the berlin daily sun, friday, september 2, 2011
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The Berlin Daily Sun, Friday, September 2, 2011TRANSCRIPT
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 2011 VOL. 20 NO. 98 BERLIN, N.H. 75 2-5858 FREE
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Bass, Burton get storm damage update from GorhamGORHAM -- U.S. Congressman
Charlie Bass and Executive Coun-cilor Raymond Burton got a fi rst hand report on the damage from Tropical Storm Irene which Gorham offi cials estimate at over $1 million.
On a two day tour of the North Country, the pair met Thursday after-noon with Gorham town manager, Robin Frost, Emergency Management Director, Chad Miller, and Selectman David Graham. State Senator John Gallus (R-Berlin) also attended as did Gorham resident Don Provencher.
Frost told Bass and Burton the storm had resulted in signifi cant infrastructure damage to the town’s roads as well as residential property.
Miller said the Peabody and Moose Rivers, which he noted are both uncon-trolled, fl ooded. The Peabody River caused the most damage, rendering White Birch Lane impassable. Stony Brook Road, Spring Road, Bangor
Road, Glen Road, Bell and Washing-ton Streets were also damaged. The Moose River caused damage to the Lancaster Road and forced the evacu-ation of residents in Braeburn Village. The town estimates damage to its roads at over $1 million.
Miller said the town will be seek-ing Federal Emergency Management Agency funding to repair the damage. In the past he said the federal govern-ment had picked up 75 percent of the cost with the state and local commu-nity splitting the remaining 25 per-cent. Miller said he hopes the state will still share in the cost.
Bass said he was re-familiarizing himself with FEMA regulations.
“We can’t fi x things but we can cer-tainly help you with the administra-tive process,” he said.
Miller said the fl ooding has caused serious erosion and bank destabili-zation to the rivers, especially the Peabody. In some cases, banks have been reduced to two to three feet. He
said the state Department of Envi-ronmental Services is still assessing the damage but it will cost millions of dollars to make the Peabody River
safe. He said fi xing the problem will be complicated, in part because the Peabody borders the White Mountain
Manchester man pleads guilty to Berlin rape, gets two years of prison time
LANCASTER — A Manchester man has been convicted in Coos Superior Court of kidnapping, rape and assault, following an incident at the Budget Inn
last summer.Charles Wade Anderson, 38, pleaded guilty in
front of Judge Peter Bornstein on Aug. 22, to charges of kidnapping, aggravated felonious sexual assault, and second degree assault. As a result he will spend
two years in jail and is required to register as a sex offender.
Anderson is accused of keeping a woman in a room at the Budget Inn in Berlin against her will on
BY BARBARA TETREAULTTHE BERLIN DAILY SUN
see UPDATE page 6
BY MELISSA GRIMATHE BERLIN DAILY SUN
see GUILTY page 6
U.S. Congressman Charlie Bass and Executive Councilor Raymond Burton meet with Gorham offi cials Wednesday during a two-day swing through the North Country. (BARBARA TETREAULT PHOTO).
Berlin fi refi ghters yesterday morning responded to a fi re at Public Service of N.H.’s Smith hydroelec-tric station. The fi re temporaily knocked out power to 5,000 customers. (RITA DUBE PHOTO).
Fire at Smith hydroelectric plant knocks out power
BERLIN -- A fi re yesterday morn-ing at Public Service of N.H.’s Smith hydroelectric station knocked out power to about 5,000 customers for approximately two hours.
Berlin Fire Chief Randall Trull said the department received a call at 9:54 a.m. Thursday, reporting a fi re alarm had been activated at the plant at 99 Glen Avenue.
Trull said an initial crew of six fi refi ghters, including two trainees, responded to discover light smoke in the basement and a small fi re inside
at the back of the building. The response team called a general alarm and an additional ten fi refi ghters responded within 15 minutes.
Because of the electrical equip-ment in the building, Trull said the crew initially attacked the blaze with carbon dioxide extinguishers until the electrical power was shut off. Once the power was off, he said the crews went in with hose lines.
Electric service was temporarily shut off to part of the city and cus-tomers in Milan and Errol. Power was restored to all customers by 2 p.m.
BY BARBARA TETREAULTTHE BERLIN DAILY SUN
see FIRE page 10
Page 2 — THE BERLIN DAILY SUN, Friday, September 2, 2011
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Anyone who says they’re not afraid
at the time of a hur-ricane is either a fool or a liar, or a little bit of both.”
— Anderson Cooper
“
Covered bridges, beloved remnants
of another era, were casualties, too
THEMARKET
1,755U.S. military deaths in
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(NY TIMES) — As the country watched scenes of devastation from Hur-ricane Irene, thousands of history and engineer-ing buffs were on edge for another reason, waiting to hear the fate of hundreds of antique covered bridges that dot the Eastern Seaboard and that are especially concentrated — and beloved — in the unex-pectedly ravaged state of Vermont.
C o v e r e d - b r i d g e enthusiasts and others shuddered as they watched an amateur video, on the Internet, of the Bartonsville bridge in Vermont sliding almost intact into the Williams River on Sunday.
Vermont offi cials have found several other cov-ered bridges, among the 100 or so statewide, that have been seri-ously damaged, but the loss of the Bartonsville bridge, built in 1871, with a wooden lattice spanning 158 feet, was considered the greatest historical blow. (Another badly damaged bridge, in Quechee, was cov-ered but built of con-crete in the 1970s.)
TodayHigh: 73
Record: 93 (1942)Sunrise: 6:08 a.m.
TonightLow: 53
Record: 35 (1936)Sunset: 7:20 p.m.
TomorrowHigh: 78Low: 60
Sunrise: 6:09 a.m.Sunset: 7:18 p.m.
SundayHigh: 80Low: 61
DOW JONES119.96 to 11,493.57
NASDAQ33.42 to 2,546.04
S&P14.47 to 1,204.42
Relief in Vermont towns as crews make inroadsROCHESTER, Vt. (NY TIMES) — There
is still no electricity in this town at the foot of the Green Mountains, but after days of being cut off from the world, there is a way out.
Road crews had cleared enough of the wreckage on Wednesday to allow in utility trucks and emergency vehicles. Still, most of the 1,100 residents remained unable to come or go after Sunday’s devastating fl oods. Many had made peace with it, for now.
“Spirits are pretty good,” said Virginia Scott Bowman, who had joined dozens of
her neighbors at a community supper in the yard of a local inn before night fell. Many had contributed food from their powerless freezers for what has become a twilight ritual. A massage table had been set up, and children were playing Frisbee on the town green across the street.
By Wednesday night, crews had completed makeshift roads into all of the isolated towns, state offi cials said. They reached the last, Wardsboro, population 850, in south central Vermont, just before 6 p.m.
But the roads, some of which pass
through treacherous mountain landscape, are accessible only by all-terrain vehicles and four-wheel-drive trucks and cannot support regular traffi c, offi cials said.
On Thursday morning, Central Vermont Public Service, the state’s largest utility company, said only 5,900 of its customers remained without power, down from more than 73,000 just after the storm. In areas where bucket trucks cannot get through, workers are arriving on all-terrain vehi-cles and four-wheel-drive vehicles, the company said.
Rebels extend deadline as Qaddafi says he’ll resist
Iran trying to shelter its nuclear fuel program
TRIPOLI, Libya (NY TIMES) — The transitional government of Libya’s tri-umphant rebels decided Thursday to extend by up to a week the deadline given to Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi and his remaining fi ghters to surren-der, but the fugitive leader rejected the ultimatum and raged at his enemies in a new broadcast that called for the country to be “engulfed in fl ames.”
Colonel Qaddafi , whose where-abouts remained a mystery, deliv-ered the screed in an audio message that was fi rst broadcast by Al Rai, a television channel in Syria that has often carried pro-Qaddafi news and
propaganda. It was not clear how the channel received Colonel Qaddafi ’s message — apparently his fi rst after more than a week on the run — or whether it had been prerecorded.
“We will fi ght the collaborators,” he said. “The Libyan people are not a herd of sheep. They are heavily armed.”
Daring the rebels to fi nd him, he improbably predicted that Libyans would rise up and reject the new gov-ernment as well as the NATO powers that have been bombing his forces for months under a United Nations man-date to protect civilians.
WASHINGTON (NY TIMES) — Iran is moving its most sensitive nuclear fuel production to a heavily defended underground military facility outside the holy city of Qum, where it is less vulnerable to attack from the air, and, the Iranians hope, to the kind of cyberattack that crippled its nuclear program, according to intelli-gence offi cials. The head of Iran’s atomic energy agency, Fereydoon Abbasi, spoke about the transfer in general terms on Monday to an offi cial Iranian news service. He boasted that his country would produce the fuel in much larger quantities than it needs for a small research reac-tor in Tehran that produces medical isotopes.
The fact that Iran is declaring that its production will exceed its needs has reinforced the suspicions of many American and European intelligence offi cials that Iran plans to use the fuel to build weapons or to train Iranian scientists in how to produce bomb-grade fuel.
THE BERLIN DAILY SUN, Friday, September 2, 2011— Page 3
N orthern Edge R ealty of B erlin, N H 232 Glen Avenue – (603)752-0003 www.team ner.com www. R EM AX .com
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HART’S LOCATION — A foot bridge spanned the gap between the Sawyer River bridge and the Route 302 pave-ment on Thursday, the fi rst connec-tion between Crawford Notch and the south since Irene blew through Sunday.
“We haven’t been across it at all,” Robert Merrill said sitting in his car on the north side with his wife and daughter. A N.H. Department of Trans-portation crew was melted bolts out of a section of guardrail several hundred feet away, dismantling pieces leading up to the busted bridge.
There was no easy way to get south the day before, when Merrill’s daugh-ter Jessica had to clamber over the debris to make it to the fi rst day of classes at Josiah Bartlett Elementary.
“Walking in the ditch,” Merrill said. “Walking into the bridge, underneath, up and over.”
“I didn’t think she was going to make it in at all,” Robert’s wife Sheila said from the passenger seat. “He was the last one to make it over this bridge before it went down.”
That was Sunday, the last time there was direct automobile access from their house to town. Now they can drive there from the north.
A foot bridge spans the gap on Sawyer River bridge. (ERIK EISELE PHOTO)
Temporary foot bridge erected in Hart’s Location
BY ERIK EISELETHE CONWAY DAILY SUN
“We’re a peninsula,” she said.The pedestrian bridge — essen-
tially a latter laid horizontal with decking and handrails — is a short-term solution to make it easier for people like Jessica to travel back and forth. It doesn’t resolve the problem, however. For that they need a vehicle on the other side.
“Here’s the plan,” Josiah Bartlett Elementary School principal Joe Voci said as he stepped out of the mini-school bus that pulled up to the south side of the bridge promptly at 8:30 a.m. “This is Ricky. He’s going to be the driver.”
Ricky will drive Jessica from the bridge to school, Voci told the Merrills, and they need to be there to meet him every morning and every afternoon. “We’ll try to get up as far as we can.”
The Merrills are the only family the bus picked up.
“This is what we do,” Voci said. “We’ve got to get them to school.”
The state patched 302 north of the bridge with dirt, building it into a single lane, but there is still no way to get a car south of the Sawyer River without driving around Mount Wash-ington.
“I’m sitting here laughing now,” Sheila Merrill said, “but I’ve been frantic ever since the storm hap-pened.”
Page 4 — THE BERLIN DAILY SUN, Friday, September 2, 2011
Rose Dodge, Managing EditorRita Dube, Offi ce Manager
Theresa Johnson, Advertising Sales RepresentativeBarbara Tetreault, Reporter Melissa Grima Reporter
Jean LeBlanc, Sports John Walsh, Contributor
“Seeking the truth and printing it”Mark Guerringue, Publisher Adam Hirshan, Editor
THE BERLIN DAILY SUN is published Tuesday through Friday by Country News Club, Inc.
Dave Danforth, Mark Guerringue, Adam Hirshan, FoundersOffi ces and mailing address: 164 Main Street, Berlin, NH 03570
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The other night I did something silly. In a hurry to reach my friend K., I made the mistake of calling him on his mobile phone.
“You should have texted,” he chided me the next morning, when he fi nally heard the voice mail I’d left. “You know that’s the fast-est way.”
It’s hard to keep track. Because my friend A., who frequently sends text messages, somehow fails to recognize that she might receive them as well and almost never checks. With her, I’m supposed to call.
But not with my friend D. Between his two mobile phones, two offi ce phones and one home phone, you can never know which number to try, and he seems never to pick up, anyway. E-mail is his preference. He has three e-mail addresses, at least that I know about, but I’ve fi gured out the best one. I think.
You hear so much about how instantly reachable we all are, how hyperconnected, with our smartphones, laptops, tablets and such. But the maddening truth is that we’ve become so accessible we’re often inaccessi-ble, the process of getting to any of us more tortured and tortuous than ever.
There are up to a dozen possible routes, and the direct one versus the scenic one versus the loop-de-loop versus the dead end changes from person to person. If you’re not dealing with your closest business associ-ates or friends, whose territory and tics you’ve presumably learned, you’re lost.
There are some people partial to direct messages on Twitter and others oblivious to that corner of the Twitterverse. There are some who look at Facebook messages before anything else, and others whose Facebook accounts are idle, deceptive vestiges of a fl eeting gregariousness that didn’t survive their boredom with Rebecca’s bread dough (“It isn’t rising! Tips?”) or Tim’s poison ivy (“Itching and itching! Remedies?”).
I know only a handful of people with just one e-mail address, but I know many with three or more, and not all of these people understand automatic forwarding. My friend M. was recently reacquainted with an in-box unattended for a year. It was stuffed with hundreds of unread messages — some, remarkably, from people fl ummoxed by her aloofness.
During a cyberbinge a few years back, I set up three new, uncoordinated e-mail accounts, though I’m not entirely sure why. Maybe I had some vague notion that I’d be a
subtly different person with a subtly differ-ent life on each. In fact, I remained the same person with the same life on the same two e-mail accounts I was already using, and that person couldn’t remember the pass-words or user names for the additional ones. My debit-card P.I.N. is challenge enough.
Recently, I missed an interview because I was 20 minutes late and the subject assumed I was a no-show. I’d been texting her about my delay because we’d communicated that way before. But it turns out that she has two mobile phones, and was monitoring the one whose number I didn’t know. Meanwhile, she was sending me e-mails, but it didn’t occur to me to look for those.
Speaking of interviews, Sarah Ferguson, the Duchess of York, arrived for one two years ago with four BlackBerrys. Maybe it was some elaborate anti-hacking system, a Murdoch Defense Shield.
Communication can become a multistep, multiplatform process. My friend J. and I like to talk on the phone, but only after she has sent me a gmail to propose a gchat, during which we determine if a call is actu-ally warranted and whether I should use her home, mobile, main offi ce or satellite offi ce number. By the time voice meets voice, we’re spent. There’s a lot of heavy breathing; none of it the fun kind.
To her egalitarian credit, she gives out all of her contact information freely. Others use theirs to create castes of acquaintances: those with only an outer layer of business coordinates; those with “private e-mail” pen-etration; and those with the vaunted home phone. I’m no longer sure why I have a home phone, whose voice mail I neglect. A mes-sage from my friend L. languished there for two weeks. She really should have e-mailed.
Newly minted relationships come with operating instructions.
“Try his cell fi rst, then shoot him an e-mail,” says a bigwig’s assistant. “Or circle back to me. Here’s my cell, and my e-mail, and ...” Contact information is now contact exegesis.
And contact itself is subject to infi nite vagaries. An e-mail can go to spam. A call can bump up against a voice mailbox not taking new messages. Its owner, managing too many mailboxes, has let it fi ll.
My friend E. just texted, two days after my text. “Didn’t see it,” she reports. “On this new phone, I can’t fi gure anything out.”
In this new world, neither can I.
Frank BruniThe New York Times
Sorry, Wrong In-Box
Sacrifi ce, persistence, dedication to excel-lence – these are words that quickly come to mind when I think about the New Hampshire workforce, our thriving business community and Labor Day.As the Commissioner of the
New Hampshire Department of Labor, I see how our state’s workers and their employers form a tremendous partnership, growing the vital economic engine that powers the New
By George N. Copadis, CommissionerN H Department of Labor
The NH Department of Labor at Work for All of Us
see LABOR page 5
Thanks for your help with Operation GratitudeTo the editor:Dear Mr. Paul Poulin,
Mr. Leo Poulin, P & L Auto Parts, Jericho Road, Berlin: Thank you so much for your assistance with my project for Operation Gratitude.
As you know, our troops are working tirelessly to protect our freedom. Receiving a care package, such as the ones you helped me ship, might bring a smile or a tear to someone in our armed forces.
With the generous sup-
port of people like you, we will be able to let some of these soldiers think of home and remind them that we are thinking of them and what they are doing for us.
By allowing me to ship these packages from your company I was able to save a considerable amount of money. Your support to me goes beyond words.
Thank you once again.Nicholas D. Griffi nBerlin
Letter to the editor:On Thursday, August 18,
The Holiday Center was invited to M.R.’s Blueberry Heaven for a day of picking. We would like to thank Deb Davis for offering us this opportunity, along with the wonderful refreshments
and hospitality that she and her staff offered to our members.
Thank you again for taking time to make our visit a great one.
Linda LozeauProgram CoordinatorThe Holiday Center
Holiday Center says thank to Deb Davis
Vet-to-Vet Program kicks off on Tuesday, Sept. 6, at FRC
GORHAM -- A group of local concerned veterans are going to begin holding meet-ings at the Family Resource Center, 123 Main St., Gorham, NH, with the inten-tion of helping other veter-ans fi nd solutions to issues, or who just feel like they would like to talk to some-body who can understand them. These meetings will be open to veterans regardless of whether they saw combat or not, from all years of ser-vice, both male and female.
They will be held the fi rst and third Tuesday evening of each month, beginning at 6:30 p.m. (In September they will meet on the 6, and 20, of the month.)
The facilitators for these gatherings have diverse backgrounds and served during different confl icts and in several different branches of the service, but they have a common concern for the welfare and well-being of all veterans from the Armed
see VET-TO-VET page 5
THE BERLIN DAILY SUN, Friday, September 2, 2011— Page 5
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• Turkey Club (m ade w ith R oasted Turkey on H om em ade B read) w ith fries . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $7.99
• 8oz S irloin topped w ith m ushroom s & blue cheese, choice of potato & veggie . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $9.95
• Chicken Salad M elt w ith fries or coleslaw . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $6.99 • B eef Stroganoff over pasta w ith a salad . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $8.25 • Fried H addock Chunk B asket, fries & coleslaw . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $8.25
Su nda y B rea kfa st Specia l • 7:30a m - 1:00pm Straw berry or B lueberry filled Crepes w ith choice of m eat . . . $6.95
Antiques, collectibles, household items, jewelry, new & used tools, plus many more items to be sold at auction (which will take place under our tent): 14k gold estate jewelry, sterling items (coins, jewelry, & more), stamp collections, golf cart, 2 glass show cases, black bear wall mount, Steger wind-up phonograph, 2 spi nning wheels, antique radios, coin operated parking meter, “Whittier” sign & “Lions Den” sign from West Ossipee, N H RR station, wood & porcelin water cooler on stand, Cuckoo clock, dolls, Pachinko game, old fishing lure s, creel, snow shoes, ice cream maker, 6 ice cream parlor chairs, 4 pressed back chairs, Victorian youth chair, 5-d rawer oak chest, 4-drawer empire chest, armoire, round oak table w/2 leaves, dropleaf table, highboy chest, 3 dining room tables, 3 piece dining room furniture set, 9 dining chairs, leather couch, leather recliner, electric recliner , upholstered couch, electric office chair, china cabinet, glass front hutch, roll top desk, entertainment center, 5 book cases (lg. & sm.), washer & elec. dryer, 2 blanket chests, antique tool chest, flute w/case, art work, wood carvings, w ood shaft golf clubs, 3 bayonetes, George Washington lamp, conductor’s lamp, 2 converted oil lamps, 2-hp water pump , 120+/- new & used tools such as heavy duty tool cabinet, lg. & sm. socket set, 3/4” 3’ torque ratchet, elec . & battery operated impact wrenches, air compressors, power washer, drywall router, Lincoln welder, Bosch recip rocating saw, Harley Davidson socket set, Craftsman battery tester, Pintle hitch, dovetail saw, Husqvarna cha in saw, wood stoves, EKG machine, artificial flower decorating supplies, plus much more! Sale will consist of 40 0+/- lots with bargain box lots at the end of the sale.
TERMS & CONDITIONS: Cash, Check, Master Card, or Visa. 13% buyer’s premium will be charged. Absentee bids accepted. Subject to errors & omissions.
GOOGLE: “Tom Troon, Auctioneer” for link to “auctionzip” for info AND photos. Food Available! See You There!
Thomas D. Troon & Sons Auctioneers • Appraisers • Liquidators
PO Box 1457, Conway, NH 03818 • 603-447-8808 • email: [email protected] NH License: #2320 Maine License: #AUC832 Vermont Credential: #057.0061940
AUCTION AUCTION DUE TO THE THREAT OF HURRICANE IRENE, LAST WEEK’S AUCTION WAS POSTPONED
AND WILL TAKE PLACE THIS SUNDAY, SEPT. 4TH, 2011, STARTING AT 11:00 AM
1470 ROUTE 16, CONWAY, NH 03818 (2 miles South of Conway Village - previously Bill’s Place Restaurant)
DATE: SUNDAY, SEPT. 4, 2011 • TIME: 11:00am PREVIEW: Saturday, Sept. 3rd 9am to 5pm
AND Sunday, Sept. 4th 9am to sale time
Hampshire advantage.Here at the Department of Labor,
we strive to ensure that both sides of that partnership—workers and their bosses—treat each other fairly, obey the law and celebrate great accom-plishments.
Our Department’s mission state-ment is clear and concise: to serve and protect the interests and dignity of the New Hampshire workforce. Our duty is to be sure the protections built into the law—wage payments, safety, compensation for work injuries—are provided when due. And we assure that every employer gets a level busi-ness playing fi eld because its competi-tors cannot skirt these laws.
In this way, we protect the interests of both workers and businesses. When both sides know the laws are enforced fairly, then both sides can concentrate on the industry and commercial suc-cess of their enterprise.
Our Workers Compensation Divi-sion administers and enforces the many provisions of the workers com-pensation law while our Inspection Division answers an average of 2,000 calls and emails a week related to labor law questions. We are also dedi-cated to reducing the number of work-related injuries by helping employers to provide a safer workplace.
The Labor Department is now
giving greater attention to educating the public on what the law requires. We are especially proud of our new 2011 Labor Law Training CD that is now accessible online – by simply visiting www.labor.state.nh.us, you can fi nd explanations of labor laws and copies of the statutes and rules themselves. You can also fi nd all the forms and posters needed for various situations. You can even sign up for an update service, so we can tell you by e-mail when any of these laws change. We’re also preparing a labor law webi-nar on our site for those business owners who don’t have the ability to take time away from their business in order to attend our seminars.
We want everyone to know what the laws are, and how they affect you. If everyone does what is expected, then there are fewer disputes, less strife, and greater cooperation by all.
Labor Day is a celebration of the accomplishments of workers. But that work is done within a legal frame-work assuring fair treatment of both employees and their employers. Here at the Department of Labor, we pro-vide that assurance. Then together we can do great things. With that in mind, Happy Labor Day and thanks to all of the state’s workers and busi-ness owners for their time and effort in creating the best business atmo-sphere in the nation.
LABOR from page 4
Forces of the United States. Gilles Laramee served during the
Korean War with the Marine Corps.Dave Canter served during the Viet-
nam War with the Army.Gary Roy served during the Viet-
nam War with the Navy.Robert Mitchell served during
Desert Storm with the Army.“We want to encourage anyone
who would like to talk as one peer to another to join us at one of these gath-erings,” said Canter.
VET-TO-VET from page 4
The Kiwanis Club of Berlin held a Past President Night on Tuesday August 30, at Camp Sawyer in Stark. Sixty-three members and guest participated to honor long time Kiwanian Richard (Dick) Blais for 55 years of community service with Kiwanis. Among his many gifts included a letter from Governor John Lynch, and letters of appreciation from the New England District Of Kiwanis and also from the Interna-tional. A photo of Dick signed by many of the members and friends was also presented. Here Kiwanis Club President Cecile Strout presents Dick Blais with his 55 year Legion of Honor plaque and pin.
Page 6 — THE BERLIN DAILY SUN, Friday, September 2, 2011
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Forest on one side. Miller said nothing will happen before next spring. With most flooding happen-ing in the fall, he said the town will be on alert.
Miller said the town came as close as possible to losing the bridge next to Irving’s gas station and the Gorham fire station. He said water started peeling back from the bridge. With both Route 2 in Shelburne and Route 16 in Pinkham Notch closed, the village would have been isolated if that had occurred.
Two home owners have con-cerns about moving back into their homes, feeling the situation is unstable. Miller said they wonder if there is an option to have the government purchase their homes.
Miller said he doesn’t believe there was any flooding from the Androscoggin River. He said flows in the river were increased two days before the Tropical Storm Irene to provide capacity in the system.
Town officials reported the Androscoggin Valley Country Club incurred significant damage and a bridge washed out in the Dolly Copp campground. Pinkham Notch Road B is indefinitely closed. Great Glen Trails and the Mount Wash-ington Auto Road also received considerable damage.
N.H. Commissioner of Resources and Economic Development George
UPDATE from page one Bald, WMNF Supervisor Tom Wagner, and representatives from a number of state agencies will meet with town officials Wednes-day, Sept. 7 at 11 a.m. at town hall to talk about the aftermath of the storm.
Selectman David Graham asked Bass to help get the federal prison in Berlin open and to help get pas-senger rail service between Port-land and Montreal.
Bass said he and the rest of the state Congressional delegation are working hard to get the prison open this fall. He said it is not a simple process because of the change in rules on earmarks. He assured town officials the federal prison is a top priority.
The congressman said said if the local rail task force can come up with a plan for passenger ser-vice, he is willing to help. But he warned it will have to be a unique plan and said there is no way Con-gress would agreed to “Amtrak it”. He also said liability insurance is an issue the group will have to deal with.
Graham asked Burton about moving up the planned paving of Main Street and pushing the completion of the Conway bypass. Burton noted the Governor’s Advi-sory Committee on Intermodal Transportation will be holding a public hearing on the updated 10-Year Transportation Plan in Berlin on Sept. 26 at 7:30 p.m. at
Aug. 2, 2010, by taking her purse, keys and phone. While holding her there, he raped, assaulted her, and forcibly raped her, according to prosecutors.
As part of the plea agreement, Anderson will serve 12 months for the second degree assault charge, and an additional 12 months for the aggravated felonious sexual assault. He was placed on probation for two years, ordered to pay restitution of not more than $1,000 and complete a sex offender program immediately upon release. For the kidnapping, Anderson was sentenced to fi ve to 10 years in prison, all suspended on the condition of good behavior. The prison sentence will run concurrent to the two 12 month terms.
In an unrelated case, Valerie Vaillancourt-Locke, 53, of Berlin, pleaded guilty on Aug. 22, to a
charge of theft by misapplication. As a result of the plea agreement, the felony charge, which was pros-ecuted by Assistant Attorney Gen-eral Walter Pazdon, was dropped to misdemeanor level and a sentence of 12 months in jail was suspended for two years. The suspension is contingent on Vaillancourt-Lock making a good-faith effort to pay restitution of $8,000 within two years directly to Catholic Chari-ties.
According to court documents, Vaillancourt-Locke misappro-priated monthly social security checks, VA pension checks and private pension checks belonging to Raymond Vaillancourt, without paying for his care at St. Vincent de Paul rehab and Nursing Center. In order to secure payment Bornstein placed a lien on any real estate owned by Vaillancourt-Locke.
GUILTY from page one
the city hall auditorium.Burton said he is always looking
to recommend District I residents for positions in state government and on state boards and commis-sion. He reported that Public Utili-ties Commissioner Clifton Below has said he does not wish to be reap-pointed when his term expires this year. Burton said Gov. Lynch will be
looking for a replacement for what Burton called one of the most pow-erful positions in state government.
Burton reported that former State Forester Phil Bryce has been confi rmed at the new head of Parks and Recreation for the state. Bryce previously worked in the woodlands department for James River and lived in Milan.
www.berlindailysun.com
THE BERLIN DAILY SUN, Friday, September 2, 2011— Page 7
WANTED! Citizen Input Please Join Us for a Series of Community Forums to Discuss the Future of Public Education in the Androscoggin Valley
Open to Milan, Berlin, Dummer, Errol, Gorham, Randolph & Shelburne Residents
A series of community forums will be held on the following dates and locations:
BERLIN Wed., Sept. 14, 2011 7:00 - 9:00 p.m. Berlin High School Library
RANDOLPH Wed., Sept. 21, 2011 7:00 - 9:00 p.m. Randolph Town Hall
MILAN/DUMMER Thurs., Sept. 22, 2011 7:00 - 9:00 p.m. Milan School Library
GORHAM Wed., Sept. 28, 2011 7:00 – 9:00 p.m. Gorham High School Cafeteria
SHELBURNE Tues., Oct. 4, 2011 7:00 – 9:00 p.m. Shelburne Town Hall
ERROL Wed., Oct. 5, 2011 7:00- 9:00 p.m. Errol School Cafeteria
A series of community forums will be held throughout the fall to gather citizen input as to the future of Education in the Androscoggin Valley. The forums will support a facilitated discussion to address future educational needs of our children. New ideas will be generated that may help lead us to maximize collaboration among local school districts and ensure the best opportunities for our students, both now and in the future. We hope to capture a shared vision of education in the Androscoggin Valley. How do we share resources in delivering programs and nurture a new culture of collaboration? What about regionalization of our schools? Early childhood education? How do we address the shrinking student populations and dwindling financial resources in order to give our children the best education possible? In collaboration, SAU 20 and SAU 3 were awarded a grant from the Neil and Louise Tillotson Fund of the New Hampshire Charitable Foundation to conduct the community forums.
Citizens are encouraged to attend any and all forums in order to speak, listen and shape the
future of education in the Androscoggin Valley!
CORNER
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Take-out Available
LEGAL PROBATE NOTICE THE STATE OF NEW HAMPSHIRE
1st. Circuit – Probate Division – Lancaster 08/03/2011 thru 08/22/2011
APPOINTMENT OF FIDUCIARIES
Notice is hereby given that the following fiduciaries have been duly appointed by the Judge of Probate for Coos County.
All persons having claims against these decedents are requested to exhibit them for adjustment and all indebted to make payment.
Holt, Edward Arnold, late of Milan, NH. Martha E. Holt, Box 154, Milan, NH 03588. #314-2011-ET-00184
McDonough, Maureen P., late of Berlin, NH. Colleen Marie Reyes, 68 Richmond St., Weymouth, MA 02188. Rebecca J. Oleson, ESQ, Resident Agent, Cooper Cargill Chant PA, 110 Pleasant Street, Berlin, NH 03570. #314-2011-ET-00170
Paradis, Sr., Raymond G., late of West Milan, NH. Jeannette Paradis Young, 32 Loon Mtn. Lane, Center Conway, NH 03813. Raymond G. Paradis, Jr., 234 Bryant Street Apt. 6, Malden, MA 02148. Jeannette Paradis Young, Resident Agent, 32 Loon Mtn. Lane, Center Conway, NH 03813. #314-2011-ET-00079
Sheptor, George, late of Milan, NH. Fred Smith, 678 Western Avenue, Berlin, NH 03570. #314-2011-ET-00150
Vaillancourt; Raymond Edward, late of Berlin, NH. Frances A. Garran, P.O. Box 162, So. Strafford, VT 05070,Valerie Vaillancourt-Locke, Resident Agent, 802 Fifth Avenue, Berlin, NH 03570. #314-2010-ET-00345
Dated: 08/29/2011 Terri L. Peterson, Cle rk
–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– OBITUARIES ––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
BERLIN -- Mr. Joseph G. “Jerry” Theriault, 87, of 457 Hillsboro St., Berlin, NH passed away on Wednesday August 31, 2011 at his home surrounded by his family. He was born in Berlin, NH on July 17, 1924 the son of Alphonse and Delia (Patrie) Theriault and was a lifelong resident. He was a US Marine Corps veteran and had fought in Iwo Jima. Jerry was a member of Guardian Angel Parish, the Fraternal Order of Eagles and the VFW Post #2520 in Berlin. He had been employed as a millwright by Brown Company and James River Corp., retir-ing in 1987. He was involved in the organization of the United Brotherhood Credit Union prior to 1956 and was elected to the fi rst Credit Union Committee of United Brother Credit Union, where he served from 1956-1994. He also served as President of the Credit Union from 1992-1994, served on the Invest-ment Committee, Computer Committee, 40th Anni-versary Committee and the Board of Directors, from which he retired in 2002 after 46 years of service to the Credit Union. Jerry could also frequently be found working at numerous Credit Union events like community concerts, anniversary picnics and open houses.
He is survived by his wife of 47 years Jeannette
(Lafl amme) Theriault of Berlin, NH: one son Dennis “Krusher” Therriault of Milan, NH and one sister Therese St. Laurent of Manchester, NH; many nieces, nephews and cousins. He was predeceased
by six brothers Alphonse, Albert, Daniel, Armand, Roger and Andre and by four sisters Bertha Fran-coeur, Cecile Morin, Rev. Sr. Bernadette Theriault, Rev. Sr. Marianne Theriault, both Sisters of Charity.
A Mass of Christian Burial will be celebrated on Saturday September 3, 2011 at 1 PM at St. Anne Church of Good Shepherd Parish. Interment will be in the Mt.
Calvary Cemetery. Relatives and friends may call at the Bryant Funeral Home, 180 Hillside Ave., Berlin on Friday afternoon and evening from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. Donations in his memory may be made to St. Jude Hospital, PO Box 1000, Dept. 142, Memphis, TN, 38148-0142. To sign the guestbook, please visit www.bryantfuneralhome.net.
Joseph G. Theriault
Joseph G. Theriault
Douglas W. YoungBERLIN, NH -- Douglas W. Young, 64, of Berlin,
NH, passed away unexpectedly on August 22, 2011 at his home. He was born in Claremont, NH, on August 12, 1947, the son of the late Roy M. and Olga Young and has resided in Berlin for the past 40 years. Prior to his retirement, Douglas had been employed by the local paper mill, retiring from Crown Vantage Corp. He was a US Navy veteran.
Members of the family include his wife Lorraine Duchesne of Berlin; a sister, Barbara Ferland and her husband John and two nephews Kevin and Ste-phen, all of Claremont.
Interment will be held at a later date. Arrange-ments are by the Bryant Funeral Home, Berlin, NH.
Online guest book at www.bryantfuneralhome.net.
BERLIN — Androscoggin Valley Hospital has joined the age of social media. In addition to rolling out a freshly redesigned website in late July, the hospital has added a Facebook page, Twitter account and email alerts to its communication arsenal.
According to James Patry, Public Relations and Mar-keting Director for AVH, the new website went live on July 22 and all of the new offerings are linked on the home page. “We wanted to make it somewhat more interactive,” he said.
In addition to being able to sign up for email alerts about upcoming events, clinics, blood drives, and gen-eral hospital news, community members will fi nd the
website easier to navigate as well, Patry said. The physi-cian’s directory has been “beefed up” making it easier to fi nd doctors, he noted. For professionals, there is a new page touting the advantages of practicing and living in the Berlin area, which Patry said is targeted at recruit-ing efforts.
While the AVH Facebook page is still gathering fans, the Twitter account is up and running. “We’ve started to tweet over the last month or so,” Patry said. The Twitter handle, AVHNH, will be used to tweet details of upcom-ing events, new professional certifi cations, blood drives and other hospital news. “It’s primarily events...what’s going on here and in the community,” he said.
AVH reaching out through social media
Page 8 — THE BERLIN DAILY SUN, Friday, September 2, 2011
Front-Loading Washer & Dryer
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–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– POLICE LOG –––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
August 151:30 a.m. -- State Police responded
to an accident in the town of Shel-burne. Michael Hilchie, 49 Ontario, Canada, struck a parked motorcycle knocking it over. There was no per-sonal injury and both vehicles were driven from the scene.
August 167:06 a.m. -- State Police responded
to a motor vehicle accident in the town of Cambridge on NH Route
16. John Shafer, 73, of Vermont, was traveling northbound when he was unable to avoid a moose that crossed into his path, striking it. There was no personal injury and the vehicle was towed from the scene.
August 176:40 p.m. -- State Police responded
to a report of a domestic dispute in Pittsburg. The incident was resolved.
August 186:38 a.m. -- State Police responded
State Police Troop F logto a report of a motor vehicle accident involving a moose on Rt 16 in Errol. There was no injury and the vehicle was towed from the scene.
August 195:40 p.m. -- State Police assisted
Gorham PD with the arrest of Michael Martinez, 19, of Stewart-stown. Charges were felonious sexual assault. He will be arraigned on August 22. in Berlin District Court.
9:27 p.m. --State Police responded to a report of
a motor vehicle collision in Randolph. A vehicle operated by Jimmy Giroux, 52, of Berlin, struck a moose as it crossed in front of his vehicle. He was transported to Androscoggin Valley Hospital with facial lacerations.
10:23 p.m. -- State Police stopped Brandy Prescott, 27, of Gorham, for a traffi c violation in Gorham. She was subsequently arrested for opera-tion after suspension and operation on suspended registrations. She will need to appear in the Berlin District Court August 28.
August 2010:41 p.m. -- State Police arrested
Peter Comeau, 31, of Stratford, for vio-lation of criminal bail order in Strat-ford. He refused a bail commissioner and was locked up at Coos County Jail. He will be arraigned on August 22.
August 211:35 a.m. -- State Police responded
to a report of an assault in Stewart-stown. The incident remains under investigation at this time.
4:05 p.m. -- State Police stopped Alan Alger, 46, of Berlin, for a traffi c violation in Randolph. He was sub-sequently arrested for driving while intoxicated. He will need to appear in the Berlin District Court Oct 28.
August 22 4:36 p.m. -- State Police responded to
a minor motor vehicle accident in Errol.
Susan Hersh, 62, of Virginia, was back-ing up from a parking space at the post offi ce and struck a vehicle operated by Haskell Nebenzahl, 46, of New Jersey. No injuries were reported and both vehicles were driven from the scene.
August 234:09 p.m. -- State police stopped
Christopher Nadeau, 21, of Berlin, for a traffi c violation in Milan. He was sub-sequently arrested for operation after suspension and disobeying a police offi -cer. He will need to appear in the Berlin District Court on Sept. 13.
11:15 p.m. -- State Police responded to a report of a domestic dispute in which a fi rearm was discharged. The man was taken into custody without incident. He will need to appear before the Berlin District Court.
August 2412:43 p.m. -- State Police verifi ed an
address of a sex offender in Stratford.August 253:05 a.m. -- Sammy Stone, 42, of
Stratford, was southbound on Route 3 in Stratford and struck two cows in the road. He was not injured.
10:12 p.m. -- State Police responded to a report of simple assault in Stratford. The incident remains under investiga-tion at this time.
11:40 p.m. -- Randy Tallmage, 42, of Colebrook, was northbound on Route 3 in Stewartstown. It appears he fell asleep drifted off the road striking a ditch causing the vehicle to become air-borne coming to rest on a cement bar-rier in a farm yard. He was transported to Upper Connecticut Valley Hospital with head injuries.
August 2812:02 a.m. -- State Police responded
to a report of a man shooting a weapon in Success. Erik Newton, 43, of Peabody, Mass., was arrested for felony reckless conduct with a weapon. He will need to appear in the Berlin District Court Oct. 28.
THE BERLIN DAILY SUN, Friday, September 2, 2011— Page 9
Thursday, Aug. 2510:10 a.m. - Police received a call that a juvenile
missing since February had been spotted. Search of area turned up negative.
10:29 a.m. - A man reported he was being harassed on Facebook. Police advised him to block the sender and if the messages continued to close down his Facebook account.
1:43 p.m. - Police arrested Christa Lozeau, 20, of 326B East Milan Road, Milan, on a bench warrant. She was released on personal recognizance bail with a Sept. 13 court date.
4:46 p.m. - A Maynesboro Street resident called inquiring how to get a restraining order. She was advised and referred to the proper agency.
5:51 p.m. - An altercation between a juvenile and his stepfather resulted in the juvenile being thrown out of the house. Police were called and an offi cer spoke to the parties and the juvenile was able to return to the house. Police later received a second call that the stepfather was damaging the residence. He had left the house when police arrived.
6:28 p.m. - Police responded to a report of a verbal argument between a husband and wife on Burgess Street. The wife claimed she was not able to get into the house. The police offi cer spoke to both subjects and the wife was able to get into the house.
7:37 p.m. - Police arrested Ricardy Roseaux, 26, of 107 Madigan St., Berlin on a capias for possession of a controlled drug/narcotic. Bail was set at $420 cash.
7:49 p.m. - A Maynesboro woman called to com-plain she was being harassed by a neighbor. Police spoke to both parties.
7:56 p.m. - Police received a call complaining about a dirt bike traveling on Willard Street. There was no sign of the bike when police responded.
Friday, Aug. 263:34 a.m. - Juveniles found a large dog and secured
the animal. Police were able to fi nd the dog’s owners.5:18 a.m. - Police issued a citation for speeding to
Rejalado Noe of 3126S Second St., Omaha, Neb.8:21 a.m. - Kristin Black, 29, of 733 First Ave.,
Berlin, was arrested on a bench warrant. She was released on $1,000 personal recognizance bail with an Aug. 31 court date in Manchester District Court.
12:35 p.m. - Police spoke several times to juveniles riding bikes on the sidewalk on Main Street.
1:06 p.m. - Police received a call from a Pershing Avenue woman who complained she was receiving harassing phone calls and texts. Police contacted the sending party and advised the person to cease the calls.
3:37 p.m. - A woman reported she was receiving threats from a man. Police assisted her in obtaining an emergency restraining order.
4:13 p.m. - A man called to inquire how he could get payment for a bad check. Police advised him of the necessary steps.
5:36 p.m. - A woman reported she is being harassed by her son. Police advised her of her rights.
9:12 p.m. - Juvenile threatened not to come home. Parents did not want to fi le a missing person com-plaint.
Saturday, Aug. 275:17 a.m. - Duane Roberts , 241 South Maggie St.,
Liberty, Mo., was issued a citation for speeding. 12:05 p.m. - A minor two vehicle accident was
reported at the IGA parking lot. No one was injured.3:49 p.m. - A Cheshire Street resident reported his
wife’s bicycle was stolen during the night.5:04 p.m. - Police receiver a report of a verbal argu-
ment between a couple on Willow Street. The male was brought to another residence.
6:06 p.m. - The Perching Avenue resident reported harassing phone calls are continuing.
9:12 p.m. - Police received a report that someone was lighting fi recrackers at Dunkin Donuts.
10:17 p.m. - Caller reported he was walking with his girlfriend on Gendron Street when a motor vehi-cle almost hit them.
10:47 p.m. - A missing juvenile was picked up and returned to his residence.
11:50 p.m. - Berlin police assisted state police in responding to an incident of shots being fi red on the
Berlin police logSuccess Pond Road.
Sunday, Aug. 283:26 a.m. - A Third Avenue resident called to
report a big argument with her boyfriend. The boyfriend left. She was advised of her rights.
6:42 a.m. - A woman reported the subject of a restraining order she had obtained was in vio-lation of that order. Police took a report and are investigating.
9:33 a.m. - Police received a report of fl ooding on Shelby Street.
11:31 a.m. - Police assisted Public Works in erecting barricades on Coos Street, Pine Island Avenue, Hermanson Street, Burgess Street, and Hutchins Street.
1:20 p.m. - Flooding reported on First Avenue.1:27 p.m. - Downed tree limbs and debris
reported on Spring Street, Summer Street, Wil-
lard Street, Hillsboro Street, Main Street, Tenth Street, and Riverside Drive.
6:18 p.m. - Flooding reported on East Milan Road.
6:30 p.m. - Report of debris on Main Street.6:34 p.m. - Police received a call about condi-
tions on Hutchins Street.6:42 p.m. - Police assisted Public Works on Den-
mark and Hillsboro Streets.6:53 p.m. - Report of debris on Success Road.8:44 p.m. - A Third Avenue resident reported a
man had come into her home and was refusing to leave. Police investigated incident and took a report.
Monday, Aug. 2912:55 a.m. - Police received a report of shots fi red
on Ottawa Street. Turned out to be male juveniles popping bottles.
Page 10 — THE BERLIN DAILY SUN, Friday, September 2, 2011
The fire was deter-mined to have been in the electronic switch-ing gear. PSNH said it had crews at the scene assessing the damage yesterday afternoon. The company said the station is normally unmanned and no personnel were there when the fire broke out.
Berlin firefight-ers remained on the scene until just before 1 p.m. Trull called it “a very dangerous fire” because of the electrical equipment in the station.
“The crews did a really good job. They worked hard,” he said.
Trull said the department also had good support. He said New England Secu-rity provided addi-tional extinguishers and Munce’s Kon-venience on Pleas-ant Street sent over water and food. Berlin Police and Emergency Medical Service also responded.
While the fire department was working the fire, it also responded to an elevator rescue at Northern Lites hous-ing complex.
FIRE from page one
Lori Angevine, medical Tych-nologist in the AVH laboratory, recently earned certifi cation as a medical technologist in the disciplines of chemistry, immunology, hematology, microbiology and immunothe-matology.
Ashley Boucher, a Medical Assistant in the 2-North area of AVH passed her boards for the Certifi cation of Medical Assistants (CMA). Ashley has been an AVH employee for a little over a year.
THE BERLIN DAILY SUN, Friday, September 2, 2011— Page 11
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2004 Honda Accord 4-dr Ex 4 Cyl., 5-Speed, A/C, Moonroof, Leather & More
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2003 Subaru Legacy Wgn. AWD 4 Cyl., Auto, A/C, Dual Moonroof, Leather, & More
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2000 Ford Ranger ExCab 4x4, XLT, V6, Auto, A/C, Low Mileage & more
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2003 Chevy Trailblazer 4-dr 4x4 LT 6 Cyl., Auto, A/C, Moonroof & More
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2003 Saturn Ion 2 4-dr 4 Cyl., 5-Speed, A/C, and More
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2001 Chevy Cavalier 4-dr 4 Cyl., Auto, A/C, & More
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2000 GMC Sierra 1500 Shortbox 4x4, 6 cyl, 5-Speed, A/C, Tilt Steerting
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2003 Pontiac Vibe 4-dr AWD 4 Cyl., Auto, A/C, Moonroof & More
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AUTO SALES
Cars
Thursday, Aug. 1112:20 p.m. A resi-
dent of Cascade Flats reported that a Wii con-sole was stolen from their home.
12:53 p.m. Walmart reported a case of shop-lifting.
2:10 p.m. Paul Allard, 54, of Glen, was issued a summons for speed.
11:24 p.m. Jason Guerin, 28, of Berlin, was arrested and charged with driv-ing after revocation or suspension. He was released on a summons and scheduled to appear in court on Sept. 9.
Friday, Aug. 125:10 p.m. A hit and run
accident was reported in Walmart parking lot. The damage caused was minor and no injuries were reported.
5:13 p.m. A theft was reported at the Gateway Gallery on Exchange Street. A book valued at $125 was reported stolen.
Saturday, Aug. 1311:59 p.m. A single
vehicle accident was reported on Gorham Hill Road near the intersection of Gorham Heights. The vehicle struck a moose causing minor damage. No inju-ries were reported.
Sunday, Aug. 1410:53 a.m. A two
vehicle rear-end colli-sion was reported at Walmart. The accident caused minor damage and minor injuries.
11:36 a.m. Edward Chaves, 41, N. Rayn-ham, Mass, was issued a summons for speed.
5:51 p.m. Jacob Bar-tolomew, 34, of Laconia, was issued a summons for non-inspection.
Monday, Aug. 157:06 a.m. Sheldon
Hinchaw, 51, of Center Conway, was issued a summons for non-inspection.
9:41 p.m. Susan Watts, 42, of Berlin, was issued a summons for non-inspection.
Tuesday, Aug. 161:54 a.m. Keith Friz-
zell, 59, of Gorham was arrested and charged with simple assault. He was released on $500 personal recognizance bail and is scheduled to appear in court on Sept. 9.
12:57 p.m. A caller
Gorham police log
see GORHAM LOG page 16
Page 12 — THE BERLIN DAILY SUN, Friday, September 2, 2011
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HOROSCOPE By Holiday Mathis
ARIES (March 21-April 19). You possess remarkable powers, both visual and social. You’ll create pictures in your mind of you in a not-so-distant future, having a ball with the people you most want to know. TAURUS (April 20-May 20). Spend some time fi guring out what you really want. When you’re not sure, you can’t help but send out a mixed signal. Who knows what you’ll bring back? It’s like casting a fi shing line out with pizza for bait. GEMINI (May 21-June 21). There’s a so-called Chinese “curse” that sounds suspiciously like a blessing: “May you live in interesting times and attract the attention of important people.” Enter gingerly into potentially ego-infl ating situations. CANCER (June 22-July 22). You know exactly why a scenario is not working out the way you want it to. One powerful person stands in the way -- or rather, it is this person’s beliefs that thwart your effort. This belief can change with the right persuasion. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). There are many ways to go about your work, some of them much more expensive than others. Investigate your options. Liking a person is not a good enough reason to employ him or her. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). You strive to be your best in every situation, but the fact remains that some situa-tions will bring out a less than optimum side of you. That’s why it’s important to get plenty of rest and give yourself every advantage. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). Someone has borrowed a part of you as though you were a book, and it is now time to call that part of you back. You need all
of your energy now so you can do what you know you’re meant to do. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). Busi-nesses and people around you hype their assets and rattle on about what they can do. You have the sneaking suspicion that it can’t all be true. You’ll take a more modest approach, and people will respond to you. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). You never know when someone is fall-ing for you. All the signs are there, but you’re too active and involved in your world to wonder what others think about you. That’s part of what makes you so charismatic. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). Your encouragement and interest will inspire someone to keep going. These qualities, as well as your patience and love, are the most signifi cant gifts you can give to others. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). You have an increasing power to heal with your thoughts. You also have the poten-tial to hurt with them. So be mindful and use your new level of infl uence well. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). Your environment will refl ect your gentle-ness, softness and kindness to others. There is a strength in this tone that is far greater than the loud aggression that sometimes goes on in the world. TODAY’S BIRTHDAY (Sept. 2). Put yourself in physically different situa-tions -- you’ll shine as a newcomer. This month, you’ll take action and gain recognition for your talent and ability. Children fi gure into your work. Teach-ing will bring excitement to your world. Now, November and January are the best months for business. Cancer and Scorpio people adore you. Your lucky numbers are: 40, 1, 42, 31 and 17.
ACROSS 1 Roy Rogers and
__ Evans 5 African nation 10 Greek cheese 14 Large kitchen
appliance 15 Rowed 16 Malicious 17 Clamors 18 Fraternity letter 19 “The Farmer in the
__” 20 Peculiarity 22 Galore 24 Reverent
amazement 25 Aquatic mammal 26 Knowledgeable 29 Boy in Johnny
Cash’s song 30 Bank safe 34 Schnoz 35 Cambridge inst. 36 Assistant 37 On the __;
punctual 38 Previously
40 Salary 41 Fit to be eaten 43 Upper limb 44 Turner and
Danson 45 Bishops’
conference 46 Invite 47 Most horrible 48 Minimum 50 Distant 51 New doctors 54 One who plays an
angel’s instrument 58 Next __; in the
adjacent house 59 Afghan capital 61 Resound 62 Aware of the
duplicity of 63 Roaring beasts 64 __ appropriate;
consider fi tting 65 Trevino and
Majors 66 Make joyous 67 Chances
DOWN 1 Dummkopf 2 Enthusiastic 3 Give for a time 4 Catch in a trap 5 Silly as a __ 6 Show-offs 7 Common verb 8 Cancel 9 Alter to fi t 10 National 11 __-tempered;
unruffl ed 12 Lean; slant 13 Actress Sheedy 21 Ram’s mate 23 Crowbar 25 Survive longer
than 26 Peru’s range 27 Singer Guthrie 28 Actor John __ 29 Gentleman 31 Certain berth 32 __ off; goes fi rst 33 Lovers’ meeting 35 __ West of fi lm 36 __ and haw
DAILY CROSSWORDTRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES
38 Firstborn of two 39 Annoy 42 Loose waist-
length jackets 44 Ship-destroying
weapon 46 Attack violently 47 Card game 49 Leg joint
50 True or __ 51 “American __” 52 Goose egg 53 Carry 54 __ for; seek 55 __ tea 56 Cast off 57 Hanks & Cruise 60 Crushing snake
Fill in the grid so that every row, every column, and every 3x3 box contains the digits 1 thru 9.
Solution and tips at
www.sudoku.com
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Yesterday’s Answer
THE BERLIN DAILY SUN, Friday, September 2, 2011— Page 13
FRIDAY PRIME TIME SEPTEMBER 2, 20118:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30
CBS 3 WCAX 48 Hours Mystery (N) CSI: NY Å Blue Bloods Å News Letterman
FOX 4 WPFO Kitchen NightmaresFringe “6:02 AM EST” News 13 on FOX (N) Frasier Jim
ABC 5 WMUR Shark Tank Å Karaoke Battle USA (N) 20/20 (In Stereo) Å News Nightline
NBC 6 WCSH FriendsFriendsDateline NBC (N) (In Stereo) Å NewsJay Leno
CBC 7 CBMT Ron BroomsJust for Laughs Å NationalGeorge STrack
CBC 9 CKSH “Trésor national” Mr. BeanLe Téléjournal (N) Kiwis/hommes
PBS 10 WCBB Wash.MaineMcL’ghlinInsideNeed to Know (N) Charlie Rose (N) Å
PBS 11 WENH AntiquesAntiquesHistory Detectives (N) “Okie Noodling II” POV “Armadillo” Å
CBS 13 WGME48 Hours Mystery (N) CSI: NY Å Blue Bloods Å News Letterman
IND 14 WTBS Fam. GuyFam. GuyMovie: ›› “Tyler Perry’s Madea Goes to Jail”“Madea Goes to Jail”
IND 16 WPME Monk (In Stereo) Å Monk (In Stereo) Å CurbOur HomesStar Trek: Next
EWTN 1 Life on the RockCampusRosaryPadre PioCatholicWomen of
CNN 24 Anderson Cooper 360Piers Morgan TonightAnderson Cooper 360John King, USA
LIFE 30 Reba Å Reba Å Reba Å Reba Å RoseanneRoseanneHow I MetHow I Met
ESPN 31 College Football Texas Christian at Baylor. (N) (Live) SportsCenter (N) Å
ESPN2 32 2011 U.S. Open Tennis Men’s Second Round and Women’s Third Round. Soccer
CSNE 33 UEFA Champions League SoccerSportsSportsNetSportsSportsNet
NESN 34 MLB Baseball: Rangers at Red Sox InningsRed SoxDailyOutdoors
OXY 39 Movie: ››› “Clueless” (1995, Comedy) Å Movie: ››› “Clueless” (1995, Comedy) Å
TVLND 42 M*A*S*H M*A*S*H Raymond Everybody-Raymond Raymond Raymond Cleveland
NICK 43 iCarly (In Stereo) Å ’70s Show’70s Show’70s Show’70s Show’70s Show’70s Show
TOON 44 Firebreath Thundr.King of HillKing of HillAmer. DadAmer. DadFam. GuyFam. Guy
FAM 45 Funniest Home VideosFunniest Home VideosFunniest Home VideosThe 700 Club Å
DISN 46 ANT FarmANT FarmANT FarmANT FarmVampireRandomGood LuckRandom
USA 48 NCIS “Ex-File” Å NCIS “Lost & Found” CSI: Crime SceneRoyal Pains Å
TNT 49 Movie: ››› “Gran Torino” (2008) Clint Eastwood. Å Movie: ››› “Gran Torino” (2008)
GAC 50 Top 20 Country Countdown (N) Top 20 Tailgating Songs
SYFY 51 WWE Friday Night SmackDown! (N) Å Haven (N) Alphas
TLC 53 Say YesSay YesSay YesSay YesFour Weddings (N) Say YesSay Yes
HIST 54 PawnPawnAmericanAmericanAmericanAmericanModern Marvels “Dirt”
DISC 55 Man, Woman, WildMan, Woman, Wild (N) One Man Army (N) Man, Woman, Wild
HGTV 56 Hunters Hunters Hunters Hunters Hunters Hunters Hunters Hunters
A-P 58 Tanked Å Tanked “Be Cool” (N) Rat Busters NYC (N) Tanked “Be Cool”
TRAV 59 Ghost AdventuresGhost AdventuresGhost AdventuresGhost Adventures
NGC 60 9/11: Science and Conspiracy9/11: Where?9/11: Science
SPIKE 61 Gangland (In Stereo) Å Gangland Å Gangland Å Gangland
MTV 63 Video AwardsJersey Shore Å Movie: ›‡ “Friday the 13th” (2009, Horror)
VH1 64 40 Funniest Fails40 Greatest One Hit Wonders of the ’90sGlastonbury 2011 (N)
COM 67 ChappelleChappelleChappelleChappelleChappelleChappelleWyatt Cenac
A&E 68 Criminal Minds Å Criminal Minds Å Criminal Minds Å Criminal Minds Å
E! 71 Sex-CitySex-CityKardashianThe SoupFashionChelseaE! News
AMC 72 Lonesome Dove Two former Texas Rangers. (Part 1 of 2) Å
TCM 105 “Mr. Peabody and the Mermaid” Movie: ››‡ “Beach Blanket Bingo” (1965) Miranda
ALN 110 Movie: ››› “Jack & Sarah” (1995) Richard E. Grant. The Ray Lucia Show
HBO 110 “Four Christmases” Hard Knocks: NFL Training CampsMovie: ›› “Devil” (2010) Å
SHOW 221 Movie: ›› “Letters to Juliet” (2010) Å Movie: ››‡ “The Switch” (2010) I Hate Val
TMC 231 Movie: ››‡ “Pitch Black” (2000) (In Stereo) Movie: ›› “Knowing” (2009) Nicolas Cage.
ENC 248 Movie: ››‡ “Dumb and Dumber” (1994) Å Movie: › “Anaconda” (1997) Å Money
TWC - 23, CNN2 - 30, C-SPAN - 99, PAY-PER-VIEW - 59, 60, 61, 62
(Answers tomorrow)VOCALCHECK GROWTH ABSURDYesterday’s Jumbles:
Answer: Being overcharged for the undercooked steakwas this — ARAWDEAL
Now arrange the circled letters to form the surprise answer, assuggested by the above cartoon.
THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAMEby David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek
Unscramble these four Jumbles,one letter to each square,to form four ordinary words.
KARCO
UHRES
SNCIEC
TIUOAP
©2011 Tribune Media Services, Inc.All Rights Reserved.
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––––––––––––––––– DAILY CALENDAR –––––––––––––––––
––––––––––––––– ONGOING CALENDAR ––––––––––––––
Saturday, September 3Blueberry Festival: 10 a.m.,
to 3 p.m., Gorham Congrega-tional Church. Yard sale 8 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Tuesday, Septermber 6Milan School Board Meet-
ing: 6:30 p.m. in the Milan Vil-lage School Library.
Friday, September 9Men’s Breakfast Group:
All men welcome. Topic: “An ‘Economic Engine’ for the North Country - What Will It Cost?” Presenters: Raymond S. Burton, Executive Councilor and Beno Lamontage, Offi ce of Economic Development and Resources. Gorham Congrega-tional/UCC Church, Main Street, Gorham. Breakfast at 7 a.m., presentation at 7:30 a.m. Free will offering at breakfast for the Ecumenical Food Pantry. FMI: 466-3496.
Sunday, September 11Special Grange Church
Service: 10:30 a.m., Shelburne Union Church. Speaker Diane Wood. Public invited.
Thursday, September 15Free Small Business Coun-
seling: Stewart Gates of the NH Small Business Development Center (NH SBDC) will be avail-able to meet with entrepreneurs, by appointment only, for no cost business counseling, 9:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m., Business Enter-prise Development Corpora-tion (BEDCO), 177 Main Street, Berlin, New Hampshire. Call 752-3319 for appointment.
Friday, September 16Red Cross Blood Drive:
White Mountain Community Ccollege, Nursing Wing Rooms 143 and 145, 12 to 5:30 p.m. Enter to win an iPad2.
Friday Cholesterol Clinic: Monday through Friday,
Berlin Health Dept., city hall. By appointment only, Call 752-1272. All area residents welcome. Fee $15.
AA Meeting: Discussion Meeting, 12 to 1 p.m., St. Barnabas Church, 2 High St., Berlin. Discussion Meeting, 7:30 to 8:30 p.m., AVH.
Weekly “Luck of the Draw” Cribbage Tour-nament. Gorham American Legion, 6 Androscoggin St., Gorham, $5pp: registration 5:15 to 5:45; play starts 6 p.m. Call Legion for more info 466-2433.
Bingo: St. Anne Hall, 5:30 p.m. Sponsored by The-atre North.
Senior Meals: Guardian Angel School, noon. Suggested donations for 60 and over $3; under 60 $6. All are welcome. (FMI 752-2545)
Berlin Area Head Start Accepting Applica-tions: For children between the ages of 3-5 years old. This is an income eligible program. Call 752-5464 to schedule an appointment to enroll your child.
Gorham Public Library: Open M-F: 10am-6pm, Saturdays: 10am-Noon. Story Time is 1:30 p.m. every Friday View On-line Catalog at https://gorham.biblionix.com/ FMI call 466-2525 or email [email protected].
Men’s Breakfast Meeting, Congregational/UCC in Gorham on Main Street. Meeting held the second Friday of each month at 7 a.m.
Artisan Gift Shop: 961 Main St., Berlin. Open Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
Foot Care Clinics: 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. every Friday at the Androscoggin Valley Hospital Home Health and Hospice Department. For an appoint-ment, call 326-5870.
Serenity Steps: 567 Main Street. Berlin’s peer support center. Open Monday to Wednesday, noon to 5 p.m., Thursdays and Fridays, noon to 8 p.m. Offers a variety of support groups and activities to area’s mental health consumers. (FMI 752-8111)
Salvation Army: Music Arts — drama/singing company/sacred dance/timbrels (for all ages), 3 to 4:30 p.m. Dinner — 4:30 to 5:30 p.m. Jr. Soldiers/Jr. Soldiers Prep/Corps Cadets — 5:30 to 6:30 p.m. Youth Horizons: (ages 13 and up), 7 to 9 p.m., 15 Cole St., Berlin. (FMI 752-1644)
Coos County Adult Learner Services: Offers free, confi dential, one-to-one instruction in basic reading, writing, math, English for speakers of other languages and preparation for high school equiva-lency exam (GED). Available Monday through Friday at 166 Main St., Berlin. To schedule an appointment, call 752-1927 or 1-800-268-5437.
Berlin and Coos County Historic Society Moffett House Museum: Open fi ve days, Tues-day through Saturday, noon to 4 p.m. Can also be opened by appointment. Call 752-4590. Available are historical documents, school yearbooks, Berlin/Gorham directories, annual city reports, city and county reports, Brown Bulletins, old books, artifacts and more. Also accepting artifacts.
SaturdayFlea Market / Craft Fair: Gorham Common.
Alternating Saturdays beginning June 11, and ending October 8, 2011. FMI contact the chamber offi ce at 752-6060.
NC Big Book Step Study: AA meeting, 7 to 8:30 p.m., Tea Birds Restaurant conference room, 151 Main St., Berlin.
Shelburne Library Schedule: Thursday - 2:30 p.m. to 4:30 p.m.; Saturdays - 9:00 a.m. to 11:00 a.m.
Dummer Library Story Hour: First Saturday of the month at 11 a.m. (FMI 449-0995; E-mail: [email protected])
Salvation Army Bible Study: 10 a.m., 15 Cole St., Berlin.
Genealogy Library: First Saturday of every month, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, Gorham Hill Road, Randolph.
Milan Public Library: Monday, 1:30 to 7:30 p.m.; Tuesday and Wednesday’s 11:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
SundayAA Meeting: Big Book. Discussion Meeting, 7 to
8:30 p.m,. AVH.Compline: Every Sunday, 8 p.m. St. Barnabas
Episcopal Church, a short evening prayer service, sung every Sunday, 2 High Street, Berlin. FMI 752-3504.
Page 14 — THE BERLIN DAILY SUN, Friday, September 2, 2011
$1-A-DAY CLASSIFIEDS • CALL 752-5858
DEAR ABBY: I have a sister I love dearly. “Thea” is mar-ried to a wonderful man, and they have a 3-year-old son I love as if he were my own. My problem is Thea has a nasty, violent temper, and she doesn’t hesitate to use it toward the boy. Recently when he was overtired and needed to go to bed, Thea said he “knows better than to push me by throwing a tantrum.” She then threatened to “beat him bloody” if he didn’t “shut up” and go to sleep. Abby, she had already swat-ted his behind to the point that he could no longer stand up. This feels like abuse to me. When I suggested that perhaps Thea should try to calm down before she hits him (more than she already had), she threw me out of her house! I am terri-fi ed that this may be happening more often than I realize. But what if what I witnessed was just an isolated incident? If I act on it, I may never have a relationship with my sister again. What (if anything) can I do? I’m worried for the safety of my nephew, but I don’t want to cause a rift I can’t mend. -- MIDWEST AUNTIE DEAR AUNTIE: It appears your sister has serious anger issues and lacks parenting skills. A mother who “swats” her child to the point that he can no longer stand IS an abuser, and she needs an intervention before her child is seriously hurt. Because Thea’s reaction when you tried to intervene and calm her down was to throw you out of the house, the next step is to call Childhelp USA. The toll-free number is 800-422-4453. Your call will be kept confi dential and a counselor can guide you further. Please don’t procrastinate. DEAR ABBY: My fi ance, “Roger,” died recently. I am
working through the devastating grief of his passing, but the core of my pain was listening to the eulogies at his funeral. I expected Roger’s friends and family to share happy memories and celebrate the best of his life. However, many of those who spoke -- including his granddaughter -- chose to remember him as a notorious womanizer both while his wife was alive and after her death. Stories were shared about how he constantly hit on much younger women, including his daughter’s childhood friends. One “gentleman” even shared an “amusing” anecdote about how he and Roger found out they were sleeping with the same woman. I knew about Roger’s past before he met me and I man-aged to come to terms with it, but I did not expect it to be brought up as entertainment at his memorial. I also thought it to be inappropriate with his late wife’s family in attendance. Now my memories are tainted, and I feel dirty and used. I live 500 miles from Roger’s home and will probably never see those people again. What can I do to get over this anger that continues to haunt me? -- STILL IN MOURNING DEAR STILL MOURNING: A eulogy is usually a respect-ful recapitulation of the deceased’s life story, which includes loving memories, lessons taught, examples set by the person. What happened at the funeral was an indication that Roger left behind bitter memories that were voiced by those who spoke. How sad for all concerned. However, this has nothing to do with you and your rela-tionship with Roger. And the quickest way to work through your feelings would be to practice forgiveness and go on with your life -- in which Roger was just a chapter.
VOLATILE SISTER HAS TO BE STOPPED BEFORE SHE HURTS SON
by Abigail Van Buren
Doonesbury by Gary Trudeau
Dear Abby is written by Abigail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was founded by her mother, Pauline Phillips. Write Dear Abby at: Dear Abby, c/o The Conway Daily Sun, PO Box 1940, North Conway, NH 03860
AUTOMOTIVE DismantlerFull Time w/benefits
Skills and Abilities: Mechanical ability with own tools Knowledge of automotive parts Able to safely remove parts Clean and test parts Physical work Other operational duties
Apply at: NH Employment Security151 Pleasant Street, Berlin, NH
Animals
DACHSHUNDS puppies boys &girl heath & temperamentguaranteed. $350 to $450.(603)539-1603.
Low Cost Spay/ NeuterCats & dogs Rozzie May AnimalAlliance www.rozziemay.org603-447-1373
TWO female, one male Poms,8/weeks old, shots & health cert.$450, 723-5671.
Antiques
ANTIQUES, glass, furniture, &collectibles of all kinds wanted byBob Gauthier, 449-2542. Special-izing in Estate and Business liqui-dation. Bonded.
Announcement
GOT a problem? Pray the Ro-sary!
THANKS, mom. For choosinglife.
Autos
1995 DODGE Ram pick-up. 360magnum V8, extended cab, 8'bed w/liner and cover. Runs anddrives like new but some rust.225k miles. $1000. 466-2039.
BUYING junk cars and trucksME & NH. Call for price. MartinTowing. (603)305-4504.
Autos
2005 Chevy Trailblazer, 92,700miles, v good cond inside & out.$9500/obo. (603)449-2298 after5:30pm, leave message.
JUNK car removal, best localprices, Roy's Towing 348-3403.
For Rent
1 bedroom apt, $100. free utili-ties, secluded duplex, $50,locked private room. Owner'sresidence (603)348-5317.
2,3,4 bedroom apts. renovated,all have w/d hook-ups, heat &h/w, hardwood floors. RobertReed. (603)752-2607, 723--4161.
2/3 bedroom ranch in Gorham.Attached garage, residentialneighborhood. $800/month. Noutilities or heat. References re-quired. (603)466-2683 after 5 orleave message.
2ND. floor, 5 rooms, 3 bed-rooms, heated, h/w, garage in-cluded, no pets, 752-3765.
BERLIN 5 room, 2 bedroom, 1s tfloor, 2 family, walk to town, offstreet parking, w/d hook-up, nopets, no utilities, references ands e c u r i t y $ 5 5 0 / m o .(603)455-2245.
BERLIN 6 room, 3 bedroom, 2ndfloor, 2 family. Off street park-ing, w/d hook-up, sun porch, nopets, no utilities, $550/mo.(603)455-2245.
For Rent
Are you working in thearea and need a room fora night, week or by themonth? Stay at a DuBee
Our Guest Bed andBreakfast in Milan. Fully
furnished including papergoods, full use of kitchen,wireless internet, DirectTV, barbecue grill, and
cleaning service. $35 pernight or $135/week.
Owners have separateliving quarters
FMI call 603-449-2140or 603-723-8722
1 bedroom on York St., Berlin.2nd floor, heat & hot water in-cluded. No smoking, no pets.$525/mo. 978-372-9362.
BERLIN 1st floor 2 bedroom,heated, call (978)609-4010.
BERLIN 2 bedroom spaciousapt. close to town, heat, hot wa-ter, garage, $550/mo. No pets.(603)752-3372.
BERLIN one bedroom, firstfloor, $600/mo.; studio firstfloor, $500/mo. electricity, h/w,heat included, 603-723-4724.
BERLIN, 1 bedroom, 2 smallrooms, 2nd floor apt. heat, w/dhook-up. Appliances available.No dogs, one car parking.$575/mo, 723-1664.
For Rent
BERLIN- 2 bedroom, apt., GlenAve., parking, $595/mo. Heat,h/w included. 1st month and se-curity. 603-345-1416.
BERLIN- 5 room first floor apart-ment, Norway St. Large paveddriveway, w/d hookups, no pets/smokers. Security deposit, ref-erences. $500/mo plus utilities.Available now. (239)273-3078.
BERLIN: 1-4 bedroom, apts.$475-$750 inlcudes heat, hotwater, free moving truck,723-3042.
BERLIN: 3 bedroom, 2 baths, 2car garage, house on 1/4 acre,dead end Street, 723-3042.
BERLIN: Affordable one/ twobedroom furnished/ unfur-nished apartments starting at$495/mo. 348-2000.
BERLIN: First floor, 2 bedroom,heat, hot water included, largestorage room, w/d hook-ups,$650/mo. small dog OK, no cats,603-348-5186,[email protected].
BERLIN: Hutchins Park, 2/3 bed -room, newly renovated, w/dhook-ups, with upgrades, possi-ble garage, 348-3921.
BERLIN: Large, 2 bedrooms,Main Street, 1st. floor, $475/mo.no heat or hot water; $675/mo.w/ hot water and heat, no pets,603-566-0070.
For Rent
BERLIN: Room, $350/mo. in-cludes everything, share 2 bed-room apt. w/ female, 723-3042.
BERLIN: Two bedroom house,$700 no utilities included, 805Fifth Ave. call 603-723-2617.
BERLIN: Two bedroom house,fully furnished, $700, no utilitiesincluded, 232 Denmark Street,603-723-2617.
COMPLETELY renovated 1 bed-room apt. on 2nd floor. CallH&R Block (603)752-2372.
GORHAM - $675/mo, 1 bdrm, in-cludes heat, h/w, electricity, a/c,cable internet, dish network.603-915-0241.
GORHAM 2 bedroom, heat, h/w,fully renovated, applianced, offstreet parking, snow removal,no pets, 723-6310.
Gorham 3 bedroom, 2nd floorin town, parking, heat incl. nodogs, $700/mo. 466-5215,630-6614.
GORHAM, 3 bedroom home.Garage, large yard, w/d, appli-ances included. Close to town.$900/mo plus ut i l i t ies .(603)393-7883.
GORHAM: 3 bedoom house,$795 completely remodeled, noutilities included, 84 LancasterRoad, 466-5933, 915-6216.
GORHAM: One bedroom, plusloft cathedral ceiling, nice yard,$550 no utilities, 466-5933,915-6216.
ONE bedroom @ $495; 3 bed -room @ $675 w/ heat, storage,w/d hook-up, parking included,752-6243.
SPACIOUS 2 bedroom, firstfloor, off street parking, heat,h/w included, lg. fenced yard,no pets, no smoking, 915-1230.
THREE rooms, one bedroom,heated, h/w, shed, $425/mo 2nd.floor, no pets, 752-3765.
For Rent-Commercial
BERLIN: 1st. floor, commmer-cial space @ 1500 sq. ft. only$500, 723-3042.
For Sale
2 large brass animals. Elephant,13 lbs., 25" high. Unicorn, 11lbs., 22" high, $125/each, bothfor $200, 723-6276, 752-6276.
ALL purchased brand new,women alone used for one year,stove, fridge, washer/dryer,4/pieces all for $1000, 348-1567.
For Sale
AMAZING! Beautiful pillowtop ma-tress sets, twin $169, full or queen$249, king $399. See AD under“Furniture”.
GOT MOOSE?Upright chest freezer for sale.$50. Available for pick up atGorham Congregational Churchyard sale on 9/3/11, 8am-3pm.FMI 603-466-2047.
LEAP Frog musical tableBumbo, Starlight Cradle Swing,Jumperoo co-sleeper babyhammock, Chicco Keyfit carseat # 728-7757.
LOVE Seat, $125; 2 Comfortglow propane wall heaters,med. $125, lg . $225,603-752-3222.
STACKING washer/ dryer,hardly used, like new, SearsKenmore, $495/BO. 723-6276,752-6276.
VEGAS Casino video poker ma-chine. Plays quarters. Paid over$800. Asking $395/obo(603)723-6276, (603)752-6276.
WOOD Stove, Kings circulator,24" logs, good grates andbricks, asking $200, 636-2944.
WOODEN futon w/ real mat-tress, sage green remo cover,machine wash, has side tablesattached $225. Blue reclinerlove seat $150. Both in excellentcondition. Great for collegekids. FMI Helen (603)752-1944after 3pm.
Furniture
AMAZING! Beautiful Queen or Full-size mat-tress set, Luxury Firm EuropeanPillow-top style, Fabulous back &hip support, Factory sealed - new10-Yr. warranty. Cost $1095, sell$249. Can deliver 603-305-9763.
Free
HIGHEST cash price paid foryour junk cars, farm equipmentand scrap metal. Free removal,no job too big. (207)393-7318.
T&B Appliance Removal. Appli-ances & AC’s removed free ofcharge if outside. Please call(603)986-5506.
Help Wanted
INSIDE Sales: 3 energetic,happy people to do telemarket-ing of business to businessmarketing services. Apply inperson to Crackerjax Marketing,157 Main Street, Suite 9, Berlin326-3327.
THE BERLIN DAILY SUN, Friday, September 2, 2011— Page 15
Coös County Nursing HomeBerlin, NH
Our 100 bed Intermediate Care Facility is accepting applicationsfor the following positions:
RN/LPNMust be a graduate from an accredited school of nursing and pos-sess a current license to practice in the state of New Hampshire.No experience is required.
• 32 hours/3-11pm shift – Permanent position, with excellent pay, shift differential, and benefit package. • On-call, all shifts
If you are interested in working in a professional, supportive andchallenging environment, where caring and compassionate per-sonalities are a must, please stop in and complete your applica-tion today.
To request an application and obtain more information regardingour wage and benefit package
Please stop by the Business Office at364 Cates Hill Road,
PO Box 416, Berlin, NH 03570,or by calling 603-752-2343
from 8 am to 4 pm.EOE
Coös County Nursing HomeBerlin, NH
Our 100 bed Intermediate Care Facility has an opening for a Qual-ity Management Director/Staff Development position.
QUALIFICATIONS: Must be a graduate from an accredited schoolof nursing and possess a current license to practice as a RegisteredNurse in the state of New Hampshire. A Bachelor of Science de-gree in Nursing from an approved accredited college is preferable.The position requires a minimum of three years’ experience innursing, preferably in Geriatrics. The applicant must possess theskills required to provide leadership and education in clinicalsituations. They must demonstrate knowledge in the field of laborrelations, economics, and infection control. Previous teaching ex-perience or Train the Trainer Course desirable.
To request an application and obtain more information regardingour excellent wage and benefit packageplease contact:
Louise J. Belanger RN, BS, NHACoos County Nursing Home
PO Box 416Berlin, NH 03570
Tel. 603-752-2343EOE
Admininistrative AssistantFast paced North Conway/Berlin Medical
offices seeking part time assistant.Medical billing experience preferred.
Must be personable, organized and haveexcellent references.
Possible full time after 90 days.Email resume to:
Berlin Youth HockeyNow accepting Coaching Applications.
(All levels)Please contact:
Joe Accardi 723-8883or Mark Dorval 752-9817
Help Wanted
PART-TIME Mechanic wantedflexible hours. Apply: C&SVending, 595 Main St. Gorham,NH.
SOMEONE to plow, shovel,sand during the winter months.Must have own plow and equip-ment, 603-723-2617.
WEB Designer: Part-time, 20-24hrs. immediately, full time inOct. Apply in person to Cracker-jax Marketing, 157 Main Street,Suite 9, Berlin, 03303.
Home Improvements
FORTIER HOME REPAIROld & New- One call, We do itAll! (603)752-1224.
Mobile Homes
GORHAM: 4 bedroom, GatewayTrailer Park, asking $20,000/BO,FMI, 603-723-1480.
MOBILE Home, Milan, NH 2bedroom, no smoking, availablei n S e p t e m b e r . F M I603-752-1871, leave a message.
Motorcycles
BUY • SELL • TRADE
www.motoworks.biz(603)447-1198. Olson’s MotoWorks, RT16 Albany, NH.
Real Estate
READY TO BUILDBERLIN- LAND FOR SALE
with FOUNDATION575 Hillside Ave.
.23 acre lot, nice residentiallocation, 1600sf
foundation,water septic in place.
Asking $22,000Call (603)986-6451
Real Estate, Wanted
SKI family looking to buy/ rentfor ski season a house or condoin Gorham, [email protected].
Services
Andy's ElectricResidential/Commercial
Licensed andFully Insured
603-466-2584603-723-4888
Services
APPLIANCE Repair: Washers,dryers, stoves, refrigerators, airconditioners, dishwashers, bestrates around. Steve 915-1390.
HYPNOSIS for habit change,stress, regression. MichaelHathaway, DCH, certifiedhypnotherapist. Madisonmichaelhathaway.com(603)367-8851.
AFFORDABLE ROOFING& SIDING SOLUTIONS.
Highest quality craftsmanship.Fully Insured. Lowest pricesguaranteed. FMI (603)[email protected]
Full Size Backhoe Services$55 per hour. Driveways, water/sewer lines, trees, stumps, etc.(603)723-1860.
IT'S not too late to have yourdriveway sealcoated, will meetyour budget, call 723-7259.
JUNK car removal, best localprices, Roy's Towing 348-3403.
LAWN Care fall cleanup andcarpentry, repairs, small tractorservices, call 636-1741.
PROPERTY Maintenance/Handyman. Carpentry, plumb-ing, electrical. Low rates. Anysize job. Emergency serviceavailable (603)915-1390.
Regular/ Spec Ed TutorExperienced. Portfolio availablefor review. Evenings, weekends.My home, yours. (603)449-6736.
Services
TECHPROS- COMPUTERSALES & SERVICE
16+ years experience! On-sitecomputer repair, upgrades,wireless setup, virus removal, &m o r e ! ( 6 0 3 ) 7 2 3 - 0 9 1 8www.TechProsNH.com
WET BASEMENTS,cracked or buckling walls, crawlspace problems, backed by 40years experience. Guaranteed603-356-4759rwnpropertyservices.com.
Wanted
BUYING silver & gold. JesstoneBeads, 129 Main Street, Gor-ham, see us first for best price.
Wanted To Buy
BUYING junk cars/ trucks, heavyequip- farm mach., scrap iron.Call 636-1667 days, 636-1304evenings.
JUNK car removal, best localprices, Roy's Towing 348-3403.
Yard Sale
3 family at 111 State St. 9-2 onSaturday 9/3. Household itemsand clothes.
807 & 809 4th Ave. 9/3, 9-3,great prices, a lot of new items,Christmas decorations andmuch more.
ENTIRE HOUSE SALE120 Bull Pasture Rd. (off Brown-field Rd), Eaton, NH. Sat. 9/3,Sun. 9/4, 9am-3pm. Items in-clude HE washer/dryer, AC’s, re-frigerator, quality furniture, bed-room sets, living room set, din-ing tables, tools, ladders, an-tiques, much much more! Eve-rything priced to go!
Yard Sale
DEALS, deals, deals!! Saturdayand Sunday 9-4pm. 571 Chesh-ire Street, at the top of the hill.Moving sale with many house-hold, office items and tools.Three woodstoves, computermonitors, TV's, kids clothes,toys, kitchen tables, and lotsmore stuff including free items!All items must go, no reason-able offers refused! Our loss isyour gain! Come get a deal!
ESTATE SALESat. & Sun. Sept. 3rd & 4th,9am-2pm. Furniture appliances,tools, kitchenware, clothes, bed-ding, and more! 1 Frazer St.Gorham. Opposite Moe’s Vari-ety Store, go to end of street.No early birds.
FRIDAY, Sat. 9/2, 9/3, 9-2, alsocheck out Pals Place for collecti-bles and antiques, 169 East Mi-lan Road, Berlin, near The Cha-let.
GORHAM CongregationalChurch, 143 Main St. 8-3, Sat.9/3, Antique iron bed, sterlingsilver servers and utensils, golfclubs, twin bed frames, mikestands, suitcases, freezer, Ham-mond organ, brake buddy andlots more.
GORHAM:50 Jimtown Rd
Lots of goodies!
Something foreveryone!
Priced to sell!
INDOOR/ Outdoor yard sale, allitems must go! Rain or shine.Saturday and Sunday 9-2. 8Hitchcock Drive in Gorham.
RANDOLPH675 Durand Rd
Sat. 9/3Sun. 9/4
9am-4pm
Toys, tools,clothes and
more.
SATURDAY 2 Stony Brook Rd.,Gorham. 8-2. Toold, furniture,books and lots of other items.
SATURDAY through September9. 10am til whenever. Every-thing must go, 557 WesternAve., Berlin.
THREE family sale: Sat., Sun.,Mon., 9-5 B-G Road, behindBond Auto, 490 Main Street,Gorham. School clothes (lots ofbrand new) household items,fish aquarium & stand, toys,books, movies, brand new babyclothes, etc.
YARD Sale to benefit cancer re-search Saturday/ Sunday Sept.3rd & 4th 8-3. 56 Randolph HillRoad, Randolph NH. All pro-ceeds go to DHMC.
YARD Sale- Garage Sale. 2dorm refrigerators, tools, bishes& more. Fri. 8-4, Sat. 8-12. 474Madison Ave. Berlin.
St. Judes - $5
Page 16 — THE BERLIN DAILY SUN, Friday, September 2, 2011
Errol Oil & Propane 350 Glen Ave.•752-7526
Acceptin g New Oil & Propane Customers Now!
We want to be your fuel company!
• #2 Hea tin g O il • K ero sen e • Pro pa n e • O ff Ro a d Diesel • 24-Ho u r Em ergen cy Service
Hea tin g System Clea n in g Special goin g on n ow through S eptem ber 9th. C all n ow for deta ils a n d to learn abou t
our pre-buy prices.
LLC
Liz LePera Brok er CRS, GRI (603) 466-2200
W onder W hat Your H om e Is W orth Call (603)466-2200
Please visit us online and take a virtual tour of these homes & our other listings at: http://www.lizrealty.com/
LLC
WONDERFUL NEW KITCHEN in this nice 4 bedroom spacious home. Amenities include a wrap a round porch, a new roof, new furnace, a walk out basement,and a pretty fenced in yard. $99,900 (4071764) BERLIN
JUST COMPLETED Quality New Ranch with mountain views. Amenities include open concept living, a wonderful kitchen with island, lots of big windows throughout, a combination laundry and bath plus a huge basement and garage. $249,000 GORHAM (2829037)
NEW LISTING
CHARMING BUNGALOW with mountain views, located on a quiet street , very close to the town center. Features a brick fireplace, gleaming floors and woodwork throughout, a sunny front porch, a large 2 car garage and a pretty yard. $105,900. 4072007
CONVENIENTLY LOCATED Well maintained, spacious 2 Family providing good steady income. Features washer & dryer hookups in both apartments, 2 enclosed porches, and a 2 car garage. NEW PRICE $ 65,000 (2773956) BERLIN
LOVELY 4 BR HOME on a corner lot bordered by a stone wall and a brook. Has a wood stove with a hearth & mantle in the Live. Rm, first floor laundry & bath, and an inviting enclosed porch. Plenty of storage space in the attic, plus a detached 2 car garage. $94,900 BERLIN (4058167)
OUTSTANDING THREE FAMILY in excellent condition. Located in a great location,near town center. The first floor has been owner occupied for decades, with tenants on the remaining floors. Is beautifully landscaped Good steady income. $189,900 (4066880) GORHAM
INVESTOR’S DREAM
NEW LISTING
NEW LISTING
ENJOY PEACE OF MIND 4% LISTING COMMISSION
MOTIVATED SELLER
Kim Poulin & Sue Martin Owners & Instructors 55 Maynesboro Street, Berlin
FMI call 723-3965 • [email protected]
K&S Fitness Studio Registrations now open for the
Fall Session which begins September 12th
5:30AM Cardio & Sculpt Fusion
ZUMBA - KICKBOXING PILATES/YOGA - BODY SCULPT
Closed Monday,
Labor Day!
416 Glen Ave. Berlin, NH 752-9855
2 16 ROUTE
12v 12v September is our 5-year anniversary
and we couldn’t have done it without all of our customers.
Come down September 17th and enjoy live music and outrageous sale items.
• Hours extended for this day only 8 am to 4 pm
• Tim Dion will be entertaining us from 11 am to 2 pm
• One day pricing on select items • Custom Route 12v cake made by
CJ at Sweet Wishes Cakes
reported fi nding a woman’s purse, clothing and some photos off Pinkham B Road.
Thursday, Aug. 188:53 a.m. A caller on Potter Street
reported that their vehicle was egged overnight.
9:33 a.m. A caller on Cascade Flats reported that their vehicle was egged overnight.
12:15 p.m. A resident came in to report being struck by an egg from a passing vehicle while walking on Main Street the prior evening.
7:13 p.m. A house was broken into on Second Street. Jewelry and car keys were reportedly taken.
Saturday, Aug. 202:55 a.m. Erin Carr, 33, of Bartlett,
was arrested and charged with driv-ing while intoxicated, resisting arrest, transportation of drugs, possession of drugs, and disobeying an offi cer. She was released on $1500 personal recognizance bail and is scheduled to appear in court on Sept. 9.
Sunday, Aug 2111:58 a.m. A two vehicle accident
was reported at Walmart. The damage was minor and no injuries were reported.
12:09 p.m. Richard Devoid, 53, of Gorham, was arrested and charged with violating a protective order. He was held overnight for an Aug. 22 bail hearing. Devoid was released on $1,000 personal recognizance bail and is scheduled to be arraigned on Oct. 7.
5 p.m. Andrew Rivard, 24, of Berlin, was arrested and charged with violat-ing a protective order. He was held overnight for an Aug. 22 bail hearing and remains held on $250 cash bail.
Rivard is scheduled to be arraigned on Oct. 7.
Monday, Aug. 2212:04 a.m. A resident on Lancaster
Road reported that people had been tapping on the house windows and carrying dead squirrels through the yard over the past month.
5:04 p.m. Edith Cloutier, 38, of Berlin, was issued a summons for non-inspection.
Tuesday, Aug. 236:05 a.m. A caller on Church Street
reported a female sleeping in her yard. Police moved the woman along.
5:49 p.m. Kelly Cox, 27, of North Conway, was issued a summons for speed.
7 p.m. Brian Cote, 19, of Berlin, was issued a summons for speed.
8:27 p.m. Tyler Holden, 19, of Sae-gertown, Penn., was issued a sum-mons for speed.
Wednesday, Aug. 241:57 p.m. A caller reported an argu-
ment at the Walmart parking lot.2:24 p.m. A caller reported the back
window of a car was smashed while parked at Walmart.
5:20 p.m. Derek Wesson, 28, of Gorham, was arrested and charged with simple assault and criminal mischief. He was released on $500 personal recognizance bail and is scheduled to appear in court on Oct. 7.
11:26 p.m. A caller reported that a car pulled up alongside while they were at the McDonald’s drive-thru and pointed a gun with a laser sight at their vehicle. Police were able to identify the participants and discov-ered that the gun was an airsoft gun. The investigation into the incident is ongoing.
GORHAM LOG from page one
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– DISTRICT COURT –––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
August 18 sessionRobert Roy, 60, of Barnet, Vt, was
fi ned $215 for an overweight truck violation.
Errol Decker, 56, of Berlin, was fi ned $60 for operating an OHRV on private land without written permission.
August 24 sessionJohn Piattoni, 58, of Gorham, was
fi ned $83.33 for non-inspection.August 26 session
Garrett Riviere, 20, of Lancaster, was found guilty of driving while intoxicated. He was fi ned $500, his license was revoked for one year and he was ordered to complete the impaired driver intervention program (IDIP). Riviere was also found guilty of possession of controlled drugs and fi ned $350. Charges of possession of
Berlin District Court
see BERLIN COURT page 17
THE BERLIN DAILY SUN, Friday, September 2, 2011— Page 17
www.riversideheightsnh.com
181 Cole Street, Berlin, NH
603-752-7535 www.pcre.com
NEW 2011 2 Bedrooms, 1.5 baths -$49,900
N orthern Edge R ealty of B erlin, N H 232 Glen Avenue – (603)752-0003 www.team ner.com
Thinking of B uying or Selling a H om e? Call Chris Lunn 603-236-1910 (Cell)
D & R PAVI NG & SEALCOATI NG
Summer Special: 60’x20’ $1935 Includes Everything!
Recycled Asphalt Paving Lawn Building Sealcoating
Call Us For All Your Asphalt Needs! (Office) 207-247-8706 (Cell) 207-281-2224
“Save Your Vehicle. Think Used” P&L Auto Parts, Inc. Can Help!
New Hampshire Certified Green Yard www.pandlautoparts.com
Route 110, Berlin, NH • 752-1040 •Late model used auto and truck parts •Free parts locating service, “If we don’t have it, we’ll get it!” •New OEM and aftermarket parts available upon request •Cash for tired, unwanted vehicles – FREE PICKUP
ROCKY BRANCH BUILDERS Affordable Home Solutions
603-730-2521 [email protected] PO Box 693 Glen, NH 03838
Asphalt Roofing System starting at $2/sf Metal Roofing starting at $3/sf Vinyl Siding starting at $1.60/sf Pressure Treated Decks starting at $9/sf
Visit us at www.mrpizzanh.com
Fresh Seafood!
Main St., Gorham
Weekend Specials Friday & Saturday Specials Available September 2nd t hru September 10th
APPETIZER: Fin and Fowl Buffalo Combo . . . . . . . . . $9.99
FRENCH DIP SANDWICH WITH ONION SOUP AND POTATO CHOICE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $9.95
CHICKEN MARSALA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $11.95
TENDER PRIME RIB . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $18.95 16 oz King cut of slow roasted, tender prime rib, with soup or salad, potato choice, vegetable du jour and warm dinner rolls 12 oz Queen cut . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $14.95
SATURDAY ROAST TURKEY DINNER . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $11.99 Fresh roast turkey with red skin mashed potatoes, gravy, stuffing, squash, cranberry sauce & warm homemade dinner rolls.
AVAILABLE EVERY SATURDAY NIGHT AND ALL DAY SUNDAY!
WE DELIVER! 466-5573
Our deck is now open 7 days a week 11:00 am to 8:00 pm
If you are looking to have year round fun in the North Country take a look at this very secluded home with to many
up-dates to list. Cozy, romantic and very well maintained.
To find out more about us and how to make your dreams come true contact us at: Teammunck.com
Margaret 603-986-5718Bill 603-986-5578
603-569-0700 office phone
OPEN HOUSESaturday, Sept. 3, 11:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m.
drugs in a motor vehicle and unlawful possession of alcohol were dropped.
Cameron Murray, 19, of Berlin, was found guilty of unlawful possession of alcohol, and fi ned $500 fi ne with $200 suspended for one year on the condi-tion of good behavior. He was also ordered to com-plete a licensed alcohol and drug abuse counseling (LADAC) evaluation within 30 days and participate in recommended follow up care. Murray was also found guilty of default or breach of bail and fi ned $1,000 with $500 suspended for two years on the condition of good behavior.
Timothy Goulet, 24, of Gorham, was found guilty of criminal mischief. He was fi ned $500 with $250 suspended and sentenced to 60 days in jail, all deferred for one year on the condition of good behav-ior. A charge of simple assault was dropped and a charge of criminal threatening was placed on fi le without fi nding for one year on the condition of good behavior.
A charge of unlawful possession of alcohol against Joseph Ewalt, 16, of Berlin, was placed on fi le with-out fi nding for one year on the conditions of good behavior, no underage alcohol violations and comple-tion of the 3rd Millenium program within 30 days.
A charge of speeding against Robert Russo, 30, of Wakefi eld, Mass., was placed on fi le without fi nding for one year on the conditions of good behavior and no major motor vehicle violations.
David Hudon, 46, of Berlin, was found guilty of driving under in the infl uence subsequent offense. He was fi ned $750, his license was revoked for 3 years, and he was sentenced to 10 days in jail with 7 served at a multiple DWI offender program. A charge of driving after revocation or suspension, was placed on fi le without fi nding for one year on the condition of good behavior. A stop light violation was dropped.
Six teens charged with underage drinking at a party in Gorham on June 11 all received the same penalty. Charges of unlawful possession of alcohol against Christa Rousseau, 18, of Randolph, Jeffrey Sanschagrin, 20, of Gorham, Joshua Rivard, 19, of Lancaster, Jeremy Dupont, 20, of Gorham, Tara Cloutier, 18, of Gorham and Alisha Vaillancourt-Locke, 18, of Gorham, were placed on fi le without fi nding for one year. The charges were placed on fi le on the conditions that the teens remain of good behavior, complete a 3rd Millennium course by Sept. 26, and have no further underage drinking viola-tions.
Eric Gilbert, 33, of Gorham, was found to have vio-lated the terms of his probation and was sentenced to two concurrent terms of 6 months in jail. He was given credit for 16 days of pre-trial confi nement.
Daniel Kenly, 27, of Gorham, was found guilty of driving while intoxicated. He was fi ned $500 and his license was revoked for nine months. An open con-
tainer charge was placed on fi le with fi nding for one year on the condition of good behavior. Additional charges of aggravated driving while intoxicated and driving while intoxicated were dropped.
A charge of possession of drugs in a motor vehicle against Zachary Wedge, 17, of Gorham, was placed on fi le without fi nding for two years on the conditions of good behavior, completion of a LADAC evaluation within 60 days and participation in recommended after care. Wedge was found guilty of unlawful pos-session of alcohol and fi ned $300. A charge of trans-porting alcohol was dropped.
Forrest Gresser-Baker, 20, of St. Johnsbury, Vt., was found guilty of unlawful possession of alcohol and fi ned $500. A charge of misrepresenting his age to purchase alcohol was dropped.
Cassandra Carson, 21, of Gorham, was fi ned $103.33 for following too closely.
Kyle Aikens, 18, of Berlin, was fi ned $51.67 for speeding. A youth operator violation was placed on fi le without fi nding for one year on the conditions of good behavior and no motor vehicle violations.
A charge of possession of tobacco products against Eric Hall, 16, of Groveton, was placed on fi le without fi nding for one year on the conditions of good behav-ior and completion of 20 hours of community service.
Brad Antone, 17, of Berlin, was found guilty of unlawful possession of alcohol and fi ned $600. Antone opted to pay the fi ne by serving 15 days in jail.
Adam Jenkins, 34, of Berlin, was fi ned $41.67 for speeding.
August 31 sessionFive counts of fraudulent use of a credit card
against Gregg Letarte, 31, of Berlin, were dropped.Shane Warren, 23, of Milan, was found guilty of
driving under the infl uence. He was fi ned $500 and his license was revoked for nine months. A charge of aggravated driving while intoxicated was dropped.
Andrew Peare, 24, of Berlin, was found guilty of driving after revocation or suspension and fi ned $500.
Mark Morin, 32, of Berlin, was found guilty of two counts of simple assault. He received concurrent sentences of six months in jail, with both suspended for two years. He will also serve one year of proba-tion.
A charge of violating a protective order against Linda Greenlay, 40, of Berlin, was placed on fi le without fi nding for one year on the condition of good behavior.
A charge of breach of bail against Daniel Ouel-lette, 25, of Berlin, was dropped.
Shannon Orr, 29, of Berlin, was found guilty of hindering apprehension or prosecution and sen-tenced to 35 days in jail with 35 days pre-trial credit.
Amber Brown, 19, of Berlin, was found guilty of unlawful possession of alcohol and fi ned $1,000, with $400 suspended for one year on the condition of
BERLIN COURT from page 16
see BERLIN COURT page 18
Page 18 — THE BERLIN DAILY SUN, Friday, September 2, 2011
Androscoggin Valley Country Club 603-466-9468• [email protected]
2 Main St., P.O. Box 280, Gorham, NH 03581
18 Holes o f Golf w ith Cart $35
Auto North Open Septmber 10th
FREE 2011 MEMBERSHIP
Call for details.
BANKRUPTCY Fast ~ EASY ~ Personal
Attorney Ed McBurney North Conway • (603) 356-9097
Free Consultation
Attention Berlin Residents There will be no garbage collection or Recycling on Monday September 5th, 2011, all collections for that day will be on Friday September 9th, 2011.
Lisa L. Barbieri Nail Technician
Available at Niki’s Hair
Fashions 53 Church Street Berlin, NH 03570 752-1717
behavior. A charge of breach of bail was dropped.A charge of violating a protective order against
Hannah Williams, 26, of Berlin, was placed on fi le without fi nding for one year on the condition of good behavior.
Cindy Chilafoe, 40, of Berlin, was found guilty of
simple assault and fi ned $200.A charge of speeding against Curtis Godin, 16, of
Berlin, was placed on fi le without fi nding for one year on the conditions of good behavior and no motor vehicle violations.
Misty Campbell, 20, of Gorham, was found guilty of unlawful possession and fi ned $600.
BERLIN COURT from page 17
International Coin Collectors Assoc. to host special event in GorhamGORHAM – Currently on a global tour, the
International Coin Collectors Association (ICCA) will be making a stop in Gorham, New Hampshire at the Town and Country Inn, located at 20 US Route 2, on Tuesday, September 6, through Sat-urday, September 10. The show hours are 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Tuesday through Friday, and 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Saturday. The ICCA will be purchasing coins, paper currency, gold and silver on behalf of their global network of collectors, dealers and refi neries. This special event is free and open to the public.
ICCA spokesman Mark Cooper says, “We hope to spend at least $250,000 while we are in town, pur-chasing people’s old coin collections, vintage bank notes and scrap gold and silver. It’s been all over the news – gold and silver are trading at record highs – and people everywhere are scrambling to cash in. We buy a lot of class rings, mismatched earrings and broken necklaces. Just a small hand-ful of gold can add up to hundreds of dollars very quickly.” Cooper continues, “Old coins are also very valuable. An ultra-rare 1894 S Barber dime sold for a whopping $1.9 million in 2007. We recently paid $120,000 for a coin collection in N.C. and even $300 for a single penny in Ga. I encourage every-one to clean out their drawers, lock boxes, jewelry boxes and bring their items to our show for a free evaluation and perhaps walk out a little richer!”
Traveling from small towns to large cities, the
ICCA hosts hundreds of events each year where local residents are encouraged to bring in their precious metals, old coins and paper money to earn extra cash. While meeting one-on-one with each guest, the ICCA specialists review, research and evaluate the items and will make an offer to purchase all gold coins, silver coins made before 1965 and paper money printed prior to 1934. The amount of the offer depends on the silver or gold content, the collectability, the rarity and the con-
dition of the items. If the guest decides to accept the offer made, a check will be issued on the spot.
Parent company of the ICCA, THR & Associ-ates is the largest and most-successful company of its kind in the world. On the leading edge of the precious metals, antiquities and collectibles industries, THR & Associates is headquartered in Springfi eld, Ill. with bases in Canada and Europe.
For more information or directions, please call 217-787-7767.
Register today to become a hospice volunteerBERLIN -- Androscoggin Valley Hospital Home
Health and Hospice Services is offering a hospice volunteer training program beginning October 3, through October 26, on Monday and Wednesday evenings from 6 to 8 p.m. at Androscoggin Valley Hospital. The program is free and open to anyone in the community who is interested in becoming a hospice volunteer or who would like to learn more about end-of-life issues and care.
For those unfamiliar with hospice, it provides comprehensive, coordinated, compassionate care to the terminally ill and their families. The goal is to improve quality of life by providing integrated services that respond to physiological, sociologi-cal, educational, spiritual, and emotional needs of the client and family during the fi nal stages of life and the bereavement that follows. Typically, care is provided in the patient’s home, but can also be administered at a hospital, nursing home, or pri-vate hospice facility.
Volunteers provide all kinds of support for patients and their families. When assigned to a family, volunteers visit on a weekly basis, gener-ally contributing two to four hours a week, and may provide support services such as companion-ship, active listening, bedside sitting and reading. They may share hobbies and special interests such as music, sports, travel and crafts, and may assist with errands such as grocery shopping, picking up prescriptions, or with transportation to a doc-tor’s appointment. No task is too big or too small
for a hospice volunteer. One of the most impor-tant things a hospice volunteer can do is to just “be there” for patients to reassure them that they are not alone, whether it is to hold a hand, offer a smile, or just listen.
Hospice volunteers report having a sense of deep personal satisfaction in being there for someone during their fi nal journey in life. “I often hear vol-unteers say they get more from volunteering than what they give,” says Edwina Keene, AVH volun-teer coordinator.
AVH Home Health and Hospice Services also offers Vigil Services which provide a range of vol-unteer support from several hours a day to full-time attendance. This depends on the needs of the family and the availability of volunteers on the Vigil Team. A Vigil is offered to a family during the “fi nal days” of life.
“If you have some free time and enjoy helping others, you may want to consider participating in the Hospice Volunteer Training Program to learn if this is something you’d like to do,” said Keene. “People participate in the program for different reasons. It may be personal, work related, or to become a volunteer. Regardless of the reason, we are happy to have you join us.”
For an application or more information, please call Edwina Keene at 326-5676 or email [email protected]. Applications are being accepted through September 21. AVH is “Leading the Way to a Healthier Future.”
Send Us Your Community News: [email protected]
THE BERLIN DAILY SUN, Friday, September 2, 2011— Page 19
Riverside Assembly of God Church • Pastor Paul Lavigne, Berlin/ Gorham Road, Gorham, 466-2851 - Sunday Morning Worship 10:00 am; Children’s Church & Nursery Available, Wednesday Bible study, 7 pm. Christian Science Society • 147 Main Street, Lancaster Sunday Service 10 am, Sunday School 10 am The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints • Preaching the “Restored Gospel” • Top of Gorham Hill Rd., Rt. 2. 466-3417, Feltus Sterling, Branch Pres. 733-6743. Sundays Meetings Sacrament 10:00 am, Sunday School 11:45 am, Prsthd & Rel Soc. 12:15pm Community Bible Church , 595 Sullivan Street, Berlin. 752-4315. Service Times: Sunday - Family Bible Hour - 9:45 AM, Morning Worship - 11:00 AM, Evening Service - 6:00 PM. Bible Studies held Tuesdays and Thursdays - call for details. Youth, Awana (September - April) - Wednesday - 6:00 PM. Community Bible Academy - Christian School for K-12. www.berlin- gorhambible.com. Dummer Community Church • Corner of Hill Rd. and East Side River Rd., Dummer. Sunday Worship and Sunday School 9:30. Bible Study ater service. 449-6628 or 449-6765 First Baptist Church • 79 High Street, Berlin. · 752-6215. Reverand: Dean Stiles. Sunday School 9:45am, Sunday Worship Services: 11:00am. Tuesday Bible Study 7:00 PM. Nursery available, handicap accessible. Gateway Apostolic Church • P.O. Box 153, Gorham, NH - Home group meetings Tuesday at 7PM, please call for locations, 1-800- 450-7298 ext. 6062. Pastor: Rodney Brown Gorham Congregational Church United Church of Christ - 143 Main Street, Gorham, 466-2136. Sunday worship at 10:00 am. Rally Sunday and the first day of Sunday School in Sept. 12. We celebrate Holy Communion on the first Sunday of the month. All are welcomed and the coffee is free. Gorham Congregational Church is a church in the United Church of Christ, no matter where you are on your faith journey you are welcome here. The Harvest Christian Fellowship, a Foursquare Gospel church • Pastor Shane Riff. First Service: 8:30am (no childcare), Second Service: 10:30am (childcare provided), Sunday School 10:30am. Midweek Service Wednesday 6:30pm. 219 Willow Street, Berlin • 752-5374. Heritage Baptist Church • Rev. Dana C. Hoyt, Sr., Pastor. Independent-Fundamental-soul winning-KJV. Sunday School 9:30; Sunday Worship 10:30; Sunday Evening 6:00; Thurs. Bible Study 7:00. 13 Exchnage St., Berlin, 752-4523. Free bible studies through the mail or in your home. Holy Family Roman Catholic Church • 7 Church St., Gorham 466-2335 Rev. Mark Dollard, Pastor - Rev. Steven Lepine Associate Pastor - Weekend Mass Schedule Sat. 6:00 pm, Sun. 11:00 am . Reconciliation Sat. 5:15–5:45 pm or by appt. Weekdays Mass Schedule Tues. & Thurs. 6:00 pm Holy Resurrection Orthodox Church • 20 Petrograd Street, Berlin, 752-2254 Divine Liturgy: 9am Sunday Lamb’s Chapel, Non-denominational Christian Church • Pastors: David & Linda Canter, 214 School Street, Berlin, NH 03570. Phone: (603) 752-5773. Services times: Sunday 10:30 a.m. Worship Services, Tuesday 6 a.m. Men’s Prayer Meeting and Bible Study, Tuesday at 3:30 p.m. Women’s Bible Study and Prayer Meeting, and Tuesday 4:30- 7 p.m. Sanctuary open for prayer. Milan Community United Methodist Church • Services at 10:30 am with Pastor William Simpson. 449-2026 or 449-3344 Mt. Forist Seventh Day Adventist Church • Corner of First Ave., and Mt. Forist St., Pastor Leon Twitchell, 207-890-7130, Saturday services: Bible study 9:30am, Worship service 11am Mt. Washington Valley Bible Church • Real direction for real life. Worship Services Sunday 9:30am; Bible Study 11-12am; Prayer Meeting Wed. 7:00pm. Information call 752-4920. Come and Join Us. New Life Apostolic Church • Services are every 2nd and 4th Wednesday at the Berlin Rec. Center from 6:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. FMI call David Willhoite at 207-357-3455 Randolph Church Services • Northern side of Route 2 near Randolph Hill Road, Randolph. Summer worship services, 10:30 a.m. Sundays through September 4. Salvation Army • Salvation Army, 15 Cole St., Berlin. Sunday School 10 a.m., Sunday Worship 11 a.m., Sunday Evening Bible study 6 p.m. Lt. Erin Smullen. Shelburne Union Church • All services every Sunday at the church at 7 pm in the evenings throughout the summer only. St. Anne’s Roman Catholic Church of Good Shepherd Parish • 345 Pleasant St., Berlin - 752-2880 • Rev. Mark Dollard, Pastor, - Rev. Kyle Stanton, Assoc. Pastor, Weekend Mass Schedule - Saturday Evenings 4:00 - Sunday 7:00 am,. 9:00 am, & 7:00 pm. Weekdays Mon., Wed. & Fri. 8:00 am. Holydays Vigil 6:0.0 pm, Feast 8:00 am & 12:05 pm. Confessions: Sat 3:00 pm or by appointment. St. Barnabas Episcopal Church • 2 High Street, Berlin; 752-3504; www.stbarnabasberlin.org. The Rev. Fran Gardner-Smith, Rector. • Worship Schedule: Sunday worship with Eucharist 10:15AM; Sung Compline Sunday 8PM; Wednesday Eucharist 10AM. Adult Bible Study Sunday at 9:15. Sunday School for Children at 9:15 (September to Mid-May). All people are always welcome at St. Barnabas! St. Paul Lutheran Church • Norway and Seventh Streets, Berlin, 752-1410 - Rev. Gail Bauzenberger. Worship Services: Sundays 10:30 am - Sunday School: 9am for ages 3-adult – Summer Schedule: Sunday Worship 9:30 am, No Sunday School. United Church of Christ, Congregational • 921 Main Street, Berlin - 752-3811. Sunday Worship Service 10 am. W. Milan United Methodist Church • Pastor Al Bunnell. West Milan Village, 449-3344 or 449-2026. Worship Services: 7:00pm, 1st & 3rd Sundays. Thursday night bible study with Pastor William Simpson at 7:00. Information call 449-3344 or 449-2026.
This service is provided free of charge every Friday. Please send pertinent information to our office if you would like to be included.
3 Hillside Ave. Berlin • 752-7225 Summer Hou rs: Ope n at 4PM
Friday: Karaoke & Dancing with Steve Emerson
Saturday: WII from 7-9pm and DJ & Dancing
Sunday: Karaoke & Dancing with Steve Emerson
Mon & Tues: CLOSED.
Come Sign Up For FUN FIGHTS, Need More
People
Fagin’s Pub & R estaurant
Serving Lunch Mon- F ri 11am-1:00pm • Serving Breakfast 7 Days A Week
777 Main Street, Berlin • 752-3744 Mon. Closed All Day - Happy Labor Day Tues. Steak & Cheese Quesadilla . . . . . . . . . $6.50 Wed. BLT with onion rings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $6.25 Thurs . Bacon Cheeseburger with one
Bosco Stick . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $6.50 Fri. Chicken or Tuna Melt with fries . $6.25
Dine in air conditioned comfort for breakfast & lunch
D J Doc Otis returning Saturday Sept. 10th
Realtors with RE/MAX Northern Edge Realty greet Joe Accardi, President of Berlin Youth Hockey with a check for $500.00. Hockey is more than a game, it develops skills on the ice that build a foundation for a lifetime. Hockey promotes confi dence, pride, focus and responsibil-ity. Hockey is also alot of fun! RE/MAX is proud to support such a great organization and they wish all of the teams, parents and coaches great success in the upcoming season. For more information on Berlin Youth Hockey please contact Joe Accardi at 752-7749 or Ema il Joe at [email protected] . From l-r: Linda Lamirande, Jennifer Stewart, Joe Accardi, Chris Lunn, Wayne Micucci, Matt Martel, Steve Grone, Roxanne Mailhot and Carl Mercier. (RITA DUBE PHOTO)
BERLIN --Nancy Burleson, MD, FACOG of AVH Surgical Associates, recently returned from Cen-tral America where she has, for the past four years, travelled to provide medical services on a volunteer basis. Using her earned time off, she treats victims of child traffi cking – those caught in slavery and pros-titution. She also provides medical care to indigent people in areas where no medical care is available.
In Nicaragua, Dr. Burleson provides free medical care to poor individuals in rural communities. She performs surgeries, obstetrical care, gynecologi-cal care, including cervical cancer screenings, and generalized medicine. She has currently worked in Nicaragua six times with three future return trips planned in 2012.
As a part of Global Health Organization, she trav-els upwards of two to three times per year to areas where there is no running water, electricity, and where any existing water can not be consumed due to the probability of illness. Her days typically begin at 6 a.m. and end at 10 p.m. Her next trip is sched-uled in January, 2012. Dr. Burleson speaks Span-ish to assist her with her medical care of indigent patients.
Dr. Burleson has a future trip planned to Afghani-stan in May, 2012 to care for refugees of the war-torn country. She is considering future trips to India
and Cambodia as there is a great need for female OB/GYNs in those areas, both of which are plagued by a human traffi cking problem. She has also been invited to go to parts of Africa, India, and the Middle
East to teach doctors in those countries basic surgical skills, including cesar-ean sections to decrease mater-nal deaths.
Dr. Burle-son welcomes patients at the AVH Profes-sional Center in Berlin and at Upper Connecti-cut Valley Hospi-tal in Colebrook.
For more information about her volunteer work or human traffi cking, please contact Dr. Burleson at (603) 752-2300. She will be presenting a health education lec-ture on human traffi cking in the AVH lecture room on Monday, February 13, 2012.
AVH Surgical Associates’ Nancy Burleson practices volunteer medicine in Central America
Nancy Burleson, MD