Business is brewing at Shapleigh shop

Transcription

Business is brewing at Shapleigh shop
VOLUME 13, ISSUE 4 PO Box 75, North Waterboro, ME 04061 • 247-0273 • [email protected]
FRIDAY, JANUARY 30, 2015
FREE
www.waterbororeporter.com
LOCALLY OWNED & OPERATED
Dollar
General
application
approved
Business is brewing
at Shapleigh shop
By Shelley Burbank
[email protected]
The Brew Shoppe, which is
part of One Earth Natural Food
Store in Shapleigh, has recently expanded due to local interest
in homebrewing, organic and
Maine-based wines and beers,
and the enthusiasm of shop’s
manager-operator, Tim Aballo.
“We started out in a little corner
space in the store, and in December we moved here into the old
One Earth space,” Aballo said
while standing behind the counter in the well-stocked, well-organized shop.
The Brew Shoppe has been
growing since its inception as just
one of many sectional offerings of
One Earth which has been selling
organic and health foods, bulk
foods, natural medicinal products, natural cleaning and bodycare items, books and more in
Shapleigh since 2005. Constantly
looking to evolve, One Earth began selling homebrew supplies
and a carefully-curated selection
of beers and wines in the shop in
2011, first in a corner of the store
and then in a small, separate room
off the main floor. When One
Earth moved into a larger building
on the property – a former barn
which now also houses the store’s
community learning space, The
Mind-Body Studio – the former
retail space became available.
It was time for The Brew
Shoppe to expand, thought Diane and Alyssa Laitres, the mother-daughter owners of One Earth
who have seen their store flourish
and grow over the years.
Luckily, Alyssa’s fiance, Tim
Aballo, who had worked 15 years
as an auto mechanic in Saco and
was tired of the long commute,
(Continued on page 2)
Life at the station
By Brigit McCallum
[email protected]
A resident of Dover, New
Hampshire, John Malia is nearing
the end of living and working for
four years at the Waterboro Fire
Department. A student enrolled in
Southern Maine Community College’s (SMCC) 27-year-old livein paramedicine program, Malia
graduates in May. He is already a
graduate of SMCC’s fire science
program. During his four years in
Waterboro, he has lived for three
years at Central Fire Station and
one at South Station.
Waterboro Fire Department
(WFD) is one of 17 departments
in New Hampshire and Maine
that participate in training 80
SMCC live-in fire science and
paramedicine students. In his first
year in Waterboro, Fire Chief
Matt Bors brought construction
costs for housing students to the
Town Meeting for a vote. There
are five slots available for students at WFD including one twobed male room and one two-bed
female room at Central, and one
bed at South Station. Deputy
Chief Lisa Bennett coordinates
the live-in program, and Captain
Dan Roy is the student advisor.
Each student is assigned to an engine company and participates as
a member of that company.
When asked how he came to
decide on a career in firefighting,
Malia said, “I’m first generation.
No one else in my family has
been a firefighter. I was a mediocre student in high school until
I got involved with a one-year
program at the Dover Fire Department, and I was hooked! My
grades skyrocketed, and I completed Firefighter 1 and 2 and was
certified to fight interior fires by
graduation. The Dover folks really mentored me, and I decided
on SMCC and entered their livein draft in May 2011, was drafted
by Waterboro, and started in August.”
Malia and all the other members of his “draft class” started
with a fire academy in Falmouth
and Yarmouth led by members of
all participating departments, and
he spent the next two years taking
fire science classes at SMCC and
documenting a minimum of 40
hours a week of work at WFD. “I
actually worked quite a bit more
than that most weeks,” he added. The work at WFD counted
as an elective in his program. At
the completion of that program,
Malia entered the paramedicine
program.
Malia and Deputy Chief Bennett meet three times a semester
to set and assess progress toward
goals that will result in his being
a fully-trained firefighter. He and
the other students provide increased value to the department
as they progress. “When I started
I was 18, and now I’m 22. When
I started and we got a call, I was
like a puppy, all excited to go on a
call. Now I am more responsible.
I ask what is the address, fire or
medical, I paint a picture of what
is needed in my head, make a diagnosis but keep an open mind. I
By Brigit McCallum
[email protected]
Tim Aballo, homebrew enthusiast and shop manager, stands in front of
the “Wall of Beer” in The Brew Shoppe of One Earth Natural Foods in
Shapleigh. The shop recently expanded into a larger space and offers
homebrewing supplies, better beers, and organic and sustainable wines. PHOTO BY SHELLEY BURBANK
Jon Malia lives at the Waterboro Fire Station as part of SMCC’s live-in
paramedicine program. PHOTO BY BRIGIT MCCALLUM
bring my training, education and
experience to bear. There are so
many kinds of calls, thousands
a year, and they can be a search,
structure fire, motor vehicle incident, medical, a dog in the lake.
The scope of possibilities is so
wide.”
Malia mentioned that it is not
common for a student to stay in
one department all four years.
“It has been so valuable to me to
be in a department that does not
have a lot of full-time staff. I get
to really work as a member of my
company here. One night my former roommate, Erik Jackson, and
I were together on a call to an interior fire on New Dam Road. The
rest of the team was on a medical call, so we were able to get
the apparatus to the fire quickly
and went into action as others arrived on the scene. We got there,
he hitched up the hose to the
(Continued on page 2)
The Waterboro Planning
Board approved the Dollar General site plan application on
Wednesday, Jan. 21 at their regular meeting, despite several planning board member resignations
and lack of an entrance permit
from Public Works Director Doug
Foglio. Kurt Clason chaired the
meeting, following the resignation of Chair Tim Neil who had
resigned on Jan. 15.
The Jan. 21 meeting followed
a previous week’s workshop between the Planning Board, Dollar
General representatives, Foglio
and Fire Chief Matt Bors, both
of whom had expressed concerns
with the original site plan from
the start of the application process
in September of 2014.
Bors’ main concerns related to
site access by fire fighting apparatus and access to water for fire
suppression. When assured that
Dollar General’s insurer would
write in sufficient clauses to cover this, Bors agreed to drop his
objections to the current site plan.
Foglio’s involvement in the
site plan approval process was
based on a section of the existing
Town of Waterboro Highway Entrance Ordinance, which calls on
him as Director of Public Works
to determine that the design, location and construction of such
driveways, entrances, or approaches adequately protect and
promote the safety of the traveling public. The Entrance Ordinance gives the Director of Public
Works final say in granting an entrance permit, without which the
Code Enforcement Officer cannot
grant a building permit.
When Foglio offered what
he considered effective ways to
manage traffic on Chadbourne
Ridge Road, especially by large
semi-trailer delivery trucks, the
Dollar General representative
stated that the company had met
minimum standards. Dollar General Project Manager Bob Gage
said that to comply with either of
Foglio’s suggestions, to build a
separate truck entrance on Route
5 or move the current entrance on
Chadbourne Ridge Road farther
back from Route 5, which would
necessitate buying more land,
would not be financially feasible
for the company. He stated, “We
feel we are meeting all the requirements and exceeding some
with the plan we have presented
to you.” Foglio disagreed and
(Continued on page 3)
REPORTER
PAGE 2 Friday, January 30, 2015
SMHC BIRTH ANNOUNCEMENTS
Zane Patrick Berry was born
on Nov. 29, 2014 to Corey and
Kaleigh Perry of Hollis. Maternal grandparent is Mike Perry of
Portland. Paternal grandparents
are Jeff and Janice Berry of Waterboro.
David Mathieu Hall was born
on Dec. 4, 2014 to Shawn and
Kimberly (Mathieu) Hall of Ly-
man. Maternal grandparents are
Ronald and Monica Romo of
Ewa Beach, Hawaii, and Kevin
and Karen Mathieu of Biddeford.
Paternal grandparents are Kevin
and Linda Hall of Biddeford.
Benjamin Fracassi Nieves was
born on Dec. 5, 2014 to Ernesto
Nieves Jr. and Ashley Jensen of
Sanford. Maternal grandparents
are Fracassi of Naples and Peter and Gwen Jensen of Cornish.
Paternal grandparents are Ernesto Nieves Sr. and Lori Nieves of
Waterboro.
Jaxson Levi Rich was born on
Dec. 5, 2014 to Cody Rich and
Brittany Guertin of Biddeford.
Maternal grandparents are Gary
and Janice Guertin of Kennebunk.
Paternal grandparents are Wayne
and Sandy Atwood of Baldwin.
Nora Kathryn Knowles was
born on Dec. 5, 2014 to James
Knowles and Kelli Karish of
North
Waterboro.
Maternal
grandparents are Win and Nancy
Karish of Nashua, N.H. Paternal
grandparents are James and Kathryn Knowles of Center Conway,
Nwe Hampshire.
Bennett Tyson Mitchell was
born on Dec. 9, 2014 to Jess and
Shawna (Marshall) Mitchell of
Wells. Maternal grandparents are
Stephen and Cindy Marshall of
Shapleigh. Paternal grandparents
are Bobby and Cindy Mitchell of
Wells.
BREW SHOPPE
Week” on the top shelf.
For wine lovers, a selection of
organic, sustainable and Mainemade wines are offered. Meads
and hard cider are available, as
well, from nearby producers. In
fact, local is very important to
The Brew Shoppe.
“We really try to bring in as
much local as possible,” said Alyssa. The shop carries Lyman’s
Funky Bow beer as well as those
of Maine-based brewers Allagash, Shipyard, Geary’s and Gritty’s. For Maine-sourced wines,
customers can choose from
Younity, Blacksmith’s, and Bartlett as well as mead from Portland
Meadworks and cider from Ricker Hill Orchards and Urban Farm
Fermentory which also supplies
kombucha to the natural food
store.
The Brew Shoppe also offers
a section called “Value Wines”
which are good-quality wines that
Laitres and Aballo have been able
to bring in at a discount--a good
way to try better wines at a lower
price-point.
And they aren’t finished yet.
The shop is finding more to offer
all the time. Future plans for the
shop include beer tastings, beginner classes in home brewing, and
beer and wine-themed gift items.
They already synchronize their
offerings with the Springvale
Public House (owned by Adam
Laitres and partner, Jessica Proto), coordinating tap and bottled
beers for the week. “We started
to learn that we had quite a community of homebrewers here,”
said Alyssa who noted that people in the area are interested in
do-it-yourself activities and in the
trendy fermented-foods movement in nearby Portland.
Alyssa and Diane have always
been on the cutting edge, it seems.
When they looked into opening a
natural food store in rural Shapleigh, the banks were skeptical
about the viability of that market
in the area. Local people were enthusiastic, however, and One Earth
soon proved the bankers wrong.
In just two years the Laitreses had
a loyal customer base, and Alyssa and Diane were able to buy
the property at 191 Emery Mills
Road which, according to Diane,
has been a mercantile space since
the mid-1800s. Continuing to expand opportunities for themselves
and their customers, they opened
the Mind-Body Studio two years
ago, and practitioners now teach
a variety of classes from yoga to
meditation and other health-conscious activities and crafts.
The Brew Shoppe, too, is an
integral part of the growth of this
forward-thinking business. “We
are excited to bring this to the
community,” Aballo said, sharing some advice with the public
which also happens to be his motto for the shop. “Don’t just stand
there. Brew something!”
FIRE STATION
field experience from working in
the ambulance. He hopes for fulltime employment, has applied to
four or five departments, and has
his name on the list in his hometown of Dover, New Hampshire.
If he does not immediately find
full-time work, he plans to work
per diem with the hope that a fulltime position will open up and his
experience will work in his favor.
Captain Dan Roy, liaison and
advisor to the live-in program
says, “It’s good to have them here.
They help with calls, and it’s
good for them to run calls, work
rescue, learn all the apparatus.
They’re here to learn, and they
really grow as professionals over
their time here. Johnnie will be
leaving soon, which will be a real
loss. He’s grown tremendously in
his time here.”
(Continued from page 1)
was ready for a change as well.
He came on board full time to
run the expanded brew shop. A
homebrew enthusiast himself
(and a professional musician with
a punk rockabilly band called The
Outsiders), Aballo gets to share
his passion and knowledge about
making beer with others. “I like
the hoppy stuff, the IPAs, but also
pale ale, pilsner, stout. I’m pretty
much all over the place,” he said
when asked about his favorites.
The shop offers everything the
homebrewer requires including
various extracts, beer ingredient
kits, wine kits, hydrometers, oak
chips, corks, caps, beer cappers,
bottles and more. “You can get
everything you need to get started,” Aballo assures. “We are happy to special order, too.”
Customers who enjoy good
wine and beer without all the hard
work of making it themselves will
find what they need here, as well.
A wall of beer greets the visitor
at the door--selections that Aballo
picks after studying the BeerAdvocate.com website which rates
brews on a scale of zero to 100.
“Everything here is rated 80 or
better,” Aballo said. “It’s kind of
cool to experiment and get new
stuff in.” For a set price, customers can create their own six-pack
from the choices on the wall, and
Aballo also makes suggestions by
showcasing “Tim’s Pick 6 of the
American Legion Brown-Emmons Post 134 of Alfred
& White-Tibbett’s Post 55 of Limerick present:
(Continued from page 1)
hydrant, I went in and we were
able to save the home. Instead of
losing the entire structure, it was
contained to one room. That felt
really good to accomplish that,
and I wouldn’t get that level of
experience and opportunity for
that level of accomplishment in
some other departments.”
Asked what stands out for him
in his time in Waterboro, he recalled, “It was pretty rough early
on in my time here. There was a fatal fire, a young suicide, the death
of a friend of the department, and
we were all dealing with loss.”
Asked how they deal with such experience, he said, “You have to stay
on the job, need to build a wall and
not get attached, stay distant with
emotions. We get training in stress
debriefing, and when we need it,
get help. PTSD is a real issue, and
part of our training is in how to
recognize it and get help. That kind
of experience is what builds the
tight bonds of brotherhood and sisterhood among all who deal with
public safety every day.”
When he graduates in May,
Malia will be awarded Associate
in Applied Science degrees in both
fire science and paramedicine. He
will have 1,000 hours of paramedical experience in clinical and field
settings. The clinical is in a variety
of hospital departments and the
Salon
Allure
1168 C Main St., Waterboro
(Next to State Farm)
Walk-ins Welcome
GOT
NEWS?
Email:
news@waterboro
reporter.com
or call 247-0273.
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call 247-0273.
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5TH ANNUAL
Ice Fishing Derby
Sokokis Lake, Route 11, Limerick at the public boat launch
Sunday, Feb. 8
7 a.m. to 3 p.m.
$10 donation per adult
Ice fishing traps
15 and under FREE
Ice fishing traps provided
for children 15 and under!
STATE OF MAINE Free Family Fishing Days
Feb. 14-15 www.maine.gov/IFW
For more information contact R. Edgar Dolbec at 793-8677 or e-mail: [email protected]
PRIZES • RAFFLES
provided for children
15 and under!
• Adult with heaviest fish
wins 50% of entry fees.
• Children with heaviest fish
win 1st and 2nd place trophies.
Derby profits will
be used to help
veterans with
FMI call 608-5837 or 793-8677
fuel assistance.
Sponsored by American Legion Post 55, Limerick
Friday, January 30, 2015 PAGE 3
REPORTER
DOLLAR GENERAL
(Continued from page 1)
said he would not give approval
to the entrance as currently laid
out.
Troy McDonald of Northeast
Civil Solutions, the engineers
who prepared the Dollar General’s site re-submitted the original plan, stating that it complies
with all the elements of the Site
Plan Ordinance of the town, had
already received approval once,
and he repeated the request that it
be approved.
McDonald addressed Foglio’s
entrance concerns by stating that
the current plan exceeds town’s
requirement, as laid out in the
Zoning Ordinance, that the entrance be at least 50 feet from
Route 5 on Chadbourne Ridge
Road by being more than twice
that distance at 110 feet. He also
addressed concerns about the
number of parking spaces by stating the regulation states that there
be one space for every 200 feet
of building space, which the plan
meets with 40 spaces.
Board member Andy Cote
said that he felt one of the standards in the Site Plan Ordinance
had not been addressed, and
asked that a condition be applied
to protect the abutting Roberge
property across from the entrance
to the store from the headlight
glare of exiting vehicles. This
was to bring the plan into compliance with the Site Plan Ordinance’s standard for screening
of abutters. Cote said, “I’d like
to see you put something on the
plan to screen that property from
glare, as a good neighbor, whether it be fencing or foliage.” Gage
agreed to give the Roberge family
the sum of $2,500 to allow them
to screen their property however
they wish.
Because the Board’s vote had
been taken prematurely the first
time, Clason took the time to ex-
pressly read each of the 15 standards included in the site plan
review process and Cote read
the Dollar General’s plan for addressing each of those standards.
As each standard was read and
addressed, board members signified their agreement that the application met the standard. Clason also acknowledged that when
the site plan had been submitted
to the town’s engineers, their determination had been that the site
plan minimally met the town’s
standards.
As they addressed the standard relating to hazards relating
to traffic onto adjacent roadways, which Foglio had found
insufficient to protect the traveling public, Clason referred to
the Entrance Ordinance as “that
37-year-old ordinance,” and suggested that they were bound by
the town’s Zoning Ordinance
Section 5.04 requirement that a
driveway shall not be within 50
feet of an intersection, and not by
Foglio’s determination.
Before their vote, the Board
reviewed the three conditions to
their approval. 1. That the abutters’ be provided $2,500 to install some kind of screening from
glare, 2. that the existing open
well on the property be capped
immediately and 3. that their decision would take effect pending
Maine Department of Environmental Protection’s approval of
the storm water drainage plan.
The Board voted, with Cote,
Judi Carll, Clason, Frank Allen,
and Lee Nelson voting in the affirmative and Dwayne Prescott
abstaining. Following the vote,
Board members Andy Cote and
Frank Allen resigned.
Clason acknowledged that
many opinions had been expressed about the location and
design of the store at the public
hearing, but said, “The Planning
Board can only follow existing
ordinances, and that the application complied with those that
currently exist. We badly need a
design standards, and that’s why
I’m staying,” said Clason. Board
member Carll also agreed.
Asked his reaction to the
Planning Board approval, Foglio
said, “I denied them a permit, so
it is up to Dollar General to make
the next step.” Foglio says Dollar General representatives have
misled the public in saying they
will have only one delivery a
week, that they will likely have
multiple deliveries by all sizes
of trucks every day, and most
of them will fill up the Roberge
side of Chadbourne Ridge Road
in order to turn into the entrance.
“I told them it was unsafe and
the Planning Board ignored both
the fire chief and me,” said Foglio. “Why did Dollar General
have meetings with us and then
say they are not going to change
anything? Why wouldn’t the
Planning Board look into any of
these things? The Planning Board
rubber-stamped it. It’s a sad situation that’s become about personalities, when it’s about safety,”
added Foglio.
In a later conversation, Code
Enforcement Officer Glenn Charette reiterated, “The Entrance
Ordinance does require that a
written permit be issued by the
Public Works Director. I will not
be in a position to issue a Building Permit to Dollar General until
I receive that written permit.”
Star gazing in Limerick
By Shelley Burbank
[email protected]
The Limerick Public Library
hosted an educational and fun
“Astronomy Night” on Friday,
Jan. 20 with astronomers Ron
Thompson and Joan Chamberlain. Parents and children gathered in the library meeting room
along with Cindy Smith, the library director, Lori Jo Rich, the
technology librarian, and four
members of the Board of Trustees
to learn more about astronomy.
Thompson gave detailed instruction on the use of sky maps which
allow stargazers to orient themselves once outside and looking
up at the night sky.
Some of the other topics covered were planets, constellations,
nebulae, apparent motion, galaxies, and the use of telescopes and
binoculars. “Looking through a
telescope is like looking through
a straw,” Thompson said, explaining how the tool narrows your vision. “If you don’t know what to
look at, it is difficult to find it.”
Thompson suggested that simply sitting outside in your lawn
chair and looking up is the easiest
way to see constellations. “The
only things you need to learn and
enjoy the night sky are your eyes.
They are a fabulous pair of binoculars,” he said.
However, looking through a
telescope is also fun and instructive, enabling the user to see details not visible to the naked eye.
The group of beginner astronomers were asked to let their eyes
adjust to less light by turning off
the lights in the library and flicking on flashlights covered with
red plastic so the light would not
cause interference with the stargazing. Once eyes were adjusted,
everyone trooped outside behind
the library to look up at a brilliant,
star-filled sky.
From the library’s Facebook
page: “It was a perfect night to
explore the night sky and to learn
about how to use a telescope. It
was amazing to see the craters on
the moon, the four moons of Jupiter, the red coloring of Betelgeuse
and the twinkling blue of Rigel. It
was also cool to see the ‘double
stars’ and the Lovejoy comet.”
For those who weren’t lucky
enough to attend the event, there
are many books for readers of all
ages on astronomy topics available to borrow from the library.
Find “The Reporter” on Facebook
and share photos, news and events.
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There will be an informational night
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PAGE 4 Friday, January 30, 2015
Brigit McCallum
[email protected]
News from the
Waterboro Public
Library
Trustees discuss
space needs
In a survey conducted by Waterboro Library trustees in 2014,
the 78 respondents were nearly
unanimous in their belief that the
greatest needs of the library are
more hours and more space. A
few years ago, when town hall
closed on Mondays, the library’s
hours were reduced eleven hours,
going from 35 to 24 hours and
have remained at this level since.
The staff is working to address
this need by submitting a budget
for the next fiscal year that adds
five hours to make Wednesdays
open from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m.
Building a new library, and
possibly including a community
center in conjunction with Waterboro Parks & Recreation, was also
discussed at a recent library trustee meeting. Patrons who support
a new building are being asked to
email their thoughts to the selectmen at selectmen@waterboro-me.
gov and the town administrator
Gary Lamb at administrator@
waterboro-me.gov.
Staff change
Jillian Keith of North Waterboro volunteered at Waterboro Library during high school, and has
been a paid staffer for seven years.
She has just given notice after being hired for a short-term position
in Westbrook, and hopes to work
in Ocean Park next summer. She
REPORTER
WATERBORO
was honored for her time of service on Wednesday at the library.
Very conveniently, her mother
Pauline Keith will take over Jill’s
hours. Pauline has volunteered at
the library and also filled in at the
desk when staffers were on sick
leave. She knows the homeschool
collection very well, is able to
work the same hours Jill did and
will fill in when needed. Staff and
trustees wish Jill well and welcome Pauline to the library.
Teen group activities
On Wednesday, Feb. 5, the
Teen Group will meet to design
the Teen Group Newsletter and
Facebook page. The Teen Group
will also be running a winter photo contest for children in grades
K-12. Kids can submit their winter photos to the library starting
Jan. 31 through Feb. 13. The contest will run from Feb. 15 through
March 31. There will be two categories: grades K-5 and grades 6
-12.
Only printed photos can be
entered. Electronic submissions
(flash drives, memory cards,
e-mails, etc.) will not be accepted. Photos can be dropped off
until Thursday, Feb. 13 at the library’s circulation desk. Entry
forms, which include a parental
permission form, will be available and every entrant under 18
must have a signed form. Photos
must be a minimum of 4 inches
by 6 inches and a maximum of
7 inches by 8 inches. All photos
must have the entrant’s full name,
grade, address, phone number and
parent’s name written on the back
of the photo.
The public will be able to vote
on their favorite photo from Feb.
16 to March 31. Ballots will be
available at the library during operating hours. The Teen Group
Blizzard clean-up
Braden Daigneault and his family helped clear the snow from the Carle’s Corner Ice Skating Rink in Waterboro
on Wednesday, Jan. 28.
COURTESY PHOTO
will have discretion to allow or
disallow multiple entries. Prizes in each category will be: first
place, a $15 Dunkin Donuts card,
second place, a $10 Dunkin Donuts card and third place, a $5
Dunkin Donuts card. For more information, e-mail Kellie DeMers,
Teen Group Advisor at kellie@
waterborolibrary.org or text her at
603-470-9308.
Upcoming events
The library book group meets
on Thursday, Feb. 5 at 7 p.m. and
is open to all who wish to be part
of a book group. Saturday Feb. 7
is “Take your Child to the Library
Day” and also the beginning of
the Annual Patron Appreciation
Week. All are invited to celebrate
with snacks, Valentine card making and other crafts all week.
BRIEFS
Ossipee Mountaineers
welcome snow
As snow fell on Tuesday,
Ossipee Mountaineers Snowmobile Club president Chrissy Locke-McGinley announced
that all gates were open, as major
snow is finally here. Groomers
would not be out until sleds break
open trails. Riders are asked to
ride right, ride safe, and stay on
marked trails. This is to protect
the privilege of riding on southern Maine trails allowed by gracious landowners who share their
property for the sport. Riders are
asked, if possible, to ride with
snips or a hand saw to clear any
fallen trees so that groomers may
pass through the trails easily after
the storms. If anyone sees areas of
concern, they are asked to email
[email protected] or [email protected]
Snowmobile club
members build bridge
Last Monday, OMSC members Leo Binnette, Shawn Mcginley and Roger Letendre beat
the storm to build a bridge on the
Ross Corner trail. It was built in
a place where there used to be a
culvert that was no longer handling the water flow. The new
bridge eliminated a potential safety hazard.
OMMUNITY NEWSPAPER
YOUR C
P.O. Box 75, North Waterboro, ME 04061
545 Main Street, Suite C, Waterboro
(207) 247-0273 • [email protected]
www.waterbororeporter.com
Kerry DeAngelis. . . . Owner/Publisher/Advertising Manager
[email protected]
Michael DeAngelis . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Sports Writer
[email protected]
Ann Fisher. . . . . . . . . . . . . . Copy Editor/Contributing Writer
afi[email protected]
Shelley Burbank . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
[email protected]
Contributing Writer
Brigit McCallum . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Contributing Writer
[email protected] (Waterboro correspondent)
Allison Williams . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Contributing Writer
[email protected] (Alfred correspondent)
MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS: $75 per year
Coverage areas: Alfred, Dayton, Hollis, Limerick,
Limington, Lyman, Newfield, Shapleigh, Waterboro
& the Sanford and Sacopee Valley Regions.
Published by KL Design & Marketing • www.kldesignandmarketing.com
The Reporter is independently owned and operated locally
and has no affiliation with any other newspaper or publication.
©2014 All Rights Reserved. All logos and trademarks are property of their respective owners.
No part of this publication may be reproduced without permission from the publisher.
LITTLE LEAGUE
Limerick and Waterboro residents:
2015 Registration Nights
Tuesday, Feb. 10 • Thursday, Feb. 12
Monday, Feb. 23 • Wednesday, Feb. 25
and Friday Feb. 27 from 6 to 8 p.m.
at BOTH Waterboro and Line Elementary Schools
T-BALL: Ages 4 & 5 - $40
Any student who
attends either Massabesic
BASEBALL: Ages 6-12 - $50
Middle or High School
SOFTBALL: Ages 6-12 - $50
is eligible to play in our
Junior Leagues!
JUNIOR LEAGUE BASEBALL
& SOFTBALL: Ages 13-16 - $60
Any registrations received after our last sign up night
of Feb. 27 will be charged a $10 LATE FEE.
Tryout/teams placements will be held on March 21
at Massabesic High School for players ages 6-12 only.
Visit our new website for updates
before and during the season:
www.eteamz.com/shakervalley
IN PERSON
SIGN UPS
ONLY!
NO ONLINE SIGN UPS.
We accept major credit
cards, debit cards,
cash or checks.
REPORTER
SPORTS
Friday, January 30, 2015 PAGE 5
O N T H E M AT
Mat men take silver
Richard, Risti lead
By Michael DeAngelis
[email protected]
Massabesic took 2nd place as a team at the Bob Benoure Invitational at Vergennes Union High School on Jan. 24.
Massabesic wrestlers took
home the silver medal with a second place finish at the annual Bob
Benoure Invitational held Saturday, Jan. 24 in Vergennes, Vermont.
The Mustangs racked up
186.5 points, well ahead of third
place Hollis Brookline’s 168 and
fourth-place finisher Mt. Mansfield’s 137.5, but behind winner
Peru who totaled 241.
Captain Mike Risti led the
Mustangs with a perfect day that
included pins in all four of his
bouts. Wrestling at 220, the senior
dropped each of his first three foes
in under 60 seconds. It took just 68
seconds to pin his fourth and final
COURTESY PHOTO BY JASON GENDRON, S4 ACTION PHOTOGRAPHY
BRIEFS
Locals named to
Dean’s List
Massabesic and Wells seniors at senior night on Jan. 23. COURTESY PHOTO
IN THE POOL
Swim teams sink Spartans
By Michael DeAngelis
[email protected]
Both varsity swim teams swept
every event in a rout of Sanford on
Friday, Jan. 23 at the YMCA.
The lady Mustangs got four
golds from Ashley Cryer, Elaine
Dudley and Amanda Dudley. The
three teammates teamed up in the
night’s first event, the 200-yard
medley-relay, along with Morgan
Houk, to post a speedy 2:03.50.
Cryer won the 100-butterfly
and the 100-backstroke, and she
joined Sophia LaFrance (winner
of the 100 free), Emily Cyr and
Houk in winning the final event,
the 400-freestyle relay.
Elaine Dudley won the 50
with a 26.62, and she won the
100-breaststroke in 1:16.59. She
teamed up with sister Amanda,
Autumn Nostrom and Helen Anderson to win the 200-freestyle re-
lay. Amanda Dudley won the 200
free and the 500 free. Emily Cyr
won the 200 IM. Massabesic outscored the Spartans 112-56.
The Mustang men got four
golds from Caleb Fuschillo, Cam
Mayhew, Mason Darling and Garrett LaFrance.
The foursome won two relay events: the 200 medley-relay
(1:52.47) and the 200 freestyle-relay (1:41.07).
Fuschillo won the 50 with a
24.43 and the backstroke with a
1:03.48. Mayhew won the 200
IM with a 2:17.58 and the 100
free with a 51.52. Darling won the
200 with a 2:07.23 and the breaststroke with a 1:11.40 LaFrance
won the 500 and the butterfly in
1:02.40.
Nate Messier, Hunter Tarbox,
Joel VanTassell and Ryan Burke
won the night’s final event, the
400 freestyle. Massabesic topped
Sanford 108-62.
GOT PHOTOS? Send to:
[email protected]
victim which gave him the gold.
Zac Richard (145) had an impressive day as well, winning all
four of his matches. He began
with a quick pin in round one, followed by a tech fall win (20-5) in
bout two. He advanced to the final
after a narrow 5-3 win in his third
contest, and the senior took home
the gold with a riveting 7-6 win
over Zachary Allen of Mill River.
The Mustangs got silver medal
performances from Justin Goodwin (99), Leo Amabile (106), Jeff
Bryan (113) and Noah Schneider
(160) as each lost in the finals of
their respective weight classes.
Trevor Walton (195) took third
place, Ethan Huff (120) was fifth,
Matt Carroll (170) and Logan
Martin (152) both garnered team
points with sixth place finishes.
Justin Langlois of Limerick
was named to the Dean’s List at
the University of New Haven for
the Fall 2014 semester.
Elizabeth Mulcahy of Shapleigh was named to Stonehill College’s Dean’s List for the Fall 2014
semester. Mulcahy is a member of
the Class of 2015 and is studying
healthcare administration.
Shane M. Archambault of Alfred, Lisette A. Labbe of Limerick
and Zachary Traver of Limerick were all named to the Dean’s
List for the Fall 2014 semester at
Saint Anselm College, Manches-
ter, New Hampshire. Archambault
is a politics major and a member
of the Class of 2017. Labbe is an
undeclared major a member of the
Class of 2018. Traver is a criminal
justice major and a member of the
Class of 2017.
Lindsay Decker, a senior archaeology major from Shapleigh,
was named to Lycoming College’s
Dean’s List for the Fall 2014 semester.
To qualify for the Dean’s List,
students must have a semester
grade point average of 3.50 or
better and must have completed
successfully all courses for which
they were registered.
Here comes the stampede!
57 Stallions Youth Basketball Association
Boys & Girls basketball
Spring
Session
Registration Night at MHS - Feb. 12, 6 - 8 p.m.
Team Placement at MMS - Feb. 23,
5:30-6:30 p.m. (Grades 5-6) • 6:30 - 7:30 p.m. (Grades 7-8)
Player Development - Grades 3-11, cost: $125.
2 sessions per week, starting March 2, ending May 1. (Max. 16 sessions)
Focus is on improving individual skills, and boosting basketball IQ.
Team Play - Grades 5-11, cost: $225.
One player development session and one practice per week, 2 games
on weekends, starting week of Feb. 23, ending May 3.
Registrations can be found at: www.57stallions.org
or can be requested through our facebook page.
Pre-register for team placements and/or player development by contacting
[email protected]. Pre-registration is encouraged but not required.
PAGE 6 Friday, January 30, 2015
OPINION
The fall of gas
Quick! What happens
ed by the United States
when you flush gas prices
Air Force. It is the first
down the toilet? Ameridefeat ISIS has suffered,
can carmakers scramble
and with the U.S. leadlike crazy in an effort to
ing a growing coalition
promote
gas-guzzling
of air support, the first
SUVs and luxury rides.
real offensive against
The 1% is buying anthis ruthless group has
by
ti-depressants as Wall
finally begun.
Jon Simonds
Street closes in the red
Iran is another conwith more regularity than
cern for Saudi Arabia.
ever, while the rest of
While not exactly fond
America is smiling. Wages haven’t of Israel, they do share a common
changed, but we certainly are wel- concern over Iran’s nuclear procoming the reprieve from an other- gram. Washington’s sanctions are
wise tough economy. The question ravaging Iran’s economy, and cheap
is, how much lower can gas drop, oil prices, led by Saudi Arabia (in
and more importantly, when will defiance of the oil cartel) are only
this middle-class stimulus come to making things tougher for Tehran. It
an end?
is the hope of Saudi Arabia and the
There are a handful of reasons United States that Iran will abandon
why gas prices are so low. First and its nuclear program.
foremost is Saudi Arabia’s growing
The Russian conflict with the
discomfort with ISIS. ISIS barreled Ukraine is another reason oil prices
across the Mideast with seemingly are tanking. Russia had become a
little or no resistance, and in their major oil exporter, but for reasons
quest for a caliphate, ISIS snatched unknown Putin decided to cosponsor
quite a few oilfields, further financ- a little uprising in coastal Ukraine.
ing their little war with the sale of This led to a little annexation of real
black market oil. ISIS, however, estate lining the Black Sea and a
recently suffered a serious setback, continued conflict with Ukraine. Eudriven from Kobane by Syrian Kurd- ropean Union and American sancish fighters and Iraqi forces support- tions have had a devastating effect
on the Russian economy. This past
week alone has seen Moody’s Investors Service downgrade Russian
government bonds, while Standard
& Poor’s is now comparing Russia’s
credit rating to junk bonds.
With all that is going on, American carmakers are rethinking the future of car sales and preparing a slew
of ads designed to draw consumers
out of low-cost puddle jumpers and
into luxury SUV’s which aren’t exactly eco-friendly. Americans would
be wise to keep this sudden windfall
in their pockets. Eventually ISIS will
fall as airstrikes from nations like the
U.S. and France continue to support
the ground forces involved in their
war with the extremist group, easing the fears of the Saudi Kingdom.
Putin will figure out a face-saving
way to resolve the crisis in Ukraine,
and the Iranian people won’t remain
quiet as their economy continues to
sink. None of these situations will
likely resolve themselves anytime
soon, but when they do, look for gas
prices to make like a helium balloon
without anyone holding the string.
Jon Simonds lives in North Waterboro and is the author of “Brooklyn Encounters,” a collection of
short stories available on Kindle.
Waterboro sidewalk
project meeting
We want to hear from you!
Send your letters,
recipes, photos,
poems & stories to:
[email protected]
Please include name, town and
phone number for verification.
ALFRED
Allison Williams
[email protected]
324-5823
Mold at town hall After finding mold spores on
the first floor of Alfred’s town hall
and in its crawl space, the selectmen have met with the church
trustees, and it was agreed that
the lower level of Conant Chapel
could be used for town business
while removal of the mold was
taking place.
In spite of the storm, the special town meeting was held as announced on Jan. 27. Eight people
attended and all approved having
the mold remediation done to the
town hall.
School news The next event at Alfred Elementary School will be “Flipping
into February” on Saturday, Feb. 7
from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. for youngsters 4 years old to those in fifth
grade. Carnival games will be 50
cents each or 3 for $1. These will
include a snowball toss, ice cube
frog flip, bowling for penguins and
others. All day tickets are $6 in
advance or $8 at the door. Families of two or more can pay $12 in
advance or $16 at the door. Tickets can be purchased in the school
office. There will also be concessions.
Harlem Globetrotter raffle
tickets may be purchased at $1 per
chance. (Last chance to buy tickets.) Four tickets have a $160 value. The winner will be announced
at the end of the “Flipping into
February” event.
Parish Church REPORTER
Two new members, Francis
(Skip) Dore and Patricia Vertefeuille joined the Parish Church
The town of Waterboro will hold
a public meeting on Tuesday, May
22, at 6:30 p.m. at Town Hall to
present information and solicit public input on the design of a sidewalk
on Old Alfred Road.
The new sidewalk would generally
run from the entrance of Massabesic
Middle School to Friendship Park.
Town leaders along with engineers
from Wright-Pierce, the town’s
consulting firm, will be present to
answer questions.
This project is funded through the
Maine Department of Transportation’s Quality Community Program
to improve pedestrian safety. It’s
also part of the town’s overall goal
of improving safety and walkability
along Old Alfred Road.
Call Tom Ursia, the town Planner, at 247-6166, ext. 3, or email to
[email protected],
for more information.
this past Sunday and Skip was
baptized during the ceremony.
The annual church and parish
meeting will be held following a
potluck
dinner onMay
Sunday,
1.
On Saturday,
19, Feb.
at 5:45
On
Feb.Sanford
8 the installation
of offip.m.,
Maine Stage
will
cers
will be
held. Murder,” a murpresent
“Café
Choir rehearsals
return event
to
der-mystery
dinner-theater
at Massabesic
Middle
School to
Thursday
evenings
at 7 p.m.
benefi
Odyssey
of theSouth
Mind
Thet the
Men’s
Breakfast
teams
fromatRegional
School
Unit
will
be held
10 a.m. on
Feb. 10.
57.Bruce
The Burnham
teams arestarts
headed
to the
his vacation Feb. 14. Rev. Pat Smith will
lead worship on Feb. 15.
MEET
GREET -Paddlers
5/18 • 1-3pmwill meet
The&Parish
Gallery on The Green
Feb.
15 at John and Lisa Cook’s at
at the Beehive in Alfred
1 p.m.
~ Refreshments ~
Dinner theater
benefits Odyssey
LETTERS
Holiday Hoopla
a success
The 57 Stallions Youth Basketball Association hosted its
second annual Holiday Basketball tournament for local fifth
and sixth grade travel teams at
the end of December at MHS.
The 2014 Holiday Hoopla was a
huge success and featured girls
teams from Waterboro, Alfred
and Limerick/Newfield, and boys
teams from Waterboro, Lyman,
Springvale, Biddeford, Kennebunk, Westbrook, 57 Stallions,
Saco and Bonny Eagle.
The championship game for
the boys came down to Kennebunk and Westbrook, with Westbrook squeaking out a win in a
close game to bring home the
first-place trophy.
The weekend’s events also
included a food drive that was
also a huge success, with multiple boxes of non-perishable items
donated. All the items were delivered to the York County Shelter
Program.
The 57 Stallions would like to
thank everyone that participated
in the food drive and would also
worldtofithank
nals. all of the sponsors
like
The
cost
is $15
for adults
and $12
of this year’s
event.
Sponsors
of
for
seniors
and
children
under
12.
the 2014 Holiday Hoopla were:
Call Maine
247-4936
reservations.
The
RedforClaws,
Lakeside
Market, RSD Grpahics, Harbor
View Lending, Biddeford Savings Bank, The Reporter, Woodys
Sports Grille, Massabesic Basketball,
ValleyTransfer
Credit Union,
TheSaco
Waterboro
Station/
Waterboro
Parks
and
Recycling Committee Recreation,
will meet at
J.P.
Carroll
Fuel Co.,
A-Pro
6:30 p.m.
on Tuesday,
May 22,
at a
Sporting
Goods,
Biddnew location
– the Saco
second&floor
ofeford
Savings
Institution,
fice in the
original
Town Hall.JD’s
Package & Redemption, Gorham Savings Bank, York County
Federal Credit Union, Sanford
Institution for Savings, FM Abbotts Power Equipment, Garnsey
On Saturday,
May Deer
26, from
Brothers
Insurance,
Pond9
a.m.-noon,
the
Ossipee
Meadows
Fuel, LA Lawn Care and Curley
Garden Club will hold a plant sale
Associates.
at the
Taylor
off
We historic
would also
likeHouse,
to thank
Route
5,
in
Center
Waterboro.
All
all the volunteers that worked at
proceeds will benefit the garden
the tournament, the MHS Athletic
club’s scholarship fund, as well as
Boosters
and MHS
custodial staff
its community
projects.
forPlants
its amazing
support!
for sale include perenOurvegetable
Spring session
startsseedin
nials,
and annual
lings, herbs and houseplants. In
addition, select perennials from the
Taylor House gardens will also be
available. Call Donna at 247-3604
for more information or to donate
plants to the sale.
The Ossipee Meadows Garden MANICURES
Club meets •atPEDICURES
7 p.m. on the
HAIRCUTS
• COLOR
• WAXING
third
Thursday
of every
month at
740
Main
Street,
Suite
1,
Waterboro Town Hall.Waterboro
New members
visitors
are Thu.-Fri.
welcome.
Call
Tue.and
11-7,
Wed. 9-7,
9-5,
Lisa, Sat
at 8-noon
247-6154,
or Maggie, at
• 247-1024
www.facebook.com/amariesstudio
New location for
recycling meeting
Garden club
sets plant sale
Reminder Lyman Parks &
Thank You Limerick
As the current president of
The Research Club of Limerick
(women’s club) I would like to
extend a sincere “Thank You” to
the citizens of Limerick and surrounding towns for the donations
made to our Red Bow Project.
The red bows purchased at Christmastime help to decorate the
lighted tree in the gazebo in the
center of town during the holiday
season. It is with great pride that
we are able to donate a substantial
amount, $1041.32, of your offerings to The REPORTER
Wounded Heroes www.keep
of
Maine Program.
This program was started five
years ago by RIEFS
Pam Payeur, executive director and mother of one
of our own for
wounded
This teeBall
727-5810,
more heroes.
information
about
the supports
club and its
program
ourprograms.
brave mil- is only
itary by coordinating assistance June 7,
The
for our wounded veterans so they
receive the support they need Massab
and rightly deserve. All money Old Al
raised in Maine stays here to help from 7
Absentee
ballots are
now available
Maine’s
wounded
return
to civil- those
from
the
Waterboro
town
clerk’s
ian life. Please take time to go ofto
fice for the June 12 municipal electheir website at www.warriorlegtion. Requests for absentee ballots
acyfoundation.org and see what
can be made during normal business
you have
helped.247-3166, ext.227,
hours
by calling
Housley
or going online Jeanine
to https://www.
Research Club President
maine.gov/cgi-bin/online/Absen-
B
Absentee ballots
ready in Waterboro
F.R. CARROLL, INC.
LIMERICK, MAINE
CRUSHED STONE
3/8” 3/4” 1-1/2”
READY MIX CONCRETE
HOT TOP • LOAM
MORTAR SAND
CRUSHED GRAVEL
MAIN OFFICE: (207) 793-8615
ASPHALT: (207) 793-4434
CONCRETE: (207) 793-2742
OR (207) 793-8753
a lo
W
be
Ca
LE
COM
Auto • Home • Life • Business • Health
FE
247-4959
Saturd
10
KASPRZAK
INSURANCE
ASSOCIATES, INC.
If you want to receive your
Please vote in the Republican Primary
mail, the mailbox must be clear
TUESDAY, JUNE 12
of snow if within the town right of
way. Also no snow may be plowed
or shoveled into the town right of
A Fiscal Conservative with the Right experience to keep Maine moving forward!
way
from a driveway. Paid for and authorized by the candidate. Meyer for House Committee,
Bonnie Heptig, Treasurer, PO Box 630, Moody, Maine 04054
March, and we are looking forward to providing teams for boys
and girls at all grade levels. For
more information, visit the 57
Stallions Facebook page or website at www.57stallions.org, or
contact the 57 Stallions at [email protected].
Scott Samson, President
57 Stallions Youth
Basketball Association
www.JudeeMeyer.com
Lots of
Free
Family
Fun!
RTE. 5 • NO. WATERBORO, ME 04061
Friday, January 30, 2015 PAGE 7
REPORTER
SPORTS
ON THE ICE
Middle school hockey
The Massabesic middle school hockey team recently attended a Portland Pirates game. Prior to the AHL match-up between Providence and Portland the team
had a practice on the Cross Center ice and
later they sat on the Pirates’ bench while the
two professional teams warmed up.
Massabesic plays in the Braun division of
the Southern Maine Middle School Hockey
League. To date, they’ve compiled a 3-6-1
record.
COURTESY PHOTO
Email to
ads@waterboro
reporter.com
Classifieds
Call 247-0273 to place your classified ad today!
FOR SALE
LINDA DAVISON
Avon Independent Sales
Representative
Order anytime online at
https://ldavison.avon
representative.com
and receive direct home
delivery. Questions or to
order a brochure, email:
[email protected]
WANTED
I BUY ANYTHING OLD!
Books, records, furniture,
jewelry, coins, hunting,
fishing, military, art work,
dishes, toys, tools, etc.
I will come to you with cash.
Call John 450-2339
EMPLOYMENT
Carpenter’s Helper
Wanted
• Must provide liability
insurance.
• Experience with
cutting and climbing.
• $15 and up depending on experience.
Call Jason 294-2046
Your ad
HERE
only $5
per week!
Please recycle
this newspaper
SHOP LOCAL
Support YOUR local businesses
SERVICE DIRECTORY:
$20 per week
TOWN OF WATERBORO
Customer Service Representative
The Town of Waterboro (population 7,700) has an
immediate opening for a front office Customer Service
Representative. This is a non-union position working
directly with citizens and alongside three other front office employees in Waterboro Town Hall performing tax
collection, vehicle registration and town clerk duties.
We are looking for candidates interested in either full
(32 hours) or part-time work. Our office is open Tuesdays 11am - 7pm and Wed through Fridays 9am - 5pm.
The successful candidate must demonstrate exceptional customer service, cash handling and communication skills, be team oriented and have a strong work
ethic. Strong experience with Microsoft Word is required. All of our front office staff are cross trained in all
aspects of town hall services. Considerable experience
with TRIO, MOSES, voter registration, vital records and
motor vehicle registrations is preferred but we are willing to train the right person.
This position would be up to 32 hours per week and
the wage range is $15-$20 per hour depending on experience. For full time employees (32 hours), the town
offers three health insurance options, dental and life
insurance, Maine PERS or 457 plan retirement options
and paid vacation, sick and holiday time.
To apply please submit a cover letter and resume
in MS Word with three references and their contact
information no later than noon on Friday February
13, 2015 to Town Administrator Gary Lamb. Email
submissions are strongly encouraged ([email protected]). Hard copy submissions
will be accepted. Send to: 24 Townhouse Road,
East Waterboro, ME 04030. For more information
please call Christina Silberman or Gary Lamb at
207-247-6166.
WANTED
Keep your family warm.
Gift certificates available.
Junk Cars & Trucks, Scrap Metal
HOURS OF OPERATION:
Scale/Yard: Mon-Fri 8-4, Sat 8-2
Office: Mon-Fri 8-5, Sat 8-3
CLOSED SUNDAY
We buy the following metals:
Copper • Brass • Aluminum Cans • Batteries
• Stainless • Lead • Wire • Aluminum Wheels
(with or without tires) • Large amounts of Metal
• Steel • Appliances • Catalytic Converter
C.I.A.
SALVAGE
Toll Free: 877-456-8608 • 207-793-2022
We’ll beat any reasonable
offer for complete vehicles.
366 Sokokos Trail N. • Route 5, Limerick, ME 04048
OVER 8 YEARS IN MAINE!
Over 30 years experience
207-602-8122
Kelley Custom
PICTURE FRAMING
& ART GALLERY
If you want to hang it, I can frame it!
One block south of Hannaford on Route 202, East Waterboro
CINDY’S HAIR SALON
Services Done Your Way
ONLY
PERMS $39.95
LUCINDA ALDOUS
Owner/Cosmetologist
Lord Road, North Waterboro
247-3017
BUSINESS DIRECTORY
Get listed for only $5 per week!
BUYING OLD ITEMS
HARDSCAPE
Buying
Old items
AFFORDABLE
STONE WALLS
Barn & Attic
accumulations.
Jimmy: 207-450-4163
Honest prices paid!
Consultation, Instruction,
Installation. DEP Certified,
25+ yrs exp, Sal Adinolfi,
Stone Artisan • 205-6868
FITNESS
LANDSCAPING
JUNCTURE
LEARNING CENTER
Affordable fun & fitness w/
Coach Lisa for boys & girls ages
1-14. Tumbling FUN!, FUNergy!,
open gym and more. FMI on
Facebook or call 318-7685.
BARK
MULCH
Loam • Sand • Gravel
Stone • Landscape Supplies
Call Buddy Knight
608-3582 or 247-5111
GRAPHIC DESIGN · ADVERTISING · MARKETING
KLDesign
& MARKETING
Kerry DeAngelis • North Waterboro, ME
E-mail: [email protected]
More than 20 years
of experience!
(207) 206-5639
www.kldesignandmarketing.com
BUXTON ANTIQUES
EMPORIUM ANTIQUES, COLLECTIBLES & FURNITURE
(207) 648-4026 • Open Daily 10-7 • 249 Parker Farm Rd., Buxton
Always buying and selling antiques, furniture,
gold, silver, jewelry, coins and old paper.
www.buxtonantiques.com
Sharing Memories...Celebrating Life
AUTUMN GREEN
Funeral Home
• Our home provides a warm and unhurried atmosphere.
• We help you create unique and memorable services.
• Your loved one will be cared for with the utmost respect.
47 Oak Street, Alfred, ME • (207) 459-7110
www.autumngreenfuneralhome.com
PAGE 8 Friday, January 30, 2015
REPORTER
SPORTS
MOB starting to rule
ON THE ICE
By Michael DeAngelis
[email protected]
MOB hockey, the varsity
squad comprised of players from
Massabesic, Old Orchard Beach
and Bonny Eagle is quietly putting together a fine season.
On Monday, Jan. 26 the ice
triumvirate topped Westbrook (011-1) for their fourth win of the
season by a 3-1 count.
MOB got on the board first
on a goal from Tanner McClure,
Chandler Dunston assisting.
Westbrook tied it before the intermission, but MOB potted two
goals in the second period and got
shut down goaltending from Matt
Bridges to close out the victory.
Kyle Whitman banged home
the go-ahead goal after collecting
a pass from Travis Marsh with
nine-minutes gone in the middle
frame and Marsh closed out the
scoring just under two-minutes
later after Robbie Axelson and
McClure worked the puck smartly
up ice.
MOB currently sits in ninth
place in the standings (the top
eight teams qualify for post season
play) with five games remaining.
They tied Windham (4-62) in their previous game, held
Wednesday, Jan. 21.
MOB player Kyle Whitman (7) scores against Westbrook. COURTESY PHOTOS
MOB player Hannah Blair.
OBITUARIES
Travis Clinton Andrews
Travis Clinton Andrews, 25,
died unexpectedly at his home in
Buxton on Jan. 20, 2015.
Travis was
born on Oct.
29, 1989 in
Portland, the
son of Perry
C. and Robin
A. (Thompson) Andrews.
Travis
Travis
grew up in NewAndrews
field where his
family had a farm; he enjoyed the
freedom of the woods, pastures
and streams for hunting and fishing. He was a member of the Oxford County 4-H Club. Travis was
a shy young man, yet was loyal
to his family and close friends.
He attended elementary school
locally and was a 2008 graduate
of Massabesic High School where
he was a 4-year varsity center/
linebacker of the football team.
He was also an outstanding wrestler and proud team member of
the Class A State Championships
for wrestling in Maine for 2007
and 2008.
Travis attended Southern
Vermont College, taking classes
within the radiology program and
then transferred to the Southern
Maine Community College where
he had an interest in the criminal
justice classes. Travis was recently employed with Poland Spring
in Hollis.
Travis was a talented artist,
enjoying drawing an assortment
of cartoons and characters that
were “larger than life.” Travis
was the consummate breakfast
cook and enjoyed the challenge
of board games and participating
in geocaching. Travis loved animals, especially his cat Milo and
his little pug, Cole.
Travis will be remembered
for his infectious smile and dim-
ples, for being kind hearted and
independent. He will be dearly
missed, forever loved and cherished by his family and friends.
He is survived by his parents,
Perry and Robin Andrews of
Newfield; his sister, Amber Mead
and husband Mike and their son
Mason of Newfield; his paternal
grandparents, Clinton and Joanne
Andrews of Limerick; his maternal grandmother, Rose Marie
Beane of Augusta; his aunts and
uncles, Cindy Bowman and husband Dana of Standish; Sue Vigue
of Newfield; Todd Thompson of
Winthrop and David Thompson
of Augusta; Wade Andrews and
wife Kim of Newfield and Jared
Andrews and wife Piper of Missouri; many cousins; and his companion, Kim Dyer of Buxon.
Travis was predeceased by
his maternal grandfather, Dale
Thompson.
Calling hours for Travis were
held on Jan. 26 at Lakeside Community Church, 1248 Sokokis
Trail, in North Waterboro. Committal prayers and burial will be
held later in the spring at Pleasant
Hill Cemetery in Newfield.
To leave a message of condolence for the family, visit www.
autumngreenfuneralhome.com
In lieu of flowers, memorial donations may be made to the
Massabesic High School Wrestling Team, 88 West Road, Waterboro, ME 04087.
The Autumn Green Funeral
Home is respectfully handling arrangements.
Ann P. Moore
Ann P. Moore, 74, a resident
of Waterboro, formerly of Wells,
died Wednesday, Jan. 14, 2015 at
St. Andre’s Health Care Facility
in Biddeford following a period
of failing health.
Ann was born April 13, 1940
in Brooklyn, New York, the
daughter of Michael Doherty and
Annabelle (O’Brien) Doherty,
and is a graduate of FontBonne
Hall Academy Roman Catholic
High School in Brooklyn, New
York.
She worked for American
Airlines as a stewardess until she
married Herbert D. Moore on Jan.
15, 1962.
She loved to garden and take
care of her grandchildren, Marissa, Alexis and Ernest. She was a
volunteer with St. Stephen’s Food
for Life pantry and Good Neighbor in Waterboro with her very
close friend who predeceased her,
Brenda Roberge.
She is predeceased by her
husband Herbert D. Moore, her
brother Michael Doherty, nephew
Michael Doherty and her grandson Logan A. Roberge.
Survivors include her son
Daniel M. Moore, her daughter
Marybeth Roberge and husband
Ernest Jr.; her sisters, Elizabeth Doherty Heinsman, Mary
Doherty Provus; sister-in-law
MaryEllen Doherty; her grandchildren Alexis Roberge, Marissa Roberge, Ernest Roberge III,
Chelsey Moore, Leigha Moore;
great grandchildren, Ariah W.
Roberge, Carter D. Moore; her
nieces, Eileen Doherty Podlovits; Kelly Doherty Kane, Marita
Provus, Laura Heinsman Jones,
Megan Heinsman; her nephews,
Michael Provus, Sean Heinsman.
A graveside service will be
held in the spring at Maine Veterans Memorial Cemetery, Old
Belgrade Rd, Augusta.
Should friends desire, memorial donations may be made to the
American Cancer Society, Maine
Affiliate, One Bowdoin Mill Island, Suite 300, Topsham, ME
04086-1240.
Arrangements are in care of
Bibber Memorial Chapel, www.
bibberfuneral.com.
Dorothy M. Patterson
Dorothy M. Patterson, 94, of
Waterboro, died Jan. 15, 2015 in
Kennebunk.
Mrs. Patterson was born Dorothy
May
Heckett
on
Dec. 18, 1920
in Bridgeport,
Connecticut,
the daughter
of Bert and
Jane Heckett. A longtime resident
Dorothy
of Connecticut, Patterson
she moved to
Waterboro in 1985. Dorothy first
married Albert Garber, Sr. in 1943
in Bridgeport; she later remarried
in 1972 and was predeceased by
her husband, Joseph Patterson of
Biddeford.
She was also predeceased by
her brother, Bert Heckett, Jr. and
sister, Jane Pietsch.
Dorothy was a retiree of the
Bridgeport Police Department
where she had worked for over
twenty years.
Dorothy is survived by her
son and daughter-in-law, Albert
and Diane Garber of Santa Fe,
New Mexico; her grand-daughter
Ariana Garber of San Francisco, California; her sister, Irene
Greenslade of Roseville, California; and several nieces and nephews.
At the request of the family,
services for Mrs. Patterson will
be private.
To leave a message of condolence for the family, visit www.
autumngreenfuneralhome.com
The Autumn Green Funeral
Home, at 47 Oak Street in Alfred,
is respectfully handling arrangements.
Joan T. Morin
Joan T. Morin, 89, of Sanford,
died in peace on Jan. 10, 2015 at
the Newton Center in Sanford.
Joan was the loving wife of
Roland R. Morin who passed
away recently on November 21,
2014.
Joan was born Jean D’arc
Desruisseaux on Dec. 11, 1925
the daughter of Marie-Jeane
Levine and Luciene Desruisseaux
of Sanford.
Joan worked as a candy striper
at the Goodall Hospital and was
a proud graduate of the Sanford
High School Adult G.E.D. program. Joan was a member of the
Holy Family Choir. Mrs. Morin
was a loving mother and an excellent homemaker. She enjoyed
cooking and sewing.
She is lovingly survived by
her three daughters, Carol Prokey
of Limington; Susan Clarrage of
Sanford; and Debbie Marzola of
Londonderry, New Hampshire;
her eight grandchildren; Valerie,
Douglas, Jenny, Eric, Joshua, Jacob, Thomas, IV and Matthew;
her two brothers, Raymond Desruisseaux of Madison, Wisconsin and Roger Brooks of
Englewood,
Florida; and
her
sister,
Dorothy Chevalier of Waxhaw,
North
Carolina.
Joan Morin
She was
predeceased by
her two siblings, Renaud “Speed”
and Donald Desruisseaux.
A memorial service was held
on Jan. 22, 2015 at 11 a.m. at the
Autumn Green Funeral Home, 47
Oak Street, in Alfred, Maine. Mrs.
Morin will be interred with her
husband at the Southern Maine
Veterans Cemetery in Springvale.
To leave a message of condolence for the family, visit www.
autumngreenfuneralhome.com
The Autumn Green Funeral
Home is respectfully handling arrangements.