20
FRIDAY, JANUARY 6, 2012 VOL. 12 NO. 155 LACONIA, N.H. 527-9299 FREE FRIDAY Adrianna Grenon 1st born in ‘12 8-lb., 4-oz. young lady was delivered at LRGH on January 3 — Page 8 FREE Laconia 524-1421 Fuel Oil 10 day cash price* subject to change 3 . 5 9 9 * 3 . 5 9 9 * 3.59 9 * OIL & PROPANE CO., INC. LASER CAR WASH Express Deluxe Works $6.00 $8.00 $10.00 Gilford Mart Rte. 11 Gilford, NH • 524-8014 BLAST BLAST ARCTIC ARCTIC SAVE UP TO On 2011 Sleds! SALE ENDS DEC 25th! 3.99% $2,300! Financing AVAILABLE!! 2011’s MUST GO BEFORE SNOW! LACONIA 603-524-0100 Santorum suddenly a center of attention Former U.S. Senator Rick Santorum of Pennsylvania (blue shirt) answers questions before an audience of N.H. Primary voters and dozens of members of the media at the historic Merrimack Valley Railroad Freight Station in Northfield on Thursday morning. Santorum has turned a stunning, unexpected performance in the Iowa caucuses on Tuesday into a spot at center stage in New Hampshire in the final campaign days leading up to the Jan. 10 “first in the nation” Presidential Primary. (Alan MacRae/for The Laconia Daily Sun) NORTHFIELD — Rick San- torum, the dog that caught the car in Iowa, brought his “Faith, Family and Freedom” tour to the historic Merrimack Valley Railroad freight depot here yesterday amid doubts that he could match his sur- prising, top-shelf showing in the Iowa caucuses in the New Hampshire presidential pri- mary. In asking for votes, Santo- rum acknowledged “I know the other candidates say they need your help, but they’re lying. I do.” Making his 31st trip to the state, where he said he has held more than 100 town meet- ings, Santorum reminded his listeners that they were well placed to shoulder their “huge responsibility of recommend- ing the right person” to the rest f the country. Asking for a show of hands, he found that nearly all the 75 odd voters in the room had met one or more of the other GOP candidates. Extolling New Hampshire’s tradition of local government, he remarked that “half the people of the state are elected to something” and said that no voters are more well versed in exercising their right. see SANTORUM page 7 LACONIA — An autopsy had determined that a prisoner at the Belknap County Jail who died on Dec. 3, 2010 died from an unin- tentional overdose of narcotics. Superintendent Daniel Ward said yes- Prisoner at county jail took lethal dose of narcotics before entry terday that the toxicology report done by the state medical examiner determined Raul Arizmendi, 39, had died from “acute intoxication by oxycodone (a painkiller) and alprazolam (a drug for anxiety).” Ward said Arizmendi had self-surren- dered to the Belknap County Jail at 4 p.m. on Dec. 3, 2010 — one hour later than his scheduled reporting time. Ward said he was processed and evaluated medically and appeared to be under the influ- ence of something. Ward said Arizmendi went to his cell, accepted a dinner tray and drank some apple juice and ate some food. He said a medical nurse offered Ariz- mendi his inhaler and a guard found him unresponsive about 10:30 p.m. Attempts to resuscitate him with an automatic defibril- lator failed. Ward said the Sheriff’s Department investigated Arizmendi’s final 24 hours as part of the investigation. According to reports of the 4th circuit see OVERDOSE page 8 BY MICHAEL KITCH THE LACONIA DAILY SUN BY GAIL OBER THE LACONIA DAILY SUN GILFORD — The sharply divided Budget Committee last night voted to recommend the new teachers’ contract and School District operat- ing budget, but with- held its support for the purchase of a new fire engine. School Superinten- dent Kent Heminway told the committee that after negotiations between the School Board and the Gilford Education Associa- tion (GEA) over a new collective bargaining BudCom approves deal with Gilford teachers by 1 vote see BUDCOM page 8

The Laconia Daily Sun, January 6, 2012

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

The Laconia Daily Sun, January 6, 2012

Citation preview

Page 1: The Laconia Daily Sun, January 6, 2012

1

FRIDAY, JANUARY 6, 2012 VOL. 12 NO. 155 LACONIA, N.H. 527-9299 FREE

FRIDAY

Adrianna Grenon 1st born in ‘128-lb., 4-oz. young lady was delivered at LRGH on January 3 — Page 8FREE

1

Laconia 524-1421 Fuel Oil

10 day cash price* subject to change

3.59 9 * 3.59 9 * 3.59 9 * OIL & PROPANE CO., INC.

LASER CAR WASH Express Deluxe Works $6.00 $8.00 $10.00

Gilford Mart Rte. 11 Gilford, NH • 524-8014

BLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTBLASTARCTICARCTIC

SAVE UP TO

On 2011 Sleds!

SALE ENDS DEC 25th!3.99%

$2,300!

FinancingAVAILABLE!!2011’s MUST GOBEFORE SNOW!

LACONIA603-524-0100

Santorum suddenly a center of attention

Former U.S. Senator Rick Santorum of Pennsylvania (blue shirt) answers questions before an audience of N.H. Primary voters and dozens of members of the media at the historic Merrimack Valley Railroad Freight Station in Northfi eld on Thursday morning. Santorum has turned a stunning, unexpected performance in the Iowa caucuses on Tuesday into a spot at center stage in New Hampshire in the fi nal campaign days leading up to the Jan. 10 “fi rst in the nation” Presidential Primary. (Alan MacRae/for The Laconia Daily Sun)

NORTHFIELD — Rick San-torum, the dog that caught the car in Iowa, brought his “Faith, Family and Freedom” tour to the historic Merrimack Valley Railroad freight depot here yesterday amid doubts that he could match his sur-

prising, top-shelf showing in the Iowa caucuses in the New Hampshire presidential pri-mary.

In asking for votes, Santo-rum acknowledged “I know the other candidates say they need your help, but they’re lying. I do.”

Making his 31st trip to the

state, where he said he has held more than 100 town meet-ings, Santorum reminded his listeners that they were well placed to shoulder their “huge responsibility of recommend-ing the right person” to the rest f the country. Asking for a show of hands, he found that nearly all the 75 odd voters in

the room had met one or more of the other GOP candidates. Extolling New Hampshire’s tradition of local government, he remarked that “half the people of the state are elected to something” and said that no voters are more well versed in exercising their right.

see SANTORUM page 7

LACONIA — An autopsy had determined that a prisoner at the Belknap County Jail who died on Dec. 3, 2010 died from an unin-tentional overdose of narcotics.

Superintendent Daniel Ward said yes-

Prisoner at county jail took lethal dose of narcotics before entryterday that the toxicology report done by the state medical examiner determined Raul Arizmendi, 39, had died from “acute intoxication by oxycodone (a painkiller) and alprazolam (a drug for anxiety).”

Ward said Arizmendi had self-surren-dered to the Belknap County Jail at 4 p.m.

on Dec. 3, 2010 — one hour later than his scheduled reporting time.

Ward said he was processed and evaluated medically and appeared to be under the infl u-

ence of something. Ward said Arizmendi went to his cell, accepted a dinner tray and drank some apple juice and ate some food.

He said a medical nurse offered Ariz-mendi his inhaler and a guard found him unresponsive about 10:30 p.m. Attempts to resuscitate him with an automatic defi bril-lator failed.

Ward said the Sheriff ’s Department investigated Arizmendi’s fi nal 24 hours as part of the investigation.

According to reports of the 4th circuit see OVERDOSE page 8

BY MICHAEL KITCHTHE LACONIA DAILY SUN

BY GAIL OBERTHE LACONIA DAILY SUN

GILFORD — The sharply divided Budget Committee last night voted to recommend the new teachers’ contract and School District operat-ing budget, but with-held its support for the purchase of a new fi re engine.

School Superinten-dent Kent Heminway told the committee that after negotiations between the School Board and the Gilford Education Associa-tion (GEA) over a new collective bargaining

BudCom approves deal with Gilford teachers by 1 vote

see BUDCOM page 8

Page 2: The Laconia Daily Sun, January 6, 2012

Page 2 — THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Friday, January 6, 2012

2

U SDA Grade A Fresh Family Pack 3 Lbs. Or More Chicken

Drumsticks Or Thighs

• Now in our Deli Roadies Chicken • Now in our Deli Roadies Chicken • Now in our Deli Roadies Chicken for lunch and dinner for lunch and dinner for lunch and dinner

• January Meat Freezer Specials In Store • January Meat Freezer Specials In Store • January Meat Freezer Specials In Store •Blockbuster Express Rentals $1 •Blockbuster Express Rentals $1 •Blockbuster Express Rentals $1

Prices Effective Through January 12, 2012 U SDA Choice

Certified Angus Beef Sirloin Tips

$ 4 98

Country Kitchen 22oz. Loaf White Or Wheat

Canadian Bread

Mckenzie Boneless Hams

2-6lb Avg.

USDA Grade A Fresh 3-4.5lb. Avg. Whole

Fryer Chickens

68 ¢

USDA Choice Certified Angus Beef Boneless

Whole Eye Rounds $ 2 98

lb.

USDA Choice Certified Angus Beef Family Pack

Round Cube Steak $ 3 49

Tender Asparagus

16lb. Come & Get It Or Prime Cuts Alpo Dry Dog Food

12.25-14oz. Original Or Honey Nut General Mills Cheerios

4.7-7.25oz. Select Pasta- R oni Or Rice-a- R oni

10-10.5oz. Select Lay’s Potato Chips

Buy One Get One Free

.5 Liter Bottles Crystal Geyser 6 Pack Water

5 / $ 5

18-19oz. Select Vegetable Classics Progresso Soup

9oz. Select Ken’s Salad Dressing

5 / $ 5 15oz. Select Progresso Bread

Crumbs 3-3.5oz. Select Quaker Quakes Rice Snacks

5 / $ 5

Fresh, Family Pack 3lbs. Or More 90% Lean Ground Round

$ 2 99

6oz. Select Chobani

Greek Yogurt

$ 2 99

6-12oz. Select Stouffer’s Lean

Cuisine

lb. lb.

Miller 18 Packs 12oz. Select

Bottles

Magic Hat, Harpoon Or Smirnoff Ice 12

Packs 12 Oz. Select Bottles

$ 11 99

Budweiser 18 Packs Cans And

Bottles

$ 13 99

98 ¢

Fresh, Bone In Center Cut Pork Roast

Shurfine, 41-50 Ct. Pkg. Frozen, Cooked, Tail On Peeled Shrimp

Shurfine Roast Beef

Shurfine Sandwich Size Swiss Cheese

22oz. 8 Inch Blueberry Pie

16oz. Italian Or Parisian Bread

New England Grown 10lb. Pkg. Shurfine White Potatoes

Garden Fresh Super Select Cucumbers

Tropicana California Navel Oranges

Chilean 6oz. Pkg. Blueberries

Chilean Peaches Or Nectarines

$ 2 49 $ 7 99 $ 4 98 $ 4 98 $ 4 99

$ 1 79 $ 1 98 2 / $ 1 4 / 98 ¢ $ 1 99 $ 2 49

Flip Flop 750ml $ 6 99

Kanga 1.5ltr. $ 6 99

Barefoot 750ml $ 6 99

Riunite 1.5ltr

$ 9 99

lb.

5 / $ 5

lb.

lb.

[ THE WINE SHOP \ [ THE WINE SHOP \ [ THE WINE SHOP \ Liberty Creek

1.5ltr

2 / $ 4 Cupcake

750ml $ 10 59 Per

Pack

$ 1 69 lb.

lb.

$ 5 98 $ 1 98

98 ¢

lb.

376 So. Main Street • Laconia, NH Phone (603) 528-5099 • Open Daily 7-9 • Sunday 8-7

lb.

98 ¢

lb.

Country Lane Bqt $6.99 4” Begonia $4.99

2 / $ 5 $ 10 49

$ 6 99

FOODS

Limit 6 Limit 2

Marlboro

$ 5 87

Meredith Cinema Meredith Shopping Ctr. • 279-7836

www.barnzs.com Friday (1/6) - Sunday (1/8)

Sherlock Holmes: Game Of Shadows (PG-13) 1:15; 4:00; 6:45; Fri & Sat 9:30 Alvin & The Chipmunks: Chip- W recked (G) 1:45; 4:30; 7:00; Fri & Sat 9:10

The Adventures Of Tin Tin (PG) 1:30; 4:15; 7:15; Fri & Sat 9:30

Family Owned & Operated for over 40 years

Us Rte 3 Between Laconia-Winnisquam NH • 603-524-6340

CHINA GARDEN RESTAURANT

CHINESE and AMERICAN FOOD

CLOSED

for

Break Break now through February 7th Re-opening February 8th

––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– WORLD/NATION–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––

–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– DIGEST––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––

3DAYFORECASTToday

High: 33Record: 57 (1993)Sunrise: 7:19 a.m.

TonightLow: 27

Record: -6 (1996)Sunset: 4:24 p.m.

TomorrowHigh: 41Low: 24

Sunrise: 7:19 a.m.Sunset: 4:25 p.m.

SundayHigh: 30Low: 19

THEMARKETDOW JONES

2.72 to 12,415.70

NASDAQ21.50 to 2,669.86

S&P3.76 to 1,281.06

records are from 9/1/38 to present

TODAY’SWORDgasconade noun, verb;Extravagant boasting; boast-ful talk.verb:To boast extravagantly; bluster.

— courtesy dictionary.com

TODAY’SJOKE“Charlie Brown is the one person I identify with. C.B. is such a loser. He wasn’t even the star of his own Hallow-een special.”

— Chris Rock

MANCHESTER (AP) — Mitt Romney’s Republican presidential rivals repeatedly attacked him as a candidate of the status quo and a timid, less-than-reliable conser-vative Thursday as they simultaneously sought to slow his campaign momentum and personally audition for the role of con-servative rival-in- chief.

“Don’t settle for less than America needs,” said Rick Santorum, eager to capi-talize on his second-place finish behind the former Massachusetts governor in this week’s Iowa caucuses, a scant eight votes

BROWNSVILLE, Texas (AP) — On a doorstep outside a family home, a father wondered why police had to shoot his son in the hall of the boy’s middle school. In an office across town, a police chief insisted that his officers had no choice.

And scores of others in this Texas border city wondered: Could the death of 15-year-old Jaime Gonzalez have been prevented?

A day after police fatally shot an eighth-grader who was brandishing a realistic-

WASHINGTON (AP) — Looking beyond the wars he inherited, President Barack Obama on Thursday launched a reshaping and shrinking of the military. He vowed to preserve U.S. pre-eminence even as the Army and Marine Corps shed troops and the administration considers reducing its

TOKYO (AP) — This tuna is worth savoring: It cost nearly three-quarters of a million dollars.

A bluefin tuna caught off northeastern Japan fetched a record 56.49 million yen, or about $736,000, Thursday in the first auction of the year at Tokyo’s Tsukiji fish market. The price for the 593-pound (269-kilogram) tuna beat last year’s record of 32.49 million yen.

The price translates to 210,000 yen per kilo-gram, or $1,238 per pound — also a record, said Yutaka Hasegawa, a Tsukiji market offi-cial.

Though the fish is undoubtedly high qual-ity, the price has more to do with the celebra-tory atmosphere that surrounds the first auc-tion of the year.

The winning bidder, Kiyoshi Kimura, presi-dent of Kiyomura Co., which operates the Sushi-Zanmai restau-rant chain, said he

Rivals go hard after Romney, who goes after Obamaoff the pace.

A heavy favorite to win New Hamp-shire’s primary next Tuesday, Romney all but ignored his Republican rivals as he campaigned in two states. Instead, he criti-cized President Barack Obama as a “crony capitalist. He’s a job killer.”

Without saying so, the rest of the field appeared to share a common campaign objective — hold down Romney’s vote totals in New Hampshire, then knock him off stride 11 days later in South Carolina, the first Southern primary of the year.

Romney benefited handsomely from having several rivals split the vote in Iowa, where his winner’s share was roughly 25 percent.

“Gradually you are going to see we have a difference of opinion about which will be the last conservative standing,” former House Speaker Newt Gingrich told report-ers as he campaigned in New Hampshire. “But I think you’ll eventually come down to one conservative and Gov. Romney and he’ll continue to get 25 percent.”

see REPUBLICANS page 11

After Texas school shooting of 8th-grader, many questions loomlooking pellet gun, his anguished parents pleaded for answers, demanding to know why police didn’t try a Taser or beanbag gun before resorting to deadly force.

In front of the family home, the father lamented his loss and called on authorities to explain their actions.

“Why three shots? Why one in the back of the head?” asked Jaime Gonzalez Sr.

Some standoffs with police last three or four hours, he said. This one “took not even

half an hour.”But there was broad agreement among

law enforcement experts: If a suspect raises a weapon and refuses to put it down, officers are justified in taking his life. The shooting also raised questions about whether pellet guns should be marked in a way that would easily distinguish them from real handguns.

Brownsville interim Police Chief Orlando see 8TH-GRADER page 11

Under budget restraints, Obama launches reshaping & shrinking of U.S. militaryarsenal of nuclear weapons.

The changes won’t come without risk, Defense Secretary Leon Panetta said. But he called it acceptable and, because of budget restraints, inevitable.

In a presentation at the Pentagon, Obama said the U.S. is “turning a page” after having

killed Osama bin Laden, withdrawn troops from Iraq and begun to wind down the war in Afghanistan. He outlined a vision for the future that some Republican lawmakers quickly dubbed wrong-headed.

“Our military will be leaner, but the see MILITARY page 10

593-pound bluefin tuna fetches $1,238 per pound at Tokyo market

see TUNA page 9

Page 3: The Laconia Daily Sun, January 6, 2012

THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Friday, January 6, 2012— Page 3

3

You Mean I Could Lose Most of my Assets to a Nursing Home?

What if my spouse or I need to be in a nursing home? Will I be able to keep my home and life savings?

How can I protect the Inheritance from my children’s creditors & divorcing spouses?

There’s no reason to worry if you take the right steps. Join us for an educational seminar and you will learn how to protect yourself from the potentially catastrophic effects of a nursing-home stay.

Come to our lecture and receive a free copy of our recent book, “The Optimum Estate Plan.”

• You will learn the necessary steps to protect you and your family

• Most people have not built a “life plan” to protect themselves from the possibility of a nursing home stay.

• Learn how putting assets in your children’s names can be a disaster waiting to happen

• How to make provisions for a Special Needs child

Possibly the Most Important Legal Seminar you could ever attend!

Presented by: Atty. David Ferber of Beasley and Ferber, PA Author & Past Vice Chair, ABA Elder Law Committee

Tuesday, January 24, 2012, 10am to 12pm Franklin Elks Lodge

192 Central Street, Franklin, NH

Call now to reserve your seat as space is limited Beasley and Ferber, P.A.

(603) 225-5010 • (800) 370-5010

TLC JEWELRY TLC JEWELRY TLC JEWELRY WOW! # 1 PLACE TO SELL YOUR GOLD,SILVER & COINS

Wholesale Prices on Fine Jewelry • Citizen’s Watches • Expert Repairs • Watch Batteries 4.99 TLC Jewelry • 279 Main St Tilton • 286-7000 • tlcjewels.net

VEHICLES ARE FOR ILLUSTRATION PURPOSES ONLY

Route 3 North, Meredith 603-279-4521

Tenney Mtn. Hwy., Plymouth 603-536-4521

EREDIT EREDIT EREDIT M M M H H H

2001 Ford F150 4X4 w/plow

$10,500 Stock # 1093a1

2003 Chevy S 10 EX 4 x 4

$7,995 Stk#1173a3

2009 Ford Focus SEL

$14,995 Stock # 20115uc

2004 Ford Taurus Wgn

$6,995 Stk# 01119uc

2003 Ford Expedition

$8,995 Stk# 9041a1

2007 Ford Edge SEL Plus

$20,875 Stk # 01234a

2008 Ford Edge

$21,995 Stk# 01125a1

2009 Ford Flex Limited

$22,500 Stk# 8462

2002 Ford Taurus Sel Sedan

$4,995 Stk# 01130uc

70 k Miles

50 k Miles

32k Miles

AWD Loaded

35k Miles

36k Miles

36 k Miles

AWD

Loaded

2010 Ford Taurus SHO

$27,995 Stk# 01125a

29 k Miles

AWD Loaded

S PECIAL S S PECIAL S S PECIAL S FOR 2012

SAN DIEGO (AP) — Mexican drug kingpin Ben-jamin Arellano Felix stood attentively in court, acknowledging his guilt as a federal judge read a plea agreement that detailed his role at the helm of one of the world’s most powerful cartels in the 1990s.

He told the judge he has been suffering migraines almost daily but that his headaches didn’t impair his judgment to accept the prosecutors’ offer.

Wednesday’s half-hour hearing was an anticli-mactic finish to the U.S. government’s pursuit of the head of an organization that smuggled hundreds of tons of cocaine and marijuana to the United States. His cartel, which once had an iron-tight grip on the drug trade along California’s border with Mexico, has struggled in recent years as other cartels have become more ruthless than ever.

Under an agreement with federal prosecutors, Arellano Felix, 58, can be sentenced to no more than 25 years in prison — a lighter punishment than ordered for lower-ranking members of his once-mighty, Tijuana-based cartel.

Prosecutors agreed to dismiss other charges that could have brought up to 140 years in prison if he was convicted.

Robert Bonner, former head of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration and a former federal judge and former top federal prosecutor in Los Ange-les, said the sentence “may not be perfect justice but

CONCORD (AP) — The House has voted to make New Hampshire the fourth state to eliminate the need for a permit to carry concealed, loaded guns anyplace where gun possession is legal.

The House voted 193-122 Thursday to make the per-mits optional. Gun owners could still get them so they could travel to states with reciprocal permit agree-ments. It also would increase from four to five years the length of time a permit is valid. The bill also would make it legal to transport unlicensed guns.

The House passed a similar bill last session, but the Senate postponed action on it until this year.

Exemptions in the law, such as for felons carrying weapons, would not change.

Vermont, Arizona and Alaska don’t require a permit.

Gov. John Lynch promises to veto the bill and two other bills that ease regulations on guns. The House ignored his veto threat on the licensing bill and on another bill Wednesday that gives the Legislature authority to regulate guns on any public land or in publicly owned or financed buildings, except the

CONCORD (AP) — New Hampshire’s House has voted to bar the unions representing state work-ers from collecting fees from non-union members to cover the bargaining and other costs.

The House voted 212-128 Thursday to send the bill to the Senate. Workers who choose not to pay a fee would have to submit a notarized statement relinquishing any rights and benefits bargained for by the union.

The vote comes less than two months after the House sustained Gov. John Lynch’s veto of a broader bill that prohibited collecting the fees from all the unions in the state if they were part of contracts agreed to between employers and employees.

House Speaker William O’Brien has made the so-called right-to-work issue a priority of his adminis-tration.

N.H. House passes right-to-work bill that applies only to state employees

House votes again to make N.H. gun licenses optionalcourts. That bill would end colleges’ ability to pro-hibit guns on campuses.

The Senate next considers the two bills.The House voted 204-110 later Thursday to pass

the third bill that would loosen a 74-year-old ban on loaded rifles and shotguns in vehicles. Weapons inside vehicles would be allowed to contain clips of ammunition as along as no bullets were loaded into the firing chamber.

State Rep. Stephen Shurtleff, D-Concord, opposed the change, arguing the law is intended to protect people from the guns accidentally discharging. Shurtleff said it would take a “nano second” to pre-pare the gun for firing if the bill passes.

But state Rep. Michael McCarthy, R-Nashua, said the original law was intended to prevent poaching. He said he was particularly concerned that the current law could be enforced against someone living in a rec-reational vehicle who has a loaded gun for self-defense.

“We’re trying to avoid a situation where people are not hunting or poaching and run afoul of the law,” he said.

see GUN LICENSE page 11

Pursuit of Mexican drug kingpin draws quietly to a close in San Diego court

see KINGPIN page 8

Page 4: The Laconia Daily Sun, January 6, 2012

Page 4 — THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Friday, January 6, 2012

4

LETTERSRaises have to be examined as part of total cost, including benefi ts

Jim Hightower

And away we go!Not just into a new year, but —zap!

— suddenly we fi nd ourselves cata-pulted en masse into the turbulent Twilight Zone of the 2012 presiden-tial election. On day three of the year, while most of us were still woozy from our New Year’s Eve celebration, Iowa voted. Well ... sort of.

The media’s breathless cover-age of Tuesday night’s 1,774 local Republican caucuses in the Hawk-eye State offered a mind-boggling blizzard of statistics, but made practically no mention of two tell-ing stats.

First: 5.5-percent. That’s the per-centage of Iowa’s eligible voters who ventured out in the cold to pick from the GOP’s rather unappetiz-ing menu of Mitt, Rick, Ron, Newt, The Other Rick and Michele. So the top vote-getters (Romney and Santorum) each got only 25 percent of the paltry turnout of 122,000 Iowans who bothered to show up — fewer people than who live in one block of some big cities.

Second: zero. That’s the number of delegates allocated to the con-tenders in Tuesday’s Hawkeye hullabaloo. You see, the 25 actual voting delegates Iowa will send to the Republican presidential nomi-nating convention this summer will be chosen in a separate, arcane series of county, district and state meetings. The caucuses are just for show — a glorifi ed straw poll.

But what a show it was! At one time or another in the past year, all six of the active wannabes rose to the top of the heap, only to slip on their own ugly records, lies or slapstick misstatements and then slide back into the muck of negativ-ity and ultra-right-wing goofi ness that is the lasting hallmark of this dispiriting Republican group.

In a December radio commentary, I noted that people have coined useful phrases to describe groups of animals — a gaggle of geese, for example, or a pride of lions. But what, I asked listeners, should we call this herd of political critters? The e-mails poured in, suggesting such juicy phrases as a pandermon-ium of right-wingers, an egoswarm, a klutz cluster, a cawcaphoeny (with apologies to crows), a giggle of candidates, a fl ub of Republicans, a pod of nimrods ... and, simply, an embarrassment.

Okay, many of you are down on President Obama, and others are just pure-blooded Republicans — but, seriously, having seen these six in action, don’t you have to ask your-self, in the words of the old Peggy Lee

Corporate cash storms Iowa

song, “Is that all there is?”In Iowa’s presidential scramble,

the biggest players were not the candidates, but an insidious and ever-growing force that voters couldn’t even see: corporate cash.

Welcome to the Brave New Politi-cal World created out of thin air by the Supreme Court two years ago. In its now infamous edict in the Citizens United case, the court’s fi ve-man majority of laissez-faire ideologues decreed that unlimited sums of money from corporations and the rich can be funneled into independent electioneering com-mittees, dubbed “superPACs.” These outfi ts are then free to bombard the airwaves with nonstop ads to elect candidates they support. In the Iowa caucuses, an unprecedented $12.5-million went into the cam-paigns — two-thirds of that was spent not by candidates, but by the superPACs.

The court theorized that super-PACs would operate entirely independently from their favored candidates. What a fantasy! In fact, the candidates themselves have merely dispatched their top staffers and millionaire funders to create and run superPACs on their behalf, so “separation” is a legalistic fraud.

Second, although the SuperPACs operate under benign, nondescript names like Restore Our Future (Romney’s) and Make Us Great Again (Perry’s), they have become each candidate’s nuclear bombs of negative campaigning, doing the sleazy work of sliming oppo-nents with attacks. In addition, the Supremes also theorized that superPACs would report the names of their donors, but — surprise — most are simply not doing so.

What the court has achieved by hurling the Citizens United mon-keywrench into America’s demo-cratic machinery is truly stunning. It has made corporate money supreme in our elections, drastically increased the number and ferocity of negative campaign ads, and danger-ously hidden the identity of funders and candidates who are quietly con-spiring to buy public offi ce. To help repeal Citizens United, go to Unit-ed4ThePeople.org.

(Jim Hightower has been called American’s most popular populist. The radio commentator and former Texas Commissioner of Agriculture is author of seven books, including “There’s Nothing In the Middle of Road but Yellow Stripes and Dead Armadillos” and his new work, “Swim Against the Current: Even Dead Fish Can Go With The Flow”.)

To the editor,Once again the taxpayers of Gilford

are not getting the rest of the story. The article that ran in the Wednesday Daily Sun is the same old saw in that it reports on wages proposed in the pend-ing labor agreement with the town’s educators. I commend the superinten-dent for at least describing what “aver-age salary” increases would be rather than using the fi rst year salary model. Gilford has rarely hired on the bottom steps of fi rst year salaries.

What is not disclosed is what the estimated total benefi t increases will be over the two years. On the face of it it looks like a decent deal for the taxpayers. We will still be facing yet another hike in pension contribution costs again on 7/1/12. It is going to come down to some credible projec-tions of the fringe benefi ts costs being included before we can see if this con-tract comes in close to a 2-percent annual increase.

I am not against raises and merit pay incentives but these issues have to be examined more closely in terms of total benefi t increases being kept closer to 2-percent than 4-percent. Some credit is due to the School Board for negotiating some virtual claw backs in this proposed contract against the previous one which seems

to have provided in some of the last three years total benefi t increases well over 4-percent.

We hope if there is a public hear-ing on this contract proposal we will be hearing a lot more of “total benefi t” and less of “wage” increases. That we will hear of “average salaries” and not of fi rst year “starting salaries”. These are excellent professional jobs with benefi ts. It is hardly credible in this current economy that we are facing, that we face insurmountable obstacles in keeping and attracting outstanding talent. We are currently living with a near current uncooked 3.7-percent infl ation rate. Our town employees should be able to get some additional total compensation increases to cope with that. Most of us are fi nding ways to cope with the rising fuel costs, insurance costs and food costs with out getting much in the way of wage increases. Many taxpayers live on fi xed incomes hampered by the ZIRP (zero interest rate policy) everlasting government polices. The only reason infl ation is as low as it is is because, as a nation, we continue to have wage defl ation. Wage defl ation does not support fi nding a stabilization in property values.

Tim SullivanGilford

This is not the time to vote for an underdog; it’s time to be seriousTo the editor,

Wake-up N.H. voters – the GOP Pri-mary is no place for empathy voting. Our country’s future economy and security is at stake. This is not the time to vote for someone just because he’s the underdog. Nor is it time to vote for someone because their extreme economic views might sound appealing but along with their foreign policy position could put our country at risk.

No, this is the time to be serious and selective in your vote. Our coun-try cannot afford to stay on its cur-rent path. The GOP candidate needs to be a compelling leader with a spot-

less past who can topple Obama in November and bring to Washington proven abilities in job creation, a track record in working across party lines, and a sound foreign policy position.

That candidate is Mitt Romney, who, by the way, is in it for the right reasons. Did you know he accepted no salary while serving as Governor of Massachusetts nor did he as presi-dent and CEO of the 2002 Winter Olympics? Yes, Mitt is in it for the right reasons: to get the job done and turn this country around. Our job is to vote for him on Tuesday.

David VarneyBelmont

To the editor,It is said that wisdom arrives with

age, but I believe, after reading the letters submitted by James Veverka

(self appointed voice of the looney left), that in his case, age arrived stag.

Dave SchwotzerMeredith

Wisdom arrives with age; well, maybe there are some exceptions

Page 5: The Laconia Daily Sun, January 6, 2012

THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Friday, January 6, 2012 — Page 5

5

Advanced General Dentistry

Jean-Paul Rabbath DMD, MAGD, PLLC

• Restorative, Preventive & Implant Dentistry • Cosmetic (Veneers, Whitening & More) • Invisalign (Clear Alternative to Braces) • Dental Surgery (Extractions) • Gum Surgery ( L aser) • Immediate Full & Partial Dentures • Same Day Emergencies

New Patients Welcome

(Adults & Children) Call Today To Schedule An Appointment!

286-8618

Major Credit Cards & Insurance Accepted

Master Academy of General Dentistry NH AGD Delegate & Membership Chair • Member AGD, ADA, CDA, NHDS, MDS

Dentist also speaks French & Spanish! 468 W. Main St., Tilton, NH 03276

www.rabbathdental.com

U NCLE H ILDE ’ S L UMBER O UTLET

5% OFF 5% OFF 5% OFF ANY IN STOCK ITEMS! ANY IN STOCK ITEMS! ANY IN STOCK ITEMS!

O ne per customer with this coupon O ffer expires 1/28/12

UNCLE HILDE WANTS YOU TO GET A WICKED GOOD DEAL

ON WINTER PROJECTS!

8MM Laminate Flooring

Starting at just

$.89/sq. ft.

Dr. Nick I. Fleury, D.M.D. and his team proudly introducing

Darlene MacDonald Office manager

Karen Mussen Front desk/Assistant

Nikki Tearno Hygienist

Mary Gosling Hygienist

Heather Mercier Assistant

We encourage the patients we have been treating for years, as well as new patients, to contact us.

We look forward to continuing the treatment of our patients to the high level you have been accustomed to.

178 Daniel Webster Hwy in Meredith, near the traffic circle. “Please call (603) 515-4060 now to schedule an appointment.”

www.circledentalnh.com

Dr. Nick Fleury

The Dental Team You Know And Trust.

LETTERSObama has arrested & deported record number of illegal aliensTo the editor,

Just when I thought there was hope for Don Ewing, he blows it again. In using examples of rich people deny-ing the poor some help he eventually arrives to blame the president! Not the obstructionists, the president! His first implosion occurs when he whines about the president supposedly caring more about his political ideologies than people. What a pantload! The president’s original jobs bill put before the floor of the House was defeated while the CBO, Moody and many more financial institutions claimed about 2-million MORE jobs would come of it, which would stimulate the economy. What the GOP offers is like scraps compared to the president’s proposal.

Cryin’ over a pipeline delay! Then Donny Boy blames the president for rising energy prices! Sheesh, it never ends! Ever hear of Wall Street speculators? Ya know, Don, the ones you don’t want to ever regulate that are the cause of high energy prices? Ever hear of Middle East turmoil which always drives prices when the speculators get their hands on the crisis. Iran’s latest threats about blocking oil exports through the Straits of Hormuz sent the price over $101 after the specula-tors got to work.

It’s the GOP that is playing the cheap, conniving, heartless scrooge.

What about those rich folk the GOP are protecting in order to put the weight of change on the backs of the middle class families, the poor, the sick, and the dis-abled? Just a tiny hike in every dollar made over a million dollars would fund the latest demand-side tax cut for work-ing families. But those who smoke the poison tea just don’t care. The GOP spends a whole year fighting any prag-matic useful rise in the taxes of the wealthy but then are the first to stop middle class tax relief and the exten-sion of jobless benefits. Unemployment compensation stimulates the economy (even better than some tax cuts), so the Republicans surely want to kill it. If it will help the economy recover, the tea party GOP wants to kill it in order to defeat the president. Get it yet? Its the GOP right wing that is copying the failed austerity plans in Europe. Cut-cut-cut the working class to shreds. Burn the social safety net!.

Well, here comes another dishonest xenophobic rant! Don Ewing is wrong in repeating Harry Accornero’s dis-honest psycho-talk about immigrant invasions. The fact is that President Obama has arrested and deported more illegal aliens than any president in American history. Google it.

James VeverkaTilton

To the editor,Mr. Dadian, after reading your letter

to the editor (Jan. 5), I felt compelled to respond. As a Mormon, the main take-away that I had from your letter is that you know very little, if anything, about Mormons and what we believe. I have grown weary of Evangelicals and other Christians thinking that because they interpret scripture one way, any other way is not Christian. In the case of many of the doctrines you brought up, they don’t even come directly from the Bible, but from the traditions, creeds and interpretations that have built up over the last 2,000 years. Believe it or

not, I could cite chapter and verse from the Bible to support my interpretation of the doctrines you brought up.

I don’t want to minimize the differ-ences between my faith and that of most other other Christians, because there are wide theological differences between the two. But people like you Mr. Dadian seem to forget that while we interpret certain scriptures dif-ferently, the core and purpose of our belief is the same, that Jesus Christ is the Savior. So yes, we can all be Chris-tians together.

Michael PerroneProvo, Utah

Mr. Dadian, the core and purpose of our belief is the same

To the editor,I find Dave Testerman’s words (letter

to the editor, Jan. 5) despicable. Dr. Paul receives more campaign contributions from active duty military personnel than all of the other candidates com-bined. President Reagan once said “Ron Paul is one of the outstanding leaders fighting for a stronger national defense. As a former Air Force officer, he knows well the needs of our armed forces, and he always puts them first. We need to keep him fighting for our country.”

This saber-rattling with Iran is danger-ous. Wouldn’t we be saber-rattling too if

Comparing Ron Paul supporters to terrorists is very offensivean Iranian spy drone crashed in Wash-ington DC? The war propaganda needs to end. America cannot afford another war. We’re BROKE. Republicans used to get elected to end wars, not start them.

Comparing us Paul supporters to terrorists is downright offensive. Mr. Testerman should actually listen to what these service men and women are saying through their donations to Mr. Paul rather than supporting them in a cursory way with a yellow ribbon on his vehicle.

Joshua MatlockIndiana

Let’s send a Jan. 10 message that we stand behind Pres. ObamaTo the editor,

Contrary to what many people understand, the N.H. Primary ballot on January 10 includes both Demo-cratic and Republican candidates. While the Republican candidates have been receiving all the press to date, our N.H. Primary remains one in which both parties can, and should, participate.

I urge all independents and Demo-

crats to get out and vote on Tuesday. We want the rest of the country to know that it’s not just Republicans who are alive and well and busy in N.H.

Supporters of President Obama want also to send the message that N.H. voters stand behind him and are ready, willing and able to work for his re-election.

Kate MillerMeredith

Page 6: The Laconia Daily Sun, January 6, 2012

Page 6 — THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Friday, January 6, 2012

6

60 Whittier Highway Moultonborough, NH 603-253-4363 www.interlakesdental.com

Dr. Charles Lambert Dr. Joseph Cariello Dr. Karin Lamar Dr. Joseph Williams Dr. Natalie Accomando

All of your family’s dental needs in one spot.

Preventative, Cosmetic & Restorative Dentistry Oral Surgery & Dental Implants

Veneers & Whitening Invisalign & Invisalign Teen

Regular & Deep Tissue Cleanings Endodontics & Root Canals

Crowns & Bridges

Call or stop in today 603-968-3005 Conveniently located I93 Exit 24

www.whitemtauto.com

Why wait for your tax refund? You could buy a car NOW!

Call TODAY for details.

Custom Stone and Chimney Services

Stove Shop Stove Shop Wood / Pellet / Gas Stoves & Fireplaces • Installations • Inspections Chimney Sweeps • Chimney Lining • Chimney Repairs • Full Masonry

Natural & Cultured Stone • And Much More....

(603) 293-4040 www.fireNstone.com

539 Laconia Rd. Tilton, NH

20% Off All

Masonry Chimney

Rebuilds & Repairs!

20% Off All Stoves/Fireplaces & Accessories!

Lowest Prices ... Guaranteed!

Monkey roams freely in our large, sunny feline

social room, but folks, it just isn’t the same for a cat who was so used to lots of human attention, sleeping on the bed with his people and enjoying life with Tiger.

Perhaps they could be adopted together?If you are interested in a sweet loving cat, perhaps times two, visit Monkey and his housemate, Tiger. Call 524-3252 or check www.nhhumane.org

Monkey is not of the simian persuasion,

rather, he is a cat, and a large one. Aged about nine years old, he lived his life happily in the company of other cats and a little girl who dressed him up in dolls clothes, which he did not object to! The reason Monkey found himself at New Hampshire Humane Society was that the humans in the household had really bad allergies, he came to us with another cat, Tiger, so both these housemates now call our shelter home. Monkey can be found cuddling with other cats, and he has appointed himself the official groomer, keeping busy cleaning up the more disheveled, if they will sit still long enough to endure his ministrations.

To the editor,The family of Barbara Bennett

would like to thank the many friends and neighbors who showed us so much kindness and caring during this difficult time.

Special thanks go to the Meredith/Center Harbor Visiting Nurses Asso-ciation for their constant and loving care of our mother and grandmother. We could not have made it through the last year without you.

Thank you to The Meredith Police Department, Stewarts Ambulance crew, the emergency doctors and nurses at the Lakes Region General Hospital and to Dr. Capron and his staff for their help and support to her and to all of us.

Our appreciation and thanks extends to our friends and co-workers at the Meredith Village Savings Bank, EFI/Vutek, the Town of Meredith, Northern Lakes Veterinary Hospi-

Family of Barbara Bennett so grateful for all the kindness shownLETTERS

Anti-war candidate Ron Paul must get show of support on Jan. 10tal and Plymouth High School, Mer-edith Fire Department, the Altrusa Community Service Club of Meredith and our many wonderful friends and neighbors in town.

Peter Mayhew and his staff and the Reverend Ed Charest made dealing with her passing so much easier for us with their kindness and professional-ism. Thank you.

We were fortunate to have our mother/grandmother/great-grand-mother with us for so many years and we are indeed blessed to live in such a wonderful, loving community. Thank you to you all.

The Bennett FamilySteven and Monica BennettDavid Sr. and Pauline Bennett,David II, Audra and Jillian BennettMichelle Bennett WilberKelly Bennett Huckins & Will HuckinsCoral, Danielle and Joe WilberNoah Bryan

To the editor,President Obama was on radio

explaining how even with military budget cuts, our military budget will grow. AFSC’s “Minute for Peace” shows that our military consumes 60-percent of our budget now! I understand dif-ferent costs in terms of welcome-home care for our returning military. What-ever psychological or medical needs personnel have, we demand they have it. But speaking of being able to do two wars at a time, or one with dis-abling of an enemy at the same time, etc. — that so sounds like “no change.” We have the same dead-end mental-ity that war is supreme, our ultimate skill and goal. I am thrown back to when President George W. Bush hap-pily called his war on Iraq, “the first

war of the 21st century.” Madness.Swear and swear again. Anti-war

presidential candidate Ron Paul must get all the show of support in our January 10 primary that he pos-sibly can get, and we need. He’s being name-called because his foreign policy cuts back on intervention and mili-tary adventuring. He says we should strengthen our country internally (so much to repair, get done), so others see us as an enviable example of well-sit-uated people. That’s the classic recipe America has followed, and families here and “over there” would appreci-ate a new dedication to that. Give Ron Paul your vote.

Lynn Rudmin ChongSanbornton

Republican candidates all seem God-like with their super powersTo the editor,

The view of the American condition presented in the latest batch of Republi-can TV comercials are nothing less than a slap in the face to the public. How stupid do they think we are?

No Mitt, you are not going to save America’s soul. I never stopped beliv-ing in America, even when George Bush’s buddies were bad-loaning the economy into this recession and spending us into oblivion in Iraq. At least you had the good sense to sup-port the bailout, without which we would all be on the bread line now, and not seeing the current turnaround.

And Ron: Could you possibly be a bit less like Moses, or at least keep the drama in check. I appreciate the consistent adhearance to principal, but the truth is, ridged adhearance to principal doesn’t solve problems, his-tory has proven that. Common sense and creativity do.

And the promises you make! Are you Republicans all somehow god-like in your powers? Tell me why we weren’t living in Eden after eight years of Bush? Now let’s see if we can lie about history some more. . .

Andrew SanbornSanbornton

Page 7: The Laconia Daily Sun, January 6, 2012

THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Friday, January 6, 2012 — Page 7

7

C O R N E R H O U S E I N N C all for R eservations

284-6219 C enter Sandw ich, N H

Junction of R ts 109 & 113

STORYTELLING DINNER!

Best Meal and a Tale!

T hur., Jan. 12

R usty L ocke

M eredith, N H

Live Entertainment in the Pub -

Friday, January 6 Jonathan Sarty

D inner: M on, W ed, T hurs. 4:30-9 pm ; F ri. & Sat. 4:30-10 pm Sunday B runch: 11:30am -2 pm ; Sunday D inner: 11:30am -9 pm • Closed T uesdays

Come and Join us for.... Wine Not? Every Monday Night 4:30-9pm • $40

dollars per couple includes Dinner and Bottle of Wine

Join us for our 15th Annual ROBERT BURNS NIGHT with the Webster family and Marion Posner

Sunday, January 29th • 5:30pm An evening of verse, songs, piping, Highland

dancing and Scottish cuisine. Call 284-6219 for more info & reservations.

NOTICE TOWN OF GILFORD, NEW HAMPSHIRE

The Gilford Planning Board will conduct a public hearing to consider changes to the Gilford Zoning Ordinance on Tuesday, January 17, 2012 at 7:00 p.m. in Conference Room A at the Gilford Town Hall, 47 Cherry Valley Road, Gilford, New Hampshire. Anyone interested is invited to attend. This is the second public hearing for this item.

PROPOSED ZONING ORDINANCE CHANGES A public hearing will be held to consider the following proposed amendment: 1. Large Vehicle Parking Regulations – Create new regulations for the parking of Large

Commercial Vehicles by creating a new definition for Large Commercial Vehicle in Article 3; create a new land use, Section 4.6.18, Large Vehicle Parking, in Table 1, the Chart of Uses; create a new use description, Section 4.7.6(q), Large Vehicle Parking; delete regulations related to vehicles from Section 4.7.6(e), Home Occupation, and Section 4.7.6(n), Home Office; and create a new Section 11.4.8, Large Commercial Vehicle Parking, to establish special exception requirements for such use.

The exact text of the proposed changes may be inspected at the Department of Planning and Land Use (DPLU) and the Town Clerk’s office in the Gilford Town Hall at 47 Cherry Valley Road, Gilford, New Hampshire. DPLU is open Monday through Friday between 8:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. The Town Clerk’s office is open 8:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday through Wednesday and Friday, and until 6:30 p.m. on Thursdays. You may contact the Department of Planning and Land Use by calling (603) 527-4727.

Boy Scout Troop 68, LaconiaThanks you for your continued support!

Drop of bins are located at:

(Former) Old Time Walters Market

D'Angelos Sandwich Shop

St. Joseph Church (parking lot)

CANS FORBOY SCOUTTROOP 68!

For years, our local community has been donating their aluminum cans to Troop 68.

Funds from these cans help maintain membership, purchase equipment, support outings, and so much more!

CONCORD — The redistricting plan announced by the Republi-can majority of the New Hampshire Senate yesterday would join Laconia, Franklin and seven towns — Gilford, Belmont, Northfi eld, Canterbury, Boscawen, Webster and Loudon — to form a new District 7.

Laconia, Gilford and Belmont are in Belknap County while Franklin, Northfi eld, Canterbury, Boscawen, Webster and Loudon are in Merri-mack County.

The new district would become an open seat since no incumbent sena-tor resides within it. Senator Andy Sanborn (R-Henniker) currently represents fi ve of the seven towns — Northfi eld, Canterbury, Boscawen, Webster and Loudon. But, Henniker has been added to District 15, where

Laconia joins Franklin & 7 towns in redrawn N.H. Senate districtSenator Sylvia Larsen (D-Concord), the Senate Democratic Leader, is serving her eighth term.

Currently, Laconia and six Belknap County towns — Tilton, Belmont, Gil-ford, Gilmanton, Alton and Barnstead — are in District 4, represented by Senator Jim Forsythe (R) of Strafford. He announced earlier in the week he would not be seeking re-election.

The plan makes only minor changes to District 2, which would lose six Grafton County towns — Bath, Landaff, Easton, Benton, Woodstock and Thornton — to District 1 and one — Holderness — to District 3 while adding six towns — Grafton, Danbury, Andover, Salisbury, Hill and Tilton. The incumbent, Senator Jeanie For-rester (R-Meredith) would remain eligible for the seat in the redrawn district.

Currently, Meredith, Center Harbor,

New Hampton and Sanbornton are in District 2. That remains the case under the news plan, but Tilton would also join the ranks.

Altogether 18 of the current 24 dis-tricts would be redrawn, leaving dis-tricts 14, 16, 18, 19, 20 and 22 — all in the southern tier — intact.

The federal and state constitutions require that the boundaries of all fed-eral, state and municipal electoral districts be redrawn every 10 years to comply as closely as possible with with the principle of “one person, one vote” in light of changes in popula-tion reported by the United States Census. Since the population of the state in 2010 was 1,316,470, the ideal size of each of the 24 Senate districts is 54,853.

Senator Jeb Bradley (R-Wolfeboro), the Senate Majority Leader, said that the plan meets the standards required

by the federal and state constitutions by ensuring the 24 single-member dis-tricts consist of contiguous towns and city wards and comply with the “one person, one vote” principle. He said that the plan also keeps cities smaller than senate districts intact, combines communities of interest and delin-eates compact districts.

“In the end, this plan was driven by math,” Bradley said.

In a prepared statement, Larsen noted that she received the Repub-licans just minutes before it was released to the press. “While redis-tricting is supposed to be an open and public proposal, this plan was designed in backrooms with clear partisan motivation to promote a future of Republican domination in the Statehouse.” She said that the fi ve Democratic senators will review the plan before commenting further.

BY MICHAEL KITCHTHE LACONIA DAILY SUN

TILTON — Former Massachusetts’ governor Mitt Romney brings his campaign for the Republican presi-dential nomination back to Belknap County this evening. The man widely expected to win New Hampshire’s “fi rst in the nation” Presidential Pri-mary on Tuesday will host a free spa-ghetti supper for all interested people at Knowles Hall on the campus of the Tilton School at 6 p.m.

The Romney campaign announced on Tuesday that it would be holding a campaign event in the Laconia area

Romney at Tilton School tonight at 6on Friday evening but it was not until after 6 p.m. on Thursday that Repub-licans began scrambling to spread the word that the venue would be in Tilton.

Romney will start the day cam-paigning in South Carolina, which votes on Jan. 21., before returning to the Granite State for a fi nal pre-vote push. Most opinion polls that have been made public have Romney attracting more than 40-percent of likely voters in the Republican pri-mary, far ahead of any of his rivals.

“This is the most important election of your lifetime,” Santorum declared, “no matter how old you are.” Pre-dicting that “New Hamphire will not be friendly territory for Obama in November,” he drew a round of applause. He said that the coun-try needed bold, strong leadership, explaining that “presidents, especially conservative presidents, get ground down” by Congress, special interests and the media.

While faith and family played well among evangelicals in Iowa, Santo-

rum passed on both, directing his strongest statements to parrying the threats to freedom, chief among them “Obamacare” and entitlement programs. Calling the Affordable Care Act a “game changer,” he said “it is about whether we are going to be a free people or not” and vowed to repeal it root and branch. “It makes every single American dependent on the federal government for their life,” Santorum claimed, adding that Mar-garet Thatcher, the former conserva-tive British prime minister, cited her

SANTORUM from page one

see next page

Page 8: The Laconia Daily Sun, January 6, 2012

Page 8 — THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Friday, January 6, 2012

8

failure to dismantle the national health care system as her greatest disappointment.

Santorum said that programs that foster depen-dence on government rob citizens of choice and erode their freedom. “There is a push to get more and more people dependent,” he said, warning that dependency leads to socialism.

Among the entitlement programs he said that Medicare and Medicaid posed the greatest problem, because their costs are driven by the cost of health care. The solution, he said, is “to get the government out of running the health care system.” By depriv-ing people of choice in managing their health care, he continued, “government is saying you cannot be trusted to be free.” Insisting that free markets gen-erate a free people, he said “trust the private sector to drive down costs.”

Turning to Social Security, Santorum conceded “there’s no easy fi x.” He offered something like a tutorial on the history of the system, stressing that it originated in the 1930s to sustain the elderly, who were the poorest age group. But, today life expec-tancy has risen signifi cantly and seniors citizens are the wealthiest age group. “I don’t agree that Social

Heather and Cliff Grenon of Laconia admire Adrianna Linda Noelle, their fi rst child and the fi rst baby of 2012 born at Lakes Region General Hospital. (Laconia Daily Sun photo/Adam Drapcho)

LACONIA — Adrianna Linda Noelle Grenon was supposed to be born, doctors thought, on Christmas Day. However, she was determined to follow her own schedule. Born at 2:45 p.m. on January 3, she was the fi rst baby of 2012 delivered at Lakes Region General Hospital.

Adrianna is the fi rst child born to Laconia resi-dents Heather and Cliff Grenon, 26 and 29 years old. She weighed eight pounds, four ounces at her birth and Although she has no siblings yet, there are plenty of relatives celebrating her birth. Adrianna has 15 aunts and uncles, many of whom live locally, and a cousin who was born weeks ago.

Her middle name, “Noelle,” was chosen because of her due date. “Linda” is in honor of her pater-

Birth of Adrianna a fi rst for Heather & Cliff Grenon & a fi rst for Lakes Region General Hospital in 2012

nal grandmother, and “Adrianna” was chosen by Heather long ago as the name of her fi rst daughter. Glancing at Cliff, Heather said with a laugh, “It took me a while to get him to accept it.”

Cliff is a HVAC technician employed by Laconia Refrigeration and Heather is a registered nurse who works at the Central New Hampshire Kidney Center and at Genesis in Franklin.

Still beaming two days later after Adrianna’s birth, the parents said everyone in the new family was doing well and they expected to bring their new-born home today. The Grenons received a gift from the LRGHealthcare Auxiliary Nursery Guild and a package from BabyThreads NH that contained a baby carrier and a collection of hand-made blankets and clothing.

BY ADAM DRAPCHOTHE LACONIA DAILY SUN

Security is a Ponzi scheme,” he said while favoring adjustments the eligibility standards and benefi ts schedule to restore the program to its original pur-pose in light of changed realities.

Overlooked for much of the campaign season when he polled in single digits, Santorum became the latest rival to frontrunner Mitt Romney in the last weeks before the Iowa caucuses and came within eight votes of being the winner. His showing recalled that of Mike Huckabee, who four years ago whipped Romney and John McCain, the eventual GOP nominee, in the Iowa caucuses.

Huckabee failed to sustain the momentum as the campaign moved past Iowa and pundits question whether Santorum, with a fraction of the resources and organization enjoyed by Romney, faces the same fate. Moreover, while running near the back of the fi eld he escaped the scrutiny he will face now that he is running in the money.

The throng of media representatives now following Santorum is testament to his new-found status. There were so many on hand Thursday that breathing room in the old freight room was hard to come by.

New Hampshire’s “fi rst in the nation” Presidential Primary is Tuesday, Jan. 10.

from preceding page

agreement reached an impasse both parties agreed to mediation. After one day-long session an agree-ment was reached, which both the board and the GEA ratifi ed earlier this week.

Teachers will forgo both a cost-of-living adjust-ment (COLA) and step increases in the 2012-2013 school year, but will receive a one-percent (COLA) in 2013-2014 when those who have not reached the top of the seniority-based pay scale will also receive a step increase. Heminway said that the COLA and step would represent an average increase of 2.4-per-cent with a total cost of $191,210.

Skip Murphy reminded Hemingway that employ-ees in the private sector have gone without raises for some time while many have had their hours or wages reduced. He asked if board could have driven a harder bargain with the union.

Hemingway reminded Murphy that the authority of the Budget Committee was confi ned to the cost items contained in the contract and that he was not at liberty to disclose the details of the negotiations.

The Board voted six-to-fi ve to recommend voters approve the contract when it appears on the School District ballot in March. Phyllis Corrigan, Dale Dormody, Kevin Roy, Rae Mello-Andrews, Gus Benavides and Dick Hickok voted in favor and Sue Greene, Skip Murphy, Kevin Leandro, Pat LaBonte and David Horvath voted against. Fred Butler abstained.

With scant discussion the committee also rec-ommended the School District operating budget of $24,142,615 with only Murphy and Horvath dis-senting.

The motion to recommend a warrant article appropriating $450,000 for the purchase of a new fi re truck failed on tie vote. Fire Chief Steve Currier said that the truck would replace Engine 4, which required repairs estimated to cost between $125,000 and $150,000.

Howver, Leandro and LaBonte argued that Engine 4 could be repaired for “$10,000 or $20,000” and remain in service for another three or four years. Leandro said that Valley Fire Equipment of Brad-ford, which prepared the repair estimates for Cur-rier, works with fi re chiefs and knowing that Currier wanted a new engine “Valley is going to help the chief get past that pesky budget committee.”

Leandro claimed much of the work proposed by Valley Fire Equipment “is not an issue” or “can be done in-house or at the Department of Public Works.” He dismissed the estimate as “not even reasonable.”

After the vote a fi refi ghter reminded Hickok, who chairs the Budget Committee, that he failed to open the meeting to public comment. Hickok apologized then remarked “knowing this group it wouldn’t have made any difference.”

BUDCOM from page one

Court of Laconia, Arizmendi was convicted on two counts of simple assault in 1996, possession of narcotics and disorderly conduct in 1997, and four counts of simple assault in 1998 along with a number of motor vehicle offenses.

OVERDOSE from page one

it certainly is adequate justice.” He said there are many reasons why lower-ranking cartel members may get longer sentences, including strength of the evidence or the government’s reluctance to having to disclose informants in a trial.

“You never have perfect equity in sentencing, and there’s no reason to expect it,” said Bonner, who was not involved in the case.

Peter Nunez, a former U.S. attorney in San Diego, said the lighter sentence was “very strange.”

“It’s like giving Al Capone a sentence less than the guy who drives his car,” he said. “There must be an explanation ... We may never know what the weak-ness was in the government’s case or what the ratio-nale was. It must have been something signifi cant.”

Prosecutors declined speak with reporters after the hearing. Laura Duffy, the U.S. attorney in San Diego who built much of her career on the case, said Arellano Felix will likely spend the rest of his life in U.S. prison.

KINGPIN from page 3

see next page

Page 9: The Laconia Daily Sun, January 6, 2012

THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Friday, January 6, 2012— Page 9

9

Credit Card Debt?Solutions that can help you get out of debt.Tom Hill CGA STAFF WRITER

ADVERTISEMENT

Every three minutes another person falls behind on credit card debt. It’s no wonder, since every major credit card company has nearly doubled the minimum monthly payment on consumers’ bills. Federal Regulators forced the change because of their concern about the growing mountain of consumer debt, which stands at $2.17 trillion. Many consumers can only pay the minimum payment, which can take up to 30 years to pay off. Now, relief is in sight for millions of Americans.

CreditGUARD of America, a non-profit licensed debt management service provider, is making a new program available to lower debt payments and become free of all credit card debt in only three to five years. Consumers need only $2,000 or more in total credit card debt and behind on any account, to cut their payment by 35% to 50%, and reduce or eliminate interest charges altogether.

Over 200,000 families, located throughout the U.S. have regained financial independence with CreditGUARD’s licensed, bonded and insured service. CreditGUARD of America has received high marks in consumer surveys showing high consumer satisfaction and confidence. The CreditGUARD debt management program can actually turn a person’s life around.

One such case is Sandra L. who proclaimed “CreditGUARD cut my monthly payment by $656 and saved me over $29,206.53 in interest. They saved my way of life and gave me back my piece of mind! Now I can see myself on my way to becoming debt free.” or Jeffery C. who said “CreditGUARD of America helped me consoli-date 3 of my credit cards into one affordable payment. They are now saving me nearly $200 a month. Now I will be debt free in 2 years or less”

Certified Credit Counselors at CreditGUARD of America provide Debt Relief Consultations at no charge, when you call 1-888- 483-6514. Calculate your interest rate savings instantly online when you visit their website at: www.creditguard.org/np

SUPER SEMI-ANNUAL

DAYS ONLY! JANUARY 7-9 3

Laconia Community Center Action Sports & Physical

Therapy Moultonboro Olympia Gym, Wolfeboro

For class schedule go to jazzercise.com or

call (603)253-4304

To learn more visit jazzercise.com/supersale

jazzercise.com (800)FIT-IS-IT

plus get 5 friend passes

Start for $0

Sale

John is celebrating his first year of new life, after his heart transplant,

and would like you to join him!

John will be our “Celebrity Bartender” and all

donations will go the Cardiac Transplant Division at Tufts

Medical Center in Boston.

Saturday January 7th

at 7pm

Route 3, Weirs Beach ~ 366-2255 www.wb-lp.com

WEIRS BEACH

L OBSTER P OUND

Join Us In Celebrating John Ganong’s Anniversary!

The guilty plea “marks the end of his reign of murder, mayhem and corruption, and his historic admission of guilt sends a clear message to the Mexican cartel leaders operating today: The United States will spare no effort to investigate, extradite and prosecute you for your criminal activities,” Duffy said.

Lawyers who have followed the case said the lighter sentence may be because the alleged crimes occurred many years ago and relied on witness accounts, instead of wiretaps or physical evidence.

John Kirby, a former federal prosecutor who co-wrote the 2003 indictment against Arellano Felix, said those cases weaken over time as witnesses die, get into more trouble or change their minds about testifying.

“This kind of case is based solely on witness testi-mony, and it slowly disintegrates,” he said. “Maybe from the time when we put it together and now, it’s not such a great case anymore.”

Anthony Colombo Jr., Arellano Felix’s attorney, said his client could be released from U.S. prison in 20 years if credited for time served in this country and good behavior, assuming he gets the maximum 25-year sentence. As a Mexican citizen, he would then be deported to Mexico, where he still has nine years left on a sentence for related crimes.

Colombo said the government may have agreed to the deal to avoid having to bargain with 21 poten-tial government witnesses for reduced sentences in exchange for their testimony.

Francisco Javier Arellano Felix, a younger brother who led the cartel after Benjamin was arrested in Mexico in 2002, was sentenced in San Diego to life in prison in 2007, a year after he was captured by U.S. authorities in international waters off Mexico’s Baja California coast. Jesus Labra Aviles, a lieuten-ant under Benjamin Arellano Felix, was sentenced in San Diego to 40 years in prison in 2010.

Benjamin Arellano Felix was extradited from Mexico in April 2011 to face drug, money-laundering and racketeering charges, one of the highest-profile kingpins to face prosecution in the United States.

The U.S. indictment said Arellano Felix was the top leader of a cartel he led with his brothers, going back to 1986. It says the cartel tortured and killed rivals in the United States and Mexico as it smug-gled Mexican marijuana and Colombian cocaine.

The cartel, portrayed in the Steven Soderbergh film “Traffic,” lost its grip after Benjamin Arellano Felix was arrested in 2002. A month earlier, his brother, Ramon, the cartel’s top enforcer, died in a shootout with Mexican authorities.

CONCORD — The N.H. Attorney Generals Office said yesterday it will not charge a Massachusetts man with the murder of one of two local men who attempted to rob him as he slept in a friend’s house in Meredith in June of 2010.

Robert Hart, late of Laconia, was stabbed to death by David Rivera in a botched robbery attempt during a time when Rivera was staying at Sarah Longval’s rented home on Lake Street in Meredith.

Hart’s accomplice, Michael Noucas of Meredith, was recently found guilty by a Belknap County Jury of being an accomplice to armed robbery and conspiracy to commit armed robbery. Judge James O’Neill sentenced him to serve 7 1/2 to 15 years in the N.H. State Prison.

“Rivera was cornered in his bedroom, outnum-bered and unarmed when the incident began,” wrote the A.G.

“During his struggle with Hart and Noucas, Rivera fought off his two attackers and used their own weapons against them,” continued the final report, noting the circumstances constituted a legitimate self-defense and no criminal charges will be brought against Rivera for killing Hart and seriously wound-ing Noucas with his own knife.

Although Rivera was brought under a court order and with a guarantee of immunity to testify against Noucas, he said he didn’t remember anything and didn’t recall ever being in New Hampshire, much less in an apartment in Meredith.

The A.G. report clarifies Rivera’s presence in Mer-edith and provided further details that were not admitted into evidence at Noucas’s March 2011 trial.

According to the report, Julie Sallies, who is serv-ing a five-to-10 year sentence for her role in the crime, dropped a bleeding and nearly dying Noucas and a second woman off at the Meredith Police Department and told the dispatcher people were being assaulted at Lake Street.

State will not prosecute Mass. man for killing masked assailant who invaded Meredith apartment

Sallies left the police department and returned to Lake Street to search for Hart, her fiance.

Police headed to Lake Street and ambulance personnel attended to Noucas, who told them he wasn’t sure what happened to him and “had no clue who assaulted him.” He was taken to the hospital, treated for multiple knife wounds and admitted he had consumed alcohol and cocaine.

An autopsy performed on Hart on June 7 deter-mined he died from multiple stab wounds to the chest. He also had a blunt impact injury to his head and his blood contained cocaine metabolites, Klono-pin metabolites and Paxil.

The report also said that Rivera admitted initially to police that he knew and liked Sarah Longval, Noucas’s on-again off-again girlfriend, and had come to Meredith to visit her. He had brought some money with him in case things didn’t go as planned and he needed to get a hotel room.

He told police his time with Longval was “unevent-ful” but that she knew he had money because she had seen him with money and he had bought a few things during his stay.

While it was Sallies testimony that Noucas and Hart had gone to Meredith to rob Rivera of “coke and cash” but the A.G.’s report made no mention of Rivera and cocaine possession.

The report also indicated that during the night of the robbery, police interviewed Longval’s neighbor Patrick McIntire. McIntire told police that he had seen Noucas and “some guy named Bob” and they had been talking about robbing a guy of his cash and drugs.

“According to McIntire, Longval had stolen $20 from Noucas and has talked about her and a friend stealing more money from him,” said the report.

The A.G. also said McIntire allegedly told police that Longval had also allegedly stolen money from him which prompted Noucas to talk to McIntire “about taking care of things himself. i.e. attacking the people in Longval’s house. One of those people was David Rivera.”

By Gail OBerTHE LACONIA DAILY SUN

from preceding page

wanted to give Japan a boost after last March’s dev-astating tsunami.

“Japan has been through a lot the last year due to the disaster,” a beaming Kimura told AP Televi-sion News. “Japan needs to hang in there. So I tried hard myself and ended up buying the most expen-

sive one.”Kimura also said he wanted to keep the fish in

Japan “rather than let it get taken overseas.”Last year’s bid winners were Hong Kong entrepre-

neur Ricky Cheng, who runs the Hong Kong-based chain Itamae Sushi, and an upscale Japanese res-taurant in Tokyo’s Ginza district.

TUNA from page 2

Page 10: The Laconia Daily Sun, January 6, 2012

Page 10 — THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Friday, January 6, 2012

10

EYE PHYSICIAN & SURGEON

P.K. SHETTY, M.D.

Complete Eye Exams, Phaco-Small Incision Cataract Surgery, Crystalens, Multifocal Lens, Diseases of the Eye, Laser Surgery, Intraocular Lens Implant, Glaucoma, Contact Lenses, LASIK: Refractive Surgery

2 LARGE CHEESE PIZZAS

$ 1 1 80 including tax!

LARGE ONE TOPPING

B UY 1 (Of Equal Value)

$ 5 00

LARGE 16” PEPPERONI FOR $9.95 GET 1

Delivery (6 mile radius)

Must present ad, 1 coupon per customer, not valid with other offers.

All Major Credit Cards Accepted

GEOR GE’S DINER Plymouth Street, Meredith • 279-8723

Just Good Food!

Daily Blackboard Breakfast & Lunch Specials

Open Daily 6am- 8pm

NIGHTLY SPECIALS NIGHTLY SPECIALS MONDAY

All U Can Eat Fried Chicken Chef Special

TUESDAY Roast Turkey Dinner Roast Beef Dinner Meatloaf

WEDNESDAY All U Can Eat Spaghetti Roast Pork Dinner Chef Special

THURSDAY Chicken Pot Pie NE Boiled Dinner Chef Special

FRIDAY All U Can Eat Fish Fry Fresh Seafood Fried or Broiled

SATURDAY Prime Rib Shrimp Scampi Chef Special

SUNDAY Chicken Pot Pie Country Fried Steak & Pork Baked Ham & Beans All U Can Eat Fish Fry *** BREAKFAST ALL DAY ***

JOE HEMPEL CONSTRUCTION

Kitchens, baths, vinyl siding, replacement windows, decks, new homes & more.

30 Years Serving The Lakes Region Fully Insured • 364-7757 • 455-7028

GENERAL CONTRACTOR • Building and Remodeling

Belmont Bogie Busters Snowmobile Club

Pasta Dinner Sunday, January 8th from 1pm-4pm

at The Tap on Rt. 106 in Belmont

$12.00/adults $5.00/kids 8 and under We have several great items donated

from local businesses for a silent auction.

Call 455-8558 for tickets.

“Off the Beaten Path, But Worth Finding!”

Open: Mon-Thur & Sat, 6am-2pm Fri, 6am-8pm & Sun, 7am-1pm

Specials Vary Daily • Children’s Menu Full Liquor License

141 Water Street, Downtown Laconia • 603-524-4144 www.water-street-cafe.com www.facebook.com/waterstcafe

Taste the Difference

Request for Design/Build Proposals The Town of Sanbornton is accepting design/ build bids for replacement of Tilton Bridge Rd. bridge deck (DOT Bridge #131/098), existing abutments to be reused. Scope of work to include removal and disposal of old deck, installation of a precast concrete one lane bridge deck (Load Resistance Factor design Code HL- 93), gravel wearing surface, guard rails, as well as align and match roadway approaches. Footers are scoured and will need to be addressed by an approved method of repair. Drawings with a P.E. stamp will be required detailing superstructure and attachment to existing abutments. A review by NHDOT will be conducted for comment and to ensure compliance. Contractors must be state approved, provide proof of insurance and provide surety bond. Bids must be received at the Sanbornton Town Office by noon, Wednesday February 2, 2012. Proposals should be clearly marked “Tilton Bridge Proposal”. Please contact Bob Veloski at 603-286-8303 with any questions or to schedule a site visit. The Town of Sanbornton reserves the right to accept or reject any and all bids.

Guitarist Michael Vincent, at right, and bass player Danny Jackson, both of whom grew up in Gilford but now play in the Gulfport, Miss.-based band Michael Vincent and Doubleshot, will be among the performers at the Open Blues Jam held at Pitmans Freight Room on New Salem Street  in Laconia on Saturday, January 7. The alcohol-free event will  raise  funds necessary  to replace the retiring police dog, “Jago.” The show is scheduled to start at 7 p.m. Admission at the door will cost $10 for adults, $5 for seniors and $5 for students. Advance tickets can be had for a 20-percent discount at Curious Goods. (Karen Bobotas/for the Laconia Daily Sun)

Doubleshot returns from Mississippi to play Blues Jam to benefi t LPD’s K-9 fund on Saturday night

world must know the United States is going to maintain our military superiority,” Obama said with Panetta and the Joint Chiefs of Staff chairman, Gen. Martin Dempsey, at his side.

In a presidential election year the strategy gives Obama a rhetorical tool to defend his Pentagon bud-get-cutting choices. Republican contenders for the White House already have attacked him on national security issues including missile defense, Iran and planned reductions in ground forces.

Obama unveiled the results of an eight-month defense strategy review that is intended to guide decisions on cutting hundreds of billions from planned Pentagon spending over the coming decade. The eight-page document contained no details about how broad concepts for reshaping the military — such as focusing more on Asia and less on Europe — will translate into troop or weapons cuts.

Those details will be included in the 2013 defense

budget to be submitted to Congress next month.In about every major war or defense speech Obama

hits themes intended to resonate with American voters — mainly, that the United States is turning a page from two wars, and that any nation-building will focus on improving the United States, not stra-tegic allies abroad.

The economy is more likely to determine Obama’s re-election fate than national security. To keep his promises to shrink the defi cit and to prove he is seri-ous about fi scal management to voters wary of enor-mous government spending, Obama must show the oft-protected Pentagon is not exempt.

The political danger, though, is that his opponents will use any slashing of spending to paint the presi-dent as weak on security.

Both Panetta and Dempsey said they anticipate heavy criticism of their new strategy, which was begun last spring by then-Defense Secretary Robert

MILITARY from page 2

see next page

Page 11: The Laconia Daily Sun, January 6, 2012

THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Friday, January 6, 2012— Page 11

11

Hauling Disposal

888-827-5612 603-470-6125 Maintenance & Management

Plowing Sanding

www.THScompletepropertycare.com

366-4411 306 Lakeside Ave, Weirs Beach

Gift Certificates Available

Best Local Watering Hole & Grub Stop In The Lakes Region!

Open 7 Days A Week At 11:30am Open 7 Days A Week At 11:30am Open 7 Days A Week At 11:30am Kitchen Hours: Kitchen Hours: Kitchen Hours:

Sun-Tue til 8pm • Wed-Thur til 9pm Sun-Tue til 8pm • Wed-Thur til 9pm Sun-Tue til 8pm • Wed-Thur til 9pm Fri & Sat til 10pm Fri & Sat til 10pm Fri & Sat til 10pm

DAILY SPECIALS ~ ALL DAY MON - 1/2 Price Mexican Pizzas TUE - 1/2 Price Chimichangas

WED - 1/2 Price Burritos THUR - 1/2 Price Enchiladas

FRI - 1/2 Price Nachos & Mexican Salads

Mexican Mexican Mexican Lunch Menu Lunch Menu Lunch Menu

$7.95 $7.95 $7.95 Monday - Thursday Monday - Thursday Monday - Thursday

11am - 4pm 11am - 4pm 11am - 4pm

Hours 7am-2pm Wednesday-Sunday

927 Laconia Road, Tilton Across from Jay’s Marina • 524-1988

O U R F A M I L Y T R E E O U R F A M I L Y T R E E R ESTAURANT R ESTAURANT

ALSO B RINGING B ACK THE $4 BREAKFAST SPECIAL

One Egg, Bacon or Sausage, Home Fries, Toast and Coffee

7am-11am Wednesday, Thursday, Friday

Starting January 1st Free Coffee with Any Breakfast

between 7am-9am Wednesday, Thursday, Friday

Wescott, Dyer, Fitzgerald & Nichols, PA

attorney Allison Ambrose

DWI/Criminal Defense

Labor & Employment

Contract Disputes �

Landlord/Tenant

[email protected]

28 Bowman Street • Laconia • www.wdfnlawyers.com

524-2166

Supporters of making licenses optional argued law-abiding citizens have a constitutional right to guns and should not be required to get a license.

“An armed society is a polite society,” said state Rep. Mark Warden, R-Goffstown.

Opponents argued the bill would weaken public safety and put people at greater risk of gun violence.

Shurtleff said local police chiefs rarely deny requests for concealed weapons permits. He said local authorities know if someone has a mental health issue that would make granting the permit dangerous.

“This is something that belongs in the local com-munities for the local communities to regulate,” he said.

GUN LICENSE from page 3

LACONIA — The Fire Department has won $88,835 in federal grant funding to pay for Central Station improvements. The money is coming from the competitive Assistance to Firefighters Grant Program of the Federal Emergency Management Agency and the Department of Homeland Security, U.S. Senator Jeanne Shaheen (D-NH) announced Thursday.

Laconia will use the $88,835 grant to install sprin-kler and fire alarm systems at its central headquar-ters fire station. Built in 1970, the Central Station currently has neither.

“While the men and women of Laconia’s Fire Department are protecting their community, we must also make sure they themselves are protected from the threat of fire,” said Shaheen, who wrote a letter in sup-port of the department’s grant application. “By helping keep Laconia’s firefighters safe, this grant will help

LFD gets $89K grant to install sprinklers at stationkeep Laconia’s citizens safe as well.”

“These funds will be used to provide an additional layer of safety to our firefighters and department personnel,” said Deputy Fire Chief Deborah Pend-ergast. “At the same time, they will also protect the investment taxpayers made in constructing the cen-tral headquarters station.”

According to Shaheen’s office the Assistance to Firefighters Grant Program provides funding to fire departments and EMS organizations to enhance their response capabilities, and to more effectively protect the health and safety of public and emer-gency response personnel with respect to fire and all other hazards. The awards help first-responder orga-nizations obtain much-needed emergency response equipment, personal protective equipment, firefight-ing and emergency vehicles, and training. All grants require a local match.

Gates after Obama called for defense spending cuts. The Pentagon now faces at least $487 billion in cuts in planned defense spending over 10 years.

The criticism from Republicans came quickly.Rep. Howard “Buck” McKeon, R-Calif., chairman

of the House Armed Services Committee, issued a statement saying, “This is a lead-from-behind strat-egy for a left-behind America.” He called it a “retreat from the world in the guise of a new strategy.”

Panetta said that smaller military budgets will mean some trade-offs and that the U.S. will take on “some level of additional but acceptable risk.” But in a changing world the Pentagon would have been forced to make a strategy shift anyway, he said. The money crisis merely forced the government’s hand.

from preceding page

Rodriguez denied the family’s accusations that the boy had been shot in the back of the head. He defended his officers, saying that the younger Gon-zalez pointed the pellet gun at police and repeatedly defied their commands to put it on the floor.

Officers spoke with the boy’s parents Thursday and exchanged information with them, the chief said.

Authorities also released a 911 recording from Cummings Middle School. The assistant princi-pal on the phone first says there’s a student in the hall with a gun, then reports that he is drawing the weapon and finally that he is running down the hall.

On the recording, police can be heard yelling: “Put the gun down! Put it on the floor!” In the back-ground, someone else yells, “He’s saying that he is willing to die.”

Before police arrived, school administrators had urged Jaime to give up the gun. When officers got to the school,

the boy was waiting for them, Rodriguez said.Moments before he was killed, Jaime began to run

down a hallway, but again faced officers. Police fired down the hallway — a distance that made a stun gun or other methods impractical, Rodriguez said.

If the situation had involved hostages or a gunman barricaded in a room, police might have tried nego-tiations. But instead, Rodriguez stressed, this was an armed student roaming the halls of a school.

The two officers who fired have been placed on administrative leave — standard procedure in police shootings. Rodriguez expected them back at work soon.

Under federal law, pellet or BB guns must be sold with an orange band around the tip of the barrel so they can be distinguished from real weapons. But law enforcement experts say users often remove the bands, and the coloring can sometimes be hard to see.

Gonzalez’s gun had no markings, according to Rodriguez.

8TH-GRADER from page 3

Also vying to emerge as Romney’s chief rival were Texas Rep. Ron Paul and former Utah Gov. Jon Huntsman, while Texas Gov. Rick Perry awaited South Carolina.

“We can’t afford to have a status quo president,” Huntsman said in Durham, N.H. “We can’t afford to have a coronation for president.”

Gingrich unveiled a new television commercial aimed at voters in New Hampshire and South Caro-lina that cited one review of Romney’s jobs program as timid and nearly identical in part to the president’s.

“Timid won’t create jobs. And timid certainly won’t defeat Barack Obama,” the ad said.

Ironically, in a year in which polls show the economy is overwhelmingly the top issue for voters, the first two contests are in states with low joblessness — 5.7 per-cent in Iowa and 5.4 percent in New Hampshire.

That all changes a week later.South Carolina’s unemployment was 9.9 percent in

November, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, worse than 41 other states and more than a full per-centage point higher than the national average.

Santorum fielded pointed questions from his audi-ences — something that he said happened regularly in Iowa, when he campaigned with little or no media coverage for months. In an appearance before college

students in Concord, he was asked about his oppo-sition to same-sex marriage, which is legal in New Hampshire. “So anyone can marry anyone else?” Santorum said, swiftly turning the conversation to polygamy. “So anyone can marry several people?”

The crowd objected and tried to talk over him.“Stop. This is not participatory. We’re not going

to do this. I’m going to ask the question,” Santorum said, growing testy.

Santorum’s aides say he has raised $2 million on the strength of his Iowa showing, and the cam-paign sought to show momentum by announcing the support of a New Hampshire tea party leader and Catholicvote.org, an online organization.

“Our mission here is to show that we’re the conser-vative alternative to Mitt Romney,” he said, virtually conceding he wouldn’t be able to close a yawning New Hampshire gap in the polls before next Tuesday.

Gingrich sought to set a high bar for Romney. “It’s probably one of his three best states, but we’ll see whether he gets a majority here,” he said.

In the ebb and flow of the campaign, one-time national front-runner Gingrich was hoping to reverse a slide that landed him in fourth place in Iowa. Santorum is ascendant, and Huntsman is hoping to make a statement after skipping Iowa to concentrate on New Hampshire.

REPUBLICANS from page 2

Page 12: The Laconia Daily Sun, January 6, 2012

Page 12 — THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Friday, January 6, 2012

12

Turkey Farm Restaurant & Gift Shop

All Major Credit Cards Accepted

MEREDITH (9 MILES EAST OF I-93, EXIT 23) • 279-6212 Open Daily for Lunch & Dinner

www.hartsturkeyfarm.com ~ [email protected]

MONDAYS - Kids Eat Free Children 12 years and younger, must order from the Children’s Menu and be accompanied by an adult.

Maximum of 2 children per adult entrée. No holidays.

TUESDAYS - Fresh Haddock Fried, broiled or baked stuffed $10.99

WEDNESDAYS - Surf & Turf 8 oz. Prime Rib & 3 Shrimp, fried or broiled $12.99

Or 12 oz. Prime Rib $12.99 Starting at 5pm ~ Available while it lasts.

THURSDAYS Trivia @ 6:30pm

FRIDAYS Prime Rib & Turkey Buffet

From soup and full salad bar to dessert

5-8pm ~ All You Can Eat $15.99 Except seconds only on Prime Rib

Starting at 5pm ~ Available while it lasts.

Atty. Stanley Robinson is designated as a Federal Relief Agency by an act of Congress & has proudly assisted

consumers seeking debt relief under the US Bankruptcy code for over 30 years.

603-286-2019 • [email protected]

L OCAL E XPERIENCED B ANKRUPTCY A TTORNEY

We Now Offer ON LINE BOOKING www.lrairportshuttle.com Toll Free

1-888-386-8181

Help Us Celebrate our 10th Anniversary with a donation to our Food Drive

Please call or email and we will pick up now through Jan. 31.

Open Tues, Wed, Fri ~ 9am-5pm • Thurs ~ 9am-8pm & Saturday ~ 9am-2pm

CALL 527-8980 NOW for Appointment & Directions.

~ Close to downtown Laconia ~

“Studio 23” “Studio 23” “Studio 23” Residential Hair Salon

Regular Pricing: Women $20 ~ Men $15 ~ Children $12

$10 Haircut $10 Haircut $10 Haircut 1 st time in!* 1 st time in!* 1 st time in!*

*(With this coupon, through 1/31/12)

169 Daniel Webster Hwy. • Meredith, NH • 556-7271 Hours: Mon-Fri 8:30 am - 4:30 pm

Call Now to Schedule Your Next Appointment and Check out our website for Monthly Specials

www.meredithbaylaser.com

Meredith Bay Laser Center Meredith Bay Laser Center Catherine Crear Catherine Crear

Lic. Esthetician Lic. Esthetician

Featuring Obagi

Products

• DermaSound Facials • Eyelash & Brow Tint

• Waxing Services • Chemical Peels

• Teeth Whitening • Lunch T ime Facials

Rt 3/Weirs Blvd • Laconia 366-4664

Freshest Seafood in the Lakes Region!

EVERY TUESDAY $8.95 Specials and $4 Margaritas & Martinis

THURSDAYS- PRIME RIB BUFFET ... $13.95 OPEN SATURDAY 1/7

Edward P. Rhodes, 82OBITUARIES

ALEXANDRIA — Edward P. Rhodes, 82, of 119 Cass Mill Road, died at the Tri City Medical Center in Oceanside, Califor-nia on Friday, December 30, 2011. He was the widower of Jennie A. (Caruso) Rhodes, who died in 2010.

Mr. Rhodes was born May 25, 1929 in Belmont, N.H., the son of Thomas A. and Theresa (Littlefield) Rhodes. He was a longtime resident of Laconia before moving to Alexandria ten years ago. He served in the U. S. Coast Guard and the U.S. Air Force and had been employed at New England Telephone for over 30 years.

Mr. Rhodes enjoyed hunting, camping, snowmo-biling, and riding his ATV He also loved to watch Boston Bruins hockey.

Survivors include a son, Edward P. Rhodes, Jr., and his wife, Andrea, of Oceanside, California; three daughters, Susan Hoffman and her husband, David, of Buffalo Grove, Illinois, Theresa Otis and her husband, Robert, of Meredith, New Hampshire and Elaine Tucker and her husband, Shane, of Bris-tol, New Hampshire; eleven grandchildren, Dawn Gamble of North Carolina, Elizabeth McDowell of California, Phillip Hoffman of Illinois, Caitlyn Hoff-man of Illinois, Jennifer Tucker of New Hampshire, Shannon Tucker of New Hampshire, Sarah Otis of New Hampshire, Melissa Otis of New Hampshire, Matthew Otis of New Hampshire, Samuel Otis of New Hampshire and Rebecca Otis New Hampshire;

two great grandchildren, Wayne Gamble of North Carolina and Owen Gamble of North Carolina; two brothers, Fred Rhodes of New Hampshire and Joseph Rhodes of Virginia and a sister, Margaret Durocher, of Laconia. In addition to his wife and parents, Mr. Rhodes was prede-ceased by four brothers, Thomas, Alfred, James and Steve Rhodes and by a sister, Mary Nadeau.

Calling hours will be held on Sunday, January 8, 2012 from 2:00-4:00 pm in the Carriage House of the Wilkinson-Beane-

Simoneau-Paquette Funeral Home, 164 Pleasant Street, Laconia, N.H.

A Mass of Christian Burial will be celebrated on Monday, January 9, 2012 at 11:00am at St. Andre Bessette Parish-Sacred Heart Church, 291 Union Avenue, Laconia, N.H. by Rev. Marc Drouin, Pastor.

Spring burial will be in the family lot in Sacred Heart Cemetery.

For those who wish, the family suggests that memorial donations be made to Newfound Area Nursing Association, 214 Lake Street, Bristol, NH 03222 or the North Country ATV Club, PO Box 161 No. Stratford, NH 03590.

Wilkinson-Beane-Simoneau-Paquette Funeral Home & Cremation Services, 164 Pleasant Street, Laconia, N.H. is assisting the family. For more infor-mation and to view an online memorial go to www.wilkinsonbeane.com.

Kathleen ‘Katie’ Wood, 53LACONIA — Kathleen “Katie” Wood, 53, of

Andrews Ave, Laconia, died at the Lakes Region General Hospital on Friday, December 23, 2011 after a lengthy battle with cancer.

Katie was born June 11, 1958 in Boston, Massa-chusetts, the daughter of David E. and Katherine A. (Doherty) Justice. Katie worked for several years as a hotel guest associate for Lake Opechee Inn and Spa where she took great pride in her work. She was also especially proud of her participation in local breast cancer walks over the past two years, the most recent of which was just a few short months ago.

Survivors include a daughter, Nikki Colton of Mill Valley, CA, a son, Scott Libby of Madbury, NH, three brothers; David, Gary and Paul Justice, Paul’s wife Nancy and daughter Erin, all of Massachusetts, and a strong network of close friends in the NH Lakes Region including Sandy Conley of Laconia.

There will be no calling hours. A Memorial Service will be held at a later date.

Wilkinson-Beane-Simoneau-Paquette Funeral Home & Cremation Services, 164 Pleasant St., Laco-nia, N.H. is assisting the family with the arrange-ments. For more information and to view an online memorial go to www.wilkinsonbeane.com.

Walking long distances, hiking the Appalachian, Long and IAT Trails program at Laconia Library

LACONIA — On Tuesday, January 10 at 7 p.m. at the Laconia Public Library, long distant hiker Gordon DuBois will present a slide - lecture pro-gram on hiking the Appalachian, Long (VT) and International Appalachian (QE, CN) Trails.

Using slides and telling stories, Dubois will share his experiences on these three major hiking trails of the East Coast: the people he met, the beautiful places he visited and the many interesting animals

he encountered: snakes, bears, moose, caribou, wild ponies, African steers, wild boar, deer, mice, raccoons, cats, dogs and more. He will also discuss equipment and clothing needed for long distant hiking.

Dubois is a New Hampshire Humanities Scholar and film maker whose real passion is long distant hiking and winter mountaineering. He has climbed 77 of New Eng-land’s highest mountains in winter and completed sec-

see next page

Page 13: The Laconia Daily Sun, January 6, 2012

THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Friday, January 6, 2012 — Page 13

13

NOTICE OF MORTGAGEE’S FORECLOSURE SALE Re: 298 Halls Hill Road, Alton, New Hampshire

Reference is made to a Mortgage Deed given by Hurd Brook Builders, LLC (“Mortgagor”) to John H. Car dinal, dated August 19, 2010 and recorded in the Belknap County Registry of Deeds on August 20, 2010 at Bo ok 2657, Page 0391 (“Mortgage”). By virtue of the power of sale contained in the Mortgage, John H. Cardinal (“Mortgagee”), of 1186 T en Rod Road, Farmington, New Hampshire 03835, being the present holder of the Mortgage, pursuant to and in execut ion of the power of sale and for breach of conditions of the Mortgage, and for the purpose of foreclosing the same, will sell at public auction on Monday, January 30, 2012, at 11:00 a.m., the premises described in said Mortgage which are known as 298 Halls Hill Road, Alton, Belknap County, New Hampshire (“Mortgaged Premises”). The Mortgaged Premises are more particularly described in the above-referenced Mortgage. Place of Sale and Street Address of Mortgaged Premises The sale will be held on the Mortgage Premises which have a current address of 298 Halls Hill Road, Alton, New Hampshire. Right to Petition Superior Court To the Mortgagor or any other person claiming a lien or encumbrance against the Mortgaged Premises: You are hereby notified that you have a right to petition the superior court for the county in which the mor tgaged premises are located, with service on the mortgagee and upon such bond and the court may require, to enjoin the scheduled foreclosure sale. Terms of Sale The Mortgaged Premises will be sold “AS IS AND WHERE IS” and subject to all unpaid taxes and liens therefore, and all other liens, easements, rights and encumbrances of any and every nature whatsoever, which a re or may be entitled to precedence over the Mortgage. The Mortgaged Premises will be offered for sale to the highest qualified bidder. In order to qualify to bid at the foreclosure sale, any interested person must register to bid and, at the time of sale, present to the Mortgagee, or its agent, cash or certified check, or other check acceptable to the M ortgagee, in the amount of $5,000.00 for the foreclosure sale. The checks of all unsuccessful bidders will be return ed at the conclusion of the public auction. The check and the funds represented thereby of the successful bid der accepted by the Mortgagee will become a non-refundable deposit on the successful bidder’s purchase. The successf ul bidder will be required to execute a purchase and sale agreement which contains additional terms and condit ions concerning the successful bidder’s purchase. The balance of the purchase price must be paid in full by the successful bidder or its designee in cash or certified check or other check acceptable to the Mortga gee within 45 days of the date of sale, time being of the essence. If the successful bidder fails to complete the purchase of the Mortgaged Premises in accordance with the preceding sentence, the Mortgagee may, at its option, reta in the deposit in full as reasonable liquidated damages resulting from the successful bidder’s failure to perform. Conveyance of the Mortgaged Premises will be by foreclosure deed. The foreclosure deed will be deliv ered to the successful bidder upon the Mortgagee’s receipt of the balance of the purchase price. The Mortgagee r eserves the right to extend the time of the closing of the sale to a date not more than 60 days after the date o f the sale. Exclusions of Warranties Except for warranties arising by operation of law, the conveyance of the Mortgaged Premises will be made by the Mortgagee and accepted by the successful bidder without any other expressed or implied representatio ns or warranties whatsoever. Right to Amend The Mortgagee reserves the right to (i) cancel or continue the foreclosure sale to such later date a s the Mortgagee may deem desirable; (ii) bid upon and purchase the Mortgaged Premises at foreclosure sale; (iii) rej ect any and all bids for the Mortgaged Premises at the foreclosure sale; (iv) amend or change the Terms of Sale set forth herein by announcement, written or oral, made before or during the foreclosure sale and such change or amendme nt will be binding on all bidders. Further Information For further information regarding the Mortgaged Premises to be sold, and for a copy of the aforement ioned purchase and sale agreement, Contact Jennifer A. Hoover, Arthur W. Hoover, PC d/b/a Alton Law Office s, PO Box 817, Alton, New Hampshire. Dated: December 20, 201 I

John H. Cardinal by his Attorneys Arthur W. Hoover, P.C., d/b/a Alton Law Offices Jennifer A. Hoover, Esquire PO Box 817, 31 Mooney Street Alton, NH 03809 (603) 875-2800

Route 3, Winnisquam • www.shalimar-resort.com • 524-1984

The Best Sunday Brunch The Lakes Region Has Ever Seen!

Featuring Chef Tossed Pasta, Homemade Sauces, Soups, Salads & More!

Buy One, Get One Free Buy One, Get One Free Buy One, Get One Free Wednesdays 5-8pm ~ All You Can Eat Fresh Tossed Pasta Buffet

* $12 value. Expires 1/31/12. Limit 2 coupons per table. With coupon. Does not include tax and g ratuity. LDS

* With this ad. Must be two guests per coupon. Not to be combined with any other offers. Limit 2 c oupons per table. Expires 1/31/12. LDS

$10 OFF* Brunch for Two $10 OFF* Brunch for Two $10 OFF* Brunch for Two All You Can Eat Gourmet Brunch with Over 50 Items! Adults ~ $15 • Children ~ $8

$12 pp or $6 pp with Coupon!

Buy One, Get One Free Buy One, Get One Free Buy One, Get One Free Thursdays ~ Buy any entreé on the regular menu

& receive one entreé of lesser value FREE! Includes Lobster!

* Expires 1/31/12. With coupon. Not to be combined with other offers. Does not include tax and gratuity. LDS

tion hikes of the Long and Appalachian Trails. He plans to continue his section hikes of the International AT in Quebec and Newfoundland, through hike the John Muir trail (CA) and the Coast to Coast Trail in England. Gordon and his

winter hiking partner, Bob Manley, were featured in the Feb. 2011 issue of the Appalachian Trail Conservancy publica-tion Journeys.

The program is free and open to the public. For more information contact Debbie Ross at 524-4775, Ext. 15.

from preceding page

Laconia Savings Bank donates $15,000 to assist military families

Louis Guevin, jr., Executive Vice President - Commercial Services for Laconia Savings Bank; Chap-lain Steven Veinotte, Chaplain Emergency Relief Fund Trustee; James Goss, Executive Director – NH Employer Support of the Guard and Reserve. (Courtesy photo)

LACONIA — Laconia Savings Bank has donated $15,000 in proceeds from its Holiday Auction to the New Hamp-shire National Guard’s Chaplain Emergency Relief Fund.

Bank employees and local businesses donated 160 items that were auctioned off in this year’s Holiday Auction.

The New Hampshire National Guard’s Chaplain Emergency Relief Fund was established during Operation Desert Storm when many military families faced financial hardship during the deployment of their loved ones. Any person serving as a member of a military unit located in New Hampshire is eligible to receive sup-port. Monies are used exclusively to assist military members and their families who are experiencing an unexpected finan-cial crisis. In the four years that Laconia Savings Bank has been supporting the NHNG-CERF through their annual auc-tion, the bank has donated more than $50,000 to the fund.

“It’s a pretty significant part of our

budget,” stated Chaplain Steven Veinotte, trustee for the Chaplain Emergency Relief Fund as he received a giant novelty check from Louis Guevin, jr., Executive Vice President of Commercial Services for Laconia Savings Bank. “This dona-tion gives CERF the flexibility to respond immediately to a serviceman or woman or their family member who is in a dire situation,’’ said Veinotte, pointing out that LSB’s gift represented about 25 percent of the total donations for 2011. Approxi-mately $50,000 in financial aid was dis-tributed by CERF in 2011.

Guevin, who himself is a veteran of the U.S. Air Force, said that “as a com-munity bank with a statewide presence, supporting a program like CERF, helps the broadest range of New Hampshire residents which is reflected in Laconia Savings Bank’s mission.”

For more information or to make a tax-deductible contribution to CERF, write to: CERF, PO Box 3448, Concord NH 03302-3448.

Page 14: The Laconia Daily Sun, January 6, 2012

Page 14 — THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Friday, January 6, 2012

14

B.C.

by M

astr

oian

ni &

Har

tPo

och

Café

by P

aul G

illig

anLO

LAby

Dic

kens

on &

Cla

rkG

et F

uzzy

by D

arby

Con

ley

HOROSCOPE By Holiday Mathis

ARIES (March 21-April 19). You’ll deliver lighthearted fun. It will be good for relationships of all kinds, including professional. Your quick wit and active life will be a magnet for new friends. TAURUS (April 20-May 20). You’ll feel youthful and unburdened by responsibilities. Feeling this way makes it true to some extent. As if by magic, your schedule will be clear of worry and chores. GEMINI (May 21-June 21). Could it be that the energy and intention you give to your goals have greater power than the actual steps you take to make them happen? You’ll get evidence to suggest this today. CANCER (June 22-July 22). You’ll be spending time with a complimen-tary individual. This person will confi rm your attractiveness, not that you need such an ego boost. Your own opinion of yourself is what really matters. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). There will be people on either side of an issue trying to get you to side with them or take action on their behalf. How do you know whether you’re doing the right thing? It feels right. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). The only way to see the big picture is to go to the top of the proverbial mountain. You can do this in your mind, or you can do it physically by heading to the highest point in your immediate geography. Either way will give you clarity. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). Accept-ing reality is the fi rst step to co-creating it. Your will is strong, but the universal will is stronger. You’ll defer to it as you realize that any other move would be pointless.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). You may be prone to silly mistakes. Try to slow down and think things through. Luckily, your refl exes are so quick that even if you blunder, you can probably recover without mishap. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). If you don’t get what you want right away, it may be the best thing for you and everyone else. Sometimes what doesn’t happen may keep something really catastrophic from happening. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). Your sense of fun and adventure is going strong. You have responsibilities, but you don’t let them defi ne who you are -- mainly because that would make you boring! AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). The world desperately will require your patience. So few people really are patient these days, and so many rely on patience from others. Without it, life will run them over. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). New resources will inspire you to put an effort into raising your attractiveness quotient on both the inside and the out-side. Consider yoga. It will help you do both at the same time. TODAY’S BIRTHDAY (Jan. 6). You have the perfect combination of pas-sion and practicality, and you’ll apply yourself. You’ll receive stellar advice and follow it to a windfall in March. There will be a May reunion. June fea-tures investment and commerce. You’ll use your knack for knowing what the public wants. Romance fi lls the end of summer. Cancer and Leo people adore you. Your lucky numbers are: 3, 38, 14, 30 and 15.

ACROSS 1 Disease-carrying

rodent 4 Can’t keep a

secret 9 Wren or robin 13 Thought 15 __ Zellweger 16 Consumer 17 Political survey 18 Day __ day;

continuously 19 Biting insect 20 Treating with

indifference 22 Jewelry box lining,

often 23 Fighting force 24 Lamb’s mother 26 Grad school

student’s paper 29 Forming braids 34 Bird in a Poe

poem 35 Enormous 36 Unknown John 37 Actor and

folksinger Burl

38 Ring-shaped baked goody

39 Location 40 __-gallon hat 41 Had supper 42 Prevent from

passing 43 Forced into

servitude 45 Voting stalls 46 Lyrical work 47 Stack 48 Greek cheese 51 Saying again 56 Eager 57 Twists 58 Part of speech 60 Thin coin 61 Standing up 62 Pierce 63 Downhill glider 64 Numskulls 65 Crackpot

DOWN 1 Seam split 2 Commotions 3 Break the news

4 Lullaby composer 5 Southpaw 6 Prefi x with freeze

or trust 7 Has-__; one no

longer popular 8 Corporal’s

superior 9 Smorgasbord 10 Bit of land 11 Rod and __;

fi shing items 12 “Darn it!” 14 Mark Twain & O.

Henry, e.g. 21 Big smile 25 Humor 26 Insignifi cant 27 Refuge 28 Balances 29 Longed 30 Praise 31 Nincompoop 32 V-shaped

indentation 33 Computer techs,

often

DAILY CROSSWORDTRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES

35 “To boldly go where no man has __ before”

38 __ the attention of; distracted

39 Aslant 41 Papa 42 Ark or dinghy 44 Drunk 45 Animals

47 Consequently 48 Passing crazes 49 Corrupt 50 Magazine title 52 Lira replacer 53 Abbr. in some

school names 54 Midday 55 Wise teacher 59 Hair bonnet

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

TU

ND

RA

by C

had

Carp

ente

r

Yesterday’s Answer

Page 15: The Laconia Daily Sun, January 6, 2012

THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Friday, January 6, 2012— Page 15

Edward J. Engler, Editor & PublisherAdam Hirshan, Advertising Sales Manager

Michael Kitch, Adam Drapcho, Gail Ober Reporters Elaine Hirshan, Office Manager

Crystal Furnee, Jeanette Stewart Ad Sales Patty Johnson, Production Manager & Graphics

Karin Nelson, Classifieds

“Seeking the truth and printing it”THE LACONIA DAILY SUN is published

Tuesday through Saturday by Lakes Region News Club, Inc.Edward Engler, Mark Guerringue, Adam Hirshan, Founders

Offices: 1127 Union Ave. #1, Laconia, NH 03246Business Office 737-2020, Newsroom 737-2026, Fax: 527-0056

News E-mail: [email protected]: 18,000 distributed FREE Tues. through Sat. in

Laconia, Weirs Beach, Gilford, Meredith, Center Harbor, Belmont, Moultonborough, Winnisquam, Sanbornton, Tilton, Gilmanton, Alton, New Hampton, Plymouth, Bristol, Ashland, Holderness.

15

FRIDAY PRIME TIME JANUARY 6, 2012 Dial 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 2 WGBH Wash. McL’ghlin Great Performances Tavis Smiley Reports Need C. Rose

4 WBZA Gifted Man Michael becomes a patient at the clinic. (N)

Å

CSI: NY The CSIs inves-tigate a charred body. (N)

Å

Blue Bloods Erin inves-tigates her informant’s death. (N)

Å

WBZ News (N)

Å

Late Show With David Letterman

5 WCVBExtreme Makeover: Home Edition “Gibbs Family Part 1” (N)

Å

Extreme Makeover: Home Edition “Gibbs Family Part 2” (N)

Å

20/20 (In Stereo) Å

NewsCen-ter 5 Late (N)

Å

Nightline (N)

Å

6 WCSHChuck Gertrude comes to Casey with a mission. (N)

Å

Grimm “The Three Bad Wolves” Investigating a suspected arson case.

Dateline NBC (In Ste-reo)

Å

News Tonight Show With Jay Leno

7 WHDH Chuck (N) Å

Grimm (In Stereo) Å

Dateline NBC Å

News Jay Leno

8 WMTW Extreme Makeover Extreme Makeover 20/20 (In Stereo) Å

News Nightline

9 WMUR Extreme Makeover Extreme Makeover 20/20 (In Stereo) Å

News Nightline

10 WLVINikita “Pale Fire” Nikita crosses paths with Alex. (N)

Å

Supernatural Dean de-velops an obsession. (N) (In Stereo)

Å

7 News at 10PM on CW56 (N) (In Stereo)

Å

Friends (In Stereo)

Å

Everybody Loves Ray-mond

11 WENHPriceless Antiques Roadshow

Antiques Roadshow

Great Performances LA Phil’s gala features Gershwin. (N)

Å

American Masters Singer Sam Cooke.

Å

Independent Lens Plant-ing trees. (N) (In Stereo) Å

(DVS)

12 WSBKMonk “Happy Birthday, Mr. Monk” Surprise birth-day party.

Å

Monk “Mr. Monk and Sharona” Sharona re-turns. (In Stereo)

Å

WBZ News Community Auditions

Seinfeld “The Stranded”

The Office “Golden Ticket”

13 WGME A Gifted Man (N) Å

CSI: NY (N) Å

Blue Bloods (N) Å

News Letterman

14 WTBS Payne Payne Payne Payne Movie: ››

“Diary of a Mad Black Woman”

15 WFXTCollege Football AT&T Cotton Bowl -- Arkansas vs. Kansas State. From Arlington, Texas. (N) (In Stereo Live)

Å

Fox 25 News at 11 (N)

16 CSPAN Politics & Public Policy The Contenders: They Ran & Lost Politics & Public Policy Today

17 WBIN The Office 30 Rock Law Order: CI News 10 Cash Cab Excused ’70s Show

28 ESPN NBA Basketball Chicago Bulls at Orlando Magic. (N) (Live) NBA Basketball

29 ESPN2 NFL Kickoff (N) (Live) Boxing Dyah Davis vs. Alfonso Lopez. (N) (Live) SportsCenter (N) Å

30 CSNE NBA Basketball: Pacers at Celtics Celtics SportsNet Sports Quick

32 NESN NHL Hockey From Jan. 1, 2010. Daily Football Daily Dennis

33 LIFE Amer. Most Wanted Amer. Most Wanted Amer. Most Wanted The First 48 Å

35 E! Kendra Kardashian The Soup Fashion Chelsea E! News

38 MTV Teen Mom 2 (In Stereo) Jersey Shore Å

Movie: “Charlie and the Chocolate Factory”

42 FNC The O’Reilly Factor (N) Hannity (N) Greta Van Susteren The O’Reilly Factor

43 MSNBC The Ed Show (N) Rachel Maddow Show MSNBC Documentary MSNBC Documentary

45 CNN Anderson Cooper 360 Piers Morgan Tonight Anderson Cooper 360 Erin Burnett OutFront

50 TNT Movie: ›››

“The Fifth Element” (1997) Bruce Willis. Å

Movie: ›››

“I Am Legend” (2007)

51 USA Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU CSI: Crime Scene CSI: Crime Scene

52 COM Tosh.0 Tosh.0 Tom Papa’s Stand -Up Playlist (N)

53 SPIKE Gangland Los Angeles. Gangland Å

Movie: ››

“Alien vs. Predator” (2004)

54 BRAVO Housewives/Atl. Housewives/Atl. Housewives/Atl. Housewives/Atl.

55 AMC Movie: ››‡

“Desperado” (1995) Antonio Banderas. Movie: ››‡

“Desperado” (1995)

56 SYFY WWE Friday Night SmackDown! (N) Å

Merlin (N) Å

Stargate SG-1 Å

57 A&E Criminal Minds Å

Criminal Minds “JJ” Criminal Minds Å

Criminal Minds Å

59 HGTV Hunters Hunters Hunters Hunters Hunters Hunters Hunters Hunters

60 DISC Gold Rush Å

Gold Rush (N) Å

Flying Wild Alaska (N) Gold Rush Å

61 TLC Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Four Weddings (N) Say Yes Say Yes

64 NICK Sponge. Sponge. ’70s Show ’70s Show George George Friends Friends

65 TOON Star Wars Generator King of Hill King of Hill Amer. Dad Amer. Dad Fam. Guy Fam. Guy

66 FAM “Legally Blonde 2: Red, White & Blonde” Jane by Design “Pilot” The 700 Club (N) Å

67 DSN Wizards-Place Jessie (N) Fish Austin Good Luck Jessie Jessie

75 SHOW Movie: ››

“Faster” Movie: ›››

“Blue Valentine” (2010, Drama) Boxing

76 HBO Movie: ››

“Torque” Life, Times Movie: ››‡

“Due Date” (2010) Life, Times 24/7

77 MAX Seabiscuit Movie: ›››

“Independence Day” (1996) Will Smith. Å

Sex Sex

––––––– ALMANAC –––––––

Today is Friday, Jan. 6, the sixth day of 2012. There are 360 days left in the year.

Today’s Highlight in History:On Jan. 6, 1912, New Mexico became the 47th

state.On this date:In 1412, tradition holds that Joan of Arc was

born this day in Domremy.In 1540, England’s King Henry VIII married his

fourth wife, Anne of Cleves. (The marriage lasted about six months.)

In 1759, George Washington and Martha Dan-dridge Custis were married in New Kent County, Va.

In 1838, Samuel Morse and Alfred Vail gave the fi rst successful public demonstration of their telegraph, in Morristown, N.J.

In 1912, entertainer and philanthropist Danny Thomas was born in Deerfi eld, Mich.

In 1919, the 26th president of the United States, Theodore Roosevelt, died in Oyster Bay, N.Y., at age 60.

In 1941, President Franklin D. Roosevelt, in his State of the Union address, outlined a goal of “Four Freedoms”: Freedom of speech and expression; the freedom of people to worship God in their own way; freedom from want; freedom from fear.

In 1942, the Pan American Airways Pacifi c Clipper, a fl ying boat built by Boeing, arrived in New York more than a month after leaving Califor-nia and following a westward route.

In 1950, Britain recognized the Communist government of China.

In 1967, U.S. Marines and South Vietnamese troops launched Operation Deckhouse Five, an offensive in the Mekong River delta.

In 1982, truck driver William G. Bonin was con-victed in Los Angeles of 10 of the “Freeway Killer” slayings of young men and boys. (Bonin was later convicted of four other killings; he was executed in 1996.)

In 1994, fi gure skater Nancy Kerrigan was clubbed on the leg by an assailant at Detroit’s Cobo Arena; four men, including the ex-husband of Kerrigan’s rival, Tonya Harding, went to prison for their roles in the attack. (Harding, who denied knowing about plans for the attack, received pro-bation after pleading guilty to conspiracy to hinder prosecution.)

One year ago: U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates announced he would cut $78 billion from the Defense Department budget over the next fi ve years, an effort to trim fat in light of the nation’s ballooning defi cit.

Today’s Birthdays: Pollster Louis Harris is 91. Bluegrass performer Earl Scruggs is 88. Retired MLB All-Star Ralph Branca is 86. Author E.L. Doc-torow is 81. Actress Bonnie Franklin is 68. Coun-try musician Joey, the CowPolka King (Riders in the Sky) is 63. Rock singer-musician Kim Wilson (The Fabulous Thunderbirds) is 61. Singer Jett Williams is 59. Rock musician Malcolm Young (AC-DC) is 59. Actor-comedian Rowan Atkinson is 57. World Golf Hall of Famer Nancy Lopez is 55. Rhythm-and-blues singer Kathy Sledge is 53. TV chef Nigella Lawson is 52. Rhythm-and-blues singer Eric Williams is 52. Movie composer A.R. Rahman is 46. Movie director John Singleton is 44. TV personality Julie Chen is 42. Actor Danny Pintauro is 36. NBA player Gilbert Arenas is 30. Rock singer Alex Turner (Arctic Monkeys) is 26.

(Answers tomorrow)OMEGA DOUBT INFANT COYOTEYesterday’s Jumbles:

Answer: The smartest kid in the math class couldalways be — COUNTED ON

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.

YOPPP

TEANK

KICLEF

CIDIAC

©2012 Tribune Media Services, Inc.All Rights Reserved.

Find

us

on F

aceb

ook

http

://w

ww

.face

book

.com

/jum

ble

AAns:

CALENDARTODAY’S EVENTS

Night at the Oscars at the Gilman Library in Alton. Free screening of “The Lost Weekend” (1945) starring Ray Milland and Jane Wyman and directed by Billy Wilder. (Best Picture, Best Actor, Best Director, etc.) 7 p.m. in the Agnes Thompson meeting room.

Open Climbing Wall at the Meredith Community Center. Friday nights. $3 per child, $10 per family.

Al-Anon Meeting at the Congregational Church Parish House (18 Veterans Square) in Laconia. 9:30 to 11 a.m. each Friday. Al-Anon offers hope and help to families of alcoholics. No dues or fees. All are welcome. Call 645-9518.

Giggles & Grins playgroup at Family Resource Center in downtown Laconia (635 Main Street). Free group for parents children from birth through age 5. For more infor-mation call 524-1741.

Jumpin’ January Tot Time at the Meredith Public Library. 9:30 to 10:20 a.m. Story, art project and snack for children up to 3.

Artsy Saturday at the Meredith Public Library. 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Drop by the Children’s Room to discover differ-ent art concepts — create and take them home. “Crayon Resist” this week.

Knit Wits gathering at the Gilford Public Library. 1:30 to 2:30 p.m. All knitters welcome.

SATURDAY, JANUARY 7Open Blues Jam to benefit the Laconia Police Depart-

ment K-9 Fund. 7 to 10 p.m. at Pitman’s Freight Room. Organized by Curious Goods and Henry’s Pawprints. Open to all ages. Snacks and refreshments available. No alcohol served or allowed. At the door, $10 for adults and $5 for seniors and students.

John Ganong, celebrating the first anniversary of his heart transplant will be the guest “celebrity bartender” at the Weirs Beach Lobster Pound restaurant, starting at 7 p.m. All of his tips will be donated to the Cardiac Trans-plant Division at Tufts Medical Center in Boston.

Annual Soup & Stew Day hosted by Ellacoya Chapter #43 Order of the Eastern Star. Noon until 2 p.m. at the Squam Valley Masonic Building on Rte. 3 in Holderness. $5/adult, $3 for children under 6.

Bird banding open house at Squam Lakes Natural Science Center in Holderness. 9 a.m. to noon. For the past 30 years, the Science Center – under special federal permits -- has captured and banded birds at the onsite feeding station on the first weekend following the New Year. Visitors are encouraged to drop in anytime during the morn-ing to learn about common birds that are winter visitors and why birds are banded. Adult must accompany children. No charge to attend. www.nhnature.org. 968-7194.

Separated/Divorced Persons Support Group meeting. 6 to 8 p.m. on the first and third Saturdays of each month at St. Joseph Catholic Church in Belmont. Compassion and affirmation in a confidential atmosphere. Refreshments. Scholarships available. For more information call the rec-tory at 267-8174 or Ginny Timmons at 286-7066.

Al-Anon Meeting at the Lakes Region General Hos-pital in Laconia. 8 to 9:15 p.m. each Saturday in the first-floor conference room. Al-Anon offers hope and help to families of alcoholics. No dues or fees. All are welcome. Call 645-9518.

Open Door Dinners offer free weekly meal in Tilton. 4:30 to 5:30 p.m. An outreach housed at Trinity Episcopal Church on Main Street, downtown. provides a free hot meal open to all members of the community. All are welcome to eat and all are welcome to help out. For more information, especially about volunteering, please call Pastor Mark at 286-3120 or e-mail him at [email protected].

Drop-In Craft Time at the Gilford Public Library. 10 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Make and take a craft. We’ll supply the materials. Refreshments.

Page 16: The Laconia Daily Sun, January 6, 2012

Page 16 — THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Friday, January 6, 2012

16

ANNIE’S MAILBOX Dear Annie: Seven years ago, I married into a wonderful family. It was my second marriage, and the family accepted my 10-year-old son as their own. My father-in-law has always been nice to me, but I’ve been told there was a lot of verbal abuse when my husband and his siblings were growing up. In the past couple of years, Grand-pa has shown some symptoms of dementia. At the last family gathering, my son, now 17, went into the kitchen to talk to Grandpa. From the dining room, we all heard Grandpa scream at my son, some nonsense about never returning a book. My husband’s family just sat there behav-ing as if nothing was happening, so I went in to rescue my child. I know Grandpa won’t remember how he acted, but I am having a problem dealing with the rest of my husband’s family. Not one of them said a thing or offered my son a word of comfort or sympathy. I stood there crying as the whole family sat at the table with eyes downcast. My husband apologized for not handling it better, but doesn’t want to do anything to damage the relationship with his siblings. But they are not the loving family I thought they were. I feel everyone at that table owes my son and me an apology. I want my husband to be as angry as I am. I no lon-ger wish to attend family gatherings, because I want to make it clear that their behavior was hurtful. What is a good compromise that would allow me a little dignity (so they know I’m not a doormat) but still permit my husband and children to be with the family? -- Furious in Florida Dear Furious: We are not excusing the family’s behavior, but they have been living with an angry Grandpa for years. Their response implied self-preservation rather than “not lov-ing.” Consider this an opportunity to teach them how to react appropriately to such outbursts. Have a family powwow. Tell

them how upset you were that they didn’t protect your son, and then explain exactly how you wish they would have be-haved instead. Also speak to your son. He’s old enough to understand that Grandpa isn’t quite himself and these rants are beyond his control. Dear Annie: We have young adult children who stayed at our home over the holidays and spent the majority of time engaged with their individual smart phones. They rarely in-teracted with other family members. I found the behavior dis-respectful and tried feebly to say something, without success. My husband and I do not want to accept this rude behavior again. What is the proper way to set boundaries with these young adults, one of whom is still being supported by us? -- Competing for Face Time Dear Competing: Set ground rules for when the kids are in your presence, but don’t do it “feebly.” Allow them to use their phones when they are lounging around, but during meals, insist that all phones be turned off. Remind them when necessary. If you engage the kids in a conversation, ask them to please put the phones away for the duration. Be pleasant, but fi rm and consistent. Dear Annie: Here’s how I solved the problem of kids who don’t appreciate what you give them. My nephew is like that. I thought he received too many toys for his birthday and Christmas, so I always bought him clothes. One time, he re-luctantly tore the paper off my gift, peeked inside and casu-ally tossed it aside, barely managing to squeeze out a “thank you.” That was the last Christmas he received a wrapped gift from me. From that time forward, I took the money I would have spent and put it in a savings account. I would place the deposit slip with the balance inside the birthday or Christmas card. For his high school graduation, he will receive a check for $600. -- Not Frustrated Anymore in Virginia

Annie’s Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers column. Please e-mail your questions to: [email protected], or write to: Annie’s Mailbox, c/o Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. Century Blvd., Ste. 700, Los Angeles, CA 90045.

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

David's Annual New Years Auction10 AM Sat, Jan 7 preview 8 AM

Leavitt Park 334 Elm St, LaconiaRare Iroquois top hat, ivory & baleen letter openerwith ship, owner & date, Birdseye maple side by side,tall case clock, signed ivory netsuke, Rockingham Parkhorse racing memorabilia, Roseville Baneda pot, CivilWar sword & drum, Griswold 875 double broiler, earlytilt top table & swell front chest, 5 Morgan $, nautical,silver, art, good glass & ceramics, B & H mirror, smallsize Saratoga trunk, 8 Hummels.

D. Cross lic. 2487* phone 603-528-0247*300+ photos at auctionzip.com Zip ID 4217

* Buyer Premium *No out of state checks unless known!

KEN BARRETT AUCTIONSMonday, January 9 @ 6pm • Preview at 4pm

Log on to: www.auctionzip.com ID#5134, for 300 photosHundreds of coins, country primitives, thousands of sports

cards, glass & china, old books, artwork, ephemera, many oldtools, ad tins & boxes, Jewelry, kerosene lamps etc,

postcards, watches, jackknives, some sterling & gold, oldcameras, Griswold, Victor decoy, and much more!

Auction Held At 274 Main St. Tilton, N.H. (1 mile off I-93N)603-286-2028 • [email protected]

Lic # 2975, buyers premium, cash, checks, credit cards.We DO NOT accept phone bids, but we DO TAKE absentee bids.

Animals

FULL EUROPEAN bloodlineGerman Shepherd puppies. Sire/dame on premisis, healthcertificate. Call for information.Colebrook, NH 603-667-1752.

GOLDEN Retriever puppies, born11/20/11. First shot, home raised,cat friendly. 6 males. $500.744-2317.

POMERANIAN puppies, 3 males,2 females, color sabel. $500.00deposits accepted and paymentsaccepted. To be paid by or beforeFeb 3, 2012. Parents on premises.524-6750 or 630-4104.

SENIOR Citizen wants free, smalldog for companionship. Will havea good home. home 279-3148,cell 290-2324

SHELTIE puppies available ,�1boy 1 girl $400.00�health cert. 1stshots 267-8729

Announcement

WE Pay CA$H for GOLD and

SILVER No hotels, no waiting.603-279-0607, Thrifty Yankee,Rte. 25, Meredith, NH.

Auctions

NORTH Country Auctions, LLC-January 28st, 2012- 9am. Heavyequipment & general merchan-dise auction. To be held at ourauction barn located at: 438Plains Road, Tamworth, NH03886. We are now acceptingconsignments! Heavy equip-ment, trailers, auto’s, industrialtools, building supplies, boats,farm equipment, landscapingequipment, and more! Call ustoday for more information:(603)539-5322 Email:[email protected] us online @www.northcountry-auctions.comAuctioneer: Doug Ryan Lic#2739.

Autos

1987 Chevy Caprice: All the 1987Extras. Less than 40k originalmiles. NH State inpection August,2011. $2,000. 524-6099 after4PM.

1994 GMC Pickup extra cab, longbed, 100751 miles. Runs good.Inspected. Asking $2,000. Call491-6405

Autos

1999 Chevy Cavalier, 4 dr, 4 cylin-der, air, auto, CD, 94K mi., $2,495obo. 934-2221.

2001 Mercury Mountaineer SUV-AWD, Automatic, All power, powermoon roof, good tires, runs well.1 4 3 K m i l e s . $ 1 , 9 9 5 .603-930-5222

2003 Dodge SLT Pickup: CleanFlorida truck, no rust, 5-speed,nice interior, 121k highway miles.$3,995 firm. Call Phil, 393-7786.

2008 Toyota Tacoma accesscab, 4wd, TRD off-road pkg. 59kmiles, $20,500. (603)493-4994.

BUYING junk cars and trucksME & NH. Call for price. MartinTowing. (603)305-4504.

CASH paid for unwanted or junkcars and trucks. Same day servicepossible. 603-231-2859.

TOP DOLLAR PAID for junk cars& trucks. Available 7-days a week.P3�s Towing. 630-3606

TOP Dollar Paid- $250 and up forunwanted & junk vehicles. Call934-4813

BOATS

DOCKS for Rent: 2012 season,Lake Winnisquam Point. Parking,bathrooms, showers, launch onsite. 603-524-2222.

Business Opportunities

CURVES: Be in business foryourself, not by yourself! Curvesis an international franchise andwill provide the tools, training andsupport you need to succeed Beyour own boss and help womenget fit and healthy at the sametime! Call Brenda for more info.528-0808.

Child Care

FLEXIBLE hours, and a safe envi-ronment. Non smoking Belmonthome. References available.Please call Donna at 520-1821.

Employment Wanted

COMPASSIONATE LNA/CareGiver. 30 years experience. Greatreferences. Will travel, doovernight. 603-875-1232

For Rent

ALTON Housemate- Private suitew/use of common rooms in quietcountry setting. No drinking/Nosmoking. $450/Month includesutilities. 875-6875

APARTMENTS, mobile homes. Ifyou need a rental at a fair price,call DRM Corp. Over 40 years inrentals. We treat you better!524-0348 or visit M-W-F, 12-5, at373 Court Street, Laconia.

For Rent

BELMONT- 2 bedroom, 1 bathduplex. New carpet/paint.Washer/Dryer hookups, porch,deck. Private $850/Month.617-909-9892

BELMONT: 2 bedroom, 3rdfloor. Coin-op laundry andstorage space in basement.$235/week including heat,electric & hot water. 524-1234,www.whitemtrentals.com.

CENTER Harbor House- Onebedroom, year-round, propanecentral heat, tenant pays allutilities, tenant does all yardmaintenance. No pets/Smoking.credit report required, verified in-come, references. $400/Month,security. Call between 5PM-8PM603-253-6924.

East Tilton- Large 1 bedroom, in-cludes washer/dryer, dishwasher& electricity. No smoking/dogs.$800/Month. 524-7315

FRANKLIN: One bedroom 2ndfloor quiet area great for single orcouple. $500+Utilities Animals?934-1252

FURNISHED room with ownb a t h r o o m . $ 1 5 0 / w e e k .603-366-4468

GILFORD 3 bedroom condo,$1300/monthly. Parking, garagesavailable. Heated pool, tenniscourt. Close to shopping and lake.Boat slip available. Washer/Dryerhook up available. NO PETS. Ref-erences & security required.781-710-2208.

GILFORD house- Furnished orunfurnished, 4-bedroom, 2-cargarage, in-ground swimming pool,fenced yard. $1,700/Month +utilities. 455-9253

GILFORD, 2-Bedroom, 2-Bath,Balconies, no smoking/pets,$890/month plus utilities, Securitydepos i t and re ferences,603-455-6662

GILFORD: 1-2 bedroomapartments from $175/Weekincludes heat & utilities. Petsconsidered. Security/References.556-7098.

GILFORD: 1 BEDROOM WITHAMAZING VIEWS, includes heat,hot water, electric, cable.Dead-end location, quiet, 3 milesto downtown. No smoking/pets,$165/week. Sec. plus first week.455-8319

GILMANTON Iron Works Village.One bedroom apartment, secondfloor. No pets/smoking, includesbasic cable & utilities. References& security deposit required.$700/Month. 603-364-3434

LACONIA 1 Bedroom- Washer/dryer hookup, storage, no pets.Security Deposit & references.$600/month + utilities. 520-4353

LACONIA 2 BR Elm Street area,spacious, clean. first floor, porch,parking, washer/dryer hook ups.$825/mo. plus utilities Referencesa n d d e p o s i t r e q u i r e d .603-318-5931

LACONIA FIRST FLOOR Large 3-Bedroom 2-bath apartment.Storage, deck, parking, Nopets/No smokers, security depositand references required.$900/Month plus ut i l i t ies.875-2292

For Rent

LACONIA Mountain VIew apts.$300 off 1st month�s rent. 2BR 1bath, $700/mo. 2BR & 3BR town-houses, 1.5 bath and large decks.$775 & $850/mo. Quiet locationwith laundry and playgrounds. NoDogs. Office on site. 524-7185

LACONIA Open concept largeone bedroom, third floor, includesheat/ hot water, one parking spot,coin-op laundry, $675/ month. Nodogs, no smoking. Application,references, background check,security deposit, 387-4885.

LACONIA Province St. 4 bedroomapartment. Private parking,laundry, bright & clean, no pets.$1,000/Month + Ut i l i t ies.508-423-0479.

LACONIA Union Ave. 3 Bedroom,fresh paint, urethane hardwoodfloors, private entrance, on-siteplowed parking, private play-ground. Heat/ hot water incl. Nopets. $910 per month. 455-6115

LACONIA- 1-bedroom, 1-bath.Freshly painted, off street parking.$135/Week, hot water included.No pets/smoking. $500 deposit.524-4771

LACONIA- 3 bedroom clean,cozy cape near LRGH. Nosmokers/pets. For Sale Also.$950/Month. 528-3789

LACONIA- 3 bedroom house.$1,000/Month + utilities. Pets con-sidered, references & deposit.524-9665

LACONIA- BIg 1-bedroom closeto downtown. Includes plowing,2-car parking & washer/dryer.Plenty of closet space. 2nd floor.$200 hea t c red i t , nodogs/smoking. $170/Week +4-week security deposit. Credit &criminal background checkrequired. Leave message for Rob617-529-1838

LACONIA- Large, sunny, 1st floor.3 bedroom, hardwood floors,heat /hot water inc luded.$1,050/Month. Call 566-6815

LACONIA- Messer St. 3 Room 1bedroom with sun porch. 2ndfloor. $165/Week. Includesheat/electric. $500 security.524-7793

Laconia- Private 1 bedroom withheat, hot water, garage. Easywalk to town. $725/Month. Nopets. 603-455-0874

LACONIA-2 bedrooms for rent.Full house access. Off street park-ing. Rent negotiable $350-$400.581-4364

LACONIA-DUPLEX 2 bedroom 1bath, washer/dryer hookups,garage. $900/month, heatincluded. References & securitydeposit. No pets or smokers.524-8886

LACONIA/LAKEPORT Condo:2-bedroom, 2-bath. $900/Month,heat & hot water included. Call603-235-6901.

LACONIA: 1 & 2 bedroom apt.W/D hookups, off-street parking,$600-$650 per month +utilities.556-3146.

LACONIA: Gilbert Apartments.Call for available apartments.524-4428

Page 17: The Laconia Daily Sun, January 6, 2012

THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Friday, January 6, 2012— Page 17

17

Town of GilfordSeasonal Truck Driver

$13.50 per hour

The Department of Public Works is acceptingapplications for a seasonal truck driver. Applicantmust be eighteen (18) years of age or older, possess avalid CDL driver’s license and be capable of moderatelifting and outdoor working conditions. This is aseasonal F/T position 7:00-3:30 M-F. Applications areavailable at the Department of Public Works,55 Cherry Valley Road, Gilford, between the hours of8:00 AM - 5:00 PM, M - F.

Applications will be taken until position is filled.EOE

Town of GilfordSeasonal “On Call” Laborer

$8.25 per hour

The Department of Public Works is acceptingapplications for a seasonal “on call” laborer. Applicantmust be eighteen (18) years of age or older and possessa valid driver’s license. Duties will include plowing,manual labor and operating equipment. Applicationsare available at the Department of Public Works,55 Cherry Valley Road Gilford between the hours of8:00 AM - 5:00 PM, M-F.

Applications will be taken until position is filled.EOE

ORCHARD HILL IIRandlett St., Belmont, NH

Now accepting applicationsIMMEDIATE OPENINGS AVAILABLE FOR2 BEDROOM FULL MARKET RENT UNIT

(Section 8 Vouchers Welcome)This is a federally assisted property featuring 32one and two bedroom ground level apartments.Community features on-site laundry a furnishedrecreation room, heat and hot water is included.

Please call the Laconia Housing Authority at524-2112/TDD; 524-2112

with any questions, or visit our office at25 Union Ave. Laconia, NH

• Applications are considered by income criteria • USDA/RD income restrictions apply • Tenant rents are based on income.

The Laconia Housing Authority does not discriminateon the basis of sexual orientation, race, creed, color,

sex, marital status, age, disability or handicap.

For Rent

LACONIA: 2 bedroom, 2ndfloor in duplex bui lding.$235/week including heat,electric & hot water, 524-1234www.whitemtrentals.com.

LACONIA: Prime 2-bedroom apt.on Gale Avenue. Walk to townand beaches. Very large rooms.Beautiful hardwood floors, loadsof closets. Private porch and ga-rage. $1,000/month, includesheat and hot water. 524-3892 or630-4771.

LACONIA: 1-bedroom for rent,heat/HW/electric included, nosmoking, no pets, securitydeposit required. $750/month.528-1685.

LACONIA : LARGE Sunny, up-dated first floor, 4 bdrm apt.H/HW included. 8 rooms in all,sunroom, laundry rm, deck, niceyard: $1,199/month. 566-6815

LACONIA: Sunny, smal l2-bedroom, 2nd f loor nosmoking/dogs. $200 per week.inc ludes heat /hot water .455-5569.

Lakeport- Spacious 9 room 2 bed-room 2 bath. Includes 3 seasonporch. Close to school, park &beach. Includes Heat/Hot water &washer/dryer. $1,350/Month +security. 528-3840

MEREDITH One bedroomapartment on second floor. 16X22ft. deck, Open concept, cathedralceiling, very elegant and rustic.Plowing, parking, dumpster &utilities included, $850/month.455-5660

M E R E D I T H - J E N N E S Hill1-bedroom 1-bath house for rent.$625/Month + utilities. 1 Monthsecurity deposit. AvailableJanuary 1st. 279-5674

MEREDITH: Beautiful downtownapartment. 2-bedroom, 3-bath,private parking. $1,250/month.491-5983.

NORTHFIELD: 2 bedroom trailerin small park with coin-op laundryon site, $225/week including heat,electric & hot water, 524-1234,www.whitemtrentals.com.

NORTHFIELD: 2 bedroom, 1stf loor, includes basement,$210/week including heat, electric& hot water, 524-1234,www.whitemtrentals.com.

For Rent

Tilton Downtown- 2 bedroomapartment. $700/Month, Heat &Hot water included. 781-315-2358

TILTON- TWO CLEAN,UPDATED one bedrooms.Heat/Hot Water included, nod o g s . $ 6 4 0 - $ 6 6 0 / M o n t h .603-393-9693 or 916-214-7733.

WINNISQUAM: Small efficiencyand a cottage including heat, hotwater, l ights and cable.$150-$175 per week. $400deposit. No pets. 387-3864.

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

For Rent-Commercial

LACONIA Prime Location, 1200sq. ft., with heated garage show-room/ office, $650/ month plusutilities, additional space avail-able. 455-6662.

OFFICE/RETAIL Space for Rent:450 Sq.Ft. Great front buildingexposure! $850 per month.Everything included. Busy Route3, 539 Laconia Road, Tilton. Call630-2332.

For Sale

14 ” -15” tires & 15 ” aluminumrims. $30 & up. (603) 539-5194

18 ft. F/G boat, motor, trailer.Never in salt water. $1,200.(603) 539-5194

90-GALLON Marine Fish Tank:Includes light, skimmer, pumps,live rock and fish! $800.968-7941 or 968-3540.

A LACONIA Indoor Moving Sale-Saturday, 12-3pm. 79-A SummerSt. Dryer, new washer, sleepersofa, TV�s & miscellaneous.

AMAZING! Beautiful pillowtop ma-tress sets, twin $169, full or queen$249, king $399. See AD under“Furniture”.

FREE- BODY by Jake Ab

Scissor. Good condition.

677-6528

For Sale

BEDROOM-SOLID CherrywoodSleigh bed. Dresser, mirror, chest,night stand. New! Cost $2,200 sell$895. 235-1773

CUSTOM Glazed KitchenCabinets. Solid maple, never in-stalled. Cost $6,000 sacrifice$1,595. 833-8278

FOUR BF GOODRICH All terraintires- 285 R18-65. $125 or bestoffer. 455-0523

Gilford Appliance/Household itemSale! 30 years of accumulation!Refrigerator, gas stove, micro-wave, gas dryer, all in good work-ing order. Rocking chair, exercizebike, many crafting books, andmuch more! Everything must go!Call 764-1035 for appointment

HOLIDAY SPECIAL: GREENFIREWOOD, cut, not split$130/cord, cut & split $175/cord.Also, logging, landclearing & treework (All phases). 393-8416.

Salon Dryer & hydrolic chair, (2)sink w/wall cabinet, station unit,desk, etc. Closing shop. BestOffer! 524-3613

HIGHEST PRICESPAID!

NO ONE PAYSMORE!

Gold, (scrap rings,jewelry, etc.) Silver,(coins, flatware, etc. )

Antiques & UnusualItems

Call 279-3087 or Stop In at Waukewan Antiques55 Main St. Meredith

Furniture

AMAZING! Beautiful Queen or Full-sizemattress set. Luxury FirmEuropean Pil low-top style.Fabulous back & hip support.Factory sealed - new 10-Yr.warranty. Cost $1095, sell $249.Can deliver 603-305-9763.

Free

FREE Pickup for your unwanted,useful item garages, automobiles,etc. estates cleaned out and yard-sale items. (603)930-5222.

Free

T&B Appliance Removal. Appli-ances & AC’s removed free ofcharge if outside. Please call(603)986-5506.

Heavy Equipment

***NEED CASH***HEAVY EQUIPMENT WANTED

Cat, Komatsu, etc. UniversalMachinery will buy today! CallNH office at (781)439-6000, askfor Leo Blais.

Help Wanted

CARE AND COMFORT

NURSING

Immediate opening for Full TimeMale LPN or RN for adolesentmale. Also looking for LNA!s withat least two years experience.Call 528-5020 or fax resume to528-0352.

Help Wanted

Lakes RegionAnswering Service

TelephoneOperator Position

Looking for enthusiastic person for part-time third

shift. Must have good typingskills and good

customer service skills.

Please contact Mel at524-0110

NowHiring

Part Time Front DeskAttendant With ExcellentCustomer Service Skills!Nights and Weekends a

Must.Please Apply In Person

177 Mentor Ave.

Laconia, NH 03246

NowHiring

Part-Time Night Security

Requires

Light Maintenance Duty

Please Apply In Person

177 Mentor Ave.

Laconia, NH 03246

Instruction

PIANO TUNING- Goodwin Piano,experienced tuner/pianist. Call603-366-1904

Motorcycles

Buy • Sell • Tradewww.motoworks.biz

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

Real Estate

FOR Sale By Owner: 2-Bedroomhouse, 1-1/4 bath. 180 MechanicStreet, Laconia. 524-8142.

Services

$20 Traditional

Japanese Bodywork

Treatments

Please come and enjoy thetherapeutic and relaxingbenefits of traditional Japanesebody work known as Shiatsu.Each treatment is performedfully clothed on a comfortablefloor mat and takes about anhour . Treatments areperformed at the SachemShiatsu office at the FitnessEdge building in Meredith.Please call Sensei Jones at603-524-4780 to make an ap-pointment.

Services

PIPER ROOFINGQuality Work

Reasonable Rates

Free EstimatesMetal Roofs • Shingle Roofs

Our CustomersDon�t get Soaked!

528-3531Major credit cards accepted

HANDYMAN

SERVICES

Small Jobs AreMy Speciality

Rick Drouin

520-5642 or 744-6277

M.A. SMITH ELECTRIC: Qualitywork for any size electrical job. Li-censed-Insured, Free estimates/603-455-5607

Meridian Stretching

Open your body for optimumhealth with this Japanese-styleyoga using the 12-mainmeridians used in Acupunc-ture. Gentle, joint-openingexercises plus meridian stretchsequence following the breath.One hour class $5, Thursdaysat 11:00 in Gilford. Learn a15-minute sequence you cando at home. Call Heidi Eber-hardt, Licensed Acupuncturistat 617-894-0178, for moreinformation and to make anappointment.

SAVE 30% on Interior Painting.Insured, references. Call Troy atTurcotte Painting 455-9179

Page 18: The Laconia Daily Sun, January 6, 2012

Page 18 — THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Friday, January 6, 2012

18

©2010 Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. Coldwell Banker is a registered trademark licensed to Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. An Equal Opportunity Employer. Owned and operated by NRT, LLC

www.NewEnglandMoves.com

Center Harbor Office 32 Whittier Hwy

Center Harbor, NH 03226 (603) 253-4345

Laconia Office 348 Court St

Laconia, NH 03246 (603) 524-2255

Gilford $1,300,000 Sunny, spacious, open contemporary w/ 1st floor MBR on a beautifully landscaped lot &

145’ of frontage on Winnipesaukee. #4087231 Susan Bradley 581-2810

Gilford $625,000 Pristine Historic home w/ gorgeous views. Completely renovated but maintained the

original features & charm. #4117826 Charlene Reinauer 581-2885

Laconia $490,000 Custom built home offering HW floors,

gourmet kitchen, 1st for MBR, fireproof room, 3 car garage, in-ground pool and more.

#4115523 Shelly Brewer 581-2879

Gilmanton $214,000 Lovely country Cape in a quiet setting.

Fieldstone fireplace, spacious tiled kitchen, 1st floor BR w/ full bath & finished lower level.

#4113395 Judy McShane 581-2800

Sandwich - $329,000 Set back off the road for nice views & privacy. 10+ac w/direct access to snowmobile trails.

Great house w/lots of living space. #4115342 Ellen Mulligan: 603-253-4345

Alton $269,000 Great open concept home w/ loads of room for everyone. Large lot in a country setting but minutes to Winnipesaukee. #4049243

Judy McShane 581-2800

Alexandria - $229,900 The Ledges at Newfound offers 4 seasons of

fun. Day dock, beach, clubhouse, pool & tennis. Lake views from unit. #4115339 Kath Blake: 603-253-4345

Meredith $205,000 Ultimate in privacy w/ this cozy lakefront

cottage. Views, sandy beach & 104’ of frontage. Convenient to shops & restaurants.

#4095651 Judy McShane 581-2800

Belmont - $164,500 2009 Windsor modular home on 1.83 acres.

Home is plumbed for radiant heat, just needs to be connected. #4116877

Cami Navoy: 603-253-4345

E-mail: [email protected] 61 Liscomb Circle, Gilford, NH 03249

VISIT OUR NEW WEBSITE AT: www.cumminsre.com

524-6565 Fax: 524-6810

NICELY SITUATED

AVAILABLE NOW!

A Historic Riverfront Mill..Restored In 2008…Stunning 1 Bedroom 1.5 Bath W/loft Factory Condo. Charming As Can Be..Granite Counter Tops, Hardwood Floors, Exposed Brick And Stone, Soaring Ceilings, Covered Parking, Workout Room, And All Along The The Riverwalk. $119,000

Now.. $140,000 …Very Nice 2+ Bedroom 1.5 Bath Belmont Ranch With Attached 1 Car Garage. Open Concept Living, 1 Garden Shed And 1 Workshop Shed..Living Rm W/sliders To Private Patio..Available Now!!

Tree Lined Lakeport Neighborhood Is Where You’ll Find This Sweet New England Home. Hardwood Floors And Nooks & Crannies!! 3 Bedrooms, 2 Full Baths, Formal Dining, Big Eat In Kitchen, Pantry And Oversized Garden Shed. Great Price!! $124,900

Samoset..On Winnipesaukee!! With A Great Amenity Package!! Deeded Beach, A Free Game Of Tennis, A Swim In The Pool, Or Play Cards At The Clubhouse!!850’ On The “Big Lake”! Condo Offers 2 Bedrms, Sleeping Loft, 2 Baths, Fireplaced Lr, Heated Screen Porch And Galley Kitchen… $219,900

Nice Lake Opechee Waterview From Your Front Porch..You’ll Appreciate The Great Condition This Charming House Is In..Natural Woodowrk, Hardwood Floors, Fireplaced Den, 3 Big Bedrooms And 1.5 Baths. Beautiful In Ground Pool With Service Cabana..Asking $230,000

CHARMING AS CAN BE

Wonderful Country Contemporary Plus A 30x50 Heated Garage W/ 12’ Doors And Water. Meticulous 2-3 Bedrm 2 Bath Home W/ Soaring Sap Redwood Ceilings. Great Condition Inside And Out!! Nicely Situated On 1.86 Acres. $189,500

GREAT CONDITION

GREAT PRICE

GREAT PACKAGE

CATES MOBILE HOME PARK …With A Row To Lake Winnisquam Boatslip Rental, When Available. Very Nice 2004 2 Bedroom, 2 Bath Home In A Nice 55+ Yr Old Park. Fully Appl’d And Air Conditioned..Deck And Garden Shed. Cats..No Dog s Please… $36,000

Services

Snowmobiles

2002 Arctic Cat ZL 600 EFIw/trailer. 1,770 miles, $3,400 orBRO. Call 393-3635-LeaveMessage

Storage Space

GILFORD garage for rent nearAirport. One large lighted garage.$170 monthly. 781-710-2208.

A $12,250 award to The Winnipesaukee Playhouse from the WLNH Children’s Auction will be used for scholarships for children to attend classes, vacation and summer camps, internships for local teens and community outreach. From left to right are Ed Darling, Children’s Auction committee member; Johanna Halperin, managing director, The Winnipesaukee Playhouse; Kate Wisnioski, education direc-tor, The Winnipesaukee Playhouse; Molly King, WLNH program director. (Courtesy photo)

LACONIA — The Winnipesaukee Playhouse has a lot to celebrate this New Year. January marks the one year anniversary of the expanded educational programs for ages pre-K through adult, and the new semester is kicking off on January 9 with classes and workshops for adults, teens and children in acting, movement, directing, puppetry, stage combat, Shakespeare, musical theatre and more.

Thanks to a generous grant from the WLNH Chil-dren’s auction, the Playhouse will be able to offer partial and full scholarships to many of its educa-tional programs. The $12,250 award to The Winni-pesaukee Playhouse will be used for scholarships for children to attend classes, vacation and summer camps, internships for local teens, community out-reach and more.Kate Wisnioski, Playhouse Educa-tion Director says “We are incredibly excited by the opportunities provided us by the Children’s Auction funds. Their generosity will open the Playhouse pro-grams to a new group of Lakes Region youth.”

The 2011 WLNH Children’s Auction raised over $331,000 for Lakes Region non-profits that provide ser-vices to children. Says WLNH Program Director Molly King, “We were excited this year to not only provide the children of the Lakes Region with the necessities – food, coats, hats – but to expand our outreach to enrichment opportunities such as those the Playhouse provides.”

To find out more about the Playhouse’s Educa-tional Program check out www.WinniPlayhouse.org. For more information on scholarship opportunities e-mail [email protected] or call 366-7377.

Winni Playhouse offers scholarships thanks to WLNH auction donation

LACONIA — A free Community Emer-gency Response Class will be offered at the Laconia High School beginning Tuesday, January 24 and running through March 20.

The course, which will be taught by local first responders and experts from the field who serve as guest instructors. Topics to be covered include Disaster Preparedness,

Fire Safety, Disaster Psychology, Safety Strategies Involved in a Terror Attack, Incident Command Systems, Light Search and Rescue and First Aid/CPR.

Upon successful completion of the course, participants are eligible to apply for mem-bership in the Lakes Region Community Emergency Response Team (LR-CERT).

Free community emergency response class begins on January 24LR-CERT is sponsored by the Lakes Region Partnership for Public Health and serves nine local communities from Sandwich to Alton. Members of LR-CERT will receive additional monthly trainings which sup-port the first responders and emergency preparation education.

see next page

Page 19: The Laconia Daily Sun, January 6, 2012

THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Friday, January 6, 2012 — Page 19

19

We don’t just list your property…we sell it!! We don’t just list your property…we sell it!! We don’t just list your property…we sell it!!

www.baysidenh.net

PRICED TO SELL AT $64,900. 2 unit, 6 BR home has a large 2-car garage/barn overlooking 100+ feet of frontage on the picturesque Squam River. Near stores and schools, here’s your winter project - to update and remodel into a single family home or keep as two unit.

$64,900 Dennis Potter 731-3551

4-SEASON GETAWAY. Quaint 3 BR cottage at Rumney Bible Conference is on 1/3 +- acre with expansion options and access to all their amenities - dining hall, store, playground, tennis, swimming, and so much more. In a gorgeous setting for years of enjoyment.

$83,900 Bronwen Donnelly 630-2776

$140,000 BELOW ASSESSED VALUE. Immaculate 3 BR home on a 1/2 acre lot with your own brook & access to 5 beaches and a boat launch on Hills Pond and Sunset Lake. Great one level layout, walkout basement, and a private back deck.

$139,900 Scott Knowles 455-7751

WINDERMERE RIDGE. One of Laconia’s premiere neighborhoods with 15 quality homes already built. 2+ acre lots, some with tremendous views, others give you wooded privacy. Community water, sidewalks, bordering a state forest with access to walking, skiing and hiking trails.

$89,900 - $109,900 Chris Kelly 677-2182

208 DW Highway, Meredith, NH 603-279-0079

423 Main Street, Laconia, NH 603-527-8200

FANTASTIC INCOME in this solid investment property. 2,500 sq.ft. convenience store plus 3 apartments. Ideal downtown location across from the Opechee Inn and Spa overlooking the lake. Near restaurants, retail/office, residential, churches, schools, and the town beach.

$359,900 Bob Gunter 387-8664

WINNIPESAUKEE ACCESS. 3 BR home steps away from a sandy beach and all the amenities that Balmoral has to offer. Fieldstone wall/hearth w/propane stove, lots of light, large deck, filtered lake views, master w/balcony, & plenty of storage. New furnace, oil tank, roof & generator.

$219,000 Rob Wichland 387-7069

Office (603) 267-8182

Email: [email protected]

Pine Gardens Manufactured Homes Sales & Park

Park Rent - $390/Month Includes Water & Sewer

Under New Ownership Under New Ownership Under New Ownership Lowest Prices

Around!

A Commendation for his support of law enforcement was given to Executive Councilor Burton at the joint Coos and Grafton County Chief’s Law Enforcement meeting that was hosted by Director Donald Vittum of the NH Police Standards & Training Council at the Gregg Public Safety Academy in Littleton. Shown, left to right, are Doug Dutile, Grafton County Sheriff, Gerald Marcou, Coos County Sheriff, Executive Councilor Raymond S. Burton, Todd Landry, NH State Police Lieutenant Troop-F. (Courtesy photo)

Councilor Ray Burton commended for support of law enforcement

GILFORD — The Belmont-Gilford hockey team will be having a 50/50 Night at Patricks Pub in Gilford from 5-9 p.m. on Sunday, January 8.

Half of the proceeds from customers who mention that they are there to support the Belmont-Gilford hockey team will go to the team.

Fundraiser for Gilford-Belmont hockey team at Patrick’s Pub Sunday

Those interested should call Kathleen Merriam at the Lakes Region Partnership for Public Health, 528-2145 x 1802, or email to [email protected]. Appli-cations will be accepted no later than January 19. To learn more about CERT visit http://www.citizencorps.gov/cert/

from preceding page

Organic gardening series opens with workshop on soil health on Tuesday

LACONIA — UNH Cooperative Extension, Belknap County will be holding a workshop on Soil Health on Tuesday, January 10 from 1-3 p.m. at the Extension Office in Laconia.

This workshop is the first in a four part series on Organic Growing. Kelly McAdam, Agriculture Educator for Belknap County, will cover the basics of soil science, and how understanding the physical, biological, and chemical makeup of the soil will help you grow better crops with minimal environmen-tal impact on a farm or in the backyard.

The cost of a single workshop is $5, and registration is requested prior to the session.

Each Tuesday in January, another session in this series will be held. On

January 17, Becky Sideman, UNHCE Specialist in Sustainable Horticulture will cover Green Alternatives to Pesti-cides. On January 24, Gwenael Engel-skirchen of High Mowing Seeds will present the new seeds that are avail-able in 2012 in the organic seed indus-try. Finally, on January 31, Victoria Smith, agriculture inspector from NH Department of Agriculture, Markets, and Food will go over the organic cer-tification process in New Hampshire.

The cost to attend all four workshops is $12. For more information or to print a registration form please go to www.extension.unh.edu or call 527-5475. People can also e-mail Kelly McAdam, Agriculture Educator for Belknap County at [email protected].

MEREDITH — A community out-reach project designed to increase awareness about fraudulent scams and consumer rights developed by Alex Samuel and Kimberly Reeve, UNH third year law students, will be presented at the Inter-Lakes Senior Center on Wednesday, January 11 at 1 p.m.

A lunch prior to the presentation will be served in the Senior Center at noon. The cost for the lunch is $2 for those 60 years of age and over and $6 for those under 60. There is no fee for the presentation.

Call 279-5631 for reservations or information.

Scams & consumer rights seminar next Wednesday at Inter-Lakes Senior Center

Page 20: The Laconia Daily Sun, January 6, 2012

Page 20 — THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Friday, January 6, 2012

20

Showroom Hours: Mon., Tues., Wed. & Fri. 8:00-7:00pm Thurs. 8:00-8:00pm • Sat. 8:00-5:00pm

623 Union Avenue, Laconia, NH 603-524-0770 or 1-800-226-8467

We’re Always Open At CANTINS.COM

Disclaimer: Offers subject to change without notice. Photos for illustration purposes only. All p ayments subject to credit approval. Silverado and Sonic are 72 months @ 3.9APR with $3,000 cash or trade equity downpayment. Cruze is GM Financia l lease for 39 months. Equinox is Ally lease for 39 months. Volt is Ally lease for 36 months. All leases are 12,000 miles per year w ith $3,000 cash or trade equity due at lease signing. Trade-in bonus cash: Must trade 1999 or newer vehicle. Owner loyalty: Must own 1999 or new GM vehicle (excluding Saab). Not responsible for typographical errors. Valid through 1/31/12.

Sales Department Now Located In Our Certified Used Vehicle Center.

ALL DEPARTMENTS 100% OPEN DURING

CONSTRUCTION.

When other dealers can’t

... Cantin can!

MSRP $22,945 Cantin Discount -727

Mfr. Rebate -3,505 Trade-In Bonus Cash -1,000

Owner Loyalty Rebate -1,000 Cash or Trade Equity Down -3,000

Drive Home Today for Just $ 1 3 , 7 1 3 $ 1 3 , 7 1 3

BRAND NEW 2011 SILVERADO REG. CAB 2011 SILVERADO REG. CAB

Auto, A/C, 4.3 V6, Locking Diff. • #10547

MSRP $16,765 Cantin Discount -521

Owner Loyalty Rebate -250 Cash or Trade Equity Down -3,000

Drive Home Today for Just $ 1 2 , 9 9 4 $ 1 2 , 9 9 4 or Just

$ 205/mo*

BRAND NEW 2012 SONIC LT 2012 SONIC LT

Auto, A/C, P/W, P/L, C/D, XM Radio • #12122

MSRP $18,740 Cantin Discount -480

Owner Loyalty Rebate -500 Cash or Trade Equity Down -3,000

Drive Home Today for Just $ 1 4 , 7 6 0 $ 1 4 , 7 6 0

or Just $ 156/mo*

BRAND NEW 2012 CRUZE LS 2012 CRUZE LS

Auto, A/C, P/W, P/L, Bluetooth, C/D, XM Radio • #12045

Lowest Prices Guaranteed ... Lowest Prices Guaranteed ... Lowest Prices Guaranteed ...

MSRP $26,010 Cantin Discount -800

Owner Loyalty Rebate -250 Cash or Trade Equity Down -3,000

Drive Home Today for Just $ 2 1 , 9 6 0 $ 2 1 , 9 6 0 or Just

$ 253/mo*

BRAND NEW 2012 EQUINOX AWD LS 2012 EQUINOX AWD LS

4-Cylinder, Auto, A/C, Alloys, C/D, P/W, P/L • #12126

MSRP $42,085 Cantin Discount -1,492

Owner Loyalty Rebate -250 Cash or Trade Equity Down -3,000

Plus Volt Qualifies for A $7,500 Federal Tax Credit! Drive Home Today for Just

$ 3 7 , 3 4 3 $ 3 7 , 3 4 3 or Just

$ 372/mo*

BRAND NEW 2012 VOLT 2012 VOLT

Extended Range Plug-In ... Stop In for A Test Drive! • #12065

MSRP $33,345 Cantin Discount -2,332

Mfr. Rebate -4,005 Trade-In Bonus Cash -1,000

Owner Loyalty Rebate -1,000 Cash or Trade Equity Down -3,000

Drive Home Today for Just $ 2 2 , 0 0 8 $ 2 2 , 0 0 8

or Just $ 346/mo*

BRAND NEW 2011 SILVERADO EXT. CAB 4WD 2011 SILVERADO EXT. CAB 4WD

LS Pkg., Auto, A/C, H/D Trailering, Locking Diff. • #11408S

in Writing! in Writing! 35

MPG!

35 MPG!

Up to 92 MPG!

City

or Just $ 216/mo*

29 MPG!