07-16-1970
07-16-1970
07-16-1970
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VOLUME 64, NUMBER 13 CASS CITY, MICHIGAN-THURSDAY, JULY <strong>16</strong>, I970 SECTION A Fifteen Cents TWENTY-TWO PAGES<br />
Lightning<br />
ignites 2<br />
fires Tuesday<br />
Fire departments from Cass<br />
City and Gagetown battled a<br />
fire at the Elmer Parrish farm,<br />
7 1/4 miles east of Cass City,<br />
Tuesday night, in a driving rain.<br />
The flames devoured a barn<br />
and some 2,000 bales of hay<br />
after the structure was evidently<br />
struck by lightning. N0<br />
estimate of the loss was available.<br />
The fire fighters were unable<br />
to save the barn but were<br />
successful in keeping the fire<br />
from spreading to near-by<br />
buildings.<br />
It was the second fire of the<br />
day thought to have been caused<br />
by lightning.<br />
In Gagetown fire fighters<br />
were able to save a garage<br />
owned by John Dieble.<br />
The fire was reported at noon<br />
and a corner of the building was<br />
destroyed.<br />
Authorities said that a valve<br />
grinding machine .and some<br />
mechanic tools were probably<br />
destroyed by the heat.<br />
The paint on a tractor and<br />
a car housed in the garage<br />
was damaged by the fire's heat.<br />
E<br />
FROM THE<br />
We will be lucky if the story<br />
of the small country town of<br />
Onaway in the northern lower<br />
peninsula is not a harbinger of<br />
a problem that will soon face<br />
Cass City.<br />
The residents of the area are<br />
fighting to keep a doctor. They<br />
are staging a drive to raise<br />
$104,000 for hospital improvements<br />
necessary to keep the<br />
doors open. If the hospital goes,<br />
so does the doctor that services<br />
a 500 square mile area.<br />
To raise part of the money<br />
the town promoters are plan-<br />
.ning.» -gi-ant auction Aug. 1 and<br />
have sent a plea for auction<br />
items over much of the State.<br />
Judging by the two drives for<br />
hospital funds conducted in Cass<br />
City, it's the view here that the<br />
possibility of raising $25,000 by<br />
this method ranges from poor<br />
to none at all.<br />
But even if the goal is eventually<br />
reached, the sad truth is<br />
that it is no guarantee of a<br />
long range solution. A revamped<br />
hospital conforming to all<br />
present health department regulations<br />
may be only delaying<br />
the inevitable.<br />
In the letter explaining the<br />
plight of Onaway, the promoters<br />
tell how their doctor handled<br />
over 14,000 office calls, plus<br />
emergencies, house calls and<br />
patients in the hospital in one<br />
year.<br />
That's over 50 a day and a<br />
good many more than most<br />
doctors see. Patients in Cass<br />
City will probably shrug off 50<br />
patients a day as commonplace.<br />
In Cass City it is. And it<br />
probably is for many many<br />
general practitioners in rural<br />
communities.<br />
And that's the trouble. There<br />
just aren't enough younger men<br />
who want to take on a burden<br />
like this when there are so many<br />
easier medical avenues open to<br />
them.<br />
And when the doctors that are<br />
Concluded on page two.<br />
LIGHTING THE NIGHT SKY Tuesday in a driving rain<br />
is the remains of this barn owned by Elmer Parrish,<br />
7 1/4 miles east of Cass City.<br />
Ratify 10% raise for<br />
non-teachers at school<br />
The Tuscola County Board<br />
of Education ratified a twoyear<br />
master contract with the<br />
International Union of Operating<br />
Engineers Local 547 of the<br />
AFL-CIO, Monday night at the<br />
regular meeting of the board<br />
at the school.<br />
The union represents the<br />
cooks, custodians and bus<br />
drivers.<br />
Terms of the agreement call<br />
for an increase ©f 10 per cent<br />
for the employees in <strong>1970</strong>-71<br />
and six per cent in 1971-72.<br />
The 10 per cent increase will<br />
require the school to pay the<br />
following salaries during the<br />
upcoming school year:<br />
Bus drivers $835 per run,<br />
per year.<br />
Cooks, $1.96 per hour.<br />
Custodians, $2.80 per hour.<br />
In 1971-72 the salaries will<br />
be:<br />
Bus drivers, $885 per run,<br />
per year.<br />
Cooks, $2.08 per hour.<br />
Custodians, $2.97 per hour.<br />
The salaries of custodians<br />
are based on 44-hour weeks<br />
with hours over 40 to be paid<br />
at time and a half rates.<br />
After ratifying the agreement,<br />
the board went into a<br />
session closed to the press<br />
and the public to discuss wages<br />
for non-teaching .personnel not<br />
covered by the master contract.<br />
After discussion was completed,<br />
the board voted salary<br />
raises of 10 per cent.<br />
For the head bookkeeper a<br />
raise from $5,900 to $6S500.<br />
For secretaries on salary,<br />
raises from $5,000 to $5,500.<br />
For secretaries on hourly rates<br />
of $1.95 to $2.15, raises of<br />
igj^^<br />
It's bargain days*.<br />
This year's summer sidewalk bargain<br />
days promises to be one of the most<br />
complete summer sales -customer<br />
appreciation promotions offered in the<br />
last decade in Cass City, Keith Me-<br />
Conkey, chairman, said this week.<br />
Cooperating with the Chamber of Commerce<br />
is virtually every store in the<br />
community.<br />
Most have special sidewalk bargains<br />
to tie in. with the fun promised in the<br />
various contests,<br />
There will be bikes given to winners<br />
of a balloon breaking contest and a pie<br />
eating contest as well as two $25 gift<br />
certificates to parents and $17 in cash<br />
prizes for teenage girls with long hair.<br />
Complete details are outlined on an<br />
inside page.<br />
10 per cent.<br />
Head cooks were boosted<br />
from $2.35 to $2.60. Head custodians<br />
were jumped from $2.90<br />
to $3.20 per hour and the assistant<br />
head custodian raised<br />
from $2,80 to $3.10 per hour,<br />
In addition, the head custodian<br />
: Deceives an additional $1,300-<br />
per year for starting buses and<br />
his assistant, $1,200 for the<br />
same duties.<br />
Seventy-five per cent of the<br />
salary for working with the<br />
buses is paid by the State.<br />
In a final action, the school<br />
nurse's salary went from $3,50-^<br />
to -$8,900; ; , *>•<br />
CD disaster plans<br />
Six weeks ago the Tuscola<br />
County Civil Defense Department<br />
mailed to all county residents<br />
a Community Shelter Plan<br />
containing detailed information<br />
about the precautions to be taken<br />
in case of a nuclear attack and<br />
a map showing civil defense<br />
shelters in various county communities.<br />
Charles F. Kroswek,<br />
County Civil Defense director,<br />
said he had received no response<br />
from the public concerning<br />
the information.<br />
Kroswek admitted that the<br />
public is generally apathetic.<br />
But it's more than a problem<br />
of apathy, he said, it's aproblem<br />
of knowledge. John Q. Public<br />
isn't concerned about nuclear<br />
attack either because he considers<br />
it a remote possibility or<br />
because he feels there won't be<br />
anything left if it happens.<br />
"Most people do not know the<br />
dangers of radiation," said Kroswek,<br />
"and they don't- realize<br />
they can survive a nuclear attack."<br />
The Community Shelter<br />
Plan, he said, was an attempt<br />
to alleviate such ignorance.<br />
A Chronicle telephone survey<br />
of 20 Cass City area residents<br />
who had received the information,<br />
indicated that 13 had read<br />
the material. Of that 13, nine<br />
knew the location of at least one<br />
civil defense shelter in Cass<br />
City or what to do if they were<br />
unable to get to a shelter,<br />
Kroswek said this was about the<br />
kind of response he expected.<br />
If it can be assumed this is<br />
typical of the entire county it<br />
means that 65 per cent of Tus-<br />
cola County's 43,000 plus population<br />
at least read the Community<br />
Shelter Plan. It means<br />
too that approximately 45 per<br />
cent of the population would<br />
know the location of a shelter<br />
where they could take refuge<br />
or other alternatives.<br />
Unfortunately these statistics<br />
also indicate something else.<br />
What about the 15,000 people<br />
who did not read the plan or<br />
the more than 23,000 who do not<br />
know the location of civil defense<br />
shelters or the precautions<br />
to guard against exposure<br />
to fall-out?<br />
"We can't force people to read<br />
the material," said Kroswek,<br />
"even though someday it may<br />
mean their survival."<br />
Horse<br />
Show plans set<br />
The 10th annual Kingston<br />
Horse Show is ready. Ready to<br />
provide a showcase for the<br />
better horses in the area and<br />
ready to provide valuable training<br />
for riders who plan to enter<br />
events in the various Thumb<br />
fairs.<br />
That's the word from Robert<br />
J. Peter, chairman of the event<br />
this year.<br />
The show starts at 1 p.m.<br />
and annually draws contestants<br />
Concluded on page 6<br />
Shaken eye witness details<br />
death crash and fire<br />
Lloyd Finkbeiner, of Green<br />
Rd., was an eye-witness to Saturday's<br />
auto accident which<br />
claimed the lives of five people.<br />
His voice reflected the horror<br />
of the crash as he recalled the<br />
disaster.<br />
"They hit head-on," he said,<br />
"and skidded around and gas<br />
must have come out of the carburetor<br />
because there was fire<br />
underneath the car and on the<br />
pavement and then the whole<br />
thing exploded." Finkbeiner<br />
said the flames shot 30 feet<br />
into the air.<br />
"It was the worst sight I've<br />
ever seen," he said, "and we<br />
just stood there, we couldn't<br />
do a thing."<br />
Prior to the accident Finkbeiner<br />
had been inside his<br />
Green Rd. home and happened<br />
to glance out the window just<br />
before the collision. He and his<br />
wife immediately called the ambulance<br />
and fire department.<br />
"I ran out of the house just<br />
as a guy from another car<br />
was pulling a man from one<br />
of the cars. His head had been<br />
through the windshield," said<br />
Finkbeiner. "And you know, he<br />
was the only one from the two<br />
cars I saw. It must have been<br />
instant death, you know. There<br />
was no moaning or anything.<br />
You could have heard a pin<br />
drop it was so quiet."<br />
Finkbeiner finally acknowledged<br />
what his voice had been<br />
revealing. "I'm still shaken up,<br />
I hope I never see a sight like<br />
that again in the next 20 years-<br />
—nervous inside, you know?"<br />
"I was going on a trip this<br />
week," he said, "but I've changed<br />
my mind now. I'm not going—<br />
I'm still too shaken up."<br />
A fiery head-on collision of<br />
two cars Saturday increased the<br />
county's automobile accident<br />
fatality toll froin 12 to 11.<br />
Killed were: John Robert<br />
Gray, 23, and John Ray Harms,<br />
23, both of Gagetown, occupants<br />
of one car, and Glen M. Paul,<br />
62, Florence, his wife, 60, and<br />
Louis Wolfgang, 63, all of Southfield,<br />
occupants of the second<br />
car. The accident occurred at 6:56<br />
p.m. on M-81 near the Green<br />
Rd. intersection, when Gray's<br />
east-bound car swerved into the<br />
west-bound lane in the path of<br />
Paul's on-coming auto.<br />
Gray, pulled from the wreckage<br />
by a passing motorist, was<br />
dead on arrival at Hills and<br />
Dales Hospital.<br />
Moments later an explosion<br />
enveloped both automobiles in<br />
flames. The bodies of the other<br />
four victims were burned beyond<br />
recognition. Witnesses<br />
called firemen to extinquish the<br />
blaze.<br />
Gi ay's body was taken to the<br />
Hunter Funeral Home in Gagetown.<br />
The others were removed<br />
to funeral homes in their home<br />
towns.<br />
Mr. Gray, the son of Mr.<br />
and Mrs. Floyd Gray, had been<br />
employed at the Pontiac Motor<br />
Division of General Motors in<br />
Pontiac for the past year.<br />
He is survived by his parents;<br />
five brothers, James,<br />
Lloyd, Charles and Ronald, all<br />
of Caro, Douglas of Gagetown;<br />
four sisters, Mrs. Willis<br />
Wirick, Warren, Mrs. Deloris<br />
Brady, Cass City, Mrs. Fred<br />
Ondrajka and Miss Patricia<br />
Gray, both of Gagetown.<br />
Funeral services were held<br />
Tuesday at the Gagetown Church<br />
of the Nazarene.<br />
A spokesman for St. Mary's<br />
Hospital in S agin aw said Wednesday<br />
John Remsing, <strong>16</strong>, son<br />
of Mrs. Martha Remsing of<br />
Ubly,remained in critical condition<br />
in the hospital's intensive<br />
care unit with injuries<br />
sustained in an auto accident<br />
Wrecked Cars Pictures<br />
on Page 4<br />
July 10. James Daniel Remsing,<br />
his twin brother, died Sunday<br />
from injuries suffered in<br />
that accident when the Remsing<br />
car collided with a pickup<br />
truck.<br />
The accident occurred on<br />
Morrison. Rd. near McMillan<br />
Rd., six miles west of Ubly.<br />
John Cieslinski, 23, Ubly, the<br />
James D, Remsing<br />
driver of the truck, was treated<br />
and released from Hills and<br />
Dales Hospital.<br />
The Remsing brothers were<br />
first taken to Hubbard Memorial<br />
Hospital in Bad Axe, then transferred<br />
to the Saginaw hospital<br />
suffering from head and internal<br />
injuries.<br />
James, a senior at Ubly High<br />
School, born September 8, 1953<br />
in Utica, was the son of Mrs.<br />
Martha Forstner Remsing and<br />
the late George Remsing.<br />
He is survived by his mother,<br />
five brothers, George of Cass<br />
City, Tom of Lake Orion, Frank<br />
of South Lyons, Joseph of<br />
Pontiac and John of Ubly, four<br />
sisters, Mrs. Helen Keyser and<br />
Mrs. LaVern Peters, both of<br />
Cass City, and Lena and Mary,<br />
both of Ubly. Also surviving are<br />
his maternal grandmother,<br />
Mrs. Magdalena Forstner of<br />
Ubly and his paternal grandmother,<br />
Mrs. Helen Remsing of<br />
Romeo.<br />
He was buried Wednesday at<br />
Elkland Cemetery following<br />
services at Little's Funeral<br />
Home in Cass City.<br />
John R Gray<br />
School to spend $34,000<br />
for building, site work<br />
The Cass City School Board<br />
approved preliminary plans for<br />
expenditures totaling some<br />
$34,000 for improvements in<br />
the school plant and grounds<br />
Monday night in its regular<br />
session at Cass City High<br />
School.<br />
The money will be spent on<br />
two projects. From the general<br />
operating fund a total of $21,461<br />
will be spent. It will be used<br />
to continue the replacement of<br />
windows at the Intermediate<br />
School. From the building and<br />
site fund, $13,000 is ear marked<br />
for grading of a school athletic<br />
field.<br />
Last year the windows on the<br />
west side of the building were<br />
replaced at a cost of some<br />
$25,000. The need was urgent.<br />
Less urgent is the work<br />
slated for this year. Supt. Don<br />
Grouse told the board that it<br />
could be possible to slide by<br />
for another year or so before<br />
replacement would be mandatory.<br />
The majority of the board<br />
agreed that postponing the<br />
repair would only lead to extra<br />
cost when the work was tackled.<br />
Intermediate Principal Robert<br />
Stickle said that the new<br />
windows on the west had transformed<br />
the rooms there from<br />
the coldest to the warmest in<br />
the building.<br />
A break down of the cost<br />
reveals that replacing the east<br />
windows will require $13,283.<br />
The east windows of the gym<br />
and the east and west band room<br />
windows will cost $3,838 and<br />
windows for the south and north<br />
ends of the building, $5,436<br />
more.<br />
The board had the option of<br />
buying one, two or all of the<br />
plans and voted 6-1 in favor of<br />
the complete project.<br />
Trustee Gerald Hicks voted<br />
against the work, saying that<br />
the $21,000 was about a mill<br />
in tax money. With all this rain,<br />
he added, the farmers' crops<br />
just don't look good.<br />
Trustee Don Reid said that he<br />
deemed it imperative to keep<br />
the buildings in good shape if a<br />
school is to be operated.<br />
While the money for the windows<br />
comes from current tax<br />
funds, the money for the athletic<br />
field is part of the fund voted<br />
for the new school and must be<br />
^ used for building and site.<br />
The $13,000 is expected to be<br />
used to level the area east of<br />
the school. There will be space<br />
for a football field, a football<br />
practice field, two softball diamonds,<br />
a baseball diamond,<br />
track and field events and tennis<br />
courts.<br />
But this is in the future.<br />
Right now the plans call for only<br />
leveling the area so it will be<br />
available for intramural sports<br />
and football practice.<br />
Two plans with slight variations<br />
were presented and Trustee<br />
Elwyn Helwig and Don<br />
Grouse were empowered to<br />
select one and submit the earth<br />
moving project for bids.<br />
While the board gave the<br />
green light to plant improvement<br />
expenditures, they hoisted<br />
the stop signal when asked for<br />
an updated version of the present<br />
biology text.<br />
The one in use is six years<br />
old and Tom Spencer requested<br />
a new book. The board said no<br />
because three new texts have<br />
been authorized and they did not<br />
want parents to have to buy any<br />
Concluded on page 6<br />
Sctinedberger 9 s<br />
In the nine years Clarence<br />
and Russ Schneeberger have<br />
been in business together in<br />
Cass City they have celebrated<br />
several openings.<br />
The opening coincided with<br />
the regular expansion that their<br />
business required. This week<br />
end the most recent celebration<br />
starts.<br />
It marks the completion of an<br />
attractive new front and more<br />
store floor space at the store.<br />
Special prices and free gifts<br />
are offered for the opening<br />
event.<br />
Record July rains threaten crop disaster<br />
Rain, rain, rain and more<br />
rain deluged Tuscola County and<br />
the Thumb during July causing<br />
crop damages estimated at $1<br />
million with a threat of nearly<br />
a total crop loss if wet weather<br />
continues.<br />
In Cass City a check of the<br />
rain gauge by Nelson Willy revealed<br />
that the area has already<br />
received more rain this<br />
month than it has in the entire<br />
month of July during the last<br />
10 years.<br />
Since 1961, the records show,<br />
there has been a low of .9<br />
of an inch of rain and a high<br />
of 4,54 inches in previous Julys<br />
Average rainfall during the<br />
month of July in the Cass City<br />
vicinity amounts to just over<br />
three inches. Thus far nearly<br />
twice that amount has fallen.<br />
As of July 10, 5.96 inches of<br />
rainfall was recorded for the<br />
area. This is an increase of<br />
more than three and a half<br />
inches over the entire month<br />
of June.<br />
Willy, disposal plant engineer,<br />
reported more drainage<br />
last Friday than at any other<br />
time he could remember. The<br />
normal drainage flow amounts<br />
to about 276,000 gallons per<br />
day. Friday's torrents produced<br />
466,000 gallons of storm drainage.<br />
The usually placid Cass River<br />
had risen to five feet at noon<br />
Friday. By 7 p.m. it had gone up<br />
to 7.53 feet Three hours later<br />
it stood at 8.25 feet. Saturday<br />
the swirling river crested at<br />
8.80 feet.<br />
The farmers will record the<br />
effects of the watery deluge,<br />
not in inches and feet, but in<br />
dollars and cents. Low-lying<br />
fields of crops became small<br />
lakes last week drowning or uprooting<br />
many immature plants.<br />
Some wheat fields looked as if<br />
they had been the site of a<br />
county carnival as the slender<br />
shoots lay flattened on the<br />
ground.<br />
William Bortel, county agricultural<br />
agent, termed damage<br />
to the white bean industry<br />
"critical." He estimated that<br />
the expected 10 per cent reduction<br />
in the bean yield may result<br />
in a $1 million loss for bean<br />
growers.<br />
Bortel said the area from<br />
Richville north to Fairgrove<br />
was apparently the hardest hit<br />
with a recorded rainfall in some<br />
areas of nearly eight inches.<br />
The harvest of wheat, oats<br />
and barley, Bortel said, is ex-<br />
pected to be "down severely."<br />
Most of damage to grain crops<br />
however was attributed to high<br />
winds and was reported scattered<br />
throughout the county. He<br />
declined to put a dollar figure<br />
on the amount of damage, saying<br />
it was still too early to tell.<br />
Jim Turner, assistant manager<br />
of the Gagetown Elevator<br />
Co., said the real effects will<br />
not be known for several more<br />
days, but that the situation<br />
"looks pretty severe."<br />
"If it doesn't quit raining,"<br />
said Turner, "harvesting the<br />
grain crops will be nearly impossible<br />
because the ground is<br />
See Rain Pictures<br />
Page 3<br />
just too wet."<br />
Besides being persistent, the<br />
rains have been capricious.<br />
Hard rains have hit on a scattered<br />
basis... missing some<br />
areas and deluging neighbors<br />
a quarter mile away.<br />
Besides the Fairgrove area,<br />
another hard hit section is in<br />
Sanilac county in the Hemans<br />
area which appeared to suffer<br />
the brunt of every rain recorded.
,-P.AGE TWO<br />
Marriage Licenses<br />
" Marriage licenses issued or<br />
applied for during the week in<br />
Tuscola County.<br />
Herman Charles McConnel,<br />
25, Silverwood to Kathleen<br />
Marie Clouse, 17, Caro.<br />
.^Robert Peter George Knight,<br />
22, Windsor, Ont., to Evelyn<br />
Kay Mathews, 18, Kent City,<br />
George Willard Willson, 37,<br />
Vassar to Elaine Helen Barn-<br />
- ard, 26, Vassar.<br />
Patrick LaVere McTaggart,<br />
25, Millington to Jessica Anne<br />
Emmons, 18, Caro.<br />
"- Fred Cano Olivarez, 20, Caro<br />
to Wendy Marie Lich, 17,<br />
Vassar.<br />
Robert Lee Alexander, 24,<br />
•Vassar to Susan Kay Reamer, 18<br />
Alger.<br />
>' Gary Allen Nichol, 19, Kingston<br />
to Laurene Leslie Tedford,<br />
<strong>16</strong>, Silverwood.<br />
Thomas Andrew Kukulski, 19,<br />
Vassar to Paula Sue Johnson,<br />
19, Fosteria.<br />
Donald Floyd Dibble, 19, Caro<br />
to Karin Wynne Crigger, 18,<br />
•Clifford.<br />
Michael Guy Payne, 21, Caro<br />
to Mary Jo Hartfield, 27, Mt.<br />
Morris.<br />
MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF<br />
CIRCULATIONS<br />
..PUBLISHED jEVERY THURSDAY<br />
AT CASS CITY, MICHIGAN<br />
6552 Main Street<br />
John Haire, publisher.<br />
National Advertising Representa<br />
tive, Michigan Weekly Newspapers,<br />
Inc., 257 Michigan Avenue, East<br />
Lansing, Michigan.<br />
Second Class postage paid at Cass<br />
City, Michigan, 48726.<br />
Subscription Price: To post offices<br />
in Tuscola, Huron and Sanilac<br />
Counties, $4.50 a year or 2 years<br />
for $8.00. $2.50 for six months.<br />
In other parts of the United States,<br />
$5.00 a year. 25 cents extra charged<br />
for part year order. Payable in<br />
advance.<br />
-" "For information regarding newspaper<br />
advertising and commercial<br />
and job printing, telephone 872-2010.<br />
CHECK YOUR TIRES!<br />
SPECIAL SALE<br />
CASS CITY CHRONICLE-THURSDAY, JULY <strong>16</strong>,.!970<br />
Mrs. Reva Little Phone 872-3698<br />
Mr. and Mrs. William Patch<br />
and Mrs. Vera AuBuchon spent<br />
the past week at their cabin<br />
near Oscoda. Mr. and Mrs.<br />
Lyle Biddle of Rochester joir
CASS CITY, MICHIGAN CASS CITY CHRONICLE-THURSDAY, JULY <strong>16</strong>, I970<br />
Record rains make July<br />
look like April -<br />
SOME SHOPPERS WAITED patiently for a break in the<br />
storm....<br />
ANOTHER ALL<br />
- while others<br />
decided they just<br />
couldn't wait and<br />
preferred a dousing<br />
to a delay.<br />
Caro Slate<br />
Hospital lists<br />
course grads<br />
A graduation exercise will be<br />
held at Murray Hall, CaroState<br />
Home and Training School, July<br />
23, at 8:00 p.m. for 30 attendant<br />
nurses. The speaker for<br />
the evening will be Dr. Joseph<br />
C, Denniston, Superintendent at<br />
Caro State Home.<br />
Among the persons from the<br />
Cass City area completing<br />
the Michigan Department of<br />
Mental Health Approved Course<br />
of Instruction for Attendant<br />
Nurses under the direction of<br />
Mrs. Fred Campbell, R. N.<br />
were:<br />
Sharon Alien, Sharon Delong,<br />
Marion O'Dell, Opal Turner and<br />
Richard Turner and Sharon<br />
Daudel of Deford.<br />
ELECTRIC HOME<br />
You Are Invited To Inspect The New Total Electric Home At<br />
4581 STATE STREET<br />
GAGETOWN<br />
OPEN DURING CONSTRUCTION<br />
• HEATED ELECTRICALLY<br />
• INSTALLED APPLIANCES ><br />
• CERTIFIED WIRING<br />
• LIGHT FOR LIVING<br />
DATES OPEN:<br />
JULY <strong>16</strong> - JULY 23<br />
HOURS:<br />
9:00 a. m. to 5:00 p. m.<br />
CHERYL RICE, Owner<br />
THE CASS RIVER crested at 8.8 feet Saturday after Friday's<br />
all-day driving rain. It was nearly four feet higher than<br />
the normal five feet measured at noon Friday.<br />
WATER STOOD in fields everywhere following the steady<br />
rains that drenched the area day after day for over a week.<br />
MOWING LAWNS<br />
Mowing lawns to the correct<br />
height increases weed<br />
resistance. Two inches is the<br />
best height for upright grasses<br />
like bluegrass and fescues.<br />
Bent, zoysia and Bermuda<br />
grass should be cut at threefourths<br />
inch or lower.<br />
SPORTS FANS!<br />
By H. M. Bulen<br />
Here's an oddity from golf<br />
.... Almost every great<br />
golfer in the world in the old<br />
days was from England or Scotland--but<br />
today, oddly enough,<br />
practically none of the world's<br />
top golfers are from England<br />
or Scotland .... Golf experts<br />
can't figure out why that<br />
happened.<br />
Did you know the only reason<br />
golf courses have sand traps<br />
is because the oldest golf<br />
courses in the world in Scotland<br />
are situated by the sea<br />
and sandy spots are on the<br />
courses by nature .... So<br />
when other courses were built<br />
everywhere else, sand traps<br />
were added to make the courses<br />
like the original ones in Scotland.<br />
Ted Williams made an interesting<br />
observation recently<br />
.... He said the single most<br />
difficult thing to do in all of<br />
sports is to hit a baseball<br />
being thrown at you 90 miles<br />
per hour by a big league pitcher<br />
.... He says that's harder<br />
than throwing a pass in football,<br />
or hitting a ball that's lying<br />
still in golf, or shooting a<br />
basket in basketball ....<br />
Whether you agree or not, you<br />
can have some fun arguing about<br />
that one.<br />
BULEN MOTORS<br />
CHEVROLET-OLDSMOBILE<br />
6617 Main Phone 872-2750<br />
Copyright<br />
PAGE THREEj<br />
"1<br />
Rabbit tracks •'""" $S? :<br />
By John Haire $|<br />
(And anyone else he can get to help) ||<br />
A little small town hospitality was shown the Rev.<br />
Van Dellen, new pastor at the Cass City Lutheran Church,<br />
when he moved in the other day.<br />
Lost in the moving shuffle were a gas stove and refrigerator<br />
and the young Van Dellens with a five-month-old daughter<br />
needed them.<br />
Ken Eisinger at Fuelgas came up with a gas stove and<br />
one of those special heavy duty appliance trucks was borrowed<br />
from Stan Asher at Thumb Appliance. A parishioner<br />
tossed in a used refrigerator and another volunteer installed-it.<br />
The pastor should start with a favorable impression of the<br />
community. • .<br />
What do you do on a rainy day on vacation? You go see a<br />
bank robbed, that's what. You do, if you are like the Ken<br />
Zdrojewskis and her mother, Mrs. William Thompson.<br />
Vacationing near Caseville, the three stopped so Mfs.<br />
Thompson could cash a check. While in the bank, the robbery<br />
occurred.<br />
Meanwhile, the Zdrojewskis remained outside in a car<br />
wondering what was keeping grandmother so long. Ken casually<br />
noticed a man walking briskly away from the bank. He could<br />
only say later that the fellow did not get into a car.<br />
Moments later Mrs. Thompson came to the car visibly<br />
shaken. When interviewed by the FBI she reported that all<br />
she remembers seeing was the man with the great, big gun.<br />
*#** ,<br />
The kooks were loose again in Cass City this week. They<br />
were operating on South Seeger Street. For no sane reason<br />
they ruined the flower boxes at the library and broke two<br />
seedling trees in half in front of residents' homes. The trees,<br />
planted by the village, were in their second year.<br />
****<br />
It was "editor's day off" Saturday and I freeloaded on the<br />
Detroit Baseball Company and Detroit Edison with my son<br />
and a neighbor's nine-year-old.<br />
The Tigers lost the game, but the kids' battle to see who<br />
could consume the most free ice cream bars, free cokes<br />
and free bags of peanuts ended in a draw: both consumed<br />
three of everything and were going strong until I<br />
the game on account of gluttony.<br />
On the way to Detroit on M-24 there is an oil like pumpfng<br />
rig that continually operates. The sign says that it is owned Jb'y<br />
a chemical company. ;<br />
What the sign doesn't say is just what the well is producing.<br />
It's not oil. *;<br />
Since the unit is in Lapeer County, I asked Jim Fitzgerald,<br />
august editor of the Lapeer County Press, what the score w|s.<br />
He replied "I should know the answer to that and at one<br />
time I did." I<br />
All of which proves nothing except what you knew all alofiig:<br />
editors don't know nothin' *<br />
J Others Get Quick Results With The<br />
j Chronicle's Classified Ad-<br />
You-Will Too!
PAGE FOUR -THURSDAY, JULY <strong>16</strong>, I970 CASS CITY, MICHIGAN<br />
Off|c|a|<br />
Tuscola County Board of Supervisors<br />
JUNE 9, <strong>1970</strong><br />
?:The June 9, <strong>1970</strong> meeting of the Tuscola County Board of<br />
Commissioners was called to order by the Chairman Shuford<br />
KirK.<br />
- Roll Call: William Tuckey and Charles Woodcock absent.<br />
Richard Sommerville, candidate for Senator from the 28th<br />
District and John Gilmore, candidate for Representative from<br />
the 84th District appeared before the Board with general discussion<br />
following.<br />
; Mac O'Dell, Equalization Director reported on the equalization<br />
study being done in Millington Township.<br />
Recess for lunch.<br />
AFTERNOON SESSION -JUNE 9, <strong>1970</strong><br />
, Afternoon session: all present except Woodcock.<br />
J. Benson Collon, Corner, came before the Board on attending<br />
the National Coroners Conference at Minneapolis, Minnesota.<br />
; Moved by Graf that Coroners be allowed to attend conference<br />
with necessary expenses be paid. Seconded by Tuckey. Motion<br />
carried.<br />
• Motion by Tuckey and supportedby Loomis that Manasse Jewelery<br />
Store have authority to put a burglar alarm system in the<br />
Sheriff office.<br />
Mr. Kern, District Court Judge, appeared before the Board<br />
with a request for an additional 1 day a week extra help. The<br />
request was referred to the Personnel Relations Committee.<br />
The Buildings and Grounds Committee presented the following<br />
recommendation:<br />
Mr. Chairman:<br />
Honorable Board of Commissioners:<br />
Your Committee on Buildings and Grounds beg to leave the<br />
following recommendation: That this Board accept the lowest<br />
bid of $11,727.00 on the purchase of a boiler for the Court<br />
House from Davanay Plumbing & Heating, Inc.<br />
Signed: Floyd Ducker<br />
Edward Golding<br />
Donald Graf<br />
Motion by Tuckey supported by Graf. Carried unanimously.<br />
Mr. Harold Johnson appeared before the Board with a report<br />
on the Saginaw Adult Mental Health Clinic and Bay Child Guidance<br />
Clinic. General discussion following.<br />
Commissioner Loomis, Chairman of the Claims and Accounts<br />
Committee gave the following report:<br />
BOARD OF COMMISSIOERS CLAIMED ALLOWED<br />
Michigan Townships Association,<br />
Membership Dues . 75.00 75.00<br />
"Tuscola County Advertiser, Supervisors<br />
Proceedings . 109.00<br />
Donald Graf, Mileage<br />
5.20<br />
Edward Golding, Per Diem and Mileage 25.20<br />
Shuford Kirk, Per Diem and Mileage . . 47.60<br />
John Loomis, Per Diem and Mileage . . 66.00<br />
Floyd Ducker, Per Diem and Mileage. . 57.20<br />
Harold Johnson, Mileage for Mental<br />
Health Board.<br />
70.00<br />
455.20<br />
CIRCUIT COURT<br />
Kenneth A. Gangler, Transcripts<br />
FRIEND OF THE COURT<br />
Doubleday Bros. & Co., Child Support<br />
Checks. .<br />
Tuscola County Advertiser, Printing .<br />
John D. Turner, Postmaster, Postage.<br />
100.65<br />
100.65<br />
432.84<br />
31.80<br />
90.00<br />
Leslie *E. Lounsbury, Mileage 95.80<br />
J. Edward Goodchild, Mileage 106.60<br />
Caro V & S Hardware, Shovel . . . ..,.,. . 5.44<br />
Blue Print & Supply, Caps for rod .... 2.45<br />
210.29<br />
109.00<br />
5.20<br />
25.20<br />
47.60<br />
66.00<br />
57.20<br />
70.00<br />
455.20<br />
100.65<br />
100.65<br />
432.84<br />
31.80<br />
90.00<br />
102.80<br />
657.44<br />
C. V. Hamilton, Mileage 102.80<br />
657.44<br />
DISTRICT COURT<br />
Doubleday Bros. & Co., Printing ..... 20.82 20.82<br />
Tuscola Co. Advertiser, Printing 133.00 133.00<br />
Fitzgeralds, Supplies 2.<strong>16</strong> 2.<strong>16</strong><br />
IBM Corporation, Supplies 38.45 38.45<br />
Typewriter Exchange, Supplies ...... 15.99 15.99<br />
Lawyers Co-Operative Pub. Co., Book . 10.00 10.00<br />
Lawyers Co-Operative Pub. Co., Book . 10.00 10.00<br />
Tuscola County Advertiser, Printing . . 22.00 22.00<br />
Henry G. Cherry, Bailiff 45.00 45.00<br />
Clara F. Peterhans, Transcripts 114.90 114.90<br />
412.32 412.32<br />
MAGISTRATE<br />
Peoples State Bank, Deposit Tickets. . . 2.75 2.75<br />
Shopper's Guide, printing<br />
and Envelopes 51.77 51.77<br />
54.52 54.52<br />
PROBATE COURT<br />
Thumb Office Supply, Supplies 5.10 5.10<br />
Graydon R. Firrer, M. D., Mental<br />
Examination * 25.00 25.00<br />
Doubleday Bros. & Co., Books , 145.08 145.08<br />
C. Bates Wills, Travel Expense. ..... 84.55 84.55<br />
John Turner, Postmaster, Postage. . ... 20.50 20.50<br />
280.23 280.23<br />
PROBATE COURT - JUVENILE SECTION<br />
Fitzgeralds, Office Supplies<br />
and Equipment 15.40 15.40<br />
Thumb Office Supply, Office Supplies . . 13.43 13.43<br />
Tuscola County Advertiser, Advertising 5.05 5.05<br />
John Turner, Postmaster, Postage. . . . 24.00 24.00<br />
Jim Franck, Dep* Sheriff, Witness<br />
Fee and Mileage<br />
20.00 20.00<br />
Milton R. Gelatt, Travel Expense 26.20 26.20<br />
Leonard Lane, Travel Expense 106.89 106.89<br />
Virginia Kirk, Travel Expense ...... 112.97 112.97<br />
219.86 219.86<br />
PROBATION - ADULT<br />
Fitzgerald's, Office Supplies 9.17 9.17<br />
9.17 9.17<br />
JURY COMMISSION<br />
Tuscola County Advertiser, Stamped<br />
Envelopes -. . . . <strong>16</strong>5.75 <strong>16</strong>5.75<br />
Harriet Downing, Per Diem and<br />
Mileage . <strong>16</strong>6.80 <strong>16</strong>6.80<br />
Elmer Haines, Per Diem and Mileage. . 75.20 75.20<br />
Max E. Lawrence, Per Diem and<br />
Mileage 40.00 40.00<br />
Fitzgeralds, Office Supplies 6.17 6.17<br />
453.92 453.92<br />
AGRICULTURAL DEPARTMENT<br />
William L. Bortel, Travel Expense . . . 104.10 104.10<br />
Don R. Kebler, Travel Expense...... 77.70 77.70<br />
Mary Kerr, Travel Expense 78.40 78.40<br />
Bernard Jadot, Travel Expense 155.93 155.93<br />
Typewriter Exchange, Office Supplies. . 3.50 3.50<br />
Fitzgeralds, Office Supplies 4.29 4.29<br />
Thumb Office Supply, Office Supplies . . 3.20 3.20<br />
427.12 427.12<br />
BOUNDARIES COMMISSION<br />
Frank J. Rolka, Travel Expense<br />
".. and Per Diem 48.50 48.50<br />
Elmer W. Pleger, Per Diem and<br />
'. Mileage 43.50 43.50<br />
92.10 92.10<br />
COUNTY CLERK<br />
IBM, Typewriter Ribbon 14;50 14.50<br />
Xerox, Equipment Rental 153.78 153.78<br />
Typewriter Exchange, Office Supplies. . 1.87 1.87<br />
Thumb Office Supply, Office Supplies . . 15.00 15.00<br />
Tuscola County Advertiser, Printing Pre-<br />
' cinct Cards 15.00 15.00<br />
Doubleday Bros., Printing 41.67 41.67<br />
Eastern Supply Co., Office Supplies . . . 254.69 254.69<br />
Tuscola County Advertiser, Gov't. Envelopes<br />
& Printing. 178.50 178.50<br />
675.01 675.01<br />
COURT HOUSE AND GROUNDS<br />
Square Deal Auto Parts, Equipment<br />
Maintenance 12.20 12.20<br />
LMA Electric, Equipment<br />
Maintenance . 29.76 29.76<br />
Sherwin Williams Co, Building<br />
Maintenance 21.74 21.74<br />
Caro Lumber Yard, Building<br />
Maintenance 2.20 2.20<br />
Caro Floral Co., Grounds Care...... 6.76 6.76<br />
Elmer G. Arnold Sales, Janitorial<br />
Supplies 75.75 75.75<br />
Shavers Garage, Equipment<br />
Maintenance 12.95 12.95<br />
Hills Grocery, Janitorial Supplies .... 9.01 9.01<br />
Rushlo's Wrekcing Co., Equipment<br />
Maintenance ., .36 .36<br />
Hanson Hardware, Equipment Maintenance<br />
. 15.20 15.20<br />
Reid Paper Co., Janitorial Supplies . . . 96.20 96.20<br />
Caro V & S Hardware, Building<br />
Maintenance 12.00 12.00<br />
Botsford Pure Oil - Ground Care 5.10 5.10<br />
Caro Supply Co., Building Maintenance. * 12.98 12.98"<br />
Hanson Hardware, Fan & Stand 25,78 25.78<br />
337.99 337.99<br />
PUBLIC IMPROVEMENT<br />
Deyaney Plumbing & Heating,<br />
Repairing Heating System 8,737.24 8,737.24<br />
8,737.24 8,737.24<br />
COUNTY PARKS<br />
Louis King, Paint, Plywood, &<br />
Steel Drums . 40.73 40.73<br />
40.73 40.73<br />
95.80<br />
106.60<br />
5.44<br />
2.45<br />
210.29<br />
ELECTIONS<br />
Herman Hadaway, t<br />
Screening Committee<br />
June A8 Steffens. Screening Committee.<br />
John Turner, Postmaster, Postage. . . .<br />
17.40<br />
3.80<br />
75.00<br />
96.20<br />
EQUALIZATION DEPARTMENT<br />
Alton Reavey, Travel Expense. <strong>16</strong>.70<br />
Tuscola County Advertiser, Office<br />
Supplies 1.25<br />
Fitzgeralds, Office Supplies 12.26<br />
Mac O'Dell, Travel Expense 60.80<br />
Commerce Clearing House, Inc.,<br />
Subscription 77.00<br />
188.01<br />
PLANNING COMMISSION<br />
Alton Reavey, Travel Expenses. 1<strong>07</strong>.41<br />
1<strong>07</strong>.41<br />
REGISTER OF DEEDS<br />
Itek Business Products, Supplies. .... 426.00<br />
TREASURER<br />
Tuscola County Advertiser, Printing . .<br />
Thumb Office Supply, Office Supplies . .<br />
Doubleday Bros. & Co., Office<br />
Supplies<br />
Grand Rapids Loose Leaf, Inc., Printing<br />
and Binder<br />
Elgene Keller, Travel Expense<br />
Arthur M. Willits, Travel Expense. . . .<br />
DOG WARDEN<br />
Armada Grain Co., Dog Food<br />
Tuscola County Advertiser, Supplies. . .<br />
CIVIL DEFENSE<br />
Mrs Dorothy Mantey, Instructional<br />
Nurse<br />
Charles F. Kroswek, Travel Expense. .<br />
Tuscola County Advertiser, Advertising<br />
Motorola Communications and<br />
. Electronics, Radi Maintenance ....<br />
LIVESTOCK AND POULTRY CLAIMS<br />
George Wark, Poultry Claim. ......<br />
George Wark, Turstee Fee ,<br />
Lloyd Hickie, Turkey Claim<br />
Lloyd Hickie, Trustee Fee ,<br />
AMBULANCE<br />
J. Benson Collon, 2 ambulance calls. ,<br />
SHERIFF DEPARTMENT<br />
Earl Mattlin, Jr., Extra Help<br />
Donald Sattelberg, Extra Help<br />
Wesley G. Foster, Extra Help<br />
Alger Lee Bush, Extra Help<br />
Branding and Siegner, Health Services<br />
Moore Drug Store, Health Services . ,<br />
Caro Pharmacy, Health Services<br />
Samuel Sinchak, D.D.S., Health Ser. • • •<br />
sun Oil Co., Travel Expense<br />
Hugh Marr, Travel Expense<br />
Ronald Phillips, Travel Expense<br />
Huron Electronics, Equipment,<br />
Repair & Maintenance<br />
Hanson Hardware, Equipment, Repair,<br />
& Maintenance<br />
Caro V & S Hardware, Equipment,<br />
Repair & Maintenance<br />
Caro Auto Parts, Vehicle Repair &<br />
Maintenance .<br />
Gambles Store, Vehicle Repair &.<br />
Maintenance<br />
Automotive Services, Vehicle Repair &<br />
Maintenance<br />
Burton-Moore Ford, Inc., Vehicle<br />
Repair & Maintenance. .<br />
Caro Tire Co., Vehicle Repair &<br />
Maintenance<br />
Square Deal Auto Parts, Vehicle Repair<br />
& Maintenance . . . . ........<br />
Rushlo's Wrekcing Co., Vehicle Repair<br />
& Maintenance<br />
Wilsie-Kelly Chev. Co., Vehicle Repair &<br />
Maintenance .<br />
Xerox Company, Office Equipment,<br />
Repairs & Maint<br />
Thumb Fruit Co., Food ...........<br />
The Kroger Store, Food<br />
J. L. Kauffman, Food<br />
Trudeaus Bakery, Food<br />
Erla's Inc. Food.<br />
426.00<br />
89.25<br />
24.80<br />
4.49<br />
335.91<br />
5.40<br />
9.60<br />
469.45<br />
35.50<br />
22.00<br />
57.50<br />
30.00<br />
51.20<br />
4.14<br />
4.50<br />
87.84<br />
<strong>16</strong>.80<br />
5.00<br />
40.00<br />
4.10<br />
65.90<br />
42.50<br />
42.50<br />
1<strong>16</strong>.00<br />
69.60<br />
23.20<br />
14.50<br />
23.00<br />
5.83<br />
2.25<br />
36.00<br />
18.58<br />
12.04<br />
6.91<br />
143.72<br />
3.29<br />
1.40<br />
202.97<br />
8.00<br />
40.64<br />
272.44<br />
173.61<br />
88.65<br />
18.80<br />
40.81<br />
40.00<br />
43.87<br />
279.<strong>16</strong><br />
50.00<br />
101.75<br />
119.42<br />
IGA Foodliner, Food 47.41<br />
Michigan Bean Co., Food .......... 7.75<br />
Ernest Ihrke, Food 39.06<br />
Easthams Cleaners, Dry Cleaning .... 115.50<br />
Fitzgeralds, Office Supplies 29.83<br />
Cass City Chronicle. Office Supplies . . 88.15<br />
Doubleday Bros. & Co., Office Supplies. 189.75<br />
Xerox Company, Office Supplies 23.70<br />
Wilsons Studio, Photo Supplies <strong>16</strong>.99<br />
CBS Specialities - Other Supplies.. , . 85.00<br />
Kirchman Brothers Co., Other Supplies.<br />
.. .'. 14.25<br />
Credit Bureau of Tuscola Co.,<br />
Other Supplies 27.60<br />
The Dudley Paper Co., Clothing<br />
and Bedding . . 28.66<br />
F. W. Woolworth Co., Clothing and<br />
Bedding 12.42<br />
Robert A. Granstra, Uniforms and<br />
Accessories ................. 68.54<br />
Municipal Supplies, Uniforms and<br />
Accessories . 4.25<br />
Texaco, Inc., Gas, Oil, Grease, Etc.. . . 680.22<br />
Bruce Talt, Employee Training<br />
and Improv<br />
5.65<br />
John Turner, Post Master, Postage ... 12.00<br />
3,453.<strong>16</strong><br />
COJTTAGIOUS DISEASES<br />
Hurley Hospital, Hospital<br />
Care for William Dawson<br />
CORONER<br />
Central laboratory, Autopsy<br />
on Alfred C. Porritt<br />
J. Benson Collon, 9 Coroner Calls. .<br />
BURIAL CLAIMS<br />
Achenbach Funeral Home,<br />
Burial of Conrad A. Burkel .<br />
Karen C. Fry, Burial of Robert<br />
C. Fry b<br />
COUNSELING CENTER<br />
Xerox, Rental and Supplies.<br />
Fitzgeralds, Office Supplies<br />
John Turner, Postmaster, Postage. . . .<br />
Thumb Office Supply, Office Supplies . .<br />
Lilia C. DeBoer, Mileage and Expenses<br />
658.00<br />
658.00<br />
200.00<br />
1<strong>07</strong>.00<br />
3<strong>07</strong>.00<br />
300.00<br />
300.00<br />
600.00<br />
56.13<br />
3.78<br />
21.00<br />
96.49<br />
99.82<br />
277.22<br />
INSURANCE AND BONDS<br />
Lawrence Insurance Agency,<br />
Dep. Sheriff Bond on Charles<br />
Kroswek 10.00<br />
Michigan Mutual Liability Co.,<br />
Additional Premium 406.11<br />
Mutual Security Ins., Sheriff Dept.<br />
Insurance 63.51<br />
479.62<br />
17.40<br />
3.80<br />
75.00<br />
96.20<br />
<strong>16</strong>.70<br />
1.25<br />
12.26<br />
60.80<br />
77.00<br />
188.01<br />
1<strong>07</strong>.41<br />
1<strong>07</strong>.41<br />
426.00<br />
426.00<br />
89.25<br />
24.80<br />
4.49<br />
335.91<br />
5.40<br />
9.60<br />
469.45<br />
35.50<br />
22.00<br />
57.50<br />
30.00<br />
51.20<br />
4.14<br />
4.50<br />
87.84<br />
<strong>16</strong>.80<br />
5.00<br />
<strong>16</strong>.00<br />
4.10<br />
41.90<br />
42.50<br />
42.50<br />
1<strong>16</strong>.00<br />
69.60<br />
23.20<br />
14.50<br />
23.00<br />
5.83<br />
2.25<br />
36.00<br />
18.58<br />
12.04<br />
6.91<br />
143.72<br />
3.29<br />
1.40<br />
202.97<br />
8.00<br />
40.64<br />
272.44<br />
173.61<br />
88e6§<br />
18.80<br />
40.81<br />
40.00<br />
43.87<br />
279.<strong>16</strong><br />
50.00<br />
101.75<br />
119.42<br />
47.41<br />
7.75<br />
39.06<br />
115.50<br />
29.83<br />
88.15<br />
189.75<br />
23.70<br />
<strong>16</strong>.99<br />
85.00<br />
14.25<br />
27.60<br />
28.66<br />
12.42<br />
68.54<br />
4.25<br />
680.22<br />
5.65<br />
12.00<br />
3,453.<strong>16</strong><br />
658.00<br />
658.00<br />
200.00<br />
1<strong>07</strong>.00<br />
3<strong>07</strong>.00<br />
300.00<br />
300.00<br />
600.00<br />
56.13<br />
3.78<br />
21.00<br />
96.49<br />
99.82<br />
277.22<br />
10.00<br />
406.11<br />
63.51<br />
479.62<br />
WATERWAY (MARINE SAFETY-<br />
Melvin Williamson, Extra Help 43.50 43.50<br />
Howard Covert, Extra Help 152.25 125.52<br />
Clair Tait, Extra Help 14.50 14.50<br />
Merkel Fader, Extra Help 1 , 26.10 26.10<br />
Botsfords Pure Oil, Gas, Oil.<br />
Grease, Etc 10.43 10.43<br />
Tuscola County Sheriff Dept. Travel<br />
Rental 100,00 100.00<br />
Gambles Store, Other Supplies 9.96 9.96<br />
Boyd Shavers Garage, Machinery &<br />
Equipment 21.20 21.20<br />
377.94 377.94<br />
TOTAL FOR THE MONTH OF MAY 20,857.54 20,833.54<br />
Moved by Loomis supported by Golding the report be<br />
accepted and orders drawn for the various amounts. Motion<br />
carried by unanimous vote.<br />
Minutes were read and approved.<br />
Motion by Graf supported by Loomis we recess to June<br />
23, <strong>1970</strong> at 9:30 a. m.<br />
Elsie Hicks, Clerk<br />
Shuford Kirk, Chairman<br />
to pave way<br />
for loans<br />
A special meeting slated<br />
Monday at the Elkland Township<br />
Hall to purchase land on which<br />
to build a new fire station, is<br />
not as important as the wording<br />
would seem to indicate.<br />
The meeting is evidently required<br />
by law, Clerk R. M.<br />
Hunter said, so that when land<br />
that the town board deems adequate<br />
for a new facility is available,<br />
the township will be able<br />
to proceed.<br />
If the authorization as requested<br />
is granted, the township<br />
will be able to buy land or a<br />
building and borrow money by<br />
signing a land contract.<br />
Without the meeting, this<br />
avenue for purchasing is not<br />
open, Hunter concluded.<br />
Start new<br />
$94,990 EOC<br />
Program<br />
The Thumb Area Economic<br />
Opportunity Commission announces<br />
the start of a new<br />
Manpower Program for the four<br />
county area. The U. S. Department<br />
of Labor has provided a<br />
grant of $94,990. for a six month<br />
program which will involve up to<br />
one hundred low-income adults,<br />
22 years of age and older, forty<br />
per cent of whom must be 55<br />
and over.<br />
The Program is primarily<br />
designed to provide work and<br />
job training for participants<br />
in ages 22 to 54 and an income<br />
supplement for those 55 years<br />
and over. They will work in nonprofit<br />
agencies which provide<br />
health services, day care of<br />
children, or public recreation.<br />
The program will be divided<br />
into two, twelve week increments<br />
with 50 enrollees in each<br />
increment. The enrollees will<br />
work under the supervision of<br />
trained personnel who will<br />
instruct them and over see their<br />
work, with the expectation that<br />
the enrollees may be employed<br />
full time upon completion of<br />
training.<br />
During the training period<br />
the enrollees will have additional<br />
services available to<br />
them, such as? counseling, G.<br />
E.D, testing, and remedial education.<br />
Anyone interested in participating<br />
in this program should<br />
contact the Thumb Area Economic<br />
Opportunity Commission<br />
at 223 E, Sherman St., Caro,<br />
or call Area Code 517-<br />
673-4121.<br />
THE REMAINS of the two vehicles following the crash<br />
where five were killed was on display at the Tuscola County<br />
Sheriffs Department as a grim reminder of Tuscola County's<br />
soaring accident rate.<br />
i<br />
Serving the Needs of Agriculture<br />
I<br />
i i<br />
i<br />
•<br />
ATTENTION<br />
WHEAT GROWERS!<br />
A long standing motto of the Michigan Bean Division has been, "where you can trade<br />
with confidence''. This motto is as true today as it was back at the turn of the cen-<br />
tury when Michigan Bean first started doing business with Michigan farmers. As the<br />
wheat harvest approaches, Michigan Bean stands ready to serve you with your wheat<br />
Marketing plans. We offer top dollar if you plan to sell your wheat at Harvest. If<br />
you plan to store your wheat under government loan, Michigan Bean is licensed by the<br />
State of Michigan and the United States Department of Agriculture as approved storage.<br />
We offer complete warehouse receipt service for government loan. If you wish, we<br />
also have commencal storage available if you want to store your wheat for later sale.<br />
REMEMBfcR "Where you can trade with confidence"—Michigan Bean a Division of the<br />
Wickes Corporation.<br />
WICKES)<br />
FERTILIZER & SEED<br />
HOURS:Mon.-Fri. 8-5:3<br />
Saturdays during Planting<br />
and Harvest<br />
I<br />
I
CASS CITY, MICHIGAN<br />
Form F.R. lOSc M<br />
(Rev. Apr. 69)<br />
CONSOLIDATED REPORT Of CONMIION «l .....?M.UNNEY.STATE.BANK<br />
RESERVE<br />
State NC<br />
Off ...9.1?.?....9A*y?...l^?.9..?la..Co^ty.,...MichiSan.....Ml?6. And Foreign and Domestic Subsidiaries,<br />
at the close of business... J.lffi9...3.Q*...19.7.P.. , a state banking institution organized and operating under the<br />
banking laws of this State and a member of the Federal Reserve System. Published in accordance with a call made by the<br />
State Banking Authorities and by the Federal Reserve Bank of this District<br />
ASSETS<br />
5 Other securities C including $ Ih f QQfoVporate stocks) ~<br />
7 Federal funds sold and securities purchased under agreements to resell<br />
13 Other assets ...<br />
14 TOTAL ASSETS . .. ».<br />
LIABILITIES<br />
22 TOTAL DEPOSITS . . s6 f 8 36 1 k68 . QA<br />
(a) Tntal demand deposit? .... . tl.p jpp&9Jf . 42<br />
(b) Total time and savings deposits $5 . l^f* 77I|..1|1|<br />
TOTAL DEPOSITS IN FOREIGN OFFICES ...<br />
27 Other liabilities . .<br />
28 TOTAL LIABILITIES .<br />
29. MINORITY INTEREST IN CONSOLIDATED SUBSIDIARIES. .<br />
RESERVES ON LOANS AND SECURITIES<br />
33 TOTAL RESERVES ON LOANS AND SECURITIES<br />
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS<br />
(specify interest rate and maturity of each issue outstanding on publishers copy)<br />
CNo. shares outstanding )<br />
r No. shares authorized 10,000 > < No. shares outstanding 10 f 000 )<br />
41 TOTAL CAPITAL ACCOUNTS (sum of Items 34 and 35 above)<br />
42. TOTAL LIABILITIES, RESERVES, AND CAPITAL ACCOUNTS (sum of Items<br />
28 29 33 & 41 above) .<br />
MEMORANDA<br />
4. Deposits of the State of Michigan ( included in Item 18)<br />
(Nmtos and tltta of offiear autbortMd to sign report)<br />
is true to the best of my knowledge and belief.<br />
XXX<br />
XXX<br />
XXX<br />
Dollars<br />
1<br />
1<br />
L.<br />
7<br />
g<br />
6<br />
7<br />
6<br />
3<br />
603 2J«?<br />
H?6 330<br />
001 W<br />
15 .00.0.<br />
0«ty<br />
20.<br />
2<br />
<br />
00<br />
?L><br />
32 42<br />
66<br />
'OS<br />
00<br />
1<br />
2<br />
3<br />
4<br />
"j<br />
6<br />
7<br />
8<br />
9<br />
10<br />
11<br />
12<br />
13<br />
14<br />
15<br />
<strong>16</strong><br />
17<br />
18<br />
19<br />
20<br />
21<br />
22<br />
(a)<br />
33<br />
/, ........... A ..^..^..?:tr...r..?.®?®?* ................................... , of the above-named bank do hereby declare that this report of condition<br />
(Nun* »nd title of officer rathorlMd to »Ign mwrt)<br />
is true to the best of my knowledge and belief.<br />
(Simitar* of officer authorized to tlsn report)<br />
We, the undersigned directors, attest the correctness of this refort of condition and declare that it has been examined by us and to the best of our<br />
knowledge and belief is true and correct.<br />
Milk is for Katz.<br />
(Also for Shultz and Pasquinelli<br />
and O'Brien and Swenson and...)<br />
C. R. Hunt v<br />
.?»...?.e..Auten<br />
38<br />
39<br />
40<br />
41<br />
State of Wi?.!»i«a» County of...!"**** ss:<br />
x<br />
Sworn to and subscribed before me this....^i^....^..'.<br />
day of j£L^ V, l9.JZf:<br />
MICHIGAN MILK PRODUCERS ASSOCIATION<br />
1<br />
2<br />
3
\ Whatever<br />
your printing needs, we serve them<br />
right! Latest modern offset and letterpress equipment<br />
to assure you of the best results in<br />
every way.<br />
BUSINESS CARDS • MENUS B BOOKLETS<br />
PROGRAMS • BROCHURES<br />
ACCOUNTING FORMS • TICKETS<br />
• VOUCHERS " STATEMENTS<br />
• LETTERHEADS • ENVELOPES<br />
THE CASS CITY<br />
CHRONICLE<br />
PHONE 872-2010<br />
ON OUR<br />
$2.00 MONTAG<br />
STATIONERY<br />
Color Pac<br />
TOOTH<br />
BRUSHES<br />
BIG BEN<br />
$1.19<br />
49*<br />
ALARM REVLON<br />
CLOCKS<br />
$17.95<br />
HELENE CURTIS<br />
$12.99<br />
CASS CITY CHRONICLE-THURSDAY, JULY <strong>16</strong>. I970<br />
DNR ignores local protests,<br />
i opens area to any deer kill<br />
George Lapp, Cass City, president<br />
of the Cass City Gun<br />
Club and a leader in the fight<br />
against antlerless deer seasons,<br />
reported this week that<br />
his week-end battle with the<br />
State Department of Natural<br />
Resources was fruitless.<br />
Lapp and other area sportsmen<br />
were at the Conservation<br />
School at Higgins Lake for the<br />
antlerless deer season hearing.<br />
He attended a similar hearing<br />
a year ago and was successful<br />
in averting an "any<br />
deer" season in Tuscola county.<br />
But this year the DNR went<br />
ahead with its plan to issue up<br />
to 300 permits for harvesting<br />
antlerless deer and the first<br />
season in history that will permit<br />
area harvesting of fawns<br />
and does will start this fall.<br />
The DNR has only three reasons<br />
for opening the area to<br />
deer shooting, Lapp said bitterly.<br />
They are starvation, lack<br />
of feed and auto accidents. They<br />
say that the season here will<br />
reduce the car-deer kill, Lapp<br />
added.<br />
Only district 75 in the Thumb<br />
is now open for antlerless deer,<br />
Lapp said, but ifs only a matter<br />
of time, he feels before districts<br />
76 and 77 will be added (see<br />
map.)<br />
The DNR just won't listen,<br />
Lapp added. It doesn't make any<br />
sense.<br />
HURON COUNTY LEAGUE<br />
TO MEET IN BAD AXE<br />
The summer luncheon meeting<br />
of the Huron County League<br />
of Catholic Women will be at<br />
Lor-Del's Restaurant, Bad Axe,<br />
Wednesday noon, July 22. Mass<br />
will be celebrated at Sacred<br />
Heart Church at 11:00 a.m.<br />
for the living and deceased<br />
members of the League.<br />
Dr. Keyes, Saginaw, will<br />
speak on abortion.<br />
Membership fees in the League<br />
help to support Catholic<br />
Family Services.<br />
PAINTING TIP<br />
Painting doors or drawer<br />
fronts? For smoother finish,<br />
paint edges first.<br />
PANTY<br />
HOSE<br />
$1.59<br />
VALUE<br />
99<<br />
SUN GLASSES<br />
1/2 Price<br />
SIDEWALK VALUE<br />
390<br />
$1.09<br />
VALUE<br />
JEWELRY<br />
BUYS!<br />
CLOSE OUTS AND<br />
NEW STOCK, TOO<br />
, $1.00 AND<br />
\ V.<br />
4 s<br />
$2.00<br />
Hot Coupon Special<br />
Reg $2.00<br />
COLOR SILK<br />
BLONDSILK<br />
MUST HAVE COUPON EXPIRES JULY 31, <strong>1970</strong><br />
v\ ... Iff<br />
<strong>16</strong> PACKETS LORIE<br />
BUBBLE<br />
BATH $1.00 VALUE490<br />
VALUES TO $2.25 EA.<br />
LIPSTICKS 600<br />
4*42.00<br />
WOOD REXALL DRUGS<br />
GUARDIANS OF YOUR HEALTH<br />
c^'GENEfiS ViEE<br />
Unionville ,_<br />
H UAR O N<br />
ro&> V |1 s AlNILAC<br />
T U S QWO L A ,_<br />
Sanduskv<br />
AlmontK IS T. C<br />
. ?2S<br />
Section 75.outlined by hec y black lines is now open<br />
to antlerless deer harvest despite protests by local men.<br />
School mulls used<br />
typewriter offer<br />
Cass City High School will<br />
replace 21 typewriters 11 to<br />
29 years old, the school board<br />
decided Monday night.. The cost<br />
of the new machines is $3,780,<br />
The company has offered the<br />
school $615.50 for trading in the<br />
older machines. Prices offered<br />
range from about $25 to about<br />
$50.<br />
On the suggestion of the board<br />
Supt. Donald Grouse will check<br />
with the company to see if the<br />
used machines could be offered<br />
to interested residents before<br />
submitted in trade.<br />
If the company agrees, they<br />
will be advertised on a first<br />
come, first served basis as a<br />
service to the community.<br />
Finance Charges Waived<br />
Until April 1,1971<br />
ASK ABOUT ...<br />
LPL(Lower Payment Lease)<br />
• Remember your Case Credit Corporation financing<br />
support. A plan for everyone! Newest credit help<br />
is the LPL lease. It recognizes the cash value of<br />
the equipment at the end of the lease period and<br />
lowers payments accordingly. Lease payments are<br />
based not on the selling price, but on the difference<br />
between the initial price and the end-oflease<br />
value.<br />
HORSE SHOW<br />
Continued frorrrpage one<br />
and horse fanciers from the<br />
entire area.<br />
Offered will be trophies,<br />
ribbons and cash awards in 27<br />
different events, Peter said.<br />
All indications are that the<br />
show which is sponsored by the<br />
Kingston Lions Club will be bigger<br />
and better attended this year<br />
than ever before.<br />
If it is, everyone will be a<br />
winner. The contestants will<br />
receive the valuable training<br />
in showmanship. The fans will<br />
be able to watch good horses<br />
and good riders and the Lions<br />
Club will make money for its<br />
sight conservation fund.<br />
Last year the club netted<br />
$750, Peter said, and we are<br />
hopeful of doing even better<br />
this year.<br />
A complete show program is<br />
listed elsewhere in the paper<br />
for this Saturday's show.<br />
BUKOSKI'S GOOD<br />
USED CARS<br />
'69 Pontiac Catalina station<br />
wagon. PS & PB. AIR CON-<br />
DITIONED. 12,000 mi. New<br />
car guarantee.<br />
67 Chevelle Impala Coupe<br />
Dk. Blue w/PS and wire<br />
wheels.<br />
'66 Buick La Sabre 2 dr.<br />
H.Top Gold with black vinyl<br />
top<br />
'65 Pontiac Catalina 4 dr.<br />
Sedan Auto w/PS<br />
SMALL CARS<br />
67 Mustang 6 cyl. Auto.<br />
4 new tires, perfect girls<br />
car.<br />
'65 Mercury Comet. Bucket<br />
seats, 4 speed $600.<br />
'63 Rambler station wagon.<br />
Like new. One of a kind,<br />
PICK UPS<br />
'66 Chev. 3/4 ton 8 auto.<br />
PS & PB Radio rear bumper,<br />
32,000 mi. 3 brand new<br />
tires.<br />
'67 Chev. 6 1/2 ton pickup.<br />
Real, real clean.<br />
Special discounts to returning<br />
Servicemen.<br />
BUKOSKI<br />
SALES & SERVICE<br />
Ubly OL 8-5841<br />
Open evenings<br />
by appointment<br />
CASS CITY, MICHIGAN<br />
SCHOOL BOARD<br />
•••^••••••••••^•••••••••••Bu<br />
more new books this year. The<br />
request will be reviewed next<br />
year.<br />
There was not total agreement.<br />
Trustees Don Koepfgen<br />
and Mrs. Geraldine Prieskorn<br />
voted in favor of switching texts<br />
now.<br />
The board approved a request<br />
by Stickle to release Mrs.<br />
Nanette Bauer from an hour's<br />
teaching duties so she can be<br />
assigned to supervision of the<br />
Title I Federal program. The<br />
pay for one-sixth of the day will<br />
come from Federal funds.<br />
Board officers were reelected.<br />
President is Horace<br />
Bulen. Helwig is secretary and*.<br />
Mrs. Prieskorn, treasurer.<br />
USED FARM<br />
EQUIPMENT<br />
Selection of planters<br />
Selection of drags<br />
4 Bottom Oliver plow w/3pt.<br />
John Deere plow 5-14? semimount.<br />
8' John Deere field cultivator<br />
John Deere mower<br />
Case rotary hoe<br />
H - narrow front<br />
656 Gas 500 hours<br />
Used Sprayer<br />
Super C w/cultivator - 2<br />
Ford tandem disk - heavy<br />
duty .<br />
M & W 200 t<br />
M & W 300 f<br />
John Deere 6 row cultivator<br />
front<br />
SEVERAL USED<br />
MOWERS<br />
LAWN<br />
ALSO USED SKI DOO'S<br />
OUR 1971 LINE OF<br />
SKI-DOO'SARE IN<br />
IH PARTS & SERVICE<br />
SKI-DOO<br />
PARTS & SERVICE<br />
(PIONEER CHAIN SAWS<br />
We have a large<br />
supply of Cub Cadet<br />
Tractors. Free<br />
mower, or blade included<br />
with purchase.<br />
HEDLEY<br />
EQUIPMENT CO.<br />
1800 W. Caro Rd.<br />
Phone 673-4<strong>16</strong>4<br />
BUY NOW!<br />
UNTIL APRIL 1,1971<br />
HARVEST<br />
LEASE<br />
(with Option to Buy)<br />
This lease allows the man "from Missouri" to try<br />
the machine for several months during the harvest<br />
period with no obligation to buy. Then if he does<br />
decide to buy, lease payments are applicable to the<br />
purchase, and regular Case financing is'available.<br />
Great for the man who needs a combine but is<br />
strapped for money until his government check arrives<br />
RABIDEAU MOTORS<br />
Phone 872-3000
CASS CITY. MICHIGAN<br />
CASS CITY CHRONICLE-THURSDAY, JULY <strong>16</strong>, I970<br />
TURK DISCARD USE PROFITA COST CHRONICLE<br />
Transit (nonbusiness) rate:<br />
20 words or less, 75 cents<br />
each insertion; additional words<br />
3 cents each. Three week for<br />
the price of two-cash rate.<br />
Save money by enclosing cash<br />
with mall orders. Rates for<br />
display want ad on application.<br />
ROOMS FOR" RENT-Girls only.<br />
References required. 4391 S.<br />
Seeger St. Phone 872-2406.<br />
5-21-tf<br />
FOR ,SALE-1965 Oliver 770<br />
wide front tractor, low hours,<br />
in very good condition; Allis<br />
Chalmers 66, all crop Harvester<br />
combine with windrow<br />
pick-up and all extra ^attachments;<br />
4 bar side delivery<br />
rake; 3 7-ft. axles, with new<br />
tires 8-14-5, 10 ply; General<br />
Electric dishwasher, portable<br />
coppertone, like new. 2 miles<br />
west, 1 south, 1 west, 1/2<br />
mile south of Deford. Stanley<br />
Faszcza.<br />
7-<strong>16</strong>-1<br />
FOR SALE - pigeons, many<br />
breeds and colors. Stanley<br />
Edzik Sr., 3 west of Cass<br />
City on M-81. 7-9-3<br />
TYPEWRITER AND ADDING<br />
machine ribbons-for all makes<br />
of machines at the Chronicle.<br />
3-2-tf<br />
Annual Festival &<br />
Parish Dinner<br />
Saturday, July 25, 7-12 p. m.,<br />
Sunday, July 26, 12:30-6 p.<br />
m. St. Michael Church, Wilmot,<br />
Mich. Chicken Dinner (<br />
"Family Style" Sunday, 12:30<br />
to 5 p. m. Adults, $2,00;<br />
Children to 12, $1.00; Pre-<br />
School, Free.<br />
.7-9-8<br />
WATER WELL DRILLING - 3,<br />
4,5 and 6-inch wells. John<br />
Zaleski, 5550 Kilmanagh Rd.,<br />
Owendale, Mich. Phone Elkton<br />
375-4233. 7-9-5<br />
AIR CONDITIONERS, freezers<br />
and refrigerators - close- out.<br />
Gibson and Tappan priced to<br />
clear. Exclusive 10-year warranty.<br />
Save up to 25%. Fuelgas<br />
Co. of Cass City. Phone<br />
872-2<strong>16</strong>1. 6-11-tf<br />
Gross and O'Harris<br />
Meat Market<br />
FOB PERSONAL SERVICE<br />
And the Best in Meats<br />
Our Own Make of Pine<br />
Sausages and Smoked Meats<br />
Freezer Meats Always<br />
Available<br />
9-23-tf<br />
FOR SALE-Rock fryers, 10<br />
weeks old, live. 4 north, 6<br />
east, 1/2 north of Cass City.<br />
Phone 872-2672. 7-<strong>16</strong>-1<br />
GRAVEL Road and fill delivered<br />
or loaded. 1 1/2 south,<br />
1/4 west of Cass City. Harvey<br />
Kritzman. 4-30-12<br />
LOSE WEIGHT safely with Dex-<br />
A-Diet, and .remove excess<br />
fluid with Fluidex. Only 98?<br />
and $1.69 at Wood Drugs.<br />
7-9-6<br />
PAPER NAPKINS imprinted<br />
with names and dates for weddings,<br />
receptions, showers,<br />
anniversaries and other occasions.<br />
The Cass City Chronicle.<br />
1-12-tf<br />
MORIARTY<br />
BUILDINGS<br />
FOR FARM<br />
AND INDUSTRY<br />
« Clear Span Construction<br />
« Colored Steel Siding<br />
« Quality at Low Cost<br />
« Planning Service Available<br />
Call Ut Today<br />
(517) 683-2300<br />
KINGSTON, MICHIGAN<br />
SUBSIDIARY OF THE WICKES CORP.<br />
7-2-tf.<br />
SOLD & ERECTEL><br />
By<br />
BILL O'DELL<br />
THUMB CONTRACTOR<br />
Phone 872-3350 or 872-2349^<br />
Cass City, Mich.<br />
FOR SALE-Potatoes, cabbage,<br />
red beets, peppers, cukes,<br />
onions, fruit, beans, zucchini<br />
squash. B & J Produce, 1 3/4<br />
south of Gagetown. Open 9 to<br />
9. 7-<strong>16</strong>-3<br />
PUTNAM Upholstery - modern<br />
and antique furniture rebuilt<br />
and recovered. Free estimates.<br />
Phone 673-2065. 315<br />
E. Grant St., Caro. 2-26-tf<br />
FOR SALE-Truck with good<br />
cattle rack. Robert Wood, Cass<br />
City. Phone 872-2<strong>07</strong>8. 7-<strong>16</strong>-1<br />
WE RENT or sell home health<br />
care aids. Guaranteed quality,<br />
low monthly rental rates.<br />
Wheelchairs, crutches, walkers,<br />
canes, commodes, beds.<br />
Coach Light Pharmacy, Mike<br />
Weaver, owner. Phone 872-<br />
3613. Emergency phone, 872-<br />
3283. 6-18-tf<br />
FOR SALE-4970 125 Yamaha<br />
Enduro, like new, 400 miles.<br />
J. Freiburger, Cass City. 872-<br />
3418. 7-<strong>16</strong>-1<br />
New<br />
Smith-Douglass<br />
Crop Builder<br />
FOUNDATION<br />
--FOR-<br />
HIGH YIEiLDS<br />
Cass City<br />
Crop Service<br />
Cass City Phone 872-3080<br />
8-29-tf<br />
FOR SALE or shares - 33 acres<br />
hay. 3 miles south, 1/2 west<br />
of Cass City on DeLong Rd.<br />
Mary Albih, R. 4, Box <strong>16</strong>61,<br />
Caro. 7-2-3<br />
FOR SALE - Beautiful blue<br />
and green spruce. Pick out<br />
your own now, for fall planting.<br />
4-6 ft. Call 872-2155 or<br />
872-3519. : 7-9-3<br />
FOR RENT-lOx50 trailer with a<br />
12x<strong>16</strong> addition semi-furnished,<br />
references required -Call<br />
Caro 673-6650. 7-<strong>16</strong>-tf<br />
FOR SALE-2 1969 Ducati<br />
motorcycles, one 250cc, one<br />
<strong>16</strong>0 cc. Both excellent shape,<br />
4 months old. Phone 872-2005.<br />
1 mile east, 3/4 north of Cass<br />
Ci *y. 7-<strong>16</strong>-3<br />
Baler Twine<br />
New Holland<br />
Baler Boy ^Regular<br />
$6.75 bale '<br />
Cash and Carry<br />
Rabideau Motors<br />
Cass City<br />
6-4-tf<br />
AUCTIONEERING - See Lorn<br />
"Slim" Hillaker. Top dollar<br />
for your property. Phone 872-<br />
3019, Cass City. 10-3-tf<br />
ZENITH HEARING Aids - for<br />
sale: Several good used factory<br />
reconditioned hearing aids.<br />
McConkey Jewelry and Gift<br />
Shop. 3-5-tf<br />
FOR SALE-Duncan Phyfe mahogany<br />
table with 3 leaves and<br />
hot pads,, $35. 6552 Main, Cass<br />
City. 7-<strong>16</strong>-1<br />
TWO RELIABLE people-would<br />
like to rent a two-car garage<br />
or equivalent for winter<br />
months. Cass City, 872-3418.<br />
7-<strong>16</strong>-1<br />
AUCTIONEERING - Farm and<br />
general. Harold Copeland,<br />
Cass City. Phone 872-2592.<br />
5-18-tf<br />
SEPTIC TANK CLEANING-For<br />
fast, guaranteed work call Dale<br />
Rabideau, Cass City 872-3581<br />
or 872-3000. 3-24-tf<br />
FOR SALE - Homelite chain<br />
saws; Johnson outboard motors,<br />
boats and accessories.<br />
Boyd Shaver's Garage, Caro,<br />
across from Caro Drive-in.<br />
Phone OSborn 3-3039. 1-23-tf<br />
BUILDINGS ANY SIZE FOR EVERY NEED<br />
CUSTOM BALING-Phone 872-<br />
3296. Don Cook, 2 miles south,<br />
3 east, second house south,<br />
on Lampton Road. 7-<strong>16</strong>-1<br />
FOR "a job well done feeling"<br />
clean carpets with Blue Lustre.<br />
Rent electric shampooer<br />
$1. Ben Franklin Store, Cass<br />
City. 6-11-6<br />
RCA-Whirlpool-Central gas air<br />
conditioners and furnaces. We<br />
sell and install complete with<br />
duct work. Free estimates.<br />
Fuelgas Co, of Cass City.<br />
Phone 872-2<strong>16</strong>1, corner M-53<br />
and M-81. 6-11-ltf<br />
We Do<br />
Altering* &<br />
Repairing'<br />
Professional cleaning by the<br />
pound.<br />
Fur .and clothes .storage<br />
available.<br />
Eichers Cleaners<br />
Phone 872-3264<br />
Oass City<br />
7-<strong>16</strong>-.3<br />
WANTED-Down and disabled<br />
cattle and horses for mink<br />
feed. Call Elkton 375-4088.<br />
Anderson Mink Ranch. 6-1-tf<br />
LADIES' SHOES: 2,000 pairs<br />
on 3rd floor at$1.00pr. Others<br />
at $2.00 up. Men's shoes, $2.00<br />
up. Children's shoes 99£ up.<br />
Famous brands included in<br />
all. Mill-End Store, 103 Center<br />
in downtown Bay City. 7-9-2<br />
FOR SALE-'68 250 Yamaha Enduro.<br />
Phone 872-4235. 7-<strong>16</strong>-1<br />
WEDDING INVITATIONS and<br />
announcements. A complete<br />
line of printing, raised printing<br />
or engraving. Dozens to<br />
choose from. Cass City<br />
Chronicle, Cass City. 1-12-tf<br />
WILL DO Babysitting in my<br />
home anytime Phone 872-4203<br />
7-<strong>16</strong>-4<br />
See Fred<br />
for the best deal on tires.<br />
New 78 series belted tire, 6ply<br />
undertread, 4-ply sidewalls<br />
Ail sizes available.<br />
Fred's Service<br />
Garage<br />
5589 B. Cass City Rd,<br />
Phone 872-2235<br />
.7-9-4<br />
1967 CHEVROLET 1/2 ton<br />
pick-up and 1959 Jeep with<br />
new body for sale. Harland<br />
Lounsbury, 1 3/4 west of Cass<br />
City. 7-2-3<br />
SALAD BAR and Fish Fry Friday<br />
nights at Martin's Restaurant,<br />
Cass City. 4-20-tf<br />
SPRAY Painting and Whitewashing,<br />
disinfect. Carl H.<br />
Kurd; phone 517: 761-2733<br />
Hutchins and Ray Briggs,<br />
phone 517: 761-3525. Clifford,<br />
Michigan. 5-14-12<br />
WANTED - Babysitting jobs.<br />
Kris Murphy, age 14. Phone<br />
872-2284. 7-<strong>16</strong>-1<br />
UPHOLSTERING - modern and<br />
antique furniture. Free estimates.<br />
Call 872-3280. Mrs.<br />
John Bresky. 3-12-tf<br />
Thumb Cycle Sales<br />
Featuring<br />
Triumph<br />
Husqvarna and<br />
Penton Cycles<br />
"Built to Win in the Dirt"<br />
Vikinig Snowmobiles<br />
Also<br />
PARTS AND SERVICE<br />
DEPARTMENT<br />
6509 Main St. Phone 872-3750<br />
Cass City 3-6-tf<br />
FOR SALE-19 ft. travel trailer,<br />
good condition. Telephone 872-<br />
3569 Cass City. 7-<strong>16</strong>-2<br />
WORK WANTED-farm or anything.<br />
Lee Taylor, phone 872-<br />
3832. 7-<strong>16</strong>-1<br />
FOR SALE - Stewart clippers<br />
for clipping cows. Phone 665-<br />
2234. 7-9-3<br />
Cash Buyers<br />
Waiting<br />
Need listings of all types,<br />
Wm, Zemke, Broker<br />
Cass City and Deford<br />
Phone 872-2776<br />
3-28-tf<br />
FOR SALE~'65 Dodge Polara<br />
9-passenger station wag-on,<br />
dark blue, with top carrier,<br />
new valve job, tires like new,<br />
very good running condition:<br />
383 engine, automatic. $895.<br />
Gordon Holcomb. 872-2977.<br />
7-<strong>16</strong>-3<br />
NEW LOW PRICE-on gas water<br />
heaters. Take your pick<br />
of outstanding heaters at this<br />
low price. Just $59.50 with<br />
Glass Lining. Fuelgas Company<br />
of Cass City. Phone 872-<br />
2<strong>16</strong>1. 5-21-tf<br />
FOR RENT-Ground floor apartment<br />
furnished. Utilities paid.<br />
Phone: 872-4008. William<br />
Patch. 7-<strong>16</strong>-2<br />
WANT TO BUY - 250 gallon<br />
tractor fuel tank with stand.<br />
Arlington Hoffman, phone 872-<br />
2697. 7-9-tf<br />
Built-up roofing with hot<br />
aspihalt; Backhoe Digging;<br />
Septic Tanks Installed; Basement<br />
Water-Proofing; Air<br />
Hammer.<br />
Also<br />
Play Cat double track ATV<br />
Sales and Service.<br />
Bresky's<br />
Contracting<br />
Pho,n« 872-3280<br />
Cass City<br />
4-<strong>16</strong>-tf<br />
WHY PAY" MORE when you can<br />
buy antenna supplies, rotor<br />
and antenna, for as much as<br />
50 per cent off when you buy<br />
from Schneeberger TV, Furniture<br />
and Appliance, Cass<br />
City. Phone 872-2696.11-27-tf<br />
FOR SALE - 2-bedroom home<br />
in Gagetown, aluminum siding,<br />
paneling, gas, excellent condition.<br />
$500 down, $7,000 on<br />
land contract. Call 1-313-449-<br />
2982 for appointment. 7-9-4<br />
APARTMENT Ranges, used.<br />
$19.50. Take your pick, Gas or<br />
electric, at Fuelgas Company,<br />
corner M-53 and M-81, Cass<br />
' City, Phone 872-2<strong>16</strong>*1. 5-ff-tf<br />
House Trailers<br />
For Sale<br />
See the all new Rebel. 12x50<br />
$3,595.<br />
12x60 with tip-out, $5,595.<br />
I & B^Homes<br />
Marlette, Mich<br />
Next to A & P Store 7-2-3<br />
FOR SALE;Holstein Springer<br />
Cows and Heifers, Grade and<br />
Registered with records. Let<br />
me furnish your Herd Replacements.<br />
Have some finance. T.<br />
B. and Vaccinated. Free Delivery.<br />
Priced- reasonable.<br />
Steward Taylor, phone 517-<br />
635-5761. 2 miles east, 1/2<br />
north of Marlette. 3-26-tf<br />
FOR SALE-Pool table - 7 ft.<br />
regulation size. A-l condition,<br />
with cues, and extras. Call<br />
665-2582. 7-2-3<br />
MAKE YOUR SELECTION NOW!!!<br />
MOBILE HOME SITE: On M-53 highway $1,100.00.<br />
IN CASS CITY: Large 7 room home with aluminum sidinggarage<br />
attached - recreation room practically completed -<br />
large living room and dining room; family size kitchen;<br />
1 block off Main Street $14,500. terms.<br />
IN CASS CITY: Three large BEDROOMS with large closets;<br />
1 1/2 BATHROOMS: built-in range, oven, exhaust fan and<br />
hood; disposal; Birch kitchen cabinets; family size kitchen;<br />
living room window Thermopane (picture window); garage<br />
attached; HOME ONLY 4 YEARS OLD; aluminum siding and<br />
part brick front - HURRY!!!! HURRY!!!! $18,500. terms.<br />
3 ACRES .- One story home - 3 bedrooms; basement; oil<br />
furnace; barn; $8,500. $2,000. down; balance like rent.<br />
Immediate possession.<br />
RANCH TYPE country home - 13 years old - £ bedrooms;<br />
closets and storage space; large kitchen and (fining area;<br />
breezeway and two car garage with workshop attached;<br />
forced hot water heating system; 1 acre of land —all of<br />
this for $18,500. $3,000 down. Immediate possession.<br />
HARDWARE STORE-Living quarters -fully equipped, everything<br />
goes - $33,000. Terms.<br />
SAVE $1,090.00 '<br />
RANCH TYPE HOME IN CASS CITY: 3 large bedrooms<br />
with closets; hardwood floors; FIREPLACE; aluminum storms<br />
and screens; lots of Birch kitchen cabinets; dining room;<br />
vestibule; large family size BATHROOM - 1 1/2 bathrooms;<br />
built-in vacuum system; wet plastered; full basement; extra<br />
LARGE LOT 109x132' street blacktopped and curb and gutter<br />
paid for - 2 car garage attached; electric door opener;<br />
RESTRICTED SUBDIVISION priced to sell immediately<br />
at $23,000. terms. HURRY!!!!! HURRY!!!!! Call for an<br />
appointment right NOW!!!!!<br />
SPECIAL!!! JUST LISTED —2 Story home with 8 large rooms-<br />
4 bedrooms; closets; WALL TO WALL CARPETING in<br />
living room; dining room; hallway; and 3 bedrooms; open<br />
STAIRWAY - large kitchen with breakfast nook -- 2 bathrooms;<br />
RECREATION ROOM; forced hot water heating system;<br />
many other features; - 3 car garage; lots of shade<br />
trees — OWNER LEAVING FOR CALIFORNIA —$20,000.<br />
terms available.<br />
40 ACRES: 3 bedroom home with extensive remodeling completed---oil<br />
furnacexnew kitchen cabinets; 1 mile from blacktop<br />
road -- owner in California —$15,900. —$2,000. down.<br />
38 ACRES-No buildings - near State Land — 36 acres tillable<br />
$6,250.00 down payment $1,500. Immediate possession.<br />
NEAR SCHOOLS & PLAYGROUND-Very neat in and out-<br />
3 bedroom home with msny closets and storage room;- 1<br />
closet cedar lined — 1 extra large bedroom with many<br />
built-ins - wall to wall carpeting - full basement; 1 1/2<br />
car garage w'.th patio, beautifully landscaped - many other<br />
features -- $21,000. terms available. Immediate possession.<br />
HURRY HURRY!!!!!!! Price Reduced<br />
40 ACRES-Between Caro & Cass City - solid framed room<br />
home; basement; furnace, some remodeling completed 8<br />
years ago; good barn; blacktop road; a very good buy at<br />
$18,500. with $2,000 down —-balance like rent —HURRY!<br />
LAUNDRAMAT with 2 Dry Cleaning machines—established<br />
6 years -- completely equipped; building included - all<br />
for $23,500. terms.<br />
RESTAURANT—grossing over $50,000.00 - very' neat and<br />
v/ell equipped - retiring - $21,000. terms.<br />
6 ACRES _ MINI FARM — Just off M-81 highway - 7 room<br />
home with 3 bedrooms; dining room; tool shed; barn; comes<br />
with John Deere tractor and other equipment—full price<br />
$12,000. terms.<br />
RANCH TYPE HOME - 5 years old - Aluminum sidingnatural<br />
gas furnace, basement; hardwood floors; vanity<br />
in bathroom; thermo-pane picture window in living room;<br />
and dining area window - 12x17' patio, thoroughly insulated;<br />
aluminum storms and screens; chain-link fenced yard cost<br />
over $500. - rose bushes, etc. GARAGE ATTACHED to<br />
home-—-full price $19,900.00 terms.<br />
CHURCH ST., Cass City: Beaut|ful 2 story home built in<br />
1952 - FIREPLACE with heatilator - 3 large bedrooms<br />
with closets; dining room or office; 1 1/2 BATHROOMS;<br />
wall to wall carpeting; full basement: 2 car garage with<br />
concrete drive; nicely landscaped; near schools, playground;<br />
shopping, etc. WILL CONSIDER TRADE HIFull price $28,500.<br />
Terms. Possession in 30 days.<br />
"FOUR BEDROOM home to rent - vacant now!!!"<br />
FURNISHED APARTMENT - available Sept. 2, <strong>1970</strong>—separate<br />
entrance - must have references.<br />
For THESE and OTHER listings on HOMES, FARMS AND<br />
BUSINESSES, see,call or write to: "<br />
B. A, CALKA, REALTOR<br />
6306 W. Main. St., Cass City, Michigan, 48726. Telephone:<br />
Area Code 517 872-3355.<br />
or call any of our 20 SALESMEN nearest you:<br />
T. William (Bill) Johnston, Dale Murray Brown,<br />
872-3538 after 6 p.m. 872-3158<br />
Fred A. McEachern<br />
872-2924,<br />
Shirley A. Kappen,<br />
872-3420<br />
WILL CARE for one preschooler<br />
in my licensed home.<br />
Phone 872-4295. 7-<strong>16</strong>-1<br />
I WILL NOT be responsible<br />
for any debts other than my<br />
own. Henry R. Gere. 7-9-3<br />
Deering Packing"<br />
Open, 6 days a week, with<br />
slaughtering Monday and Fri<br />
day. No appointment necessary if<br />
delivered by 12 noon.<br />
Halves and quarters for sale,<br />
We wrap for freezer.<br />
For trucking, phone 872-<br />
6 1/2 miles east of Mayville<br />
on.-E. Mayville Rd. 3-5-ti<br />
-.',--,/<br />
AKC Registered silver poodle<br />
puppies for sale. Phone 674-<br />
8415. 7-<strong>16</strong>-tf<br />
L P GAS: 500 and 1,000 gallon<br />
tanks. 100-lb. cylinders-regular<br />
routes. Two- way radios.<br />
Tri-County Gas Co., division<br />
of Long Furniture of Marlette.<br />
7-24-tf<br />
AKC Registered Alaskan Malaniiite<br />
puppies, 7 weeks. $60.00<br />
females - $75 males. Phone<br />
673-6600 after six p.m. weak<br />
days. 7-<strong>16</strong>-3<br />
Notice<br />
Re-Roof Awmings<br />
Re-side Insulate<br />
Aluminum Windows and Doors<br />
Gall or W.rite<br />
Bill Spragne, owner<br />
Of Elkton. Roofing- and Siding<br />
Company<br />
Elktan 375-421.5<br />
Bad Axe CO' 9-7469<br />
Bad Axe CO 9-7158<br />
Terms to 5 years<br />
3-17-tf<br />
AT EILV Orchards: Montmorency<br />
cherries. Large crop<br />
in prospect. Will start picking<br />
about July 17. Bring containers<br />
and pick your own* We will<br />
pit them for you. Pitting and<br />
washing area will be roofed<br />
with washing space much enlarged.<br />
Open 8 a.m, till 7p.m.<br />
week days, 10 a.m. till 5 p.m.<br />
Sundays. Harvest should last<br />
for three weeks. We will also<br />
pick and pit cherries toorder.<br />
Hill Orchards - 7 miles southwest<br />
of Caro on M-81. Phone<br />
673-2771. 7-2-6<br />
SOFT WATER doesn't cost, it<br />
pays! Try it and be convinced.<br />
You can rent or purchase a<br />
Century Water Softener at<br />
Fuelgas at low-low rates. Call<br />
872-2<strong>16</strong>1 for details. Fuelgas<br />
Co. of Cass City. 5-21-tf<br />
THE Striffler-Benkelman reunion<br />
will be held Sunday, Aug.<br />
2, at the Cass City park. Potluck<br />
dinner at 12:30. 7-<strong>16</strong>-3<br />
LIMITED TIME special offer.<br />
Hamilton gas dryer for $139.95<br />
at Fuelgas Co. of Cass City.<br />
Act now! Phone 872-2<strong>16</strong>1.<br />
5-21-tf<br />
Cass City<br />
Steel Supply, Inc.<br />
I-Beams - Angles - Chaamels<br />
Plates - Bars - Re-»Steel<br />
Pipe - Cable - Sheeting-<br />
Corrugated Steelpipe<br />
Steel Fabrication & Erection<br />
Phone 872-3770<br />
FOR SALE- Registered Aberdeen<br />
angus bulls, ready for<br />
service. 1 3/4 miles north of<br />
Kinde — Robert Damrow- -<br />
Phone 874-4771. 7-<strong>16</strong>-1<br />
PUTNAM Upholstery - modern<br />
and antique furniture rebuilt<br />
and recovered. Free estimates<br />
Phone 673-2065. 315<br />
E. Grant St., Caro. 2-26-tf<br />
NORM COATES TV sales and<br />
service of Packard Bell Color<br />
- also servicing other<br />
makes. Phone 872-4000, 6238<br />
Main St., Cass City. 10-<strong>16</strong>-tf<br />
AVAILABLE-for backhoe work.<br />
Call 638-2718. Duane Pelton.<br />
Kingston. 6-18-7<br />
REAL ESTATE<br />
FOR SALE - Registered Aberdeen<br />
Angus bull, ready for<br />
service. 1 3/4 north of Kinde.<br />
Robert Damrow. Phone 874-<br />
4711. 7-<strong>16</strong>-1<br />
BUILDING FOR RENT 66x120.<br />
All or half. On Church Street.<br />
Inquire at R & M Auto Parts.<br />
5-21-tf<br />
FULLER BRUSH Products now<br />
available in this area. Call<br />
Tim McManus, 872-4295.<br />
7-<strong>16</strong>-1<br />
IT COSTS VERY little to keep<br />
your store fronts spic and<br />
span. Supreme Window Cleaners<br />
handles commercial window<br />
cleaning problems. Just<br />
call 872-2010. Free estimates.<br />
All work guaranteed, all workers<br />
insured. 7-4-tf<br />
MONEY IN SPARE TIME!!!You<br />
can earn up to $7.50 per hour<br />
cdmmission if you enjoy meeting<br />
people. Let "Sandra Parties"<br />
show you how. No delivering.<br />
No collecting. Weekly<br />
paychecks. For details and<br />
color catalog, call Bad Axe<br />
269-8022. Hostesses wanted.<br />
6-18-10<br />
FOR SALE- Furniture and<br />
household items. Wednesday,<br />
Thursday and Friday afternoons,<br />
starting at 3 p.m. 6829<br />
E. Cass City Rd. 1/4 mile<br />
east of Cass City. 7-<strong>16</strong>-1<br />
Auctioneer<br />
EXPERIENCED<br />
Complete Auctioneering Service<br />
Handled Anywhere.<br />
We make' All Arrangements<br />
My Experience Is Your<br />
Assurance<br />
Ira and David<br />
Osentoski<br />
PHONE:<br />
Cass City 872-2S52 collect<br />
CUSTOM BUTCHERING-Monday<br />
and by noon Tuesday. By<br />
appointment only. Cutting and<br />
wrapping for deep freeze. 11/2<br />
miles south. Carl Reed, Cass<br />
City. Phone 872-2085.10-27-tf<br />
FOR SALE - 2-year-old Hoistein<br />
heifer, fresh and springing.<br />
Arthur Battel, 1 east,<br />
3 north and 2 east of Cass<br />
City. Phone 872-29<strong>16</strong>. 7-9-3<br />
LOST-Black yearling heifer<br />
disappeared from Victor Hyatt<br />
farm, 3 miles west, 1/2 mile<br />
south of Argyle. Please notify<br />
Cliff O'Connell, Owendale.<br />
7-<strong>16</strong>-3<br />
No.l<br />
Smith - Douglass<br />
FERTILIZER - NITROGEN<br />
- CHEMICALS -<br />
Cass City<br />
Crop Service<br />
Corner M-53 & M-81<br />
Phcme 872-3080<br />
Cass City, Michigan<br />
9-18-tf<br />
RUMMAGE SALE-July <strong>16</strong>-17-<br />
18 at former Jim's Fruit Market,<br />
starting at 9:00 a.m. Sponsored<br />
by Bl>W Club. 7-<strong>16</strong>-1<br />
FOR SALE - 4 gas space heat-<br />
. ers: Warm Morning, 20,000<br />
BTU; Temco pre-vented<br />
10,000 BTU; Siegler 75,000<br />
BTU and Empire 30,000 BTU.<br />
Also, twin bed with bookcase<br />
headboard. 4314 Maple St. Call<br />
872-2302. 7-9-3<br />
FUELGAS CO. Bulk gas for<br />
every purpose. From 20<br />
pounds to 1,000 gallons. Rates<br />
as low as 4£ per pound.<br />
Furnaces, ranges, water heaters,<br />
refrigerators, wall furnaces,<br />
floor furnaces, washers<br />
and dryers. If it's gas, we<br />
sell and service it. Corner<br />
M-81 and M-53. Phone Cass<br />
City 872-2<strong>16</strong>1 for free estimates.<br />
5-21-tf<br />
AN EXCEPTIONAL NICE two bedroom home, dream home<br />
if you wish, full bath, washer and dryer hookup, 12 x 18'<br />
living room carpeted, kitchen with inlaid tile, balance carpeted,<br />
sun room, oil furnace, garage and a very nice back<br />
yard, excellent shrubbery. If this fits the bill don't look any<br />
further. $<strong>16</strong>,500 full price.<br />
THREE BEDROOM HOME with two lots, plenty of room in<br />
this one, nice garden soil. Owner has reduced the price<br />
to $9,500 cash. You can't go wrong on this kind of price.<br />
Located on Garfield Street.<br />
I NEED HOMES in the $12,000 to $15,000 bracket. If you<br />
have such a home for sale then give me a call.<br />
BEAUTIFUL WOODED FORTY acres located on blacktop<br />
road with a high strip going through farm, just right for<br />
that new home. Must be seen to be appreciated.<br />
See<br />
Edward J. Hahn- Broker<br />
when you wish to buy or sell, located at 6240 W. Main Street,<br />
Cass City or phone 872-2155 days or 872-3519 evenings for<br />
prompt and courteous service. 7-<strong>16</strong>-1<br />
PAGE SEVEN<br />
BALER TWINE-certified and<br />
African Queen brands. Due to<br />
other work, please call evenings<br />
and Saturdays. Alfred<br />
Goodall, 1 mile west, 3/4 mile<br />
north of Cass City. 7-2-4<br />
FOR RENT-Electric adding<br />
machine by day or week. Or<br />
rent a new Smith-Corona<br />
portable typewriter. Also new<br />
and used typewriters for sale,<br />
all makes. Leave your typewriters<br />
and other office equipment<br />
at our store for repair.<br />
McConkey Jewelry and Gift<br />
Shop. 10-6-tf<br />
ARE YOU FED UP with your<br />
present job? Would you like to<br />
make a good living another<br />
way? You may start part time,<br />
work at home, be your own<br />
boss. Earn as much as you<br />
wish. Ideal for husband and<br />
wife teams. Call Caro,<br />
673-r4581. 7-<strong>16</strong>-1<br />
Caro Honda Sales<br />
-^Featuring —<br />
Honda & Kawasaki Cycles<br />
Sales & Service<br />
— 'Also Featuring — -<br />
Portable Generators & ^Mini<br />
Bikes<br />
We service what we sell<br />
1006 E, Caro Rd.<br />
Phooie 673-2680<br />
3-5-26<br />
BOOMS RED AND WHITE TOP<br />
SILOS: Over 41 years' experience<br />
to do a better job for<br />
you. We do the complete job<br />
including the foundation. Write<br />
or call today and get all the<br />
facts about the silo with the<br />
heaviest and best inside finish.<br />
Silo-Matic and VanDale unloaders<br />
and feeding equipment.<br />
Booms Silo Co., Inc., Harbor<br />
Beach, Mich., 48441. 7-2-tf<br />
FOR SALE-2 Holstein cows,<br />
springing. 11 east, 2 1/4 south<br />
of Cass City, or 1 mile west,<br />
3/4 north of Argyle. William<br />
Burk. 7-<strong>16</strong>-3<br />
SELF-CLEANING gas' ranges.<br />
Choose from Tappan, Hardwick,<br />
Magic Chef. Prices way<br />
down at Fuelgas. Ranges start<br />
at just $99.50. Fuelgas Co. of<br />
Cass City. Phone 872-2<strong>16</strong>1.<br />
5-21-tf<br />
Mohawk Carpeting 1<br />
From the looms of Mohawk<br />
comes the finest carpets made<br />
by the largest carpet maker<br />
in the world.<br />
From $4.95<br />
per sq. yd. and up<br />
Thumb Appliance<br />
Center<br />
Cass City<br />
10-7-tf<br />
RED RASPBERRIES for sale-<br />
Picking days: Monday, Wednesday<br />
and Fridays. Starting<br />
Friday, July 17; picking by<br />
appointment only. You pick<br />
your own 35? a quart. Ten<br />
miles north of Cass City, one<br />
west and first house on second<br />
mile. Phone 375-2533 Elkton.<br />
Ervin Andrews. 7-<strong>16</strong>-3<br />
CUSTOM SLAUGHTERING -<br />
Monday and Tuesday, Thursday<br />
and Friday— No appointment<br />
needed. We also cut,<br />
wrap and freeze for your<br />
freezer and - do custom curing<br />
and smoking. Erla Packing<br />
Co. Phone 872-2191. 1-13-tf<br />
FOR SALE - Hay by the acre,<br />
4 miles south, 1/2 mile west<br />
of Cass City. Earl Grigg.<br />
Phone 872-2897. 7-<strong>16</strong>-1<br />
FOR SALE - 1 set 14 inch<br />
wide ovals, $40. 1 set 15<br />
inch racing slicks, never used,<br />
$50. Voice of Music stereo<br />
record player. Phone 872-<br />
2462. 7.9.3<br />
SALT FOR WATER conditioners.<br />
Just $2.00 per bag-cash<br />
and carry at Fuelgas Co. of<br />
Cass City. Get yours now.<br />
Phone 872-2<strong>16</strong>1. 5-21-tf<br />
RUMMAGE SALE-July <strong>16</strong>-17-<br />
18 at former Jim's Fruit Market,<br />
starting at 9:00 a.m. Sponsored<br />
by BPW club. 7-<strong>16</strong>-1<br />
WE WISH TO thank our relatives,<br />
neighbors and friends<br />
for the nice chair, beautiful<br />
cards and lovely gifts; especially<br />
those who worked so<br />
hard to make our anniversary<br />
celebration possible. Mr. and<br />
Mrs. William Englehart.<br />
7-<strong>16</strong>-1<br />
I WISH TO thank my -friends,<br />
neighbors, and relatives for<br />
the cards, flowers, gifts, and<br />
visits. Also for the benefit<br />
held in my behalf following<br />
my recent surgery. Your kind<br />
thoughtfulness will always be<br />
remembered • and deeply appreciated.<br />
Betty Jo Agar.<br />
7-<strong>16</strong>-1
PECIAL MEETING<br />
The Elkland Township Board hereby orders that a special meeting<br />
of Elkland Township electors be held on<br />
MONDAY, JULY 20,<strong>1970</strong><br />
8:00 P. M.<br />
AT THE<br />
ELKLAND TOWNSHIP HALL<br />
IN THE VILLAGE OF CASS CITY, MICHIGAN<br />
The purpose of this meeting is to permit township electors to determine<br />
whether or not they shall authorize,the Elkland Township Board<br />
to purchase land on which to build a new fire station and secure the<br />
services of a registered architect to do that which is required by law<br />
in the construction of said fire station.<br />
Dated: July 6, <strong>1970</strong><br />
R. M. HUNTER, Clerk<br />
CASS CITY CHRONICLE-THURSDAY, JULY <strong>16</strong>, I970<br />
FLAMES DtVOUR the barn and contents at the Elmer Parrish farm<br />
Tuesday. See story page one.<br />
23 new teachers needed<br />
When school starts in Cass<br />
City Sept. 8, there will have<br />
been a turnover of about a third<br />
of the teaching staff. There are<br />
a total of 23 vacancies stem-<br />
ming from a variety of reasons.<br />
One is the abundance of teachers<br />
for more positions. This<br />
seeming paradox is caused by<br />
the State which is pressuring<br />
schools to replace non-degree<br />
teachers.<br />
There are many of them that<br />
Cass City Schools has been<br />
using because of the teacher<br />
JULY SPECIALS SAVE YOU MORE<br />
AT CROFT-CLARA LUMBER<br />
7V4" CIRCULAR SAW<br />
Powerful 1-1/4 H.P. motor.<br />
Takes 7-1/4" and<br />
6-1/2" blades. Includes<br />
rip fence and 7-1/4"<br />
blade. Cuts 90° 2-3/8",<br />
45° 1-7/8".<br />
335 300/7310<br />
DUAL ACTION<br />
FINISHING SANDER<br />
Straight line action for fine finish; Orbital action<br />
for fast wood removal. Over 32 sq. in, of<br />
sanding areo. One-hand control; flush sands<br />
on 3 sides. 3-5/8" x 9" paper size. 1/7 H.P.<br />
338 281/7420<br />
WOODEN<br />
COMBINATION<br />
DOOR<br />
2'8"x6'8"<br />
IB 19<br />
Made of 1-1/8" thick Pondei osa<br />
Pine with 3 flat panels. Screen<br />
CASH<br />
AND<br />
CARRY<br />
Gearing and chuck made to<br />
handle bigger, tougher jobs.<br />
Double reduction gear system<br />
delivers full torque action.<br />
Drills 3/4" in hardwood,<br />
3/8" in steel. 1/7 H.P. 1000<br />
RPM. 351 719/7100<br />
Va"<br />
REVERSING<br />
DRILL<br />
3495<br />
With top mounted auxiliary handle. Reversing<br />
switch permits easy removal of jammed bits.<br />
Drills 1/2" in steel, 1" in hardwood, i/3 H.P.<br />
500 RPM. 345 843/7250<br />
FLAT PANELED<br />
DOOR<br />
2'8" x 6'8" x 1 3/8"<br />
REG.<br />
17"<br />
22.49<br />
Made from thoroughly seasoned<br />
Western hemlock.<br />
See Our Complete<br />
Selection of Doors<br />
Whether it might be an inexpensive service<br />
door or a new high-style entrance door, you<br />
have a wide choice of quality doors to choose<br />
'Tha Cria<br />
JIG SAW<br />
3495<br />
Multi-speed to suit material. Quickchange<br />
tilting shoe. Includes blade,<br />
wrench and holder. Capacity, hardwood<br />
1", softwootl 2". 1/4 H.P.<br />
336 238/7545<br />
Black & Decker<br />
POWER TOOLS<br />
HWI BONUS<br />
i(<br />
PANELING<br />
4' x 7' x 4MM<br />
REG. 4.29<br />
4' x 8' x 4MM<br />
REG. 4.69<br />
Ideal for basements!<br />
112 434<br />
112 443<br />
6 FT. WOODEN<br />
STEPLADDER<br />
Durable, sturdy. Fully<br />
rodded. Four-way metal<br />
spreader. Yellow pine.<br />
770 026/144-6<br />
- — -COUPON<br />
BLACKTOP<br />
BRUSH<br />
(With Coupon<br />
Tand Purchase of<br />
•5 Gal. or More of<br />
iDriveway Sealer.<br />
11" hardwood block with rubber squeegee<br />
and 2-row applicator brush, 2"<br />
bristles. 772 248/22<br />
ADDITIONAL OR __ .<br />
WITHOUT COUPON 99
CITY CHRONICL<br />
VOLUME 64, NUMBER 13 CASS CITY CHRONICLE-THURSDAY, JULY <strong>16</strong>7<strong>1970</strong> SECTION B EIGHT PAGES<br />
"If It Fib.<br />
And then I wrote....<br />
Out of the Jimmy Hoffa trial,<br />
of all places, came another<br />
sneaky jab at my hero, the<br />
bachelor. A news item lamented<br />
the lonely time the 12 jurors<br />
had, locked away from the rest<br />
of the world for 6 weeks. With<br />
FORA<br />
GROWTH<br />
ORIENTED<br />
FUND?<br />
Shares of NEL Growth Fund,<br />
Inc. are' now available from<br />
representatives of NEL Equity<br />
Services Corporation, who are<br />
also representatives of New<br />
England Life.<br />
The NEL Growth Fund is a<br />
mutual fund aimed at possible<br />
capital appreciation by investing<br />
primarily in growth stocks<br />
selected on the basis of longterm<br />
prospects without regard<br />
to current income.<br />
Also available through NEL<br />
Equity Services Corporation<br />
(a wholly owned subsidiary of<br />
New England Life) are shares<br />
of NEL Equity Fund, Inc., a<br />
common stock fund for the<br />
long-term investor who seeks<br />
possible capital appreciation<br />
and current income.<br />
Loomis, Sayles & Company<br />
, Investment Adviser<br />
Ai<br />
Witherspoon<br />
4615 Oak<br />
Cass City<br />
Phone 872-2321<br />
Please send me, without obligation,<br />
f~l a prospectus on NEL Growth Fund, Inc.<br />
n a prospectus on NEL Equity Fund, Inc.<br />
fj a prospectus on both.<br />
BY JIM FITZGERALD<br />
which I will not argue. But then<br />
this insidious propagandist added:<br />
"Juror Patrick Haverty had<br />
the easiest time of it. He was<br />
the LONE BACHELOR in the<br />
group." (The caps are mine; so<br />
is the neck pain.)<br />
There is a. one-sided war<br />
going on in the world. All the<br />
married people are fighting to<br />
get all the single men down the<br />
middle aisle in a rented suit.<br />
For some reason I don't understand,<br />
the bachelors are not<br />
fighting back with vigor. As a<br />
result, Joe Single is easy prey<br />
for the nice couple around the<br />
corner who know this lovely<br />
girl who Joe should meet, he<br />
really should.<br />
So Joe meets her, under the<br />
influence of free steaks and<br />
booze. His married friends<br />
show off their pretty children,<br />
well-bribed to behave for the<br />
first time since Christmas eve.<br />
Mr. and Mrs. talk glowingly<br />
about delicious dinners, Sunday<br />
papers read in bed, and a light<br />
in the window. No mention is<br />
made of mortgages, dirty diapers<br />
or chocolate fingerprints<br />
on favorite books. The usual<br />
sighing remarks are made about<br />
"How do you stand it all alone<br />
in that tiny apartment over the<br />
poolroom, Joe?" In no time,<br />
the guy is hooked.<br />
And then Joe can say: "I<br />
never knew what living was until<br />
I got married, but then it was<br />
too late."<br />
I am not here to knock marriage<br />
per se. It is an ok type<br />
of life and I wouldn't sell my<br />
family for any amount of swinging<br />
freedom. Lease or rent,<br />
maybe, but I would always insist<br />
on retaining ownership.<br />
God, in his almighty wisdom,<br />
invented Love, a formless substance<br />
which somehow cements<br />
the most unlikely relationships<br />
and can make a husband forget<br />
any number of undies soaking<br />
in the bathroom sink or sticky<br />
candy in his favorite chair.<br />
But it is time that some married<br />
man told Joe Single that<br />
he is not necessarilyanunfortunate<br />
slob, merely treading<br />
water until some doll comes<br />
along to show him what swimming<br />
really is. As a man always<br />
interested in seeing a pat<br />
on every back, and a kick in<br />
every seat, I am volunteering to<br />
answer such "poor bachelor"<br />
nonsense as planted in the Hoffa<br />
trial story.<br />
Why was it easier for Patrick<br />
Haverty, rather than the married<br />
jurors, to be isolated for<br />
6 weeks? The average reader,<br />
well brainwashed by the unfair<br />
climate which prevails, would<br />
answer: "Well heck, those married<br />
people were lonesome for<br />
their spouses and children. Patrick<br />
didn't have anyone to be<br />
lonesome for, so he didn't mind<br />
being cooped up."<br />
Such an attitude assumes that<br />
there is little in this world to<br />
interest Joe Single. Despite<br />
being married 132 years, I can<br />
remember slamming my front<br />
door carelessly at 3 a.m.; I<br />
know that Joe doesn't have to<br />
go home when the library<br />
closes. I could, in fact, list<br />
a countless number of goodies<br />
available to Joe but I won't, as<br />
I hate to make myself cry.<br />
It is not my intention to tell<br />
Joe Single what he should do;<br />
only what he shouldn't. And the<br />
biggest thing he shouldn't do is<br />
fall for the malarkyhis married<br />
friends pass out with the dinner<br />
invitations. Keep eating in<br />
restaurants, Joe. You may think<br />
it costs more but you don't<br />
know what costs are until you<br />
push an overflowing cart up to<br />
the A & p checkout counter.<br />
Joe shouldn't be rushed. A<br />
nice age to get married is 30;<br />
almost as nice as 40. And Joe<br />
shouldn't worry about the beach<br />
being swept clean of pebbles.<br />
New ones come in with every<br />
tide.<br />
There is much to be said<br />
for living alone, making your<br />
own decisions, and watching the<br />
clock for no one except yourself.<br />
Such a life affords a peace<br />
and solitude; a time for quiet<br />
thinking and reading; a type of<br />
quiet contentment rarely available<br />
to the married man.<br />
Unless he gets jury duty.<br />
4-H'ERS VISIT CONGRESSMAN JIM HARVEY--ln recent days, Michigan Eighth District Representative<br />
Jim Harvey visited with a host of 4-H'ers from Bad Axe, Yale, Cass City, Sebewaing, Snover, Kalkaska,<br />
South Boardman, Marlette, Palms, Sandusky, and Fostoria. After discuss ing critical issues confronting the country,<br />
including domestic farm, problems, Congressman Harvey posed with the group in front of the Rayburn House<br />
Office Building. In the background is the United States Capitol Building with the square building in the foreground<br />
the United States House of Representatives. Participating in the tour, headed by Gerald 0. Jessup, Extension 4-H<br />
Youth Agent, for Sanilac County, were left to right, Ken Krug, of Bad Axe; Wanda Havens, of Yale; Janet Koepfgen<br />
of Cass City; Tom Russell, of Cass City; Joanne Gruehn, of Sebewaing; Dan Widdowz, of Snover; Jim Warschefsky,<br />
of Bad Axe; Robin Golden, of Kalkaska; Deb Monette, of South Boardman; Jane Falnnigan, of Marlette;<br />
Angela Mass, of Bad Axe; Carol Clarke, of Cass City; Robert Wolf, of Palms; Janet Wenta, of Fostoria; Jane Marie<br />
Powell, of Kalkaska; and Chip Ezinga, of Kalkaska. The group was in Washington, D. C. for a week in seeing and<br />
learning first hand of governmental operations on a Federal level.<br />
Mclntyre promoted<br />
to SP4 in Vietnam<br />
Douglas J. Mclntyre, 20, son<br />
of Mr. and Mrs. Duncan Mclntyre<br />
of Route 2, Ubly, recently<br />
was promoted to Army specialist<br />
four near Long Binh, Vietnam,<br />
while serving as a truck<br />
driver with the 233rd Transportation<br />
Company.<br />
Mclntyre graduated<br />
Ubly High School in 1967 an<br />
Mrs. Thelma Bogart,and<br />
secretary-treasurer,Mrs. Vincent<br />
Wald. Mrs. Mary Brock<br />
of Caro was the eldest person<br />
present.<br />
Mrs. Dan McCarthy and Mrs.<br />
Loretta Collins of Detroit were<br />
luncheon guests of Mrs. Harry<br />
Johnston Friday and of other<br />
relatives and friends in this<br />
vicinity.<br />
Sunday, June 28, at St. Columbkille<br />
Parish hall a miscellaneous<br />
bridal shower was given<br />
by Mrs. Paul Izydorek, Mrs.<br />
Roy Powell, Miss Karen Gaffney<br />
and Miss Marsha Geister for<br />
Miss Elaine Powell, daughter<br />
of Mr. and Mrs. Sanford Powell.<br />
Heating Has Key-<br />
C-2 ***<br />
To Quick Change<br />
For Interiors<br />
Nine out of 10 home improvement<br />
projects will require<br />
heating.<br />
With this fact as a basis,<br />
homeowners planning improvements<br />
can make the<br />
job easier by considering<br />
heating at the outset, suggests<br />
the National Better<br />
Heating-Cooling Council.<br />
Updating the heating system<br />
can work wonders in an<br />
older home, with no structural'<br />
changes needed. Modern<br />
hydronic (forced hot<br />
wafer) baseboard heating<br />
panels update room appearance<br />
and add decorating<br />
freedom, too.<br />
Because baseboard heating<br />
panels are thin (they protrude<br />
only a few inches from<br />
the wall) and are mounted<br />
at ankle height, much space<br />
is liberated, for furniture<br />
can be placed against the<br />
heating panels without fear<br />
of scorching or of blocking<br />
off the heat.<br />
This warm-but-not-hot<br />
characteristic of hydronics<br />
also permits draperies to<br />
hang to floor, carpeting to be<br />
laid wall-to-wall.<br />
Evening-<br />
An experimental Tuesday<br />
evening worship service has<br />
been approved by the Session of<br />
the First Presbyterian Church.<br />
The evening services, scheduled<br />
Aug. 18 and 25 and Sept.<br />
1 at 8 p.m., will duplicate the<br />
Sunday worship theme for the<br />
benefit of those unable to attend<br />
church Sunday mornings.<br />
Worry kills energy, purpose,<br />
vitality-and produces nothing.<br />
Miss Rosalia Mail<br />
Phone 665-2562<br />
Miss Powell is to be married;;<br />
to Aaron Anthes Saturday, July-<br />
18. Mr. and Mrs. Vincent Remain<br />
of Caro, Mr. and Mrs. Alva<br />
- Raggett of Wisher, Mi-, and Mrs.<br />
Francis Goslin and family and<br />
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Rabideau<br />
were Sunday afternoon<br />
visitors at the home of Mr. and<br />
Mrs. Arthur Carolan.<br />
Mrs, Arthur Carolan, Mrs..<br />
Josephine Rabideau and Mrs.<br />
Jerry Dewey went to Tri-City<br />
Airport Wednesday where they<br />
met Mrs. Tony Mendieino of<br />
San Antonio, Texas, daughter<br />
of Mrs. Rabideau. They were<br />
dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs.<br />
Wendell Birch of Bay City.<br />
Mr. and Mrs, Arthur Carolan<br />
went to Auburn Heights Tuesday<br />
to visit their son, Mr. and<br />
Mrs. Gary Carolan.<br />
Members of the North Elmwood<br />
Farm Bureau held their<br />
picnic Sunday at the Gagetown<br />
park with a cooperative<br />
picnic dinner. Six members and<br />
their families were present. In<br />
the afternoon they went to<br />
Patrick Coslin's and the<br />
children enjoyed swimming in<br />
their pool.<br />
Need vitamins? Get them here<br />
1733 APR'69 M.P. 39<br />
When vitamins are called for, call on<br />
us. We stock a complete range of vita-<br />
mins, nutritional supplements, health<br />
aids of ail kinds. You can count on your<br />
pharmacist.<br />
COMPLETE CONVALESCENT<br />
• Wheelchairs • Walkers ® Canes<br />
• Crutches • Commodes • Sterile Bedding<br />
Prescription service<br />
promptly provided?<br />
as the doctor orders<br />
COACH LIGHT PHARMACY<br />
. (Formerly Mac ,, ScQliy-P^ig<br />
MIKE 4 WEAVER, Owner .7 v;' r VVV-E'<br />
, ;;• ;\ : y
PAGE TWO<br />
&atsas&a^^<br />
Sidewalk paifs<br />
BATHING<br />
SUITS<br />
OFF<br />
LADIES'<br />
PANT SHIFT<br />
SIZES 10-<strong>16</strong> $1.49<br />
GIRLS'<br />
SHIFT DRESSES<br />
SIZES 7«14 77<br />
SIMMER PURSES 25% off<br />
LADIES' -, jn •<br />
SUMMER JEWELRY 1/2 price<br />
LADIES'AND CHILDREN'S OffO/ t*f*<br />
SHORTS ***S JB. JB. ^r JB. ^/ JBL K^s "*" "" ^^ «—• ~^ ^^ "*•" "^ ~~ "" ~~~ "•" ^«> /O 4f ^f OH<br />
LADIES' AND CHILDREN'S<br />
SUMMER SANDALS<br />
& WHITE SHOES<br />
25% OFF<br />
LADIES'<br />
SLEEVELESS<br />
BLOUSES C1<br />
SIZES 32-34<br />
ONLY<br />
LADIES'<br />
SUMMER<br />
DRESSES<br />
OFF<br />
KNEE HOSE 2<br />
PANTY HOSE ___2<br />
prs.<br />
prs.<br />
LADIES' AND CHILDREN'S ^^<br />
SCOOTER SKIRTS 25%<br />
BOYS'<br />
SPORT SHIRTS<br />
2~ $3.00<br />
MEN'S COLORED<br />
I SHIRTS<br />
$1.00<br />
S-M-L-XL<br />
MEN'S<br />
KNIT SHIRTS<br />
$2.79<br />
2FOR$5.00<br />
SIZES S-M-L<br />
SEW & SAVE<br />
£*CX. 80 SQUARE PRINTED<br />
Percale<br />
YDS.<br />
2 YDS.<br />
MEN'S -•<br />
PANTS /2<br />
UPHOLSTERY 56" WIDE<br />
Fabric YD |2.99<br />
100% LINEN<br />
Toweling<br />
WASH CLOTHS<br />
.00<br />
.50<br />
off<br />
MEN'S<br />
SPORT SHIRTS<br />
SHORT SLEEVES<br />
MEN'S SIZE 10-13<br />
WORK SOX 3 ^ $1.00<br />
REGULAR OR SLAX LENGTH- CUSHION<br />
SOLE - COLORS: WHITE -RANDOM - GREY<br />
-CLOSE OUT SHOES-<br />
ODDS& ENDS ... 1 /2 PRICE<br />
BROKEN SIZES - SOME BOOTS<br />
RUNNER RUG<br />
SIZE 24x36<br />
MULTI-STRIPED<br />
CANNON<br />
BATH TOWELS<br />
t~.bl.UU<br />
PRINTS AND PLAIN COLORS<br />
FOAM RUBBER<br />
PILLOWS 2<br />
^<br />
8 _'_ 2 _ 4 _ $1.00<br />
PRINTED TERRY<br />
DISH TOWELS<br />
~ /tfr-1 rk^k<br />
3 OR 81.00<br />
s^^f«pipff^<br />
CASS CITY<br />
FOR<br />
CASS CITY CHRONICLE-THURSDAY, JULY <strong>16</strong>, I970<br />
Spearheaded by the appearance<br />
of Gov. George Romney<br />
and his wife, the Cass City Centennial<br />
celebration was off to<br />
a flying start Monday as the<br />
Cultural Center was dedicated<br />
and the first of six performances<br />
of the Centennial pageant<br />
presented. It was highlighted<br />
by the crowning of the queen.<br />
Gov. Romney spoke briefly in<br />
front of the Cultural Center,<br />
stressing the importance of<br />
freedom and telling how it made<br />
this country great.<br />
A surprised and happy Queen<br />
Helen was crowned by Court<br />
of Appeals Judge Timothy Quinn<br />
at Saturday's Coronation Ball<br />
at the high school. The wife<br />
of Dwaine Peters of Cass City^<br />
Queen Helen's crowning was the<br />
high point of the ball which was<br />
attended by about 200 persons.<br />
Mrs. Peters will reign over<br />
all centennial festivities for the<br />
remainder of the centennial.<br />
Walbro Corporation became<br />
the third of Cass City's largest<br />
industries to become unionized<br />
Friday when employees<br />
voted 59-39 to have the UAW,<br />
AFL-CIO represent them at the<br />
plant. Bargaining will start<br />
after the election is certified<br />
by the National Labor Relations<br />
Board.<br />
Fire losses throughout the<br />
county during June totaled<br />
$22,300, Cass City firemen<br />
learned Thursday night, July<br />
15, at a Tuscola County Fire<br />
Association meeting in Richville.<br />
Three Cass City residents<br />
were selected as jurists for<br />
the August term of Circuit Court<br />
recently. They are: Betty Crandell,<br />
Neil J.- Sherman, Jerome<br />
A. Root.<br />
TEN YEARS AGO<br />
"We have replaced four<br />
teachers and added four addi-'<br />
tional ones to bring the faculty<br />
of Cass City schools up to 48<br />
members," Superintendent<br />
Willis Campbell said this week.<br />
New to the Cass City faculty are<br />
Donald J. Mance, Anne Mance,<br />
Donald R. Gillette, Dale V.<br />
Sherman, Marvin Hauck, Fulton<br />
McLain, Nancy Jean Cockerill<br />
and Betty Murphy.<br />
Crowds swarmed into Cass<br />
City Friday and Saturday for the<br />
third annual sidewalk sale in<br />
the village and were greeted<br />
with outstanding bargains and<br />
specialty events originated for<br />
the two days. It was the most<br />
ambitious program staged in the<br />
three-year history of the townwide<br />
sale.<br />
Four Cass City youths left<br />
Saginaw early Monday morning<br />
by train for the Fifth National<br />
Boy Scout Jamboree being held<br />
July 22-28 near Colorado<br />
Springs, Col. Attending are<br />
Explorers Ed Knight and Bill<br />
Bliss and Scouts Tom Craig and<br />
Jim Champion.<br />
Mr. and Mrs. S. C. Striffler<br />
will celebrate their 50th<br />
wedding anniversary with a<br />
reception Sunday, July 24.<br />
Police Chief William Wood<br />
spent a busy three days in Detroit<br />
last week when he attended<br />
the 35th annual police chief's<br />
convention in Detroit. Mr. Wood<br />
represented the Michigan Association<br />
of Chiefs of Police.<br />
Dr. Albert A. MacPhail, son<br />
of Mrs. Angus MacPhail,<br />
recently began the practice of<br />
radiology in Flint, where he is<br />
associated with the Drs. Jackson<br />
Livesay, Earnest Griff in Jr.<br />
and Donal Bryant. They have<br />
offices in the Mott Foundation<br />
Building in Flint and are at St.<br />
Joseph Hospital in Genesee<br />
County Memorial Hospital. He<br />
was graduated from Cass City<br />
High School in 1946 and<br />
Michigan State College in 1950.<br />
There is a host of prizes<br />
waiting for a lucky unmarried<br />
ORDER OF PUBLICATION<br />
General<br />
State of Michigan File #21014<br />
Probate Court for the County<br />
of Tuscola. Estate of Mabel<br />
E. McComb, deceased.<br />
It is ordered that on September<br />
24, <strong>1970</strong>, at 10:30 a.m.,<br />
in the Probate Courtroom Caro,<br />
Michigan a hearing be held at<br />
which all creditors of said deceased<br />
are required to prove<br />
their claims and heirs will be<br />
determined. Creditors must file<br />
sworn claims with the court and<br />
serve a copy thereof either by<br />
certified mail or personal service<br />
upon Aletha I. Radovic,<br />
44931 Robson, Belleville, Michigan,<br />
prior to said hearing.<br />
Publication and service shall<br />
be made as provided by Statute<br />
and Court Rule.<br />
Dated: July 7, <strong>1970</strong>. Clinton<br />
C. House, Attorney for Estate.<br />
475 N. State Street, Caro, Michigan.<br />
C. Bates Wills<br />
Judge of Probate<br />
A true copy Beatrice P. Berry<br />
Register of Probate<br />
7-<strong>16</strong>-3<br />
FROM THE FILES OF THE CHRONICLE<br />
girl, 15 to 23 years old who lives<br />
within a 15- mile radius of Cass<br />
City when she is selected homecoming<br />
queen. Early this week<br />
there were no contestants to<br />
,vie for the awards.<br />
Rev. Ernest Robinson will be<br />
the guest pastor preaching at<br />
the Cass City Methodist Church<br />
Sunday during the vacation of<br />
Rev. Robert Searls, regular<br />
pastor. His topic will be "Christians<br />
Regardless."<br />
TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO<br />
Dudley C. Mosure, who resigned<br />
as pastor of the Cass<br />
City Methodist Church and<br />
entered the army as a chaplain<br />
a year ago, was promoted from<br />
the rank of first lietuenant to<br />
that of Captain on June <strong>16</strong>th last.<br />
He is now stationed at Camp<br />
Philadelphia near Reimes,<br />
France.<br />
The first Cass City 4-H beef<br />
show will be held here on Friday,<br />
August 3. The cattle will<br />
be exhibited at the John Deere<br />
implement shed of Copeland &<br />
Munro and will be judged by<br />
'Jim Miiligan, Alfred Goodall,<br />
Lynn Spencer and Don Koepfgen,<br />
all former 4-H club boys who<br />
have shown champion animals.<br />
Harry Stine is named as alternate<br />
judge.<br />
Hugh Monro, inpersonating<br />
Stalin, George Dillman as Truman,<br />
and Watson Spaven as<br />
Churchill held a "Big Three"<br />
conference as a portion of the<br />
program of the Gavel club.<br />
All issues were not decided<br />
Tuesday evening, but club members<br />
got a "kick" out of the<br />
local conference anyway.<br />
C. U. Brown was elected<br />
president of the board of education<br />
at the first meeting of that<br />
body since the school election.<br />
F. E. Hutchinson was chosen<br />
secretary to succeed himself<br />
in that position, and Mrs. B. H.<br />
Starmann is the new treasurer.<br />
Pfc. Cecil J. Whittaker, 22, of<br />
Cass City has returned from<br />
service outside the continental<br />
United States and is now being<br />
processed through the Army<br />
Ground and Service Forces Redistribution<br />
station in Miami<br />
Beach, where his next assignment<br />
will be determined. While<br />
in the European theatre of operations<br />
he was awarded a purple<br />
heart for wounds received in<br />
combat.<br />
THIRTY-FIVE YEARS AGO<br />
Starr Commonwealth for<br />
Boys will hold its annual Tag<br />
TUSCOLA<br />
COUNTY<br />
MONDAY - ENTRY DAY<br />
Day in Cass City on August<br />
13, permission having been<br />
granted by Village President<br />
George West. Situated near Albion<br />
this "character building<br />
factory" for the under-privileged<br />
boys of the state of Michigan<br />
has been carrying on its<br />
work since 1913.<br />
Cattle and chicken thieves<br />
are active in Tuscola county.<br />
Jud Howe reported to Sheriff<br />
George Jeffrey that six choice<br />
heifers had been taken from his<br />
pasture 1 1/2 miles west of<br />
Fostoria. Jacob Lefler of Denmark<br />
township is minus 100<br />
Rock chickens since thieves<br />
visited his poultry yard Friday<br />
night.<br />
A horse pulling contest, popular<br />
feature of the fair at Caro<br />
for several years, will be held<br />
at the Tuscola County fair which<br />
takes place August 19-23,<br />
Stockholders of the Cass City<br />
Oil and Gas Company, at the<br />
annual meeting Friday night,<br />
elected the following directors<br />
to succeed themselves: Charles<br />
E. Hartsell, W. O. Stafford,<br />
M. B. Auten, Bruce Brown,<br />
Henry Smith and W. B. Hicks.<br />
Open-air concerts are given<br />
each Wednesday evening by the<br />
Cass City Ladies' Band. The<br />
program starts at 8:10 and continues<br />
for an hour.<br />
A meeting in the interest of<br />
the improvement of State Highway<br />
M-150 arranged by boosters<br />
of the project at the southern<br />
end of the route was held<br />
here Tuesday evening and<br />
brought a delegation of 75 or<br />
more from surrounding areas.<br />
Three Felician Sisters of<br />
Detroit are in charge of the<br />
vacation school being held in St.<br />
Pancratius church in Cass City.<br />
WSCS meets at<br />
Zinnecker home<br />
Fourteen women, including<br />
two guests, attended the monthly<br />
meeting of the WSCS of Salem<br />
United Methodist Church Monday<br />
evening, July 6, at the home<br />
of Mrs. John Zinnecker.<br />
Mrs. Clara Gaffney, vicepresident,<br />
presided over the<br />
business meeting. The lesson<br />
was given by Mrs. George Dillman.<br />
Refreshments were served<br />
at the close of the meeting.<br />
Several members plan to attend<br />
a meeting for WSCS officers<br />
later this month at Sebewaing.<br />
Mrs. Joyce Loo mis and Mrs.<br />
Gaffney reported during the<br />
meeting on a three-day school<br />
of missions they attended<br />
recently in Adrian.<br />
6:00 P.M. Colt Stakes - Harness Racing<br />
8:00 P.M. Mustang Hell-Drivers Thrill Show<br />
TUESDAY - KID'S DAY<br />
1:00 P.M. Kid's Day Fun Show at the Grandstand with prizes galore<br />
and reduced rates on the Midway<br />
8:00 P.M. Harness Racing at the Grandstand<br />
Cash Prize Drawings<br />
WEDNESDAY - HORSEMAN'S DAY<br />
1:30 P.M. Horse Gymkhana with races and horsemanship contest<br />
events<br />
8:00 P.M. Harness Racing at the Grandstand<br />
Cash Prize Drawings<br />
THURSDAY - FARMERS AND SENIOR CITIZENS DAY<br />
All gates and afternoon grandstand free to all senior<br />
citizens 65 years of age and over.<br />
12:00 P.M. Preliminary Tractor Pulling Contest at Grandstand<br />
1:30 P.M. 4-H and FFA Livestock Sale<br />
7:30 P.M. Tuscola County Bean Queen Pageant<br />
8:00 P.M. Harness Racing at the Grandstand<br />
Cash Prize Drawings<br />
FRIDAY - rv,,^CHANTS DAY<br />
!:()() P.M. State Tractor Pulling Championship at Grandstand<br />
7:30 P.M. Gigantic, Thrilling Demolition Derby at Grandstand<br />
SATURDAY SPORTMAN'S DAY<br />
l >:30 A.M. Pony Pulling Contest<br />
1 :()0 P.M. Dynamometer Horse Pulling Contests<br />
5:00 P.M. Motorcycle Practice and Time Trials<br />
'8:00 P.M. Motorcycle Racing at Grandstand<br />
FREE DRAWIN6II<br />
CASS CITY, MICHIGAN<br />
Area students listed for honors<br />
Eight area college students<br />
were recently named to honors<br />
lists at Michigan State University<br />
and Central Michigan<br />
University for the spring term.<br />
Keith R. Baudoin, Lynn J.<br />
Haire and Robert M. Donahue<br />
all of Cass City and Michael<br />
D. Comment of Gagetown were<br />
among more than 3,000 MSU<br />
students named to the spring<br />
term honor lists. To be eligible<br />
for this, a student must<br />
achieve at least a 3.5 (B plus)<br />
grade point average for the<br />
term.<br />
Judy Ann Traxler, a senior<br />
at Central Michigan University<br />
from Kingston was named to the<br />
all A honor list. Also listed<br />
with a "B" average or better<br />
from CMU was Diane C. Freiburger,<br />
senior, Cass Qity;<br />
Evelyn S. Schmuhl, sophomore,<br />
Deford and James E. Parrott,<br />
senior, Kingston,<br />
Are Newsy Too! 1<br />
Land a prize<br />
in the big<br />
"Michigan<br />
Outdoors"<br />
Fishing<br />
Contest<br />
That big fish you catch this year could win you<br />
a valuable prize in the "Michigan Outdoors" fishing<br />
contest. There are many awards—thousands of<br />
dollars worth—to be won in categories covering<br />
just about every kind of fish caught in Michigan<br />
waters. But to be eligible, you must pick up a free<br />
entry blank before you catch your fish. Last<br />
year dozens of fishermen would have won if they'd<br />
remembered this. Don't miss out. Stop at our<br />
station before your first fishing tripl<br />
LYNN'S LEONARD<br />
SERVICE<br />
Phone 872-4200 Cass City<br />
AUGUST 3-8<br />
CARO<br />
FAIRGROUNDS<br />
MON. NITE ONLY<br />
TRACTOR and HORSE<br />
CHAMPIONSHIPS<br />
DEMOLITION<br />
FRI. NITE<br />
RIDE THE SKY DIVER<br />
SWISS TOBAGGON * MOON WALK<br />
-ALL NEW ,<br />
SAT. NITE
CASS CITY. MICHIGAN<br />
PROFESSIONAL & BOSINESS<br />
DR. W. S. SELBY<br />
Optometrist<br />
Hours 8-5:00 except Thursday<br />
Evenings by appointment<br />
4624 Hill St.<br />
Across from Hills and Dales<br />
Hospital.<br />
Phone 872-3404<br />
Harold T. Donahue, M.D.<br />
Physician and Surgeon<br />
Clinic<br />
4674 Hill St., Cass City<br />
Office 872-2323- Ees. 872-2311<br />
PAT'S BEAUTY SALON<br />
6265 Main St.<br />
Across from Leonard Station<br />
Phone 872-2772 Cass City<br />
Harry Crandell, Jr. D.V.M.<br />
Office 4438 South Seeger St.<br />
Phone 872-2255<br />
DR. D. E. RAWSON<br />
DENTIST<br />
Phone 872-2181 Cass City<br />
JAMES BALLARD, M.D.<br />
Office at 4530 Weaver St.<br />
Hours: 10:00 a.m. to 12:00-<br />
2:00 p.m. to 4:30 p.m.<br />
Daily except Thursday afternoon.<br />
DR. J. H. GEISSINGER<br />
Chiropractic Physician<br />
Monday, Tuesday, Thursday<br />
and Friday 9-12 and 2-5.<br />
Monday, Thursday evenings<br />
7-9.<br />
21 N. Aimer St., Caro<br />
Phone 673-4464<br />
VERA'S BEAUTY SHOP<br />
On Argyle Road 5 miles east<br />
of M-53 or 3 miles west of Ar-<br />
Phone Ubly OL 8-5108<br />
For Appointment<br />
Barbara MacAlpine and Vera<br />
Ferguson, Operators.<br />
LEAR JET STEREO<br />
TAPE PLAYERS<br />
ADMIRAL 9"<br />
PORTABLE TV's<br />
WASHER<br />
AND<br />
DRYER<br />
Dr. E. Paul Lockwood<br />
Chiropractic Physician<br />
Office Hours:<br />
Mon., Tues., Wed., Fri.<br />
9-12 a.m. and l:30-5:00'p.m.<br />
Saturday 9-12 a.m.<br />
Evenings-Tues. & Fri. 7-9 p.m.<br />
Closed All Day Thursday<br />
PH. 872-2765 Cass City<br />
For Appointment<br />
Edward C. Scollop D.V.M.<br />
Office 4849 North Seeger St.<br />
Phone 872-2935<br />
DENTISTRY<br />
E. C. FRITZ<br />
Office over Coach Light Pharmacy.<br />
We solicit your patronage<br />
when in need of work.<br />
Expert Watch Repairing<br />
PROMPT SERVICE<br />
Reasonable Charges<br />
Satisfaction Guaranteed<br />
No job too big -<br />
No job too small<br />
Win. Manasse<br />
JEWELER<br />
180 N. State St. Caro, Mich.<br />
K. I. MacRAE, D.O.<br />
Osteopathic Physician and<br />
Surgeon<br />
Corner Church and Oak Sts.<br />
Office 872-2880 - Res. 872-3365<br />
ALLEN WITHERSPOON<br />
New England Life<br />
NEL Growth Fund<br />
NEL Equity Fund<br />
Value Line Fund-Keystone Funds<br />
Phone 872-2321<br />
4615 Oak St., Cass City<br />
HAMILTON<br />
BOTH<br />
HARRIS-HAMPSHIRE<br />
Insurance Agency<br />
Complete Insurance Services<br />
6815 E. Cass City Rd.<br />
Cass City, Michigan<br />
Phone 872-2688<br />
NO FROST<br />
DUPLEX<br />
DUPLEX<br />
County 4-H'ers<br />
Detroit guests<br />
of MMPA<br />
More than sixty 4-H boys and<br />
adult leaders from throughout<br />
Michigan learned about the<br />
mechanics of milk marketing<br />
and the purposes and organization<br />
of Michigan Milk Producers<br />
Association during a twoday<br />
visit, July 8-9, at MMPA<br />
headquarters in Detroit.<br />
Included were Dick DeLong,<br />
Cass City, James Koch, Millington,<br />
and adult leader Don<br />
DeLong, Cass City.<br />
The tour was sponsored by<br />
MMPA with the cooperation of<br />
the Michigan State University<br />
Extension Service.<br />
In addition to a tour of the<br />
MMPA office, the 4-H members<br />
and advisors visited the huge<br />
Kroger Dairy in nearby Livonia<br />
to learn about fluid milk bottling<br />
and the manufacture and packaging<br />
of other dairy products.<br />
Glenn Lake, MMPA president,<br />
described the association<br />
and its purposes while Jack<br />
Barnes, MMPA general manager,<br />
told of the organization's<br />
role in price bargaining.<br />
The tour participants attended<br />
a banquet Wednesday night<br />
at the Fort Shelby Hotel in<br />
Detroit and then saw ihe Detroit-Boston<br />
baseball gams.<br />
During the Thursday session,<br />
the 4-H members divided into<br />
groups to discuss and formulate<br />
answers to problems faced by<br />
dairy cooperatives.<br />
CASS CITY CHRONICLE-THURSDAY, JULY <strong>16</strong>, I970<br />
MISS KATIE BRAYTON, right operations<br />
supervisor, explains the workings of the<br />
Michigan Milk producers Association's<br />
computer center to, from left, DickDeLong<br />
of Cass City and Jim Koch of Millingtort<br />
during annual 4-H milk marketing tour at<br />
MMPA headquarters in Detroit.<br />
Former resident dies in Indiana<br />
A former Cass City resident,<br />
Mrs. Barbara Ruth Maddox of<br />
New Castle, Ihd., died June 8<br />
after a six-year illness.<br />
Formerly Barbara Knuckles,<br />
she was born Nov. 18, 1923, in<br />
Alexandria, Ind. She moved to<br />
Cass City in 1937 with her parents,<br />
Mr. and Mrs. John B.<br />
Knuckles, and graduated from<br />
Cass City High School in 1946.<br />
She was married to Lester J.<br />
Maddox in June, 1946.<br />
Survivors include her parents;<br />
her husband; a daughter<br />
Linda, a son John W., and a sister,<br />
Mrs. Jeanette Horn.<br />
Burial was in Alexandria, Ihd.<br />
Remodeling Wins in Two-Way<br />
Stretch for Space, Savings<br />
Today's expense may be<br />
tomorrow's bargain — when<br />
it's money spent for home<br />
improvement.<br />
Adding a room, or converting<br />
the basement or attic, increases<br />
property value as well<br />
as living comfort. And it's<br />
still more economical when<br />
the homeowner undertakes<br />
some of the work on a do-ityourself<br />
basis.<br />
Walls, ceiling and floor are<br />
all points to be considered, in<br />
the two-way stretch to make<br />
both money and space go<br />
further. Paneling Walls<br />
Wall paneling is an example<br />
of the type of remodeling<br />
the average do-it-yourselfer<br />
can handle.<br />
ADMIRAL<br />
Hardboard panels are durable,<br />
yet lightweight enough<br />
to be handled by one man.<br />
They can be cut or worked<br />
with ordinary carpentry<br />
tools,, and are easily installed<br />
over furring strips, or in some<br />
cases, right over the existing<br />
wall.<br />
Ready-made accessories<br />
such as matching moldings<br />
and waterproof, cartridge -<br />
type adhesive for nailless application<br />
simplify the job and<br />
give professional looking results.<br />
Prefinished hardboard<br />
panels need no priming,<br />
painting or staining. They<br />
come in woodgrains, decorator<br />
colors, marble surfaces,<br />
SALE$329.95<br />
15 Cu. Ft.<br />
REG. $369.95<br />
<strong>16</strong> Cu. Ft.<br />
REG. $419.95<br />
ADMIRAL<br />
CHEST FREEZERS<br />
15 Cu. Ft. REG. $249.95<br />
95<br />
RANGES<br />
No. FE 3002<br />
SALE $379.95<br />
UPRIGHT<br />
FREEZERS<br />
15 Cu. Ft. REG. $269.95<br />
$229 95<br />
-ANTENNA INSTALLATIONS-<br />
WINEGARD AND CHANNEL MASTER<br />
Choice<br />
of Colors<br />
1 Phone 872-2930 SALES & SERVICE Cass City<br />
filigrees and a variety of textures<br />
and colors.<br />
About Ceilings<br />
Acoustical ceiling systems<br />
are available from several<br />
manufacturers, with the dual<br />
advantages of decorative<br />
looks and sound control. Ease<br />
of installation adds a third<br />
benefit.<br />
The suspended ceiling with<br />
acoustical properties might<br />
be of special interest to the<br />
do-it-yourselfer, since such<br />
ceilings make it easy to cover<br />
up overhead plumbing, wiring<br />
and ductwork.<br />
Accent on good looks could<br />
be provided by still another<br />
modern building product —<br />
polyurethane reproductions<br />
, of wood beams and wall posts.<br />
Lightweight yet sturdy,<br />
easy to cut to size and glue<br />
into place, such beams and<br />
posts provide a quick way to<br />
luxury and elegance in home<br />
remodeling.<br />
For the Floor<br />
Vinyl asbestos floor tile can<br />
be applied directly to concrete,<br />
and new designs and<br />
patterns in striking colors<br />
are now available.<br />
Upkeep is minimal — an<br />
important consideration in a<br />
basement family room.<br />
For best results, holes and<br />
cracks should be filled in before<br />
applying the tile, cautions<br />
the Better Floors Council.<br />
Subfloor must be absolutely<br />
smooth, whether<br />
standard tiles or new selfstick<br />
types are used.<br />
Or Carpet It<br />
Practical, even in a basement<br />
workshop, are new indoor-outdoor<br />
carpets. They<br />
are especially adaptable to<br />
cement floorings since they're<br />
backed with high density<br />
foam rubber, which can be<br />
put down directly over cement.<br />
Indoor-outdoor carpets are<br />
made of durable, synthetic<br />
fibers and come in a variety<br />
of prints, flocks, tweed and<br />
colors.<br />
They can even be used as<br />
wallcoverings — practical as<br />
well as decorative. The carpets<br />
act as an acoustical<br />
installation and muffle the<br />
sound of laundry equipment<br />
or power tools.<br />
HUNTSVILLE<br />
PARK<br />
Now open<br />
with choice lots<br />
available.<br />
New<br />
MARLETTE<br />
HOMES<br />
for sale<br />
PHONE 872-3144<br />
^^~»^^^*~~»<br />
Hire Debbie Ortner<br />
for summer 4-H<br />
BY BERNARD JARDOT<br />
We would like to report to<br />
the people of Tuscola County<br />
that the Cooperative Extension<br />
Office has hired a new 4-H Summer<br />
Assistant to work with<br />
Bernard Jardot, Extension 4-H<br />
Youth Agent.<br />
She is Miss Debbie Ortner,<br />
a former 4-H member of the<br />
Busy Beavers 4-H Club of Unionville.<br />
Miss Ortner is a junior<br />
at Michigan State University and<br />
will work with the Extension<br />
office this summer.<br />
If 4-H clubs are in need of<br />
her help this summer, please<br />
feel free to call upon her for<br />
help at the 4-H office in the<br />
Civil Defense Center, Caro.<br />
She is especially interested in<br />
visiting some of our 4-H clubs.<br />
There is joy in the tree house nestled<br />
high in the boughs . . . for the boys<br />
climbing up to piay in it ... for the<br />
adults remembering the golden afternoons<br />
of their own childhood.<br />
If You Were DISABLED.<br />
Where would your next pay check<br />
come from??<br />
AETNA'S DISABILITY POLICIES OFFER: ;<br />
1. Guaranteed Renewable ;<br />
2. Non-Cancellable<br />
3. Premium refunds at age 65 I<br />
CONTACT: ><br />
HARRIS-HAMPSHIRE INS. AGENCY<br />
Phone* 872-2688 Cass City<br />
Advertise It In The Chronicle.<br />
Sometimes grownups say wistfully,<br />
"I wish I were that age again." But do<br />
they really wish it? Being a child is wonderful,<br />
but maturing can be a painful<br />
process.<br />
Help your children enjoy the precious<br />
childhopd hours — never forgetting that<br />
they must grow up. Remember you have<br />
a never-ending source of.guidance. The<br />
church will help your children preserve<br />
the spirit of youth and give them the<br />
wisdom, courage and faith that will<br />
sustain them through the rest of their<br />
lives.<br />
& Sunday Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Safurday *j£<br />
i* Ephesians James Matthew Matthew Luke Matthew Matthew *%•<br />
ijij 5:2? to 6:9 2:1-17 5:1-12 6:1-8 6:37-42 13:1-9,18-23 13:31-35,44-52^<br />
^.-Scriptures selected by the American Bible Society Copyright <strong>1970</strong> Krister Advcrti.iian Service, Inc., Stra., Vofjv<br />
*
KINGSTON'S<br />
AT KINGSTON<br />
ATHLETIC<br />
ADMISSION:<br />
ADULTS<br />
CHILD.. 500<br />
CASS CITY CHRONICLE-THURSDAY, JULY <strong>16</strong>, <strong>1970</strong><br />
'REALLY BIG"<br />
SPONSORED<br />
KINGSTON<br />
SATURDAY, JULY 18<br />
STARTS at 1:00 p. m<br />
CASS CITY, MICHIGAN<br />
ACTION CRAMMED<br />
PROGRAM<br />
NANCY HARTER, Judge ROBERT PETER, Chairman<br />
1. Pony at Halter, 46" & Under<br />
2. Pony at Halter 47" & Under 56"<br />
3. Mare & Foal at Halter<br />
4. Western Halter 1 year<br />
5. Western Halter 2 years<br />
6. Western Halter 3 years & over<br />
7. Fitting & Showing<br />
8. Pony Under Saddle 47" & under<br />
9. Pony Under Saddle 47" & over<br />
10. Western Pleasure 14 years & under<br />
11. Western Pleasure 15 years & over<br />
12. Jr. Western Horsemanship 15 & under<br />
13. Sr. Western Horsemanship <strong>16</strong> & over<br />
14. Bare Back Horsemanship open<br />
15. Tire Race 14 & under<br />
<strong>16</strong>. Jr. Speed & Action <strong>16</strong> & under<br />
17. Sr. Speed & Action 17 & over<br />
18. Musical Chairs <strong>16</strong> & under<br />
19. Musical Chairs 17 & over<br />
20.<br />
21.<br />
22.<br />
23.<br />
24.<br />
25.<br />
26.<br />
27.<br />
INTERMISSION<br />
Grand Entry - AH Riders 7:30 p. rn.<br />
NATIONAL ANTHEM<br />
Jr. Barrel Bending, 15 yrs. & under<br />
Sr. Barrel Bending, <strong>16</strong> yrs. & over<br />
Boots & Saddle Scramble, <strong>16</strong> & under<br />
Jr. Flag Race, 15 & under<br />
Sr. Flag Race, <strong>16</strong> & over<br />
Cloverleaf-open<br />
Pickup Race- open<br />
Amateur Jumping -open<br />
REFRESHMENTS<br />
Sponsored in behalf of Kingston's Program By These Progressive Merchants. . . .<br />
GAMBLES<br />
CassCity<br />
RICHARDSON<br />
SADDLERY<br />
2673 N. Vassar Road, Fairgrove<br />
Phone 693-60<strong>07</strong><br />
KINGSTON LUMBER<br />
& BUILDING<br />
SUPPLY, INC.<br />
TRANSIT MIX CONCRETE<br />
Phone 517-683-2280<br />
ZORN'S FOOD<br />
MARKET. INC.<br />
Phone 683-2320<br />
PARKER<br />
FURN. and APPL.<br />
Kingston and North Branch<br />
INSURANCE AGENCY<br />
Main Street<br />
Phone 683-2494<br />
MORIARTY POLE<br />
BUILDERS, INC.<br />
One mile west of Kingston on M-46<br />
Phone 683-2300<br />
STATE BANK<br />
Kingston, Clifford, Snover<br />
RESTAURANT<br />
Phone 683-2640<br />
Ribbons<br />
Ribbons<br />
Ribbons<br />
Ribbons<br />
Ribbons<br />
Ribbons<br />
Ribbons<br />
Ribbons<br />
Ribbons<br />
Ribbons<br />
Ribbons<br />
Ribbons<br />
Ribbons<br />
Ribbons<br />
Ribbons<br />
Ribbons<br />
Ribbons<br />
Ribbons<br />
Ribbons<br />
Trophy & 6 Ribbons<br />
Trophy &6 Ribbons<br />
Trophy & 6 Ribbons<br />
Trophy & 6 Ribbons<br />
Trophy & 6 Ribbons<br />
Trophy & 6 Ribbons<br />
2 Trophy & 12 Ribbons<br />
Trophy & 6 Ribbons<br />
$2.00<br />
$2.00<br />
$2.00<br />
$2.00<br />
$2.00<br />
$2.00<br />
$2.00<br />
$2.00<br />
$2.00<br />
$2.00<br />
$2.00<br />
$2.00<br />
$2,00<br />
$2.00<br />
Free<br />
$2.00<br />
$2.00<br />
$2.00<br />
$2.00<br />
$2.00<br />
$2.00<br />
$2.00<br />
$2.00<br />
$2.00<br />
$2.00<br />
$2.00<br />
$2.00<br />
THE DAY IN KINGSTON!<br />
HARMON<br />
FUNERAL HOME<br />
Phone 683-2210<br />
BARRON'S ANTIQUES<br />
FLEA MARKET<br />
Sunday, July 19.<br />
10to6atWilmotHall<br />
i •<br />
KINGSWOOD INN<br />
Dancing Saturday Night<br />
Beer and Wine to go<br />
One mile west of Kingston on M-46<br />
Air Conditioned
CASS CITY, MICHIGAN CASS CITY CHRONICLE-THURSDAY, JULY <strong>16</strong>, I970 PAGE FIV£<br />
|^$fi$£Mfe&3yte&$tei^^<br />
BAKERY<br />
BUTTERMILK PUFFS<br />
3M jj DOZ. | •<br />
FRIED<br />
CAKES<br />
GLAZED<br />
DONUTS<br />
25% OFF<br />
25% OFF<br />
DOZ,<br />
DOZ.<br />
SUMMERS BAKERY<br />
2nd GENERATION OF QUALITY<br />
PHONE 872-3577<br />
The Want Ads Are Newsy Too!<br />
BOND STAMPS<br />
Deford Area News<br />
Mrs. Walter Thompson and<br />
Miss Georgia Thompson ware<br />
Sunday, evening guests at the<br />
home of Mr. and Mrs. Walter<br />
Schlutcher of Decker.<br />
Mrs. Jack Kappa a and daughters,<br />
Deena, Miirjorie, Moaica<br />
and Kuren and Mrs, Mildred<br />
Kappen attended a bridal shower<br />
Sunday afternoon at St.<br />
Joseph Hall in Argyle in honor<br />
of M:.ss Ross Hacker.<br />
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Swindell<br />
of Dearborn came Monday to<br />
visit her sister, Mrs. Mildred<br />
Kappen for a few days.<br />
Mrs. Vina Webster, Mrs.<br />
Winnie Cork and Donald Cross<br />
'were Sunday afternoon visitors<br />
o f Mrs. Bertha ChalwJck<br />
Miss Molli Butler of Cass<br />
City, Mr. and Mrs. Ron Voss<br />
and Ronnie and Mr. and Mrs.<br />
Colbert Woodward, Teri and<br />
Brian went Friday, July 3, to<br />
Mrs, Voss's grandmother'seabin<br />
near Fairvtew. Sunday they<br />
attended the motorcycle races<br />
near Mio, in which Mr. Woodward<br />
was a participaTi 1 :. Mr.<br />
and Mrs. Woodward and children<br />
returned home Sunday, July<br />
5. The Voss family and Miss<br />
Butler span': one day on Mackinac<br />
Island and one day ai<br />
Hartwick Pines and returned<br />
home last Friday evening.<br />
Mr. and Mrs. Lee Wilson<br />
wore Thursday evening visitors<br />
of Mr. and Mrs, Etssl Wilcox<br />
and M.?s. Shaver, Mr. and Mrs.<br />
Dar old Terbush and Shelly spent<br />
Sunday with her parents and<br />
grandmother. Mrs. Shaver<br />
spent Saturday evening with Miand<br />
Mrs. Cecil Shaver o* M:iyville.<br />
Mr, and Mrs. Harold Field<br />
and ::ami]y attended the Horst<br />
family reunion Sunday, held at<br />
the Caro Fa'rgrounds. Relatives<br />
were there from Berkley,<br />
Flint, Grand Rapids, Bay<br />
City, Deckerville, Akron, Silverwood,<br />
Caro and Deford.<br />
WITH EVERY PURCHASE<br />
& BEDDING<br />
THUMB APPLIANCE CENTER<br />
PHONE 872-3505<br />
Russell Peck of Flint spent<br />
three days last week with his<br />
daughters, Mr. and Mrs. David<br />
Moody and Mr and Mrs, Harold<br />
Field. Mr. and Mrs. Moody,<br />
who are preparing to move to<br />
this community, returned to<br />
their' home in Grand Rapids Sunday<br />
evening after attending the<br />
Horst reunion at Caro.<br />
Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Brauer<br />
and family and Charles Brauer<br />
of Oxford an 3 Mr. and Mrs,<br />
Edw?;*d Brauor spmt the week<br />
end at Grand Maraif and<br />
Monocle Lake near Brimley.<br />
Mr. and Mr 3. EdSieradzki Jr.<br />
and family of Rochester spent<br />
the ivsak end with his brothsr}<br />
Mr. and Mrs.ChesierSieradzki<br />
and family. Saturday evening<br />
Mr. and Mrs. Joe DybiJas of<br />
Holbrook, Mr and Mrs. Joe<br />
Sweeney, Mr. and Mrs. Jos<br />
VanErp of Ub?.y, Mv. and Mrs.<br />
Ed Sieradiss; and Mr and Mrs.<br />
Chaster Sieradzki celebrated<br />
the fifteoni'h wwdding anniversaries<br />
of the two laHer couples<br />
at Sherwood Forest Country<br />
Club at Gagetow.u,<br />
Mr. and Mtis. Ralph Zinneeker<br />
re?ur:i*>d homo v rid;iy from<br />
a w«ek spent with her grandfather,<br />
Alec Leonard o* Oak<br />
Hill, Ohio and visiting Cedar<br />
Point, Sandusky, Ohio,<br />
The quilting club from the<br />
Novesta Church of Christ ware<br />
dinner guests Thursday of Mrs.<br />
Vernita Stilson at Caseville;<br />
p-'esea 1 . were Mrs. Fred Joos,<br />
Helen Little, Florence Powell,<br />
Mrs. Floyd Brown and Mrs.<br />
Lyle Zapfe of Cass City and<br />
Amanda Me Arthur, Hazel Zinnecker<br />
and Sophie Dodge of<br />
Deford.<br />
Mr. and Mrs. William Zemke<br />
and four children and Mr. and<br />
Mrs. Fred Kilbourn left Wednesday<br />
afternoon and visited<br />
Tahquamenon Falls in the Upper<br />
Peninsula and rei-urued loms<br />
Friday evening.<br />
Week end guasis at the<br />
William Zemk-> hom-a w";-.-e her<br />
CASS CITY<br />
Mrs. Frank Little<br />
Phone 872-3583<br />
mother, Mrs. Lucille Hartwick<br />
and aer graadeir.ldren, Sharri<br />
and Russell Craun,<br />
Mrs. Effie Warner and Miss<br />
Harriet Warner left Sunday<br />
morning, June 28 to visit Mrs.<br />
Warner's brother, Howard Cuer<br />
at Coffeyville, Kansas, and returned<br />
home last Thursday.<br />
Mr. and Mrs. ClaytonSawdon<br />
and family spent last week at<br />
Grand Maraif on Lake Superior<br />
on a camping and fishing trip.<br />
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Little<br />
and family visited Cedar Point<br />
at Sandusky, Ohio last week.<br />
They also visited the African<br />
Safari and Sleepy Hollow at<br />
Port Clinton, Ohio, stopping<br />
at the Metropolitan Airport<br />
and the Detroit Zoo en route<br />
home.<br />
Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Phillips<br />
were Sunday dinner guests of<br />
their daughter, Mr. and Mrs.<br />
Hallie Holmes of Caro.<br />
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Kosto<br />
of Fair grove were Sunday afternoon<br />
and evening visitors of<br />
their daughter, Mr. and Mrs.<br />
James Gyomory and Brian.<br />
Mr. and Mrs. John Laszlo<br />
and daughter, Mr. and Mrs.<br />
Walter Zajac and daughter and<br />
Mr. and Mrs. James Gyomory<br />
and son gathered at the home<br />
of Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Gyomory<br />
Sunday for a barbecue dinner.<br />
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Englehart<br />
and family left July 2<br />
to visit her relatives in Witchita<br />
Falls, Texas and in Alton,<br />
Illinois returning home<br />
Sunday.<br />
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Vandemark<br />
visited her sister, Mr. and<br />
Mrs. Oscar Genereaux of Lake<br />
Pleasant Sunday afternoon.<br />
Mr. and Mrs. William Denby<br />
and son of Port Huron were<br />
Sunday guests of her parents,<br />
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Englehart.<br />
Mr. Denby returned home<br />
that evening while Mrs. Denby<br />
and son will spend this week<br />
here.<br />
Mr. and Mrs. Bun Collins entertained<br />
Sunday, July 5 at a<br />
barbecue dinner. Guests included<br />
their daughter, Mr. and Mrs.<br />
Kenneth Packett and family of<br />
Falls City, Nebraska; his brother,<br />
Mr. and Mrs. Payton Collins<br />
and nephew; Mr. and Mrs.<br />
Charles Pruitt of Pontiac; a<br />
nephew, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Collins<br />
and family of Flint and<br />
their son, and Mr. and Mrs.<br />
Tom Collins of Cass City. The<br />
Packett family are visiting her<br />
parents and other relatives for a<br />
few weeks.<br />
Franklin Holcomb was released<br />
to his home from Hills<br />
and Dales Hospital Friday.<br />
Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Holcomb<br />
called on Mr. and Mrs.<br />
Bun Collins last Tuesday evening,<br />
and Sunday afternoon they<br />
were callers at the homes of<br />
Mrs. Amanda Me Arthur and Mr.<br />
and Mrs. Clark Zinnecker. Mr.<br />
and Mrs. Collins were visitors<br />
Saturday evening at the Holcomb<br />
home.<br />
Mr. and Mrs. Eldon Field<br />
attended the Field reunion Saturday<br />
at Poplar Hill Park, Ontario,<br />
Canada. Mr. and Mrs.<br />
Robert Pratley of Battle Creek<br />
were Sunday guests at the<br />
Field home.<br />
Mr. and Mrs. Danny Allen,<br />
Sue and David and Guy Whittaker<br />
are spending this week fishing<br />
at Wawa, Canada on Lake Superior.<br />
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Van-<br />
Allen and family attended the<br />
Campbell reunion July 4 at the<br />
home of her sister, Mr. and<br />
Mrs. Bill Langenfelter of Flint.<br />
It was also a surprise 40th<br />
wedding anniversary party for<br />
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Campbell;<br />
they were presented with a<br />
money tree. Mrs. VanAljen and<br />
children remained until Wednesday<br />
with her sister.<br />
Mrs. Pearl Blagburn and<br />
Norman Darge of Detroit came<br />
Friday to spend two weeks with<br />
her sister, Mrs. Nellie Mathews.<br />
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Mathews,<br />
Carol, Sue and Tonia<br />
Marie of Highland spent the<br />
week end with his mother, Mrs.<br />
Nellie Mathews. Sunday a<br />
barbecue dinner was given at<br />
the home of Ralph Sous a of<br />
Kingston to celebrate the birthdays<br />
of Kenneth Mathews and<br />
Norman Darge.<br />
Mrs. Margaret Renilong and<br />
Mrs. Madeline Miller of Detroit<br />
visited Mrs. John Koepf<br />
last week from Tuesday until<br />
Thursday afternoon; Mrs. Bea<br />
Little and granddaughter called<br />
on Mrs. Koepf Friday evening.<br />
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Smeik<br />
ezski and family of Alpenawere<br />
Saturday guests of Mr. and Mrs.<br />
John Kapala. Mr. and Mrs. Huerh<br />
Sefton of Oxford, Mrs. Lillian<br />
Osborn and Mr. and Mrs. Walter<br />
Stuart of Sandusky were Sunday<br />
afternoon visitors at the Kapala<br />
home.<br />
Mfi and Mrs^ Duane Thompson<br />
and family of Mar lette visit-,<br />
ed her mother, Mrs. Lillie<br />
Bruce, Sunday afternoon.<br />
Mr. and Mrs. David Allen and<br />
Jeffrey of Caro were dinner<br />
guests Sunday of his parents,<br />
Mr. and Mrs. Burton Allen.<br />
John, son of Mr. and Mrs.<br />
Glen Churchill Jr., was a patient<br />
at Caro Community Hospital<br />
from Tuesday until Thursday.<br />
Barbara Churchill spent<br />
Wednesday at Caseville with<br />
her uncle and aunt, Mr. and<br />
Mrs. Clarence Churchill and<br />
family of Cass City.<br />
Mr. and Mrs. Clem Schott<br />
and Tina of Lima, Ohio;were<br />
Sunday evening visitors of her<br />
sister, Mr. and Mrs. Douglas<br />
VanAllen and family.<br />
Mr. and Mrs. Burton Allen,<br />
Mrs. Shelby Ennis of Birch<br />
Run and Mr. and Mrs. Dorsev<br />
Ennis of Elizabethtown, Ky.,<br />
visited the Ford Museum at<br />
Dearborn Wednesday.<br />
Billie and Shari VanAllen<br />
spent Thursday with their<br />
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.<br />
Ernest Campbell of Ubly;<br />
Debbie VanAllen was a guest<br />
Friday and Saturday of Janie<br />
Hartwick of Cass City.<br />
Mrs. Bernard Babich and<br />
children and Mrs. Allan Hartwick<br />
and children are spending<br />
this week at Crescent Beach<br />
near Caseville.<br />
Mr. and Mrs. Andy Tall man<br />
of Caro were last Monday evening<br />
visitors at the home of<br />
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Babich.<br />
Mr. and Mrs, Gene Babich of<br />
Caro were Sunday dinner guests<br />
of his parents, Mr. and Mrs.<br />
Lewis Babich.<br />
Floyd Russell of New York<br />
City was a supper guest<br />
Monday evening of his niece,<br />
Mr. and Mrs. James Connolly<br />
and family. Mrs. Connolly's<br />
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Fred<br />
Pratt of Bad Axe? were Sunday'<br />
evening visitors.<br />
Mrs. James Connolly and<br />
Mrs. Glen Churchill Jr. attended<br />
a bridal shower Friday evening<br />
at Columbia Corners Hall<br />
in honor of Marie Sanborn of<br />
Caro who will marry Joe Pfaff<br />
of Caro August 1.<br />
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Hoppe<br />
and children of Mt. Morris were<br />
Sunday visitors at the home of<br />
his brother, Mr. and Mrs. Norman<br />
Hoppe and sons. They visited<br />
his mother, Mrs. Emma<br />
Hoppe, who is a patient at Tuscola<br />
County Medical Care Facility.<br />
Mrs. Vina Webster visited<br />
Mr. and Mrs. Clare Root of<br />
Caro Friday. Mr. and Mrs.<br />
Frank Nelson (Lois Root) are<br />
visiting her father, and other<br />
relatives in northern Michigan.<br />
Mrs. Nellie Martin and Mrs.<br />
Dora (Pierce) Way of Caro and<br />
Mrs. Vina Webster visited Mrs.<br />
Amanda McArthur Wednesday<br />
afternoon.<br />
Mr. and Mrs. Everett Field<br />
and Jill, and Mr. and Mrs. Gene<br />
Kramer and children of Essexville<br />
were overnight guests Saturday<br />
of Mr. and Mrs. Alvin<br />
Mozden of Lapeer. Sunday Mr.<br />
and Mrs. Field and Mr. and<br />
Mrs. Kramer attended the<br />
double-header at Tiger Stadium<br />
where Baltimore was the visiting<br />
team.<br />
Enhance Floor<br />
with Carpet Tiles<br />
Carpet tiles might be the<br />
bright idea for the new floor<br />
treatment on the re-decorating<br />
list.<br />
If so, here are a few tips<br />
which will go a long way toward<br />
making a carpet tile<br />
floor an easy yet professional-looking<br />
do-it-yourself job<br />
in every respect.<br />
First, draw a diagram of<br />
the room on graph paper,<br />
laying out the proposed pattern<br />
either straight-line or<br />
diagonally. This will serve as<br />
a guide to the number of tiles<br />
required in each color or pattern.<br />
Preparing the floor is the<br />
next step. Eliminate loose or<br />
creaky floorboards by nailing<br />
them down with spiralgrooved<br />
flooring nails. Then,<br />
thoroughly clean the floor.<br />
Remove any wax build-up,<br />
and make certain that the<br />
surface is completely dry before<br />
beginning the installation.<br />
Now, stack the carpet tiles<br />
face down within easy reach<br />
of work area. Making individual<br />
stacks for each color in<br />
the pattern will also save<br />
time and reduce the chance<br />
of making an error in the<br />
pattern.<br />
One of the newest methods<br />
of making a permanent or<br />
semi-permanent installation<br />
is to use an aerosol adhesive,<br />
such as 3M Company's Spra-<br />
Ment Multi-Purpose adhesive.<br />
Easy-to-use "glue in a can"<br />
is simply sprayed on the<br />
edges of the carpet tile and<br />
then sprayed diagonally.<br />
Position each carpet tile<br />
so that corner and edges<br />
meet firmly but don't buckle.<br />
Should a tile need to be realigned,<br />
the adhesive will al-<br />
CMU hosts local<br />
incoming: freshmen<br />
Four area young people were<br />
among 3,000 prospective freshmen<br />
attending orientation activities<br />
at Central Michigan University<br />
during the month of July.<br />
They are: Betty Ballagh and<br />
Sally Geiger both of Cass City,<br />
Donald Trzemzalski and Fred<br />
F. Peters of Kingston and<br />
LouAnn Parker of Gagetown.<br />
In addition to registering for<br />
fall classes, the new students<br />
become acquainted with the<br />
campus and met many of their<br />
future classmates and instructors.<br />
For most, it was also<br />
their first experience with dormitory<br />
living.<br />
low it to be picked up. If,<br />
however, adhesive has been<br />
allowed to dry more than five<br />
or six minutes, it will be more<br />
difficult.<br />
As each tile is set in place,<br />
press down firmly, applying<br />
pressure over the entire area.<br />
There x is no need to use anything<br />
other than the hands<br />
for pressure.<br />
Behind the Counter<br />
Diabetes<br />
More than 1.5 million people<br />
in the U.S. — most of them<br />
women — have diabetes and<br />
don't know it. And there are<br />
about 2.5 million known diabetics<br />
in this country, with a<br />
disease for which there is no<br />
known cure, but which can be<br />
controlled to some extent.<br />
An analysis of U.S. Public<br />
Health service records, suggests<br />
that the type of person<br />
most likely to be diabetic is an<br />
elderly woman with a weight<br />
problem. Nearly six out of 10<br />
known diabetics are women,<br />
and on the average, they have<br />
more severe cases than men.<br />
Diabetes becomes more common<br />
with age, with a peak in<br />
the 65-to-74 age group. In most<br />
cases, diabetes isn't diagnosed<br />
until a person is 45 years or<br />
older.<br />
There's a definite relationship<br />
between diabetes and obesity.<br />
One recent screening<br />
showed diabetes occurring seven<br />
times more often among<br />
overweight people, than among<br />
normals.<br />
The most frequently reported<br />
symptoms of diabetes are<br />
extreme fatigue, leg pain and<br />
eye trouble. Other symptoms<br />
are sudden weakness, frequent<br />
urination, thirst, loss of weight<br />
and abnormal appetite.<br />
Diabetes can be detected with<br />
a relatively simple, quick and<br />
painless test. If caught early,<br />
the disease can be controlled<br />
with drugs and diet, preventing<br />
further complications.<br />
I WOOD<br />
MLDRUG<br />
TOM PROCTOR - R. Ph.<br />
PHONE 872-2<strong>07</strong>5<br />
CASS CITY, MICHIGAN<br />
Sidewalk pans<br />
STORE-WIDE BARGAINS<br />
THERMOS 1 qt. f .<br />
VACUUM BOTTLE $ 1 A A<br />
HIGH INTENSITY<br />
REG. $2.19<br />
1st TIME ADVERTISED<br />
i ONE-HAND £6<br />
REG. $2.< ,t«7%7 t^^B HH ^iH<br />
BANNER<br />
SAVE HALF<br />
made to sturdy construction<br />
standards<br />
with reinforced ties<br />
Ekco One-Hand Beater<br />
with double spinning<br />
action mixes in cup,<br />
glass, bowl. Stiffens egg<br />
whites in 30 seconds,<br />
scrambles eggs, whips<br />
dessert toppings. Safe'<br />
I 'RFATER ?» "^^ ^Tef,oa 8 J<br />
I 4 ULffl I LII LIMIT 1 |<br />
BPS PAINT<br />
504 Qt.<br />
$2.00 Gal.<br />
SUPER KEMTONE<br />
Discontinued Colors<br />
72 Off<br />
ALBEE HARDWARE & FURNITURE<br />
YOUR TRUSTWORTHY STORE<br />
6439 MAIN ST., CASS CITY * PHONE 872-2270
'PAGE SIX<br />
I<br />
!i<br />
I!<br />
!l<br />
II<br />
I!<br />
1!<br />
0<br />
WOMEN'S SUMMER<br />
DRESSES ARE ON DISPLAY<br />
INSIDE KRITZMAN'S STORE<br />
REG. PRICE SALE PRICE<br />
$17.95 up __$12.99<br />
$14.95 to $<strong>16</strong>.91 -10.99<br />
$13.95 8.99<br />
$11.95 to $12.95—7.99<br />
$9.95 to $10.95 6.99<br />
$7.95 to $8.95_ _ 5.99<br />
$6.98 4.99<br />
$4.98 to $5.98 3.99<br />
$3.98 2.99<br />
SHOP KRITZMAN'S SIDEWALK SALE<br />
FOR OTHER ITEMS-FRIDAY, 17 - SATURDAY, 18<br />
RLS'SHOE<br />
-ONE GROUP-<br />
BROKEN SIZES AND<br />
WIDTHS- PICK UP NOW<br />
FOR BACK TO SCHOOL<br />
WOMEN'S<br />
VALUES<br />
TO $5.98<br />
MMER SPORTSWEAR<br />
• SKIRTS « SHORTS<br />
• 2-PIECE SETS<br />
^<br />
WOMEN'S<br />
SUMMER<br />
SHOE SALE<br />
CLOSEOUT OF DISCONTINUED STYLES-BROKEN SIZES AND WIDTHS<br />
GREAT FOR BACK TO SCHOOL<br />
V E T O<br />
CASS CITY CHRONICLE-THURSDAY. JULY <strong>16</strong>, I970<br />
JULY 17-18<br />
WOMEN'S SUMMER<br />
HEELS-FLATS-SANDALS<br />
* CHILDREN'S<br />
• MEN'S<br />
S® WOMEN'S<br />
wimsuits<br />
GIRLS'<br />
SUMMER<br />
SPORTSWEAR<br />
, Shorts<br />
• Tops • Sets<br />
MEN'S AND BOYS'<br />
BERMUDA<br />
SPORT SHIRTS<br />
SHORT SLEEVES<br />
HURRY WHILE SELECTION<br />
IS BEST-GREAT FOR BACK<br />
TO SCHOOL<br />
MICHIGAN '•'<br />
BANKAMERidARa<br />
MM.tO 123 M5b 78T<br />
OOOOIBBO^IZ 71 8AC<br />
MEN'S and YOUTHS<br />
PANT<br />
SALE<br />
PLAIDS AND PLAINS - BROKEN<br />
SIZES AND STYLES. WAIST SIZES 29 to 36<br />
SALE JmJJ<br />
BANK AMEBICABD<br />
WELCOME AT<br />
KRITZMANS<br />
Cass City<br />
VALUES<br />
TO<br />
$6.98<br />
CASS CITY, MICHIGAN<br />
Greenleaf News<br />
Mrs. Ida Gordon Phone 872-2923<br />
Wally Hempton arrived •
'<br />
^C **************************<br />
-si s- 5 *<br />
S|ISS5'°ol*<br />
J<br />
' s 7<br />
S uJI<br />
-1^1<br />
5Q<br />
g •> >> at<br />
® O 33 rt *<<br />
O - T3 a
FRYERS<br />
WHOLE<br />
or<br />
HALVES 1 West Virginia<br />
Semi-Boneless Half Ham<br />
MICH.<br />
POTATOES<br />
FRESH<br />
10 Ibs.<br />
Cucumbers 2/251<br />
Peppers 2/25*<br />
Calif. Hd.<br />
MICHIGAN BRAND<br />
LettUCe Head<br />
Salad<br />
4 59*<br />
TABLfRITE<br />
ICE CREAM<br />
Gallon<br />
Ctn.<br />
BORDEN'S<br />
Ice Milk Bars<br />
12-ct.<br />
Pkg.<br />
-if' /rlRONlCLE-THUFSDAY, JULY <strong>16</strong>, I970<br />
FAMILY FOOD BUDGET<br />
TABLERITE BEEF<br />
n * WEST VIRGINIA<br />
1-lb, 8-oz.<br />
**********<br />
3 Ibs. of Ball Park Franks<br />
2 Ibs. of Ball Park Bologna<br />
^ 1 Ib. of West Virginia Bacon 3 Ib. West Virginia Canned Ham +<br />
*************************<br />
Ib.<br />
FAME SLICED<br />
LUNCHEON MEAT<br />
ASSORTED'<br />
Ib.<br />
WEST VIRGINIA 'WHOLE'<br />
Semi-Boneless Hams ">•<br />
Sliced Bacon<br />
WEST VIRGINIA<br />
Boneless Hams . .'. ">-$].29<br />
BALLPARK<br />
Franks • ">• o9v<br />
BALL PARK<br />
Bologna - .. •<br />
ib,<br />
" TOME'S GREAT AMERICAN PICNIC KIT<br />
SWEEPSTAKES ENTRY BLANK<br />
IS.<br />
A drawing will be held in this store for a prize picnic basket filled<br />
with Hygrade products. The picnic basket will contain (1) Vz W. Va.<br />
Brand Semi Boneless Ham (2) a 1-lb. package of W. Va. Sliced<br />
Bacon (3) a 3-lb. W. Va. Brand Canned Ham (4) 3-lbs. of Ball Park<br />
Franks and (5) 2-lbs. of Ball Park Brand Bologna. Fill out this entry<br />
blank and deposit it in coupon box. A drawing will be held at a later<br />
date. You need not be present to win.<br />
NAME<br />
ADDRESS<br />
CITY<br />
STATE<br />
OUR SIDEWALK SALE ITEMS<br />
Your Choice f<br />
FAME 1 FLAVORS<br />
CANNED POP<br />
FAME<br />
TASTY LIVER-BEEF<br />
net 12-oz, Can<br />
CAT or DOG FOOD<br />
FAME -mm**<br />
Vegetarian BEANS<br />
FAME<br />
ruifii; jLivbis ii*vA,hi«<br />
STRAWBERRIES net<br />
1 WEEK TO GO ON COOKWARE 'ONLY AT IOA*<br />
NORDIC<br />
Heaviest guage cookware with china-like<br />
Permo-Porcelain exteriors<br />
Cooking surfaces of triple layer scratchproof.<br />
hard base Shield Coat Teflon If, durable enough to<br />
use with metal spatulas or spoons It's our finest<br />
cook and serveware and comes in beautiful<br />
blended contemporary colors of Avocado Green<br />
and flame Red<br />
HEATPROOF • FAOEPROOF • STAIN RESISTANT<br />
25 COUPONS<br />
AND THE SET IS<br />
99<br />
PURCHASE CLUB<br />
COUPONS FOR ONLY<br />
LAUNDRY DETERGENT<br />
wt.<br />
JO-oz.<br />
Pkg.<br />
^«ito"«£<br />
CASS<br />
net 7-oz8 Pkg<br />
net 15Y2~oz, Can<br />
net<br />
net 15V2-oz.<br />
Can<br />
Can<br />
1-lb, Can<br />
Can<br />
FAME net<br />
Sunfan lotion v.° 99*<br />
BIRDS EYE<br />
coot<br />
couPors<br />
FREE FREE<br />
with this coupon<br />
ONE REGULAR SIZE ' „/..„, ^7£<br />
m, ^^ 1 0* m I ' Replar Retal1 Value &' ^<br />
EL ^IC 1 Ci iml * LIMIT ONE COUPON PER UNIT PURCHASED<br />
This coupon redeemable only AT CASS CITY IGA<br />
PEPSODENT<br />
CASS CITY, MICHIGAN<br />
OPEN PIT<br />
Bor-B-Que Sowe. _}£!'.... 39 1<br />
REGULAR or KOSHER<br />
IGA Dill Pickles<br />
FAME - 6 VARIETIES<br />
*<br />
Vegetables ..... :±. c r. ...... 3/49$<br />
FAME Gallon MtU<br />
Cider Vinegar .......... *; ......... 69f<br />
TABLE TREAT<br />
Tomatoes<br />
PREAM<br />
Coffee Creamer<br />
REYNOLDS HEAVY DUTY<br />
SUNSHINE<br />
Shredded Wheat<br />
1-lb. Can<br />
1-lb. 4-oz.<br />
Jar<br />
18" x 25-ft.<br />
Roll<br />
KEEBLER - 6 VARIETIES<br />
„„, ,0-o2.<br />
Snack Crackers ....... .'£ .......<br />
net<br />
Town House Crackers..<br />
STOKEIY<br />
CATSUP<br />
TOMAN)'<br />
l-Pint 4-oz.<br />
Btl.<br />
7 FRUIT FIAVORS<br />
HI-C DRINKS<br />
• CRUSHED<br />
1-Quarl 14-oz.<br />
Can<br />
net 6V2-B.<br />
Can<br />
FAME<br />
• SLICED 1-lb, 4-OZ.<br />
• TIDBITS Can<br />
BLUE RIBBON<br />
FACIA! TISSUE<br />
• WHITE<br />
• ASSORTED 200-Ct.<br />
COLORS PkgS.<br />
IGA KING SIZE<br />
OVEN FRESH<br />
Nuffy Donufs<br />
« REGULAR<br />
4<br />
12-ct.<br />
Pkg.<br />
SPRAY NET<br />
39*<br />
HAIR SPRAY<br />
• HARD-TO-HOLD<br />
net 13-oz,<br />
Can<br />
9 $ 1 ^ FOR | 9<br />
CLOSE UP<br />
Toothbrush ASSORTED 2/59< Toothpaste<br />
^f 3YW •$-' i * < ~'??<br />
ljV\ GOLD BOHD STAMPS<br />
iHV. \ iA/;th With Purrhase Purchase<br />
FARMER PEETS<br />
RING BOLOGNA<br />
Void after Sat.', July 18<br />
GOLD BOND STAMPS<br />
With Purchase,<br />
1 pt. 11 oz.<br />
AERO-WAX<br />
Void after Sat,, July 18<br />
net 6.2 oz.<br />
Tube<br />
69C<br />
f-OLB BOMD STAMPS<br />
With Purchase Any<br />
SHELL NO-PEST STRIP<br />
Void after Sat., July 18<br />
GOLD BOND STAMPS<br />
With Purchase<br />
1 qt. 14 oz.<br />
VLASIC KOSHER DILLS<br />
Void after Sat., July 18
VOLUME 64, NUMBER 13 CASS CITY , MICHIGAN THURSDAY, JULY <strong>16</strong>, I970 SECTION C SIX PAGES<br />
Cooking—that's what brings<br />
a bachelor to his knees<br />
BY MIKE WALSH<br />
After a month of living alone<br />
I now know why men marry,<br />
why they are willing to sacrifice<br />
independence and comfort<br />
for the time-worn tradition of<br />
matrimony, A need for compan-<br />
THE CASS<br />
Jim Gross<br />
ionship? Hardly. A bachelor is<br />
able to have a variety of com»<br />
panions. A desire for the quiet<br />
life? Nonsense, a bachelor's<br />
solitude, self imposed, is<br />
obviously superior to the subdued<br />
existence of marriage.<br />
These and similar reasons are<br />
mere rationalizations devised<br />
by the female of our species<br />
to convince herself that she is<br />
needed and that man cannot<br />
exist without her.<br />
And she is, needed and right,<br />
If for nothing else but to insure<br />
a man's self-preservation.<br />
Let's look at just one bachelorhood<br />
dilemma.<br />
COOKING: Not every man<br />
hates to cook, but how many TV<br />
dinners can he tolerate? Recently<br />
I decided to enhance my<br />
regular cookin'-bag meal with a<br />
cake, I had no desire to purchase<br />
one of those ready made<br />
sponge cakes that taste as if<br />
they were made from real sponges.<br />
No, I'd do it myself. Meaning<br />
a cake mix. All the ingredients<br />
were in the bowl, all I<br />
had to do was mix it up. Since<br />
I had no electric beater the<br />
package instructions said I'd<br />
have to do it myself--300<br />
strokes. It began OK5 but the<br />
third time the batter hit the<br />
wall something had to be done.<br />
So 1 put the top on the Tupperware<br />
bowl and shook it. There,<br />
that should mix it up, I felt<br />
so inventive. The w^omenreaders<br />
will of course know the outcome<br />
of my efforts. But I<br />
thought beating the batter was<br />
to mix the ingredients not to<br />
get air into them. Needless to<br />
say my triple layer devil's<br />
food looked like the offspring<br />
of a mating of a pancake and a<br />
brownie.<br />
• Cooking itself is bad enough,<br />
but washing the pots, pans<br />
and dishes is reason enough<br />
to make any man opt for marriage,<br />
to completely escape the<br />
perils of the culinary torture<br />
chamber.<br />
Paper cups and plates solve<br />
part of the problem but Ihaven't<br />
yet found disposable pans. If<br />
the Green Giant could cook his<br />
vegetables in a plastic pouch,<br />
why couldn't I. Another innovation,<br />
men. Dump a can of those<br />
tender, golden kernels of corn<br />
into a baggie, secure the top<br />
with one of those wire dofoickjes<br />
and drop it into a pan<br />
of boiling water, Voila! The<br />
result: Tender golden, kernels<br />
of steaming corn topped with<br />
succulent melted baggie-sauce,<br />
Great,<br />
OK ladies, you win and "I<br />
do."<br />
FARMER PEETS - Old Fashioned - Fully Cooked<br />
Over 15 years ago we introduced<br />
the loose housing dairy<br />
building, 10 years ago new designs<br />
in poultry laying houses*<br />
and 3 years ago the cold free<br />
stall dairy housing. Now we are<br />
nearly ready to present to the<br />
hog farrower and feeder a new 1<br />
type of advanced design hog<br />
housing.<br />
This new swine housing is just<br />
being completed at Michigan<br />
State University and it is be-<br />
. lieved to be basically the ultimate<br />
long-time best system<br />
around. In brief these are<br />
the details of the building and<br />
system.<br />
The frame building is 32 feet<br />
wide and about 102 feet long<br />
and will house 200 to 300 hogs<br />
depending on their size.<br />
The house can be shortened<br />
or lengthened by six foot increments<br />
because the single<br />
pens are 6 feet wide. The length<br />
of each pen extending from the<br />
center' aisle to the outside wall<br />
is fourteen feet.<br />
The buildings are of two designs<br />
for air ventilation. They<br />
are either totally closed and,<br />
windowless. or closed with adjustable<br />
side openings. Both<br />
have reversible fans capable<br />
of one complete change of air<br />
in every one to two hours.<br />
These buildings have 3 and<br />
6 inches of blanket insulation<br />
in the walls and ceilings, respectively,<br />
and a supplemental<br />
thermostat controlled heating<br />
system. Both have air pressure<br />
controlled air intake strip ducts<br />
running along the edge and top<br />
line of the side wall-ceiling<br />
juncture.<br />
The manure handling system,'<br />
a real important must in hog<br />
farrowing and finishing, is com-.,<br />
posed of slatted concrete or<br />
aluminum floors and aerator.<br />
Slatted floors either .partial or<br />
total in each pen area plus a<br />
manure pit is now acknowleged<br />
to be the best type not only for<br />
manure handling but also hog<br />
sanitation disease control.<br />
Either of the two ventilation or<br />
air exchange systems v/ill give<br />
equal effectiveness.<br />
Now we come to the newest<br />
and perhaps the best innovation<br />
yet developed for odor elimin-<br />
ONELESS HAM<br />
TENDER .... JUST RIGHT FOR THE GRILL<br />
CHUCK STEAK<br />
FRESH . . . . GROUND FROM FRESH BEEF ONLY<br />
GROUND BEEF _<br />
Koege; s<br />
GROSS<br />
FREE PARKING IN PE.-M? 'HARRIS<br />
NKS<br />
LBS.<br />
LB.<br />
LB,<br />
AROUND THE FARM<br />
ation and manure decomposition.<br />
This is the aerator. This<br />
five horsepower motor driven<br />
paddle wheel moves the liquid<br />
manure to incorporate greater<br />
amounts of oxygen to the liquid<br />
manure. This greater supply of<br />
oxygen causes air living bacteria<br />
to be present in larger<br />
numbers in the liquid manure<br />
thus accelerating the rate of its<br />
decomposition. This increased<br />
decomposition rate causes less<br />
odor buildup too.<br />
So in a nutshell this is a real<br />
change for the best in hog housing,<br />
manure handling, environmental<br />
control and hog sanitation.<br />
The swine and agricultural<br />
engineering specialists from<br />
MSU feel there will be very<br />
little changes to be made from<br />
this basic design for many years<br />
to come.<br />
to Thumb EOC for<br />
emergency aid<br />
The Thumb Area Economic<br />
Opportunity Commission announces<br />
the receipt of a $29,-<br />
997.00 Federal grant for an<br />
Emergency Food and Medical<br />
Program. The program is funded<br />
for a fifteen (15) month<br />
period beginning July 1, <strong>1970</strong>.<br />
The purpose of this program<br />
is to provide emergency assistance<br />
to people suffering from<br />
malnutrition and starvation. As<br />
indicated by the Michigan Economic<br />
Opportunity Office, the<br />
project will complement efforts<br />
of other state and local agencies.<br />
It will also provide additional<br />
resources to serve<br />
migrant farm workers and local<br />
families who are seasonally<br />
employed.<br />
The program will assist those<br />
eligible people having an emergency<br />
need for food, when other<br />
agencies are not readily available<br />
to provide for them. It<br />
will also attempt to seek out<br />
and identify those people who<br />
< are living on an inadequate<br />
diet and insure that the children,<br />
especially of those families,<br />
receive adequate food.<br />
The aged whose income is<br />
too low to maintain an adequate<br />
diet are also to be identified<br />
and given assistance.<br />
FRESH DRESSED . . . . FRYER<br />
RYAN'S<br />
j MEN'SWEAR<br />
**e<br />
\ KNIT PULLOVERS<br />
Whole or Shank Half<br />
ROCK CHICKENS<br />
CENTER CUT<br />
PORK STEAK<br />
SHORT SLEEVE SHIRTS<br />
Lot- Lot-<br />
SUITS-BERMUDAS<br />
LB.<br />
% OFF<br />
3 LBS. UP<br />
Park In Rear - USE OUR NEW REAR CUSTOMER ENTRANCE<br />
MEAT MARKET<br />
SERVING CASS CITY FOR OVER 74 YEARS<br />
Y LOT -ALSO AT BACK DOOR<br />
LB.<br />
BOX<br />
• © • «<br />
AND<br />
MORE<br />
Paul Q'Harris<br />
FRESH POTATO SALAD MEATS FOR FREEZERS FRESH DRESSED CHICKENS<br />
HOME K'lADE SAUSAGE BULK CORNED BEEF<br />
GROCERIES - TURKEYS HOME DRESSED MICHIGAN BEEF AND PORK
"PAGE TWO<br />
, Barstow, California:<br />
; This city of 12,000 is situated<br />
in southern California al-<br />
*most in the exact center of<br />
I the Mojave Desert.<br />
< My own prime memory of<br />
•"parstow is getting caught in<br />
Ija sandstorm during a night<br />
^crossing of the desert and ar-<br />
; giving with all the paint gone<br />
'|rom one side of the car and<br />
*;|he windshield so badly pitted<br />
*it needed replacement.<br />
'/jr But the main thing about Bar-<br />
*'stow is that it gets hot there.<br />
'. - "This is the hottest place in<br />
' -the world during July and Aug-<br />
• just," one oldtimer said. "I don't<br />
'-care if you go to the Sahara<br />
' or the Libyan desert or whatlever<br />
they claim for southern<br />
^Arizona. This is it. One of my<br />
•chief pleasures in life is watching<br />
the tourists step from their<br />
; air conditioned cars, and wilt."<br />
Temperatures during the<br />
summer months range from an<br />
average 100 degrees to 120<br />
degrees, and while it's a dry<br />
desert heat, it's a hot heat,<br />
to coin a phrase. Nobody more<br />
enjoys telling stories about how<br />
hot it gets than the natives.<br />
A barber: "I've seen glasses<br />
of water boil away before I<br />
could get them to my lips.<br />
I've gotten blisters on my feet<br />
just thinking about going for<br />
a walk. I've known my hair<br />
to move by itself to cover up<br />
the part so my scalp wouldn't<br />
burn."<br />
ONE FOR THE ROAD<br />
Barstow: catch<br />
By Dan Marlowe<br />
BPW<br />
RUMMAGE<br />
SALE<br />
IULY <strong>16</strong>-17-18<br />
STARTING 9:00 B. m.<br />
AT FORMER<br />
JEW'S FRUIT MKT.<br />
Sponsored By<br />
WOMEN<br />
Exaggeration? Surely, but it<br />
must be admitted that the hardy<br />
citizens of Barsto^-have something<br />
to exaggerate.<br />
A filling station owner: "I've<br />
actually seen lizards on the edge<br />
of town carrying sticks in their<br />
mouths. They run along on the<br />
hot sand, get winded, set down<br />
the stick and climb on it. The<br />
sand's too hot for them."<br />
A beauty shop operator: u l<br />
recall a day so hot that when<br />
I dropped my glasses on the<br />
sidewalk and bent over to pick<br />
them up all there was left<br />
was a lump of plastic bubbling<br />
on the concrete. And I got a<br />
third degree burn on the backs<br />
of my legs where my skirt<br />
raised when I bent over."<br />
A bartender: "One day I saw<br />
a 300-pound friend of mine<br />
across the street and called<br />
him over. He took three steps<br />
on that hot asphalt and sank<br />
out of sight. We never did find<br />
him. Owed me a dollar, too."<br />
A sheriff's deputy: "I had<br />
two live rabbits ready for the<br />
pot this day but they got away<br />
from me and ran out the door.<br />
Fell into a bucket of water<br />
and stewed themselves. Easiest<br />
meal I ever fixed."<br />
A former resident of Alaska:<br />
"Up there we had to do our<br />
fishing through the ice. Around<br />
here, we catch them already<br />
fried."<br />
Hyperbole, thy name<br />
Barstow,, California.<br />
is<br />
WATCH FOR<br />
Sponsored in The Community Interest By<br />
Michigan Mirror<br />
CASS CITY CHRONICLE-THuhSDAY, JULY <strong>16</strong>, <strong>1970</strong><br />
Dem "name" candidates<br />
in bid for high court posts<br />
"WILLIAMS RUNS AGAIN"<br />
The man whose name was<br />
once synonymous with the Democratic<br />
Party in Michigan, G.<br />
Mennen "Soapy" Williams, is<br />
making another try for public<br />
office this year.<br />
Williams, who won six consecutive<br />
terms as governor between<br />
1948 and 1960, is running<br />
for one of the two<br />
nominations which the Democratic<br />
Party has for the Michigan<br />
Supreme Court this year.<br />
The Democrats, who are<br />
scrambling around trying to fill<br />
several other spots on their<br />
ticket, actually have an overabundance<br />
of candidates for the<br />
high court. In addition to Williams,<br />
those contending for the<br />
nomination include former Gov.<br />
John B. Swainson, now a Wayne<br />
county circuit judge, and former<br />
Lt. Gov. T. John Lesinski,<br />
now chief judge of the State<br />
Court of Appeals.<br />
While the veterans of Democratic<br />
Party politics view Williams<br />
as something of a patron<br />
saint, he is handicapped by the<br />
fact many of the younger party<br />
people who have come in since<br />
1960 don't hold him in the<br />
same awe.<br />
En fact, when Williams attended<br />
a Democratic fund raiser<br />
in Lansing earlier this year,<br />
ANNUAL<br />
AAUW<br />
BOOK SALE<br />
JULY <strong>16</strong>-17-18<br />
DURING SIDEWALK DAYS<br />
JARTS OUTDOOR<br />
LAWN<br />
GAME<br />
PERMALUBE<br />
MOTOR<br />
OIL<br />
BANKAMERICARD<br />
20 and 30<br />
WEIGHT<br />
10-W<br />
30<br />
THURSDAY<br />
FRIDAY-SATURDAY<br />
AT<br />
CULTURAL CENTER<br />
Cass City<br />
QT.<br />
a secretary handing out name<br />
tags was heard asking him,<br />
"And what is your name?"<br />
To combat this, Williams has<br />
mounted a fullscale, well<br />
financed campaign to secure ,<br />
the nomination. He recently<br />
hired Howard Lancour, the man<br />
squeezed out of the job of press<br />
secretary to* Detroit Mayor<br />
Roman Gribbs, to handle press<br />
relations for the campaign.<br />
One rnark against Williams is<br />
the fact that he lost the last<br />
statewide race he ran by losing<br />
to Robert Griffin in the U. S.<br />
Senate race in 1966.<br />
But that is also true of Swainson,<br />
who lost to former Gov.<br />
George Romney the first time<br />
Romney ran for governor in<br />
1962. Lesinski, on the other<br />
hand, won two terms as lieutenant<br />
governor, the first under<br />
Swainson and the second under<br />
Romney, before moving to the<br />
court of appeals.<br />
The crucial moment for Williams<br />
and the other two men<br />
will come at the Democratic<br />
State convention Aug. 22-23 in<br />
Grand Rapids.<br />
It will be then the party<br />
decides whether to follow its<br />
former undisputed leader into<br />
battle one more time or whether<br />
to pick two relatively newer<br />
faces to lead it.<br />
******<br />
"TAXES UP EVERYWHERE."<br />
Michiganders who are chagrined<br />
over the tax increases<br />
voted by the legislature this<br />
year shouldn't feel alone. The<br />
same thing happened all over<br />
the country as lawmakers<br />
searched for ways to finance<br />
programs without offending taxpayers<br />
,any more than was<br />
absolutely necessary in an<br />
election year.<br />
Five other states have raised<br />
their cigarette taxes. West Virginia<br />
took the biggest jump,<br />
going from 7
CASS CITY, MICHIGAN CASS CITY CHRONICLE-THURSDAY, JULY <strong>16</strong>, I970 PAGE THREE<br />
Cass City<br />
SjDE WALK SALE<br />
OFF ENTIRE STOCK<br />
MANY SPECIALS UP TO<br />
OFF<br />
r Cass City Chronicle Classifieds<br />
Bring Fast Results-Phone 872-2010<br />
Uncle Tyre<br />
t/ *<br />
Dear Mister Editor:<br />
Clem Webster reported to the<br />
fellers at the country store Saturday<br />
night where he had sajy<br />
by the paper about this suicidl<br />
by a young feller jest out of<br />
college. Clem said the feller<br />
left a note saying he was kill?<br />
ing hisself fer "no reason at<br />
all," and Clem allowed that<br />
note has a lot to say about<br />
the way things is in this<br />
country.<br />
Follering up on the discussion<br />
about not being able to decide<br />
things, Clem said he was of the<br />
mind that too many choices is<br />
making folks do things fer no<br />
jeason at all. Farthermore,<br />
went "on Clem, young folks is<br />
caught between choices that<br />
seems to be equal bad.<br />
Fer instant, said Clem, they<br />
is the first generation that ever<br />
growed up knowing the world<br />
could be blowed up and everbody<br />
wiped out in 30 minutes.<br />
Being young and allus seeing<br />
their lives in front of em instead<br />
of behind, these young<br />
folks have a hard time deciding<br />
if they want to plan a<br />
life or do nothing. They have<br />
trouble figgering out a reason<br />
to do anything, Clem said.<br />
Bug Hookum was agreed with<br />
Clem that young folks ain't<br />
having aeasy time making sense<br />
out of life, but that problem<br />
has been around since way afore<br />
Hector was a pup. Bug said he<br />
got sick reading where Guvernment<br />
officials, preachers and<br />
all kind of people in high places<br />
was speaking to college graduates<br />
this spring. Bug said the<br />
speakers was congratulating the<br />
younguns fer not rioting, fer<br />
not burning down the school and<br />
fer not throwing rocks at policemen.<br />
%% ..^pmiiii^i^ ^4<br />
Now.. .year's lowest prices.<br />
We're taking in more trades<br />
because of our new car<br />
clearance sale. So our used<br />
car choice is great...and<br />
the prices are right!<br />
Shop the No.<br />
low-price dealer.<br />
Your Ford Dealer<br />
It is a sad day, allowed Bug,<br />
when people git high praise fer<br />
not breaking the law. If you<br />
think about that some, it really<br />
means the natural thing to<br />
do is riot and bust ever law on<br />
the books. It ain't no wonder<br />
young folks have trouble figgering<br />
out which way to head<br />
out in life, Bug said.<br />
Clem butted in to say he has<br />
saw where this woman had<br />
wrote to the editor of her daily<br />
paper to complain about all the<br />
news of crimes, stock market<br />
troubles and wars. She was special<br />
upset about the Sunday paper<br />
that was the biggest of the<br />
week. She wrote that it upset<br />
her day of rest to read nothing<br />
•but bad news on Sunday, and<br />
she suggested that the editor<br />
set aside ever Sunday as "good<br />
news" day.<br />
Practical speaking, said<br />
Clem, the pore woman ain't<br />
got a case. They ain't that<br />
much good news, but Clem said<br />
we had ought to be thankful<br />
that crime still is news instead<br />
of jest a routine part of everbody's<br />
life.<br />
Personal, Mister Editor, I<br />
didn't learn much from the session<br />
Saturday night. I still figger<br />
killing yoreself fer no reason<br />
is as good a reason as any,<br />
but they is a lot of good reasons<br />
not to. Yours truly,<br />
Uncle Tim<br />
A life is more precious than<br />
the time you'll save speeding.<br />
MONKEY WRENCH<br />
An executive is a man whointerferes<br />
with a smooth-running<br />
machine just to make<br />
others think he is necessary.<br />
KEEPING A WATCHFUL eye out for the swimmers in one<br />
of the various swimming classes at Cass City Recreational<br />
Park pool is Karen Kerbyson, right, swimming instructor,<br />
and her assistant, Karen Martin. The classes are Red<br />
Cross approved and the teachers work with students in all<br />
stages of swimming proficiency. Gail Hoffman said one<br />
of her most satisfying projects was teaching a fearful<br />
swimmer not to be afraid to put her head under water<br />
after two weeks of classes. She is the pool's other swimming<br />
instructor.<br />
INTENTLY LISTENING for instructions in a Red Cross<br />
course are, from left: Stuart Venema, Glen MacCallum,<br />
Carrie Carpenter, Duane Smith, Noreen MacCallum, Maryki<br />
Venema and Susan Kappen.<br />
THERE ARE TWO SWIMMERS WORKING on this exercise<br />
although only one is visible. The "phantom" on the right is<br />
Dennis Meredith. Plainly visible is Mike Newman.<br />
ORDER OF PUBLICATION<br />
State of Michigan, Probate<br />
Court for the County of Tuscola.<br />
Estate of Hattie D. Turner,<br />
deceased.<br />
File #20543<br />
It is Ordered that on July<br />
30, <strong>1970</strong>, at 9 a.m., in the<br />
Probate Courtroom in the<br />
Village of Caro, Michigan > a<br />
hearing be held on the petition<br />
of Garfield L. Turner, administrator<br />
for allowance of his<br />
final account.<br />
Publication and service shall<br />
be made as provided by Statute<br />
and Court Rule.<br />
Dated: June 24, <strong>1970</strong>.<br />
C. Bates Wills, Judge of Probate.<br />
;<br />
A true copy. •<br />
Beatrice P. Berry ffi Cgss Cjty<br />
Register of Probate .-.v'.;-';<br />
Go modern<br />
with the jet-age heating fuel<br />
... Gulf Solar Heat<br />
Every drop of Gulf Solar Heat*<br />
is scrubbed clean with hydrogen<br />
by an extra refining process<br />
called Gulfining. It burns<br />
cleaner and hotter, yet costs<br />
no more. CaH us today.<br />
heating oil<br />
CASS CITY OIL & GAS<br />
Phone 872-2065
.PAGE FOUR CASS CITY CHRONICLF-THbRSDAY, JULY <strong>16</strong>, <strong>1970</strong> CASS CITY, MICHIGAN<br />
AT ONE TIME THE Schneeberger building site was occupied by this building which<br />
served the Cole Implement Company for over half a century. It was torn down<br />
after World War H when the H. CX Paul Company built a large new building to sell<br />
implements.<br />
Tour to feature new varieties of malting barley<br />
The annual Thumb Malting<br />
Barley Tour is scheduled for<br />
Huron and Tuscola counties<br />
Thursday, July <strong>16</strong>. Growers and<br />
others interested in malting<br />
barley will see fields of both<br />
the new two-row Coho variety<br />
and the standard Larker variety.<br />
In addition, a twilight<br />
meeting is scheduled for the<br />
same day at the Michigan State<br />
University oat and barley plots<br />
on the E. C. Korthals farm near<br />
Reese.<br />
The tour starts at 11:00 a.m.<br />
at the Andy Draschil farm in<br />
Huron county where a field of<br />
Larker barley will be viewed.<br />
The Draschil farm may be<br />
reached by going 5 miles east<br />
of Sebewaing, 1 mile south and<br />
BAD AXE GENERAL HOSPITAL authorities voted to transfer<br />
$10,426.09, the remaining assets, of the closed facility to the<br />
new Huron Memorial Hospital. The presentation was made<br />
by Mrs. Joseph Palm, former Bad Axe General Hospital<br />
administrator, to Murry j. Hagen, president of the Huron<br />
Memorial Hospital.<br />
Mrs. Palm is the mother of Richard Palm, former Hills<br />
and Dales Hospital administrator.<br />
INTRODUCING OUR<br />
KIDDIE COLOR<br />
SPECIAL<br />
DARLA-<br />
Daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A. McKee<br />
10 A.M. TO NOON & 1 P.M. TO 5:00 P.<br />
1 - 5X7 COLOR PRINT<br />
Your Choice From<br />
3 Poses<br />
No Appointments • Only 1 Special Per Child<br />
• Special Re-order Prices<br />
*Age Limit--3 MONS. THRU to YEARS *No Groups<br />
BRIGGS STUDIO<br />
MAIN ST.<br />
CASS CITY<br />
3/4 mile east on Rescue Road.<br />
The afternoon stops will feature<br />
four stops in Tuscola<br />
County. The first location is at<br />
the Keith Goslin farm where a<br />
field of two-row Coho barley<br />
will be seen. The tour will reach<br />
the Goslin farm at 1:30 p.m.<br />
which is located 3 miles west<br />
of Gagetown at 3351 Bay City-<br />
Forestville Road.<br />
At 2:15 p.m. the tour stops<br />
at the Don Keinath farm where<br />
Larker barley will be seen.<br />
The farm is 5 1/2 miles north<br />
of the Caro standpipe and 1 1/4<br />
miles east on the Akron Road.<br />
Robert Aldrich farm will be<br />
IN AN UNUSUAL arrangement, a new front has been added to the existing building<br />
built by H. O. Paul? adding about 1?200 feet of floor space to bring the total floor<br />
area to 9,000 feet. The front, of course, also provides excellent display space for<br />
pedestrian traffic.<br />
the third stop in the county at<br />
3:30 p.m. The Larker variety<br />
will be seen on Bradleyville<br />
Road. 3 1/2 miles east and 1/2<br />
mile south of Reese.<br />
The last stop is at the E. C.<br />
Korthals,farm at 4:00 p.m. The<br />
farm is located 3 1/2 miles<br />
east and 1 1/4 miles south of<br />
Reese on Bradleyville Road.<br />
The twilight meeting at the<br />
Michigan State University oat<br />
and barley plots on the E. C.<br />
Korthals farm is scheduled for<br />
7:00 p.m. New strains of sixrow<br />
barleys, and high yielding,<br />
high test weight oats will be<br />
seen at the plots.<br />
ASC feed payments<br />
About 60 per cent of the<br />
<strong>1970</strong> farm program payments<br />
earned by producers in Tuscola<br />
County have been made, according<br />
to Mike Singer, Chairman<br />
of the Tuscola County Agricultural<br />
Stabilization and Conservation<br />
(ASC) Committee.<br />
"Thanks to the fine cooperation<br />
of participating farmers,<br />
we are well on the way to completing<br />
payments in the Feed<br />
Grain and Wheat programs. The<br />
U. S. Department of Agriculture<br />
this year made a commitment<br />
to make farm payments<br />
earlier than ever beforeand<br />
we are keeping that commitment,"<br />
he said.<br />
The ASC Committee Chairman<br />
said that in previous years<br />
partial payments had been made<br />
in advance to Feed Grain participants.<br />
Budget restraints this<br />
year made it impossible to make<br />
any farm payments before July<br />
1, the beginning of the Government's<br />
fiscal year.<br />
"As soon as that date arrived,<br />
however, farm program<br />
payments began. We expect to<br />
complete them within the next<br />
two weeks here in Tuscola<br />
County, which will be the earliest<br />
date we have ever completed<br />
farm program payments," Mr.<br />
Singer added.<br />
He commented that producers<br />
participating in the farm programs<br />
have earned payments by<br />
helping stabilize markets and by<br />
giving up the use of productive<br />
cropland that would otherwise<br />
have been put into cash crops<br />
or other income-producing<br />
uses. Instead, they maintain<br />
the land in conserving uses<br />
which help prevent soil erosion<br />
and air and water pollution.<br />
The farm programs in which<br />
they participate help achieve a<br />
balance between commodity<br />
supply and demand. They also<br />
help producers work together<br />
to curb excess production and<br />
strengthen markets.<br />
Mr. Singer said, "Success of<br />
the early payment plan has<br />
hinged on close cooperation by<br />
farmers, and results have been<br />
gratifying. Virtually all Tuscola<br />
2 county men<br />
win trophies at<br />
Holstein show<br />
The District Black and White<br />
Show was held last Wednesday<br />
in St. Clair County which featured<br />
180 head of the best Holstein<br />
cattle of the Thumb area.<br />
The annual activity attracts cattle<br />
from six counties and is<br />
recognized as one of the better<br />
District Shows in the state.<br />
Two exhibitors from Tuscola<br />
county showed fifteen head of<br />
cattle and each exhibitor carried<br />
a beautiful trophy home.<br />
The Kingstreet Farm of Vassar<br />
showed the first place junior<br />
calf with over 20 in the class.<br />
The farm owned by Harold Blaylock<br />
and Marvin Rupprecht<br />
was presented a trophy. Ronald<br />
Opperman of Vassar exhibited<br />
the first placed mature cow bred<br />
by the exhibitor and received<br />
a trophy.<br />
The Want Ads<br />
Are Newsy Too!<br />
County participants accurately<br />
certified their compliance with<br />
farm program requirements as<br />
soon as they could."<br />
"Spot checks made by ASC<br />
personnel on individual farms<br />
throughout the county have revealed<br />
a very low degree of<br />
error in reporting of planted<br />
and diverted acres and conserving-use<br />
acres by producers<br />
in the Feed Grain and Wheat<br />
Programs."<br />
Congratulations<br />
and Best Wishes<br />
TO<br />
SCHNEEBERGER<br />
TV-APPLJANCE-FURNITURE<br />
IT WAS OUR PRIVILEGE AND PLEASURE TO BUILD<br />
THE NEW FRONTAL ADDITION TO THEIR STORE.<br />
WILLIAM C. O'DELL<br />
CONTRACTOR<br />
to<br />
SCHNEEBERGER<br />
TV - APPLIANCE - FURNITURE<br />
Cass City<br />
furnish building materials for this valued<br />
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HEAVY DIM<br />
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EXTERIOR FINISH<br />
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PAGE FIVE<br />
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AuE SIX :ON1^ <strong>1970</strong><br />
Fresh Whole or Half<br />
PORK LOINS<br />
ERLA'S HOMEMADE<br />
SUMMER SAUSAGE<br />
CHUBS<br />
79<<br />
m& ^^^v mr~«<br />
ERLA'S HOMEMADE<br />
BRAUNSCHWEIGER<br />
tender Aged Beef Blade Cuts<br />
3 oz.<br />
Pkgs.<br />
ALL FLAVORS<br />
AMERICAN LEADER Sliced-Tidbit-Crushed<br />
PINEAPPLE<br />
Ib.<br />
ERLA'S PRODUCE<br />
U.S. No. 1 NEW<br />
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FRESH HOME-GROWN<br />
SWEET CORN<br />
RED, RIPE, JUICY<br />
• •§ ^^ • w • 4HF — — — -— ; — —. ——•—•—-<br />
NEW<br />
CABBAGE<br />
>oiy Smoked<br />
Sliced Mixed Cut<br />
ORK CHOPS<br />
Erla's Homemade Bulk<br />
PORK SAUSAG<br />
2 or49«lb.<br />
Erla's Mild Sensation<br />
SKINLESS FRANKS<br />
Erla's Homemade Fresh<br />
LIVER RINGS<br />
2 Us J or<br />
59< Ib.<br />
Fresh Sliced Young<br />
STEER<br />
LIVER<br />
Fresh Ground<br />
HAMBURGER<br />
Tender Aged Beef<br />
CHUCK<br />
STEAKS<br />
69t<br />
Ib.<br />
QUANTITY<br />
RIGHTS<br />
RESERVED<br />
FRESH<br />
PORK<br />
HOCKS<br />
39t<br />
*m 0<br />
YOU CLIP THE SAVINGS<br />
SALADA INSTANT<br />
TEA 2 oz<br />
Jar<br />
Golden oen Age ge Elbow ow tf%rf%<br />
C<br />
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Food Cente<br />
CASS CITY<br />
OPEN MONDAY__THURSDAY<br />
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SATURDAY<br />
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BEER<br />
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Erla's Homemade Sliced<br />
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CORN 3 Mb.<br />
Cans<br />
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c<br />
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> _