These are some of the stories central Maine is talking about today.

Shaw's and Hannaford stores are recalling house brands of bottled water after E. coli bacteria were found in the water's supply. Shaw's brand of bottled water and Hannaford's Nature's Place water are both bottled by Niagara Bottling Co. in Pennsylvania. The bacteria were detected at one of the springs from which the company obtains water. The company says no E. coli was detected in the spring water delivered to its plants or the finished products. The bacterium causes cramping, nausea, diarrhea and vomiting. The stores advise customers to not drink the water and return it to the store for a refund. Niagara Water asks consumers to check the notice on the company's website to determine if they bought a recalled bottle.  (AP)

Majority of Medway residents voted no on the proposed national park.  Election officials said turnout was steady; in total, 252 voted no and 102 voted yes. According to WCSH, the vote was non-binding and leaders said they were using it to gauge the public's opinion on the proposed 75,000 acre national park along with a 75,000 acre national recreation area in the Katahdin area. The recreation area would allow hunting and snowmobiling. Next up resident s in East Millinocket will have the chance share their views in a non-binding vote.  (WCSH)

For the second time in less than a week the Maine Legislature voted to extend its lawmaking session for an additional five days with votes early Wednesday morning. According to the Sun Journal, lawmakers are winding up their work in what's been a contentious, 6-month lawmaking session highlighted by a split between House and Senate Republicans on a budget proposal offered by Republican Gov. Paul LePage. Under the extension lawmakers will return to take up their remaining work and any remaining vetoes from LePage, including an expected veto of the state budget on Tuesday, June 30 at 10:30 a.m. (Sun Journal)

A former office manager and treasurer at a Winthrop church has been indicted on charges she embezzled about $30,000 in church funds. According to the Sun Journal Tricia Day, of Winthrop, was indicted by a Kennebec County grand jury on a charge of theft by unauthorized taking that carries a maximum penalty of 10 years in prison. According to the indictment, funds from the United Methodist Church were stolen between Jan. 1, 2013, and Jan. 5, 2015. The case was investigated by Winthrop police. Capt. Ryan Frost said as much as $30,000 in church funds is missing. (Sun Journal)

Two local stores at the Turnpike Mall recently learned their leases would not be renewed; prompting speculation a national chain store might be moving in. Both the Maine Made and More and Beverly’s Craft and Gift, which were neighbors in at the mall, were both told their leases would not be renewed for the space their shops occupied there. According to the KJ, mall officials wanted the shops to remain at the mall, just not in the same spots. Both tenants were offered space elsewhere in the building but declined the offer. (centralmaine.com)

Wednesday is the formal sentencing for Boston Marathon bomber Dzhokhar Tsarnaev. A federal jury last month condemned Tsarnaev to die for the 2103 bombing that killed three people and wounded more than 260. But under the federal death penalty law, the judge is required to impose the jury's sentence. More than 30 bombing victims and their relatives are expected to give victim impact statements before the sentencing. (AP)

Some other southern states are following South Carolina in the Confederate flag debate. Mississippi House Speaker Philip Gunn is calling for the removal of the Confederate emblem from the state flag. Both Democrats and Republicans in Tennessee say a bust of Confederate general and Ku Klux Klan leader Nathan Bedford Forrest must go from the Senate. And Virginia Gov. Terry McAuliffe wants vanity license plates depicting the Confederate flag replaced. On Tuesday, South Carolina lawmakers voted to consider removing the Confederate flag from their Statehouse grounds. (AP)

South Carolinians will spend the rest of this week saying goodbye to some of the victims of last week's shooting massacre at a historic black church in Charleston. On Wednesday, the coffin of church pastor and State Sen. Clementa Pinckney will lie in the Statehouse Rotunda. Then he'll return to his church for a viewing on Thursday. On Friday, President Barack Obama plans to deliver Pinckney's eulogy at a Charleston sports arena. (AP)

Iran may be toughening its stance on a final nuclear deal before a June 30 deadline. In a broadcast on Iranian state television Tuesday night, Iran's top leader rejected a long-term freeze on nuclear research and supported banning international inspectors from accessing military sites. Ayatollah Ali Khamenei also says Iran will sign a final deal provided all economic sanctions now on Iran are first lifted. (AP)

Scientists and volunteers have been searching the frozen dirt and ice of an Alaska glacier where 52 service members were killed in a 1952 military plane crash. The plane was headed to Elmendorf Air Force Base in Anchorage when it vanished with 41 passengers and 11 crew members onboard. The wreckage was found soon after, but became buried in snow and eventually became part of the glacier at the bottom of Mount Gannett. The wreckage was rediscovered in 2012, and so far, the remains of 17 service members have been recovered. (AP)

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