the United States won the first two of his seven gold medals at the Munich Olympics, finishing first in the 200-meter butterfly and anchoring the 400-meter freestyle relay. The Soviet women gymnasts won the team all-around. In 1973, an earthquake shook Veracruz, Mexico; death toll estimates range from 600 to 1,200. In 1983, Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin (men-AH’-kem BAY’-gihn) announced his resignation. In 1988, 70 people were killed when three Italian stunt planes collided during an air show at the U.S. Air Base in Ramstein (RAHM’-shtyn), West Germany. In 1990, an F5 tornado struck the Chicago area, killing 29 people. Ten years ago: British Prime Minister Tony Blair denied the government had “sexed up” a dossier on Iraq’s weapons threat and said he would have resigned if it had been true. A Defense Department survey found that nearly 1 in 5 female Air Force Academy cadets said they had been sexually assaulted during their time at the academy. Five years ago: Surrounded by an enormous, adoring crowd at Invesco Field in Denver, Barack Obama accepted the Democratic presidential nomination, promising what he called a clean break from the “broken politics in Washington and the failed policies of George W. Bush.” One year ago: Former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney swept to the Republican presidential nomination at a storm-delayed national convention in Tampa, Fla. Hurricane Isaac spun into the southern Louisiana coast, sending floodwaters surging and unleashing fierce winds, as residents hunkered down behind boarded-up windows.

WEDNESDAY PRIME TIME 8:00

Dial 2

CRENOE RIPNAS

Charlie Rose (N) Å

7 8

WMTW The Middle The Middle Mod Fam

Neighbors ABC’s The Lookout (N) News

J. Kimmel

9

WMUR The Middle The Middle Mod Fam

Neighbors ABC’s The Lookout (N) News

J. Kimmel

5

6

10

WLVI

11

WENH

Arrow “Unfinished Business” A woman dies violently. Å The Return of Sherlock Holmes Watson finds Holmes alive. Å NUMB3RS “Double Down” Card counters. (In Stereo) Å Big Brother (N) Å

Supernatural “Hunteri Heroici” Castiel decides to become a hunter. Death in Paradise The murder of a local diver. (In Stereo) NUMB3RS “Harvest” Organ-trafficking ring. (In Stereo) Å Criminal Minds

12

WSBK

13

WGME

14

WTBS Fam. Guy

15

WFXT judges’ sons critique a challenge. (N) (In Stereo)

16 17

Fam. Guy

Big Bang

Big Bang

MasterChef “Top 5 Compete, Parts 1 and 2” The

Å (DVS) CSPAN House of Reps. WBIN Law Order: CI

7 News at 10PM on Everybody 30 Rock CW56 (N) (In Stereo) Å Loves Ray- “Season mond 4” Å The Bletchley Circle PBS NewsHour Rep. The women confront the John Lewis (D-Ga.). (In murderer. Å Stereo) Å WBZ News What’s in Seinfeld The Of(N) Å Store “The Invita- fice “The tions” Banker” CSI: Crime Scene News Letterman Big Bang

Big Bang

Conan Å

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

TMZ (In Stereo) Å

Capitol Hill Hearings Law Order: CI

Insider

The Office Simpsons There Yet?

28

ESPN MLB Baseball: Orioles at Red Sox

29

ESPN2 2013 U.S. Open Tennis Men’s First Round and Women’s Second Round.

30

CSNE MLS Soccer: Union at Revolution

Sports

SportsNet Sports

SportsNet

32

NESN MLB Baseball: Orioles at Red Sox

Extra

Red Sox

Telethon

33

LIFE Movie: “Hidden Away” (2013) Ivan Sergei Å

Movie: “Gone Missing” (2013) Daphne Zuniga.

35 38

E!

Baseball Tonight (N)

Who Wore Who Wore Kardashian

MTV Catfish: The TV Show

The Soup

The Challenge

The Soup

The Challenge

Greta Van Susteren 42 FNC The O’Reilly Factor (N) Hannity (N) 43 MSNBC All In With Chris Hayes Rachel Maddow Show The Last Word 45

CNN Anderson Cooper 360

50

TNT

51

USA NCIS Å (DVS)

Castle “Setup”

SportsCenter (N) Å Olbermann (N) (Live) Sports Chelsea

E! News

The Challenge The O’Reilly Factor All In With Chris Hayes

Piers Morgan Live (N)

Anderson Cooper 360

Erin Burnett OutFront

Castle “Countdown”

Castle (In Stereo) Å

The Mentalist Å

Royal Pains (N)

NCIS Å (DVS)

Suits “She’s Mine”

COM South Park South Park South Park South Park Futurama

Futurama

Comedy Central Roast

53

SPIKE Cops Å

Cops Å

Jail Å

54

BRAVO Million Dollar LA

52

55

Cops Å

Cops Å

Cops Å

Million Dollar LA

Cops Å

Top Chef Masters (N)

“The Mummy Returns” Paranormal Witness

SYFY Paranormal Witness

Paranormal Witness

Joe Rogan Questions

57

A&E Duck D.

Duck D.

Duck D.

Dads

59

HGTV Love It or List It, Too

Property Brothers (N)

Hunters

Hunt Intl

60

DISC Fast N’ Loud Å

Fast N’ Loud Å

Patrick Dempsey

56

61

Jail Å

Million Dollar LA

AMC Movie: ››‡ “The Mummy Returns” (2001, Adventure) Brendan Fraser.

TLC

Honey

Duck D.

Honey

Honey

Duck D.

Cheer Perfection (N)

Honey

Dads

Dads

Brother vs. Brother Fast N’ Loud Å Cheer Perfection Å

64

NICK Full House Full House Full House Full House Full House Full House Full House Full House

65

TOON Legends

Teen

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

66

FAM Melissa

Daddy

Spell-Mageddon (N)

67

DSN Austin

Austin

Movie: ››‡ “Hannah Montana: The Movie”

75

SHOW Donovan

Melissa

All Access “Richard Pryor: Omit the Logic”

Daddy

Fam. Guy

The 700 Club Å Dog

Jessie

All Access “Venus and Serena”

76

HBO Movie: “Clear History”

The Newsroom Å

77

MAX Strike Back Å

Movie: ››‡ “The Man With the Iron Fists”

REAL Sports Gumbel

Hard Knocks Life on Top

CALENDAR TODAY’S EVENTS The Templed B’nai Israel in Laconia and Plymouth Congregational Church will host ceremonies to commemorate the 50th anniversary of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s ‘I Have a Dream Speech’. 3 p.m. at both venues. For more information about the Laconia event call 524-5792 and for information regarding the bell ringing in Plymouth email eileen@weisshouse.net. The Winnipesaukee Playhouse presents the last show of the summer season the dramatic comedy The Unicycle Life. 7:30 p.m. at the Winnispesaukee Playhouse theater in Meredith. Tickets are $20 for seating in the orchestra and $15 for seating in the balcony. To purchase tickets or for more information call 279-0333 or visit www.winniplayhouse.org. LWWA’s summer speaker Series on the M/S Mount Washington cruise featuring John Goodhue for a talk about the history of Lake Winnipesaukee. 12:30 p.m. on board the M/S Mount Washington. Program free with cruise tickets. For more information contact 581-6632 or see www.winnipesaukee.org. Sanbornton commemorates Dr.King’s ‘I Have a Dream’ speech by watching a film of his famous speech and ringing church bells. 2:15 p.m. at the Sanbornton Library. For more information all 286-8288. The Laconia High School Class of ‘48 will hold a pot luck lunch at Beaver Meadow Village Cabana in Concord at noon. For information and or directions call Joye Olson at 219-0407 or 582-1536. Events at the Gilford Public Library. Line Dancing for Beginners 9-10 a.m. Check–Out–An–Expert! 10 a.m. to noon. Social Bridge 10:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. The Thrifty Yankee (121 Rte. 25 - across from (I-LHS) collects donations of baby clothes, blankets and hygiene items for Baby Threads of N.H. every Wednesday through Saturday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. 279-0607. Laconia Elders Friendship Club meeting. 1:30 p.m. at the Leavitt Park Clubhouse. People 55 and older meet each Wednesday for fun, entertainment and education. Meetings provide an opportunity for older citizens to to meet for pure social enjoyment and the club helps the community with philanthropic work. Country Acoustic Picking Party at the Tilton Senior Center. Every Wednesday from 7-9 p.m. Duplicate bridge at the Weirs Beach Community Center. 7:15 p.m. All levels welcome. Snacks. Preschool story time at Belmont Public Library. 10:30 a.m. Overeaters Anonymous offers a program of recovery from compulsive eating using the Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions of OA. Wednesday nights at 5:30 p.m. at St. Joseph Church in Belmont. Call/ leave a message for Elizabeth at 630-9969 for more information. Free knitting and crochet lessons. Drop in on Wednesdays any time between 10 a.m. and 3 p.m. at Baby Threads workshop at 668 Main Street in Laconia (same building as Village Bakery). 998-4012. Zentangle workshop held every Wednesday from 5-7 p.m. at the Vynart Gallery located at 30 Main Street in Meredith. For more information call 279-0557. Narcotics Anonymous meeting. 7 to 8:30 p.m. at 18 Veterans Square in Laconia. TOPS (Taking Off Pounds Sensibly) group meeting. 5:30 p.m. at the First Congregational Church in Meredith.

see CALENDAR page 23

Edward J. Engler, Editor & President Adam Hirshan, Publisher Michael Kitch, Adam Drapcho, Gail Ober Reporters Elaine Hirshan, Sales Manager Crystal Furnee, Jeanette Stewart Ad Sales Patty Johnson, Production Manager & Graphics Marcy Greene, Ad Sales & Graphics Karin Nelson, Office Manager Now arrange the circled letters to form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon.

Print answer here: Yesterday’s

10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 NOVA Å (DVS)

Late Show With David Letterman Jimmy Kimmel Live Å Tonight Show With Jay Leno Jay Leno

Jumble puzzle magazines available at pennydellpuzzles.com/jumblemags

©2013 Tribune Content Agency, LLC All Rights Reserved.

SLUKK

9:30

WBZ in the veto competition.

by David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek

INAAV

9:00 NOVA Å (DVS)

Big Brother Competing Criminal Minds A sus- CSI: Crime Scene In- WBZ News pect abducts nannies and vestigation “Fearless” (In (N) Å (N) (In Stereo) Å children. (In Stereo) Stereo) Å (DVS) The Middle The Middle Modern The Neigh- ABC’s The Lookout (N) NewsCen(In Stereo) Å ter 5 Late WCVB “The Friend” “The Smile” Family (In bors Å Stereo) (N) Å (DVS) America’s Got Talent America’s Got Talent Camp “Harvest Moon” News Performance recap. (N) Six acts advance; One Mack’s parents visit. (N) WCSH (In Stereo) Å Direction. (N) Å Å (DVS) News WHDH America’s Got Talent America’s Got Talent Camp “Harvest Moon”

4

THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

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

8:30

WGBH Nature Å (DVS)

AUGUST 28, 2013

(Answers tomorrow) Jumbles: EMPTY GRILL LOTION SQUARE Answer: When the top-ranked player lost in the first round to an unranked player, it was — UPSETTING

“Seeking the truth and printing it” THE LACONIA DAILY SUN is published Tuesday through Saturday by Lakes Region News Club, Inc. Edward Engler, Mark Guerringue, Adam Hirshan, Founders Offices: 1127 Union Ave. #1, Laconia, NH 03246 Business Office 737-2020, Newsroom 737-2026, Fax: 527-0056 News E-mail: news@laconiadailysun.com CIRCULATION: 18,000 distributed FREE Tues. through Sat. in Laconia, Gilford, Meredith, Weirs Beach, Center Harbor, Belmont, Moultonborough, Winnisquam, Sanbornton, Tilton, Gilmanton, Alton, New Hampton, Plymouth, Bristol, Ashland, Holderness.


Page 20 — THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Wednesday, August 28, 2013

ANNIE’S MAILBOX

Dear Annie: Earlier this year, I was caught up in a liability issue with my high school track coach. I had a knee injury and was being treated by a sports chiropractor, with the full approval of the superintendent of the school district. My coach, however, rejected the note from the chiropractor and caused me horrible stress and anxiety with the unnecessary demand that I see an internist. The principal said I had to do it. The internist said that the school and the coach were being ridiculous. Several months later, I am still thinking about everything that happened, and I sometimes become so obsessed with it that I suffer horrible anxiety. Every time a friend asks what happened, I become emotionally and mentally unstable and relive it. This former track coach treated my parents and me with hostility, and I am worried about returning to school. How can I move on? My mind is taking a beating. -- Still Reliving the Misery Dear Still: Any trauma can lead to Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder, which causes the sufferer to relive the event over and over. You need to find a way to break the loop in your thinking. If you can do this by imagining a different, more empowering outcome, great. It’s also possible that once school starts, your coach will simply ignore the incident, and you can do the same. Or you could approach him in a mature fashion and ask to put this behind you. If he mistreats you, report it to the principal. If you are still traumatized, please consider short-term counseling. High school doesn’t last forever. Dear Annie: Last week, I walked into our computer room to see my husband trying desperately to hit the delete button and get rid of an email he did not want me to see. I managed to glance at the woman’s name, however, and asked him who it was. Well, she is the one I suspected he hooked up with at

his 50th class reunion. There were about five hours during the weekend that he could not account for. His 95-year-old mother knows this woman and says, “She’s such a nice girl and married. She would never do such a thing.” And she says the same about my husband. I don’t believe this. My husband suddenly can’t keep his hands off of the waitresses at our favorite restaurant, and he ogles every woman who walks by. I won’t be going to my 50th class reunion. I can’t leave him alone for a second, and I certainly don’t want him running off with one of my classmates. I don’t want to go out of my house anymore. What should I do? -- Humiliated Wife Dear Wife: Your husband is in his late 70s. In some instances, as a person ages, early signs of dementia start to show up, and one of them is the loss of inhibition. Unless your husband has exhibited such behavior during your entire marriage, we believe his problem is age related. This doesn’t make it less irritating or worrisome, of course, but it’s possible he could be helped by seeing his doctor. Insist that he make an appointment, and go with him. If the doctor is not experienced in this area, ask to be referred to someone who is. Dear Annie: My sympathy for “Shady Family Business,” who wants to change his name because some of his family was engaged in not quite legal doings. It is very likely that the majority of us have forebears who have engaged in activities that would humiliate and horrify us. Even those who discover that they are related to the rich and famous could easily uncover shameful doings in those illustrious backgrounds. Let the dead past lie. If your family has done things of which you are not proud, your lifetime can show that the bloodline is also capable of good. -- Life Is a Mixed Bag

Annie’s Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers column. Please e-mail your questions to: anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or write to: Annie’s Mailbox, c/o Creators Syndicate, 737 3rd Street, Hermosa Beach, CA 90254.

$1-A-DAY CLASSIFIEDS • CALL 527-9299 DOLLAR-A-DAY: Private Party ads only (For Sale, Lost, Autos, etc.), must run ten consecutive days, 15 words max. Additional words 10¢ each per day. does not apply to yard sales. REGULAR RATE: $2.50 a day; 10¢ per word per day over 15 words. PREMIUMS: First word caps no charge. Additional bold, caps and 9pt type 10¢ per word per day. Centered words 10¢ (2 word minimum) TYPOS: Check your ad the first day of publication. Sorry, we will not issue credit after an ad has run once, and we do not offer refunds. DEADLINES: noon the business day prior to the day of publication. PAYMENT: All private party ads must be pre-paid. We accept checks, Visa Mastercard and Discover credit cards and of course, cash. $10 minimum order for credit cards. CORRESPONDENCE: To place your ad call our offices at 527-9299 between 9 am & 5 pm, Monday through Friday; Stop by our office or send a check or money order with ad copy to The Laconia Daily Sun,1127 Union Ave, Laconia, NH 03246. You can email ads to ads@laconiadailysun.com, we will contact you for payment. OTHER RATES: For information about display ads or other advertising options, call 527-9299.

Animals

Autos

BEAUTIFUL Puppies: Apricot and black Pomapoo Teddy Bears. Champ background. Healthy, happy, home raised. 253-6373.

2005 VW Beetle GL Convertible: 4-cylinder, auto, A/C, dark blue, 84k, excellent condtion, $9,995. (603)387-6794.

DACHSHUNDS puppies. Heath & temperament guaranteed. Parents on premise, $450, ready now. (603)539-1603.

2006 Chrysler Sebring Convertible, 42k miles, Great Condition, $7,900. Call 603-253-3363.

GUINEA Pigs born July 30th, ready now. $20 each. 603-832-4540

2011 Ford Focus SE- Silver, 4-cylinder, auto, CD, 27K, 2 new tires, $12,500. Bristol 978-886-4019

WEST Highland White Terriers. 3 females 1 male. Ready Sept. 8th. Will have first shots. Also available, Trained 9 month old pups, with all shots. $450-$750. 603-262-0204-or-508-509-0212

Announcement MAKE EXTRA CASH by consigning your unwanted furniture and home decor items. Please call 524-1175 or stop in at Too Good To Be Threw, 84 Union Avenue, Laconia.

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

BOATS Boat Winterize & Store Starting at $24 per foot

Call JP or Rick

366-4801 PRIVATE Dock for rent: Up to 10x30. Varney Point, Winnipesaukee, Gilford, $1000/rest of season 603-661-2883.

Child Care

BOATS 18 LL.Bean Royalex Canoe, hunter green, strongest hull available, all new wood trim. $700. 603-875-0363

BELMONT- Extra large, redone, 1 bedroom, 2nd floor. Quiet, sunny Rte. 3. $750/Month. Includes heat/hot water. No pets/Smoking outside. 528-1991 Bristol, 2+ bedrooms. Large, eat in kitchen, lots of space. 3rd floor with private entry. Beautifully restored building with! May consider one small pet. Unique layout that goes on forever. $700 per month plus utilities. First months rent, security deposit and references. Please call 603-387-6498 for more information and to make an appointment to see. BRISTOL: 1BR for $675/month & 2BR for $725/month. Heat and hot water included. 217-4141. DOWNTOWN LACONIA- Single Adult 1 Bedroom Apt. Includes Heat and Hot Water, No Pets, References. $160./Week Call 455-5343

NEW THRIFT SHOP Now open. Thrift & Gift. 80 Bean Rd. Center Harbor Christian Church. Come and visit our store. Lots of good, clean household items, clothing, furniture. Mon-Sat. 10am-4pm 253-8008.

Employment Wanted

Autos

Do you need housekeeping help or errands? Discount rates for the disabled. Good references. 998-2601.

$_TOP dollar paid for junk cars & trucks. Available 7-days a week. P3 s Towing. 630-3606 1999 Convertible GT Mustang has 50 mods, including super charger, and vertical doors. Electric green, tan top & interior, $16,000 or best reasonable offer. Call Ed for details 603-253-5002 or 203-592-6244.

HOME CARE: 15 years experience. LNA background, help with activities of daily living. Flexible hours and overnights. References available. 387-7629

For Rent

2001 Chevy 1500 series 8 ft bed, 60k miles good condition $6900/ BRO. 528-2988 2005 Cadillac Deville- 4 door,

For Rent APARTMENTS, mobile homes. If you need a rental at a fair price, call DRM Corp. Over 50 years in rentals. We treat you better! 524-0348 or visit M-W-F, 12-5, at our new location, 142 Church St. (Behind CVS Pharmacy.)

KAYAK- 2-man Nu-canoe with paddles, seats, etc. Like new, 0riginally $825, sell $485.

BARN IN BLEMONT- 5 stall barn with lots of hay storage, tack room, grain room, shavings room, riding arena, 2 large paddock ar-

FRANKLIN 2 Bedroom Apartment in beautiful Victorian home & grounds. 2nd floor, heat/hot water, appliances, washer/dryer supplied. No pets/No smoking, $775/month, 1 month security. 603-279-1385. GILFORD 1 room efficiency apartment. Great location, $650/Month, includes utilities. No smoking/No pets. 603-759-2895 GILFORD Condo: 2-bedroom partially furnished, 1.5 bath, granite counters, fireplace. Pool, tennis, washer/dryer. $1,175/month plus utilities. No pets. 617-501-8545 GILFORD Furnished 3-bedroom waterfront winter rental. Dock, washer & dryer. Available through

For Rent

For Rent

GILFORD- 5 bedroom 2 bath home available Sept. 1st. Newly renovated, swimming pool. $1,850/Month plus utilities. No smoking, pets allowed. 603-759-2895

LACONIA Beautiful 2BR apt in stately home on Gale Ave. Glossy hardwood floors, nicely decorated, full kitchen and bath, pvt porch and garage space. Walk to town and lake. $1,000 a month heated. 524-3892 or 630-4771

GILFORD/LACONIA housemate wanted for 2 room studio completely furnished, in private home now available in Laconia/Gilford. $150/week or $550 per month. 8 minutes from college, hospital and downtown in quiet area. Rent includes all utilities, internet and dish, short/long term. Sorry no pets. Call cell 971-219-7363. GILFORD: 1BR house, very private, oil heat, hookups, $750/month. 30ft.x32-ft garage available, $125/month. No pets. 455-7883. GILFORD: 3BR house, $1,395/month. Very private, oil heat, 3-season room, washer/dryer included. No pets. 455-7883. GILFORD: MARINA BAY 2 Bedroom, 1 1/2 Bath pool/tennis NO PETS. $975 per month 617-605-4984 LACONIA 1 mile from Weirs Beach. Fully furnished one bedroom condo, available now, $750/month 802-338-0952.

LACONIA Large 3-Bedroom, walk to Downtown, Coin-Op laundry, ample parking, heat & water included, no pets. $225/week - 4 weeks security deposit required 267-7949 LACONIA Large one bedroom, second floor, separate entrance, parking for 2 cars, quiet and well-maintained, in good neighborhood, 3-season private porch, includes heat/hw/w/d hookups, no dogs, no smoking in apt. $775/ mo. plus security. 455-8789. LACONIA, new 3 bedroom duplex, 1.5 baths, efficient natural gas heat. $1,100/mo plus utilities and sec. deposit. Call Mark 387-7349. LACONIA, Large 1-bedroom, $185/week. Includes parking, heat and hot water. No pets. References & security. 455-6662. LACONIA1 bedroom, Court Street. $725/Month, includes heat & hot water. $725 Security, no dogs. 603-387-5929

LACONIA 2-bedroom, second floor, clean, quiet, near park, coin-op laundry, no smoking, heat included, pets considered. $850/month. Call 524-0703.

LACONIA: Large 3-bedroom, wood floors, W/D hookups, dishwasher, microwave. Quiet street, large deck. A must see. No pets, first floor, no smoking. 1st & security. Credit report. $1,200/mo. plus utilities. 603-387-6810.

LACONIA2-ROOMMATES wanted to share personal home. Clean, quiet, sober environment. All inclusive, $140-$150/week. 455-2014

LACONIA: One bedroom, 2nd floor, $160/Week includes heat and HW, coin-op laundry, no dogs, no smoking. Security. 387-4885.


THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Wednesday, August 28, 2013— Page 21

For Rent

For Rent-Vacation

For Sale

Free

LACONIA: spacious two bedroom apartment for rent. Rent is $702 to $844 per month with heat and hot water included. On-site laundry, storage room and off-street parking. Close to pharmacy, schools and hospital. EHO. Please call Julie at Stewart Property Mgt. (603) 524-6673

SEPTEMBER Rental- Classic Winnipesaukee cottage. 50ft. sandy beach, dock, mooring, fully equipped, 10 min. from Meadowbrook, P a t r i c k s Pub. $1,000/Week 603-470-6131

MAYTAG Neptune front load washer/dryer, $500. Upright washer & dryer $100/each. 4 burner electric stove $100. Center Island, ceramic & oak $300. Fridge $200. Electric fireplace $40. Countertop water cooler $25. Ladies gym equipment 3-pieces $75/each. Treadmill $125. 603-998-6391

FREE Pickup for of unwanted, useful items. Estates, homes, offices, cleaned out, yardsale items. (603)930-5222.

LACONIA: ELM STREET AREA 2-Bedroom, first floor. parking, W/D hookups, no smoking, no dogs, $800/ month + utilities, security/ references. 603-318-5931. LACONIA: Gilbert Apartments. Call for available apartments. 524-4428 LACONIA: Mountain VIew apts. 2BR & 3BR townhouses, 1.5 bath and large decks. $775 & $850/mo. Quiet location with laundry and playgrounds. No Dogs. Office on site. 524-7185. MEREDITH Waterfront Lake Waukewan 1 bedroom with outstanding views. extremely private, non-smoker, $950 per month plus utilities. Call 279-8078. A pet considered MEREDITH Room for Rent- Quiet, beautiful home. Laundry, kitchen, cable TV, porch. $125/Week. 603-689-8683 MEREDITH- 1 bedroom apt. with kitchen and living room. Ideal for one person. $700/Month, includes heat & hot water. Security deposit required. No smoking/No pets. 279-4164 MEREDITH/LACONIA: Exceptional, large beautiful studio apartment. 19X32, cathedral ceilings, many windows, stunning views, 2 large closets, luxury bath, large deck, solar powered, rural. $1,000/Month, including utilities. Security deposit, no pets. 455-3585. MOULTONBOROUGH HOUSEYear round, one bedroom, renter pays all utilities. Credit report required, application fee, security. $400/Month. 253-6924 MOULTONBOROUGH- Furnished 3 bedroom country home. Energy efficient, two full baths, washer/dryer, dishwasher, beach access, tennis court & canoe. $800/Month + utilities. No pets/No smokers Sept.-June. Call 253-3363

For Rent-Commercial LACONIADowntown. Prime storefront. approx. 900 sq. ft., ideal for snack shop, retail, etc. Good exposure & foot traffic. $750 includes heat. Also, in same building, sm storefront approx. 450 sq ft. $375 includes heat. 524-3892 or 630-4771 OFFICE Space - Industrial Park first floor 3600 sq.ft. 5 offices, reception area, large work area, 2 rest rooms second floor 2600 sq.ft., 2 offices 3 large open areas, 2 rest rooms. Parking. Rent 6.50 sq.ft. includes utilities. Call Rick 491-9058.

For Sale (4) Uniroyal Tiger Paw Tires: R14, no wear, $40/each. 528-0688. 1885 Ivy Franklin parlor stove. rare, good condition. $1,000 B/). 603-470-6131 AMAZING! Beautiful Pillowtop Mattress Sets. Twin $199, Full or Queen $249, King $449. Call 603-305-9763 See “Furniture” AD. BEAUTIFUL wooden pews. Memento of former Lady of the Lakes Church. 524-2277 BICYCLETrek 4500 Ladies 14inch with extras. Used little, like new. $275. 970-379-0326 Laconia

RED SOX Tickets: September 18th, vs. the Orioles, good seats, $150 for both. 520-6061. ROCKWELL 9” Collectible Plates, 25 available, $25 each or 5 for $99. 603-875-0363. SIMPLICITY Broadmoor Lawn Tractor. 44in. deck, 15HP, Mulching attachment, runs great. $585/OBO 603-536-5501 SNAP On Toolbox- 3 piece, 32 drawer, good condition. $2,500. Call John (603) 801-3513 USED & almost new tires, truck and car. Call 393-0688

Furniture AMAZING! Beautiful Queen or Full-sized Mattress/ Box-spring Set. LUXURY-FIRM European Pillow-Top Style. Fabulous Back, Hip and Leg Support, Hospitality A+ Rating! All New Factory Sealed with 10-YR Warranty. Compare Cost $1095, SELL $249. Can Delivery and Set-up. 603-305-9763

to join our team of nurses in a diversified practice. Must be able to work independently in various roles and possess critical thinking skills. We are looking for someone 4 days per week. We offer a very competitive salary. Please call (603)524-7402 x 210 for more information.

EARN EXTRA CHRISTMAS SPENDING MONEY! WONDERFUL opportunity for a cheerful person! Looking for farm stand help in our apple orchard, Stonybrook Farm in Gilford, weekdays 10-5 and Saturdays 9-5pm, Labor Day thru Oct. 20. Beautiful location, happy customers. Contact Brenda at Brenda.petvet@gmail.com

BRAND new freezer 20 cubic Fri gidaire Gallery stainless steel with built-in ice maker $700 OBO. 603-707-9934 CUSTOM- 4 18x8 Chrome Rims w/ center covers. 6 hole. Fits all GM Trucks-SUV. $700. 934-4907 leave message. DEWALT radial arm saw with rollaway stand. $150. AnnaLee dolls $5.-$80. 603-253-6576 DRY firewood $250/Cord. Green wood available for $200/cord. Round wood dry & green. 16-18 cut. Free delivery. 524-9011 FIREWOOD: Green, Cut, split and delivered (Gilmanton and surrounding area). $200/ cord. Seasoned available $250/ cord. (603)455-8419 Generac generator 5500 watt with 50ft. power cable on wheels $350. Antique radio $200. 744-6107

HARLEY motorcycle seat. Fits 1997-2007 touring models. $99. 603-366-4047 NORTHFIELD: One bedroom 2nd floor. No smoking, $170/week, including heat & security. 387-4885 TILTON: 1-BEDROOM 3rd floor spacious apartment. Convenient location, no pets. $550/Month. plus utilities, heat. Available 9/7. Security deposit, references. 286-8200

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

WINTER RENTAL Gilmanton Iron Works, Crystal Lake, 2 bedroom cottage, stone fireplace/wood stove, gas heat, enclosed porch, fully furnished, washer/dryer, TV, DVD. $750/month plus utilities. 1 month security. Pets considered.

JOHN Deere number 40 AeratorSpreader $200. JD 10p utility cart $100. 528-2988. KENMORE Elite 16.7 cu. ft. upright freezer with digital control, $300. Darkwood hutch, $50. Call 524-8595 Leave message LEER- White truck cap Model XQ. Fits Colorado Crew. $500 934-4907 leave message. LOG Length Firewood: 7-8 cords, $900. Local delivery. 998-8626. LOOKING for someone who loges to sew/quilt. I have 2 Husqvarna sewing machines, books, tons of material and sewing items. All for sale. Call 286-7489 MODEL Tractors by ERTL 1/16th scale, 8 Farmall, 1 each Kubota & Ford, $32-$60/each. 603-875-0363. NAPOLEON cast iron propane gas area stove, hardly used, 25 to 30,000 btus. Will sell for $650.

Immediate opening for Journeyman Electrician. Submit resume to: DW Electrical Contractors, Inc. PO Box 1948, North Conway, NH 03860 or email to: kevin@dweci.com

Help Wanted

BUSY LACONIA SPECIALTY PRACTICE SEEKING AN RN

WANT TO MAKE A DIFFERENCE?? The Carroll County Complex is now seeking qualified candidates for the following positions:

Licensed Practical Nurse – full time Carroll County House of Correction Successful candidates will have demonstrated the ability to perform as an active member of an interdisciplinary team. Must be able to positively interact with staff and residents in a correctional setting; positively work with emotionally upset, and at times withdrawn or aggressive persons of all ages. Must be willing to work evenings, and occasional weekends and holidays. Must be currently licensed in State of New Hampshire. Experience in a correctional setting preferred but not required.

Dietary Aides Mountain View Community

Part time and per diem positions currently available. Experience not required, but a willingness to work hard is. Must be able to obtain ServSafe certification, and be willing to work a flexible schedule including weekend hours. Under 18 will be required to provide parental permission. Applications for openings at the Carroll County Complex are available online at www.carrollcountynh.net, or at the Department of Human Resources. Mail, email or fax completed application with resume to: Department of Human Resources PO Box 152, Ossipee, NH 03864 (phone) 603-539-1721 • (fax) 539-1804 wdegroot@carrollcountynh.net Carroll County takes pride in being an Equal Opportunity Employer

Help Wanted ELECTRICIAN

FENCE & GUARDRAIL LABORERS NEEDED

BUSY florist/gift shop looking for experienced retail person: Year round, must be flexible and available 7 days a week. Apply in person or send resume to Dockside Florist, 54 NH Route 25, Meredith, NH 03253.

BOAT Lift, $400; In/Out 6-Person Jacuzzi, $1,500; Row Boat, $150; Bumper Pool Table, $250. (203)561-4943.

GOLF CLUBS, used once, like new: Callaway Razor X Pro, 4 AW, steel, reg. men s, $299. Call 253-7464, Center Harbor

Help Wanted

Driver s license, D.O.T. Card and a CDL License required along with a 10 HR. OSHA Card.Please Contact: B.I.I. FENCE & GUARDRAIL AT 524-1415 AND LEAVE A MESSAGE.

“GILFORD MOBIL MART located at 1400 Lakeshore Rd. is looking for friendly and reliable cashiers. Applicants must be willing to work weekends, please apply in person.”

LAUNDROMAT ATTENDANT Part time, evening shifts. Tanning certification a plus. Apply in person, 585 Union Ave. Next to Dominos


Page 22 — THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Wednesday, August 28, 2013

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

FIRESIDE INN & SUITES ALL POSITIONS

IMMEDIATE NEED ENTRY LEVEL RETAIL:

T he Fireside Inn & Suites is accepting applications for the following positions: Maintenance Assistant, Housekeeping Supervisor, Part-Time Front Desk Associate, and Housekeeping Personnel. Applicants must be flexible with weekend availability. Persons should be able to maintain a professional attitude while at work, be reliable, dependable and hard-working. Experience within the field is helpful but not necessary. Apply in person at 17 Harris Shore Rd., Gilford, NH 03249.

Energysavers, the original hearth & spa center, is looking for our next “Dedicated Advisor”. We are a highly recommended 38 year old Lakes Region retailer, of well known hearth and spa products. Our Advisors learn all aspects of our product lines, making them the best in our industry. You can earn while you learn! No prior experience required. Must be able to lift and carry a 50 lb. minimum and have a valid driver s license. Hourly base pay plus commission. Stop in for an application. Energysavers Inc, 163 Daniel Webster Hwy, Meredith NH. EEO

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

SWISSET TOOL COMPANY INC. Full Time 1st Shift Cutting Tool Maker. Knowledge of micrometers and optical comparators a plus. Must be self motivated. We are willing to train the right individual. 524-0082

MARINA YARD HELP

- CNC MILL OPERATOR - PRESS OPERATOR for Aerospace Work 40 hr week Position 1st Shift Benefits available

Please apply in person at

AEROWELD, INC. 49 Blaisdell Avenue • Laconia, NH 03246

(603)524-8121 POLICE OFFICER The Town of Northfield seeks an experienced team player for a full time Police Officer position. Responsibilities include patrol, investigation, traffic control and a variety of other duties. Salary $17.18/hr. - $22.33/hr., competitive benefits. A position description with a list of job requirements and application instructions is available at Northfield Town Hall and at http://www.northfieldnh.org The Town of Northfield is an equal opportunity employer

Services

2004 mobile home in small co-op. 3-BR, 2-FB, Eat-in-kitchen, DW, new stove. Asking $35,000. Call 524-7225

Motorcycles 2006 Honda VTX 1300 Low mileage mint condition $6,500 or best reasonable offer. Call 603-520-5198

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

Recreation Vehicles

MUSICIANS- Country music. Looking for guitarist, bass, lead & drummer. Call Bob Kent 603- 387-1918

SIX EXPERIENCED HAIRCUTTERS

WEIRS Beach Area: To share house, $550/month, everything included. Beach rights. 393-6793

Buy • Sell • Trade www.motoworks.biz

needed at busy marina yard. Tasks include detailing, moving boats, 40-48 hrs/week pleasant working environment, apply in person, Rt. 3 Belmont, Winnisquam Marine. 524-8380.

Must be good with children & like to have fun! Call Dan for more details. 524-7978

GILFORD: 1.13 acres of level and open field land with western exposure and mountain views, $89,900. Owner/broker 524-1234.

1982 Mobile Home: 14-ft. x 65-ft., 2-bedrooms, 1.5 baths, lots of improvements. $19,900. Call 603-998-3113.

MAINTENANCE Assistant and Janitor. Experience preferred. Part to full-time. Must have a valid NH drivers license, clean background check. 393-6584.

Seeking a licensed Journeyman or Master Plumber Experience in Residential service and repair, new construction and remodels, and some light commercial. HVAC experience a definite plus as well as NH Gasfitters license. Professional Work habits Excellent Customer Service Skills Valid Drivers license with Clean Driving Record Call 603-875-1118 for more details.

Roommate Wanted BELMONT: $105/week. Share 4-bedroom home on private property. All utilities included. Free internet access. Must have a good work history. Please no pets. Call 520-4500.

Mobile Homes

LNAs and PCSPs Responsible and dependable candidates for Care and Comfort Nursing, 102 Court St., Laconia. 528-5020

LICENSED PLUMBER WANTED

Land BELMONT: 3 acres with 180' of paved road frontage in vicinity of high school. Dry and rolling land with great soils for building, $54,900. Owner/broker 524-1234.

2009 Fleetwood 34-B Class-A Fiesta LX. 8K miles, full body paint, 3 slides. Mint $69,900. 267-7044

PART-TIME Nursery Help Wanted at Appletree Nursery, Route 3, Winnisquam: Must be dependable and flexible. Please apply in person, 524-8031.

COMMUNITY JOB SPECIALIST NEW HAMPSHIRE EMPLOYMENT PROGRAM (NHEP) Community Action Program, Belknap-Merrimack Counties, Inc. is seeking a part-time (22.5 hours per week) Community Job Specialist to develop and monitor paid and volunteer work opportunities for TANF public assistance recipients in the Laconia NH area. Duties include case management with local NHEP Team; develop and monitor appropriate work experience and onthe-job training (OJT) agreements in the public and private sector; intervene & resolve clientemployer work issues; support program training staff; and prepare required activity reports. Bachelor s degree in Human Services, Education, Psychology, Business Admin, or other relevant discipline. Should have min. 2 years professional experience in career counseling, teaching, workforce development, marketing, or human resources; min. 2 years experience or volunteer work with low income families; experience in job development and/or career instruction; strong familiarity with State & local social services; skilled in e-mail, Internet, WORD, & EXCEL; and an ability to energize and motivate adult job seekers. Prior work with Immigrant, Refugee, or New American populations a plus. An Associate s Degree in the above disciplines with 4 years experience may be considered in lieu of the Bachelor s degree. Send resumes to: CAPBMCI, P.O. Box 1016, Concord, NH 033302-1016 or via email to lhazeltine@bm-cap.org by September 4, 2013. E.O.E.

32! Southwind Motor Home made by Fleetwood. Self contained, runs excellent, nice for camping. $4,500. 707-1545.

Real Estate

Instruction CNA / LNA TRAINING Evening Class Begins Oct. 9th in Laconia. Graduate in just 7 weeks! (603) 647-2174 www.LNAHealthCareers.com

Sarah's Tutoring • Specialty; SAT and ACT tests • Math, English and Subject tests •All High School Subjects • Languages; Spanish, French, German and Russian

Lakes Region/Concord

Reasonable Rates

603-528-2964

ESTATE Sale, Cedar Lodge Penthouse Condo, Fantastic View, Marble floors, must See. Franklin 62 Acres overlooking Webster Lake. Investment potential, subdivision, make offer. 603-767-2211 ESTATE Sale, Cedar Lodge Penthouse Condo, Fantastic View, Marble floors, must See. Franklin 62 Acres overlooking Webster Lake. Investment potential, subdivision, make offer. 603-767-2211 HOUSE for sale by owner in Meredith, NH. Large raised ranch, 3 BR, 2 full baths, 12 rooms total, plus side building 16! x 24! with electric, phone and heat. Built in 2003, on a small cul-de-sac road. 5.8 acres, $310,000. 279-4692

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

Our Customers Don!t get Soaked!

528-3531 Major credit cards accepted CALL Mike for yard cleanups, mowing, maintenance, scrapping, light hauling, very reasonably priced. 603-455-0214

CHAIR CANING Seatweaving. Classes. Supplies. New England Porch Rockers, 2 Pleasant Street in downtown Laconia. Open every day at 10. 603-524-2700.

Real Estate, Wanted

DICK THE HANDYMAN

LOOKING FOR LAKES REGION HOUSE w/garage for long-term rental. 2 bedroom, 2 bath, immaculate housekeeper. Local retired couple. Call 970-379-0326

Available for small and odd jobs, also excavation work, small tree and stump removal and small roofs! Call for more details. Dick Maltais 603-267-7262 or 603-630-0121


THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Wednesday, August 28, 2013 — Page 23

Shaw promoted to compliance officer at Bank of New Hampshire

Laconia Elks gives out 22 bicycles

Laconia Elks #876 held its first annual youth bike fest on Saturday August 17 and gave needy children of the Lakes Region bikes and helmets. This was through Elks National Fundation and the membership of the Laconia Elks #876.The Laconia Elks partnered with the Boys and Girls Club of the Lakes Region and local newspapers to promote the event. Pictured are the majority of the 22 bikes and their new owners, the volunteers and children who participated in the bike safety course. Shown are front row: Mia, Amber, Alivia, Ashley, Amila, back row: Tory, Haley, Caroline, Doti, Emma, Norman, Zachary, Joan, Evan and Autumn. (Courtesy photo)

Services

Services

Services ALSTATE SIDING & ROOFING

Metal & asphalt roofs, vinyl siding with insulation, vinyl replacement windows. (603)733-5034, (207)631-5518.

YARD MAINTENANCE Flower bed maintenance, pruning, planting, transplanting, trimming, weeding mulching, spring & fall cleanup. Alan, 491-6280

Storage Space CLEAN DRY Storage Easy access. $65/ month. 520-4465.

Wanted

DAVE Waldron Maintenance: Sand, Gravel, Loam & Mulch. Excavation,Driveway/Road repair, Etc. 279-3172.

HAULING - LANDSCAPE MAINTENANCE. ATTIC & GARAGE CLEANOUTS. 520-9478

HEIDI’S HOUSECLEANING IS BACK! NO JOB TOO BIG NO JOB TOO SMALL Now accepting: Seasonal/Year-Round Residential

References available upon request

393-3174 HOME Repairs: roofing, siding, painting, tile, concrete, repairs and chimney cleaning. 603-726-8679 Paul. JD’S LAWNCARE & PROPERTY SERVICES- Cleanups, small engine repair, mowing, edging, mulching, scrap-metal removal. 603-455-7801

USED Dock- Three 10ft. or four 8ft. sections. Wood or Aluminum. Must be in good condition. 470-6131

Wanted To Buy WE buy anything of value from one piece to large estates. Call 527-8070.

LACONIA — Bank Bank of New Hampof New Hampshire has shire, founded in 1831, announced that Heidi provides deposit, lending Shaw has been promoted and wealth management to Assistant Vice Presiproducts and services to dent – Assistant Complifamilies and businesses ance Officer. throughout New HampShaw began her employshire. With 21 banking ment with Bank of New offices throughout New Hampshire in December Hampshire and assets of 2004 as a Customer exceeding $1 billion, Bank Service Center Represenof New Hampshire is the tative and in 2005 became oldest and largest indethe Compliance Specialpendent bank in the state. ist for the Bank. She has Heidi Shaw (Courtesy photo) Bank of New Hampshire served on several project is a mutual organization, teams and was the team manager for focused on the success of the bank’s the implementation of RESPA. Shaw customers, communities and employholds a BA in Human Resources Manees, rather than stockholders. For agement and is a Certified Regulatory more information, call 1-800-832-0912 Compliance Manager, earning this or visit www.BankNH.com. designation in 2011 from the ABA.

Bridgewater Hazard Mitigation Plan Committee to meet on September 4

BRIDGEWATER — The Bridgewater Hazard Mitigation Plan Committee is in the process of updating its 2008 Hazard Mitigation Plan. The committee, which is represented by the Board of Selectmen, Planning Board, Police and Emergency Services, the Road Agent, and the Hebron-Bridgewater Refuse Facility is considering the natural and manmade hazards that put Bridgewater at risk as well as developing of recommendations to protect the safety

and well being of town residents. The committee will hold its second meeting on September 4, at the Bridgewater Town Hall starting at 10 a.m. Residents of Bridgewater and representatives from neighboring communities are encouraged to attend and provide input. For more information call the Selectmen at 744-5055 or David Jeffers, Regional Planner, Lakes Region Planning Commission at 279-8171.

Yard sale Saturday will help send local dance team to the Orange Bowl

BELMONT — The Broadway North Dance Team is holding a yard sale on August 31, to raise funds to help the team travel to Florida and participate in the half-time performance of the Orange Bowl, to be held on January 3, 2014. The Broadway North dancers CALENDAR from page 19

THURSDAY, AUG. 29 The 39th Army Band performs as part of the 2013 Franklin Concerts in the Park series. 6:30 p.m. at Odell Park. Rain location is the Franklin Opera House. Ice cream social hosted by State Senator Jeanie Forrester. 6-7:30 p.m. at Riverview Village in Bristol. To RSVP for this free event email jeanie@jeanieforrester.com or call 271-2609. The Winnipesaukee Playhouse presents the last show of the summer season the dramatic comedy The Unicycle Life. 7:30 p.m. at the Winnispesaukee Playhouse theater in Meredith. Features a special post-show discussion and Q & A with the cast and crew. Tickets are $20 for seating in the orchestra and $15 for seating in the balcony. To purchase tickets or for more information call 279-0333 or visit www.winniplayhouse.org. Events at the Gilford Public Library. Conversational French 3:30-4:30 p.m. Crafter’s Corner 6-7:30 p.m. The History

will learn a routine to perform with other schools during the game. The yard sale will be held at the dance school’s studio in Belmont from 7 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday. Those who wish to drop off a donation may do so at the studio from 5 to 8 p.m. on Friday.

of Ragtime with Deborrah Wyndham 6:307:30 p.m. Al-Anon Meeting at the Congregational Church Parish House (18 Veterans Square) in Laconia. 8 to 9:15 p.m. each Thursday. Al-Anon offers hope and help to families of alcoholics. No dues or fees. All are welcome. Call 645-9518. Plymouth Area Chess Club meets Thursdays from 7-9 p.m. at Starr King Fellowship, 101 Fairgrounds Road. Form more information call George at 536-1179. American Legion Post #1 Bingo. Every Thursday night at 849 N. Main Street in Laconia. Doors open at 4 p.m. Bingo starts at 6:30. Knitting at Belmont Public Library. 6 p.m. Chess Club at the Goss Reading Room (188 Elm Street) in Laconia. 2:30 to 4:30 p.m. each Thursday. All ages and skill levels welcome. We will teach. Giggles & Grins playgroup at Family Resource Center in downtown Laconia (719 No. Main Street, Laconia). Free group for parents children from birth through age 5. For more information call 524-1741.


Page 24 — THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Wednesday, August 28, 2013

MODEL YEAR END

NCE CLEEAVREA NT

AUTOMOTIVE GROUP OVER

0 able 35 603-524-4922 | www.irwinzone.com ta’s Avail

NEW Toyo

OVER

200

NEW Hyu n

dai’s Ava il

able

0 Payments for 3 Months | 0% APR up to 60 mos | Irwin’s $1,000 Bonus Voucher

60 payments of $16.67 per month for every $1,000 borrowed.

TOYOTA SCION NEW 2013 TOYOTA

COROLLA LE

35 MPG

59 Bisson Ave Laconia, NH 603-524-4922 | www.irwinzone.com

$39/MO OR $ LEASE FOR ONLY

1/PerDay

27 available at this price! 0% Available 60 Mos

PRIUS TWO

LEASE FOR ONLY

LEASE FOR ONLY

SALE PRICE

Lease for 24 months with 10,500 miles per year. Buy for 84 months at 4.99% with approved credit. F.M.C.C. financing may be required. $2,999 cash or trade equity, st payment, $645 acquisition fee and dealer fee due at signing. $0 security deposit with approved credit. No sales tax for NH residents. All rebates to dealer. Manufacturers programs are subject to change without notice. Ad vehicles reflect MFG rebates and all Irwin discount vouchers. Expires 8-31-2013.

Stk# DFC856

NEW 2013 FORD

ESCAPE SE 4x4

$19,999

$98/MO LEASE FOR ONLY

SALE PRICE

$99/MO

NEW 2013 TOYOTA

RAV4 4x4

LEASE FOR ONLY

SALE PRICE

Lease for 24 months with 10,500 miles per year. Buy for 84 months at 4.99% with approved credit. F.M.C.C. financing may be required. $2,999 cash or trade equity, st payment, $645 acquisition fee and dealer fee due at signing. $0 security deposit with approved credit. No sales tax for NH residents. All rebates to dealer. Manufacturers programs are subject to change without notice. Ad vehicles reflect MFG rebates and all Irwin discount vouchers. Expires 8-31-2013.

Stk# DFT407

$293/MO

NEW 2013 FORD

F150 STX S/Cab 4x4

BUY FOR ONLY

$149/MO $357/MO

23 MPG

SALE PRICE

LEASE FOR ONLY

HYUNDAI

NEW 2013 HYUNDAI ACCENT GS 32 MPG

Stk# HDC557

$66/MO $159/MO LEASE FOR ONLY

$14,866 SALE PRICE

BUY FOR ONLY

SALE PRICE

37 F150’s Available 0% Available 60 Mos

18 Accent’s Available

Lease for 24 months with 10,500 miles per year. Buy for 84 months at 4.99% with approved credit. F.M.C.C. financing may be required. $2,999 cash or trade equity, st payment, $645 acquisition fee and dealer fee due at signing. $0 security deposit with approved credit. No sales tax for NH residents. All rebates to dealer. Manufacturers programs are subject to change without notice. Ad vehicles reflect MFG rebates and all Irwin discount vouchers. Expires 8-31-2013.

Stk# DFT432

446 Union Ave Laconia, NH 603-524-4922 | www.irwinhyundai.com

NEW 2013 HYUNDAI ELANTRA GLS 38 MPG

Stk# HDS580

$29/MO $209/MO LEASE FOR ONLY

$17,395 SALE PRICE

BUY FOR ONLY

$26,864

63 Rav4’s Available Lease for 24 months with 12,000 miles per year. Buy for 84 months at 4.99% with approved credit. $2.999 cash or trade equity, 1st payment, $650 acquisition fee and dealer fee due at signing. $0 security deposit with approved credit. No sales tax for NH residents. All rebates to dealer. Manufacturers programs are subject to change without notice. Ad vehicles reflect MFG rebates and all Irwin discount vouchers. Expires 8-31-2013.

Stk# DJT766

BUY FOR ONLY

25 Escape’s Available 0% Available 60 Mos

$23,312

31 MPG

$299/MO

$22,911

33 MPG

52 Camry’s Available 0% Available 60 Mos Stk# DJC651

BUY FOR ONLY

20 Fusion’s Available 0% Available 60 Mos

BUY FOR ONLY

Lease for 24 months with 12,000 miles per year. Buy for 84 months at 4.99% with approved credit. $2.999 cash or trade equity, 1st payment, $650 acquisition fee and dealer fee due at signing. $0 security deposit with approved credit. No sales tax for NH residents. All rebates to dealer. Manufacturers programs are subject to change without notice. Ad vehicles reflect MFG rebates and all Irwin discount vouchers. Expires 8-31-2013.

$257/MO

$19,999

0% Available 60 Mos

LEASE FOR ONLY

35 MPG

$82/MO

FUSION SE

$69/MO $248/MO

CAMRY LE

0% Available 60 Mos

Lease for 24 months with 10,500 miles per year. Buy for 84 months at 4.99% with approved credit. F.M.C.C. financing may be required. See dealer for details. $1,803 cash or trade equity, st payment, $645 acquisition fee and dealer fee due at signing. $0 security deposit with approved credit. No sales tax for NH residents. All rebates to dealer. Manufacturers programs are subject to change without notice. Ad vehicles reflect MFG rebates and all Irwin discount vouchers. Expires 8-31-2013.

35 MPG

Lease for 24 months with 12,000 miles per year. Buy for 84 months at 4.99% with approved credit. $2.999 cash or trade equity, 1st payment, $650 acquisition fee and dealer fee due at signing. $0 security deposit with approved credit. No sales tax for NH residents. All rebates to dealer. Manufacturers programs are subject to change without notice. Ad vehicles reflect MFG rebates and all Irwin discount vouchers. Expires 8-31-2013.

NEW 2013 TOYOTA

SALE PRICE

NEW 2013 FORD

SALE PRICE

Stk# DJC886

BUY FOR ONLY

$17,835

Stk# DFC849

BUY FOR ONLY

50 Prius’ Available

$222/MO

10 Focus’ Available

$22,805

51 MPG

LEASE FOR ONLY

35 MPG

$99/MO $286/MO

NEW 2013 TOYOTA

$97/MO

FOCUS SE

NOT JUST ONE

Lease for 24 months with 12,000 miles per year. $2.999 cash or trade equity, 1st payment, $650 acquisition fee and dealer fee due at signing. $0 security deposit with approved credit. No sales tax for NH residents. All rebates to dealer. Manufacturers programs are subject to change without notice. Ad vehicles reflect MFG rebates and all Irwin discount vouchers. Expires 8-31-2013.

Stk# DJC901

FORD LINCOLN

NEW 2013 FORD

BUY FOR ONLY

32 Elantra’s Available

NEW 2013 HYUNDAI SONATA GLS 35 MPG

Stk# HDC565

$69/MO $209/MO LEASE FOR ONLY

$18,770 SALE PRICE

BUY FOR ONLY

47 Sonata’s Available

NEW 2013 HYUNDAI SANTA 28 MPG

SPORT FE FWD

Stk# HDT596

$176/MO $269/MO LEASE FOR ONLY

$23,299 SALE PRICE

BUY FOR ONLY

36 Santa Fe’s Available

Lease for 36 (24 Months Elantra) months with 12,000 miles per year. Buy for 84 months at 4.99% with approved credit. H.M.F. may be required. $2,999 cash or trade equity, 1st payment, $595 acquisition fee and dealer fee due at signing. $0 security deposit with approved credit. No sales tax for NH residents. All rebates to dealer. Manufacturers programs are subject to change without notice. Ad vehicles reflect MFG rebates and all Irwin discount vouchers. Expires 8-31-2013.


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