Clare County Review June 17, 2016

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Clare County Review June 17, 2016
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The Clare County Review
Volume 69, No. 6
Friday, June 17, 2016
Established 1947
Mid Michigan’s Most Widely Circulated Weekly Newspaper • Serving all of Clare County • 989-386-4414 • On Line at www.clarecountyreview.com
Two firefighters injured
in Lake apartment fire
By Pat Maurer
Correspondent
Three fire departments
fought a blaze for nearly
nine hours last Saturday
that erupted in a fourapartment complex at
Circle Court off Lake Station Avenue just south of
Maple Grove Road.
No residents were
injured in the fire, but two
firefighters were injured
and sent to MidMichigan
Medical Center Clare, Garfield Township Fire Chief
Kevin Tubbs reported.
“One had heat exhaustion,
he was taken to Clare by
Mobile Medical Response
Ambulance Service. The
other firefighter strained
his back and drove himself
to the hospital.”
One of the apartment
tenants called in the fire
around 3:30 p.m.
Tubbs said the apartment complex was a total
loss. “Windy conditions
and high temperatures
made fighting the fire difficult for us,” he said. “It
was around 90 degrees.”
Three other departments, Lincoln Township,
Nottawa-Sherman and
Evart were on the scene to
assist the Garfield firefighters, Tubbs said.
“The Red Cross also
have stepped in to assist
the tenants,” he added,
“and the Garfield Township Auxiliary provided
us with food and refreshments.”
BOC tells County
no more hiring
By Rosemary Horvath
Correspondent
Clare County imposed
an immediate hiring
ban Wednesday notifying all departments not to
hire full-time, part-time or
temporary employees until
further notice.
County Administrator Tracy Byard emailed
the edict to department
heads before the county
commission meeting
ended Wednesday.
The decision wasn’t
easily made. Commissioner Karen Lipovsky’s
original motion seconded
by Commissioner Samantha Pitchford only
listed full-time employees.
Commissioners Jim Gelios
and Don David voted no
because they wanted more.
Commissioner David
then moved with second
by Commissioner Leonard
Strouse to freeze part-time
employees as well. The
motion was amended to
include temporary employees as recommended by
Commissioner Pitchford.
Chairman Jack Kleinhardt and Commissioner
Lipovsky voted no.
Both motions contained
a provision that a department that wanted to hire or
replace an employee must
come before the board for
approval.
Freezing payroll is
viewed as the first step
in serious budget cutting.
Treasurer Jenny BeemerFritzinger submitted a
chart indicating a budget
deficit of nearly a half million at the end of this fiscal
year. The Municipal Employees Retirement System,
or MERS, the program
that handles the county’s
retirement benefit program, notified the county
its fund is only 71 percent
funded. In other words, the
fund is around $6.6 million
underfunded.
Revenue that has
bolstered the sheriff’s department and jail budgets
may be in store for a major
setback next year because
the Department of Corrections is pulling out state
inmates from county jails.
Clare County has relied on
that jail bed revenue for
years.
Commissioner Dale
Majewski noted that
pensions nationwide are
underfunded because the
rate of return on investments has been so low.
He read where pensions
are unfunded by trillions
nationwide.
Commissioner David
pointed out that unfunded pension liability
is a formula based on the
presumption all employees
will retire at the same time.
“That’s not going to happen.” He went on to suggest padding the pension
fund more to send a sign
to MERS that more money
was being put aside. It’d
show the county was making an honest effort.
Chairman Kleinhardt
doubted if that would be
enough. MERS has already
singled out eight Michigan
counties that will receive
letters from the State Treasury. State government
“can come in and order
cuts,” he said, adding that
the “county’s obligation
was growing faster that the
attempt.”
Some counties are passing bond issues to replace
MERS. Administrator
Byard noted however, a
county has to be 100 percent funded before it can
exit the program.
The county’s hiring
freeze surfaces at the
same time commissioners
are dealing with personnel
matters.
Longtime equalization director Kim Halis
who has sought multiple
raises unsuccessfully
has resigned and is now
employed as the equalization director for Gladwin
County. The change came
about in the last week.
If Clare County were
to contract services with
another county, that person
would have to be credentialed at Level 4.
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Two of the tenants at the
complex had a personal
stake in fighting the fire.
Garfield Township firefighters Tommy Hawley
and Myranda Pitman lost
almost everything in their
apartment in the fire.
Hawley and Pitman,
who were working in
Grand Traverse County
when the call came in,
rushed back to help fight
the fire.
Hawley told 9 & 10
news, “I’ve been in a few
A four-unit Circle Court apartment complex in Lake was destroyed by a fire last Saturday.
fires but nothing will ever
prepare you for being in
your own, looking through
your own stuff and deciding in a split second what’s
important to you; what do
you need.”
The apartment complex, owned by Gerry and
Delores Mertens, is one of
four they built to augment
their retirement. Now they
are helping the tenants find
places to stay and working
with their insurance company to recoup the loss.
They told 9 & 10 news
they are hoping to rebuild.
The cause of the fire,
how, and where it started
is still under investigation,
Chief Tubbs said.
The Garfield Township
Fire Department was also
assisted at the scene by
the Clare County Sheriff’s
Department and MMR.
Fireworks highlight
30th Summerfest
By Pat Maurer
Correspondent
Renee Haley outlines a proposal to combine
veterans affairs programs of
Clare and Wexford counties.
The state has imposed
higher requirements on
assessors and equalization
directors that the number
of recruits has dwindled. The data entry clerk
and field appraiser left in
the Harrison office has
requested a salary increase
and new job title of deputy
director/mapping clerk due
to the extra responsibilities
she will fulfill.
Byard was directed to
survey companies capable
of carrying out equalization responsibilities. She
will also survey other
counties on the idea of
contracting.
A bit of good news
stemming from the meeting Wednesday seemed to
be a collaboration between
Clare County and Wexford
County. Commissioners
unanimously showed support of reappointing Renee
Haley as executive director
of veterans affairs and they
agreed to an intergovernmental agreement.
Haley will divide her
week day schedule with
Wexford’s newly created
veterans affairs office in
Cadillac. The new director,
Anthony Garcia Rubio,
will shadow Haley as she
attends meetings and she
will guide him in becoming accredited.
This way, Haley noted,
claims for veterans can
begin immediately. This
regional collaboration
is fostered by Governor
Snyder’s push to regionalize programs, Haley noted,
because “partnerships
improve services.”
Wexford will pay Clare
$20,800 as its share of
Haley’s salary. The agreement will run for two
years.
There are 3,200 known
veterans living in Clare
County and 2,900 living in
Wexford County. Commissioners agreed
this experience may open
the door to other possible
collaborations.
Clare Automotive Inc.
214 W . Fourth St, Clare • 989-386-7200
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Auto Parts Specialists
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An annual part of the
Fourth of July celebrations
is Summerfest in Clare.
This year the celebration begins early. The
30th annual Summerfest
celebration will be held
June 23 through June 26
in Clare this year with the
majority of events scheduled for Friday, June 24.
But the fun begins on
Thursday.
Thursday, Friday and
Saturday the annual citywide garage sales will be
held. Sale goers can get
a Google map of all the
locations on the Chamber
website.
After a long day of
shopping, relax under the
City Water Tower. Thursday evening come to the
Clare City Park where the
Clare Summer Concert
Series will feature Southbound from 6 to 8 p.m.
The event is sponsored
by Chemical Bank and
Schumacher Insurance.
Friday activities at
Shamrock Park include;
*Witbeck’s free picnic
beginning at 6 p.m.;
*The famous annual
Teddy Bear Races sponsored by Maury Irwin of
State Farm at 6 p.m.;
*A Kids Game Park
where a ticket package
for the events is just $5.
Youngsters will enjoy a
climbing wall, bounce
house and carnival type
games with prizes;
*The Children’s’ Activity Pavilion sponsored by
Mid Michigan Community
Action Agency;
Brad Malley
Well Drilling
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*A Water Station by
Owen Soft Water;
*The Little Forks
Conservancy with seed
planting;
*A Gospel Group performance at 7 p.m.
*The Gateway Community Band Concert at 8
p.m.; and
*The evening will wind
up at 10 p.m. (or dusk)
with the annual huge
fireworks display over
Shamrock Lake.
There will also be a 4th
Street Market, an Artisan & Farm Market (that
will be held with several
events over the summer)
in the Art Alley downtown
Friday evening from 5 to
9 p.m.
Saturday is focused on
Bikes & Families.
Summerfest events at
Pere Marquette District
Library and the Rail Trail
include Touch-A-Truck/
Bike Safety/Fire Safety
from noon to 2 p.m.;
Art-Bikes Grand Opening Ceremony at 1 p.m.;
and a Family Decorated/
Costume Bike Parade with
prizes at 1 p.m.
The Art Bikes Grand
Opening Ceremony will
introduce the Art-Traction
Tour bikes that have been
artfully decorated and will
enable visitors to borrow
a cool bike to tour art
& architecture throughout Clare. The Family
decorated Bike & costume
parade is an opportunity
for kids and their families
to decorate bikes for a
parade, as in the reminiscent past. But also, a time
for crazy, fun costumes. Conbtinued on page 4A
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Seawalls
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989-588-0199
Licensed & Insured
Page 2A - The Clare County Review - June 17, 2016
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7425 N. Leaton Rd.
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Phone: (989) 424-9200
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MacLean’s Mercantile
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155 N. Second St., Harrison
Bob Winter
Free Estimates
Hours: Monday - Friday 10-7 • Saturday 10-5 • Sunday 12-4
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Furnaces • Air Conditioners • Water Heaters
Mobile Home Furnaces • Custom Ductwork • Repairs
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A-1 HANDYMAN SERVICE
Randy Wynn - Owner
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Painting, Drywall, Minor Repair,
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www.pioneerpole.com
Budd Logging, LLC
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We do Aluminum Welding
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7400 S. Clare Ave.
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26 Dealers on site
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The Clare County Review - June 17, 2016 - Page 3A
Metal Roofing
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Second Front Page
Bigford sentenced to life in prison, no parole
By Pat Maurer
Correspondent
On Wednesday June
8, Mary Lou Bigford, 53,
of Lake was sentenced
to life in prison without
possibility of parole for
the April 15, 2015 murder
of Lawrence Howard Jr.,
36 of Fenton, who was
the father of her granddaughter.
Isabella County Judge
Paul Chamberlain also
sentenced her to a two-
year prison term for an
additional firearm charge,
with 417 days served.
Bigford was found
guilty of the charges May
17 after a week long-rial.
It was the third attempt to
try her for the murder. The
first two were declared
mistrials.
The Gilmore Township
woman was convicted of
shooting Howard in the
parking lot of Chase Run
Apartments in Mt. Pleasant when he arrived there
around noon that day to
pick up his daughter.
Howard was shot six
times in the apartment
complex parking lot.
The prosecutor charged
that Bigford was waiting
there for him with the
intention to shoot him.
Bigford reportedly
believed that Howard had
molested his three-yearold daughter. She and
the then-3-year-old girl’s
mother, Latesha Bigford,
filed sexual abuse com-
Mary Lou Bigford
plaints against Howard,
but investigations by
plans to pay for his children’s and grandchildren’s
education.
Lauer is the third
Michigan player to win $1
million playing the Mega
Millions game this year.
Tuesday’s Mega Millions jackpot has climbed
to $293 million. If a Michigan player win’s Tuesday’s
jackpot, it would be the
largest Mega Millions
prize ever won in the state.
A Port Huron couple,
Ralph and Mary Stebbins,
won $208 million on April
22, 2005.
threw the gun she used in
a ditch. He had given her
the gun two years ago to
shoot animals.
The murder weapon,
reportedly a .22 or .25
handgun, has not been
found.
In just over two hours
of deliberation, the jury
found Bigford guilty on
all counts.
In a Fenton newspaper
article, Howard’s family
said they are glad that
justice is being served.
McLaren tech charged
with drug embezzlement
Mt. Pleasant man
wins $1 million
A Mount Pleasant man
got a big surprise when he
checked his Mega Millions
ticket and learned he won
$1 million.
Herman Lauer matched
the five white balls drawn
– 25-48-51-65-72 – in
Tuesday’s drawing to win
a $1 million prize. He
bought his winning ticket
at the Kroger store, located
at 4080 East Blue Grass
Road in Mount Pleasant.
Lauer visited Lottery
headquarters in Lansing on
Friday to claim his prize.
With his winnings, he
Child Protective Services
showed no evidence of
abuse, according to court
records, and the case was
dropped.
Bigford and daughter
Latesha still believed
Howard was molesting
the child and were pursuing the allegation of abuse
with Fenton police.
Bigford admitted to
killing Howard, her Uncle
reportedly told police
after the shooting. He
said she told him that she
By Pat Maurer
Correspondent
Herman Lauer is the 3rd Michigan player to win
$1 million while playing the Mega Millions.
Angelee Wilkerson,
a 43-year-old Weidman
woman, is facing several felony embezzlement charges for stealing
prescription medication
after turning herself in this
week.
Wilkerson, a Pharmacy
Technician at McLaren
Hospital in Mt. Pleasant,
confessed to stealing prescription medication from
the hospital for the past
couple of years, a release
from the police said.
The theft was discovered during an audit when
a pharmacist at the hospital
noticed an inconsistency
with medication ordering
and dispensing, the release
from Public Information
Officer Jeff Browne said.
A detailed audit followed
and revealed that a hospital
employee had been embez-
zling prescription drugs for
a number of years.
The theft was reported
to police who began an
investigation May 31, and
identified Wilkerson as the
suspect.
The Isabella County
Prosecutor issued a threecount felony warrant and
Wilkerson turned herself
into the court.
Wilkerson was arraigned June 14 in Isabella
County Court on one count
of Embezzlement-Agent
or Trustee $1,000 or more
but less than $20,000;
Controlled SubstanceDelivery/Manufacture;
and Controlled SubstancePossession/Analogues.
She posted bond and
was released, Brown
reported.
Teenage Mutant
Ninja Turtles
Visit
us on
Some headstones have been vandalized in the past at the Surrey Township Cemetery and some are deteriorating
badly. Unfortunately the township is not responsible for upkeep and repair of the gravesites and headstones.
Facebook
for more
news you
can use.
Check
out our
website
for even
more news.
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Surrey Township Clerk Glenna Bradbury explains the responsibilities of the township at the cemetery and the lack of
funds for additional grounds work to Rita Vance and her mother Joy Fuller.
Surrey Board hears cemetery complaints VBS
By Pat Maurer
Correspondent
The Surrey Township Board fielded some
complaints about the
condition of the older part
of the Surrey Township
Cemetery at their meeting
Tuesday evening.
Rita Vance and her
mother Joy Fuller were at
the meeting to voice their
concerns that the older
part of the cemetery near
the front where a family
member is buried is in
poor condition. “We had
permission to plant a tree
by a grave from the board
(in 1989),” Vance said. It
was topped and then cut
down. It’s gone now.”
She said a lilac bush was
also cut down. “The older
graves in the front of the
cemetery are not being
taken care of,” they said.
They said some head-
stones were broken, there
was little grass there and
they wondered if something could be done.
Township Clerk Glenna
Bradbury responded saying
the maintenance people
were not responsible for
the headstones. Supervisor Russ Hamilton added,
“There has been some
vandalism there, but the
headstones and graves
belong to the people that
own the plots.”
He added that a lot of
trees in the cemetery have
been removed because they
were diseased and there are
still more that need to be
removed.
Bradbury added, “We
do the best we can to keep
it nice there. There’s no
money for grass seed. We
did have a group that was
interested in repairing the
headstones at one time.”
She continued, “I get
compliments all of the time
on the cemetery. I think it
looks really nice. The older
stones are very delicate
and crumble easily, but the
headstones are the responsibility of the owners.”
Township Treasurer
Esther Pitchford said the
board could try and put
more in the budget for
the cemetery for grounds
maintenance.
Evaluation of the
Landfill groundwater was
another issue that came
before the board Tuesday.
Zoning Administrator Rod
Williams, who is responsible for checking the monitoring equipment at the
landfill, asked the board
to approve a Gas Detector
Kit for $1,005.00. He also
asked the board to approve
$5,750 to have Environmental Resource Management do a groundwater
evaluation and prepare a
report for the Department
of Environmental Quality.
The board approved
both expenditures unanimously.
Other business at the
township meeting included:
*A zoning report from
Williams.
*A report from Fire
Chief Dave Williams.
*Approval for a $4,950
software update for the fire
department’s 15-year-old
outdated program.
*Approval of the
$16,908.75 purchase of
five portable radios, to
come from next years’
budget to improved communication with Central
Dispatch and Isabella
County.
*A vote to waive the
purchase of foreclosed
properties in the township.
*Approved bills payable
totaling $37,714.34.
2016
June 20th - 24th
Clare Church of the Nazarene
10160 S. Grant Ave., Clare, MI 48617
Stop by & pick up a registration form
or call: 989-386-3381 Mon. - Thurs.
Church Services Sundays are at: 9:30 am & 11am
Come see live farm animals and
join us for a farmtastic good time!
Karolyn Smith
Page 4A - The Clare County Review - June 17, 2016
Grant Twp. to seek 1.2 mils for roads
By Pat Maurer
Correspondent
Once again, Grant
Township voters will be
asked to approve a road
millage.
After a lengthy discussion and hearing an extensive special presentation on
funding and programs from
Clare County Road Commission Board Chair Julie
Lightfoot and EngineerManager Deepak Gupta,
the Grant Township Board
voted 4-1 (with Dick Zinser voting no) to put a 1.2
mill proposal for roads on
the November ballot.
Before the vote, board
members stated their preference on three suggested
proposals: Option 1 - no
millage request, Option 2
– a proposal asking voters
for 1.2 mils for ten years,
or Option 3 - a proposal
asking for 2 mils for ten
years.
Over the ten years, Option 2, the 1.2 mill proposal, would raise enough
funds to finance $745,000
in HMA blacktop overlays,
$505,000 for gravel work,
$300,000 for truck route
enforcement and three,
rather than two dust control
applications per year.
Option 3 for 2 mils
would have included all of
the work in Option 2 and
added $485,000 for surfaced subdivision work.
The board members
were polled for their
choice.
Township Trustee
Richard Zinser immediately said no to placing
any millage request on the
ballot, adding that it isn’t
the township’s responsibility to repair the roads.
Superintendent Dan
Dysinger and Trustee
Marge Bell both opted for
the 2 mil proposal. Marge
said she would prefer the
2-mil proposal saying it
was “the better route.”
Dysinger agreed, saying
he preferred going for 2
mils but would support
either of the two millage
requests depending on
what the board wanted.
Township Treasurer
Tammy Shea said she preferred the 1.2 mil request,
which would allow the
township to fix and maintain the roads.
Township Clerk Sue
Wentworth also supported
the 1.2 mil option, saying,
“There was already a vote
that would have fixed all
the roads. It was voted no.”
In 2014 the township
voters turned down a tenyear, 3-mil request by just
seven votes.
Township resident
Merle Harmon, who was
in the audience, cautioned
the board that residents of
the subdivisions might not
support the option that left
them out. “You may lose
voters if you don’t address
all township residents.”
Shea said she supported
fixing the subdivision
roads too, saying with the
promise of funding from
the State and careful management of the township
funds, that could be accomplished. “I want this to
benefit all our residents,”
she said.
Dysinger said the
subdivision roads could be
addressed. After Option 2
was approved, he said, “I
just hope the (township)
residents support this. If
it doesn’t pass, we won’t
be doing any road projects
next year. We’ve pretty
much used our available
funds.”
He said, “While admittedly the Township Board
had initially agreed the
millage would not be a
ballot subject, being approached by a group from
the Township, not just Five
Lakes Area, required we
at least look at it. After
careful consideration and
crunching numbers we can
hope voters will see the
value of our tax dollars being spent locally.”
He added, “The Board
agreeing to a 1.2 mill question [if approved] will raise
about $115,920 in its first
year inclusive of 2016 for
10 years. However, voters
must first pass the measure
in November. 1.2 mills is
nearly 2/3rds less than the
issue defeated in November 2014. Work completed in 2013 to 2016 and
removing routes from the
original plan, plus cost savings and possibly increased
funding from CCRC, led to
the reduction.”
The township will be
spending an estimated
$512,255 repairing roads
this year with help from
the Road Commission, a
$20,000 match incentive
for one paving project and
the engineering and labor
for the projects.
The contract between
the CCRC and township,
also approved at Tuesday’s
meeting, said, “The Road
Commission will provide
engineering, prepare the
road bed for aggregate,
order the MDOT 23A
aggregate, and arrange for
trucking and then spread,
shape and compact the
Dense Graded aggregate,
also install the culverts
and do the proper drainage work. On the Chip and
Asphalt overlays, the road
commission will oversee
the placement and keep
track of the quantities.”
Roadwork scheduled
for this year includes:
$129,787 for gravel roads
including Leghorn, Elm,
Bass Lake, Rock and
Washington and $354,081
for Asphalt on Kapplinger,
Beaverton, Grant and Harrison. “Grant Road will get
an overlay all the way to
Ann Arbor Trail,” Dysinger noted. The total estimated for the projects was
$483,868 with $48,387 set
aside for possible overruns.
This is much more than
the township had originally
planned.
The scope of the projects is Blacktops (HMA’s)
on Grant Road from Beaverton to Ann Arbor Trail
and Beaverton Rd. / Kapplinger Rd. from Pebble
Creek to Grant Rd.
Chip Seals will be done
on Harrison Ave. from Surrey to Pike Ave.
Gravel Projects include:
*Rock Rd. from Bass
Lake Ave. to Harrison Ave.
*Bass Lake Ave. from
Rock to Elm Rd.
*Elm Rd. from Bass
Lake to Harrison Ave.
*Leghorn Rd. from Elm
Rd. to Surrey Rd. and
*Washington Rd. from
Beaver Rd. to Harrison
Ave.
Dysinger said, “Grant
Township Residents should
also be aware that over 3
Farwell couple turn to MBF
Willow is a beautiful
7-year-old American Bulldog, the beloved pet of Tiffanie and Justin Baker in
Farwell. Willow has mast
cell cancer and requires
chemotherapy. The cost of
treatment is out of reach
for the Bakers, but they are
not willing to give up.
The Bakers discovered
Magic Bullet Fund (MBF),
applied for financial assistance, and the Fund agreed
to help. Magic Bullet Fund
helps when a dog would
not be able to receive
treatment without financial
assistance.
The fund was founded
by medical animal writer
Laurie Kaplan, in honor of
her own cancer survivor,
Bullet, in conjunction with
the release of her book,
“Help Your Dog Fight
Cancer.” This book has
given tens of thousands
of dog owners the knowledge, confidence and optimism needed to see their
beloved canines through
cancer treatment. Thanks
to the assistance of Magic
Bullet Fund, Willow will
have a chance to survive
cancer.
A diagnosis of canine
miles of Surrey Rd. will be
chip sealed this summer,
this is funded by federal
dollars flow through the
Clare County Road Commission. This chip and
seal will help to preserve
the surface from further
degradation. Surrey Rd. is
very heavily traveled.”
He continued, “All of
these projects combined
wipe out a significant
portion of needed road
improvements within
Grant Township. There is
certainly more needed. Weather permitting the
HMA work will be completed before the end of
June and Chip Seals should
be done before August
15. By early fall gravel
work should be completed
depending on progress.”
Once the roads are repaired, the township board
wants to keep them from
being damaged by truck
traffic as has happened in
the past.
Local roads are under
the township’s jurisdiction
and the board unanimously
approved developing an
ordinance that will place
weight limits on some.
Dysinger said, ““The
tentative roadways under
consideration for restricted
trucks through a “truck
route ordinance” is: Grant
Road from Dover to Ann
Arbor Trail; Harrison Ave
from Kapplinger to M-115
(old 10); Harrison Ave.
from Surrey to Pike Rd;
Surrey Rd. from Old 27 to
Cornwell; Dover Rd. from
Old 27 to Eberhart Rd. and
Eberhart Road.”
He added, “There are
plans to introduce the
first draft copy in July’s
regular meeting; adoption
in August with an effective
date in September. This
may be pushed back a
month but hopefully we
can use this schedule.”
Other business at the
township meeting Tuesday
included:
*Approval of the first
right of refusal for PA 123
properties.
*Approval for a summer
newsletter.
*A County Commission report from Leonard
Strouse.
*A presentation by Clare
County Sheriff Candidate
Barney Ledford.
*Approval of the
payment of bills totaling
$16,859.75.
File photo by Steve Landon
Clare Summerfest
Continued from page 1A
your own theme and
make a fun afternoon with
the kids!
More fun is scheduled at
Gateway Lanes. Saturday
events include: $1 Youth
Cornhole Doubles at 3
p.m.; Youth Rock & Glow
Bowl Paint Party at 9 p.m.;
a Karaoke Paint Party
at 10 p.m.; and for the
grownups, a $5 Cornhole
Double’s event with cast
prizes at 7 p.m.
Summerfest’s major
sponsors this year include
Witbeck’s Family Foods,
Clare Automotive Inc.,
Kyle’s Manufacturing,
Jay’s Sporting Goods,
Chemical Bank, Owens
Soft Water and Cops &
Doughnuts.
For more information
about Summerfest, call the
Clare Chamber at 989-3862442 or email chamber@
claremichigan.com.
Want to get our News sent to
your e-mail box for free?
Tiffany and Justin Baker raise funds for “Willow’s cancer
treatments through MBF”
cancer is not necessarily a
death sentence. Veterinary
oncology has made tremendous advances in the
past decade and there are
treatment options available
to those who want to fight
their pet’s cancer.
Fund founder Kaplan says, “Cancer is as
unpredictable in pets as it
is in humans. We do not
expect miracles for all of
the dogs, but we celebrate
the ones we get. The real
miracle for these families
is that they can have an extended goodbye, time for
special moments that will
become lasting memories,
and the very important
ability to say, ‘I fought for
my dog’s life!’’”
The fund helps families
across the U.S. If Willow’s
campaign goal has been
met, you’ll find her on the
Dogs Funded page, but
you can still donate to the
General Fund to help other
dogs receive treatment and
a chance to survive cancer.
To donate by mail, send
a check to Magic Bullet
Fund, PO Box 2574, Briarcliff NY 10510
It’s easy!
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www.clarecountyreview.com
or send an e-mail to us at:
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to start your FREE email
subscription - you’ll always have
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The Clare County Review - June 17, 2016 - Page 5A
Antique saw mill star of M-61 tractor show
By Rosemary Horvath
Correspondent
Four members of the
Twenty Lakes Antique
Engine & Tractor Association huddled over
the carriage of a late 19th
century saw mill, preparing to fire it up in time
for ongoing demonstrations at the club’s annual
summer event Thursday
through Saturday.
The apparatus is a
reminder of local history when the land was
a dense forest threaded
with Indian trails. Then
lumber barons arrived
and established camps
throughout the region.
The history museum at
the Evart Public Library
displays relics and tools
of lumber camps that
show how primitive but
functional tools were in
the day.
The Empire sawmill
at the organization’s
grounds on M-61 features
a carriage that holds a
log in place pass a large
circular saw that cuts the
wood to size.
Maurice “Smitty”
Smith of Harrison said
the sawmill is from the
late 1800s and came from
the Gladwin area. It bears
the name Empire which
could also mean it had
been part of the Empire
Lumber Company in
Leelanau County back in
the 1800s. History shows
the company had been
the largest mill in the area
at the time.
Tom Hosmer of Harrison operates the carriage.
He and his dad Charles
have been club members
for 10 years or more.
They started out volunteering to help with the
mill “and we just keep
coming back,” Charlie
said.
Tom couldn’t say if he
descended from lumberjacks. “My granddad
worked in the woods so
I’m sure everyone back
in the day” were one
form of a lumberjack or
another.
Tom as with most
members of the organization own antique tractors,
and typically more than
one. They bring their
collections to the summer
show to display and demonstrate. Collectors began
to set up on Wednesday,
along with vendors and
campers who planned to
stay over this weekend.
Donna Hosner, association treasurer, was
outside the blacksmith
shop, directing new arrivals on where to park.
The event also features
plowing demonstrations,
cedar shingle planer,
Donna Hosner, treasurer of Twenty Lakes Antique Engine
& Tractor Association, takes a break Wednesday from lining up vendors and collectors ready to set up for the 32nd
annual summer show opening Thursday and running
through Saturday.
Maurice “Smitty” Smith of Harrison, left, explains the process of cutting logs at the working sawmill on the grounds of
the Twenty Lakes Antique Engine & Tractor Association on M-61. In the background are Tom Hosmer and his father
Charlie Hosmer, both of Harrison, and Virl Wright of Farwell.
stump puller, tractors and
much more.
The association began
in 1994 in Dodge City
and has grown with
more than 150 members.
Members come from
Clare County and nearby
Osceola County and from
around the state. This
year’s 32nd annual show
is dedicated to longtime
member Barry Reynolds
of Farwell for all his
hours of dedication.
Like
us on
Facebook
CMS names Students of Month
Above are the Clare Middle School students of the month for May. Front Row: Kameron
Haag, Jon Bouchy, Hannah Green, Hattie Veenkant
Back Row: Marlee Lance, Hayley Campbell, Mr. Spranger, Nicole Taylor, Mea Mitchell
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Page 6A - The Clare County Review - June 17, 2016
Mike’s
Musings
Michael Wilcox, Publisher/Editor
Viewpoints
Pat’s
Bits & Pieces
Pat Maurer, Review Correspondent
Wildlife visitors enjoy life
on the Tobacco too
Time to pay respects,
not push agendas
My thoughts and
prayers go to the victims’
families of that horrible
tragedy in Orlando over
the weekend. I especially
hope that each and every
one of the fifty or so that
were taken to Orlando
Regional Center and other
area hospitals recover
quickly from their injuries.
That said, I’m appalled
at our politicians who are
using this tragedy as an
opportunity to push their
political agenda. Conservatives are speaking out
in an effort to label many
Moslems as purveyors
of radical Islam and are
renewing efforts to ban
Moslems from immigrating to the United States.
Liberals are demanding
stricter gun control, claiming mass shootings like
Orlando wouldn’t happen
if deranged gunmen didn’t
have access to weapons.
For me I don’t want to
listen to either argument
right now. This is a time
to pay our respects to the
forty-nine innocent men
and women who died in
that Orlando nightclub.
They went there to have a
good time, and to mingle
with friends. They certainly didn’t expect to be
targeted by an Isis-inspired
maniac.
I don’t want to listen
to the politicians arguments because there are
two more important issues
in my opinion. First, I
dread the next six months
where Clinton and Trump
will partake in the nasti-
est presidential campaign
ever known to the United
States.
I greatly wish that each
candidate could refrain
from negative rhetoric. It is
more important than ever,
that we see civility not nastiness, from our leaders. I
wish they could be positive
and lay out their positions
on how they would tackle
the various problems facing our great nation. I wish
they took a pledge to end
all personal attacks.
Whether we are a
Democrat, Republican,
Libertarian or independent,
we as a body of people
need to come together.
Whether we are straight
or gay, Moslem, Jewish or
Christian we need to embrace one another. Whether
we are black, white, yellow
or mixed it is time to stop
racial hatred and love thy
fellow man.
Secondly, we have
to realize that there is a
greater problem than gun
control or banning Moslems, and that is mental
illness. No sane person
could kill innocent people
like Omar Mateen did in
Orlando. Make no mistake
he was mentally ill. His
co-workers at the security
firm he worked for called
him bi-polar and a “nut
job.” Others ignored his
homophobic ramblings,
discounting them because
he was crazy.
The same can be said
for all the other recent
mass killers in this country.
Yes, for the most part they
utilized automatic weapons and many professed
allegiance to radical Islam,
but to a tee, they were all
mentally ill.
And you know what,
you don’t hear Clinton or
Trump, or any other high
ranking politician talk
about the sad state of affairs when it comes to taking care of the mentally ill
in this country. The number of people diagnosed
with some type of mental
illness is staggering, yet
treatment either has failed
or is non-existent. In some
cases treatment or meds
is too costly. In many
cases, persons aren’t even
diagnosed because they are
too embarrassed to see a
medical professional.
Let me reiterate. I hope,
we as a nation have learned
a couple of things from
these mass killings. I hope
we can unite as a people.
Certainly healthy debate
is productive, but we have
got to stop the personal
attacks and religious and
racial hatred. AND additionally we need to provide
help for the mentally ill in
this country. So much talk
about gun control yet so
little about mental illness.
That needs to be reversed,
in this columnist’s opinion.
Letters
Response to naysayers on bathroom
On May 12, 2016 when
The Obama Administration circumvented the rule
of law and sent directives directly to each and
every school district in
the nation, mandating that
students be allowed to “self
identify” their gender and
select which bathroom,
locker room and shower
facility they would use
in the schools, I penned a
Letter to the Editor of our
esteemed local paper. My
husband and I also attended
the Clare School Board
Meeting to discuss the issue
that following Monday.
Now that the Board has had
more than 72 hours to review the directives, we will
be attending the upcoming
meeting on June 20th.
Since the publication
of my letter, I have been
called a “Stepford Wife”
and a “hater” (among other
amusing things), and my
husband’s letters have been
called “psychotic political
rantings”. I found the
Stepford Wife comment
most amusing. I’m just old
enough to understand the
attempted metaphor, but it
is so wrong that I’m just
left shaking my head.
The sad thing is, I think
the readers completely
missed the point of the
letter and went right to the
transgender issue. I’m hoping it is not because of poor
reading comprehension
skills, rather its more due to
progressive indoctrination.
I laid out a very concise
argument about how the
Executive Branch of Federal government acted completely out of scope of their
enumerated powers, and are
now basically blackmailing
our local school districts
with the threat of withholding federal funding from
them if they do not comply
with their directive. However, no one addressed
that, they went right to the
transgenders.
Perhaps I wasn’t clear
enough about the problem
with the directive. First
off, I have no problem
with human beings who
are legitimately transgendered using the bathroom
that corresponds with their
body parts. By definition,
I mean someone who so
legitimately believes they
are actually the gender
opposite that of which they
were born, that they have
had the surgeries and the
therapies to change their reproductive organs. I’d like
to see the actual statistics of
how many of these students
we have in our school district. I’m certain in many
instances I have shared
public bathrooms with
people whom are transgendered. I’m certain it has
probably even happened in
the schools.
The key problem with
the directive is that it
allows people to “self
identify”. Essentially this
means that a boy or a girl,
can walk into the boys’ OR
girls’ locker room, shower
areas, bathrooms, etc. IN
THE SCHOOL. The types
hurling the insults at me for
my letter say “this didn’t
happen before, and it won’t
happen now, this directive
is just to prevent bullying”
frankly don’t have a crystal
ball. Can we all stipulate
that teenagers, both boys
and girls, have the opposite
sex on the brain a great
portion of their day? And
now, the federal government has basically tied the
schools hands from protecting students from one another, including transgender
students, straight students,
gay students and any other
category of student. If the
schools are to follow this
loose directive, they are
putting everyone at risk.
There really is no ifs, ands
or buts about it, anyway
you look at it. This is
probably the worst way the
government could attempt
to truly protect transgender
students. However, I don’t
believe that was the government’s intent by handing
down this directive. That is
a whole different letter.
Sincerely,
Angela Isaac
Clare, MI
High fuel prices hurt all
Dear Editor,
I understand very much
when the price of fuel goes
up it’s a burden on the
truck drivers. Who deliver
most everything from soup
to nuts all over the U.S.A.?
But then the taxpayers feel
the strain too. The truckers get their share added
to their paychecks. Every
time fuel goes up it’s like
their getting another raise
in pay. I don’t believe it’s
fair. Instead of adding it
to their paycheck, give the
truckers a separate “Cost
of living check” when the
fuel prices rise. What ever
happened to “What goes
up must come down?” The
country is in dire straits! If
this is not possible, what’s
next? Do we eat dirt and
walk to our jobs? “Windows are made to break!”
The sun doesn’t shine here
The
anymore.
Sincerely,
Joseph C. Provo
Letters continued
on page 7A
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We reserve the right to
refuse Letters to the Editor at our discretion.
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Some days I think the
‘critters’ enjoy living out
here on the Tobacco as
much as we do.
Besides our usual
complement of wild birds,
squirrels, rabbits and
chipmunks, we have been
enjoying the company of a
couple of does with spotted
babies out here on the river
recently.
One has a single fawn
and the other mother has
twins.
As with all youngsters,
these little ones are more
concerned with running
and playing than with
being cautious. They have
been carousing all over the
yard in the past week or so.
The moms are extra
cautious though and our attempts to capture some of
those antics with a camera
usually scare them and
they immediately hustle
the young ones away.
I did get lucky Sunday though. We had just
returned from our third
weekend since Memorial
Day up at the new camper
and settled down to relax a
bit after the unpacking was
done.
Jack said, “Look at who
is running all over the
yard!”
I quietly got up and
slipped into the office
for my camera. Although
“Mama” noticed me moving, she must have thought
they were far enough away
from the house to be safe,
and allowed her young one
to continue frolicking all
around the riverbank.
Using the telephoto, I
was able to capture the
two in a couple of pictures,
including a slightly blurry
one of the little one nursing…something I have
never seen before.
We have had fawns here
before. In fact I think these
two deer have taken up
residence in our backyard.
They seem to stick around
most of the time.
One year a doe hid her
very small young one in
a particular place, our fire
pit. Not only was it full of
old ashes, it was raining
and that little one sure was
uncomfortable, and very
visible. I got some pictures
of that one too.
I sure enjoy watching
them…when they let us
that is.
Unfortunately since I
spend the majority of my
time facing this computer,
I think I probably miss
out on a lot of the activity along the river, but
late afternoons and early
mornings are dedicated to
wildlife watching when we
can.
This year we seem to
have an abundance of
“small critters.” A lot of
them are bunnies, big and
small that scrounge on the
ground under the bird feeders every day.
Then there’s the ground
squirrels and chipmunks
that come in and fill up
their cheeks until they are
nearly as wide as they are
long. They make several
trips every day and probably have “stashes” of
seeds under the deck and
under our little barn.
It’s funny, we seem
to see more deer here at
home than we do on our
weekend excursions to the
“wild” country up near
Roscommon.
There we usually see a
few turkeys, an occasional
coyote, a chipmunk or two,
but few deer and never any
fawns.
Last weekend we did
have a great view of four
large herons who landed
in the field in front of the
camper though. They stuck
around for quite a while as
we watched them “stalk”
back and forth just 50 feet
away.
We haven’t been doing
much wildlife watching up
there though as we are still
getting settled into the new
(to us anyway) Fifth Wheel
we bought last month.
Jack is in his glory. He
is a “project” man and has
lots to do up there making
our campsite perfect. Now
he is planning to build
a new deck using some
lumber from the old one,
which he has been working
to dismantle for the past
couple of weekends.
I encourage him because
once that is done, he will
put up the screens on
our awning and I can sit
outside and enjoy camping
life without the bugs!
There’s lots of those up
there.
Deer enjoying life on the Tobacco
Parents who host, lose the most
By Goldie Wood, Prevention & Outreach Manager, Ten 16 Recovery Network
The Importance of Developing
Protective Factors in the
Lives of Children
Many parent’s in todays
society worry about the
possibility of their children
using alcohol and other
drugs, especially when
their children come into
their adolescent years.
How does one protect their
child from beginning drug
or alcohol abuse? Luckily for parents, researchers have been focused on
this question for the past
twenty years, and have
been studying how drug
abuse begins and how it
progresses.
There are many factors
that can add to a person’s
risk of drug abuse. According to the National
Institute on Drug Abuse,
risk factors can increase a
person’s chance for drug
abuse, while protective
factors can reduce the risk.
However, it is important
to note that the majority
of people who are at risk
for drug abuse never start
using or become addicted
to drugs.
Risk and protective
factors exist at every level
that an individual interacts
with others and the society
around them. One way that
researchers organize these
factors is by domain. There
are six domains in which
interactions occur. Listed
below are a few examples
of risk and protective factors in each domain.
Individual domain:
Risk factors include the
perception of a child that
most of their friends use
drugs and alcohol and genetic vulnerability. Protective factors include knowledge regarding the risk
associated with substance
use and abuse, positive
relationships with adults,
and youth involvement in
alternative activities.
Peer domain:
Risk factors include
thinking drug and alcohol
use is “cool” and attachment to deviant peers.
Protective factors include
being involved in substance free activities and
friends disapproval of drug
and alcohol use.
Family domain:
Risk factors include
family members having a history of drug or
alcohol abuse, families
not spending much time
together, and lack of clear
rules and consequences.
Protective factors include
close family relationships,
consistency of parenting,
and education being valued
and encouraged by parents,
as well as parental involvement.
School:
Risk factors include a
lack of clear expectations,
students lacking a sense of
belonging at school, and
parents and community
not being actively involved
with the school. Protective factors include regular
school attendance and the
communication of high
academic and behavioral
expectations.
Community/Society: Risk factors include
alcohol and other drugs
being easily available
and a pro-use message.
Protective factors include
opportunities for community involvement and
religious composition in a
community.
Next week: Clare Coun-
ty MiPHY Results (Risk
and Protective Factors)
Thank you to Donna
Patterson, Clare County
Prevention Coordinator,
for writing this article.
Goldie J. Wood, MSA,
CAC, CPC, has been active in the substance abuse
field for over thirty years,
focusing on adolescent
counseling, substance
abuse prevention, and
coalition building in Bay
County and the state of
Michigan.
She currently serves as
Prevention and Outreach
Manager, for 1016 Recovery Network, for all six of
their regional counties.
Her home office is at their
Clare site, where she will
be a working Supervisor.
Goldie lives in Rhodes,
MI with her husband,
three dogs, and two cats.
She has two wonderful
adult children, 12 grandchildren and four great
grandchildren. She enjoys
camping, fishing, hunting
and reading.
The Clare County Review - June 17, 2016 - Page 7A
Letters
cont.
Reader unfolds a Michigan CPS nightmare
Dear Editor:
My daughter moved
home with my son and I
when she learned she was
pregnant with her first
child. She moved in on
July 7, 2015. The baby
was due January 23, 2016.
We had plenty of time to
prepare for the new arrival.
Plenty of time to find a
bigger place to live and get
settled in. We moved into a bigger
place on August 17, 2015.
The father chose not to
participate, so I became her
pregnancy partner. Then on October 17,
2015 my grandson Ryker
James-LaRoy McEvers was
born by cesarean section
14 weeks early. We didn›t
know if he would make it
or if he did, what problems
he could have. All we knew
was that she and I already
loved this tiny bundle all of
one pound 2.7 ounces and
twelve inches long. She an
I were in almost a constant
state of prayer and never
ever did we lose hope. The doctors inserted a
broviac line to infuse nutrition when his umbilical
veins dried up. He was on
a ventilator from birth, and
frequently receiving blood.
It seemed he had tubes and
IVs everywhere. Ryker was
born with a host of medical
problems. Ryker was twelve days
old on October 29, 2015
when flown to a bigger
hospital for a PDA repair.
A patent ductus arteriosis
repair is a repair of a valve
near his heart. He was just over three
weeks old, he sailed
through the surgery like
a trooper. He had a chest
tube afterwards to drain
any fluid. Ryker was removed
from the ventilator on
November 24, 2015 and
moved to a CPAP machine. On December 1st, 2015
Ryker was stable enough to
be sent back to his hospital
of birth. On January 3rd,
2016 my son Tyler met his
nephew for the first time. He remained on CPAP
UNTIL December 12,
2015, next he was moved
to high flow oxygen and
then finally a home oxygen
unit. We knew he would be
coming home on various
machines, such as oxygen,
an apnea monitor, and
nebulizer treatments. He
was gonna be a lot of work,
but worth it. We love him
so much. In December we
received an unannounced
visit from a Clare County
Child Protective Services
Investigator stating she had
received a complaint from
the Social Worker at his
hospital of birth. Within the
allegations were that my
daughter has sleep apnea
and is not on meds for
bipolar-disorder. Dannielle
had never been diagnosed
with sleep apnea and she
had been symptomatic of
bipolar-disorder for two
years. The sleep study was
going to be addressed after
we got the baby home.
Why would she take meds
for bipolar-disorder when
she had been asymptomatic
for two years? That would
be like taking high blood
pressure pills when you
already have low blood
pressure or taking anti seizure meds when you don’t
have seizures. It just didn›t
make sense. She also stated Dannielle was observed in the
Neonatal Intensive Care
Unit showing sad emotions. I think this would
be expected given the fact
she was in the Neonatal
Intensive Care Unit. There
are a multitude of emotions
the parents of a micro-preemie experience for many
months and sometimes
years after their birth. The
report also said our house
was not fit for a baby. The
investigator said our home
was immaculate.
On January 13, 2015 an
RN in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit stated she
had read the report from
the Protective Services
Investigator and it was just
“glowing”. The investigator
called my daughter on this
same day while we were
at the hospital and told
her she and I were being
required to do psychological evaluations. I happen to
know those can only be ordered by a judge and there
was no case. On this same
day, I sent the investigator
a text message.
The Child Protective
Services Investigators boss
offered us a gas card at
the very end of January to
To the editor:
I would like to respond
to the recent letters to the
editor involving the transgender issue. I wonder if
those who think that we
should allow anyone to
use the restroom/shower/
locker room of their choice
based on which sex they
say they “identify” with on
any given day, have given
any thought to girls and
women who have suf-
Funeral Home
2 Locations to serve you
Lawrence D. Wyman, Jr.
Michael Fetzer
Farwell • 588-9630
CLARE CITY WIDE YARD SALES
City wide Yard Sales will be held on 2 weekends
this year. June 23-25 & Jun 30-July 2. The
Chamber puts together a map, so be sure to
register your yard sale by calling 989-386-2442.
No permit is needed from the City for these dates.
COMMUNITY PICNIC TRINITY
CHRISTIAN LIFE CENTER
You’re Invited to a Community Picnic at Trinity
Christian Life Center! 236 E Park, Harrison on July
3rd from 12:00 – 3:00 p.m.
There will be great food, music, games and a
bounce house for Kids! Come and Join the fun!!!
For more information, give us call (989) 539-7479
Quality Jewelry
Bridal Specialist
Repairs
“We Buy Gold”
months at during Ryker›s
visits. We couldn’t be happier to finally be taking him
home. Dannielle and I agreed
to sleep in shifts, so that we
could both get sleep and
watch the baby. On February 7, 2016,
just eighteen hours after
he was discharged, Ryker
had another life threatening
event of apnea. The stimulation we were
taught was not working.
He began to turn blue.
Dannielle called 911. He
was rushed to the ER.
Soon he was is in route
flying to Ann Arbor, U of
M Hospital. Dannielle and
I went home so that she
could pack to go to U of M,
shower, and leave. A Washtenaw County
Child Protective Services Investigator came to
investigate the 911 call.
She states Dannielle did
everything properly. Dannielle and I both
came home on February
10, 2016 from U of M to
pack some more things
and we were going to head
back in the morning. The morning of February 11, 2016 while Ryker
was still in the hospital,
Danielle had the Child
Protective Services
Investigator and a Sheriff
deputy knocking on the
door serving her a petition. The petition stated a
judge had removed Ryker
from Dannielle›s care and
custody and there was to be
a hearing the next morning. Ryker is now in Foster
Care and reunification is
the plan. Dannielle has
successfully completed all
services except 7 therapy
sessions. The next hearing is June 29, 2016 in
Clare County Family
Court at 9:00 A.M.
It is in the courtroom of
Marci Klaus and Richard
Dubridge is my daughters
court appointed attorney. Thank you, JLMcEvers
Lake, Michigan Responds to letters on transgender issue
Stephenson-Wyman
Clare • 386-7451
go see Ryker. We went to
pick it up at DHHS and
Investigator invited us into
a room, proceeded to speak
to us rudely, and gave us
the gas card. Dannielle nor I heard
from the investigator again
neither by phone, email,
text, or in person. Ryker had frequent
episodes of bradycardia
(low heart rate) and apnea
(he often quit breathing).
The nurse taught us how to
stimulate Ryker to breathe
if he happened to stop
breathing at home. We
were also taught that if that
stimulation didn’t work, to
call 911 immediately.
On January 29, we were
finally told Ryker was
being discharged home on
February 2, 2016. We were
so happy and so prepared.
Baby items that were in
place all throughout the
house finally we’re going
to be in use. We were all
glowing with excitement.
The plan was to go to
the hospital in February
1st and spend the night
with him in a hospital room
and he would go home the
next day. February 1, 2016 finally
came. We were ready! During that evening he had an
awful event at the hospital.
He quit breathing 3 times
for over 30 seconds within
a half hour period. They
had to stop his feedings,
put his IV back in, put him
back on CPAP, and almost
had to put him back on the
vent. He was also moved
back to an incubator. They
want to keep him for a few
more days. It was scary. He
will be home. It was just
heartbreaking that it was
going to take more time. Over the next few days,
they were able to wean
him back down to where
he was before that apparent life threatening event
and informed us he would
be discharged on February
6th, 2016. We proudly left the hospital we had spent so many
VOTED
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fered the trauma of rape.
Can you imagine having
been victimized in such a
terrible fashion and then,
the government tells you
that you have to share the
ladies room or women’s
shower with people who
are biologically and
anatomically males? Talk
about causing or amplifying Post Traumatic Stress
Disorder. But apparently
the liberals are far more
concerned with accommodating the desires of a tiny
handful of gender-confused
people than they are about
protecting women and girls
from being traumatized.
In my opinion, if
someone has had surgery
to alter their sex organs,
they should certainly be
allowed to use the facilities that best correspond
with their body. However, I
would not care to have my
daughter taking a shower
after gym class with a student who is anatomically
a male. One of the biggest
problesm with the proposals put forward by the
Obama administration’s
Departments of Education
and Justice as well as the
Michigan Department of
Education, is that anyone
could use, not just rest
rooms, but locker rooms,
showers, etc.…of the opposite sex based simply by
declaring that he “identifies” as that sex on any
particular day. This would
allow students who have
all male parts, for example,
to use the girls’ locker
rooms, showers and rest
rooms. If you don’t think
that some teenaged boys
would use this to their advantage, you are extremely
naïve.
To the letter writer who
last week said these things
are fiction, here are a few
examples I could cite
involving men in women’s
facilities doing inappropriate things:
Very recently in Oregon,
a woman was groped in a
water park women’s room
by a man.
The University of
Toronto had to shut down
coed bathrooms in dorms
due to prying eyes of some
male students.
In Seattle, a man used
a women’s dressing room
at a public pool to undress,
citing the new law allowing him to do so and
shocking a poor woman
who walked in on him.
Another woman was
shocked by a man using
a women’s dressing room
in Dallas, saying he was
“representing himself as a
woman today”.
The above are not
fictional; they are very real
events.
Some other recent developments:
In Alaska, a boy took
all-state honors at the girls
state track championships,
because he “identifies” as
a female. This could spell
the end for women’s/girls
sports.
In some parts of the
country, including NYC
and Oregon, one can be
fined or sued for calling
someone by a pronoun
they don’t care for, even
if it matches that person’s
biology.
Some school systems
have offered students suffering gender dysphoria
(identifying as the opposite
sex) separate changing
facilities but the Obama
Administration is saying
that isn’t enough…they
MUST be allowed to share
all facilities with those of
the opposite sex if that is
how they see themselves.
Enough is enough.
We can make reasonable
accommodations such as
some single stall unisex
bathrooms in schools or
other public places, but
without inconveniencing
and terrorizing the rest of
us. It’s time for some common sense!
Obituaries
Ernestine (Tina) Beyer Smith
Ernestine (“Tina”) Beyer
Smith (formerly Tina Schultz) passed away on May 25
at age 86. Tina was born on
October 3, 1929 in Scranton,
PA. She graduated from The
Masters School in Dobbs
Ferry, NY, and Mount Holyoke College (class of 1951),
and held master’s degrees
from Brown University and
the University of Michigan. Tina was a truly indomitable spirit. She lived in
Ann Arbor for 51 years and
was active in its political,
educational, cultural and
social arenas. In 1970 she
co-founded the Ann Arbor
Bicycle League which successfully lobbied for and
planned Ann Arbor’s comprehensive bike path system,
one of the nation’s first. An avid outdoorswoman,
she hiked in 57 national
parks and traveled around
the world, including visits
to every continent, and treks
to remote places such as
Patagonia and Nepal. Tina
lived a long and adventurous life, filled with a
love of learning. She
was fortunate to have
many great friends whose
company she cherished,
and a loving family whom
she adored. Her beloved
husband, Haldon Smith,
predeceased her, and she is
survived by her children,
Tim Beyer, Gwen Beyer and
Amy Freeman, her daughterin-law, Jayne Palu, and her
grandchildren, Allyson and
Ryan Beyer and Tiffany and
Kiana Freeman. A memorial
service will be held at 1:00
pm on July 10, 2016 at the
Matthaei Botanical Gardens
Auditorium. In lieu of flowers, donations in her name
to the Kelsey Museum of
Archaeology (lsa.umich.edu/
kelsey/) or Food Gatherers
(info@foodgatherers.org)
would be appreciated. Donald Frank Snyder
Donald Frank Snyder,
age 87 of Clare, went to be
with the Lord on May 26,
2016. Don was born in Hazel
Park on August 10, 1928,
the son of Lewis and Edna
(Johns) Snyder. He married the love of his
life, Dolores Hersha on January 12, 1946; they celebrated
70 years of marriage this past
January. Don moved to the Clare
area in 1972, where he
resided until his death. He
was a lifelong truck driver
working in the moving industry and retiring from Graebel
Van Lines in 1990. Don was
known for his love for God
and his family. He was a
hard, dedicated worker with
a very gentle spirit. He loved
to laugh, sing and socialize. To know him was to
love him.
Don is survived by his
loving wife, Dolores; his children Linda and Carl Porter
of Clare, Ron and Pat Snyder
of Clare, Dennis and Barbara
Snyder of Williamston and
Susan and Brian Langley of
Beaverton; several grandchildren, great grandchildren and
one great great granddaughter; brothers Ken and Keith
Snyder and several nieces
and nephews.
Visitation will be held
at the Clare Chapel of
Stephenson-Wyman Funeral
Home on Thursday, June 16,
2016 from 6 to 9 P.M.. Funeral service and celebration
of Don›s life will be held
on Friday, June 17, 2016 at
the Clare Assembly of God
Church with Pastor Scott
Harper officiating. Visitation
will be from 12 noon until the
time of service at 1 P.M. a
luncheon will follow the
service at the church. Burial
will take place in the Mt.
Pleasant Memorial Gardens Cemetery. Memorial
contributions may be made to
his wife, Dolores Snyder to
offset any expenses. On-line
guestbook at www.stephenson-wyman.com
Happy 90th Birthday!
There will be an open
house for Elton Marshall’s
90th Birthday on June
25th, 2016 from 1-4 pm at
the Clare Moose Lodge.
No gifts please
Dr. Gierucki and staff welcome
new and returning patients!
We offer all facets of general
dentistry from simple
procedures like cleanings, crowns
and dentures to specialized services
like Invisalign and Lumineers!
Most insurance accepted and filed for you.
Payment options also available with
approval. We can’t wait to meet you!
Dr. Gierucki
152 S. 1st St., PO Box 636, Harrison
989-539-2146
Name withheld upon
request
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Page 8A - The Clare County Review - June 17, 2016
Adopt-A-Pets
Reflections
By Roger Campbell Ministries
My three Fathers
Many mornings find
me giving thanks that my
parents loved each other
and loved me. The most
valuable gift a father can
give to his children is a daily
demonstration that he loves
their mother.
I’m the son of a farmer,
horse-trader, who taught me
to rise early, work hard and
quit late. Solomon’s words
could have come from my
father’s lips: “Love not
sleep, lest thou come to poverty; open thine eyes (which
meant get up at 6:00 am),
and thou shalt be filled with
bread” (Proverbs 20:13), or,
in my case at that time, probably pancakes.
My father was an encourager and confidence builder.
I still remember some of his
friends telling him he would
spoil me if he didn’t stop
praising my work, but he
knew the more he praised
the harder I would work so
ignored their warnings. I
can’t remember one putdown coming from my father. I’m sure his confidence
was sometimes better than
my performance, but knowing he believed in me made
a difference and I’m grateful
for the positive influence he
had on my life.
Getting to know my heav-
enly Father was the result of
the coming together of many
experiences and influences.
Sometimes, in memory, I
scan the crowd of those who
had a part in modeling their
Lord before me, convincing me of His love. The
strong faith and faithfulness
of my mother was vital to
establishing this relationship, as was the earnest work
of Sunday School teachers, Vacation Bible School
workers, believing friends,
faithful pastors and visiting
evangelists.
The crucial connection
to my heavenly Father came
near the close of a Sunday
night service. Pastor Leon
Wood finished his sermon by
explaining that knowing God
was a matter of the heart
responding to His love in
personal faith.
“That’s what I want,” I
said silently. And though no
one in the church knew that
anything unusual had taken
place, I knew I had gained
another father, an eternal
one who would never let me
down nor leave me alone.
Years later, a pretty young
woman walked into my
life and ultimately down a
church aisle to be my bride
Area bridge repairs
to begin June 20
Bridgework around Clare
and Farwell is estimated to
begin Monday.
Watch for lane closures
and traffic shifts on US-10,
M-115 and US-127 beginning Monday when repair
work begins on the US-10
bridge over M-115 and the
westbound US-10 bridge
over US-127.
The Michigan Department of transportation
(MDOT) will invest $2.1
million in repairs on the two
bridges.
While work is ongoing,
traffic on US-10, US-127,
and M-115 will be maintained using single lane
closures and traffic shifts.
The southbound M-115
ramp to eastbound US-10
will be closed and traffic
will be directed to take the
northbound M-115 ramp to
eastbound US-10.
Work on the two bridges
is expected to be complete in
November.
and give me another father.
Pastor Martin Blok, her
father, was the pastor of the
church where I served as the
minister of youth and music.
Pastor Blok was more
than my father-in-law; he
was my mentor, my friend
and teacher. One Sunday
morning, he announced there
would be a special speaker
the following Sunday.
“Who’s the special
speaker?” I asked later.
“You are,” he replied,
taking me by surprise and
launching me on a career
that continued to be more
exciting every year.
I’ve been blessed by
two fathers who placed
confidence in me and One
in whom I’ve learned I can
place full confidence. How
fortunate I am!
Expecting the best from
our children helps bring out
the full potential of their
lives. Expecting the best
from our heavenly Father
demonstrates we believe
He’s good all the time. And
He is!
Roger Campbell was an
author, a broadcaster and
columnist who was a pastor
for 22 years. Contact us at
rcministry@ameritech.net
ROSE 161D16:
Rose is a stray that was
found and brought into the
animal shelter. Rose is an
adult dog that weighs 76
lbs. When Rose was found
she wasn’t wearing a collar
and had no identification
on her. Rose is a sweet girl
that loves attention. Rose is
now available for immediate
adoption. For more info on
adopting Rose please call
the Clare County Animal
Shelter at 989-539-3221. PATCHES 076C16:
Patches is an owner
surrender that has already
been spayed and front paw
declawed. Patches is an
older cat that weighs 9 lbs. Patches is a very sweet girl
that loves attention. Patches
is available for immediate
adoption. For more info on
adopting Patches please call
the Clare County Animal
Shelter at 989-539-3221. BEAR 170D16:
Bear is a stray that was
picked up in Clare County. Bear is an adult dog that
weighs 87 lbs. Bear has
already been neutered. Bear
is a happy boy that loves
attention and treats. Bear
has good manners and walks
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Section B Community Events
5/26/16 2:28 PM
June 17, 2016
Upcoming events should be submitted at least 1 week in advance. Email to info@ClareCountyReview.com
June 17th - 30th
Fish Fry
Friday, June 17, 2016
The Lake George Boosters Club is hosting a Fish
Fry. We are located at
89 S. Bringold Ave. north
of Lake George. Serving
will start at 4pm. Take out
is available. Everyone is
welcome. The proceeds
will go to fund our College
Scholarships.
Clare County Arts
Council Presents
The Art of Gardening
Jennifer Denton Jordahl,
Bob Lozen, Lloyd (Butch)
Eberhart, and Bud Palmateer. Tickets for the event
are $25.00 in advance or
$30.00 at the door. The
ticket includes dinner and
the induction ceremony.
If you know any of the individuals being inducted,
or are just interested in
attending please contact
the Clare Public Schools
administrative office at
201 E. State St., 989-3869945 for tickets.
Jam & Jelly Class
“The Art of Gardening” sponsored by the
Clare County Arts Council
Saturday, July 16, 2016
10:00 a.m. till 3:00 p.m.
Tickets $8.00 per person in advance; $10.00 if
purchased on the day of
event. This year we have
5 beautiful gardens & you
will have the opportunity
to tour the historic Doherty
home on McEwan Street!
Questions call Carol at
989-386-3861
Taking place on Tuesday, June 21, 2016, from
10:00 AM – Noon, in the
Clare County Building in
Meeting Room A, 225 W.
Main Street, Harrison, MI
48625. Cost is $15 per
family; scholarships are
available to those participants receiving SNAP or
WIC benefits. To register,
contact Marybeth Denton
at 989-539-7805 or register on line at: http://events.
anr.msu.edu/JamClare16/
FREE MOVIE NIGHTS
Water Safety Class
FREE MOVIE NIGHTS
at Rosebush United Methodist Church Movies for
parents, kids and the
whole family! June 17 @
6pm Kids Movie: “BRAVE”
Adult Movie: “90 Minutes
in Heaven” Come and
join us … free popcorn,
hotdogs & fun! Please
contact 989-433-2957 or
www.rosebushumc.com
for more information.
Hot Rods & Hot
Dogs Car and
Motorcycle Show
The Sons of the American Legion Post 558 are
hosting their annual car
and motorcycle show on
June 18. The show is
held in beautiful downtown Lake George, There
is no charge or entry fee;
trophies will be awarded in
over a dozen categories.
This event is being held in
conjunction with the Lake
George Craft Fair & Expo.
Vendors are wanted and
may rent a 10 x 10 space
for only $10. Car Show
and Expo hours are 9 am
to 3 pm; trophies will be
awarded at 2 pm. The
American Legion Honor
Guard will open the ceremonies at 10 am with
a full military salute. For
more information please
call Jan at 989-588-9882.
Clare FCA Sports
Camp
Clare
FCA
Sports
Camp, Monday-Thursday,
July 18-21 will take place
at Clare High School.
This camp for kids ages
5-13 will teach fundamental skills in baseball/
softball, basketball, track/
cross country, volleyball,
gymnastics, football, and
soccer. Each camper
will experience unbelievable fun, outstanding
sports training, awesome
speakers, and incredible
friendships.
For more
information, call Barbie
at(989)386-3232 or come
to Clare High School on
Sunday, July 17 from
5-6pm to register. Cost is
$10 per child before July
18, $12 if registered July
18 or later. More info can
be found on our Facebook
page
atwww.facebook.
com/RiseSports365.
CHS ANNUAL ALUMNI
REUNION
The CHS Annual Alumi
Reunion will be held June
18th at the Doherty Hotel.
For info contact Karen at
kaprince3421@gmail.com
or call 989-859-8363.
10th ANNUAL CLARE
HALL OF FAME CLASS
TO BE INDUCTED
On July 21, 2016, Clare
Public Schools will induct
the tenth class of athletes,
teams and Clare supporters into the Clare Hall of
Fame. The induction will
begin at 6:30 p.m. at the
Doherty Hotel in Clare.
The four individuals to be
inducted this year are former athletes: Brian Hales,
Kelly McLaughlin Meints,
There will be a Water
Safety Class given by US
Coast Guide Auxiliary/
State of Michigan Instructor On Wednesday June
22, 2016 at Unity Church
of Clare, 215 W. Sixth
Street in Clare, MI (corner of W. sixth Street and
Maple) from 9:00 AM – to
4:00 PM . Drinks will be
provided but bring a sack
lunch. Those successfully
completing the course
will be issued a Michigan
Boater Safety Certificate
Class size is limited –Preregistration required call
(989) 821-8433 Class is
FREE but donation for the
use of the building will be
accepted.
Food Pantry
Rosebush
Ecumenical Assistance Program
(REAP) Free food pantry on Thursday’s at the
St. Henry Church – corner of Mission & Vernon
Rd Serving Rosebush,
Mt. Pleasant, Clare, Farwell, Lake, Weidman only.
Hours 9:00am – 11:00am
Please bring a valid Michigan ID
FREE CLOTHING
STORE
Priceless Apparel- all
clothing is “like new” sizes ranging from infant to
adult. Open on Thursday’s from 10:00am to
Noon,
and Sundays
at11:30am. Open to
all. Located at the Rosebush
United
Methodist Church 3805 School
Street, Rosebush – behind
the Rosebush Elementary
School
Clare City Wide
Yard Sales
City wide Yard Sales
will be held on 2 weekends this year. June 2325 & Jun 30-July 2. The
Chamber puts together a
map, so Be sure to register your yard sale by
calling 989-386-2442. No
permit is needed from the
City for these dates.
Lake George Boosters
Club Summer Trap
Shoot
The
Lake
George
Boosters Club, located
at 89 S. Bringold Ave,
Lake George, would like
to invite the public to their
Summer Trap Shoot.
They shoot Thursday’s, at
5:00pm. The shooting will
start June 2 through September 29. Young shooters are welcome. For additional information please
call Mike 989-854-4902.
4th Street
Marketplace
Get Artisan and Farm
Products June 24 - July
15 & September 2 from
5 - 9pm in Clare’s Art Alley. Chamber of Commerce are looking for local
vendors for the 4th Street
Marketplace. Application/
Registration form is located on our website www.
claremichigan.com or call
(989)386-2442 for more
information.
Clare Summerfest
Summerfest will be held
June 24 & 25th. Friday,
June 24th will feature a
Family Picnic in Shamrock
Park, sponsored by Witbeck Family Foods, Children’s Games, sponsored
by Maury Irwin State
Farm, Mid Michigan Community Action Agency, &
City of Clare Parks & Rec.
The Clare Community
Band will perform under
the big pavilion at 8:00pm,
with the Fireworks show
over Shamrock Lake at
dusk.
20 Lakes Antique Engine and
Tractor Show Rolls Into Harrison
Rockets Red Glare
at Shamrock Park
The rocket’s red glare
and bombs bursting in
air will take place Friday
June 24th at 8:00pm at
Clare Shamrock Park. As
a celebration of America’s
Independence the Gateway Community Band will
be performing a tribute to
America. Those in attendance will be treated to a
wide array of music thru
the years ranging from
marches to blues to rock
and roll. Featured in this
year’s concert will be a
medley of songs from Britain’s rock band Queen:
We Will Rock You, Bohemian Rhapsody, Another
One Bites the Dust and
We Are the Champions.
Also being performed will
be St Louis Blues which
contains a mix of swing
and Dixieland. To complete the celebrations are:
An American Celebration
and John Philip Sousa’s
Washington Post March
and The Stars and Stripes
Forever.
Ole Time Country
Gospel Jamboree
First
Congressional
Church is having an
Ole Time Country Gospel Jamboree Saturday
June 25 2016 from 6pm
- 8:30pm. Come and enjoy the singing at a fun
filled night of great entertainment and praising
the Lord. Refreshments
to follow. All musicians
welcome. For more information contact Pastor
Vaughn 989-539-7163 or
Bob 989-539-5637.
Sweat Shaker
Mountain Bike Race
at MMCC
Mid Michigan Community College in Harrison is hosting its annual
Sweat Shaker Mountain
Bike Race on Saturday
June 25th from 10am 2pm. The course is set
in a beautiful forest with
massive trees and rolling hills. This trail sports
some long, gentle climbs
(a few not so gentle) and
holds up well to rain.
A nice combination of
mostly fast flowing trails
some tighter technical trails, with a couple
short sections of hilly two
tracks.
This course will be
challenging and fun for
all racers. The race has
an approximately 1/2
mile rollout which sets
up the 10 miles of single
track. Beginner is one
lap-10 miles. Sport is two
laps-20 miles and Elite/
Expert is three laps-30
miles. Wave starts will
begin promptly at 10:00
am with Elite/Expert,
followed by Sport and
ending with Beginners.
Questions?
Contact
Meghan at mckeen@
midmich.edu or (989)
386-6651
Free ORV Safety
Class
The Clare county Sheriff
Department will be teaching a Free ORV Safety
Class on Saturday June
25th at the Eight Point
Lake Association Clubhouse in Garfield Township. The Class is Free
and will last about 6 hours.
For further information
and seating please contact Sgt Ryan Schmidt at
989-539-7166.
By Steve Landon
We’ve all heard the
sayings “They don’t make
them like they used to” or
“We’re in a throwaway
society”, both comments
are correct. Years ago
things did last, in most
cases longer than the
person using it. Back in
the day you could fix
just about anything or at
least jury rig it to get the
job done. Thanks to the
Twenty Lakes Antique
Engine and Tractor
Association Inc. you can
see engines, tractors, tools
and equipment working as
well as they did when they
came off the assembly line
almost 100 years ago. On
June 16, 17 & 18, Engine
and Tractor enthusiasts young and old can see
Running Crooked
5K Fun Run & Walk
The Crooked Lake
Improvement
Association (CLIA) is hosting a
5K Fun Run or Walk onSaturday, June 25 at 10
a.m. (registration 9 a.m.).
Festivities begin at the
Crooked Lake Township Park on Lake Station Ave. (near the tennis court) in Lake. Free
gift for kids participating
(while supplies last) and
awards given to the first
male and female to finish the race, best running
outfit, best team name for
family or running group.
Come out and enjoy
the fresh air, get a little
exercise, have fun with
these mighty machines
in action at the 32nd
Annual Antique Engine and
Tractor Show in Harrison.
Presented by the Twenty
Lakes Antique Engine and
Tractor Association Inc.,
on club grounds, located
four miles west of Harrison
on M-61, the annual
event features a great flea
market, vintage hands on
interactive displays for
kids, a 4-H petting zoo,
working engines, tractor
parade, sawmill, blacksmith
shop, children’s peddle
tractor pull and more. This
years Featured Tractor is
Ford, the Featured Engine
is Briggs & Stratton.
Pull your kids, grand
kids and friends away from
their electronic toys and
bring them to this year’s
show. Take time to really
friends and family and
pick up a first ever Running Crooked t-shirt.
Sign up online or see
more details at http://
w w w. c r o o k e d l a k e clarecounty.org/5k_runwalk.htm#form.
Anything on
Wheels Car Show
Sunday June 26th
starting at noon at the
Clare Moose Lodge.
UPS 98.5 Live REMOTE from 12 to 2 Live
Music with The Coyote Creek Band from
2-4 Brats & Dogs from
the Grill 12 to 4. For
more information call
(989)386-2442.
look at these machines and
think about how they were
designed and built without
the aid of a computer. Old
fashion ingenuity, a lot of
trial and error, plenty of
hard work along with blood
sweat and tears built these
machines.
Saturday June 18th is the
biggest day of the event so
bring out the whole family,
wander the grounds and
reminisce about simpler
times long ago. Admission
is $3.00 Daily, Weekend
Pass $7.00 Children 12 and
under Free.
For more information
contact the Twenty Lakes
Engine and Tractor
Association Inc. at P.O.
Box 845, Harrison, Mich.,
48625 or call 989-5395035, new members are
always welcome.
Liberty Baptist
Church Vacation
Bible School
Liberty Baptist Church,
6007 West Mannsiding Rd., Lake George,
invites you to Vacation
Bible School, June 27 –
June 29, from 6:30– 8:00
PM.
Thursday, June 30,
beginning at 5:30 PM,
will be a picnic followed
by the children presenting their closing program
for friends and family. All
parents & grandparents
are encouraged to attend
the picnic and the program with their children.
For more information,
please call Pastor Gelatt
at (989) 588-7039.
July 1st - 3rd
Community Picnic
Trinity Christian
Life Center
You’re Invited to a Community Picnic at Trinity
Christian Life Center! 236
E Park, Harrison on July
3rd from 12:00 – 3:00 p.m.
There will be great
food, music, games and
a bounce house for Kids!
Come and Join the fun!!!
For more information, give
us call (989) 539-7479
Firecracker 5K
Walk/Run The
Fourth Awakens
Beaverton Firecracker
5K the Fourth Awakens
on July 2. Registration
begins at 9am. Awards
will be given to top racers,
you can dress up but it’s
not required. To register
for this years race please
visit our active listing on
ACTIVE.COM or stop in to
the Schumacker Agency
in Beaverton and ask for
Kelsey REDMEN to register. You will also be able
to register at packet pick
up before the race. The
Beaverton Firecracker 5K
is sponsored by the Beaverton Activity Center and
MidMichigan Health. For
more information contact
Kate at (989) 615-8064
Community Picnic
Trinity Christian
Life Center
You’re Invited to a Community Picnic at Trinity
Christian Life Center 236
E Park, Harrison on July
3rd from 12:00 – 3:00
p.m. There will be great
food, music, games and a
bounce house for Kids!For
more information, give us
call (989) 539-7479
Send us your
Community Event
info@ClareCountyReview.com
GLSS Winged Sprints
invading
Friday, June 17th
Gates Open at 5 • Racing at 7:45
WEDNESDAY, June 22ND
American Ethanol Late Models
& Kraphol Ford Sponsored Mods
Gates Open at 5 • Racing at 7:00
989-773-2387
Page 2B - The Clare County Review - June 17, 2016
Farwell MS Honor Roll
5th GRADE
Emma Abbott
Kaden Benton
Maverick Blain
Ciara Brooks
Rylee Carncross
Rori Cook
Avery Cotton
Kyle Crusan
Jacob Dickinson
Madison Dysinger
Kierstin Fouts
Ruby Frisch
Madison Haring
Kole Ingraham
Austin Lake
Jalyn LaPratt
Shelia Larsen
Alexis Lenhart
Maria Merlino
Alexis Mize
Hannah Norbury
Michael Nunn
Rachel Odykirk
Gabriel Parker
Anna Pitts
Jozzline Sharrow
Raini Sponseller
Remi Sponseller
Caden Stoddard
Thomas Taylor
Mason Thormeirer
Emilee Wyatt
Kaleigh Yats
Colton Young
Kai Crusan
Izabele Ellul
Samantha Farnum
Amber Flowers
Emily Freudiger
Ashley Gajda
Alana Gaskill
Melanie Hall
Michele Hamilton
Kandice Heinze
Landen Heller
Suvanee Hill
Hannah Huber
Braxton Hutchinson
Jacob Jarczynski
Carter Jones
Amaris Joseph
Alexis Kelley
Kyleigh Kilgore
Jordan Kosnik
Bryanna Lalone
Brynn Lund
Collin McFalls
Lauren McMann
Olivia Moss
Chloe Obermiller
Catalina Ortiz
Matthew Parker
Megan Reed
Joseph Robinson
Abigail Self
Jazzmine Sharrow
Austin Sheets
Megan Smith
Emma Swarthout
Allison Thrush
Madison Travis
Zara Wardwell
Samantha Warner
Luke Waite
Alexis Walker
Chelsea Wiley
Jaiden Yats
6th GRADE
Abby Apps
Collin Barber
Hannah Bass
Alexandria Brown
Chase Burchette
Xandra Card
Mackenzie Commet
Troy Conlay
Gavin Conroy
7th GRADE
Ashlee Ackerman
Alexandria Bacon
Abigail Bass
Breanna Blain
Glenn Coburn
Elliana Dailey
Kylee Donaldson
Anthony Dutton
Zachary Evans
Skylar Foster
Alicia Frost
Chloe Gerow
Nick Gray
Brendan Green
Seth Hanna
Alec Harrison
Braden Jones
Harmoni Herber
Braden Jones
Tyrell KavanaghThrush
Allison Lake
Kaden Lewis
Jasmine Lopez
Issac McIntyre
Bradin Maxey
Liam McFalls
Cameron McInnis
Xavier McNinch
Thomas Murphy
Audrianna Nealey
Shelby Nickerson
Emily Nickerson
Tyler Phelps
Mackenzie Phillips
Sean Riley
Arreeana Shea
Sawyer Shepherd
Liberty Shindorf
Jonathan Smith
Kylie Smith
Braylee Thrush
Madelynne Thrush
Nicholas Thrush
John Walkiewicz
Jasmine Warner
Vincent White
Logan Wunderlich
8th GRADE
Aleia Allbee
Braeden Apps
Brooke Baldwin
Soyer Barnett
Hannah Bellingar
Jordan Bigford
Nathan Bissonnette
Summer Brouwer
Kayla Burchette
Brock Byard
Alexis Card
Jeffery Carncross
Concetta Cataldo
John Cogswell
Lauren Cotton
Elisabeth Dawes
Darren Eigner
Mia Fetzer
Jesse Fogle
Kyle Frost
Harley Greer
Zach Haring
Emily Higgins
Jacob Holt
Barbara Judd
Josh Mangus
Allison Marshall
Ethan Mears
Hannah Montalvo
Rylee Moore
Jeff Nealey
Madison Nunn
Caleb Pitts
James Railer
Breanne Randolph
Caitlyn Simons
Camrun Thornton
Jeffery Timoteo
Andrea Torr
Jenna Wilkerson
Madyson Williams
Bishop Wilson
Conner Yule
Harrison Schools Honor Roll
9TH GRADE
Mariah Adams
*Christina Bailey
Mary Brainard
Tyler Collins
Clara Dropp
*Abigail Dunn
*Makayla Eichhorn
*Abigail Fillhard
Kaylynn Fowler
*Sierra Fredenburg
*Sara Gillespie
Hunter Hakes
*Michael Hathaway
*Heaven Hodgson
*Mitchell Hoskey
*Jeana Jackson
*Kaylee Johns
*Olivia Johnson
Remi Lipovsky
Kylie Lubs
*Marlee McVicar
*Wyatt Minor
Paige Mogg
*Rachael Parrett
*Kaylub Pepper
*Jadyn Rauch
Rachael Rice
Kalib Robinson
*Cody Roehrs
Mariah Sanderson
Burhan Sarsour
Skyler Schaefer
Shyanne Shipman
Breanna Whitaker
Taryn Woodworth
*Devon Zimmerman
*Indicates all A’s
Samantha Russell
Keigen Saxton
*Morgan Shafer
*Shania Slater
*Makayla Stamper
Krystal Steele
*Quincy Swartout
*Zachary Taylor
*Sarae Weakland
*Milena Wein
Holly Wentworth
*Mackenzie White
*Ross Wilson
10TH GRADE
Jayden Agin
Krista Allen
*Harley Bashaw-Mullin
Ryley Bennett
Jacquelyn Bushell
Ryan Carlstrom
Trinity Cassidy
*Jonah Cesal
Ryan Clark
Megan Cole
*Janae Coon
*Joel Coughlin
*Taylor Craine
*Chevelle Crofoot
Erika Cullen
*Chelsea Dunn
Seneca Dussia
Alyssa Feddersen
*Kylee Greenfield
Megan Hadley
*Parker Haines
Brenden Hamilton
Vanessa Harrison
Tyler Head
*Aisha Hiller
*Morgan Hofmann
*Jacob Hopkins
Alexis Jensen
*Baylie Keysor
Catherine Kirchen
*Jonathan Kukulis
*Elizabeth LaPorte
*Quinton Larion
Elayna LeVasseur
Natalie Lewandowski
*Lisanna Lewis
*Maecy Lighthall
*Bryce Lipovsky
Katelynn Maran
Baylee Mashue
Brendan Powell
(located right
behind Clare
Auto Sales)
11TH GRADE
*Gracia Agin
Tyler Battle
Jelena Becanovic
*Jared Bennett
*Cole Burch
Andrew Cargill
*Taylor Chrisman
Elle Coughlin
Logan Curns
Corey Davis
*William Dennis
Kurtis Eichhorn
Jeremy Fillhard
*Savanna Fredenburg
Brendan Gardella
*Lydia Gervase
*James Gillespie
*Harley Hakes
*Britney Hale
*Aja Heber
Devin Hoffman
Angela Kinnan
*Emily Kushmaul
Corey Lang
Austin LaVigne
*Elyssa LeVasseur
Kathryn Lockhart
Nicholas Loeffler
*Hank Minor
Krysten Mogg
*Allyssa Morningstar
Brandon Nimtz
Jens Oellers
Natalie Olstrom
Oscar Orozco Martinez
Mirella Petrucci
Kristen Pitt
*Alice Roe
Kasumi Sakamoto
*Kassidy Seebeck
Kane Smith
Daniel Stalnaker II
*Cecile Telliez
*Jaycob Walters
*Alexa Wheeler
*Irena Wise
*Ashleigh Woolston
*Lena Zeumer
12 GRADE
Shawn Anderson
Dylan Atwell
Reese Avery
Alyssa Bennett
*Jordan Bennett
*Samuel Black
Morgan Bradburn
Zachary Brown
Charles Cassidy
*Cody Chambers
D’Andres Charles
Raymond Chenoweth III
Tyler Clark
Breanna Cosgrove
*Erykah Curns
*Sylvia Davis
Clare Auto
Service, Inc.
108 E. Mineral Street, Clare
989-386-3964
Big town service
small
town pricing
We are bringing our integrity
and honesty from our sales
side over to our service side.
Best prices on sales and service. Our superior service and
low cost will surprise you!
*Carleigh Dellinger
*Hunter Dollen
*Katelyn Duesbout
Ashley Eichhorn
*Toni Fletcher
*Jarod Given
Kenneth Haskell
*Zachariah Hillier
*Noah Hodgson
*Jacob Jackson
Branden Kerley
*Alexis LaChappa
Robert Lang III
*Aleta LaPage
Hannah Lipovsky
*Marissa Mathews
*Madelyn McLavy
*Madison Mott
Kelsey Nagy
*Jasmine O’Toole
*Adam Palmer
Raylene Ramirez
*Adam Scherrer
*Jessica Scherrer
*Steven Scherrer
*Kyla Shannon
Samuel Shaydik
Cameron Sherrick
*Zeanna Smith
Sky Stacy
Kasey Teebo
Joshua Weisheim
Makenzie Williams
Dustin Withey
Girls on the Run hires Fulton
Girls on the Run of Central Michigan is excited to
announce the hire of its first
full-time Program Coordinator, Megan Fulton.
Over the past year, Girls
on the Run of Central
Michigan (GOTR-CM) has
merged efforts with Midland
and Gladwin and added a
Fall Season of its programs.
With that, GOTR-CM
now serves five counties:
Clare, Gladwin, Gratiot,
Isabella, and Midland with
its physical activity-based,
positive youth development programs for girls in
3rd-8th grades. The mission
of GOTR is to inspire girls
to live joyful, healthy,
confident lifestyles using
a fun, experience-based
curriculum which creatively
integrates running.
“We’ve seen a need for
growth of our staff to best
serve the Central Michigan
area,” noted GOTR-CM
Executive Director, Samantha Jones. “Megan exhibits
great passion and commitment to our programs and
we are thrilled to have her
on our team!”
Fulton recently graduated from Central Michigan
University with Bachelors
of Science in Community
Health Education. Prior to
her hire, she completed a
full-time internship over
fifteen weeks with GOTRCM.
“I am very excited to
have this opportunity to
work for the Central Michigan council. I’m looking
forward to growing with the
council and working in such
an amazing community,”
Fulton stated.
For more details about
our programs, the upcoming
fall season, or to get your
school involved, please
contact us!
Contact: Samantha Jones,
989-330-4085, director@
gotrcentralmichigan.org
Website: gotrcentralmichigan.org
• 2” and 4” Well Repair • 5” PVC Wells Drilled
• Water Pump Sales and Service
Brett Dodd • Owner/Driller
989.539.8505
5323 N. Old State • Harrison
Reg.No. 18-1995
doddwells.com
Large Estate Sale & Grand Opening
of Davey’s Salvage & Antiques
Small Antiques Store. Large variety of items. Tools,
Household, Old Iron, Garden & More. 1473 W. Surrey
Rd. Farwell. June 30th - July 2nd. 8 am - 5 pm.
Questions call David @ 989-240-0027, or
check out our website: www.daveyssalvage.com
www.harrison-realty.com
www.harrison-realty.com
www.buyhr.co
www.buyhr.co
Serving Northern Michigan since 1953
ServingOPEN
Northern
Michigan
since 1953
7 DAYS
A WEEK
!!!
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK !!!
795 N 1st St
P.O. Box 499
795 N 1st St
Harrison MI 48625
P.O. Box 499
Harrison MI 48625
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Text:
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the lake. $7,900
705For
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200 acres
Photos Text:
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85377
roads
and trails,
perfect for2 the
400-31,
32 Lakewood
Lots close
outdoor
adventures
andBeech
business
to the
Association
at the
opportunities.
south end $1,000,000
of Arnold Lake. Great
Forcamping
photos Text:
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85377
or building
site.To
$10,000
7795
Avenue
Golf course
ForClare
photos
text P632382
to 85377
operation
lounge
with all
NEAR and
Norway
3 acres
allbar
wooded
greatand
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set Oldest
up your
camper
license
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course
walk County,
to public$1,600,000
access on Windover
in Clare
Lake quiet area! $10,995
www.harrison-realty.com/165033
Text: P279410
To: 85377
LotFor
387photos
Birchwood
Drive 60x175ft
4887 lot
Highland
540sf to
full of
wooded
in Lake Court
of the Pines
potential!
2
BD
with
loft
needs
build on or use for all the
finished, kitchen cabinets are there,
recreational
amenities. $2,200
bath is started. $12,500
For photos Text P885682 To 85377
For photos Text: T521963 To: 85377
LotNHN
218 Camino
NiceRoad
cleared
Finley Lake
Not too far
building
lot close
to towna and
a 2.43
but just
far enough,
perfect
great
location
to
build
a
home
with aor
acre parcel. Build a dream home
walk
out
basement.
$4,000
camp and relax. $13,000
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Photos
P498580
to 85377
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Text:
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101Parklane
Springwood
Bring your
5353
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RV tender
and enjoy
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a
accessaway
with property
improvedwith
lot with
greatget
lakewell &
septic,
slab, sheds.
$14,000
access
to elect,
Cranberry
lake. $8,000
photos
Text:
T11848414
To: 85377
ForFor
photos
Text
P741070
to 85377
6931
Swallow
2/3
bedroom
NHN Finley Lake Road Not too
far
bungalow with lake access. Large lot
but just far enough, 2.43 acre parcel
and nice outdoor space with deck.
to build
a home or camp and relax
close to state land $14,900
on For
weekends.
Possible
L/C $9,500
photos Text:
P597239
to: 85377
Harrison office: (989) 539-2261
Harrison office: (989) 539-2261
Lake George office: (989) 588-6171
Lake George
office:
588-6171
Fax:
(989) (989)
539-9770
Fax: (989) 539-9770
to buy! $5K dn, $5K per yr next 2
House and then was a Township
state land. This 2 BD cabin is being
years, zero interest $15,000
Hall. $48,900
sold by the original owner. $19,900
4305 Haskell Lk Rd Adjoins
588 For
Judy
Nice
and
neat
1
bedroom
18.4
Townline Lake Road 18.4
photos Text: T1907120 To: 85377
For photos Text P659383 to 85377
For photos Text: P768861 To: 85377
Stateland
fenced
square
40
acres,
cottage
just
off
a
paved
road.
Newer
acre
threeBringold
sided parcel.
Niceof paradise,
2456 Stockwell Two unit (mobiles)
4277 Oakley Handyman special on
5775
14 acres
trails,
camper,
mix ofgas. siding,
windows,opportunity.
shingles flooring
near state
investment
One 2 BDbuilding
2 small
lots near
towngarage,
w/ natural
500 site
ft along
Half land
Moonand
Lake, and
trees,
hand
pump, camp
$89,900
more.one
$25,900
$39,900
3B unit. Corner lot, somelakes.
Once
remodeled,
it would
make a and unit,
384
sf cabin to hang out in. Beautiful
For great
Photos
Text T101239 To
85377 For photos
P302784 to 85377
For photos
Text:
T438171
To 85377
updates.Text
$21,000
cabin/home/rental.
$15,000
site, well
wooded.
$59,900
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768sf home
home
on a canal
leading
to
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acre
w/well, carpet
w/exist
gar &
crawl
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2 BA Newer
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with unfinished
hasseptic,
den for elec
desk &or bunk
in ready.
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on for
88x160
lot Crooked
furnace
and
conc beds,
slab. Beach move
& Septic
on location. Private atsomebasement,
car garage, natural gas,
access
all-sports
Lily $99,000
lake. 30 ft nearWell
26x32
gar on
11.53 acres
Haven
lake. $28,500
updates. 2$39,900
end of deadend
road $21,000
all just outside
of town. To
$60,000
campP234148
or build $15,900
For camper.
photos Text:
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Text: P279411
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Text:
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853775324For
photos Text:
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7625
Drew
Road
1720
sf, 4 BD
Rose
Lane
Comfortable
3 bed
Pointview
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Deerwood
NHN cottage
Clarwinwith
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2.6 acre parcel, 2 bath
floor100-08
plan allows
for flexibility,
mobile
on a nice Adorable
lot at the 1BD,bedroom
view ofBeautiful,
1BA,
steel
roof,
vinyl
siding,
full
bath,
serene
14
+
acres
on
Cedar
24x32
tin
pole
barn.
Electric
pole,
old
depending on needs. 2 car garage,
end of the street. Close to lakes and Cranberry Lake. Dedicated beech River.
concept, ceramic tile, laminate,
Grab your canoe and start enjoying
well
and access.
old septic
in unknown ORVopen
Lake
Isabella
$119,900
trails. $29,900
for swimming. $39,900
appliances $23,900
life on the river. $65,000
condition. $15,900
For photos Text: P745166 To 85377 For Photos
Text
P691912
To
85377
For
Photos
Text P489120 To 85377
For photos Text: P590145 To: 85377
For photos Text: P190576 To: 85377
For Photos Text: P261375 To: 85377
6565 Circle Lakefront Home,4 bdrm 53742261
Ferndale
Get
away
or
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lakecharming
Oakridge All set for your future
207
BarbaraCranberry
Road Very
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home on anGreat
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home, this
lot at
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community
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maintained
2BD,lots,
1BA2 MFG
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This Tri-Level
rounder
with lake
accessslab,
in a well,sheds,
mostly
garage,
cement
home
hasfurnished,
a 2 car large
pole barn with
getofaLakes.
way cottage
on 2.37has
acres. year24x32
53' on
Sandplace
Laketo$134,900
recreational
area. $29,900
rooms,
lots offloor
windows.
$43,900
septic
and NG. $24,900
concrete
and shed
$69,900
Perfect
spend the weekends terrific
Text Text:
T1695215
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For with
photos
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For photos
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the Text:
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Lot
6
Canal
Long
Lake
vacant
4802
Wildwood
2BD
1BA
home
or
8671
Old
State
Lake
Thirteen
4071
Oak
Shores
Turn
Key
50 acres Stockwell Building site
For photos Text P678232 to 85377
cottage
with50'deeded
lake access.Cottage.
lot has
sand bottom
with Two
maximum
Nicely
Waterfront
Gem! Completely
bedroomseclusion.
cottage right
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around or foracross
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parcel
notsouth
far from
endused
of lake,
City
of Harrison for
2bd,the
1 ba
, fireplace,central
air,building.
level frontage
the street
to the
canaltown.
week end
ways. $24,900
$69,900 Lake. $44,900
Priced under
SEV. $137,500
$15,900
obtaining
landget
usea permit.
$30,000
lot, natural
shoreline.
to Cranberry
For photos
Text:
P279409
85377For Photos
For photos
T647076
To: 85377
photos
Text:
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1988 1BD 5100 Navajo Trail 2bd/1ba cabin
30190
Rodgers
Custom
Parcel
A&B
Stockwell
acres
near
town,
lakes,
and
state
wooded
parcel
is
located
Park
model
in
Sandy
Shores
Resort.
home on 17.58 acres. This 2432 sq close to state land many updates,
parcels covered with mature trees.on a
land, Great location to build or camp.
winding country paved road in a
made
with lake carpet,
siding, roof, heat, windows.
ft 3 Camping
bdrm 2 bath
homesimple
has large
Build, hunt, or camp. Each listed for
$25,000
desirable area near town. $70,000
access and other perks. $18,000
Nothing to do but enjoy. $32,500
comfortable rooms. $149,900
$27,500
or all 20 acres for $45,000
For photos Text: T537878 To: 85377
For photos Text P664628 to 85377
For photos Text: P261376 To: 85377
For photos
Text T1636918
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For 2522
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Text
P632380
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TBD
Clare
Avenue
9267 Townline Lake Road You are
Windermere Peace & quiet
286 dream
Second
3 bedroom
home
3190
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lake
house
on a nice
levelor
building12ACsure
to haveCranberry
luck at "Campwanna
come
with 27
thisAcres,
2 BD2800'
mobile
home.
split duplexthe
in the
of of thewaterfront
127Att
frtg,heated
2160sfgarage
office,with
showroom,
acres,6 bunks,
lotaoverlooking
5th City
fairway
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30 acres,12.46
10 blinds,
work space. make
Harrison
with
all
the
amenities.
kit/bath
warehouse
w/16'
building
lake2 view,
Tamarack Golf Course. $25,900
and site,
225ftfull
along
rivers.canel
$79,899
Lake+of2970sf
the Pines
perks $19,500
yard $34,500
door,2
& Text:
septics
$175,000
wildlife
habitat.
$47,000 To: 85377
For photos
Text: P281113 To: 85377front,For
photos
Text: P649851
For wells
photos
P651453
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For
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For 4827
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Text P274474
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For
photos
Text:
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3181
Tice
Trail
3BD
1.5BA
home,
Get away retreat
Judy Nice
andBungalow
neat 1 bedroom32 Sandy
Parklane
Drive
5+ acres,
2 car
att garage,
47x19
4785
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largeCome
in thisenjoy the 5247588
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retreat at
with
all the
fixins.
cottage
offwith
a paved
road. Newercondo
barn
& shed.on
Deck
backGreat
for coffee
Turnjust
key
lake and
north
withwith
lake4 access
sports Beauty.
family
home
beds, 3 to
ba,allpole
campsite
the off
water.
siding,
windows,
& deerfor
gazing.
$79,900
beach
access.
Walk toshingles
the park. flooringamenities
barnlake
att $19,900
garage on 10 acres, family
the whole
family
andit more.
$25,900
For photos Text P765360 to 85377
Forfireplace
photos Text:
P664625 To: 85377 Check
out $36,500
room,
$175,000
$48,975
For
photos
Text
P302784
to
85377
10240
Cathleen
3
cabin or
Cranberry
Lake For photos Text: P756222 To 85377 For photos Text T101154 Bed
For 4965
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Text P644888
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To 85377
CherryLarge
Grove
home in theTrail
heart11.2
of the
north. State
retreat,
1bd,Deer
1ba,
40622921
Valleyview
1BD2 bedroom205 Woodland
2090
Deer Lake
Lake appliances,
. 130 ft
Acres
mobile
on a nice
lot across
land
and trails
close pond.
by along with
furnished,
new
well,
wood
cottage
or home
on 3.6
acres. the
HasstreetCamp
on water,
private
lake,
2603
sg ft,stove,
5
up north
on private
from Lily Lake wit a private
the river. $79,900
pine, shed $19,900
covered porches on 3 sides and
bd, knotty
fireplace,
finished walkout,
Close
to
trails
and
16x33
pole
barn,
beach and park. $25,900
For photos Text P674049 to 85377
For photos Text: T101093 To: 85377 smallsubdivision
basement.
$36,500
garage, ect. $179,900
out house.
Wooded
For
photos Text:
T1524602 To: 85377well, 9725
Doe Road
Well$49,700
maintained 2
4190 Southwood Walk to beach. 1
For photos
Text: P820250
For bed,
Photos
Texthome
P590145
to 85377
P219310 To 85377
1355 Christine
2 BD, 1 To
BA 85377
cute as aFor Photos
bdrm Text
Cottage/Home
on
the
1 bath
w beach
access &
4049button...charming
Oak Flats Very up
nice
twocabin with185 Main
2551
Harding 80
abuts
Kitty
Street
1344open
sf downtown
north
Muskegon
River,
floor plan with
laundry-one
of acres
the best
values
in the
bedroom,
one
bath
ranch.
Located
Kurtis
Farms,
30x40
barn,
heated
building
with
five
offices,
lobby,
deeded access to Lily Lake. $36,900
great views of the river. $79,900
area and for the price $19,900
fenced Text
in lots.
2.5 garage
workshop
& 14ft
lean
to. 1760sf,
room,
storage
and to 85377
For photos
P664632
to 85377breakFor
photos
Text room
P666226
For photos
Text:
T797149
To: 85377 on three
with
extra
out
building.
$38,500
4875
Knollwood
720
sf
3
BD
3BD,
2.5BA
great
design.
$235,000
prime
location.
2129
Mel $49,900
Lane Hunters paradise.
4455 Oak Flats 1 bedroom cottage
VacationText:
get away
with lake
access -For photos
P135996
To 85377
This 2 Text:
bed 1P363881
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bordering
For not
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P949552
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far from
Open
plan, For photos
upBA
north
retreat
Elm 3BR 1
located
in$38,500
the
StateCounty
Land Farm
and 1040
close
7852
3 bed
1.5Make
bath this 220 affordable
501 Old
sf, 3to the
fullCook
bath Avenue
and Natural
Gas.
photos Text
P664624
River and
trails.
City For
of Harrison
with a
large lot.to185377BD, 2Muskegon
week
end
retreat.
$19,900
withyour
40x60
pole
barn
on 80
acres,
BA with fenced
yard
and$79,900
Lake
Road
Own adetached
For
photos
Text:
T1524464
To: 85377 Car 8995
For photos
Text:
P482876
To: 85377
garageArnold
Close to
shops,
park,
butts
state
land,
covered
porch,
garage.
Walk
to
piece
of
history
on
10
Acres.
This
11932
George
Lake
Road
Well
built
and the lake. $39,500
trails and blinds $280,000
everything. $49,900
buildingtext
was
originally
a
School
and maintained cottage close to For photos
P237819 to 85377
ForON
photos
Text: T11821058
To 85377
Mannsiding
Rd Building
parcel
4827
Court
365
sf, 1 BD
on Highland
part of nice
pond
w/paved
road
cabin
with
renovations
underway.
frontage. Watch deer, duck, geese
Finish
to your eagle.
taste, $15,000
access allandthis
occasional
sports
Lake.
$12,500
For Cranberry
photos Text:
T225452
To: 85377
ForBphotos
Text:Lake
T101105
85377
& C Long
RoadTo
1.77
acres
road
to Tamaracks
Loton
34paved
Dodge
Lkbacking
Rd 180x200ft
lot
Golf Course
and
Long Lake.
is yours
to camp
or close
build.toHunt,
Driveway
in, lot
$15,000
hike,
relax orisride
oncleared.
1100 acre
For
photos
Text:
T360224
Sportsmans Club. $13,500 To: 85377
Blueberry
Drive to
Fisherman's
For5280
Photos
Text P751826
85377
For Photos Text P127789 To 85377
w/5"Lake
well, easy
keepacres
& easy
B &cabin
C Long
Roadto1.77
on paved road backing to
Tamaracks and close to Long Lake.
Driveway is in, lot cleared. $15,000
For photos Text: P746773 To 85377
90 Sandy Shores 1988 1BD Park
model in Sandy Shores Resort.
Camping made simple with lake
access and other perks. $17,000
For photos Text: P261376 To 85377
24 Red Pine Ridge Level building
lot on an 18 hole golf course in
Northern Michigan. $17,900
For Photos Text T101144 To 85377
2129 Mel Lane Hunters paradise.
This 2 bed 1 bath home bordering
State Land and close to the
Muskegon River and trails. $79,900
For photos Text: P482876 To 85377
40A Haskell Lake Road Wooded
39.9 acre hunting parcel sides to
state land near Haskell Lake. 1960's
mobile used for hunting camp.
$80,000
For photos Text: P465953 To 85377
Lot 4 Clare Avenue Nice level
buildable lot on Business 127 just
north of town and close to the
freeway interchange. $17,000
For Photos Text T1659880 to 85377
30 Red Pine Ridge Level building
lot on an 18 hole golf course in
Northern Michigan $19,900
For Photos Text: T101145 To 85377
4911 Wildwood 540 sf, 2 BD, 1 BA
Furnished cabin with access to allsports Arnold Lake. New plumbing,
fixtures, & well pump $19,900
For photos Text: T101216 To 85377
2361 Bonnie Mae Lily Lake Access
1.09 acre camping site, well, septic,
electric updated, slab, 2007 31ft
camper, shed, 158x299. $21,900 .
For Photos Text P153814 To 85377
4334 Tobacco Drive Clean older 2
BD mobile with nicely wooded
setting. Shed, outhouse just in case,
large deck. Furnished as seen
$25,500
For Photos Text P746775 To 85377
5539 Gronda 720 sf, furnished 2
BD cabin with Arnold Lake access.
Great location, 70x150 ft lot,
sunroom, views of lake. $39,900
For Photos Text P595178 to 85377
6761 Carpenter Year round or
resort living. Large home, attached
garage and detached hobby shed
water access $39,900
For Photos Text 657681 to 85377
4214 Southwood Meticulous 2 BD
cabin with large kitchen and dining
area, 15x20 garage, open deck, fire
ring, and lake access $39,900
For photos Text: P745558 To85377
2871 Robin 1/250th shared
ownership in beachfront Lily Lake
lot. 2 BD cabin on wooded corner
lot come turn-key ready. $39,900
For photos Text: P775180 To 85377
307 Park 860 sf 1 BD home with
room for guests in the fully finished
basement. Walk to everything town
has to offer. $39,900
For Photos Text P237777 To 85377
For photos Text: T287226 To 85377
215 Second Income property or
business operation you decide.
Apartment, beauty shop and office
space, shared services $49,900
For photos Text T11830904 To 85377
8281 Lakeview Large building lot
on canal to Springwood Lake 2.
Electricity is on site and lot has
been partially cleared. $49,900
For Photos Text P223978 to 85377
1055 Arthur Country living is
sweet- 1100sf, 2Bd/2Ba quality built
2 sty home on acre wooded lot
between Clare & Harrison. $50,000
For Photos Text: P877990 To85377
631 Eola Well maintained 2 bdrm
home not far from town. Very roomy
and comfortable, attached garage
circle paved drive. $53,500
For photos Text T1524477 to 85377
2304 Lake Court Shared Lily Lake
access, 2 BD 1973 mobile, 24x32
detached garage, 2.18 acres with
20x50 green house. $54,000
For photos Text P741069 to 85377
The Clare County Review - June 17, 2016 - Page 3B
Cops & Doughnuts purchase American Cleaners building
Cops & Doughnuts of
Clare announced Thursday that they have signed
papers on the purchase of
another building downtown.
The nine cop owners
now own the former American Cleaners building on
West Fifth St. The former
owners, Dave and Julie
Isaac, have retired from the
dry cleaning business.
Cops & Doughnuts
president Greg “Ryno”
Rynearson said,”The building will have several uses
including dry storage and
space for our cake decorator. Other uses are also
being considered including
corporate offices.
Vice President Al, “Bubba” White said, “Cops &
Doughnuts may now own
the building, but we are
giving the entire South and
East wall to Kim Kleinhardt at the 515 Gallery for
the Art Alley Project.”
Cops & Doughnuts also
wants to help the Art Alley
Project by asking people
to donate license plates
from 1969 and older to
be used as an art project.
The license plates can be
dropped off or mailed to
the 515 Gallery.
The nine cop owner
said they are pleased to
expand their footprint in
downtown Clare and look
forward to more exciting
projects to come.
American Cleaners on West Fourth Street in Downtown Clare.
Mid Health awards $200k in scholarships
Read
stories,
see
photos
and
connect
with
other
readers!
BBBS group visit Macinac Island
Mid Michigan Big
Brothers Big Sisters, Big
Brothers Big Sisters of
the Lakes, and Meceola
Big Brothers Big Sisters
took a group of 55 people
to Mackinac Island on
June 4th, 2016. Bigs and
Littles enjoyed a ferry ride,
carriage tour, the Butterfly House, lunch, and ice
cream.
JACK OF ALL TRADES
COINS
Scammer fools Mount
Pleasant Speedway
A scam affecting cashiers statewide hit locally.
A quick change artist
was successful at a Speedway on Pickard Road in
Mount Pleasant.
Quick change artists
try to confuse cashiers by
paying for inexpensive
items using large bills,
then aggressively throw
out small bills, taking all
of their own bills plus
their change from the
cashier.
Police say the cash
drawer at Speedway came
up about $20 short as a
result.
A couple hours later
the same thing happened
in Big Rapids, and now
police are working to put a
stop to this.
“I would encourage
everybody if they are a
cashier to move the money
back to the till, move it
and then make the change
from there and then hand
the change out. If somebody tries to confuse you,
slow down, take your
time. And if they ever
want to complain about it,
they can always call us,”
says Jeff Browne, public
information officer.
New Mt. Pleasant Location NOW OPEN!
Located at 1028 S. Mission
Old Gold Creations
Next to Jon’s Country Burger
I BUY ALL COINS
Silver & Gold
FREE APPRAISALS
HOME APPRAISALS
WE PAY YOU MORE
THAN ANYONE!
FOR COINS • JEWELRY
GOLD • SILVER
Gutters, Shutters & Back Porch Clutter
Summer brings back-breaking work.
Come see us, we can help.
Clare Hometown
Chiropractic
We are a Full
Buy • Sell • Trade shop!
Over 25 Years of experience!
We are your only coin &
jewelry experts!
I BUY ALL
COLLECTIONS
FROM ONE COIN TO
A DUMP TRUCK FULL
Antiques • Coins
Jewelry • Collectibles
and much more!
Stop in or call for your
free appointment
517-204-0787
Ask for Matt
Read News
Online!
www.clarecountyreview.com
River Haven
I MILLI
LT
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DO
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Each Office Independently Owned and Operated
Chris Lowes®
Email: Lowes4realestate@gmail.com
Cell: 989-741-3989
11200 Arnold Lake Road $155,000
10 Acres on Cedar River. 3 BR 2 bath Home w basement. Garage
& Pole Bldg. Fireplace. Must see to appreciate. Schedule an Appt
to view today!!
1874 Pratt Lake Road $119,900
Reduced Again!! Waterfront 3 BR 1.5 bath Pratt Lake Home.
Natural Gas. Garage + shed. Level Waterfront Lot with Sandy
Frontage. Motivated Seller!!
777 W. Cedar Ave., Gladwin • www.lowes4realestate.com
Stutzman
Feed and Farm Supply
Complete line of Nutrena & Tribute Feeds in stock
We now
carry a
full line of
animal
feeds!
Feeds for: Rabbits • Chickens
Dogs • Cats • Dairy • Horses
9736 Tobacco Drive, Clare • 1-989-386-3013
FREE
$5.00
ACTIVATION
CHARGERS
$25.00 Value
Good thru 7/5/16
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1028 S. Mission, Suite 3
Mt. Pleasant, MI 48858
1028 S. Mission, Suite 3
Mt. Pleasant, MI 48858
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get up to 5 lines as low as
$95
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Good thru 7/5/16
Elite Wireless
1028 S. Mission St. • Suite 3 • Mt. Pleasant, MI 48858
Hours: Mon-Sat 10am - 8pm • Sun 12pm - 5pm
NEXT TO JON’S COUNTRY BURGERS
989-317-8500 • See us on Facebook
391 S. Webber St., Farwell • 989-588-2222
www.whitmansharpening.com • Open Monday-Friday
Now Open in Farwell
Professional grooming in our
state of the art grooming facility.
Kurt Keppner
New Patients canDr.get
218 E. Fifth Street, Clare Vast selection of grooming supplies
an exam and up toIn the
two
Gateway Title Building
x-rays only $25! (989) 424-6360
www.clarechiro.com
Help is just Around the Corner
Patients:
EXPIRES 07/06/16 New
Get a FREE
15-Minute
Massage
Don’t forget massage!
Beaverton
Outdoor
After Your First Visit
Must bring coupon to appointmentExpires 2/24/12
Wood Furnace
Beaverton, MI 48612
Ask us about our decompression services!
We’re the only one in the area that offers this!
989-435-9240
218 E. Fifth St., Clare • 989-424-6360
(Insurance will be processed as required)
Bring in this ad for
M 8-5 T 9-6 W 8-6 Th 6:30-6 F 8-2 S 9-12
CentralBoiler.com
Family Center
11245 N. Mission Rd., Clare
989-386-KIDS (5437)
FOR ANYONE WHO IS A DAD OR HAS A DAD!
Patient Appreciation Day
Dr. Tamara Slusher
One Day Only • June 17
th
All Insurances
Accepted
Receive: FREE exam,
initial adjustment, and x-rays
(2 plates if necessary)
If insurance exists, all procedures must be billed per provider agreement.
Expires 6-17-16
Digital X-Rays • Emergency Care Available • 3 Convenient Locations
$10.00 OFF a grooming
FIRST TIME CUSTOMERS ONLY
Rodnick Chiropractic
Participating with
Medicare, Medicaid,
BCBS, Blue Care
Network; Aetna,
Cigna, Priority Health,
Wk. Comp. & Auto
Associate Broker
Clip and Save
Ghilardi, chair; Ashley
Raetz-Myers, administrator; William Bailey,
Jim Bicknell, M.D.,
Bridgett Husted, Dennis
Johnson, O.D., Ellamary
Kane, Colleen Markel,
Francine Padgett, Greg
Rogers and Amy Spalding.
Applications for the
2017-2018 school year will
be accepted beginningDecember 1, 2016 through
March 1, 2017. Those
interested in reviewing
the eligibility guidelines,
including a scholarship
application, may visitwww.
midmichigan.org/bailey,
or call (989) 839-3638. A
video highlighting planned
giving and the Bailey Family Fund scholarship program can also be viewed at
this link.
Those interested in
additional scholarship opportunities may visitwww.
midmichigan.org/scholarships.
MU
to qualified individuals.
More than 1,000 area students have benefited from
their legacy gift.
As life-long residents,
Bernard and Melissa Anne
Bailey’s contributions in
business, leadership and
philanthropy have made a
difference in the Midland
community for more than
50 years.
According to their
nephew William Bailey,
“As their long and productive lives became more
difficult in later years, their
appreciation for those in
the medical profession
became the focal point of
their legacy of giving. It
was their sincere desire
to recognize the contributions of all caregivers and
to help those who have the
passion to make caring for
others their life’s work.”
Members of the Bailey
Fund Scholarship Committee include Greg
N
Gladwin – Kamah Ellena, Selina French, Sue
Lennon, Marlene Smalley,
Melanie Smalley, Scott
Smith, Jennifer Woods
Harrison – Mary Beach,
Michele Booms, Kristi
Lizyness
Rosebush – Sylvia
Vogel
Examples of the health
professions being pursued
by these students are anesthesia, nursing, medicine,
occupational therapy, pharmacy, physician assistant,
physical therapy, radiology, respiratory therapy
and speech therapy.
The Bernard F. and Melissa Anne Bailey Family
Fund was initiated through
a $3.3 million bequest
left by Bernard Bailey to
MidMichigan in 2004.
Since Bernard Bailey’s
bequest was placed in an
endowment, a portion of
the income earned from the
fund is awarded annually
O
MidMichigan Health
has awarded $195,225 to
147 area students for the
2016-2017 school year
from The Bernard F. and
Melissa Anne Bailey Family Fund. More than $2
million in total has been
awarded in scholarship
funds by the Bailey Family
Fund to assist area students
as they pursue a career in
health care since it began
offering scholarships in
2005. The following individuals have received scholarships for the upcoming
academic school year:
Beaverton – Katelyn
Bergman, Jordan Hayes,
Stephanie Williams
Clare – Renee Doherty,
Garret Greer, Tiffini Jarstfer, Travis Walton
Coleman – Melissa
Grice, Emily Havens, Melissa Huckins, Jean Welther
Farwell – Gloria LaFollette
Page 4B - The Clare County Review - June 17, 2016
43rd Holley-Colt reunion
Farwell Students of Character
The Farwell Students of Character for the month of May are:Back: Raelynn Pacheco,
Josta Green, Lillie Graham, Nicholas Ackerman, Austin Harris, Faith St Charles and
Jadeyn Back.Middle: Walker Brown, Christopher Lake, Ethan Riker, Cassidy Steinert,
Ava Rose-Jobe and Rylee Back. Front: Nolan Jarczynski and Blake Sholes.
Like us on
NOTICE
The Clare City Fire Department is seeking to purchase a
pickup (2016 or newer) by sealed bid. Detailed specifications may be obtained from Clare City Hall, 202 W Fifth
St, Clare, MI 48617, Monday through Friday between
8:00 am and 5:00 pm.
Sealed bids will be accepted until 2:00 p.m. on Tuesday,
June 28, 2016, at which time they will be opened. Sealed
bids shall be submitted to:
City of Clare
Fire Dept. Pickup Bid
202 West Fifth Street
Clare, MI 48617
The City of Clare reserves the right to accept and/or reject any and/or all bids. The City of Clare is an equal
opportunity provider and employer.
HATTON TOWNSHIP NOTICE
ANNUAL BUDGET HEARING
The Hatton Township Board will hold a public hearing
on the proposed township budget for fiscal year 20162017 at 3988 E. Ashard Road, on June 21, 2016 at 7:00
p.m. *The property tax Millage rate proposed to be levied to support the proposed budget will be a subject of
this hearing and is based on the Headley amendment
for roll back. Such tax becomes part of the general
fund for operational purposes. A copy of the budget
may be reviewed by contacting the Clerk.
This notice is posted in compliance with PA 267 of
1976 as amended (Open Meetings Act), MCLA 41.72a
(2) (3) and the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA).
The Hatton Township Board will provide necessary
reasonable auxiliary aids and services, such as signers
for the hearing impaired and audio tapes of printed
materials being considered at the meeting, to individuals with disabilities at the meeting upon 15 days notice
to the Hatton Township Board.
Individuals with disabilities requiring auxiliary aids or
services should contact the Hatton Township Board by
writing or calling the Clerk at 989-965-1660.
Jessica Evans, Clerk
STATE OF MICHIGAN
80th DISTRICT COURT
Case No. 16-1587 SP
Hon. Joshua M. Farrell
ADD Investment, LLC,
Plaintiff,
-vsJames J. Davis and Linda S. Davis,
Defendants,
Order For Service of Process by Publication
At a Court session held in the courthouse in
Harrison, MI on May 26, 2016
Present: Hon Joshua M. Farrell
District Court Judge
After reading Plaintiff ’s motion, the court finds that
Plaintiff has shown that service of process cannot reasonably be made on Defendants under MCR 2.105(A)
in that diligent attempts toserve Defendants by personal delivery have been unsuccessful. The court further
finds, pursuant to MCR 2.105(1), that service of process
by publication is the best available method of service
of process reasonably calculated to give Defendants actual notice ofthe proceedings and an opportunity to be
heard.
IT IS ORDERED:
1. Plaintiff may serve Defendants by publishing
the following notice once each week for three consecutive weeks in a newspaper, as defined in MCR
2.106(F), published in Clare County:
An action seeking forfeiture of a land contract
dated July 23, 2010 has been commenced by ADD
Investment, LLC, against James Joseph Davis
and Linda Sue Davis in Michigan’s 80th District
Court. Defendants must answer or take other
action permitted by law within 28 days after the
last date of publication. If Defendants do not answer or take other action within the time allowed,
judgment may be entered-against them for the relief demanded in the complaint.
2. Plaintiff must mail a copy of this order, along with
a summons and a copy of the complaint, by registered mail, return receipt requested, to Defendants
at their last known residence.
/s/ Joshua M. Farrell
District Court Judge
Prepared by:
Stuart J. Snider (P29043)
Attorney for Plaintiff
17211 W. 12 Mile Road
Southfield, MI 48076
(248) 443-9700
Facebook
On June 4, 2016 the employees of the Holley-Colt
Corporation celebrated
their 43rd annual reunion
picnic.
There was 32 attending
the pot luck dinner. After
eating and going over old
times they posed for their
picture. Thro Corporation
started in Clare in 1946
and closed in 1972.
Posing in the picture are
Bill Wood, Elva Cohee,
Betty Draves, Lloyd Eberhart, Maxine Bates, Dale
Laverty, Ken Kapplinger,
Frank Graham, Bill White
#1, Bill Schlafley, Chuck
NOTICE
The City of Clare is accepting sealed bids for the purchase of one (1) Mid-Mount ZTR Mower (or equivalent). Specifications may be obtained from Alan J. Jessup, Public Works Director, at Clare City Hall, Monday
through Friday, 7:00 a.m. to 3:30 p.m., 989/386-7541,
extension 202. Sealed bids should be submitted to:
City of Clare
Mower Bid
202 West Fifth Street
Clare, MI 48617
Sealed bids will be accepted until 2:30 pm on Tuesday,
June 28, 2016 at which time they will be opened. The
City of Clare reserves the right to accept and/or reject
any and/or all bids. The City of Clare is an equal opportunity provider and employer.
NOTICE
The City of Clare is accepting sealed bids for the installation of metal roofing on a 26’ x 44’ pavilion and a 35’
x 33’ cement block building located in Shamrock Park.
Sealed bids will be accepted until 2:15 p.m. on Tuesday,
June 28, 2016, at which time they will be opened. Submit sealed bids to:
City of Clare
Shamrock Park Roofing Project
202 West Fifth Street
Clare, MI 48617
Detailed project descriptions may be obtained from
Clare City Hall, Monday through Friday, 8:00 a.m. to
3:30 p.m., 989/386-7541, ext. 202. The City of Clare
reserves the right to accept and/or reject any and/or all
bids. The City of Clare is an equal opportunity provider
and employer.
AS A DEBT COLLECTOR, WE ARE ATTEMPTING
TO COLLECT A DEBT AND ANY INFORMATION
OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE.
NOTIFY US AT THE NUMBER BELOW IF YOU ARE
IN ACTIVE MILITARY DUTY. MORTGAGE SALE Default having been made in the terms and conditions
of a certain mortgage made by JEANNINE L COLE and
LARRY M COLE, Husband and Wife, Mortgagors, to
Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc as nominee for GMAC Mortgage Corporation, Mortgagee, dated the 27th day of September, 2004 and recorded in the
office of the Register of Deeds, for The County of Clare
and State of Michigan, on the 8th day of October, 2004
in Liber 930 of Clare County Records, page 645, said
Mortgage having been assigned to Ditech Financial LLC
on which mortgage there is claimed to be due, at the
date of this notice, the sum of Eighty Seven Thousand
Seven Hundred Twenty & 02/100 ($87,720.02), and no
suit or proceeding at law or in equity having been instituted to recover the debt secured by said mortgage or
any part thereof. Now, therefore, by virtue of the power of sale contained in said mortgage, and pursuant to
statute of the State of Michigan in such case made and
provided, notice is hereby given that on the 6th day of
July, 2016 at 11:00 AM o’clock Local Time, said mortgage will be foreclosed by a sale at public auction, to
the highest bidder, at the County Courthouse in Harrison, MI MI (that being the building where the Circuit
Court for the County of Clare is held), of the premises
described in said mortgage, or so much thereof as may
be necessary to pay the amount due, as aforesaid on said
mortgage, with interest thereon at 5.875 per annum and
all legal costs, charges, and expenses, including the attorney fees allowed by law, and also any sum or sums
which may be paid by the undersigned, necessary to
protect its interest in the premises. Which said premises
are described as follows: All that certain piece or parcel of land, including any and all structures, and homes,
manufactured or otherwise, located thereon, situated in
the Garfield Township, County of Clare, State of Michigan, and described as follows, to wit: Lot 20, of Silver
Birch Shores Subdivision, according to the recorded
plat thereof, Garfield Township, Clare County Register
of Deeds Records, Clare County, Michigan, in Liber 7,
Page 15 of plats, Clare County Records During the six
(6) months immediately following the sale, the property
may be redeemed, except that in the event that the property is determined to be abandoned pursuant to MCLA
600.3241a, the property may be redeemed during 30
days immediately following the sale. Pursuant to MCLA
600.3278, the mortgagor(s) will be held responsible to
the person who buys the property at the foreclosure sale
or to the mortgage holder for damaging the property
during the redemption period. If the sale is set aside for
any reason, the Purchaser at the sale shall be entitled
only to a return of the deposit paid. The Purchaser shall
have no further recourse against the Mortgagee or the
Mortgagee’s attorney Dated: 6/3/2016 Ditech Financial
LLC Mortgagee _______________________________
_____ FABRIZIO & BROOK, P.C. Attorney for Ditech
Financial LLC 700 Tower Drive, Ste. 510 Troy, MI 48098
(248) 362-2600 GTAZ FNMA ColeJeannine
(06-03)(06-24)
Seymour, Ed Richardson,
Pat Sprague, Norm Schroeder, Walt Longstreth, Joe
Pudvay, Bill White #2,
Bruce Dole, George Miller
and Carl Schaaf.
3 earn scholarships
Three deserving Clare
County 4-H members
were presented with the
4-H Higher Education
Scholarship at the Senior
Honors Awards ceremony
for Clare Public Schools.
The Clare County 4-H
Council sponsors the
Higher Education Scholarship each year for up to
three deserving youth in the
amount of $500.00 each.
The 4-H Higher Education
Scholarship is one of the
most prestigious awards
given to 4-H members in
Clare County. Candidates
must meet all eight (8) of
the criteria, complete an
application, and participate
in an interview with a panel
of judges made up of community members.
This year’s winners were
Josiah Bear, Clare; Paige
Gould, Clare; and Katharina Jehnzen, Harrison. NOTICE OF PROPOSED ORDINANCE AMENDMENT
CITY OF CLARE
PUBLIC NOTICE
The City of Clare Planning Commission will hold a public
hearing on Wednesday, July 13, 2016, at 6:30 p.m. at Clare
City Hall, 202 W. Fifth Street, to receive public comments
pertaining to an amendment of the City of Clare Code of
Ordinances: Chapter 52, Article III, Section 52-279 – Sign
Review Standards; Chapter 52, Article IX, Section 52-437
through Section 52-444. A copy of the proposed Ordinance amendment is available for review in the Clerk’s office, Monday through Friday, 8 am to 5 pm. The City Commission will accept comments at the hearing or in writing
if the written comments are received by the City Clerk not
later than 5 p.m. on the date of the hearing.
The City of Clare City Commission will hold a public
hearing on Monday, July 18, 2016, at 6:00 p.m. at Clare
City Hall, 202 W. Fifth Street, to receive public comments
pertaining to an amendment of the City of Clare Code of
Ordinances: Chapter 52, Article III, Section 52-279 – Sign
Review Standards; Chapter 52, Article IX, Section 52-437
through Section 52-444. A copy of the proposed Ordinance amendment is available for review in the Clerk’s office, Monday through Friday, 8 am to 5 pm. The City Commission will accept comments at the hearing or in writing
if the written comments are received by the City Clerk not
later than 5 p.m. on the date of the hearing. The City of
Clare is an equal opportunity employer and provider.
Diane Lyon
Clare City Clerk
FORECLOSURE NOTICE RANDALL S. MILLER
& ASSOCIATES, P.C. MAY BE A DEBT COLLECTOR ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT A DEBT AND
ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED MAY BE USED
FOR THAT PURPOSE. IF YOU ARE A MILITARY
SERVICEMEMBER ON ACTIVE DUTY NOW OR
IN THE PRIOR NINE MONTHS, PLEASE CONTACT OUR OFFICE. Mortgage Sale - Default has
been made in the conditions of a certain mortgage
made by Daniel Finney AKA Daniel L. Finney, A
Single Man to Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. acting solely as a nominee for Ross Mortgage Corporation, Mortgagee, dated April 23, 2010,
and recorded on August 13, 2010, in Liber 1147, Page
847, Clare County Records, said mortgage was assigned to J.P. Morgan Mortgage Acquisition Corp. by
an Assignment of Mortgage which has been submitted to the Clare County Register of Deeds, on which
mortgage there is claimed to be due at the date hereof
the sum of Fifty-Two Thousand Eight Hundred Nineteen and 90/100 ($52,819.90) including interest at the
rate of 5.50000% per annum. Under the power of sale
contained in said mortgage and the statute in such
case made and provided, notice is hereby given that
said mortgage will be foreclosed by a sale of the mortgaged premises, or some part of them, at public venue,
at the place of holding the Circuit Court in said Clare
County, where the premises to be sold or some part
of them are situated, at 11:00 AM on July 20, 2016
Said premises are situated in the City of Clare, Clare
County, Michigan, and are described as: A PARCEL OF LAND IN THE CITY OF CLARE, CLARE
COUNTY, MICHIGAN, BEGINNING AT A POINT
76 FEET NORTH OF THE SOUTHEAST CORNER
OF LOT 8, BLOCK 2, MCEWAN`S FIRST ADDITION TO THE CITY OF CLARE, THENCE WEST
79 FEET; THENCE NORTH 62 FEET; THENCE
EAST 79 FEET; THENCE SOUTH 62 FEET BACK
TO THE POINT OF BEGINNING. BEING PART
OF LOTS 7, 8, 9, BLOCK 2 OF MCEWAN`S FIRST
ADDITION TO THE CITY OF CLARE, ACCORDING TO THE RECORDED PLAT THEREOF AS
RECORDED IN THE OFFICE OF THE REGISTER
OF DEEDS, CLARE COUNTY, MICHIGAN. Commonly known as: 903 BEECH ST, CLARE, MI 48617
If the property is eventually sold at foreclosure sale,
the redemption period will be 6.00 months from
the date of sale unless the property is abandoned
or used for agricultural purposes. If the property is
determined abandoned in accordance with MCL
600.3241 and/or 600.3241a, the redemption period
will be 30 days from the date of sale, or 15 days after
statutory notice, whichever is later. If the property is
presumed to be used for agricultural purposes prior
to the date of the foreclosure sale pursuant to MCL
600.3240, the redemption period is 1 year. Pursuant
to MCL 600.3278, if the property is sold at a foreclosure sale, the borrower(s) will be held responsible to
the person who buys the property at the mortgage
foreclosure sale or to the mortgage holder for damaging the property during the redemption period.
TO ALL PURCHASERS: The foreclosing mortgagee
can rescind the sale. In that event, your damages are,
if any, limited solely to the return of the bid amount
tendered at sale, plus interest. Dated: June 17, 2016
Randall S. Miller & Associates, P.C. Attorneys for J.P.
Morgan Mortgage Acquisition Corp. 43252 Woodward Avenue, Suite 180, Bloomfield Hills, MI 48302,
(248) 335-9200 Case No. 16MI00452-1
(06-17)(07-08)
The Clare County Review - June 17, 2016 - Page 5B
CCCF awards $8.5K to track, stage
Clare County Community Foundation helps
out Harrison Community
Schools
Harrison Community
Schools is thrilled to have
received an award of
$8500.00 to use towards
Varsity Track warm-ups
and a stage curtain for the
gymnasium.More specifically, track and field
athletes were able to stay
warm during the late nights
and cold meets with new
Under Armour warm up
pants. In addition, a new
stage curtain and curved
track will replace the old
one at Harrison Middle
School. This will help
with the acoustics for band
and drama performances at
the school.
4 Ways to Get Your News
Print • Online • Facebook • Email
BBBS
Match
We are excited to celebrate our newest match with
Big Sister Shirley Papp and
Little Sister Alissa! They
were matched this week in
Clare. Shirley and Alissa
are looking forward to getting to know each other and
sharing quality girl time,
like doing their nails and
shopping! To learn more
about our mentoring options
or to start the application
process contact Big Brothers Big Sisters at 989-3869304, info@midmichiganbbbs.org, or check us out on
Facebook.
Brugger
named to list
Davenport University has announced that
Ervanna Brugger of Clare
has been named to the
President’s List for the
Winter 2016 Semester. The
President’s List recognizes
top students who excel
with outstanding academic
performance. To achieve
recognition, a student must
maintain a minimum 3.8
grade point average while
enrolled in at least nine
credits of regular coursework.
STATE OF WISCONSIN
CIRCUIT COURT
RACINE COUNTY
Case No. 2016FA000488
In RE the marriage of
Edwin Larrylee
Stillman Jr. and
Katrina Lynn Stillman
Activity: First hearing FCC
Date: 06/06/2016
Time: 1:30 p.m.
Court Official:
Georgia L. Herrera,
Court Commissioner
TO: Edwin Larrylee
Stillman Jr.
NO MC
Marriage: 07/09/1988
File Date: 04/14/2016
Affidavit of non. Since the
address where summons
was attempted was a home
that the wife inherited from
her parents. This is the
only address that he knows
of her to be at. He received
a call from a bill collection agency stating that the
wife was at that address
approximately a year ago.
Permission to publish
granted. 60 day
extension granted - good
cause fundings.
Note: 07/13/16 - 90 days
Next Activity: August 1st
appearance
Date: 08/01/16 at 2:30 p.m.
5th Floor
A copy of the proceedings of the Clare County Board of Commissioners’ regular meeting
has been posted on the bulletin board of the
County Building and copies are available,
without charge at the Clare County Clerk’s
Office in Harrison, Michigan.
Signed: Pamela Mayfield, County Clerk
FORECLOSURE NOTICE THIS FIRM IS A DEBT
COLLECTOR ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT A DEBT.
ANY INFORMATION WE OBTAIN WILL BE USED
FOR COLLECTING A DEBT. IF THE DEBT WAS
DISCHARGED IN A BANKRUPTCY PROCEEDING,
THIS NOTICE IS NOT AN ATTEMPT TO COLLECT THAT DEBT. If you are in the Military, please
contact our office at the number listed below. ATTN
PURCHASERS: This sale may be rescinded by the foreclosing mortgagee for any reason. In that event, your
damages, if any, shall be limited solely to the return of
the bid amount tendered at sale, plus interest, and the
purchaser shall have no further recourse against the
Mortgagor, the Mortgagee, or the Mortgagee’s attorney. MORTGAGE SALE – Default has been made in
the conditions of a certain mortgage made by: Hector
O. Perez aka Hecter Perez, A Single Man to Mortgage
Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. as nominee for
GMAC Mortgage, LLC fka GMAC Mortgage Coporation, its successors and assigns, Mortgagee, dated February 5, 2007 and recorded February 20, 2007 in Liber
1034 Page 85 Clare County Records, Michigan. Said
mortgage was assigned to: Ocwen Loan Servicing, LLC,
by assignment dated June 19, 2013 and recorded July 1,
2013 in Liber 1233, Page 689, on which mortgage there
is claimed to be due at the date hereof the sum of Thirty-One Thousand Three Hundred Thirty-Nine Dollars
and Ninety-Four Cents ($31,339.94) including interest
7% per annum. Under the power of sale contained in
said mortgage and the statute in such case made and
provided, notice is hereby given that said mortgage will
be foreclosed by a sale of the mortgaged premises, or
some part of them, at public vendue, Circuit Court of
Clare County at 11:00AM on July 13, 2016 Said premises are situated in Township of Hayes, Clare County,
Michigan, and are described as: The North half (N onehalf) of Lot No. 155, Cranberry Lake Subdivision No. 1,
as recorded in Plats, Clare Count Records. Commonly
known as 5416 Blueberry Dr., Harrison MI 48625 The
redemption period shall be 6 months from the date of
such sale, unless determined abandoned in accordance
with MCL 600.3241 or MCL 600.3241a, in which case
the redemption period shall be 30 days from the date of
such sale, or upon the expiration of the notice required
by MCL 600.3241a(c), whichever is later; or unless MCL
600.3240(17) applies. If the property is sold at foreclosure sale under Chapter 32 of the Revised Judicature
Act of 1961, under MCL 600.3278, the borrower will be
held responsible to the person who buys the property at
the mortgage foreclosure sale or to the mortgage holder
for damaging the property during the redemption period. Dated: 6/10/2016 Ocwen Loan Servicing, LLC,
Assignee of Mortgagee Attorneys: Potestivo & Associates, P.C. 811 South Blvd. Suite 100 Rochester Hills, MI
48307 (248) 844-5123 Our File No: 16-38075
(06-10)(07-01)
CITY OF CLARE
PUBLIC NOTICE
The City of Clare Planning Commission will hold a public hearing on Wednesday, July 13, 2016 at 6:30 p.m. at
Clare City Hall to receive public comment pertaining
to a site plan application of Alro Steel, 635 Industrial
Drive, Clare, Michigan, for proposed new construction
of an 1,600 square foot storage structure. The Planning
Commission will accept comments at the hearing or in
writing if the written comments are received by the City
Clerk not later than 5:00 p.m. on the date of the hearing.
A copy of the site plan application is available for review
at the City Clerk’s Office. The City of Clare is an equal
opportunity employer and provider.
Diane Lyon
City Clerk
MS patient gets scooter
Tinesha Vollmar of Harrison, who has MS, navigates her
new scooter which was donated to her by G’s Kustom
Karts in Harrison.
SURREY TOWNSHIP
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING &
SPECIAL MEETING
The Surrey Township Board will hold a Special Meeting
and Public Hearing on Thursday, June 30, 2016 at 3:00
p.m. in the Surrey Township Hall, 110 E. Michigan, to
amend the 2015/2016 Budget and review/approve the
proposed Township Budget for 2016/2017.
“The property tax millage rate proposed to be
levied to support the proposed budget will be a
subject of this hearing.”
Copies of the proposed budget are available for public
inspection at the clerk’s office at 110 E. Michigan during
regular business hours.
Glenna Bradbury, Surrey Township Clerk
Page 6B - The Clare County Review - June 17, 2016
Don’t go far, shop where you are!
Find what you’re looking for in Clare County Review Business Directory
Harsh
EXCAVATING
ROBBIN
Generac Certified Sales & Service
Auto Stand By Generators
Customers
are our
#1 Priority
Commercial and Residential
www.apcomelectric.com
1.877.272.6628
Residential • Commercial
INC.
Producer of Sand, Crushed Concrete & Screened Topsoil
9395 S. Clare Ave., Clare, MI
989-386-3528
www.harshexcavating.com
CROWN
CONCRETE
989-429-3697
“A Bright Idea”
Over 25 Years Experience
Mark Heckman
Owner
HARRISON, MI
(989) 539-3247 • (989) 429-5623
Insured
Free Estimates
Master Electrician
License #6208632
BEEMER’S
blished in 1995
Esta
FLOORS FOR POLEBARNS, GARAGES,
DRIVEWAYS AND ROCK LANDSCAPES
Licensed & Insured • Harrison, MI • Free Estimates
2 locations to better serve you!
CARS-R-US
SAND & GRAVEL
EXCAVATING
Family Owned & Operated Since 1964
www.beemerssand.com
F X
Home
Builders
FOR ALL YOUR ROOFING,
ROOF REPAIR AND SIDING NEEDS.
EXPERIENCED AND LOCAL
989-773-4665
CLARE AUTO SALES, INC.
2005 Chevy
Silverado 2500 HD
CCrew
LARE AUTO SALES, INC.
Cab, 4x4, Duramax,
Awesome Condition
FREE 6 MONTH NATIONWIDE WARRANTY
GRAND
989-424-6600
OPENING
309 S. McEwan St., South End of Clare • Clare, MI 48617
www.clareautosales.com
HARRISON
3020 N. Clare Ave.
Harrison, MI 48625
989-539-0955
Fax: 989-539-0952
CARO
2129 W. Caro Road
Caro, MI 48723
989-673-0955
Fax: 989-673-0954
JIM IS
BACK!
&
229 W LAKE GEORGE AVE
LAKE GEORGE, MI 48633
(989) 588-6171
Selling Northern Michigan since 1953
Ken Kinsey
Ken’s Auto Repair
of Harrison LLC
Fleming Marine
Construction Inc.
S
’
L
L
E
B
y
ppl
Building Su
s
In busines
rs!
a
ye
0
3
for
Over 1,000
items for
$
1.00 ea.
• Thermostats $1.00
• Pre-Hung Steel Doors $80.00
• Over 800 windows in stock
• Over 800 Steel and Fiberglass doors
• Bath tubs $250.00 • Oak Trim
• Countertops $3.00/foot
Thursday & Friday 9:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.
Saturday 9:00 a.m. - 3:00 p.m.
Get the news the way you want it,
Starters, Alternators, Generators
Rebuilt At
CLARE STARTER
386-4439
Serving Mid Michigan for over 30 years
Want to Advertise your business
here? Call us today at
989-386-2200
www.clarecountyreview.com
Guaranteed
On Time & Certified
“Our customers are our warmest friends”
CLARE • HARRISON • GLADWIN • EVART
989-386-7731 • 800-386-7731
513 W. 5th., Clare, MI 48617
PROPANE, FUEL OIL, GASOLINE & DIESEL
Licensed & Insured
989-386-7859
Cell: 989-429-2086
CELL: 989-339-4377
989-539-7542
Serving ALL of the Mid- Michigan Area!
Free Estimates - 3620 N. Clare Ave - Harrison, MI
PIONEER
Metal Roofs
7325 S. Clare Ave.
Clare, Michigan 48617
800-292-0679
office 989-386-4880
Sales Rep. Mark Mills
Owner Bob Griffor
Residential Steel Roofing
www.pioneermetalroofs.com
ACKERMAN
PLUMBING & HEATING
5015 US-10, Clare
386-7431
Plumbing & Heating Supplies - Installation - Add-ons
Sales & Service - Pumps - Furnaces
Fully Licensed
GAMBLE’S REDI-MIX
Harrison: 539-6460
800-539-6460
ump
crete P
36M Con
1415 N. CLARE
HARRISON
Mid Michigan’s most
widely circulated news paper
JB
TWO-WAY COMMUNICATIONS
FOR TODAY AND BEYOND
Electronics LLC
www.jbelectronics.net
PH: (989) 539-6559
Gamble’s Redi-Mix, Your neighbor since 1947
No Fly Ash In Our Mix Results In:
• More cement per yard in mix
• Better finishability • Better set time
• Better concrete
- Two Way Radios
- Cellular Telephones
- Police Scanners
- Weather Radios
- Overhead Lights & Sirens
Jerry & Shirley Becker
Dawn McDonald
3725 North Clare Ave.
Harrison, MI 48625
GENERAL REPAIR
New Construction • Water Softeners
Sewer Cleaning • Services & Repairs
CELL: 989-429-1775
Come Visit us on the web at
MILLER’S
COMMERCIAL • RESIDENTIAL
HENRY TREE SERVICE
989-539-7542
11211 S. Brand, Clare
Between Colonville & Clarabella Roads
989-386-4414
COYNE
OIL & PROPANE
HENRY EXCAVATING & CONCRETE
231-743-5546 • 231-743-6546
Seawalls ~ Decks ~ Beach Stairs
Wood ~ Vinyl ~ Steel ~ Fieldstone
www.flemingmarine.com
Flemingmarine@aol.com
(989) 258-9638
NO JOB
TOO BIG Free Estimates • Work Gauranteed • Insured
Winter Rates Available
OR SMALL
P.O. Box 566 Lake, MI 48632
Kinsey_e3200@sbcglobal.net
2786 E Larch Rd
Harrison, Michigan 48625
GO CALL CAL TODAY!
(989) 588 - 4223
owner
Scott Owens – Owner
• Interior & Exterior • Power Washing & Deck Care
• Window Washing & Gutter Cleaning
• Drywall Repair • Cleaning and Refinishing Log Homes
• Cabinet, Woodwork, Door & Furniture Refinishing
Construction and Farm
E-mail • Traditional Print
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
P.O. Box 04
Clare, MI 48617
Over 30 Years Experience
COMMERCIAL & RESIDENTIAL
County Line Heavy Equipment
Welding & Repair
TOTALLY
FREE
Online • Facebook
www.buyhr.co
www.harrison-realty.com
(989) 539-0970
CAL’S PAINTING
CLHE
14789 M-66, Marion, Mi 49665
(989) 539-2261
2”. 4” Steel and 5” PVC Water Well Drilling and Repair
2” Screen Changes, and Pump Installation Service and Repair
Family owned and Operated, Fully Licensed and Insured
•••+••• Free Estimates •••+•••
BUY HERE PAY HERE • WWW.CARSRUSCARO.COM
989-539-3211
P.O. Box 499,795 N FIRST ST.
HARRISON, MI 48625
Serving Mid-Michigan Area Since 1952!
Honda Power Equipment
Sales & Service
Farm Tractor &
Industrial Diesel Repair
3681 E. Surrey Rd., Clare, MI 48617
989-386-7564
Kiefer’s 989-387-7238
Cleaning
Service LLC
nationwide prepaid cellular
• Personal
• Professional
• Guaranteed
• Commercial
• Residential
• One time cleanings
www.kieferscleaning.com
The Clare County Review - June 17, 2016 - Page 7B
CTE enrollment jumps
Athletes include: (left to right) Back row- Jeremy Fillhard, Adam Scherrer, Jens Oellers, Cameron Sherrick,
Austin LaVigne, Tyler Head. Front Row-Zach Taylor, Elle Coughlin, Abby Fillhard, Kassidy Seebeck, Krysten
Mogg, Alleah Shellito, and Aja Heber.
13 Harrison athletes qualified for State Competition
Track and Field Athletes
Qualify for MHSAA State
Competition
On June 4, 2016, Har-
rison Community High
School sent 13 athletes to
compete at the MHSAA
Track and Field Division 3
State Competition. Events
included high jump, Pole
vault, 100 hurdles, and
both the 400 and 1600 me-
ter relays. Congratulations
to the athletes that qualified for such a prestigious
competition.
Classifieds
While officials with
the Clare-Gladwin Career
& Technical Education
program work to determine how to maximize the
opportunities for students
gained with the passage of
its millage request in May,
there’s also a new variable: Enrollment is way,
way up.
While the numbers are
likely to fluctuate somewhat between now and the
start of the school year,
enrollment in CTE classes
has increased by more
than 100 students – almost
30 percent. According to
Clare-Gladwin Regional
Education Service District
Superintendent Sheryl Presler, it’s a great problem
to have.
“We were definitely
hoping for an increase in
enrollment, but I’m not
sure anybody anticipated
a jump like this – not
that we’re complaining,”
Presler said. “The passage
of the millage meant we
could follow through on
our plans to offer Welding
and Business Management immediately, and that
accounts for some of the
enrollment increase – as
we mentioned repeatedly
during the information
campaign, those were highdemand classes.”
Voters approved the
1-mill, ten-year millage
to be used solely for CTE
programming on May 3.
The jump in enrollment
comes despite Coleman’s
departure as a participating district. Next fall, that
district will participate in
CTE programs in Midland
County, driving down the
number of Coleman students at Clare-Gladwin’s
CTE program from 21 to
two. On the other hand,
Farwell’s student participation in CTE is soaring this
fall, rising from 35 to 95.
Read Sports Online
www.clarecountyreview.com
Classifieds: $1.00 a word ($10 minimum charge) • Deadline for classified ads is WEDNESDAY AT NOON
Call 989/386-4414 or email classifieds to info@clarecountyreview.com or yourmarionpress@gmail.com *(The Review or Press is not liable for classifieds taken over the phone)
*No commercial ads
Lucky 7 CLASSIFIED SPECIAL • 30 for 4 weeks*
$
Your Classified appears in: 1 Print edition of The Clare County Review 2 Print edtion of The Marion Press 3 On Clare County Review website
4 On Marion Press website 5 On digital download version of The Clare County Review 6 On digital download version of The Marion Press 7 On Facebook
FURNITURE & APPLIANCES
FOR RENT
QUEEN PILLOW TOP
Mattress set. $175 each.
King $275.
Full set
$150. All new in plastic.
989/772-1517. TFN
FOR RENT
2 & 3 Bedroom Homes.
Call between 8-4:30
weekdays. 989-588-9792.
TFN
AMISH LOG \
HEADBOARD
With queen pillow top
mattress set. New in plastic. Cost $975. Sell $275.
989/773-5582. TFN
GREAT Apartment
SWEET Community
AMAZING Price!
Harrison
Woods Apts.
MEMORY FOAM
Mattress set. Queen size.
New. Never used. Cost
$1,399. Must sell $475.
989/953-4400.
TFN
800 Richard Dr.,
Harrison
1, 2 & 3 Bedroom Apts.
Tons of Storage Space
On Site Laundry
Free Heat, Water,
Trash Removal
Deck/Patio
Beautiful, Pleasant
Community
Easy Access to US 27
and US 10
Rent Based on Income
Equal Housing
Opportunity
Barrier Free Units
Available
TDD/TTY: 711
This institution is an
equal opportunity
provider
SERVICES
HOUSE CLEANING
Honest, dependable, references. Weekly, monthly or
one-time. Keenon’s Kleanin’
989/429-8496 - TFN
PETS
FREE KITTENS
Ready to go! 989-2552226 6/24/16
PROPERTY FOR SALE
2.50 ACRE
Wooded parcels, located 6
miles east of Clare on year
round country road with
electricity. Great building sites. E-Z Land Contract terms. Private owner.
$14,900 (239) 394-3488.
6-17-16
HOMES FOR SALE
FOR SALE
Two & three bedroom
homes for sale or rent, fully
remodeled, excellent condition. Coleman, MI 989-4651048. TFN
No Application Fee!!
APPLY TODAY!
989-539-3380
FOR RENT
2 bedroom apartment, appliances including washer
and dryer. $475/month.
989-386-7117 TFN
FOR RENT
2 Chair Beaquty Shop,
$400/month.
989-3867117 TFN
FLEA MARKET
AND THRIFT STORE
770 E. Main, Farwell
Open Daily 10 a.m.-6:00 p.m.
989-588-3090
GARAGE SALES
LAKE OF THE
PINES ANNUAL
NEIGHBORHOOD
GARAGE SALES
June 23, 24 & 25. Maps located at LOP office. 7257
Ashard Rd., Lake. 989-5889304 - 6-17-16
HUGE COUNTRY
NEIGHBORHOOD
YARD SALES!
East Herrick Rd., Clare, MI
(off Mission Rd.) June 23,
24 & 25. Times vary, Something for everyone. - 6-17-16
HUGE YARD SALE
June 17th & 18th 8:30
to 4:30. June 19th 9 to 1.
Household items, tools, upright freezer, hunting gear,
fishing rods, fishing tackle,
rod building and repair
equipment, gun reloading
equipment & much more.,
632 Cunningham, Clare.
6-17-16
Deadline for
Classifieds
is Wednesday
at Noon
GARAGE SALES
NO.WORDS
EMP ID
ADDRESS
STATE
FARWELL
BINGO
Tues. 6PM, Open 4PM
CC Senior Comm. Ctr.
(Behind Hardware)
Over 18 Welcome
Proceeds: BLDG/Upkeep
FOR SALE
CLEAN FUTON SOFA
AND MATCHING
FUTON TWIN CHAIR
and footstool. Lodge Peters Casbin Print. Very nice
excelent condition. $700
OBO. 248-701-2924 6/16/16
ZIP
AUTH #
TOTAL
Deadline for
Classifieds
is Wed. at Noon
IMMEDIATE
OPENING
Rehabilitation Aid/Caregiver,30+ hours per week.
Must be energetic and self
motivated, have reliable
transportation with air.
Leave message. 989-5443386. 6/17/16
Sign Language Interpreter
The Clare-Gladwin RESD has an opening for a Sign
Language Interpreter.
Please visit our website for the full Job Posting and Application process for this position:
www.cgresd.net. Click on Community/Employment.
Click on Community/Employment.
Instructors for Criminal Justice and
Business Management - CTE
The Clare-Gladwin RESD has two openings for instructors: Criminal Justice and Business Management in our
Career Technology Education (CTE) Program
Please visit our website for the full Job Posting and Application process for these positions:
www.cgresd.net. Click on Community/Employment.
Click on Community/Employment.
Administrative Assistants
The Clare-Gladwin RESD has an opening for Administrative Assistants - one 11 month in our Special Education Department and one 12 month in our General
Education Department.
Please visit our website for the full Job Posting and Application process for these positions:
www.cgresd.net. Click on Community/Employment.
Click on Community/Employment.
Paraeducator/Job Coach Health Occupations (CTE)
The Clare-Gladwin RESD has an opening for a Paraeducator/Job Coach in our Career and Technical Education
(CTE) Department.
Please visit our website for the full Job Posting and Application process for these positions:
www.cgresd.net. Click on Community/Employment.
Click on Community/Employment.
CITY OF CLARE
PUBLIC NOTICE
The City of Clare is accepting applications for the position of Heavy Equipment Operator in the Public Works
Department. This position is responsible for operating
equipment used in the completion of repair and maintenance work on city streets and sidewalks; cemetery;
parks and rights of way; snow removal; the installation,
maintenance, & repair of water, waste water, and storm
water distribution systems; grounds and building maintenance & repairs; and other duties as required or directed. Applicant must have the ability to read, write,
and perform basic mathematical calculations. Current
or recent experience operating construction equipment,
hand tools, and other equipment necessary for the accomplishment of various department projects is preferred. Applicant must possess a valid Class A or B CDL
driver’s license. Interested applicants may complete an
employment application online at www.cityofclare.org,
in person at 202 W. Fifth St., Clare MI or submit a resume to:
DPW Operator Position
City of Clare
202 W. Fifth Street
Clare, MI 48617
ACCT NO
CASH CHECK MC VISA
DATES TO RUN
Marion Press
P.O. Box D
Marion, MI 49665
231-743-2481
REAL ESTATE
MOBILE HOMES
MOTORCYCLES
SNOWMOBILES
PERSONAL
LOST AND FOUND
FURNITURE &
APPLIANCES
NAME
EXP. DATE
BINGO
STIPED GRAY MALE CAT
Friendly with people, not
neutered. Meows alot. 989426-4044. TFN
FOR RENT
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
WANTED
GARAGE/YARD SALES
RECREATIONAL VEHICLES
BOATS AND MOTORS
REWARD
BINGO
CITY
HELP WANTED
Part-time housekeepting position. 20 hours/week. Salary. Apply at Clare United
Methodist Church 105 E. 7th
Street, Clare. Applicationd
due June 27th 6-17-16
FOUND
Classified Ad Order Form
PHONE NO.
HELP WANTED
Experienced CNC/Lathe/
Mill operator/programmer.
Benefits: health, dental, disability, life, vacation, 401K
& profit sharing. Send resume to 215 S. Webber St,
Farwell, MI 48622 or email
motto@futuremoldcorp.
com 6-24-16
Shop Locally
and SAVE with
the classifieds!
CLASSIFIED AD DEADLINE IS WEDNESDAY AT 12 NOON
CLASSIFIEDS COST: $10.00 FOR 10 WORDS OR LESS
EACH ADDITIONAL WORD COSTS 50 CENTS
ORDER DATE
DELIVERY DRIVERS
Full and part-time. Must
have valid drivers license
and clean record. Apply in
person at Wood’s Household. TFN
License A22094
Shop locally and
save with the
classifieds
MISCELLANEOUS
HELP WANTED
SERVICES
IN MEMORY
THANK YOU
PETS
AUTOMOBILES
FOR SALE
NOW HIRING PAINTERS
with 2 years experience,
must have own transportation. Go Call Cal, 989-2589638 7-1/16
FARWELL
HOUSE FOR SALE
3 bedroom home, 1.5 baths,
3 acres with pasture. 28x36
Pole Barn, 24x40 Pole Barn,
small greenhouse & tool
shed. 10002 Washington
Rd., Clare. $135,000 6-17-16
Clare County Review
105 W. Fourth Street
Clare, MI 48617
989-386-4414
HELP WANTED
FLEA MARKETS
Applications will be accepted until 5:00 p.m. on Thursday, June 24, 2016. The City of Clare is an equal opportunity provider and employer.
Welding Lab Technician (Part-time)
Mid Michigan Community College is seeking qualified candidates to apply for a part-time
Welding Lab Technician position in the Academic
Services department. For a detailed list of position qualifications and application requirements
visit Jobs at MMCC at www.midmich.edu.
EEO/AA
FREE PHOTO IN CLASSIFED
Place your ad today
$10.00 for 10 words.
50¢ each additional word
e-mail your classified to
YourMarionPress@gmail.com 231-743-2481
info@clarecountyreview.com 989-386-4414
JOIN THE CONVERSATION
LIKE US ON FACEBOOK!
Page 8B - The Clare County Review - June 17, 2016
Sports
Lady Eagles ousted by regional semis
Golf Tips
By Ben Murphy
Sports Writer
By Thom Slusher
Clare County’s PGA Pro
How Do I
Get 10 More
Yards?
Nothing gets golfers
more excited than hitting a
drive that goes farther than
their typical. Gaining extra
yards can be elusive but
here are a few tips to help
you in your search.
Solid contact is one of
the main determinants in
the distance you hit your
shots. I would start here in
looking for extra distance.
Shots off the toe or heel
will not go as far and more
than likely be crooked
too. Work on your overall
swing to get better contact.
Players improving their
swings and solidness of
contact hit the ball farther
without even trying. If you
are not sure where the ball
is hitting on the club try
putting some masking tape
on the face before hitting
shots. The tape will tell you
where the ball is impacting
the club.
Work on speed after
solid contact is achieved.
One drill I like to have
students perform is to grip
the club at the opposite
end (club head end). I have
them take swings listening
to the swoosh sound the
grip end makes when they
swing. The louder they can
make the sound; the faster
the club is moving. It is not
about how hard but about
how fast. Players can increase their club head speed
and their distance by using
this drill on a regular basis.
The Farwell softball
team had its bats fall
quiet in its division three
regional game with Shepherd on Saturday, as the
Lady Eagles fell to the
Lady Blue Jays 4-0 in the
regional semi-final game.
Shepherd was the eventual regional champion
as it topped Reese in the
regional final, 6-5.
Farwell starting pitcher
Grace Saupe did her part
to keep her team in the
game, as she kept Shepherd scoreless through
five innings.
In the top of the
sixth though, Shepherd
slammed a pair of doubles
and were also aided by a
Farwell fielding error to
take a 2-0 lead.
Then, in the top of the
seventh, the Blue Jays
added two more runs,
as their lead-off batter
walked, then they added
a double and a single to
push their margin to 4-0.
Though the Eagles
were unable to score a
run, they had a few good
opportunities, as they got
their lead-off batter on
base each of the first three
innings, and four times in
all in the game.
In the bottom of the
first, Alysha Luster led
off and reached base by
getting hit by a pitch,
Kelsey Seiter led off the
bottom of the second and
reached on an error and
in the third, Jade Wilson reached on an error.
Wilson reached second
base on a walk to Luster
with one out, but back-to-
back strike outs ended the
Farwell scoring threat.
Brittany Cogswell led
off the bottom of the sixth
with a double, but she
was stranded there as the
next three batters were
retired.
Cogswell’s double was
the only hit of the game
for the Eagles.
Saupe finished all
seven innings and gave
up four runs, two earned
on seven hits, five strikeouts and two walks.
The Eagles finish the
season 29-13.
LEARN
TO GOLF!
SNOW SNAKE - HARRISON
Thom Slusher, PGA • Clare County’s PGA Pro
Junior Golf - 4 pm Tuesdays - Starts June 14th - $75.
Parent/Junior Class - 5 pm Tuesdays - Starts May14 - $99 for 6 weeks.
Get Golf Ready - Adult Class - 6 pm Tuesdays - Starts June 14 - $99 for 6 weeks.
Private instruction available by appt. $40 for 1/2 hour, Series of 3 for $100.
Detailed class description available at facebook.com/thomslusherpga or snowsnake.net for more info
Register at (989) 330-6317 or thomslusher@pga.com
District Champion Lady Eagles
NEW 2016 F-150
NEW 2016 FUSION
14
in Stock
18
8
in Stock
in Stock
NEW 2016 ESCAPE
NO PAYMENTS FOR UP TO 90 DAYS
2014 FORD TRANSIT
CONNECT WAGON
Certified, XLT, FWD, Auto, Deep
Impact Blue Metallic, GP034
$18,886
y
Happ
rs
Fathe
Central Michigan’s
Best
Selection
Day for Dad is at Krapohl’s
$19,450
$18,895
2009 DODGE JOURNEY SXT FWD
SUV, Gas V6 3.5L, Auto, Blue, 78757 Miles, GU028
$11,695
2013 FORD FUSION SE FWD
2011 FORD RANGER SPORT EXT.
Certified, Sedan, Gas I4 2.5L, Auto, Bordeaux Reserve, GP003
CAB, RWD, Truck,Gas V6 4.0L, Auto, Red, 17260 Miles, GU071
$17,185
$19,495
JUST ARRIVED
2012 FORD FOCUS
HATCHBACK SE
2013 FORD
ESCAPE SE 4DR
2014 FORD EDGE
SEL 4DR AWD
2014 F-150 CREW
XLT 4X4
2014 F-150 CREW
4X4 FX4
$18,900
4 Cyl., Auto, Air, Cruise, Bright
Red, 1-Owner,
HT012A
4 Cyl., Ecoboost, Auto, Air,
Cruise, Tilt, Frosted Glass
Metallic, GU097
3.5, 6 Cyl., Auto, Leather, Full
Power, 1-Owner,
22,000 Miles, Sunset Metallic
6 Cyl., Ecoboost, Auto, Full
Power, Trailer Tow Package,
1-Owner, Blue Jean Metallic
3.5, Ecoboost, Auto, Leather,
Trailer Tow, 1-Owner, Ruby
Red Metallic, 27,000 Miles
2011 LINCOLN
MKS AWD
2012 HONDA CR-V
EX 4WD
2013 FORD TAURUS
LIMITED FWD
2012 FORD FLEX
SEL FWD
2013 FORD ESCAPE
SE 4WD
2013 FORD ESCAPE
SE 4WD
$19,500
$19,750
Sedan, Gas V6 3.7L, Auto, White
Platinum Tri-coat Metallic, FU215
2013 FORD F-150
STX REG. CAB 4WD
$9,895
$38,850
2014 FORD FUSION
SE FWD
Intercooled Turbo Reg. Unl. I-4
1.5L, Auto, Sunset Metallic, GU058
$19,498
2014 FORD EDGE
SE FWD
Certified, Crossover/Wagon, Gas V6,
3.5L, Auto, Dark Blue, GU036
Certified, SUV, Turbo/Gas I4 2.0L,
Auto, Kodiak Brown, GP023
Certified, SUV, Turbo/Gas I4 2.0L,
Auto, Tuxedo Black, GP022
Certified SUV, Intercooled Turbo,
Auto, Ingot Silver Metallic, GP019
2014 FORD ESCAPE
TITANIUM 4WD
2014 RAM 1500 BIG
HORN CREW CAB 4WD
2016 FORD MUSTANG
ECOBOOST RWD
2013 FORD F-150 STX
EXT. CAB 4WD
2015 FORD
MUSTANG V6 RWD
2013 FORD F-150
CREW CAB 4WD
$25,499
$28,875
$27,498
$27,950
2014 FORD FLEX
SEL FWD
2013 FORD F-150
CREW CAB 4WD
$29,995
$34,450
Sedan, Gas V6 3.5L, Auto, Ingot
Silver Metallic, FU115A
Certified, Intercooled, Reg. Unl. I4
1.6L, Auto, Ruby Red, GP020
Certified, SUV, Reg. Unl. V6
3.5L, Auto, White Suede, GP016
$16,995
$27,300
SUV, Gas I4 2.4L, Auto, Gray,
GU045
Certified, Gas/Ethanol V8 5.0L,
Auto, Oxford White, GU064
$25,495
$18,995
Crossover/Wagon, Gas V6 3.5L,
Auto, Black, FP103A
Sedan, Reg. Unl., I-4 2.5L, Auto,
Meteor Gray Mica, GT293A
Sedan, Gas, V6 3.6L, Auto,
Tungsten Metallic, GT245B
Sedan, Gas I4 2.5L, Auto,
Oxford White, FP011
2011 FORD EDGE
LIMITED FWD
2014 MAZDA MAZDA
6 I TOURING FWD
2012 CHRYSLER 300
LIMITED AWD
2013 FORD FUSION
SE FWD
Truck, Gas/Ethanol V8 5.0L,
Auto, Blue Jeans Metallic, FU175
$30,500
$19,975
$20,995
Truck, Reg. Unl. V6 3.6L, Auto,
Charcoal Black, GU061
Certified, Coupe, Prem. Unl. I4
2.3L, Manual, Race Red, GP036
2015 FORD MUSTANG
ECOBOOST
2013 FORD F-150 4X4
SUPERCAB
Prem. RWD, Convertible, Intercooled
Prem. Unl. I4 2.3L, Auto, GP031
$31,495
163 Ext. Cab 4WD, Truck, Turbo
Gas V6 3.5L, Auto, Brown, FP067
$31,499
$21,800
$22,950
Truck, Gas/Ethanol V6 3.7L,
Auto, Oxford White, FP102
Certified, Convertible, Reg. Unl. V6
3.7L, Auto, Triple Yellow, GP030
Gas/Ethanol V8 5.0L, Auto,
Race Red, FU144
2015 FORD EDGE
SEL AWD
2015 FORD F-250 EXT
XLT EXT. CAB 4WD
2013 FORD F-250
XLT EXT. CAB 4WD
$32,495
$32,800
$39,900
Certified, SUV, Reg. Unl. V6
3.5L, Auto, Tuxedo Black, GU017
KRAPOHL’S
$22,400
$28,580
Truck, Reg. Unl. V8 6.2L, Auto,
Oxford White, GU042
$29,800
Truck, Gas/Ethanol V8 6.2L,
Auto, Oxford White, FU201
Visit our website
www.krapohl.com
for our entire inventory!
MT. PLEASANT 1 Block East of Meijer
Toll Free 1-800-772-5974 • Local 772-2991
A-X & Z Plan Headquarters
visit our website: www.krapohl.com
* PRICE & PAYMENT $0 DOWN PLUS TAX, PLATE, DOC. ALL VEHICLES SUBJECT TO PRIOR SALE PAYMENT. 4.9% FIXED RATE & APPROVED CREDIT.
DOWN PAYMENT ON TRADE EQUITY WILL LOWER PAYMENT TERMS & INTEREST RATE WILL VARY DEPENDING ON CREDIT RATING.