11-09-1978 - Rawson Memorial Library
Transcription
11-09-1978 - Rawson Memorial Library
lull ,,; ,, VOLUME 72, NUMBER 29 CASS CITY, MICHIGAN-THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1978 LINEUP -- This was the line in the Elkland township fire hall shortly before 5 p.m. Tuesday. Late in the morning, the line of voters extended out the door. new store Tuscola County Prosecutor Patrick Joslyn was elected the new circuit judge Tuesday for Tuscola and Lapeer counties. He polled a total of 14,52-4 votes to 13,575 for his opponent, Lapeer County District Judge John P. Spires. Joslyn's margin of victory came in his home county, where; he collected 7,72(i votes to 5,121 for Spires. In (he lattcr's home county, he received (i,798 votes to 8.454 for Spires. In Elkland township, Joslyn garnered 522 votes; Spires, 280; Novesta township, Joslyn, 164; Spires, 101, I I I I I i ! 1 5 I is resolved. "Our basic problem is economics. Beyond t h a i , we move pretty good." lie added t h a t the company negotiators have said the plant might be closed if the strike runs too long "but we d i d n ' t take it as a threat." Plant Manager Carl V'an- diver chose not to comment on the economic issues. He said the federal m e d i a t o r t h a i has been involved in negolialions probably w o n ' t call another meeting u n t i l the end of the m o n t h unless either side requests a session earlier. Other t h a n t h a t n o t h i n g is outlet w i l l enable them to double the hardware, p l u m b i n g and electrical supplies in stock. The new b u i l d i n g will also f e a t u r e a decorating center as part of the company's plan to m a k e the store a complete hardware and home c e n t e r . Herron Builders. Inc. is the c o n t r a c t o r and the Albees say t h a t March I is t h e target date for the opening of the new building. M mm UK* KJUJ nan tost tw=s met ± tu wju aau IIMN (. Two i n c u m b e n t R e p u h l i c a n members of ihe Novesta Township Board were o u s t e f l Tuesday in a I > e n u > c i a t i c ' upsel. In a d d i t i o n , I h e R e p u b l i can supervisor ol E l l i n g t o n tow nship losl his bid for reeh'( l i o n . In Novesta. l o n g - t i m e C'lei k Henry Rock was def e a t e d by Democrat Nursie K l o t . 194-191. The R e p u b l i c a n t r e a s u r e r , (can Clarke, serving her f i r st t e r m , was defeated by E v e r e t t J. Field. 2(i3-18ii. \ otes for Ihe other t o w n ; ship o f f i c i a l s , all Re|)iiblican and unopposed, were \ V i l liam o'Dell, s u p e r v i s o r . 23(1: At Icon Rctheri'ord. t r u s t e e . 234, and D o n a l d . ) . M i l l e r J r . . constable, 22;>. Tuscola County Clerk Elsie Hicks, a Novesta resident, said i t was the first lime she could recall t h a i Democrats have been elected to the t o w n s h i p board. In E l l i n g t o n t o w n s h i p , Frederick J. Bardwell J r . . super visor for six years, was defeated in his bid for reelection by Democrat Jack W Happen, 204-107. Otherc a n d i d a t e s were all Republ i c a n and unopposed: Mona 1, \VJIson. c l e r k . 252 votes; 1'earl A. P u t n a m , treasurer. 2,")-). Robert L. Wood, truslee, 252. and H a r r y Sleele Jr.. constable, 25(1. The only race in Kingston t o w n s h i p was for treasurer, where' R e p u b l i c a n i n c u m bent Louis F. Wen/.iaff defeated challenger K m i l y K. A l b r e c h l . 25:!-177. Supervisor Robert K. G i l more. Republican, got 24!) votes; Democratic Clerk V i c t o r i a K. Wolak. 28(1; Trustee John J. Burns, D e m o c r a t , 274. and R e p u b l i can Wayne Newton, constable. 251. The only candidates in E l k l a n d and Elmwood townships were R e p u b l i c a n incumbents : K l k l a n d : Supervisor, Jack G a l l a g h e r , H52; clerk, Carolyn Ware, 8B(i; treasurer, Art Randall, H7:i; trustee. Fay McComb, !l(12, and constable, Frederick C. M a r t i n , «:{;"). Klrnwood: Supervisor. Roy Messer. 272; clerk, Joanne Sattelberg, 271!: treasurer, Belly J. Russell. 274; trustee, Lewis McCreecly, 267, and constable, Harry King, 255. of the r e p n v i n g , the road surface was 5-8 inches above the should/," on the norlh side. It contends thai because of " t h e dangerous and unsafe condition of said h i g h w a y " the ear went out of control when the right front t i r e dropped off the north eck . . . ' in-. . id and i an i n t o I He tree. According to the s u i t , s t a l e ];iW r e f i i m v f i the contractor to post signs, signals or other devices to warn of the unsafe c o n d i t i o n but Strausberg and Son failed to do so and t h a t the Road Commission knew of the condition but took no a c t i o n to correct il As a d m i n i s t r a t o r of the estate of his daughter. Goslin seeks ,$(154.000 in d a m ages from the defendants, consisting of $350,000 for loss of income she would have earned had she lived. $2(10,000 for pain and suffering incurred by his deceased daughter ( h a l f of which in the name of the e s t a t e ' i SI00,000 for loss of love and companionship and $4.000 for medical and funeral e v pcnscs. The suit also says t h a t judgment may be entered against the defendants for interest on and Ihe cost of l i t i g a t i o n and " f u r t h e r such relief as s h a l l be agreeable to e q u i t y in good conscience." S A N I I . A C COUNTY In A u s t i n township, the present supervisor. Democrat Claire Gril'ka defeated Republican Jerry Peters. Ni7-<i9. The present clerk, Democrat Arnold Lapeer. lost to Republican John Osentoski. 129-110, and the present Democratic treasurer. Joseph Zmich. losl to Republican Mary Spnetzel, Ki9-7(). Sylvester Bukoski. Democrat . won the fouryear term for trustee w i t h 177 votes. Republican Ed Kulish was elected to the two-year trustee term w i t h 142 votes. The only race in Argyle township was for- treasurer, where Republican K . M . O'Connor received 144 votes to write-in candidate Frances Reinelt's 45. There svere no races in all other townships in the area. Township officials start their new terms Nov. 20. See no problem now at Kingston landfill There appeal's to be no The l a n d f i l l belonged to ~ immediate problem from the village of Kingston and I possibly PBB-conlaminalecl was closed in 1974, after the feed clumped a few year's feed was dumped. The prop= ago m a l a n d f i l l near Kings- erty sold, not because of the ton and there may not be a PBB, however. f problem at all. Village Treasurer Mildred According to Jack Bails, Parrott, the former village -Chief of tlit! environmental clerk, said it was closed "enforcement division of the under orders from the DNR. =state Department of Natural Bails said his agency -Resources, l!l 50-pound bags didn't know that the ma_were put in (he landfill on terial had been dumped _the west side of Cemetery there until last week. [Road, about a quarter-mile The information was con"north of M-46 tained in a discovery docu- K e i t h Goslin, father of 11-year-old Marsha Goslin. who was killed in an a u t o mobile crash Nov. 7 of last year, has filed suit against the Tuscola County Road Commission and a paving contractor seeking $(i54,000 in damages. The c o n t r a c t o r : • Frank St: a i i M i e r g ami Soe <n Saginaw. who was under cont r a c t w i t h the Road Commission to resurface part of Bay City-Forestville Road to upgrade it from a class B to a class A road. Miss Goslin svas a passenger in a car driven by her sister. Brenda, which was westbound on Bay City-Fore s t v i l l e , east of Hurds Corner Road. The car went out of control and struck a tree on the south side of the road, k i l l i n g Miss Goslin. The suit says t h a i because and Elmwood, Joslyn, 198; Spires. 102. The prosecutor will start his 10-year term J a n . 1. Circuit Judge M a r t i n E. Clements was unopposed for re-election to a six-year term. He received 10,236 votes. The present Tuscola county district judge, Richard F. Kern, easily outdistanced his challenger. Chief Assist a n t Prosecutor G. Scott Slermer, 9,15:1-3,793. For the second district of the s t a l e Court of Appeals, which covers most of eastern M i c h i g a n , the present judge, Walter P. Cynar received 4.445 votes to 7,754 for challenger K. Thomas Fitzgerald. Filed Monday, the suit has been assigned to Circuit Judge N o r m a n A. Baguley. Goslin, of 3351 Bay CityForestville Road, Gagetown, is being represented by attorney Robert E. Kleeb of Barley i Kleeb of Ilowell. For death of daughter I Construction started Thursday on a new b u i l d i n g for Alhee True V a l u e Hardware at the west v i l l a g e l i m i t s of i'ass C i t y . Thi' store w i l l he nearly 2'.' t i m e s bigger t h a n the present store and w i l l have 15,000 square feel of floor space, according to Dick and Lynn Albee. owners. The present s t u n - is a l i t t l e over li.OOli square feet. The f r o n t of the b u i l d i n g w i l l be cedar and brick. The Albees say t h a t the new TWENTY PAGE.- 79.G percent who voted ml 197(1 in the general election I In K l k l a n d township 1,223| voted out of 1,9(10 registered, which is (12.3 percent I n l Novesta, it was 7(1.(1 per cent,t 40(1 out of 530 registered, and) in Elmwood, (12.4 pel cent, 455 out of 729. Elmwood was the frrstt township to report its vote tol the c o u n t y clerk's office,t coming in w i t h the results a l t 9:20 p . m . Tuesday. As expected, the last two! to report were the only u n i t s ) who s t i l l use paper ballots I Ellington township returns! were brought in at 4:25 a m I Wednesday and the city off Vassar. at 5:45 a.m. In a d d i t i o n to everything [ t h a t everyone else was vot-t ing on, Vassar residents alsot voted on c i t y candidates a n d f . S A N I I . A C COl'NTY a recall of council m e m b e r s ' County Clerk Elsie Hicks! Voters elected a new county D i s t r i c t Judge. Rich- d i d n ' t know t h e t o t a l number I ard 1'. Riordan received of absentee b a l l o t s cast, ;; 728 votes; the present which have to be counted b v f judge. Eugene K. Deegan h a n d , but guessed that t h e r e ! were a b o u t t w i c e as inanv as[ got W.I7. Allen K. Keyes was un- were cast in previous elec [ opposed for re-election as lions. Five t o w n s h i p c l e r k s ? c i r c u i t judge and received used up t h e i r o r i g i n a l allot L merit and had to gel m o r e l 11.752 votes. absentee ballots. For court of Appeals, I n d i n n f i e l d s t o w n s h i p ban! Cynar got 5.798; F i t x g e r a l d , the most absentee \ o t e s ! easl. 3 13. T h u m b area voters \ \ e r e i i i r r t o N COUNTY w i t h the m a j o r i t y of Michi f g a n i a n s in v o t i n g for Go\ I Bad Axe a t t o r n e y M. R i c h W i l l i a m G. M i l l i k e n for i e i ard Knoblock won the new e l e c t i o n but in Ihe i n i n o i i t \ t c i r c u i t j u d g e s h i p o v e r Huron in t h a t rhey favored im 11111-1" County Prosecutor Peter bent U.S. Senator Robert P i Burns Capling, (1,927-4,KC.:i. G."iffi:i over lV'^;::';':i, f \ it l'i.-,tr;c! .nidge .John L e v i n , who won t i n election t Schuble was unopposed for Those in t h e upper' T h u m b ! re-election and got 9.7(17 voted w i t h t h e m a j o r i h ' n fe voles. t h e 11 s t a l e ballot proposals I For Court of Appeals. w i t h one exception. C y n a r got 4.37-1 votes; F i t / S t a t e voters defeated P r o gerakl. 5,45(1. posal R. A h i e h would h a v e t authorized the state to makef low i n t c r e s i loans to r a i l ! Turnout by Tuscola county voters was less t h a n t h a t roads for t r a c k and o t h t i mi f d u r i n g the Presidential elecprovements : tion two years ago. A ma j o r i l y of those in t h e l T h u m b voted in favor ol t h e l Out of the 28.448 registered voters in the c o u n t y , 17,438 measure, possibly because L of the i m p o r t a n c e of r a i l t voted Tuesday. That is roads for h a u l i n g agi icnl \ s l i g h i K over (11 percent of those eligible, compared to tura I goods 3 8 8 Twenty Cents ment filed by the Michigan Farm Bureau Services in a PUB law suit. The document, which it had to submit in response to a motion by the plaintiff, listed sites where PBB-contaminaled feed was buried. Of those sites on the list, reportedly :!14, only three were not already known to the DNR. One of the three was the site near Kingston. An environmental enforcement investigator inPlease turn to page 17. Employees and managem e n t are evidently far apart in negotiations for a new three-year contract at Evans Products Co. in Gagetown. The latest pact to be t u r n e d down by employees was for a total of $1.30 for 3 years. Workers have been seeking a 3-year contract totaling $1.75 plus cost of living not to exceed 30 cents an hour per year. The 95 members of United Steel Workers Local (13(18 have been on strike since last Thursday, their previous three-year- contract with the firm having expired at m i d n i g h t . Negotiations between the company and union began Sept. 24 and workers have twice voted down a company contract offer since then, on Oct. 27 and again on Monday. Union members contend they are paid less than what other industries in the area pay. On the first day of picketing last Thursday, a friend of one of Ihe workers said she had started working the night before at Active Industries in Elkton on the 11 p.m.-7 a.m. shift. She was working as a spray painterarid earning $5.1)0 an hour. In contrast, Ernest Sbresny Jr. of Gagetown, a welder, said he has been working at Evans Products for 18 years and receives $4.99 an hour. The lowest paid workers, union members said, are sweepers who get $3.89 an hour and the highest, jig and f i x t u r e workers who earn a l i t t l e over $5 an hour. According to Dale Purtell. U n i t e d Steelworkers staff representative from Bay City, the local wants either a big enough pay increase to cover i n f l a t i o n or a smallerpay i'lcrease plus cost of living. The union is seeking a 75 cent per hour across the board pay increase the first year and 50 cents increase both the second and third year plus cost-of-living starting the second year w i t h a cap of no more than 30 cents increase in any year. According to union local Recording Secretary Lorna Knoblock. the offer rejected Monday was 55 cents per hour across the board increase the first year, 40 cents the second and 35 cents the third w i t h no cost of living increase. Ten voted for the pact, but as she was at home when contacted by the Chronicle and d i d n ' t have her records with her, couldn't recall how many voted againsl it. Mrs. Knoblock has worked at the plant nine years. Her husband, Walter, is the local president and has worked there about 12 years. The contract rejected the first time, she said, was Ihe same except the company was offering five cents per hour less the third year. Purtell said there are other issues in the negotiations beside pay, but didn't expect any problem in settling them once the pay issue Iteing produced d u r i n g the s t r i k e , he .-.aid there h a \ e L been no problems. i Workers in Gagetown [ make s u p p l y racks for I l i e t a u t o i n d u s t r y a n d sornc-i t u n e s ( a r m implements r Evans Products h a s i t s f headquarters in Portland, )• Oregon. ON STRIKE — Members of United Steelworker Union Local 6368, employed at the Evans Products plant in Gagetown, have had their picket line up since last Thursday after their previous contract with the company expired. PAGE TWO CASS CITY, MICHIGAi CASS CITY CHRONICLE-THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1978 Mrs. Reva Little Cass City Social and Personal Items Mr. and Mrs. Paul Miller and son of Clarkston spent Monday with Mrs. Lyle Biddie. Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Tracy and her father, Theo Hendrick, went to Toledo, Ohio, Saturday to attend the wedding of Jeffery Smith of Clarkston and Miss Susan Henry of Toledo. The wedding took place in the First Unitarian church. The groom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Blaine (Betty Brown) Smith. The group returned home Monday. Mr. Hendrick spent the rest of the week end with Mr. and Mrs. Sherwell Kelly at New Boston. Mr. and Mrs. Tracy were overnight guests in the Ray O'Dell home at Carleton and at the Jim Bol/ home at Willis. / I Mr. and Mrs. Michael Sieradzki A harvest dinner will be held in Salem UM church Saturday evening at sixthirty. Those attending are asked to bring table service and a salad or dessert. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Holm had as guests from Saturday until Monday, his sister, Mrs. Jim Conners, and daughter Sherri of Minneapolis, Minn. Sherri was discharged last week at Baltimore, Maryland, after completing an Army enlistment. Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Holm of Clare were also Sunday guests. Mrs. Grant Ball had as dinner guests Sunday, Mr. and Mrs. Wesley Ball and children of Reese and Mr. and Mrs. Donald Ball and son. Mr. and Mrs. Max Agar Mr. and Mrs. Henry Cooklin of Lansing spent the week had as a guest from Wednesend at the Donald Loomis day u n t i l Friday last week, her sister, Mrs. Leila Huffhome. man of Lapeer. Edward Mark underwent The Deford Craft Club will surgery Nov. 1 in Huron hold their monthly meeting Memorial Hospital, Bad Axe, and returned to his Monday, Nov. i:i, at 7:30 p.m. This is a half-hour home Tuesday. earlier. Members will be Mr. and Mrs. Roger Hart- working on corn husk flowwick, Jeff and Angle of Mil- ers, corn husk wreaths and lington were Sunday visitors Christmas ornaments. at the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Hartwick. ' Jamea McKnight of Irv- mother, his grandmother, Mrs. Irene Sierad/ki of Mt. ing, Texas, and Michael 'Sierad/ki exchanged wed- Clemens, and the bride's ding vows Tuesday, Sept. 2(>, grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. at the A & M United Meth- Earl J. Roberson of Pottsodist church at College Sta- boro, Texas, and a number of the couple's friends. tion, Texas. The groom, stationed with ' The groom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Chester Sier- the Army in F r a n k f u r t , ad/ki of Deford. Lt. Col. and Germany, returned to (he Mrs. James G. McKnight of States for the wedding and Carlisle, PA., are the bride's the couple has returned to Germany. parents. A reception was held in the The bride wore a rosepoinl lace and taffeta gown with lounge at the church. Bonnie crown design veil and car- Reeves of Houston was hostried yellow silk rosebuds ess. with baby's breath. Susan Farguhar of Houston, Texas, was the bride's a t t e n d a n t . She wore a turquoise floor-length gown Leonard V. Thiel, 18, Maywith pinch pleat full skirt ville, and Raelynn K. Lusand lace lop. She carried a comb, 18, Romeo. single yellow silk rose. Donald J. P u t n a m , 44, Bradly I). Lamberth of Vassar, and Sylvia M. Floreville. Texas, Schwaderer, 34, Vassar. groomsman. Lowell C. Frit/ Sr., 37, A t t e n d i n g the wedding Vassar, and Carol A. Clark. ceremony were the groom's 38, Vassar. Kenneth J. Lalko, 21, K i n g s t o n , and C y n t h i a S. Langmaid. 20, Cass C i t y . David P. Weber, 21. M i l l i n g l o n , and Deborah L. Snyder, 2(1, M i l l i n g l o n . W i l l i a m P. Peterson, 52. The Thumb area chapter M i l l i n g t o n . and Larna I). ol the Organic Growers of Koch. 2!l, M i l l i n g l o n . Michigan w i l l meet Thurs.lames (). Dorlnnd, 24, day, N o v . Hi. at 1 p.m. at the Cass C i t y , and Linda S. home of c l u b President Daniels, 2f>, Cass City. Nancy l l o x i e . Willow (.'reek Ronald D. Meader. 2f>. Farms, on I . a m t o n Road, M i l l i n g l o n , and Veronica L. Decker. Jean. ;i;i, F l i n t . There w i l l be an election of Frank E. Androl. 25, Akolfieers. Guests are wel- ron, and Joyce J. VanBev' UlliiC. ei'n, 21. U n i o n v i l l e . Mr. and Mrs, Harold Craig and Mrs. Paul Craig spent the week end at Big Rapids with Mr. and Mrs. Ron Decker. Mrs. Arthur Little accompanied her daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Don Roberts, and son Kevin of Center Line to Mio Friday evening and spent the week end at the Roberts' Mio home. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Putnam entertained at dinner Sunday evening, Mrs. Beatrice Berry of Grayling, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Berry and Mr. and Mrs. Frank Rocheleau of Caro and Mr. and Mrs. John Zinnecker. Mrs. Beatrice Berry came to Caro to attend the funeral of Mrs. Bates Wills Monday. Twenty-four were present Thursday evening when Rev. and Mrs. Eldred Kelley entertained retired members of the congregation of Salem UM church at a dinner at the parsonage. The Progressive class of Salem UM church will meet Thursday evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Walter at 8 p.m. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Beardsley had as guests from Saturday u n t i l Monday, cousins of Mrs. Beardsley. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Alward of London, Out. Everyone is a Winner! Mr. and Mrs. Grant Fry Discount on Every Purchase From our Regular Fall and Winter Selection -Make Your SelectionThen Draw for Your LUCKY LADY DISCOUNT! 50-10% 40-20% 6-30% 4-40% HURRY-JOIN THE FUN- BE A LUCKY LADY at The Clothes Closet Bad Axe Cass City Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Gelbaugh of Plainwell spent the week end with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Holm. Circle I of the Presbyterian Women's Association was in charge of a noon luncheon at the church Monday. Mrs. Hendrikje DeYoung of Bay City, president of the Presbyterian, was guest speaker. She was one of (>4 Presbyterians who in November of 1977 attended seminars in Japan, Hong Kong, Korea, Taiwan and the Philippines. Mrs. DeYoung's assignment was the Philippines. Mrs. James Young and daughter Lori of Caro had lunch Saturday with her mother, Mrs. John Guinther. Marie Ho bar t in Who's Who from Albion Marie Hobart, an Albion College senior, has been named to Who's Who Among Students in American U n i versities and Colleges. A Biology major, she is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ben Hobart, 255K Hobart Road, Gagetown. She is a 1(175 graduate of ('ass City High School. Students are elected to Who's Who by members of their senior class. Those nominated are considered on (he basis of academic achievement, leadership, services to the college and to the c o m m u n i t y and p o t e n t i a l future achievement. John Hane, publisher National Advertising Representative, Michigan Weekly Newspapers. Inc., 257 Michigan Avonue, East Lansing, Mich- Lady Discount 10% to 40% Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Finkbeiner attended a rock-athon at Sebewaing Saturday where their grandson, 11year-old Douglas Holland, was one of 20 from a Sunday school class raising money for missions. The 10-hour effort raised $400.00. CASS CITY CHRONICLE PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY AT CASS CITY, MICHIGAN 6552 Main Street Mrs. Ella Cumper and sister, H a n n a h Pierson of Coleman, spent Thursday in Flint visiting a nephew and son Rav. will receive from The Judson-Berean class of the First Baptist church had a farewell gathering Sunday evening following the regular church service for Mr. and Mrs. demons Kappen who are soon moving from their home on Little Rd., which they sold, to a location west of Caro. Rev. and Mrs. Lew Pizzala of Flint were guest speakers at the Cass City Assembly of God church Nov. f> and dinner guests of Mrs. Elsie Thompson and Georgia. Afternoon callers were Mr. and Mrs. Robert Sherman and son Russell of Royal Oak and Mr. and Mrs. Richard Sherman of St. Petersburg, Fla. The Elm wood Missionary Circle will meet Wednesday, Nov. 15, w i t h Mrs. Alma Walcl and Miss Mary Wald. 100 LUCKY LADIES Mrs. John Guinther and family members were called to Flint recently because of the death of Mrs. Mamie Dyer, 79, sister of the late John Guinther. The group included Mrs. James Young of Caro, Mrs. John Guinther, Mr. and Mrs. Hazen Guinther, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Doerr and son Jim and friend, Mrs. Dick Szarapski, Stanley Guinther and Mr. and Mrs. Jim Guinther. Mrs. Katherinc Martin and Ella Cumper spent last Saturday with an a u n t , Mrs. Susan Kennedy, and Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Sullivan at Imlay City. Dr. and Mrs. Robert Foy and son Tommy of Holt spent the week end with Tom Dewey. Organic farm group to meet Mr. and Mrs. Dick Guinther and daughters, Tina and Nancy, and Joe and Kim Smith were Sunday dinner guests of Mr. Guinther's mother, Mrs. John Guinther, celebrating Dick's birthday. In the afternoon they were callers at the Charles Guinther home. Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Lounsbury had as Sunday evening guests, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Boglarsky of Mt. Clemens and Mr. and Mrs. Tom Lounsbury and son Jake. Mr. and Mrs. Bo Wiles entertained the "Sunshine Gals" and their families at a Halloween hard times party Monday evening, Oct. 30. Twenty adults and Iwo children attended. Marriage Licenses Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Guinther spent the week end at their cabin at Mio. The Alma United Methodist church of Alma was the s e t t i n g for the Aug. 12 1:00 p.m. worship service uniting Jeanne Kli/.abeth Alexander of Cass City and Grant ('aniielo Fry of White Cloud in marriage. Rev. Donald Scranlon and Rev. Charles Fry, uncle of the groom, performed the double-ring ceremony for the d a u g h t e r of Mr. and Mrs. Robert 1). Alexander of ('ass City and the son of Mr. and Mrs. Otis A. Fry of White Cloud. Fscorted by her father, the brick' wore a gown of clotted swiss over taffeta complimented w i t h imported pearl accented Brussels lace. It featured a chokered neckline, long bishop sleeves and floorlength skirt w i t h hack fullness spreading gracefully into an attached chapel t r a i n . A f i n g e r t i p veil of bridal mist illusion was secured to a m a t c h i n g Brussels lace and pearl studded Juliet headpiece. She carried a bouquet of wood fiber pink and w h i t e roses, yellow asters, baby's breath, blue six-petal flowers and greens. Martin 1 Dasef of Grosse Poinle Park, college roomm a t e of the bride, was maid of honor. Bridesmaids were Karen Wagg of Cass City, cousin of the bride, and Sally Ever of Cass City, friend of the bride. The m a i d of honor and bridesmaids were identically a t t i r e d in floor-length ice blue polyester gowns featuring short blue dotted swiss jackets accented with ice blue ribbon edging. Their bouquets consisted of wood fiber white rosebuds, yellow asters, blue six-petal flowers, baby's breath and greens. They wore wood fiber floral headpieces consisting of a wreath of white and blue six-petal flowers, baby's breath and greens. Dan Dosson of Southgate, friend of the groom, was best man. Groomsmen were Clark Fry of White Cloud, brother of the groom, and Phil Wourinen of Southgate, friend of the groom. Rob Alexander and Todcl Alexander of Cass City, brothers of the bride, were ushers. The groom wore a misty blue Seville tuxedo with a white shirt and white ruffle. The groomsmen and ushers wore tuxedos identical to the groom's with a blue edged ruffle. Candlelighters for the ceremony were Jennifer Fry, sister of the groom, and Elizabeth Davis, "Little Sister" of the bride. They wore floor-length ice blue polyester gowns with short puffed sleeves accented by blue dotted swiss pinafores. Each wore a wrist corsage of white asters and blue sixpetal flowers. Organist for the wedding was Jon Steimel, friend of the bridal couple. Soloist was Lorie Hawkins, who sang "You Light Up My Life" and accompanied herself on guitar while singing "The Wedding Song." Additional music included a tape of the groom singing "Evergreen" and of the bride singing a song she wrote entitled "Yours, Ours, His" played during the lighting of the'unity candle. The bride's mother wore a floor-length ice blue floral print gown highlighted by a matching chiffon capelet. The groom's mother wore a dusty pink pleated floorlength dress accented by a chiffon cape. Identical corsages were worn by the mothers consisting of wood fiber yellow sweetheart roses, baby's breath, white asters and greens. A buffet and reception for 200 guests was held in the church fellowship hall following the ceremony. The wedding cake was made by the groom's mother. After a wedding trip to the Pocono Mountains in Pennsylvania, the newly weds are residing in Rochester, ML, where the groom is employed as a research chemist by E.I. duPont de Nemours and Company, Troy, MI. Phone 872-3698 igan. Second class postage paid at Cass City, Michigan 48726 Subscription Price: To post offices in Tuscola, Huron and Sanilac Counties, $6.00 a year or 2 years lor $1050 3 years lor $15.00 $3.50 lor six months and 3 months for $2.25. In other parts ol Ihe United States, $7.00 a year or 2 years lor $13.00 6 months $4.00 and 3 months lor $2 50 50 cents e x t r a charged for part year order. Payable in advance For information regarding newspaper advertising and commercial and jot printing, telephone 872-2010. The American Legioi Auxiliary will meet Monda evening, Nov. 13, at 8 p m. a' the Cultural Center. Th' committee for arrange merits are Mrs. Garnsos Stine and Mrs. Cas Bartnik Mrs. Dorothy Kline of Mil lington, Seventh Distnc American Legion Auxiliar Association officer, will b< making her annual visit tithe Unit. Hills and Dale? General Hospite BIRTHS: Oct. 30, to Mr. and Mrf Johnny Spencer of Deford, boy, Jeremy Lee. Oct. 31, to Mr. and Mrf David LeVeck of Caro, t boy, Jeromy Dean Nov. 3, to Mr. and Mr* Thomas Ruth of Caseville, f girl, Kristen Lynn. PATIENTS LISTED MOf D A Y , NOV. (i, W E R E , f Ralph Hastings, Sherloct Frederick, Norman Enl mons, Robert Helfnch, Jef fery Mulrath of Casb Cityf W i l l i a m Younglove of Ea\ Axe; Mrs. Ida McKnight, Mrf Joseph Lockhart, Scof Gould and Brian Yoe ct Caro; ^ James Lacko, Raymont Krauss and Dale Sigmund cf Sebewaing; Leslie Munro, Bruce Kmt and Jerome Rocheleau <: Gagetown; Robert Wolschlagei <f Owendale; Loren Ewalcl of Unioif ville; Mrs. Victor LeJune r Port Austin; -Mrs. Bernice Neal o. Kingston; = Harold Phelps, Mrs Ryer^ son Pulerbaugh of Snover \ George Reichenbach o; Royal Oak; ^ Mrs. Clara Samson of Sanduskv. = We're the one-stop insurance specialists! Through the Michigan Mutual we offer a wide range of policies for car, business and home . . . with up-to-date features and reasonable rates. Let us show you how to insure everything you own the best way. Call us today! DOERR INSURANCE AGENCY 6440 Huron Street, Cass City Phone 872-3615 '/: UNTERS >«\N W Before the Hunt Join Us For COFFEE and DONUTS We'll Be Open 4:00 a.m. • 5:30 p.m WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 15 See Our COMPLETE LINE SHELLS SOREL BOOTS Extra BARRELS for • SHOTGUNS Fluorescent Orange • HUNTING Vests, Jackets Coveralls, Hats, Gloves Remington, Ithaca & 8KB EVERYTHING FOR YOUR HUNTING HEEDS OPEN- Mon.-Sat. 8 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Thurs. & Fri. Evenings till 9 p.m. CASS CITY SPORTS, INC Phone 872-4630 Plaza West . Dave Luana, Mgr. _ HB • M^.d» M****f* CASS CITY, MICHIGAN CASS CITY CHRONICLE-THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1978 PAGE THREE "If It Fitz... " Rabbit Tracks Chess vs. jacks By John Haire By Jim Fitzgerald I'll tell you one thing. No radio commentators have u n t i l he agreed to crouch in (And anyone else he can one ever shoots the star on promised to commit suicide. the cupboard and shoot his get to help) fivesies by mail. You have to Certainly it will be fasci- pictures through an opening be there. nating to see the touchy in the breaclbox. Jacks is my game. Chess Fischer's reaction to VladiT h a t ' l l give you an idea of The odds are great that the students in Ron Crandell', is another- game. In 1972, mir Zoukhar, the "mad the strain I was under'. But I course in antiques really don't appreciate him. Bobby Fischer won a chess s c i e n t i s t " who put the won, mostly because Mary That's because they may not know the effort he puts intc game and he wasn't even wham my on Korchnoi from Margaret was no match for the course. Crandell runs a gift-antique store in Mackinaw there. a ringside seal, t h u s m a k i n g me in the free figure compeCity. He's there most of the time except for once a week Fischer won I He chess Karpov's victory possible. t i t i o n . when he drives here to teach the course. championship of the world Korchnoi w a n t e d Zoukhar to She conceded defeat when without appearing al the sit in t h e back row. I tossed the ball high, put all game site to make his f i n a l , Fischer will insist t h a i five j a c k s in my mouth, spit victorious move. A special Zoukhar sit outside (he chess t h e m i n t o my s h i r t pocket At one time the Chronicle ran personal items from chair for Fischer' had been arena, under a steam roller one at a time, and then Rescue. It was a mini-community 8 miles north of Cass City flown from New York lo flown in from New Jersey caught the b a l l before it hit 25 years and more ago. Now it is no more. Reykjavik because there for t h e occasion. the floor. The Rescue store has been closed and when the road wasn't a chair' in all of B u t t h a t ' s enough about I'd like to see Bobby builders resurfaced the road the Rescue sign was taken Iceland t h a t f i t Bobby's chess. As mentioned, jacks Fischer m a i l t h a t i n . down. It hasn't been replaced. This bit of intelligentsia l u m p right. B u t . on t h a t lasl is my game. 1 was jacks was sent our way by Dick Hendrick. day, Fischer d i d n ' t show up c h a m p on my block -40 years to sil in i t . ago, edging M a r y Margaret Instead, he stayed in his M o r i a r i t y in a showdown hotel suile and put a w r i t t e n m a t c h t h a i lasted three The rumor is that after two straight years of hosting the chess move i n t o a sealed weeks and delayed Ibe openboys' district basketball games it will be shifted to another envelope and bad it d e l i v - ing of the yo-yo season. I ' l l PROMOTED — Scouts receiving progress awards (promotions in site. ered to his opponent. Boris never lorget t h a t b a t t l e . . . rank) at the Troop 594 court of honor Monday night were, back row, If this is true, all is not lost. The girls' district basketball Spassky. at the chess arena from left, Robert Healy, life rank; James Baker H, bronze palm; John There w i l l be no m a i l tournament will be at Cass City High School again. First t h e r e was a t e r r i b l e where hundreds w a i l e d to delivery S a t u r d a y , the post Healy, life. Front row, from left, William Holdburg, tenderfoot, and watch the big m a t c h . a r g u m e n t a b o u t t h e p l a y i n g office being closed because Jim Palmateer, tenderfoot. They also received various skill awards f i e l d . Should it he wood, conSpassky read the n o t e . of Veterans Day. and-or merit badges. conceded d e f e a t and l e f t . c r e t e or Reynolds LinoAfter monkeying around for a week trying to repair a Fischer made his e n t r a n c e leum'.' \Ve f i n a l l y compropress t h a t was down, we called in an expert. He fixed the mised and played on our an hour' l a t e r . The a u d i e n c e press in about an hour. k i t c h e n floor, which had all had gone home. There was If you're wondering why we waited so long, it's because three s u r f a c e s . The roll of no one else t h e r e except the guy w i t h the know-how lives in Cleveland and it's portal t h e j a c k s d e t e r m i n e d how Gudmundiir Arnlaugsson. to portal pay, plus expenses. the b a l l w o u l d bounce a n d deputy referee of Ihe m a t c h . Despite the financial pain it is a real pleasure to watch a whether the players' He was s t i l l h a n g i n g a r o u n d pro at work. No sweat, no strain. Almost leisurely he does k n u c k l e s were scraped, l i v i n g to gel Ins n a m e the job, packs his tools in his Lincoln and heads back home. s p l i n t e r e d or w a x e d . spelled correctly on the off i c i a l score s h e e t . Then, t h e r e was posture. I Bobby Fischer's six-year favored the kneeling posiold t r i u m p h is rehashed t i o n because it allows greatIn Gagetown there is a speed-limit sign that I noticed for today because it appears he er reach. But Mary M a r g a the first time last week end. is coming on! of i s o l a t i o n lo ret i n s i s t e d we sit on one It's because the :i in 35 has been altered to read 85 miles plav tournament chess b u l l o c k each and play side per hour. again. He has been c h a l saddle \Ve f i n a l l y comproIt's a fairly good job, too. You have to look twice before Cass C i t y police at H:.'i() lenged by A n a t o l y Karpov, A H o n t i a c man was ap- Donald M i l l e r drove there Dyke Road, was t a k e n to the mised b y s i t t i n g I n d i a n you realize t h a t i t ' s the work of thoughtless pranksters. p.m. M o n d a y arrested A l v i n who r e c e n t l y , w i t h the aid of s t y l e . I I ' s t e r r i b l y d i l l ' i c u l t t o prehended by I m l a y C i t y and t h e n took him to Cam. c o u n t y j a i l on charges ol K. Werschsky of lifi.'W (lart r a n s p o r t i n g open i n t o x i Par apsychologist V l a d i m i r police early Tuesday in a car Two Cass C i t y teenagers play jacks s i t t i n g I n d i a n r -f + + -f- -f- -(- + + + l i e l d Street at his home on a Z o u k h a r , made a successful s t y l e , unless you d o n ' t h a v e he was accused of t a k i n g in were t a k e n i n t o c u s t o d y by c a n t s in a m o t o r vehicle and w a r r a n t from the Saginaw improper e x h a u s t ( a l Cass C i t y . defense of his world c h a m p Cam s l a t e police S a t u r d a y a n v knees Life's l i t t l e tragedies d e p a r t m e n t : Monday the Haire County S h e r i f f ' s DepartKinship against Victor Taken i n t o custody was n i g h t a l t e r t h e i r c a r w a s tered i . He was l a t e r relawn was so covered w i t h leaves you'd never know t h a t I m e n t on a charge of overThis t y p e of a r g u i n g con- Louis A. ( i u i l d s . '.VI. Cass stopped in Caro because of leased, p e n d i n g appearance Korchnoi. spent four hours removing them on S a t u r d a y . There is a loaded a x l e . t i n u e d Inr l.'i weeks and C i t y police were lo request a an i m p r o p e r e x h a u s t system in d i s t r i c t c o u r t . Chess promoter F l o i v n c i u silver l i n i n g . Saturday was a great day to be outdoors. He was booked at the I ' i n a l K w e n t i n t o b i n d i n g w a r r a n t Wednesday from and beer was f o u n d in I h e i r His passenger, a lii-yearCanipomanes said he could c o u n t y j a i l and later rea r b i t r a t i o n by K e v i n Seaold bov, was released to t h e r a i s e a Sf> m i l l i o n purse lor the Tuscnla c o u n t y prosecu- car. -f 4• -f + leased on bond, pending i n n s u ' l . o a r v . a n e i g h b o r tor's office c h a r g i n g h i m the Karpov-Fischer m a t c h . T h e d r i v e r . R a n d a l 1 ) . custody of bis f a t h e r . appearance in Saginaw w h o w a s d o p u l s referee u n t i l Their car was stopped at with unlawfully d r i v i n g K a n i s e y . 17. ol f)22l) Van Fischer has a l r e a d y schedI voted Tuesday m o r n i n g as the polls opened. Elwyn countv. ('.o'clock each n i g h t when his away an a u t o m o b i l e . As of H i : Hi p . m . iled a w a r m - u p m a t c h w i l h Helwig, veteran election o f f i c i a l , t i m e d me. It took 3 m o t h e r m a d e him go lo bed. Tuesday a f t e r n o o n , he was SuMo/.ar ( J l i g o r i c . N ' a l u r a l m i n u t e s . I did not have my choices w r i t t e n in advance but being held i n t h e c o u n t y j a i l \ , i t ' s Imped t h a t ( i u d m i i n ( M i c e t h e m a t c h began. did know for whom and what I would vote. p e n d i n g possible issuance of dur \rnlaugsson w i l l be a b l e M a r \ Margaret's dad There were only two persons ahead of me and two behind a warrant. to leferee. If all of t h i s can started t a k i n g pictures w i l h High Low me in line at 7:05, Several of them had crib sheets with their Precip. Denise L. ( i i d d m g s ol I H i l l be a r r a n g e d , a w o r l d w i d e Ins P o l a r o i d w h i l e 1 was choices marked for easy v o t i n g . Wednesday r>n . 1M . (I t o t a l of (1711 newspaper- prool- doing e g g s - m - t h e - b a s k e t . 1 Luder Hoad, Can), t o l d Cass Thursday 711 li-l 0 C i t y police at 12: Hi a . m . teaders and ii.'iii TV and walked out and didn't return Friday 7-1 -4 . . . (i -I- + t- *• t- -I- I- 4- + -)Tuesday t h a t she and G u i l d s Saturday 7i; 'ill o had d r i v e n f r o m Cam In Sunday lin -tn Thelma Jackson, veteran correspondent from Holbrook. Cass C i t y in her car ii has to be the most dedicated w r i t e r I know. Last Wednesday Monday 5d ->> Thev were i n s i d e the Tuesday -Ill !-! she fell and broke her leg chasing the neighbor's cattle. She .10 -.11 i 'olmii'a! I n n and G u i l d s said says she wrote this week's news from Holbrook flat on her i Recorded at Cass City wa.stewater treatment plant.) ()l i t s e n r o l l m e n t o f H i . 2 ( i M . he had to go to the r e s t r o o m . hack. When he d i d n ' t r e t u r n , she t h e second h i g h e s t i n i t s checked o u t s i d e where her (Hi vcar l u s i o n . iufi s t u d e n t s CANDIES car had been p a r k e d , f o u n d are 1mm Tu.-vola c o u n t ) . Hifi i t m i s s i n g a n d c a l l e d police. Irom l l u r n n and 1.17 i r o m Police t h e n put out an S a m l a c The greatest number, area b r o a d c a s t . I m l a y C i t y police slopped ( i u i l d ^ a t l.'.i 12. are i r o m i l a k l . m d 12:. r iil a . m . Cass < ' i l y < MTiccr c o t i n U . from Thumb Pit Stop service a hurry The a ire et ASSORTED C H O C O L A T E S 1 Ib. $3.50 2 Ibs. $6.95 LITTLE AMBASSADORS 1 Ib. $4.85 2lbs. $9.50 O u r e d i t o r c a n ' t under stand why the Chronicle receives l e t t e r s a b o u t t h e lack of a p p r e c i a t i o n for the band a n d n o t h i n g about t h e c u r r e n t c r i s i s about a m b u lance service. "Don't t h e y care'.'" he asks. "U'hon they need one and i t ' s not there, they w i l l care," he says. M i k e , i t ' s n o t because they don't care. I t ' s because i t ' s not personal enough. I n t e l l e c t u a l l y we know t h a i the lack ol an a m b u lance is serious. Very serious. But i t ' s not i m m e d i a t e . When we're s t r u c k by a heart a t t a c k i t ' s serious, i m m e d i a t e and personal. I t ' s also too l a t e lo w r i t e letters. There's a tendency among n o r m a l persons to feel t h a i it won't happen to me. I I ' s what keeps us from going bananas. oli, in the back of our m i n d s we know t h a t it could happen. But i t ' s b e t t e r no! to t h i n k about i t . The "other guy" syndrome has to be s t a l l i n g Ihe a m b u l a n c e service prog r a m . C e r t a i n l y if any of us Ihouglrl f o r a m i n u t e lira! the lack of emergency medical technicians < KMTs> would c'ost the l i t e n| someone clo.se to us. the t o w n s h i p s would be overrun w i t h volunteers instead ol l o o k i n g tor t h e m . Despite t h i s d e l a y a n d t h e apparent public apathy, t h e r e ' s not a shadow ol a doubt t h a t e v e n t u a l l y w e ' l l muddle thrmigh. There w i l l be enough KMTs t o i l n t h e job. And a l t e r i t ' s operating. M i k e , d o n ' t be surprised if we get some l e t t e r s . L e t t e r s t h a t are f u l l of a p p r e c i a t i o n lor the job ( h a t the v o l u n t e e r s are doing. Because w h e n an a m b u lance run is credited w i t h perhaps s a v i n g a life, t h a t ' s personal. And a f t e r a few years a m b u l a n c e service w i l l be regarded just as our fire d e p a r t m e n t is t o d a y . I t ' l l have a t r e m e n d o u s a m o u n t ol good w i l l and Ihe volunteers w i l l do a t r e m e n dous a m o u n t of work to earn it Just as t h e l i r e departm e n t volunteers do today. And the f a l l o u t of all t'his w i l l be a m b u l a n c e service t h a t w i l l be b e t t e r t h a n we have t o d a y . And more t h a n a few letters to the editor. Whether you're having tiro trouble in the field, or you just need a l i t t l e advice, your local 'Pit Stop' service man is as near as your phone. One call to this number brings him right to your farm. And w i t h him come the tools and the training to get the job done f a s t . WhaCs more, he offers you the most complete line of Goodyear farm tires around, plus a wide range of important services to keep you rolling. Whatever your particular tire needs may be, you can rely on your 'Pit Stop' man to be at your service — whenever and wherever you need him. Just give him a call. "WE'RE ALL YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT FARM TIRES" • Fiee o n - l a i m t i r o i n s p e c t i o n and ovnluation program • Flats r e p a i r e d or r e p l a c e d p r o m p t l y • Liquid-filling service lor tires • Complete line of quality Goodyoar farm and auto tires. ACH LIGHT PHARMACY Ph. 872-3613 E WEAVER, Owner Emergency Ph. 872-3283 Your Family Discount Drug Store 6 • • • WAYS TO BUY: • Cash Our Own Customer Credit Plan Crop Terms • American Express BankAmericard • Master Charge GOOD/YCAK L THE CASS CITY CHRONICLE 6168 West Main Street Cass City fiooo/iPr4fl I IM 1 1 3 , mi in ,ih,.,i,, ilit. Jllll, „ ! , I, II ,J ..JljililLillllillilliiilJlllill.! JH.lL.ill. PAGE FOUR CASS CITY CHRONICLE-THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 9, 1978 Group to hear plastic surgeon Dr. Samuel S. Valia, Saginaw plastic surgeon, will discuss plastic surgery related to cleft lip and palate at the Saginaw Valley Cleft Palate Association meeting at 7:30 p.m., Wednesday. Nov. 15, at Delta Family Clinic, 2303 E. Amelith Road, Bay City. CASS CITY, MICHIGAf Governor Big Brothers/Big Sisters oks region Grand opening for the this 14-year-old boy is eager water plan Second Chance consignment to have someone to snow- shop will be all day Monday. The public is invited and refreshments will be served. It is located in the Big Brothers-Big Sisters office at 230 N. State Street, Caro. Single parent Down Memory Lane in Bad Axe FROM THE FILES OF THE CHRONICLE mobile w i t h . He's from Deford, and also enjoys h u n t ing, fishing, and outside spoils. meeting held Gov. William G. Milliken Pain Kahlerfrom Calholit' has formally certified the Family Service in Huroi $1.09 million water quality county spoke on "The Joyf management plan (o abate and Problems of Secoru water pollution in the 14 -I- + + + + + mated damage at about were honored on their 64th Marriages" at a gatherm; FIVE YEAKS AGO counties of east central $2,500 in a fire in a small wedding anniversary. of the Single Woman Parent Michigan. A special Big Brother is The Cass City Intermed- building owned by Eugene Loss of ration books, fuel Self-Enhancement Piojecj The plan, developed by the needed for t h i s 13-year-old Advertise it in the Chronicle. iate School has enough fuel Smentek on DeLong Road. oil and kerosene coupons in the Sacred Heart Parisli With winter approaching, boy from Vassar. He has a East Central Michigan Plan- to heat the building until will mean a wait of 15 days Center in Bad Axe Oct 29 f ning and Development Re- Dec. 1 and after that there variety of interests, both TWENTY-FIVE YEARS after filing application for gion staff, local elected offi- will be no more available indoors and out, and needs AGO duplicates. She spoke about the adt cials and residents identifies from the school's present someone who lives in the The following 17-year-old justmenl in life during an<|= 19 categories of water polluVassal' area. supplier, Bay City Central High boys of the Upper Thumb following divorce or tlxf tion and those t h a t need to be Fire destroyed much of School announced that Art district enlisted in the Navy death of a spouse, bemj h controlled in each watershed the Caro Farmers Co-op Paddy, former + -I- -t- -)• + + assistant during October: Raymond ready to remarry, choice oiof the Region. and football S. Darbee, Raymond L. a partner, problems enl Elevator Sunday night, basketball According to Jim Sygo, causing an estimated $90,000 coach at Central, has been Brady and Duane C. Peti- countered in marriage witlf This cute l i t t l e nine-yearregional chief water quality damage. old has a house full of named head cage mentor at prin, all of Caro, and Paul R. children and in circumf management program planbrothers and doesn't gel Provincial House, Inc., no the school. Schweitzer of Sebewaing. stances of divorce, the ext ner, the plan was developed longer owns the recentlymuch a t t e n t i o n . He needs a The Novesta Church of Robert Profit, son of Mr. partner. Suggestions werd to assist local units of gov- completed nursing home Christ will commemorate its and Mrs. Clair Profit, has given on keeping a marriage^ man to have fun w i t h and ernment in meeting federal complex in Cass City but it Golden Anniversary with a been transferred from Shep- or relationship meaningful fwho enjoys outdoor sports. He lives in the lUillington and state water pollution will continue to lease the special program featuring pard Field, Texas, and is requirements. area. structure and operate the addresses by guest pastors now attending Fenn College Prececling the general The plan will serve as a at Cleveland, Ohio. business for at least the next from other communities. meeting, a business meeting guide for f u t u r e spending of 20 years. Members of the Cass City Negotiations were com- was held with Joan <\ndia^ s t a t e and federal funds to Hunter Bob Watson put his Gavel Club voted to install a pleted Nov. 4, for the trans- kowicz as c h a i i m a n Plan'1" improve water quality in the bow and arrow to good use lighting system for the pic- fer of 147 acres of land two were made toi the next W o u l d n ' t you like to be a region's 14 counties: Bay, late Saturday when he nic grounds for evening use. miles southwest of Cass City business meeting at fi p m f special friend to t h i s super Huron. Sanilac, Tuscola, l i t t l e eight-year-old b o y Jeri Ryan underwent a by the Cass City Sand and Dec. 10 and the generalbagged a 10-point buck on Isabella. M i d l a n d , Saginaw, land he owns east of Cass tonsillectomy at Pleasant Gravel Co. to the county of meeting at 7 .50 at the? PAUL LEONARD & BRUCE KING from Cass C i t y ? He likes to Arenac, Clare, Gratiot, do just about a n y t h i n g from Home Hospital. City. Tuscola. Sacred Heart Parish Center!" fosco, G l a d w i n , Ogemaw q u i e t lo a c t i v e and would The official Elkland Town6148 E. Cass City Road Cass City, Ml 48726 E. Wayne Hackel of KingsJoseph Clement, Henry Bill Waller, y o u t h minister \ m a k e a neat companion for and Hoscommon. Ion is s t i l l picking large, ship Community Chest drive Ball and Stanley McArthur w i l l speak on "Feelings ' JL W i l l ) the governor's certiany man. Office Phone: 517-872-4720 luscious raspberries from a ended and President Wilma left to h u n t deer near Barton The meeting is open to alt f i c a t i o n , Sygo said, the plan Cilv. 10 by 10 foot patch in back of Fry reported a collection of single w o m a n p a r e n t s fe The dependability you want. w i l l now be sent to the U.S. approximately $5,626.80. his house as of Nov.l. E n v i r o n m e n t a l Protection Agents with the farm insurance knowledge Agency for approval. EPA THIRTY-FIVE YEARS TEN Y K A H S AGO Hig Brothers-Big Sisters approval is expected by late you need. AGO in Tuscola county is located J a n u a r y or early Februarv. Voters nixed the sale of at 230 N. S l a t e Street in Many ways to build a farm insurance plan) Mr. and Mrs. William liquor on Sunday. Caro, telephone f>7.'i-(>99(>: in Benjamin Hicks of Deford that works for your operation. The defunct ' Cass City Huron c o u n t y at 122 N. Hospital A u x i l i a r y gave its l a n s e l m a n Street, Bad Axe. funds to the Leader Dogs for REASONS WHY FARM BUREAU MUTUAL telephone 2(i!)-72i;-). and ill the Blind School at RochSanilac c o u n t y at 2(> LexingIS MICHIGAN'S LARGEST FARM INSURER. ester and the Cancer Fund. ton Street. P.O. Box 1. Residents of the village S a n d u s k y . telephone (>-}8The YMCA Thumb Singles c o n t r i b u t e d $209.31 lo the 4-433. FARM BUREAU"^ Club w i l l hold a dance I'MCEF drive, an a l l - t i m e Saturday evening at San- high. INSURANCE dusky High School. E l k l a n d township's drive Music w i l l be provided by for a new fire hall was Learning to be discreet GROUP o f t e n gets us i n l o a lot of John P r i l l and His Pace- boosted when voters okayed trouble. m a k e;TS. a one-mill levy for three September milk producyears. tion of 400 million pounds First pri/e in the C'ass City was 1 percent less than the Chamber of Commerce same month in 1977, accordsponsored window contest ing to the Michigan Crop went to the scene created by Reporting Service. Wendy W h i t t a k o r . The decrease came deChief Nelson Willy esti- spile an increase in the number of cows, up 3,000 from a year ago to 408,000. The production increase was more than offset by the continuing low output of 980 pounds per cow, 15 pounds less than they were producing a year earlier. Two years ago, however, Michigan cows were only producing 955 pounds. The state's dairy farmers j M a t i l d a Charlotte (Teliai in September increased i H u n t e r of (iagetown died ' Saturday at the Tuscola their grain and concentrate I County Medical Care Facil- feeding to an average of 14.3 EVERYDAY LOW PRICES ity in Caro a f t e r a short pounds per cow, an increase of l.-l pounds from a year illness. She was horn Nov. 150, 1878, ago and 1.7 pounds from two in O n t a r i o . Canada, the years ago. September milk producdaughter of John and C a t h tion in the United States erine M a l l , coming to the (iagctown area as a small totaled 9.73 billion pounds, 31/2" x 31/2" down 1 percent from a year child w i t h her parents. Single Prints Miss Mall married earlier. Production per cow averaged 897 pounds, 1 From 126 Rolls Cyrenius P. H u n t e r in June, 1 Plus Processing 1901), in Gagctown. He was pound less than a year the owner and operator of earlier but '27 pounds more Hunter's Funeral Home in than September, 1976. There Gagetown. Mrs. Hunter was were 10.8 million milk cows 3V 2 " x 4V2" postmaster of Gagetown in the country, off 1 percent Single Prints from lilUli u n t i l 19-17, when from 12 months earlier. From 110 Rolls Accumulated milk proshe retired. Her husband Plus Processing duction for (he first nine passed away July 1:5, 19.'i(i. months of 1978 nationally Mrs. H u n t e r was the oldest member of St. Agatha's was down 1 percent from the Catholic church of Gage- same period last year but up town. For many years she 2 percent from the same was secretary of the Royal period in 1970. The September milk-feed Order of Gleaners in this MIKE WEAVER, Owner Ph. 8. area. She was also a mem- price ratio nationally was Einerpency Ph. 872-3283 ; ber of the Gagetown Wo- 1.81, up from 1.7G in August ; and also September, 1977, men's Study Club. Your Family Discount Drug Sloi She is survived by one due to higher miJk prices. d a u g h t e r , Mrs. Delos ( P a u l ine) Wood of Toledo, Ohio; two sons, Francis Hunter of Grosse Pointe Woods and William Carrol Hunter of Gagetown; i:i grandchildren, and Hi great-grandchildren. Seven sister's preceded her in death. A rosary was recited SunVontoH nac ^^ day evening at Little's Vented Gas Moator Heater Funeral Home, Cass City. Funeral mass was conducted Monday morning from St. Agatha's Catholic church. Father Norman Van Poppelen o f f i c i a t i n g . Heats Up to 5 Rooms Burial was in St. Agatha cemetery, Gagetown. Top-O-Matic Controls YOUR DOLLARS, OUR FARMOWNERS INSURANCE. A HARDWORKING PARTNERSHIP ® Dance slated on Saturday Milk output down in September I Mrs. Telia dies at 99 COLO! YOUR MONEY MULTIPLIES WITH THUMB NATIONAL DIFFERENT SAVINGS PLANS I COACH IIGHT PHA 5% on Passbook Savings 5l/2 % on 90-Day Passbook 6% on 1-Year Passbook 6l/2 % on a 2y2-Year Passbook 71A % on a 4-Year Certificate 7l/2 % on a 6-Year Certificate 73/4 % on an 8-Year Certificate 6-Month Money Market Certificates at Current Rates REDUCE HEATING COSTS NOW! Warm Iflarnlna TIIK I.OSKHS » Interest On All Savings Accounts Paid From Date of Deposit to Date of Withdrawal It's a revolting sight to see people squandering money — when we have none to squander. • Big 50.000 BTU Capacity iu,.. • Carpet of Comfort Blower MODEL VR-50 MAG A substantial interest penalty is required for curly withdrawal of time savings. CASS CITY BRANCH See us tor all your heating purposes. VISA, Master Charge or use our convenient payment plan Hours S a m to 5 p m (Monday thru Friday) THUMB NATIONAL BANK 6128 W. Cass City Rd. AND TRUST COMPANY SOUlHMSfERN ,\ /MICHIGAN ,A\ &4S /f|\ COV1B4NY — Phone 872-4311 HOURS: Mon.-Thurs. 9-4 — Fri. 9-8 — Sat. 9-12 l;rcc Checking - No Minimum, No Service Charge' FREE COFFEE AND DONUTS ANYTIME Sandusky: 648-2333 Caro's Leading Jeweler Phone 673-2444 Check your telephone directory for a toll free number for your area. iliiliiiUiiiilttili CASS CITY, MICHIGAN CASS CITY CHRONICLE-THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1978 PEDALING AROUND PAGE FIVE Grindstone City artist in Cass Teen By Mike Eliasohn The works of Grindstone City artist Ann Mikolowski will be on display at the Rawson Memorial Library starling w i t h a reception for the artist Sunday. The exhibition is being sponsored by the Cass City Arts Council and will run during regular library hours for a! least three weeks, according to council President Linda Albee. If (here is s u f f i c i e n t interest, the display w i l l run longer. The reception will run has been the recipient of several awards and grants, including a Scarab Club (Detroit) Silver Medal in 1977 and a Thumb Council for the Arts award in 1976. She was the recipient of a Coordinating Council of Literary Magazines grant in 1973 and National Endowment for the Arts Small Press grant: in 1975. She received her formal t r a i n i n g at Cass Technical High School, the Society for Arts and Crafts and Wayne State University, all in Detroit. She worked as a keyline artist for Chrysler Corp. from 1958-61 and i n d u s t r i a l illustrator for the Ford Motor Co. from 1904-06. In 1972 and 1973, she was a free lance i l l u s t r a t o r for the Det r o i t Free Press Sunday magazine. She and her husband. Ken, a poet, started The Alternative Press in 1909. On a small hand press, they p r i n t eontemporary poetry and art, which they sell n a t i o n a l l y and i n t e r n a t i o n a l l y by subscription. In A u g u s t . 1974, the couple, along w i t h t h e i r two c h i l d r e n , moved t h e i r operat i o n from Detroit to G r i n d stone C i t y . Their shop is in the downstairs of what was o r i g i n a l l y a general store, b u i l t in lilH-l. They live upstairs. Mrs. M i k o l o w s k i teaches an a d u l t e d u c a t i o n class in Bad Axe in d r a w i n g and painting. Her husband teaches a creative w r i t i n g class at the U n i v e r s i t y of Michigan. was open almost to his In my continuing search navel. Remember when the for an easy way to make a only singer who could get living, I missed one. away with that was Harry Unfortunately, I missed it Belafonte?) by about 15 years. I should Garrett's racket is a good have been a teenage idol. Dick Clark on his "Live way to make easy money. Become famous for doing Wednesday" program last something and then you can Wednesday had the latest teen idol, Leif Garrett. At get away with doing it not as least I assume he is the well or for doing something latest teen idol. Dick Clark, else that you are not very the world's oldest teenager good at but people will pay said he was, and there were you for doing anyway. For instance, Pablo some teenybopper girls in Picasso. He may have been the audience who screamed a good artist once but in his whenever Clark mentioned later years - he lived to the kid's name. Garrett, 17, looks like an about 90 - he lost his touch. But all he had to do was average teenaged juvenile delinquent with long messy draw a few lines on a piece of paper, i n i t i a l it, and he hair and money. I assume he is on some could sell it for several television program which 1 thousand dollars. (A more obviously d o n ' t watch. Go- sophisticated version of that is called c o u n t e r f e i t i n g . ) ing back to the clays of David Become famous as an Cassidy, t h a t seems to be the a t h l e t e and you can spend way teen idols become teen the rest of your life selling a idols these days. So assuming Leif G a r r e t ! book a b o u t your life, c u t t i n g supermarket is on t e l e v i s i o n , maybe he ribbons a t openings and a d v e r t i s i n g can a c t . He c e r t a i n l y c a n ' t soda pop on t e l e v i s i o n . (Or sing. I m u s t admit I did nof see you can become a sports anG a r r e t t ' s e n t i r e perform- nouncer, i Considering w h a t I do for ance on (lie Dick Clark show as 1 was c l e a n i n g my b a t h - a l i v i n g , wh;.' I should do is ioom at t h e t i m e . ( N o w you w r i t e t h e Great A m e r i c a n Ann Mikolowski all know w h a t glamorous Novel. One big book and I lives we bachelors lead - could spend the rest of my from 7-9 p . m . R e f r e s h m e n t s except for Leif (Jarre! t, l i f e l i v i n g off of royalties and w i l l be served. whose m o t h e r probably s t i l l by w r i t i n g pap. Mrs. M i k o l o w s k i . :>H. w i l l Some big a u t h o r s only cleans his b a t h r o o m , i have water colors and drawI did catch a few glimpses have one big b o o k , i n t h e m . ings on d i s p l a y . She has done of his performance. What he A f t e r t h a t t h e y w r i t e t r i v i a numerous d r a w i n g s for but because t h e i r name is on did, at least w h i l e I was books and m a ga/ines. w a t c h i n g , was j u m p around i t , i t s t i l l sells. To get on a t a n g e n t , I'm on the stage like Mick Her works have appeared Jagger of the R o l l i n g Stones c o n t i n u a l l y ama/ed by some in n u m e r o u s shows and in and yell i n t o the microphone of the books t h a t get pubgalleries in D e t r o i t and she 1 lished -- w h i c h probably once in a w h i l e . The music and back- don't sell well a f t e r w a r d s . giound singers were so loud For instance the wife of t h a t even when he did yell ex-Olympics s t a r Bruce .leni n t o the microphone, you ner ( t h e one in t h e Wheaties c o u l d n ' t hear h i m . That was commercials i wrote a book no doubt done on pin-pose. If about her l i f e . Who cares'.' But back to my being a anyone actually heard him sing, they would know t h a t teen i d o l . Being r e a l i s t i c , it never would h a v e worked. 1 he can't sing. It G a r r e t t performs at a would have been w i l l i n g to concert - and i-; as big a teen go a r o u n d w i t h my shirt The Thumb cost taxpayers more money dol as Dick Clark says he is unbuttoned if t h a t ' s what it gressman and and passage meant no in- the screams from his fans took but all you would have lives i n t h crease in taxes, voters in seen is my u n d e r s h i r t . vould be so loud t h a t he easily won H u r o n and Sanilac counties vouldn'l need a loud band I f ; -- • r day.' defeated s i m i l a r proposals ind backup singers so t h a t In the illli Cungri'ssional autliori/int! their respective hey wouldn't know he can't P.S. A l t e r w r i t i n g this, 1 District. Democrat Bob c o u n t i e s to borrow money mg came across an a r t i c l e in the T r a x l e r ol Day ( ' i l y received for lax r e v o l v i n g funds, to be Not a bad racket for new issue of People magaKil.91-! voles to fii.:)ii:) tor his backed by the f u l l f a i t h and .omeone who doesn't h a \ c /ine a b o u t G a r r e t ! . 1 was conservative Republican opcredit of the c o u n t y . uiii on his c l k ' s t . 1 1 know he wrong, he made it big in the ponent. Norman Hughes of In H u r o n , the measure to ioesn't because his shirt record business and apM e l a m o r a . not i n c l u d i n g t h e a u t h o r i z e borrowing SI.5 1 peared in a movie before r e s u l t s li'om A r e n a c count) , m i l l i o n in each of two years d e b u t i n g on the television which forms a small portion was d e f e a t e d . 5.:)95-4,457. In show " F a m i l y " last m o n t h of t h e d i s t r i c t . Sanikic. the re-quest was to for a couple guest appearTraxler received his borrow SI.8 m i l l i o n in each ances. But to show how old greatest m a r g i n of v i c t o r y in of two years. It was deI'm g e t t i n g , t h e r e was a Hay c o u n t y , r o l l i n g up 29.H30 f e a t e d , 7.050-0.239. photo in the a r t i c l e ol ( J a r votes to o n l v 9.()(iii for his The money w i l l now have ret! w i t h his m o t h e r . I o p p o n e n t . In Saginaw counto he borrowed at a higher y , lie got 30.0fi4 votes to i n t e r e s t r a t e . It will be used J tt ehrorui fgihct. his mother looked t1H.-1:~)3 for Hughes and in to r e i m b u r s e local governLapcer, 1 1 .K77 to 0.927 for t h e m e n t a l u n i t s and schools for Republican. d e l i n q u e n t taxes. The county Two Will Be Admitte Figures for the t h r e e upt h e n collects the delinquent for $2.25 on Monda per T h u m b c o u n t i e s are t a x e s and the l a t e payment c o n t a i n e d in the t a b l e elseNight! Come & Save where in t h i s issue. CITY »•»••• (4 Days) November 9-10-11-12 THURSDAY ALL SEATS $1.00 — 8.00 ONLY Fri.-Sat.-Sun. 7:30 & 9:40 Just when you thought it was safe to go back in the water... -—•"- EAGLE BAY, near Grindstone City. Drawing by Ann Mikolowski. One new commissioner There will only be one new gins, 525. D i s t r i c t 5 - Margaret face on the Tuscola County W e n t a , 1,27:); John B. Hiilin. Board of Commissioners in 1979, that of Hoyce Russell of 9-4:). Elm wood t o w n s h i p , who D i s t r i c t li - Robert R u s won the Republican primary sell. 1,2(12; George W. Clark in August for d i s t r i c t 2 and .Jr.. l,i:!2. was unopposed Tuesday. He District 7 - Kenneth Kenreceived 1,(!71 votes. nedy. l.iiii-1; L e t i t i a T a r r a n t . He replaces M a y n a r d Mc- «:):").' Conkey. who d i d n ' t run for W e n t a . Russell and Kenre-election. The d i s t r i c t consists of Klmwood. K l k l a n d , nedy are Democrats, the E l l i n g t o n and Novesta town- rest Republicans. ships and t h e north, half of SAMI.AC COUNTY Kingston t o w n s h i p . The rest of the commisIn d i s t r i c t 1 of the Sanilac sioners on the board all sought re-election and all County Hoard of Commiswere successful. Results sioners, the present commissioner. Republican were: D i s t r i c t 1 - Donna R a y l , Lloyd Severance won reelection. 1,01(1-7(11 over Dem1 ,:«il; Ralph Rasch. »!I7. D i s t r i c t 3 - Paul N a g y . ocrat Eileen Riess. The d i s t r i c t consists of 1.732; Gordon A. Tagged, G r e e n l e a l , Evergreen. La7-10. District 4 - ,). Benson Col- m o t t e , Moore and Argyle Ion, 1,21)9; Vernon M. Hig- townships. COMIMG THURSDAY NOV. U Don Knotts in Disney's ^^•»1*«B»<M SELL HOMES AND BUILDING MATERIALS, TOO The Want Ads Arc Newsy Friday and Saturday Only! November 10-11 4 Limited Engagement...Don't Miss This One.' PETER FRAMPTON THE BEE GEES _ 'SGT. PEPPER'S LONELY HEARTS CLUB BAND' V I C:.A! N f L! A:,! 7 to" 71 ' ' H M i ' f i U ' l - '• I'ANAVISION ' IICIDOLBY'STEREO STATI-: SK.NATK With returns incomplete. R e p u b l i c a n A l v i n Dedrow of Pigeon r e t a i n e d his seal in the stale Senate over Democratic challenger Kathleen Asher of Vassar, 33, -15925,207. Totals from S t . ( ' l a i r and Macomb counties, a small part of the d i s t r i c t were una v a i l a b l e as ol press t i m e . In Tuscola c o u n t y , he won I1.5H2 votes to 7,505 for Asher; 8.84(1 in S a n i l a c (4.(1(1(1 for Asher i ; 9.405 in Lapcer county ( 7 . 7 1 8 ) . and (1,500 in Huron ( f > , 2 9 H i . In M i c h i g a n you are never more t h a n six miles from a l a k e or a stream. LIMITED ENGAGEMENT f X l t h H O I S K IMSTHKT Ki A Very Special Matinee Program for All the Family...Saturday and Sunday Only I NOVEMBER 11 and 12 ALL SEATS ONLY $1.00 for ADULTS and CHIL DREN...COMEand ENJOY! SUN-MON-TUES ONLY! NOVEMBER 12-14 Two Outstanding Features...First Showingsl afunny love story Calls" IEOHCOIOR The wdrli THE GREEK •X•XAn abto hlnn I'tuilui lion • A 'Universal Release rr • '»< UWVIMU Cll,» ITUOlAl. MC * R e p u b l i c a n Loren Armbruster of Caro had no trouble- d e f e a t i n g Democrat James McCann of Akron, 10,072-1(1,200. He received 9,950 votes in Tuscola counts 1 to 0,244 for M c C a n n ; 4,045 votes to :(.(ll(i in Genesee (14 out of 18 precincts r e p o r t i n g ) , and 2,1)71-401) in Saginaw county. 7 7 t h l I ( ) r S K lUSTKHT Republican Quincy Hoffman of Applegate, the inc u m b e n t , bad no trouble defeating Democrat Richard Davies of Melvin, 17,917ti.t'MO. The returns don't include those from SI. ('lair county, a small portion of the district, which were u n a v a i l a b l e as of press time. H o f f m a n piled up 9,336 votes in Sanilac county, 7,093 in Huron and 8811 in La peer county, to 4,171 votes, 3,851 votes, and 024 respectively for his opponent. COUNTY TAX NOTES Despite the fact that defeat of the measure would m you have to walk through unbelievable darkness to reach the light m a better yield in any field The working man is always looking for the highest possible yield in his own field or in the field of finance. Look at these important benefits a convenience card account at Mutual Savings offers you: Emergency Cash—available nt over 4500 locations BAD AXE THEATRE Show Times 7 p.m. & 9 p.m. nightly Transmatic Transfers—save automatically for the things you've always wanted CASS CITY: 6454 Main St. Fee-Free—travelers checks and money orders Direct Deposits—automatic and safe deposit of social security, civil service or railroad retirement checks to your savings account Mutual Savings is a better yield in any field. SAVINGS 2 p.m. matinee Sun., Nov. 12 Advanced coupons are avail able by calling 479-9433. Remember, we pay %% more than all banks. »yilii,i,ii!iiii,,i mull , jit IN iii ;uli ihLiiiiiiiji, i, .,,11,1 PAGE SIX CASS CITY CHRONICLE-THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1978 CASS CITY, MICHIGAN AI BEE'S Marie Meredith Shabbona Area News SPECIALS! GUNS* AMMO ^ CLOTHING SHOTGUNS Model 870 Remington Deer Gun 164 95 Automatic From 8KB Deer Gun From Model 1100 Automatic 239 Remington Deer Gun Check Our 95 See Our Large Selection LOW PRICES™ Fluorescent Orange • HATS • GLOVES • PANTS • JACKETS AT SPECIAL LOW PRICES BY Remington and Winchester Fluorescent Orange Insulated COVERALLS $ 3195 $ 3495 $ 2188 S.M.L&XL Reversible Dacron Filled Camouflage & Fluorescent Orange JACKETS Reversible Dacron Filled Camouflage & Fluorescent Orange VESTS HARDWARE! CassCity Phone 872-2270 $13 million project ok'd at Caro center Phone 672-9489 The Caro Regional Mental Health Center has received approval from the state health director to remodel and renovate 10 cottages at the center to correct code deficiencies. The $13,278,000 project will be completed in five phases. Three cottages will be remodeled by February, 1979; three by October, 1979; two by June, 1980; one by February, 1981, and one by October, 1981. attended the wedding of Jim Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Smith Dorland and Linda Boyle at attended the Gideon banquet nex, for supper. Cam United Brethren Saturday evening al San- Mrs. Curtis Cleland welchurch Saturday. comed the group. Group dusky High School. Mrs. Gladys Hichens Mrs. Bob Brown and singing was led by Miss spent the week end visiting daughter Debbie of Cass Lillian Dunlap. Readings by Mrs. Frank Pel ton. Satur- City visited Mrs. Frank Mrs. Bruce Kritzman and day they attended the wed- Pclton Sunday afternoon. Mrs. Howard Gregg were ding of Sandra Pallas at Mrs. Dale Leslie and presented. Games were Akron. daughters, Robbie, Merilee played. Mr. and Mrs. Andy Hoagg and A n n a , attended the wedand Miss Grace Wheeler ding of Sandra Pallas Saturvisited Mrs. Rufus Walker at day evening. Marlette Thursday. Mrs. Fred Emigh, presiMr. and Mrs. Ralph Smith The facility currently Mrs. Dan Maslen, Mrs. were Sunday dinner guests dent of the Pioneer Group, Clair Auslancler, Mrs. Fred of Mr. and Mrs. Vern Geis- announces the group will go serves 556 residents in its Emigh, Mrs. Arlie Gray, ler of Marlette. Other guests to Veronica's in Cass City intensive care mental reMrs. Mary Vatter, Mrs. were Mark Geister of Ferris for dinner Nov. 16 at 1:00 tardation facility and 146 residents in its skilled nursNclin Richardson, M r s . State College, Mr. and Mrs. p.m. ing component. After renoMarie Snell, Marie Meredith Leigh F r a n k l i n and daughThe Neighborettes will vation, there will be a reducand M r s . George Krauso ter of Brown City and Mrs. Influenza vaccine for high attended the Craft Show at meet Nov. 15 at 8p.m. at the tion of 108 beds in the Heather Westover. risk individuals - those with Sandusky intensive care facility. home of Bonnie Laming. High School Mr. and Mrs. Randy Smith chronic health problems - Thursday evening. There will be no change in and f a m i l y were Sunday has been supplied to the nursing staff. Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Tib- evening callers of Mr. and Sanilac County Health De- bitts and boys of Detroit Mrs. Don S m i t h and f a m i l y . partment for immediate spent the week end w i t h The state health director's use. decision was approved by Mrs. Don Krause and A n n a . I I I I . I / r o l ' I ' K K S The vaccine offers protecthe East Central Michigan Mrs. Ryerson Puterbaugh tion against three influenza is a p a t i e n t in Hills and Health Systems Agency and The Hil Hoppers of the strains, the A-USSR, Dales Hospital, Cass City. state administrators of the HLDS church entertained A-Texas, and B-Hong Kong. federal Hill-Burton proMrs. Nelin Richardson the Sunshine Gang Sunday For individuals not yet vac- and Mrs. Mary V a t t e r were gram. evening, at the church ancinated or who are unable to Sunday afternoon callers of receive influenza vaccine Mr. and Mrs. Willis Brawn from their physicians, it w i l l at Cass C i t y . As host county for the be offered at 'the Health Dearea, the Lapeer County partment clinics this ThursCooperative Extension ServIH'.NCO .NOV. I l l - I T day and Nov. Hi. ice w i l l present "Holiday Two types of vaccine arc Happenings" Monday from The Bunco Group met MONDAY a v a i l a b l e ; namely, for high Saturday evening, Nov. 4. 1-4 p.m. or 7-10 p.m. at Hie risk youths ages 13-25 years w i t h Mrs. Cecil Navarro. Lapeer County Center BuildFislwich ing. and for high risk adults 2(> High was won by Joe Riley T a r t a r Sauce years and over. High risk and low by Mrs. Arlie Gray. A t e n t a t i v e schedule of Chins i n d i v i d u a l s include those The door prize w i n n e r was events includes ideas in While Milk age 65 and over and (hose Jeff Wheeler. consumer education, a tastFruil Cup 1 w i t h conditions such as d i a ing session, demonstration The next m e e t i n g , Nov. 18. betes, heart, lung or kidney w i l l be w i t h Mr. and Mrs. ideas, sharing and reporting 1 Tl KSD.AY disease and other chronic Clair Auslander. sessions, n u t r i t i o n plans, a illness t h a t lower the body's question and answer period, Chicken Noodle Soup resistance to infection. and m u c h , much more. 4 + 4 f + -I Crackers The h e a l t h d e p a r t m e n t is Each p a r t i c i p a n t a t t e n d Tuna Sandwich located at 115 N. Klk Street. ing w i l l receive a resource Mr. and Mrs. Don S m i t h A plan for your child Tickles Sandusky and clinic hours and f a m i l y and Mr. and book of ideas and recipes. White.Milk that provides up to both days are il:.'ii)-ll :HO Mrs. R a n d y S m i t h and f a m There w i l l be no cost. "The Apple Sauce $4,000 of life insurance a.m. and 1 ::i()-4:OD p . m . ily were Friday supper program is open to everyone .More i n f o r m a t i o n can be guests of Mr. and M r s . for one low premium i n t e r e s t e d in dairy foods." \VKI).\KS[).\Y obtained by c a l l i n g the De- R a y m o n d H u e r k l e Jr. They says Marbara Ayre, 4-11 until age 23... p a r t m e n t at cil.'ii (i4ll-i>l(i(ior celebrated Mrs. Don S m i t h ' s Program A s s i s t a n t for Tus- Then automatically l l o ! I )oi; & I H i n cola c o u n t y . birlhdav. Chijis converts to permanent R e g i s t r a t i o n is not reM u t t e r e d Beans life insurance quired, but would be h e l p f u l . White.Milk Contact the Cooperative Exguaranteeing up to A p p l e Crisp tension Service Office in $140,000 worth of Caro at (i73-:il(i! for f u r t h e r protection TIHHSDAY i n f o r m a t i o n and directions to the Lapeer County Center (ioiilash Building. Cheese The Michigan Milk ProMread-Mutter ducers Association are the Teach Slices sponsors of "Holiday HapWhile.Milk penings." Their focus aims ('tinkle toward dairy food education. Dr. (iale Maumgardner, AL SWIDERSKI FRIDAY dairy y o u t h specialist from 872-4731 M i c h i g a n S t a t e University Marliecue mi nun or toll free w i l l conduct the program. Mr. and Mrs. John Dunlap spent Friday afternoon with Mr. and Mrs. Don Smith and family. They came to help celebrate Janice's birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Wilfred Turner were Thursday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Pearl and family of Richmond. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Smith Sanilac has influenza vaccine meeting set for area Memberl_ife23 Sfhool Menu ONE PAYMENT PREMIUM Unbelievable? Believable! WEEK ONLY 25" Works in a Drawer Color TV Muttered Corn Chips While.Milk 1-800-322-1120 The Want Ads are newsy, too. Cookie 13" Portable Color TV Menu subject to chan.ue. Activities set for (Catholic women x group 100:i. Solid Stale Service Miser Chassis • In-line Picture Tube with additional pre-focus lens • Weighs only 3')' .• Ibs • Uses loss energy than a 75 wall bulb Hypiwli • Walnut gram finish on plastic cabinet WP3033PW. $ Save NOW S 52 ONLY 298 00 Plus 1 Year Free Service Quasar 25 Console Color TV 12" Quasar Black& White TV ; i > - K ) y than two 60 wait light bulbs $ Your Choice $ 599»? 21 Months Fffff SERVICE on all Quasar Console Color TV's -""."-—-^i^-'tTsr7 a Portable TV's in stock •——. / Mediterranean Styling Model WL 9-119PP HURRY WHILE SELECTION IS GREATEST. ICHARD'S 6467 Main St. On All Color Big vmgs • On All Quasar 25" Console Color TV TV, APPLIANCE & FURNITURE Phone 872-2930 St. T a n c r a t i u s Women's Council met Nov. li at the social h a l l . Speaker lor the evening was O f f i c e r Hon Schneider, from the M i c h i g a n State Police post in Caro. He showed a f i l m s t r i p and ^ave a t a l k on Self P r o t e c t i o n . A bake sale - m i n i ha/aar w i l l be held in December for the p a r i s h . A p a r i s h - w i d e Christmas parly w i l l t a k e place at the council's next m e e t i n g . Dec. •I. Dei 1 . :i. all women of SI. P a n c r a l i u s are i n v i t e d to sit together to receive the K u e h a r i s t as a body. Stale of Michigan. The Probate Court for the County of Tuscola. K s t a t e n f Velda M. Diebel, deceased. File No. 23578. T A K K N O T I C K : On November 27, l!i7H, at 10:00 a.m., in the Probate Courtroom, Caro, M i c h i g a n , before the H u n . W. Wallace Kent, Jr.. Judge of Probate, a hearing w i l l be held on the p e t i t i o n of Carolyn Joyce 1'1'aff and Terri J. Strieter for license to sell real estate of said deceased. Persons interested in said estate are directed to appear at said hearing to show cause why such license should not be granted. Dated: November (i, 11)78. A t t o r n e y tor Petitioner: Donald R.'Clark, Attorney at Law, U 5 N . Han.selman, Bad Axe, Mich. •I841H. Phone 517 2li!)-(i4H7. Carolyn Pfal'f and Terri Strieter', Petitioner, 21)03 S. Van Dyke, Bad Axe, Mich. 4IM13. 24Hi Caseville Road, Bay Port, Mich. 48720. The Probate Court, County of Tuscola. I nearby certify that the foregoing is a true copy of the original on file in said court. Marilyn J. Griffis, -'egister of Probate. 11-9-1 Professional and Business DIRECTORY DR. W.S. SELBY Optometrist Hours f i - ' , f . < : i ' | i ! ;''u".,Mv DR. E.PAUL LOCKWOOD Chiropractic Physician OHice Hours Mm 4624 Hill Si M !• ,'M[i.l,",M,,-.l,>\, Phone 872-3404 Allen Witherspoon N ' - V , I - l ( | : , r u ] 1 '•• M 1 l l ' . , A V . I U'n! Physician & Surgeon CLINIC 4674 Hill Street, Cass City f , i i i |l, !, • ; , ' „ ! r,.-,-.|.,:.,.( .,•]:]•, Phom-8/2-2321 4.6 15 Oak Harold T. Donahue M.D. C.iSiCily K.I. MacRae, D.O. Osteopathic Physician and Surgeon Curni.T C h u r c n and Oak Sueel r > Ollicub722BaO R u u 8/23365 DR.J. H. GEISSINGER Chiropractor 21 N Almur. Cato. Michigan Phono 6/3-4464 James Ballard, M. D. O f f i c e at 4530 Weaver Street Harris-Hampshire Agency, Inc. Complete Insurance Services 681ft E C a s s C i t y Road Cass Cily, Michigan Phono 872-2688 Saib A. Isterabadi, M.D. 4674 Hill Street Cass City, Michigan 48726 General Surgeon Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgeon O f f i c e Hours: Thursday Alternoon 1-5 p m. Phone 872-2323 EfrenM, Dizon, M.D. Perla A. Espino, M.D. DO YOU HAVE A DRINKING PROBLEM? ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS andAL-ANON tvery Friday Evening - 8:00 p.m. Good Stiophmd L.ulhoran Church CassCity Edward Scollon, D.V.M. Veterinarian Call (or Appointment tor Small Animals Phone 872-2935 4849 N. Sooner SI., Cass Cily Diplomates of the American Board of Pediatrics (Practice limited to Infants and Children) 4674 Hill SI. Cass Cily. Mich. 48/26 lAuosii liorn M i l l s & Da Ins Hospil.ll) Phono5l/-872-43a4 Hoon K. Jeung, M.D. General Surgery 9a.m. -5p.m. Daily Saturday-9 to 12 noon Office Hours by Appointment Phone B72-4611 4672 H i l l SI. Cass Cily, Mich. 48726 Homo 1172-313B Richard A. Hall, D.O. Harry Crandell, Jr. Osteopathic Physician D.V.M. 4672 Hill Street CassCity, Michigan Office 4438 South Seeger St. Phone 872-2255 OHii.oB/2 4725 Homo til? 4762 1,1, , ! , , J ........ UL ......... iltl,, ,>, , I I L I . I J . J . . J I ! l,i ilii *,,, ,,l , IJil, I! ...... ILnMl..........IlllllillllilllltlJUl I......Illtlll Illlll IJJI il ,1 I, ill:..,!,! CASS CITY, MICHIGAN ,u il«!,];i]l ,i, liii,, Ji! llni'i . ,,m. ; u HI CASS CITY CHRONICLE-THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1978 PAGE SEVEN MfcCWt At Of OCTOIUH, 1171 PrlM Value No.ol Prizes Odds lor Ona Store Visit Odds lor Odds for 6 Slora 16 Store Visits Visits J 1,000.00 20 167,693 to 1 20,962 10,481 100.00 150 22,359 to 1 2,795 1,397 50.00 290 11,565101 1,446 723 10.00 632 5,307 to 1 663 332 5.00 1,263 2,695101 332 166 2.00 4,270 785101 98 49 1.00 30,687 109101 14 7 37,312 90101 11 5% TOTAL This game Is being played in tho ninety-three (93) participating IGA and alliliated (ood stores located In the Sale ot Michigan. Scheduled termination date: December 18,1978. STORE HOURS: DAILY TO 6:00. THURSDAY AND FRIDAY TO 9:00. 'II you visit a participating store 16 times in the 7 weeks ol this promotion your chances are 1 in 5Vi lor winning a cash prize! AD FOR WEEK ENDING SAT., NOV. 11, 1978 NOTE Not responsible for errors mode in printing. QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED, Until On* Coupro P«r ttrrJtf Coupon EipsrB* Nav 11 1171 WHti ttil* Coupwi end lift Puncta**. B***. WkMi. Uo*r*n»* (•• ChJ>« Coupon rwm* arid Sociat Service Orders Fosf Photo Finishing Service for Your Shopping Convenience Just Received a New Shipment of | Foliage Plants, Hanging Baskets and Plants. We have a Complete Piant Care De { P - Peat Moss m Stock. We Stock Kowalski's Sausage SUNSHINE HI HO CRACKERS FAME EVAPORATED MILK FOR HOLIDAY BAKING FOR HOLIDAY BAKING M £fr M PLAIN CANDIES Bmj EVERFRESH SUGAR SALE ALL-PURPOSE FLOUR M£tM PEANUT CANDIES ICE CREAM $129 BIG 17 PIECE BOX BANQUET•FROZEN FRIED CHICKEN BANUQET-FROZEN FAME • CHILLED FAME-FRESH HOLIDAY PIES ORANGE JUICE 2% MILK $O89 EXTRA STRENGTH COFFEE FILTERS EXCEDRIN TABLETS SAVE 50' DRISTAN TABLETS OVEN FRESH LUMBERJACK BREAD PECAN SANDIES'RICH (t CHIPS • C.C. DROPS-ICED FRUIT KEEBLER COOKIES $109 '%m&ri CASS CITY CHRONICLE-THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1978 PAGE EIGHT Your Neighbor says ass City Bowlin I believe that TUESDAY AFTERNOON LADIES Oct. I!!, 1978 UFOs exist Flying saucers - or officially, unidentified flying objects - have been in the news of late, with sightings reported in Australia, Ludington, and Huron county. The official explanation for the latter was flares dropped by the Air Force. Bill Zeidler counts himself among believers in UFOs, although he has never seen one. "Why not?," he said. "We go to the moon. They (UFOs) can be coming down h'ere." "Maybe they're a l i t t l e more advanced than we are," he said of visitors from outer space, "and they've got all their problems t a k e n care of." Zeidler sets up machinery at Walbro Corp. He and his wife, Bonnie, and children live on Huron Line Road, Cass City. Their children are Bill Jr.,'7. and Belli, 4. FaRfTlrl Bureau BUSINESSMEN HOME OWNERS FARMERS FARM DURFAU SERVlCFS INC Planning a New Building, Store, Office, Warehouse, Garage? Farm Bureau Bui « « e • Professionally Engineered Designed to Fit Your Needs Carry a Long Term Warranty Erected or Material Only "Ask the Farm Bureau People" j Call 872-4409 or 753-3457 Now 1 Anton Peters 5822 Cass City Road Cass City, Ml 48726 Team No. 8 27 Bowling Grannies C & C Lumber Mother's Girls Over-lhe-hill gang WickesAg. Sunshine BBB Charmont Girls Shcr\vood-on-the-Hill Chappel's Men's Shop , J £ . J Service ' 26 22 22 20 19 19 18 15 14 12 2 High Scries: D. Wischmeyer 479. liigh Game: B. Regnerus 187. High Team Scries: Team No. 8 1735. High Team Game: C & C Lumber 621. 170 & Over: M. Campbell 172, M. Cooper 178, C. Ware 174. D. Wischmeyer 181, Y. Burleson 172, B. Regnerus 187. Splits Converted: G. Stilson 3-10, M. Walpole 3-10, D. Taylor 5-10, 3-10, R. Neilsen 2-7, P. Geister 2-7, G. Corcoran 5-6, 5-10. He has a friend who says he saw a UFO a couple of years ago in the vicinity of M-19. If people from other planets want to visit Earth, (hat's okay with Zeidler but he doesn't' think we should be trying to go in the opposite direction. "I think they (government) should forget about outer space and take care of the world around here." 4330 Seaway Drive Carrollton, Ml 48724 THURSDAY MORNING COFFEE Nov. 2, 1978 Crest wood Lounge Kappen Saw. Sweeties Bowlettes Pin Pickers Sugars & Spice < ' e n t r a l Builders G u l t e r Dusters Pilots & 1 Colonial Inn B a n k e t tes C h a r l i e ' s Angels Troublemakers 27 24 21 20 > : 18': 18 17 17 16 15': 12': 9 High Series: L. Kretzschmer 4!MI. H i g h G a m e : S. McClorey 188. H i g h Team Series: Sugars \- Spice 1(147. H i g h Team G a m e : Sugars & Spice d i l l . 171) \- O v e r : S. McClorey 188. K. A l c C u l l o u g h 182. L. K r e t z s e h m e r 172, M . L . Lorencz 174. S p l i t s Converted: N. Rugu l e . s M l o . S . Koekler 3-6-8, M. Home 2-7, B. Louks 2-7, 3-10, E. Willis 2-7, V. Shemko 5-6, K. Herr 6-7-10, M. Truemner 6-7-10, M.L. Lorencz 2-5-7, L. Kretzschmer 5-8-10. Klinkman 210, M. Lagos 213. Ladies' 500 Series: A. Ricker 522, M. Lagos 50G. Men's 550 or Better: B. Klinkman 56(i, N. Willy 560. THURSDAY NITE TRIO Nov. 2, 1978 TUSCOLA GETTOGKTIIKHS-'A" Oct.HO, 1!)78 Draves Dist. Nemeth Smiths Del Nicholas Trucking Van Dale Jacques Seeds Wildwood Oops Big John's Blatz B.I. Wilson Hillside Barber Shop THE SUNDAY NITERS Oct. 29, 1978 Pressure Kochcrs CohvoodBar Matt Drainage Inc. FourLaLa's Gutter Dusters Outlaws Wild Bunch Colwood Bar No. 2 Riecks Construction Alley Cats Blount Agriculture Blacksmiths OPEN YOUR CHRISTMAS CLUB TODAY Halls Trim Shop Cole Carbide Hillaker's Auct. Serv. Lawrence Ins. Ouvry Chevy-Olds Croft-Clara Lumber Bartnik's Sales & Parts Harris-Hampshire Ins. WIDL Radio Spring Crest Draperies Pabst Sommers' Bakery 25 2:3 22 204 20 194 19 Hi 18 13 10 8 High Gan'ie: C. Kolb 234. High Series: C. Kolb 612. High Team Series: Cole Carbide 274fl. . High Team Game: Ouvry 983. 500 Series: B. Bader 532, L. Summers 519, J. Hacker 512, E. Schulz 543, K. Gremel 584, M. Zuwilinski 561, A. Ouvry 5(13, C. Kolb (i!2, S. Hammed 519. M. Hehvig 508. R. Tuckey 505, ,). Burleson 541, D. Miller 505, R. Surbrook 528, .1. Mclntosh 5(i(i, D, Allen 536. B. Wildman 51(1, D. LOUTV 509, I). Shannon 577. M. Wasserman 523. R. Schember 545, B. Hoffman 538, (!. Thompson 546. 200 Games: L. Summers 205. K. Gremel 222, M. Zawilinski 225, C. Kolb 212234, R. Surbrook 200, J. Mclntosh 215, F. Nowak 203, D. Shannon 208. S. Osenloski 201. Tl'SCOI.A <;KTTO(;KT1IKHS"H" O r t . Illl, 1!»7S T h u n d e r Road Speed. ( i e m i n i Band K i n g s t o n S l a t e Bank Farm Bureau Pagan's Blounl A g r i . Bliss M i l k H a u l e r s i K i n g s t o n Krome K i l b o u r n Teeh. Sup. Rogers Hay Cohviuirl Bar ' A m i ' s Te.xaeo 25 22'20 2(1 19'18 18 1(1 Hi 15 15 8 i Innimplele. Men's High ( l a m e : R. J e n k i n s 217. Men's High Series: R. J e n k i n s 598. High Team Series: Blounl 2(152. High Team G a m e : G e m i n i 925. 500 Series: R. J e n k i n s 598, B. A l h r e c - h t 541. B. M r l . a d i lan 511. J. Z a w i l i n s k i 591. R. Nusoine 52(1. 200 G a m e s : R. J e n k i n s 21(1-217. A. .\ii-kens 204. J. Z a w i l i n s k i 214-210, R. N n some 204. WE WILL MAKE THE FINAL PAYMENT ON ALL COMPLETED CHRISTMAS CLUBS * ** THE PINNEY STATE BANK Cass City, Michigan member FRS. B. Selby 510, M. Zawilinski 509, E. Bradley 505. 200 Games: J. Fox 223, M. Helwig 213-211, J. Gallagher 211, II. Wolak 211, E. Lcwicki 205, P. Robinson 205, A. McLachlan 204, T. Suiter 202, B. Copelancl 201. LADIES' CITY LEAGUE Oct. 31, 1978 Copeland kGornowicz Clare's Sunoco ArgyleRec. Francis Builders Don's Auction Sommer's Bakery Deering Packing Chuck Gage Welding 4 4 3 '.', 1 1 0 0 MKIU'IIANT'S "B"LKAdUK Nov. I , I!)7S High Team Series: Argyle Rec. 2094, Don's Auction 2039. High Team Game: Copeland & Gornowic/. 751, Argyle Rec. 747. High Individual Series: I. Schweikarl 488, J. Lapp 475, R. Mellenclorf 473, C. Mellenclorf 451. High Individual Games: K. Harmon (sub) 197, A. Pallas 182, I. Schweikart 178-104, R. Mellendorf 178151, C. Mellendorf 177-157, J. Lapp 1(18-158, L. Yost 1(17-1(10, D. Mathewson 163, D. Franxel 1(12, R. Pringle 160, C. Fin-ness 159, E. Fran/.el 156, D. Cox 156, I). Zimmerman 154, C. Davidson 153, M. Muska 152-150, D. Grifka 151, J. Hines 150. Splits Converted: L. Yost 2 - 7 ( 2 ) , A. Pierce 3-10, 5-11-10, R. Pringle 3-6-7, 3-10, R. Mellendorf 4-10, P. Chilcls 3-10. K. Fran/el 5-6, G. Hightower 6-7-10. .MERCHANT'S "A" L E A G U E Nov. I , 1978 Blounl A g r i c u l t u r e 25'- Croft-Clara Lumber Erla's Food Center Charlie's Market Ouvry Chevy-Olds Warren Electric Charmont New England Life Krit/.man's CassCily Oil & Gas Fuelgas' Kingston S t a t e Bank 25 21 21 20 20 15 15 15 14 13'11 lino Series: M. Helwig 612. 5011 Series: .1. Gallagher 572. J. Fox 5(18. B. Copeland 549. E. Helwig 545, G. Deering 538. R. Osenloski 538, E. Schul/ 538. N. Willy 537. E. Lewicki 533. D. Blank 530, II. Wolak 530, G. Lapp 528, P. Smilh 524. G. W h i t t a k e r 524. P. Robinson 522, L. Summers 522, I). Erla 520, T. Suller 519, A.D. Frederick 518. D. Wallace 518, E. Bilicki 514. E. Ruggles 512, 163, J. Ardler 159, R Leyvq, 1K2, M. Smithers 164, E-; Roma in 185, R. Spencer 155,' P. Mclnlosh 186, A. Turner; 159, B. Rinker 150, M Lagos;,! 170, M . P a r r i s h 178, J. O'Dell. 174, M. Spencer 186, M/ Guild 1GO, D. Russell 173, S •'• Badder 159. •-, Splits Converted: J Koch 4-5, 4-5-7, M. Nicholson 2-7, E. Butler 5-7, C. Mellendorfc. 5-0-10, R. Spencet; 5-6-10, P Johnson 3-10. Colony House Clare's Sunoco Service Tuckey Concrete Charmont Croft-Clara Lumber Herron Builders Bauer Candy Co. Gagetown Oil & Gas Shagene Constr. Rabideau Motor Sales General Cable Copeland Builders 25 25 23 G U Y S & GALS 19 1 Oct. H I , 1978 II! lii Muldoos 291 lii Commets 241 17 Brand X 23 14'u Kens & Kerbs 21 t 14 D&l) Construction 2l"l 13 Udder Guys 17 F 11 Mike's Heating if I 17 I 500 Series: E. H a a g 5 ( i l , J. Kingston Klowns 15, Sontag 545. VV. I'rich 540. i?. Double Deckers !•}' Anthes 535, B. Bartle 529, .J. Sand Baggers li [ Guinther 517, M. Wasser- Wild Rollers 7 man 517, B. Silvernail 51(i. G. Lucky Strikes Deering 514. J. Tuckey 512. High Team Series O&D I). Koch 508. 200 Games: E. Haag 207. Construction 1995, Commets .). Sontag 205, I). Englehart 1867, Kens & Kerbs 1805 High Team (James D&D 202, B. B a r t l e 202, B. SilverC o nstruction (181-672-642, nail 201, J. Tiifkev 201, Commets 658. Kens & Keibs 652 i H i g h Men's Series N W i l l y 563. C. Comment 560, C. K o l b 543, S. Shaw 515, R ' C o l l i n g 510. High Men's Games T, C h a r d 217, C. Kolb 199, C' C o m m e n t 198. N. Wilh 197 High Women's Series M R a b i d e a u 490. M. Keibyson 47!',. S. Reynolds 465,' M ' L e i l e r m a n 431. H i g h Women's Games M Kerbyson 188. M. Rabideau 1 7 8 - 1 7 1 . M. Schwarl/. 161, S. R e y n o l d s 161). Spills Converted: 2-7-10 M K e r h y s o n . 2-7 N. M a h a i g , C P h i l l i p . - . , 5-6-10 K. M a h a i g , 5 7 - 9 I I . W a l t e r , 3-10 H W a l t e r . P. L e i t e r m a n , S S h a w . T. Chard, 5-7 R B o u e k , 5-6 10 Joyce Tin ner, 67-in T. (''hard, M S c h w a r t / , K. D i s t e l r a t h E B i l i e k i . 3-10 M. Inbodv. I) Knise. D. Carnal/.ie, C Kolb ; 2 ' . 6 V 1 ) . Carnat/.ie. CIIAH.MONT I.ADIKS Oct. Id, 1!I7S .Johnson Plumberettes Woods Research Veronica's Ber-\Va-Ga-Na Texaco B r i n k m a n Bins Live-Wires Cabelettes Fort's IGA Foodliner Cass C i t y Sports Inc. Erla's ' 27 23 20 19 18 18 18 17 Id Hi 13 11 Team H i g h Series: J o h n son P l u m b e r e t t e s 2327. Team High ( l a m e : John son P l u m b e r e t t e s IM9. High Series: R. Speirs 57i. P. M c l n t o s h 542. P Johnson 509, M. G u i l d 41)5, S. Rev nolds 482. B. Abke -152. A. T u r n e r 4(i(i, M. P a r r i s h 4ti:;, E. R o m a i n 451, R. Spencer 4li3. High ( J a m e s : R. Speir.s 221, P. Johnson 216, Carol R u l k o s k i 182, M. Schember 150, C. Wallace 152. L. Uolcornb 155. S. Reynolds 168, B. Abke 163, P. Koch 165, J. Koch 161, N. H e l w i g K E E L I N C ; sniim F Thr reason some people |_ iad is because liie\ waste r loo m u c h l i m e h u n t i n g foi |1 sympathy. .MKIU'IIANKTTKI.KAGU Nov. 2, KITS Kril/.man's Tuckey Block Walbro Herron Builders Damm's Wheel Horse 20' L . Big"!)" 2(1 Cole Carbide 20 Olympia Beer 19 Wilson I n s . if! Bliss Milk Hauling 1(1 Annul Screen Cyl. 14 Albee Hardware 9 unii let Us x'^v Vo/< n Christinas Gift FDIC 13 11 10': 9 9 8 Men's High Series: B. K l i n k m a n 566. Ladies' High Series: A. Ricker 522. Men's High Game: E. Albin 224. Ladies' High Game: M. Lagos 213. High Team Series: Pressure Kochers 1904. High Team Game: Pressure Kochers 673. 200 Games: E. Albin 224. D. Koch 215,'*J. Willy 212,' B. Five different Clubs provide an easy way to Save $50 to $500 for Christmas 1979 Mern/ Christmas 24 23 23 22'.2 22 21 20'2 20 19 19 14 12 High Series: J. Fox 553. High Game: J. Fox 206. High Team Series: Del Nicholas Trucking 1818. High Team Game: Del Nicholas Trucking 627. 200 Games: J; Fox 206, E-: Gordon 202, D. Miller 20L 500 Series: J. Fox 553, E. Gordon 546, G. Deering 520, 0. Pierce 519, J. Steadman 510, A. McLachlan 507, Dale Smith 507. Plan for Christmas 1979 with a CHRISTMAS CLUB * -A- * CASS CITY, MICHIGAN High Team Series: Walbro 23(12, Olympia Beer 2259, Herron's 2257, Kril/.man's 2212, Bliss 2150, Annul 2090, Wilson 20(13, Damm's 2045. High Team (James: Walbro 84(1-79(1-720, Olympia Beer 774-743-742, Herron's 7(14-753-740, Kril/.man's 75(1754-702, Wilson's 75(1-704, Annul 755, Bliss 743-738, Damm's 727, Cole 71-1, Tuckey 's 700. High Individual Series: L. Selby 550. J. Lapp 525, C. Krueger ( s u b ) 523, Nancy Helwig 502, ,). La Roche 497, P. L i t t l e 493, J. Smithson 492,1). Golding482, S. Doerr 472, P. Tomas/.ewski 4(!G, N. Wallace 4(1(1, I). Wischmeyer 4(13, L. Herron 4(11, M. Guild 454. High I n d i v i d u a l Games: P. L i t t l e 210-]5f>, J. Lapp 200-1(13-1(12, .J. LaRoche 19915-1, L. Selby 199-179-172, L. Bryant 195, C. Krueger (siib) 193-177-153, P. Tomaszcwski 189, ,]. Smilhson lillt157, F, Ridenour 185, M. Guild 184-151, Nancy Helwig 181-KM-157, N. Wallace 178IfiS, L. Salas 17R, I). Golding 17-1-159, L. Herron 174-153, J. Hunt 174, S. Doerr 173-1 (59, M. Damm 170, M. Rabideau 108, D. Dunn 107, B. Deering 158-153, B. Irrcr 158, M. Romig 158, D. Wischmeyer 157-157, Phyllis Mclntosh 15G, Pat Mclntosh 155-151,11. Sontag 1S4, M Kerbyson 153, M. Downing 152. *m:/*HAND SPOTLIGHT Powerful sealed beam lamp. Plugs into cigarette lighter. Long cord reaches engine compartment. t(n WINCH PULLER Leverage, 18 to 1, vton capacity, glift. 3 16" galvanized aircraft cable. WEATHERPROOF LANTERN It floats. Ideal for auto, boat, home, camping Rugged rustproof case with weatherproof switch 6-volt battery included. © SPARK PLUGS Change now for easier cold weather starting, save gasoline. For all US cars including late models, most imports. J^vFo WINTER BLADES Entire blade protected by heavy duty rubber sheathe. Tough enough to stand up against worst winter weather. For most cars. EMERGENCY „ J TOW ROPE 5 8 " yellow braided polypropylene 12' i' long. 6500 Ib. breaking point, Slip hooks, protector grips on both ends. ._ Good .it pnrtfcipntYng CAROUEST Auto Parts'stores nncl p,n tinp.uinq denim thru Nov i:>. ,1978 CASS CITY AUTO SUPPLY 6585 Main St. Cass City Phone 872-2178 Mr •****>****" WE KNOW WHAT YOU MEAN WHEN YOU'RE TALKING PARIS WM AT MOST LOCATIONS I I ,an.<1,:,:.'..i: CASS CITY, MICHIGAN City Bowling Leagues FRIDAY NIGHT CARCASS UNION Nov. 3,1978 26 22 21 191/4 Men's 500 or Better: R. Pierce 585, B. Andrus 500, B. Knowlton 522, B. Healy 510. Splits Converted: M. Pierce 5-4, W. Edwards 3-10, D. Andrus 2-7, N. Particka 4-5, G. Neely 3-10, S. Knowlton 2-4-7-10. 16V2 16 14 13'/2 13 Men's High Series: N. vVilly 506. Ladies' High Series: I. Campbell 488. Men's High Game: L. Spaeth, R. Cooper 183. Ladies' High Game: N. labideau 187. High Team Series: Four "s 1826. High Team Game: Four "s 627. Ladies' 150 & Over: G. •cott 163, L. Ashmore 154, N. labideau 152-187, M. Wood 55, E. Borodychuk 181, I. Campbell 153-159-176. Splits Converted: Jerry ieronemus 3-7, M. Wood -10, N. Rabideau 6-7-10, =7-9, R. Cooper 5-7. CITY LEAGUE Nov. 6, 1978 Cass City Lanes Evans Products Whittaker's Saw Mill Woods Hay & Straw Dale's Eaves Troughing Mac & Leo Service Missionary Church Wesley's High Team Series: Cass City Lanes 2566, Whittaker's Saw Mill 2552. High Team Games: Cass City Lanes 920, Whittaker's Saw Mill 903. 33 29 28 23 'i: 22 22 211 , 21 21 20 16 7 Men's High Series: R. lerce 585. Ladies' High Series: J lay 459. Men's High Game: R. 'icrce 211. Ladies' High Game- J lay 168. High Team Series: Inlaws 312. High Team Game: Inlaws .6 200 Games: R. Pierce 1-201. Hammond ends training Navy Operations Specialist Seaman Recruit John C. Hammond, son of Max S. and Betty L. Hammond of Big Sisters 'glamour night' this Thursday The public is invited to attend Big Sisters "glamour night" this Thursday at 7 p.m. in the Tuscola County Advertiser building in downtown Caro. Featured will be a showing of cosmetics, fashions and dried flower arrangements. Big and Little Sisters will be modeling the fashions and wearing the make-up. The event is sponsored by Tuscola County Big Brothers-Big Sisters. 1892 Agnes St., Ubly, has graduated from Operations Specialist School. The 15-week course was conducted at the Naval Training Center, Great Lakes, 111. Students received instruction on the operation of surveillance and search radars, electronic recognition and identification equipment, aircraft approach control devices and electronic aids to navigation. Their studies were designed to prepare them for duty in a shipboard combat information center or at a shorebased fleet training center. He joined the Navy in April. Three of America's top ten industrial corporations and 20 of its top 500 businesses are headquartered in Michigan. WINTER'S COMING! f/. See Our Fine Selection of Wood Burning Equipment Glass Fireplace Enclosures Add On Furnaces Stoves to Fit In or On Your Present Fireplace LAMPLIGHTER FIREPLACE +0. SHOP _ | 'l31 N. State St. Caro _ Ph. 673-8454 Advertise It In The Chronicle. hin i •§ ii mn ii •• i- niL mm _!• u ^ i • " n* " «•" ITT • i r-rt •"• -i High Team Games: Rescue Squad 684-673-648, Odd HEALTH TIPS Deer not only ones endangered FRIDAY NIGHT MIXED LEAGUE Nov.:!, 1978 inlaws A illey Bombers \ M. vlixers vlisfits Don't Know ".andbaggers lolloway Fire 'he Pits 'en Pins J M. lopeless 3 3 3 3 l 1 1 l Individual High Series: V. Couples 647-616, Pin JamGallaway 597, L. Taylor 530, mers 643, Ron's Automotive 636. 0. Pierce 509. Individual High Games: High Men's Series: D. V, Gallaway 237-202, M. Cummins 514, G. Gallaway Franzel 218, J.Schwartz 193, 488, J. Brown 481, R. Bock L. Taylor 191, J. Blades 183, 474, B. Thorp 473. 0. Pierce 180, H. Bartle 178, High Men's Games: D. D. Thane 178. Cummins 187-171, J. Brown 185, M. Martin 183, R. Bock 175, W. Czekai 172. KINGS & QUEENS High Women's Series: S. Nov. 2, 1978 Cummins 512, P. Schwartz Rescue Squad 4 452, I. Schweikart 450, T. Rebels 3 Frederick 424, A. Pierce 405. High Women's Games: A. Odd Couples 3 Pin Jammers 2 Pierce 184, S. Cummins 174, T-B's 2 T. Frederick 168, I. SchweiOld Folks l kart 164, P. Schwartz 156. Splits Converted: 3-10 G. Forty Niners l Ron's Automotive 0 Gallaway (2),3-7W. Czekai, 4-7-10 S. Cummins, 9-10 D. High Team Series: Rescue Cummins. Squad 2005, Ron's Automotive 1801, Odd Couples 1753, Pin Jammers 1700. iiUiiii,mi , il! PAGE NINE CASS CITY CHRONICLE-THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1978 Cass Four C's Ball Busters Colonial Bar Fishbowlers Turkeys Ashmore Cats Slow Rollers Alley Cats Tutti Frutti Cannonballs , 11,1.1.,,.,.1 v As thousands of Michiganians prepare themselves for another hunting season, many will be going to the shooting range to brush up on both their marksmanship and their gun safety procedures. And such precautions are indeed justified, for during the 1977 deer hunting season, nine people died in shooting accidents. There is, however, a greater risk awaiting Michigan's hunters. During the same period last year, 15 people suffered fatal heart attacks while hunting. What few hunters probably realize is that the rigors of hunting can quadruple the heart's workload. Several factors contribute to this added workload, according to Dr. Richard Antell, Flint internist and pres- Z-BRICK BRAND FACING BRICK Add color and charm to any room in your'home. Weatherproof — use it for siding or other outside jobs. Firesafe and non-toxic — can't burn. Guaranteed for 10 years. AS ADVERTISED ON TV COUNTRY RUSTICALL COLORS PER CARTON Reg. 8.88 NOTICE Croft-Clara will be CLOSED WED., NOV. 15 FOR THE FIRST DAY OF DEER SEASON Your cooperation in anticipating your needs will be appreciated Croft-Clara Lumber, Inc. Cass City Phone 872-2141 ident of the Michigan Heart Association. "Hunting can be very strenuous," said Antell. "The average hunter is not used to really exercising all year. Suddenly he is in a different environment, where he will have to climb over hills and around trees. Cold weather adds to the strain on his system; he may be carrying a gun and other heavy equipment. Add to that the excitement of the hunt itself, and you're asking for trouble." Dr. Antell listed some precautions hunters can take: --Never hunt alone. -Know where to get help in case of emergency - any kind of emergency. You should be aware of the phone number of the sheriff's department and hospital facilities in the county in which you're hunting. -Be sure you are in condition. A program of moderate exercise will help put you in better condition to withstand some of the situations you're likely to encounter while hunting. -Be sure to wear warm clothing that protects head, ears, hands and throat. Cold weather puts an added strain on the heart. --Know the symptoms of heart attack: A feeling of fullness, heaviness or squeezing pain in the center of the chest, which may spread to arms, shoulders, neck or jaw and may be accompanied by nausea, vomiting, sweating or shortness of breath. If someone in your party experiences these symptoms, get help fast! -If you are on medication for your heart, make sure that all members of your hunting party know where you keep your medication and how it should be used. -Don't tire yourself excessively. Take the hunting, the eating and the celebrating in reasonable doses and get plenty of rest. -Watch your alcohol intake. Though it may make you feel warmer, alcohol causes your body to lose heat faster. -Get help to drag your quarry out of the woods - it can be very physically demanding to do so alone. KRISTY'S KLOSET AT OUR NEW LOCATION Pop the For Savings of 10 - 20 - 30 - 40 and 50 % Irrnmi \m\\m IIMi By Sweater Bee, Azure, The Branch By Vicky Vaughn Skirts Tops By The Branch, Maverick By Salty, Reve' Sweater Coats • Blouses By Sweater Bee, Azure by Reve' Slacks • Jeans ByF.S. Tiger, The Branch by Maverick, Organically Grown, Genes Jeans Infant-Children • Night Wear ,20% Clothing By Barbizon, Gilead \ OFF iinri Sweaters Dresses By Hollywood Needle Craft Stop in and FREE Junior Sizes 3-4 to 13-14 Misses Sizes 6 to 16 REGISTER FREE $ Echo Chapter Order of the Eastern Star will have a special open meeting at the Masonic Temple Saturday evening, Dec. 2, when the beginning of the 75th year of the Chapter will be celebrated. The Eastern Star Grand Family and surrounding area chapters have been invited to attend. A dinner for Grand Officers and Echo Chapter members will start at six o'clock in the Temple dining room. There will be a program starting at eight o'clock, according to the worthy matron, Virginia Hartwick. The program will include a vocal quartet, the "Noblemen," from the Shriners of Saginaw. The program will include honoring 50-year and 25-year members. 25 o FREE BALLOONS U For the Kids CERTIFICATE 0 OFF ••»••«••"••— VfSA 30°/o master charge Kristy's Kloset 6491 W. Main , COFFEE & \\ DOUGHNUTS for Stars slate open meeting The Want Ads are newsy, too. I1MT1 Phone 872-4747 PAGE TEN CASS CITY CHRONICLE-THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1978 Gagetown Area News Mrs. Harold Koch DSS handling reports of adult neglect Phone 665-2536 New books at the library As a part of the Tuscola County Department of Social Services total protective Lucille LaFave spent sev- taught school and then Kochs Sunday. services policy, there are Tim Barr of Empire was eral days with Carrie Camp- farmed. now procedures for handling A DISTANT MIRROR, by Barbara W. Tuchman (fiction) f an overnight guest of his ell at Atlanta last week. inquiries or reports of ne- Barbara Tuchman, the most gifted popular historian of our I parents, Mr. and Mrs. glect, exploitation, abuse or time, discovers a 600-year-old mirror through which to view f James Barr, Friday. He the modern world, and creates a masterpiece that elevates GOLDEN ANNIVERSARY cruelty to adults who live in Mr. and Mrs. Randy came to see his brother nursing homes, homes for historical narrative to the heights of great imaginative Mr. and Mrs. Basil Ziehm Weatherhead of Lansing and Sean play his last football the aged, and adult foster literature. In the mid-1300s the Black Death, the most I devastating pestilence in history, tore society asunder of Gagetown were honored Mrs. Elaine Hendrick of game with the Owen-Gage care homes. at a dinner in the Golden Cass City visited Mr. and team. These procedures may be Against this background of death and upheaval, Barbara! Room at Zehnder's in Mrs. Frank Weatherhead of special interest to resi- Tuchman vividly portrays the people and events that I CUB SCOUTS Frankenmuth Saturday eve- Saturday afternoon. dents of c o m m u n i t y place- bridged the tumultuous transition from the Middle Ages to | Mrs. Gerry Carolan spent ment facilities, their friends the Renaissance. ning, Oct. 28. The Cub Scouts met at the and relatives or other conThe occasion was hosted Saturday at the home of her by the couple's children, Mr. daughter, Mrs. W. Conners, Gagetown Firehall Wednescerned groups and agencies. THE BLUE M A N , by Thomas Atkins ( f i c t i o n ) . "The bluef and Mrs. Richard Ziehm of at Caseville. Also visiting day after school. There were A log of all inquiries is man" is the harrowing tale of a desperate effort to block a [ Gagetown and Mr. and Mrs. were her sister, Mrs. Robert nine boys present who en- maintained in order to as- murder that would shake the world. The time: two weeks in f Dennis Condon (Georgia) of Day, and granddaughter, joyed a game with hats sume prompt action and an September, 1952. The place: the countryside near Roanoke, [ Okemos. They have six Tony Waterworth of Detroit. made from newspaper. inquiry form is used to Virginia. The event: Dwight D. Eisenhower's whistle-stop j Each boy is making a head Sunday afternoon, Mrs. grandchildren who were all record the report and the campaign through the South. The threat: a sniper on the E present except the youngest Gerry Carolan, Mrs. W. fora totem pole. Billy Erlich results of the investigation. loose, two murders to his credit, and a third planned-the big f granddaughter, Lori Ziehm, Conners, Mrs. Robert Day was the first to bring his Any i n d i v i d u a l , group, or one, with the biggest target of all-Ike himself. The local I finished. Discussed were agency t h a t wishes lo make police must track a rough mountain man who knows the Ia Rotary Exchange Student and Tony Waterworth atprojects the boys should tended a bridal shower for in Brazil. a report or inquiry may terrain like the back of his hand. Their only clue is an f A "Living scrapbook of Collene Conners at the home work on for the month of telephone one of the adult unbelievable one: it is reported the man suffers from a f November. If weather permysterious disease that has turned him blue. The onlv thing [ of Mr. and Mrs. Robert memories" was presented to services workers, Gordon mits, the scouts will t a k e a the honored guests by the Gillingham of Caseville. Freeman, Jessie (Joodall or the police are sure of is that Ike is coming. And the B l u e f nature hike (his week as an Mr. and Mrs. Carl Weber, family during the evening. Craig Lundsted, at (i7:i-4H4. Man is waiting for him. introduction lo the theme Louise Morrice and Basil Holly, Heidi and Don were or w r i t e or visit the depart"High Country." Ziehm were married Oct. 27, supper guests of the Harold ment at HIOII W. Caro Road, THE COMPLETE WINDOW BOOK: WINDOWS B E A U T I - f FLIL, by the Kirsch Company (non-fiction). Numerous color t 1928, at the home of the Caro. photographs illustrate ideas and suggestions for a variety of f1 bride's parents, Mr. and window treatments, covering all types of window treatment I Mrs. George Morrice in and such related topics as drapery care, problem windows f Alma, Mich. The couple sewing c u r t a i n s , etc. 1 have lived the entire fifty years on a farm near Gagetown where Mr. Ziehm first IGITALS From $69.95 Y Honor roll students Cass City Phone 872-3025 CASS CITY, MICHIGAN at Owen-Gage listed Advertise It In The Chronicle. Find The Service Or Product You Meed In This iECTORY I Home Repair Following is the first marking period honor roll at Owendale-Gagetown High School. A + denotes all A's. The honor roll includes all members of the undefeated varsity girls' basketball team. KKJHTI! (iHADK Stanley Andrakowicx. Vicky Alexander. C'raif,' Endcrle, Brian Haatf, Jackie Kain, Laurie L o u i s t . Mike Powell. Jason H e i n h a r d t , Jennifer Wood. Beverly Zaleski. TWELFTH GRADE Galloway on carrier Bfo5P8Pfffc B BkB^ Navy A v i a t i o n Support E q u i p m e n t Technician A i r man A p p r e n t i c e Joel A. G a l l o w a y , son of Lee K. and Dorris M. G a l l o w a y of f)!)70 Snovcr Road. Decker, has reported for d u l y aboard t h e a i r c r a f t carrier I : SS M i d way, o p e r a t i n g from Yokostika, J a p a n . He joined the N a v y in October, IH77. ^"IfiM/^ PEERING B%f£&AC 10 ml 1 1 Mile North, /2 Mile East Of Silverwood at 4808 E. Mayville Road FRESH COUNTER MEATS CHECK OUR PRICES ON • LAMB ^ PORK ^ VEAL • BEEF HALVES AND QUARTERS SK\ K N T I I ( i K A I ) K Aluminum Siding EJVK 1 rotitj!;:,, ,'-,,'i )'/,', POLE BUILDINGS E & J Aluminum •Garage»Farm Ma|0f and Minor House Repair ALUMINUM SIDING, SOFFIT ANDTRIM •Warehouse "Commercial Complete line of building motor-Hill. Workm.insnip i ;<;<i', /"?>';"•(< All Work Guaranteed <;,!// C&CLUMBER Call 872-3320 RAY ARMSTEAD 872-4527 or 673-7420 dtru Plume tip 4 IBti Insulation Auto Bump and Faint Caterers TA mt NCE BODY "SHOP" Winters' •Complete Collision S e r v i c e •Bumping • Painting' •Rust Repair (i4.nl N v'.in DVK>> C.iss City COLONY HOUSE FOAM INSULATION 10 yr. l i m i t e d warranty Specio/izing in Weddings - Bonquefj produced, patented and backed by Borden...a name you know and trust Plum,•!!,'..' J.'iuii or 8<V-JI03 6853 Deckerviilo 8d, Docker, Ml h M i l a W e s l o f M-53 B«cker (mutation Contra. Christian Book Storel Phone 674-2673 THE WORD Glare's Sunoco Sorvice Bibles • Books • Gifts Call 872-2470 I i The hiflhflsl R factor ol any insulation Can be sprayed exterior or interior New Homes • Mobile Home Root* Pols Buildings • Vins Crawlnpaces BECKER INSULATION CONTRS. Phone 8 7 2 - 2 3 4 2 Phone 674-2673 C e r t i f i e d Muelianics fc,.,,-'/;;,.v;,,. | i URETNANE SPRAYFOAM 6451 Main Street Pnone 672-2026 L & S Standard Service i a ID seallac Records • Tapes Art Supplies * Crofts Greeting Cards Open Daily Except Sunday CHARMONT i i | Friday Buffet i : | WRECKER SERVICE Monuments s p m uipm Mon..Thurs. 10 30 .i m 9pm Fri.-Sst. Ill .'tO.i in 10 p m Sun. U IKX;M M ;> m LITTLE'S MONUMENT CO. v Whatever your needs, you will find our \ f > ' service helpful, '•' OA economical and unc) erstanding. Pizzo & Short Orders Village Service Center t i l l 1 a.m. B/1M200 rroc In-Town Pickup & Dolivery Please Call i Veronica's Restaurant t—* < ROGER LITTLE Cass City" Phone 872-2195 ! Meeting & Banquet Room i Available C/1/cAi.vi Chops Seatood Phone 872-2550 6234 Main Street Mac & Leo Service Farm Equipment • Home of Irish Bread • Doi/y lunch Special Moil • I liUK KM - /' .! ' I . I Total Got and Oil Products for Home ami Farm Delivery Medley Equipment Co., Inc. [I IN If I Fuirn (:C]mpnif;Mt SM Oou Snov,niol;il<j:i Mini t. McCullocli Chiim Saws ,';i in Call 872-3122 Parti v*4 S«rvic« itiiXi W Cam Road.Caro Phono G73 4164 6314 Main Cass City Photography Hair Styling John Wayne Chapelo and the Country Shadows f j HAIR BENDERS HtlVinC] ,1 /?(•:,c,1),'.1. i / / , /'.i.'r'v Cuffing • Styling 01 Spcc/j/ <'.vi .I.MI '•' ' Call « fitmi luus A f n il .1 in • 6 p.m 673-7967 WMI! A nuns H.i.m. - U 30 p.m. S WILOON TUDIO 367 N. State Street ii;il - / ,1 m • J (J m ^ i.nlirl.l Phone 673-2435 Caro J ['lidfli' M/, -HM!} Rubber Stamps Cass City Lanes 4533 Weaver 872-2844 Open Bowllstfii Hillside Beauty Solon 6263 Church Ph. 872-2740 Wed. 6.30 p.ID. PH. 6:30 p.m. Sat. 1 p.m. - ? Sun. 1 p.m -6p.ni.-H:15-? Tues. Through Sat. /M/i/r/c IK tnu place /or Protosx/onul Hun Cafe Rubber Stamps MADE TO ORDER • Personal • Business • Standard Stamps Ernie'i Robber Stomp Stop . f>73-74!0 Wood Burning Equipment LAMPLIGHTER FIREPLACE SHOP Croft-Clara Lumber, Inc. CassCily 872-2141' Andersen IrVindows Dexter locks Prefimshcd Pone/ing Mon F-n it <i m '> 1(11> ni S.il b a in ') p in I Brenda Scliwart/. t , (Jary Erickson, Todcl Sanders. Scott W r i g h t . Scott Thies t - , John P a t n a u d e . dlenda McPhail. Taniniy M a n d i c h . Joe Lope/.. TIME MAKCHKS ON It is never too late to do a kindness, for you never know how soon it w i l l be too late. FOR BUSINESS TRUCKING AND SLAUGHTERING CALL 517-761-7073 ELEVENTH GRADE Mary Kay Burrows, Kirk Carolan, Brad Erickson, Debbie Gettel, Paula Good, Jennifer Errer, Carol Goslin, Ed Grates, Alan Haag, Tammy Kain, Pete Klemkowsky, Lori Mandich, Becky Parker, Richard Powell, John Retford, Jay Richez, Kathy Rocheleau, Kris Russell, Robin Sullivan+, Dan Warack, Dawn Wissner, Scott Wissner, Carol Parker. canbujnooe of th<^ exceptional ' TENTH GRADE Julie Andrakowicz, Marcy Bruno, Kris Erickson, Joni Flores + , Scott Gaeth, Becky Howard, Dana Laurie, Cheryl Mandich, Marie Radabaugh, Dave Richardson, Annette Rockefeller, Mike Sullivan, Deidra Thick, Beth Thies. NINTH GRADE Terry Muntz, Jim Patnaude, Renee Nicholas, Tina Mandich, Kim Diebel, Julie Enderlee, Patty Roemer, Mark Russell, Teresa Schmidt, Michelle Schwartz, Bonnie Lamirande, Karla Kretzschmer + , Bonnie Wells. Oil and Gas 6:30 >.m. fl p.m. • Closed Sundtys Sommer's Bakery & Restaurant Laurie Andrakowicz-f, Sean Barr, Laurel Billy + , Cindy Faust, Lori Gaeth, Dick Glidden, Linette Hahn, Jerry Harbuck, Brenda Haley, Jim Hendershot, Jim Koch + , Tammy Koss-f, Doug Laurie, Mark McDonald, Lynn Prich, Jan Rapson, Debra Vargo-f, Tammy Wissner-f, Barb Wright, Lynette Ziehm, Kim Richer. HOME OF THE CERAMIC FIREPLACE Sierra Wood Burning l ;htw-l WlXXlHtlJl ConiploloLlnoolM«talboslos Chlmnoys • Martin Slovon, Fireplaces i ACCG390rla9 131 N btalobt Caro Air Tight Stoves Bennett Ireland Glass Enclosures Free Measure manl with Sale Phone 673-84M Meeting date changed for Baptist ladies Fourteen women attended the monthly meeting of the Baptist Missionary Society Monday evening at the home of Mrs. James Burleson. Devotions were conducted by Mrs. Rosella Kretzschmer, using the 139th Psalm. Prayer time for missionaries was led by Mrs. Vera Bearss, using a chapter from "What Happens When Women Pray?" A letter from a Bangladesh hospital was read by Mrs. Richard Shaw. Mrs. T. Teall gave a paper on "Important Keys to a Missionary Church." In the business meeting, a nominating committee of Mrs. Lou LaPonsie, Mrs. Stanley McArthur and Mrs. Ralph Hanby was appointed, Members voted tc change the meeting date from the first Monday to the first Tuesday of the month, starting Jan, 1. Miss Dartene Hull, a missionary, orv furlough from Peru, win be guest speaker at the December meeting. Members will bring gifts for a personal shower for Miss Hull. Refreshments were served by the hostess and Linda Helwig. THE PEOPLES xSTATEBANK PSB> OF CAKO Those exceptional works of art can be yours when you open a Christmas Club Account. Their extraordinary natural beauty will embellish any holiday decoration. When you open your 1978-1979 Christmas Club, you can purchase one for only $1.50. Additional etchings can be purchased at $2.50 each, a fraction of the regular re tail cost, Stands not included. . , I:U, <L, iill :: ill iliUti niJi!iiiiJLiiiiil>ii!!Lii!l;iiiliftiiikidilllilfai AMiiilllJiliillii Inn JlUliiiiuii!, IliLillllllJIhlililiilhilliiliilllilii.iiiillJ.lillllJ Illi CASS CITY, MICHIGAN CASS CITY CHRONICLE-THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1978 PAGE ELEVEN Farm Fresh Grade A LARGE WHITE EGGS II Uli'illJll Erla's Homemade MILD SENSATION HARVEST TIME SKINLESS FRANKS! Erla's Homemade FRESH LIVER RINGS (CHUNK) Erla's Homemade OLD FASHION Hickory Smoked Sliced Rindless I AYFR .—-i "-.*-"- : ,^~&Ji|pW RINGor STICK Ib $1 29 BOLOGNA ™ lb. Erla's Homemade Smoked Erla's Hickory Smoked POLISH or ROASTED Erla's Homemade SLICED MIXED CUTS SAUSAGE BRAUNSCHWEIGER 98 Erla's Home Cured & Smoked Erla's Homemade By the SLAB Chunk BACON Summer Sausage or Pepperoni Sausage Ib. Fresh Ib. Erla's Homemade HEAD CHEESE Sliced Free or CHICKEN LOAF $-129 Whole or Rib Half Sliced Ib. Ib. Tender Aged Beef PRODUCE U.S. No. 1 BANANAS U.S. No. 1 Mich. POTATOES Mountain Top Frozen Mince Pies Size 24 California 26 oz.Pkg. l ^ V *fl H 1 9 "., > , t Mountain Top Frozen LETTUCE U.S. No. 1 Mclntosh *>*. APPLES 3 Pumpkin Pies 200,^ SIRLOIN Thank You Cherry Pie Filling -BONE. Red Emperor GRAPES 21oz .can Planters ORTERHOUSE j Roasted in Shell Ppjan B WO I 9 24 oz. Pkg. t QQ'-- . f n >1 r\ V I Kelloggs 145 7 oz. Pkq. Campbell's CHICKEN NOODLE •vseyj i , t f If f- ( fal Shedd's Smooth • Crunchy Peanut Butter 10'.- 02. Cans sib.cm. Grape, Orange, Very Berry Hershey HAWAIIAN Assorted Jeli-0 Puddings 3o PUNCH Kraft Philadelphia 64ozJug Bordens i• —BAKERY— Cream Cheese Oven Fresh Golden White BREAD 28 oz. Pkg ,, 4 l l ) L O d , Oven Fresh Golden Wheat BREAD C 59 Long Groan fiice Oven Fresh l^ BREAKFAST ROLLS 8 pack McDonald Mcuonaia Riceland Kraft Mini Marshitiafbws c-i 32 oz. Pkg. '' l O o z Pkgs. Kra ICE CREAM BARS l2c ,p k g1 " Marshinailow Creme Keebler 13 oj. Jar DELUXE GRAHAMS HILLS BROS. Reg., Drip, Elec. Perk 2 lb. COFFEE ° Specials good Mon<k.y,Nov. 13 French's BANQUET 2 4 OZ .ctn. Mustard BREAD DOUGH Heinz Keg-0-Ketchup Made Rite 32oz. Btl. Reg. or 5 1 lb. Loaves Potato Chips'*" S o 2 p k9 Gentle Fels Dish Soap 320,3,, Imperial Qtrd. Purina Moist & Chunky Dog Food20ib Tide Food Center IN CASS CITY OPEN MONDAY THURSDAY TO 6 P M F R I D A Y TO 9 P M SATURDAY 8 00 BEER MEMBER T W AM TO 6 P M WINE fOOD STORE Laundry Detergent mo*.Pkfl. Health and Beauty Aids Dry Idea Roll-On ^-< Rose Milk SKIN CREAM Regular or Mint SOL /Oz CREST TOOTHPASTE Rolls Quttorflako,., c 8 02. Pkg. Low Fat Milk R.UU* DEODORANT Pillsbury lb. Pkg. McDonald Head & Shoulders • Imperial Size SHAMPOO Margarine «.».» 09 Reg $1.29 Gal. 1 0i? § : ' -^ l, ,„;,!»!,.....,!!„, , „ , „, ...... ill ,1 ......... ,|,i n u l l , J i l l !.......n i U n , , ; . , , J l n i l j 1 „!!,,!!, li!l, lllllNh,!!,, illJill , iMiil!. l l i l l , , , U m| ||; ..... , , , l i l l l j>li!l!i!h>llll....., J . l i j 1 1 ii || CASS CITY CHRONICLE-THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1978 PAGE TWELVE CASS CITY, MICHIGAN School Scribbles By Diane McAlpine ecus TID BITS Friday, no school was held as it was parents-teacher conference day. It seemed good to sleep in again! BAND DKFOHI) Last week the Home EcoFriday, conference day, a nomics III classes baked bread. It's outright torture pofluck luncheon was enjoyed by the teachers, secreto make students breathe that aroma all day long tary, and guest, Shelly TcrBush. Miss Harriet Warner without being able to eat any poured, and Thanksgiving of the bread! Congratulations to Carrie table decorations were proCarpenter and the Cass City vided by Mrs. Martha Butcher. debate t e a m . Carrie brought The first graders are enhome a trophy for being Hth joying the story Cats and out of the 85 speakers debatKittens and are looking foring at Lapeer East High ward to h a v i n g their "take School. Halloween ghosts and gob- home" books at home. Tuesday, an interesting lins must have been in the school last week -of course, program of c o u n t r y dancers t h a t ' s the only explanation was enjoyed at the Intermediate building. for t h e waxed windows!?! Thanksgiving turkeys are beginning to crowd the building! Friday night, the Cass City Marching Band presented a h a l f t i m e show w i t h a salute to the senior band members. This year's band seniors are: Lorie Brown, Carrie Carpenter, Lynn U a r t w i c k , Frances Kozan, Carol Little, Suzanne Little, Diane McAlpine, Deb Milligan and Bob Potrykus. Each senior received a rose corsage for their lasl h a l f lime show performance. I t h i n k a lot of credit can The a n n u a l powder puff be given to the band for all football game will be Friday its time and effort they put night at 7:30. The Senior and into each show this year. Freshman girls will be t a k The band is under the direcing on the .Junior and Sophotion of George L. Bushong more girls. Classes, clubs, ^nd Thomas II. Clair. C'onand the school faculty are 7 i a i u l a t i o n s on a fine season i n v i t e d to make m i n i floats. Judging w i l l be on the silliest f l o a t . This year there will be a King and his court elected during halftime. AND FREE SUBSCRIPTIOM Tuesday, an assembly was held at the I n t e r m e d i a t e School. A group called "The C e n t r a l M i c h i g a n Country Dancers" performed. with each order. C.V.MI'BKI.I. The Chronicle Miss H r u n e r ' s first grade class has a new member. His name is Donald Tenc/a . . . . welcome to Cass Citv. overnight. I'lluNK K72-2nli The bookworm reading contest in the second and t h i r d grade room is proceeding nicely and soon a prize w i l l be given to the w i n n e r . S t u d e n t s in the t h i r d and f o u r t h grade class have completed a u n i t about dinosaurs. Soon, t h e y w i l l begin a u n i t on n u t r i t i o n . Kindergarteners are s t u d y i n g alpha l e t t e r s . To help them o u t , the class has records, balloons and d i t l o papers. Mrs. S m i t h , Fvergreen p r i n c i p a l , reported t h a t parent-teacher conference daywas "very well attended."' COl'.NTDOUN As of Thursday. Nov. 9, there are m days left of school!!! Regular Our Price Price i2o z . Riopun 2.42 1.49 i6 oi. Flex Shampoo 2.35 1 .69 ANY SIZE j The i n t e r n a t i o n a l l y k n o w n L u t h e r College Concert Hand from Deeorah, I o w a , w i l l appear in Cass C i t y Tuesday. N o v . 14. The concert w i l l s t a r t al " p.m. in the h i g h school gymnasium. The ()9-mcmber b a n d w i l l be appearing here as part of a n i n e - c i t y t o u r . N o v . Hi- 111. i n Wisconsin. M i c h i g a n . I l l i nois and Iowa. The band is a p p e a r i n g here t h r o u g h t h e f r i e n d s h i p of its director. Frederick N y l i n e , w i t h Cass C i t y band director George Bushong. For two s u m m e r s . N y l i n e was d i r e c t o r of a s u m m e r band c l i n i c a l N o r t h e r n Michigan University and Bushong was assistant director. The college band m e m bers w i l l spend t h e n i g h t here a f t e r the concert at the homes of h i g h school b a n d members. Tickets lor t h e concert are a v a i l a b l e f r o m local band members or al the door. On the tour, the band will play such pieces as "Choi-ale Prelude: So Pmv the Sound" by IVrsichetn. Sousa's "Hands Across the Sea" and the f i n a l e of T c h a i k o v s k y s ".Synipiioiiy in F m i n o r . No. -I." Luther ('ollege. founded in 1 lilil. is a college ol the American Lutheran church will) an enrollment of 2,(Kill students. N y l i n e is in his s i x t h season as c o n d u c t o r , h a v i n g p r e v i o u s l y been associate d i r e c t o r of b a n d s al the l i n i v e r s i t v oi M i n n e s o t a . ctn. K. Striffler dies in Caseville land. France. G e r m a n y and Switzerland. It celebrated i t s c e n t e n nial anniversary during the last school year w i t h ;i 2ii-coneert lour in 11 western slates. In a review, the Xew York Times said of the b a n d . "Judging from the lone of t h e o v e r a l l ensemble, m a n y of these m u s i c i a n s would be a c r e d i t to any of t h e c o u n t r y ' s symphony orchestras." K. Kenneth Striffler died p.m. this Wednesday with suddenly early Tuesday at services there at 11 a m his home in Caseville. Thursday, Rev. Warren PetHe was born Jan. 24, 1007 tis of the Caseville United in Cass City and raised here. Methodist church officiatHe moved to Detroit in 1925 ing. and was treasurer and Burial was in Elkland comptroller of Revere Cop- cemetery, Cass City per and Brass there before r e t i r i n g in 1972 and moving to Caseville. The first regularly sched- f He and his w i f e Florence, who survives h i m . were uled air passenger service f m a r r i e d in 193"). He was a began operation between F member of the Caseville Grand Rapids and Detroit, j in 1926. Tinted Methodist church. He is also survived by a son. Charles I). S t r i f f l e r of FORMAL Rockville, Md., and a brother, S t a n l e y S t r i f f l e r of Detroit. Men's Wear and V i s i t i n g hours at the Shet- Formal Wear Rental ler Hussema Funeral Home 'hone 872-3431 in Pigeon were from (1-10 Frederick N y l i n e Now i n i t s l o l 1 , 1 -.ear. t h e band is one ol the oldesl college l o u r i n g groups in the country. i i I K I ^ t u U I V t i r.UI'ujje 11 \ e t i n i o . t h e lasl t i m e in 11)75 when it p e r f o r m e d in Fng- Flat...or...Low Lustre , • Washable, colorfast flat finish ->v writci clean-up ONLY & M A*i 4$^Kf^* A EP% P"H*v (Ptf* CIGARETTES Internationally known KYKKGKKK.N INTKKMKDIATK Catalogs loaned HONORED FOR THEIR WORK WITH THE Cass City marching band were eight seniors. At halftime Friday they each received a rose. From left: Lynn Hartwick, Diane McAlpine, Carrie Carpenter, Carol Little, Frances Kozan, Deb Milligan, Bob Potrykus, Suzanne Little. Missing is Lorie Brown. vffL®* •" plus tax Twin Pak Summer's Eve 1 .20 .86 u oz. Siblin 617 4.69 100 vita™ E 4oou Water Soluble 7.99 4.99 100 sq. feet Christmas $011 a ' WRAPPING PAPERS *2 1¥ Double Hamburger (Maker 1 e 95 9.99 H oz. Lisferine 1.69 1.18 1 Ib. Plain or Peanut M&M /oz. Crest n oi. Gillette Foamy 1.69 u Kotex Stick Tampons 1.37 A • 1 75 AnaCIII Arthritis Pain Formula Authorized Thumb Distributor for Hollister - Ostomy Products 1.09 182 4.28 .99 .67 1 TT JL . / / We Accept All Pre-Pay Prescription Plans Ask for Your 10% Senior Citizen Prescription Drug Discount LIGHT «EACH WEAVER, Owner ,•• • PHARMACY Ph. P. 872-36 872- 13 Emergency Ph. «72-mV •• ' ' " •> . Your Family Discount Drug Store TOP SAILOR - Boatswain Mate Seaman Michael T. Gruber (right) receives congratulations and a certificate for being named nonrated sailor of the quarter from Capt. R.F. Donnelly, commander of the USS Yosemite. Gruber named sailor Boatswain Male Seaman Michael T. l i m b e r has been named n n n r a t e d sailor til the quarter on the USS Yosemite, a Navy tender ship t h a t sails out of M n y p o r l , Ma. He is Hit.' son of Mr. and Mrs, John Gruber of K. K i m wood Road, Cass C i t y . A June, l!)7(i graduate of Cass City High School, he joined the" Navy in September of that year. A member of the deck crew, he was recogni/.ed for his diligent "can do" a l t i tude, aggressive demeanor and his ability to inspire his shipmates to emulate his efforts and enthusiasm, l i e was presented w i t h his a w a r d i n ceremonies Oct. I I by the commander of the Vosemite, ( ' a p t . K . F . Donnelly. ( i r u b e r met his w i f e , the f o r m e r Daureen Mcl.ane, w h i l e s t a t i o n e d iii Florida. They were m a r r i e d Sept. 9 and live in A t l a n t i c Heacb. Inmwood is as far west as SI. Louis, M i s s o u r i ; Port Huron is as far east as G r e e n v i l l e , South C a r o l i n a , or Asheville, North Carol i n a ; Hancock is farther north t h a n Montreal, Canada just in time for the holidays ..when you want your home to look the most Inviting! Created beautiful room at savings of 15-40 >! Thousands of wallpaper patterns from America s foremost manufacturers. All first-quality, current lines. Hurry, while selection is best. Sale ends November 26. ALSO SALE ON SELECTED UPHOLSTERY AND DRAPERY t 25% °50% 0fF THE PAINT STORE Cass City 6535 Main III , , L,I. iiHii.ii i n I ..,,.! til:,!.. ,;,:,,:„„ i ih lit ill CASS CITY, MICHIGAN , .......Ill.....,1 , ll i Jill, Jiiii ilijll.ilL ii, il!U: ,l,,iili, l! , Discover [fl BEN FRANKLIN \JJ We bring variety to life! %^ .<% '% ' Viiiii1 PP •^ -; /% "Ao, Nylon __ TRI-COLOR BOOTIES Old fashion quality and prices on things for the family, the home and you! .«' Rr- ]\lBl^^V ,'^ '.*« PANTV HOSE GIRLS SIZES N, «3v-V .tffiV Cotton Terry L«L* A.« «r^» • Deep fries 4-cups of chicken, shrimp, potatoes, most anything! Double-crotch training pants with elastic waist, rib knit cuffs. Colors. Sizes 2-6. f DUCT TAPE Just 2-inches wide. For sealing around windows, doors, and ducts. Easy to apply. PLASTIC HOUSEWARES o 3-Pc. Bowl Set • Bowl Brush & Holder • Pour Spout Pail • Dish Pan • 12-Qt. Wastebasket • Laundry Basket Only L_^ Denim-Look How Only JEAN SOCKS Women's Trimmed Denim-look socks in all the most popular colors, in sizes for men and boys. BOYS' MEN'S BRIEFS, BISCINiS Choice ^ Sale price 60-Yd. Roll TUCK ' */^ .~ f~^L -..'^^V *^ •• J |Pk • -V ? ^ ^^ . „?-<*•'~**'jf '-•- i f \ itl',1,/'.: II \\f\-j Now Only $i >$;. r jU^r">-'s;H=i ~>*, • "' : W. f Handy for so many uses. %-in. wide. Stock up at our low sale price. 'A. Poly-cotton briefs and bikinis with matching lace trims. Col ors. Sizes 5-7. Discover BEN FRANKLIN We bring variety to life! MASKING TAPE -•Cuu.»TV each oa. COAT and HAT RACK - i&?«/ price Discover :BENFRANK UM \.f> we oring variety to life! Wooden Walnut f i n i s h e d r a c k of Ramin Wood, a full 19'.' inches long. 4-3 8 in. deep. Our low Lightweight, w o r k - s a v e r s of durable non-mar plastic. Wide color choice to match your decor. Exceptional values at this low sale price. 10-Yd. Roll Discover BEN FRANKLIN We bring variety to life! Chem-free, flame-retardant sleeper with full-length zip, nonskid soles. Machine wash/no ironing. Sizes 5-6-7. TRAINING PANTS Sale Special ^HAMILTON BEACH i^l^r-i J.'; dfe K MISSES SIZES price Cooks up to 8 cups of stews^ soups, etc. 3 position heat control. Non-stick surface for easy cooking, cleaning. Large, easy-drain basket. © Gives extra protection to babies 16 to 23-lbs. With custom-fit tapes. 0/w low ««s V DAYTIME DIAPERS \ M A.V; ^ Juvenile Boys' No seams anywhere! With nude heel, demi-toe. P/A, A/T sizes. Choice of shades. %J New, Tall Fry' FRYER COOKER ^ Extra-Absorbent Hi-bulk stretch, pineapple stitch pattern. Elastic cuffs. Choice of colors. Seam-Free | AnyMFORi •_.- (Si^;: each W|, ORION KNEE-HI'S CANDY BARS -*-^» of 48! 1 $ Sale price >4// K?//r Favorites! • Mounds • Almond Joy • Baby Ruth i Butterfinger • Nestle Crunch . $100,000 Bar • Heath • Hershey's Milk Chocolate . Kit Kat. Reese's Peanut Butler Cup and many more. to ^; e CHOCC -^< V\«-: P tmV AV ^ VF\ Sale price IPa^ v V» n«fy V S rfC One size fits 9-11. Choice of colors. 75% Orion acrylic/25% nylon. Aluminum BAKEWARE Select from pizza pans, pie pans, round or square cake pans, more! Heavy gauge aluminum. •( -ro> Sale price Only 2 W^.VJ "^ •-VN aw •£ * i <J n ^W \*H. #• ./i < ^ f- ( >• ROLLS '$ r ' ^ ! ""S7i»VT ^ 'XftJKv. •'•yiii*-, > •? ^ ,,liij!,l PAGE THIRTEEN: ^L2 Sale Price Only Ml-!, ill, CASS CITY CHRONICLE-THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1978 \ •MltK ( lil. •"»& r°°\' ' - * , m& •?»• ?«w m > j \ i • c i' # ^ - I • ' •v/.^r^ •>ii^«- S IWESTCLOX •• MULTIPLE PROGRAM TIMER ^ •*>, Will turn lights or appliances on and off automatically once, twice or more times daily. 1/ I:P ' il . MATCHING TOWELS Multi-color bath coordinates on sheared cotton/ polyester. BATH TOWELS HAND TOWELS WASH CLOTHS 487 dfceaeh 187 STITCHERV PRINT SHEETS, PILLOWCASES Old-fashioned charm in delicate stitched-look print. Multi-color print in white or bone background. Permanent press poly/cotton. TWIN-Flat or Fitted Itaeh 87* FULL-Flat or Fitted PILLOW CASES Sale price 49? • «aeh SCREWDRIVERS 4 to 6-in. screwdrivers, mechanics, cabinet or recess type. Plastic handles. Choice | each 1^ Pair Make a great game of decorating with jungle motif sheets! Poly/ cotton, permanent press to stay crisp. Brown and tan on hone. TWIN-Flat or Fitted FOR BED PILLOW Plump polyester fiberfil pillow covered in poly cotton print. 20x26-in Our low price Discover BEN FRANKLIN We bring variety to life! 77 each Discover i BEN FRANKLIN We bring variety to life! , master charge I INI IKUMlMH CIBO FULL-Flat or Fitted KODEL ' Standard Size 447 »27 each ANIMAL HABITAT SHEETS, PILLOWCASES 24-Hour ' Cass City • Where everything you buy is guaranteed. PILLOW CASES MATCHING TOWELS Look of A f r i c a ' Sheared cotton & polyester. Brown and tan on bone. BATH TOWELS each HAND TOWELS 187 WASH CLOTHS 87! I each CANNON. SHEET BLANKET Woven sheet blankets of poly'cotton with stitched ends. Colors. 70x84-in Only each ., CASS CITY CHRONICLE-THURSDAY, PAGE FOURTEEN ll,,.lt I: ,,H CASS CITY, MICHIGA NOVEMBER 9, 1978 It's cheaper, says visitor German beer may use American hops BUSY VISITOR — Max Hirschberger of West Germany was busy on the Arnold Broecker farm last Friday cutting boards to be used to heighten the sideboards on a farm truck trailer. You've had a long hard day. Now it's time to sit back and relax and enjoy that genuine German imported beer. That genuine German imported beer may be made from genuine American hops, according to Max Hirschberger. Hops is something he knows about. He grew up on a farm in Bavaria where hops is one of the staple products. He spent from Sept. 21 to this past Sunday working on the Arnold Broecker farm on Hoadley Road, Decker, learning about American agriculture. Hirschberger, 21, grew up on a farm but he now is studying to be a lawyer at the U n i v e r s i t y of Regensburg. On his r e t u r n to West Germany, he w i l l be s t a r t i n g his second year of studies. H e l m s four years to go, then must work two years before taking his final examinations. The young German isn't p l a n n i n g to be a lawyer, however. In his c o u n t r y , he e x p l a i n e d , there are too m a n y lawyers now but a law degree is considered a good background for a career in management. He hopes to some day work for a farm organization and for that reason thought it would be a good idea to get acquainted with agriculture in other countries. He inquired with a German farm group similar to the Farm Bureau here and through the Future Farmers of America, the visit to the Broecker farm was arranged. Mr. and Mrs. Broecker's daughter, Deb, has participated in two FFA farm exchanges to other countries. Hirschberger paid for the t r i p himself. He was paid by Broecker for his work on the f a r m but because of his relatively short stay, didn't earn enough to pay the cost of his trip. Before r e t u r n i n g home, he a t t e n d e d the FFA national convention in Kansas City. THK I I I H S C H B K K C K K f a m i l y f a r m is about 40 miles n o r t h of M u n i c h , about a m i l e from the nearest village. The f a m i l y lives on the f a r m but most German farmers, he said, live in a village and have all their buildings located there, w i t h I h e i r land outside of town. The f a r m t o t a l s 15(1 acres, which is large for the mountainous area. A 250- acre farm is large by German standards even in flatter areas. Crops grown on the Hirschberger farm are hops, wheat, barley, (sold as certified seed), oats and sometimes corn. For 10 years, Hirschberger explained, his father grew only cash crops. But the market for 1 hops isn't as good as it once was, so his father is now raising pigs. He has 70 now and when an addition on a building is finished, he will increase the number to 250. The declining value of the dollar in comparison to the German m a r k is a big factor in the declining value of hops as a cash crop for German farmers. The low value of I he dollar has made it economical for German breweries to import hops all the way from Washington state, the m a i n area where hops are grown in the United States. Hops require a lot of hand labor a n d , at least in better days, it was possible lor a lone f a r m e r to make a l i v i n g off only 20 acres of the crop. About two-thirds of hops grown in Germany are sold under contract w i t h middlemen, w i t h the price set in THANKSGIVING • CHRISTMAS STIHL CHAIN SAW SPECIAL SPECIAL Stihl Chain Saws and Stihl Saw Chains We have the Christmas Package Yoursfffff FARM BOSS With Purchased! 015 and 020 STIHL Saw Includes Vuluttd to AND IT'S A STIHL! Reg. $349.Vb with purchase of any With Free Chain Valued a t $ 1 /.95 Stihl Saw at Retail Price $ 28 95 excluding 015 and 020 When Your Chain Saw Has A Toothache See $20 . Stihl Cham Saw of a 95 I- ilc ;imi M.inilli- WniiilsMMii M, inu.il SPECIAL On Purchase 3AYE $2995 Woodcutters Kit CAME iheDEFORD DENTIST On any purchase of a $ SAVE Chain Saw 3°°- $ 00 8 Chain DAN'S AUTOMOTIVE „„„ FIREPLACE SHOP 1445 N. K i n g s t o n Road. Dcford Phone 872-3190 advance. The rest is sold on the free market and the price can vary widely from day to day, according to Hirschberger. HK VISITKI) SOMK other farms in the area in addition to working on the Broecker f a r m , which totals 900 acres (cash crops plus hogs and feeder heifers). His impression of American agriculture in comparison to that of his native country? Farming is as mechanized in Germany as it is here, but the machinery here is larger because farms are larger. 1978 MODEL CARS H u n t i n g prospects for deer hunters in the Thumb appear good, according to Bud Jarvis, s t a t e Department of N a t u r a l Resources w i l d l i f e biologist for Tuscola, Huron and S a n i l a c counties. The f i r e a r m s deer season s t a r t s Wednesday. Nov. If), and runs t h r o u g h Nov. 3D. Based on a larger number of c o m p l a i n t s from farmers about crop damage from deer and a slight increase in car-deer accidents compared to lasl year, Jarvis said it appears there may be more deer around. Accordingly, he expects the k i l l t h i s year w i l l be as good or s l i g h t l y b e t t e r t h a n last year. Al t h e end of (he 1!I77 season, be e s t i m a t e d 1,100 deer were k i l l e d in Tuscola c o u n t y , fioo in Sanilac and 51)0 in H u r o n . The well advanced corn harvest should m a k e i l easier for h u n t e r s ( h i s year. A year ago. due to wet w e a t h er, l i t t l e corn had been harvested by the s t a r t of deer season. Manx 1 deer preferred lo s l a \ in I l l e corn fields to feed, where they were hard to spot. Also, the then new lav.' requiring hunters to get w r i t t e n permission before h u n t i n g on p r i v a t e property may have kept some h u n t e r s out of such fields. W i t h most corn harvested t h i s year, more deer should be in brush and wooded areas where t h e y are easier to spot. Successful hunters can stop at (lie D N K office on M 2-1. south of Caro. to report t h e i r k i l l s and receive a "successful deer h u n t e r " patch. Reporting is not m a n dalorv. NOW SHOWING Because some DNR staff members will be on duly elsewhere in the area, the office w i l l only be open from ft a.m.-5 p.m. Monday through Friday. In past years, it has been open at least during the first week end of deer season. For h u n t e r s heading n o r t h , the Automobile Club of Michigan expects few if any t r a f f i c problems, with the heaviest traffic on Tuesday. "Traffic on major roads leading north w i l l be heavy t h a t day. but barring any weather problems, hunters should be ( r a v e l i n g at m a x i - BRAND NEW • * • Keep that great GM feeling with Deluxe Belts Tinted Glass Power Brakes V-6 Engine Automatic Transmission Power Steering White Walls AM Radio 00 Plus Taxes and Trans. genuine GM parts GM QUALITY SGRVCE/MRIS GENERAL MOTORS I*RTS DIVISION OUVRY CHEVROLET- OLDS, INC Cass City One of the exceptions is i the Detroit area. The oth< one is on northbound 1-7' north of Saginaw, where tl, northbound lanes have be( reduced from three to tw. near the Zilwaukee Bridge Statewide, the predictic. is nearly loo.ooo bucks wil be t a k e n , down from tl, record 105,000 killed la 1 year. The drop in the dec population due lo the sevet 11)77-711 winter is given as th 1 reason. Increased farm meehani- awareness t h a t the piobleii /.atioii has been a big boost to even exists. Because heatfarmers but it poses a ing loss occurs gradualK1 p o t e n t i a l t h r e a t to their the farmer usually lails t notice the problem unt§ hearing. Robert W i l k i n s o n , Mich- after permanent da map' igan Stale U n i v e r s i t y agri- has already occurred Hearing loss is due tl c u l t u r a l engineer, says hearing protection should be an exposure levels and dui atiol integral part of a farm of noise. The Occupations safety management pro- Safety and Health Admmf s t r a t u m ( O S H A i icconi gram. "Tests we've conducted mends t h a t noise not exceei a n n u a l l y since 1972 show a (Id decibels ( t h e unit HUM* s i g n i f i c a n t l y higher rate of urement of loudness) lor al hearing loss among farmers eight-hour day. Nomi;! compared to (hose in other speech is (id decibels ( ( I B ) industriali/.ed occupations," noisy t r a c t o r , power mow en chainsaw, jack ham men he said. H e a r i n g protection is in- two-row corn picker, com expensive, bul the major bine, electric elevatoi. lat problem among farmers is drying system or othei pieci of f a r m machinery produce! noise well over (he l)0 rill T OSHA l i m i t . "Decibels are not addr live," Wilkinson explained "Two tractors o p e i a t i n s side by side, each at OOclB, <1( not produce IKOdB." Till noise level would insteai increase :)dB, so !)3rlB r! twice as loud as 9()dB \! distance from the noisd source doubles, loudness de creases to one-fourth thd previous level. * * * * * Stock No. 2315 mum speeds everywhei| with two possible excel lions," said Joseph Ratk< auto club touring manage) Noise threat to farmers 1979 Still in Stock 1 Chevrolet Caprice - 4 dr. 1 Monte Carlo Coupe 1 Nova Custom - 4 dr. 1 Monza Wagon 7 Cutlass Supremes and Salons + * 1 Chevrolet Impala 4 dr. Demo * 1 Omega Brougham • Coupe * 1 Cutlass Supreme Coupe • Demo working this year on son one else's farm to gain soi, diversified experience The farm isn't big enou| to support two brothr working full-time with thf father (there are also a •! year-old brother and a sisi at home). Farms are passi down from father to son at with land selling for $5,C an acre, it is virtually 11 possible to buy land to stf off on one's own. (Rentn land is also difficult ) ' I "You don't move," • ! explained. One stays on t farm they were raised c "You can't buy a farm "I Hunting prospects look good in area COME IN AND SEE GOOD SELECTION OF And because farms are larger here - and because farmers and their families live on their farms instead of in villages -- he feels farm life is lonelier here than in Germany. Hirschberger would like some clay to return to farming but that may not be possible. An 18-year-old brother is planning to stay and is now studying agriculture in a two-year program, which consists of two days of classes a week the first year and one day a week the second year. The brother is Phone 872-4301 * Several methods exist td reduce a g r i c u l t u r a l noise A quieter machine, desigtr changes, slower speeds and rubber m o u n t s can reduce noise at the source. Tlu' farmer has more control over noise on the path lo thr r ear and at the ear, however' Enclosures, walls, a b l sorbers and distance affect 1 the noise on the way to the ear. but the most effective easiest and least expensive way to protect hearing j<with ear plugs or m u f f s 1 Plugs and muffs are avaiJ able at catalog stores, fa mil supply stores, sporting 1 , goods shops and welclmgl supply stores. "Availability of protection! should not be an excuse fori not using protective do-L vices," Wilkinson con- f eluded. "If you want lo hear your grandchildren learn tol t a l k , protect your hearingj now before it is loo late." ! i READ THf Chronicle i THEY CAN ill, „ 1,1 ^ASS CITY, MICHIGAN CASS CITY CHRONICLE-THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1978 PAGE FIFTEEN 3wen-Gage receives J-M accreditation The Owendale-Gagetown chool District has been ccredited by the University f Michigan. Accreditation, Supt. RonId Erickson said, should sip the district in its efforts keep property from being ansferred from it. Lack of adequate facilities id accreditation, he exained, were reasons cited ,' the state Board of Educaon in approving transfers om Owen-Gage to surjunding school districts. With the district now acedited and part of the new rfdition already in use -- it ill be completed in DecemSIMULATED • ENGRAVED BUSINESS CARDS AVAILABLE 1-COLOR OR 2-COLOR The Chronicle Phone 872-2010 no longer matters. At its October meeting, the Owen-Gage school board voted to start the process to achieve accreditation from the North Central Association, which has stricter standards than that of the U-M. On another matter, Erickson said he expects to receive the taxes from the Goslin parcel that will be billed this December due to a recent decision by Ingham County Circuit Judge James Kallman sending the matter back to the state Board of Education for rehearing. Tuscola County Prosecutor Patrick Joslyn said Tuesday that he is "leaning" toward the opinion that the taxes should go to the Cass City district, but has yet to write a formal opinion to present to the county Board of Commissioners. He also said there may be a meeting this week with a representative from the state attorney general's office, himself, and the two ber -- he commented, "It looks like the state board has no more reasons but to restore our district to what it was five years ago." Accreditation is based on such factors as class size, curriculum, number of books in library, extra-curricular activities and enrichment classes offered, quality of staff and financial condition. The district was notified in a letter dated Oct. 31 that the status was granted by the U-M Accreditation Advisory Committee. In August of last year, Owen-Gage was notified by the committee that accreditation would be granted once its new addition was in use so the letter dated Oct. 31 did not come as a complete surprise. At one time, accreditation or lack of it could be a factor in whether a student might get into certain colleges or universities but with most such schools now hungry for students, Erickson said, it $ 97 6 Size 27x26 DLANIVCi Sizes 6 mo SLEEPERS ° 4yeas doz. Wide variety of colors Sleep or Play $ 00 2/ 5 COVERALLS Boxed forGift Giving Receiving 2 BLANKET $$O49 Am for 2 £• Size 30x30 100% Acrylic INFANT BUBBLE SUITS Rompers and Coveralls 98 6mos.-24mos. $ 2 49 Infant's KNIT CAPS $-|97 • Infant's Knit Sleep or Play COVERALLS A wide selection of Patterns HOODED SWEAT SHIRTS Gripper Front Size 2-4 Toddler $498 TP Size 4-7 FOLLOW THE LEADER — Instructors Lori Reed and Keith Gugel (closest to camera) demonstrate a step as their class follows along. The four-session Cass City Community Education disco dancing class came to an end Tuesday night, though participants may bring in a disc jockey for a "graduation dance." Classes will probably be held again in the future. German school is different To become an a c c o u n t a n t , budget specialist or h a v e an office job in the government they can go for two years to Handelsschule, a special school for the "middle" careers. I ligh School in G e r m a n y is called G y m n a s i u m and it has n o t h i n g to do w i t h exercises. An American G y m n a s i u m is called Turnh a l l e here. To get i n t o High School ( w h i c h takes nine years to By Debbie Medrano c o m p l e t e ) they lake a test Summer v a c a t i o n is over a l t e r the f o u r t h year of Volksschule. If they don't here too. The German School sys- pass it they get a second tem is different in many chance again after the f i f t h ways than t h a t in the U n i t e d year. Report card grades in States. Each i n d i v i d u a l state runs its own schools so they Germany go from 1 to (i. One all start on the same d a y . to -1 are passing grades. If This year it was Sept. •) in students get a "> or (i in two or more classes they have to Hessen where we live. Children start school at :i repeat the whole school i k i n d e r g a r t e n - a German year. They can repeat only word Americans b o r r o w ) two years and then they and go there to the age of (i, have to leave school. To get into a u n i v e r s i t y to get t h e m used to school. After that i t ' s off to Volks- a f t e r the nine years of schule (people's school) for Gymnasium are completed, they t a k e a test called the up to age 10. After finishing the fourth A b i t u r . which by U.S. standyear of Volksschule, they ards is equal to two years of change to a system leading college because of the d i f f i c u l t y of the test, knowledge to higher education. First there's M i t l e l s c h u l e required, and number of or Realschule. They can go school years already comthere for six years after pleted. II for whatever reason which, when they pass a f i n a l exam, they receive a they don't take or pass the Mittlere, a diploma that A b i t u r they have a chance to gives them t h e opportunity make it up by going to Abendschule ( n i g h t school) to get better jobs. for three years. German kids go to school Monday through Saturday, li a . m . - l p . m . and sometimes extra hours during the week in the afternoon. There are a lot of German kids I've talked to ( E n g l i s h is m a n d a t o r y for at least four years) who t h i n k kids The Gagetown Village back in the States have it Council Monday evening ap- made. I think so too! pointed Leroy Stapleton of C593 Third Street to the council. He replaces Elmer Shope who resigned. It was decided to put up the Christmas lights downtown this Saturday while the weather is still relatively warm. The council discussed the six-month financial report with an auditor from Karl Leppien and Co. of Pigeon. The village is in good f i n a n cial shape after the first half of the fiscal year, it was reported. The meeting dates for December and January were changed to the first Wednesday of each month, to Dec. fi and J a n . li. The iiuthor is the former Debbie Francis, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Klmer Francis of Cass City. Slie joined the A r m y a f t e r g r a d u a t i n g from high school here in l i l T I and met her h u s b a n d , .hum Medrano. while stationed in Texas. No longer in the service, she is w i t h her h u s b a n d , u h o is stationed in ( l e i - m a n y . They h a v e two sons, Curt and Jason. AT FEDERATED FLANNEL DIAPERS sides in the dispute with the aim of resolving the argument over where the taxes go until the property transfer case is definitely resolved. Erickson contends that based on an attorney general's ruling, since the matter hasn't been resolved yet, the taxes still go to OwenGage. An attorney for property owners seeking to transfer out of the district, Robert Kleeb, said at the time of the Kallman decision that the judge erred in including the Goslin parcel in his ruling as the state Supreme Court had already approved the transfer and he therefore would ask for reconsideration. The matter may be discussed at the Owen-Gage School Board's meeting Monday. $598 Infants' ANKLETS Size 4-61/z. White or pastel colors. 100% Stretch Nylon Staple ton appointed to council DISCO FEVER — Lori Reed and Keith Gugel demonstrate the latest disco dance step to their students. The singles class (which included some wives whose husbands preferred to stay home) had 60 enrolled. There were 37 couples in the other class. Trespassing law affects all hunters The M i c h i g a n Recreational Trespass Act prohibits h u n t i n g , f i s h i n g , operation of a snowmobile, off-road recreational vehicle or other motori/.ed vehicle on someone else's property, w i t h o u t t h e i r w r i t t e n consent. The only t i m e consent is not necessary is if a h u n t e r enters property for the sole purpose of retrieving his h u n t i n g dog. If a h u n t e r loses his dog, he may enter property w i t h o u t prior permission, but he may not carry a gun and must leave promptly if the owner or t e n a n t asks him to. If the h u n t e r carries a firearm w h i l e retrieving his clog, a court must decide whether the h u n t e r was merely getting his dog, or instead intended to h u n t . Hunters are subject to common law l i a b i l i t y , which means they can be sued i!' they cause any property damage. A hunter is also liable under Michigan's c r i m i n a l code for trespassing if he enters property without permission and refuses to leave when asked. jail and a SUM fine. A l t h o u g h there have been reported cases of landowners refusing to sign permission slips to aliow hunters on t h e i r land because of feai they i l a n d o w n e r s ) will be l i a b l e if the hunters are i n j u r e d , s t a l e law provides: "A landowner is not liable for injuries to fishermen, h u n t e r s , trappers, campers, snowmobilers. motorcyclists or other recreational users who use his land if a fee is not charged and if the i n j u r i e s were not caused by Violation of the law is a the gross negligence or willmisdemeanor, punishable ful misconduct by the landby a m a x i m u m of 1)0 days in owner." HUNTERS' SPECIAL Boys' Corduroy PANT AND KNIT SHIRT SET Long Sleeve Size12.2-.nnos. 9-24 T-SHIRTS Infants' BUTTON SWEATERS $ 5 $ *2 $ 98 5 *^O4Q J The Cass City Chronicle ALL SHOT GUNS THURSDAY - FRIDAY - SATURDAY ONLY FOR A YEAR •1 Iff^'lta I m. J^^Bi I •• mtr ' Cassciry MAKES A 6497 Main Street PERFECT GIFT. Phone 872-3515 I, ,,l, il ilk i .,,,! PAGE SIXTEEN, 0. oves Ja Governor and Lieutenant Governor WILLIAM B. FITZGERALD OLIVIA P. MAYNARD n D e o = zu 3HS ac Coun scola Coun CASS CITY CHRONICLE-THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1978 c o u c o 3 1152. 535*1 5007 Governor and Lieutenant Governor WILLIAM 6. MILLIKEN JAMES H. BRICKIEY 70X1 1100 D UO D SH* R 565- D s-nr 23 G Secretary ol State RICHARD H. AUSTIN Secretary of State MELVIN L. LARSEN Attorney General FRANK J. KELLEY nz. 67CZ. CASSCITY.MICHIG^ Driver arrested after ramming buildings A Mayville man was arrested on a charge of driving under the influence of liquor after his car ran off the road late Friday and slammed into a house on Hurds Corner Road. Arrested was James V. Maguire, 22, of 1980 Saginaw Road. He was released from jail Saturday after posting $100 bond. He is scheduled to appear in district court Nov. 13. Sheriff's deputies reported he was southbound on Hurds Corner, north of Hoppe Road, at 11 p.m. when his car went off the west side of the road and traveled 252 yards before slamming into the house of Maurice Evans of 5581 N. Hurds Corner, Gagetown. A daughter, Sheryl Evans, told the Chronicle the car slammed into a well house, a few feet away, demolishing it, then swung around and struck the home. The family rebuilt the well house Saturday afternoon. The impact shut off the water supply and that was restored. The main damage to the house was to the siding, which as of Tuesday had yet to be repaired. Miss Evans said the car just missed hitting a fuel oil storage tank which was next to the well house. At 11:50 a.m. Friday, according to Cass City police, Mildred R. Mosack,67, of 4729 South Street, Gagetown, was westbound in the alley north of Main Street and collided with a car that was northbound on West Street. Driver of the other car was Eldon L. Young, 60, of Elkton. At 2:15 p.m. Friday, village police said, Cynthia Sue Langmaid, 20, of 4595 Oak Street, parked alongside the south curb on Main Strec east of Seeger, and backs into a parked car. Owner i the other vehicle was Mei ritt B. Perry of Caro. At 3:10 a.m. Saturda^ Jeffery S. Rutkowski, 17, t 4271 Seeger Street, wi westbound on Cass Cit Road, east of Hadley Roe in Greenleaf township, whe[ his vehicle struck a deer I reported the mishap to Cas City police the next day Your Guide to 165 Marked Michigan Snowmobile Trails 12.50 1979 LEGEND Attorney General COCO STEPHEN C. BRANSDORFER STATE PARKS AND RECREATION ARE « United States Senator mi m CARL LEVIN £003 9117 United States Senator in ROBERT P. GRIFFIN IOC ZHI Representative In Congress BOB TRAXLER £73 ZB3 7Z20 SSTl \ST3 45-71 S£Z2. Representative in Congress NORMAN R. HUGHES State Senator KATHLEEN M. ASHER D HOI State Senator zos ALVIN DeGROW Z12- Representative in State Legislature JAMES McCANN D 84th 307 Representative in State Legislature LOREN S. ARMBRUSTER R 84th S03 4HI RICHARD DAVIES D77th QUINCY HOFFMAN R 77th 7613 Svprtmi Cowrt 79CO IS-I G. MENNEN WILLIAMS Svprtmt Cowrt JAMES L. RYAN ISS fe3 ALICE GILBERT ll 103 Svprtmt Court GARY R. MCDONALD zor H^OI 17 ZC7S" X X. N) B - Parole Limit OO r-J U N ir- C - State Funds =^ 00 T- A • Constitution 0- O o— DO [»Q Ir. M D - Drinking Age rj- O E - Headlee U, U 00 O or r~ U VJ? 00 u r- i/s 0 N IA r- 00 r- o b- LTk -^= 00 o- G - State Police H - Voucher 2317 V* sj) U <*» (A CA 00 V4 N J - Tisch STATE PARKS 1 MC LAIN: near Calumet, 365 acres 2 TWIN LAKES: near Winona. open area.165 acres 3 PORCUPINE MTS. near Onlonagon. 35 miles ol trails 4 LAKE GOGEBIC: near Maremsco, 345 acres 5 BEWABIC: near Crystal Falls. 120 acres 6 CRAIG LAKE: near Nostoria, 4.W7 acros. 7 VAN RIPER: near Ishpoming, 1.025 acres 8 WELLS near Cedar River. 875 acres 9 FAYETTE: near Garden. 200 aoes 10 INDIAN LAKE, near Mamslique, 375 acres 11 MUSKALLONGE LAKE near Deer Park. 125 acres 12TAHQUAMENON FALLS near Paradise, 14,300 acros. Groomed trail. 13 STRAITS: near Si Ignace, 120 acres 14BRIMLEY. 45 acres 15 DETOUR near Cedarville, 400 acres 16WILDERNESS near Mackinaw City. 15 miles ol trails 17 ALOHA near Cheboygan, 30 acros 18CHEBOYGAN: 917 acros 19ONAWAY 132 acres 20PETOSKEY t-mile trail 21 BURT LAKE: naar Indian River. 280 acros 22 HOEFT near Rogers City. 224 acres 23 YOUNG near Boyne City. 500 aoes 24 CLEAR LAKE, near Atlanta, 269 noes 25INTERLOCHEN neai Traverse City. 100 acres 26HARTWICK PINES near Grayling. 4.01B acros 27 ORCHARD BEACH near Manistoe. 140 acres 2H MITCHELL near Cadillac, trail corridor 29 NORTH HIGGINS LAKE near Roscommon, 368 acres Groomed trail 30TAWAS POINT near East Tawas. 75 acres 31 RIFLE RIVER near Rose City. 4.318 acres Groomed trail 32 LUDINGTON 7 miles ol trails 3.3 SILVER LAKE near Han, 700 acres 34 NEWAYGO 237 acres 35 GLADWIN 370 acres 36 BAY CITY 90 acros 37 SLEEPER near Casoville. 850 acros 38 PORT CRESCENT near Port Austin, 546 acres 39 SANILAC near Forestvilk). 111 acros 40 MUSKEGON 400 acres 41 GRAND HAVEN 25 acres 42 HOLLAND. 40 acros 43 YANKEE SPRINGS near Middleville 3.204 acres 44 IONIA 2,700 acres 45 SLEEPY HOLLOW near Lansing, 2,600 acres 46ORTONVILLE 3.886 acres 47 HOLLY noar Pontiac. 1.870 acros 48 SEVEN LAKES near Holly. 1.375 acres 49METAMORA HADLEY near Melamora. 630 acres 50 LAKEPORT near Port Huron. 200 acres 51 ALGONAC: 750 acres 52 BALD MOUNTAIN near Ponliac. 2.800 acres 53 ROCHESTER-UTICA near Uhca. 400 acros 54 VAN BUREN near South Haven. 750 acres 55 WARREN DUNES noar St Josepn. '40 acros 56 FORT CUSTER. near Battle Creek, 1.337 acres 57 PONTIAC LAKE noar Ponliac. 3.500 acres S3 HIGHLAND noar Now Hudson, 3,600 acres 59 DODGE PARK NO. 4 near Pontiac. 130 acros 60 BRIGHTON: 3,820 acres 61 PROUD LAKE: near Millord, 2,200 acres 62 ISLAND LAKE near Brighton, 3,100 acres 63 PINCKNEY: noar Gregory. 5.500 acres 64 WATERLOO 11.000 acres 65 CAMBRIDGE near Cambridge Junction. 120 acres 66 HAYES near Clinton. 400 acres 67 STERLING: noar Monroe, 525 acres IX) e« K - Bail Denial <r M - Gas Tax R - Railroads vtf N N <r~ r? rrt U3 r-J U 0« 0 r* v» U CO o* 00 r/\ 00 V0 Ln GET A CHECKUP! The man who is concerned about his future sees his doctor regularly to make sure he is healthy. He averts disaster by thinking ahead. He also sees the insurance professionals at our INDEPENDENT AGENCY for the proper insurance on his home, auto and business. HARRIS-HAMPSHIRE AGENCY, IMC. 681 5 E. Cass City Road Cass City Phone 872-2688 f 5 SOUTHERN GAME AREAS 68 ROGUE RIVER 4 mi W ol Kent City on M-57. Trail: 13 mi 69ALLEGAN 5 mi. NW ol Allogan off 118th Avo Area: 12.000 acres 70 BARRY: 9 mi. W, ol Hastings off Yankee Springs Rd Trail 6 mi 71 FLAT RIVER: 1 mi N ol Belding, 3 mi S. ol Groenville Trail 23 mi. 72STANTON: 2 mi. S ol Slanlon on M-66 Trail: 12m. 73MINDEN CITY: 12 rni. N. ol Sandusky oft Gates and Reined rds. Trail. 7 mi 74 PORT HURON: 6 mi W. ol Port Huron on M-136 Trail 6 mi STATE FORESTS 75 CAMP 9 TRAIL, 2 mi W ol Connorvillo Trail 2 mi 76MAnENISCO-PRESOUE ISLE, WIS . Iron Range State Fores! in Maronisco, Trail 12 mi 77 RAMSEY MARENISCO. al Mnromsco Trail 33 mi 7BMARENISCO-UF.HGLAND, at Maremsco Trail: 24 mi 79BERGUND.PORCUPINE MT., 1 mi N ol Oorgland Trail 18 mi BOflERGLAND-VICTORIA, MishwabiC Slalo Forest at Bcrgland or Victoria Trail 20 mi 01 DILL NICHOLS, Misrrwiibic Slnlo Forest al Mass Trail 40 mi H2 PORCUPINE MT , Porcupine Mlnr, St Pk Trail 29mi. B3 MISERY BAY. Mishwabic Slalo Forosl: 2V; mi N. ol Wmonn along M-26 Trail 14 mi. 84 ALSTON-WINONA, Mishwabic Slalo Forost. at Donkon. Trail: 30 mi 85 ATLANTIC-FREDA, Mishwabic Slalo Forosl. ',> mi W. ol Atlantic, Trail 9 mi 80KEWEENAW, Mishwabic Slate Forosl. v> mi. SE of Laurujm. also in Copper Harbor Trail; 50 mi. 07 LAURIUM-LAKE LINDEN. Mishwabic Slfllo Forosl: In Laurium and Lako Lmdon. Trail: 5 mi. 88 LAC VIEUX, Baraga Slalo Foresl; 3 mi. W, ol L'Anso on Mongo C«M)k Rd Trail 17ml 8 9 C R Y S T A L F A L L S - B A T E S JCT . Iron 147MUSKRAT LAKE. Oscoda Slate Forest 5 118 PARADISE-UPPER TAHQUAMENON Range Slate Foresl 2 mi NW ol Crystal mi N ol MKJ on M-33 to Co Rd 608. 4'i FALLS. Lake Superior Stale Forest t mi Falls oil US-141 Trail IB mi mi W . 1 mi N Trail 25 mi W ol Paradise on M-123 Trail 14 mi 90 S T A G E R G R A D E . Iron Range Slntc 148 NORTH HIGGINS LAKE, Au Sable Stale 119PULLUP LAKE. Mackinac and TahquameForest 1 mi E ol Crystal Falls on M-69 or Forest 1 mi E ol N Higgms Lake 1-75 exit non State Forests 2 mi E ol Naubmway on "i mi E ol Alpha on US-141 Trail 10 mi Trail: 8 mi. US-2 to M-2B, 4 mi S ol Newborry Trail 91 L ANSE-ALSTON-SIDNAW, Ottawa Na20m, 149 WEST HIGGINS LAKE. Houghion Lake tional Forest nt L'Anse. Alston or Sidnaw and Au Sablo State loresls v< mi W ol 120 CARH RIVER. Mackinac State Forest 3 mi Trail 51 mi interchange US-27 and Co Rd 104 Trail NE ol Brovort on Worth Rd 10 2 mi SW ol ( J2 PALMER. Mictugamme Slale Forest 4 mi 18 mi Trout Lako Trail 16': mi NE ol Palmer on M 35 Trail 7 mi t50 PRUDENVILLE. Houghion Lake Slale 121 REXTON. Mackinac Slate Forest at Forosl 2 mi W ol Prudenvillo on M-55. 4 93 K E L S O - C R Y S T A L F A L L S Iron Range Rexlon Trail 26 mi mi S Trail 25 mi State Forosl ill Kelso Jet Trail 6 mi 122 K I N R O S S - R A C O . Munuscong Stale 151 OGEMAW HILLS. Ogomaw State Forest 3 94 SILVER LAKE-FLOODWOOD. Ford Rivei Forost al Race Trail 12 mi mi. E ol Si Helen on Boaver Lako Rd State Forosl 5 mi N ol Channing on M-95 123 RUDYARD-TROUT LAKE, Munuscong Trail 13 mi Trail 40 mi State Forosl at Rudyard Trail 24 mi 95 C H A R L E Y L A K E S . Ford R i v e r Slato 152 HOSE CIIY-CLEAH LAKE. Ogomaw Slalo 124SOO-RACO. Munuscong Slate Forest Forest 6 mi NE ol Ralph Trail 6 mi Forosl. 3'-i mi W ol Rose City Trail 50 mi Sherman Park. 1 mi E ol Sauti Sle Mono 96 L O R E T T O - F E L C H . Ford R i v e r Slato Trail 21 mi 153 SEVEN MILE-HILL. Oscoda Stale Forest Foresl I1') mi E ol Wauccdah oil US-2 or 5'i mi W ol Oscoda on Rivm Rd , 2 mi N 125 CASTLE ROCK, Mackinac Slate Forosl 4 2 ' j mi S ol Poster City Trail 25 mi lo Bissonotto Rd 1 mi W Trail 20 mi mi N ol Si Ignace oil 1-75 Trail 18 mi 97 L I T T L E L A K E . Escanaba River Slalo 15-1 STRATFORD-GRASS LAKE, Missaukoe 126 CEDARVILLE, Munuscong Slato Foresl Forost In Gwinn and Little Lako Trail 5 mi and Kalkaska Slalo loresls i'i mi E ol r-j mi N ol Cedarville on M-129 Trail 98 SAND PLAINS, Michigammo State Forest Moorcstown. 1 mi NE Tr.iil 13 mi 26 mi oft M-35 al Now Swnnzy Trail 21 mi 155 LINCOLN HILLS. Pore Marquite Stato and 127CHEBOYQAN-BLACK MOUNTAIN. Black 99 CHATHAM BRANCH. D.iy do Noc State Mamslee National lorosts 15'j mi N ol Lako Slale Forost 3 ' j m i E olChcboygan Fores! 2 mi E ol Chatham oil M-94 Trail Baldwin on M-37. E ol Kaderabok s gas Trail 45 mi 6 mi station Trail 24 mi 128 INDIAN RIVER. Hardwood Slale Forest 100FELCH GRADE, Bay do Noc, Menominoe 156 LITTLE MANISTEE, Pore Marquotto Slale 2': mi W ol Indian River on M-68 Trail and Ford River Stale loror,!s al Feich Tr.nl Foresl 4'imi N ol Baldwin on M-37, W mi 21 mi 44 mi E Trail 45 mi 129 WOLVERINE. Hardwood Stale Foresl 2 101 PIPELINE, Sturgeon River Statu Forost 1 157 TIN CUP, Pero Marquerto Slalo Forost 5 mi W , V: mi S ol Wolverine to Peel Rd mi S ol Ralph on Co Hcl 501 Trail 17 mi mi NW ol Nirvana Trail 19 mi Trail 17 mi 102 SKUNK CREEK. .Sturgeon Rivor State 156 OLD SHEEP RANCH, Chippewa River 130 CHANDLER HILL. Jordan River Stale Foresl 2': mi N ol Folch on Co Rd 501 Slato Forost 1 mi N , 3 mi W ol Evan on Foresl 5 mi W ol Boyno Falls on Co Rd Trail ?3 mi Twin Creek Rd Trail 25 mi 626. 2 mi N on Slashing Rd . '» mi W on 103 LAKE ANTOINt. Slu/gt'on River State 159 FUR FARM, Chippewa River and MisChandler Rd Trail 34 mi Forest 2 mi E of Wnucedah at Goavor saukoe Stato lorosls al Harrison airport 131 NORTH BRANCH. Otsooo Stalo Forest Poles Trail 10 mi Trail 50 mi 7'7mi S otGaylordonOldUS-27, 8 mi E 104 HOVIE. Grand Snbip Slate Foresl 15mi S 160 MOLASSES RIVER. Titlabawassee River on Slato Rd Trail 23 mi ol Munising on Hwy 13 Trail 6 mi Slalo Forost 7 mi E ol Gladwin on M-61 132 SILVER CREEK, Black Lake Slate Forosl 105 ENSIGN-ROUND L A K E , Grand Satilo Trail 35 rni 2 mi E ol Millorsburg Trail 40 mi St.lle Forost 15 mi S ol Munising on Hwy 161 WEST MICHIGAN, al Deer Run Goll 133AVERY HILLS. Thunder Bay River Slale 13 Trail 7 mi Course on Cascade Rd S ol Lowell, o; Forost 4'imi S ol Atlanta on Co Rd 487, 106 N HIAWAThA, Gr.lnrJ S.lblo Stale Forest Yankee Springs Roc Area Trail 50 mi 3 mi W on Avery Lako Rd Trail 14 mi at Shingleton Trail 4H mi 134 BRUSH CREEK. Thunder Bay Rivor Slalo 107 SUNRISE. Grand Sable Slale Foresl I mi Forest 2 rni N ol Atlanta on M-33. ** mi E N ol Shmglelon on Co Rd HIS Trail 40 on Voyor Rd Trail 30 mi mi 135 DEVIL'S LAKE, Alpona Stato Forosl 4 mi NATIONAL FORESTS 108 HAYWIRE. Mamsliqun River Sl.llo Forest S ol Alpona on Pipor Rd Trail 27 mi 162 OTTAWA. 200 miles ol marked, groomed 5 mi N ol Manistiqtio on M-9-1 Trail 21 mi 136 PLATTE RIVER, Bolsio River Slalo Forest trails. Obtain maps and regulations al 109 HIGH ROLLWAYS. Manisliquo River Slalo 6'.i mi SE of Honor on Cider Rd 1'imi E supervisor's office in Ironwood or al Rangor Forost 10 rni N and 1 mi E ol Manisliquo ol Co Hd 669 Trail 39 mi Dislncl otlicos in Dossomor, Borgland. Iron on Co Rd 448 Trail 15 mi 137 BETSIE RIVER, Bntsio Rivor Slalo Forost. Rivor, Ontonagon and Walersmeel 110 GRAND MARAIS. Lake Suoorior Slale start at Boulah. Honor, Thompsonvillo or 163 HIAWATHA, Rapid Rivor District (near Forosl 24 mi N ol Newtxirry on Co Rd Turtle Lako Trail 38 mi Rapid River), one roulo, 20 miles; Mams407 Trail 17 mi 13HBOARDMAN VALLEY, File Lako & Kalliquo District (al Manislique), one trail, 8 111 PINE STUMP-TAHOUAMENON FALLS. miles, one route, 11 miles; Munising District kaska Stato lorosls start al Maytiold. KalLnko Superior Slalo Forosl 20 mi N ol (at Munising), two trails, 28 miles, plus 50 kaska, Walton Jet.. Traverse City 250 or Nowborry on Co Rd 407 Trail 32 mi miles ol routes; St. Ignace District (near Si. Filo Lako Trail: 81 mi. 112 PARADISE-PINE STUMP JUNCTION. Ignaco), ono route, 20 miles, and Soo Dis139 BEAR LAKE SPUR Bolsio Rivor Slalo Lnko Superior Slale Forosl In Paradise trict (al Saull Sle. Marie), two routes, 50 Forosl: al Thompsonvillo. Trail: 16 mi. and Pino Slump Junction Trail 10 mi. miles. Obtain detailed maps al supervisor's 140 BLUE BEAR, Kalkaska Slalo Forost: 11 mi. 113DOLLARVII.LE DAM, Tahqunmonon River office in Escanaba or at Ranger District ofE of Kalkaska on M-72. Trail: 45 mi. Slale Forosl Imkr, Nowborry with Irnils to fices in above cilios. 141 MISS-KAL LINE, Missaukoo Slalo Fo-est: Grnnd Marais and Tahqunmonon Falls 164 MANISTEE, al Baldwin, 9 trails from 22 to IV; rni. E. of Mooroslown. 1 mi NE Trail: TraJ 10 mi • 50 miles long. Al Cntwrfue Ski area near 26 rni 114 NEWQERRY-UPPER TAHQUAMENON Cadillac, t trail, 37 miles plus trails 15 miles 142GRAYLING-LOVELLS, Au Sablo Slam FALLS. Lake Suponoi and Tiihquiimonon north to Mosick, 10 miles south to Lincoln Forosl: 2 mi. N ol Grayling on Old US'27. Slain lorosls Charcoal Grade, t mi N. ol Hills stale trail and 25 miles east lo Cadillac; Trail. 63 mi. Nowborry, or Tahquamonon Falls Sl;ilo Udell Hill, 4 miles west ol Wollslon oft M-55, 143 SKYLINE, Au Sablo Slalo Forosl: 6W mi. S. Park. Trail 25 rni 15 miles; Nowaygo-Whilo Cloud, near ol Grayling, 1 mi, E. Trail: 25 mi. 115NEWQERRY-TAHOUAMENON RIVER, While Cloud Slate Park, 88 miles; Oceana 144 GLADWIN REFUGE. Tittabawassoo Rrvor Tahquamonon River and Lako Superior Crook, near Pines Point Campground 14 Slalo lorosls IVj mi N. of Nowborry oil Stato Forosl: 1W ml. N. ol Meredith. Trail. miles northoasl of Montague, 25 miles. 13 mi. M-123. Trail: 22 mi 165 HURON, Hanisville, throe trails from 10 to 116 McMILLAN. Tahquamonon River Slato 145HOSCOMMON-ST. HELEN, Houflhlon 20 miles; Oscoda, 20-mile-lorig trail; Huron, Forosl: 3 mi, S. ol McMillan on Co, Rd. 429 Lake Slalo Forosl: t ml. SE ol Roscommon 76-mllo-long trail linking Oscoda; Hale, on M-76, Of In SI. Helen Vi mi. E. ol M-76 on Trail; 13 mi. South Branch; Sand Lake and East Tawu Beaver Lake Rd. Trail: 25 mi. (maps at Oscoda-Au S«ble or T«w*i 117PARADISE-RACO, Lako Superior and chambers ol commerce); 200 mile* ol un> Munuscong Stats loroslo: al Paradise or H6 ROLL TRI, Oscoda Stale Forosl: *. mi, E. plowed forest roads. Rnco Trail 35 ml ol Lovolln on Lovells Rd Trail 25 nil. PAGE SEVENTEEN CASS OITY CHRONICLE-THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1978 •ASS CITY, MICHIGAN Circuit Court cases Citizens of tomorrow Yorke receives 3 years' probation "PICKLE PUSS" is the name of the Ubly High School senior play, to be presented Friday and Saturday at 8 p.m. in the high school cafeteria. Rehearsing a scene are, from left, Ken Western, Bill Rutkowski, Debbie Kubacki and Marge Lowe. Camille Timoszyk is faculty advisor for the comedy about a boy who tries to get by dressed as a girl in order to win a bet; Linda (ilaza is student director. No immediate danger from PBB at landfill tinued from page one; peeled the site Thursday. vccording to Bails, there is • pole b u i l d i n g there now. >ut no well or s t r e a m nearby o no immediate threat of ontamination. "We do have •^tme lime to react." The s i t e is covered w i l l ) cla\ a l t h o u g h one spot could use some a d d i t i o n a l such material. It w i l l be up to a D N R geologist to d e t e r m i n e w h a t t e s t i n g is needed to determ i n e if there is a long-range p r o b l e m . W h e t h e r soil borings m i g h t be needed, for i n s t a n c e , m i g h t depend on w h e t h e r it can be learned w h a t type of soil is u n d e r n e a t h where (he t r a s h was dumped T e s t i n g is "not a high p r i o r i t y . " he c o n t i n u e d , as some s i t e s where PBB is b u r i e d pose a more i m m e d - Others (iet Quick Results With The Chronicle's Classified Ads You Will Too! i a t e t h r e a t of spreading c o n t a m i n a t i o n . T e s t i n g at the K i n g s t o n d u m p m i g h t be done some t i m e next year 1 . As for who dumped the c o n t a m i n a t e d feed there -and w h e t h e r it is indeed c o n t a m i n a t e d -- i s n ' t known for sure y e t . Bails said conceivably it could have been disposed of out of fear it m i g h t be c o n t a m i n a t e d , not out of knowledge t h a t i t was. The Farm B u r e a u records indicate the feed belonged to t h e K i n g s t o n Farm Service, however, the business' own• • 'iehard K. Walker, told t i n 'ironicle the feed d i d n ' t come f r o m there and t h a t he never has sold Farm Bureau Services feed. Timothy A. Yorke was placed on three years' probation Monday by Circuit Judge M a r t i n E. Clements for felonious assault. Yorke, 18, of 3268 Barnes Road, M i l l i n g t o n , pleaded guilty to the charge Sept. 11 in connection w i t h an assault July 19 in M i l l i n g t o n township upon Donald Mclntyre, the defendant being armed w i t h a shotgun. Yorke was also sentenced to (id days in the county j a i l , to be served s t a r t i n g June 2(1, a f t e r completion of school, fined $100 and assessed $200 court costs. Also M o n d a y before Judge Clements: Robert W. Adams, 39, of 15(i Center Street, Fairgrove, stood m u t e to charges of o b s t r u c t i n g , resisting or opposing a police officer, d r i v i n g w i t h o u t a license, f a i l u r e to obey an order of a police officer and speeding KM miles per hour in a 35 mph /.one. The charges were all in connection w i t h an i n c i d e n t A p r i l 14. 197,r> in Fairgrove. In May of t h a t y e a r , the d e f e n d a n t f a i l e d to show up for a p r e l i m i n a r y e x a m i n a tion in the case. A plea of i n n o c e n t was entered in his behalf Monday and a p r e t n a l hearing scheduled Dec. 4. Bond was continued. Dean A. F i n e r y . 22. formerly of M a y v i l l e . pleaded guilty to attempted uttering and p u b l i s h i n g of a forged d o c u m e n t . H i s plea was accepted and sentencing scheduled Dec. 4. The charge was in connect i o n w i t h a t t e m p t e d cashing ol a false or a l t e r e d l ; .S Treasury t a x r e f u n d check for $151 in Cam in M a r c h . 197H. Michigan Mirror Officials eye new tax options A number of stale officials have been scrambling to develop contingency plans to put into operation should any one, or all three, of the tax proposals on the November ballot be approved, The plan is to prepare (Instate and its revenue coffers should the proposals take e f f e c t . California recently was caught somewhat f l a t footed when Proposition 13 was approved there reducing property taxes. The state, however, had a $5 b i l l i o n surplus w i t h which to work, while Michigan has only its so-called budget and economic stabilization fund t o t a l i n g under $200 m i l l i o n . The group is supposed to have a set of options ready just prior to the election. Those o p t i o n s will likely be discussed and debated by a special ballot proposal imp l e m e n t a t i o n commission to be appointed by Governor William G. Milliken. f f 4- -I- + + PRE-DEER (DEAR) SEASON Outstanding Low Prices On All STEEL CABINETS That commission is to consider the implications and a l t e r n a t i v e s of the proposals. "The idea behind these plans is not to discredit the proposals, but to be ready," said Thomas Clay, director of the state's office of the budget. The group is divided i n t o two separate subgroups one to draft options to deal w i t h Proposals "E" and "J" •- the lleadlee tax l i m i t a t i o n proposal and Tisch property tax cut - and the second to deal w i t h proposal "II" - the voucher school f i n a n c i n g plan. •I- -f- +- + -f + Robert Kleine, director of the Office of Revenue and Tax Analysis, said if only the lleadlee plan is adopted, the state will not have too many problems in adjusting. The amendment prohibits increases in state spending greater t h a n actual increases in personal income. The Tisch property tax cut, however, would require the state to make up around SI.7 billion in revenue, revenue, that would largely go to schools and local governments. It cuts property taxes in half, limits the amount they can increase and puts a ceiling of 5.6 percent on the income tax. Approval of both Tisch and voucher would wipe out nearly three-fourths of Michigan's property taxes c u t t i n g revenues by some $3 billion. The voucher plan takes schools off property tax financing and requires the Legislature to devise an alternative method of funding schools, both public and private. Choice of White, Copperlone, Avocado & Harvest Cold 42" DELUXE CHINA 42" x 20" x 72" Custom kitchen storage with exfended plastic work area magnetic catches, utility drawer. 42 MASTER WARDROBE 42" x 21" x 72" Hat shelf, storage drawer below, plus s t r o n g lock Sandalwood finish. $5.00 Additional tor Copper/one, Avocado or Harvest Gold \- Wi. :-1Tp,- i-iii-jul Hi: days in the county jail but will be allowed to go to work during the day. He was placed on two years' probation Oct. 11, 1977 for possession of phencyclidine. Violation of probation was due to his being convicted Aug. 21 in district court of d r i v i n g with license 5, suspended. Emery is presently serving a sentence in the Muskegon Correctional Facility for another uttering and publishing charge. Probation was continued for GeorgeS. Buniack, 21, of Hurds Corner Road, Caro, who pleaded guilty Oct. 10 to violation of probation. He also was sentenced to 15 Lisa, 9, Christy, and Matt, 3, children of Mr. and Mrs. LaVern Rutkowski, 4394 Woodland Ave. Christopher, 8, Amy, 4, and Holly, 1, children of Mr. and Mrs. Alan Klco, 4439 S Seeger Street. Shannon, 10, and Bryce, 5, children of Mr. and Mrs. Dale M c l n t o s h , (J824 Houghton Street. Debbie, 10, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Mclntosh, 5312 Milligan Road. CO.MMITTKK OFFICIALLY FOIIMKI) TO STOP GAS TAX I 1 I K K After p r e l i m i n a r y discussions, a c o m m i t t e e has been formed to stop the Legislature's adoption of a two-cent increase of gasoline and diesel fuel taxes and an increase in the vehicle license plate fee. "People Against Higher Taxes" w i l l try to hold up the effectiveness of the increases by placing the quest i o n on the 1980 ballot. Republican Senators Harry DeMaso of B a t t l e Creek and John Welborn of Kalama/.oo. co-sponsors of the group, said they hoped to have petitions ready for c i r c u l a t i o n in the state in about t h r e e weeks. If thi' propel' n u m b e r of s i g n a t u r e s are certified by the Stale Board of Canvassers to place the question on the b a l l o t , the increase would be delayed u n t i l after the 108(1 election where v o t ers would make the f i n a l d e t e r m i n a t i o n as to w h e t h e r the increases should t a k e effect. '•' "*>«s?« ^*& „ * * i D e n i s e, 9, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Elmer H. Francis, «44H Pine Street. Kill insects to damage by w The staccato of a woodpecker's d r u m m i n g in the forest is e x c i t i n g , but on the side of your house, it's downright e x a s p e r a t i n g . These creatures feed m a i n l y on insects in trees. Around houses, many homeowners f i n d t h a t the woodpecker's search for insects causes problems. Glenn Dudderar, Michigan Slate University Cooperative Extension Service wildlife specialist, says t h a t when this occurs, the best ways to prevent house damage by woodpeckers are to kill the insects the woodpeckers are seeking, or to plug the openings where the insects hide. "This time of year, insects look for a place to spend the winter, either for themselves or for eggs they lay which will hatch in spring," Dudderar explained. "They look for any crack or hole in the house siding. If the daytime temperature is warm enough, they may move around inside the wood, and the noise they make as they move around attracts the woodpeckers." One of the materials insects frequently invade is decorative plywood siding Because of t h e way plywood is made, il has l o t s ol holes along the edge. These may r u n several inches i n l o t h e sheet or across the cut ire w i d t h of i l . This is ideal for insect p e n e t r a t i o n . To k i l l insects t h a t h a v e entered these openings, Dudderar advocates spraying l i n d a n e or m e t h o x y e h l o r along the seams between the plywood sheets and along the edges of grooves put i n t o the plywood siding for decoration. Apply t h e i n s e c t i c i d e w i t h a p u m p - t y p e garden sprayer so t h a t the wood becomes saturated. Lindane is especi a l l y suited for a p p l i c a t i o n because the fumes from the chemical w i l l p e n e t r a t e t h e insect " t u n n e l , " k i l l i n g both a d u l t insects and larvae. Woodpecker damage to houses occurs most commonly in f a l l and spring but may also occur in w i n t e r . " A n y t i m e the sun shines on the house long enough lo warm the wood and b r i n g insects out of their cold-induced stupor, they s t a r t moving around," Dudderar said. House siding may also ;fr 36 DELUXE UTILITY 36"x15"x66" 4 deep shelves, storage bin, magnetic doors. While, Coppertono, Avocado & Harvest Gold \ 30" BASE 30" x 20" x 36" Plastic top. Double shelf storage below. White, Copperlone, Avocado & Harvest Gold 36 WARDROBE 36" x 21 "x 66" Hat shelf, holds 30 g a r m e n t s , ample storage room below. Sandalwood finish. 2 Locks — $5.00 Additional lor Copperlone, Avocado or Harvest Cold ^ 11W mll«i SW ol C«B9 City on Hit 81, turn f e l t by Colwood " Rd oo Tomlinson Rd.; to mile down. <•»&•• 42 SLIDING DOOR WARDROBE 42" x 221/*" x 66" Hat shelf, extra deep. Room for shoes and boxes. Sandalwood finish. INSTANT FINANCING Bargain Center Furniture 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Tues., Wed., Thurs. ; 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. Mon. & Fri.; Sat. till 4 p.m. 2249 Tomlinson Rd. Caro Ph. 673-2480 Peter, 9, and Whitney, 12, children of Mr. and Mrs. R ober ( W a 1 p o I o , 4 7 1 <• Hunt Street. allract \\<Midpi-ckn> i i cause i l is a i : I ' V r l i e n l p l a t < • for t h e m lo d r u m I'he nois • t h a t r e s u l t s •-' s m i . r v , h;i! lik" t h a t m a d r !<> t i r i a i i m m g on a h o l l n w t I ' f c ! > ! • i i i i i i i i i n i ; it h e w . i v a ','. . i < " . l | H ' i ' k i • s l a k e s mil i t s I r i T i l n r , Homeouners ''aii olten f r i g h t e n t h r '.'. ^ " i l p i v k i . a u a s b'. n i a k i r u : Midden loud i i i i i s i ' s . - j ' i ' a ; in.! '-,'.alt i w i l l ) a g a r d e n hi.--r ,.r u s i r g a flashing mirrn: Visu ii r e p e l l e n t s , .-iifii as '>", ] sii h o i l e l l e s or d e c o r ? . t w i r l e i •% and a l u m i n u m pit- pan may help If Ihcsi' l a d i c - < a r e n ' t sin cessf ul and i l comes down t o a choice bdv.ei'ii h u n d r e d , of d o l l a r s ol t i a h u ' g f or .1 dead woodpeckei liomt owners m a \ seek a p e n i n i from the I '.S l''ish and W i l ' i l i t e Service l o k i l l t h e b i r d An a p p r o p r i a t e \\ eapon is ,' KB g u n . a i r r i f l e , or L!' c a l i b e r r i f l e loaded w i t h r a t shot. Dudderar pouiied out however, t h a i i l insects a r e a t t r a c t i n g (lie birds, no a m o u n t of b i r d s h o o t i n g is going to solve t h e problem One dead b i r d may just m a k e room lor a n o t h e r to move i n . 7 ^ / I ' t v : fur //'«' v/w/j/'i/' ,7'i',/<///.y //n'/v ,//v n^itu/ r / t ' A / / A In '»' i //.V/.' i /,','/ hi 1 in /> //A /.'//:,/ Ihi' ;i'i'J<lii!(/ tl>i's/lli/!i/ c//.'[/ ifin'thdll'i C//7IV f i-i'rij /;/•/;/!' . v / f / ; i ' t //,v •'<> l>^ /'/,!/ />l'r/i'c! . for /Jhlt ;l'<i/!i/crfu/ I/Hi! 10 lli'Jl> I/till / > / V / ) , / / V 1 tLlif, iV'i //tin' rti/r/>t/i'<i' ./ //>.' til jin'tinm* /»ml cuinnionlit i / f / v < / In/ //"' ln'iJ\.' !n /n' 'i' in i/ .\h»ti<cr tif / v < v or uso our I instant Credit PUn The Cass City Chronicle Phone 872-2010 PAGE EIGHTEEN CASS CITY CHRONICLE-THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1978 CASS CITY, MICHIGA Holbrook Area News USE LOW COST CHRONICLE CLASSIFIED AD Mrs. Thelma Jackson Transit (nonbusinessj rates. 20 words or less, $1.00 each insertion; additional words 4 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. Phone 658-2347 f General [Merchandise. f General j [ Merchandise] Real Estate For Sale Real Estate For Sale j • Mr. and Mrs. Martin Mrs. Glen Shagena. morning. FOR SALE - White Swan FOR S A L E - k i t c h e n cabinet Sweeney and Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Cliff Jackson Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Lanurse's uniform, size 12, with chopping block top, WARM 4 BEDROOM hon, Kevin O'Connor were Sun- were Tuesday supper guests brand new, never worn; designed for family hvm[ INVESTMENT HOME day guests of Mr. and Mrs. of Mr. and Mrs. Bob Yax at peer were Thursday supper new, $75; dining room set and evening guests of Mr. girl's bike. Phone 872-3533. Cliff Jackson. Over 1500 sq ft of livn, Almont. w i l h 8 matching chairs, and Mrs. Steve Timmons 2-10-26-3 $100; one Andersen win- 2 bedroom bungalow on a space with a full high base Mr. and Mrs. Gaylord Mrs. Don Tracy, Mrs. and family. corner lot '.•-.. Located ment and a 2 car garage Lapeer were Friday supper Burton Berridge, Mrs. clowall combination 42x42, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest E. close to downtown and the Fireplace included in thf and evening guests of Mr. Hiram Keyser, Mrs. Frank $100; six 3" gale valves, $5 FOR SALE 12x60 American Bouck, Chris, Jennifer and schools. $18,200. 3-year-old beauty Call an^ and Mrs. Steve Timmons Laming and Mrs. Arnold Madeleine 1971 mobile home, 2 bed- each. Phone 872-1286. Mae of Hartland and family. time to see. The Hamilt( Lapeer were Monday lunch spent the week end with Mr. FOR SALE - 1976 Chevy rooms, skirting, screens, 2-10-26-3 Phone 872-2352 Co. Realty, 872-4321 f street van. Fully custom- two add-ons, 4x8 and 16x20, Mrs. Jim Jackson and guests of Mrs. Gaylord La6265 Main St. and Mrs. Olin Bouck. An ized. Low mileage. Call after sister Leo of Sand Lake were peer. 3-11-21 septic tank. Will sell any Albee's early birthday dinner was 1-11-9-3 portion or all - w i t h or Thursday guests of Mr. and Dr. and Mrs. Tom Collins held Sunday for several of 3:30,872-3177. and family of Allegan and the Bouck children. without appliances and TOYLAND COUNTRY HOME f FOR SALE - 1977 Olds furniture. Well kept. Price Kevin Sweeney of Novi were 1 Sunday evening guests of Cutlass One mile to Cass City, Supreme, V-8, autoSunday dinner guests of Mr. Mr. and Mrs. Olin Bouck negotiable. Call 872-3262. Now Open paved road, threematic, air, power steering, and Mrs. Martin Sweeney. 2-10-26-3 were Mr. and Mrs. Arnold power Layaway now for Christmas bedrooms, fireplace.f brakes, AM radio. Mr. and Mrs. Cliff Jackson Lapeer and their guests, Mr. basement, two baths.f were Wednesday dinner and Mrs. Beergarden of Good condition. 19,000 miles. BULK PROPANE systems EXECUTIVE TYPE ranch outbuildings and 2 acres ^ ALBEE Call during day between 8 guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ed Atlanta. for the particular buyer. for grain driers or home Immediate possession, t a.m. and 4:30 p.m. 872-2111, Ericson at Standish. Everything first class. SitThursday evening dinner heating. Fuclgas Company Mr. and Mrs. Gaylord guests of Mr. and Mrs. Olin ask for Maynard Stine. After of Phone 872-2352 I uated on 3 acres with river "Telephone customers in Cass City. Phone 872-2161". HARDWARE 5 p.m. Tuesday and Thurs6265 Mam St. P frontage. Huge fireplace the communities of Case- Lapeer were Saturday fore- Bouck were Mr. and Mrs. day 2-11-14-tf call 872-3608. 1-11-9-3 Cass City with walk-out basement. ville, Cass City, Elkton, and noon guests of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Miller and Mr. and Lynwood Lapeer and fam' 2-10-26-tf Call for more details. The Kingston who want to make ily. Mrs. Roy Davis of Bad Axe. FOR SALE - 1973 Plymouth Hamilton Co. Realty, 872BLACK DIRT - good for cprrections or additions to Mr. and Mrs. Olin Bouck Mrs. Cliff Jackson entered will leave Friday to fly to 2 door Fury III, automatic. lawns, garden, shrubbery. RED DELICIOUS apples - 4321. 3-11-2-2 (he directory must contact Good shape. Call after 6:00. Arlan Brown, Ubly. Phone hand picked before the frost. the company's service office Hills and Dales Hospital in Florida for the winter. Best offer. Phone 872-4142. B5H-H452. 2-5-4-1 f Also, red, green and yellow before Friday, Dec. 1," ac- Cass City Wednesday eveEXCELLENT 1-11-9-3 HOUSE FOR SALE - At 420.C swept peppers. Phone 872cording to Bob Kowalski, ning. Visitors were Susan STAHTER HOME Bond, Cliff Jackson, Mrs. Leach St., owner has ret division manager for the 2512. 2-10-19-tf Charles Bond, Mr. and Mrs. served right to sell Rutl," FOR SALE - 1975 Pinto, low DEER HUNTING special company. 19-foot travel t r a i l e r . Jack B e a u t i f u l 2 bedroom Lynn Fuester, Mr. and Mrs. mileage, 5 new tires Call Dorman, phone 313-672-9279^ During the information FOR R E N T - new ehrlric F. Doerr, 6720 Third Sired. spacious rooms - remod872-2987 after 3 o'clock. 3-10-26-:§ compilation period, both R.B. Spencer, Mr. and Mrs. or m a n u a l typewriters by eled k i t c h e n - new 100 1-10-26-3 Call after 4:0(1. 872-2711. i esidcntial and business cus- Elmer Fuester, Mrs. Harold t h e week or m o n t h . Also 2-11-2-3 Amp service - located in A 4 & 5 acre parcel west of t tomers can change their Copeland, Mr. and Mrs. leave y o u r t y p e w r i t e r s and t o w n . Call today for an town. Financing avail- T FOR SALE - 1970 Fairlane listings. There may be a Gaylord Lapeer, Mr. and appointment. able. L 500. 75,000 miles. Power FOR SALE -Treeing Walker other o f f i c e e q u i p m e n t a( nominal "records change" Mrs. Jerry Decker, Jean our store for repair. I'sed Pvt. Dale R. Smith, son of steering, good tires. Vinyl coon hound puppies, 8 weeks typewriters for sale. Mccharge for revisions made to Deachin, Mr. and Mrs. Lee Phone 872-2352 If Phone 872-2352 Hendrick, Mr. and Mrs. w h i t e page listings. Wilford B. Smith, 5420 Sev- top. Good condition. Great old, $25 each. Partly-started Conkev .leu-ell-}-. 6265 Main St. 6265 Main St. P 2-4-6-1 f "Most changes can be Jack Tyrrell, Mrs. Dave erance Road, Deford, re- transportation. $750. Phone year-old coon hounds. Phone cently completed the multi- 872-2026 or 872-3653. 1-10-26-3 after 3:30 p.m. Cam 673- FOR SALE - Two lavender handled by telephone and a Sweeney, Mrs. Mary Sweencommunications personal visit is usually not ey, Dr. Ivan MacRae, Mrs. channel 2-11-9-3 g i n g h a m bedspreads, t w i n Anna Frit?., Mr. and Mrs. equipment operator course FOR SALE - 1974 Ford half 2678. required," Kowalski said. size, and m a t c h i n g l a m p ; ton pickup with camper under the One Station Unit Publication and distribu- Ward Benkelman and Mrs. gold E a r l y American sofa; shell, power steering, power FOR SALE 4800 W a t t Don Hanby. Mrs. Jackson Training (OSUT) Program tion dates for the new direcgreen swivel rocking chair. toiy will be announced later. returned home Sunday at the U.S. Army Signal brakes, standard transmis- u t i l i t y heater w i t h w a l l or $60.110 each. Call 872-2956. sion, V-8 engine. $2300 or ceiling m o u n t , new c o n d i t i o n School, Fort Gordon, Ga. REAL ESTATE ^ 2-11-!)-! best offer. Call 375-2446. $75. Charcoal g r i l l SKI. The OSUT program comCHECK THESE 2-11-iK! 1-10-26-3 Phone 872-41KH. bines basic training with No. 814 Bad Axe - Mobile on 1 ' a acres with terms available fc, WATER K I N G SOFTENER, advanced individual trainused been mi! on rental and No. 813 Wilmot - 10 acres with some woods surveyed ing. FOR SALE - '69 Oldsmobile FOR S A L E - W h i t e purebred r e c o n d i t i o n e d . Very good Students learned to install, convertible. Best offer. 4010 German shepherd, 1' •< years perk. Call for appointment. c o n d i t i o n . $100. Fuelgas Co. old. Likes c h i l d r e n , very operate and repair field Lamton Rd., Deford. •1 miles east of Cass C i t y . radio relay, carrier and 1-11-9-3 kind. Phone 872-40(18. No. 741 Ubly - Brick, 3 family apartment plus a mobile At Phone 872-2161. 2-3-2-lf 2-11-9-3 associated equipment. rented and showing good return. $39,900. ^ Smith is a 1978 graduate of FOR SALE - 1966 AMC FOR SALE beagle puppies, Cass City High School. Rambler, 2 door, 6 cylinder, PAPER N A P K I N S i m - $10 f e m a l e No. 762 Sandusky - Two family home on large corner loff $21) male. One printed w i t h names and $125. Phone 872-2920" Let the tenant help make the payment. $32,900 E3-year-old beagle. very 1-11-9-3 dates for weddings, recep- good. $35; one 2-year-old Automotive OSENTOSKI Deadline set jfor iphone book changes Dale Smith ends Army training SS£~ HUNTERS Sailor reports for sea duty CAR SPECIALS 1978 Olds Cutlass Supreme, Landau Roof, Air Cond., Power, Cruise Control, Radio. Only 8,000 miles. Check this one and $AVE 1978 Olds 98 Regency, 4 Dr., Sliding Roof, Full Power, Air Cond., Stereo, Loaded with all the Toys. Check this f o r a great buy. 1978 Olds Custom Cruiser Wgn., 9 Pass., Wood Grain, Air. Stereo, Full Power, Roof Rack, Like New. $AVE 1977 Ford LTD II, 4 Dr., V8. Auto. Trans., Power Steering 4 & Brakes. Special Two-Tone Paint. This car is Sharp. I SAVE 1 1977 Pontiac Cotalina, 4 Dr., V8, Auto., Power and Air 2 Cond. Like New. Check and $«Vt 1977 Plymouth Sto. Wgn., 9 Pass., Auto., Power, Air Cond., Wood Grain. Sharp Wgn. at a Bargain. $AVE 1977 Olds Brougham, 4 Dr., Vinyl Roof, Cruise Control, Air, Stereo, Auto. & Power. Like New. SAVE on This One 1976 Chevelle Cpe., Vinyl Roof, V8, Auto. Trans., Power, Radio, and W. Walls. This one is Sharp. $AVE 1975 Chrysler New Yorker Brougham, 4 Dr., Vinyl Roof, Air, Power, Split Seat. Lots of Other Extras. SAVE 1974 Cutlass Cpe., Landau Roof, Power, Air Cond., Radio, Rally Wheels. SAVE on This One 1973 Chevrolet Caprice Wgn., 9 Pass., Auto., Power, Radio, Air Cond., Wood Grain. Check This One for a Real Buy. TRUCK SPECIALS 1978 Chevrolet Short Box Vi Ton Pickup, 4x4, Silverado Pkg., V8, Auto., Power Steering & Power Brakes, White Lettered 10-15 Tires & Styled Wheels, 9,000 Miles. Still in warranty. , 1978 Chevy Van, Short Wheel Base, Radial Tires, Rally Wheels, Economy 6 Cyl. Std. Trans., Power Steering, Finished Inside. See This One. SAVE 1977 Dodge Von, Long Wheel Base, V8, Auto., Power Steering & Brakes. Like New. Check This One. SAVE 1977 Chevrolet >/2 Ton, V8, Auto., Power Steering & Brakes, Radio. Clean Truck, Good Buy. SAVE 1 976 CMC Jimmy, 4 Wheel Drive, 4 Spd., & Power Brakes, Mud & Snows. Sharp. Power Steering SAVE 1974 Chevrolet Vi Ton Deluxe Pickup, Two-Tone, V8, Auto., Power Steering & Power Brakes, Radio. Extra Clean. SAVE GM QUALITY S8MOE/MRTS , I Keep that great GM feeling with genuine GENERAL MOTORS HVRTS DIVISION GM pa rtS QUVRV "ft 872-4301 IIMC. CassCitv B FOR SALE - '69 Mustang, good running condition. Make offer. Phone 872-3045. 1-11-9-3 Seaman Recruit Del Potrykus reports for duty this "Thursday on the USS Calooshatchee, a Navy oiler based at Norfolk, Va. The May graduate of Cass City High School is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Potrykus of Crawford Road, Deford. In October, he completed training as a medical corpsman at the Great Lakes Naval Training Center in Illinois. FOR SALE - '64 Impala SS, 283 with two barrel, bucket seats and 2 speed on the floor. Call 872-3932. 1-10-26-3 [ General 1 [Merchandise] FOR SALE - one male and one female dachshund clogs, one year old. $60. Phone 872-4286. 2-10-26-3 Nov. 15 to April 1. Michigan motorists traveling state roads with illegal studs or with legal studs outside the set time periods are subject to a fine of up to $100 and-or a jail sentence of up to 90 days. It is the practice of Michigan State Police to extend to out-of-state motorists traveling Michigan roads the same privileges for studded tires permitted in their home states, Triple-A points out. Studs are illegal at any time in neighboring Wisconsin and Ontario. Ten other states in which studs are totally banned are: Florida, Hawaii, Illinois, Louisiana, Minnesota, Mississippi, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Texas and Utah. (Minnesota permits out-of-state motorists with studded tires to drive on its roads for 30 days.) Twenty-seven states allow studs, with varying time restrictions. SO YOU SAVE $ $ 1978 NOVA RALLY l-wrto. K/Mirtrto $4295 1977 PONTIAC CATAUNA4-*. uxton. lo«M. ih*y. 19,000 *I.$SJ9S 1977 CHEVROLET CHfVETTI 4-cyl. wto $2195 1976 MERCURY MONARCH 2-dr. sidM. 6-wto. PS/PI, AIR.. $3195 1976 PLYMOUTH DUSTER 6-cyl. itkk. PS $1795 W6 PINTO J-dr. iwhm 4-cyl. 4-ipf $2395 1975 CHEVROLET IMPALA l-wte. PS/PI $2595 1975 AMC MATADOR 4-fc. Mdwi. l-mito. PS/PB $1995 1973 OLDS IS 4-dr. AIR $1695 1972 CHEV. IMPALA 2-dr. fc.nl top. l-wtto, PS/PI AIR $1495 1972 CHEV. CAPRICE 4-dr. |.<wt«. PS/PB AIRit«r*o $1195 1967 CHEV. IMPALA SMMT Snort Hki now. OPEN Mon.-Thurs. 9-5 Fit 9-6 — Sat. 9-12 Anytime By Appt. 2 LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU CARD LOT 842 State St. CASS CITY LOT 6617 Main St. PICK-UPS 1977 FORD Vvtcm 6-cyl. itiiMkH ifctft 17,001 ml 1976 CHEV. Vi-TOH PICKUP 6-cyl. itk*. wild c*v«r 1975 CHEV.LUV 4-cyl. 4-*|*kl 1974 EL CAMUtO t-wtt. PS/PI ittn* 1973 INTERNATIONAL Vi-fcw 0-wrt*. PS/PB $JM5 $JW fUfl WtfS wfc 91495 B & W AUTO SALES 6617 Main THINGS WE PRINT Cass City Phone 872-4620 1 Business Cards Accounting Forms Programs Statements Envelopes Tickets Menus Letterheads Vouchers Brochures Booklets The Chronicle Phone 872-2010 FOR SALE - 2 house t r a i l e r axles and six 14.5 tires and rims. Phone 872-40%. Harold Crawford. 2-11-2-3 F I R E P L A C E S and wood heaters. Over 70 u n i t s on display. Chimneys and Adda-Furnaces. Leisure L i v i n g . 350 N. Tiiscoln Rd. ( H g y . M-15) Bay C i t y . Closed Saturday at 2. Closed Sundays and Mondays. Call 517-8(127212. ' 2-5-II-If FOR SALE - mixed h a r d wood fireplace wood. W i l l deliver. $30 p i c k u p load. Phone 872-2579 evenings. 2-11-2-3 Tire studs still OK in 27 states A growing number of motorists who want to get a better grip on winter roads this season will be depending on snow tires and chains rather than studs, according to the Automobile Club of Michigan. The only studded snow tires permitted on Michigan roads are radial-ply tires equipped with soft studs known commercially as Perma-T Grippers. Any other types of studded tires have been illegal in Michigan since 1975. The firm that introduced Perma-T Grippers discontinued their manufacture in 1976. The Auto Club was told by the only known Michigan distributors that supplies of the legal studs are sufficient to meet demand this year. Approved studs may be used on Michigan roads north of a line from Mason to Arenac counties from Oct. 1 to May 1. Below that line, they are permitted from tions, showers, anniversaries and other occasions. The Cass City Chronicle. 2-1-12-tf FOR SALE - two P i n t o snow tires m o u n t e d on rims. Phone 872 3544 a f t e r 5. 2-11-9-3 FOR SALE - lour a l u m i n u m c o m b i n a t i o n s t o r m windows 2!tx54'- ' I or 24x2-1 2 l i t e windows). One a l u m i n u m combination storm window 34x38 i lor : i u x l 6 2 l i t e w i n d o w ) . Phone 872-3U13. 2-11-9-3 FOR SALE - bed davenport, $10; gray chair, $15. Phone 872-3253.' 2-11-9-3 6608 Main St. Cass City. Mich. 48726 8:00a.m. t o 4 p.m. Monday thru Friday 2-1U 12-0 FOR SALE - a u t o m a t i c washer, $60; dryer, $25; 8-track tape player $30. 6 east and 2 north of Cass C i t y . Phone 872-4615. 2-11-!)'•! FOR SALE - 1969 Mercury Engine 300. Newly overhauled. Good shape. $100.00. Call 673-4859 a n y t i m e or may be seen at 162 W. Gamble St.,inCaro. 2-11-9-2 FOR SALE - •}•! magnum Ruger automatic rifle with scope and sling, reasonable; 7';> ft. Western snow-plow, hydraulic angle, good working condition. Call (i73-(i(i(K) after 4 p.m. 2-II-!)-:) GAS WATER HEATERS 30-gallon size, glass lined with P and T valve, only $119.95 at Fuelgas Co., Inc", 4 miles east of Cass City. Phone 872-21(11. 2-3-2-lf FOR SALE - Gibson acousl ic 12 string guitar with Barcus Berry Bridge transducer pick up. Shure Unisphere I mike and stand. Custom made coffee table. Call between 11-4:30 872-2312. 2-1(1-20-3 CASH FOR LAND CONTRACTS Arty .type of real estate throughout Michigan. .No commissions : or eloping costs. First National Accept.; Call Free .t-800-292-1550 3-11-2-1!= This Week's Special NEW LISTING Grade A nursing formula medicated milk replacement calf feed Available to all calf feeders. FOR SALE - Hoover washer in excellent condition, avocado green. Phone 872-4615. 2-11-9-3 1 block west of light, Marlette, Mich. F Phone office (517) 635-7417 f To list or sell, plione 872-4498 - Lana Osentoski f C A N D Y F L A V O R I N G OILS - 20 d i f f e r e n t f l a v o r s . Coach Light P h a r m a c y , phone 872-3613. 2-10-10-9 FOR SALE - 5 piece ( l i n i n g room set, oval table w i t h two 10-inch leaves and padding, upholstered chairs. Call 8723305. 2-11-9-3 A M B K R L I G H T Gas G r i l l s and Carts - Special at $99.110. Fuelgas Company of Cass City, M-53 & M-81. Phone 872-2161. 2-5-25-11' Donley Realty & Associates Inc IF beagle, go id. $25. Plione 872-3622. 2-11-9-1 Wesley Milk Co. Located on over an acre. This new 3 bedroom tri-level, lots£ of storage and closet space, large garden area, on a paved^= road. Phone 872-2352 6265 Main St. H A M I L T O N GAS D R Y E R used, (iood o p e r a t i n g condit i o n , only $97.5(1. Fuelgas Co., Cass C i t y , M-53 &• M-81. Phone i!72-21iil. 2-5-11-tf FOR SALE 12 x 60 A m e r i can m o b i l e home i 1973). Appliances, . s k i r t i n g , shed. Can s t a y p r i m e l o t . Immediate occupancy. M a k e offer. Call 872-3832. ' 2-11-9-3 WEDDING INVITATIONS and announcements. A complete line of p r i n t i n g , raised p r i n t i n g or engraving. Do/ens to choose f r o m . Cass City Chronicle, Cass C i t y . 2-1-lVtf f Real Estate] FgrSale j Homes Wanted Free appraisals No obligation Call now for appointment. Osentoski Realty 6265 Main St. Cass City, Mich. Phone 872-2352 3-'.)-2i-tr INVESTMENTS We have several homes and vacant properties with excellent terms. Phone 872-2352 H2G5 Main St. OSENTOSKI REALTY .ll'ST LISTED Very attractive 3 bedroom ranch style home in newer subdivision in Cass City. Home features aluminum sidmg[ and 'i: brick front. Attached garage, very smartly) decorated. Low, low heat bills with natural gas heat For" more information call and ask for Paul. A LOT OF IIO.MK FOR THE MONEY ~ This is a 5 bedroom large ranch style home on 1.7 surveyed^ acres. Home has large family room and living room witht Ben Franklin fireplace. Every room is large and roomy |_ Located on llurds Corner Road. T H I N K I N G OF IH'IUMNG? ~ We have a 2-acre parcel located just off M-81 between Care and Cass City. Property is all cleared and backs up against' a woods on the north. This would be an ideal spot to put in a; pond and build on higher ground near the back. Property isu 200 ft. by 500 f t . -A McLeod Realty, Inc.r 630 N. State 8498StateRd. Tri-Valley CaroMillingtonPh. 673-6106 Ph. 871-4567 Board ol Real Eatato And Listing Exchango Commercial Residential Farm EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNIT REALTOR* Open Daily 9 • 7. Sat. 9 - 4, Other Times By Appointment I .: ,. i, PAGE NINETEEN CASS CITY CHRONICLE-THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1978 . CASS CITY, MICHIGAN TURN DISCARDS INTO CASH - USE PROFITABLE, LOW COST CLASSIFIED ADS Real Estate For Sale Real Estate I For Sale • LOTS - In town or in the country. 10 acre or more 'parcels, some wooded. Invest in land to secure your future. The Hamilton Co. •Realty, 872-4321. 3-11-2-2 A remodeled church, three bedrooms, kitchen, living room and bath. New roof. Located on lk acre. Seller has reduced price for quick sale. Phone 872-2352 6265 Main St. OSENTOSKI ".••..;: REALTY :;, IN TOWN Large bungalow with attached garage. Beautiful kitchen, lots of closets and !'/•. baths - 30 days possession. Phone 872-2352 6265 Main St. OSENTOSKI HOUSE FOR RENT in the country. Phone 872-4431. 4-11-9-1 PRINGLE ROAD - Approximately 10 acres wooded, full of birch, pine trees, priced to sell. 78508-A MUSHROOM ROAD - 3 bedroom ranch, full bath, spacious living room, kitchen has lots of cabinets, dining area, sliding glass doors, large utility room, approximately 2 acres, outbuildings. 78448-CY MR. INVESTOR-2 apartments under one roof, corner lot; 1st floor - 3 bedrooms apartment; kitchen, dining room, living room, bath, lots of storage space, basement; 2nd floor - 2 bedrooms, kitchen, dining area, living room, bath, 'basement, (good income). 78454-TO. utchinson ealtyjnc. 447 N. S t a t e St Caro, M i c h i g a n ( 5 1 7 ) 673-7773 .Ann Sherman - Associate Sales Person 1(17 S. M a i n St Vassar. M i c h . ( 5 1 7 i !"'.'!-84f>5 (172-2641 Notices"""] FOR RENT - 2 bedroom apartment with garage. Conveniently located. Phone 872-2291 after 3 p.m. 4-11-9-3 FOR RENT - 2-bedroom trailer home. Prefer married couple. Will accept 1 child. References and deposit required. 8 north, '.i west of Cass City. Call 872-2980. 4-10-26-3 Now open Handmade crafts for all occasions HOUSE FOR RENT - 2 bedrooms, partially f u r nished. (Downstairs apartm e n t . ) Phone 872-2579. 4-11-2-3 Seasonal items now on display Call 872-4141 or 6 miles straight north of Cass City. 5-10-19-4 LOST - Hereford cow, with one short horn. Has baby at home. Last seen on M-53 near Wildwood Farms. Reward. Call 872-3(i32. 5-10-2G-3 ( Notices "HOLIDAY ON PARADE" style show and bazaar, Nov. 15 at High School, 7 p.m. Refreshments, door prizes. Sponsored by Zonta Club. 5-11-2-2 G A M E PARTY - Every Sunday night at St. Pancratius h a i l , Cass City, 7:30 p.m. 5-2-20-tf BIRTHDAY, HAPPY G r a n d p a , Wisconsin loves 5-11-9-1 you. MAC. ROSS'S LICENSED raw fur market. Also deer and beef hides. 8 years' experience and service. Call mornings for pick up arrangements. Gerald Ross, State Park Rd., Caseville. Phone 8562324. 5-10-26-tf REPAIR Your Broken Windows Now! CUSTOM CUT GLASS and PLEXIGLASS at 1 AM NOT responsible any debts other t h a n own. R i c h a r d Lee Tale. 5-11-2-6 Albee Hardware Cass City K I R B Y V A C U U M Cleaners the world's f i n e s t . Prices as low as $299.95. For free home d e m o n s t r a t i o n c a l l 2(i9-7562. Kirby Company of Had Axe. ' 5-11-9-5 5-9-7-tf CUSTOM COMBINING. Corn and soybeans. H a u l i n g a v a i l a b l e . Call 872-4292. 5-10-12-6 FOR SALE BY B. A. CALKA REAL ESTATE Good Buy!! SPECIAL!!! I 1 ;; story home with 3 bedrooms; large kitchen with many cabinets; new roof; new painting; utility room off kitchen and bathroom; 2 LOTS —all of this for $13,500.00. S P E C I A L ! ! ! ! Newly Weds & Retirees!!!! 3'j ACRES: 1974 Champion Mobile home 12x60' in excellent condition - wall to wall carpeting; comes with appliances and l u r n i t u r e - h o m e is insulated; skirted on 12x60' slab with Florida tie-downs; PLUS 12x12' utility building in excellent condition; 126' deep well with own water system; septic t a n k . 1 pyramid of strawberries, choice garden soil - many other features - only 4 miles from Cass City - on blacktop toad OFFERED TO YOU for $21,500.00. B U I L D I N G : With 5500 square feet! Ideal for classrooms, offices, etc. Brick & Block construction - very good condition; 55x100' building on 165x298' lot - 'YOUR INSPECTION INVITED!!!!!$65,000.00. MAIN STREET, CASS CITY: Stately home with 5 bedrooms; OFFICE, den and FAMILY' ROOM; in exceptionally good condition - wall to wall carpeting; I 1 - BATHROOMS; library room - many built-ins formal dining room; extra large garage with workshop aluminum sided - home is well insulated - Your inspection i n v i t e d ! ! ! ! ! Very desirable for doctor, insurance office. real estate office, etc. SPECIAL!!!!! BRICK HOME w i t h 4 bedrooms; FIREPLACE in den formal dining room; office - 2 1 - BATHROOMS; basement; f o r m a l (lining room; 24x28' PATIO; 2 car garage plus w o r k s h o p ; EXTRA LARGE LOT LANDSCAPED - many other features - EXCEPTIONAL BUY AT S37.500.00 terms BUILDING SITE: 10 ACRES on Robinson Rd. - near Germania Road -'8,500.00. PARTY STORE Remodeled home with new and brick; 3 bedrooms; presently closed - license in $36,500.00 terms. in the country!!!! oil furnace; aluminum siding comes with all equipment; escrow — everything goes for SPECIAL!!! 7 ACRES with 5 room one story home 10 years old - aluminum siding; CAR PORT - 200 arnp service; HORSE BARN - 1 mile to store, blacktop road only 4 miles from Caro - just off M-81. Offered to you for $23,500.00 HURRY!!! HURRY!!! 1 '/2 ACRES in the Country!!!! COUNTRY HOME: 2 story BRICK HOME in very good condition - wall to wall carpeting; Moncrief oil furnace 6 years old - drilled well - new two car garage attached to home, large family size kitchen; additional room for den or office - utility building - situated on l1^ ACRES - priced to gelJ at $42,500.00 bank terms. Building Site: North of Cass City — 6 1 - Acres - creek thru back of property —- blacktop road —- $8500.00 terms. INVESTMENT!!! 20 ACRES all tillable - 515,000.00. YOUR OPPORTUNITY TO BE YOUR OWN BOSS!!! PARTY STORE: ALL MODERN BUILDING with living quarters; completely equipped: Beer & Wine take out enjoying a good gross business - doctor's orders - offered to you for $85,000.00 plus inventory at cost, $20,000. down. LOTS OF ROOM H E R E FOR YOUR F A M I L Y ! ! ! 2.9 ACRES: Brick & Frame home in Shabbona - 4 bedrooms, all large rooms; practically new oil furnace; remodeling completed jus! a nice place to retire to —- all this for $35,()()().(ID. SPECIAL!!!!! 80 ACRES: ALL REMODELED HOME with 3 bedrooms; LARGE FAMILY ROOM; 2 bathrooms; oil furnace (new); many other features; a very good buy at $55,000.00 terms, possession on short notice —- Your inspection invited!!!! Close in to Cass City. SPOTLESS SPECIAL: 2.7 ACRES.- RANCH TYPE HOME with 3 large bedrooms; wall to wall carpeting; in excellent condition comes w i t h refrigerator and range; a l u m i n u m siding and storms and screens; well i n s u l a t e d ; 2'- car garage 4 years old attached to home: plus HORSE BARN; 16x20' granary; plus another I 1 - car garage; silo; nicely landscaped garden all tiled - many features - Offered to you for $42.51)11.00 - MOVING TO FLORIDA. NEED MORE LAND? 60 acres - no buildings - choice building site for your new HOME — CASH CROP LAND $42,500.00 terms. CHRISTMAS BAZAAR - In Snover in the corner store, Nov. 10 and 11, 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Quilt tickets and prizes. Bake sale, home5-11-2-2 made Christmas gifts. All proceeds for Snover ComFOUND-maleCollie. Dr. E. munity Christmas decoraScollon. Phone 872-2935. tions. 5-11-9-1 5-11-9-1 GARAGE SALE - washer, WANTED - barn beams - dryer and many other houseslab lumber - power and hold items. Thursday, Frihand tools. All donations tax day and Saturday. 7776 E. deductible. Caro Area Serv- Cass City Rd. (M-81). 5-11-9-1 ices for the Handicapped. Phone 517-673-7721. 5-3-10-tf LARGE GARAGE SALE Everything priced to sell at 50 cents or below. All day Free Estimates on roofing, siding, insulation, Saturday 9:00-6:00. 4409 5-11-9-1 aluminum doors and windows Brooker. and aluminum or Fiber Glass LOST - Tan and white awnings. dachshund and poodle mixed, male. Child needs Elkton Roofing him home. Reward. Phone & Siding Co. 872-4489. 5-10-26-3 5-7-21-tf BUILDING SITE: Close in to Cass City -on blacktop road - 2 ACRES with about 300 feet frontage - small patch of woods in swale - $5,500.00 for quick sale. Building Sites!!!! 2 PARCELS of 5 acres each - SURVEYED - West of Cass City — $8500.01) each. COUNTRY' HOME: Between Cass City & Caro - 7 room Brick home with 3 bedrooms; extra large dining room with wainscoting; all modern kitchen; sun-room; utility room; home has natural wood trim and finish; oil fired furnace; well kept grounds - circular drive - lots of shade trees; 36x50' barn for more storage - a very good buy at $32,000.00. Free Appraisals —- No obligation on your part. FOR THESE & OTHER LISTINGS CALL: B.A. CALKA, REALTOR OrCallCARLA CALKA, Associate Telephone: Area Code 517 872-3355 Listings Wanted On All Types of Real Estate In Tuscola, Sanilac & Huron Counties. Serving This Area For Over 25 Years. Telephone: Area Code 517 872-3355 Martin Electric Residential and Commercial Wiring CROSS WITH CHRIS Romantic Europe June 28 July 12 $997.00; Scandinavian Tour July 12 - July 26 $1194.00; Heart of Europe Aug. 2 - Aug. 16 $997.00. Price from Detroit includes air, 2000 miles land and sea transportation, hotels, two meals daily, admissions, porterage, tips, taxes. Personally escorted by German teacher, Mrs. Chris Press, 7369 Berne Rd.. Pigeon, ML, 48755. For free brochure w r i t e or call 517-453-2202. Try a Chriscross. 5-11-9-1 Country Kitchen Bazaar Saturday, Nov. 11 Doors Open 10a.m. Lunch Served Beginning at 10:00 Trinity United Methodist Church Cass City 5-11-2-2 STORAGE SPACE available - b o a t s , RVs, etc. Phone H72-3055. 5-10-26-3 G A M E P A R T Y - E v e r y Sunday n i g h t at SI. Pancratius hail, Cass C i t y , 7:30 p.m. 5-2-20-tf FREE Cattle picked up free, butchered and processed by Walsh Packing 7551 Pigeon Road, Pigeon, Mich. State inspected plant, processed to your specifications (cut, wrapped, frozen). We sell beef sides and pork. 4-27-tf THE PINE CONE SHOP is now open. Unusual wall and table decorations. Dried flower- arrangements, cone wreaths, brooms. Butcher block tables - ideal layaway for Christmas. Always something different. Stop in at 6241 West Main, Cass City. Across from Hahn Building. Phone 872-2155. 5-9-14-tf F^uTlsllERE! CHECK ALBEE TRUE VALUE HARDWARE FOR DOOR, WINDOW AND PIPE INSULATION Albee Hardware Cass City State Licensed Terra si & Son 5-9-7-tf REDUCE SAFE & fast with GoBese Tablets & E-Vap "water pills." Old Wood Drug, 6498 Main, Cass City. 5-11-9-4 BAZAAR AND Bake Sale Wednesday, Nov. 15, at hospital meeting room, 9 a.m. 3:30 p.m. Sponsored by Hills and Dales Hospital Auxiliary, 5-11-9-1 • New installations and repairs • Violations corrected • Electrical heating & cooling service • Homes - Farms - Business CALL ANYTIME AUCTIONEER EXPERIENCED Ira, David& Martin Osentoski Help Wanted Male, part time Phone Cass City 872-2352 Collect Must be able to meet the public. Call 872-2195 11-11-9-tft Custom Slaughtering - Curing Smoking and Processing BABY SITTER wanted inf my home for one child, ![• months. Day s h i f t , 7-4 Muslt have own transportation andt references. Call 872-40481. a f t e r 4. 11-11-9-3 ^ Beef-Pork-Veal-Lamb Wanted to B u y ] Cass City, Michigan Dick Erla Phone 872-2191 8-11-2-tf FAGAN'S THUMB Carpet Cleaning - Dry foam or steam. Also upholstery and wall cleaning. Free Estimates. Call toll free 1-800322-0206 or 517-761-7503. We welcome BankAmericard Master Charge 8-3-20-tf SEPTIC TANK C L E A N I N G and installation. Guaranteed work. Also septic beds, sewer lines. basements, ('buck O'Dcll. Phone 8723031. 8-7-13-tf WANTED - t w o t w i n beds or F bunk beds and dresser, mu good c o n d i t i o n . P h o n e L 872-4596. 6-10-26-3 fr" W A N T TO BUY - t w o cows p not too far from fresh. Ralphf S m i t h , phone l-313-672- l )3 ( )4 | 6-10-26-.C W I L L BUY - silver coins, ^ silver dollars and old pocket T watches. Phone 872-26351; alter 5 p.m. 6-9-7-tln p E^ [TO Give Away ] | FREE PUPPIES - MostlyF beagle. Make good h u n t m g f dogs. Four male and onef female. Call 872-3611. ~ 7-10.26-.ih- Help Wanted] Send resume P.O. box 14, Cass C i t y . ML. or call Gainor's Meatpacking HELP W A N T E D - truck driver for local deliveries of LP gas. Good benefits, adBad Axe, Phone 269-8161 vancements for right person. Send resume to P.O. 1 mile north, l mile west of Box 177, GagetowM, Mich. 48735. 11-11-9-1 Bad Axe. SEWING M A C H I N E and vacuum cleaner sales and service. Parts in stock for all makes. Service Department and store hours, 8 to 5. Tom Lowery, 319 Bacon St., Bad Axe. Phone 269-9101. 8-1-8-tf For Funeral Home Assistant B AND B Refrigeration Repair all makes of washers, driers, refrigerators, freezers and ranges. Call Caro 673-6125. 8-5-1-tf TEXAS R E F I N E R Y Corp. We now have heli-arc welding offers plenty of money plus cash bonuses, fringe beneSpecializing in stainless f i t s to m a t u r e individual in steel, blacksmithing, fabrica- Cass City area. Regardless ting and radiator repair. of experience, write A. N. Pate, Pre-s.. Texas Refinery Also portable welding Corp., Box 711, Fort Worth Texas 76KH. 11-11-9-1 7062E.DeckervilleRd. Deford, Michigan BABYSITTER WANTED Phone 872-2552 For 2 children for lour hours 8-5-15-tf a n i g h t , 7:00-11:00 p.m. Preferably in my home. Phone ELMER I I . FRANCIS, l i - 872-4413. ' 11-10-26-3 censed builder. New homes or remodeling. Roofing, sid- TEXAS OIL Company needs ing, barns, pole buildings. m a t u r e person for short Phone 872-2921. 8-11-7-tf trips surrounding Cass City. Contact customers. We t r a i n . Write T. B. Dick, CUSTOM Pres.. Southwestern PetroBUTCHERING l e u m , Fort Worth. TX. Meat cut, wrapped and frozen 11-11-9-1 8-11-25-tf WANTED - baby sitter i n f our home. Must have own transportation and be de-l pendable. Tuesday-Friday, 9[ o'clock t i l l 5 p.m". Call 872-r 4596 after 5:30. 11-11-0-31 Complete A u c t i o n e e r i n g Service Handled Anywhere. We Make All Arrangements Our Experience Is Your Assurance. 65N-22!)! Cass City Road, Snover WANT - someone to help dig 8-11-2-5 small C h r i s t m a s trees for CHAPPEL'S Plumbing & landscaping. Phone 872-4297. 11-11-9-1 Heating Service. Also storm door and window repair. No job too small. Phone 375-2510. W A N T E D - Pre-School 8-7-22-tf teacher, 3 mornings a week. Chuck Gage Welding Shop WANTED - one cook and onef waitress, over 18, afternoon! shift 4:00-10:00p.m. Alsoonef night 10 p.m. to 4 a m and! every other Sunday Pizza I Villa, Cass City, phone 872-14440. 11-11-9-1 8-8-10-tf Erla's Packing Co. FOR "a job well done feeling" clean carpets with Blue Lustre. Rent electric shampooer $1. Ben Franklin Store, Cass City. 8-6-11-tf 11-11-2-2' EXPERT BRAKE service from $29.95. Call for appointment. Kingston Tire Center, Kingston. Phone 683-2826. Phone 872-4114 8-lO-l-tf WANTED - Nurse Aides tol work full time on a perma-f nent basis. On the job tram-l ing provided. Rewarding) experience in geriatric re-l habilitative facility Apply) at Provincial House, 47821 Hospital Drive, Cass City,); ML, or call 872-2174 INTERIOR and EXTERIOR painting. Theron Esckilsen, 4314 Maple St., Cass City. Phone 872-2302. 8-10-19-4 Free Estimates 4180 Hurds Corner Road (Help Wanted] EXPERT WHEEL alignment. Call for appointment. Kingston Tire Center, Kingston. Phone 683-2826. 8-8-10-tf For Sale - Beef and Pork, Whole or half. Wrapped in the new clear shrink film master electrical contractor BARGAIN CENTER Furniture now open Monday and Friday 9 a.m. - 8 p.m., Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday till 6 p.m., Saturday till 4 p.m., 2249 Tomlinson Road, Caro. Phone 673-2480. 5-11-2-4 DO YOU NEED MORE LAND? 70 acres - level - no buildings - $55,000.00, located 6'a miles from Cass City. A U C T I O N E E R I N G - See Lorn "Slim" Hillaker. Top dollar for your property. Phone 872-3019, Cass City, 8-10-3-tf CHRISTIANS - beware of false teachers, religions, sects, independent denominations. For pure Bible teaching, write Project Phillip, box 425, Holland, Mich. 49423, Request Rebel With a Cause study guides No. 1 and 2. ' 5-11-9-1 30 ACRES or will divide into 3 parcels - CRAWFORD RD. blacktop road; call office for details. 160 ACRES: CHOICE LOAM - 2 story home painted white, w i t h shutters, wall to wall carpeting; 36x80' cow barn built in 1973; 48x70' machinery storage building built in 1955; grade A m i l k house: plus another' barn built in 1973; 155 acres tillable and productive soil - beautifully landscaped — offered to you for $175,000.00 terms. Burnside township, La peer county, Mich. Services Phone 269-7469 10th A N N U A L Services ) Notices "HOLIDAY ON PARADE"style show and bazaar, Nov. 15 at High School, 7 p.m. Refreshments, door prizes. Sponsored by Zonta Club. Call Anytime 453-2961 HOMES NEEDED TO FILL DEMANDS OF OUR CLIENTS 6306 W. Main St., Cass City, Michigan 48726 Notices ] RESTAURANT: Only 5 years old - NEW BUILDING AND EQUIPMENT; situated on 1' 2 ACRES. Completely equipped - serving sandwiches, fish, chicken, etc. 200' frontage on highway. 1 ELKTON: Very neat I - story home with aluminum siding; oil tired hot water heating system; wall to wall carpeting; 1 ' j bathrooms; all curtains and drapes remain: many other features — Asking only $22,000.00. SPECIAL!!! 2 ACRES: l',a story REMODELED HOME - all new bathroom; all new kitchen with many Birch cabinets; plus SNACK BAR: aluminum siding; many closets; oil furnace 6 years old - built-in range, oven and exhaust fan; l'/z car garage attached; small orchard nicely landscaped - large shade trees; many other features - WIDOW OFFERS FOR $35,000.00 terms. [ BAZAAR AND Bake Sale Wednesday, Nov. 15, at hospital meeting room, 9 a.m. 3:30 p.m. Sponsored by Hills and Dales Hospital Auxiliary. 5-11-9-1 FOR RENT - 3 bedroom large home, furnished, fireplace, 2 car garage. References. Call 872-4675. 4-11-9-1 Real Estate For Rent ' CASS CITY - Nice 3 bedroom home, kitchen has all the built-ins, dining area, living room, P,.i bath, family room, den, full basement, garage, above ground pool, approximately 5 acres. This is a well kept home. 78510-CY [ at Judy Rocheleau residence ••:-;•:•:- : •'•Rt'ALfV : • • / • ' • • - ' • ••' REAL ESTATE REALTY WORLD Real Estate For Rent N E E D EXTRA M O N E Y ? Sell and demonstrate Artex craft products. Valuable sales gifts. Meet people, advancement opportunity. Experience not necessary. No obligation. Phone 8723639 or 872-2894 and Elkton 375-2792. ' 11-11-2-3 F:T-IW MACHINIST Knowledge and experience on various milling machines, machining cavities in cast iron molds. Must read blue prints and use micrometers, verniers and gauges. Applicant must have completed an approved apprentice f Farm ( Equipment FOR SALE - one 5-ton bulk t feed bin with auger and P~ ladder. Call Sebewaing 88'i- ^ 2292. 9-11-2-3 T FOR SALE - m a n u r e r spreader in good condition f Call 872-3222 after five p m ^ 9-11-9 l n t = Livestock ] f FOR SALE - Geese and [ ducks, dressed or live £ Phone 872-2870. 10-10-26-3 tFOR SALE - 2 registered yearling Charolais bulls 1 west and 1 ' j north of Cass City or call 872-321!). Jack Gallagher. 10-11-2-,! FOR SALE - Bull - :'.i Maine Anjou. Sire: Capone. Born 6-10-76 from llollysluie Maine Anjou Ranch. Phone FOR SALE -(iee.se and rnuscovy ducks. 2 miles south, P.i miles cast of Cass City on Kelly Road. Phone 872-3552 10-11-2-3 (Work Wanted] WILL DO babysitting in my home. Live in town. Phone 872-3918. ll-li-9-1 WANTED - Job for 18-year-1 old girl. Have worked in parts 1 store, as a waitress, and also secretary. "Will work part time in store as i Christmas help. Write to box S, Cass City Chronicle.'' WILL DO BABYSITTING in I rny home days. Call 872-2795 12-10K20-3 I WILL DO BABYSITTING in my home anytime. Live in Huntsville Trailer Park. I Call 872-4548. 12-10r26-3 program or have a journeyman card, or have a minimum of 6 years of experience in the trade. Foundry background WANTS WORK, age desirable, but not necessary. Fringe benefits include 58, full time - good work pension, vacation, insurance, cost of living and paid record. Telephone 872-47.3G Call after 5 p.m. 12-10-26-3 holidays. An equal opportunity employer. f Card of ThankS; EATON CORPORATION FOUNDRY DIVISION 700 E. Huron Ave. Vassar, Mich. 48768 11-11-1-3 L V '-/ I WISH TO express 'my thanks to friends for cards and flowers while I vyas hospitalized in Portland, Oregon, Nellie Mcfloll Vaughn. lS-lh'9-1 .Ilililiiill l . n l l l l l L 11 J l l l . n l l l , ill .ill I h III :^h I l i i d i l l H l J I l u l l J h i ! , ; lUllJillll ill! j | , 1 , 1 1 1 jjilliiblitll,!!!! iilUi PAGE TWENTY CASS CITY, MICHIGA CASS CITY CHRONICLE-THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1978 careers with sa «/ over The Cass City Red Hawks ended the 1978 grid year on a satisfying note Friday with an easy victory over Almont in a non-league encounter, 33-6. For one of the few times this year the Hawks were able to dominate the line of scrimmage and roll with ease on the ground. In most games it has been the pass or the long gainer that has netted points for Coacli Don Schelke's charges. Because the offensive line was blocking well, Tony Doerr was able to do what he does best. . .bulldoze through the line for valuable yardage. Against the Raiders he did it 15 times for 111? yards and three touchdowns. A l t h o u g h the visitors kept the game respectable for the first h a l f it appeared to be only a m a t t e r of t i m e before the Hawks broke the game wide open. A big f o u r t h q u a r t e r score accomplished t h a t . For the record, C'ass City scored touchdowns on runs by Doerr from the one, 10 and 26-yard lines. Dave lleins added another m a r k e r on a 4-yard i a u n l . TONY DOERR rams through a hole in the Almont forward wall for a first down in the first quarter. The 3-year regular ended his career with 113 yards in 15 carries. Another senior, Ray Piaskowski, co-captain, watches the play. t > v . e i i d a l e - ( i a ! . : e U m n conc l u d e d i t s l o o t b a l l season F r i d a y n i g h t v i t l i a 2(\-K win i l l a n u n league contest o\'ci' v i s i t i n g A l c o i i a 1 hgh School. Tlic w i n g a v e t h e Bulldogs ,111 !;-i m . > r k lor t h e season and I', I I I K I I k in t h e N o r t h ( V n t r a l i J League, good lor a t h r e e p l a c e 110 l o r f i r s t . Fxeepl f ' i r t h e d i s a p p o i n l i n g ! • - / loss lo A k r o n F a i r g r o v e \'. hen some key B u l l do;: p l a y i 1 !':- v e r e ou! due lo i l l i i i ' s s . i t wn:> a g.ood season ' T l i . ' i ! - i . i i d a r i ; s u n ." eon; m e n l e d e o a e l i A r n i e Besonen i l l s l e a n : roiled up 27H p o i n t - . d t i r h u - 1 t h e season w h i l e alle.win. 1 i t s opponents to s c o r e u i l i y I n t h e t h i r d q u a r t e r . Howard scored on a 2 ] - y a r d run lo cap a -lli-yard d r i v e . He scored a g a i n in the l o t i r t h q u a r t e r on a s i x - y a r d run a l t e r a d r i v e of till yards. B o t h ol h i s e x t r a point a t t e m p t s i n t h e second h a l f \\ere unsuccessful. The i M i i - p o u n i l senior was 'admg scoi er in t h e l e a g u e I h i s season i t s only ihe fourth 'r on a three vard run 1 Hart, tlie series of plays t o t a l i n g !'2 yards. Scott H a r t t h e n passed to Tom Weichol tor an a d d i t i o n a l two p o i n t s . The Bulldogs m a d e M f i r s t downs i n t h e g a m e , f u m b l e d once, were p e n a h / e d eight l i m e s for lor> yards and p u n t e d l o u r l i m e s lor a •i:i y a r d a v e r a g e Their opponents made ' ' i g h l f i r s ' downs, f n m h l e d once, were penali/ed four t i m e s lor -111 yards and forced to p u n t s i x t i m e s , a v e r a g i n g LID y a r d s each l i m e . On Hie g r o u n d , the B u l l dogs c a r r i e d the h a l l 4!! l i m e s f o r a g a i n of :!:W yards. They gamed 111!) more in the air. all on the arm of C a r o l a n who had six comp l e t i o n s out of 1'J a t t e m p t s and no i n t e r c e p t i o n s . Leading ground gainers were H o w a r d , 'I'l carries and Mii \ a r d s and J e l l l l a l l o c k . six c a r r i e s and (if) vards. ( i l i d d e n was t h e lop receiver, einchmg the l-all five t i m e s for a g;dn o!' luo yards. A l c o n a g a i n e d 1 la \ a r d s on t i l e ground in 41 carries and 2!) yards in the a i r . w i l h Scott H a r t passing 11 limes w i t h three completions and no i n t e r c e p t i o n s . D e l e n s i v e s t a n d o u t s for the v i c t o r s were Scott Bruno w i l h 12 tackles and one f u m b l e recovery and Dan Warack a n d M a r k M c D o n a l d , each w i t h 111 t a c k l e s . Score by q u a r t e r s : (i 0 14 0 Hoar r Jeff Prieskorn Owen i l a g e look a s t r a n g l e hold on a n o t h e r N o r t h C e n t r a l !' c h a m p i o n s h i p Tuesda\ num! w i t h a c o n v i n c i n g '. i e t o r y over secolid place ( ' a . M - v i l l e . U! .i:i. The B u l l d o g girl 1 - '.UMM in I r o n ! m t h e earh, 1 g o i n i ! a n d u e n - never headed .M ihe intermission tlie \\inn--i> were e o m l o r t a h l 1 , ah"ad. ; I -j; Becky H o w a r d showed the wav w i i h '1'i p o i n t s and 21 \ .-Viler being behind three [ j o i n t s at Ihe end oi Ihe f i r s t quarter last Thursday, ov,,-;) (,;ig( - q u i c k l y piled on ihe p o i n t s in Ihe second and : - . t a > e;l a h e a d (o win o\'(-r K i n g s l o n . ,")l.i-:!7. The g a m e \vas played at 7-{'h.iV;j7u 4 .'~ Kmeslon lo: 1 Ihe 'A'lntlefs u l l e ' s record is ll!-'.! The I'.ulldog .IV lost the preliminary, Ui:!l. KI\(iSTO.\ CAMK K a r e n Leach w i t h i!l p o i n t s Tnree B u l l d o g s were in a n d - M rehoiinds paced i ' a s i d o i i h l e l i g m e s . Carol ( l o s l i n ville. ' - v i l h Hi T a m m y K a m \ v i t h \ 2 T h e v i c i o r \ u'as t h e i : ; t h i n a n d L a u r i e A n d r a k u w i c / a row !or ( i v , en ( I age. ( ' a . - e - '.'. i l l ) in Andrakowic; 1 had 10 •!:'. The n a m e i - ' r u i a v u as the t i n ; i l o n e l o r seniors Scott B r u n o . T . M . I llov. a r d . Sean Ban'. .ln:i llendershot. Jerry l l a r b u c k , Arnie llowa r d , I to':-' L a u r i e . M a r k M c D o n a l d . M a r k Sonlag a n d Dick ( H i d d e n . D e s p i t e t h e p l a v e r loss, Besonen said prospects look good lor n e x t y e a r w i t h Ihree M a r l i n g backs and two ol' lensivo linemen reluming plus several good players moving up trom the junior \ a r s i t y . w h i c h also w o n the league c h a m p i o n s h i p , losing o n l y one game Besonen w i l ! he hack for Ins i n t h season, as coach next \ e a r and is already c o u n t i n g t h e days r e m a i n i n g u n t i l I h e s t a r t of p r a c t i c e . As of M o n d a y , there were 27it to «"Tom Howard racked up the first p o i n t s in the game F r i d a y . scoring on a Ihrce\ a r d run in the second q u a r t e r , capping a (i!!-yard drive. He t h e n kicked the extra point. Later in the q u a r t e r , Kirk Carolan passed to his favorite large! for the season. Dick < H i d d e n , to add six more, the play t o t a l i n g :ili \ a n l s . Howard kicked the extra point Fahrner recovered a Doerr fumble in the end /one for the other Cass City touchdown. Paul Harmer kicked three extra points. The v i s i t o r s scored t h e i r lone marker in the dying moments of the game. It was the final high school game for 14 Hawks. Included were eight players who earned two varsily letters and one, Doerr, who was a regular for three years. The two-year lettennen include Todd Alexander, H a r m e r , Dale Peters, Mike T r u e m n e r , Kay Piaskowski, Doug K r l a , Jeff Jensen, Mike Lefler, K e i t h Pobanz. and Steve Meeker. Also g r a d u a t i n g will be regulars Dave Hcins and Paul Guernsey. Scott Fisher and Anders Albaage have also played t h e i r last game for Cass C i t y . Despite t h e losses by gradu a t i o n Schelke can look for a f i n e nucleus ol experienced «/ */ players c o m i n g back next season. Bolstered by a b e t t e r t h a n average group of j u n i o r v a r s i l y players. I he Hawks look to be s t r o n g e r in 1!)"!). Cass C i t y rushed for 20") compiled a 37.4 recoirl w f Jeff Prieskorn, senior at yards in 40 a t t e m p t s w h i l e Cass C i t y High School, has leading the Red Hawk'tA l m o n t n e t t e d 147 yards in been named lo t h e Class C llu ' T h u m b B Conleic liii t r i e s . a l l - s t a t e f i r s t learn in golf as e h a m p i o i i s h i p . Led by Ken M a r t i n ' s f i v e selected by the D e t r o i t m Sl;lt( ' Competition \ receptions in seven t r i e s , the \ r u - s ' all-staler was runnci-uf) Hawks passed f o r l i f t yards. the regionals losing inedc) The selection means t h a t A l m o n t was c r e d i t e d w i t h P r i e s k o r n is r a t e d as one of llmu s !) a "' >' l i i l i yards. T h e Hawks the best 24 golfers in the Prieskorn w i l l be t e l e d f c h a l k e d up a 111-12 edge in s t a t e . an awards d i n n e r at Lat f i r s t downs. For the season. Prieskorn ing, The (.'ass i ' i t y Hed H a w k s r a l l i e d i n t h e f i n a l period M o n d a y to lop a s t u b b o r n K e d s k i n q u i n t e t a t Sand u s k y , (il.-fiH. Cass C i t y t r a i l e d in a n i p and l u c k game 1'Mn at the q u a r t e r and 2!l-2i; at the intermission. But a big t h i r d q u a r t e r erased t h e Sandusky a d v a n tage and the H a w k s led al t h e end of three periods. -)2-:i7. Cass C i t y added to t h e m a r g i n in the last period with a 21- Iti advantage and the victory. Coach Lloyd Schinnerer was pleased w i t h the shooting of his charges. The g i r l s hit 27 of lio shots from the floor for a 4f> percent average. From the free t h r o w line Cass C i t y converted '.) of i:i for (lit percent. Padgett R a n d a l l led the Hawks w i t h 21 p o i n t s . Kelli W i n t e r added lii and Nancy Tonti. 12. For Sandusky, iJenelle Xook scored 17 and Karen H a l e . 12. Libby H a n d l e d t h e H a w k rebounding w i t h 11 boards. The H a w k ,JY team made it a n a l l - v i c t o r i o u s n i g h t w i t h a 51-4(1 decision. The absence ot t h r e e key p l a y e r s and a second half l e t d o w n spelled t h e d i f f e r ence last \Vednesda\ as Cass ( ' i t \ ' s hopes f o r a n upset in girls' basketball were dashed by F r a n k e n m u t h . .".1-:•!!•). Hopes for an upset plus it being p a r e n t s ' nigh! drew a good t u r n o u t lo the Hed H a w k g y m . The cheerleaders were there to cheer t h e home t e a m . Cass C i t y was h a n d i capped, however, by the loss ol s t a r t e r V i c k i e f 'obair.'.. out w i t h a bad a n k l e , and the top two substitutes. Julie llicha n l s . also u i t l i a bad a n k l e , and 1'al i H u l a k o w s k i , out due lo illness. The Red H a w k s led a! Hitcud of the f i r s t h a l f . r.Mf>, bill in t h e second h a l l , t h e Fagles scored :iil p o i n t s lo o n l y 111 lor Cass C i t y to put the g a m e on ice ( o a c h Lloyd S c h i n n e r e r t h o u g h t his t e a m played well, c o n s i d e r i n g t h e loss of t h e I h r e e p l a y e r s , shooting 1C, of 44 from the floor for :i(i percent and six of 12 f r o m [lie t r e e t h r o w l i n e . The only Red H a w k in double f i g u r e s was Padgett R a n d a l l w i t l i !f> p o i n t s . The Fagles were led by Carrie V i t a i i y , 17 p o i n t s . Barb R i t l e r , 14. and Connie A d a m s . 12. The loss dropped the Red H a w k s to 7-f) o v e r a l l and r>-4 in t h e league. F r a n k e n m u l h won the j u n i o r v a r s i t y game. f>2-:if>. Score by q u a r t e r s : scribed. Map l o c a t i o n s and art d r a w i n g s of l a y o u t s are i n c l u d e d for the ski parks and resorts w i t h d e t a i l s on facilities and activities offered at each p a r k . Nearly r>o cross-country ski t r a i l s are described as to l o c a t i o n , l e n g t h , contact for information and trail facili- ties: also where e q u i p m e n t may be rented. For snowmobilers n e a r l y loo t r a i l s are l i s t e d w i l h f u l l information. The guide also includes a h i g h w a y map of the Fast M i c h i g a n region. Winter carnivals, festivals, sporting events and w i n t e r season c u l t u r a l a c t i v ities are described in the regional Calendar of E v e n t s in the new guide. The calendar runs from December Girls share crown EIGHTH GRADE CHAMPS — Members of the eighth grade girls' basketball team at Cass City Intermediate School are, front row, from left, inunager Scott Geiger, Janie Wright, Bonnie McDonald, manager Hob Albee. Middle row, coach Karen Martin, Karen Bock, Jamie Fox, Carrie tautner, Sue Opanasenko, Jill Seurynck, coach Kally Maharg. Back row, Kathy Tuckey, Michelle Fahrner, Laura Richards, Deanna Pomeroy, Jill Root and Lisa Wilson. The e i g h t h grade girls' basketball team at Cass City I n t e r m e d i a t e School shared first place in the area junior high league. The team played its final game last Thursday, finishing with an H-2 mark in the league and 10-2 overall. The other teams tied for first in the league were Laker Middle School and UnionvillcSebewaing Junior High, Other teams in the league are Bad Axe, Ubly and Harbor Beach. The team is coached by Kally Maharg and Karen Martin. (.IUI.S' It.\SKKTK U I [ ( > w e n - ( iag.e I'aseville North Huron Pi-ck Carsonville-l'S Port Hope I 'ort A u s t i n Akron Fairgrovc Kingston ri??&LiS^*&w^f?«(-inf.ri<iX'tt£*Jt**tW'j*atf!1tOf1trrMt<1fiffXrfWjpiiif 10th ANNUAL COUNTRY KITCHEN TRINITY UNITED METHODIST CHURCH HILLS AND DALES HOSPITAL AUXILIARY AND Houghton and Seeyer Sts. NOV. 11 • Doors Open 10 a.m. Luncheon Starts 10 a.m. inter Guide" is r The 48-page "Fast M i c h i gan W i n t e r (inide" is ready for d i s t r i b u t i o n , according lo the Fast M i c h i g a n Tourist Association. Detailed i n f o r m a t i o n on a l p i n e i d o w n h i l l i and nordic (cross-country i skiing, s n o w m o b i l i n g , ice f i s h i n g and w i n t e r carnivals is de- r rebounds . her s i s i e i Jull 11 i )eh Legg \\'as top scon lor die ( ' a n i m a l s u i t h r points. ( l \ \ e n - ( ! a g e 'Aon the limf ' / a r s i i y eonte.-,! ::iMf> p Featuring Knitted Goods, Xmas Decorations, Baked Goods, Jellies 'Holiday on Parade' AND NOV. 15 — 9 a.m.-3:30 p.m. at HOSPITAL MEETING ROOM ShabbonaR.LD.S. Church CHRISTMAS BAZAAR BAKE SALE LUNCHEON High School Cafe. f »«WH • 10a.m. t o 4 p.m. Luncheon 11:30 a.m. - 2 p.m. 7 p.m. • Refreshments and Door Prizes • Sponsored by Zonta Club Friday, Nov. 10, Only Bazaar and Bake Sale - 2-7 p.m. Pie and coffee will be served HUNTERS' SPECIAL BREAKFAST 4a.m. till 8 a.m. FIRST DAY OF DEER SEASON CASS CITY GUN CLUB 4 south, 1 east, 1/t north of Cass City SPONSORED IN COMMUNITY INTEREST BY THE CASS CITY STATE BANK It
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