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SMH teaching bread-making basics

NORWAY — Stephens Memorial Hospital will offer a class in bread-making basics for people seeking simple, healthy recipes for delicious homemade bread. 

Course instructor is Sarah Carter Hill, community nutrition educator for SNAP-Ed with the University of New England, and program coordinator at Healthy Oxford Hills, a project of Stephens Memorial Hospital.

This session will meet from 5:30 to 7 p.m. Tuesday, April 5, at the Harper Conference Center in the Ripley Medical Office Building. The program is free, but registration is required.

FMI, register: 207-743-1562, ext. 6896, www.wmhcc.org, www.facebook.com/StephensMemorialME.

Grange to host dinner, open mic

WILTON — Wilson Grange, 321, Main St., hosts a dinner and open mic night the first and third Wednesdays of the month.

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The dinner begins at 5 p.m. and costs $5. Open mic runs from 7 to 9 p.m. and is free.

FMI: 207-645-3388.

VFW Post 9787 to meet

PARIS — The Floyd A. Harlow Jr. Post 9787, VFW, will meet at 6 p.m. Wednesday, April 6, at 58 East Main St.

Lithuanian Heritage Club to meet

RUMFORD — The Lithuanian Heritage Club will have its monthly meeting at noon on Wednesday, April 6, at Sam’s Italian Sandwich Shop on Route 2.

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‘Yardscaping for a Healthy Maine’

PARIS — “Yardscaping for a Healthy Maine” is the topic of the final lecture in the McLaughlin Garden series on Wednesday, April 6.

Megan Patterson and Anne Chamberlain will represent YardScaping, a partnership of the Maine Department of Agriculture, Conservation and Forestry with the Board of Pesticides Control. YardScaping hopes to inspire Maine people to create and maintain healthy landscapes through ecologically based practices that minimize reliance on water, fertilizer and pesticides. 

This program requires registration by calling 207-743-8820.

Tea will be served beginning at 3:30 p.m. with the lecture scheduled at 4 p.m. It will be held upstairs in the historic Tribou home at 97 Main St., where Bernard McLaughlin lived with his wife. Both tea and the lecture are free and open to the public, although donations will be requested for the preservation of the buildings and garden. The garden’s gift shop will be open.

FMI: www.yardscaping.org. 

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