Maine DEP has announced new grant awards for municipal stream crossings

photo: Maine DEP

Maine DEP’s Municipal Stream Crossing Grant Program provides grants that match local funding for the upgrade of culverts at stream crossings on municipal roads. Projects funded through this program will benefit public infrastructure and safety by replacing failing culverts that are at risk of complete washout or collapse; reduce flooding and increase resiliency with the installation or larger, higher capacity and longer-lived crossings, benefit fish and wildlife by opening and reconnecting stream habitat fragmented by undersized and impassable culverts, and represent a cost-effective and efficient investment based on planning, detail, and local matching funds committed to the project.

Funding for this round of grants includes $3 million from the Maine Jobs and Recovery Plan, with additional awards being made from previously-returned grant funds. The Maine Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) received 45 applications to review with a total over $6.5 million dollars in funding requests. Thirty-two stream crossing projects funded this round will result in new or improved upstream fish passage to 60 miles of stream habitat, and result in less flooding and improved resilience of local transportation infrastructure.

Maine DEP is pleased to announce funds for the following projects in the central Maine area:

Fairfield, Green Road, $150,000; Mercer, Pond Road, $150,000; Whitefield, South Hunts Meadow Road, $146,000.

SRLT hires program manager

Cheryl Daigle

Sebasticook Regional Land Trust (SRLT) has announced the hiring of Cheryl Daigle as program manager. The membership-supported conservation association works to conserve and restore the lands and waters of the Sebasticook River Watershed in Central Maine, and has been all-volunteer for more than six years.

Daigle will take the lead on operations and coordinate the activities of the board and volunteers beginning in early March. She brings extensive experience in communications and outreach at diverse community-based conservation organizations across New England. Her career focus has been on conservation, restoration, cultural vitality and economic health of the communities in which she has worked. She most recently served as the editor of Northern Woodlands magazine. Managing SRLT marks a return to Maine for Daigle. Her previous conservation work in the Pine Tree state has been in the roles of executive director at the Maine Lakes Society, outreach coordinator at the Penobscot River Restoration Trust and publications specialist at Maine Sea Grant.

“Our dedicated core of volunteers has struggled to do more than maintain our preserves, monitor easement holdings and present outreach events,” said SRLT board president Tom Aversa. “Cheryl’s skills in community engagement, fundraising, grant writing and land stewardship will help us meet the challenges of the future.”

Sebasticook Regional Land Trust focuses on land conservation, habitat restoration and environmental education, working with landowners to help them voluntarily protect their land for future generations. In its first ten years, the SRLT and its landowner partners have ensured the permanent protection of nearly 4,000 acres of wild and working lands. Learn more at sebasticookrlt.org.

CHINA: More discussions take place on appeals board ordinance

by Mary Grow

China select board members spent the first hour and a half of their two-hour March 6 special meeting talking about the Board of Appeals Ordinance that they, planning board members, board of appeals members and other residents have been discussing since early January.

The result of their deliberations is a draft revised ordinance that they intend to present to voters at the June 13 town business meeting.

Board member Brent Chesley, whose initial amendments on Jan. 3 started the series of not always amicable public conversations, had divided proposed changes reacting to his proposed changes into three categories: those from town attorney Amanda Meader; those from the China planning board; and two from other sources.

[See related story: Planners vote unanimously to forward new version of appeals board ordinance, following another fight]

Attorney Meader’s recommendations were accepted unanimously and without discussion.

Planning board proposals were uniformly rejected, mostly with select board members Chesley, Blane Casey and chairman Wayne Chadwick opposing them and members Jeanne Marquis and Janet Preston favoring them.

A recommendation from an unnamed resident, supported by China Region Lakes Alliance executive director Scott Pierz, to have any variance that the Board of Appeals approves recorded in the county Registry of Deeds within 90 days was unanimously approved. (A variance is an exception to an ordinance requirement.)

Suggested language from the China Lake Association board of directors, via an email from vice-president Eric Lind, directing the Board of Appeals to make sure an approved variance would not harm nearby water bodies and authorizing the board to add conditions to a variance was rejected. Only Marquis and Preston voted to add it.

Board members asked Town Manager Rebecca Hapgood to have the ordinance in final form for planning board members to consider at their March 14 meeting.

There will be a public hearing on the proposed ordinance before it goes to voters, Chadwick told audience members. And, he said, on the June 13 town meeting warrant it will appear with a recommendation from the select board that voters approve it; he does not object to adding a recommendation from the planning board if that board chooses to make one.

The June 13 town business meeting will be by written ballot, Hapgood said; select board members so voted last fall.

The budget that select board members approved March 6 was slightly amended to incorporate their Feb. 27 decisions (see the March 2 issue of The Town Line, p. 2). It was to be forwarded to the budget committee for consideration at a March 7 meeting.

The next select board meeting is scheduled for 6:30 p.m. Monday, March 13.

China planners vote unanimously to forward new version of appeals board ordinance, following another fight

by Mary Grow

At a March 2 meeting, China Planning Board members unanimously voted to forward their recommended version of the Board of Appeals Ordinance to the select board, scheduled to meet March 6.

The decision was not reached without yet another argument – they started in January – about the relationship between the select board and the planning board, with planning board co-chairman James Wilkens and select board member Brent Chesley squaring off again.

Chesley first proposed amending the ordinance. The rest of the select board endorsed it at a Jan. 3 meeting, leading to the ongoing argument about what town body recommends ordinance changes.

[See related story: More discussions take place on appeals board ordinance]

Voters have the final say. Select board members intend to have an amended Board of Appeals Ordinance (Chapter 9 of the China Land Development Code) on the June town meeting warrant.

Planning board members generally approve Chesley’s suggested procedural changes, but their final draft, as co-chairman Toni Wall explained it March 2, rejects three of his substantive points.

  • The existing and proposed ordinances allow the Board of Appeals to vary some dimensional requirements (setbacks from property lines, for example) within limits. Chesley proposed allowing relaxation of the 20 percent limit on setback variances with written consent from the abutting property-owner; planning board members deleted the provision.
  • The planning board’s draft ordinance includes the existing prohibition on variances that would allow new or enlarged principal structures on lots less than 20,000 square feet in resource protection, stream protection and shoreland zones, a prohibition that Chesley’s draft deletes.
  • The planning board draft includes a list of nine standards for approving a variance that Chesley’s draft removes. The standards say that the Board of Appeals should find that approval would not cause “unsafe or unhealthful conditions,” water pollution or other harmful effects and would protect shoreland vegetation, public access to the water body and other benefits.

Two other proposed additions are a requirement that the landowner register an approved variance at the Kennebec County Registry of Deeds and a paragraph authorizing disability variances.

During the March 2 meeting, resident Scott Pierz recommended town officials register variances and pass the cost on to the landowner, rather than assuming the landowner will do it. Without a record, future title searches are apt to lead to confusion.

The disability variance would be included in a permit issued by the codes officer and would be only for equipment or a structure to make a building accessible for a handicapped resident or frequent user – for example, a handicapped ramp that needs to encroach into a setback area.

The second major topic at the March 2 meeting was China’s comprehensive plan. Wall had excerpted references to planning board responsibilities under the plan.

Board members agreed they should review China’s Phosphorus Control Ordinance (Chapter Four of the Land Development Code), first educating themselves on new water quality information. The town website, china.govoffice.com, dates the ordinance June 5, 1993.

Planners also intend to return to discussion of a solar ordinance to govern future siting of commercial solar developments.

The comprehensive plan calls for an implementation committee to supervise carrying out plan recommendations. Town Manager Rebecca Hapgood said March 3 that the select board created a new implementation committee in July 2022; she is waiting for residents to volunteer to become members.

The next regular China Planning Board meeting is scheduled for 6:30 p.m., Tuesday, March 14.

Lawrence girls basketball claims state championship

Front rows, from left to right: Brianna Poulin, Mckenzie Nadeau, Alisabeth Dumont, Hope Bouchard, Elizabeth Crommett, and Alicen Higgins. Back, Payton Cole, Kaylee Elkins, Lilly Gray, Ashley Shores, Madalyn Provost, Nadia Morrison, Taylor Pellerin, and Ella Minihan. (photo by Ramey Stevens, Central Maine Photography staff)

Defeats Brunswick, 58-43

The Lawrence High School girls basketball team won the Class A state championship on March 3, at the Augusta Civic Center, defeating Brunswick, 58-43.

Cutting down the net after the Class A Northern Championship Title on Friday Feb 24. On the ladder, left, from top down, Ali Higgins, Brianna Poulin and Taylor Pellerin. Right, top down, Ella Minihan, Hope Bouchard and Makenzie Nadeau. (photo by Ramey Stevens, Central Maine Photography staff)

Issue for March 2, 2023

Issue for March 2, 2023

Celebrating 35 years of local news

Vassalboro Historical Society gets new Bookeye scanner

The Vassalboro Historical Society (VHS) has a new tool, and VHS president Jan Clowes is excited about using it and about sharing it. It’s called a Bookeye scanner, and it takes pictures of documents and transfers them to a computer, from which they can be read, downloaded, printed and otherwise used without risk to the irreplaceable, often-fragile originals… by Mary Grow

Town News

Select board calls special meeting to address board of appeals ordinance

CHINA – China select board members have scheduled a special meeting at 6:30 p.m. Monday, March 6, in the town office meeting room. They hope it will be a short one; the primary purposes are to finish – temporarily — talking about the Board of Appeals Ordinance and to make remaining preliminary recommendations on the 2023-24 municipal budget…

ICE OUT 2023? Take a guess. Win a prize!

CHINA — Write down your best guess (one per person) and send it to The Town Line, PO Box 89, South China, ME 04358, or email us at townline@townline.org with the subject “ICE OUT 2023“. If more than one person guesses the correct date, a drawing will be held to determine the winner. Get your guess to The Town Line office by noon, Friday, March 17, 2023…

Name that film!

Identify the film in which this famous line originated and qualify to win FREE passes to Railroad Square Cinema in Waterville: “Go ahead, make my day.” Email us at townline@townline.org with subject “Name that film!” Deadline for submission is March 9, 2023…

Local happenings

New Dimensions FCU awarded grant for ending hunger campaign

WATERVILLE – Elan, headquartered in Minneapolis, Minnesota, continuing the commitment to partners and their communities, has selected 25 new credit union partners to designate a charity in their community to receive a $15,000 donation on the credit union’s behalf, as part of the 2023 Elan Charitable Giving Program…

Palermo resident to celebrate professional pet sitters week March 5 – 11

PALERMO – Business owner Sandy Patrick will use the annual observance to celebrate industry growth and encourage local pet owners to learn more about the advantages of using a professional pet-sitting company…

EVENTS: Waterville Creates announces youth art month exhibition

WATERVILLE – Ticonic Gallery, a division of Waterville Creates, is delighted to partner with Greene Block + Studios to celebrate Youth Art Month (YAM) with a spectacular, multi-site exhibition of artwork by local students in grades K–12. The 9th annual YAM exhibition will be on view at both locations March 3 – 31, with an opening reception on March 3 from 4­­ – 7 p.m…

EVENTS: Gaslight Theater announces audition dates for Black Comedy

HALLOWELL – Gaslight Theater announces audition dates for their upcoming show, Peter Shaffer’s Black Comedy, directed by Lucille Rioux. Auditions will be held 6:30 p.m. on Sunday, March 12, and Tuesday, March 14, at Hallowell City Hall, located at 1 Winthrop Street, in Hallowell…

SCHOOL NEWS

Elmira College recognizes annual Key Award recipients

OAKLAND – Those receiving the award included Emma Fortie and Jonathan EccherMullally, both of Oakland…

Emerson College student Conway earns dean’s list

CENTRAL ME – Emerson College, in Boston, Massachusetts, has announced that student Ella Conway, of Skowhegan, earned dean’s list honors for the Fall 2022 Semester. Ella is majoring in Media Arts Production and is a member of the class of 2026…

Students enroll at St. Lawrence University

CENTRAL ME – The class of 2026 are leaders in and out of the classroom. They’re artists and performers, entrepreneurs, athletes, and advocates. Even before they matriculated on August 21, 2022, they set the bar high for future Laurentians. They came to St. Lawrence University, in Canton, New York, with a cumulative four-year GPA of 92.3 – a record for an incoming class. Among them are Emma Crosby, of Augusta, and Tanley Tibbetts, of Chelsea…

Jasmine Daly named to Clarkson University’s dean’s list

CHINA – Jasmine Marie Daly, of South China, a junior majoring in political science, was named to the dean’s list for the Fall 2022 semester at Clarkson University, in Potsdam, New York…

PHOTO: Lawrence girls basketball claims eastern title

FAIRFIELD – Photos of the winners of the Class A Northern championship, by Central Maine Photography…

PHOTO: Lawrence’s Hope Bouchard presented with award for outstanding play and sportsmanship

FAIRFIELD – Lawrence Senior Hope Bouchard received the 2023 Bob Whytock Award for outstanding play and sportsmanship at the Augusta Civic Center on Friday, Feb 24. Photo by Central Maine Photography…

FICTION: The House, part 6: There’s a chill in the air

“Would either of you two mind if Amy comes over this weekend?” asked David about his girlfriend, Amy Cookson. “I’ve been telling her about the house and the weird things we’ve been experiencing and she’d love to see the place”… by Peg Pellerin

Webber’s Pond

Webber’s Pond is a comic drawn by an anonymous central Maine resident (click thumbnail to enlarge)…

Up and down the Kennebec Valley: Augusta families – Part 4 (new)

AUGUSTA HISTORY – The fourth early Augusta settler, prominent citizen and diarist your writer promised to introduce was Henry Sewall (Oct. 24, 1752 – Sept. 4, 1845). His diary poses a puzzle. James North, whose history of Augusta was published in 1870, relied heavily on it from the 1780s through the late 1790s, and mentioned it in footnotes to events in 1820 and 1828, but not thereafter… by Mary Grow [2042 words]

Up and down the Kennebec Valley: Augusta families – Part 3

AUGUSTA HISTORY – Daniel Cony (Aug. 3, 1752 – Jan. 21, 1842) has been mentioned in previous articles in this series in various contexts, including as the founder of Augusta’s Cony Female Academy and the man after whom Cony High School is named… by Mary Grow [2162 words]

Up and down the Kennebec Valley: Early Augusta Families – Part 2

AUGUSTA HISTORY – Last week readers met James Howard, one of the first settlers at Cushnoc (which became Hallowell, which divided into Hallowell and Augusta) and some of his family members; and your writer promised information on other pre-Augusta settlers, Ephraim Ballard, Daniel Cony and Henry Sewall… by Mary Grow [1758 words]

Up and down the Kennebec Valley: Early Augusta Families – Part 1

AUGUSTA HISTORY – The three people whose diaries Charles Nash excerpted in his 1904 Augusta history, and who provided old weather records for last week’s article, were members of some of the first families to settle in the area. Martha Ballard came to Hallowell in October 1777, two years after her husband Ephraim brought his surveying business to the area. Henry Sewall came “after the Revolution,” Daniel Cony in 1778… by Mary Grow [1985 words]

Listing of local town meetings

CENTRAL ME — Listing of 2023 local town meetings in central Maine. To have your town listed, please email us at townline@townline.org…

2022-’23 Real Estate Tax Due Dates

Real estate tax due dates for the towns of Albion, China, Fairfield, Oakland, Palermo, Sidney, Vassalboro, Waterville, Windsor and Winslow…

CALENDAR OF EVENTS: Upcoming Sew for a Cause dates

VASSALBORO — Here are the upcoming Sew for a Cause dates: Thursdays, March 2, March 16, April 6 and April 20. Meet from 10 a.m. -3 p.m., at St Bridget Center, 864 Main St., Vassalboro. All sewing skill levels are welcome to join… and many other local events!

Obituaries

VASSALBORO – Beverly A. Perry, 86, died Monday, February 20, 2023, at the Oak Grove Center, in Waterville, following a long illness. She was born in Waterville, on December 24, 1936, a daughter of the late Cecil and Ruth (Vaughn) Fitch… and remembering 7 others.

Common Ground: Win a $10 gift certificate!

DEADLINE: Wednesday, March 8, 2023

Identify the people in these three photos, and tell us what they have in common. You could win a $10 gift certificate to Hannaford Supermarket! Email your answer to townline@townline.org or through our Contact page. Include your name and address with your answer. Use “Common Ground” in the subject!

Previous winner: Ann Budris, Winslow

Town Line Original Columnists

Roland D. HalleeSCORES & OUTDOORS

by Roland D. Hallee | While in the early stages of my seventh decade, like everyone else of my generation, we have aches and pains that appear from time to time. I happen to have one in my neck (no, not my wife). I’ve tried various things, but my oldest brother put me on to a product called Blue Emu…

GROWING YOUR BUSINESS

by Dan Beaulieu | The tide has changed when it comes to employers and employees. Certainly, there is a shortage of the latter which is causing significant problems for all businesses, especially smaller ones. We are seeing restaurants both large and small including take out places, closed on Monday and Tuesday for lack of people to work those days and also to give their very hard working employees a break from the many hours they are putting on the days they do work…

SMALL SPACE GARDENING

by Melinda Myers | Start this year’s tree pest management with a stroll through the landscape. As you enjoy the scenery, be sure to look for any unwelcome pests that may be overwintering on the twigs of trees…

Peter CatesREVIEW POTPOURRI

by Peter Cates | The 22nd/24th former President Stephen Grover Cleveland achieved distinction in three ways during his years in the White House…

LIFE ON THE PLAINS

by Roland D. Hallee | This photo revisits the layout of the southern end of the Plains in the 1950s…

FOR YOUR HEALTH

You might think that seasonal allergies are just a spring thing. Not true. Autumn brings pollen from the ragweed plant to many parts of the U.S. And if you’re allergic to it, you may find yourself dealing with watery eyes, a runny or stuffy nose and an itchy throat…

FOR YOUR HEALTH: Should you get tested for seasonal allergies?

You might think that seasonal allergies are just a spring thing. Not true. Autumn brings pollen from the ragweed plant to many parts of the U.S. And if you’re allergic to it, you may find yourself dealing with watery eyes, a runny or stuffy nose and an itchy throat.

Ragweed pollen levels typically peak in mid-September. But depending on where you live, they can hang around until November, according to the American College of Allergy, Asthma & Immunology.

Here’s what you need to know about the symptoms and treatment of ragweed allergies — and when you should see your doctor.

What causes seasonal allergies?

“Seasonal allergies occur when the body’s immune system overreacts to something in the environment, such as pollen,” explains Morris Nejat, MD. Dr. Nejat is the chief medical officer at NY Allergy & Sinus Centers in New York City.

Many times throughout the year, certain plants release pollen. Tree pollen causes problems in the spring, and grass pollen is common in the summer. When fall comes, ragweed pollen takes over.

Seasonal allergies affect as many as 60 million people in the U.S., according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (Learn why the allergy season is getting longer.)

As pollen travels through the air, it can make its way into your eyes, nose and lungs. Your body may act as if it’s under attack and release a chemical called histamine into your blood. This causes symptoms such as:

  • Runny nose
  • Red, watery eyes
  • Itchy eyes, nose, throat and skin
  • Sneezing, coughing and wheezing
  • Sinus pressure
  • Tiredness

When do you need to get tested for seasonal allergies?

If you think you have seasonal allergies, talk to your primary care doctor. Finding out the cause of your symptoms helps your doctor decide which medications to give you. They will discuss your symptoms and medical history. Your doctor may also refer you to an allergist for testing, if necessary.

“You should get tested for seasonal allergies if you have symptoms that last more than 3 months or if you have chronic sinus infections, nasal congestion or difficulty breathing,” says Dr. Nejat.

A skin prick or scratch test can confirm your allergy, says the Asthma and Allergy Foundation of America. The doctor will place a drop of an allergen (such as ragweed) onto your skin, usually on the forearm. Then they will lightly prick or scratch your skin. You probably won’t find the test painful, but you may have a little discomfort. If your skin gets a red, raised bump, it means you’ve had an allergic reaction.

How to relieve symptoms

Taking an over-the-counter medicine can help relieve your symptoms. Your doctor might recommend:

  • Corticosteroid nasal spray. These medications reduce nasal inflammation. Examples include budesonide (Rhinocort®) and fluticasone propionate (Flonase®).
  • Antihistamines. These medications block the release of histamines, a chemical your body releases during an allergic reaction. Some examples are Loratadine (Claritin®) and cetirizine (Zyrtec®). (Here’s the difference between Claritin and Zyrtec.)
  • Decongestants. Oral decongestants such as pseudoephedrine (Sudafed®) relieve sinus congestion. Oxymetazoline (Afrin®) is a decongestant nasal spray.

“Oftentimes, the same medication comes in both over-the-counter and prescription versions,” says Dr. Nejat. The allergist will be able to decide which medicines are best for you.

You can also try a saline nasal rinse to reduce congestion. Eye drops can calm itchy, red and watery eyes.

No matter what regimen you’re on, always follow the medication’s instructions. For example, decongestant nasal sprays shouldn’t be used for more than 3 days in a row (unless your doctor says otherwise).

Other tips that can help you manage fall allergies

Don’t let allergies keep you from having fun this fall. Making small changes to your daily routine can help you get ahead of ragweed pollen.

  • Track the pollen count. You can check pollen counts in your area using the map provided by the National Allergy Bureau.
  • Avoid outdoor chores. When the pollen count is really high, steer clear of yard work such as gardening or mowing the lawn. If you do outdoor chores, wear a face mask, says the Mayo Clinic.
  • Close the windows. That goes for the doors in your house, too.
  • Remove pollen. Change your clothes when you come into your house from the outdoors. Take a shower, and toss the clothing in the laundry to wash away the pollen.
  • Breathe clean air. Use air conditioners in your house and car. Consider buying high-efficiency filters. And use dehumidifiers to keep the air dry and breathable.

LIFE ON THE PLAINS: The Plains, circa 1950s; southern end

by Roland D. Hallee

Legend: 1. Intersection of Summer and Gold sts.; 2. The former Notre Dame church and school, now KVCAP; 3. South End Arena; 4. The southern tip of “the island”; 5. Site of Picher’s Furniture Store; 6. Silver St.; 7. South Grammar School, now the Muskie Center.

REVIEW POTPOURRI: Grover Cleveland

Grover Cleveland

Peter Catesby Peter Cates

Grover Cleveland

The 22nd/24th former President Stephen Grover Cleveland achieved distinction in three ways during his years in the White House:

1. He was the only Democrat to be elected president since James Buchanan’s one term ended in 1861 and would remain so until 1913 when the Democrat Thomas Woodrow Wilson would defeat both Republican William Howard Taft in his bid for re-election and Taft’s predecessor, Teddy Roosevelt, who had bolted the Republican party and ran as an independent Bull Moose candidate.

2. Cleveland remains the only president to serve two split terms, first from 1885 to 1889 only to be defeated by the Republican Benjamin Harrison ; and then to defeat Harrison in the latter’s re-election bid and again serve from 1893 to 1897.

3. He was stubbornly, abrasively, incorrigibly honest, not giving a hoot about his own political interests, let alone pleasing others; he earned the honorary epithets “Ugly-honest” and “His Obstinacy!”

Cleveland was born in Caldwell, New Jersey, March 18th, 1837, to a Presbyterian minister, Richard Falley Cleveland (1804-1853), and his wife, the former Ann Neal (1806-1882), and had three brothers and five sisters.

When Rev. Cleveland was appointed district secretary for the American Home Mission Society, he relocated the family to New York State, which Cleveland himself would consider his home base for most of his working adult life.

He taught at a New York City school for the blind, moved to Buffalo where he studied law and was admitted to the bar in 1859, became a ward supervisor, assistant district attorney and sheriff of Erie County, mayor of Buffalo and finally governor of New York before winning the presidency.

As sheriff, Cleveland personally pulled the lever at the hangings of two convicted killers.

During the horrible 1880s of corruption in the country when the rich kept getting richer and buying up just about every official in government, one historian remarked that “the Standard Oil Company has done everything with the Pennsylvania legislature except refine it.”

Despite the rampant political criminality versus Cleveland’s refusal to wheel and deal in his frequently cursed honesty and independence, honest people in high places sought him out and his rise in public life began its ascendancy. As mayor, governor and president, he cut much fraud and waste with his own reforms and reduced tariffs.

But he did at times make mistakes, perhaps the greatest one being his appointment of a hard-nosed Attorney General Richard Olney , who in turn used harsh measures in cracking down on unemployed workers and strikers against the Pullman Railroad and Standard Oil.

In 1886, the 49-year-old bachelor married 21-year-old Frances Folsom, the daughter of one of his Buffalo law partners who had died 11 years earlier and of whom Cleveland had been a guardian for both her and her widowed mother. Married life softened Cleveland’s personality considerably. The couple had three daughters and two sons.

Cleveland had two vice-presidents – Indiana Senator Thomas A. Hendricks (1819-1885) who died shortly after taking office; and, during the second term, Illinois Representative Adlai Stevenson (1834-1914) who was the grandfather of the more famous opponent of Dwight D. Eisenhower twice for the White House and later appointed by John F. Kennedy as Ambassador to the United Nations.

An addendum:

Cleveland’s Republican opponent in 1884 was Maine’s own James G. Blaine who, as Speaker of the House, had engaged in suspicious sales of some railroad stocks and bonds.

The campaign became one of vicious mud-slinging with Democrats singing “Blaine, Blaine, James G. Blaine/The continental liar from the State of Maine!”

Then Republican operatives found a woman, Mrs. Maria Halpin, who stated that Cleveland had fathered her illegitimate son.

He accepted responsibility and, when his advisors inquired as to how they should respond, simply replied, “Tell the truth.”

Now the Republicans jeered, “Ma! Ma! Where’s my Pa?/Gone to the White House. Ha! Ha! Ha!”

After leaving the White House in 1897, Cleveland moved to Princeton, New Jersey, where he served on the University board of trustees and wrote the occasional article for Saturday Evening Post.

Grover Cleveland’s health declined during his last two or three years and he died of a heart attack on June 24, 1908, at the age of 71.

His widow outlived him by 39 years and died at the age of 83 in 1947. Except for the couple’s oldest child Ruth, who died at 13 in 1904, the remaining four children outlived both parents.

A personal note: the Nobleboro, Maine, author Elizabeth Coatsworth and her husband Henry Beston visited my grandmother annually for dinner over a period of years. She was a native of Buffalo and a cousin of Frances Folsom Cleveland.

Another cousin, Amelia Folsom, was one of Brigham Young’s 27 wives.

LEGAL NOTICES for Thursday, March 2, 2023

STATE OF MAINE
PROBATE COURT
COURT ST.,
SKOWHEGAN, ME
SOMERSET, ss
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
18-A MRSA sec. 3-801

The following Personal Representatives have been appointed in the estates noted. The first publication date of this notice March 2, 2023. If you are a creditor of an estate listed below, you must present your claim within four months of the first publication date of this Notice to Creditors by filing a written statement of your claim on a proper form with the Register of Probate of this Court or by delivering or mailing to the Personal Representative listed below at the address published by his name, a written statement of the claim indicating the basis therefore, the name and address of the claimant and the amount claimed or in such other manner as the law may provide. See 18-C M.R.S.A. §3-80.

2023-043 – Estate of JOAN A. FARNSWORTH, late of Yavapai, AZ deceased. Laura J. F. Mullen, PO Box 16166, Portal, AZ 85632 appointed Personal Representative.

2023-045 – Estate of DAVID E. HARTFORD, late of Smithfield, Maine deceased. Dale E. Hartford, 153 Mt. Tom Rd., Smithfield, Maine 04978 appointed Personal Representative.

2023-046 – Estate of JAMES E. QUIMBY, SR., late of Solon, Maine deceased. Timothy Jason Quimby, 42 B Pleasant St., Solon, Maine 04979 appointed Personal Representative.

2023-048 – Estate of THOMAS H. ENSMINGER, late of Skowhegan, Maine deceased. Nancy Johnstone Wilson, 49 Mount Pleasant Ave., Skowhegan, Maine 04976 appointed Personal Representative.

2023-052 – Estate of DAKOTA WAYNE BRYANT, late of Hartland, Maine deceased. Amy L. Philbrick, 311 Dexter Rd., St. Albans, Maine 04971 appointed Personal Representative.

2023-053 – Estate of JOAN A. TREMBLAY, late of ST. Albans, Maine deceased. Allard K Tremblay, PO Box 134, St. Albans, Maine 04971 appointed Personal Representative.

2023-054 – Estate of MICHAEL SCOTT FLOOD, late of Pittsfield, Maine deceased. Maureen A. Sullivan, 1574 Maine St., Pittsfield, Maine 04967 appointed Personal Representative.

2023-058 – Estate of ALFRED LEO NADEAU, late of Jackman, Maine deceased. Jennifer Dawn Lacasse, 801 Long Pond Rd., Long Pond TWP, Maine, 04945 appointed Personal Representative.

To be published on March 2 & March 9, 2023

Dated February 27, 2023
/s/ Victoria Hatch,
Register of Probate
(3/9)

STATE OF MAINE
PROBATE COURT
41 COURT ST.
SOMERSET, ss
SKOWHEGAN, ME
PROBATE NOTICES

TO ALL PERSONS INTERESTED IN ANY OF THE ESTATES LISTED BELOW

Notice is hereby given by the respective petitioners that they have filed petitions for appointment of personal representatives in the following estates or change of name. These matters will be heard at 10 a.m. or as soon thereafter as they may be on March 14, 2023. The requested appointments or name changes may be made on or after the hearing date if no sufficient objection be heard. This notice complies with the requirements of 18-C MRSA §3-403 and Probate Rule 4.

2023-024 – Estate of SEAMUS EDWYN WALDEN. Petition for Change of Name (Adult) filed by Seamus Edwyn Walden, 200 Franklin Street, Pittsfield, Me 04967 requesting his name be changed to Sophie Rose Walden for reasons set forth therein.

2023-037 – Estate of RYAN ACHILLES LEVESQUE. Petition for Change of Name (Minor) filed by Katya A. Tilton, 393 Center Road, Fairfield, Me 04937 requesting minor’s name be changed to Ryan Achilles Tilton for reasons set forth therein.

2023-057 – Estate of ABIGAIL MAE BAGLEY. Petition for Change of Name (Adult) filed by Abigail Mae Bagley, 106 Ridge Road, Fairfield, Me 04937 requesting her name be changed to Alaska Mae Bagley for reasons set forth therein.

Dated: February 27, 2023 /s/ Victoria Hatch,
Register of Probate
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