2022 Golf Fore Kids’ Sake raises $35,000 for youth mentoring

Big Brothers Big Sisters of Mid-Maine’s 2022 Golf Fore Kids’ Sake, at Belgrade Lakes, presented by Kennebec Savings Bank, raised $33,000 on Friday, September 2, to support one-to-one youth mentoring throughout mid-coast, central and eastern Maine.

The Belgrade Lakes Golf for Kids’ Sake was sponsored by Kennebec Savings Bank (Invitational Presenting Sponsor) with support from Major Sponsors Skowhegan Savings Bank, Cives Steele Company, Robert Gatof, and Horch Roofing. Lunch and Scoreboard Sponsors included Central Maine Motors Auto Group, Darlings, Sprague & Curtis Real Estate, and Sappi.

First Place Net: Maine General #2: Andy Dionne, John Smith, Jason Brown, Tim Borelli.

First Place Gross: Horch Roofing: Tim Matero, Chris Seavey, Jordan Matero, Benjie Blake.

Second Place Net: Bank of New Hampshire: Sean Rankin, Matt Worthen, Don McFadden, Travis Frautten.
Second Place Gross: Skowhegan Savings Bank: Kevin Holland, Don Skillings, Jim Coffin, Ed Goff.

Longest Drive awards were presented to Mark Eldgridge (men’s) and Adrian Phair (women’s). Ed Goff won the Chipping Contest.

To learn more about becoming a mentor, or for more information about Big Brothers Big Sisters of Mid-Maine’s youth mentoring programs, visit bbbsmidmaine.org.

Belgrade Golf Fore Kids’ Sake 2022 Tournament winners:

First Place Gross: Horch Roofing: Tim Matero, Chris Seavey, Jordan Matero, Benjie Blake. (photo courtesy of Monica Charette)

First Place Net: Maine General #2: Andy Dionne, John Smith, Jason Brown, Tim Borelli (photo courtesy of Monica Charette)

Issue for September 15, 2022

Issue for September 15, 2022

Celebrating 34 years of local news

Headstone returned to China Village Cemetery

Many unanswered questions still buried

The bell tolled from the church at the head of the lake just as Margaret B. Ayer’s headstone was finally laid back into place again at the China Village Cemetery. Cindy Gagnon, of the Daughters of the American Revolution remarked, “Well did you hear the bell ringing? How appropriate. It says Margaret’s family appreciates she’s back now and they are complete again”… by Jeanne Marquis

Webber Pond tests positive for blue-green algae toxins

Following weeks of speculation, the test results were confirmed, on Friday, September 9, that Webber Pond, in Vassalboro, has tested positive for toxic algae blooms. According to Linda Bacon, at the Maine Department of Environmental Protection, “scum collected Wednesday afternoon [September 7] tested positive for microcystin this afternoon, an algal toxin that causes damage to the liver”… by Roland D. Hallee

Your Local News

Select board approves one consultant; postpones another

CHINA – At their Sept. 12 meeting, China select board members discussed hiring consultants for two different projects. They postponed action on a municipal building consultant until they know the price, and approved a consultant to assist with meeting state Department of Labor regulations…

Tax rate set at 12.05 mil

CHINA – China’s property tax rate for the 2022-23 fiscal year, which began July 1, will be 12.05 mils ($12.05 for each $1,000 of valuation). After a series of frustrating delays caused by computer issues, the new rate was approved unanimously by the board of assessors (also the select board) at a special meeting Sept. 6…

Review of solar moratorium ordinance on agenda

VASSALBORO – One agenda item at the Vassalboro select board’s Thursday, Sept. 15, meeting is a review of a solar moratorium ordinance that board members intend to ask voters to approve on Nov. 8…

Two applications approved by planners

VASSALBORO – Vassalboro Planning Board members unanimously approved both applications on their Sept. 6 agenda, a new business and an extension of a solar development permit…

An open letter to our readers

BECOME A MEMBER: With the advent of the internet in the 1990s, advertising is no longer controlled by publications, but by social networking websites and search engines. As the internet has grown and gained more influence in our daily lives, the advertising power of the internet has grown as well. Over the years, the revenue from advertising that used to support local newspapers has shifted to global search engines and huge social networking websites instead. This change in who benefits from advertising has been a death blow to many local papers…

LETTERS: Smith supports hunting rights

from Paul Lucas (China) Hunting season is upon us, a tradition Mainers have looked forward to for generations. In this day and age with the rising cost of inflation hunting is now not only a tradition, but a necessity to feed our family. There is only one candidate in the race for the Maine House of Representatives who will ensure your right to hunt and to bear arms…

LETTERS: Gubernatorial positions on rising utility costs?

from Pam Partridge (North Anson) With Election Day now just weeks away, I’m eager to hear where the gubernatorial candidates stand on one of the issues of great concern to Mainers, particularly older Mainers on a fixed income. Electric bills jumped by 30 percent for average use customers this year with no meaningful break in sight while winter is just around the corner…

LETTERS: Couple to vote for Hemenway

from Kenny and Sandy Bowen (China) My wife and I will be voting to elect Stephen J. Hemenway for State House District #39 during the upcoming November 8. election. Stephen is a retired deputy sheriff of 32 years…

Name that film!

Identify the film in which this famous line originated and qualify to win FREE passes to Railroad Square Cinema in Waterville: “My momma always said life was like a box of chocolates.” Email us at townline@townline.org with subject “Name that film!” Deadline for submission is October 6, 2022…

EVENTS: Windsor Historical Society to offer evening talk

WINDSOR – The Windsor Historical Society is offering an evening talk with John Bunker who will share his knowledge of Maine apple trees on Wednesday, October 12…

EVENTS: KVCOG to hold hazardous waste collection day

CENTRAL ME – The Kennebec Valley Council of Governments (KVCOG) will be offering Household Hazardous Waste Collection Days for the following locations…

TEAM PHOTO: Lawrence High School girls varsity soccer team

FAIRFIELD – The Lawrence High School, of Fairfield, girls varsity soccer team photo…

Carrabec High School 2021-22 fourth quarter honors

NORTH ANSON – List of honor roll students at Carrabec High School…

Volunteers needed for Window Dressers workshop

CHINA – There is a great need for local community volunteers to make this a successful Window Dressers workshop. It is requested (but not required) that anyone ordering frames also commit to a four-hour shift on one of the workshop days. The committee is also looking for anyone who can supply food to the teams participating in the workshop…

Fall weather preview

CENTRAL ME – It has been a hot summer across the United States with the mercury frequently flirting with the 100-degree mark in countless cities and towns across the country and even some of the longest-duration heat waves in a decade. However, there is a light at the end of the tunnel for those awaiting the return of hoodie weather, pumpkin-flavored beverages and even snow…

Up and down the Kennebec Valley: Waterville historic district – Part 3 (new)

WATERVILLE HISTORY — After two weeks’ digressions, your writer returns to Waterville history, beginning with the C. F. Hathaway Shirt Company, described in Roger Reed and Christie Mitchell’s Lockwood Mill Historic District application as “an internationally known firm that originated in Waterville.” The application adds that Mill Number 2 “is the only intact industrial facility in Waterville associated with the important shirt maker”… by Mary Grow [1674 words]

Up and down the Kennebec Valley: Trotting parks

CENTRAL ME HISTORY — Your writer intended to deliver the promised article on Charles Hathaway and his shirt company, and more information on Waterville’s historic Main Street buildings, this week. But a reader reacted to last week’s digression on agricultural fairs with a question: what is a trotting park? by Mary Grow [1918 words]

Up and down the Kennebec Valley: Agricultural Fairs

CENTRAL ME HISTORY — Your writer is pleased that she didn’t promise a story about Hathaway shirts this week, because, considering the season, she decided to detour to write about the country fairs our ancestors enjoyed. Some of the historians cited previously in this series mentioned them; your writer will share bits of their information… by Mary Grow [1865 words]

Up and down the Kennebec Valley: Waterville historic district – Part 2

WATERVILLE HISTORY — This week’s description of Waterville’s Main Street Historic District begins where last week’s left off, with the Common Street buildings on the south side of Castonguay Square, and continues down the east side of Main Street. It adds a summary of the separate Lockwood Mill Historic District, across the intersection of Spring and Bridge streets at the north end of Water Street… by Mary Grow [1780 words]

CALENDAR OF EVENTS: Picture book author at ACB library

CHINA — Albert Church Brown Memorial Library, 37 Main St, China, will be hosting author, illustrator and musician Stephen Costanza, on Sunday, September 18, at 2 p.m. He brings his picture book, King of Ragtime: The Story of Scott Joplin, to life with a musical presentation… and many other local events!

Webber’s Pond

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

Give Us Your Best Shot!

The best recent photos from our readers!

Obituaries

PALERMO – Nancy A. Saban, 84, of Palermo, passed away on Friday, August 19, 2022, in Palermo. She was born in Vassalboro, on August 15, 1938, to parents Herbert and Ferne Keller… and remembering 12 others.

Town Line Original Columnists

Roland D. HalleeSCORES & OUTDOORS

by Roland D. Hallee | While I was playing cornhole last Friday night, I was interrupted while in the process of preparing for my next toss. It was pointed out to me that something was attached to the leg of my pants. It was approximately two to three inches long, black/brown – at least in the evening light. Someone said it was a cicadae, but I knew better. I wasn’t sure what it was. We sent it on its way. Research told me it was a giant water bug…

Peter CatesREVIEW POTPOURRI

by Peter Cates | A Jacksonian Democrat, the 11th President James Knox Polk (1795-1849) promised to be a one-term leader and to do what needed to be done in that self-allotted time span. His style was secretive, in working quietly behind the scenes…

I’M JUST CURIOUS

by Debbie Walker | I like words, groups of words and their meanings. I didn’t know for years, what an Idiom was. I had to learn it while working with first and second graders! So here goes, let me give you what I learned, and it is in the Mary Jane’s Farm magazine from the July 20-21 issue…

VETERANS CORNER

by Gary Kennedy | Well, as I promised here is part three of VA series. Not much has changed at the VA, Togus; the doors to Veteran Services are still closed/locked, the pool, gym are still off limits to all veterans except paying employees. Veterans are giving up…

FOR YOUR HEALTH

(NAPSI) | Get the facts, not the flu. For many people, the start of fall means busier schedules and longer to-do lists, but you shouldn’t let your annual flu shot fall to the bottom of that list…

FOR YOUR HEALTH: Don’t Let Flu Season Sneak Up On You

Flu shots are available at CVS Pharmacy and MinuteClinic locations nationwide

(NAPSI)—Get the facts, not the flu. For many people, the start of fall means busier schedules and longer to-do lists, but you shouldn’t let your annual flu shot fall to the bottom of that list.

What You Can Do About The Flu

With flu season approaching and COVID-19 cases still prevalent, Sandra Leal, PharmD, MPH, FAPhA, offers the following tips to help you fight the flu this season:

Get your annual flu shot as soon as possible: Getting your flu vaccine is the best way to help prevent the flu. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) recommends getting your vaccine as early in the fall as possible, ideally before the flu season begins. Not only can you help protect yourself from getting sick but you can help protect your family, friends and at-risk populations such as those who are 65 and older, people with certain immunocompromising or chronic medical conditions, infants or children under 5 and pregnant women. CVS Pharmacy and MinuteClinic locations nationwide administer the flu shot every day, with evening and weekend hours. New this year, you can schedule flu vaccination appointments for up to four family members at the same time for added convenience by visiting CVS.com, through the CVS app or by texting FLU to 287898.

Stay home if you’re sick: It’s important to know what the early symptoms of the flu are, such as fever, cough and body aches. If you experience them, you should stay home and away from others and, if you are sick, you should limit your contact with others as much as possible to stop the spread.

Practice good health habits: Beyond staying up to date with your vaccinations, you should wash your hands frequently, get plenty of sleep, be physically active, manage your stress, drink plenty of fluids and eat nutritious food. These are all healthy habits that can help support your immune system during flu season.

For seniors, take advantage of your vaccine options: For those over age 65, CVS Pharmacy and MinuteClinic offer three senior dose flu vaccines—Fluzone HD, Flublok, and Fluad. They may help create a stronger immune response and are preferred for seniors because they are at greater risk of developing severe flu-related illnesses. For protection against COVID-19, the CDC has also confirmed that patients can get any of the currently authorized COVID-19 vaccines at the same time as the flu vaccine, so don’t hesitate to get your flu shot and COVID-19 booster simultaneously during your next visit.

Learn More

Certain immunizations have age and location restrictions. For additional information on vaccines, visit www.CVS.com and www.MinuteClinic.com.

I’M JUST CURIOUS: What are idioms?

by Debbie Walker

I like words, groups of words and their meanings. I didn’t know for years, what an Idiom was. I had to learn it while working with first and second graders! So here goes, let me give you what I learned, and it is in the Mary Jane’s Farm magazine from the July 20-21 issue. Sorry, but I don’t know who submitted it.

For anyone who is out of touch with these things, an Idiom is a group of words that convey a meaning not quickly figured out. For instance, if you are talking to someone new here from Chile and you tell them it’s ‘raining cats and dogs today’, what do you think the picture will be in their mind? Oh, yeah, questions I believe.

I am giving you some of them and the history of the saying:

“I can be ready AT THE DROP OF A HAT”: (quickly) 1800s when the drop of a hat was a signal for the start of a race.

“Stop BEATING AROUND THE BUSH”: (avoid getting to the point) Dates back to the 1400s. Wealthy hunters would hire men to literally beat the bushes to draw out the birds.

“I can see you have a BEE IN YOUR BONNET” (Obsessed with something). You can’t stop thinking about something. First used in 1500s, likening the busyness of a beehive.

“Don’t try to BUTTER ME UP”: (to flatter). Came from ancient India, where it was custom to throw balls of butter at the statues of gods to seek their favor, forgiveness, and fortune.

“Let’s CUT A RUG”: (dance). Phrase from the 1920s invention of the jitterbug, a vigorous dance, would make carpet look cut.

“Don’t LET THE CAT OUT OF THE BAG” (Tell a secret): Originates in the 1700s, street vendors would sell pigs and present them in a bag. There was a fraud, the vendors would replace the pigs with cats. Wasn’t discovered until they reached home.

“Use some ELBOW GREASE on that”: (apply physical effort). First used in 1600s, a term for working in a sweat.

“PUT A SOCK IN IT!” (stop talking): 1800s people used socks to stuff the horns of their gramophones to muffle the sound (early volume control).

“Don’t SPILL THE BEANS” (tell a secret): Ancient Greek, voting process of placing beans in a container, if someone spilled them the results would be prematurely revealed.

“That new tool just doesn’t CUT THE MUSTARD.” (live up to expectations): Thought to have come from the phrase “pass the mustard” when solders are assembled for inspection. Also, as early as the 1600s phrases like as ‘hot as mustard’ or ‘as strong as mustard’ were used to describe something powerful or enthusiastic and to measure up would be to cut the mustard’.

“I have a NEST EGG (Savings)”. This is thought to have originated from the practice of placing fake eggs in hens’ nest to encourage them to lay more eggs, resulting in more income for the farmer.

Can you imagine if you are struggling with the language here as it is and then we throw in a few of these idioms, that’s just not fair. I’m just curious if you ever questioned an idiom. Feel free to send me your comments to DebbieWalker@townline.org. Have a great week and thanks for reading.

REVIEW POTPOURRI: James K. Polk

James K. Polk

Peter Catesby Peter Cates

James K. Polk

A Jacksonian Democrat, the 11th President James Knox Polk (1795-1849) promised to be a one-term leader and to do what needed to be done in that self-allotted time span. His style was secretive, in working quietly behind the scenes.

But he accomplished what he set out to do.

Among his achievements was the westward expansion of the United States into California and Oregon at the cost of a war with Mexico and some diplomatic hostilities with Great Britain over the expansion of Canada below British Columbia.

President Polk also put into effect the Walker Tariff of 1846 which greatly reduced the taxes on foreign goods which the Whig Tariff of 1842 had implemented, much to the anger of northern industrialists, who didn’t believe in the free market as Polk and his fellow Democrats did.

Finally, although Polk was a slave owner, he avoided the topic as much as possible in his speeches and policy decisions, much to the annoyance of certain southerners.

In the end, by holding to a mostly secretive below-the-radar management style, he managed to antagonize the radical Whigs and radical Democrats, both accusing him of mendacity in his secrecy.

Sarah Polk

First Lady Sarah Childress Polk (1803-1891) was born into a very wealthy family in Murfreesboro, Tennessee, and sent away to the Moravian Institute, in Salem, North Carolina, then considered one of the finest private schools in the country.

The couple got married on New Year’s Day in 1824 and she was the totally supportive help mate whose advice her husband sought more often than from fellow politicians.

However, like a number of other First Ladies, she avoided political discussions like the plague at social gatherings. And, as a result, she got on well with visitors who were among themselves the bitterest enemies.

In her ever-fascinating, at times gossipy book, America’s First Ladies, Christine Sadler writes very captivatingly of Mrs. Polk, skillfully pinpointing how this presidential couple was truly joined at the hip:

“Rugged old Sam Houston once said in exasperation, and perhaps after he had imbibed a dram too much that the only fault with James Knox Polk, the president who literally worked himself to death, was that he was ‘addicted to the drinking of plain water. ‘ Some felt much the same way about Polk’s handsome wife, Sarah. Her disciplined goodness was apt to bore and then to irritate lesser mortals.

“She was vivid to look at-a real Spanish-beauty type with the air of a high-born Donna, and her dresses were of magnificent fabrics in gorgeous colors – but in personality she was determined to be colorless. She was gracious, democratic, affable, and pulled no conversational bloopers. She was well-educated and some have said that in some respects she was a better politician than her husband, but ladies of her day did not discuss politics – not if they were real ladies. Sarah Polk, with her belief in the non-controversial, would not have discussed it anyway. Her conversation, at which she was considered quite good, ran to exclamatory sentences such as, “Sir, I’ve never known it otherwise!’ and to little come-ons as, “How so, Sir?”

Sarah’s firmly Biblical Presbyterianism meant no booze, cards and dancing at the Polk White House and, to avoid further unnecessary expenses, no refreshments at all.
After one particular reception, the hungry and thirsty guests were able to adjourn to the home of a newly-found family friend Dolly Madison, who satisfied their appetites.

By the time the Polks left the White House in March 1849, his workaholic habits had destroyed his health. He died three months later at the age of 54; Sarah outlived him by 42 years and died in 1891 at 88.

Up and down the Kennebec Valley: Waterville historic district – Part 3

Original Hathaway Shirt Factory, on Hathaway, St., in Waterville.

by Mary Grow

After two weeksdigressions, your writer returns to Waterville history, beginning with the C. F. Hathaway Shirt Company, described in Roger Reed and Christie Mitchell’s Lockwood Mill Historic District application as “an internationally known firm that originated in Waterville.” The application adds that Mill Number 2 “is the only intact industrial facility in Waterville associated with the important shirt maker.”

The company was founded by Charles Foster Hathaway, born July 2, 1816, in Plymouth, Massachusetts. In May 1840 he married Temperance Blackwell, of Waterville, in Waterville. Temperance died Jan. 19, 1888; Charles died Dec. 15, 1893. Both are buried in Waterville’s Pine Grove Cemetery.

Wikipedia says Hathaway quit school when he was 11 to work in a nail factory. When he was 15 he switched to printing, and later to his uncle Benjamin’s shirt factory in Plymouth.

The Hathaways moved to Waterville in 1843 or 1844, and Hathaway worked for different printers. In 1847 he bought out one of them for $571.47 and in April started publishing the Waterville Mail, described as “a weekly paper of four pages filled with sermons, religious homilies, and moral stories.” On July 19, 1847, he sold the business, for $475.

Ernest Marriner, who devoted a chapter in his Remembered Maine to Hathaway, explained that Waterville readers were not interested in “the religious homilies and the stern puritanical advice with which Hathaway filled his paper.”

By 1850, perhaps earlier, Hathaway was back in Massachusetts, opening the Hathaway and (Josiah) Tillson shirt factory, in Watertown. He sold out on March 31, 1853, and on April 1, according to his diary quoted on Wikipedia, agreed to start C. F. Hathaway and Company, in Waterville, in partnership with his brother George.

The first Hathaway Shirt Factory site was a one-acre lot on Appleton Street, bought for $900; the ground-breaking was June 1, 1853. Over the summer, Hathaway and two others made shirts in Hathaway’s house. By the end of October, Marriner wrote, quoting Hathaway, the factory was operating: “the working hours were 7 A.M. to 6 P.M., six days a week, with an hour off at noon” – a sixty-hour work week.

Cyr/Professional Building, corner of Appleton and Main streets, in Waterville.

Appleton Street runs from Elm Street across Main Street to Water Street, the intersection north of Temple Street. Your writer has been unable to locate the Hathaway factory on the street (Editor’s note: It is now an apartment building on Hathaway St.). She believes the building was wooden, because Marriner described Hathaway’s 1856 negotiations over lumber for an addition.

The Hathaway Company manufactured only men’s shirts until 1874, when a line of ladies’ underwear was added. Henry Kingsbury, writing in 1892, said that since 1853, the business “has grown with the steadiness of an oak tree.” By 1902, Reuben Dunn wrote in Edwin Whittemore’s Waterville history, Clarence A. Leighton, “associated with” Charles Hathaway since 1879, was sole proprietor. (Dunn disagreed with other sources on the dates of the company’s founding and of Hathaway’s death.)

Marriner wrote that the Appleton Street factory ran for more than a century, information that matches Reed and Mitchell’s saying that Mill Number 2 in the Lockwood complex “served as the principal manufacturing plant” for Hathaway shirts from 1957 to 2002, when the business closed.

Kingsbury called Hathaway “a man of strong, original character” who valued “thorough, honest work,” held “unusually earnest religious convictions” and had “friendly and honorable” relations with his employees.

Whittemore showed Hathaway the patriot. When the first two Waterville companies mustered for Civil War service in May 1861, the 183 men and their officers marched to the Hathaway factory, “where each man was presented with a pair of French flannel shirts by Mr. Hathaway.”

Marriner called Hathaway “Poor tortured soul!” He described a man overdriven by his religious belief, seeking to be a saint but constantly bemoaning his own “depravity and deceit” and the “wickedness of…[his] natural heart.”

Hathaway wanted to convert his employees; Marriner said he required prayer at the start of each work day – “Charles Hathaway’s special brand of prayer” – until rebellion and ridicule made him lift the requirement. He felt a duty to preach to everyone he met, including those who found his “starvation wages and other business practices” not very Christian.

He was hard to do business with, being frequently sure he was cheated. Marriner described his feud with Waterville Baptist Church pastor Henry S. Burrage; and joined Whittemore’s contributors and Kingsbury in praising Hathaway’s role in establishing the Second Baptist Church in the South End.

Marriner expressed sympathy for Temperance, writing that in 1840, she could not have foreseen “the ostracism, the loneliness, the ridicule she must encounter as the wife of this man.”

* * * * * *

Before the interjection of the Lockwood Mill Complex and Hathaway’s shirts, readers had followed Matthew Corbett and Scott Hanson’s 2012 application for Historic Preservation listing southward on the east side of Waterville’s Main Street. Crossing to the south end of the west side of the street, Corbett and Hanson listed three buildings south of the intersection where Silver Street joins Main Street from the west. Ticonic Row was at 8-22 Main Street, separated by an alley from the newer Parent Block at 26 Main Street; next was the Milliken Block, bordered on the north by Silver Street.

Ticonic Row is described as showing Greek Revival architectural elements. Brick, four stories high, flat-roofed, it is divided into four sections with name plates from periods of separate ownership: from south to north, Gabrielli Pomerleau, Abraham Joseph, Tozier-Dow and Sarah Levine. Built in 1836, it is the district’s oldest building. Originally three stories with a gable roof, the fourth floor was added, the uppermost windows lengthened and the roof flattened in 1924.

The Parent Block, a four-story brick building with decorative brick trim, dates from 1909. The style is described as “early 20th century commercial.” Corbett and Hanson found a mid-20th-century photograph of “the original storefront with a deeply recessed central entrance between tall display windows on low wood bulkheads…. The floor of the recess was one step up from the sidewalk and appears to be a granite slab.”

The building on the south corner of Silver and Main streets, which now has Silver Street Tavern on the street floor, was in 2012 the Milliken Block, dating from 1877.

An on-line Maine Preservation website gives more history than Corbett and Hanson had space for. The site says in 1866, Waterville National Bank directors hired architect Moses C. Foster (see box) to design a bank building on the site of an earlier wooden building.

Foster’s three-story brick Italianate style building went up in 1877. Waterville National Bank failed two years later, and the building was renamed to honor banker Dennis L. Milliken.

An undated photograph on the website shows a small carriage drawn by a white horse standing on Silver Street and eight men loitering on Main Street, two leaning on hitching posts and one holding a dog on a leash. The photo shows business signs above three street doors on Main Street; the legible ones read “Mitchell Clocks & Jewelry” and “Waterville National Bank.” Smaller signs mark second-floor businesses, and on the building’s northeast corner is a large third-floor shield identifying the Odd-Fellows Hall.

This photo shows the elegant brick and stone trim and the elaborate ornaments on the protruding cornice that Corbett and Hanson described. The Milliken Block is flanked by story-and-a-half wooden buildings south on Main Steet and west on Silver Street.

Early in the 20th century, the Maine Preservation site continues, O. J. Giguere bought the building. He combined three street-level stores into one, Giguere’s Clothing Store, and “installed the “G” lead glass windows.” He also put “a name plaque on the Maine [sic] Street elevation, a common trend in Waterville as Franco-Americans started purchasing commercial blocks on the south end of Maine [sic] Street.”

The plate on the building in the photograph described above is between the second and third floors. It appears to have a name and a date.

Moses Coburn Foster

Moses Coburn Foster was born in Newry, Maine, July 29, 1827. He married Francina Smith (born in 1830), of Bethel, in 1849; they had five daughters and one son.

According to the chapter on businessmen in Whittemore’s Waterville history, Foster was educated at Rumford High School and Gould and Bethel academies. He began his career as a builder and contractor in 1846; during the Civil War he was a master builder in the Union Army’s quartermaster’s department.

The family moved to Waterville in 1874, and in 1880 he incorporated M. C. Foster and Son with his son Herbert (born in 1860, died Aug. 31, 1899).

Foster is credited with many public buildings in New England and adjacent Canadian provinces, including post offices, churches, hotels and the Maine Central Railroad Station, in Brunswick.

Francina Foster died in 1890; Moses died Sept. 21, 1906. They are buried in Pine Grove Cemetery.

Their daughter, Carrie Mae (July 18, 1862 – Dec. 24, 1953), married businessman Frank Redington in 1890. From about 1892 until Moses Foster died, the couple lived with him in the Queen Anne style house that he built, described in a 2014 Central Maine newspaper article as “the first example of this architectural style in Waterville.” The two-story wooden house is an elaborate multi-gabled structure, with a square turret and a small front porch, its fancy shingles and decorative moldings painted contrasting colors. Wikipedia says parts of the interior are original, including “the entrance hallway with formal fireplace and ‘mahogany woodwork’ and stairs.”

The Redingtons remodeled in the early 1900s, probably adding the “tin ceilings, chandeliers, and fluted Doric columns in the opening between the parlor and library.” After Frank Redington’s death in February 1923, Carrie continued to live in the house until her death.

The Foster-Redington House was listed on the National Register of Historic Places on April 11, 2014. Located in a secluded area near downtown Waterville, it is privately owned; anyone visiting is urged to respect the owner’s rights.

Main sources

Corbett, Matthew, and Scott Hanson, National Register of Historic Places Registration Form, Waterville Main Street Historic District, Aug. 28, 2012, supplied by the Maine Historic Preservation Commission.
Kingsbury, Henry D., ed., Illustrated History of Kennebec County Maine 1625-1892 (1892).
Marriner, Ernest, Remembered Maine (1957).
Reed, Roger G., and Christi A. Mitchell, National Register of Historic Places Registration Form, Lockwood Mill Historic District, Jan. 11, 2007.
Whittemore, Rev. Edwin Carey, Centennial History of Waterville 1802-1902 (1902).

Websites, miscellaneous

LEGAL NOTICES for Thursday, September 19, 2022

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 September 15, 2022 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.

2022-271 – Estate of VIRGINIA E. JORDAN, late of Skowhegan, Me deceased. John B. Jordan, PO Box 607, Skowhegan, Me 04976 appointed Personal Representative.

2022-275 – Estate of DONALD D. KELLE, late of Palmyra, Me deceased. Michael J. Kelle, 24 Drew Lane, Newport, Me 04953 and JoDean I. Carsley, 1065 Warren Hill Road, Palmyra, Me 04965 appointed Co-Personal Representatives.

2022-279 – Estate of JOHN A HUSSEY, late of Pittsfield, Me deceased. Robert M. Hussey, 68 Fieldside Lane, Wells, Me 04090 appointed Personal Representative.

2022-281 – Estate of FLORENCE McCARTY SPAULDING, late of Madison, Me deceased. Beverly McCarty Grover, 176 Lakewood Road, Madison, Me 04950 appointed Personal Representative.

2022-284 – Estate of ARLAND R. CROPLEY, late of Skowhegan, Me deceased. Patricia Cropley, PO Box 52, Norridgewock, Me 04957 and Robert Cropley, 34 Black Point Road, Scarborough, Me 04074 appointed Co-Personal Representatives.

2022-285 – Estate of PAUL HENRY JOSEPH RODRIGUE, late of Canaan, Me deceased. Heather Rodrigue, 21 Fieldstone Xing, China, Me 04358 appointed Personal Representative.

2022-287 – Estate of ROBERT A. AMES, late of Skowhegan, Me deceased. Kendall R. Ames, 349 Old Bath Road, Brunswick, Me 04011 appointed Personal Representative.

2022-292 – Estate of PATRICK WOLF, late of Mercer, Me deceased. Zachariah Wolf, 608 Coldbrook Road, Hermon, Me 04401 appointed Personal Representataive.

2022-293 – Estate of MEREDITH K. HICKS, late of Richmond, VA., deceased. Susan M. Shaw, 1123 Ward Hill Road, Plymouth, Me 04969 appointed Personal Representative.

2022-294 – Estate of DAVID S. BATCHELDER, late of Pittsfield, Me deceased. Gloria J. James, 217 Bates Street, Pittsfield, Me 04967 appointed Personal Representative.

2022-224 – Estate of ROBERT A. MORSE, late of Skowhegan, Me deceased. Andrea K. Scott, 59 Old Post Road, Apt B2, Clinton, CT 06413 appointed Personal Representative.

2022-296 – Estate of BARBARA J. WELCH, late of St. Albans, Me deceased. Rebecca J. Boulanger, 262 Front Street, Richmond, Me 04357-1469 appointed Personal Representative.

2022-302 – Estate of LILLIAN M. STEWART, late of Madison, Me deceased. Ricky L. Stewart, 9 Harding Street, Skowhegan, Me 04976 appointed Personal Representative.

2022-304 – Estate of SARAH B. PRICE, late of Rockwood, Me deceased. Eric N. Price, PO Box 206, Rockwood, ME 04478 and Nancy L. Malinauskas, 116 Dover Road, Garland, ME 04929.

2022-306 – Estate of VICTOR HARTLEY, late of Canaan, Me deceased. Victoria Lund, 135 George Street, Pittsfield, Me 04967 appointed Personal Representative.

2022-307 – Estate of HALEY LYNN FARRIN, late of Madison, Me deceased. Tammy L. Gray, 872 East Madison Road, Madison, Me 04950 appointed Personal Representative.

2022-310 – Estate of SCOTT A. CAMPBELL, late of Skowhegan, Me deceased. Lindsey A. Campbell, 9 Lois Ave., Inglis, FL 34449 appointed Personal Representative.

2022-313 – Estate of GARY D. OUELLETTE, late of Palmyra, Me deceased. Ryan R. Ouellette, 5 Balsam Street, Lewiston, Me 04240 appointed Personal Representative.

2022-314 – Estate of DIANE M. GOBIN, late of Solon, Me deceased. Sean A. Greenleaf, 2625 Vineyard Circle, Sanford, FL 32771 appointed Personal Representative.

2022-315 – Estate of BETTY V. HENSLEY, late of Moscow, Me deceased. Valerie L. Travers, 496 Sabattus Street, Apt 9, Lewiston, Me 04240 appointed Personal Representative.

2022-316 – Estate of WANDA P. CALDER, late of New Portland, Me deceased. Cristen L. Dilworth, 64 Carroll Street, Falmouth, Me 04105 appointed Personal Representative.

2022-317 – Estate of DIANE L. ARABIE, late of Norridgewock, Me deceased. Patricia A. Blaisdell, 16 George Street, North Waterboro, Me 04061 and Theresa M. Blaisdell, 5 Old Falls Pond Road, Alfred, Me 04002 appointed Co-Personal Representatives.

2022-319 – Estate of PETER B. GARDNER, late of New Portland, Me deceased. Donna L. Gardner PO Box 33, New Vineyard, Me 04956 appointed Personal Representative.

2022-320 – Estate of JOHN H. PHILLIPS, late of Skowhegan, Me deceased. Leta M. Howes, 21 Summer Street, Skowhegan, Me 04976 appointed Personal Representative.

2022-321 – Estate of ALBERT G. JOHNSTON, late of Fairfield, Me deceased. Betty A. Whitney, 1 Burke Court, Fairfield, Me 04937 appointed Personal Representative.

To be published on Sept 15 & 22, 2022

Dated September 12, 2022

/s/ Victoria Hatch,
Register of Probate
(9/22)

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 1 p.m. or as soon thereafter as they may be on September 28, 2022. 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.

2022-282 – Estate of JOSHUA FRYE, adult of Anson, Me. Petition for Change of Name (Adult) filed by Joshua Les Frye, 14 Second Street, Anson, Me 04911 requesting his name be change to Joshua Lee Nichols for reasons set forth therein.

[Redacted at the request of petitioner on 02-14-2023]

2022-295 – Estate of HARPER J. CLOUTIER, minor of Fairfield, Me. Petition for Change of Name (Minor) filed by petitioners Kayla C. Roderick, 29 Cottage Street, Fairfield, Me 04937 and Shawn S. Cloutier, 255 Grand Army Road, Whitefield, Me 04353 requesting minor’s name be changed to Harper Juliette Roderick-Cloutier for reasons set forth therein.

2022-312 – Estate of MARK ANTHONY WEAVER. Petition for Change of Name (Adult) filed by Mark Anthony Weaver, 265 Grant Road, St. Albans, Me 04971 requesting his name be changed to Mark Anthony Groskranz for reasons set forth therein.

Dated: September 28, 2022 /s/ Victoria Hatch,

Register of Probate
(9/22)

PROBATE COURT
SOMERSET, SS

NOTICE TO HEIRS
Estate of JOHN H. PHILLIPS

DOCKET NO. 2022-320

It appearing that the following heir of John H. Phillips, as listed in an Application for Informal Probate of a Will and Appointment of Personal Representative are of unknown names and addresses:

THEREFORE, notice is hereby given as heir of the above-named estate pursuant to Maine Rules of Probate Procedure Rule 4(d) (1) (a), and Rule 4 (e) (a).

This notice shall be published once a week for two successive weeks in the Town Line with the first publication to be September 15, 2022.

The name and address of the Personal Representative is Leta M. Howes, 21 Summer Street, Skowhegan, Me 04976.

Dated: September 12, 2022

/s/ Victoria M. Hatch,
Register of Probate
(9/22)

VETERANS CORNER: Not much has changed at the VA

Veterans Administration facility at Togus. (Internet photo)

by Gary Kennedy

Well, as I promised here is part three of VA series. Not much has changed at the VA, Togus; the doors to Veteran Services are still closed/locked, the pool, gym are still off limits to all veterans except paying employees. Veterans are giving up. They now tend to meet in small groups in various places such as the veterans home, once per month and also the canteen at VA on certain days and times. It seems everything is becoming secret. I have been thanked on multiple occasions for the information provided in this column.

I was in communication with a veteran employee this past week and was told that veteran suicide conversations were up. It doesn’t take much outside of norm to aggravate veteran anxiety. Many of those who haven’t served don’t have a clue what some veterans go through. Thank God there are some of us willing to answer the need of those in pain. Unfortunately, many of those in need of help are not reaching out to VA but to other veterans. For some reason many vets feel safer with other vets, especially during these times of inadequacies within the system.

In just two years with the Wuhan Virus the veteran has been alienated from what they consider norm. I have had two veterans this summer who contacted me via a third party to see if I knew why they were not eligible to be seen at VA Togus. They said they were told they make too much money. I basically said, “I don’t care if you make a million dollar per year. If you were injured in the military you qualify for help.” And now they have it. Don’t settle or give up, the common sense answers are available. We are a fraternity and we always come to a brother or sister’s aid, singly or collectively. Don’t let China, Russia, Iran or Ukraine get you down. We will get through this entire fiasco together; even in our declining years.

I promised I would explain VA’s billing procedure as of late and why I believe it’s doomed to failure. I am going to extrapolate from an actual bill to try to show you how I see it. Let’s say you go to hospital X for a procedure which entails anesthesia, MRI, contrast and miscellaneous supplies. This procedure also required a doctor of anesthesia, a regular doctor, perhaps a PAC and a couple of nurses. This as you know, probably already guessed, is a total spinal procedure which requires the use of an MRI machine as well as these professionals for more than four hours. We must not forget that there is also a recovery room involved.

The total was $12,234.69 of which insurance paid $871.00.

Although there appears to be some redundancy and repetition; the bill is accurate according to my phone conversation with Community Care. They will get back to me as they seemed to agree with me; the payment to services is greatly deflated compared to asking fees. This example shows no Medicare as there is none. In some cases other insurance companies will be billed to recoup some of the initial fees.

In the past I was told that the VA was paying between 35 percent and 51 percent of valid billings. This was last year so I decided to check it out. I spoke with a doctor in Portland and I will paraphrase his position on this matter. He said, this is a professional office and as such I must hire professional employees. These employees expect a wage comparable to their abilities and education. VA’s new policies are so limited and restrictive so that I can’t afford to take VA referrals. I don’t pay patients to come here.

When I did the math he was spot on as was his office manager. So what does that tell us? Are we talking quantity verses quality. Some are locked in, as are some colleges, as they request and accept federal money. That is the reason veterans go to University of Maine not Bowdoin. (Example Only) The one Ivy League exception is Maine Maritime Academy which accepts federal funds. I don’t want to mislead you. You can still receive a great education in the University System.

So, I have given you a medical example which evolved into an educational one. The one thing that confuses me is, we have been hiring some fantastic doctors recently in orthopedics, neurology, primary care, etc., yet our halls remain empty and more and more veterans are being farmed out. Work at home has become common practice.

Basically the evolution of billing has evolved from billing of two years ago. We were dealing with service payments of between 35-51 percent. Now we are looking at around 29 percent payment of the doctors/hospital asking fees. How long will the system tolerate these sort of forced fees? In my opinion the dam will break sooner or later, and the price paid will be the veterans. We need honest political interplay not the games that the government is now playing. If you love our veterans than deal with them from your heart. They were there when you needed our shares protected. I hate to say it but the way things are going we might need the veterans of tomorrow, they may be facing this again.

All your comments have been evaluated and appreciated. Please keep your interplay alive. We advocates, both private and at VBA, want to be there for you. God bless and keep you. As long as there is speech and pens your needs will not go in vain.

LETTERS: Smith supports hunting rights

To the editor:

Hunting season is upon us, a tradition Mainers have looked forward to for generations. In this day and age with the rising cost of inflation hunting is now not only a tradition, but a necessity to feed our family. There is only one candidate in the race for the Maine House of Representatives who will ensure your right to hunt and to bear arms is never infringed upon and that is Katrina Smith. Endorsed by the NRA, Katrina Smith will stand strong and defend the 2nd Amendment, knowing that Maine is the safest state in the nation. Please join me and vote for Katrina Smith on November 8.

Paul Lucas
China

LETTERS: Gubernatorial positions on rising utility costs?

To the editor:

With Election Day now just weeks away, I’m eager to hear where the gubernatorial candidates stand on one of the issues of great concern to Mainers, particularly older Mainers on a fixed income. Electric bills jumped by 30 percent for average use customers this year with no meaningful break in sight while winter is just around the corner.

No one should have to choose between necessities — such as medicine and food — and needed utility services. In a state like Maine with a widely distributed population, many of our most vulnerable residents live in remote corners of our state. All consumers deserve affordable utility service that keeps us warm in the winter, cool in the summer and with the lights on when we need them.

Where do the gubernatorial candidates stand on this issue? If elected, how will they protect Mainers on a fixed income from skyrocketing utility rates, and bring equity to Maine’s utility policy?

Pam Partridge
AARP Maine Volunteer Advocate
North Anson