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\ Forester Dave Dunn looks at village maple tree decline ’c Page 3 Hazzards‘ Joy Ministries is something for the lord Page 5 Moore wrong, village right in grievance Page 5 II VOLUME 78, NUMBER22 CASS CITY, MICHIGAN -THURSL - Twenty-five cents Vassar Youth killed Sundav Larry J. Vagaski, 1 killed when he was ! .ct by a vehicle driven by Jot Perez on M-46 about a milf west of Bradford Road Sun day at 4:45 a.m. He is thf son of Mr. and Mrs. Josepk S. Vagaski, 3042 Kirk Rd.. Vassar. Perez, 820 Ruth Rd,, Car. sonville, told Tuscolr County Sheriff’s Depart ment deputies Wayne New ton and Jeff Bagocius tha he was driving on M-4 when he saw Vagaski lyini on the road. Perez said tha he swerved to attempt tl miss Vagaski, but was un able to avoid hitting him. Sheriff’s reports stated that Vagaski, 3042 S. Kirk Rd., Vassar, was wearing a black or dark blue shirt and blue jeans. Perez was arrested for operating a vehicle while under the influence of al- cohol. . + The -. accident, the eighth AY tatality in Tuscola County SUPERINTENDENT’S PROTEST - Ronald Erickson, this year, has been taken under advisement by the Tuscola County Pro- Superintendent of the Owendale-Gagetown school district Secutor’s office. No d~i- held his own demonstration before the school board ion has been made yet. meeting Monday night. ricular activities if enough student interest is shown and a teacher can be found for the programs. Testing for minimum please turn to page 16. A LACK OF a contract with the Owendale-Gagetown teacher’s resulted in a protest by teachers, parents and students at the Gagetown Elementary School before the board meeting Monday night. Erickson cries blackmail 20 from Owen-Gage picket for contract I When the Owen-Gage school board members ar- rived at the Gagetown Elementary School Mon- day night they were greeted with signs protesting the lack of a contract with the teachers. About 20 sign carrying teachers, parents and elementary students greeted the board as they arrived for the 8:OO p.m. meeting. The teachers have been without a contract since July 1, 1983. At the meeting a letter was read from the teachers’ union, Tri County Bargaining Association (TCBA) informing the board that they will not enter into any voluntary ag- reements with school dis- tricts that have not reached an agreement with their teachers. School Superin- tendent Ronald Erickson said that the district has an agreement with the TCBA and the Huron County In- termediate School District (HISD) for state aid fund- ing for the special educa- tion programs. Owen-Gage School District is not eligi- ble to receive state funding for special education because the district has too high of a state equalized valuation and is out of for- mula with state require- ments. Erickson said that in order to qualify for the state aid the school district has entered into a consortium with schools in the HISD and TCBA. The special edu- cation teachers are employees of the Owen- Gage School District, but through the consortium the district nets about $30,000. Erickson said that in ef- fect the letter says t bt be- cause the two school dis- tricts, Owen-Gage and North Huron, do not have a contract, the TCBA is going to withhold $250,000 from them and the rest of the school districts in the county. Erickson told the board that he felt that the letter was a “bush league tactic.” Board member Joseph Job training act of 1984 Warack read a letter from Erickson to John Noble, executive director of the TCBA, informing Noble that his letter “smacks of blackmail. Erickson wrote that he felt that the “children who are men- tally, physically or emo- tionally crippled” are being used as pawns. “They (TCBA) care little for educational excel- lence.. .all they care about is political power,” Erickson said. “I will be damned if they are going to blackmail us.” Erickson said that he was going to send a letter to the HISD informing them that Owen-Gage would be start- ing a lawsuit against them if the funds for special edu- cation are not released. If the HISD is afraid of the TCBA, fine, but it had bet- ter not damage us by not giving us our proper fund- ing,” Erickson said. Manuel Thies, a high school science teacher and a member of the bargaining team for TCBA, said that the board has been “play- ing a song and dance at the negotiations.” Thies I said that the board has cancel- led the last three negotia- tion meetings and when they do meet, nothing is ac- Residents protest asphalt plants, trucks in Novesta At a Novekta Township board meeting Monday night township residents went before the board to protest the traffic and dust problems caused by the as- phalt plants on Warner Road, Nancy doward, 3308 Warner Rd., told the board that the plants are creating a lot of dirt and dust and the trucks have thrown stones against the side of houses on the road. “They have ruined every- thing for us,” Howard said. “We moved out to the coun- try to get away trom the hustle and bustle of the city life.” She added that one afternoon from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m.she counted 35 trucks coming and going down Warner Rd. “It’s terrible, the noise from the asphalt machines starts about 5:30 a.m.,” she said. “It sounds just like a jet engine when they fire up the asphalt processor.” Howard said that last year it wasn’t so bad but this year it has increased, and so has the dirt and the dust. She bought a new car about five months ago and the dirt and the dust are ruining the finish. “It is like scrubbing it with sandpaper. ’) Howard said that she and her neighbors have had sev- eral close calls with the trucks leaving the asphalt plant. She said that the trucks don’t stop at the end of the driveway when they leave. She and her neighbors have come close to getting hit by the trucks. , “We just haven’t been able to do anything out- Please turn to page 16. Commission ok ’s 2 millage proposals missioners At a Tuscola meeting County Tues- Com- day, county commissioners decided to ask the voters of Fed propam puts 100 to work Tuscola County to .. decide Since its beginning Jan. 1, 1984, the Job Training Partnership Act (JTPA) has placed about 100 un- employed Tuscola County workers back into the work force. “The program was de- igned to help the person who is low skilled and out of the work force,” said Marvin Pichla, Executive Director for the Thumb Area Employment and Training Consortium, ,which administers the JTPA program. Pichla said that the feder- ally funded program is not a giveaway program, but a boost to the person unable 3 stay employed because of lack of job skills. Pichla said that funds for the prog- ram, approved through congress, are listed as per- manent legislation, but that it could be reorganized through legislative proce- dures. “It looks like a con- tinual program, but there is no forever,” Pichla pointed out. Pichla said that in order lor anindividual to qualify for the JTPA program he or she must be unemployed, meet specific income guidelines and show a lack of specialized job skills. He said that since Jan. 1, about $800,000 has been spent on the adult job train- ing and education for the four-county area of Huron, Tuscola, Sanilac and Lapeer. An additional $800,000 has been spent on the Summer Youth Prog- ram that placed about 600 youths from the ages of 16 to 21 into public service jobs in the area. These are tem- porary jobs at school dis- tricts, villages, cities and for the county. The prog- ram started June 1, and will expire Sept. 30. Pichla said that the youth must come from a low income family to qualify for the program. Pichla said that one of the programs offered is the On The Job Training, where a job is found for the indi- vidual by JTPA. Under this program, the employer and JTPA enter into a contract where the employer agrees to give the individual train- ing for a set period of time. He said that the employer signs an agreement with JTPA that states that they will give the individual training on a specific job for a predetermined time period. During this time period one half of the worker’s wages will be paid by JTPA and the other half by the employer. Jim Jackson, Employer Services Liaison for the Thumb Area Employment and Training Consortium, Caro office, said that when an employer agrees to hire someone through the ser- vice, the employer will de- cide on the duties to be per- formed. Jackson said that he will then use a federal guideline manual, the Di- rectory of Occupational Ti- tles, to determine how many hours it will take to give the employee suffi- cient training. He said that the time period generally lasts from two to 5% months. “We don’t dictate to the employer what they have to pay,” Pichla said. He said that they agree to the set wage unless it is under the minimum wage. He said that it is illegal to pay less than the minimum wage. When the employee reaches the end of the con- tract with JTPA, it is up to the employer to dec,ide if they will hire the worker or not. “At that point you would hope that the employee is earning his keep,” Pichla said. Pichla estimated that in the four counties that he ad- ministers, about 75 to 80 percent of the employees are put on the payroll by the employer. Pichla said that JTPA is mounting a campaign to in- form area employers that the program is available to them. Employers are re- quired to sign a four-page contract that states that training will be given for a specified time period. At the end of each month the employer must fill out a time card verifying how many hours the employee worked. He said that in some cases the employer may be requested to fill out a report on the employee’s performanbe. Unlike the CETA prog- ram, where the worker’s wages were always paid with federal money, JTPA only pays while the employee is under contract for the job training. Pichla said that mcst of the jobs are in small fac- tories where plastic auto re- lated parts are manufac- tured. The JTPA also pays for continuing education for the unemployed worker. According to Mary Lou King, Education Training Specialist, Car0 office, 92 students have signed up for classes this fall. She said that students attend either Delta Community College, Baker Junior College, Mott College, Saginaw Business School, St. Clair County Community College or the Tuscola Area Skill Center. She said that of the 30 who have graduated since the program began, nine are working full time in the pri- vate job sector, 12 are employed through On-The- Job-Training programs and nine have not yet found work. Pichla said that most of the requests for continuing education in the four county area are in the medical field. King said that they will fund the student to take classes in clerical, medical and technical fields. She pointed out that some of the programs that the students take are auto mechanics, computer sciences, ac- counting, word processing and nursin programs. King saif that those who are going to attend school must apply for Pell Grants, financial aid for students in need. She said that JTPA will pay the difference of what the Pell Grant pays for tuition, books and fees. If the student does not qual- ify for the grant, then JTPA will pay for all of the tuition, books and fees. She said that JTPA will also pay up to $20 per week for mileage, but that the student must attend at least 90 percent of the classes that he or she has registered for. She said that the Pell Please turn to page 16. the fate of twomillage re- quests; The first request, Propos- ition One, is for a 0.50-mill increase for five years. Re- venues gained from the re- quest are to be used for cap- ital improvement, opera- tional costs, and major maintenance and repair to the county buildings. At recent county commis- sion meetings the board dis- cussed what areas they would have to cut funding if no additional millage was approved. At those meetings commissioners said that funding to the county cooperative exten- sion service, the veterans administration, the build- ing codes office, primary and secohdary sheriff’s de- partment road patrols, the Medical Care Facility, the road commission and the county library could all face cuts or some may be eliminated if the millage in- crease is not approved. Electors will also vote on a five-year, 0.25-mill in- crease to be used for the Building and Site Fund for the county. Voters rejected the millage by a vote of 2,198 to 1,697 at the Aug, 7 primary. At that election voters did approve a 0.2- mill increase to be used for senior citizen projects. County Commissioner Royce Russell, Cass City, said that the 0.25-mill in- crease is to be used for an addition to the courthouse annex. “We needed space then and that hasn’t changed from August to now,” he said. At the meeting the com- missioners added an addi- tional $135,000 to the Child Care Fund. The commis- sioners took the funds from the capital outlay fund, public improvement fund and the contingency fund. At an August meeting the commissioners were re- quested to add $259,000 to the Child Care Fund to fi- nance it until the end of the year. At that meeting the commissioners came up with $65,000 for the fund. The money is used to house county youths who are unable to stay at home because of a family or law enforcement problem. The commissioners ac- cepted the resignation of Chief Assistant Prosecutor David G. Myers. Myers worked in the Pro- secutor’s Office for five years and is leaving to work in a private practice in Caro. His official resigna- tion will be Oct. 15.
Transcript
Page 1: newspapers.rawson.lib.mi.usnewspapers.rawson.lib.mi.us/chronicle/1984/Issues/09-13... · 2005-07-24 · \ Forester Dave Dunn looks ’ at village maple tree decline ’c Page 3 Hazzards‘

\

Forester Dave Dunn looks ’ at village maple tree decline

’c Page 3

Hazzards‘ Joy Ministries is something for the lord

Page 5

Moore wrong, village right in grievance

Page 5 II

’ VOLUME 78, NUMBER22 CASS CITY, MICHIGAN -THURSL - Twenty-five cents

Vassar Youth killed Sundav

Larry J. Vagaski, 1 killed when he was ! .ct by a vehicle driven by Jot Perez on M-46 about a milf west of Bradford Road Sun day at 4:45 a.m. He is thf son of Mr. and Mrs. Josepk S. Vagaski, 3042 Kirk Rd.. Vassar.

Perez, 820 Ruth Rd,, Car. sonville, told Tuscolr County Sheriff’s Depart ment deputies Wayne New ton and Jeff Bagocius tha he was driving on M-4 when he saw Vagaski lyini on the road. Perez said tha he swerved to attempt tl miss Vagaski, but was un able to avoid hitting him.

Sheriff’s reports stated that Vagaski, 3042 S. Kirk Rd., Vassar, was wearing a black or dark blue shirt and blue jeans.

Perez was arrested for operating a vehicle while under the influence of al- cohol. .+ The - . accident, the eighth

A Y

tatality in Tuscola County

SUPERINTENDENT’S PROTEST - Ronald Erickson, this year, has been taken under advisement by the Tuscola County Pro- Superintendent of the Owendale-Gagetown school district Secutor’s office. No d ~ i - held his own demonstration before the school board ion has been made yet.

meeting Monday night.

ricular activities if enough student interest is shown and a teacher can be found for the programs.

Testing for minimum please turn to page 16.

A LACK OF a contract with the Owendale-Gagetown teacher’s resulted in a protest by teachers, parents and students at the Gagetown Elementary School before the board meeting Monday night.

Erickson cries blackmail

20 from Owen-Gage picket for contract

I

When the Owen-Gage school board members ar- rived at the Gagetown Elementary School Mon- day night they were greeted with signs protesting the lack of a contract with the teachers.

About 20 sign carrying teachers, parents and elementary students greeted the board as they arrived for the 8:OO p.m. meeting. The teachers have been without a contract since July 1, 1983.

At the meeting a letter was read from the teachers’ union, Tri County Bargaining Association (TCBA) informing the board that they will not enter into any voluntary ag- reements with school dis- tricts that have not reached an agreement with their teachers. School Superin- tendent Ronald Erickson said that the district has an agreement with the TCBA and the Huron County In- termediate School District (HISD) for state aid fund- ing for the special educa- tion programs. Owen-Gage School District is not eligi- ble to receive state funding for special education because the district has too high of a state equalized valuation and is out of for- mula with state require- ments.

Erickson said that in order to qualify for the state aid the school district has entered into a consortium with schools in the HISD and TCBA. The special edu- cation teachers are employees of the Owen- Gage School District, but through the consortium the district nets about $30,000.

Erickson said that in ef- fect the letter says t b t be- cause the two school dis- tricts, Owen-Gage and North Huron, do not have a contract, the TCBA is going to withhold $250,000 from them and the rest of the school districts in the county. Erickson told the board that he felt that the letter was a “bush league tactic.”

Board member Joseph

Job training act of 1984

Warack read a letter from Erickson to John Noble, executive director of the TCBA, informing Noble that his letter “smacks of blackmail. ” Erickson wrote that he felt that the “children who are men- tally, physically or emo- tionally crippled” are being used as pawns.

“They (TCBA) care little for educational excel- lence.. .all they care about is political power,” Erickson said. “I will be damned if they are going to blackmail us.”

Erickson said that he was going to send a letter to the HISD informing them that Owen-Gage would be start- ing a lawsuit against them if the funds for special edu- cation are not released. “ If the HISD is afraid of the TCBA, fine, but it had bet- ter not damage us by not giving us our proper fund- ing,” Erickson said.

Manuel Thies, a high school science teacher and a member of the bargaining team for TCBA, said that the board has been “play- ing a song and dance at the negotiations.” Thies I said that the board has cancel- led the last three negotia- tion meetings and when they do meet, nothing is ac-

Residents protest asphalt plants, trucks in Novesta

At a Novekta Township board meeting Monday night township residents went before the board to protest the traffic and dust problems caused by the as- phalt plants on Warner Road, Nancy doward, 3308

Warner Rd., told the board that the plants are creating a lot of dirt and dust and the trucks have thrown stones against the side of houses on the road.

“They have ruined every- thing for us,” Howard said. “We moved out to the coun-

try to get away trom the hustle and bustle of the city life.” She added that one afternoon from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m.she counted 35 trucks coming and going down Warner Rd.

“It’s terrible, the noise from the asphalt machines starts about 5:30 a.m.,” she said. “It sounds just like a jet engine when they fire up the asphalt processor.”

Howard said that last year it wasn’t so bad but this year it has increased, and so has the dirt and the ’ dust. She bought a new car

about five months ago and the dirt and the dust are ruining the finish. “It is like scrubbing it with sandpaper. ’)

Howard said that she and her neighbors have had sev- eral close calls with the trucks leaving the asphalt plant. She said that the trucks don’t stop at the end of the driveway when they leave. She and her neighbors have come close to getting hit by the trucks.

, “We just haven’t been able to do anything out-

Please turn to page 16.

Commission ok ’s 2 millage proposals

missioners At a Tuscola meeting County Tues- Com-

day, county commissioners decided to ask the voters of Fed propam puts 100 to work Tuscola County to .. decide

Since its beginning Jan. 1, 1984, the Job Training Partnership Act (JTPA) has placed about 100 un- employed Tuscola County workers back into the work force.

“The program was de- igned to help the person

who is low skilled and out of the work force,” said Marvin Pichla, Executive Director for the Thumb Area Employment and Training Consortium,

,which administers the JTPA program.

Pichla said that the feder- ally funded program is not a giveaway program, but a boost to the person unable

3 stay employed because of lack of job skills. Pichla said that funds for the prog- ram, approved through congress, are listed as per- manent legislation, but that it could be reorganized through legislative proce- dures. “It looks like a con- tinual program, but there is no forever,” Pichla pointed out.

Pichla said that in order lor anindividual to qualify for the JTPA program he

or she must be unemployed, meet specific income guidelines and show a lack of specialized job skills.

He said that since Jan. 1, about $800,000 has been spent on the adult job train- ing and education for the four-county area of Huron, Tuscola, Sanilac and Lapeer. An additional $800,000 has been spent on the Summer Youth Prog- ram that placed about 600 youths from the ages of 16 to 21 into public service jobs in the area. These are tem- porary jobs at school dis- tricts, villages, cities and for the county. The prog- ram started June 1, and will expire Sept. 30. Pichla said that the youth must come from a low income family to qualify for the program.

Pichla said that one of the programs offered is the On The Job Training, where a job is found for the indi- vidual by JTPA. Under this program, the employer and JTPA enter into a contract where the employer agrees to give the individual train- ing for a set period of time. He said that the employer

signs an agreement with JTPA that states that they will give the individual training on a specific job for a predetermined time period. During this time period one half of the worker’s wages will be paid by JTPA and the other half by the employer.

Jim Jackson, Employer Services Liaison for the Thumb Area Employment and Training Consortium, Caro office, said that when an employer agrees to hire someone through the ser- vice, the employer will de- cide on the duties to be per- formed. Jackson said that he will then use a federal guideline manual, the Di- rectory of Occupational Ti- tles, to determine how many hours it will take to give the employee suffi- cient training. He said that the time period generally lasts from two to 5% months.

“We don’t dictate to the employer what they have to pay,” Pichla said. He said that they agree to the set wage unless it is under the minimum wage. He

said that it is illegal to pay less than the minimum wage.

When the employee reaches the end of the con- tract with JTPA, it is up to the employer to dec,ide if they will hire the worker or not.

“At that point you would hope that the employee is earning his keep,” Pichla said.

Pichla estimated that in the four counties that he ad- ministers, about 75 to 80 percent of the employees are put on the payroll by the employer.

Pichla said that JTPA is mounting a campaign to in- form area employers that the program is available to them. Employers are re- quired to sign a four-page contract that states that training will be given for a specified time period. At the end of each month the employer must fill out a time card verifying how many hours the employee worked. He said that in some cases the employer may be requested to fill out a report on the employee’s

performanbe. Unlike the CETA prog-

ram, where the worker’s wages were always paid with federal money, JTPA only pays while the employee is under contract for the job training.

Pichla said that mcst of the jobs are in small fac- tories where plastic auto re- lated parts are manufac- tured.

The JTPA also pays for continuing education for the unemployed worker. According to Mary Lou King, Education Training Specialist, Car0 office, 92 students have signed up for classes this fall. She said that students attend either Delta Community College, Baker Junior College, Mott College, Saginaw Business School, St. Clair County Community College or the Tuscola Area Skill Center.

She said that of the 30 who have graduated since the program began, nine are working full time in the pri- vate job sector, 12 are employed through On-The- Job-Training programs and nine have not yet found

work. Pichla said that most of

the requests for continuing education in the four county area are in the medical field.

King said that they will fund the student to take classes in clerical, medical and technical fields. She pointed out that some of the programs that the students take are auto mechanics, computer sciences, ac- counting, word processing and nursin programs.

King saif that those who are going to attend school must apply for Pell Grants, financial aid for students in need. She said that JTPA will pay the difference of what the Pell Grant pays for tuition, books and fees. If the student does not qual- ify for the grant, then JTPA will pay for all of the tuition, books and fees. She said that JTPA will also pay up to $20 per week for mileage, but that the student must attend at least 90 percent of the classes that he or she has registered for.

She said that the Pell Please turn to page 16.

the fate of twomillage re- quests;

The first request, Propos- ition One, is for a 0.50-mill increase for five years. Re- venues gained from the re- quest are to be used for cap- ital improvement, opera- tional costs, and major maintenance and repair to the county buildings.

At recent county commis- sion meetings the board dis- cussed what areas they would have to cut funding if no additional millage was approved. At those meetings commissioners said that funding to the county cooperative exten- sion service, the veterans administration, the build- ing codes office, primary and secohdary sheriff’s de- partment road patrols, the Medical Care Facility, the road commission and the county library could all face cuts or some may be eliminated if the millage in- crease is not approved.

Electors will also vote on a five-year, 0.25-mill in- crease to be used for the Building and Site Fund for the county. Voters rejected the millage by a vote of 2,198 to 1,697 at the Aug, 7

primary. At that election voters did approve a 0.2- mill increase to be used for senior citizen projects.

County Commissioner Royce Russell, Cass City, said that the 0.25-mill in- crease is to be used for an addition to the courthouse annex. “We needed space then and that hasn’t changed from August to now,” he said.

At the meeting the com- missioners added an addi- tional $135,000 to the Child Care Fund. The commis- sioners took the funds from the capital outlay fund, public improvement fund and the contingency fund.

At an August meeting the commissioners were re- quested to add $259,000 to the Child Care Fund to fi- nance it until the end of the year. At that meeting the commissioners came up with $65,000 for the fund.

The money is used to house county youths who are unable to stay at home because of a family or law enforcement problem.

The commissioners ac- cepted the resignation of Chief Assistant Prosecutor David G. Myers.

Myers worked in the Pro- secutor’s Office for five years and is leaving to work in a private practice in Caro. His official resigna- tion will be Oct. 15.

Page 2: newspapers.rawson.lib.mi.usnewspapers.rawson.lib.mi.us/chronicle/1984/Issues/09-13... · 2005-07-24 · \ Forester Dave Dunn looks ’ at village maple tree decline ’c Page 3 Hazzards‘

Cass City Social and Personal Items Mrs. Reva Little Phone 872-3698

Deford church Doug and Lynn Adkins;

missionaries to Kenya with World Gospel Mission, will speak at the United Methodist Church in De- ford.

v

CASS CITY, MICHIGAN

S t . Pancratius Women plan coming e@ents

St. Pancratius Women’s Council met Monday even- ing at the church social ha with 30 attending.

Plans were made for the East Region of Catholic Women meeting and lunc- heon, to be held at St. Pan- cratius Oct. 24. The Cass City women’s council will be hosts.

Allan Sward, adminis- trator of Provincial House, gave an interesting tall. patients. about his work and care oi

The group’s fall bazaar plans were finalized. Sewage problems at Mammoth Cave

The world’s most exten- sive cave system, Ken- tucky’s Mammoth Cave, is suffering from untreated sewage from several nearby communities, says the National Wildlife Fed- eration. At risk are more than 100 species of cave life, including rare blind fish and shrimp.

PAGE TWO Marriage Licenses Ken R. Sommerfield, Gil-

ford, and Michelle R. Poull- ion, Gilford.

George R. Turner, Vas- sar, and Leann S. Berlin, Millington,

Rodney R. Weinzierl, Millington, and Jacalyn J . Rappuhn, Millington.

Thomas S. Oxley, Fort Worth, Texas, and Christ- ine E. Slater, Arlington, Texas.

Michael J. Barrons, Caro, and Suzanne L. Pasanski, Cass City.

Alan L. Herr, Cass City, and Patricia M. Moore, Cass City.

Larry D. Middleton, Fos- toria, and Lori E. Atkins, Fostoria.

Michael S. Lobb, Saginaw, and Debra J . In- scho, Vassar.

Announcements

Catalogs loaned

FREE SUBSCRIPTION WITH EACH ORDER.

The promotion of over 40 youth into upper Sunday school classes took place Sunday in Evangelical Free Church. Nine youth who had completed the 1984 Bible memory program with Betty Powell were honored and included Cindy and Beth Powell, Julie’and Diana Loomis, Darren Ross, Steve Hammett Jr . , Laura Taylor, Kathy Leino and Charity Gaszczynski. Twelve junior-high youth have completed the Bible instruction class under the direction of Nancy Leino and will be eligible for church membership Oct. 7.

Fr. Julius Spleet of St. Pancratius Church of- ficiated at the baptism of Jessica Chere‘ Doerr, 10- week-old daughter of Mr.

Services will be held Sun- day, Sept. 16, at the morn- ing and evening services, 9:30 a.m. and 7:OO p.m.

Doug Adkins, son of WGM missionaries, works with Radio Injili. He is in charge of all English prog- ram production for this Christian recording studio and maintains the equip- ment and buildings as well. He also conducts nightly radio communications with co-workers a t Naikarra, West Pokot, Tenwek, Kabo- son, and Kipsalu. He also has been involved with work crusades, building projects and speaking en- gagements.

His wife, a Michigan na- tive, does secretarial work and bookkeeping for Radio

Mr. and Mrs. Roger Nicholas and family of Kawkawlin spent Saturday afternoon with Mr. and Mrs. Garrison Stine.

Michelle Tkacz and brothers, Joe and Mike, re- turned to their home Aug. 29 after ’ visiting three weeks. with their aunt, Trudy Tkacz, in Durand. They also visited their father, Mike Tkacz, of Flint and their brother, Kevin Clark. They are the chil- dren of Geneva Schember of Owendale and grandchil- dren of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Pierce of Sebewaing.

Mrs. Mary Kirton had as afternoon and supper guests last Wednesday, Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Wilke of Palms.

Evening a n d supper guests Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Lounsbury were Mary Barriger of Caro, Er- nest Kelly and daughter Janice of Tobyhanna, Penn., Mr. and Mrs, Cecil Barriger, Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Wiles, Mr. and Mrs. Dean Tuckey and Myrtle Evans. Mr. Kelly came to attend his high school class reunion Saturday evening at Gagetown.

The Novesta Church of Christ had two guest speak- ers Sunday. Professor Dean Warren of Great Lakes Bible College in Lansing was the morning speaker and Pastor Dick Hollis of Traverse City was the evening speaker.

Helen Lorentzen, Betty Greenleaf and Theda Seeger joined Anne Marie Lorentzen in Saginaw Saturday and attended a microwave cooking de- monstrat ion. Mr. and Mrs. John

Hartle of Pontiac spent S a t u r J y with her sister and husband, Mr. and Vrs. Laurence Bartk ,

Elmwood Missionary Circle women are meeting Wednesday of this week with Mrs. Lloyd Finkbeiner. The annual Sunday

school rally day service will be held Sunday at Salem UM Church. Sunday school, at 10 a.m, is followed by the 11 o’clock worship service.

Labor Day luncheon guests of Mr. and Mrs. George Fisher Sr. were Mr. and Mrs. George Fisher J r . and Elizabeth, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Fisher and David, Mr. and Mrs. John Shagen‘a, Mary and Joel and Mr, and Mrs. Gerald Langmaid and Paul.

Trinity Women meet Monday

United Methodist Women of Trinity Church met Mon- day evening at the church beginning with a six-thirty dinner served by women of group No. 1, of which Mar- garet Czekai and Betty Doerr are co-chairmen. Thirty-five members and guests attended.

Mrs. John Marshall pres- ided over the business meeting and Emma Lou Goodall revealed “secret pals.”

The program was pre- sented by Betty Cham- pagne of Elkton. She de- monstrated what color can do for you.

Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Tracy had as Sunday dinner guests, Mr. and Mrs. Sam Evens of North Branch.

The Masons attending the regular meeting of Tyler Lodge Sept. 3 donated $45.00 to the Masonic Ser- vice Association. The Association serves the needs and wants of vete- rans of the armed Services who are crippled, maimed or otherwise handicapped,

Mrs. George Fisher Sr. had as a caller Wednesday afternoon, Mrs. Ralph Ray1 of Akron.

Seventy-two members of Mrs. Cecil Loomis’ family attended the Labor Day reunion at the Loomis pond. The group included all of Mrs. Loomis’ familyof five, Lucille DeLong, Dorothy Murray of Williamston, Donald Loomis, Shirley Kritzman of Millersburg, Ind., and David Loomis.

and Mrs. Mike Doerr of Sebewaing Saturday even- ing. Godparents are Mr. and Mrs. Dick Szarapski, great-aunt and uncle of the baby. Among those attend- ing the baptism were Mr. and Mrs. Jim Doerr and son of Caro.

Injili and often-helps with Mrs. Ken Marker and the nightly radio communi-

children of Essexville were cations. Sunday afternoon and sup- per guests of Mr. and Mrs. Garrison Stine. In the after- noon the Stines and their guests were callers a t the Ivan Stine home near Ubly.

The Adkinses arr also heavily involved with the Kericho Town Africa Gos- pel Church.

Following a period of fur- lough in the United States, they will be returning to their work in Kenya.

World Gospel Mission is an interdenominational missionary organization with 335 missionaries and homeland staff serving in eighteen areas of the world. The public is invited to at- tend.

For Insurance health to

soar help pay ng hospital and surglcal bills, C h e c k W i t h state Farm.

CONG RA TU LA TIONS to the following

engaged couples who have registered with us!

Amie Nemeth of Deford, Normaleen McIntosh and Donna Holm, Cass City, and Pat Wester of West Bloomfield, sister of Mrs. McIntosh, visited Mac- kinaw City and Sault Ste. Marie over the week end.

Mr. and Mrs. George Fisher Sr, and Mrs. Phoebe Klinkman, Cass City, and Mrs, Edna Putnam of Vas- sar visited Mr. and Mrs. Henry McDurmon in Lans- ing Friday.

Mrs. Paul Craig, Mrs. Lucile Miller, Mrs. Reva M. Little and Cleo Spaulding were Friday evening din- ner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Alva McNeil on Bristol Rd.

Mrs. Grant Ball had as Sunday dinner guests, Mr. and Mrs. Norman Armstrong of Oklawaha, Fla., Mr . and Mrs. Don Hazard of Bad Axe, Mr. and Mrs. Brian Hazard and daughter Sara of Pigeon, Mr. and Mrs. Wesley Ball and family of Reese and Mr. and Mrs. Donald Ball and sons, Cass City,

A group from Evangeli- cal Free Church will be at Spring Hill camp, Evart, Friday and Saturday to at- tend a conference for Sun- day school teachers and youth workers. The group includes Rev. and Mrs. Eldred Kelley, Deb Martin, Gary and Cindy Bader, Nancy Leino, Joni Upfen- bach, Jacquie Sturtevant, Steve and Judy Hammett.

Pattons take Methodist tour CASS CITY CHRONICLE

PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY AT CASS CITY, MICHIGAN

6550 Main Street

USPS 092-700

Rev. and Mrs. Clare Pat- ton of Cass City traveled to Britain Aug. 27-Sept. 4 as part of a Methodist Herit- age Tour planned for the Pan-Methodis t celebration of the bicentennial of American Methodism.

Participants in the tour visited Epworth, the birth- place of John and Charles Wesley; Lincoln College at Oxford, where the Wesleys founded a Holy Club nicknamed “Methodist” ; the New Room in Bristol, the oldest Methodist meet- ing place in the world, and Wesley Chapel on City Road in London.

The climax of the tour was an evening service in Wesley Chapel when 800 pil- grims from America, rep- resenting the five par- ticipating denominations who trace their roots to the Wesleys, each celebrated their contributibns to the Methodist movement in the United States.

Other places visited dur- ing the tour included Lin- coln Cathedral, Stratford- upon- Avon, Coventry Cathedral , Blenheim Palace, Windsor Castle, Westminster Abbey and the changing of the guard at Buckingham Palace.

call. ERNEST A. TEICHMAN JR.

6240 W. Main Cass Phone City, 872-3388 Michigan

John Hatre publisher National Advertising Representative

Michigan Weekly Newspapers, InC 257 Michigan Avenue East Lansing Michigan

Second class postage paid at Cass City. Michigan 48726

Subscription Price To post offices in Tus- cola Huron and Sanilac Counties $8 00 a year or 2 years for $15 00 3 years tor $21 00 $4 50 for six months and 3 months for $2 50

In Michigan - $10 00 a year 2 years $18 00 6 months $5 50

In other parts of the United States, $1 1 00 a year or 2 years, $20 00, 6 qonths $6 00 and 3 months tor $3 25 50 cents exIra charged for part year order Payable in ad vance

For information regarding newspaper ad- vertising and commercial and ]ob printing telephone 672-2010

1 SchoolMenu 1 Visitors Saturday at the home of Mrs. Reva M. Lit- tle were Mr, and Mrs. Don Roberts and Mr. and Mrs. Dick Flannery of Center Line.

Suzanne Pasa’nski & Michael Barrons Kathleen Guilds & Steven Bock. Colleen Auten & Terry Sweeney Diane Howard & Jerv Gibbard

Sharon Fassett & Douglas Weber Paula Limberger & Dennis Robinson I

Nancy Bergman & Rick Mallory Lori Ewald & Michael DeVries

1 SEPT. 17-21, 1984 I Mr, and Mrs. William

Kitchin of Cass City have two new great-grandchil- dren. Steven and Lori Bentley of Flint have a boy, Joshua Steven, and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Stratton of Ann Arbor, a daughter, Elaine Joyce.

MONDAY Lucky Tray Day

Hot Dog on a Bun or

Tuna Sandwich Baked Beans Fresh Apple

Chocolate Milk

- ‘ I

I Like a good neighbor. State Farm IS thw. Mrs. Della Wright of

Lapeer was a Wednesday overnight guest of Mr. and Mrs. Max Agar.

Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Zapfe and son, Roger Godeby, of Clio visited Mrs. Lyle Zapfe Friday.

Hills and Dales TUESDAY Mrs. Phyllis Linderman, Cass City chairman of the recent Breath of Life Cam- paign, announced this week that workers raised over $300 in the fight against Cystic Fibrosis.

Schedule of Events:! Pizza or

Barbecue Pork Hot Buttered Corn

Chilled Pears White Milk

OPEN TO GENERAL PUBLIC Sept. 16 DATE thru Sept. TIME 22 .

PLACE EVENT

Drs. lsterabadi and Sept. 19 8-12 a.m. Out-patient

Expectant parent Sept. 20 7-9 p.m. Lg. Room Meeting

Clinic Donahue

Class

Suzanne Little of Kalamazoo spent last week with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Little.

- Phone 872-2270 Cass City

Hills and Dales General Hospital

WEDNESDAY

Breaded Chicken or

Hot Dog on a Bun Whipped Potatoes

Peaches Chocolate Milk

PATIENTS LISTED MON- DAY, SEPT. 10: Sept. 21 8-12 a.m. Out-patient 1

Clinic Dr. Jeung

I

I I

ARTCARVED SlLADlUM HIGH SCHOOL CLASS RINGS Every ririy is backed by the Art- Carved Full Lifetime Warranty This offer expires Novetnbcr 30 1984 and is to be used only for the pur- chase of Ar tcarved Siladium high school c l a s ~ ririqs PLUS up to S36 worth’of custom features FREE!

I Mrs. Ellen Brewer, Terry

Blanchard, Mrs. Cheryl Crane, James Hanby, Mrs. Marilyn Gibelyou, Wel- lington Hendra, Mrs. Catherine McDonald, Wayne Mellendorf, Mrs. Delores Silvernail and Mrs. Dawn Stone of Cass City;

Lynne Creason and Mrs. Valarie Yax of Deford;

Scott Michalski Jr. of Gagetown;

Mrs. Alma Nugent of De- cker ;

Rebecca Mammel, Mrs. Barbara Diebel of Sebewa- ing ;

Mrs. Carrie Wiergowski of Akron;

Mrs. Helvi Pylkas of Pi- geon ;

Mrs. Minnie Bye of Snover ;

Barbara Pomeroy of ’ Fairgrove.

There is an Immediate Care Clinic in the Ambulatory Care Center: Fridays - 6:OO p.m. - 8:30 p.m.; Saturdays - 12:30 p.m. - 830 p.m. and Sundays 1O:OO a.m. - 8:3O P.m.

Free Blood Pressure will be taken in the Ambulatory Care Center from 8:OO a.m. - 8:OO p.m. any day. Please stop in and have yours taken.

Physical, Respiratory and Speech Therapy scheduled on an Out-patient basis as ordered by your physician.

TO SCHEDULE YOURSELF FOR ANY OF THE ABOVE CLASSES OR CLINICS, CALL 872-2l21 Ext.255.

There is a physician In the Emergency Room from 6:00 p.m., Friday, until 6:OO a.m., Monday. There is always a

I

THURSDAY

Submarine Sandwich or

Chili Carrot Sticks

Pineapple Tidbits White Milk

Baptist Women help Liberians

Twelve were present Monday evening when the

FRIDAY

All American Hamburger or

Creamy Coleslaw

Chocolate Milk

Baptist Women’s Missio- nary Society met a t the

Fishwich church. In the business meeting women were asked

Cass City Chilled Fruit to bring sewing notions to the October meeting to be sent to Marge McMillan, a

id missionary in Liberia. At

I McCONKEY JEWELRY AND I I I GIFT SHOP

Phone 872-3025 a73 J-0000 BRING THIS AD LD - - - - - - i= - =----_I

the November meeting they are to bring articles for a baby shower to be sent to Miss McMillan for Libe- rian mothers.

Devotions were led by Mrs. Carol LaPonsie and prayer for missionaries by Lillian Hanby.

A committee was ap- pointed for the father-son banquet in October and in- cludes Carol LaPonsie, Linda Helwig, Debbie Par- rott and Lillian Hanby.

Refreshments were served by Shirley Shaw and Olive Stark. ~

WEDDING POLICY

The Chronicle will only use photographs with wedding stories if they are received within two months of the wed- ding date.

Photographs can be in black and white or color. thru September 29

4546 Leach St. Cass City

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PAGE THREE:

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CASS CITY CHRONICLE-THURSDAY SEPTEMBER 13,1984 CASS CITY, MICHIGAN r I

Little fear of wide-spreac “If I t F i t z m m e m 7 3

To heck with d i f f of trees in cass.citv .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... Brussels sprout By Jim Fitzgerald

I J

Cass City residents who have noticed village and area trees showing various degrees of str‘ess can be as- sured that nothing dmstic is going to happen to them.

Dave Dunn of Cass City, who works for the agricul-

tural department and has a degree in forestry, says that most of the trees that shade village streets today will still be alive and doing their. job five years from now.

That’s not to say, he

cautioned, that these trees are not showing signs of being in a decline. They are, and the worst of them could possibly succumb to disease, Dunn explained, but most of them will sur- vive.

There was a public con- frontation. At high noon on Saturday, Sept. 8, in Lapeer’s Cramton Park, the SOBS and LOBS met in‘ the “Fourth Annual Brus- sels Sprouts Are Not an Edi- ble Vegetable Tug-of-war Challenge.” The SOBS won the first three trophies, ac- cording to Preisel, because there aren’t enough 1,OBS in the world to tug an unan- chored shoelace through a huge eyelet. But Myers claims the first three chal- lenges were held in private, and he promised that Satur- day he would field enough LOBS to tug the SOBS into the raging Cramton Park creek that separated the two warring factions,

This is serious. All lovers and haters of Brussels spr- out were urged to join the competition Saturday and the Lapeer Farmers’ Mar- ket was to award $100 to the county library in the name of the winning team. The losing team was to be eaten to death by the carp in the creek. Until Judge Preisel reported them to the Humane Society, some cruel people used to feed Brussels sprout to the carp.

I was editor of the Lapeer County Press when the prc- sent publisher was a little boy. No one likes to see a kid go wrong, and I’m re- ally sorry that Ben Myers grew up to like Brussels sprout. But I can’t say I’m surprised. His father likes rutabaga and fried mush, God help us all.

A young newspaper pub- lisher named Ben Myers has jumped to the defense of the Brussels sprout. I mention that he is young so you will understand he isn’t old enough to know any bet- ter than to defend such a useless vegetable.

Leading the much-de- served attack against this foul-tasting food is Clayton Preisel, an older and wiser man, who is chairman of the Society Opposed to Brussels Sprouts (SOBS). Preisel lives in Lapeer County where, when he can spare time away from his more important anti-spr- outs post, he dabbles as a probate judge.

Lapeer County is only 60 miles north of Detroit, so if Preisel fails to curb the pro- liferation of Brussels spr- outs there, it won’t be long before the deathly stuff crosses Eight Mile Road, reaches downtown and forces Mayor Young to seek

Busy beavers on the job

At one time or another, beavers have probably changed almost every watershed on North America, reports National Wildlife magazine. For example, a 1960 excavation down to bedrock revealed the area now called Boston Common was created by busy beavers.

federal funds to build a Brussels sprout mover. Preisel is fighting for all of

“Imagine a dish of Brus- sels sprouts,” Preisel said recently. “Can you think of anything more wretched looking, limp, mushy, ugly and unappetizing? You can’t stuff them as you do cabbage, and, according to Cole’s Law, they are too small for sauerkraut.”

(For the benefit of people who aren’t probate judges, it should be pointed out that Cole’s Law is appliyable only in litigation aimed at determining the difference between cabbage salad and coleslaw. Preisel’s use of such a deadly pun is plainly indicative of how nasty the battle between him and Myers has become.)

Myers is publisher of the Lapeer County Press when he isn’t too busy serving as chairman of Lovers of the Brussels Sprout (LOBS). “1 take umbrage at the t r u h - lent remarks made bv Judge Preisel in his mali- cious attack on one of the most delicious vegetables to be found in the American garden,” Myers said.

Preisel retorted that Myers should watch his lan- guage, pointing out that “a truculent might find favor- able growing conditions around Myers’ newspaper, but the umbrage isn’t usu- ally seen north of Washington, D.C.

us.

The story that appears in the Chronicle this week about the trees in the village and area was due to the concern of John Ryba, Cass City.

Ryba has been worried about losing the trees and on his own tried to get answers about their condition. Failing he came to the Chronicle with his concern.

Cass City is not alone with I this problem, according to

Dunn. Early maple tree de- cline has been noted for sev- eral years now and has been pointed out in an ag- ricultural department bul- letin.

No one reason has been found for the early decline of the maples. It may well be a combination of factors, Dunn feels.

Salt on roads getting into snow and then pushed around the base of the trees is one. Another is not allow- ing the trees enoug_h room to get adequate water be- cause they are t0.o close to pavement.

Fungal toot and trunk rot also can cause early dieback of the trees, says Dunn. Acid rain? There hasn’t been enough re- search in this area to tell.

There will be more trees losing limbs and thinning out at the top. Many will lose their leaves earlier than normal in the fall. That’s common in early de- clineofthetrees.

The trees may hurt a lit- tle, Dunn concluded, but we,ll have them here to enjoy for the foreseeable fu-

\

‘1 in ; ‘

THIS TREE on Seeger Street is in advanced stage of early decline. It may die, but the majority of the maples in the village are expected to survive. ture.

From his new post at Benton Harbor former editor Mike Eliasohn is still setting us straight. We said last week that we asked riders what the tags on the back were for. They said it was to honor Dick Allen. Well, Mike says, we have the right name and the wrong guy.. The Dick Allen the ride was named for is former Senator Dick Allen of Ithaca and not Rep. Dick Allen of Fairgrove. The race has been staged for about 13 years. About 1,OOO bicyclists took part this year.

It’s lead pipe cinch that most of them didn’t know any more about Sen. Dick Allen than I did.

******** Editor Bill McLeod says that he can’t remember a

fall with so much rain. You can tell he wasn’t here the year that corn stood in the fields all winter because fields were too wet to enter. That’s the year it rained just enough every week to keep the fields too wet for hhrvesting. I tried to think back to pinpoint what year it was, but even with the help of past issues of the paper was unsuccessful. I guessed four years ago.

I found out how wrong I was when Ben Hobart told me without hesitation that it was 1977. Time flies.

**a*****

Speaking of rain, the Cass City Golf League seems to have an affinity for selecting a date for the yearend outing that is wet.

This year rain forced many of the players to quit before getting around the course. Last year was great, but the two years prior to that brought intermittent weather problems.

********a*

When is a sale not a sale? When regular prices are listed instead of sale prices. That happened last week in the paint advertisement for Albee’s Home Center.

Each of the 9 prices listed were regular prices instead of sale prices.

It’s the biggest boo-boo we’ve had to live with in 33 years in Cass City. Deputies arrest

T he

H aim

Net

I I I

I

I I

I

I I

I

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I P€PSI. I I

I TH€CHOlCE I O f I

I GENERATION: I j ANEW i I !

64 in August The Weather High Low PreCip.

Wednesday ................. 68 ...... 38 ...... .02 Thursday.. .................. 70 . . . . . 52 ...... 0 Friday.. i . . ................. 66 ..... 56 . . . . . . .15 Saturday ................... 81 ...... 58 ...... .04 Sunday ..................... 68 . . . . . . 55 . . . . . . ,32 Monday.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 77 ...... 56 . . . . . . .43 Tuesday .................... 78 . . . . . . 53 . . . . . . .06

(Recorded at Cass City wastewater treatment plant.)

1

; Purchase 2 8-packs of Pepsi, Diet Pepst, Pepst Light, Mountain Dew, Pepsi Free, Diet Pepst Free and pay only

: I I

A look at the passing to march. I I I I I $ 1 6 9 per a - p a c k

I I I I I I

nate, could have bluep- rinted the best thing that could happen to him when he marched in the Labor Day parade in Detroit, the script probably would have read just the way it actually happened.

Lousma was involved in a verbal hassle and a scuffl- ing match with AFL-CIO President Tom Turner and his supporters for march- ing at the head of the parade.

The result? Oceans of publicity and sympathy for Lousma from the ordinary guy whose sense of fair play was outraged.

Sen. Carl Levin, Democ- rat incumbent running for re-election, is no dummy. He immediately issued a statement saying that Lousma should be allowed

of these, 161 were for speed- ing. A tptal of 11 tickets were issued for minor in possession of alcohol.

The Sheriff’s Depart- ment responded to 669 tele- phone calls, most of which were for traffic complaints.

Deputies worked a total of 6,827 hpurs? 771 hours less than were scheduled.

Patrol units traveled 47,310 miles during the month, 40 miles more than were driven last month. The department used 3,587 gallons of gasoline.

The county jail served 3,574 meals during August. Of the 203 inmates admitted to the county jail, 21 were females. 203 inmates were released from the jail.

The Sheriff’s Depart- ment sounded seven severe weather alerts.

Deputies reported one fatal accident for the month. So far this year seven fatal injuries have been reported, equal to the total for 1983. There were two suicides reported in Tuscola County during Au- gust.

The Cass City Police De- partment arrested or filed charges against four per- sons, down from eight for July.

Police from the Car0 post arrested 22 individuals, 16 were for traffic related of- fenses.

The number of respective complaints from and acci- dents in area townships and

The Michigan State -

****** I I

I I I

I Additonal Quant i t w?s The Michigan Licensed

Beverage Association is campaigning for a law ban- ning the two-for-one (happy hours) and multiple drink specials.

That’s okay. Everyone has the right fo try and feather their own nest. But to say the reason for the law is to “control custom- ers’ drinking and reduce drunk driving”? Come on, now.

I I I I I I I I I I

VCR SYSTEM ******

The absolute worst “shaggy dog’’ joke of the year was reprinted re- cently in a metro daily. Here it is.

A guy went to his doctor to find out why he was dreaming that he was a tepee and a wigwam. It was happening night after night.

That’s easy, said the doc, you’re two tents.

It ’s a Table Model It’s a Portable b

LETS YOU CATCH ******

It’s not that Tawas Area Schools are too tough for Cass City in football that it would be great if the series is terminated.

It’s just that it’s so far that not even the players’ parents can all make the trip. The game between the two schools Friday was

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with an optional video camera. AC/DC versatility makes this unit completely portable as it plays off i ts own built-in rechargeable battery.

CAUTION The unauthorlzed recording of television programs or other materials may in f r inge the r ights of others

Most Americans spend more heating the outside of their home

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Page 4: newspapers.rawson.lib.mi.usnewspapers.rawson.lib.mi.us/chronicle/1984/Issues/09-13... · 2005-07-24 · \ Forester Dave Dunn looks ’ at village maple tree decline ’c Page 3 Hazzards‘

PAGE FOUR

OSENTOSKI REALTY & AUCTIONEER

872-4377 6501 Main, Cass City

C A S CITY CHRONICLE-THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 13,1984

w 4

_ _ . _

VILLAGE SERVICE 6415 Main, Cass City

872-3050

WALBRO CORPORATION 6242 Garfield, Cass City

CASS CITY, MICHIGAN TUSCOLA COUNTY

BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS

These are condensed minutes approver for publication by your Tuscola Count) Board of Commissioners

The full official text of this summary 01 Board proceedings may be exa;nined at the office of the County Clerk during regular business hours

I 872-21 31

Surplus commodities to be

ANTHONY'S PARTY SHOPPE 6348 N. Van Dyke, Road

872-2944

BARTNIK'S SALES & SERVICE 6524 N. Van Dyke Road

872-3541

6549 Main, Cass City 872-2245

distributed in Cass Citv

CLARE'S SUNOCO SERVICE 6597 Main Street

872-2470

CROFTmCWRA LUMBER, INC. 6141 W. Main, Cass City

872-2 1 4 1

E R L ~ S FOOD CENTER AND PACKING, INC,

6233 Church, Cass City 872-2191

A distribution of surplus commodities will be held at the Lions Pavilion, Cass City Village Park, Friday, Sept. 21 from 10:OO a.m. to 12:30 p.m.

The Human Develop- ment Commission will be distributing the surplus cheese, butter and honey to

CAS$ CITY CHRONICLE 6550 Main, Cass City

872-201 0

Surplus Commodity Regist- ration card. All households who receive a form of pub- lic assistance, such as Aid for Dependent Children, General Assistance, food stamps or Supplemental Security Income may be eligible to receive the com- modit ies. Commodities

FUELGAE of CASS CITY 6466 N. Van Dyke, Cass City

872-2161

J

872-2300

CHEMICAL BANK C A S CITY 6522 Main, Cass City

872-4355

living on fixed incomes or receiving unemployment benefits. If an individual has not received a surplus commodity registration card, they are to contact the Human Development Commission, 429 Mon- tague, Caro. Those apply- inp for the commodities

. -

6285 Garfield, Cass City 872-21 11

CHUCK GAGE WELDING 7062 E. Deckerville Road

072-2552

they can pick up any surplus commodities.

Individuals who are un- able physically to go to the distribution site may have someone pick up their com- modities only if the Surplus Commodity Registration

individuals who have a may be available to persons mis t have the card before card is shown. -

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bwncd 6 Operated bq Ted J. L a f r v e Opermiionr Mmagec. Kurt S. LrFave

0 bituaries held Tuesday at the Hall GEOKGE W. COOPER Funeral Home in Gladwin.

George William Cooper, Mrs. Ellen H. Demaray, The Rev. R.E. Fogelsonger 98, of Marlette died Satur- 89, of Cass City died Satur- officiated- day, Sept. 8, a t the Marlette day at Provincial House in Burial was in Ridge Extended Care Facilitv. Cass City. Cemetery, Gladwin. ,

ELLEN DEMARAY

He was born May 16,1886 i n Deford, the son of Jesse and Susan Cooper.

Cooper and Elva Phillips were married Dec. 11,1912, in Decker. She died Oct. 19, 1980.

A lifelong resident of the Marlette area, he was a farmer and was employed at Marlette Lumber & Con- crete for 30 years.

Among the many posi- tions held in Sanilac County and Marlette community are several years on the Board of Drain Commis- sioners, a Sanilac super- visor for 18 years, served as chairman of Sanilac Election Commission and on the board of Marlette Livestock Sales for 20 years.

A son, Gene P. Cooper, preceded him in death Sept. 13, 1968.

Funeral services were

She was born May 5,1895, in Newaygo County, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Frye.

She married Earl Shell Oct. 8, 1914. He died Oct. 4, 1951. She married Frank Demaray June 5, 1955, in Gladwin.

Mrs. Demaray was a re- tired school teacher. She taught school in Gladwin County and retired in 1960.

Survivors are her hus- band Frank; two sons, Robert Shell of Brooksville, Fla., and William Shell of Holiday, Fla. ; three daughters, Mrs. Gilbert (Gladys) Albee of Cass City, Mrs. Edison (Lucille) Shepherd of Midland and Mrs. John (Tresa) Pangborn of Midland; 15 grandchildren, 21 great- grandchildren agd, one great-great-grandchdd.

Other survivors are: two stepchildren, Jack De- maray of Seminole, Fla., and Mrs. Robert (Coraleel

held Wednesday in the Roof of Houghton Lake; one Marsh Funeral Chapel, brother, Harold Frye of Marlette, with Rev. John Burt, MI, and one sister,

Mrs. Edith Edick of Punta R. Allan officiating. Burial was in the Mar- Gorda, Fla.

lette cemetery. Funeral services were

1 Time is money, and the time spent each1 1 day practicing farm safety could be the best

investment you'll make. Simple precautions can yield the highest dividends: a smooth-running and

accident-free farm. Invest in safety. /

I

GENERAL CABLE Station Products Division CAS$ CITY FORD

A Unit of Penn Central Corporation 6392 Main, Cass City

HARRIS4AMPSHIRE 6815 E. Cass City Road, Cass City

072-4351

HILLSIDE BEAUTY SHOP 6263 Church, Cass City

872-2740

IGA FOODLINER 6121 E. Cass City Road, Cass City

072-2645

MR. KELLY'S MARKET 6473 Lincoln, Gagetown

665-2521

MID THUMB FARM SERVICE 7705 Van Dyke Road, Cass City

872-5345

MUTUAL SAVINGS & LOAN . 6241 Main, Cass City

872-2 105

pILUBURY CO. 6210 Main, Cass City

072-2 1 7 1

PLUMBING & HEATING

THUMB NATIONAL BANI AND TRUST CO.

6132 E. Cass City Rbad, Cass City

Cass City - 872-5084 Pigeon - 453-3531

072-431 1

0

JOSEPH LOUIS CRUBER

Joseph Gruber of Great Bend, Kansas, formerly Cass City, died Friday, Sept. 7, at the Kansas Cent- ral Medical Center.

He was born July 24,1959, in Cass City, the son of Mr, and Mrs. John Gruber of Cass City.

Mr . Gruber moved to Kansas in 1981 from Cass City. He was a member of St. Pancratius Catholic Church of Cass City, and the Harley-Davidson Motorcycle Club of Kansas.

Surviving, beside his pa- rents, are two brothers, William Gruber of Gagetown and Michael Gruber of Jacksonville, Fla.; four nieces and two nephews. Also surviving is his fiance, Miss Lisa Roach of A Great prayer Bend, service Kansas. was

held Monday evening at 8 p.m. from Little's Funeral Home, Cass City.

Funeral mass was con- ducted Tuesday at 1 1 a.m. from St. Pancratius Catholic Church with Rev. Julius A. Spleet, pastor, of- ficiating.

Interment will be in Elk- land Cemetery, Cass City.

HARRY RAYMOND WISE 6

Harry Wise of Auburn Heights died Friday, Sept. 7, at his residence.

He was born Aug. 12,1920, in Cass City, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Wise.

Mr. Wise served in the US. Army in the Pacific during World War 11. He was a life member of the National Rifle Association and of the Disabled Ameri- can Veterans No. 16 of Pon- tiac. He was also a member of the American Legion Post No. 507 of Cass City; of the AARP of Auburn Heights and of the National Wild Turkey Federation.

He is survived by two brothers, Maxwell Wise of Cass City and Andrew Wise of Port Huron; three sis- ters, Mrs. Clyde Lindsay of St. Helen, MI., Mrs. Cora Wilson of Port Huron and Mrs. Ross Hurley of Car- sonville; 17 nieces and nephews and 13 grand- nieces and nephews.

Funeral services were conducted Monday at 1 p.m. from Little's Funeral Home, Cass City, with Rev. Clifford Jordan, pastor of the Wheatland Missionary Church of Deckerville, of- ficiating.

A military graveside ser- vice was held Zt Elkland Cemetery, Cass City.

HELEN AGATHA WRIGHT

Mrs. Wright of Jupitei, Fla., died at her home Wed- nesday, Sept, 5, after an ill- ness of nine months.

She was born near Col- wood in Tuscola County July 27, 1917, the daughter of the late Iza and Henry LaFave.

She was buried in Wood- lawn Cemetery, Miami, after a graveside service, the Rev. Lou Miller officiat- ing. Arrangements were by the direction of Forrest Lawn Mortuary of Fort Lauderdale, Fla.

She is survived by her husband, Charlie Wright of Jupiter, Fla. ; one brother, Harold (Bud) LaFave of Bay City, and three sisters, Mrs. Harry (Gen) Kehoe of Gagetown, Mrs. William (Elaine) Prieur of Far- mington Hills, and Mrs. Wendell (Willa) Birch of Bay City.

Relatives and friends may attend a memorial mass at St. Agatha Church, Gagetown, 30. Sunday, Sept.

Aug 14 1384

Meeting opened with Prayer and Plr-'ie

Roll Call 6 members present 1 absent ACTION TAKEN The Agenda was approved as prbsented Minutes of July 24. 1984 approved as

typed Stanley Baldwin. Area Agency on Aging

appeared before the Board with a report on the Agency

A resolution regarding various boards was adopted

A letter was received and placed on file from the Prosecuting Attorney

A special order of the day was set for Aug 28. 1984 at 1 30 p m for a public he:>ring for a Community Action Development P grant home for disabled and age? 1

Gagetown A request from James McCann was re-

ceived to attend an emergency Manage- ment Workshop Sept 17 1984 Request approved

Claims and Accounts were presented and approved

Appointment to and Operating Guideliries for Tuscola County Boards and Commis- sions were presented and adopted

The adjusted bill for Maintenance of effort in the amount of 529 45 to be paid

The June bill for Maintenance of effort was presented and approved

Becky Mohr of the Caro Ans Society ap peared before the Board with a reques use the Courthouse lawn Oct 6 1984 the Harvest Fair entertainment Request approved

An administrative order was received and placed on file from District Judge Richard Kern

Cynthia Woodruff was appointed Special Magistrate of the 71-8 District Court for the Sole purpose of solemnizing marriages

A letter was received in regard to the guideline from Prosecuting Attorney and placed on file

Paul Lefler. Building Code Administrator appeared before the Board with a proposed resolution approving the contract amer ment for Tuscola Count\ Sanitary Se\ system (Caro Area) Resolution approvea

The 1984 Tuscola County Federal Re- venue Sharing Budget was amended as presented

Approved the transfer of funds from Fed era1 Revenue Sharing Fund to Treasurers Revenue 101 -253-696 ~ Public Safety

Approved the transfer of funds to increase the General Fund Probate Child Care 101-

Approved the increase General Fund Contingency Account 101 -041 -965

Motion approving the 1984 General Fund expenditure budget

The monthly statement of the County Tre- asurer was received and placed on file

A request from John Marshall to attem summer conference was approved

Travel expense vouchers were received and approved from the Road Cornmission

Motion authorizing the County Clerk to advertise for the recruitment of applicants for the various boards and commissions and the 3 month prior notice be waived

Minutes were read and approved Motion to adjourn to Aug 28 1984 at

10 00 a m Carried

Aug 28. 1984

Meeting opened with Prayer and Pledge

to the Flag

662-065

,

to Roll the Flag Call All members prcsenl

ACTION The agenda TAKEN was approved as amended

Minutes of Aug 14, 1984 were approved as Robert typed Wellington presented a local roads

and Approved bridge progress the transfer report of monies from the '

bridge millage fund to the road commiSSlan for local roads and bridge constructim

Approved the application of highway safety grant for alcohol enforcement and Re-appointed William Pratt Richard to the Smith. Private Don Industry Tonli

Council the Received Medical Care and placed Facility ori in file regard a letter to build from

ing improvement and matter referred io building and grounds comrnittee for fudkv study and recommendatiorl

Received and placed on file a letter from the Prosecutinb Attorney concerning the amendment of tax limitations established in 1964 Public hearing was held at 1 30 p m on

Community Action Development Block Grant Authorization was given to Tuscda

County Economic Development Corpora- tion to apply to the Michigan Small Cities program for grant for a home for the aged

Resolution was adopted regarding Its policies and procedures for use of recap- tured grant funds

Adopted the Community Development Plan

Approved the transfer of mOnieS frC general fund to the Department Of SoCidl Services appropriation Child and Care Monies fund from as a the 3rd general quarter

fund to the Tuscola Soil Conservation n iS - trict ing, Sept purpose 4, 1984 of receiving was set for testimony a special and meet- dis-

CUSSIO~ of proposbd increase in the 1984 millage rate for County operating and in- crease in 1984 Senior Citizens extra voted milla e. and the 1984 extra voted millage for local road bridge and local street system vertise Departmental for bids to Control remove Committee the County owned to ad-

house on Grant Street Authorized the Sheriff to requisition for Si

state Renewed cars the farm lease with Russell

Farm Met for with 1 year Departmen\ heads and elected

officials

4J

Approved the minutes as read Adjourned to Sept 4 1984 at 10 00 a m

Sept 4, 1984

Meeting opened with Prayer and Pledge

Roll Call 6 members present 1 member to the Flag

absent ACTION TAKEN Agenda accepted as presented 10 00 a m Public hearing on Increasing

Properly Taxes Discussion followed on the proposed mil

lag@ Minutes proposition were approved as read

Adjourned to Sept 1 1 1984 at 9 00 a m

ANNUAL LOCAL UNIT I FISCAL REPORT I ~

11 ~- - ---

'I For The

TOWNSHIP OF EVER9REEW Is Available To Be Seen On

SEPT. IS, 1984 From 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.

At 4968 N. Van Dyke Road

Cass City

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CASS CITY, MICHIGAN

Arbitrator CASS CITY CHRONICLE-THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 13,1984 PAGE FIVE

Hazzards run

Not a single bank existed anywhere in the thirteen colonies before the Amer- ican Revolution. Anyone needing money had to bor- row from an individual.

Romancing the

*Adult Titles XXX

116 E FrankSt Ph 673-5110

ment. He is presintly scheduled for eight hours per week.

The arbitrator, William P. Daniels, reported that the village’s layoff of Moore was “an exercise of statut- ory authority in the man- agement of the affairs of the village. ”

Village Superintendent Lou LaPonsie said that by cutting back on Moore’s hours the village saved about $24,000 per year.

The second grievance was filed to protest a change in policy where only one officer was scheduled for duty Friday and Satur- day night instead of the usual two officers. The Fraternal Order of Police stated that even before Moore’s layoff the village had two officers on duty Friday and Saturday nights.

Daniels ruled in favor of the Fraternal. Order of Police that the village must have two officers on duty during the week end.

IaPonsie said that it will cost thc village about $5,000 per year to keep the second officer on duty Friday and Saturday nights .

TWO ADMITTED FOR $3.00 ON MON. & TUES.!

- .------ I__r-

SUNDAY: 2:30 till 6:OO Adults $1.50 -- ----

STARTS W E D N E S D A Y P T . ~ ~ A R E / L SMASH HIT!!

“THREE CHEERS FORWERDS’! This is great stuff! Carradine’s performance

is a comedy marvel. ‘Nerds: rah!”

“I laughed my head off! One of the funniest films of the year!’‘- J ~ Y ~ ~ ~ tyon5, S W k P r e v l e L ~ s

- Jdc k Mdf‘lews USA Toady

I‘

a winner, but loses money

Whenever a person starts nazzard and her husband d

a business they expect that began a cassette tape lib- it will take some time be- rary that loans tapes to chll- fore they begin to see a pro- dren and adults who want fit from their investment. to listen to Christian based But for Joyce and Garth stories. Hazzard, cash profits from Hazzard said that the their business, Joy Minis- idea of having a cassette tries Inc., will never be library began from draw- seen. And to them, it ings that she held where doesn’t matter. The busi- children registered to win a ness is operated in the Haz- record album that she zard home on Van Dyke purchased. Hazzard said

that she put registration Road, Joyce Decker. Hazzard began forms in public places in operating J o y Ministries the Cass City area for ch’il-

zard Said. Hazzard keeps records on

the tapes that she sends to the families so that they will not be getting repeats of tapes that they have al- ready had.

“It is growing. The kids love it ,” Hazzard said about the popularity of the cas.- sette library. She said that she has gotten volunteer help from Ruth Dorman of Snover, and Dan Allen of Deford. She added that she feels that kids could be lis-

Inc., a nonprofit organiza- dren to sign up to win the tening to better radio prog- tion, almost two years ago album. From these en- raming than what is on when she wanted some- try forms she recelved the most radio shows.

Of Joy Incm, inventories of the cassette tapes that have been sent to children and adults who use th6Christian based cassette library. thing to do for the Lord:”

As a result of this desire.

HUNTER SAFETY COURSE THURS., SEPT. 20

FRI., SEPT. 21 7-10 p.m.

SAT., SEPT. 22 8 a.m. - 1 p.m.

For Ages 11 ’12 - 16 Years

$5.00 Fee, Lunch Included at

Registration 6-7 p.m. Classes Over at 9:30 p.m.

Cass City Gun Club 4 south, 1 east, 1/2 north of Cass City

Join TIGER CUBS

7 years old

CUB SCOUTS 8 thru 10 years old

Sign-Up at

Campbell Elementary School Gym

MONDAY SEPT. 17 6:30 p.m.

Celebration 75th Anniversary

of Scouting

SPONSORED IN COMMUNITY INTEREST BY

FRI.-SAl.-SUN., SEPT, 21-22-23

Next Fri.: “Up The Creek” and “Cheech & Chong as Corsican Bros.”

Made to measure: An ice cream scoop holds the equivalent of one-third CUD.

names of about 450 children Last Year Jov Ministries who entered the drawing.

Hazzard said that sh& began her tape library by getting the permission from the broadcasting com- panies that produced the re- ligious based shows that are played on Family Life Radio, WUGN, Midland. After getting the permis- sion to make copies of the radio show, she would pro- duce between 8 to 14 copies to be distributed,

Some of the radio shows that Hazzard tapes are “Ranger Bill,” a story of a forest ranger who presents a Christian based message, “Story Book Room,” which is an educationally based religious program, and “Fables of Faith,” stories for young children. I

“Our kids just love thes’e programs,” Hazzard said, “and we are finding out that other children do, too.”

Hazzard also records “The Unshackled Series,” which is more for teenagers and adults. She said that the series are true stories of individuals from all walks of life who have had their lives changed by the power of God.

So far Hazzard serves about 128 families with cas- sette tapes. Each month the family receives a package of five tapes to be listened to and returned at the end of the month.

“We find that kids that don’t go to church like to

Inc. coit aboutw$1,800 to op- erate. Most of the money went for the purchasing, packaging and mailing of the tapes. She said that about $500 was donated to the tax deductible organi- zation, the rest was paid for by her husband and herself.

Recently Joy Ministries Inc. received a permit to allow them to use library postage rates which cut their mailing costs from $1.35 per package to 35 cents each.

Joy Ministries Inc. also has a Bible correspondence course where adults and children are able to study the Bible by mail. Hazzard said that the correspon- dence study course is purchased through The Mail Box Club and the book- lets are sent out for the indi- vidual to complete. Upon completion, the booklet is sent back to Hazzard where she corrects what the indi- vidual has been tested on. She said that upon comple- tion of the course they mail a certificate to those who took the course.

Both Garth and Joyce Hazzard teach Sunday School at the Deford Com- munity Church and Garth is a deacon at the church.

Garth is a truck driver for Fuelgas of Cass City.

The Hazzards have three children, Jody, Rodney and Nathan, who attend the De- ford Christian Academy,

near these stories,” Haz- Deford.

-_I-

THURSDAY thru SUN DAY SEPT. 13.1 4-1 5.1 6 (4 DAYS)

Friday-Saturday-Sunday. . . . . . . . . .7:30 & 9:20 THURSDAY IS “BARGAIN NITE”--8:00 ONLY

.-

An outrageous new comedy from the creators of

“Police Academy” and the star of “Splash.”

- -

NEXT THURSDAY (4 DAYS)

“The Muppets Take Manhattan”

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PAGE SIX CASS CITY CHRONICLE-THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 13,1984 CASS CITY, MICHIGAN

Thumb B season starts at.North Branch

Tawas capitalizes on errors to top Hawks It appeared as if Cass

City would bounce right back into the lead, From their own 22 the Hawks moved for a first on the one- yard line. But a fumble on the vered next by Tawas. play was reco-

Cass City forced the Braves to punt and when the kicker stepped out of the end zone was awarded a safety.

Cass City then took the Tawas free kick and moved in to score. Beecher wedged over from the one. A key run in the series was a 22- yard gallop by Tracy Lapp.

Things really looked rosy for Hawk fans when Viney

slipped around left end be- hind good blocking for 40

yards and a touchdown to put Cass City ahead 22-13.

But that was the end of the offensive show for the Hawks and Tawas used a coiiple of big breaks al- ready described to take the win.

The defense was led by Bill Sontag who was cre- dited with 9 solo tackles and 10 assists. Joe Viney led the runners with 101 yards in just five carries.

The statistics: Rushingatt. CC 37 44 T

Rushing yards 243 189 Passes comp. 5-7 15-25 Passingyards 42 160 Totalyards 285 349 Fumbles, lost 1-1 1-1 Penalty, yards 6-80 6-75

extra points were good. The second key penalty

came in the crucial last period with the game on the line. With 8:18 left the Hawks were moving the ball and had an apparent first down on the Tawas 33. But a holding penalty nul- lified the gain and Cass City lost the ball a couple of plays later.

With 6: 32 left in the game, Tawas started the winning drive from its own 49-yard line.

Staying oh the ground all the way the Braves picked up yardage in big chunks. It was first and 10 on the Hawk 25 and then first on the 15. Ten more yards in one run made it first and goal from the five. Rob Jackson smashed over for the score. There was 2:31 left in the game. Cass City was not able to generate an offensive threat in the time remaining.

In the first period it looked as if Cass City might be steam rolled. After tak- ing the kick and doing no- thing the Hawks punted and Tawas promptly moved in to score.

The visitors used the air route to eat up most of the distance. The final in a series of passes resulted in a first down on the three- yard line from where Tawas took it over on three plunges into the line. Jim Pollin picked up the TD. The kick was good and

Tawas was in front 7-0 with 8:11 left in the first period.

It didn't take the Hawks long to get that one back. Starting on their own 26, Cass City picked up three first downs, one on a 15- yard pass from Bryan Beecher to Joe Viney.

From the 25, Beecher ran around his own left end on a quarterback keeper to score. Beecher scored the extra points on a pass-run option play. The score came with 4:57 left in the first quarter.

Tawas got back in front with a sustained driye from their own 22. The Braves picked up five first downs in the march and scored on a pass to Ernst.

The preliminaries are out of the way and the Cass City Red Hawks will get down to the serious business of the Thumb B Association race when they travel to North Branch Friday for a clash with the Broncos.

North Branch, always a tough football school, lost its opener against Mil- lington and 14 of the front line players from last sea- son's fine team.

Coach Don Schelke be-

lieves that the Hawks will The Hawks won the first have to put two halves of half, 22-21, and Tawas won offensive football to start the second, 6-0, for a 27-22 the year wlth a conference decision and a sweep of the win. That didn't happen in home and home series. the loss Friday in the sea- Penalties played a key son's opener against Tawas role in the game. Two of A k a Schools. them led to scores by the

It was two different Braves. games in the first and sec- In the closing moments ond half. The first was a of the first half, Cass City wide open scoring affair was in front by nine points, and the second a dogged de- 22-13, and Tawas was fight- fensive battle marred by ing the Hawks and the clock penalties for both teams. to get a touchdown and

close the gap before time ran out.

Cass City apparently had the drive stopped at about midfield when a penalty gave the visitors new life and they marched down the field to score.

With the ball on the four- yard line and just seven seconds left in the period, Matt Ernst stepped all alone into the end zone and took a pass from John Holmes for the marker. The

BRYAN BEECHER skirted his own left end on this play to give the Hawks a touchdown in the first half. Tawas stopped the end runs in the second half and shut off Hawk scoring.

Hawk cagers lose 2 TIED FOR THE play-off championship of the Cass City

Golf League Sunday at Verona Hills Golf Course, Bad Axe, were the teams of Kim Glaspie and Roland Pakonen, left, and Bill Kritzman and Jeff McKenzie.

The Cass City Red Hawks will be definite underdogs when they travel to North Branch tonight (Thursday) for the opening game in the Thumb B Association.

The Hawks are in a re- building year and probably won't win too many games this season, especially in the first half of the year.

The Hawks did improve -defensively in their second game of the season in a 40- 19 loss a t Ubly and that's the aim for the squad this season. . . . . improvement from game to game.

Cass City was blanked in the first period against the Bearcats as the hosts took a 7-0 lead. The winners added to the lead with a 7-5 margin in the second quar- ter and also extended the lead in each of the final two periods.

Chris Britt was the top Cass City scorer with five. Julie Maurer led Ubly with 12 points.

CASEVILLE GAME

It was a learning experi- ence, said new coach Daryl Ivankovitsch after the Cass City Red Hawks cage squad dropped a 65-39 decision to Caseville It was the Tuesday, opening Sept. game 4.

for the inexperienced Hawks and Caseville quickly established who was boss for the night.

The host girls jumped off to a 19-10 lead in the opening period and went on from there, At the half it was 34- 16 and after three periods,

Caseville had four players in double figures led by Chris Barton with 21 points. The Hawks were led by Kerry McIlrath with 14.

The Hawks were beaten on the boards by Caseville. Julie Burns led Cass City with seven rebounds.

49-26.

Hunter safety class ofsered COTTONELLE

The Tuscola County Ar- chers Club will be holding a hunter safety class for youths 12 years old and up at the Tuscola County Archer's Club on Bruisee Rd., Caro.

, During the class, youths will be instructed on hunt- ing safety, first aid and sur- vival in the outdoors.

The class will start Sept. 21, from 6 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. and will be completed Sept. 22 from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.

A $1 fee will be charged to youths who want to prac- tice shooting 22 rifles a t the range. To register call 673- 2705.

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CASS CITY, MICHIGAN CASS CITY CHRONICLE-THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 13,19&1 PAGE SEVEN

Ready for Deckerville Arrest Gage+town ‘man Owen-Gage wins season for re c k less d r iv ing opener against *Eagles

Miller reported that a vehicle driven by David A. Dorland, 18,6219 Shabbona Rd., Decker, backed into a vehicle driven by Betty J. Aurey, 56, 6610 Seed St., Cass City. Miller said that Dorland was backing out of a parking spot and failed to see the Aurey vehicle. No injuries were reported.

Arnold J. Horn, 19, 1295 Phillips Rd., Deford, was not injured when his vehicle struck q deer Friday, a t 2:20 p.m., on Cedar Run Rd. Horn told Cass City police that he was northbound on Cedar Run Rd., about one quarter of a mile north of Cass City Rd., when the deer ran in front of his veh- icle.

Police chief Gene Wilson reported that a vehicle dri- ven by William Torrance, 24, 866 Cedar Dr., Pontiac, backed into the building of Frank’s Service Station, 4083 N. Cemetery Rd., Cass City. Wilson said that the vehicle was not damaged. Minor damages were done to the building.

Officer Todd Alexander reported that Thomas E. Howard, Oak St., Cass City, complained that someone had kicked in the side of his 1984 Toyota pic- kup. Howard said that it happened sometime bet- ween 12:oO a.m. and 12p.m. Friday when it was parked in front of the Station Bar, 6432 W. Main St., Cass City or in the United Parcel parking lot, Cass City.

The Tuscola Sheriff’s De- ’ artment-deputies issued a bcket to Randy D. Thompson for reckless driving and failure to re- port an accident when he lost control of h’is vehicle and damaged the yard of Bill Solden, 1997 E. Cass City Rd., Unionville.

Deputies reported that Sunday a t 12:02 a.m., Thompson, 24, 3105 Bay City-Forestville Rd., Gagetown, was spinning his car around in circles a t the intersection of Cass City and Colwood Roads when he lost control of the car. Deputies reported that he drove onto the Solden yard and damaged several large flower pots and the sod in the yard.

Deput Patrick Woiden reporteB that a boat and trailer being towed by Gerald N. Cosway came loose from- his car and ended up in the ditch on Mushroom Rd., Saturday a t 5:40 a.m.

Cosway told deputy Woiden that the trailer came loose when he hit a bump. The trailer crossed the center line and went into the ditch on the left side of the road. Extensive dam- age was done to the trailer.

Wallace C. Kappen, 56, 3192 E. Cass City Rd., Cass City, was not injured when the vehicle he was driving struck a deer last Wednes- day a t 8:35 p.m. Kappen told deputy Ronald Bege- man that he was westbound on M-81 east of Crawford Rd., when the deer ran in front of him.

The Owendale-Gagetown I Bulldogs easily handled the Arenac-Eastern Eagles 20- 0 to win their season opener Friday afternoon.

“We didn’t look bad,” Coach Arnie Besonen said about his -team’s perfor- mance. Leading th6 offen- sive charge was junior halfback Ron Susalla with 10 carries for 79 yards. Halfback Steve Root scam- pered for 52 yards and senior quarterback Reid Goslin rushed for 47 yards.

The Bulldogs scored their first touchdown about half-

way through the first quar- ter when Goslin scored on a 28-yard run to cap a 61- yard scoring drive. John Shope kicked the extra point.

In the second quarter Tom Jeffery punched in the score from two-yards out. The second score for the Bulldogs culminated a 54- yard scoring drive. Shope kicked the extra poipt.

Late in the third quarter the Bulldog defense tight- ened up and stopped A-E on a 4th and 1-yard to take over on their own 48 yard line.

This was the first and only time that the Eagles got in to Bulldog territory.

After taking possession on their own 48-yard line, Owendale - Gagetown marched to the A-E 1-yard line where Goslin scored the final points for the even- ing. The extra point was missed.

The Bulldogs rushed for a total of 226 yards and Gos- lin was two for two in the passing department for 20 yards on the evenin .

Linebacker Ange B o Bat- tisti and Goslin, free safety, led the defense assault against A-E with d total of 10 tackles and 3 intercep- tions in the victory. Bat- tisti, a back up linebacker, was playing for Matt Ricker who was ill. Battisti had seven solo tackles and one intercept ion.

Defensive nose guard Victor Battisti made five solo tackles and recovered a fumble for the Bulldogs.

Besonen does not expect such an easy time with De- ckerville Friday night. He said that Deckerville is a well coached feam with a lot of running power. Beso- nen said that they played a good game in their loss against Sandusky last Fri- day.

“We’re going to have to sell the farm against that

team,” Besonen said about Deckerville. He said that they need a well balanced offensive attack because Deckerville will adjust to any single area where they are able to ain yardage. Besonen sai that the De- ckerville offensive line av- erages over 200 pounds per man and the Bulldogs de- fense will have to stop the

uick trap play up the mid- %e.

The game will be played at Owendale High School Friday, a t 7:30 p.m.

%

Owen-Gtzge @h lose second straight

Sheehy named consultant for Edison

The Owendale-Ga etown

team dropped their second traight league game to

North Huron, 36 to 41, Tues- day night.

Coach Don Cumrnins said1 that the Bulldogs led through the first three quarters of the game, but lost in the last quarter.

Cummins said that the Bulldogs went 0 for 5 from the foul line in the ’fourth quarter. He said that be- Tause they were in a bonus situation they could have

girls’ varsity bas k etball scored 10 points which would have won the game for the girls:

Cummins said that they led 18-13 at the half and were tied a t 32 each a t the end of the third quarter. ,

The junior varsity lost their game to North Huron 22 to 26.

Linda Retford was top Bulldog scorer with 24 points and 10 rebounds.

The Bulldogs face De- ckerville Thursday night a t 6: 30 in Owendale.

Robert E. Sheehy, 41, has been named economic de- velopment consultant for Detroit Edison’s Thumb Di- vision, according to Robert S. Howard, division man- ager.

Sheehy will work with the economic development or- ganizations in ’ the Thumb Division’s 160 com- munities, as well as with its more than 13,000 commer- cial and industrial custom- ers in an effort to retain and expand existing businesses and to attract new employers to the Division’s 4,000-square-mile service area.

Sheehy is a native of Yale and has been a resident of Caro for the past 10 years. He holds an associate de- gree from St. Clair County Community College and a

1985 Model Show Sept. 27th & 28th

Have you driven a Ford Lately? Now is your time to own one. -

This We .Believe Ubly barn fire ~ O S S

Purc hase-low interest financing. Lease for 1/2 the price.

1 Your Family Needs CASSCITY Cass City police officer

Donald Miller was called to Erla’s Food Center, 6233 Church St., Cass City, last Wednesday a t 4:15 p.m. to investigate an accident in the parking lot.

the Sunday School at $60,000 quency is rising at such an alarming rate that one child in nine can now be ex- pected to appear in juvenile court before the age of 18. And every year at least 1 million children, most of them from middle-class families, run away from home. And what could be said about the incredible upsurge in the heinous crime of incest and child brutality?

On the other side of ‘the coin is the apathy many American families hold to- wards church and religious training. To millions of moms and dads, Christian- ity is something you can take or leave alone.. . .like aspirin for a headache. Yet a church that is solidly built upon the Bible, the Word of God, is capable of giving to the family the very set of values it so desperately needs:

A Bible-centered, Christ- oriented Sunday School (for example) can teach every member of the family how they can be right with God and know the joy of sins for- given and the blessing of personal salvation thru Jesus Christ. Moral and spiritual values are plainly taught in the Bible, in black and white. Many of our old- fashioned values are now said to be “relative,” i.e. honesty, integrity, moral purity, etc. As a result, the

An epidemic of major lroportions has hit the

American family, a disease called The Parent Gap. In a word, the problem is. a .pa- rents have Iost control over their families! Several fac- tors contribute to this.

Parents are today coping with problems their pa- rents never dreamed possi- ble. The advent of televi- sion is partly to blame. The 7 verage (Iroungster spends lours an hours each week

before the “boob tube,” and what they see and learn is not conducive to building strong families. Peer pres- sure has always been strong, but today kids are pressured into lifestyles in- volving drugs and alcohol and sex, and the average parent seems to be incapa- ble of handling the prob- - *m. Jerome Kagan, a Har- dard psychologist, argues that parents today suffer from a lack of consensus on values. That is, they really don’t know what is right and what is wrong; what is good or what is bad. So how can they teach their chil- dren?

Unable to give their kids a solid set of values, whether moral, ethical or Jritual, we find that

suicide has now become the second leading cauSe of death among young Ameri- cans between the ages of 15 and 24. Juvenile delin-

The Elkland Township Fire Department was cal- led to the A.J. McCarty farm, 6126 Ubly Rd., Ubly, Saturday about S p.m. to assist the Ubly Fire Depart- ment in putting out a barn fire.

Fire chief Jerome Root said that eight firemen and the department’s tanker and pumper trucks were dispatched to the fire, about eight miles south of Ubly.

The fire destroyed the dairy barn that contained hay and straw along with a tractor that was inside the barn. The loss is estimated at $60,000.

The cause of the fire is unknown.

Sunday School can teach every member of the fam- ily what is authoritatively right and wrong and what God expects of us.

No wonder some of leading America’s

sociologists and criminologists have en- couraged Sunday School at- tendance. J. Edgar Hoover once testified before a Con- gressional committee and said: “Youths who regu- larly attend Sunday School do not become involved in juvenile criminal viola- tions.”

A young father, finding his son with nothing to do, tore a map of the world out of a magazine, cut it up and gave it to the boy to piece together again. A few mi- nutes later the job was finished and he asked his son how he ever did it so quickly. “Well, Daddy,” said the lad, “on the back of the map was a picture of a boy. I knew if I could build the boy right, the world would come out right, too.”

Can we help you build your children? Don’t send them to Sunday. School.. . .bring them ! 1

truck - low monthly payments. Small farms on increase in U S . New 1984 Vehicles at very low

Close=Out Prices thru Oct. 3rd. The number of small

farms and the value of all agricultural product sales increased between the 1978 and 1982 agriculture cen- suses, preliminary data from the Commerce De- partment’s Census Bureau shows.

Farms of less than 50 acres increased 17 percent to 637,000, according to the 1982 census, conducted in 1983. Their growth helped to keep the total farm loss under 1 percent, one of the smallest declines in recent decades. The new count is 2,241,000 compared with 2,257,000 in 1978.

At the other end of the scale, the number of farms with 2,000 acres or more rose by 1,224 between cen- suses to a total of 64,525, The market value of a -

amounted to $131.8 billion ricultural products SO B d

r---- ------

compared with $107.1 bill- ion in 1978, up 23 percent. Average sales per farm grew to $58,815 from $47,424. Farms with sales of $lOO,OOO or more gained by 80,723 for a total of 302,964. The dollar figures have not been adjusted for inflation during the period. The Bureau points out that the Consumer Price Index (CPI), based on the costs of food and beverages, was up 35 percent for food for the same period.

Livestock, dairy and poultry products in 1982 ac- counted for 53 percent of sales, or $69.5 billion; lives- tock alone brought in 33 per- cent or $43.5 billion. Other totals were dairy products, $16.3 billion or 13 percent, and poultry, $9.7 billion or 7 percent. Crop sales to- taled $62.3 billion, or 47 per- cent of all sales; grain ac- counted for more than half.

1 r---u-------

Cass City Ford Sales and Service

6392 Main St. Cass City 872-2300

Pastor John R. Wood First Baptist Chu;:;. I 1 E T 5 Cass City

I . 1 WO/o OFF S A L E , CLINIC includes water heater,

tax, installation $1 95 and permit fees I . f A chain of events 9 Add Sparkle To Your Life

Fouteen karat golden fashion for the wrist and neck. Treat yourself or someone you love to a beautiful chain. Available in a wide variety of lengths and styles. Cobras, II I ‘Based on 80 gallon capacity electric water heater trade-in

52 gallon electric tradein would be $223. Some limitations may apply to certain installations i

i I I

I I i I I I

I I t

serpentines, open links, ropes., .we’ve got them

I

You can replace your existing electric water heater with a new A. 0. Smith GAS WATER HEATER and begin to put money In your pocket, even while you pay for it.

ELECTRIC $O.OISB/KWH vs. GAS $0!55/THERM SAME RECOVERY RATE AT 450 GAL. HOT WATER/WK.

your monthly your average monthly If you you can presently own replace it with payment (24 mo.) energy savings Take advantage of our “Strike

it Rich” 14 kt. gold chain sale. 52% Off every piece in inventory.

Sale Ends Sept. 22 You’ve Not Seen

0 ’

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incld. tax water heater water heater s . I 1 I FRIDAY, SEPT. 21 I c Anything l ike It. t i 1 USE OUR CONVEMENT PAYMENT PLAN

OPEN MONDAY - FRIDAY 8-5

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Check your telephone directory for a toll free number for your area.

1

I Make Plans Now !To Be There i Hundreds of chains will be at McConkey Jewelry for this Gigantic One-Time Sale. f

1 JEWELRY AND GIFT SHOP 5 I McCONKEY i I

CASS CITY f PHONE 872-3025 7 .Phone 872-3025 Cass City f f

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Page 9: newspapers.rawson.lib.mi.usnewspapers.rawson.lib.mi.us/chronicle/1984/Issues/09-13... · 2005-07-24 · \ Forester Dave Dunn looks ’ at village maple tree decline ’c Page 3 Hazzards‘

- Food Stamps & WIC

Coupons Gladly Accepted

+

Rug Doctor Steam Cleanlng Equipment to Rent

* CASS CITY, MICHIGAN C A S CITY CHRONICLE-TH

Cass City track bid wheduled Down Memory Lane

I I

NEW STORE HOUR& 1 TICKETS 1

sently employed at Lear- Siegler, Rapids. Inc., of Grand

bowmen defeated Caro ar- chers, the local team win- ning by 55 points. Members of the Cass City group are Charles Tuckey, C,L. Gregg, Charles New- bery and Ellis Karr.

The McConkey Jewelry and Gift Shop has added an attractive electric sign to the building front.

The Council of Churches Youth Fellowship held a hayride Tuesday evening. Two tractors with wagons were driven by Ed Karr Jr. and Charles Tuckey. This party was planned by the recreation committee con- sisting of Roger Little, Ed Golding Jr. , James Bishop, Bonnie Benkelman and Eunice Tuckey. Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth

Cumper have purchased a restaurant in Marlette cal- led the Rendezvous. Mr. Cumper will continue to manage the New Gordon Hotel in Cass City while Mrs. Cumper will manage and cook at the Rendezv- ous.

The wckk is for recon- truction of track of the 'uscola & Saginaw Bay lailroad Co., and construc- ion of one mile of spur rack from the end of the kisting rail south of Mil- .ngton to the industrial site outh of Otter Lake by July 985. The 25 projects are ex-

ected to cost about $6.8 iillion.

FIVE YEARS AGO

The Cass City Lions Club annual broom sale starts Monday. The money raised will be used to aid various Lions club projects, includ- ing the Leader Dog School in Rochester. Last year's sale netted more than $1,800 profit, according to Alger Freiburger .

Mr. and Mrs. Andy Hoagg attended a potluck dinner Labor Day as a farewell for Tim Hill, who is going into the Air Force.

The Michigan House of Representatives and Se- nate have adopted a resolu- tion honoring Esther McCullough for her more than 40 years of playing piano and organ Sunday mornings at Salem United Methodist Church.

Walter G. Szotak of Kingston has been named to the dean's list for the summer term at Delta Col- lege.

25 YEARS AGO

Candidates for the Owen- Gage Homecoming queen are: freshmen, Sharon Weippert and Patricia Finkbeiner ; sophomores, Lynn Burdon and Marsha LaFave; juniors, J,anet Szidik and Norma Osborn, and seniors, Pat Wissner and Loraine Adams.

Mrs. John Zinnecker took their daughter Kathreen to Albion Sunday where she is enrolled as a freshman.

Mr. and Mrs. William Benkelman and children have returned to their home in Cincinnati, Ohio, after 10 days here with Mr. Benkel- man's parents, Mr. and Mrs. H.L. Benkelman.

Three Cass City teachers have been granted Masters degrees after completing their requirements during the summer. Frank Walsh has been granted a Master of Arts degree in library science from the University of Michigan. Mrs. Grace Quick has earned a Masters degree in elementary edu- cation from Central Michi- gan University, and Jim Seals, English teacher a t Cass City High School, was granted a Masters degree in education, with a major in secondary administra- tion.

prices, you save even more ... Look for the ESP Savings Tags throughout our store! y. tra - lupplrn * I. p.u dlrr*c 4 m IOU.

h my. T b ow- e~ UVM b.kp )ar

Tk... h v m -v -1 tU

T h m w Y k h d r t Y know d u e c r d c a t

Ip D h W w k O

Offer square dance classes

The Cass City Commun- ty Education Department will offer a beginning square dance class Tues- lays, beginning Oct. 2 from 1:00-9:00 p.m. in Campbell Elementary gymnasium.

The class will be offered n two sessions, each 12 weeks in length. The cost is i30.00 per couple mr 12- Meek session.

This popular series of nodern square dancing les- sons win be taught by Finn 3urk, an experienced cal- er.

Deadline for registration s Tuesday, Sept. 25.

Regular Now Save

Del Monte Pudding cups 4 pk. 1.27 1 l 2 1SC

Del Monte Catsup 32 oz. 1.45 1 O7 386 - Log Cabin Country Kitchen Syrup 24 OZ. 1.65 1 40 256

Broadcast NO Beans Chili 15 02. 1.25 1 O9 166

Scrub Free Bathroom Cleanerls.,. 1.79 1 I i 6 ~

166 Lestoil Cleaner 28 Ot. 2.09 1 Marzetti Slaw Dressing Pint 1.79 1 1SC

Hefty lawn Clean Up Bags 1Oct. 2.75 2'' 20c

Realemon Lemon Juice 32 oz. 1.55 1 4 0 15$

A.47 1 32 15c

*. '

TEN YEARS AGO ' ., '

I ' I .

, , Deford Club Dagmar Brown com- pleted her 14th trek across the Mackinac Bridge Labor Day in 62 minutes. The number of walkers has grown from 200 to approxi- mately 25,000.

Around 30 friends and re- latives surprised Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Hartwick at their home in Cass City for a housewarming and pot- luck dinner Sunday.

Three Cass City dele- gates from United Steel- workers L.U. 6222 attended the AFL-CIO convention in Lansing last week. Mary Smithers, Duane Moore and Grace Nemeth at- tended the meeting that featured an address by Sen. Edward M. Kenney )D- Mass.).

Jeffrey Allen Tuckey, son of Mr. and Mrs. James Tuc- key of Elmwood Rd., graduated from United Electronics Institute of Grand Rapids. He is pre-

slates meet . . I

The Deford Craft Club will meet Monday, Sept. 17, a t 7:30 p.m. a t the Novesta Church of Christ.

Members are to bring quilt squares.

Hostesses will be Martha Masten and Linda Voss.

McLarty reunion

held in Ontario Approximately 68 at-

.ended the annual McLarty 'eunion Aug. 26 at Canatara 'ark, Pt. Edward, Ontario.

Sharing honors as the old- :st guests were Mrs. lorothy McPhail of Sarnia, h t . , and Murray Haines of Xodney, Ont. Traveling the greatest distance were Mr. md Mrs. ..Tony Strang of ;ibralter, MI, and Mr. and. Irlrs. Norris White of Can- on, MI.

Officers for next year ire: Chairman - Alex Mc- ,arty of Yale; games and reasurer, Mr. and Mrs. :arl Rossman of Owosso ind Secretary, Deloris Wil- erton of Midland.

Windex Ref ill 32 02. 35 YEARS AGO

To cut cheese with ease, warm the knife before slicing.

At an inter-city shoot a t Car0 Sunday, Cass City Bird's Eye

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(NEW) Breakstine's Small Curd Creamy or Low Fat

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New books at 1:00 P.M.

the librarv - COLONY HOUSE - 8 pk. 1/2 liter -

I J Lorn Hillaker, Auctioneer

We're Passing Along Swings A TIME TO REAP by Michael T. Hinkemeyer (mystery). Emil Whippletree of Sterns County, Minn., is back and in splendid form. Emil is now 71 and a retired, four-term sheriff. He and his wife, Sarah, are trying to enjoy his retirement, but Emil's young successor asks for help in a grisly double murder. Trixie Miggs and one of her young sons have been shotgunned, and her ex-husband and current boyfriend are automatic suspects. But during the last rites the rather eccentric Father Creedmore tampers (deliberately) with evidence, and Emil focuses on the priest as chief suspect. This embroils Emil in a struggle with the local bishop (73-year-old "Imperial Bill" Bundeswehr) and some nasty, threatening Right-to-Lifes.

- r Savings Bonds (several denominations)

Camera - TV - Luggage Watch - Furniture Paintings by Local Artist Collectibles - Chandelier Sliding Glass Shower Doors New Infant Car Seats "Maid for a Day" Personal Will - Dishes Antique Picture Frame Glassware - Household Wares Several Grocery Gift Certificates Small Appliances Miscellaneous Services and Many Many More Items! ! ! !

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A TEN-STEP PROGRAM FOR RELIEVING

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Expires Sat., Sept. 15, 1984 ~ ~ - 0 0 1 r ) # L . I c ALZHEIMER'S DISEASE: A GUIDE FOR FAMILIES by Lenore S. Powell and Katie Courtice (non-fiction). In the past, when older people started lwing their memories, they were called senile. Now the public is becoming aware that what wed to& labeled senility is a component of Alzheimer's disease, an organic brain syndrome in which memory and consequently normal functioning are impaired. Written in an exceptionally easy-to-understand style, this book goes a long way toward demystifying the disease while offering practical advice for caregivers who must meet both the physical and psychological problems posed by loved o n e who often can't remember what they are doing, where they are, or at times who they are. The advice is not only patient oriented, however. The importance of caregivers taking time for themselves is also stressed, and the authors

Sponsored by 1

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Church, 4631 N. Van Dyki, Cass City, will be conduct- ing a missionary confer- ence Sept. 16 through Sept. 19 at 7:OO p.m.

The public is invited to hear Rev. Jon Sevall and Jackie Ummel talk about, their experiences in South America.

B&L EXTENDED WEAR CONTACT LENSES 00 Initial Lenses w/exam only

Professional Fees not included Sevall was a missionafv W m

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Page 10: newspapers.rawson.lib.mi.usnewspapers.rawson.lib.mi.us/chronicle/1984/Issues/09-13... · 2005-07-24 · \ Forester Dave Dunn looks ’ at village maple tree decline ’c Page 3 Hazzards‘

PAGE TEN I

1 -Tammy Connolly f completes 'course

Tammy Connolly : graduated from Dorsey ; Business School of Troy in I June after a one-year I course. : She is an executive word

processin secretary and graduatefwith a 3.9 grade

: point average. ; She is the daughter of Mr. * and Mrs. John Connolly of

Cass City and a 1983 : graduate of Cass City High ; School.

Miss Connolly is * employed with a firm in : Birmingham.

r------ ' 7

CASS CITY CHRONICLE-THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 13,I-W CASS CITY, MICHIGAN

1 I Living Truth at I Salem Church

Holbrook Area News Mrs. Thelma Jackson

Phone 6582347 Living Truth, a contem-

porary Christian singing 1

m o d , will be at Salem v

U.M: Church Sunday, Sept. 16, and will present a prog- ram of music and personal

Mrs. Frank Laming's birth- day.

*Lucy Hamilton of Royal Oak spent the week end with Sara Campbell and Harry Edwards. Mr. and Mrs. Hal Conkey of Caseville were Saturday guests.

Mr. and Mrs. Olin Bouck and Mr. and Mrs. Elwin Richardson and Brenda were Sunday evening guests of Mr. and Mrs. Cliff Jackson.

Jessica and Ryan Gib- bard of Bad Axe spent the week end with Mr. and Mrs. Carl Gibbard.*and family. Other Sunday guests were Jerry Gibbard and Mr. and Mrs. Carl Gibbard Jr. of Bad Axe and Diann Howard of Argyle.

Mr. and Mrs. Orrin Wright were Thursday evening guests of Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Cleland.

Mr. and Mrs. Frank Laming were Tuesday af- ternoon guests of Mr. and Mrs. Glen Shagena.

Mr. and Mrs. Elbert Otto and Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Fuester were Friday even- ing guests of Mr. and Mrs. Gaylord LaPeer.

Ralph Hoxie and Mrs. Lynn Spencer attended the Mid Central Regional meet- ing of Michigan Federation of food co-ops a t Midland Sunday.

Reva Silver spent the week end with Mr. and Mrs. Larry Silver and family a t Bay City.

Mr. and Mrs. Cliff Jackson were Friday after- noon and supper guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ward Benke- lman.

Bob Andersen of Wayne left Thursday forenoon after spending three days with Mr. and Mrs. Earl Schenk.

Lucy Hamilton of Royal Oak, Helen VanErp and Sara Campbell visited Ira Robinson a t Provincial House in Cass City Satur- day.

Mr. and Mrs. Cliff Fur- ness of Caseville and Mr. and Mrs. Olin Bouck were Tuesday evening dinner guests of Mrs. Willard Sprague a t Lakeside.

Mrs. George Jackson Vis-

ited Margaret Carlson Sun- day evening.

Mrs. Raymond Wallace visited Annie Pelton and Mrs. Alex Cleland and Carol Laming Thursday and Friday.

Mr. and Mrs. Arnold LaPeer and Donna Holm were Tuesday . evening guests of Mr. and Mrs. Gaylord LaPeer.

Mr. and Mrs. Jack Tyr- re11 took Brenda Tyrrell to Big Rapids where she will attend college ,at Ferris.

Rev. and Mrs. Robert Von Oeyen of Harbor Beach were Saturday supper guests of Mr. and Mrs. Lynn Spencer.

Jack Ross was a Tuesday evening guest and Lloyd Messing was a Saturday forenoon guest of Mr. and Mrs. Earl Schenk.

Mr. and Mrs: Ira Robin- ' son Jr. of Roseville, Lucy Hamilton of Royal Oak and Lorene Bowron visited Ira Robinson a t Provincial House in Cass City Sunday. ,

Mr. and Mrs. Sam Pow- ers of Millington were Saturday evening guests of Mr. and Mrs. Martin Sweeney.

Mr. and Mrs. Olin Bo k visited Mr. and Mrs. &1 , Kunstman a t Caseville Sun- day afternoon.

Mr. and Mrs. Norbert Magalski of Southfield spent the week end with Mr. and Mrs. John Glaza. Mrs. George Jackson and

Don were Tuesday evening guests of Mr; and Mrs. Mel- vin Peter and family. Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Cle-

land attended the luncheon and bazaar a t the Shabbona RLDS Church annex.

Bette Lou Hurford and Clara Bond were Wednes- day overnight and Thurs- day guests of Mr. and Mrs. Dale Fox and Kathy a t Manistee.

Mr. and Mrs. Frank McComb were Wednesday evening guests of Mr. and Mrs,. Gaylord LaPeer. Mrs. Larry Konkel was a

Friday lunch guest of Mr. and Mrs. Lynn Spencer.

Mr. and Mrs. Blake Soule of Sebewaing were Satur- day evening guests and Bryce Champagne was a

b

Funeral services were Jean Matthews was a Fri- held Thursday, Aug. 30, for day guest of Mrs. Alex Cle- Mary Walker, 66, of land and Carol Laming. Chicago who died Tuesday, Mrs. Jack Tyrrell visited Aug. 28 a t home. Survivors Edanna Sweeney Friday include her husband evening. Robert; two ,daughters, Mrs. Ray Armstead and Joyce and Jackie of Bernard Shagena of Sebe- Chicago, and cousins in- waing were Thursday fore- cluding Ethel Wright of noon guests of Mr. and Mrs. Clio, Grant Davis and Rege Glen Shagena. Davis, both of Florida, Mrs. Hiram Keyser was Reva Silver and Mrs. a Thursday afternoon guest Gerald Wills of Ubly. of Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Cle-

Naples of East Detroit Mr. and Mrs. Alex Par- s nt from Thursday ticka were Thursday even- tgough Monday with Mrs. ing guests of Mr. and M p . Louis Naples. Arnold LaPeer. Tom Kolar was a Satur- Mr. And Mrs. Larry

day forenoon guest and Mr. Leitch and Amie of Bad and Mrs. Calvin Hunt were Axe, Mr. and Mrs. Bill evening guests of Mr. and Chippi and Eric of Bay City, Mrs. Glen Shagena. Mr. and Mrs. Duane Chippi Mrs. Bob Swackharner of of Cass City took Mr. and

Bad Axe and Sara Mrs. Frank Laming to Ubly Campbell spent Tuesday in Heights Country Club for Bay City. dinner Sunday in honor of

Mr. and Mrs. John land.

Friday forenoon guest of Mr. and Mrs. Earl Schenk. and Mrs. Henry Sofka. p.m.

reunion a t the home of Mr. testimony from 6: 30 till 8 : 30

Other guests were Mr. and Mrs. John J. O'Berski of Summer Haven, Mr. and Mrs. Bernie O'Berski of Parisville, Mr. and Mrs. Norbert Magalski of South- field, Mr, and Mrs. Harold Frantz and Mr. and Mrs. John Glaza of Ubly and Mr. and Mrs. Joe Priemer of Harbor Beach.

The group is composed of Russ and DeeDee Tibbits, Dale and Debi Ackerman and Tammie Barbret.

Living Truth has a con- temporary folk-gospel sound and enjoys using original music and ar- rangements. They also in- corporate many unique in- struments like melodica, recorder, dulcimer, ham- mered dulcimer, zither, ukelin, and mandolin- guitar, as well as electric bass, acoustic guitars, piano and synthesizer. m-

EUCHRE CLUB

Five tables of cards were played when the Euchre Club met Saturday evening a t the home of Mr. and Mrs. Arnold LaPeer. High prizes were won by Mrs. Jerry De- cker and Gaylord LaPeer. Low prizes went to Mrs. Elmer Fuester and Cliff Jackson. Harold Copeland won'the traveling prize.

The next party will be held a t the home of Mr. and Mrs. Gaylord LaPeer Oct. 27.

A potluck lunch was served.

, * A LITTLE CHRONICLE WANT AD

Labor Day weekend guests of Mrs. Mary Beardsley were her grand- son, David Beardsley Jr. of Orlando, Fla., granddaugh- ter, Connie Beardsley, and mother, Mrs. Michele Beardsley of Oxford. Mon-

were Mrs. Bear rsts sley's day to Thursday

niece, Lavon Cole of Pon- tiac, and brother-in-law, ' LeRoy Cole Sr.

'GETS- Big Results I ThewantAds I ******

-I Are Newsy Too! I Lorene Bowron and Sara Campbell visited Ira Robin- son a t Provincial House in Cqss City Thursday.

Mr. and Mrs. George Jacksop Jr. and Lavena of Oxford spent the week end a t their home here.

I Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Cle- land and Mr. and Mrs, Jim Doerr and Jeff attended a corn roast and cookout at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Cleland Saturday evening.

E)ette Lou Hurford and' Clara Bond took Scott Hur- ford and Chris Langenburg to Big Rapids Wednesday where the boys will attend Ferris College.

Don Tracy was a Satur- day guest of Mr. and Mrs. Arnold LaPeer.

Ralph Hoxie of West Bloomfield spent the week end with Mr. and Mrs. L y h Spencer.

Mr. and Mrs.. Charlie Hendrick of Port Austin were Thursday supper and evening guests of Mr. and Mrs. Cliff Jackson.

Mr. and Mrs. Earl Schenk visited Beatrice Hundersmarck Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. I ra Robin-

son Jr. ,of Roseville spent the week end with Lorene Bowron. Mr. and Mrs. Eugene

Priemer of Walhalla, MI, spent the week end with Mr. and Mrs. Henry Sofka and Sunday attended a Priemer

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FARM DIVISION 872-26 1 6

/

Cass City Community Education STARTING NO. OF

Adult Pacesetter

FEE * TIME DATE WEEKS INSTRUCTOR ROOM

MONDAY B, Lovejoy - H.S. 200 $ l.OO/wk.

$20. + s u p p l i e s H , S . 107 D. Doyen D. Deering Int, HomeEc, $ 60 + supplies P. Romberg/J. Ware I n t , Gym $32.

O c t o 1 o c t o 1 O c t . 15 Septa 24 S e p t . 1 7 Sept. 24 Nov. 5 Oct . ,1 octo 1 O c t . 8 Sept . 17

6 8 2 9 20

6 . 1 6 4 2

17

Cribbage Match 9:30-11:OO a.m. Beginning Taxidermy 7:OO-9:OO p.m. Microwave I , 7:00-9:00 p.m.

7:30-8:30 p.m. Kalosomatics ( M , T h ) Men's Conditioning (M/W/F) 6:OO-7:15 a,m. Hand-Quilt ing 7:OO-9:00 p.m, Enrichment H.S. Gym $25

H . S . 103 $14. + s u p p l i e s $ 2.50 + k i t H , S , 109

H,S, Shop $15. f s u p p l i e s $12. + supplies H.S. 109

H.S. Library FREE H.S . 101 $40. *

C. Strickland K. Niedrich K, Niedrich R, Lomasney P. Metzger J. Esau J, Brown

"Stained Glass" Quilting Woodworking Soft-Sculptured Dol ls History of Cass C i t y

7:OO-9:00 p.m. 7:OO-9:OO porn, 7:OO-9:00 p.m. 7:OO-9:OO p.m. 6:OO-9:30 p.m.

Program a - n 0 - m n --- -- Typ**g

8 I TUESDAY

' 8 Beginning Basketweaving

I Beginning Cake Decorating

4 WL OR PRESENT IN PERSON TO:

Beginning Bridge I

I Cooking on the Barbecue Grill

; - I Investment Class @ Addr#S I 4 CPR

I ~ ~ ~ d ~ n ~ ~ ENRICHMENT @ Call igraphy

REGISTRATlON COUPON

CrssCltyNghSchool

cur cy. M- a726 1868 N. SI.

m

H.S. 103 H.S. Library H.S. 108 H.S. 107 H.S. Int. HomeEc. 304

H.S . Shop H.S. 102 Cultural Campbell Center Gym

H.S. 205

$11. + supplies $12. $ 7. + supplies $16. $ 8. $15. + s u p p l i e s

$10

$30. per couple

$ 7.0

ut**

O c t o 2 Oct. 2 Octo 2 octo 2 O c t o 16 Octm 16 O c t . 2 Oct . 2 S e p t . 18 Sept. 25 Oct. 2

5 6 4 1 4 7 3 6

J7 9 12

V. Shay T. Weaver C. Carter S Hutchinson J. Szewc Staff Le Battel C . Lounsbury Staff P. Romberg Finn Burk

7:OO-8:30 p.m. 7:OO-9:00 porn. 7:00-8:30 p.m. 6:OO-1O:OO p.m. 7:00-9:00 p.m. 7:OO-9:00 p.m. 7:QQ-10:QQ p,m, 7:OO-8:30 p.m. 6:OO-9330 p.m, 9:30-10:30 a.m. 7:00-9:000 p.m.

'Bas ic She l l Re-loading :Accounting

I Beg. Square Dancint I Kalosomatics (T Th)

- 1 Rwe

CUSSES I WlSH TO TAKE: FEE

I* 4 I- $ WEDNESDAY

$ 2 5 . + s u p p l i e s H.S. 107 Int. Gym $10. per person

1 Advanced Taxidermy * ' Co-ed Volleyball 230-9:OO p.m.

Furniture Refinishing 7:OO-9:00 p.m. Communication Skills 6:0Q-9:30 p.m. Basic Math

7t00.-10;QQ pImr I I

t AMOUNT ENCLOSED Men's Conditioning (See MONDAY) I - .. I II I I I I a - - - -0 - ----I mr

I I

4 .6:00-9:30 p.m.

pct, 3 7 S e p t . 26 ' 6

D. Doyen B. Howard

HA. Shop $10. f s u p p l i e s H.S. 306 $40. * H.S. 302 $40. * I

Oct . 17 5 S e p t , 19 17 Sept. 19 17

K. Jackson Staff Staff

THURSDAY . I

Communication S k i l l s (See WEDNkSDAY). Basic Math (See WEDNESDAY) Reading Improvement 6:OO-9:30 p.m. Sept . 20 17

Kalosomatics (See MONDAY)

\

Beginning Basketweaving 6:OO-1O:OO p.m. Oct . 4 . 1

Everyday Self-Defense for Women7:00-9:00p.m~ O c t o 11 1 Home Security - 7:Oo-g:OO p.m. Octo 18 1 Powder, Puff Mechanics 7:OO-9:OO porn, . Octo 25 4

H a s * 303 $40.* H.S. 107 $16,

Staff S. Hutchinson

G. Wilson G. Wilson I,. Clarke

1 I ' 872-4151 OFFICE HOURS:

Monda y-Thursday 8 a.m. 930 p.m.

Friday 8 a.m. - 4:OO p.m.

H.S. 110 FREE H.S. 110 , FREE Int. Shop $10.

I

FRIDAY Men's Conditioning (See MONDAY) I

\

' *May be taken for high school credit

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CASS CITY CHRONICLE-THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 13,1984 CASS CITY, MICHIGAN PAGE TWELVE

I Group plans Shabbona Area News Cass City Bowling

Marie Meredith Phone 672-9489 I I revue A

I With&rspoon 591, J . CHARMONT LADIES tin Electric 1720. . High Team Game: All. -High Team Game: Mar- Sept. 4, 1984

tin Electric 651.

Mathewion 580, D. En- glehart 577, E . Lewicki 571, D. Miller 568, K. Adelberg 560, K. Anthony 560, 3. Steadman 559, J. Smithson 554, G. Thompson 550. ,

ner Labor Day. ‘me Gibson sisters, Mrs. Naomi Lindsay of Au Gres, Mrs. Erma Jacob and Mrs. Emma Nichols, treated their aunts, Mrs. Amanda Waun of Birch Run, Mrs. Lucille Cole of Saginaw and Mrs. Verna Van Norman to dinner Tuesday a t the Bavarian Inn in Franken- muth. Mary Cease of Au Gres was also present.

Mrs. George Krause was a dinner guest Labor Day of Mr. and Mrs. Lee Nichol of Carsonville.

Mr. and Mrs. Voyle Dor- man visited Mr. and Mrs. John Schcnk, Mrs. Merle Dorman and Mr. and Mrs. Joe Billot Sunday after- noon.

Mr. and Mrs. John Ddn- lap and family of California arrived Sundayto visit rela- tives in this community for a week. They were Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Don Smith and family.

Mr. and Mrs. Jim Hrabec of Flint spent the holiday week end with Mr, and Mrs. Dale Leslie and family, Mr. pnd Mrs. Bob Moore of Snover joined them for din-

Mrs. Chuck Darr and Mrs. Andy Hoagg visited Mrs. Marie Wheeler Wed- nesday at McKenzie Hospi- tal, Sandusky.

Mrs. Bruce Ake of Bay City spent Friday overnight and Saturday visiting her grandmother, Mrs. Wilfred Turner.

Mr. and Mrs. R lph Snlith and Mr. and Ars. Vern Geister of Marlette spent from Thursday till Tuesday in Greenville, S.C. visiting Mr. and Mrs. Pat- rick McCloskey, Mrs. McCloskey came home with her parents and grand- parents for a few days. Mr. and Mrs. Voyle Dor-

man visited Mr. and Mrs. Gene Groombridge of Cass City Thursday.

Mrs. Howard Hill and Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Ferguson were Sunday evening cal- lers of Mr. and Mrs. Andy Hoagg.

Mrs. Mary Kritzman of Cass City and Miss Lillian Dunlap of Caro were Wed- nesday lunch guests of Mrs. Dan Smith and Mrs. John Dunlap Jr. and family.

Mr. and Mrs. Vern Geis- ter of Marlette and Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Smith were Wednesday supper guests of Mr. and Mrs. Leigh Franklin and family of Brown City.

Mr. and Mrs. Grant Meredith and grand- daughters, Brenda and De- nise Meredith, and Marie Meredith a t tended the Brown-Mcnerey reunion Sunday at the home of Mr, and Mrs. Wayne Chatterton at Yale.

Mrs. Keith Bye was a Monday lunch guest of Mr. and Mrs. Andy Hoagg.

Mrs. Frank Pelton at- tended the christening of her great-granddaughter, Michelle Ann Warczinsky, a t the Palms Lutheran Church Sunday morning. Later dinner was served at the home of Mr. and Mrs, Larry Warczinsky.

Mr. and Mrs. John Dun- lap J r . and family of California were Thursday supper guests of Miss Lil- lian Dunlap. Other guests were Pete Kritzman and Mrs. Mary Kritzman.

Mrs. Vern Geister of Marlette and Mrs. Patrick McCloskey of Greenville, S.C., were Thursday supper guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Smith,

Mr. and Mrs. Voyle Dor- man were Sunday supper guests of Mr. and Mrs. Gil- bert Groombridge.

Mrs. John Dunlap Sr. spent from Wednesday till Friday visiting her daugh- ter Leona and family in Flint.

Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Smith were Sunday after- noon callers of Mr. and Mrs. Vern Geister. Their granddaughter, Mrs. Pat- rick McCloskey returned home after a visit.

The RLDS Women’s De- partment will meet. Thurs- day evening, Sept. 20, a t the church annex with Betty Mackowiak and Marie Meredith, co-hostesses. Mrs. Don Richards, district women’s leader,will be guest speaker.

Jack Johnson of Flint was a Saturday afternoon caller of Mr. and Mrs. Andy Hoagg.

Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Smith were Sunday supper guests of Rev. and Mrs. Harold Smith.

Wrights 658. Tuscola County Big Brothersmig Sisters will sponsor a Broadway Revue Saturday, Sept. 29, at 7:30 p.m. a t Vassar High School Auditorium as part of their Midwest Lyceum Series. Entitled “Four by Four and More,” the revue features four professional actors from the Grand Rapids theatre community; Jean Reed Bahle, Kirk Swenk, Mary Gamble Wyatt and Stephanie LeTourneau. .

Four by Four is the first in a series of three Midwest Lyceum performances, also including a classical concert and travelogue pre- sented by a world-famous narrator, sponsored by Tuscola County Big Brothersmig Sisters. Sea- son tickets for all three per- formances can be reserved by calling 673-6996, All pro- ceeds from the series will be directed toward the op- eration of the Big Brothers/ Big Sisters program.

MERCHANETTE Sept. 6, 1984 Charmont . 6

Erla’s 6 Veronica’s 6 Ca ble-et tes 5 Cass City State Bank , 5 Colony House 4 Fort’s 4 Truemner Salvage 4

3 Live Wires Ouvry ‘s 3 Cass City Sports 2 Country Girls 2

METHODIST WOMEN GUYS & GALS

Sept. 4, 1984 Shabbona United Methodist Women met Wednesday evening, Sept. 5, with Mrs. Norman Heronemus.

The meeting was called to order by Vice-president Mrs. Bob Bader. The devo- tional was in charge of Mrs. Arthur Severance.

Plans were made to en- tertain Salem and Trinity United Methodist Women at their next meeting at the church Oct. 3.

Roll call was answered by 18 members. A report from the nomination com- mittee was given. Shirley Bader will be president, Helen Hubbard, vice-chair- man, Janet Severance, sec- retary, and Normaleen McIntosh, treasurer. Mar- ion Gray was named to the nominating committee.

The lesson on the begin- ning of the church was given by Mrs. Clark Au- slander and Mrs. Andy Hoagg.

Mrs. Bader conducted the pledge service and lunch was served by the hostess.

Kritzman’s Leiterman Builders Charmont Chemical Bank Anrod Screen Cyl. Esther’s Health Spa Kar Mikel’s Walbro Cass City Sports IGA Foodliner Herron Builders Miller’s Chicks

3 3 3 3 3 2 2 1 1 1 1 1

Copeland & Gornowicz 8 Odd Couples 7 Country, Cousins 5 Gutter Stompers 4 Brand X 3 Ballbusters 2 Stump Jumpers 2

1 Trinity Street

MERCHANTS’ “B” Sept. 5, 1984

Cass City Sports 4 Herron Builders 4 Thumb National Bank 4 McMahon’s Auto Parts 3 Clare’s Sunoco 3 Charmont < 2 Bauer Candy 2 Tuckey Concrete 1 Walbro No. 1 1 Fuelgas 0 Evans Products 0 Walbro No. 2 0

Men’s High Series: C. Kolb 544, R. Bock 509, M. Hutchinson 514, A. Far- relly 527.

Men’s High Games: B. Brinkman 204, M. Hutchin- son 201.

Women’s High Series: K. Milligan 468.

Women’s High Game: K. Milligan 168.

High Team Series : Brand X 1853.

High Team Game : Brand X 655.

High Series: L. Hugo 548, S. Seeley 532, E. Romain 512, C. Furness 505, B. Phil- lips 505, P. Beecher 503.

High Games: L. Hugo 222, P. Beecher 201, S. Seeley 203, E. Romain 200, B. Phillips 203.

High Team Series: Cable-ettes 2416. , High Team Game : Cable-

ettes 833.

High Team Series: Kritzman 2386.

High Team Game: Kritzman 828.

500 Series: J . LaRoche 526, G. Root 516, J. Morel1 514, S. Badder 506, D: Wis- chmeyer 504.

210 or Better Games: D. McLaren 237-227, C. Com- ment 232, T. Comment 226, C. Karr 222, L. Truemner 222, T. Peruski 218, P. McIntosh 213.

550 or Better Series: D. McLaren 634, C. Comment 631, T. Comment 609, P; Berry 602, R. Patera 553, L. Truemner 553, C. Karr 551. ,

ME RC H ANTS’ ‘‘ A” ’ Sept. 5, 1984

THURSDAY NITE TRIO Sept. 6, 1984 Charmont

Rabideau Motors Best Five Agr i-Sales Fuelghs Ouvry Chevy-Olds New England Life Paul’s Urethane Syst. Croft-Clara Lumber Gagetown Oil & Gas Kingston State Bank Cass City Oil & Gas

4 3 3 3 3 3 1 1 1 1 1 0

Englehart Jaques Seed Nelesco USWA Local 6222 Circle S Anthony’s Party Three R’s Babich Farms Martin Electric Gordon Builders

Central Shop Rite ’- Pine Valley

7 7 6 6 5 4 4 3 3 1 1 1

FRIDAY NITE DOUBLES Sept. 7, 1984

Thumb area Colwood Bar 5 Happy H’s 5 L & S Standard 5 Old Folks 5 All Wrights 5 Rebels 5 Alpbets 2 4 of us 2 Davison & Wilson 2 Family’s 2 Hard Times 2 Blind - 2

Men’s High Series: H.

TUESDAY AFTERNOON ’ LADIES

Sept. 4, 1984

Wildwood Farms 3 Georgine ’s 3 Chemical Bank 3 Pierce’s Honey Bees 1 Charmont 1

1 Hillside Beauties

women bowlers sturt season

The Thumb Area Women’s Bowling Associa- tion is in its 1984-85 season and officers and directors are :

Connie Swartzentruber of Ubly is president; Judy Os- trander of Bad Axe, vice- president ; Elaine Romain of Cass City, secretary-tre- asurer, and Marilyn Schneider of Ubly, sergeant a t arms.

Directors - include Pat McIntosh, Laurianne Hugo and Nina Davis, all of Cass City.

The Bowler of the Week program will run through April 28, 1985. A tourna- ment will again determine a Bowler of the Year. This year the award’week will run from Monday through Sunday.

The first Bowler of the Week award for 1984-85 is being presented to Flor- ence Penfold. She bowled an actual series of 528 with games of 175-193-160. Flor- ence bowls on the Monday Night Ladies’ League at Biff’s Bowling Bar, Kinde.

****** \

Mrs. John Krug of Cass City was a caller last week of Mrs. Wilfred Turner.

Labor I Day dinner and supper guests of Mr. and Mrs. Don Smith, Julie and Donnie were Mr. and Mrs. John Dunlap Jr. and family of California, Mr. and Mrs. Gene Czpla of Plymouth, John Dunlap of Caro Medi- cal Center and Mrs. John Dunlap, Mr. and Mrs. Randy Smith and family, Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Buerkle, Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Moore and family and Brian Schember.

Mrs. Wilfred Turner vis- ited Mr. and Mrs. Laurence Cousin of Marlette last week.

Old-Timers Sunday is Sept. 16. Services are as fol- lows: church school 1O:OO; worship 11:15; dinner at 12:45 and program 2:OO p.m.

Mrs. Lucille Henry of Florida was a caller of Mrs. Wilfred Turner.

210 or Better Games: R. Ellis 255-229, T. Comment 246, J. Storm 235-215, M. Grifka 234, K. Anthony 227, G. Deering 226, A. Withers- poon 225, J. Gallagher 221, D. Englehart 220, A. Fre- derick 216, J . Steadman 214, M. Mellendorf 213, E. Lewicki 210, D. Miller 210.

550 or Better Series: J. Storm 644, R. Ellis 621, T. Comment 616, A. Frederick 607, J. Gallagher 591, A.

High Series: K. Martin 647, J. Smithson 593, W. Northon 581, J. Guinther 590.

High Games: K. Martin 269, J. Guinther 228, D. En- glehart 214, W. Northon211, M.! Lefler 219, K. Martin 211, J. Smithson 211, L. SWnmers 237, Dave Smith 232.

High Games: V. Taylor 21%, L. Comment 200, ,C.

F’urness High Series: 190. C. Furness ment 531, V.. 476. Taylor 499, L. Com-

High Team Game: Wildwood Farms 616.

High Team Series: Wildwood Farms 1707.

Edwards 595 Men’s High Games:

Edwards 216-209. Women’s High Series:

Rabideau 456. Rabideau Women’s 167. High Game :

Hiph Team Series:

Edward H. Doerr

Does Your Homeowners Insurance

for the Full Cost ontents Losses?

H.

N.

N.

All --- - - - - - - - - - High Team Series : Mar- Wiihhts ‘1750.

Replacement cost cover- age in a Michigan Mutual homeowners po l icy means you’ll get new items for used items de- stroyed by fire or other insured causes. Ask us about Replacement Cost Coverage for your con- tents.

Doerr Agency 6265 Main St.

Cass City Phone 872.361 5

Q.WHAT IS KEOGH?

A. Keogh is the name of a tax-sheltered retirement plan for the self-employed.

Q.HOW DO I KNOW IF I QUALIFY FOR A I

KEOGH PLAN? 17 attend Salem UM

A. You qualify i f you are self-employed (sole proprie- tor or partnership) and not incorporated. Women meet

Seventeen at tended the meeting Monday evenin of Salem United Metho ist Women at the home of Mrs. Charles Tuckey.

The meeting was opened by Shirley Geiger with de- votions on the subject of prejudice. Barbara Kirn, who has relatives going to New Guinea later this month as missionaries, gave the report on mis- sions.

Helen Bartle announced an Oct. 6 luncheon at Wildwood to which Trinity and Shabbona Methodist women will be invited. Also announced was a retreat to be held in November at Boyne Mountain.

A pledge of $525.00 to mis- sions for 1985 was con- firmed.

The lesson, “Words and Accents:” was given by Elaine Jezew ski.

The Oct. 1 meeting will include a uotluck supper

2 Q.HOW DO I BENEFIT BY A KEOGH PLAN?

L+ One to a Customer ‘ Am You benefit in your retirement years in that you will

accumulate funds for your retirement. The funds you accumulate, plus the earnings on those de- posits, are free of current income taxes right up to the time you retire or start withdrawals.

I

Men - Women - Children

Quality MQ Products Sold Walk-ins Always Welcome

Call 872-4722 For Anr Appointment Ahead of Time

0.DOES THAT MEAN I NEVER PAY ANY TAXES ON MY KEOGH FUNDS?

DANA’S DOWNSTAIRS BARBER SHOP

Am No, but it does mean that while your funds are ac- cumulating, you will pay no income taxes. Keogh is a tax-deferred plan in that you will pay taxes as you withdraw your funds.

Corner Main & Seeger, Under Osentoski Realty

- *

r--------LI.---.---.V. -.-.---..F..k..C.V.LI..-- and white efephant sale and ’I will be held at the church. Mrs. Tuckey served re-

freshments a t the close of the meeting. r-------- ”E

1 KAR MIKELS DAiRY CONE Q. LET’S SAY THAT I HAVE TWO JOBS-ONE WHERE I WORK FOR SOMEONE ELSE AND

CAN I SET UP A KEOGH PLAN? THE OTHER AT WHICH I’M SELF-EMPLOYED=.

I

A. By all means, yes. However, you can only count your self-employed income in figuring your Keogh . contributions. ‘

The law imposes specific limits on the amounts that may be contri- buted under a S-E plan and on the amounts which may be deducted for years beginning before 1984. For years after 1983, there are no special limits to self-employed plans as such.

1 6628 E. MAIN CASS CITY f I f I i Mr, Farmer t

t I I

i I I i i 3 I I I I i ‘I I

I i

NOW UNDER

NEW OW8NERSHIP OF \ I

1 m T I CHRONICLE DICK AND JAN HUNT 1 I CLASSIFIED ADS 1

i I 5 To sell or rent a farm

To sell or buy livestock

( To sell or buy implements

f To profitably sell or buy

t I

!

NEW FALL HOURS Mon.-Thurs. - 11 a.m to 10 p.m. Fri. - Sun. - 11 a.m. - 11 p.m. 1 1 anything

I The Classified Section Is I i 5

Where Interested Prospects Look First Now! Added to our regular sandwich and dinner

menu we have sloppy [oes, and hot coffee. I I CASS CITY 1 ’ ! 1 CHRONICLE 1 Phone Orders: 872.471 1 1 [ PHONE 872-2010

Page 13: newspapers.rawson.lib.mi.usnewspapers.rawson.lib.mi.us/chronicle/1984/Issues/09-13... · 2005-07-24 · \ Forester Dave Dunn looks ’ at village maple tree decline ’c Page 3 Hazzards‘

d

C A S CITY CHRONICLE-THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 13,1984

Anderson, Tuckey, B.qmhardt & Co., P.C. Certified Public Accountants

Qav AnkrnM. CPA -873.3137 RokH Tuckmy, CPA - 871-3730

J m Brmhardt, CPA - 873-3137 715 E. Frank St., Caro, Mi,

and 6261 Church St. Cass City, Mi.

PhoDO872-4868 - ,

CASS CITY, MICHIGAN ...................e o o . . e . *

0 0 . i Get Quick i

. . i Results With i

i O L The Chronicle’s:

0 e 0 0

e 0 e 0 0

e 0 0

PAGE THIRTEEN

Caro bus HEALTH TIPS

Clove oil cigarettes nationivide problem

driver 2nd Gen Kehoe Gagetown Area News Phone 665-2221 in state Michigan’s 1984 champ-

ion small-bus driver is James Locke of the Otsego County Transit system.

He scored highest (549 points of a possible OOO) among 39 small-bus drivers from across the state who competed in Thursday’s small-bus “roadeo” at Lansing.

Placing second in the competition, with 538 points, was Richard Conley of Car0 in Tuscola County. The Caro bus system has been operating only since the first of July.

Jill Peterson of the Saugatuck Township transit system in Allegan County took third place with 536 points.

The ninth annual compet- ition included a written test covering rules of the road and driving attitudes for bus drivers, a pre-trip in- spection of the bus, and a driving test through a course set up with specific driving problems.

Eleven officers from Lansing-area law enforce- ment agencies were the

J’%?‘roadeo” is co-spon- sored by the Michigan De- partment of Transportation (MDOT) and the Michigan Public Transit Association to encourage drivers of small buses to drive care- fully and provide the best service and courtesy to rid- ers e

The participating drivers represented Dial-A-Ride transportation systems, small-bus operations in urban and rural areas, and transport at ion programs for seniors and handicap- pers. All participating sys- tems receive some finan- cial support from the state.

This year, the day of the “roadeo” was declared Michigan Public Transit Bus Driver Day by Gov. James J. Blanchard.

i Classified A& i The American Lung As- e . : sociation of Michigan is

the use of clove oil cigaret- tes, an imported cigarette from Indonesia that is be- coming a nationwide prob- lem.

Cigarettes containing clove oil (eugenol) have be- come increasingly popular over the past year as a status or luxury cigarette, especially among teena- gers. They think it is made up only of ground cloves and therefore safe to smoke, but analysis shows that they are mainly to- bacco. The Oak Ridge Na- tional Laboratory in Ten- nessee had tested clove to- bacco cigarettes and found levels of tar, nicotine, car- bon monoxide and carbon dioxide similar to those found in all-tobacco cigarettes.

Clove oil is one of hun- dreds of additives currently being used by the tobacco industry to “improve” flavor, aroma, and burning qualities of cigarettes. While most of these addi- tives appear on the “gener- ally recognized as safe” (GRAS) list of the U.S. Food and Drug Administra- tion, they are only pre- sumed safe when consumed orally in their unburned form. When burned, many of these substancesmay be- come toxic and potentially harmful to the smoker’s health. Additives such as cocoa, licorice, and caramel have been widely us@ by the tobacco indus- try but are known to pro- duce carcinogens and co- carcinogens when burned.

Another additive, lycerol, produces acro-

fein, a tent, toxic product of com ustion. Acrolein, to- gether with other combus- tion products, paralyzes the action of the cilia thereby inhibiting the natural cleansing mechanism of the lungs and increasing risks of developin chronic bronchitis an f em- physema.

The tobacco industry has resisted attempts of health and government agencies to secure information iden- tifying which additives are used in various brands of ci arettes. Therefore iden- tification can bn1y made through chemical analysis. Because addi- tives are likely to continue to be used in tobacco pro- ducts and because the po- tential threat to public health of such additives re- mains an important issue, the American Lung Associ- ation of Michigan advises the public that smoking any substance or materials should k considered dangerous to health.

For more information about smoking call the American Lung Associa- tion of Michigan toll free at 1$00-292-5979.

Coming Auction

Word was received of the sudden death in Los Angeles, Calif., of Alex LaFave.

A recent guest of Mrs. Connie Seurynck for an af- ternoon of cribbage and visiting was her brother, Lewis Bourdlais of Saginaw.

Mr. and Mrs. Les Munro joined other members of Mrs. Munro’s family Aug. 30-31 for a get-together at the home of a sister in Har- bor Beach. The hosts were Harry and Fran Roberts and, besides the Munros, Fred McDonald and Elmer and Ann Thering of Mt. Pleasant, Evelyn Sphoer of Flat Rock and Margarite Haener of Allen Park at- tended. Mrs. Sphoer and Mrs. Haener spent Satur- day and Sunday at the Munro home here. Mr. and Mrs. Murl

LaFave spent Labor Day week end in Grand Rapids. They were guests of Bob

with Mr. and Mrs. Elger Generous before she left last Wednesday to make her home in Seal Beach, Calif.

Mrs. Gerry Carolan at- tended a surprise birthday party in Caseville Saturday evening, Sept. 1. Guest of honor and the was party Phyliss was Conners hosted ,

by her family. A dinner guest of Deacon

and Mrs. Lambert Kuhr last Friday evening was their daughter-in-law, Mrs. Rick (Peggy) Kuhr, and they visited the Fred Sulli- vans.

Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Comment are spending sev- eral days in Marietta, Ga., with Mr. and Mrs. Gary Diebel and sons. The Diebels have moved from Cass City and are making their home in Marietta, where Mr. Diebel is employed. Mrs. Marge Rice, Mrs.

Marian Stanton and Mrs.

Mr. and Mrs. Jim Win- chester left July 18 for an extended vacation, visiting their families. They spent three Weeks in Sheboygan, Wis., with their daughter and family, Mr. and Mrs. Terry Leonhard, visited friends, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Kreuger, in Jackson, Tenn., and spent the remainder of their time with Mr. and Mrs. Larry Winchester and family in Arlington, Tex. They re- turned home the last of Au- gust.

Friday evening. Grandsons John and Pat Kreger are players for Sandusky High School. Mr. and Mrs. Munro spent the week end with Mr. and Mrs* Ray De- Shano helped and celebrate daughters the 13th and

birthday of Kathy De- Shano.

Jerry Jamieson is visit- ing from California with his mother, Mrs. Ethel Jamieson, of Bad Axe and Sunday they were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Elva HaggitL

Sunday afternoon, Lawr- ence Langlois suffered se- vere burns in an accident at home and is a patient a t Hills and Dales Hospital, Cass City. Mrs. Velma Helwig and

Mrs. Harry Kehoe returned Sunday evening after spending 10 days in Jupiter, Fla., in time for the Kehoes’ 43rd wedding anniversary, Monday, Sept. 10.

I

2 . 0 0 0 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ~ warning the public- about

Professional and Business

DIRECTORY Dr. G. W. McNiven Or. R. R. Watson

Optometrists Prlmrry Vlrlon Center P.C.

8!2-4374 or 8724375 Hours: Monday thru

Friday 9-5 Special

Appoinlments Available

6505 E. Maln, Cas8 Clty

SCOTTISH GATHERING

St. Columbkille Church hall was the site a few weeks ago of the Cameron- McIntyre reunion. Christ- ’ ine McIntyre, Patricia Tynon and Florence Kel- logg of Grand Ledge at- tended. They are daughters of the late Alex gnd Mary McIntyre and grew up in Gagetown.

The over 100 adults and several children gathered, enjoyed the impromptu bagpipe, violin, bass and piano music provided by family members, in the manner of their Scottish an- cestors, and the potluck dinner.

- ~~

Dr. W. S. Selby Optometrist

Hours: 0-5 except Thursday E12 noon on Saturday

4624 Hill St. scrobs t r m Hill8 and Dales HoeplW

Phone 872-3404 ,

and- Marsha- Potter, Curt Gerry Carolan were guests Nylon was first introduced and Cathy Burkenpass and last Sunday for brunch at to the public in 1938. Re- visited Mrs. Ruth Russell the home of Mr. and Mrs. search chemists of the and family in their new Jim Mr. LaFave. and Mrs. Les Munro

DuPont made this material Laboratories by home. Mrs. Dorothy Poppe attended the Sandusky-De- combining water, air and 8

spent a few days legst week ckerville football game last by-product Of coal-

Bendrey, Brining, Sweeney and Nartker, P.C.

Certified Public Accountants Gary E. Bendrey, CPA

Douglas P. Brining, CPA Harold D. Sweeney; CPA Joseph H. Nartker, CPA 6144 E. Caas Clty Rd., Cass City

P h W 51 7472.2005 84 Westland Dr., Bad Axe, MI 48413

Phonr 61 7*)69.#m 47 Austln St., Sandusky, MI 48471

Phonr 31 3-w-4931

~-

Harold 1. Donahue M.D.,A.A.F.P. 4674 Hill Street

Cass City 872.2323

Offlce hours everyday but Thursday ’

Dr. J. Qelssinger Chiropractor

Mon., Tues., Thurs., Fri. 9-12 a.m. and 2-6 p.m.

Sat., 9-12’a.m.

21 N. Almer, Caro, Mlch. Across from IGA Store

Phone Caro 673-4464

Some 40 members of the Mcqachin family, still in the area after their reunion the previous day, also being of Scottish descent, joined in the McIntyre’s celebra- tion.

How cafl pennies a day prevent you from losing everything?

No problem. Auto-Owners Executive Umbrella Liability Policy gives you very broad protection on all your assets from a loss due to lawsuit. And all this coverage costs only pennies a day. A small investment for all you have. Just ask your “no prob1em”Auto-Owners agent exactly what he can do for y m . You’ll find complete protection is no problem.

******

Saturday, Aug. 25, Mr. and Mrs. Murl LaFave, ac- companied by Mr. and Mrs. Harlan Stack of Unionville, attended an antique car show and sale in Auburn, Ind .

Welnlander, Fltzhugh, Bertuleit &

Schairer, PC Certified Public A ccoun tahks

1600 Center Avenue P.O. Box 775

Bay City, Mi 48707

W a l k G. Welnlander, CPA Stewart J. Reid; CPA

Robert L. Hennessey, CPA + Phone Toll Free . 1.800-824-2400

Rlchsrd A. Hall, 0.0. Osteopathic Physician 6545 Church Street Casa Clty, ,Michigan

072-4446 3ffice 8724725 ‘ Home 8724782

Lsle Hoi? e Cdr Bus

Call or Stop By

Harris-Hampshire Agency, Inca 6815 E. Cass City Rpad Cass City 872-4351

I

61 attend 0 - G senior citizens meet

The Owen-Gage Senior Sept. 20 at St. Agatha’s Parish Hall. A potluck din- Citizens met at St. Agatha’s

Parish Hall, Gagetown, ner will be served. ~ ~~

Salb A. litrrabadl , M.D., F RCS 4674 Hlll Street

C88S Clty, MlChig8n 48728 hJqpm,o@f-10-. .

Outpatient Cllnic Hills & Dales Hospital

Each Wed. 8 a.m. - 1 p.m.

Sept. 6. Of the 61 members attending, 34 had their blood pressure reading taken by Mary Lewis, LPN.

E m a Miklovich opened the meeting by having the Lord’s Prayer and pledge to the flag recited in unison.

A get-well card was sent to Irma Chisholm at Hills and Dales Hospital. Alice Kolter expressed thanks for the get-well card she re- ceived during her recent

- A

DO YOU HAVE A DRINKING PROBLEM?

ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS AND &=NON

Every Frlday Evenlng - 8:W p.m. Good Shepherd Lhhsran Church

Cas9 Clty Hoon K. Jeung, M A

General Surgery 9 a.m. - 5 p.m. Daily

Saturday - 9 to 12 noon Office Hour8

By Appointment 6230 Hospital Drive Cass City, MI 48726

Ib.

Farmer Peet Tender Link

Pork Sausage $1 29

$1 79

Koeg e 1’s

Big Bologna ib.

Cotto Salami i b.

Koeg e I ’ s

1 Dental -

hospital stay. Mike Pisarek played the

piano while the members sang Happy Birthday to five members with birth- days in September.

Irma and Louis Ouvry will celebrate their 58th an- niversary and Don and Beatrice Miljure will celeb- rate their 46th anniversary, it was noted.

It wai decided that in- stead of the usual potluck dinner Oct. 18, dinner would be held a t Sherwood on the Hill.

The senior group decided to buy some new euchre cards with the money that was raised from raffling off their unclaimed dishes.

Flu vaccinations will be given at the Oct. 4 meeting by the Huron County Health Department. There will be a $3 charge. , Next meeting will be

Thick Sliced Ranch Style $ 1 ~ ~ 1 Ib. Bacon GROUP, P.C.

I i - PRODUCE .- Phone 8 7 2 4 1 1

P.S. Kum~c, MiO. Dionish A. Sy, MOD.

Pediatrics

Horn 872.31 58 , - H E . kgh, D.D.S. * M U- M, D.D.S.

C. Ikrrkdr, D.D.S. , W M Y m r e L , D.D.S. ,- 429 N. State St., Car0

Ph.073-3838 ‘ ,:Complete Dental Care Faclllty Now Servlng TuscolaFounty Area

Weekend Emergency 6 Phone Sagina w 799-6220

I

/ .

10 Ib. Bag 89$ Michigan

Potatoes

Stalk 4gc GROUND $ 39 BEEF I Ib.

Celery Saturday, Sept. 22 - Ar- thur Aiken will sell house- hold goods and antiques at the place located three miles northeast of Caro on M-81, then 3/4 mile east on Tomlinson Rd. Hillaker Au- ction Service.

Per Pound 7gc Seedless Green

Grapes (Irrfaltts, CMldren

O l d Addotcents )

1184 Cleaver Road Caro

Monday thru Friday By Appointment

Ph. 673.31 17

Dr. E. Paul Lockwood Chiropractic Physician

Office Hocln: Mon.. TUO~., W d . , M. 9-12 noon and 1;30.5:00 p.m.

Saturday 912 a.m. Closed All Day Thurlday phom 872-2765 krl city

1wAppdntmt

Sang H. Park, M.D. Obstetrics & Gynecology

4672 Hill Street Off ice Phone 872-2800

Home Phone 872-3705

(Speclalist in all women’$ pfOblem8 and dellvrry.)

Offlce Houn by Appolntment

_ _

S I 00 4 ibs.

r-- CAR0 FAMILY DENTAL CENTER Dalton P. Coe, D.D.S.

barrel1 M. Sheets, D.M.D., ASSOC.

Jeff Waiby, D.D.S., Assoc. 204 W. Sherman, Car0

Mon., Wed. - 8:00.4:30 . Tues. - 8:oQ6:00

Thurs-Fri. - 8:OO-3:30 Saturday by Appointment

Phone 873-2939 Emergency 883-3530

Bananas Boneless Beef

3 Ib. Bag 89$ CHUCK $ 49 ROASTS 1 Ib.

The Irish were referred to as Scotti in early Latin documents. When some of these people settled Scot- lend about 500 A.D. they gave the country their name.

Apples

.Peaches Per Pound 29$ EDWARD LEMANSKI

R. Paul Chappel, DDS, PC ’ Family Dentistry

\ Cornprshenslve Orthodontics . 6240 Hill, Cass City

Phone 8724870 FARM MACHINERY and REAL ESTATE

SUNDAY, SEPT. 16

9 miles east, 3 miles north, and 2% hiles east of Bad Axe on Rapson Road.

at 1:00 P.M. Ford tractor #801 with heavy duty

loader and blade 18’ dual wheel trailer with 8T electric

winch Several other pieces of farm mach-

inery, antiques and miscellaneous

73 acres-tillable, 3 bedroom home with full basement, 1% car garage, 40’x68’ barn in good condition, 34’x50’ machine shed.

Excellent terms available.

80 ACRE FARM

N. Y. Yun, M.D. Physician & Surgean

Offlce Hours: Mon.-Fri. - 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday - 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. 6233 Hmtrl Dr., City

Res. 872-4257 Off ice 072-4733

Comprnlon Anlmrl t i ospl tal

4438 S. Seeger St. Cass City - Phone 872-2255

Rod Ellis, O.V.M. Carol Qalka-Elllr, D.V.M.

1

IMMEDIATE NON-EMERGENCY

+ HEALTH CARE I ‘ U Boyer

Peanut Butter Bars e Frito Lay

$1 15 6 pk.

Pkn.

$25 Fee

fi lncludlng physlclan’s fee and cllnle room.

Np Appointmpt Necessaw &8:30 p.m. Fridays

% 2:3&0:30 p.m. Saturdays ’ 1O:m a.m. - 8:30 p.m. Sunday

k l U S ANb;;iO)#LES 1 HOSPltfiC I

-

1 ib. Pkg. 3 Dori tos Reg. $2.49 St#. krT Offer Explreis Sept. 16,1984

MR. KELLY’S MARKET

Mr. KelIv’s Market I ~.

&nWitharspoon . New England Llfe * I NEL Growth Fund I . NEL Equlty Fund : NEL Income Fund - : M d s y Markst series 1 * PhOM 872-2321

Mi5 Oak Cass City

Edward Scollon, D.V.M. Ve te rina r i m

Call for Appointment for Small Animals Phonr 8724@3S

4819 N. Seegrr St., Cass Clty

Beer= Wine To Go \ Hillakea Auction Service I

51 7-872-301 9 I

Page 14: newspapers.rawson.lib.mi.usnewspapers.rawson.lib.mi.us/chronicle/1984/Issues/09-13... · 2005-07-24 · \ Forester Dave Dunn looks ’ at village maple tree decline ’c Page 3 Hazzards‘

\

CASS CITY CHRONICLE-THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 13,1984

14-9-13- 1 -- -

GARAGE SALE -Thursday only, 9 till ?. 6692 Houghton. Miscellaneous and boy tod- dler clothes. 14-9-13-1

\

CASS CITY, MICHIGAN

Trees for

landscaping

PAGE FOURTEEN

Selected Books

Until Oct. 1st. Albee

i

Nelson new account

- . . . - .

YARD SALE - Thursday and Friday 9 till 4:30. 6469

USE LOW” COST CHRONICLE CLASSIFIED ADS

Beautiful Colorado Blue

Garfield s t . Canning Jarsi clothes, dishes, tires, sink,

14-9-13-1 iron bed, etc. Spruce 2-15 ft. available

Call Nadara Walther RuM-M-AT- s A L E - I - ~ ~ > ~ miles east of Kingston on

872-3429 2-9-13-4

\

Phone 872.2342 Certified Mechanics

Complete Car Care Service Wrecker Service

Rich’s Disposal Residential & Commercial

Rubbish Removal Container Service Available

New Location 218 N. State St., Caro, MI

We also now have a Phone 673-3200 BACK DOOR ENTRANCE

Villclgs Service Center fires V-Belts Batteries

)Tune-ups Brakes b Mufflers Certified Mechanic

FREE

SQUIRREL’S ~~ NEST

KltcMn L Bath Boutlquo

SA8 131 N. State, Car0

3 mod4 mo., 2T-4T Children’s 4.8X and 7-14

Maternity Clothes also Avallable 120 W. Llncoln St., Caro

’ Phone 673-8266

be yours for as little as $1.25

per week.

Transit (nonbusiness) rates. 10 words or less, $1.25 each insertion; additional words 7 cents each. Three weeks for the price of two - cash rate. Save money by enclosing cash with mail orders. Rates for display want ad on application.

(-) [General] [General] [General] GROUP GARAGE SALE - Merchan&se Merchandise Merchandise manager at Walbro Corp.

2-9-13-1 2-8-30-3 -- . . ~ .......... -- - -. .~ - .- -

BIG GARAGE SALE - Thursday and Friday 9 till 5. Saturday 9 till ?. 6420 Bay City-Forestville Rd. Some- thing for everyone.

ONIONS, SQUASH, potatoes and apples, Polega’s Vegetable Mar- ket, phone 872-3348. Noon till dusk. 2-9-13-3

Automotive 1 USA BUILDINGS - 30’ wide by 40’ long, up to lOO’x200’. Must sell cheap im- mediately, Phone 1-800-482- 4242 extensioh 540.

FORD LAWN and garden tractor, hydrostatic drive,

2-9-13-3ec - - .-- - - - .

Coming to McCONKEY’S

JEWELRY SEPT, 17-22

14 kt, Gold Chain Sale 52% Off

Hundreds of chains will be in our inventory for this one time gigantic sale. DON’T MISS OUT ON

THE BARGAINS. 2-916-3

pointment annouic& .’:’:‘.’:..’.’ .............................................................................. ........................... ................................................................................................................. ............................................................................. ........................................................ J ..................... bv Automotive Products .......................................................................................................................................................... FOR SALE -‘77 Buick Es- tate wagon, $2995 or best offer. Body mint condition. Contact 6318 Houghton St.

1-9- 13-3

Cfroup Vice-president Clark Searle. Your neighbor s a w - 14-9-13-1 ..... .- ..........

LOVESEAT, brown, $25; In his new position, Nel-

son will be responsible for sales of electric fuel pumps to major automotive origi- nal equipment customers.

Hopes run high for Lotto win

I

from Nelson Wescon comes to Products Walbro

-- -- GARAGE SALE - Sept. 13- 14, 9 till 5. Furniture, tools, many good clothes, collecti- bles. G.E. Space Saver micro-wave oven and much more. 6789 Pine Street.

small refrigerator, $20; Rupp minibike, good condi- tion, $70; ’74 Plymouth Dus- ter, slant 6, $1100; 26” man’s Huffy bike, $40. Phone 872-3988. - 2-9-13-3 - - _- __ - _

’75 FORD ELITE - power steering, power brakes, good tires, Runs good. $600. Call between 10 and 1:OO

’72 CHEVELLE, new tires. Phone 872-2848 after 4.

872-5032. 1-9-13-3 - .-

1 -9- 13-3

16 hp., -complete with mower and snow thrower. Excellent condition, like new! Laethem’s, Caro, phone (517) 673-3939.

. 2-9-13-1

- . - . - ..

14-9-13-1 WATER HEATERS and ............... - . Water Softeners now on Company, Wichita, Kan.,

where he was Regional Sales Manager. Prior to that position, he served as a sales engineer for Mil- waukee Spring Company, Milwaukee, Wis., and Helro

h Corporation, Fraser, Mich., calling on OEM cus- tomers in the Detroit area. He has also been employed as a buyer by Volkswagen of America, Inc.

Nelson attended Cleary

What would you do with the money if you won the new Michigan lottery game, the Lotto?

“Pay off my bills first, and then I would buy a new car, ” said Josephine Bartnik.

“That will be the day,” she said, “when I win it.”

Bartnik said that she hadn’t yet bought a ticket for the new game, but that she would soon be going to place her bet,

“I got my numbers,” she said, adding that she didn’t have a system for deciding which numbers she would be using. “I just picked them out,” she said.

Travel is also in the fu- ture for the would-be win- ner of the lottery. She said that she would like to take a trip to Hawaii or Florida with the money.

Bartnik said that she would also pay off the debts ....................................... ....................................... ........................................ ....................................... ........................................ ............................................................................... ................. ,“” ................

of her family, “If I had enough left over.” A con- tribution to the church is also in order for the future millionaire should she win.

Bartnik and her husband Casimir, live at 3333 N. Cemetery Rd., Cass City. They have one married son and one grandchild.

GARAGE SALE - Sept. 15- sale a t Fuelgas. Call 872: WALLPAPER 1 17, 2% miles north of Cass 2161. 2-8-23-tf FOR SALE - to good homes

onlv. 6 roly-poly indoor-out- do& puppies, wormed. Mother is house dog, ter- rier, medium size. 6 weeks old Aug. 30, $10. also 3 cuddly kittens. Call 872- 4512. 2-8-30-3,

_ - . - -.

ANTIQUE cupboard, paioted, OAK kitchen and

very ornate antique walnut rocker. Call 678-4222.

FOR SALE--- 1200 bales of wheat straw. Call 872-2254.

2-8-30-3

2-9-6-3

I SALE FOR SALE - 1981 Chevy Malibu, very good condi- tion, power steering, power brakes, automatic, air. Call 872-4498 after 6 p.m.

FOR SALE - 1974 Duster, $250 or best offer. Phone

FOR SALE - 1977 Cutlass Supreme 2 door, in good shape; 4 wheel rubber tired wagon for ponies and bobs- led, black and white filly pony colt. Call 872-2689.

# 1-9- 13-3 - - +

872-4466. 1 -8-30-3

1-8-30-3

30% off

self employment on increase ONE COUNTER - 2 large

security mirrors; 1 work- - ,

9 till 7. Miscellaneous items, clothes all sizes, cheap. 14-9-13-1

Prior to 1970, self- employment had been on the decline, largely due to the reduction in the agricul- tural sector. However, self- employment on farms has now stabilized at about 1.6 million since 1976, and non- farm self-employment has increased each year since 1970, reaching 7.6 million, according to a publication issued by the Bureau of Labor Statistics of the US. Department of Labor.

MATTRESSES . queen ...... bench. Formerly Frank siz& extra firm $235 per 1955 FORDTREK - g a i n Music Store, 6414 Main, set; full size $185. Folding box, hoist, $300. 81 camper, Phone 872-2580. 2-9-13-2 aerobic exercise mats $20. $300. 2 refrigerators, 1 Snover Mattress and Furni- apartment size electric ture, phone 313-672-9747 or stove. Phone 872-2768. (Real Estate I I General 1 1974 GMC half-ton pickup,

power brakes, power steer- ing, 6 cylinder, stick, $895 or best offer. Walk-in insu- jated camper top for pickup with heater $375. Phone 872- 3045. 1-9-6-3

(Merchandise] 313-672-9024. 2-9-13-4 .’ 2-9-13-3 1 For Sale-- J

.-. -- - . _ - --

Puzzled? , SCM 44 Electrostatic copier HOME OWNERS - Does - single sheet feed, K & E Your house have a farm

Give a gift subscription to Anvil compensating polar home mortgage? Are You planimeter - adjustable thinking of selling? We arm, snowmobile, 3 have several qualified

The Cass City Chronicle wheeler soil auger Sam- buyers - call: Realty pier. Ph& 872-5188. 2-9-6-3 World HutchinSon InC. 673-

3-8-30-3 Birthdays, anniversaries 7773. jJJJJJJJJJJJilJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJ~JJ.1

FOR SALE_- Used Stearn and Foster queen box springs and mattress. Call

BRAND- -NEW fi ini t i re coming! New brand name furniture coming! Where is this furniture coming? U

872-2554. 2-9-13- 1

Guessed It! 2-9-13- 1

..................................... ..................................... .................................... ..................................... .................................... ..................................... ............................. .............................................

___I__

Real Estate GAS STATION & CONVENIENCE STORE

Building 28’ x 52’ two and a half story, consisting of sales area on first floor for gas station and convenience items, feed stock, and underground storage and store equipment. Upper floors are for living quarters and storage. The living quarters are not complete at the present time. There is one bay for automatic car

wash. C-06

I Household Sales) ~

GARAGE SALE - Baby clothes, clothes, antiques, new and used tires, lawnmowers, books, mis- cellaneous. 6536 Kelly Rd., Thursday, Friday, Satur- day, 9:OO-6:OO. 14-9-13-1

Many varieties of peaches pears

Canning tomatoes Please bring containers

Michigan plums, apples, potatoes, onions, t o m a h , cabbage, squash, Honey Rock melons. Many other fresh 50 lb. fruits bag onions, & vegetables. $5.00

Clark’s Farm Produce Mprket

4 miles east of Cass City, 1/4 mile soyth an M-53.

Open 7 days a week 2-8-30-3

Gift card mailed with each order

- - .

FOR SALE - cedar posts, peeled or unpeeled, 8-ft. finished picnic tables; lawn swings, wishing wells. Call 872-2039.4351 Rescue Road, Cass City.

GAS FURNACES and heat- ers available at Fuelgas.

% LOW prices on installation. Free financing available.

2-4-26-tf - .

Call 872-2161. 2-8-23-tf

J Call Us at (517) 673-6106 J J

Card and board games are thought to be as old as civilization itself. Carvings on Egyptian tombs from about 2500 B.C. show board games played.

j A TREE LINED DRIVE leads to this Cass City country a

J farm home. Both the front and side porches have J L 4 gingerbread” trim. This home features natural wood J wainscot in the formal dining room. It has new plumb- J

ing and the hot water heat has an attached wood burn- J

’er. Well insulated. Also includes a metal shed and a J

i p well maintained barn. This home could become your J

J J

EXCELLENT LOCATION. Large, approximately goo0 J sq. ft. commercial building on approximately 4 acres. J Located in a high trgffic area. Building is in excellent J condition and is suitable for many different uses. Own- : ers are motivated to sell. Land contract terms offered J

country show place. Ask about 778-CY

GARAGE SALE - One day only, Sept. 14, girls’, boys’ clothing, sizes 3-14, excel- lent condition. 5 miles west to Cedar Run, 3 miles north to Hoppe, 3 miles west to corner of Jacob. Phone 665- 2265. 14-9-13-1

758 N. STATE ST. CAR0 PH. 673-8153 OPPORlUNlTY

LARGE RUMMAGE~KLE - Sept. 14-15, 10 till 6. Sev- eral families. Good furni- ture, clothes assorted sizes, many household items, books, lamps, stereo. Shab- bona Community Hall, Phone 313-672-9629.

14-9-13-1

to qualified buyers. 746-C J f FOR SALE - New and used - . -

Action Guide I Find the Service or Product You Need in This. I McLeod Realty, Inc. Magic Chef ranges 20 and J

Fuelgas call 872-2161, Excellent condition. Elec- J 844 Hooper Phone St. Across 673-6106 from 7-11, Caro, J 30 inch. Specially priced at pickup fold-down camper. J

2-8-23-tf tric and gas refrigerator, J

FOR SALE - 10 ft. Scamper

1

--.~ -. - - - - -_ .

FOR SALE - 2-year-old Whirlpool 15.9 upright freezer; 1981 Suzuki 850L, excellent condition, $1800. Call 872-4433. 2-8-30-3

BEAUTIFULLY CRAFTED BUSINESS CARDS

gas stove I and furnace, toilet. Dean Tuckey, 4784 Koepfgen Rd., Cass City. Phone 872-2907. 2-9-13-3

# 8498 State Rd., Millington, Phone 871-4567 J J

REALTOR @ OPPORTUNITY J

J J J JJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJ”JJJJJJJJJJJJJ

Commercial - Residential - Farm

- _._ .- . - - --. - - - 3 FAMILY Garage Sale - Friday and Saturday, Sept. 14-15. Antique oak table, teen clothing, antiques and collectibles , miscellaneous household items. 6278 Beechwood Drive, Cass City, west of high school.

14-9-13- 1

FOR SALE - 4 Ford pickup Chrome wheels 5.15~7, also used bicycles. Phone 872- 3567. 2-9- 13-1

t

-- - - WATERBEDS - B i y a COK plete waterbed and get your choice of three distinctly different headboards. Pay

Clare’s Sunoco Service Tune Ups Minor Repairs

Tires Batteries Grease & Oil

Certified Mechanic

Call 872-2470

177 N. State Caro

Phom 673-5244

See Us For Your

Craft Supplies!

Gdteway Sanitation Services

Home - Commercial. Industrial Cass City Area

TRASH COLLECTION Call Collect 31 3-798.8025

“Big Enough lo Serve You”

Designed to make that first impression a lasting one!

Highest quqlity raised printing RUMMAGE SALE - Due to

the weather I will rerun sale Thursday, Friday, Sept. 13 and 14, 9-5. Lots of good clothing and winter coats - all sizes. Portable mangle and miscellaneous. Back building at Gene’s M- 81 Motel. . 14-9-13- 1

only $189.50. Buy them See our new catalog. where they’re built. # Cass city Chronicle Waterbed Manufacturers I L&S Standard Service I I Next Door Neighbor I 1 1974 HILLCREST - 12x52 mobile home all

skirted and set up in Huntsville Park. Stove, refrigerator arid storage shed, $4,500.00. Very clean!

2-2-94 of Michigan. 8625 M-25, Sebewaing. Phone 883-3385. Daily until 5:30. Friday until 8:OO. Saturday and Sunday until 5:OO. 2-9-13-1

_ - - .- .

NATIONAL Steel Building CO. must sell 30 buildings in 20 days due to volume commitment. We must

or beat any price in writing at the time of purchase.

2-9-6-tf

1 Y2 STORY BRICK - 1 bedroom down and 2 up in this lovely home. Dining room, living room, full basement with natural gas heat. Also wood forced air furnace. Available on land contract. $24,900.00.

..- I

YARD SALE - Thursday and Friday, 10 till 5. Chil-

‘dren’s and adult clothes, baby stroller, walker, etc. 4129 Leach St. 14-9-13-1 FOR THE FAMILY THAT THOUGHT

THEY HAD EVERYTHING - 4 bedroom, 2% bath home located on North Seeger St. in Cass City. 198’x242’ lot. 2% car garage, ap- proximately 40 mature trees, plenty of flow- ers, 22x26 family room with fireplace, for- mal dining room plus a whole lot more. Call today and ask to take a look at Erla’s on the hill! ! !

. - ...... 4 FAMILY Garage Sale - women’s clothing thru size 52, white lab coats XL, girls’ 6 thru teen, boy’s suit 16 slim, pants 29 thru 32 waist, men’s shirts small thru XL, sport coats, parka, jackets 46 and 48, work un; iforms, snowmobile suits, hub-caps, Raleigh R-1000 BMY 12 inch rims, dishes, toys, knickknacks, miscel- laneous. Thursday 9 till 6. Located between M-81 and Cass City Road at 4180 Hurds Corner Rd. Ken Mar- tin. 14-9-13-1

‘ I I Automotive Rust Proofing

Systems 6 Waxing Gravel Guards

HAIR BENDERS SCItkliJyh

cwflia# stymag rems Tuss. L FrI. - 8 a.m - 6 0.m.

Runnlng Board8 Rock Kote Stone Chip Protection Croft-Clam lumber, Inc.

Cass City - 872-2141 AnlmmWinkrt

PIxru L d s Phone 269-9585 I 827 S. Van Dyke, Bad Axe I 4% MILES NORTHEAST - 3 bedroom, newly remodeled farm house on 1% acres of land, Full basement, 2 car garage,wood and oil heat. Bathroom off master bedroom. Work- shop is 12x34 fully insulated and heated. Asking $52,500.00.

PRICE SLASHED TO $35,900.00 - 2 bedroom home, LP gas heat, living room, dining room, plenty of extras, This home is all insulated. Small barn. All this on 23 acres of land, ‘/2 wooded, Land contract terms. Call today for more details! ! !

MINI FARM - Between Caro and CasS City. All brick 2 story home, 3-4 bedrooms, for- mal dining room, modern kitchen, wood furnace, full basement, large tool shed and barn. 3 acres of land, hardtop road. Super land contract terms. Call today! ! !

Kelly Smith - 872-2248 Maw Hobart - 8 7 2 4 1 Bill Hamilton - 872-4625 Martin Osentoski - 872-3252

Wed. & Thurs. - 8a.m. - 8:30 p.m. Sat. - 7 a.m. - 3 p.m.

6350 krfhld ?h. 872-3145 I I h f i n i r h d ?adan Men.-Fri. - 8 am.630 P.m. I Sat*- 8 a.m.-3 p.m.

Buy your carpet or linoleum, then call US for expert installation. W 8 also do custom and repair work, Factory tralned. “We Do It Right.” Sat lsfact Ion guaranteed.

J.J.’s Flooring Senrice Cass City - 517.872-3758

or 872-4701

Cars, Kubota & New Holland Sales and Service

RABIDEAU MOTORS Forrn Diddon 872-2616

SIGN PAINTING by

JERRY LANGMAID Truck Letterlng - Magnetic Slgns

4x8’s - Logo Design - Boa! Lettering In Cass City

(517) 672-4139 FALL NEEDLEWORK CLASSES AT

SUNNNY SIDE OF THE STREET Carpet and Linoleum Installation 24=HR. SERVICE

6196 Lakeside Or. Cass Clty, MI GKGJ

PLUMBING L UEATING, INC.

6528 Main

Pigeon Phone 453.3531 Phone 872-6064

I

SUPREME WINDOW CLEANING

* BEGINNING NEEDLEPOINT - Thursday, Sept. 27 - 6 weeks 7-9 p.m. * BEGINNING KNITTING - Wednesday, Oct. 3 - 4 weeks 7:30-9 p.m. * BEGINNING CROCHET -Tuesday, Oct. 9 - 4 weeks 10-11:30 a m . * BEADED CROSS-STITCH -Thursday, Oct. 11 - 1:30 p.m. One Day Workshop, * KNITTING CLINIC - Thursday, Oct. 25,1-4 p.m. One Day, * ChRISTMAS ORNAMENT CLASS - Nov. 7 , 3 weeks 7:30-9 p.m.

9 Storms-Screens-Windows Janltorial Service Floors,

Eaves 8. Gutters Cleaned Hi-Riser Service L Rental

Estimates on Commercial, Residential 8 Industrial Work Complete Insurance Coverage

Security Services Avallable Pre-Registration and Deposit Required Limited Classes I 1120 Gratiot, Saginaw

Call 790.7809

-

872-4377 Cass City Phpne 872-2070 9-13-2

L’ I

Page 15: newspapers.rawson.lib.mi.usnewspapers.rawson.lib.mi.us/chronicle/1984/Issues/09-13... · 2005-07-24 · \ Forester Dave Dunn looks ’ at village maple tree decline ’c Page 3 Hazzards‘

‘CASS CITY, MICHIGAN

. *

C A S CITY CHRONICLE-THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 13,19&1

\

COUNTRY HOME 2.9 Acres - blacktop road - 1% story with aluminum siding and black shutters; Moncrief furnace with Jensen addan wood burning stove -

PAGE‘ FIFTEEN

f Real Estate ’I I Real Estate I I Services 1 I Livestock1 Real Estate I [ Notices J LOST - Cass City area,

ForSale 1 ForSale ( ForSale -~ 1 ForSale , J ForSale J FOR SALE - Young pullets,

starting to lay, terrific brown egg producers, Red Sex-Links. Phone 872-2310.

10-8-30-3

,?OR SALE or rent - 12’x60’ Vindale mobile home. Phone 375-4184. 3-9-6-3

FbR SALE by owner - Brick bi-level, 3 bedrooms, 2% baths, 2 car garage with opener, 2 decks,. Hills and Dales subdivision. low 70’s.

HILLS AND DALES Sub- division - 3 bedroom, full basement, gas or wood heat, central air, 2% car garage, fireplace. 6291 Vir- ginia St. Call 872-3520.

3-8-2-t f

LISTINGS WANTED - If you have a home, farm or business you’d like to sell, call Kelly W, Smith at Osen- toski Realty - office till 5:00 872-4377 and after 5:OO 872- 2248 e 3-2-24-t f

HOUSE FOR SALE in Bad large white fish cooler, Tuff Axe - Three bedrooms with One. Reward. Call 872-4540 some furniture, new gas days. 5-9-13-2

Ken Martin Electric, Inc.

Residential and Commercial Wiring

State Licensed ’

Free Estimates

418C)Hurds Corner Road Phone 872-4114

8-8-10-tf

-~ -- -- --

FOR SALE - 4 bedroom home, barn and 2 acres. Phone 872-2848. $3-13-3

furnace. Phone 269-6256 after 3 p.m. 3-9-13-3 Attention Phone 8 w or 872-4075.

3-9- 13-3

FOR SALE - AQHA 15’2 ~

chestnut gelding, five years old. Must sell soon. Call 872-

=STYRE half-Arab mare, 9 years old, and purebred Arab mare, shown three years, western and halter, 7 years old, in foal for 1985. Phone 678-

3134. 10-9-6-3

4222. 10-9-6-3

Remount Clinic C O M ~ N C TO MC-

CONKEY’S JEWELRY. 1 DAY ONLY FRIDAY, SEPT. 21st.

See complete new selection of mountings, wedding sets, dinner rings, earrings, pendants and men’s diamond rings. MAKE PLANS NOW

TO BE THERE. 5-94-3

CUSTOM BUILT HOME - situated 10 minutes north of Cass City on paved road. 2Wo square feet, living room, country kitchen, 3 bedrooms, 1?h baths. Situated on 5 acres. Priced in the ~ W S , price negotiable. Terms to suit qualified buyer. Shown by appoint- ment only. Call 375-4576.

3-9-13-3

I 1

I INCOME! ! I SPECIAL! ! ! Reduced from $lS,sOO to $35,ooO for QUICK SALE ! ! In Cass City - extra large lot 99x132’, Pine trees, large family home or two income - comes with refrigerators, ranges, etc. Two car garage - VACANT --- $35,000. Sellers moving to Indiana. I - FLEENOR APPLIANCE

Service - washer, dryers, stoves, water heaters, re- frigerators. 4260 Woodland Ave., Cass City. Phone 872- 3697. 8-3-29-tf

IN CASS CITY: 1% story 3-4 bedroom home - quiet residential neighborhood; Lennox furnace;. garage attached to home plus 16x20’ building with chimney suitable for home occupation -walking distance to churches, stores, etc. $28,500.00. Immediate possession.

North of Cass City:”3 ACRES: 1% story comfortable home with 3-4 bedrooms; Lennox Furnace plus wood burner in living room witp raised slate hearth; formal dining room; 2 bedrooms dowrr and 2 up; living room with exposed beams; new 4 piece bathroom; basement walls are panelled - well insulated; “Parklike Grounds” 1% car garage; taxes only $440.00 --- Priced to sell a t $42,500.00 terms.

Just Over a mile from CaSS City! ! ! ! CLOSE’ IN: For the executive --- this fine family home consisting of over 2300 square feet - 2% bathrooms; 2 fireplaces - open stairway - all large rooms; office plus den and recreation rooms; inter-com - patio leads to swimming pool plus appliances; garage - basement; nicely landscaped with ornamental trees, shrubs, flowers, etc. b! 208x208’ -your inspection invited! ! ! ! $85,O(N. Terms. GAGETOWN: Very nice home - neat in and out - 1% story with 2 bedrooms; front porch; open staiway - natural gas furnace; basement; new 16x24’ garage with electric door owner; cute kitchen arrangement - $21,000.00.

[Help Wanted) MARCUS P. PETERS, Pringle Rd., Decker, as of

FOR RENT - aDartment. 3 SeDt. 8.1984. will not be re-

[ ForRent DOCTOR’S office assistant needed iri Bad Axe area. Send resume to Box M, care of Cass City Chronicle.

OFFICE HELP - 20 hours per week in business office. Job consists of meeting public and clerical duties. Send resume to WC, Care of Chronicle, Cass City.

11-8-30-3 -- -

11-9-13-1

. . . - - _

rooms and bath, utilities sfinsible for any debts furnished, a t New Green- other than my own. 5-9-13-3 leaf. Phone 872-3169. 4-9-6-3 Arthur Brown

Cass City FOR RENT OR SALE - 2 bedroom mobile home, 6 314 acres. 2 miles from Cass City. Needs little repair. Call 872-3475 after 3:00 p.m. or 313-666-4009. 4-9-13-3

Well Drilling

Pump Repair and

STATE LICENSED

SEPT. 13

HAPPY BIRTHDAY RIVER ROAD --- 2-3 bedroom home - one story - new well with own water system; several new Andersen Windows; insulated - garage attached --- VACANT - $26,500.00 terms. Seller will hold land contract. $3500 down. 79 ACRES: Close in to Cass City - Newly decorated home with 3 bedrooms; gas furnace; large barn- OWNER RETIRED FROM FARMING --I- $60,000.00 will hold land contract. IMMEDIATE POSSESSION.

40 ACRES - near Cass City - Doublewide built in 1972 - 2 bedrooms; gas furnace; ideal for starter home or retirees - $39,900 - Sellers will sell on land contract - vacant - immediate possessivn.

46- ACRES: Remodeled 8 room home with 4 bedrooms; “12x24’ sunroom with Jalousie windows; gas furnace 6 years old; beautiful Brick Fireplace with Heatilator and glass dmr; formal dining room with large picture window; 6 acre hardwood grove; 40 a c r e tillable productive soil - new 2% car garage plus 24x32’ tool shed; your inspection invited - $92,500.00 terms.

Carolyn Martin You’re over the hill

51

FOR RkNT - 2 bedroom , apartment. All utilities fur- nished. Phone 872-2352 evenings or before 8 a.m.

FOR RENT - Storage space for snowmobiles. cars.

4-9-13-1 -

Phone 673:384)0 8-1-27-tf

PIANO TUNING and re- pairing on all makes of pianos. 20 years’ experi- ence. Member of the Piano Technicians Guild. Duane Johnston, Bad Axe, Mich. 48413. Phone 269-7364. 8-2-1-tf

ATTENTION ! Merri-Mac needs 3 outgoing people to demonstrate our guaran- teed line of gifts, toys, home decor on party plan. No in- vestment, delivery or col- lection. Car and phone necessary. 883-2662 collect. Call Also Eliz - book- 517-

ing parties. 11-9-13-2

5-9-13-1 CLOSE TO CASS CITY: Blacktop foad - iih story very neat in and out home: 3 bedrooms; lots of storage room; FORMAL DINING ROOM; hardwood floors; 1arge)family size kitchen; Birch cabinets; breezeway; garage attached; basement; 16x24’ storage building; treed 1% Acre lot - priced to sell right away for $49,500.00.

trailers, etc. Behind Paint Store. Phone 872-2446 after FREE WATER 5 : 00. Dale Damm. 4-5-24-3n analysis - Water King water

softeners and salt on sale at FOR RENT - 1 bedroom Fuelgas, 4 miles east Of

kitchen Cass City on M-53. Phone apartment,

drapes, storage area, laun- dry facilities. Phone 673- 8151 or 872-3610. 4-9-13-3

HOUSE FOR RENT - AUCTIONEERING - See Gagetown area, Cas$ City Lorn “Slim” Hillaker. TOP School District, 3 bedroom, for your property- carpeted, corner of Hurds Phone 872-30197 Cass City.

Forestville Rds. Call ‘SSS- msbm Butchering BEEF &PORK

appliances, carpeting, 872-2161. 5-1-20-tf

[Services)

Corner, Bay City- 8-103-tf

2284. 4-9-6-3

IN CASS CITY: Stately 2 story home with aluminum siding; 3-4 bedrooms; forced hot water heating system; 1% bathrooms; formal dining room; front porch about 30’ in length; awnings on 6 windows; attic and walls insulated -- 2 d r g e Lots complete $5O,Ooo.00. Sellers will hold land -contract. Immediate possession! ! !

RESPONSIBLE baby-sit- ter needed to care for 3 chil- dren in my home. Cass City- Gagetown area. Must have own transportation. Call

WATKINS’ spices, ex- tracts, liniments sell ! You can be Watkins’ dealer for this area with small fee, no quotds. For information ‘or order: Watkins, box 356, Brimley, MI 49715, phone

665-2678. , 11-8-30-3

(906) 437-5408. 11-9-13-3

Mr. 2’s PROFESSIONAL CARPET

AND UPHOLSTERY CLEANING

FIRE RESTORATION Commercial Fast, courteous & Residential and

inexpensive; F r e Estimates

Near Gagetown: 24x64’ RANCH TYPE HOME with walk- out basement;’ 8 rooms; 4 bedrooms; 2 bathrooms; forced hot water heating system; gas fired; BRICK FIREPLACE with heatilator; 20x24’ FAMILY ROOM: comes with appliances - large wooded lot 125x500’; $89,500.00 terms. TWO INCOME HOME with practically new aluminum

siding and roof; separate meters - good income - $43,000.00 terms.

IN CASS CITY: 1% story 5 room home - very neat in and out - close to schools, churches, playground, stores, etc. Hard- wood floors carpeted - basement; all modern kitchen; sun porch; garage - offered to you for $42,500.00.

IN CASS CITY: Stately 2 story home with aluminum siding; aluminum storms and screens; 4 bedrooms; 1% bathrooms; FORMAL DINING ROOM; wall to wall carpeting; very desirable family home with lots,of room in and out - extra large landscaped and treed lot; 1% car garage with lots of storage room; this home has had good care with “parklike grounds” - Asking only $55,000.00. This one won’t last long! ! ! !

with Brick and Aluminum siding; 6 rooms; Luxaire Furnace with forced hot air; all large rooms; 1% bath- rooms; 1680 square feet of living space plus full basement; 24x24’ two car garage attached; lot nicely landscaped 198x200’ - $75,000.00 terms.

\

BAY CITY-FORESTVILLE ROAD - RANCH TYPE HOME

Mick Zawilinski Phone 872-3725

84-16-t f FOR RENT - office space, 2 and 3 room units, all car- peted. Main Street. B e a t and lights furnished. Hahn

(Hogs are scalded - not skinned)

Check our prices on half or whole

JUST LISTED : IN CASS CITY: This beautiful seven room home with aluminum siding; Library; Formal Dining Room; 3-4 bedrooms; wall to wall carpeting; FIREPLACE with heatilator - Bay Window - large recreation r w m with wet bar - basement; garage; nicely landscaped - many -other features ---- priced to sell immediately at $69,500.00 --- Seller will finance. Possession on short notice.

$6.00 MINIMUM charge - mixers, toasters, coffee- makers, etc. repaired. Tus- cola Appliance, phone 673- 2720. . 8-8-9-tf

POSTING OF AVAILABLE POSITION The Kingston Community

Schools are accepting ap- plications for the position of

Buil&..g. 6240 W. Main, Meat Wholesale and Retail Cass C3y. Phone 872-2155 -

4- 12-2 1 -t f Gainor’s Meat

Packing residence 872-35 19. Bus Mechanic. Qualifi- cations include the following:

ChuckGage 1. ExDerience as a 1 mile north, 1 mile west-of Baa Axe.

Phone (517) 269-8161 %9-9375

Dave Reed - 872-2827 8-9-304

RICH’S DISPOSAL - Resi- dential and Commercial Rubbish ReFoval. Con- tainer ‘ service available. Call 683-2233. 8-2-12-tf

SPECIAL! ! A lot of home for the money! ! Hip roof style with 3 bedrooms; painted white with shutters; gas heat and hot water; laundry room off kitchen; wood burning stove remains - 55’ deep well - own Myers water system; plus storage building - 103’x210’ lot - in the country - all of this for $2o,ooo.~.

[ Notices 1 Welding Shuop Heli-arc welding

Specializing in aluminum, stainless steel, blacksmith- ing, fabricating and radi- a tor repair.

Also portable welding All types of welding

mechanic: 2. Knowledge of air brakes

and automotive wiring. Applications and job

descriptions may be ob- tained at the office of the Superintendent a t the High School Building, 5790 State Street, Kingston, Michigan

WANTED - land to rent in Elkland Township. Will do fall plowing. Call 872-2743.

5-9-6-3 REDUCED FROM $29,500 to $20,000 for immediate sale! ! Mobile home with 3 bedrooms; gdld carpeting; 9x12’ rear entry; all modern kitchen; plus former church building 21x34’ hardwood floors; new drop ceiling; 2 restrooms; office, furnace, basemedt; many other features - % acre of land - $20,000.

Several businesses for sale - Let us tell you about them! ! !

REDUCED! ! ! SPECIAL! ! ! LOW COST HOUSING --- 2 bedroom home carpeted; natural gas furnace; well insulated - family&

, need of larger home - may trade - reduced from $16,000 to $12,000 on land contract or will accept $10,500 cash.

60 ACRES - Close to Cass City - BRICK HOME with lots of remodeling done; new carpeting - large Mrn; garage, etc. $65,000.00 - seller will hold land contract - Immediate Possession.

DOCTOR’S HOME: RANCH TYPE HOME with aluminum siding; 7 rooms; Marble FIREPLACE; new Andersen Windows; Family room; 15x17’ Sun Room - 26x30’ Recreation room; 3 bedrooms; 24’ SWhmhg P0d.l- two car garage with two electric door openers - nicely landscaped - $69,500.00.

FALL CLEARANCE

SALE Blown Insulation New construction

Remodeling Additions Garages

Roofing, Siding Pole Buildings

FREE ESTIMATES

113 off River Road: 1% ACRES: RANCH TYPE HOME with 3 bedrooms; furnace with 3 zones; drilled well with 2 storage tanks; Andersen windgws throughout - built in 1976 - all this for $46,500.00. TWO INCOME HOME: REMODELED - $365.00 income - SPRCIAL at $29,900.00 - a good investment here!

rooms; large kitchen with dining area - garage attached; seller will hold land contract --- $48,500.00 terms. IM- MEDIATE POSSESSION. $5000 down. SUPER MARKET: Grossing over $840,000.00; brick building; SDM license; 7,000 square foot building; location; real estate, fixtures, equipment, $240,000 plus inventory.

JUST LISTED: ALL BRICK HOME 28x42’ plus -4’ garage and 9x13’ breezeway attached - 6 rooms with 1% bathrooms; FAMILY ROOM with FIREPLACE with heati- lator; PLUS 32x39’ Building suitable for HOME OCCUPA- TION - nicely landscaped lot 258x297’ on Highway M-81- $85,oO0.00 terms.

TWO HOMES FOR THE PRICE OF ONE! ! ! Situated on a parcel of land 400x400’ - or will sell separately - let us tell you about it! ! ! ! $40,500.00 for both homes.

COUNTRY HOME: 1% story with 3 4 bedrooms; base- ment; 1% car garage attached; newly decorated - possession on short notice - Reduced to $29,900. terms.

22 ACRES: SPORTSMAN’S PARADISE! ! ! 1% story home with yellow aluminum siding; FIm- PLACE ; large FAMILY size kitchen - Laundry mom - base- ment; furnace plus woodburning addon - bmzeway - 2 car’ garage; WHITE CREEK THRU PROPERTY - many beautiful Pines - lots of deer, pheasants, rabbits, fishing, etc. Sellers will hold land contract.

. .

RANCH TYPE HOME IN NEWER SUBDIVISION - 3 bed-

All trees & shrubs Thru Oct. 1

Oscar Brooks 6398 Seventh St.

Leiterman Builders Phone 872-2932 5-9- 13-2 C a s City

Phone 872-3721 PERSONALIZED MATCH Licensed and Insured BOOKS AND WEDDING

NAPKINS 8415-tf

‘ STARTER HOME IN CASS CITY: Cute two bedroom home - comes with refrigerator and range; basement; furnace and electric water heater - corner lot -- $21,000. FMHA Approved.

ONLY $15.00 service charge (within 15 miles of M-46 and M-24). Re-

washers, frigerators, dryers repaired. 90 day guarantee. Fast in-home service. Tuscola Appliance. Call 673-2720.

8-8-9-tf

kit is yours free to keep and help you earn money. Con- tact 872-3244. I am also booking parties. 11-8-30-4

Luscious colors

latest designs new catalog for

Cass City Chronicle

Free Estimates

5-2-9-tf

on roofing, siding, insulatio~ aluminum doors and windows and aluminum

or Fiber Glass awnings

Elkton Roofing

Phone 269-7469

& siding co.

5-7-214

To Give Away 1 FREE - black Lab-Springer pups. Call 872-3530. 7-9-63

~- KINGSTON: SPECIAL! I Very neat one story home with aluminum siding; 3 bedrooms; carpeted - Natural gas furnace; gas hot water heater; Formal Dining Room; built-in dishwasher; front porch; basement; very desirable location - nicely landscaped large lot for the children to play ---- all this for $3o,OOO.00.

WANTED - Babysitter, housekeeper, . afternoons,

FREE - Two adult female 20 hours week. Senior adult beagles, Purebred, no Pap- preferred. Phone 872-4530. ers. Call 872-3089. 7-8-30-3 11-8-30-3

AUCTIONEER

Complete Auctioneering Service Handled Anywhere. We Make All Arrangements.

Our Experience Is Your Assurance.

EXPERIENCED ’

Farm 1 )

Ira, David & Martin Osentoski

Phone Cass City 872-2352 Collect

8-2-23-tf

[Work Wanted] TO GIVE AWAY - to coun- try home, two 8-month-old female part German Shepherd and bulldog. Will pay half spaying. Call 87235 17. 7-8-23-tf

RETIREE SPECIAL!!! Frame one story home with aluminum siding; 2 bedrooms; with beautiful brick FIRE- PLACE and new brick chimney - lots of kitchen cabinets; all carpeted - 100 AMP service - circuit breakers - offered to you for $14,000.00 terms available.

WILL SELL YOU 2 Acres or 20 Acres with 28x50’ brick home with Andersen Windows; all large rooms; 3 bed- rooms; large bathroom and laundry room; 2 sets of sliding, glass doors lead to PATIO -- FIREPLACE - 200 AMP service - Patio 14x16’ --- Your inspection invited! ! ! ! Sellers will finance on land contract. Located only 2% miles from Cass City.

WILL CARE FOR elderly man or woman in my home, Call 658-8452. 12-9-6-3

MAN SEEKING work, any type. Phone 665-2265.

12-9-13-3 Equipment 1 ___

I WILL DO housecleaning. Contact Chronicle Box B- 33. 12-8-30-3

SUND 20 Ft. bean pickup reel. Designed to fit 20 ft. flexible platform to harvest edible beans standing. Laethem’s, Cam, phone (517) 673-3939. 9-9-13-1

BRAND NEW furniture coming! New brand name furniture coming ! Where is this furniture coming? U Guessed It ! 5-9-13-1

OPEN HOUSE -- . I

I Card of Thanks 1 SHARPENING SERVICE - 2 miles south, 1 1’/4 west at 5870 W. Kelly Rd. Ed Spencer, 872-4512. -8-9-15-tf Before \ Buying or Selling h

THANK YOU everyone who donated to the Muscu- lar Dystrophy road block Julv 28 and those who con-

FOR SALE - International Model 303 bean special. in

See, Call or Write to: Knots ’n CUSTOM SLAUGHTERING excellent conditiok. Ready trihted to the canisters. BEEF-P.o~K-VEALLAMB

CURING, SMOKING AND PROCESSING

TUESDAY & FRIDAY

Erla I

Packing Co., Inc.

to go in field and thresh beans. Call 375-4241.

9-8-30-3

Special thanks to Ver- onica’s Restaurant, Walbro employees and General Cable employees for the total contribution of $578. Cass City trophy Chairman Charles Brown. 13-9-13-1

Ceramics Thursday -Saturday

10: 00-8: 00 Sunday 1 : 00-4 : 00 ‘ Sept. 13-16

6 miles south, 2% east of C a s City on Deckerville Rd .

Door Prizes Refreshments Phone 872-2350

5-9- 13-1

B.A. Calka Real Estate‘ FOR SALE - two 16.9~28 tractor tires, 2 wagon run- ning gears, fuel tank. Phone 872-5329, 9-9-6-3

JOHN DEERE forage box, USDA Plant 1074 model 116 3 beaters, co-

Caw City 517-872-2191 vered to;, 3 conveyor 8-84tf chains, with John Deere

6306 W. Main St., Cass City Phone 872-3355 THE MCCARTY family

wish to thank the Ubly, Min- I

den City and Cass City Fire DepartmFnts, the men who volunteered the use of their

WE HAVE A LABGE SELECTION OF FARMS - BUSINESSES AND U R G E R & MORE EXPENSIVE HOMES, VACANT LAND

not shown here - please call office. SCRATCH PADS FAGAN’S THUMB Carpet m n h g Laethem’s, gear. Caro, Must phone sell! barns the men for for our the milking useof cows, their

Cleaning - Dry foam Or (517) 673-3939. 9-9-13-1 trailers, the ladies who pro7 steam. Also upholstery and -..-.-- ~ _- vided the sandwiches and wall cleaning. Free esti- INTERNATIONAL H trac- coffee and to all who helped mates. Call toll free 1-800- tor and Model 91 self propel- in any way at the time of the 322-0206 Or 5!7-761-7503- We led combine, both in good fire Saturday evening. We welcome BankAmerlcard - shape. Phone 872-2424 offer our heartfelt thanks.

Now in stock

Cass City Chronicle

13-9-1 3- 1 55-34 Master Charge. 8-3-20-tf 9-9-13-3 .

LIST1 ATE

N / t -~

&wing the Thumb Area for over 30 years U We buy Land Coptracts An Equal Opportunity Lender

REALTOR

Page 16: newspapers.rawson.lib.mi.usnewspapers.rawson.lib.mi.us/chronicle/1984/Issues/09-13... · 2005-07-24 · \ Forester Dave Dunn looks ’ at village maple tree decline ’c Page 3 Hazzards‘

PAGE SIXTEEN C A S CITY CHRONICLE-THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 13,1984 CASS CITY. MICHIGAN

Pickets march for 0 - G contract

has been using copies from other books he had.

The board approved $500 to the high school yearbook fund to pay off a $400 back debt to the printer and the remainder to be used to start the students on this year’s yearbook.

At the request of Dick

Glidden, junibr high school girls’ basketball coach, the board agreed to allow the girls to use the Owendale High School gymnasium for home basketball games. Glidden said that the flobr. in the Gagetown gym- nasium is in bad shape and not fit for games.

- .

I! through the principal’s of - fice.

Wright said that he re- cently talked to the cooks and they said that every- thing was going good in the cafeteria. Last year 96 per- cent of the students ate the cafeteria food.

01’ Charley Redfield, the Financial guru of Juno Beach, is in an advanced state of maturity. Like the rest of us in South Florida he must be careful to keep his arteries open.

His therapy the past sum- mer was to go to the upper altitudes of North Carolina. There the reduced aif pres- sure makes your heart pump harder because you need more air. At the same time, with the atmospheric pressure being less it is easier to shove blood through those scaly old tubes that form a network in his body. Fatty deposits are flushed out, leaving only the one at his midriff.

During the dog days up in the mountains he has had nothing better to do than send abusive letters to me, reviling my taste in invest- ments. Things he has said about bonds shouldn’t be al- lowed in the mails.

His chortles were heard all over Cedar Mountain, when the stock market took that 100-point leap in early August. (He overlooked the fact that it was still 75

’ points lower than it was in January this year. 1

One of his stocks was Cowles Broadcasting, which did go up about 50 percent in that period. He doesn’t mention the others. Nor does he mention that Cowles pays a teeny-weeny dividend of 1 percent a year, of which Charley will keep half. At this rate of after-tax return if such a stock manages to stay on its high perch, it will double his money in 142 years.

Contrast that with some zero-coupon municipal tax free bonds yielding 10 per- cent. They’ll double your money in seven years, and there’s no capital gains tax, - as there is on Brother Red- field’s lucky stock pick.

The next response will be

from that mighty army of misled investors whose bat- tle-cry is always:

“But stocks are an infla- tion hedge. ”

I try to puncture this popular myth, but I have little success. One more ef- fort:

Financial Weekly, which must be a smart publica- Cion because it carries this column, now and then runs a graph showing the Dow stock averages. Below it is a graph showing these same averages adjusted for inflation on the basis of 1967 dollars,

Latest figures were for the Dow averages in June 1984, and the adjustment to current inflation rate as shown by the Consumers Price Index. Here are the figures :

High school teacher c Hear twotest in Kathj Kropewnicki said that she felt that the cafeteria food was good, and that she .had gotten large portions of thg food they served. She added that the cooks are not wearing Novesta TWD. BEAN HARVEST - Harold Little, 5178 Kelly Rd., Cass City, was one

Little said that the yield on the beans is not sb good as in past years. of the few area farmers who were able to begin harvesting beans.

, He has about 300 acres of beans planted this year.

hair nets or gloves. Erickson requested that

1

Kuhl and some of the other students meet with Wright so that he can explain the complaints to the cafeteria workers. They are to report to the board at their next meeting e

- collect the 1.4778 mills.

Kloc said that the brining to control the dust on the gravel roads in the township was completed at a cost of $2,100 to the township. Grading, ditch- ing and graveling by the Road Commission on Shab- bona Road between Phillips and Cemetery Roads are underway

K€oc said that township residents who are not regis- tered to vote are to register a t her house, 6195 Sever- ance Rd.

side,”.Howard said. &dink that m the summertime they have to keep their win- dows closed to keep the dust from coming in.

Supervisor William O’Dell told the board that he would go to the h s c o l a County Road Commission to see if they can get a speed limit sign put up on the road, and to see what else can be done about the prob- lems with the dust and traf- fic.

The board agreed to have clerk Nursie Kloc contact county clerk Elsie Hicks to see if the township can go back to using paper ballots for the November election. Kloc said that she felt that too many of the township’s voters were unsure of the new voting machines. Kloc said that after she talked to Hicks she found out that it was too late to get paper ballots for the November election. She said that be- cause the district has over ‘ 500 registered voters they would have to split the dis- trict into two precincts. Kloc said that the township didn’t have time to properly split the district.

Kloc said that the board agreed to ask the township residents for a three year, 1*/2-mill increase to up- grade the roads in Novesta Township. She ‘said that the 1% mills would generate about $24,000.

At the meeting, the board held a public hearing on the tax roll back from an allo- cated 1.65 mills to 1.4778 mills. The board agreed to

BUS COST

Erickson told the board that during the 1983-84 school year it cost the school district $1.03 per mile to run the school buses. He said that in the county schools that were listed, the district’s cost per student of $244.99 for the school year was about aver- age. Ubly had the lowest of the schools surveyed with a cost of 60 cents per mile.

At Wright’s request, the board approved an athletic budget of $17,145 for the 1984-85 school year. Wright told the board that last year the school budgeted $18,400 for athletics, but the de- partment used only $14,200 of the funds. This actually resulted in a cost to the board of $8,845.56 because the department generated $5,397.79 from ticket sales and a basketball tourna- ment.

Wright said that football was the most expensive sport with a total projected cost of $4,900. The program generated $1,321.65 last year.

The board also approved spending $334.20 for 15 ad- vanced biology textbooks. Science teacher Manuel Thies said that he has been teaching the class for three years without a textbook. He told the board that he

Dow averages,

June, 1984 1133 Increase 14%

Adjusted for Price Index: June, 1966 306

Decrease 66%

June, 1966 , 995

June, 1984 107 JTPA aids In other words, instead of

apparently going up 14 per- cent, real stock prices in terms of 1967 dollars went DOWN 66 percent.

The price index, mean- while went up almost exactly 300 percent. Never before was there such infla- tion in 18 years. During this time stocks were worth a third what they were a t the start, in 1966.

Some hedge! But Charley’s happy, and

that’s important. . As a matter of fact, so am

I. I just sold some zero- coupon bonds bought in 1982 a t 20, for 29, net. That’s a 45 percent gain, showing that old maids occasionally kick up their heels, too.

unskilled workers Grant will only pay for two. out of the three semesters each year. JTPA requires that the students go to school all year, so during the time that the student does not receive money from the grant, JTPA pays for all the tuition, books and fees. “We want them to get

through the training sanc into the work force as quickly as possible,” King said. King said that she sees an

attitude change in the stu- dents. She said that they are looking at themselves and the job world diffe- rently.

“They believe that they can do something now,” King said.

- - . . . - *

WET BEAN fields were the result of rains that fell on the Cass City area this past week. According to Bill Bortel of the Michigan State Co- operative Extension Service, the recent rain will not hurt the bean crop tocr much providing that the fields dry out so that farmers can get the equipment in the fields to harvest. This bean field on Cedar Run Road had water standing in several areas. The Cass City Waste Water Treatment Plant recorded 1.02 inches of rain since last Wednes- day. Because the storms were scattered throughout the area, other parts of the area received more rain. Bortel said that projections for the 1984 bean crop are 10.4 bags per acre, down from 14 bags per acre last year. Bortel said that the rains early this season is the reason for the lower than average yield projection.

Y

1st set of color prints Pair sentenced to jail

Rd., Decker, was ordered to pay a $192 fine, $133 court costs and is to pay $60 to mental health for screen- ing. He was also sentenced to probation for one year and has had his license sus- pended ‘for three months. During the suspension he is allowed to drive to work, school and the educational treatment program meet- ings.

Also on ,Monday, Debora J . Bimer, 34,4617 State St., Gagetown, pleaded guilty to driving while under the influence of ihtoxicants, Judge Kern ordered her to pay $192 in fines, $133 court costs and $60 to mental health for screening.

Bimer was also placed on probation for one year and had her license suspended for three months. During the suspension she is al- lowed to drive to work and educational treatment programs.

Monday, Circuit Court Judge Patrick Joslyn sen- tenced Edward P. Osborn to one year in the county jail for his July 7 charge of breaking and entering of an unoccupied dwelling.

Osborn, 21, 4275 Center St., Akron, pleaded guilty to breaking and entering of the Briggs Furniture Store, 3717 Main St., Akron.

Joslyn also sentenced Os- born to five years’ proba- tion and ordered him to pay a fine of $1,000 and $1,500 court costs.

Also on Monday, Judge Joslyn sentenced John D. Androsuk, 17, 322 Wells St., Caro, to 180 days in the county jail for his June 27 charge of larceny and at- tempted larceny from a motor vehicle. Androsuk pleaded guilty to the charges. He was also sen- tenced to three years’ rob- ation, ordered to pay g7.34 restitution, a $500 fine and $l,OOO court costs.

Judge Joslyn refused to accept a plea bargain from Ronald L. Richards, 31, 3837 N. Phillips Rd., Cass City. Richards has been charged with armed rob- bery of Mark Clark and Janice Botkins, Almer

Township, Dec. 2, 1983, Richards attempted to have the charges reduced to intent to rob and steal while armed with a danger- ous weapon.

No trial date has been set. Because the courthouse

was closed for Labor Day last Monday, no Circuit Court news was reported in last week’s edition of the Chronicle. The following cases were heard by Judge Joslyn Tuesday, Sept. 4.

Marcus L. Craig, 20, 1140 E. Dayton Rd., Caro, pleaded guilty to charges of breaking and entering an occupied dwelling owned by Thoillas Gould, 1575 Pierce Rd., Wells Township. A sentencing date of Nov. 5 ha5 been set.

Nolan Nash, 30, 2121 Evergreen St., Caro, pleaded guilty to attempted larceny by conversion of a 1977 Chevrolet van owned by Warren Keezer, Indian- fields Township. Nash will be sentenced Nov. 5.

Anthony Ruiz, 20, 2066 Mertz Rd., Caro, was sen- tended to 180 days in the county jail after pleading guilty to attempted larceny of a building Aug. 11. The building is owned by Henry Johnson, 2720 Bliss Rd., In- dianfields Township.

Ruiz was given credit for 20 days served.

Judge Joslyn sentenced Edward D. Carlisle Jr . , 19, 5063 Sanilac Rd., Vassar, to one year in the county jail after pleading guilty to charges of breaking and en- tering of an unoccupied building with intent to com- mit larceny.

Carlisle was given 24 days credit and 30 days de- ferred jail sentence with no date for his Jan. 8 breaking and entering of the Vassar Golf Course building.

John P. Dykes, 19,181 N. State St., Caro, pleaded guilty to the Jan. 24 charges of obstructing a police of- ficer. Dykes was sentenced to 100 days in the couhty jail with 56 days credit for time served.

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OTHER BUSINESS

The board opened bids to borrow $1.6 million against anticipated tax revenues. Three bids weke received. Low bid was 6.95 percent from Thumb National Bank of Cass City and Pigeon.

The truth in taxation meeting required by law was held and because of in- creased valuation 1.65 mores will be raised than’ in the previous year.

Supt. Donald Crouse explained again that the in- crease in local tax revenues is balanced by about an equal decrease in money received from the state. The district doesn’t benefit from the increased valua- tion, hesaid.

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