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THE WEIRS TIMES & THE COCHECO TIMES, Thursday, February 16, 2012
NORTH from 6 “de-Christianizing” -- and ultimately destroying -- the U.S. military. The opening shot was
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Consider joining a study for COPD. Take the first step. See if you qualify.
Call Caitlin at 603-319-8863 2299 Woodbury Ave 2nd Floor Newington, NH 03801
ACTIVMED PRACTICES & RESEARCH STUDYING TOMORROW ’S TREATMENTS TODAY
Introducing The Cocheco Times: A New Seacoast Edition of The Weirs Times
For the past twenty years the Weirs Times has been New Hampshire’s favorite free weekly publication.
From the Lakes Region to Concord to the seacoast, we have been providing our 60,000 plus readers (as verified in an independent audit) with the best in New Hampshire’s good news, history and happenings.
We’ve also been providing our advertisers with a potential customer base that is clearly one of the largest among New Hampshire publications.
This past year saw our newest publication, The Cocheco Times, introduced to our
readers along the Cocheco River and the seacoast. The Cocheco Times has all the same great features and advertisements that
readers love about The Weirs Times, with more focus on the Seacoast Region. So, if you love The Weirs Times you’re going to love The Cocheco Times too!!
DISTRIBUTION COVERAGE AREA
Total 32,000 26,000 200 Copies Distributed Every Week Locations
The Weirs Times is picked up by over 66,000 readers in the Concord/Lakes Region market area. That’s the kind holds for less money than any other newspaper.
THE WEIRS TIMES & THE COCHECO TIMES, Thursday, September 1, 2011
Presorted Standard U.S. Postage
CONCORD, NH 03301 Permit No. 177
PAID 1 6,000 40 Copies Distributed Every Week Locations
The Cocheco Times is read by over 13,000 each week by readers in the Cocheco Valley/Seacoast market area from Farmington to Portsmouth.
Farmington, Rochester, Gonic, Durham, Somersworth, Dover, Newington & Portsmouth THE WEIRS TIMES & THE COCHECO TIMES, Thursday, June 16, 2011
Presorted Standard U.S. Postage
CONCORD, NH 03301 Permit No. 177
PAID 1 VOLUME 20, NO. 24
A SPECIAL COCHECO VALLEY EDITION OF THE WEIRS TIMES NEWSPAPER. THE WEIRS, LAKE WINNIPESAUKEE, N.H., THURSDAY, JUNE 16, 2011
COMPLIMENTARY
DOVER RESTAURANT DEFINITELY ONE OF A KIND
by Brendan Smith Weirs Times Editor
Tucked away in the city
of Dover, New Hampshire, sits the only restaurant in New Hampshire that serves its own dry-aged beef. Chris “Koz” Kozlowski,
owner and head chef of the Orchard Street Chop Shop, is a well-travelled and educated food and wine expert. Originally from Moultonborough,
Plymouth Ossipee VOLUME 20, NO. 35 THE WEIRS, LAKE WINNIPESAUKEE, N.H., THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2011 Compare Us To The Competition!
Lake Winnipesaukee Museum curator, Lynda LaFlamme, holds a copy of the 1936 200th Anniversary celebration booklet on Aquedoctan, the first settlement in the Weirs in 1736.
Carroll County Independent.......... Granite State News.......................... Meredith News................................ Record Enterprise............................ Citizen.............................................. Gilford Steamer................................ Baysider............................................. Winnisquam Echo............................ Concord Monitor............................. Union Leader.................................... Rochester Times...............................
HISTORY OF FIRST SETTLEMENT IN THE WEIRS The Weirs Times..............................$31.00
BOOKLET FROM 1936 CELEBRATES On August 25-27th,
1936, the City of Laco- nia celebrated the 200th Anniversary of the first settlement at Aquedoc- tan in the Weirs in 1736. The following article by Arthur H. Nighswander, Esq., is part of a special booklet that was pub- lished to commemorate
Foster's Sunday Citizen.................... Hippo................................................ Laconia Daily Sun............................
WEIRS/COCHECO TIMES COMBO BUY.........$29.00
the occasion. We have also included some of the ads from the booklet. The booklet itself is on display at the Lake Win- nipesaukee Museum on Rte. 3 in The Weirs, and is open Wed - Sat, from 10am-2pm.
In 1652 when the first
white man gazed upon this region he must have seen an unbroken wilder- ness, without any signs of cultivation or civiliza- tion with the exception of a settlement of very friendly Penacook In- dians, members of the Abenaqui tribe, at the outlet of the Winnipe-
This cost comparison is based on a full page ad at open rate and total distribution or print run
Combined distribution of 32,000 copies, available weekly at over 200 locations.
www.TheWeirsTimes.com 1-888-308-8463
provided to Business NH Magazine and published in their 2009 Business Resource Directory.
www.CochecoTimes.com
The Cocecho Times..........................$89.00 $59.00 $48.00 $35.00
$420.00 $270.00 $252.00 $217.00 $216.00 $189.00 $162.00 $126.00 $103.00 $92.00 $91.00
saukee Lake. The Indi- ans called this village, Aquedoctan. It might be said that, as the Indians had no alphabet, early settlers wrote down what they thought they heard spoken, which accounts for the many different spellings and interpre- See AQUEDOCTAN on 10
COMPLIMENTARY Cost for Your Full Page Ad To Run In 1,000 Papers
Paint the Town In
Wolfeboro Sat, Sept. 10th
Art lovers are encour-
aged to visit Wolfeboro on Saturday, Septem- ber 10, for the Governor Wentworth Arts Council’s second annual Paint the Town event. Area artists will gather at locations in downtown Wolfeboro for a day of open air painting. Visitors can watch works of art being created and can purchase pieces dur- ing the day or at a silent auction that caps off the event. The event begins at
Laconia AlAlton on Loudon
10am and the silent auc- tion will take place at 3:30pm at the Wolfeboro Community Bandstand in Cate Park. Money raised from the
Boscawen
event is used to fund edu- cational activities spon- sored by the Governor Wentworth Arts Council, including grants to area schools and libraries. Artists can still sign A
Penacook Concord
up to be part of the fun. Those interested should cal l 603-569-4994 or 603-569-1701, or they can download an ap- plication form from the Paint the Town page at
WolfeboroArts.org. o
n W i BEST e The Weirs Times & The Cocheco Times VALUE! i
See our website
PlayAtHomePetSitters.com for rates and service area or call us for more information, 603.279.7770.
Chichester Gonic Durham Wolfeboro
Farmington Roches er
Rochester Somersworth Dover
Portsmouth Newington
Chris “Koz” Kozlowski in front of his popular Dover restaurant, The Orchard Street Chop
Shop. The only restaurant in New Hampshire to serve their own dry-aged beef. COURTESY PHOTO
New Hampshi re, he learned his craft at the prestigious Culinary In- stitute of America in New York and travelled the country perfecting his knowledge of food and wine before coming back to the Granite State and opening shop in Dover or as Koz calls it: “a quaint little forgotten city near Portsmouth.” “We’ve been doing our own dry-aged beef now for
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The Weirs Times backs its circulation information with a Circulation Verification Council audit. CVC is an independent, third-party audit company that specializes in community newspapers, shoppers, magazines and niche publications. CVC audits over 4,200 community papers nationwide.
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fired when President Ba- rack Obama declared in his January 2010 State of the Union address that he would “repeal the law (SET ITAL) that denies gay Americans the right to serve (END ITAL) the country they love because of who they are.” (Em- phasis added.) The “law” to which the president referred was “don’t ask, don’t tell,” which wasn’t a law at all; it was an ad- ministrative policy imple- mented by the Clinton ad- ministration. The actual governing law -- Section 654 of Title 10 of the U.S. Code -- states, “There is no constitutional right to serve in the armed forces.” The president ran rough- shod over the law of the land in a political payoff to a preferred constituency. The Defense of Marriage
Act was next. Though the bill was argued, debated, passed by both houses of Congress, and signed into law by President Bill Clin- ton, Obama and Attorney General Eric Holder uni- laterally declared the law unconstitutional in Feb- ruary 2011. Holder was courteous enough to send Congress a letter explaining our legislature’s irrelevance
in the matter. He stat- ed, “The President and I have concluded that ... Section 3 of DOMA is unconstitutional.” Since then, Obama has said, “Where Congress is not willing to act, we’re going to go ahead and do it our- selves.” Efficiency is one of the great advantages of dictatorships. Dispensing with DOMA paved the way for the Pen- tagon to greenlight same- sex “marriages” presided over by military chaplains -- on or off base -- in states that recognize such “unions.” Now the O-Team has mandated that the Roman Catholic Church violate its own teachings on birth control and abor- tion. The Obama adminis-
tration’s edict requiring employers -- including the Catholic Church -- to offer “health” coverage that includes sterilization, abortion-inducing drugs and contraception ignited a firestorm. Roman Cath- olic bishops protested loudly and in unison that the action was a violation of the First Amendment. In churches across the country, letters from the bishops were read to con- gregations, explaining the directive as unjust and unconstitutional because it forces Catholic institu- tions to violate their faith or pay staggering fines.
The O-Team shrugged
off the dissent until Arch- bishop Timothy Broglio -- who leads the Arch- diocese for the Military Services, USA -- issued a pastoral letter denouncing the Obamacare directive because “the Administra- tion has cast aside the First Amendment to the Constitution of the United States, denying to Cath- olics our Nation’s first and most fundamental freedom, that of religious liberty.” The letter, sent to Catholic military chap- lains, instructed them to read it to their congrega- tions on the weekend of Jan. 28-29. In his mis- sive, Broglio declared that the new rule “is a blow to a freedom that you have fought to defend and for which you have seen your buddies fall in battle.” Apparently, the arch-
bishop’s assertion that “we cannot -- we will not -- comply with this unjust law” was too much for the Army chief of chaplains. He ordered that the let- ter not be read in military chapels or field services because Broglio had not “coordinated” with his of- fice. Army Secretary John McHugh subsequently ad- mitted that such censor- ship was “a mistake.” “Mistake”? It wasn’t a
mistake if McHugh and the rest of the administra- tion’s objective is elimi- nating Christianity from the United States armed forces and wrecking the finest military the world ever has seen. We’ll know for sure what the goal really is when the com- mander in chief orders chaplains to violate their religious beliefs and per- form same-sex “marriag- es” or just get out. And then our men and women serving in uniform will finally have freedom from religion.
Oliver North is the host
of “War Stories” on Fox News Channel, the found- er and honorary chairman of Freedom Alliance, and the author of “American Heroes in Special Opera- tions.”
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2011 EXPO GUIDE
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#1
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