Classifieds

Classifieds

All classified ads cost $10.00 each week for 25 words plus telephone number or email address, plus 25¢ for each additional word. Boxed ads are $3 extra. Shaded boxed ads are $5 extra. To include a picture to accompany your ad is $2 extra.

Listing a Classified Ad with us is simple. Just visit our Contact page and send us an email! Please include your name, telephone number and the appropriate category you would like your ad listed under. Follow-up your email with a check mailed to: P.O. Box 89, Jonesbrook Crossing, So. China, ME 04358.

Articles for Sale

SIDE-BY-SIDE, 2024, 176 miles, roof, windshield & wiper, automatic, power steering. Blue & black, CF moto 600. Back canvas, first oil change. $9,000 firm, cash. (207) 859-0004. (1/16)

Animals

Automotive

Employment

POWERS AUTO, in Clinton, is looking for a DIESEL mechanic to work on big trucks and an AUTO mechanic to work on light duty cars and trucks. Pay based on experience. Hours negotiable. Please call 426-9099. (10/17)

Free

Items in the FREE category are published one week for free, 14 words and phone number. Visit our Contact page to send us a listing.

Legal Notice

Lost and Found

LOST AND FOUND items are published for one week free, 14 words and phone number. Visit our Contact page to send us a listing.

Personals

Real Estate for Sale

Rentals

RENTALS, for functions and family gatherings. South China American Legion Hall, Legion Memorial Dr., starting at $150 per day. Call or text 207-462-4321. (c)

OFFICE SPACE for rent, in Professional Building, on heavily traveled Rte. 3, in South China. Immediate occupancy. Answering service available. Located near Bar Harbor Bank & Trust and South China Post Office. Please call 445-4475. (c)

APARTMENT: Active senior citizen is looking for an apartment in the South China area. Non-smoker, non-drinker, and no wild parties. Call (207)-779-6337. (c)

Services

EMILY WORKS PHOTOGRAPHY: Affordable portraits, events, landscapes, move. Portraits start at $35. Mention this ad for special: Buy one print, get one 1/2 off. http://emilyworks.webs.com. Call 207-314-8607 for an appointment. (c)

GRAVE SITE CARE: Forget-Me-Not grave site care offers stone cleaning, edging, and planting for your loved one’s final resting place. Free estimates, reasonable rates, prompt service. Visit us on Facebook. 207-213-9179. (7/18)

HOME HEALTHCARE nights, weekends, early mornings. Shopping, errands, light housekeeping. PSS state certified. Available days, evenings, weekends. Specializing in dementia and Alzheimers with certification. Call Diane 615-9007. (c)

Sports/Recreation

Volunteering

NEED VOLUNTEERS? or WANT TO VOLUNTEER? Visit our Contact page and send us an email with the subject line “Volunteer Classifieds.” Tell us about your situation and we’ll create a classified ad for you and include it in this section. And yes, it’s FREE!

WATERVILLE AREA SOUP KITCHEN is looking for a volunteer cook and kitchen workers. One to two days a week in the morning: info@watervilleareasoupkitchen.com, 859-3063.

ADVERTISING SALES: The Town Line newspaper, a nonprofit 501(c)3 private foundation, is seeking volunteers to assist in the solicitation of advertising through inside telemarketing sales. Volunteers would be asked to make telephone calls to help promote special sections in the newspaper. Those interested can contact Kathy Duhnoski, advertising sales director, at 445-2234 or 691-2332, or email ads@townline.org.

CANCER PATIENT DRIVERS: The American Cancer Society is recruiting drivers to take cancer patients to their appointments. You need a good driving record, a current driver’s license, proof of adequate insurance, access to a safe and reliable vehicle, schedule availability, and regular desktop, laptop, or tablet computer access. FMI: contact Road to Recovery, at cancer.org or 1-800-227-2345. Volunteer now and help give cancer patients a much-needed ride. (c)

SOMERSET COUNTY CATHOLIC CHARITIES. Become a volunteer in Somerset County with Catholic Charities SEARCH Retired and Senior Volunteer Program. Call Cindy at 576-5730 or email cwhitney@ccmaine.org.

VASSALBORO FOOD PANTRY SEEKS VOLUNTEERS: The Vassalboro Food Pantry, located at 679 Main St., Vassalboro, is in need of volunteers on Mondays 9:15 – 11:30 a.m., Wed. 8:30 – 10 a.m. (July-Oct), Thurs.7:30 – 9:30 and 9:15 a.m. – 12:30 p.m., and Fridays general cleaning. For more info please call (207)873-7375 and leave a message (name and call back number). We’ll get back to you.

KVCAP is in need of volunteer drivers to provide rides to medical services, work programs, programs for people with special needs, children’s services and a variety of other services that provide valuable assistance. Volunteers are reimbursed for mileage, must have a reliable vehicle, and pass a state background check. FMI: contact Steve at 859-1631 or steves@kvcap.org

MAINE ALLIANCE FOR ADDICTION RECOVERY is seeking individuals to form a planning committee for a Recovery Wellness Rally, scheduled for Sept. 15, from 10 a.m. – 2 p.m. The first meeting is planned for May 8, starting at 6 p.m. at the MAAR office, 295 Water St., first floor conference room, Augusta. FMI: Darren at 207-621-4111. dripley@maineallianceforaddiction recovery.org.

SOUTH CHINA LIBRARY seeks volunteers during open hours Wed./Sat. Flexibility in work schedule. Work involves opening and closing the library, checking books in and out, re-shelving books. Training provided, but some familiarity with computer use helpful. FMI: Cheryl 445-2956 or clbaker818@gmail.com.

VOLUNTEER TEACHERS needed: art, logic and Latin. Grace Academy, Rte. 3, South China. FMI: 445-8239. (c)

THE VASSALBORO MINISTRY ASSOCIATION is currently looking for community minded residents who would like to join our group. Our mission includes helping fellow residents in need with an emergency delivery of heating oil.. The people we help include low income residents with a focus on families with children. If you would like to find out more please call Rose at 873-1342 or e-mail mainlystrmrs@myfairpoint.net.

VOLUNTEERS NEEDED to assist with vacuuming and dusting, and snow and ice management. FMI: contact Waterville Public Library.

The Importance of a Ride

For many of our neighbors in central Maine communities, they no longer have access to a car. Imagine needing to get to a doctor appointment, your important dental visit or to see your Eye Doctor and you have no ride. Thankfully, organizations like KVCAP, with offices in Waterville, Augusta and Skowhegan can help. Our Vans and Volunteer Drivers provide nearly 1000 trips per day.

If you have a clean driving record and would like to build your own schedule, you could volunteer drive for KVCAP. Some drive 5 hours a week, some drive 40 hours. We reimburse you for the use of your car, up to 65 cents a mile and pay you from the time you leave your driveway.
Want to do your part to help others? Call KVCAP at 859-1631 for more information.

Wanted

Yard Sales/Flea Markets/Craft Fairs

YARD – BOOK – BAKE – CRAFT SALE: Benefit for South China Library, American Legion Hall, 79 Legion Memorial Drive, South China, Saturday, June 22, 8 a,.m. – 2 p.m. (6/20)

WINDSOR: Two family garage sale, Saturday and Sunday, June 22 & 23, 8 a.m. – 4 p.m., 791 Ridge Road, Windsor. (6/20)

WINDSOR: Estate sale, Saturday, June 22, 7 a.m. – 3 p.m., 398 Weeks Mills Rd. A/C unit, tools, ladders, kitchen table, twin bedroom set, desks, kitchen supplies, lawn equipment, recliner, end tables, school supplies, and more. (6/20)

TABLES AVAILABLE AT YARD SALE: South China Library will hold a yard/book sale at the American Legion Hall, on Saturday, June 22, 8 a.m. – 2 p.m. Limited number of tables available for rental by community members who wish to sell their own craft or yard sale items. Fee is $15. FMI or to reserve a table, call 445-2956 or email southchinalibrary@gmail.com. (6/13)

Week of September 28, 2017

Week of September 28, 2017

Phil Haines, Vassalboro selectman succumbs to illness at 72 years old

Phil Haines 1945 – 2017


VASSALBORO – Dr. Philip “Phil” Wills Haines, 72, passed away Saturday, September 23, 2017, at MaineGeneral Medical Center, in Augusta.  He was born July 19, 1945, in Cherry Hill, New Jersey, the son of Bernard S. and Elizabeth S. (Matlack) Haines. VASSALBORO – Dr. Philip “Phil” Wills Haines, 72, passed away Saturday, September 23, 2017, at MaineGeneral Medical Center, in Augusta.  He was born July 19, 1945, in Cherry Hill, New Jersey, the son of Bernard S. and Elizabeth S. (Matlack) Haines.  Phil grew up in Maple Shade, New Jersey, attended Moorestown Friends School (New Jersey) and graduated from Westtown School (Westtown, Pennsylvania) in 1963. Phil then graduated from Union College with a bachelor of science degree in 1967, and earned a master’s degree in chemistry from Purdue University in 1969.  Later, in 1982, Phil earned a Doctorate… [read more…]

Your Local News

We’d like to feature stories about you, your neighborhood, schools, events and places you remember in Maine from the 1960s or before. Photos, too!

Send your story, with name, phone, or email, to townline@fairpoint.net or P.O. Box 89 Jonesbrook Crossing, So. China, ME 04358. FMI: 445-2234.

Town Line Original Columnists

Laser Vision Correction For Life’s Major Milestones

For Your Health

(NAPSI)—College graduation, a new job, getting married. These life milestones often lead to setting goals for achieving our best selves. For people dealing with nearsightedness, farsightedness and astigmatism, big life transitions are also a good time for considering LASIK eye surgery. Unlike prescription eyeglasses or contact lenses, LASIK, which uses laser technology to reshape corneas, offers a permanent way to improve vision.

“LASIK helps remove the layer that glasses and contacts put between you, your life and the world around you,” said Dr. Kerry Solomon with the American Refractive Surgery Council. “This is why a lot of people consider LASIK when approaching a milestone. The improved quality of life that excellent vision provides can make the next phase even more appealing.”

Clear vision, without the need for glasses or contacts, offers many benefits during and after life milestones, such as:

College Graduation: Transitioning into life as an independent adult is made much easier with great vision. For many, laser vision correction is a terrific gift the graduate will appreciate for years. Some choose to use their cash gifts to go toward the cost of the procedure.

Career: For some careers—military, emergency responders and airplane pilots—excellent vision is a matter of life and death. Professional athletes rely heavily on vision to keep a competitive edge. Photographers depend on their vision to capture the moment. But, in any career, having excellent vision without worrying about glasses or contacts is important.

Wedding: Every couple wants to look and feel their best as they celebrate their wedding day. For those who are good candidates, LASIK allows couples to see every moment of their big day in clarity and comfort, and have great vision at the ready for years.

Travel: Whether sightseeing, hiking, camping or exploring, travelers want to focus on their adventures, not on their vision. Needing glasses or contacts can weigh down bags and put a barrier between the traveler and the experience. Laser vision correction can give people their visual freedom and open up the world in new and exciting ways.

If a milestone in your life has you thinking about laser vision correction, such as LASIK, visit the American Refractive Surgery Council blog to research the procedure, learn what to expect before and after surgery, find ways to pay for it, and much more at www.Americanrefractivesurgerycouncil.org/blog.

Local boys take top prize at karate tournament

Mark Huard, center, is flanked by Huard’s Sports Karate team members Xander Giguere, 12, left, of Winslow, and Landon Nunn, 12, of Skowhegan, after they captured first place in fighting at the Pine Tree State Karate Championships, held at Freeport High School on September 9.
Photo by Missy Brown, Central Maine Photography staff

SCORES & OUTDOORS: Talk always turns to weather

Roland D. HalleeSCORES & OUTDOORS

by Roland D. Hallee

Isn’t it amazing how when you begin a conversation with someone, inevitably, it always leads to the weather. What would we do if we didn’t have the weather to talk about. Maybe some of us would never speak.

Whether you’re at the supermarket, church, or just bumping into a friend on the street, the conversation always goes something like, “What a nice day” or “boy, it sure is hot enough.” Get the idea?

Well, the other day, a colleague and I started talking about whether this recent stretch of weather constituted an “Indian Summer.” Which prompted me to think, “what really is an Indian summer and what determines whether we have one or not?”

An Indian summer is unseasonably warm, dry and calm weather, usually following a period of colder weather or frost in the late autumn, in September, October or early November. The Old Farmers Almanac describes it as taking place between November 11 and 20. It states, “During true Indian summer, the atmosphere looks hazy or smokey, and the weather is calm and dry.”

Modern ideas on what an Indian summer constitutes vary, but the most widely accepted value for determining whether an Indian summer is occurring is that the weather must be above 70 degrees for seven days after the autumnal equinox. The autumn equinox occured last week, and we have had a stretch of seven days where we are experiencing unseasonally warm weather. We also had a period of cold weather earlier in September.

The term Indian summer has been used for more than two centuries. The origin of other “Indian”phrases are well-known as referring to North American Indians, who prefer to be called Native Americans, or, in Canada, First Nations. The term Indian summer reached England in the 19th century, during the heyday of the British Raj in India. This led to the mistaken belief that the term referred to the Indian subcontinent. In fact, the Indians in question were the Native Americans, and the term began use there in the late 18th century.

Indian summer is first recorded in Letters From an American Farmer, a 1778 work by the French-American soldier-turned-farmer J. H. St. John de Crevecoeur: “Then a severe frost succeeds which prepares it to receive the voluminous coat of snow which is soon to follow; though it is often preceded by a short interval of smoke and mildness, called the Indian Summer.”

There are many references to the term in American literature in the following hundred years or so. In the 1830s Indian summer began to be used figuratively, to refer to any late flowering following a period of decline. It was well enough established as a phrase by 1834 for John Greenleaf Whittier to use the term that way, when in his poem Memories,” he wrote of “The Indian Summer of the heart!.”

Or, Thomas DeQuincey, in a republishing of Bentley’s Works of Thomas DeQuincey, 1855, wrote: “An Indian summer crept stealthily over his closing days.”

Also, in his story The Guardian Angel, Oliver Wendell Holmes mentions “an Indian summer of serene widowhood.”

As a climatic event it is known throughout the world and is most frequently associated with the eastern and central states of the U.S., which have a suitable climate to generate the weather pattern. For example, a wide variation of temperature and wind strength from summer to winter.

Why Indian? Well, no one knows but, as is commonplace when no one knows, many people have guessed.

Some say it was from the prairie fires deliberately set by Indian tribes; from raids on European settlements by Indian war parties, which usually ended in autumn; or, in parallel with other Indian terms, it implied a belief in Indian falsity and untrustworthiness and that an Indian summer was a substitute copy of the real thing.

But my grandfather, who could spin a yarn with the best of them, had the best I’ve ever heard.

It seems an Indian chief was concerned about a hunting party that was delayed in returning from a late summer gathering of meat for the winter. The year had been an extremely difficult one and the tribe needed the buffalo, deer and turkey meat for their winter consumption, and the hides for clothing and shelters. Fearing the crops in the fields would go to waste before the braves returned to harvest, the chief sat at his campfire and began to feverishly smoke a pipe, until the air was filled with smokey, hot air. Once the hunting party made its return, the air was still warm enough to gather the crops that had not been damaged by frost, that the chief feared would be destroyed by the impending cold weather.

Makes sense to me.

I’m Just Curious: Learning a little about Halloween past

by Debbie Walker

I almost feel bad for you all to be left to my mind for any of your reading material. But I doubt that many others have as much fun in their heads as I do. Yesterday, my head was busy dreaming up new pocketbooks. Once I get the kinks worked out I’ll let you know how they come out if you are interested. Today, I saw some clothes in a catalog that I think I may attempt to make one or two similar. This kind of stuff happens all the time!

Tonight I wanted to pass on some Halloween history. This was printed in The Country Register, written by Elizabeth Nix. I have pulled out bits and pieces of interest.

Trick or Treating started in the 1930s and early 1940s. In those years children were given homemade cookies and pieces of cake, fruit, nuts, even coins and toys. When I started Trick or Treating we were still given baked goods and store bought treats. That was in the ‘50s. Fudge made by mom was and always will be the best treat. That is my best Halloween memory!

In the 1950s candy manufacturers started to promote their products for Halloween. About 1970 or so the “boughten” candy became more important. There was and still is a problem with safety. Why in the world anyone would ever be cruel enough to try to harm children. I am afraid there is a sickness involved.

I like the idea of Trick A Trunk. My grandsons used to go to their church for Trick A Trunk. They had the fun of dressing up and to be able to holler Trick or Treat and be safe.

One of the things I enjoyed about Ms. Nix article was the history of some of our “today” candies:

1900 – Hershey’s Milk Chocolate bar invented
1907- Hershey’s Kisses
1923- Milky Way bars
1928- Reese’s Peanut Butter Cups
1930- Snickers bar
1932- 3 Musketeers bar
193?- Mars bar
193?- Nestle Crunch bar
1937- Kit Kat bars
1941- M&Ms

The really neat one is the tri-color candy corn that was invented in the 1880s!

So, I don’t know about you but just from writing this I feel like I am on a chocolate rush and I haven’t had a bite! I do like chocolate especially the dark stuff. But when I start buying candy for Halloween I make sure I buy the stuff I don’t like! Keeps me out of it (pretty much!).

I’m just curious what your favorite memories of Halloween are? Let me know at dwdaffy@yahoo.com sub: Halloween. Don’t forget to try out our website!

REVIEWS: Pianist: Sunwook Kim; Band leader: Count Basie; Conductor: Sir Thomas Beecham

Peter CatesREVIEW POTPOURRI

by Peter Cates

Beethoven

Emperor Concerto and Symphony No. 5
Sunwook Kim, pianist (in the Emperor), and Myung-Whun Chung conducting the Seoul Philharmonic; Deutsche Grammophon- 481 031-2, CD, recorded live January 17-18, 2013.

Sunwook Kim

I have lost track of how many recordings I own of both of these Beethoven masterpieces – ones that continue to hold my interest through great, good and bad performances I have heard during the more than 50 years since I first made their acquaintance as a kid. This CD features two very gifted South Koreans applying themselves to the stringent challenge of plumbing for further meaning still – and succeeding wonderfully. The Emperor has the grandeur, elegance, biting drive and sheer beauty but most importantly, the sense of love for every note and the ability to communicate that love to listeners from every man and woman involved in the session. The Fifth has a very special muscle-driven momentum and power communicating its very core. YouTube has a video of two or three different Fifths conducted by Chung, this one among them; it also contains one giving a partial view of the recording of the Emperor Concerto.

Count Basie

Count Basie

Do You Wanna Jump, Children ?
Panassie Stomp. Decca- 2224, ten-inch 78, recorded 1938.

Count Basie’s band was in really peak form when they recorded this late ‘30s pair. Both are swing numbers and demonstrate the technical and musical virtuosity of every player, each of whom was of the highest calibre, and the soulful bluesy eloquence of Jimmy Rushing’s singing. In fact, I do not know of any bad record with Basie’s name. This can be heard on YouTube.

Berlioz

Harold in Italy
William Primrose, viola, with Sir Thomas Beecham conducting the Royal Philharmonic; Columbia ML 4542, LP, recorded early ‘50s.

Sir Thomas Beecham

This is a four-movement symphony with the viola accompanying the rest of the orchestra. It is a beauty with four very musically alive movements, based on Byron’s poem, Childe Harold, but only lightly. The subject is a dreamy traveler drifting around Italy. The scenes include mountain travel, the pilgrims’s procession as they sing an evening hymn, a mountaineer serenading his lady and a gathering of drunken bandits.

Beecham’s performance is a classic but one among several other good performances, many of which, including Beecham’s, can be heard on YouTube!

Saige Knightv enrolled at St. Lawrence University

St. Lawrence University, in Canton, New York, has welcomed Saige Knight, of Oakland, as a member of the class of 2021. Knight attended Messalonskee High School.

Colby-Sawyer welcomes new students

Colby-Sawyer College, in New London, New Hampshire, welcomed two local students as the newest Chargers to campus, including first-year students and transfer students.

Included were Chelsea Perry, of Oakland, and Alex Hayes, of Waterville.

Palermo residents demand better consideration on dam issue

COMMUNITY COMMENTARY

by Ursula Burke
Palermo resident

Several environmental groups (Mid-Coast Conservancy; Atlantic Salmon Federation) and Maine State agency (Department of Marine Resources) are advocating opening the Sheepscot Lake fishway to alewife herrings, American eels and parasitic sea lamprey eels. They say it is a river restoration project. But look at the history of the past 40-50 years on this lake. The lamprey eels damaged the rare, self-sustaining population of togue to the point that the fishway was closed for many decades. Now the evidence of damage to these fish has receded.

The Maine legislature will vote on bill LD922, introduced by State Rep. Jeffrey Pierce, who is also the founder and executive director of the Alewife Harvesters of Maine, to wrest control of the Sheepscot Lake dam from Inland Fish & Wildlife over to Marine Resources. Isn’t it a coincidence that alewives are used as bait for the lobster industry and that Mr. Pierce has an economic interest in having this bill pass? Isn’t this an obvious conflict of interest and an abuse of political position for personal gain?

And to reintroduce these fishes into Sheepscot Lake after many decades of being blocked is like introducing entirely new species. Yet no environmental impact studies or engineering studies have been done to gauge the impact to either the fish rearing station just downstream, to the existing fish population, or to water levels in the lake.

We, the Palermo residents and property owners of Sheepscot Lake, demand better consideration than this on behalf of this beautiful, balanced lake. It is a David and Goliath battle. Who will win…. the small town of Palermo or big business greed?