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by mardi suhs

cadillac news
F
rom her apartment
near Grand Rapids,
Joani Patrick, a dis-
abled grandmother,
gave a glowing update on the
lives of her six children.
Her voice sparkled with
pride as she discussed her
oldest son, an instructor
with the Air Force and her
daughter, a veteran of the
Marine Corps now studying
to become a math teacher.
Three children are in col-
lege, one studies performing
arts, one will become an en-
gineer, another a teacher, and
a disabled daughter lives in a
group home.
Its time to share my sto-
ry, she said. I did it... We did
it! We made it and my chil-
dren are doing great!
But the statistics were
against them. When her six
children were young, Patrick
was a victim of domestic vio-
lence. And when her husband
began abusing the children,
she fed to a womens shelter
to save them from their fa-
thers abuse.
Patrick raised six children
in government housing. She
worked three jobs and lived in
poverty.
If I can do it, you can do
it! she said.
And then she added. I grew
up in an abusive home. And
then I lived with an abusive
husband. But I broke that cy-
cle of abuse.
turn to a2
www.cadillacnews.com Vol. 142 No. 101 Cadillac, Michigan October 7, 2013 75 cents
Local celebs
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fundraiser
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mardi suhs | cadillac news
From left, Lauren nimeth and oaSIS Director Sally repeck organize a Facebook campaign to raise awareness
about domestic violence. our goal is outreach, repeck said.
1 killed in two-
vehicle crash
on M-115
Incident occurred Sunday
afternoon between 100th
Ave., Hibma Road
antonio coleman | cadillac news
two vehicles involved in a fatal crash Sunday
afternoon are shown on fat-bed trucks.
cadillac news
MarIon One person was killed in a
two-vehicle crash on M-115 Sunday af-
ternoon between 100th Ave. and Hibma
Road in Osceola County.
Traffic was rerouted near South 47
Road while workers cleared the scene.
Information regarding how the crash oc-
curred and the identities of the parties
involved was unavailable at press time.
Check cadillacnews.com for additional
details.
news@cadillacnews.com | 775-news (6397)


If I can do it, you can do it
Domestic abuse
survivor tells her
story, hopes to
inspire others

by antonio coleman
cadillac news
CaDILLaC Crowds of
breast cancer survivors
showed their support for
cancer awareness by paint-
ing the town pink and teal.
The Fifth-annual Love
INC/ Breasts Friends
Awareness Walk was held
on Saturday to raise funds
for community members
fighting breast cancer.
Community members
gathered at the Cadillac
Junior High School at 8:30
a.m. to register for the
walk. Beginning at 9:30
a.m., participants walked
from Cadillac Junior High
School to the rotary pavil-
ion and back. Walkers paid
a $20 registration fee to
participate in the weekend
walk.
Held during National
Breast Cancer Awareness
Month, the walk raises
money for local breast can-
cer patients in Wexford,
Missaukee and Osceola
counties.
More than 50 partici-
pants registered for the
walk this year.
Robin Mosher, a founder
of the walk and seven-year
breast cancer survivor,
said the walk provides fi-
nancial and emotional sup-
port for those who have ex-
perienced a breast cancer
diagnosis.
When you get the diag-
nosis, your heart just hits
the floor, Mosher said.
Its the same as the stages
of grief. Youre in shock
and denial.
However, she said partici-
pants at the walk represent
women who have a strong
positive spirit. She said she
considers her own breast
cancer experience an hon-
or to share among women.
Youre not going to be
able to tell whos had breast
cancer and who hasnt here
because there isnt an at-
titude of poor me among
these women, Mosher
said.
Although walkers were
met with rainy weather
Saturday morning, Mosher
assured participants the
walk would continue.
Cancer doesnt stop be-
cause of bad weather and
we cant either, Mosher
said.
This year, participants
not only wore pink, but
also teal shirts during the
walk. Mosher said the teal
shirts represent the fact
that breast cancer is a can-
cer that affects both men
and women.
Except for skin cancer,
breast cancer is the most
common cancer among
American women, accord-
ing to the American Cancer
Society. The ACS estimates
about 232,340 new cases of
invasive breast cancer will
be diagnosed in women in
the United States in 2013.
Lois Williams, a resident
of Cadillac, said she has
been a breast cancer sur-
vivor for almost 13 years.
Williams said although the
initial diagnosis was scary,
finding support in local
survivors helped her keep
her faith.
This walk shows how
many survivors there
are and what weve gone
through, Williams said.
Every survivor is differ-
ent and has experienced
different treatments.
Guests al so raised
money bidding in a silent
auction for items such as
clothing, crafts and baked
goods. Walkers were also
provided with door prize
giveaways. Cancer survi-
vors also received special
black goodie bags.
Annually, the walk rais-
es an average of about
$5,000 for breast cancer pa-
tients.
The cancer awareness
walk was a partnership
between Breasts Friends
of Cadillac and Love INC.
Proceeds raised from the
walk will go toward Love
INC.s breast cancer fund.
The fund supports cancer
expenses such as mastecto-
my bras and hospital travel
costs.
acoleman@cadillacnews.com | 775-news (6397)
antonio coleman | cadillac news
the Fifth-annual Love InC/ Breasts Friends awareness Walk was held on Saturday to raise funds for
community members fghting breast cancer. Community members gathered at the Cadillac Junior
High School at 8:30 a.m. to register for the walk. Beginning at 9:30 a.m., participants walked from
Cadillac Junior High School to the rotary pavilion and back.
Getting soaked for a cure
Breast cancer survivors brave rain to
raise awareness, funds to fght disease
Inside
The Sweet
Shop
Home of the Snowbird
111 S. Mitchell, Downtown Cadillac
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Now Thru
October 13
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Thank You
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Great Service
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a2 cadillac news | TrusTed. local. connecTed 775-NEWS (6397) www.cadillacnews.com | monday, ocTober 7, 2013
courTesy phoTo
A vintage photo shows domestic abuse survivor Joani Patrick with fve of her six children.
by mardi suhs
cadillac news
GRAND RAPIDS Statistics
said my children would fail, ex-
plained Joani Patrick with mod-
est pride. Statistics said they
wouldnt go to college and that
they would do drugs and alco-
hol.
But Patrick and her family
beat the odds. Although raised
by a single mom in poverty, fve
of Patricks chil-
dren will all earn
college degrees
while one disabled
daughter lives in
a group home. Be-
fore describing
her parenting suc-
cess, she revisited
the years of abuse
and how she got
the courage to
leave.
Years ago, Pat-
rick fell in love
with a man she
met at a church-
sponsored retreat.
Although their first child was
born out of wedlock, they mar-
ried and had fve more children.
But there were frightening red
fags after the birth of their son.
Her husband became control-
ling and violent and she fled for
divorce. But a repentant hus-
band suggested counseling and
things got better for awhile. And
that became the cycle. Abuse,
then sorrow and forgiveness.
Eventually, fghts about how
to discipline the children be-
came loud and violent. Patrick
didnt believe in spanking or
hitting her children. He did.
She often had to jump between
her husband and children to
stop the abuse. Thats when she
would escape to area shelters.
I had gone to a number of
shelters over the years, she ad-
mitted. I knew they were avail-
able and I knew where it was. I
knew I could call.
Etched in her mind is an in-
cident that made her decide to
leave for good.
She found a large bruise on
her daughters leg and her hus-
band admitted that he hit the
toddler 20 times. She knew the
bruise would be spotted in day
care and reported.
Something inside of me
said, no more. That was the mo-
ment.
Patrick took her children to
the Oasis/Family Resource
Center. Thats when counselors
found a hand print bruise on
another child.
I was terri-
fied, she ad-
mitted. I had
six chil dren. . .
I looked at my
kids and thought,
What am I going
to do? What will
this do if I pull
them from their
dad? Am I strong
enough? Where
are we going to
go?
But one thing
moved her for-
ward.
She saw the
pictures taken of her 2-year-
old daughters bruises. In one
photo, the child looked into the
camera as if asking, What are
we going to do momma?
I kept that picture, she ad-
mitted. That was the impetus.
She deserves better and well
work it out. We will make it.
The family was moved from a
neighboring county to Cadillac,
where Patrick went to Oasis-
sponsored classes and received
counseling and support.
I followed my gut instincts
with my children, she re-
called. We had picnics on the
living room floor. We spent
time together as a family. We
didnt have fancy vacations
but we did have cable and we
watched educational televi-
sion. I love to learn. I wanted
them to be ready for the world.
Patrick took her children to
the park, to swimming lessons
at Kenwood Beach and became
involved in the sports, band
and strings programs. When
they moved to Big Rapids she
coached volleyball for her twin
girls.
Through OASIS, she took the
Love and Logic parenting
course that showed her how to
react to tantrums and disobedi-
ence.
They blossomed after their
dad was gone, she said. We
became a happy family.
Looking back, Patrick said
she was terrified to leave her
husband, but her strength has
inspired all of the children.
When she returned to college
for a degree in 2006, it inspired
them to pursue their own
dreams.
Its never too late is the mes-
sage I gave them, Patrick said.
I also gave them strength by
being strong. And our family
broke the cycle of abuse.
mardijo@chartermi.net | 775-news (6397)
Domestic abuse survivor tells her story, hopes to inspire others
OASIS Activities During
Domestic Violence
Awareness Month, 2013
Silhouettes Red silhouettes fea-
turing a personal story of domestic
violence will be scattered around
Cadillac at many local businesses.
Facebook Oasis/Family Resource
Center will take a stand against do-
mestic violence with a campaign
during October featuring a new
person with a new support state-
ment sign.
Candle March On Wednesday,
Oct. 23 at 6 p.m., a Candle March
against domestic violence will start
at 6 p.m. Community members are
invited to meet at 118 S. Mitchell
street. At the same time, the kids
event Hands are Not for Hitting
will take place.
Ribbon Ties 500 purple ribbons
will be tied to the branches of a
tree near the fountain in the Cadil-
lac City Park. Each ribbon represents
the Wexford County victims that
have reported domestic violence.
Lights on Street Light Poles
Purple lights will be wrapped
around 10 city light posts in front of
Oasis for domestic violence aware-
ness.
Sidewalk Chalk Sidewalks in
front of the pavilion will share posi-
tive slogans.
Radio Listen for domestic violence
awareness issues every Tuesday at
10 a.m. on 107.9 FM.
Family Fun Festival Oasis will be
present in Manton for this event in
Manton on Oct. 19 from 11 a.m. to
2 p.m.
Speaking Engagements Oasis
Director Sally Repeck will speak at
many public venues and activities on
domestic violence awareness.
Your LocaL connection
Something
inside of me said,
no more. That was
the moment.
Joani Patrick
Domestic abuse survivor

by rick charmoli
cadillac news
CADILLAC For students
with post-high school edu-
cational goals, an event on
Thursday is a must attend.
For years, Cadillac High
School has hosted College
Night, where students from
around the area have the
opportunity to interact,
ask questions and talk with
the people who ultimately
might be deciding if they
are accepted to the school
they are applying to.
Cadillac High School
Counselor Linda Fiester
said it is an important
event for students if they
plan on continuing their
education.
It is the only time all
year that this many col-
leges, trades schools and
branches of the military
are under one roof and
in one location, she said.
The representatives there
are actually the people
who make the admission
decisions for the colleges.
The (Central Michigan
University) lady there is
the person who decides
which students from the
area will be attending the
school.
When students and par-
ents come on Thursday,
they will see pretty much
all of the state colleges and
universities. They include
Central Michigan, Western
Michigan, Eastern Michi-
gan, Michigan State, Michi-
gan, Ferris State, as well as
most of the private schools.
Local colleges and commu-
nity colleges such as Baker
College of Cadillac, North-
western Michigan College,
Mid-Michigan Community
College and Kirtland Col-
lege will be there, as well
as the branches of the
military and technical and
trade schools.
Fellow counselor Teresa
Williams said the event is
important on different lev-
els depending on the grade
a student is in. For exam-
ple, juniors should attend
the event so they can get
information from the col-
lege and universities they
are interested in attend-
ing. For seniors, however,
it is a chance to meet and
talk to the people who are
overlooking their applica-
tions.
Although the event is be-
ing held at Cadillac High
School, it is open to any
student in the area free of
charge. Fiester also said it
is important that parents
attend the event with their
children.
We encourage students
to bring their parents or
guardians as they will
have different questions
than their children, Fies-
ter said. The student may
want to know about the
size of campus or the foot-
ball team while the parent
may want to know about
cost.
The event is causal and it
is not required that anyone
stays the entire time un-
less they want to. The event
is held in Cadillac High
Schools Auxiliary Gym
and doors open at 6:30 p.m.
rcharmoli@cadillacnews.com | 775-news (6397)
Cadillac High School to hold
College Night on Thursday
What: College Night
When: 6:30 to 8 p.m. Thurs-
day
Where: Cadillac High School
Auxiliary Gym
Why: Roughly 40 college,
universities, trade schools
and all the military branches
will be on hand to answer
questions and give out infor-
mation.
Your LocaL connection
FBI searches 2 sites in
northern lower Michigan
SUTTONS BAY (AP)
Dozens of federal agents
with help from Michigan
authorities have raided
two sites in the northern
Lower Peninsula, taking
precautions for possible
exposure to hazardous
chemicals.
The Leelanau County
Sheriff s Department says
about 60 federal agents
are participating in the
investigation, which led
to raids Friday in Suttons
Bay and Leelanau Town-
ship.
Sheriff Mike Borkovich
says in a Web posting that
other searches are being
conducted related to the
case in other states.
He didnt identify those
states.
FBI spokesman Robert
Beekman in Detroit con-
firms the Michigan raids
but says the affidavits
that let to them are sealed
and so he cant disclose
any information about
links to raids elsewhere.
Man injured when car
hits Mich. welcome sign
PORTER TOWNSHIP
(AP) Authorities say a
southwestern Michigan
man has received hospital
treatment for injuries he
sustained when he hit a
Welcome to Michigan
sign on his return from
Indiana.
The Cass County sher-
iff s department says
50-year-old Brad Martin
of Vandalia was north-
bound Friday afternoon
when he lost control of
his vehicle and struck the
sign along Michigan 217
in Porter Township.
MLive.com reports that
he was treated at Elkhart
General Hospital in Indi-
ana and released.
The sheriff s depart-
ment says the crash
remains under investiga-
tion.
Boy, 4, wounded in gun
attack on house in Flint
FLINT (AP) Police
say a 4-year-old boy was
wounded when attack-
ers opened fre on a Flint
house with seven people
inside.
Authorities say the at-
tack happened about 11:30
p.m. Saturday. MLive.com
the attackers came from
the homes backyard.
Police say someone
drove the wounded child
to a hospital in a private
vehicle, and the boy was in
good condition.
Authorities say the sev-
en people in the house in-
cluded three children. The
house is in the 700 block of
East Bundy on the citys
north side.
Police say those involved
in the incident arent giv-
ing information to inves-
tigators, and theyre seek-
ing help in determining
what happened. Genesee
County Child Protective
Services also is investigat-
ing.
EDITORS NOTE: Inves-
tigators ask anyone with
information on the shoot-
ing attack to call state
police Detective Robert
Dunham at 810-237-6915.
In Brief
The CadillaC News reserves this
space daily for clarifying items
or correcting any errors that
appear on our news pages. We
encourage our readers to report
any errors by telephoning the
News at 775-6564. Please ask for
the newsroom.
Corrections and
Amplifcations

Inside
OBITUARIES A4
OPINION A5
SPORTS B1
SCOREBOARD B4
TASTE C1
COMICS C2
WEATHER C2
PUZZLES C3
COMMUNITY C4
CLASSIFIEDS D1

Odd News
Oregon
bartender gets
$17,500 tip
SPRINGFIELD,
Ore. (AP) An
Oregon bartend-
er just got the tip
of a lifetime.
One of Aurora
Kepharts regu-
lars at Conways
Restaurant
and Lounge in
Springfeld often
tips her with
Keno tickets from
the Oregon Lot-
tery. On Tuesday
evening, the man
who wishes to re-
main anonymous
asked Kephart to
choose two.
When she
checked the num-
bers, Kepharts
frst ticket won
$5. The second
turned into a
$17,500 gratuity.
The look on
his face was in-
credible, Keph-
art, 25, told The
Register-Guard
newspaper, I
automatically
handed it back
to him; it was his
ticket.
But the man
wouldnt take the
ticket and made
Kephart sign it so
she would be the
only one able to
collect the prize.
Kephart said
80 percent of her
customers are
regulars, and
they were excited
for her.
The reac-
tion was crazy,
Kephart said.
Everyone was so
amped up.
With the bar
busy, Kephart
went right back
to work, her
brain scram-
bled by the big
tip. The next day,
she claimed her
prize at the Ore-
gon Lottery offce
in Salem.
Kephart said
she gave the man
a percentage of
her winnings. I
just couldnt not
give him some of
it, she said.
Kephart said
she plans to buy
a new couch with
her share and
save the rest.
Those modest
plans earned her
teasing from the
bars regulars,
but she had been
looking for a
couch before
going to work
Tuesday and was
scared off by the
prices.
I never real-
ized how expen-
sive couches
were, she said.
Instead of wait-
ing till Christmas
or later, now I can
buy something I
really need.
lotto Numbers
Midday Daily 3:
2-7-4
Midday Daily 4:
4-6-9-4
Daily 3: 1-0-1
Daily 4: 8-7-6-1
Fantasy 5: 15-16-20-
27-36
Keno: 3-4-7-9-13-16-
18-20-22-25-28-29-
33-43-44-46-48-58-
69-70-79-80
Monday, october 7, 2013 | www.cadillacnews.com 775-NEWS (6397) cadillac news | trusted. local. connected A3

Volume 142 Number 101 2013 Cadillac News.
The Cadillac News retains the publication rights to all contents
produced or supplied by the Cadillac News. Use of said
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prohibited. Contents copyrighted; all rights reserved.
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Fire leads to discovery of marijuana grow operation
by ANToNio CoLEMAN
cadillac news
FIFE LAKE Fife Lake
firefighters discovered
a large marijuana grow
operation while respond-
ing to a fire in a two-story
home in Fife Lake.
The Fife Lake Fire De-
partment responded to
the fire about 4 a.m., on
Sunday. The two-story
home had been divided
into five separate apart-
ments. While performing
their duties, firefighters
discovered marij uana
plants growing in two of
the apartments. Deputies
from the Grand Traverse
County Sheriff s Office
responded to the scene
and contacted the Tra-
verse Narcotics Team.
TNT detectives obtained
a search warrant and
found a total of 192 mari-
juana plants in various
stages of growth through-
out the apartments and
basement area. A main
floor apartment and base-
ment area held the ma-
jority of the marijuana
plants.
Fire department offi-
cials advised it appeared
the fire started in one of
the upstairs apartments
and was likely caused by a
grow light used in manu-
facturing marijuana.
Several high powered
grow lights were found
inside the areas contain-
ing plants connected to
unknown power sources
in a haphazard fashion,
according to police re-
ports. At least three resi-
dents had to be evacuated
from the building, with
the structure sustaining
smoke and fire damage.
The resident living in
the apartment where the
fire began told police he
was a medical marijuana
card holder and was grow-
ing marijuana for himself.
TNT was unable to verify
whether or not the person
was a medical marijuana
card holder and seized the
plants.
Medical marijuana card
holders are only allowed
to possess a total of 12
plants for themselves.
acoleman@cadillacnews.com | 775-news (6397)

Ride em Cowboy
antonio coleMan | cadillac news
Dancing to Save a Horse, Ride a Cowboy, Tracy Winkle and his partner Alicia Elmore were awarded both the Peoples Choice and Judges
Choice awards.
Third-annual Dancing with the Y Stars returns to Wex
by ANToNio CoLEMAN
cadillac news
CADILLAC Eight local celebrities
and their partners performed for a
packed crowd at the Wexford Civic
Center for the YMCA Dancing with
the Y Stars annual fundraiser.
Dancers competed against each
other at the third-annual event for
the Peoples Choice and Judges
Choice Awards.
Dancers included: Tracy Winkle,
Alicia Elmore, Lucy McGuire, Vic-
tor Lucas, Scott Koenig, Julie Gen-
try, Steve Drabik, Tiffany Nerem,
Anne Cool, Jody Brown, Sheila
Hill, Tim Parker, Carla Filkins,
Gordon Koll, Deb Ballard and Terry
Fetters.
Doors opened at 6:30 p.m. on Sat-
urday with dancers taking the
stage around 7:15 p.m.
One by one, Brian Nolf intro-
duced dance couples to the stage.
Each dance group performed a
variation of dances, including
swing dance, mambo and cha cha.
Teams showed their dance moves
in fashionable costumes as judges
Bridgett Coffey, Bill Rzepka and
Lindsay Rumohr held up score
cards rating each performance.
Members of the audience donated
to the YMCA to vote for their favor-
ite dancers for the Peoples Choice
Award.
Dancing to Save a Horse, Ride
a Cowboy, Tracy Winkle and his
partner Alicia Elmore were award-
ed both the Peoples Choice and
Judges Choice awards.
After choosing to perform country
swing dancing, Winkle said the two
practiced at least once a week since
June. Still, he said swinging Elmore
around the stage was the most chal-
lenging part of their performance.
He said the dance couple felt re-
lieved and fulfilled after learning
their performance had won the
competition.
Being on stage isnt as bad as
you think, Winkle said. When
you are prepared and ready, you go
up there and nail it. When you put
that much time and effort into a
performance, it feels good to be rec-
ognized.
Winkle said he was excited to be
a part of an event that helps the
YMCA better serve the community.
I really appreciate all the hard
work all the dancers put into it,
Winkle said.
Dan Smith, executive director of
the YMCA, said this years event
had a great turnout with about 20
volunteers and more than 400 tick-
ets sold. Smith said the weekend
event helps the Y in its goal of be-
ing a healthy community center for
everyone.
We give between $50,000 and
$60,000 of financial assistance for
people to participate in the Y and
our healthy living programs,
Smith said. This event will pro-
vide the resources for people to do
that.
Proceeds from Dancing with the
Y Stars will go toward the YMCAs
annual fundraising campaign.
acoleman@cadillacnews.com | 775-news (6397)
antonio coleMan | cadillac news
Members of the audience donated to the YMCA to vote for their favorite dancers for the
Peoples Choice Award. Tim Parker and Sheila Hill perform for the crowd at the Wex.
ALLERGY AND ASTHMA
SPECIALISTS OF CADILLAC
Pediatric & Adult Allergy, Asthma, & Immunology
Martin Dubravec, M.D.
Board Certifed Allergist/Immunologist
Hay Fever astHma sinus Diseases Hives insect stings
allergies FooD allergies Drug anD latex allergies
200 East Mason St., Cadillac
(231) 779-4444 Toll Free: (866) 828-8044
www.martindubravec.yourmd.com
Heart to Heart Floral
110 S. Mitchell, Downtown Cadillac
www.hearttoheartforal.com
231-775-1984
Creating beautiful sympathy tributes for 25 years
a4 cadillac news | TrusTed. local. connecTed 775-NEWS (6397) www.cadillacnews.com | monday, ocTober 7, 2013
Death Notice
Donald Kalback
LAKE CITY Donald
Kalback, of Lake City,
passed away Thursday,
October 3, 2013, at Cadil-
lac Mercy Hospital. He
was 84.
Graveside memorial
services are 3 p.m.,
Thursday, October 10,
2013, at the Forest Hill
Cemetery in Evart.
Obituary
Dorothea L. Cress
CADILLAC Dorothea
L. Cress died peacefully in
Cadillac, Mich., on October
1, 2013.
She was born on April 9,
1924, in Chicago, Ill., to Wal-
ter and Lucia (Eifert) Schro-
eder. Dorothea married the
Rev. Clyde Cress on June
28, 1947. He preceded her in
death in 1992. In her lifelong
walk with the Lord, she and
Clyde ministered to many
and opened their hearts
and home to all who needed
their help.
Dorothea is survived by
her sons: David (Debbie)
Cress, Daniel (Kathy)
Cress, Dale Cress and
daughter-in-law, Wendy
Werner. Her son, Donald,
preceded her in death in
1987. She is also survived
by her three grandchil-
dren: Jacob Cress, Julie
(Carlos) Galan and Alex
Cress; her great-grandchil-
dren: Andrew and Mia
Galan; nieces: Bev Stein-
ke, Laurie Knodel, Vicki
Roberts, Peggy Todd; and
her special friends, the Belt
family and Carol Hall.
Visitation will begin at 3
p.m., on Saturday, October
12, at the Emmanuel Lu-
theran Church in Cadillac.
A memorial service will
follow at 4 p.m., with a light
dinner served afterward.
At Dorotheas request,
cremation has taken place
and interment will be at the
Bluff City Cemetery in El-
gin, Ill. Memorial tributes
may be given to Hospice of
Michigan or LWML.
Condolences and memo-
ries may be shared with
the family online at www.
hitesman-holdship.com.
The family is being served
by the Hitesman-Holdship
Funeral Home.
(231)775-3433
www.hitesman-holdship.com


Bulldog royalty
courTesy phoTo | daniel cochrane
Mesick High Schools Jenee Spoor and Zachary Riffe were crowned homecoming queen and king during halftime of Mesicks home-
coming game against Benzie Central.

A Wild(cat) weekend
nicole weiss | cadillac news
Megan Green and Dean Marsh were crowned Evart royalty as king and queen at halftime of Saturdays homecoming game.
Evart celebrates festive homecoming weekend
by nicole weiss
cadillac news
EVART The skies were
gray and opened up with
rain during Evarts home-
coming game Saturday
against the Pine River
Bucks.
But Wildcat spirit was
in the air and the cats,
getting off to a slow start
the frst half, roared to vic-
tory.
At halftime, the march-
ing band entertained and
homecoming court was
introduced before Dean
Marsh was crowned Ev-
art homecoming king
and Megan Green was
crowned homecoming
queen.
The game rounded out a
week of festivities, includ-
ing spirit week themes in
all three schools, a Friday
parade down Main Street,
and a Saturday birth-
day party at the current
home of Evart Middle
School.
The building turned
90, and used to house the
communitys high school.
Alumni and current resi-
dents toured the build-
ing and indulged in some
birthday cake while pe-
rusing old photographs
taken from inside the
school over the past cen-
tury.
nweiss@cadillacnews.com | 775-news (6397)

DULUTH, Minn. (AP)
The group that found
a sunken freighter off
the shore of Marquette,
Mich., this spring has
found a second one in
Lake Superior that sank
more than 60 years ago.
Searchers confirmed
the location of the Scoti-
adoc in more than 850 feet
of water last month near
Thunder Bay, Ontario,
possibly making it the
deepest shipwreck ever
found in the Great Lakes,
the Duluth News Tribune
reported.
Jerry Eliason, of Clo-
quet, Minn., is part of
the group that has found
many lost ships, includ-
ing the long-sought-after
wreck of the Henry B.
Smith near Michigan in
May.
Finding the Henry B.
Smith was the entree; the
Scotiadoc was the des-
sert, Eliason said.
The 424-foot Scotiadoc
sank after colliding with
the 451-foot freighter Bur-
lington in 1953, killing one
person.
The Scotiadoc departed
Port Arthur, Ontario
part of whats now Thun-
der Bay with a crew
of 29 and nearly 260,000
bushels of wheat on June
20, 1953. About two hours
into the voyage, the Sco-
tiadoc and the Burlington
were in the vicinity of
Trowbridge Island and
each ship, the court ruled,
made crucial errors as
they navigated through
thick fog and driving rain.
The Burlington plowed
into the starboard side of
the Scotiadoc at an angle
near the stern, gashing a
hole in the smaller vessel
as its bow scraped along
the side.
Most of the Scotiadoc
crew went to the port-
side lifeboat, which was
launched successfully. But
about a half-dozen crew
members went to the star-
board-side lifeboat.
In heavy seas and with
several crew members
in the lifeboat, the stern
slipped from the deck over
the side of the sinking
ship, dropping five peo-
ple about 15 feet into the
frigid lake. Four of them
grabbed onto ropes and
were hauled out of the wa-
ter.
Wallace McDermid, 39,
of Sault Ste. Marie, On-
tario, may have had some
physical limitations and
apparently did get ahold
of the raft. He disap-
peared into the fog and
was not seen again.
The ship rests upright
and largely intact near
Trowbridge Island
about 20 miles southeast
of Thunder Bay, with the
bow at a depth of 850 feet
and the stern at 870 feet.
Eliason said it appears
the previous record-hold-
er for deepest wreck found
in the Great Lakes is the
Isaac Jenkins, discovered
in Lake Ontario in about
750 feet of water.
The Scotiadoc frst came
to the groups attention
as it searched for the The-
ano, another shipwreck
in the area, Eliason said.
Court testimony and oth-
er accounts helped the
searchers narrow a point
from which to start look-
ing.
Beginning in the early
2000s, the group which
also has included Ken
Merryman of Minneapo-
lis, Kraig Smith of Rice
Lake, Wis., and Randy
Beebe of Duluth through
the years made periodic
trips to search for the Sco-
tiadoc, eventually acquir-
ing a good target.
With the Henry B. Smith
wreck the group found
earlier this year, Elia-
son and his wife, Karen,
had acquired a lot of raw
data from government ar-
chives that also helped.
They also ran a sonar unit
in a grid pattern over a de-
fned search area.
Another sunken
freighter found
in Lake Superior
LANSING (AP) Some
Michigan lawmakers are
working to make sure a
pint of beer is really a pint
of beer.
A bill introduced last
week would amend the
Liquor Control Act to re-
quire each pint of beer
have at least 16 ounces. It
would make it an offense
to advertise or sell any
glass of beer as a pint in
this state unless that glass
contains at least 16 ounces
of beer.
Rep. Brandon Dillon,
R-Grand Rapids and a co-
sponsor of the bill, said
short pints arent the
most pressing issue fac-
ing Michigan or its Legis-
lature. But, he said, a lot
of people, I think, would
appreciate knowing what
they get when they order
a pint.
Self-employed plumber
Gary Lord of Lansing is
among them.
Lord said he has been in
a few taverns where the
pint glasses didnt appear
to hold what they adver-
tised.
A pint should be a pint,
and a U.S. pint to the best
of my knowledge has 16
ounces, Lord told the De-
troit Free Press at a Lan-
sing bar on Friday.
Some pint-style beer
glasses with thicker bot-
toms hold as little as 12
to 14 ounces.
Bar owner Mark Sell-
ers of Grand Rapids-
based Barfly Ventures
said the term pint is often
used in Michigan as more
of a description of the
style of beer glass than an
exact unit of measure. He
said his bars use 16-ounce
pint glasses but said many
bars use 14-ounce glasses,
and some use 20-ounce
glasses modeled on the
larger British pint.
Many bar owners might
be up in arms if they have
to buy all new glassware,
Sellers said.
John Holl, editor of All
About Beer magazine in
Durham, N.C., called the
Michigan bill as a good
step forward in what he
said is a great beer state.
Cheater pints, glasses
that look like the regu-
lar size but actually hold
less beer, are particularly
common in places such as
airport bars that have cap-
tive customers but can be
found almost anywhere,
Holl said.
Bars that dont want to
replace their undersize
glassware have a simple
solution to the problem,
he said: Stop calling them
pints.
Bill would require each beer pint have 16 ounces
Viewpoint
From the Cadillac News vision statement:
We fully recognize the enormous responsibility
we have as the fourth estate and will ensure
that our business has a positive effect
on the communities we serve.
Monday, october 7, 2013 | www.cadillacnews.com 775-NEWS (6397) cadillac news | trusted. local. connected A5

Contact your
Legislators
Governor
Rick Snyder
P.O. Box 30013
Lansing, MI 48909
(517) 335-7858
Constituent Services
Rick.Snyder@
michigan.gov
State
Representatives
102nd District
Representative
Phil Potvin serves
Wexford and Osceola
counties
S1386 House Offce
Building
PO Box 30014
Lansing, MI 48909
517-373-1747
philpotvin@
house.mi.gov
103rd District
Representative
Bruce Rendon serves
Missaukee County
S1387 House Offce
Bldg.
PO Box 30014
Lansing, MI 48909-7514
517-373-3817
brucerendon@
house.mi.gov
100th District
Jon Bumstead serves
Lake County
P.O. Box 30014
S1289 House Offce
Bldg.
Lansing, MI 48909-7514
517-373-7317
E-mail:
jonbumstead@
house.mi.gov
State Senate
35th District
Darwin Booher serves
Wexford, Missaukee,
Lake and Osceola
counties.
P.O. Box 30036
520 Farnum Building
Lansing, MI 48909-7536
517-373-1725
Fax: 517-373-0741
E-mail:
SenDBooher@senate.
michigan.gov
U.S. Senate
Debbie Stabenow
133 Hart Senate
Offce Bldg.
Washington D.C.
20510
202-224-4822
Traverse City offce
3335 S. Airport Road
West, Suite 6B
Traverse City, MI
49684
231-929-1031
senator@
stabenow.senate.gov
Carl Levin
269 Russell Senate
Offce Building
Washington, D.C.
20510
202-224-6221
Traverse City
107 Cass Street,
Suite E
Traverse City, MI
49684
231-947-9569
http://levin.senate.
gov
U.S. House
4th District
Dave Camp serves
Missaukee,
Osceola and Wexford
counties
341 Cannon Building
Washington, D.C.
20515
202-225-3561
Cadillac offce
112 Spruce St., Ste. A
Cadillac, MI 49601
231-876-9205
http://camp.house.
gov/
2nd District
Bill Huizenga serves
portion of Lake
County
1217 Longworth
House Offce Building
Washington, D.C.
20515
202-225-4401
Cadillac offce:
210 1/2 N. Mitchell St.
Cadillac, 49601
775-0050
http://huizenga.
house.gov/
Publisher
Christopher Huckle
Editor
Matthew Seward

Advertising Leader
Pat Sorger
Circulation Leader
Holly Schonert
Production Leader
Ken Koch
News
C A D I L L A C
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of religion, or
prohibiting the free
exercise thereof;
or abridging the
freedom of speech,
or of the press; or
the right of the
people peaceably
to assemble,
and to petition
the Government
for a redress of
grievances.
The condemned
books of one
age are often the
classics of later
eras.
Robert B. Downs
librarian and author,
1979
The First
Amendment is
a daily Opinion
Page feature
compiled by The
Freedom Forum,
an organization
dedicated to
defending freedom
of speech and
press.
The First
Amendment
Speak Out
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reserved for readers
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The opinions and
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Speak Out are those
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and are not those of
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unless otherwise
specifed.

By Michael R. StRain
and Stan a. VeugeR
Mcclatchy-tribune news service
Much is in fux in Washing-
ton this week. But two impor-
tant realities have remained
constant, whether certain
elements in the GOP accept
them or not: We must not de-
fault on the federal debt, and
we shouldnt wait until were
on the brink of default to
raise the debt ceiling. Heres
why.
As measured by econo-
mists Scott R. Baker, Nicho-
las Bloom and Steven J.
Davis, policy uncertainty
was more severe during the
previous debt ceiling fght
in the summer of 2011 than
at any time since the terror-
ist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.
If the possibility of default
produces such turmoil, imag-
ine what actually defaulting
would do.
As Republicans have so
often pointed out in the fght
over Obamacare, the abil-
ity of frms to make plans
is severely hindered when
government policies that
affect them are in a state of
extreme uncertainty. Rais-
ing the debt limit before the
eleventh hour will help frms
plan their activities, hire
new workers and keep the
(too weak) economic recov-
ery going.
Consumer confdence
plunged during 2011s debt
ceiling fght to a low not seen
since the dark days of the
recession, and it took a long
time for confdence to recov-
er. In a report released last
week, Gallup found that eco-
nomic confdence is already
much worse now
than it was in
May and June,
and attributes
it to the current
budget and debt
ceiling battles.
Many econo-
mists believe
that consumer
confdence measures serve
as an indicator of how house-
holds will spend money in
the future. If households
are rattled by Washington
shenanigans, they are likely
to rein in spending, which
would negatively affect the
countrys already fragile
economy.
And even the threat of a
default would likely raise the
interest rate on Treasuries
by increasing their riskiness.
This would bring higher bor-
rowing costs for businesses
and tighter credit for con-
sumers.
As we know from the last
debt ceiling fght, the squab-
bling also costs taxpayers
money. The Bipartisan Policy
Center estimates that the
cost to taxpayers of the de-
layed debt limit increase in
2011 will total almost $20 bil-
lion over 10 years.
The United States actually
defaulted on its debt once,
in spring 1979. Then, as now,
the debt ceiling was a source
of partisan bickering, and
an agreement was reached
only at the last moment.
The late passage, along with
computer problems, meant
the Treasury Department
was late in making payments
on maturing securities to
individual investors and in
redeeming T-bills.
The moral
of that story is
clear: If Con-
gress waits too
long to raise the
debt ceiling, the
slightest error
can throw the
country into
default on its
obligations. Economists
Terry L. Zivney and Richard
D. Marcus, who studied the
incident, concluded that this
temporary default on a tiny
share of the debt increased
T-bill yields by six-tenths of a
percentage point and result-
ed in $12 billion in additional
interest payments.
If the near-default of 2011
and a very minor default in
1979 cost so much money,
imagine how much an actual
default would cost taxpayers.
After we ran up to the
brink of default in 2011, Stan-
dard & Poors lowered the
countrys credit rating for
the frst time. The response
to that downgrade was not
overwhelming, but a second
downgrade would in all like-
lihood be more serious. A
wide variety of institutions
face restrictions on the risk
profle of the assets they
hold, and a second down-
grade could make it harder
for many of them to hold
Treasury securities.
As if all that isnt bad
enough, default could harm
the economy in much more
destructive ways as well. As
the risk-free asset par excel-
lence, Treasury bills are
used as collateral in many
transactions, including in
repo markets, which were
a central player in the 2008
fnancial crisis. Shaken faith
in their reliability would
potentially trigger a credit
crunch, Fedwire could seize
up, a generalized fight from
risk would drive down equity
markets, banks could col-
lapse. In other words, many
of the pieces would be in
place for a repeat of the 2008
fnancial meltdown. Fed-
eral Reserve Chairman Ben
Bernanke probably wasnt
exaggerating when he said in
July 2011 that default would
throw the fnancial system
into chaos.
Of course, no one knows
for sure what would happen
if the U.S. were to default.
(Interest rates could fall in a
fight to safety, for example,
or the Fed could try to stop
the panic by stepping in as
the bond buyer of last resort,
maintaining the liquid-
ity of Treasuries.) But we
shouldnt wait to fnd out,
and we shouldnt charge up
to the brink.
The GOPs laundry list of
demands in exchange for
a debt ceiling increase is
ridiculous. But President
Obamas position that he
wont negotiate on the debt
ceiling is also outrageous:
Previous presidents have
done so, and he should too.
Shut down the government
if you must, but dont shut
down the entire economy.
Washington needs to get seri-
ous about the debt ceiling.
Quickly.
Michael R. Strain and Stan A.
Veuger are resident scholars at
the American Enterprise Institute.
They wrote this for the Los
Angeles Times.
Dont wait on the debt limit
OpInIOn
&
Analysis

By lane FilleR
Mcclatchy-tribune news service
House Speaker John
Boehner is being manipu-
lated by his more rabid
Republican members. They
want to stop Obamacare and
are willing to bring the na-
tion to a screeching halt via
government shutdown and
destroy our fnancial system
with a debt default to make
it happen. Or they just want
to bring the federal govern-
ment to a screaming halt,
and stopping Obamacare is
the cherry on top.
Regardless, watching it
play out is going to make us
feel like we just ate a poison
ivy salad.
A bit of fault also goes to
President Barack Obama. He
postponed the part of Obam-
acare that made companies
give health care to employees
or face fnes, but refused to
postpone the requirement
on those workers hes not
making companies cover, to
get their own insurance or
pay fnes. I dont know why,
honestly. The mainstream
media havent asked him
to explain it, which, since
the president is protecting
corporations like hes Mitt
Romney hidden in a Barack
Obama costume,
is surprising.
To be fair, the
media have been
busy explaining
the sociologi-
cal signifcance
of Miley Cyrus
and twerking
to a concerned
public.
Weve been here before,
and recently. We now face
world-altering deadlines and
defning moments of truth
so frequently they should be
named like movie sequels:
Fiscal Cliff of Doom III:
This Time its About the
Health Care.
We could have a solution,
if we focus on the right prob-
lem.
That problem, and it goes
beyond this particular crisis,
is multiple-issue legislation.
In this case, House Republi-
cans started out with a bill
that combined repealing
Obamacare with funding
the rest of the federal gov-
ernment, two pretty much
unrelated issues. They have
since doubled down, and
are now willing to fund the
government only if Obam-
acare is put off for a year,
the Keystone XL pipeline is
built, regulatory agencies
are no longer al-
lowed to impose
regulations,
Duck Dynasty
gets a monument
on the National
Mall and Obama,
a Harvard Law
School gradu-
ate, wears a Yale
sweatshirt every
day for a month.
The idea is to force the op-
position to grant something
you want by tying it to some-
thing they want. In this case,
the most extreme House
Republicans want to repeal
Obamacare, and Obama
wants the United States to be
a functioning nation-state, so
... man, does this seem stupid
when you actually type it.
How is that a trade?
Multiple-issue legislation
leads to those confusing,
soulless campaign argu-
ments:
Candidate 1: My opponent
voted to let pharmaceutical
companies buy orphans and
test skin treatments made
of bubonic plague on their
faces.
Candidate 2: No, I voted
to fund bandages for sol-
diers who get blown up. The
Plague for Orphans Amend-
ment was tacked on as a
rider.
The One Subject at a Time
Act, which is an actual bill
introduced in the House by
Rep. Tom Marino (R-Pa.),
would require each bill to be
about only one subject, and
stand or fall on its merits.
Many states have such
rules in their constitutions,
excluding only budget leg-
islation , because having
a separate bill for every
budget item is impossible.
Fair enough. But every sub-
stantive policy and funding
issue should be voted on
separately.
With about 5 percent of
congressional races truly
competitive, politicians
know compromise, which
can be used against them
during a primary, doesnt
pay. If compromise doesnt
pay, then multiple-issue bills,
rather than guaranteeing
multiple things get done at
once, guarantee that nothing
does. And all of this seems to
be getting worse, not better.
If we cant improve the
players, we have to fx the
game.
lane FilleR is a member of the
Newsday editorial board. His email
address is lane.fller@newsday.
com.
The trouble with multiple-issue bills
OpInIOn
&
Analysis
PiTTsbuRgh PosT-gazeTTe on
proof of Tehrans seriousness will
come in Geneva:
President Barack Obamas
phone conversation Friday
with Iranian President Has-
san Rouhani was a historic
ice-breaker after decades of
no high-level contact with
the leadership of that critical
Middle East country.
Some believed that the two
presidents should have delib-
erately run into each other
during the busy frst week of
the United Nations General
Assembly in New York. At
the same time, the inevitable
grip-and-grin photo of the
two wouldnt have done ei-
ther president any good at
home in the overheated polit-
ical atmospheres of Tehran
and Washington.
No one should presume
too much at this stage, but it
now appears that the road is
set for a constructive, negoti-
ated approach to the primary
issue dividing the United
States and Iran, that coun-
trys nuclear program. Talks
between Iran and U.N. Securi-
ty Council permanent mem-
bers China, France, Russia,
the United Kingdom and the
United States, plus Germany,
are now scheduled for Oct. 15-
16 in Geneva. Those talks are
not specifcally about U.S.-
Iranian relations, but a deal
involving Western economic
sanctions and Irans nuclear
program will be at the core.
Rouhani, the whole week in
New York, including during
interviews with American
journalists, gave signals that
Iran is now ready to work
toward a deal. So far he has
not been disowned by Irans
supreme leader, Ayatollah
Ali Khamenei. The Geneva
meeting will provide Iran
with every opportunity to
show whether Rouhani was
serious about repairing rela-
tions. A failure by Iran to put
concrete proposals on the
table would be an equally
clear signal that Rouhanis
performance in New York, in-
cluding his phone conversa-
tion with Mr. Obama, was an
effort to substitute theater for
real willingness to negotiate.
America and the world
have every reason to hope
that Rouhanis posture re-
fected Iranian reality, not
subterfuge. The Geneva con-
ference will tell the tale.
editorial roundup
Michigan
Newspaper readers line
the Michigan lakeshore
all 3,288 miles of it.
Sources: Scarborough Custom Research, 2013 (integrated newspaper audience includes readers of newspapers across print and digital platforms)
Not really, but they could! The state of Michigan has
more freshwater shoreline than any place in the world
17.4 million feet of it. And thats exactly the space
required to fit, arm in arm, the 5.3 million adults reading
Michigan newspapers in an average week.
If youre a newspaper reader you might want to
pick your spot now, if youre an advertiser
you might want to cast your line with newspapers.
Your
logo
here


Michigan_Layout 1 9/12/2013 1:34 PM Page 1
130 N. Mitchell St., Cadillac, MI 49601
231-775-6565 Toll Free: 1-888-304-6565
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a6 cadillac news | TrusTed. local. connecTed 775-NEWS (6397) www.cadillacnews.com | monday, ocTober 7, 2013
Today in History
Cadillac History
Oct. 7, 1913
A 2-month-old child was
brought to Mercy Hospi-
tal for surgery to repair
her skull, which had be
crushed a few days earlier.
The child and her parents
were staying in a stateroom
and at some point during
the night, the upper berth
collapsed onto the lower
berth, where the child was
sleeping. The doctor in
charge of the operation
would not comment on how
he predicted the surgery
would go.
Oct. 7, 1963
A Wexford County jury
could not come to a ver-
dict in the case of the Rev.
Eugene Furr and was dis-
missed. Furr was being
tried on a charge of at-
tempting to procure an act
of gross indecency, but
the report did not explain
further what this meant.
Prosecutor Burton Hines
said he planned to pursue
a retrial.
Oct. 7, 1988
The State Boundary
Commission approved the
annexation of three par-
cels of Clam Lake Town-
ship property to the city of
Cadillac, including a parcel
on the southern edge of the
Country Acres Mobile Vil-
lage. The owner of Coun-
try Acres was pleased with
the annexation because he
wished to expand the vil-
lage and was required to be
zoned within the city.
Today
Cadillac
What: Dig Pink for Breast
Cancer Awareness
Info: Freshman and JV
start at 5:30 p.m. with
varsity following. Come
support the Lady Vikings
as they raise awareness
for breast cancer.
date: Monday
Place: Cadillac School,
Cadillac
What: Stehouwer Free
Clinic
Info: The Stehouwer
Free Clinic is available by
appointment Monday
through Thursday from
9 a.m. to noon and 1 to
4:30 p.m. for medication
assistance, appointments
with a doctor, nurse
practitioner or physicians
assistant (available when
they volunteer).
date: Monday
Place: Lower level of the
Old City Hall Building,
201 N. Mitchell Street
Contact: 231-876-6150
What: Blood Drive
Info: A blood drive will
be held.
Time: 1 to 6:45 p.m.
Monday
Place: Temple Hill Baptist
Church, 1601 West
Division
What: Men of the Moose
meeting
Time: 6:30 p.m. Monday
Place: Moose Lodge,
Boon Road
What: T.O.P.S. 0579 Group
Info: Weight loss support
group, visitors welcome.
First month free.
Time: 6:30 p.m. Monday
Place: Zion Lutheran
Church, 350 Pearl Street
Contact: Marie
Mercier 231-775-1713
teachmercier@yahoo.com
Cost: $28 per year, $4 per
month
What: Al-Anon
Info: Meets every
Monday.
Time: 8 p.m. Monday
Place: First Presbyterian
Church, 221 E. Harris
Street
Contact: Dolores Eisele
231-775-3102
What: Taco Night
Info: Serving tacos every
Monday.
Time: 11 a.m. to 8 p.m.
Monday
Place: American Legion
Post 94, 422 N. Mitchell
Street
What: Alzheimers
Support Group
Info: On the frst and
third Wednesday of each
month. For caregivers,
family and friends of
persons with Alzheimers
disease and related
disorders.
Time: 2 p.m. Monday
Place: Green Acres, 235
Pearl Street
Contact: 231-779-9420
What: Kiwanis Club of
Cadillac
Info: Area men and
women interested in
serving children and
youth. All welcome.
Time: 6 p.m. Monday
Place: McGuires
Contact: 231-920-6822
Tustin
What: Radio Control
Instruction
Info: Learn to fy RC
aircraft with expert
instructors. CAMS
offers free lessons every
Monday evening at 7
p.m.
Time: 7 to 9 p.m. Monday
Place: Tustin, Club Field,
south of blinker light in
Tustin
Contact: 231-768-4259
Cost: Free
Tuesday
Cadillac
What: Stehouwer Free
Clinic
Info: The Stehouwer
Free Clinic is available by
appointment Monday
through Thursday from
9 a.m. to noon and 1 to
4:30 p.m. for medication
assistance, appointments
with a doctor, nurse
practitioner or physicians
assistant (available when
they volunteer).
date: Tuesday
Place: Lower level of the
Old City Hall Building,
201 N. Mitchell Street
Contact: 231-876-6150
What: Blood Drive
Info: A blood drive will
be held.
Time: 11:15 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Tuesday
Place: Temple Hill Baptist
Church, 1601 West
Division
What: Masonic Lodge
Meeting
Info: Dinner at 6 p.m.
Lodge meeting at 7 p.m.
All Masons are welcome.
Time: 6 to 9:30 p.m.
Tuesday
Place: 124 1/2 N. Mitchell
Street, 124 1/2 N. Mitchell
Street
Contact: 231-775-2617
What: Grand Slam Bridge
Club
Info: For women, every
Tuesday.
Time: 11:30 a.m. Tuesday
Place: Lakeside Charlies,
Contact: Jeanne 231-775-
5086
What: Weekly Peer Grief
Support Group
Time: 9 a.m. Tuesday
Place: Big Boy
Contact: 231-779-9550;
800-822-8318
What: Depression,
Bipolar Support Alliance
Info: Meets every
Tuesday.
Time: 6 p.m. Tuesday
Place: Mercy Hospital,
Mortimer Room
Contact: Louie or Betty
231-920-3411 or 231-
775-4937
What: Hamburger Night
Time: 6 to 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday
Place: Moose Lodge,
Boon Road
What: Shepherds Table
Info: Free community
meals. Everyone
welcome. Volunteers
needed for clean-up, 5
to 7 p.m.
Time: 4 to 6 p.m.
Tuesday
Place: First Baptist
Church, Chapin Street
entrance
Contact: 231-775-0608
Cost: Free
What: Alzheimers
Support Group
Info: On the frst and
third Wednesday
of each month. For
caregivers, family and
friends of persons with
Alzheimers disease and
related disorders.
Time: 2 p.m. Tuesday
Place: Green Acres, 235
Pearl Street
Contact: 231-779-9420
What: Cadillac Area Low
Vision Support Group
Info: Guest speakers,
sharing experiences,
information and coping
skills and social time.
Refreshments served.
Time: 10 to 11:15 a.m.
Tuesday
Place: Cadillac Senior
Center, Chestnut Street
Contact: 231-775-0133,
231-779-9420
Lake City
What: Al-Anon
Time: 10 a.m. Tuesday
Place: St. Stevens Catholic
Church, 506 Union Street
Manton
What: Support Group for
Victims of Violent Crimes
Info: Second Tuesday of
each month. All welcome.
Time: 7 p.m. Tuesday
Place: St. Theresa Hall,
Mesick
What: Hamburger Night
Info: Mesick Amvet
Post No. 120 Sons.
Hamburgers,
cheeseburgers,
homemade soup and
chili, french fries and
onion rings. Proceeds
used for projects that
beneft veterans and
the community. Public
welcome.
Time: 5:30 to 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday
Place: Mesick Amvets
Post, M-37, Just south of
M-115
Reed City
What: Quilts to Comfort
Info: Quilts to Comfort
meets the second
Tuesday of each month,
except December. Charity
quilts will be made for
the Crossroads Radiation
Therapy Group.
Time: 1 to 5 p.m. Tuesday
Place: Reed City,
Crossroads Quilt Shop
Community Calender
By Monte Morin
los angeles Times
When it comes to making
boneheaded choices, teen-
agers usually win societys
award for overall poor deci-
sion-making.
Yet a study published re-
cently in the journal Pro-
ceedings of the National
Academy of Sciences sug-
gests that our ability to
make wise choices changes
over time, and actually de-
clines with old age.
In fact, the study found
that in certain situations,
the decision-making abil-
ity of people older than 65
was worse than that of ado-
lescents. While teens were
more apt to drive carelessly,
the studys authors argued
that seniors were more like-
ly to make poor medical or
fnancial decisions.
The study involved 135
men and women ages 12
to 90. Each was assigned
a sum of money $125
and then asked a series of
lottery questions. The
questions were designed to
gauge risk aversion, consis-
tency of thought and ratio-
nality.
Seniors disturbingly
chose irrational wager op-
tions 25 percent of the time,
according to the study. An
example of an irrational
choice would be to bypass
a sure gain of $5 in favor
of an ambiguous or risky
choice to win the same
amount of cash.
By contrast, adolescents
chose irrational options 10
percent of the time, while
young and midlife adults
chose them only 5 percent
of the time.
Seniors were far more
cautious than the other
age groups when choosing
between two possible cash
gains. If faced with the op-
tion of receiving $5 for cer-
tain, or a lottery that paid
$20 with a 50 percent chance
of winning, seniors chose
the $5.
When seniors faced a
choice between two losses,
however, such as losing $5
for certain or choosing a lot-
tery in which they stood a
50 percent chance of losing
$20 or nothing, they chose
the riskier option with the
higher potential loss.
Seniors also lacked con-
sistency, the study found.
When a certain question
was asked four times, se-
niors switched their an-
swers signifcantly more
than all other age groups
and roughly twice as often
as adults ages 21 to 50, the
authors said.
The authors argued that
the pattern of decision-
making among elder par-
ticipants in the study was
not a function of illness or
age-related dementia. The
36 seniors who participated
were all screened and deter-
mined to be healthy.
Levy said the fndings fall
in line with a growing body
of research that suggests
older adults make decisions
detrimental to the wealth,
health and general well-
being. For instance, they
generally borrow at higher
interest rates, incorrectly
estimate property values
and pay more fees to fnan-
cial institutions.
The reason for such be-
havior remained a mystery,
but it did raise potential pol-
icy issues, considering that
seniors are more likely to
fail to choose health plans
correctly and more likely to
make voting errors, the au-
thors wrote.
The decrease in con-
sistency and rationality
may be due to a general re-
duction in cognitive func-
tion, which occurs even in
healthy aging, although we
were surprised that it is so
extreme, Levy said.
Ability to choose wisely declines with age, study suggests
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ieves
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*American Cancer Society
There are over two
million breast cancer
survivors alive today
in the U.S.*
In honor of October being Breast Cancer
Awareness month, the Cadillac News is
going PINK! On Wednesday, October 9th
a PINK section promoting Breast Cancer
Prevention will be wrapped around the
Cadillac News! Be sure to get your copy!
Monday, october 7, 2013 | www.cadillacnews.com 775-NEWS (6397) cadillac news | trusted. local. connected A7
NEW YORK (AP) A
motorcyclist accused of
smashing a window and
catalyzing a bloody en-
counter between a group
of bikers and an SUV driv-
er was arraigned Sunday
on gang assault and other
major charges, while his
lawyer said the motorcy-
clists role in the headline-
grabbing case was unfairly
overplayed.
The fourth person ar-
rested so far in a case held
up as a highway night-
mare, Reginald Chance,
was being held on $75,000
cash bail. Prosecutors
said he played a key role
in the SUV drivers beat-
ing, which came after the
driver ran over a biker in
what the motorists family
said was fear for his life.
While Chance didnt
participate in the beating,
by shattering the SUVs
drivers-side window, he
set into motion a chain of
events that resulted in the
driver being dragged out
of his vehicle and beaten
by others, Manhattan As-
sistant District Attorney
Samantha Turino said.
Chances lawyer, Gregory
Watts, acknowledged his
client broke the window in
a burst of anger after the
SUVs door knocked him
earlier in the encounter
that went from a Manhat-
tan highway to a neighbor-
hood street. Video shows
Chance then got on his
motorcycle and left, and
he didnt hit SUV driver
Alexian Lian or encourage
anyone else to do so, Watts
said.
This is not a man riding
around assaulting people
with a quote-unquote
gang, Watts said. We
will hotly contest those al-
legations.
Dozens play chess
in public to defy SF
crackdown
SAN FRANCISCO (AP)
Dozens of people backed
by a brass band are playing
chess in downtown San
Francisco to defy a recent
crackdown by police on
the public games that have
been a staple of the city for
years.
Earlier this month, po-
lice confscated chess gear,
tables and chairs used by
the mostly homeless play-
ers.
Police say the games had
begun to attract illegal
gambling and drug sales to
an area adjacent to a cable
car terminal, which is a
popular tourist destina-
tion. Nearby merchants
also complained about an
increase in illegal activity
around the games.
On Sunday, homeless ad-
vocates and the chess play-
ers organized a chess-in
and played for hours on the
citys busy Market Street
in balmy, sunny weather
with no visible police pres-
ence.
Gunfght at Fresno biker
club kills 1, wounds 12
FRESNO, Calif. (AP)
Authorities Sunday were
investigating what touched
off a wild running gun
battle inside and outside
a Fresno motorcycle clubs
annual dance, leaving one
man dead and at least a
dozen other wounded.
Shots were still being
fred at 2 a.m. Saturday
when the frst of more
than 100 law enforcement
offcers arrived at the Soul
Brothers clubhouse near
Fresno, the Fresno County
Sheriff s Offce said.
The gunfre erupted
during the Soul Brothers
annual dance, which draws
bikers and other motor-
cycle clubs from all over
the state. About 500 people
were inside the warehouse-
like clubhouse when the
shooting started.
The shooting quickly
tuned into a running gun
battle in the street outside
the club, and hundreds of
partygoers were running
for cover when the frst
offcers arrived, sheriff s
spokesman Chris Curtice
said.
Despite briefy detaining
and questioning about 100
people, authorities have
yet to make an arrest.
Mormon leader defends
stance vs. same-sex
marriage
SALT LAKE CITY (AP)
More states and na-
tions may legalize same-
sex marriage, but human
laws cannot make moral
what God has declared
immoral, a top Mormon
leader said Sunday.
Apostle Dallin H. Oaks,
in an address at the Mor-
mon churchs biannual
general conference in
Salt Lake City, said the
faiths stance against
same-sex marriage might
be misunderstood or
prompt accusations of
bigotry.
But he urged members
to remember that their
first priority is to serve
God, and The Church of
Jesus Christ of Latter-
day Saints policies are
based on Gods decrees,
The Salt Lake Tribune
reported.
An LDS eternal per-
spective does not allow
members to condone
such behaviors or to find
justification in the laws
that permit them, Oaks
said. And unlike other
organizations that can
change their policies and
even their doctrines, our
policies are determined
by the truths God has
declared to be unchange-
able.
Some 20,000 Mormons
gathered at the Confer-
ence Center in Salt Lake
City and millions more
watched worldwide via
telecasts and the Internet
to hear Oaks remarks on
the final day of the two-
day conference.
Oaks, a former Utah
Supreme Court justice,
bemoaned Americas
declining birthrate, later
marriages and rising co-
habitation.
Marine base partially
evacuates from wildfre
CAMP PENDLETON,
Calif. (AP) Crews built
containment lines Sunday
around a wind-driven wild-
fre that scorched more
than 2 square miles of dry
brush and forced people to
evacuate part of a South-
ern California military
base.
The blaze at the Marine
Corps Camp Pendleton
was 15 percent contained
and frefghters were try-
ing to halt its movement
toward the northeast, said
Sgt. Christopher Duncan,
a press offcer for the Ma-
rines.
The fre broke out Sat-
urday amid hot, dry and
windy conditions through-
out the region. It quickly
prompted the evacuation
of 230 residents from a
housing unit near Lake
ONeil and caused minor
damage to four build-
ings, base offcials said.
Photos posted on Camp
Pendletons Facebook page
showed a few charred ve-
hicles.
The evacuees spent the
night elsewhere on the
195-square-mile coastal
base in northern San Di-
ego County and will be al-
lowed to return home after
5 p.m. Sunday.
Boy boards plane at
Minneapolis airport
without ticket
MINNEAPOLIS (AP)
A 9-year-old runaway
went through security,
boarded a plane at the
Minneapolis-St. Paul
International Airport
without a ticket and flew
to Las Vegas, an airport
spokesman said Sunday.
Security officials
screened the Minneapolis
boy at the airport shortly
after 10:30 a.m. Thurs-
day after he arrived via
light rail, Metropolitan
Airports Commission
spokesman Patrick Ho-
gan said. The boy then
boarded a Delta flight
that left for Las Vegas at
11:15 a.m.
The flight was not full,
Hogan said, and the flight
crew became suspicious
midflight because the
boy was not on their list
of unattended minors.
The crew contacted Las
Vegas police, who met
them upon landing and
transferred the boy to
child protection services,
Hogan said.
Its hard to piece any-
thing together from his
stories why he got on the
flight and went to Las Ve-
gas, Hogan said.
Minneapolis police Sgt.
Bill Palmer said officers
talked to the family after
Las Vegas police contact-
ed them. A family mem-
ber told police the boy
ran away and was last
seen earlier Thursday.
Yale searches for stinker
adding feces to dryers
NEW HAVEN, Conn.
(AP) Yale University
hopes to solve a case of
whodungit by identifying
the stinker who has been
soiling students laundry
by sticking human feces
inside clothes dryers.
The culprit has been
dubbed the poopetrator
and is being blamed for at
least four incidents in the
past month in the laun-
dry room at Saybrook
College.
We have asked our stu-
dents not to leave their
laundry unattended, the
affected machines have
been thoroughly disin-
fected and we are actively
seeking information
about who the perpetra-
tor might be, Saybrook
Master Paul Hudak told
the Yale Daily News.
Thats about all we can
do.
Hudak said Yale police
are investigating. Of-
ficials at the Ivy League
school also are consider-
ing changes to laundry
room access.
Yale police declined to
comment in the investi-
gation.
Eminem shuns
spotlight at daughters
coronation
CLINTON TOWNSHIP,
Mich. (AP) The daugh-
ter of rap superstar Emi-
nem has been crowned
homecoming queen at
her suburban Detroit
high school, accompanied
by her mother but with
her famous father out of
the spotlight.
The Macomb Daily of
Mount Clemens says that
17-year-old Hailie Scott
received the honor Fri-
day at Chippewa Valley
High Schools stadium in
Macomb Countys Clin-
ton Township.
The newspaper says
Scotts mother Kim Scott
was introduced with her,
while Eminem didnt ap-
pear publicly.
Chippewa Valley school
board President George
Sobah says he cant con-
firm reports that Emi-
nem was with school of-
ficials in the cafeteria so
he could see the event.
Eminem was born
in Detroit as Marshall
Mathers and grew up in
Macomb County.
associated press
This combination of undated images released by the New York City Police Department shows a man wanted for questioning in regards
to an assault on Sept. 29, 2013, where dozens of bikers stopped a Range Rover SUV on a highway, attacked the vehicle, then chased the
driver and pulled him from the car after he plowed over a motorcyclist while trying to escape.
Public Record
84th District Court,
Wexford County
Cristi Lynn Terry, 21, of
Cadillac, was ordered to pay
$557.33 and was placed on
probation for three months
and was ordered to pay $172
restitution after pleading
guilty to shoplifting.
Cody Carlton Brazee, 24,
of Cadillac, was ordered to
pay $805 and was placed on
probation for four months
after pleading guilty to op-
erating while visibly im-
paired. Brazee also may
not enter bars.
Marc D. Vogelpohl, 39,
of Woodville, was ordered
to pay $725 and must com-
plete alcohol counseling
after pleading guilty to op-
erating while intoxicated.
Adam Anthony Vande-
water, 31, of McBain,
stood mute to a charge
of operating while in-
toxicated, third offense.
Vandewater allegedly
was driving while intoxi-
cated Sept. 1 in Clam Lake
Township.
The third offense car-
ries a felony notice,
which, with conviction,
could bring one to fve years
in prison and fnes of $500
up to $5,000 or probation
with 30 days to a year in jail
with at least 48 hours to be
served consecutively and 60
to 180 days of community
service as well as rehabilita-
tion, costs of prosecution,
cost of emergency response
and mandatory vehicle im-
mobilization.
He also was charged with
operating while license
suspended, second or sub-
sequent offense, punishable
by up to a year in jail.
jbroddle@cadillacnews.com | 775-news (6397)
US News
DA: Motorcyclist had key role in NYC SUV brawl
Public Notice
Political Signs
City of Cadillac
Section 46-664 of the Cadillac City Code:
1. Political signs must be located on private property
with the permission of the property owner or agent.
Political signs placed in the public right-of-way, such
as tree lawn areas, are not permitted and are subject to
removal and disposal by the city.
2. The maximum sign size per face is 4 square feet in
residential zone districts and 32 square feet in other
districts.
3. Signs must be removed within 10 days following the
election to which the signs refer.
4. Political signs do not require a sign permit.
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a8 cadillac news | TrusTed. local. connecTed 775-NEWS (6397) www.cadillacnews.com | monday, ocTober 7, 2013
associaTed press
People run as an out of control monster truck plows through a crowd of spectators at a Mexican air show in the city of Chihuahua,
Mexico, Saturday. According to authorities, at least eight people were killed and 79 were injured.
A suspected Libyan al-
Qaida fgure nabbed by U.S.
special forces in a dramatic
operation in Tripoli was
living freely in his home-
land for the past two years,
after a trajectory that took
him to Sudan, Afghanistan
and Iran, where he had
been detained for years,
his family said Sunday.
The Libyan government
bristled at the raid, asking
Washington to explain the
kidnapping.
The swift Delta Force op-
eration in the streets of the
Libyan capital that seized
the militant known as Abu
Anas al-Libi was one of
two assaults Saturday that
showed an American deter-
mination to move directly
against terror suspects
even in two nations mired
in chaos where the U.S. has
suffered deadly humilia-
tions in the past.
Hours before the Libya
raid, a Navy SEAL team
swam ashore in the East
African nation of Soma-
lia and engaged in a ferce
frefght, though it did not
capture its target, a leading
militant in the al-Qaida-
linked group that carried
out the recent Kenyan mall
siege.
We hope that this makes
clear that the United States
of America will never stop
in the effort to hold those
accountable who conduct
acts of terror, U.S. Secre-
tary of State John Kerry
said Sunday at an econom-
ic summit in
I n d o n e s i a .
Members of
al-Qaida and
other terrorist
organizations
literally can
run but they
cant hide.
N a z i h
Abdul-Hamed al-Ruqai,
known by his alias Abu
Anas al-Libi, was accused
by the U.S. of involvement
in the 1998 bombings of the
U.S. Embassies in Dar es
Salaam, Tanzania, and Nai-
robi, Kenya, which killed
more than 220 people. He
has been on the FBIs most
wanted terrorists list since
it was introduced shortly
after the Sept. 11, 2001 at-
tack, with a $5 million
bounty on his head.
U.S. offcials depicted his
capture as a significant
blow against al-Qaida,
which has lost a string of
key fgures, including lead-
er Osama bin Laden, killed
in a 2011 raid in Pakistan.
However, it was unclear
whether the 49-year-old
al-Libi had a major role in
the terror organization
his alleged role in the 1998
attack was to scout one of
the targeted embassies
and there was no immedi-
ate word that he had been
involved in militant activi-
ties in Libya. His family
and former associates de-
nied he was ever a member
of al-Qaida and said he had
not been engaged in any ac-
tivities since coming home
in 2011.
But the raid signaled a
U.S. readiness to take ac-
tion against militants in
Libya, where al-Qaida
and other armed Islamic
groups have gained an in-
creasingly powerful foot-
hold since the 2011 ouster
and killing of dictator
Moammar Gadhafi and
have set up tied with a belt
of radical groups across
North Africa and Egypt.
Libyas central govern-
ment remains weak, and
armed militias many of
them made up of Islamic
militants hold sway in
many places around the
country, including in parts
of the capital. Amid the
turmoil, Libyan authori-
ties have been unable to
move against militants,
including those behind the
Sept. 11, 2012 attack on the
U.S. consulate in Benghazi,
in which the U.S. ambassa-
dor and three other Ameri-
cans were killed. Libyan se-
curity offcials themselves
are regularly targeted by
gunmen. The latest vic-
tim, a military colonel, was
gunned down in Benghazi
on Sunday.
Libya bristles at US raid that captured militant
al-Libi

World News Round-up

Peru bus plunges off
road, killing 19
LIMA, Peru (AP) Po-
lice in southern Peru say a
bus ran off a remote road
in the Andes and plunged
into a ravine, killing two
children and 17 adults.
Eighteen more people are
injured.
Regional police com-
mander Col. Julio Prado
says the cause of the ac-
cident is under investiga-
tion. He says it happened
about 4:20 a.m. Sunday in
a farming community in
the Acoria district of the
Huancavelica region about
246 kilometers (152 miles)
southeast of Lima.
Deadly bus accidents are
frequent in Peru, where
enforcement of road safety
rules is weak. Government
fgures say 5,435 people died
and 13,520 were injured in
bus crashes between Sep-
tember 2008 and December
2012.
The Peruvian Attorney
Generals Offce says the
main causes of such ac-
cidents are bus drivers
recklessness, excessive
speed, alcohol drinking and
sleepiness.
Experts begin
dismantling Syrian
chemical program
BEIRUT (AP) Inter-
national disarmament
experts on Sunday began
dismantling and destroying
Syrias chemical weapons
arsenal and the equipment
used to produce it, taking
the frst concrete step in
their colossal task of elimi-
nating the countrys chemi-
cal stockpile by mid-2014,
an offcial said.
The inspectors from
the Organization for the
Prohibition of Chemical
Weapons have about nine
months to purge President
Bashar Assads regime of
its chemical program. The
mission, endorsed by the
U.N. Security Council, faces
the tightest deadline in the
watchdog groups history
and must simultaneously
navigate Syrias bloody
civil war.
Sunday marked the ffth
day that an advance team
of around 20 inspectors
have been in the country
and the frst day that in-
volved actually disabling
and destroying weapons
and machinery, an offcial
on the joint OPCW-U.N.
mission said.
The team oversaw Syrian
personnel who used cutting
torches and disc saws to
destroy and disable a range
of items, including missile
warheads, aerial bombs,
and mixing and flling
equipment, the OPCW said
in a statement.
Crocodiles disappearing
as dinner in Jamaica
CASCADE, Jamaica (AP)
Crocodiles were once so
abundant along the salty
rim of southern Jamaica
that images of their toothy
jaws and spiny armor
crown the tropical islands
coat of arms and are sten-
ciled on the bumpers of
military vehicles.
Now, the big reptiles are
increasingly diffcult to
spot, and not just because
they blend into swampy
backgrounds. These days, a
growing taste for crocodile
meat and even eggs in Ja-
maica has conservationists
worried that the reptiles
might be wiped from the
wild altogether, although
theyve been protected by
law since 1971.
I went from never hear-
ing about anyone eating
crocodile meat, much less
crocodile eggs, to hearing
about it all the time. Theres
just so much carnage going
on, said Byron Wilson, a
reptile specialist at Jamai-
cas University of the West
Indies.
Crocs have steadily
reclaimed their range in
Florida, their only U.S.
habitat, after rebounding
from the edge of extinction.
But experts believe the
reptiles may be reaching a
tipping point in economi-
cally struggling Jamaica. A
recent newsletter from the
Crocodile Specialist Group,
a global network involved
in croc conservation, said
the situation appears dire
on the island as the impact
of habitat loss deepens
with a new demand for
crocodile meat, both for
personal consumption and
for local market distribu-
tion.
The poaching problem
has gotten so bad in Ja-
maica that a passionate
reptile enthusiast, Law-
rence Henriques, has set up
a crocodile sanctuary and
captive rearing program
just outside a tiny northern
mountain town called Cas-
cade, far from the animals
southern habitat, as insur-
ance against future loss.
CHIHUAHUA, Mexico
(AP) An out-of-control
monster truck shot into
a crowd of spectators
at a Mexican air show,
killing eight people and
hurting 79, officials said.
The driver was detained
Sunday on suspicion of
manslaughter and offi-
cials said they were in-
vestigating possible safe-
ty violations in the setup
of the show.
Carl os Gonz al e z ,
spokesman for the Chi-
huahua state prosecu-
tors office, said driver
Francisco Velazquez ap-
peared to lose control of
the truck after leaping
over cars it was crushing
during a demonstration
at the Extreme Aero-
show on Saturday.
Video taken from the
stands by spectator Kriz-
thall Martinez and pro-
vided to The Associated
Press shows the truck
making an initial pass
over two cars. It then
makes a second pass at
higher speed, coming
down sharply nose first
and bouncing violently
before piling straight
into the crowd, which
stood directly in the path
of the monster truck un-
protected by any wall or
barrier.
The three-day show,
which included perfor-
mances by airplanes, the
monster truck acts and
other events, was can-
celed after the accident
on its second day in a
park on the outskirts of
Chihuahua, the capital
of Chihuahua state.
On Sunday, two armed
men threw a firebomb at
monster trucks and other
vehicles parked at a hotel
that were part of an unre-
lated monster truck pro-
duction at the air show.
Chihuahua Gov. Cesar
Duarte Juarez said his
administration, which
was listed as a sponsor
of the air show, was in-
vestigating whether Civ-
il Protection authorities
had correctly enforced
safety regulations. He
and other officials didnt
say if those regulations
required any protective
barrier for spectators.
Mexican monster truck wreck kills 8, hurts dozens

WASHINGTON (AP)
The Supreme Court is be-
ginning a new term with
controversial issues that
offer the courts conserva-
tive majority the chance
to move aggressively to
undo limits on campaign
contributions, undermine
claims of discrimination
in housing and mortgage
lending, and allow for
more government-sanc-
tioned prayer.
Assuming the govern-
ment shutdown doesnt get
in their way, the justices
also will deal with a case
that goes to the heart of
the partisan impasse in
Washington: whether and
when the president may
use recess appointments to
fll key positions without
Senate confrmation.
The court was unaffect-
ed for the frst few days of
the government shutdown
and there was no expecta-
tion that arguments set for
October would have to be
rescheduled.
The new term that starts
Monday may be short on
the sort of high-profile
battles over health care
and gay marriage that
marked the past two
years. But several cases
ask the court to overrule
prior decisions bold ac-
tion in an institution that
relies on the power of prec-
edent.
There are an unusual
number of cases going
right to hot-button cultur-
al issues and aggressive
briefing on the conserva-
tive side asking precedents
to be overruled, said
Georgetown University
law professor Pamela Har-
ris, who served in Presi-
dent Barack Obamas Jus-
tice Department.
Paul Clement, a frequent
advocate before the court
and the top Supreme Court
lawyer under President
George W. Bush, agreed
that the opportunity exists
for dramatic precedent-
busting decisions. But
Clement said each case
also offers the court an
off-ramp, a narrower out-
come that may be more in
keeping with Chief Jus-
tice John Roberts stated
desire for incremental de-
cision-making that bridg-
es the courts ideological
divide.
There is a familiar ring
to several cases the jus-
tices will take up.
Campaign finance, af-
firmative action, legisla-
tive prayer and abortion
clinic protests all are on
the courts calendar. The
justices also will hear for
the second time the case of
Carol Anne Bond, a wom-
an who was convicted un-
der an anti-terrorism law
for spreading deadly chem-
icals around the home of
her husbands mistress.
Supreme Court term begins with contentious topics
cadillac news | TrusTed. local. connecTed. Sports Editor: Marc Vieau | sports@cadillacnews.com | 775-NEWS (6397) www.cadillacnews.com | monday, ocTober 7, 2013
Settling on a
leader:
It may have taken fve
games but MSU has
found its quarterback.
B3
Section
B
PREP SPORTS B2
NASCAR B2
COLL. FOOTBALL B3
SPORTS BRIEFS B4
SCOREBOARD B4
nfl
gREEN BAy 22
DETROIT 9
NEW ORLEANS 26
ChICAgO 18
CINCINNATI 13
NEW ENgLAND 6
kANSAS CITy 26
TENNESSEE 17
INDIANAPOLIS 34
SEATTLE 28
ST. LOuIS 34
jACkSONvILLE 20
BALTImORE 26
mIAmI 23
PhILADELPhIA 36
N.y. gIANTS 21
ARIzONA 22
CAROLINA 6
DENvER 51
DALLAS 48
Top Scores
Familiar foe
The Cadillac
volleyball team
hosts Traverse
City Central in
a key Big North
Conference
match today.
Get the details.
TUESDAY
On Deck
Youth Football
Pop Warner and
Rocket Football
coaches and par-
ents The Cadil-
lac News would
like your help in
publishing stories
and photos from
game action this
fall. Email us sto-
ries and photos to
sports@cadillac-
news.com or call
775-6564 for more
information.
Cardiac Cats
Pine Rivers
Tyler
McCurry
brings down
Evarts
Jamin Drake
during
Saturdays
Highland
Conference
contest. The
Wildcats
beat the
Bucks
33-27.
Evart rallies for improbable win over Pine River
By Marc Vieau
cadillac news
EVART Better late than
never.
Trailing 27-0 late in the
third quarter, Evart rallied
for an improbable 33-27 win
over Pine River in a Highland
Conference football contest
Saturday that included two
touchdowns in the fnal min-
ute of play.
Wildcat senior quarterback
Jacob Fortune hit senior receiv-
er Jacob Hopkins for a 14-yard
touchdown pass to tie the game
at 27-27 with 51.1 seconds re-
maining and then found him
again for a 34-yard score with 0.5
left to win the game.
The win set off a wild
celebration among Evart
players, coaches and fans and
left Pine River stunned as to
what happened.
This is the best feeling Ive
ever felt, Hopkins said. I
was thinking overtime.
So was everyone else in
attendance on Evarts home-
coming day but it seemed
fate had other plans. After
rallying to tie the game at 27-
all, a missed PAT set up the
assumption of overtime.
Pine River got the ball back
with 45 seconds remaining in
regulation but couldnt quite
run out the clock and was
forced to punt.
An illegal block on the Bucks
moved the ball to their 34-yard
line with 7.8 seconds remain-
ing and thats when Fortune hit
Hopkins for the go-ahead score
to cap the comeback.
The coaches called a
really good play and I was
open, Hopkins said. (For-
tune) threw a great ball and it
couldnt have been any better.
Both touchdowns were
kind of the same play.
Evart coach Pat Craven
hadnt seen a comeback like
that in 16 years of coaching.
We never through the
game was over, he said. I
knew wed score points but
when its 27-0, what are you
waiting for?
This is real testament to
the coaching staff and the
kids for not giving up on each
other.
The frst three and a half
quarters of the game were
not last on Craven either.
We need to prepare better
as a team, he said. We have
a team full of tremendous
athletes who struggle to see
the big picture. They just
need to start believing in
themselves.
Pine River played three
and a half quarters of mis-
take-free football and they
put it to us.
As jubilant as the Evart
sideline was, it was just as
dejected on the other side of
the feld. First-year head coach
Terry Martin struggled to fnd
the words to sum up what his
team was going through.
I told them this was as
tough of a loss as Ive been
part of, he said. I dont
have any words of wisdom to
make it hurt any less.
We deserved to win this
game.
Pine River led 14-0 at half-
time on touchdown passes
of 28 yards and 32 yards to
Brandon Fulks and Brandon
Hoaglund, respectively. The
scoring pass to Hoaglund
came on fourth-and-31 with
4:22 to go in the frst half.
The Bucks went up 21-0
on a 27-yard TD run by Jeff
Gross in the third quarter
and then 27-0 on a 5-yard run
by Gross.
Evart got on the board
late in the third quarter on
a 23-yard TD run by Jamin
Drake that made it 27-7 and
then cut the lead to 27-14
when Hopkins caught a
tipped pass early in the
fourth quarter that made you
think the football gods were
changing sides.
An 82-yard pass play from
Fortune to Hopkins made it 27-
21 with 6:38 left after a Bucks
receiver couldnt hang on to
a pass in the end zone on the
previous possession.
Pine River could do little
offensively and Evart got the
ball right back, moving it to
the Bucks 35-yard line. A con-
troversial pass interference
call on Pine River gave the
Wildcats a frst down at the 20
with 2:00 left in regulation.
A run and two small pass
plays brought up a fourth-
and-9 at the 15 with 57.4
seconds to go but an offsides
call made it fourth-and-4 with
55.4 ticks left. Thats when
Fortune hit Hopkins for the
tying TD.
Fortune was 11 of 21 pass-
ing for four touchdowns and
three interceptions while
Hopkins caught eight passes
for 156 yards and the three
TDs. Drake ran the ball 13
times for 81 yards while
Derek Bowen had 83 yards on
10 carries.
Robert Young-Burge had
12 tackles while Bowen had
10 and two sacks. Drake had
eight tackles and a sack while
Josh Decator had nine tackles.
Nelson was 7 of 16 passing
for 114 yards while Hoaglund
caught two passes for 58
yards. Gross led the Bucks on
the ground with 103 yards on
15 carries.
Defensively, Mitchell Mc-
Donald had 13 tackles while
Kyle Nixon had nine.
Hoaglund had six tackles
and two sacks.
marc vieau | cadillac news
marc vieau | cadillac news
Pine Rivers Brandon Hoaglund hauls in a touchdown pass in front of
Evarts Dillon Danley and Robert Tapling.
Packers
stymie
Lions
By GeNarO c. arMaS
The associaTed press
GREEN BAY, Wis. Cal-
vin Johnson showed up for
the Detroit Lions, just not in
uniform.
With
their star
receiver
watching
warmups
from the
sideline in
a T-shirt
and a gray
backward
Detroit
cap, the
undermanned Lions lost to
the Green Bay Packers 22-9
on Sunday.
Not that they used John-
son's absence as an excuse.
"We didn't get it done well
enough today offense,
defense or special teams,"
coach Jim Schwartz said.
"With or without Calvin,
that was the story of the
game not whether Calvin
played or not."
It sure didn't help, though.
Reggie Bush was held to
44 yards on 13 carries and
four catches for 25 yards.
The Packers' improved run
defense mostly contained
the dangerous Bush on frst
down, leaving the Lions
with long second- and third-
down situations.
The Packers (2-2) extended
their winning streak in Wis-
consin over the Lions to 23.
Still, the Lions trailed
by just 16 late because the
Packers had to settle for
feld goals. They drove to
the Packers 30 with 7:16 left
before three straight incom-
pletions left them headed
back to the sideline.
Detroit especially felt
Johnson's absence then.
A pass attempt on fourth-
and-3 went awry after Kris
Durham slipped on the turf.
Schwartz declined to offer
more details on the extent
of Johnson's injury. Listed
as questionable, Johnson
missed a couple days of
practice last week before
taking part on a limited ba-
sis Friday.
Johnson missed his frst
regular-season game since
2010. Matthew Stafford,
who fnished 25 for 40 for
262 yards, said he had an
inkling Saturday that John-
son might be out.
"He's one of the guys on
our team that can stretch
the feld," Stafford said.
The Lions' only touch-
down came late when Staf-
ford found Durham for a
13-yard score.
For a change, defense set
the pace for the Packers be-
fore the offense caught up.
The Green Bay offense
struggled to get into the end
zone until Rodgers found
James Jones on an 83-yard
scoring pass down the left
sideline for a 16-3 lead late
in the third quarter.
On Deck: at
Browns, 1 p.m.
Sunday
TV: Fox 32
Chicago Bears St. Louis
Rams
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ETA 5 p.m. </AP>
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Updates Vikings logo
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Chargers
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East Detroit Lions Green Bay Packers Minnesota Vikings Arizona
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South West Atlanta
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Saints
NFC
Oakland As
Stephen Vogt
is lifted up by
teammate
Josh Reddick
as Daric
Barton
moves in to
celebrate
Vogt's game
winning hit
in the
bottom of
the ninth
inning of
Game 2 of
the ALDS
against the
Detroit Tigers
in Oakland,
Calif.,
Saturday.
marcio jose sanchez | associaTed press
Sanchez next in Detroits impressive rotation
By NOaH TriSTer
ap baseball wriTer
DETROIT On another team, he
might be an ace.
For the Detroit Tigers, Anibal San-
chez is the No. 3 starter at least in this
AL division series against Oakland.
Sanchez takes the mound today for
Game 3 between the Tigers and Ath-
letics after the teams split a pair of
pulsating one-run games in Oakland.
The A's evened the series Saturday
night despite a brilliant performance by
Detroit right-hander Justin Verlander,
and now the Tigers will call on Sanchez,
another standout from what's become
an exceptional starting rotation.
"We just came back from playing
two playoff games, and we're pitch-
ing a guy that led
the league in earned
run average," Detroit
manager Jim Leyland
said. "That's pretty
good."
Sanchez's 2.57 ERA
this season indeed
paced the American
League, and he's been
exactly what Detroit
hoped for when the
Tigers acquired him
from the Miami Marlins in the middle
of last season. Sanchez, Verlander
and right-hander Max Scherzer have
been so good over the last couple
years, it wasn't clear how Leyland
would order them for this series.
"This year, I just tried to keep to the
level of those guys," Sanchez said.
"For me, I've got my job, and every fve
days, I try at that point, to throw a re-
ally good game."
Scherzer won Game 1 against Oak-
land, and Verlander held the A's score-
less for seven innings in Game 2. Oak-
land fnally scored in the ninth off the
Detroit bullpen to win 1-0, but now the
Tigers can send Sanchez out Monday.
Doug Fister will take the mound in
Game 4 after going 14-9 with a 3.67
ERA during the regular season.
"They're lucky enough to have three
guys and really Fister at times
can be just as tough as any of them,"
Oakland manager Bob Melvin said.
"If you put any of those four guys on a
different team ... you're looking at top-
of-the-rotation guys."
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AL CENTRAL AAA AA A
CHARLOTTE KNIGHTS,
INTERNATIONAL
BIRMINGHAM
BARONS,
SOUTHERN
KANNAPOLIS
INTIMIDATORS,
SOUTH ATLANTIC
WINSTON-SALEM
WARTHOGS,
CAROLINA
CHICAGO
WHITE SOX
AKRON AEROS,
EASTERN
MAHONING VALLEY
SCRAPPERS,
NEW YORK-PENN
CLEVELAND
INDIANS
KINGSTON INDIANS,
CAROLINA
LAKE COUNTY
CAPTAINS,
SOUTH ATLANTIC
BUFFALO
BISONS,
INTERNATIONAL
TOLEDO MUD HENS,
INTERNATIONAL
DETROIT
TIGERS
ERIE SEAWOLVES,
EASTERN
LAKELAND TIGERS,
FLORIDA STATE
WEST MICHIGAN
WHITECAPS,
MIDWEST
ONEONTA TIGERS,
NEW YORK-PENN
BURLINGTON
ROYALS,
APPALACHIAN
KANSAS CITY
ROYALS
OMAHA
ROYALS,
PACIFIC COAST
WICHITA
WRANGLERS,
TEXAS
WILMINGTON
BLUE ROCKS,
CAROLINA
BURLINGTON
BEES,
MIDWEST
ROCHESTER RED WINGS,
INTERNATIONAL
NEW BRITAIN
ROCK CATS,
EASTERN
FT. MYERS
MIRACLE,
FLORIDA STATE
MINNESOTA
TWINS
BELOIT
SNAPPERS,
MIDWEST
ALDS Gm 3
vs. Oakland,
1:07 p.m. today
TV: MLB-TV
Sports Tidbits
On this date:
2001 Barry
Bonds wraps up
his record-break-
ing season with
his 73rd homer
and shatters the
slugging percent-
age record that
Babe Ruth had
owned for 81
years. He fnishes
with a slugging
percentage of
.863, easily sur-
passing the mark
of .847 that Ruth
set in 1920.
B2 cadillac news | trusted. local. connected. 775-news (6397) www.cadillacnews.com | monday, october 7, 2013
Pine River boys, Manton girls claim Burch Invite titles
cadillac news
LEROY Pine Rivers
boys and Mantons girls
took home the top spots
from Saturdays Cecil R.
Burch Invitational.
The Bucks were frst
with 44 points while
Manton was second at 82,
Grand Rapids Union third
at 104, Lake City eighth at
186, Northern Michigan
Christian 10th at 234 and
Marion 11th at 270.
For the Bucks, Ben
Rigling took frst in 17:59,
Chris TerBergh third in
18:21, Elliot VanDreumel
11th in 18:54, Derek Hart-
line 12th in 18:56 and Tony
Moore 17th in 19:22.
For the Rangers, Tommy
Brettschneider took fourth
in 18:24, Jordan Sinkel 15th
in 19:08, Dillon Gouge 16th
in 19:09, Jordan Johnigan
18th in 19:27 and Jesse Tay-
lor 33rd in 20:19.
Our entire boys team
had an outstanding day,
beating out a Division 1
school for the second-place
trophy, Manton coach
Jeff Harding said. Junior
Jordan Johnigan seems
to be coming into his own
and is crossing the gap be-
tween out top three and the
rest of the varsity. Jordan
has earned every second
of his improvement with
his 400-plus miles over the
summer.
For the Trojans, Daniel
Cuevas took 21st in 19:34,
Nolan Linderman 31st in
19:59, Amador Vasquez 41st
in 20:56, Jake Gillow 54th
in 21:49 and Chris Harvey
61st in 22:31.
For the Comets, John
Brouwer took 32nd in 20:16,
Chase DeMott 46th in 21:10,
Jonathan Perry 51st in
21:36, Connor Witbeck 57th
in 22:03 and Jonathan Jen-
ema 76th in 26:03.
For the Eagles, Garrett
Melvin took 44th in 21:07,
John Anderson 55th in
21:56, Parker Johnson 56th
in 22:00, Austin Swinehart
68th in 23:18 and Isaiah
Keeler 68th in 23:18.
The boys ran strong
with Garrett, Parker and
Isaiah all running timer
near their personal bests,
Marion coach Jason Keeler
said.
For Reed City, Kris Kel-
logg took 20th in 19:29,
Drake Walker 22nd in
19:38, Matt McGahey 25th
in 19:42 and Zack Borst
72nd in 24:25.
For Buckley, Nathan
Schichtel took 23rd in
19:39, Lincoln Spitzer 35th
in 20:27 and Drew McHugh
49th in 21:29.
On the girls side, Man-
ton was frst with 47 points
while Lake Leelanau St.
Mary was second at 79,
Pine River third at 85,
Marion fourth at 114, NMC
ffth at 133 and Lake City
eighth at 192.
For Manton, Emily Flint
took ffth in 21:37, Tori Mof-
ft seventh in 22:13, Julia
Helsel 10th in 22:41, Alonza
Bosma 12th in 22:55 and
Autumn Fedorowicz 21st
in 23:25.
For Pine River, Devyn
Powell took frst in 20:51,
Cheyanna Rizor 11th in
22:52, Holly Bailor 23rd in
23:29, Alyssa Geer 28th in
23:44 and Julia Lucas 35th
in 24:46.
For Marion, Kinzie Sik-
kema took 13th in 22:56,
Kylie Sikkema 20th in
23:24, Anissa Keeler 22nd
in 23:34, Alivia Nelson 37th
in 24:55 and Jenee Hall 41st
in 25:16.
As a team, we were
pretty happy with a fourth-
place fnish for the girls,
Jason Keeler said. Kylie
ran a personal-best time
and was a medalist. Kinzie
and Anissa also were med-
alists.
For NMC, Adri Sigafoose
took second in 21:07, Kylie
Lanser 14th in 23:02, Emma
Towers 30th in 23:49, Syd-
ney Dick 46th in 25:54 and
Cami DeMott 66th in 20:19.
For Lake City, Madison
Kruschinska took sixth in
21:54, Emilie Lolk-Ottosen
43rd in 25:26, Lisa Marie
Paulisch 57th in 27:50,
Elizabeth Ashton 60th in
29:01 and Kathleen Bradley
67th in 30:35.
For Reed City, Lindsey
Greer took 26th in 23:42, Jo-
elynn Gamble-Brown 39th
in 25:04, Lindsey Kienitz
49th in 26:38 and Shawana
Riley 75th in 34:04.
For Buckley, Kirsi Wild-
fong took third in 21:18,
Abby Wicker 31st in 24:00,
Kayla Traylor 36th in 24:53
and Lauren Beeman 44th
in 25:40.

Vikings 4th, 7th at Sag.
Heritage invite
SAGINAW The Cadil-
lac girls took fourth and
the boys seventh at the
Saginaw Heritage Invita-
tional.
Division 1 teams took the
frst three spots with Ann
Arbor Pioneer (58) frst,
Midland Dow (79) second
and Midland (89) third
while the Vikings were
fourth at 98.
Scoring for Cadillac were
Emily MacLean (ninth,
20:43), Haylea Smith (19th,
21:12), Kaitlyn Monfls
(20th, 21:13), Brittney
Smith (23rd, 21:20) and Jes-
sica Netzley (27th, 21:33).
The girls gave a great
effort today against a
feld of mostly Division 1
teams, Cadillac coach Tim
OMalley said.
Emily had a top 10 fn-
ish and our girls had the
best time spread of all the
teams with only 50 seconds
between our No. 1 and No.
5 runners.
Hannah Ludviksen
(21:41) and Katy Jackson
(22:09) were frst and third
in the JV race.
The Viking boys 154
points landed them in
seventh. Saginaw Heritage
(33) was frst, Midland (70)
and Midland Dow (107)
third.
Trevor Thiebaut (10th,
17:11) and Phil Merrell
(11th, 17:14) led Cadillac
while Max Stebbins (41st,
18:25), Austin Carlington
(44th, 18:40) and Anthony
Greenwood (48th, 19:04)
also scored.
Trevor and Phil had a
terrifc back-and-forth race
today, OMalley said. Its
a good sign to see them
both running well before
the fnal Big North meet.
kevin decker | for the cadillac news
Cadillacs Trevor Thiebaut, Max Stebbins and Phil Merrell take off at the start of the Saginaw
Heritage Invitational on Saturday.
marc vieau | cadillac news file photo
Pine Rivers Devyn Powell and Northern Michigan Christians Adri
Sigafoose compete in a recent meet at Evarts Spring Hill.
Marion wins Brethren Invite; Buckley tops Kingsley in soccer
cadillac news
BRETHREN Marion put to-
gether a strong day and claimed
the Brethren Invitational on
Saturday.
The Eagles went 3-0-1 in pool
play as they beat Northport 21-
13, 21-12; beat Bear Lake 21-15,
21-14; beat Brethren 21-16, 21-14
and split with Cadillacs JV team
21-13, 14-21.
Marion beat Kalkaska 25-19,
25-21 in the semifnals and Cadil-
lacs JV team 25-11, 25-13 in the
fnals.
Serving was huge for us today.
When we served aggressive and
kept the ball in play, we were un-
beatable, Marion coach James
Holmes said. Overall, we had a
great day. I am proud of how the
girls played and I am very happy
to see them get rewarded with a
tournament win.
Chloe Johnson had 26 kills, 38
digs and 15 aces on 65 of 67 serv-
ing while Kassidy Duncan had
21 kills, 15 digs and 10 aces on 36
of 40 serving. Amber Gillespie
dished out 64 assists and 15 aces.
Marion (19-8-4 overall) is at
Pine River on Tuesday.
For CADILLACS JV team,
Ali Finch led the way in kills and
blocks while Hanna Liptak led
in assists. The Vikings host Tra-
verse City Central today.
MANTON went 2-1-1. The
Rangers beat Buckley 21-8, 21-9;
split with Mesick 19-21, 22-20; and
beat Onekama 21-10, 21-5 before
falling to Kalkaska 21-18, 21-5.
We played better as a team
and the girls are starting to catch
on, Manton coach Holly Frank-
lin said.
Taylor Donaldson had nine
aces, eight kills, 23 assists and 22
digs; Kristain Ulrich seven aces,
a block, three assists and 23 digs;
Kirsten Reid eight aces, nine
kills, three blocks and 15 digs;
Gabby Carsten nine aces, 23 kills
and a block; Ana Garcia six aces
and 28 digs; McKenzie Hughes 10
kills and two blocks; Becca Red-
dick two blocks; and Zoe Thomp-
son 12 assists.
Manton hosts McBain on Tues-
day.
SOCCER
Bears beat the Stags
KINGSLEY Buckley scored
a 4-2 win over Kinglsey in a
Northwest Conference contest.
Weve had a much-improved
season, Buckley coach John
Vermilya said.
Right now, to be sitting here,
its a tribute to the perseverance
of the core of our team. Its been
a three-year battle.
Demian Allen, Steven Zresnek,
Alex Welling and Jake Burgess
scored goals for the Bears.
Allen, Burgess and Dominique
Kraskie had assists.
Tyler Welch made four saves in
the nets.
Buckley (7-5-2 overall) is at
Traverse City Christian today in
non-league action.
Harvick wins wreck-
flled race at Kansas
By DAVE SKRETTA
the associated press
KANSAS CITY, Kan.
Kevin Harvick didn't
simply have his hands
full with the rest of the
Sprint Cup feld Sunday.
He also was trying to tame
a squirrely surface at Kan-
sas Speedway.
He handled both better
than anybody else.
Harvick pulled away
from Kurt Busch and Jeff
Gordon on a late restart
to win a wreck-flled race
over the recently repaved
track, keeping his No. 29
Chevrolet out of trouble all
afternoon and making a big
move in the Chase for the
Sprint Cup championship.
"It was an interesting
weekend, to say the least,"
said Harvick, who moved
into third in points behind
leaders Matt Kenseth and
Jimmie Johnson.
"Everybody was battling
the tires and the track, and
I think it was like driving
on a razor blade."
Harvick sat on the pole
for the frst time in 254
races, and that should
have given him some conf-
dence. He also won the last
time he qualifed frst, at
New Hampshire in 2006.
"These guys just did a
great job
all week-
end," Har-
vick said.
"To have
a car fast
enough
for me to
qualify on
the pole
says a lot about how fast
this thing is."
Harvick was chased
across the line by Busch
and Gordon. Joey Logano
fnished fourth, Carl Ed-
wards was ffth, and John-
son fnished sixth despite a
hiccup with his engine on
the fnal lap that cost him a
spot on the track.
Kenseth held onto his
lead in the Chase with an
11th-place fnish. Johnson
narrowed the gap to three
points, while Harvick
closed to within 25 points
heading to Charlotte.
"We just got to keep do-
ing what we did today to be
a contender," said his car
owner, Richard Childress.
"I don't think top 10s will
win a championship when
you're racing Jimmie
Johnson and the group of
guys that are up there."
Kyle Busch was the big
loser after crashing out of
his third straight Sprint
Cup race at Kansas. He
dropped from third in
points to ffth, 35 out of
frst place.
"All-in-all just a crazy
day," said Johnson, who
shaved fve points off of
Kenseth's lead.
"Wacky restarts, a lot of
chaos there, and caution af-
ter caution for who knows
what."
There were 15 cautions
in the race, breaking the
record of 14 set in last
year's race.
The frst came when
the race wasn't even a lap
old and Danica Patrick
slammed into the wall, and
most of them occurred
when cars got loose coming
out of Turn 2.
colin e. bradley | associated press
Driver Kevin Harvick celebrates in victory lane after winning the
Hollywood Casino 400 NASCAR Sprint Cup series race at Kansas
Speedway in Kansas City, Kan., Sunday.
Bank of Amer-
ica 500, 6:30
p.m. Saturday
at Charlotte
TV: ABC
Americans make
it 5 in a row at
Presidents Cup
the associated press
DUBLIN, Ohio Fred
Couples, the coolest guy
in golf, never really looked
that way until he stood
on the edge of the 18th
fairway Sunday and saw
everything going his way.
The Americans needed
only one more point to win
the Presidents Cup.
And there was Tiger
Woods, who has a history
of delivering the winning
point, in the middle of the
fairway at Muirfeld Vil-
lage, where he has won a
record fve times.
The Presidents Cup end-
ed just the way it always
does.
Woods found the green
and two-putted for par and
a 1-up victory over Richard
Sterne, the third straight
time he has won the clinch-
ing point in the Presidents
Cup. The Americans won
for the ffth straight time
and eighth time in 10
tries against an Inter-
national side that showed
some fght when it was too
late to matter.
The Americans, who fn-
ished strong Sunday morn-
ing in the rain-delayed
foursomes for a 14-8 lead,
only needed to win four
singles matches.
It took longer than any-
one expected.
"I must have asked 500
times, 'How are we getting
this fourth point? Where
is the fourth point coming
from?'" said Couples, a
three-time winner as U.S.
captain. "You're nervous.
Not for the players the
players know what they're
doing. But we knew we
needed 18 points, and we
got them. It was a very,
very good match today.
And the matches were all
close. At no given time was
I a nervous wreck. But it
was nice when Tiger two-
putted that last green to
get the 18th point."
The fnal score United
States 18, International
15 and whether the
matches would beat the
rain was really the only
suspense on Sunday.
"People say it was close.
Jack (Nicklaus) said it was
close," International cap-
tain Nick Price said.
monday, october 7, 2013 | www.cadillacnews.com 775-neWS (6397) TRUSTED. LOCAL. CONNECTED. | cadillac neWS B3
Michigan rediscovers TE
Funchess in passing game
By LARRy LAGE
the aSSociated preSS
ANN ARBOR Michi-
gan has rediscovered tight
end Devin Funchess.
The sophomore set
career highs with seven
receptions and 151 yards
receiving on Saturday
against Minnesota.
He caught a 24-yard, go-
ahead touchdown pass late
in the frst half and made
some more catches in the
second half to help the
Wolverines pull away and
beat the Golden Gophers
42-13.
Funchess had a total of
just eight catches for 145
yards and a score in Michi-
gan's frst four games, and
insisted he was patient
while waiting to produce
in ways that would show
up in the box score.
"I just wait until my
number gets called," he
said. "And then once it gets
called, I just try to make
the big play to try to help
the team so we can ulti-
mately get
to the Big
Ten cham-
pionship."
The Wol-
verines
(5-0, 1-0
Big Ten)
can take
another
step to-
ward their quest to win a
conference championship
for the frst time since 2004
by beating Penn State (3-2,
0-1) on the road Saturday,
a week after the Nittany
Lions lost by 20 points at
Indiana.
Michigan moved up one
spot, to No. 18, on Sunday
in The Associated Press
college football poll.
The 6-foot-4, 235-pound
Funchess seems suited to
be a go-to target for Devin
Gardner. He completed
more than half of his
passes against Minnesota
to Funchess as part of a
game plan that included a
lot of handoffs to running
backs in the hopes of cut-
ting down turnovers.
Gardner, though, wasn't
sure throwing to Funch-
ess so often was a sign of
things to come.
"Whatever the offense
needs," Gardner said. "If it
calls for me to throw it to
Devin Funchess 17 times in
a game or to Jeremy Gallon
17 times or for me to throw
17 passes in total.
"Whatever we need dur-
ing that day, on that given
day, we're going to do it."
Michigan is listed as a
tight end, but is versatile
enough that he can line up
in the slot or out wide as
he did at times against the
Gophers.
"We obviously planned
it that way," coach Brady
Hoke said. "Getting him
out on the perimeter is a
little bit is mismatch in
a lot of ways because he
runs awfully well. He's a
big target."
Funchess got off to a
fantastic start as a fresh-
man last season with four
receptions for 106 yards
and a score in his debut,
helping Michigan beat Air
Force 31-25. He caught four
more TD passes the rest
of the season, but didn't
have more than two recep-
tions or more than 34 yards
receiving in any game the
rest of the year. And this
season, until Saturday, he
was averaging just two
receptions and 36 yards
receiving over four games
with one score that ended
up being very important
in a four-point win against
Akron.
Michigan running back
Fitzgerald Toussaint said
Funchess can help him run
and Gardner pass if he's
a player defenses have to
worry about again.
"It defnitely makes it
easier, knowing he can do
stuff with his hands and
with his feet," Toussaint
said. "He's just incredible,
so it takes a lot of pressure
off of a few people."
Gardner agreed.
"It's going to help our
team overall as a balanced
and effective offense," he
said.
Michigan cornerback
Blake Countess knows
how diffcult it is to defend
Funchess because he sees
teammates try to do it in
practice.
"Funchess is just an
athlete," Countess said.
"You see fashes of that
when he's at tight end, but
you can really see it on the
perimeter. He's faster than
you think, and he can real-
ly go up and get the ball. He
creates a lot of mismatches
out there."
tony ding | aSSociated preSS
Michigan tight end Devin Funchess (87) catches a 47-yard pass as Minnesota defensive back Jeremy
Baltazar (22) defends in the fourth quarter of a game Saturday, in Ann Arbor. Michigan won 42-13.
<AP> FBC BIG 10 HELMETS LOGOS 081205:
Football helmets for the Big 10 conference; with
related stories; Staff; ETA 8 p.m. </AP>
IOWA
MICHIGAN STATE MICHIGAN
NORTHWESTERN MINNESOTA
OHIO STATE PENN STATE
ILLINOIS
PURDUE WISCONSIN
NOTE: All helmets and logos are trademarked and the property of their respective college or university.
These logos are reproduced for editorial use only by AP members.
INDIANA
Editors note: It is mandatory to include all sources
that accompany this graphic when repurposing
or editing it for publication.
On Deck: at
Penn State, 5
p.m. Saturday
TV: ESPN
MSU offense fnds identity as defense continues to wow
By shAwn windsoR
mcclatchy-tribune neWS Service
IOWA CITY, Iowa
Its all out there now. We
learned that much Saturday
afternoon.
The Legends Division.
The Big Ten title game. The
Rose Bowl. Suddenly, noth-
ing seems out of reach for
Michigan State after the
Spartans knocked off the
Iowa Hawkeyes, 26-14.
Such goals sounded pre-
posterous two weeks ago,
when Mark Dantonio still
hadnt committed to a quar-
terback, when his offense
struggled to make frst
downs against an average
defense in South Bend.
But then that loss led Dan-
tonio to shake up his rou-
tine the following Monday.
And that decision just may
have saved the season.
At the very least it swung
the conversation, because
now we are talking about
Michigan States most im-
portant victory since 2011,
about the play of quarter-
back Connor Cook, about
an offense that didnt sub-
marine the defense.
And oh, what a defense.
The Spartans punter
rushed for more yards than
Iowas running backs Sat-
urday, its best cornerback,
Darqueze
Dennard,
picked
off two
passes, and
its gifted
rush end,
Shilique
Calhoun,
laughed
off an at-
tempted juke by a Hawkeye
receiver to make an improb-
able open-feld tackle. (When
your ends are as quick as the
opponents skill players, the
other team is in trouble.)
How dominant was the
defense? The Spartans held
the Hawkeyes to three plays
or less on 10 possessions.
Seven ended in punts, two
in Dennards hands, the
other in a missed feld goal.
Sure, Iowa might stink
this is, after all, the Big Ten,
and its easy to dump on the
league. Yet Iowa City is a
place the Spartans struggle
to win. So Dantonio circled
the calendar and embraced
the challenge.
They told themselves
weve got to win, he said.
The frst step was to get
them to believe.
Worried his team might
nosedive after the gut-
punch loss to Notre Dame,
Dantonio tossed aside his
bye-week routine that starts
with Monday flm study and
instead spent the day acting
as counselor and confdant.
He asked them how they
were doing. He likened the
opening month to navigating
a storm. He told them they
would navigate it together,
beginning in Iowa City.
We were getting beat
around a little bit. We had
to look within and fnd our-
selves, Dantonio said.
No one needed to fnd
his identity more than the
quarterback. Cook used the
extra week of practice to re-
double his pocket presence,
to synchronize his throws
with his receivers, to relax,
dissect the defense, set his
feet and make plays.
This showed on Saturday,
at no time more than half-
way through the second
quarter, when Cook stood
in the pocket, brushed off
a blitz, and found a streak-
ing Macgarrett Kings for a
46-yard touchdown strike.
Kings made a nifty cut and
hesitation to score. But the
pass hit him in stride.
Im very proud of him,
Kings said. We had a lot of
fun out there.
The play was a revelation
for the offense. Cook called
a spark.
Its what we need, said
Cook, big, explosive plays.
Its just a great confdence
booster.
For him, but also for his
team in him.
As Kings told me, Cook
knows its his job now. He
isnt worried about compet-
ing for the job. Now he is
just competing against the
opponent.
The sophomore threw for
277 yards against Iowa.
Not extravagant by
todays pitch-and-catch
standards, but an avalanche
compared to what wed seen
the frst four games.
The last time we saw
Cook he was standing on
the sideline during the fnal
offensive series in South
Bend, uncertain of what
would come next.
Now he knows whats pos-
sible.
Whether or not Cook
shouldve started the season
is irrelevant.
The Spartans found their
quarterback.
charlie neibergall | aSSociated preSS
Michigan State wide receiver Bennie Fowler, right, catches a pass in front of Iowa defensive back B.J.
Lowery during the second half of a game Saturday in Iowa City, Iowa. Michigan State won 26-14.
<AP> FBC BIG 10 HELMETS LOGOS 081205:
Football helmets for the Big 10 conference; with
related stories; Staff; ETA 8 p.m. </AP>
IOWA
MICHIGAN STATE MICHIGAN
NORTHWESTERN MINNESOTA
OHIO STATE PENN STATE
ILLINOIS
PURDUE WISCONSIN
NOTE: All helmets and logos are trademarked and the property of their respective college or university.
These logos are reproduced for editorial use only by AP members.
INDIANA
Editors note: It is mandatory to include all sources
that accompany this graphic when repurposing
or editing it for publication.
On Deck: vs.
Indiana, noon
Saturday
TV: ESPN2
Central Michigan
runs past Miami
(Ohio) 21-9
the aSSociated preSS
OXFORD, Ohio Say-
lor Lavallii rushed for
151 yards and two touch-
downs to lead Central
Michigan to a 21-9 victory
over Miami (Ohio).
Lavallii rushed 19 yards
for a score to give the
Chippewas (2-4, 1-1 Mid-
American Conference) a
7-3 lead early in the sec-
ond quarter. Miami (0-5,
0-1) responded in the third
quarter when Austin
Boucher found David Fra-
zier for the 10-yard score.
Central Michigan
took the next drive and
marched on a 16-play,
84-yard scoring drive,
capped off with Lavallii's
3-yard score. Maurice
Shoemaker-Gilmore add-
ed a 16-yard scoring run
with 6:13 left to play, and
the Chippewas let their
defense do the rest.
Miami's Austin Gearing
fnished with 108 yards on
15 carries but was unable
to fnd the end zone. This
is the third time this sea-
son that Miami was held
to less than 10 points.
Toledo routs Western
Michigan 47-20
TOLEDO, Ohio David
Fluellen rushed for 220
yards and four touch-
downs as Toledo routed
Western Michigan 47-20
in a Mid-American Con-
ference matchup.
Toledo (3-3, 2-1) ran up
360 rushing yards and
limited Western Michi-
gan (0-6, 0-2) to 87 yards on
the ground. Toledo also
won the turnover battle,
as the Broncos lost two
fumbles and threw two
interceptions.
The Rockets took off in
the frst quarter, scoring
on their frst two posses-
sions. Following an in-
terception by Chaz Whit-
taker, Terrance Owens
hit Bernard Reedy for a
40-yard touchdown strike
on Toledos frst offensive
play of the game.
Late rally not enough for Ferris State
for the cadillac neWS
BIG RAPIDS The Ferris State Uni-
versity football team made a big come-
back, but could not overcome a slow
start as Saginaw Valley State spoiled
FSU's homecoming with a 31-28 victory
in a Great Lakes Intercollegiate Athlet-
ic Conference (GLIAC) North Division
showdown on Saturday.
The Cardinals jumped out to a 24-0
lead in the opening half before the
Bulldogs battled back to pull within
three points with 2:46 to play.
FSU could not come up with an on-
side kick attempt, however the FSU de-
fense held on downs and the offense got
the ball back with less than 30 seconds
to play and a chance to win the game
before the Cardinals intercepted a fnal
throw down feld with less than 10 sec-
onds remaining to preserve the win.
The win was the fourth in a row for
SVSU and snapped FSU's three-game
win streak as the two teams entered
the contest tied atop the GLIAC stand-
ings with identical 3-0 league records.
The Cardinals took advantage of a
Bulldog special teams fumble early in
the opening quarter and came away
with a 20-yard feld goal from Scot
Stanford to take an early 3-0 edge.
SVSU pushed the edge to 10-0 at the
end of one stanza as the Cardinals
drove 56 yards in eight plays before se-
nior quarterback Jonathan Jennings
capped the drive with a one-yard scor-
ing run.
The Cardinals increased the lead to
17-0 early in the second frame as Bull-
dog sophomore signal caller Jason
Vander Laan was hit as he dropped
back to pass and SVSU's Major Met-
calf scooped up the loose ball and
raced 42 yards to the endzone on the
defensive score.
Then, later in the second quarter, a
lengthy SVSU drive last nearly eight
minutes and covered 93 yards as the
Cardinals marched out of their own
end and scored on a one-yard burst
from Mark Mays with less than two
minutes remaining in the quarter to
make it 24-0.
The Bulldogs fnally cracked the
board with only 32 seconds remaining
in the frst half to cut the defcit to 24-7
at halftime as redshirt freshman tail-
back Kitwana Clark found paydirt from
four yards away to fnish a 79-yard drive
that featured only fe plays and took just
a 1:15 of clock time.
Ferris State received the second half
kickoff and the Bulldogs pulled within
24-14 midway thru the third quarter
as Vander Laan found senior tight end
Jace Heneveld on a six-yard scoring
connection.
The throw capped a 75-yard drive in
15 plays for FSU.
However, Saginaw Valley State an-
swered early in the fourth quarter by
driving 86 yards in 15 plays to push the
lead to 31-14 on Jennings' seven-yard
scoring pass to tight end Andrew Dillon.
The Bulldogs, though, scored twice
late in the game to pull within striking
distance.
Vander Laan led the Bulldogs down
the feld and hit slot Phil Annese on a
six-yard TD pass with 8:01 left on a nine-
play, 69-yard drive.
After getting the ball back later in
the game, the Bulldogs needed only
four plays to cover 40 yards before
Vander Laan reached the endzone
on a two-yard run to make it a three-
point contest.
The Bulldogs suffered the setback
despite totaling 403 offensive yards
and limiting SVSU's potent attack to
only 274 yards, which included only 38
carries for 45 yards.
FSU had 160 yards rushing and the
Bulldogs owned a 22-16 edge in total
frst downs.
Ferris State threw for 243 yards in
the air as Vander Laan connected on
15-of-22 throws for 201 yards and two
scores, but was intercepted twice.
Slot receiver Dontae Ingraham also
completed a pass to Annese, which
was good for 42 yards and put FSU in
the redzone.
Annese caught fve passes for 115
yards on the Bulldog side while Anto-
nio Agurs grabbed fve receptions for
73 yards and junior Jake Lampman
had three catches for 32 yards.
The Bulldogs were led on the
ground by Vander Laan's 93 yards on
24 carries.
Defensively, linebacker Darnell
Morris tallied a career-high 17 stops
for the Bulldogs with end Justin
Zimmer making 10 stops, including
three for a loss of 14 yards and a quar-
terback sack. Junior backer Terrell
Porter had eight stops for FSU and
recorded both a sack and two tackles
for loss.
Ferris State will host archrival
Grand Valley State in the Anchor-
Bone Classic next Saturday at Top
Taggart Field. Kickoff is set for 7 p.m.
under the lights in Big Rapids.
B4 cadillac news | trusted. local. connected. 775-news (6397) www.cadillacnews.com | monday, october 7, 2013
MONDAY
OCTOBER 7
EVENING
New York Jets at Atlanta Falcons.
Rookie quarterback Geno
Smith and the 2-2 Jets take on
Matt Ryan and the 1-3 Falcons.
From the Georgia Dome in At-
lanta. (Live)
8:30 % (TBS) MLB Baseball
Division Series: Teams TBA.
TUESDAY
OCTOBER 8
AFTERNOON
5:00 % (TBS) MLB Baseball
Division Series: Teams TBA.
EVENING
7:30 5 (NBCSN) NHL Hockey
Tampa Bay Lightning at Buf-
falo Sabres. From First Niagara
Center in Buffalo, N.Y.
8:00 (ESPN2) WNBA Basketball
Atlanta Dream at Minnesota
Lynx. Finals, game 2. From the
Target Center in Minneapolis.
8:30 % (TBS) MLB Baseball
Division Series: Teams TBA.

Prep Sports Schedule
Sports on TV
n
MONDAY, OCT. 7
Volleyball
Traverse City Central at Cadillac
Soccer
Manistee at Reed City
Heritage Christian at Pentwater
Buckey at Traverse City Christian
TUESDAY, OCT. 8
Volleyball
McBain at Manton
Marion at Pine River
Evart at Lake City
NMC at Beal City
Chippewa Hills at Reed City
Benzie Central at Mesick
Buckley at Kingsley
Soccer
NMC, Pine River host NMSL Crossovers
Leland at Buckley
Cross Country
Coleman at Evart
Buckley, Mesick at Northwest Meet (Kingsley)
wEDNESDAY, OCT. 9
Volleyball
Cadillac at Petoskey
THURSDAY, OCT. 10
Soccer
Cadillac at Alpena
NMC, Pine River at NMSL Crossovers
Volleyball
Bellaire, Kingsley at Manton
Cross Country
Mesick Invitational
Pine River, Reed City at Manistee Invite
FRIDAY, OCT. 11
Football
Traverse City West at Cadillac
Evart at McBain
Manton at Pine River
Beal City at Lake City
Marion vs. East Jordan at Alma College
Reed City at Hesperia
Kingsley at Mesick
Soccer
Charlevoix Northwest Acad. at Heritage Chr.
Cross Country
Evart, McBain, Marion at Montabella Invite
SATURDAY, OCT. 12
Volleyball
McBain, Pine River at Morley Stanwood Inv.
Lake City, Mesick at Suttons Bay Invite
Manton at Mancelona Invitational
Buckley at Brethren Invitational
Cross Country
Lake City, Manton at Ogemaw Hts Invite
Buckley at TC Central Invitational
Miami (Ohio) fres Don
Treadwell after 0-5 start
the associated Press
OXFORD, Ohio Miami
of Ohio fred coach Don
Treadwell on Sunday, a day
after the RedHawks fell to
0-5 with a 21-9 loss at home
to Central Michigan.
The school didnt imme-
diately appoint an interim
coach. Offensive coordina-
tor John Klacik was also
fred.
Treadwell went 8-21 at
his alma mater. He decided
to go to a run-based offense
this season, and it didnt
work out at all, setting up
repeated blowouts.
The RedHawks have lost
to Marshall 52-14, to Ken-
tucky 41-7, to Cincinnati 14-
0 and to Illinois 50-14. The
RedHawks play at Massa-
chusetts next Saturday.
Pirates edge Cardinals
5-3, take 2-1 lead in
NLDS
the associated Press
PITTSBURGH Pedro
Alvarez hit a tiebreaking
single in the eighth inning
and the Pittsburgh Pirates
beat the St. Louis Cardi-
nals 5-3 on Sunday to take
a 2-1 lead in best-of-fve NL
division series.
Alvarez pulled a
grounder into right feld
that scored pinch-runner
Josh Harrison from sec-
ond base. Russell Martin
followed with a sharp RBI
single against reliever
Kevin Siegrist, who took
over after Carlos Martinez
(0-1) faltered.
Mark Melancon (1-0)
picked up the win despite
allowing Carlos Beltrans
tying home run in the top
of the eighth.
Jason Grilli worked the
ninth to move the Pirates
within one victory of win-
ning a postseason series
for the frst time since the
1979 World Series.
Charlie Morton is set
to start for the Pirates in
Game 4 on Monday against
rookie Michael Wacha.
Force wins again, pads
Funny Car points lead
the associated Press
MOHNTON, Pa. John
Force raced to his second
straight Funny Car vic-
tory to open a 65-point lead
with two events left in the
NHRAs Countdown to the
Championship.
The 64-year-old Force,
a record 15-time season
champion, won for the
third time this season and
the record 137th of his un-
precedented career.
He beat rookie Chad
Head in the fnal round
with a 4.106-second run at
313.37 mph in a Ford Mus-
tang.
Shawn Langdon won in
Top Fuel to also extend
his points lead, beating
defending series champion
Antron Brown in the fnal
with a 3.779 at 323.81. Lang-
don, 83 points ahead of
Doug Kalitta, has a series-
high six victories this year.
NHL
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
Toronto 3 3 0 0 6 12 8
Boston 2 2 0 0 4 7 2
Detroit 3 2 1 0 4 6 7
Ottawa 2 1 0 1 3 5 5
Montreal 2 1 1 0 2 7 5
Florida 2 1 1 0 2 4 9
Tampa Bay 2 1 1 0 2 4 5
Buffalo 3 0 3 0 0 2 7
Metropolitan Division
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
Pittsburgh 2 2 0 0 4 7 1
Carolina 2 1 0 1 3 4 4
N.Y. Islanders 2 1 0 1 3 6 6
Columbus 2 1 1 0 2 6 6
Washington 3 1 2 0 2 10 12
New Jersey 2 0 1 1 1 3 7
N.Y. Rangers 1 0 1 0 0 1 4
Philadelphia 3 0 3 0 0 3 9
wESTERN CONFERENCE
Central Division
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
St. Louis 2 2 0 0 4 11 2
Colorado 2 2 0 0 4 9 2
Winnipeg 2 2 0 0 4 10 7
Chicago 2 1 0 1 3 8 7
Dallas 2 1 1 0 2 4 5
Minnesota 2 0 0 2 2 5 7
Nashville 2 0 2 0 0 3 7
Pacific Division
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
San Jose 2 2 0 0 4 8 2
Calgary 2 1 0 1 3 8 8
Vancouver 2 1 1 0 2 7 6
Phoenix 2 1 1 0 2 5 5
Anaheim 2 1 1 0 2 5 9
Los Angeles 2 1 1 0 2 6 7
Edmonton 2 0 2 0 0 6 11
NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for overtime
loss.
Saturdays Games
Toronto 5, Ottawa 4, SO
Columbus 3, N.Y. Islanders 2, SO
Tampa Bay 3, Chicago 2, SO
Boston 4, Detroit 1
Montreal 4, Philadelphia 1
Pittsburgh 4, Buffalo 1
St. Louis 7, Florida 0
Dallas 2, Washington 1
Anaheim 4, Minnesota 3, OT
Vancouver 6, Edmonton 2
San Jose 4, Phoenix 1
Sundays Games
Carolina 2, Philadelphia 1
Anaheim at Winnipeg, (n)
Vancouver at Calgary, (n)
Mondays Games
New Jersey at Edmonton, 9:30 p.m.
N.Y. Rangers at Los Angeles, 10:30 p.m.
Tuesdays Games
Colorado at Toronto, 7 p.m.
Phoenix at N.Y. Islanders, 7 p.m.
Florida at Philadelphia, 7 p.m.
Carolina at Pittsburgh, 7 p.m.
Tampa Bay at Buffalo, 7:30 p.m.
Minnesota at Nashville, 8 p.m.
New Jersey at Vancouver, 10 p.m.
N.Y. Rangers at San Jose, 10:30 p.m.
In Brief
n
Praters FG lifts Broncos past Cowboys
ARLINGTON, Texas (AP) Matt Prater
kicked a 28-yard feld goal as time expired and
Peyton Manning and Denver overcame the
frst 500-yard passing game in Dallas history
to keep the Broncos unbeaten with a 51-48 vic-
tory over the Cowboys on Sunday.
Manning maintained his record pace of
touchdown passes to start the season and
fnished with 414 yards and four scores for
Denver (5-0).
Tony Romo threw for 506 yards and fve
touchdowns for Dallas (2-3), but he was inter-
cepted by Danny Trevanthan inside the Dal-
las 30 to set up Praters winning kick.
The teams combined for 1,039 yards of total
offense in the second-highest scoring game in
regulation since the NFL-AFL merger in 1970,
according to STATS.
Cincinnati and Cleveland combined for 106
points in the Browns 58-48 win in 2004.
Foles, Eagles keep Giants winless
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. (AP) Nick
Foles threw for two touchdowns and led four
scoring drives after taking over for an injured
Michael Vick late in the second quarter, and
the Philadelphia Eagles kept the New York Gi-
ants winless with a 36-21 victory Sunday.
Foles threw fourth-quarter touchdown
passes of 25 yards to Brent Celek and 5 yards to
DeSean Jackson as the Eagles (2-3) snapped a
three-game losing streak by forcing three inter-
ceptions by Eli Manning in the fourth quarter.
Vick left the game with a hamstring injury
late in the second quarter.
LeSean McCoy added a 1-yard touchdown run
and Alex Henery kicked fve feld goals for the
Eagles, who gained 439 yards in total offense.
David Wilson scored on a 5-yard run for the
Giants (0-5) and Manning threw two touch-
downs to Rueben Randle in the third quarter
to give New York a 21-19 lead.
Indianapolis rallies late to beat Seahawks
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) Andrew Luck
threw two touchdown passes and Donald
Brown scored the go-ahead TD with 8:55 to go
to lead the Indianapolis Colts past the Seattle
Seahawks 34-28 on Sunday.
The Seahawks (4-1) lost their frst regular-
season game since Nov. 25.
Delano Howell scored on a 61-yard return of
a blocked feld goal for Indy (4-1).
Luck led his ninth career fourth-quarter
comeback by going 16 of 29 for 229 yards,
beating Russell Wilson in the frst matchup
between last seasons NFL rookie of the year
runner-ups.
Indy trailed 12-0 early, took the lead after
Howells return, then rallied again to take the
lead for good on Browns fourth-quarter TD
run. The Colts sealed it with a 2-point conver-
sion pass and a late feld goal.
Wilson fnished 15 of 31 for 210 yards with
two TDs, one interception and ran 13 times for
102 yards.
Brees leads Saints past Bears 26-18
CHICAGO (AP) Drew Brees threw two
touchdown passes to Pierre Thomas, Jimmy
Graham tied an NFL record with another
100-yard game and the New Orleans Saints
beat the Chicago Bears 26-18 on Sunday to re-
main unbeaten.
Brees was 29 of 35 for 288 yards in his frst
victory in four career games at Soldier Field.
Garrett Hartley matched a career high with
four feld goals as New Orleans (5-0) picked up
its frst win in Chicago since a 31-10 victory on
Oct. 8, 2000.
Graham continued his torrid start for the
Saints (5-0), catching 10 balls for 135 yards
in his fourth consecutive 100-yard game
matching an NFL record for a tight end. Tony
Gonzalez was the frst to accomplish the
streak in 2000, and Graham matched it in 2011.
Jay Cutler threw for 358 yards and two
touchdowns for Chicago (3-2), which has lost
two in a row.
Bengals end Bradys streak, beat Patriots
CINCINNATI (AP) BenJarvus Green-
Ellis ran 1 yard in the fourth quarter for the
games only touchdown, and the Cincinnati
Bengals ended Tom Bradys long streak of
touchdown passes in a 13-6 victory over the
previously unbeaten New England Patriots.
The Bengals (3-2) sacked Brady four times
and kept New England (4-1) out of the end
zone on a frst-and-goal from the 1-yard line
late in the fourth quarter.
National Football League roundup
MLB Playoffs
DIVISION SERIES
(Best-of-5; x-if necessary)
American League
Boston 2, Tampa Bay 0
Friday, Oct. 4: Boston 12, Tampa Bay 2
Saturday, Oct. 5: Boston 7, Tampa Bay 4
Monday, Oct. 7: Boston (Buchholz 12-1) at
Tampa Bay (Cobb 11-3), 6:07 p.m. (TBS)
x-Tuesday, Oct. 8: Boston (Peavy 12-5) at Tam-
pa Bay, 8:07 or 8:37 p.m. (TBS)
x-Thursday, Oct. 10: Tampa Bay at Boston,
5:37 or 8:07 p.m. (TBS)
Detroit 1, Oakland 1
Friday, Oct. 4: Detroit 3, Oakland 2
Saturday, Oct. 5: Oakland 1, Detroit 0
Monday, Oct. 7: Oakland (Parker 12-8) at
Detroit (Sanchez 14-8), 1:07 p.m. (MLB)
Tuesday, Oct. 8: Oakland (Straily 10-8) at
Detroit (Fister 14-9), 5:07 or 7:07 p.m. (TBS)
x-Thursday, Oct. 10: Detroit at Oakland, 6:07
or 9:07 p.m. (TBS)
National League
Pittsburgh 2, St. Louis 1
Thursday, Oct. 3: St. Louis 9, Pittsburgh 1
Friday, Oct. 4: Pittsburgh 7, St. Louis 1
Sunday, Oct. 6: Pittsburgh 5, St. Louis 3
Monday, Oct. 7: St. Louis (Wachia 4-1) at
Pittsburgh (Morton 7-4), 3:07 p.m. (TBS)
x-Wednesday Oct. 9: Pittsburgh at St. Louis,
5:07 or 8:07 p.m. (TBS)
Los Angeles 1, Atlanta 1
Thursday, Oct. 3: Los Angeles 6, Atlanta 1
Friday, Oct. 4: Atlanta 4, Los Angeles 3
Sunday, Oct. 6: Atlanta (Teheran 14-8) at Los
Angeles (Ryu 14-8), 8:07 p.m. (TBS)
Monday, Oct. 7: Atlanta (Garcia 4-7) at Los
Angeles (Nolasco 13-11), 9:37 p.m. (TBS)
x-Wednesday Oct. 9: Los Angeles at Atlanta,
8:37 p.m. (TBS)
Thank you for
reading the
Cadillac News.
Prep Soccer District Draws
DIVISION 2
Geographic District
Northern Half
4:30 p.m. Oct. 15 Cadillac at Ogemaw
Heights; 4:30 p.m. Oct. 15 Gaylord at
Petoskey; TBA Oct. 17 Gaylord/Petoskey
winner at Cadillac/Ogemaw Heights winner.
Southern Half
4:30 p.m. Oct. 15 Bay City John Glenn at
Mount Pleasant; 5 p.m. Oct. 15 Bay City
Western at Saginaw Arthur Hill; TBA Oct. 17
Mount Pleasant/John Glenn winner at BC
Western/Arthur Hill winner.
TBA Oct. 19 Championship game. Winner
advances to Fenton regional vs. Fowlerville
district winner.
DIVISION 3
Host: Ludington H.S.
4:30 p.m. Oct. 15 Shelby at Mason County
Central; 5 p.m. Oct. 15 Pine River at Lud-
ington; 5 p.m. Oct. 15 Big Rapids at Man-
istee; 5 p.m. Oct. 17 Ludington/Pine River
winner vs. MCC/Shelby winner; 7 p.m. Oct.
17 Manistee/Big Rapids winner vs. Reed
City; Noon Oct. 19 Championship game.
Winner advances to Big Rapids regional vs.
Elk Rapids district winner.
DIVISION 4
Host: Glen Lake H.S.
4 p.m. Oct. 14 Buckley at Glen Lake; 4
p.m. Oct. 14 Suttons Bay at Northport; 5
p.m. Oct. 14 McBain NMC at Forest Area;
4 p.m. Oct. 16 Forest Area/NMC winner
vs. Glen Lake/Buckley winner; TBA Oct. 16
Northport/Suttons Bay winner vs. Leland;
4 p.m. Oct. 18 Championship game. Win-
ner advances to Muskegon Western Michigan
Christian regional vs. Muskegon Catholic Cen-
tral district winner.
National Football League
AMERICAN CONFERENCE
East
W L T Pct PF PA Home Away AFC NFC Div
New England 4 1 0 .800 95 70 2-0-0 2-1-0 2-1-0 2-0-0 2-0-0
Miami 3 2 0 .600 114 117 1-1-0 2-1-0 2-1-0 1-1-0 0-0-0
N.Y. Jets 2 2 0 .500 68 88 2-0-0 0-2-0 1-2-0 1-0-0 1-1-0
Buffalo 2 3 0 .400 112 130 2-1-0 0-2-0 1-3-0 1-0-0 0-2-0
South
W L T Pct PF PA Home Away AFC NFC Div
Indianapolis 4 1 0 .800 139 79 2-1-0 2-0-0 2-1-0 2-0-0 1-0-0
Tennessee 3 2 0 .600 115 95 2-1-0 1-1-0 3-2-0 0-0-0 0-1-0
Houston 2 2 0 .500 90 105 1-1-0 1-1-0 2-1-0 0-1-0 1-0-0
Jacksonville 0 5 0 .000 51 163 0-2-0 0-3-0 0-3-0 0-2-0 0-1-0
North
W L T Pct PF PA Home Away AFC NFC Div
Baltimore 3 2 0 .600 117 110 2-0-0 1-2-0 3-2-0 0-0-0 1-0-0
Cleveland 3 2 0 .600 101 94 2-1-0 1-1-0 2-2-0 1-0-0 1-1-0
Cincinnati 3 2 0 .600 94 87 3-0-0 0-2-0 2-1-0 1-1-0 1-1-0
Pittsburgh 0 4 0 .000 69 110 0-2-0 0-2-0 0-2-0 0-2-0 0-1-0
west
W L T Pct PF PA Home Away AFC NFC Div
Denver 5 0 0 1.000 230 139 3-0-0 2-0-0 2-0-0 3-0-0 1-0-0
Kansas City 5 0 0 1.000 128 58 2-0-0 3-0-0 2-0-0 3-0-0 0-0-0
San Diego 2 2 0 .500 108 102 1-1-0 1-1-0 0-2-0 2-0-0 0-0-0
Oakland 1 3 0 .250 71 91 1-1-0 0-2-0 1-2-0 0-1-0 0-1-0
NATIONAL CONFERENCE
East
W L T Pct PF PA Home Away NFC AFC Div
Philadelphia 2 3 0 .400 135 159 0-2-0 2-1-0 2-0-0 0-3-0 2-0-0
Dallas 2 3 0 .400 152 136 2-1-0 0-2-0 2-0-0 0-3-0 1-0-0
Washington 1 3 0 .250 91 112 0-2-0 1-1-0 0-3-0 1-0-0 0-1-0
N.Y. Giants 0 5 0 .000 82 182 0-2-0 0-3-0 0-3-0 0-2-0 0-2-0
South
W L T Pct PF PA Home Away NFC AFC Div
New Orleans 5 0 0 1.000 134 73 3-0-0 2-0-0 4-0-0 1-0-0 2-0-0
Carolina 1 3 0 .250 74 58 1-1-0 0-2-0 1-2-0 0-1-0 0-0-0
Atlanta 1 3 0 .250 94 104 1-1-0 0-2-0 1-1-0 0-2-0 0-1-0
Tampa Bay 0 4 0 .000 44 70 0-2-0 0-2-0 0-2-0 0-2-0 0-1-0
North
W L T Pct PF PA Home Away NFC AFC Div
Detroit 3 2 0 .600 131 123 2-0-0 1-2-0 3-2-0 0-0-0 2-1-0
Chicago 3 2 0 .600 145 140 2-1-0 1-1-0 1-2-0 2-0-0 1-1-0
Green Bay 2 2 0 .500 118 97 2-0-0 0-2-0 2-1-0 0-1-0 1-0-0
Minnesota 1 3 0 .250 115 123 1-1-0 0-2-0 0-2-0 1-1-0 0-2-0
west
W L T Pct PF PA Home Away NFC AFC Div
Seattle 4 1 0 .800 137 81 2-0-0 2-1-0 2-0-0 2-1-0 1-0-0
Arizona 3 2 0 .600 91 95 2-0-0 1-2-0 3-2-0 0-0-0 0-1-0
San Francisco 2 2 0 .500 79 95 1-1-0 1-1-0 2-1-0 0-1-0 1-1-0
St. Louis 2 3 0 .400 103 141 2-1-0 0-2-0 1-3-0 1-0-0 1-1-0
Thursdays Game
Cleveland 37, Buffalo 24
Sundays Games
Green Bay 22, Detroit 9
New Orleans 26, Chicago 18
Kansas City 26, Tennessee 17
St. Louis 34, Jacksonville 20
Cincinnati 13, New England 6
Indianapolis 34, Seattle 28
Baltimore 26, Miami 23
Philadelphia 36, N.Y. Giants 21
Arizona 22, Carolina 6
Denver 51, Dallas 48
Houston at San Francisco, (n)
San Diego at Oakland, (n)
Open: Minnesota, Pittsburgh, Tampa
Bay, Washington
Mondays Game
N.Y. Jets at Atlanta, 8:40 p.m.
Thursday, Oct. 10
N.Y. Giants at Chicago, 8:25 p.m.
Sunday, Oct. 13
Carolina at Minnesota, 1 p.m.
Oakland at Kansas City, 1 p.m.
St. Louis at Houston, 1 p.m.
Green Bay at Baltimore, 1 p.m.
Philadelphia at Tampa Bay, 1 p.m.
Pittsburgh at N.Y. Jets, 1 p.m.
Cincinnati at Buffalo, 1 p.m.
Detroit at Cleveland, 1 p.m.
Tennessee at Seattle, 4:05 p.m.
Jacksonville at Denver, 4:05 p.m.
Arizona at San Francisco, 4:25 p.m.
New Orleans at New England, 4:25 p.m.
Washington at Dallas, 8:30 p.m.
Open: Atlanta, Miami
Monday, Oct. 14
Indianapolis at San Diego, 8:40 p.m.
Auto Racing
NASCAR Hollywood
Casino 400 Results
At Kansas Speedway
(Start position in parenthe-
ses)
1. (1) Kevin Harvick, Chevro-
let, 267 laps, 138.4 rating,
48 points, $364,636.
2. (19) Kurt Busch, Chevrolet,
267, 101.3, 42, $229,810.
3. (14) Jeff Gordon, Chev-
rol et , 267, 105. 8, 41,
$216,776.
4. (5) Joey Logano, Ford, 267,
118.7, 41, $176,473.
5. (9) Carl Edwards, Ford,
267, 102.6, 39, $164,765.
6. (3) Ji mmi e Johnson,
Chevrolet, 267, 116.2, 39,
$164,376.
7. (8) Paul Menard, Chevrolet,
267, 114.3, 37, $146,456.
8. (6) Dale Earnhardt Jr.,
Chevrolet, 267, 120.8, 37,
$126,140.
9. (25) Marcos Ambrose,
For d, 267, 77. 5, 35,
$137,154.
10. (20) Aric Almirola, Ford,
267, 82.1, 34, $145,601.
11. (7) Matt Kenseth, Toyota,
267, 105.2, 34, $144,096.
12. (16) Jeff Burton, Chevro-
let, 267, 78.5, 33, $113,355.
13. (26) Greg Biffle, Ford,
267, 71.4, 31, $117,655.
14. (22) Clint Bowyer, Toyota,
267, 81, 30, $141,613.
15. (15) Kasey Kahne,
Chevrolet, 267, 82.6, 29,
$116,880.
16. (24) Jamie McMurray,
Chevrolet, 267, 84.7, 28,
$128,625.
17. (4) Brad Kesel ows-
ki, Ford, 267, 89.2, 28,
$150,871.
18. (12) Juan Pablo Montoya,
Chevrolet, 267, 90.8, 26,
$127,394.
19. (13) Martin Truex Jr.,
Toyota, 267, 73. 1, 25,
$131,555.
20. (28) A J Allmendinger,
Toyota, 267, 62. 5, 24,
$126,138.
21. (37) Casey Mears, Ford,
267, 58.6, 24, $122,238.
22. (23) Mark Martin, Chevro-
let, 267, 63.4, 22, $140,905.
23. (10) Denny Hamlin, Toyo-
ta, 267, 83.7, 21, $113,255.
24. (34) David Gilliland, Ford,
267, 50.2, 20, $110,313.
25. (41) Dave Blaney, Chevro-
let, 267, 51.4, 19, $107,663.
26. (36) Travis Kvapil, Toyota,
267, 52.7, 19, $112,277.
27. (33) J.J. Yeley, Chevrolet,
267, 47.1, 18, $94,030.
28. (35) Timmy Hill, Ford,
267, 43.9, 16, $93,430.
29. (42) Tony Raines, Chev-
rolet, 267, 40.9, 0, $90,230.
30. (2) Ricky Stenhouse
Jr., Ford, 266, 70.8, 14,
$140,316.
31. (30) Cole Whitt, Toyota,
260, 32.8, 0, $93,280.
32. (11) Brian Vickers, Toy-
ota, accident, 242, 76.4, 0,
$97,580.
33. (43) Landon Cassill,
Chevrolet, 235, 36.6, 0,
$89,380.
34. (18) Kyle Busch, Toyota,
accident, 199, 54.6, 11,
$134,588.
35. (17) Ryan Newman,
Chevrolet, 188, 57.3, 9,
$123,103.
36. (32) David Ragan, Ford,
acci dent, 168, 48. 5, 9,
$96,755.
37. (27) David Reutimann,
Toyota, 157, 31, 7, $88,525.
38. (31) Michael McDowell,
Ford, vibration, 144, 34.5, 6,
$82,860.
39. (21) Justin Allgaier, Chev-
rolet, accident, 135, 55.1, 0,
$86,860.
40. (38) Josh Wise, Ford,
vi brati on, 108, 29. 4, 0,
$74,860.
41. (39) Joe Nemechek,
Toyota, engine, 107, 29.9, 0,
$70,860.
42. (40) Reed Sorenson,
Ford, vibration, 103, 32.2, 0,
$66,860.
43. (29) Danica Patrick,
Chevrolet, accident, 0, 29.3,
1, $63,360.
Race Statistics
Average Speed of Race Win-
ner: 114.884 mph.
Caution Flags: 15 for 71 laps.
Top 12 i n Poi nt s: 1.
M. Kenset h, 2, 183; 2.
J . J ohns on, 2, 180; 3.
K.Harvick, 2,158; 4. J.Gordon,
2,151; 5. Ky.Busch, 2,148; 6.
G.Biffle, 2,139; 7. Ku.Busch,
2,136; 8. D.Earnhardt Jr.,
2,129; 9. C.Bowyer, 2,128;
10. J.Logano, 2,124; 11.
C. Edwar ds, 2, 123; 12.
R.Newman, 2,110.
NFL Box Score
LIONS-PACKERS STATS
Detroit 0 3 0 69
Green Bay 3 3 10 622
First Quarter
GB_FG Crosby 26, 1:24.
Second Quarter
GB_FG Crosby 52, 11:19.
Det_FG Akers 53, :15.
Third Quarter
GB_FG Crosby 31, 5:04.
GB_J.Jones 83 pass from Rodgers (Crosby
kick), 3:12.
Fourth Quarter
GB_FG Crosby 42, 10:16.
GB_FG Crosby 45, 3:50.
Det_Durham 13 pass from Stafford (pass
failed), 2:06.
A_78,200.
___
Det GB
First downs 19 16
Total Net Yards 286 449
Rushes-yards 19-64 33-180
Passing 222 269
Punt Returns 0-0 4-14
Kickoff Returns 2-40 0-0
Interceptions Ret. 0-0 0-0
Comp-Att-Int 25-40-0 20-30-0
Sacked-Yards Lost 5-40 1-5
Punts 6-51.8 3-47.0
Fumbles-Lost 1-0 2-0
Penalties-Yards 7-50 10-72
Time of Possession 27:41 32:19
___
INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS
RUSHING_Detroit, Bush 13-44, Bell 5-21,
Stafford 1-(minus 1). Green Bay, Lacy 23-99,
Cobb 2-72, Rodgers 5-8, Franklin 3-1.
PASSING_Detroit, Stafford 25-40-0-262.
Green Bay, Rodgers 20-30-0-274.
RECEIVING_Detroit, Pettigrew 4-59, Scheffler
4-55, Bell 4-30, Bush 4-25, Durham 3-30,
Broyles 2-27, Ogletree 2-20, Edwards 2-16.
Green Bay, Finley 6-32, Nelson 5-82, J.Jones
4-127, Cobb 4-35, Lacy 1-(minus 2).
MISSED FIELD GOALS_None.
Legends Division
Conference All Games
W L PF PA W L PF PA
Michigan 1 0 42 13 5 0 194 97
Michigan St. 1 0 26 14 4 1 141 67
Nebraska 1 0 39 19 4 1 212 127
Iowa 1 1 37 33 4 2 178 101
Northwestern 0 1 30 40 4 1 195 135
Minnesota 0 2 20 65 4 2 187 145
Leaders Division
Conference All Games
W L PF PA W L PF PA
Ohio St. 2 0 71 54 6 0 281 115
Indiana 1 0 44 24 3 2 222 155
Wisconsin 1 1 65 41 3 2 188 73
Illinois 0 1 19 39 3 2 180 138
Penn St. 0 1 24 44 3 2 157 102
Purdue 0 1 10 41 1 4 85 183
Saturdays Games
Michigan St. 26, Iowa 14
Indiana 44, Penn St. 24
Nebraska 39, Illinois 19
Michigan 42, Minnesota 13
Ohio St. 40, Northwestern 30
Saturday, Oct. 12
Nebraska at Purdue, TBA
Indiana at Michigan St., Noon
Northwestern at Wisconsin, 3:30 p.m.
Michigan at Penn St., 5 p.m.
East Division
Conference All Games
W L PF PA W L PF PA
Bowling Green 3 0 100 43 5 1 192 99
Ohio 1 0 43 3 4 1 149 104
Buffalo 1 0 42 14 2 2 101 147
Kent St. 1 2 78 93 2 4 108 182
Miami (Ohio) 0 1 9 21 0 5 44 178
UMass 0 1 7 28 0 5 35 158
Akron 0 2 17 74 1 5 113 208
west Division
Conference All Games
W L PF PA W L PF PA
Ball St. 2 0 82 44 5 1 248 147
N. Illinois 1 0 38 24 5 0 211 149
Toledo 2 1 109 68 3 3 171 151
Cent. Michigan 1 1 38 47 2 4 106 206
E. Michigan 0 2 34 93 1 4 85 190
W. Michigan 0 2 34 79 0 6 90 229
Saturdays Games
Buffalo 42, E. Michigan 14
Ball St. 48, Virginia 27
Cent. Michigan 21, Miami (Ohio) 9
Ohio 43, Akron 3
Toledo 47, W. Michigan 20
N. Illinois 38, Kent St. 24
Bowling Green 28, UMass 7
Saturday, Oct. 12
E. Michigan at Army, Noon
Buffalo at W. Michigan, 2 p.m.
Cent. Michigan at Ohio, 2 p.m.
Miami (Ohio) at UMass, 3 p.m.
Kent St. at Ball St., 3 p.m.
Akron at N. Illinois, 5 p.m.
Bowling Green at Mississippi St., 7:30 p.m.
Big Ten Mid-American
AP Top 25
The Top 25 teams in The Associated Press
college football poll, with first-place votes in
parentheses, records through Oct. 5, total
points based on 25 points for a first-place
vote through one point for a 25th-place vote,
and previous ranking:
Record Pts Pv
1. Alabama (55) 5-0 1,495 1
2. Oregon (5) 5-0 1,424 2
3. Clemson 5-0 1,359 3
4. Ohio St. 6-0 1,305 4
5. Stanford 5-0 1,278 5
6. Florida St. 5-0 1,158 8
7. Georgia 4-1 1,138 6
8. Louisville 5-0 1,051 7
9. Texas A&M 4-1 1,003 9
10. LSU 5-1 993 10
11. UCLA 4-0 844 12
12. Oklahoma 5-0 819 11
13. Miami 5-0 780 14
14. South Carolina 4-1 764 13
15. Baylor 4-0 681 17
16. Washington 4-1 556 15
17. Florida 4-1 536 18
18. Michigan 5-0 514 19
19. Northwestern 4-1 418 16
20. Texas Tech 5-0 358 20
21. Fresno St. 5-0 258 23
22. Oklahoma St. 4-1 204 21
23. N. Illinois 5-0 138 NR
24. Virginia Tech 5-1 115 NR
25. Missouri 5-0 105 NR
Others receiving votes: Auburn 61, Notre
Dame 50, Nebraska 35, Wisconsin 29, Michi-
gan St. 16, UCF 7, Arizona St. 3, Mississippi
3, Rutgers 2.
USA Today Top 25
The USA Today Top 25 football coaches poll,
with first-place votes in parentheses, records
through Oct. 5, total points based on 25
points for first place through one point for
25th, and previous ranking:
Record Pts Pvs
1. Alabama (57) 5-0 1,544 1
2. Oregon (4) 5-0 1,486 2
3. Ohio State 6-0 1,379 3
4. Clemson (1) 5-0 1,356 4
5. Stanford 5-0 1,327 5
6. Florida State 5-0 1,188 8
7. Georgia 4-1 1,130 6
8. Louisville 5-0 1,105 7
9. Texas A&M 4-1 1,067 9
10. Oklahoma 5-0 964 10
11. LSU 5-1 953 11
12. South Carolina 4-1 833 12
13. UCLA 4-0 807 13
14. Miami (Fla.) 5-0 747 14
15. Baylor 4-0 698 16
16. Michigan 5-0 591 17
17. Florida 4-1 574 19
18. Northwestern 4-1 393 15
19. Washington 4-1 366 18
20. Oklahoma State 4-1 350 20
21. Texas Tech 5-0 336 22
22. Fresno State 5-0 325 21
23. Northern Illinois 5-0 169 23
24. Nebraska 4-1 125 25
25. Virginia Tech 5-1 97 NR
Others receiving votes: Missouri 86; Notre
Dame 58; Wisconsin 29; Michigan State 16;
Auburn 11; Central Florida 11; Oregon State
8; Rutgers 8; Arizona 4; Arizona State 4; Ball
State 3; Brigham Young 2.
Transactions
FOOTBALL
National Football League
BUFFALO BILLS_Signed P Brian Moorman.
Canadian Football League
WINNIPEG BLUE BOMBERS_Acquired OT
Patrick Neufeld and a 2015 fourth-round
draft pick from Saskatchewan for DE Alex
Hall and a 2014 second-round draft pick.
HOCKEY
National Hockey League
WINNIPEG JETS_Assigned D Adam Pardy
to St. Johns (AHL). Activated D Grant Clit-
some from the injured reserve list.
COLLEGE
DUKE_Suspended S Deondre Singleton for
this Saturdays game against Navy for vio-
lating team rules.
NFL Record Book
NFLs Most Points-Two Teams
The top scoring NFL games in the regular and
postseason (x-wild card game):
113 Washington 72, New York Giants 41,
Nov. 27, 1966
106 Cincinnati 58, Cleveland 48, Nov. 28,
2004
101 Oakland 52, Houston 49, Dec. 22,
1963
99 Seattle 51, Kansas City 48 (OT), Nov.
27, 1983
99 Denver 51, Dallas 48, Oct. 6, 2013
98 Chicago Cardinals 63, New York Giants
35, Oct. 17, 1948
98 San Diego 54, Pittsburgh 44, Dec. 8,
1985
97 Los Angeles Rams 70, Baltimore 27,
Oct. 22, 1950
96 New York Jets 51, Miami 45 (OT), Sept.
21, 1986
96 Cleveland 51, Cincinnati 45, Sept. 16,
2007
96 x-Arizona 51, Green Bay 45 (OT), Jan.
10, 2010
TasTe
Monday, october 7, 2013 | www.cadillacnews.com 775-NEWS (6397) cadillac news | trusted. local. connected C1
By Betty Hallock
Mcclatchy-tribune news service
Baking season has ar-
rived, and the oven is
beckoning. So weve asked
some of the best pastry
chefs in Los Angeles for
home recipes to ease bak-
ers into fall. Their recipes
call for 10 ingredients or
fewer but are desserts wor-
thy of bringing to a party,
even Sharlena Fongs
marshmallow-studded
campfre scones from Semi
Sweet Bakery. (Brunch is
a party, Fong says. And
scones are fancier than
muffns.)
Karen Hatfeld of Hat-
felds and the Sycamore
Kitchen shares a rich,
rustic-yet-elegant brown
butter cake with dark choc-
olate and hazelnuts.
The traditional pecan
pie is re-imagined by Gen-
evieve Gergis, pastry chef
at Bestia, with a flling
and crust thats improved
with a little creme frache.
Roxana Jullapat of Cooks
County makes a pumpkin
mascarpone fool that is
creamy and cool. And
Gjelina Take Away pastry
chef Nicole Ruckers apple
custard crumb pie, spiced
with cardamom, is sort of
genius. Rucker uses dried
apples so you dont have
to peel, core and cut them,
she points out. Easy.
HAZELNUT BROWN
BUTTER TORTE WITH
BITTERSWEET CHOCOLATE
1 hour. Serves 8 to 12
1 cup (2 sticks) butter
2 cups plus 2 tablespoons
(11.5 ounces) powdered sugar
1 cup (3.6 ounces) almond
four
2/3 cup (2.9 ounces) cake four
teaspoon salt
1 cup egg whites, from about
7 eggs
tablespoon hazelnut oil
cup chopped bittersweet
chocolate
cup chopped roasted
hazelnuts
2 to 3 tablespoons granulated
sugar, for sprinkling
1. Brown the butter: In
a medium saucepan, heat
the butter over medium-
low heat and cook until
the butter melts and
browns, taking on a nutty
aroma, 8 to 10 minutes. Be
careful not to overcook or
the butter will burn. Re-
move from heat and cool
to warm before using.
2. While the butter is
cooling, prepare the pan:
Grease a decorative 10-
inch cake or tart pan with
butter and four, or line
with parchment. Heat the
oven to 375 degrees.
3. In the bowl of a stand
mixer ftted with the
whisk attachment, or in
a large bowl, sift together
the powdered sugar with
the almond four, cake
four and salt. With the
mixer running, or using
a hand mixer, add the egg
whites in a steady stream.
Once combined, quickly
add the hazelnut oil, then
the butter, and mix just
until combined; be careful
not to overmix.
4. Pour the mixture into
the prepared pan, flling
the pan three-fourths of
the way full. Sprinkle
with the chopped choco-
late and hazelnuts, as well
as the granulated sugar.
Bake until the torte is
puffed and medium brown
on top, about 35 minutes.
Cool before serving.
EACH OF 12 SERVINGS
Calories: 372
Protein: 5 grams
Carbohydrates: 39 grams
Fiber: 2 grams
Fat: 23 grams
Saturated fat: 11 grams
Cholesterol: 41 mg
Sugar: 31 grams
Sodium: 185 mg
NOTE: AdApTEd from Karen
Hatfeld of Hatfelds and the
Sycamore Kitchen.
AUTUMN FOOL
40 minutes, plus cooling
and chilling times.
Makes 8 individual fools
or one family-style fool
GRAHAM CRACKER CRUMBS
2/3 cup (2.8 ounces) all-pur-
pose four
1/3 cup (1.5 ounces) whole-
wheat four
teaspoon kosher salt
teaspoon ground cinnamon
cup (1 stick) cold butter,
cubed
1/3 cup dark brown sugar
1. Heat the oven to 350
degrees. In the bowl of a
food processor, combine
the four, wheat four,
salt, cinnamon, butter
and brown sugar, pulsing
until they come together
to form a somewhat frm
dough.
2. Place the dough be-
tween two sheets of parch-
ment paper and roll to a
thinness of approximately
one-eighth inch. Place the
dough, still covered, on a
cookie sheet and chill for
20 minutes.
3. Carefully peel the
top sheet of parchment
paper and bake the dough
until it is a deep golden
brown, about 10 minutes.
Cool the graham cracker
completely, then crumble
the cracker and pulse in
a food processor until
it is broken into coarse
crumbs. This makes about
2 cups crumbs.
PUMPKIN FILLING AND
AUTUMN FOOL
1 cup pumpkin puree
1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
1 cups heavy cream
cup dark brown sugar
1 cups mascarpone
Prepared graham cracker
crumbs
1. In a mixing bowl,
combine the pumpkin
puree with the ground
cinnamon.
2. In the bowl of a stand
mixer, or in a large bowl
using an electric mixer,
whip the heavy cream,
brown sugar and mascar-
pone on medium to high
speed until the mixture
forms soft peaks, about 5
minutes.
3. Carefully fold the
pumpkin puree into the
whipped cream mixture
using a rubber spatula.
Fill a large pastry bag set
with a plain decorative tip
with the pumpkin flling.
4. To build the fools,
place 8 half-pint glasses or
Mason jars on a tray. Put a
tablespoon of the graham
cracker crumbs into each
glass, pipe about 2 table-
spoons of the pumpkin
mixture directly on top.
Continue alternating
until you fll the glasses
to the top, fnishing with
graham crackers. Alter-
natively, to serve a family-
style fool, build the layers
in a trife dish (4-quart
capacity). Refrigerate for
at least one hour, and up
to 24 hours, before serv-
ing.
EACH SERVING
Calories: 710
Protein: 8 grams
Carbohydrates: 38 grams
Fiber: 2 grams
Fat: 61 grams
Saturated fat: 35 grams
Cholesterol: 180 mg
Sugar: 23 grams
Sodium: 134 mg
NOTE: AdApTEd from Roxana
Jullapat of Cooks County.
CAMPFIRE SCONES
1 hour, plus overnight
freezing time for the
dough. Makes 10 to 12
scones
3 1/3 cups (14.1 ounces) all-
purpose four
1/3 cup (1.4 ounces) whole
wheat four
4 teaspoons (.7 ounces) bak-
ing powder
teaspoon cinnamon
cup (1.75 ounces) sugar
Pinch of salt
cup (1 stick) cold butter, cut
into cubes
2 tablespoons honey
1 cups heavy cream, plus
cup for brushing, divided
1 cup mini chocolate chips
1 cup mini marshmallows, plus
extra for dotting the tops of
the scones, if desired
Cinnamon sugar, for sprinkling
1. In the bowl of a stand
mixer ftted with a paddle
attachment, or in a large
bowl using an electric
mixer, beat together the
all-purpose and wheat
fours, cinnamon, sugar
and salt. Add the cold
butter and mix at the low-
est speed until the butter
is reduced to the size of
peas.
2. Combine the honey
and 1 cups heavy cream
and, with the mixer on
low speed, slowly pour
into the four and butter
mixture. Mix until just
blended. The dough will
look lumpy, and there
should still be bits of but-
ter visible in the dough.
Combine the chocolate
chips and marshmallows,
add to the dough, and mix
on low speed just until
incorporated.
3. Place the dough onto
a well-foured surface and
knead it into a ball. Flour
your hands and a rolling
pin, and roll the dough
three-fourths-inch thick.
You should see small bits
of butter in the dough.
Flour a 3-inch round plain
or futed cutter and cut
circles of dough. Place
the scones on a baking
pan lined with parchment
paper. Collect the scraps
neatly, roll them out, and
cut more circles. Freeze
the dough overnight after
theyre cut; the scones
can be prepared up to this
point and frozen for up
to 2 weeks before baking
(wrap the scones well if
freezing for an extended
period of time to prevent
freezer burn).
3. Heat the oven to 375
degrees. Brush the frozen
scones with the remaining
cream and sprinkle with
cinnamon sugar. Bake
until puffed and set and
the tops are a rich golden
brown, 25 to 35 minutes. If
adding extra marshmal-
lows to the top, sprinkle
them over the scones
halfway to two-thirds of
the way as they bake so
the marshmallows brown
slightly (the extra marsh-
mallows may defate a bit
once they come out of the
oven).
4. Cool the scones on a
rack before serving.
EACH OF 12 SERVINGS
Calories: 431
Protein: 5 grams
Carbohydrates: 49 grams
Fiber: 2 grams
Fat: 25 grams
Saturated fat: 16 grams
Cholesterol: 68 mg
Sugar: 17 grams
Sodium: 194 mg
NOTE: AdApTEd from Sharlena
Fong of Semi Sweet Bakery.
MAPLE PECAN TART WITH
CREME FRACHE
1 hours, plus cool-
ing, chilling and freezing
times. Serves 8 to 12
CREME FRACHE CRUST
1 cup plus 3 tablespoons (5
ounces) four
1 tablespoon sugar
teaspoon salt
cup (1 stick) butter, cut into
cubes and frozen
1/3 cup creme frache
1. In the bowl of a food
processor, pulse the four,
sugar and salt together to
combine. Add the frozen
butter cubes and pulse
until the butter is reduced
to pea-sized balls. Add the
creme frache and pulse
until mixed and the dough
begins to form clumps.
2. Remove the dough
and form into a coarse
ball, then fatten to form
a disk. Cover with plas-
tic wrap and chill for at
least 2 hours, preferably
overnight.
3. Roll the dough larger
than the diameter of the
10-inch tart pan, ap-
proximately 12 inches in
diameter. Chill the rolled
dough for 30 minutes, then
carefully ft it into the
pan, trimming and saving
any leftover dough. Freeze
the dough until ready to
bake, at least 1 hour.
4. Heat the oven to 375
degrees. Line the inside
of the tart shell with foil
and beans or pie weights.
Blind-bake the frozen
shell until set and golden
on the sides, 20 to 25
minutes; the dough will
shrink a bit on the sides.
Remove the weights and
foil and continue to bake
until the crust is fully set
and a deep golden brown,
an additional 10 to 20
minutes.
5. Cool on a rack, then
chill the shell until ready
to complete the tart (chill
up to one day before bak-
ing).
FILLING
teaspoon vanilla extract
1 tablespoon dark rum (op-
tional)
6 tablespoons creme frache
6 tablespoons butter
cup maple syrup
cup light brown sugar
teaspoon salt
3 egg yolks
1 cups coarsely chopped
lightly toasted pecans
Prepared frozen tart shell
Whipped creme frache
( cup each heavy cream
and creme frache beaten
with 1 tablespoons
sugar to soft peaks)
1. Heat the oven to 350
degrees. In a small bowl,
whisk the vanilla and rum
into the creme frache.
2. In a heavy saucepan,
combine the butter, maple
syrup, brown sugar and
salt over low heat. Cook,
continuously whisking,
until the butter is com-
pletely melted and the
mixture comes together.
Increase the heat to high
and continue to cook until
the mixture is frothy and
bubbly. Continue cooking,
whisking constantly, for 1
minute.
3. Remove from heat
and slowly and carefully
add the creme frache
mixture, whisking until
smooth. Continue whisk-
ing, adding the yolks,
one at a time. Stir in the
pecans.
4. Fill the cold tart shell
with the flling just to
below the top of the crust;
you may have a little fll-
ing leftover. Bake until the
top has developed a crust
and the flling looks set,
20 to 25 minutes. Remove
the tart from the oven and
gently tap on the counter
to release any air bubbles.
Place on a rack to cool
completely. Serve the
cooled tart with whipped
creme frache.
EACH OF 12 SERVINGS
Calories: 473
Protein: 4 grams
Carbohydrates: 33
grams
Fiber: 2 grams
Fat: 37 grams
Saturated fat: 2 grams
Cholesterol: 128 mg
Sugar: 22 grams
Sodium: 165 mg
NOTE: AdApTEd from Genevieve
Gergis of Bestia.
APPLE CUSTARD
CRUMB PIE
1 hours, plus freezing
and cooling times. Serves
8 to 12
CRUST
6 ounces (approximately
12) digestive biscuits, prefer-
ably Gentilini Osvego
cup sugar
1/8 teaspoon salt
cup ( stick) plus 1 table-
spoon butter, melted
In the bowl of a food
processor, pulse the cook-
ies, sugar and salt until
sandy in texture, then
add the melted butter and
pulse a few more times
to combine. Turn out the
mixture into a buttered
9-inch deep-dish pie
plate, pressing evenly
onto the sides and bot-
tom to form a crust with
uniform thickness. Freeze
the crust and, just before
flling and baking, run a
pairing knife around the
top edge to trim the cookie
crust cleanly.
APPLES
2 cups dried apples
1 tablespoon sugar
teaspoon cardamom
vanilla bean, seeded
cup water
In a large saute pan,
combine the apples with
the sugar, cardamom,
seeds and water. Gently
simmer until the apples
have absorbed the water
and are plumped. Remove
the apples from the pan
and set aside to cool.
CUSTARD
cup sugar
1/3 cup four
Pinch of salt
3 eggs
vanilla bean, seeded
2 cups milk
While the apples are
cooling, assemble the
custard: In a large bowl,
whisk together the sugar,
four and salt. Add the
eggs and vanilla seeds,
and whisk until incorpo-
rated. Whisk in the milk
until completely com-
bined.
APPLE CUSTARD
CRUMB PIE
Prepared apples
Prepared frozen cookie crust
Prepared custard
1 tablespoon granulated
sugar
Powdered sugar, for sprinkling
1. Heat the oven to 350
degrees.
2. If there is any excess
liquid with the apples,
discard the liquid, and ar-
range or scatter the apples
in the bottom of the
prepared crust. Pour the
custard over the apples,
leaving one-eighth inch of
crust at the top.
3. Place the pie on the
bottom rack of the oven
and bake until a light skin
forms at the top of the
flling, about 5 minutes.
Sprinkle the tablespoon
of granulated sugar over
the flling, then continue
to bake until the custard
starts to brown on top and
a knife inserted into the
center comes out clean, 30
to 55 minutes (timing will
vary depending on the
oven, beginning tempera-
ture of the crust and fll-
ings, and type of pie dish).
The fnished pie will
still jiggle slightly when
remove from the oven but
will set as it cools.
4. Cool the pie on a rack,
then sprinkle with pow-
dered sugar; serve warm.
EACH OF 12 SERVINGS
Calories: 281
Protein: 4 grams
Carbohydrates: 44
grams
Fiber: 2 grams
Fat: 10 grams
Saturated fat: 5 grams
Cholesterol: 63 mg
Sugar: 31 grams
Sodium: 159 mg
NOTE: AdApTEd from Nicole
Rucker of Gjelina Take Away in
Venice, Calif. Digestive biscuits
are available at select gourmet
markets and cooking supply
stores, as well as online.
Ideas are baking for fall desserts
Mtns
Pastry chefs in the Los Angeles area were asked to submit recipes that use few ingredients and are easy for the home cook to make.
Karen Hatfeld, of Sycamore Kitchen, offered up her chocolate hazelnut brown butter torte.
Section
C
WEATHER C2
COMICS C2
PUZZLES C3
COMMUNITY C4
Immunization, fu shots
available
District Health Depart-
ment No. 10 has scheduled
the following immuniza-
tion clinics on the following
dates:
CADILLAC
Immunization: Monday,
Oct.14, 21, 28
Flu: Oct. 11, 25
Call 231-775-9942 for ap-
pointment
LAKE CITY
Immunization: Tuesday,
Oct. 24
Flu: Oct. 16
Call 231-839-7167 for ap-
pointment
Family Planning Clinic
District Health Depart-
ment No. 10 has scheduled
family planning clinics on
the following dates:
CADILLAC
Today, Monday, Wednes-
day, Oct. 17, 21, 23, 28, 30.
Call 231-876-3849 for ap-
pointment
LAKE CITY
Oct. 14, 28. Call 231-839-
7167 for appointment
WIC Clinics
District Health Depart-
ment No. 10 has scheduled
WIC Clinics on the follow-
ing dates:
CADILLAC Oct. 7, 8, 9,
10, 11, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 21, 22,
23, 24, 25, 28, 29, 30, 31. Call
231-876-3804 for appoint-
ment
LAKE CITY Oct. 9, 15,
16, 17, 23, 30. Call 231-839-
7167 for appointment
This program provides
supplemental foods and
nutrition education for eli-
gible pregnant and breast-
feeding women, infants and
children.
Breast and Cervical
Cancer Screenings
CADILLAC Oct. 16, 30.
Call 231-775-9942, ext. 8042 to
schedule an appointment
LAKE CITY Oct. 24, 28.
Call 231-839-7167, ext. 8042 to
schedule an appointment
This program is available
to women ages 40 to 64 who
have limited or no health
insurance.
Hearing and Vision
Screenings
CADILLAC Call 231-
775-9942 for appointment
LAKE CITY Call 231-
839-7167 for appointment
This is a free program
for children ages 3 through
high school. Appointments
are necessary.
MSU Extension offers
gardening resources
CADILLAC Michigan
State University Exten-
sion is offering many free
resources for home garden-
ers.
For the gardening web-
site, visit www.migarden.
msu.edu to fnd articles
on your topic of interest,
events and educational op-
portunities.
For more information on
the resources available at
MSU Extension, contact
231-779-9480 or visit 401 N.
Lake St., Cadillac.
c2 cadillac news | TrusTed. local. connecTed 775-NEWS (6397) www.cadillacnews.com | monday, ocTober 7, 2013
BLONDIE
BEETLE BAILEY
PEANUTS
HAGAR THE HORRIBLE
SHOE
FRANK & ERNEST
DILBERT
Community Round-up
Snow Ice Flurries Rain T-storms Showers
Cold front
Warm front
Stationary front
Cadillac
Ironwood
Escanaba
Marquette
Sault Ste. Marie
Mesick
Lake City
Merritt
McBain
Ludington
Chase
Reed City
Harrietta
Manton
Benton
Harbor
Kalamazoo
Ann Arbor
Detroit
Port Huron
Tawas City
Lansing
Grand
Rapids
Muskegon
Mt. Pleasant
West
Branch
Mackinaw City
Traverse
City
Gaylord
Alpena
Cadillac 5-day Forecast
RF
Hi
Hi
Lo
RF
Hi
Lo
RF
Hi
Lo
RF
Hi
Lo
RF
Lo
RF
Shown is todays weather.
Temperatures are todays highs and
tonights lows.
City Hi/Lo/W
National Cities
Today
City Hi/Lo/W
Today
Precipitation
Almanac
UV Index

Tomorrow
Sun and Moon
Today Tomorrow
The higher the AccuWeather.com UV Index number, the
greater the need for eye and skin protection.
Temperature
For hour by
hour weather
check out our
website at
www.cadillacnews.com
Weather (W): s-sunny,
pc-partly cloudy,
c-cloudy, sh-showers,
t-thunderstorms, r-rain,
sf-snow urries, sn-snow, i-ice.
-10s -0s 0s 10s 20s 30s 40s 50s 60s 70s 80s 90s 100s 110s
Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are
highs for the day. Forecast high/low temperatures are given for selected cities.
Month to
date
Normal
Month to
date
Year to
date
Normal
year to
date
(RF): The patented
AccuWeather.com RealFeel
Temperature

is an exclusive
index of effective temperature
based on eight weather factors.
Last week's temperatures
Normal High Normal Low
30
40
50
60
70
80
66
56
64
56
76
53
71
42
70
42
68
45
65
39
8 a.m. 10 a.m. Noon 2 p.m. 4 p.m.
0
3
6
9
12
15
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
26.46 27.18
0.74 0.55
57/39
58/39
59/39
61/41
56/42
59/40
57/40
57/39
58/40
61/44
58/38
59/39
58/39
59/41
60/45
59/45
60/41
64/46
59/43
60/43
60/45
60/46
61/47
58/41
58/39
57/35
61/46
56/39
60/44
TODAY
FRIDAY
THURSDAY
WEDNESDAY
TUESDAY
TONIGHT
57
54
68
49
70
66
43
68
63
41
65
62
43
64
39
42
A shower
Partly sunny
Sunshine
Mostly sunny
Mostly sunny
Fair
First Full Last New
Nov 3 Oct 26 Oct 18 Oct 11
Sunrise 7:47 a.m. 7:48 a.m.
Sunset 7:11 p.m. 7:10 p.m.
Moonrise 10:42 a.m. 11:49 a.m.
Moonset 8:48 p.m. 9:36 p.m.
9/30 10/1 10/2 10/3 10/4 10/5 10/6
Albany 75/53/r
Anchorage 48/42/r
Atlanta 73/54/c
Baltimore 77/57/r
Billings 72/44/pc
Boise 72/43/pc
Boston 74/61/c
Buffalo 66/50/r
Chicago 63/48/pc
Cleveland 64/49/c
Dallas 84/57/s
Denver 79/48/s
Duluth 61/42/pc
El Paso 80/56/s
Houston 84/54/s
Kansas City 71/49/s
Knoxville 70/46/pc
Las Vegas 85/63/s
Little Rock 77/49/s
Los Angeles 83/58/s
Memphis 73/49/s
Miami 89/77/t
Milwaukee 62/47/pc
Nashville 68/47/s
New York 76/65/r
Omaha 72/47/s
Orlando 88/72/t
Phoenix 94/70/s
Rapid City 56/42/pc
Reno 75/41/s
St. Louis 68/49/pc
San Diego 74/60/pc
Seattle 57/48/r
Tampa 86/75/t
Topeka 74/45/s
Tucson 92/65/s
Wash., DC 76/59/r
Forecast for Monday, Oct. 7
Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. 2013
RAVE REVIEWS:
It is in showing where to fnd out-of-the-way trout
streams that makes the map such a treasure to the
fsherman.
Joe Gordon, TRIBUNE-DEMOCRAT, Johnstown, PA
I have one of the original Higbees Stream Map of
Pennsylvania on my wall behind my desk. Its the best
thing available as far as streams are concerned. I use it
all the time for reference. I dont know of anything more
extensive, and it is the most accurate map out there as far
as streams are concerned.
Dave Wolf, PA Fish and Boat Commission
Buy the Stream & Lake Map
of Michigan Now & Save!
Hook the
Perfect Gift!
Why every angler and boater needs this map
Professor Higbees Stream & Lake Map of Michigan is the frst and only highly detailed map of its kind.
The 4-foot-by-4-foot Michigan map shows 35,000 miles of streams plus lakes.
For a limited time get 3 bonuses with each map!
Bonus #1 GUIDEBOOK: Pinpoint the best fshing in Michigan with this valuable guide. Easily locate over
5,000 streams and lakes shown on the Stream & Lake Map both alphabetically and geographically. Your map
and guidebook will take you to the top 443 select fshing waters select waters for 14 species of gamefsh.
Bonus #2 REPORT: Finding Secret Fishing Spots
47 tips, tactics and tools you can use to fnd your own secret spot & catch more fsh.
Bonus #3 REPORT: How Anglers Stalk and Catch Record Fish
The average big fsh has evaded capture for over 10 years. Find out which instincts set them apart from
smaller fsh. Stalking and catching a trophy requires knowledge of their unique habits and those special times
when their guard is down. Armed with the information in this new and exclusive 24-page report you could be
in for the fght of your life.
LOST STREAM MAP
The STREAM & LAKE MAP OF MICHIGAN resembles another map known to Pennsylvania anglers as the Lost
Stream Map.
The Stream Map of Pennsylvania was completed in 1965 after a thirty-year effort by Howard Higbee, a former Penn
State Professor.
Professor Higbee succeeded in creating a map of the highest detail possible a map that shows every stream and
lake. He painstakingly plotted by hand, the location of 45,000 miles of streams onto a 3 by 5 foot map.
The map sold extremely well until it was lost several years after it frst appeared in print. Incredibly, the printer
entrusted with the original drawing and printing plates, declared bankruptcy, then carelessly hauled Higbees 30 years
of work to a landfll.
The few remaining dog-eared copies became a prized fshermans possession. Professor Higbee was offered $400
for one of his last maps. And state agencies were forced to keep their copies under lock and key.
Experts told Professor Higbee that reprints were impossible, because the maps were printed in non-photographic
blue.
Then in 1991, at the age of 91, Howard Higbees dream came true. Computers made it possible to reprint the map.
Holding an updated map, Howard said, I never thought Id live to see this day.
Then, by combining Professor Higbees knowledge with computer technology the STREAM & LAKE MAP OF
MICHIGAN was created.
BUY LOCAL &
SAVE $7.50
ON EACH MAP!
STREAM MAPS ARE
ALSO AVAILABLE FOR:
California (Northern)
Colorado Connecticut
Delaware
District of Columbia
Illinois Maryland
Massachusetts Missouri
New Hampshire New Jersey
New York North Carolina
Ohio Oregon Pennsylvania
Rhode Island Vermont
Washington West Virginia
Wisconsin
ALL OUT-OF-STATE
MAPS WILL BE MAILED
DIRECTLY TO YOUR
HOME.
CALL TODAY TO PLACE
YOUR ORDER!
BONUS #1, #2, #3 INCLUDED WITH EACH MAP BY MAIL LOCAL PICK UP
__Michigan 4 FT by 4 FT Rolled Paper Map(s) $29.10 ea. $21.15 ea.
__Michigan 4 FT by 4 FT Folded Paper Map(s) $29.10 ea. $21.15 ea.
__Michigan 4 FT by 4 FT Laminated Rolled Map(s) $50.30 ea. $42.35 ea.
*Prices include 6% sales tax.
Check or money order enclosed $______ Make check payable to CADILLAC NEWS
EACH ROLLED AND LAMINATED MAP SHIPPED IN A STURDY STORAGE TUBE
Credit card orders 24-Hours-A-Day 1-800-859-7902 Department NC-CC
Mastercard VISA Discover Card
Credit Card # ________________________________ Exp. Date ___________
Name _________________________________________________________
Address _______________________________________________________
City _______________________________State _______ Zip ______________
MAIL COUPON WITH PAYMENT TO THIS ADDRESS:
CADILLAC NEWS, Attn: Stream Maps, 130 N. Mitchell PO Box 640, Cadillac, MI 49601
or save $7.50 Postage when you purchase locally at this address.
LIMITED TIME OFFER 3 BONUSES WITH EACH MAP
Available rolled or folded. ALSO AVAILABLE in heavy gauge LIFETIME GUARANTEED,
glass-like clear lamination, write-on wipe-off surface, with brass eyelets for easy hanging.
monday, october 7, 2013 | www.cadillacnews.com 775-NEWS (6397) cadillac news | trusted. local. connected c3
JUMBLE
TODAYS SUDOKU
ANSWER
How to play: Each Sudoku
has a unique solution that
can be reached logically
without guessing. Enter dig-
its from 1 to 9 into the blank
spaces. Every row must con-
tain one of each digit. So
must every column, as must
every 3x3 square.
7 Little Words
CRYPTOQUOTE
(Answers tomorrow)
ROYAL ENACT CHANGE SCRIPT
Saturdays
Jumbles:
Answer: The pony with the negative attitude was
A NEIGH-SAYER
Now arrange the circled letters
to form the surprise answer, as
suggested by the above cartoon.
THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
by David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek
Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square,
to form four ordinary words.
ZISEE
DARNB
FOECEF
NUFSUG
2013 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
All Rights Reserved.
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Each row and each column must contain the
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The numbers within the heavily outlined boxes,
called cages, must combine using the given operation
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top-left corners.

Freebies: Fill in single-box cages with the number in
the top-left corner.
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D
EAR AMY: I love my
husband of 20 years.
Hes a good man. He
is intelligent, well-read, a
good husband (for the most
part) and a good father.
I know for certain my
husband isnt gay, but for
the better part of our mar-
riage, weve not had sex on
a regular basis. This pat-
tern began within the frst
two years of our marriage
(until then we were totally
hot for each other).
I dont know why he has
experienced this early loss
of libido; I know I am still
eager to have a sexual rela-
tionship with him. Though
were both older than when
we first got together, I am
still attractive and so is
he.
Ive been living without
sex for many years and
have never been unfaithful.
I see myself as an ethical
person. I dont want to end
my marriage, but self-grat-
ifcation isnt the same as a
one-on-one sexual relation-
ship.
Over these many years,
weve discussed this
problem but nothing has
changed, so would it be un-
ethical for me to seek sexual
gratifcation elsewhere?
Wondering (but not Wan-
dering) Wife
DEAR WIFE:
Discussing the
extreme sexual
drought in your
marriage is one
t hi ng. Doi ng
something
anything about
it is another.
Does your hus-
band want to try
to recover his li-
bido and sexual
function? Has he
had a conversa-
tion with his doc-
tor about it? Are
you two willing
to speak to a mar-
riage counselor
or seek sex thera-
py together?
It seems you two have ma-
ny opportunities to at least
try to recover from this
challenge, aside from hop-
ing that things will some-
how miraculously change.
If you took traditional
marriage vows then you
will recall the phrase for
better or for worse. In a
loving marriage you each
have a duty to try your
hardest to maximize the
experience for yourself
and your partner. This does
not mean that you are both
guaranteed a wonderful
sex life or any sex life.
Intimacy comes in many
forms; as painful
as this is for both
of you, facing
this challenge
together could
deepen your mar-
riage.
If your hus-
band agrees
for you to seek
sexual gratifica-
tion outside of
your marriage,
then your choice
is on the ethical
end of the spec-
trum (though
it would place
additional chal-
lenges on your
relationship). If
you decide to pur-
sue this and keep it a secret
from him, then it is decid-
edly unethical.
DEAR AMY: My best
friend is in her mid-40s. She
has a serious alcohol addic-
tion and it is ruining her
life. She is unable to keep a
job or friends, or maintain
a romantic relationship due
to this terrible disease.
I love my friend dearly
and I have told her that Im
there to support her when
she decides to attempt re-
covery, and I do not enable
her in her addiction.
Now my friend has devel-
oped memory issues that
I believe are due to her ad-
diction, but she blames that
and everything else going
wrong in her life on other
causes.
A recovering addict told
me that my friend has de-
veloped brain problems re-
lated to her addiction and is
literally killing herself. Im
desperate; what can I do to
help my friend? Heart-
broken
DEAR HEARTBRO-
KEN: Addicts are some-
times forced into treatment
because of a crisis related
to their drug or alcohol use
an automobile or other
accident, a suicide attempt,
a crime committed, or a
workplace non-negotiable.
If you are rescuing your
friend in times of crisis,
you may need to stop. Po-
lice or hospital personnel
may be able to force her
into rehab.
Otherwise, you can re-
search treatment options
in your area and meet with
a professional to see if you
and other loved ones can
stage an intervention. Inter-
ventions should be guided
by an addiction specialist
otherwise even the most
dedicated attempt may
backfire and have serious
(unintended) consequenc-
es.
Sexless marriage creates ethical dilemma
Ask
Amy
Amy
Dickinson
By NaNcy Black
tribune content agency
Todays Birthday (10/07/13). Ve-
nus enters Sagittarius today,
portending a passion for travel
and adventure this year. Cre-
ativity and independence call,
especially this month. Explora-
tion is the theme. Career and f-
nances grow stronger, especial-
ly as you nurture collaborative
partnerships. Commit to a cause
that gives purpose. Stick to sim-
ple basics, like love, family and
good food. Pamper yourself.
To get the advantage, check the
days rating: 10 is the easiest
day, 0 the most challenging.
Aries (March 21-April 19) -- To-
day is a 5 -- Venus enters Sag-
ittarius today (until Nov. 5).
Follow your heart, and stick to
it. For four weeks, traveling is
easier. Check out an interesting
suggestion, and rely on logic.
Choose words carefully. Con-
nect with a teacher. Keep prac-
ticing.
Taurus (April 20-May 20) -- Today
is a 5 -- Listening is the key to
communication. Your reward
comes later. Ask for what you
need in partnership. Accept a
generous offer. Gather materi-
als. Tidy up and prepare for a
trip. Youre building something
of lasting value.
Gemini (May 21-June 20) -- To-
day is a 6 -- Confer with your
team. Youre extra persuasive,
and word travels. More plan-
ning is a good idea. Put in cor-
rections. Toss unnecessary pa-
pers and junk. Celebrate success
privately. Compromise comes
easier. Begin a fresh dialogue.
cancer (June 21-July 22) -- To-
day is a 5 -- Your work becomes
more fun. Consult a signifcant
other. Get family to help. Invest
in your business. Your insistence
on perfection makes the dif-
ference. Maintain decorum (at
least with customers). Add ad-
venture to the mundane.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) -- Today is
a 5 -- Love is easier to fnd these
days. Show your appreciation.
Be respectful. Youre irresist-
ible. Take notes on what works.
Cleanliness is a good thing. Co-
workers are successful. Shop
carefully, and sign with a four-
ish.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) -- Today
is a 5 -- Home and family take
priority. Get a project under
way. Do it for love, not money.
Seek solid data, and check all
details twice. Stick to logic. Its
a good time to fnd household
bargains.
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) -- Today
is a 6 -- Trust your heart to lead
you, and increase your profts.
Keep track of earnings. Theres
no need to do it the hard way.
Accept assistance and a brilliant
suggestion. You get farther
than expected.
Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) -- To-
day is a 6 -- Prepare your best
argument. Youre the star, and
your words get farther than
expected. Accept suggestions
and great ideas from colleagues
near and far. Share heartfelt
thanks.
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) --
Today is a 6 -- Give in to a bril-
liant idea. Youre irresistible
for a month. Ponder the situ-
ation. Others ask your advice.
The career groove is just right.
You can achieve great rewards.
Education provides access to a
whole new world.
capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) -- To-
day is a 5 -- Allow yourself more
quiet time to follow a passion.
Some of your theories succeed.
Finish an old job. Build security
by having more than you show.
Revel in the abundance. Be a
budgetarian.
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) -- To-
day is a 5 -- Group activities
go well over the next month.
Create a buzz. Push your own
agenda. Offer encouragement.
Share adventure stories. Make a
private presentation. Youll fnd
the numbers fascinating. Youre
developing expertise. Respect-
fully spread your wings.
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) -- To-
day is a 5 -- Get social this
month. Go out and play! Get
your chores done frst. Nurture
your strongest connections.
More income becomes available
... its a deciding factor. Negoti-
ate openly. Youre very quick
now. Push past old barriers.
Surround Yourself
with Caring
For over 11 years, weve provided seniors
with the care they need, surrounded by all
the comforts of their own private apartments.
You can start to enjoy the carefree lifestyle
and peace of mind you deserve.
State Licensed
235 Pearl St., Cadillac
Call Sharease Beaudet, Administrator
for more information (231) 775-5300
www.rlmgmt.com
Community
c4 cadillac news | TrusTed. local. connecTed 775-NEWS (6397) www.cadillacnews.com | monday, ocTober 7, 2013
In Brief
Military news
Air Force Airman Sa-
mantha M. Hall gradu-
ated from basic military
training at Joint Base San
Antonio-Lackland, San An-
tonio, Texas.
The airman
completed
an intensive,
eight-week
program
that included
training in
military dis-
cipline and
studies, Air Force core val-
ues, physical ftness, and
basic warfare principles
and skills.
Airmen who complete
basic training earn four
credits toward an associate
in applied science degree
through the Community
College of the Air Force.
Hall is the daughter of
Dale Hall of LeRoy.
She is a 2012 graduate of
Pine River High School,
LeRoy.
Air Force Airman Steven
L. Vassello graduated from
basic military training at
Joint Base San Antonio-
Lackland, San Antonio,
Texas.
The airman
completed
an intensive,
eight-week
program
that included
training in
military dis-
cipline and
studies, Air Force core val-
ues, physical ftness, and
basic warfare principles
and skills.
Airmen who complete
basic training earn four
credits toward an associate
in applied science degree
through the Community
College of the Air Force.
Vassello is the son of Mi-
chelle Vassello of Planta-
tion, Fla., and grandson of
Louis Fitz of Irons.
Placemaking grants
awarded for projects in
Missaukee, Wexford
Projects in Missaukee
County and Mesick are
benefting from grants
that will help communities
with their Placemaking
efforts.
The Missaukee Conser-
vation District is receiving
$5,000 for enhancements
to the N.E.W. Missaukee
Fitness Trail and Native
Gardens, including sig-
nage, a kiosk and a covered
picnic area. Mesick will
receive $5,000 for a free
movie night program and
improvements at the vil-
lage recreation park.
Blood drive results
The two-day Red Cross
blood drive in August was
a success. It resulted in 157
productive units. There
were also 7 double red do-
nations (14 units).
The next regularly
scheduled blood drive will
be held at Temple Hill
Church in Cadillac on Oct.
7 and 8. To make an ap-
pointment, call 1-800-RED-
CROSS.
Habitat for Humanity
receives grant
CADILLAC Wexford Hab-
itat for Humanity has re-
ceived a $1,250 grant from
the Great Lakes Energy
People Fund.
The grant will be used
to upgrade the lighting in
Wexford Habitats offices
and re-store with higher
quality and more energy
efficient lighting. The
new lighting fixtures and
fluorescent bulbs will re-
duce energy costs by ap-
proximately 50 percent.
The savings will assist
Habitat in their construc-
tion of new homes for
qualified families.
Hall
Vassello

A face only a pumpkin could love
Photo courtesy of Frank Pogorzelski, of Wellston
Baker announces part-
time deans list
CADILLAC Baker College
has announced its part-
time deans list for sum-
mer 2013.
Cadillac
Tiffany Adams
Jeanette Baumgras
Cameron Berwald
Joseph Cornell
Shonda Delmage
Joseph Eisele
Kristine Goodwin
Christopher Granger
Hillary Hogberg
Jacklyn Holman
John Lehr
Erica Longstreet
Shane McGowan
Christopher McMillan
Nicole Niederquell
Jamie Nowland
Robert Penix
Tiffany Robinson
Toni Rose
Rebecca Rucinski
Jennifer Russeau
Allison Smith
Allyson Smith
Matthew Stephan
Michael Stilson
Audrey Suchecki
Jessica Townsend
Jennifer Tyler
Canada Vandervelde
Alisha Weidenfeller
Delana Wiggins
Chase
Chad Marr
Tina Miller
Stacey Ringler
Evart
Casey Keysor
Daniel Mowat
Kathleen Smith
Ashley Tea Hui
Falmouth
Lerita Hamel
Dianna Medendorp
Harrietta
John Fick
Anastasia Merritt
Hersey
Carol Burr
Emily Campbell
Samantha Miller
Lake City
Rhonda Bond
Della Brainerd
Patience Brown
Adam Fall
Jeremy Houser
Kimberly Lang
Cody Letts
Amanda Looney
Julie Mosher
Gerry Ray
Kaitlyn Root
Jeannie Saylor
Patricia Vasser
LeRoy
Rebecca Grody
Trudy Lewis
Matthew Sherman
Jennifer Wanstead
Luther
Angela Merkle
Manton
Virginia Berg
Julianne Gerhard
Nathan Hartson
Mary Heady
Danielle Lutke
Alyssa Richardson
Cassandra Wilson
Marion
Stephanie Bostian
Robin Coombs
Christopher Fruhling
McBain
Glenda Brintnell
Derek Fauble
Loren Quist
Jeremiah Shepler
Mesick
Mariah Grzybowski
Hannah Sharp
Jenifer Wekwert
Reed City
Macie Battle
Courtney Causey
Troy Goloversic
Emily Johnson
Shelley Stinson
Rebecca Webster
Leanne Younger
Sears
Zuleika Carey
Tustin
Lisa Clothier
Laurie Michaels
Brittney Norman
Ashlee Swales
Baker announces full-
time deans list
CADILLAC Baker College
has announced its full-
time Deans List for sum-
mer 2013.
Cadillac
Kisan Barot
Roger Bartlett
Christine Crawford
Tiffany Cruson
Kristipher Daniel
Randy Harris
Nicole Hough
Kenneth Lee
Joseph Misukaitis
Coty Moore
Rebecca Mys
Krystyne Paca
Aspen Rose
Jeremiah Stephenson
Vincent Vollmar
David Warner
John Williams
Tonya Wingrove
Evart
Jesse Hyden
Hersey
Andrew Spalo
Lake City
Ami Beebe
Casey Gill
Robert Mosher
Kim Whipple
Luther
Emily Choponis
Daniel Reid
Manton
Michelle Marshall
Marion
Amanda Chrispell
McBain
Tawnya Ebels
Reed City
Chantelle Kailing
Sarah Maneke
Baker announces
presidents list
CADILLAC Baker College
has announced its presi-
dents list for summer
2013.
Cadillac
Michael Fisk
Jason Green
Joshua Houseman
Tracy Lehr
Jason Olmstead
Preston Pike
Joseph Sicoli
Mark Tykwinski
Kendra Wagenschutz
Ryan Weston
Lake City
Mary Benac
Jason Davis
Manton
Jerry Bard
Kim Freese
Marion
Brayden Eychner
Mesick
David Ball
Todd Evens
School News

courTesy phoTo
Dylan Boonstra, ninth grade;
Meghan Bronkema, 10th grade;
Jordan Vanderhoef, 11th grade;
Allison DeRuiter, 12th grade
McBain
October
students
of the
month
DEADLINES
4:00 PM Monday-Thursday, 2:30 PM Friday
Northern Michigan News: 9:00 AM Friday
EMAIL & FAX DEADLINES
3:00 PM Monday-Thursday, 2:00 PM Friday
Northern Michigan News: 5:00 PM Thursday
POLICIES
Charges of private party classieds are accepted by current
subscribers and others with an account in good standing only.
Cancellation: Ads may be canceled without additional fee,
however no refunds will be made after deadline of rst publication.
Standards Of Acceptance: All ads accepted subject to publisher
approval with right of cancellation reserved.
Errors: Advertisers should check their classied the rst day of
publication. Adjustment for errors is limited to the cost of the portion
of the ad in which the error occurred in the rst days insertion.
Classieds
CADILLAC NEWS
PHONE: 231-775-6565
TOLL FREE: 1-888-304-6565
FAX: (231) 775-8790
E-MAIL: customerservice@cadillacnews.com
www.cadillacnews.com/classieds/
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MON-FRI: 8AM-5:30PM SAT: 8-10AM
MONDAY, OCTOBER 7, 2013 | cadillacnews.com CALL (231) 775-6565 TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED CADILLAC NEWS | TRUSTED. LOCAL. CONNECTED D1
Call Ashley or Brittany, your Classied Specialist today at 231-775-6565 to take advantage of this deal and reach over 80,000 readers.
$15 additional for photo for 30 days.
Restrictions: Special must be mentioned at the time of placing ad. No refund after rst day of
publication. Copy changes limited after rst day of publication. 10 line base, $2.00 each additional line.
Limited to one item per ad. Cannot be used in combination with any other offer. Some restrictions apply.
Ad must begin publishing by October 31st, 2013. 30 insertions include 4 insertions into the Northern
Michigan News, 26 in the Cadillac News and 30 days online at: www.cadillacnews.com.
ANYTHING
WITH WHEELS
from skateboards to autos
PRIVATE PARTY LINER SPECIAL
30 DAYS FOR $35!
Due to the overwhelming response we had we are
extending the Anything with Wheels special another month.
COMMERCIAL LINER SPECIAL
Rentals
2 weeks for $75
Restrictions: Special must be mentioned at the time of placing an ad. Four line base, $2 each additional line. One rental property per ad. 12 insertions in the Cadillac News with 2 insertions in the Northern Michigan News as well as running online everyday it is in the paper. Special can not be used with any other offer. Ad must be published by October 31st, 2013. No refunds for early cancellations.
TIRE CENTER
Cadillac
South U.S.-131 Cadillac 231-775-7382
OPEN: Mon.-Fri. 7:30 am-5:30 pm, Sat. 8 am-1 pm
ASK ABOUT A BRIDGESTONE CREDIT CARD
6 MONTH PROMOTIONAL PAYMENT PLAN
(with approved credit)
No
Surprises!
ALL TIRE
PRICES
INCLUDE
MOUNTING
AND
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QUALITY DOESNT NEED TO BE EXPENSIVE!
Is Your Car Ready To
RE-TIRE
For Winter?
Brakes Shocks Struts
Wheels Alignments
Our First Price Is
Your Best Price...
www.cadillactirecenter.com
Highway and off-road traction
All-terrain traction
Two steel belts provide
protection and durability
Passenger car-like ride
50,000 miles treadwear limited
warranty (P-Metric sizes only)
Destination

A/T
SUV/Light Truck Radial
SAVE ON ALL 4!
Silica improves traction in wet
conditions
Tread design resists hydroplaning
Tuned for a comfortable and quiet ride
PRECISION

TOURING
TOURING
CALL OR STOP
FOR COMPETITIVE
OUT-THE-DOOR PRICES
ANNOUNCEMENT
Announcements
104
Place your Classified where it
Works! With the Cadillac News
your message will reach area
subscribers, non-subscribers
and be available for viewing on-
line 24/7 at
www.cadillacnews.com.
Youll get results.
Call (231) 775-6565 today.
Classifieds that Work
www.cadillacnews.com
Lost & Found
105
LOST: 1952 class ring lost in Ca-
dillac area. Please call (231)775-
0733.
LOST: 2 Springer Spaniels, both
males. Buster Brown, liver and
white with black training collar and
Colby Jack, black and white with
lime green training collar. Both
went missing Sep. 26th North of
Lake City from Phelps Rd. They
can travel, I have found them as
far as 10 miles away. They may
not come to you, but they will
hang out some where and bark at
you if they have lost there direc-
tion. Call (231)944-4587 any time
of day, I really miss my best
friends. Reward!
LOST: Black cat, near the corner
of S 41 Rd. (Hector) and E 44 Rd.
around September 30th, reward.
Call (231)775-4810.
LOST: Brittany Spaniel, no
collar, red/white, young male
and older brown/white female,
both have short tails, last
seen morning of October 2,
2013 from E. 32 and 29 Rd.
Call (810)543-0733 or
(231)878-3183 or notify Wex-
ford Co. Animal Control.
LOST: McBain area, 11 month
old, Cchocolate Lab, male, green
collar and 4 month old German
Shorthair, female, no collar
black/brown. Call (231)846-4252
or (231)233-3859.
LOST: White/grey (neutered) Ti-
ger striped cat on Cecil Rd., by
Walmart, REWARD! Call
(231)468-2540.
Freebies
107
FREE: 1 Year old female cat, out-
side. Call (231)829-3637.
FREE: 5 Kittens, 8 weeks old
looking for a forever home. Call
(231)829-3637.
FREE: 55 Gallon plastic barrels
and wood pallets. J & D Marine &
Powersports 6600 M-115, Cadillac
West or Call (231)775-7880.
FREE: Fireproof your marriage!
Undoubtedly the best movie on
marriage resoration ever. Empow-
ered Chistian Ministries presents
the DVD Fireproof. No cost or
obligation to reserve this movie -
Call (231)942-5077.
FREE: Kittens need home mother
is a stray cat, friendly, lovable and
cute kittens. Call (231)872-9848.
Located in Dighton. Please take
one or two.
FREE: Kittens, 4 months old, or-
ange and white. Call (231)920-
6591.
Freebies
107
FREE: Kittens, 6 weeks old, litter
trained, 1 tortie female, 1 tuxedo
male, 3 orange/white females, 1
cream/white male. Call (231)884-
3389.
FREE: Scrap construction lumber,
has nails, 2x4, 2x6, 2x10, could be
good for outdoor boiler, Cadillac
West. Call (231)357-0255.
FREE: To good homes,
Husky/Shepherd mix puppies, 6
weeks old, 1st shots. Call
(231)429-1263.
AUTOMOTIVE
Autos For Sale
201
1996 Eagle Vision 3.3L engine
asking, $1,750. Call Craig @
(231)429-1007.
2005 Cadillac SRX 92K miles,
very clean, $11,900. Call
(231)775-7416.
2006 Pontiac Grand Prix, local
trade, with the bullet proof 3800
engine that gets 30+ mpgs,
chrome wheels, power everything,
take over payments of $178/mo.
Call Matt at Classic Chevy today
(231)872-9710
2009 Chevy Cobalt XFE, 4 cyl.,
manual, 36 mpgs and so clean
you can eat off it. Bought here and
serviced here! $0 down and only
$163/mo. Hurry Call Matt @
Classic Chevy (231)872-9710.
2009 Chrysler Sebring, local
trade, 4CY, well equipted, drive it
away for $133/mo. Crossroads
Chevy, Reed City. Call (231)832-
4362.www.crossroadschevy.com.
2010 Chevrolet Aveo LT, manual
trans, solid transportation, pay-
ments as low as $143/mo. Cross-
roads Chevy, Reed City. Call
(231)832-4362.
www.crossroadschevy.com.
2010 Chevrolet Impala, GM Certi-
fied with only 37,000 miles! 5 year
look powertrain transfers to you!
Full size luxury that gets 30
MPGs plus! Only $249/mo. Call
Matt at Classic Chevy today
(231)872-9710.
ITS EASY! Its easy to place
a classified ad in the
Cadillac News. Go online to
www.cadillacnews.com or call
a classified professional at
(231)775-6565 today!
Youll get results.
Classifieds that Work
Autos For Sale
201
2011 Chevrolet Impala 2LT,
39K miles, Red Jewel Metallic,
1 Owner, Heated Leather Seats,
Moon Roof, Automatic, Power:
Dual Power Seats / Windows /
Locks / Mirrors, A/C, Cruise, Cd
Player, Drivers Information Cen-
ter, Remaining 5yr/100k Mile
Power Train Warranty, Alloy
Wheels, Remote Start & Entry,
39K Miles, Red Jewel Metallic,
Sample Payments: $206.73 / 66
Months @ 2.24% APR*
$14,900. Dons Adopt-A-Car
@ (231)775-2583. Please visit
us at
www.DonsAdoptACar.com
2012 Ford Focus SEL Hatch-
back, 29K miles, red, 1 Owner,
Leather Seats, Moon Roof,
Chrome Wheels, Power: Win-
dows/ Locks/ Driver's Power
Seat, A/C, Tilt, Cruise, Cd Play-
er w/ Microsoft, Steering Pod
Controls, Fold Down Rear Seat,
Remaining 5yr/60k Mile Power
Train Warranty & Remaining
Full Factory Warranty, 29k
Miles, Red, Sample Payments:
$206.73 / 66 Months @ 2.24%
APR* $14,900. Dons Adopt-A-
Car @ (231)775-2583. Please
visit us at
www.DonsAdoptACar.com
2013 Chevrolet Spark LT, auto,
sharp, low miles, starting at only
$209/mo. Crossroads Chevy,
Reed City. Call (231)832-4362.
www.crossroadschevy.com.
GRANDMAS SOUTHERN SE-
DAN! This 2000 Buick LeSabre is
looking for a new home! Great
shape inside and out! No Rust!
Full power equipment, 3800 V6
engine (hard to find!), and only
125K! Priced to sell at $5,400!
Call Dave @ Classic (231)878-
9737 Today!
I REALLY NEED YOUR HELP!
My boss said this great 2006
Chrysler 300 sedan has been here
to long and must go! I am looking
for a reliable party to take over
payments of $203/mo. with only
$203 down! This one has full pow-
er equipment, spaciouss interior,
seating for 5 and only 91K miles!
Call Dave @ Classic (231)878-
9737 before its gone!
Autos For Sale
201
Want to drive a 2013 Impala LT
with many extras and super low
miles? For $0 down and
$341.23/mo.? Drive it away today!
Call Adam @ Classic Chevrolet
(231)388-2311.
Trucks
202
1989 Dodge Ram 50 pick-up, less
than 50K miles on rebuilt engine,
rebuilt carb. fall 2012, good tires,
asking $1,450. Call (231)824-9279
or (231)884-6521.
1998 Dodge Ram 1500, reg. cab,
4X4, runs and drives, $2,000 out
the door, MUSTGO! Crossroads
Chevy, Reed City. Call (231)832-
4362.www.crossroadschevy.com.
2002 Chevrolet S-10 LS, 2.2,
4cyl., 2 wheel drive, standard cab,
step side, air, crusie, tonneau cov-
er & bed liner, only 132K, $5,995
+ fees or $199/mo. to qualified
buyers. Call Dale Eising @ Clas-
sic Chevrolet (231)839-7231.
GEAR UP FOR WINTER WITH A
NICE 4X4! I am looking for a relai-
ble party to take over payments on
a 2008 Siverado LT ext. cab w2ith
only 67K miles! 4x4, 5.3L, V8, full
power, black ext. and black int.,
only $337/mo. with $337 down!
Call Dave @ Classic (231)878-
9737 right away!
Truck Season- 2011 Chevrolet
Silverado ext. cab, 35K miles,
power windows/locks, tow pack-
age, local trade-in, $0 down,
$389/mo. Call Dale Eising
(231)839-7231.
SUVS
203
2001 Ford Explorer Sport 4X4,
130K miles, lots of extras, $2,800
or best offer. Call (231)429-3017.
2004 white Dodge Durango, Hemi
engine, runs great, clean leather
interior, moon roof, premium
sound, tow package, almost
175,000 miles, KBB $6,800 in
good condition, asking $4,500.
Call (231)388-3355.
2005 Envoy XLT, 4WD, 143K
miles, loaded, $8,000. Call
(231)920-0025.
SUVS
203
2009 Hummer H3, 4X4, 53K
miles, White, 1 Owner, 3.7L 5
CYL, Automatic, Power: Win-
dows, Locks, Mirrors, Driver's
Seat, A/C, Cruise, Tilt, CD Play-
er, Alloy Wheels, New Tires,
Fold Down Rear Seat, Remain-
ing 5YR/100K Mile Power Train
Warranty, 53K Miles, White,
Sample Payments: $238.10 / 72
Months @ 2.24% APR*
$18,900. Dons Adopt-A-Car
@ (231)775-2583. Please visit
us at
www.DonsAdoptACar.com
2010 Jeep Wrangler Sport Unlim-
ited, 4dr, 4x4, towing package, lo-
cal trade-in and ready for the long
cold winter, WONT LAST @
$316.81/mo. Call Adam @ Clas-
sic Chevrolet (231)388-2311.
2012 Chevrolet Equinox LS
32mpg hwy, 30K one owner, local
trade-in, real clean, $0 down and
$338/mo. Call Dale Eising
(231)839-7231.
SUVS
203
2011 Chevrolet Traverse LS,
FWD, 26K miles, Charcoal Met-
allic, Remaining 5yr/100k Mile
Power train Warranty, 8 Pas-
senger Seating, 24mpg High-
way, Power: WIndows/ Locks/
Mirrors, A/C, Cruise, Rear Heat
& A/C, Cd Player, Fold Down
Rear Seat, Luggage Rack, Re-
mote Entry, Sample Payments:
$250.70 / 72 Mos. @ 2.24%
APR*,$19,900. Dons Adopt-A-
Car @ (231)775-2583. Please
visit us at
www.DonsAdoptACar.com
2012 Chevrolet Captiva Sport
1LT, FWD, 50K miles, Blue,
Clean Car Fax, Polished Alloy
Wheels, V6, Power: Drivers
Seat/ Windows/ Locks/ Mirrors,
A/C, Cruise, Cd Player, Drivers
Information Center, Fold Down
Rear Seat, Remaining 5yr/100k
Mile Power Train Warranty,
Sample Payments: $228.93 / 66
Mos. @ 2.24% APR* $16,500.
Dons Adopt-A-Car @
(231)775-2583. Please visit us
at www.DonsAdoptACar.com
D2 CADILLAC NEWS | TRUSTED. LOCAL. CONNECTED CALL (231) 775-6565 TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED cadillacnews.com | MONDAY, OCTOBER 7, 2013
MEDICAL:
CANADA DRUG CENTER IS
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affordable medications. Our
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you with savings of up to 75
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tion needs. Call today 1-800-
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your rst prescription and
free shipping.
MISCELLANEOUS:
THIS CLASSIFIED SPOT
FOR SALE! ADVERTISE your
product or recruit an appli-
cant in more than 100 Michi-
gan newspapers! Only $299/
week. Call this paper of 800-
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ADOPTION:
ADOPT: LOOKING TO ADOPT
ANOTHER little miracle, giv-
ing our daughter a sibling/
best friend and completing
our family. Contact Robin
and Neil: 866-303-0668,
www.rnladopt.info
BUSINESS OPPORTUNI-
TIES:
ATTN: COMPUTER WORK.
WORK FROM anywhere
24/7. Up to $1,500 Part Time
to $7,500/mo. Full Time.
Training Provided. www.
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FOR SALE:
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mill - Cut lumber any dimen-
sion. In stock ready to ship.
FREE Info/DVD: www.Nor-
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HELP WANTED:
GORDON TRUCKING CDL-A
DRIVERS NEEDED! A better
Carrier. A better Career. Up
to $5,000 Sign-on Bonus!
Starting Pay Up to $.44 cpm.
Michigan Regional Available,
No East Coast. EOE Call 7
days/wk! GordonTrucking.
com 866-950-4382
CENTRAL AND SOUTHERN
MICHIGAN Drivers Wanted!
$1000 Sign On Bonus! Class
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tional Pay ($60-$70K an-
nually) 888-409-6033 visit
online HYPERLINK http://
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NEW PAY PACKAGE TRAC-
TOR OWNER Operators
$1,500 Sign-On Bonus, Tu-
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2,500-3,000 miles/week.
888-888-7996
FLATBED OWNER OPERA-
TORS NEEDED. New Region-
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Owner Operators Now, First
Five Position available cur-
rently. Call 888-888-7996
FOR SALE
SATELLITE TV
ADOPTION
HELP WANTED
MISCELLANEOUS
STEEL BUILDINGS
EDUCATION/TRAINING
MEDICAL
BUSINESS
OPPORTUNITIES
The Cadillac News is accepting
applications for a career-oriented
individual to ll an opening in our
advertising department.
The qualied candidate will
have a strong desire to help
businesses grow through
effective marketing campaigns. Applicants
should possess strong organizational, written and verbal skills and be
able to meet daily deadlines.
Prospects must be able to operate in a fast-paced environment, work
independently, learn quickly and display creativity in problem solving.
This position requires self-starters who are able to work efciently
without direct supervision and offers paid vacation, health & life
insurance, 401k plan, and a family friendly environment.
Please send cover letter and resume with references to:
Pat Sorger
Cadillac News
P.O. Box 640, Cadillac, MI 49601
or email psorger@cadillacnews.com
No phone calls please.
Outside
Advertising
Sales
The Cadillac News is seeking a Web Development Assistant to
join our CN Digital Solutions staff. We are looking for a proactive,
organized problem solver that would be comfortable functioning
in a fast-paced, dynamic team environment. Personal strengths
should include trouble-shooting and analytical processing, great
communication, desire to learn new technologies and gain new
skills, strong work ethic and being a team player that can work
independently.

Responsibilities for this position would include but would not
be limited to:
Support, development and maintenance of internal and
external websites and/or web based applications.
Converting client site mocks into html/css.
Testing functionalities of web applications/websites
between various Internet browsers.
Minor IT support. (This is not a primary function.)

Necessary requirements for the position would be 1 year
minimum PHP experience as well as HTML5/CSS experience.
Candidate must be able to hand code using HTML/CSS and
will be required to submit samples of both PHP and HTML/
CSS work. Preferred but not required qualications/experience
would be MySQL, JavaScript, JQuery/AJAX, web application
development and an understanding of relational database design
and development. We are willing to invest in training if you are
the right person and have at least the necessary requirements.

If you are a rock star looking for a fun, fast paced, family
oriented place to work and this sounds like you, please email
resume to ceastway@cadillacnews.com

No phone calls please.
Web Development Assistant
Vans
204
1999 Ford Windstar, very good
condiiton inside and out, power
windows/doors/locks, CD/TAPE,
cold A/C and heat works, K&N air
filter, runs and drives great, every-
thing works, new tires, mag
wheels, 4 door, 7 passenger, real-
ly nice van, $2,700 or best offer.
Call (231)775-1198.
2005 Pontiac Montana SV6, one
owner, silver, loadded, used in
summers, great condition, 86K
miles, $10,000, a definite MUST
SEE. Call (231)229-4288.
2010 Chrysler Town & Country
Touring van, 3.8, V6, only 51Km
Stow-n-Go, power door, $0 down,
$319/mo. Call Dale Eising
(231)839-7231.
Trailers
206
5 X 8 Utility trailer, 24 removable
side walls and tailgate, good con-
dition, $1,200. Call (231)775-
7093.
Auto Parts &
Accessories
208
4 Cylinder motor for a 1999
Ford Ranger, has 100,000 miles
on it, $250 or open for trades.
Call Dan (231)887-0326.
Large Assortment Of Used
And New 14 & 15 Inch Tires
Available! Stop In Today!
Paynes Tire 605 N Mitchell
Call (231)775-2361.
EMPLOYMENT
General Help Wanted
301
CDL Drivers needed.
Local-Regional. $1,000 Sign-
On Bonus + Benefits.
Call (231)832-2267.
Experienced Christmas Tree
workers wanted. Ready to work
an all weather job, chainsaw expe-
rience required. Must have own
transportation. Call (231)824-
4180.
Full time night manager position
on a McBain area dairy farm.
Hours would be 5pm to 5am. Must
be able to work weekends. Experi-
ence is required. Send resumes to
P.O. Box 2, McBain, MI 49657.
Housekeeper
On-Call housekeeping position
available for our Cadillac office.
Evening work. Commercial experi-
ence preferred. EOE. Send re-
sume and letter of interest to:
Human Resources
1615 Michigan Ave.
Baldwin, MI 49304
Fax: (231)745-3690
Local trucking company seeking
motivated CDL-A drivers, mini-
mum of 3 years experience, com-
petitive wages and benefit pack-
ages, full and part time available.
Send resumes to Joshwa Salis-
bury, Inc. 12547 20 Mile Rd., Tus-
tin MI 49688.
Patient Care Specialist
Full-time position for our Cadillac
medical facility. Responsibilities
will include taking of vital signs,
immunizations, preparing patient
exam rooms and assisting provid-
ers with various procedures. Pre-
vious medical experience along
with excellent communication
skills is a plus. Competitive wage
and benefits. EOE. Send resume
and letter of interest to:
Human Resources
Baldwin Family Health Care
1615 Michigan Ave.
Baldwin, MI 49304
Fax: 231-745-3690
SCHOOL BUS DRIVER
Well train you to be the best
School Bus Driver for Regular Ed-
ucation and Special Needs Stu-
dents. $12.75/hr after 90 days,
split shift required, benefits partial-
ly paid with seniority, CDL re-
quired or will train. Must have ex-
cellent driving history, must pass
background check and remain
drug free. We look forward to
meeting you in person Mon-Fri at
Dean Transportation, 1004 Lee-
son Ave, Cadillac, MI 49601, or
apply online at:
www.deantransportation.com/jobs
The Mecosta-Osceloa
Intermediate School District
is accepting applications for a
Special Education Para-educa-
tor and a Culinary Arts para-ed-
ucator. Complete postings are
available at www.moisc.org. In-
terested applicants must submit
a letter of application, resume,
transcripts and references to:
Mark R. Klumpp, Assistant Su-
perintendent, Mecosta-Osceloa
Intermediate School District,
15760 190th Avenue, Big Rap-
ids, MI 49307.
General Help Wanted
301
The Wexford-Missaukee College
Access Network is accepting ap-
plications for a College and Ca-
reer Advisor (deadline October 18,
2013). Complete posting and ap-
plication requirements are availa-
ble at
http://www.micollegeaccess.org/re
sources/job-board
The Wexford-Missaukee Inter-
mediate School District is accept-
ing applications for Business Serv-
ices Coordinator (deadline Octo-
ber 11, 2013). Complete posting
and application requirements are
available at www.wmisd.org
Work in a fun-filled atmos-
phere and make more doing
it! We are seeking dependa-
ble, hard workers for availa-
ble cooks, prep-cooks, bar-
tenders and wait staff posi-
tions. Above average wages
to individuals who are availa-
ble to work all shifts including
weekends. Apply in person
only, Cadillac Party Lounge,
Downtown Cadillac.
Medical (Health Care)
304
Curry House Continuum of
Care Community is seeking a
qualified LPN or RN to work ev-
ery other weekend and be on
call one week per month. Poten-
tial for more hours. Must have a
passion for helping Seniors.
Come join our team of dedicat-
ed staff members. Complete an
application at Curry House,
5858 S. 47 Mile Rd. (off from M-
55 East), Cadillac, MI. Attn: HR
Department. No phone calls
please. Curry House is an
equal opportunity employer.
Part Time
309
Health Partners now hiring Home
Health Aides in the Cadillac area!
Experience with TBI preferred.
Please apply online at
www.healthpartnersinc.com or call
(888)834-2851 to request an ap-
plication.
SERVICES
MERCHANDISE
Farm Equip., Supplies
508
1943 John Deere B, $1,950.
Voelker John Deere, Lake City,
(231)839-8660.
1988 International dump truck, L-
10 Cummins engine, 270 HP,
large gram & silage box, $10,000.
Call (231)825-2724.
Antique Bowens tractor, with
mower deck plow, $700. Call
(419)277-2184, located near M-37
& M-55.
Case 530, diesel, w/loader,
$4,900. Voelker John Deere,
Lake City, (231)839-8660.
International Harvester M,
$2,000. Voelker John Deere,
Lake City, (231)839-8660.
International Harvester M, re-
stored, $4,000. Voelker John
Deere, Lake City, (231)839-8660.
International Harvester M, re-
stored, $4,000. Voelker John
Deere, Lake City, (231)839-8660.
John Deere 4310, 395hr, FWD,
loader, hydro, $15,000. Voelker
John Deere, Lake City, (231)839-
8660.
John Deere 650, 3pt, PTO, die-
sel, $4,500. Voelker John Deere,
Lake City, (231)839-8660.
Farm Equip., Supplies
508
John Deere 750, cab, FWD, load-
er, power steering, $8,500. Voelk-
er John Deere, Lake City,
(231)839-8660.
John Deere 850, 2wh, cab, 60
mid mower, $5,900. Voelker
John Deere, Lake City, (231)839-
8660.
John Deere 955, 595hr, FWD,
loader, hydro, turf, $8,500. Voelk-
er John Deere, Lake City,
(231)839-8660.
Kubota B6000, 3pt, PTO, FWD,
$3,500. Voelker John Deere,
Lake City, (231)839-8660.
Long, 60HP, 1980, 3pt, dsl,
$3,900. Voelker John Deere,
Lake City, (231)839-8660.
Massesy Ferguson 135, gas,
w/loader, $5,000. Voelker John
Deere, Lake City, (231)839-8660.
Farm & Dairy Products
509
Ear Corn - $5 a bushel in bulk, $5
a bag or $150 for a pick-up load.
Call (231)878-0509.
Good Things to Eat
512
Apples for sale: Wolf River,
Northern Spy, and several others
Also deer apples. Open Mon- Fri.
2pm - 6pm, Sat. 10am -6pm, Sun.
call ahead (231)775-0846. 5270
S. LaChance Rd., Lake City.
Cadillac Farmers Market
Lake St. N. of Public Library
Tues. & Fri. 8am-4:30pm
Fall veggies, assorted fruits,
apples, pumpkins & more.
Now accepting bridge cards!
Double up food bucks!
Household Goods
513
King Size Pillow Top Mattress
set, new with frame, and still in
plastic. List price $999 will sac-
rifice $375. Call (231)824-9419.
Queen Size Pillow Top Mat-
tress set, new, still in plastic
with frame. List price $699 will
sacrifice $235. (231)824-9419.
Firewood & Timber
517
Firewood - Quality Oak
Cut, split, delivered, $54.50/Rick
Seasoned $65/Rick, Visa, DHS
& Energy drafts accepted.
(231)266-5102
CUT & SPLIT
$60 per face cord dry, cut, split
+ delivery, 4.5 cord minimum
8 FOOT WOOD
$85 per cord green + delivery
10 cord minimum
Call (231) 824-6655
Mixed hardwood firewood, 8 ft
lengths $85 per cord. Cut, split,
deliv. - $55 per cord. Accepting
DHS and energy drafts. Buying
standing timber. Call (231)878-
0582.
Paying TOP PRICES! Looking
for trees to cut, hardwood, soft
wood & Red Pine, 5 acre mini-
mum. Call Jim (231)463-0363.
Snowblowers &
Snowplows
521
Ariens snow blower, 9 HP, used
1 winter, practically brand new, in-
cludes manual, $900 or best offer.
Call (231)775-0170, leave mes-
sage.
Merchandise Wanted
523
Collector buying military items
Civil War thru Vietnam only, all
countries, uniforms, helmets,
swords, rifles, pistols & medals,
Call (231)775-2756, Cadillac.
Merchandise Wanted
523
WANTED: 5 1/2 - 6 ft. tractor
loader bucket. Call (231)829-3372
or text (231)884-9827.
WANTED: Affordable, working
metal detector. Please call Jeff,
(231)429-7631.
Pets & Supplies
526
Basic Obedience & Therapy
dog class, starting Tuesday,
Oct. 8th at Cooley School,
6:30-7:30pm $95 for 8 weeks.
Call Magnum Kennels
(231)824-6777 for info.
Foster or Forever Home Need-
ed! Temporary home for 2 vetted
kittens, sweet dispositions. For
CARE of Wexford County! Please
Call (231)775-3775, leave mes-
sage.
Very large purebred Great Dane
puppies, male and females, $125,
shots and wormed, ready to go,
both parents on site! Call
(231)667-0797 or (810)748-7799,
leave message.
Wonderland Humane Society
can help with the cost of
spay/neuter surgery for your cat or
dog. (231)920-6405. Like Us On
Facebook!
Merchandise Under
$300
St. John's drop-leaf table with 2
chairs, very good condition, $150.
(231)734-2086.
Victor 1 1/2 traps, in working con-
dition, with chains, double & single
spring, $10. Call (231)709-9755.
Floating mallard duck decoys
with line & weight, used very little,
dozen, $75. Call (231)709-9755.
Wood 6 gun cabinet with glass
door & key lock, has bottom draw-
er, nice condition, $145. Call
(231)709-9755.
Coleman cook stove, double
burner, works with dual gas, folds
up, good shape, $35. Call
(231)709-9755.
Canada Goose decoys shell,
great shape,with carrying sack in-
cluded, dozen, $80. Call (231)709-
9755.
Craftsman jigsaw, works great,
$8. Call (231)942-6296.
Murray snowblower 5 hp 22" cut,
works good, $300 or best offer.
Call (231)779-1861.
Toro push snowblower $80 or
best offer. Call (231)779-1861.
Portable adjustable basketball
hoop with base, good shape, sun-
faded, $60 or best offer. Call
(231)779-1861.
Hallmark Happy Holidays Sled
Carolers, $25 firm. Call (231)779-
1861.
.22 Long rifle ammo for sale, 525
rounds, $80. Call (231)360-4031.
Merchandise Under
$300
Two kids outdoor toys both for
$60 or will sell seperatley. Call
(231)779-1861.
2 Vintage galvanized calf milking
nipple buckets original condition
$50 or best offer for both (need
new nipples). Call (231)408-2159.
They are selling on ebay for $30
each!
6 Bags of Iams dog food that is
6.3 lbs. for senior/senior preimem
protection, $30 for all will sell indi-
vidually. Call(231)878-9267.
Two man fold up and down ice
fishing shanty Is on aluminum
skis, $150 or best offer. Call Reed
City (231)832-1069 any time,
please leave a message if no one
is home.
Two recliners in good shape, one
brown and other is light gray, ask-
ing $50 for both will sell separate-
ly. Call anytime (231)832-1069
Reed City.
Craftsman wood chipper/shred-
der, 8 1/2 HP, very good condi-
tion, $240. Call (231)779-2461.
Wood stove chimney kit, 6" Simp-
son Dura-Vent, through the roof
type, new, still in box,. $125. Call
(231)779-2461.
Ford New Holland snow blower,
42" for a lawn or garden tractor,
includes chains and mounts, very
good condition, $225. Call
(231)779-2461.
Men's leather car length coat 1X -
black, very nice condition, $25.
Call (231)839-0530, please leave
message.
Crystal clear pair of lamps., can
be seen on Craigslist, Lake City,
the pair with no lampshades, so
you can customise them, $10. Call
(231)229-8746.
Tassimo single cup coffee ma-
chine, can buy pods at Meijer and
Walmart, works great, $20. Call
(231)229-8746, Lake City.
Pro Form 825 home gym, great
condition, $100. Call (231)824-
6003.
Merchandise Under
$300
Netgear ATT high speed internet
wireless gateway, model 7550,
new, in box with all paperwork and
connections, switched to Dish Net-
work, $100 or best. Call (231)734-
5259.
Air conditioner, large, GE, $150.
Call (231)878-3442.
Microwave, commercial grade,
works good, $40. Call (231)878-
3442.
Good Year lift, barely used, lift
your snowmobile or lawn mower,
$100. Call (231)878-3442.
Apple iPhone 4 through Straight
Talk, excellent condition, no
scratches, regular price $600, ask-
ing $250 or best offer. Call
(231)429-7906.
Guitar, Spectrum 6 string, great
shape, ready to play, $150 or best
offer. Call (231)743-6760.
Rustic Spiral Staircase, made of
Pine, 8'x 3', good for cabin, tree-
house or deer blind, $50 or best
offer. Call (231)825-2375.
Huffy 18 speed bike, 26" black,
good condition, needs tires, a
great value for $20. Call (231)825-
2375.
10 speed 26" Huffy, black & red,
good condition, needs tires, great
value for $20. Call (231)825-2375.
Box of ladies jeans, designer
names, size 16, like new, 4 pair,
$15. Call (231)825-2375.
Coke machine used in the 1960s.
$50 or best offer. Call (231)734-
2086.
Seat for 1974 Yamaha 750, $50
or best offer. Call (231)734-2086.
Horseshoe set, 4 shoes, 2 posts,
in nylon zip case, $15. Call
(231)878-6366 before 6pm.
Self stick vinyl tiles, parquet wood
pattern ,45 square feet, new in
box, from Home Depot, $20. Call
(231)878-6366 before 6pm.
Corvette collector pictures, sev-
eral, $150 takes them all, will sell
separately. Call (231)779-8114.
MONDAY, OCTOBER 7, 2013 | cadillacnews.com CALL (231) 775-6565 TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED CADILLAC NEWS | TRUSTED. LOCAL. CONNECTED D3
Merchandise Under
$300
Rubbermaid free standing cabi-
net, 2 doors, 3 shelves, 70 high,
30 wide, 16 deep, $25. Call
(231)878-6366 before 6pm.
Homemade bookshelf, sturdy all
3/4 plywood, 48x48, 3 shelves, is
rough but good for garage or
workshop, $20. Call (231)878-
6366 before 6pm.
2 end tables, matching coffee ta-
ble, parquet wood tops, great
shape, $40. Call (231)878-6366
before 6pm.
One gallon of dark brown, Behr
premium plus, exterior, satin en-
amel paint, never opened, $30.
Call (231)645-3637.
Homedics automatic blood pres-
sure monitor, has two cuffs, one
regular and one large adult, brand
new in zip up carrying case, $40.
Call (231)645-3637.
Complete lot of XBox 360 slim
and 11 games, 2 controllers in the
box, $300 or best offer. Call
(231)920-3117, located in Cadil-
lac.
Kenmore 30" electric range with
black ceramic top, self cleaning,
bisque and bakes perfectly, like
new! $250. Call (231)775-6804.
PSE Nova GameSport compound
bow, 35 to 50 pds, draw length
26", excellent condition with all ac-
cessories, $150. Call (231)829-
3587.
PSE Polaris GameSport com-
pound bow, excellent condition, 55
to 70 pds, 29" draw length with all
accessories, $200. Call (231)829-
3587
Thompson Center 50 caliber
Renegade muzzleloader with Tas-
co scope with see-through mounts
with accessories, $300. Call
(231)829-3587.
Winchester Model 1300 feather-
weight pump action 20 gauge, 2
and 3/4" and 3", modified, im-
proved cylinder and full choke.
$300. Call (231)829-3587.
Craftsman power washer 2300
psi, 2gm, 6HP, rarely used, $150.
Call (231)779-8114.
Toro self propelled lawn mower,
good condition, $150. Call
(231)779-8114.
Scotts Broadcaster fertilizer
spreader, $25. Call (231)779-
8114.
20ft., Fiberglass extension lad-
der, $75. Call (231)779-8114.
24" Mongoose mountain bike, 21
speed, excellent condition, 2 years
old, ridden just a few times, asking
$50. Call (231)944-8105.
RECREATIONAL
Cycles, Scooters,
ATVs
602
2006 Yamaha 660 Grizzly, Out-
doorsman Edition, warn winch,
Yamaha windshield, heavy duty
hitch, headlight protector, hand
warmers, treated wood box for
rear rack horn, Moose brand front
side bag, slush deflectors, rear
light above hitch, 4,200 miles,
$4,400. Call (231)825-8018.
WANTED: Snowmobiles, 3 & 4
wheeler ATVs, watercraft, street
bikes, dirt bikes, campers, trailers,
cars, trucks, lawn/garden equip-
ment, golf carts, related equip-
ment for big auction October 19th.
Only cost is a $25 entry fee-no
selling fees. All info at www.snow
mobileauction.com or call
(517)369-1153. Buyers from 7
states and Canada. White Star
Auction, Bronson, Michigan.
Boats & Marines
603
A Piece of Cadillac History.
Algonquin Mahogany wood ca-
noe. 17' Built in the 1950's. In
pristine condition, $2,000. Call
for more history of this canoe
(231)775-0055.
Motor Homes
604
2007 Coachmen Cross Country
Sport Coach, 38 ft. class A diesel
pusher, fully loaded, 31,376 miles,
2 slide outs, 300HP turbo charged
Cummins engine, Allison 6 speed
automatic transmission, Freight
liner chassi, handi-cap lift, new
awning, MUST SELL due to health
reasons. Was $83,500, reduced to
$78,500. For more information or
to look at motor home, stored in
Cadillac please call (573)201-
4126 or (231)775-8396.
Snowmobiles
608
1981 Arctic Cat snowmobile with
sled, $700. Call (419)277-2184,
located near M-37 & M-55.
REAL ESTATE
FOR SALE
Homes For Sale
701
#1 BEST BUY RANCH!!!
3br 2ba kit-din-liv-fam rooms 1
level/1br 1ba kit-din-liv-fit on
lower level/2-cr att/city/fab/159K
PHONE 231-775-1368 NOW!
ADVANCE REALTY
www.advancerealty.com
INVESTMENT PROPERTY for
sale in Manton, reasonably
priced. Please call (231)468-
9026.
Homes For Sale
701
#1 IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY!
Condo! 4br 2-3/4 ba 2-cr att
appliances/vaulted ceiling/nice
kitchen/large deck pond side/114K
CALL 231-775-1368 TODAY!
ADVANCE REALTY
www.advancerealty.com
AFFORDABLE BARGAIN! Cozy
2 bedroom, 1 bath, partially updat-
ed, located close to several lakes
and public recreational land. Good
for starter, cabin, or retirement
home. 4 season recreational area.
Only $22,000. #2872. Call Shirley
@ PRO Realty (231)779-2515.
BARGAIN HUNTERS! 3 bed-
room, Cape Cod, 2 baths, fire-
place, large living room, formal
dining room, full basement, attach-
ed 2 car garage, corner lot. Cen-
tral Cadillac location, needs work.
CASH BUYERS! Only $34,900!
#2876. Call Shirley @ PRO Real-
ty (231)779-2515.
By owner, 211 Olympic Rd.,
Woodward Lake Subdivision, Ca-
dillac. 3 bdrm, 1 1/2 bath, attached
garage on beautiful lot. Remod-
eled top to bottom, includes all
stainless steel appliances,
$87,900. Additional lots available.
Open House September 28th and
29th, 10am-4pm. Call (231)884-
5338.
For sale by owner, 3bdrm, 2ba,
master bedroom, large closets,
1465 sqft., heavily treed 10 acres,
attached 2 car garage, plus 24X26
detached garage for shop, adjoins
1000s of acre national forest off
back line, room for a horse or 2,
$134,500. will consider offers. Call
(231)942-1555.
For Sale By Owner- $56,000
3 bedroom, 1 bath home on 2
country acres in Evart, MI. All up-
dates. Call (248)762-2076 or
(248)762-2075 for more informa-
tion.
Home For Sale By Owner, 15160
Harlan Road, Copemish. 4 bed-
room, 2 bathroom home on 3
acres, 2 car detached garage &
30x40 pole barn w/ electric. Many
updates inside and out. Asking
$154,900. Please contact
(231)342-2797 or (231)499-9009
for more info. Or visit
forsalebyowner.comand enter
Copemish in the search criteria
or email stogner01@gmail.com
LAKE MITCHELL 70 FT FRONT-
AGE! - Cadlillac - $149,900. 3
bedrooms, 1 bath, fireplace, vault-
ed ceiling, 2 car garage, 2 sheds,
great views, dock included, new
cold roof/R36 insulation, low gas
bill, huge deck, on demand hot
water, newer furnace, covered hot
tub, exterior just repainted, new
trim on doors and windows, large
yard, room in drive for 9 cars,
room to build on, MLS LISTING
#21106304. Call Mary Anne Col-
mus (231)357-5218. ERA Great-
er North Properties 3080 W.
13th St., Cadillac.
8 New Homes on Display
E. US 10 Reed City 231-832-4444
www.sphomes.net
Modular Home Sales
ON GOLDEN POND authentic log
cottage on all sports Diamond
Lake. Awesome sunset views!
Stone fireplace, modern kitchen,
lakeside deck, sandy beach. Re-
cent updates include newer roof
furnace, kitchen, windows, water
softener, water heater and well.
Open floor plan. $125,000. #2870.
Call Shirley @ PRO Realty
(231)779-2515.
Rental Income Opportunity
Income properties! #1 Single
family home in Cadillac, rents at
$700 per month, same renters
for 3 1/2 years, will continue,
$82,000. #2 Single family home
in Lake City, rents at $600 per
month currently leased for 12
months, completely remodeled
2012, new furnace, hot water
heater, dry wall and roof,
$90,000. Both properties close
in 30 days or less, land con-
tracts possible with substantial
down payments (231)577-1281.
Your New Home is
Just a Click Away
Customizable search options
to find that perfect home.
Search all area realtor listings
in Wexford, Missaukee and
Roscommon counties.
Go to www.cadillacnews.com
and click on the Local Real
Estate Listings tab to begin!
Land & Lots
704
1 1/2 acres cyclone fenced new
well, septic, electric and pad for 80
ft mobile, Marion/Farwell/Cadillac
area, $11,000 possible land con-
tract. Call (231)350-6782.
Land & Lots
704
2 Acres, Marion area, 1/2 wooded
and 1/2 level with an old well,
$7,000. Call (231)350-6782.
Harmony Hills lots 1 & 2 $20,000
each or both for $35,000 cash, im-
mediate close, land contract pos-
sible with substantial down pay-
ment. Call (231)577-1281.
Mobile Homes for Sale
706
1999 Fairmont 16x72 mobile
home in immaculate condition, 3
bedroom, 2 bath. Property devel-
oped in June 2011, home sits on a
concrete pad, new 12x16 Amish
barn with loft, 10.5 acres with ap-
prox. 1 acre fenced with chain link,
new appliances, 16x10 deck with
new 24x12 roof over in November
2012., new back deck in 2011,
new seamless gutters in May
2013, deer lake also comes with
the property, deer right out your
door, very private but only 15 mi-
nutes to town, $85,000. Reed City,
MI. Call (231)287-3140 or email
jmurray66@embarqmail.com
for photos.
2 bedroom, 1 bath, 65 X 12
mobile, ideal for a small
family/hunters, new roof and
windows, never vacant and well
maintained, must be moved.
Call for details (231)779-9826.
Manufactured Homes
713
HOMESTEAD HOME SALES
Manufactured Homes (231)383-
3023. WOW! 2000 28x60,
$32,900 & 1997 28x66,
$29,800. Free Delivery.
HOMESTEAD HOME SALES
Thompsonville (231)383-3023
1995 16x74, 2 bed, 2 bath, vinyl
siding, shingled roof, Central air,
ceramic tile, laundry, bathroom,
clean, $18,800 delivered.
Land Contract (Financial)
714
Mobile 30K, $4,300 down, option
rent to own, $550 per month, 3
bdrm., 2 full bath, 1,200 sq.ft., all
appliances, carport, remodeled,
decks, sheds, garden, 1/2 acre,
134 Forest Trail, LeRoy, MI
49655., Rose Lk. Forest off 18
Mile Rd. Call (785)375-0636.
REAL ESTATE
FOR RENT
Homes For Rent
802
1 Bdrm cabin, furnished, on a
lake, 6 mo. lease, $475/mo., quiet,
w/garage, + $300 deposit,
Tustin/LeRoy area. Call (269)998-
1477.
Cadillac area, lakefront cottage,
available through April, 2 bdrm
completely furnished, $600/mo. +
utilites, dep., references. Call
(231)775-7907.
Harrietta area. 2 bedroom, 1
bath, 1 car detached garage, elec-
tric washer & dryer, gas heat, re-
cently refurbished. No smokers or
pets. $600 month + utilities. Call
(231) 885-1508
Mobile Homes For
Rent
804
2 bdrm mobile, 1 bath w/ washer
dryer hookup, in country, storage
building, no pets, $375/mo. $375
dep., plus utilities, Bristol/Tustin
area. Lease req. Call (231)829-
3948.
Rooms for Rent
805
$400/month + $100 security, new-
er home, newer subdivision, North
of Cadillac. Call or text (231)920-
0827.
Apartments For Rent
808
1 bedroom, utilities included,
$450/mo. 2 bedroom, utilities in-
cluded, $650/mo. Security deposit.
Manton/Cadillac area. Call Sam
(231)388-1767.
2 & 3 bedroom townhouses with
full basement! Rent is based on
income. Call Cadillac Shores
at (231)775-8509.
TTY 1-800-649-3777
Equal Housing Opportunities.
2 bdrm upsatirs, stove, fridge, all
utilites & garbage included,
$550/mo. + $550/dep., no
pets/smoking, references re-
quired. Call (231)775-0592.
Spacious 3 bedroom apartment,
near downtown Cadillac,
$575/mo., includes water & gas.
Call for appt. (231)878-1628.
SPRINGFIELD FAMILY APTS.
534 N. Michigan in Manton is up-
dating the waiting list for one and
two bedroom units. Rent based on
income with subsidy for most
units. Minimum without subsidy is
$582. Barrier free units in building.
Laundry facilities and play area on
site. Applications at mgr. apt. #42
or call 1(800)225-7982. Managed
by Stratford Group Ltd., 442 W.
Baldwin, Alpena, MI. Equal Hous-
ing Opportunity. TDD #1-800-855-
1155. This institution is an equal
opportunity provider and employ-
er.
Wanted to Rent
810
Looking to rent: 2 Bedroom
house as soon as possible.
McBain/Cadillac/Lake city area,
must allow 2 housebroke loving
Labs, clean, smoke-free, full time
steady employment, house must
be clean, references upon re-
quest. Call (231)884-0116.
SPECIAL SALES
Garage / Yard Sales
October 10th & 11th
Thursday & Friday
8:30am-5:30am
319 Sears St.
From 131- East on US 10 1/4
mile turn South on 220th then
East on Franklin to Sears St.
North 2nd block.
ESTATE SALE: Treadmill, exer-
cise bike, matching sofa and
chair, recliner, washer and dry-
er, 2 bedroom sets, many
household items, acting selling
agents assume no liabilities or
guarantee. Not responsible for
accidents.
BUSINESS BRIEFS
004
2013 Fall Color Tour
Shop Hop, Oct 1-31.
Julie Anns & Cross-
roads Quilt Shops
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Legals
CHARTER TOWNSHIP
OF HARING
NOTICE OF
PUBLIC HEARING
PROPOSED ZONING
AMENDMENT
Notice is hereby given
that the Charter Town-
ship of Haring Planning
Commission will conduct
a public hearing on
Tuesday, October 22,
2013 at 6:00 pm at the
Township Hall, located at
515 Bell Avenue, Cadil-
lac Michigan.
The purpose of the
pub-
lic hearing is to consider
a request by Hewstra,
LLC to rezone property
from the Commercial (C)
to the Industrial (I) dis-
trict. The subject proper-
ty is generally along the
west side of S. 41 Road
just north of E. 34 Road
(Boon Road) and is de-
scribed as:
The South 327 feet of
the East 985 feet of the
N 1/2 of the SE 1/4 of
Legals
the SE 1/4 of Section 20,
T22N, R9W, Haring
Township, Wexford
County, Michigan EX-
CEPT a parcel described
as commencing at the
SE corner of the N 1/2 of
the SE 1/4 of the SE 1/4
of Section 20; thence
North 200 feet to the
point of beginning;
thence North 127 feet;
thence West 465 feet;
thence Southeasterly to
the point of beginning
TOGETHER WITH an
easement for ingress,
egress and utilities over,
across and under the
South 50 feet of the East
200 feet of the N 1/2 of
the SE 1/4 of the SE 1/4
of Section 20, T22N,
R9W, Haring Township,
Wexford County, Michi-
gan
The proposed Zoning
Amendment and Haring
Charter Township Zon-
ing Ordinance are availa-
ble for public inspection
in the office of the Zon-
ing Administrator, 515
Bell Avenue between the
hours of 9:00 am and
1:00 pm, Monday
through Friday, exclud-
ing holidays. Please call
(231) 920-2029 or (231)
775-8822 for further in-
formation. Comments or
questions may also be
emailed to
zoning@twpofharing.org.
The Charter Township of
Haring will provide the
necessary reasonable
auxiliary aids and serv-
ices to individuals with
disabilities at meetings /
hearings upon giving
seven (7) days advance
notice by writing or call-
ing the Township Clerk
at (231) 775-8822 or fax
(231) 775-8830.
Michael Green, Haring
Township Zoning Admin-
istrator
October 7
NOTICE OF
MORTGAGE
FORECLOSURE
AND SALE
THIS FIRM IS A DEBT
COLLECTOR AT-
TEMPTING TO COL-
LECT A DEBT. ANY IN-
FORMATION WE OB-
TAIN WILL BE USED
FOR THAT PURPOSE.
PLEASE CONTACT
OUR OFFICE AT THE
NUMBER BELOW IF
YOU ARE IN ACTIVE
MILITARY DUTY.
Default having been
made in the terms and
conditions of a certain
Mortgage made the 27th
day of August, 2008, by
Elizabeth A. Kolbicz,
Trustee of the Edward J.
Kolbicz Revocable Trust
U/A/D 12/29/78, as
amended, of 107 North
Shore Drive, Cadillac,
Michigan 49601 (as to
Parcels 2 and 3) and
K.F.C.-L.E.T., Inc., a
Michigan corporation, of
Post Office Box 669,
Baraga, Michigan 49908
(as to Parcels 4 and 5)
as Mortgagor, to Guided
Investments LLC, a
Texas limited liability
company, of 1753 Ha-
verford Drive, Allen,
Texas 75013-3054, as
Mortgagee, and record-
ed in the office of the
Register of Deeds for the
County of Wexford, and
State of Michigan, on the
28th day of August,
2008, at Liber 614 of
Mortgages, Page 446,
on which mortgage there
is claimed to be due as
of August 23, 2013, for
principal and interest, the
sum of SIX HUNDRED
Legals
FIVE THOUSAND ONE
HUNDRED EIGHTEEN
AND 98/100 DOLLARS
($605,118.98).
No suit or proceeding
at law or in equity having
been instituted to recov-
er the debt, or any part
of the debt, secured by
said mortgage, and the
power of sale contained
in said mortgage having
become operative by
reason of such default,
Notice is hereby given
that on October 11,
2013, at 10:00 a.m., in
the forenoon at Cadillac,
Michigan, that being the
place for holding the Cir-
cuit Court for the County
of Wexford, there will be
offered for sale and sold
to the highest bidder, at
public sale, for the pur-
pose of satisfying the
amounts due and unpaid
upon said mortgage, with
interest thereon at twelve
(12%) percent per an-
num 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 neces-
sary to protect its interest
in the premises.
Said premises are de-
scribed as follows:
Parcel 2: The West 55
feet of Lot 4, Block 70,
G.A. Mitchell's Plat of the
Southwest 1/4, accord-
ing to the plat recorded
in Liber 1 of plats at
page 11, City of Cadillac,
Wexford County, Michi-
gan. Section 3, T21N,
R9W. Tax ID#: 10-083-
00-048-00
Parcel 3: The East 45
feet of the West 100 feet
of Lot 4, Block 70, G.A.
Mitchell's Plat of the
Southwest 1/4, accord-
ing to the plat recorded
in Liber 1 of plats at
page 11, City of Cadillac,
Wexford County, Michi-
gan. Section 3, T21N,
R9W. Tax ID#: 10-083-
00-049-00
Parcel 4: The East 50
feet of the West 150 feet
of Lot 4, Block 70, G.A.
Mitchell's Plat of the
Southwest 1/4, accord-
ing to the plat recorded
in Liber 1 of plats at
page 11, City of Cadillac,
Wexford County, Michi-
gan. Section 3, T21N,
R9W. Tax ID#: 10-083-
00-050-00
Parcel 5: The East 50
feet of the West 200 feet
of Lot 4, G.A. Mitchell's
Plat of the Southwest
1/4, according to the
plat recorded in Liber 1
of plats at page 11, City
of Cadillac, Wexford
County, Michigan. Sec-
tion 3, T21N, R9W. Tax
ID#: 10-083-00-051-00
The redemption period
shall be six (6) months
from the date of such
sale, unless determined
abandoned in accord-
ance with MCLA
600.3241a, in which
case the redemption pe-
riod shall be 30 days
from the date of such
sale or abandonment if
abandonment occurs af-
ter sale.
McCURDY, WOTILA &
PORTEOUS, Professio-
nal Corporation
Dated: September 4,
2013
By: Michael A. Figliome-
ni (P36206), Attorneys
for Guided Investments
LLC, 120 West Harris
Street, Cadillac, Michi-
gan 49601, (231) 775-
1391
September 9, 16, 23, 30,
October 7
D4 CADILLAC NEWS | TRUSTED. LOCAL. CONNECTED CALL (231) 775-6565 TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED cadillacnews.com | MONDAY, OCTOBER 7, 2013
Your Guide to Services in Wexford, Missaukee, Osceola and Lake Counties
JEFFS LAWN CARE
ALL YEAR CLEAN UPS
Shrub & Tree Trimming/Removal
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Clean outs of houses & garages
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MARKETING SOLUTIONS
(231)884-1663
Marketing Materials
Office Services
BUILDING SERVICES
Bill's Handyman
Service
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Small Jobs Welcome
Licensed, Insured
(231) 775-0388
Bob Sturdavant
Builder & Electrician
Licensed/Insured
New Home
Construction, Additions,
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Roofing, Window &
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Decks, & Electrical
Free Estimate!!!
Call (231)510-5090
Commercial/Residential
Ed Mendez
Specializing in Masonry

Basements Crawlspaces
Driveways & Sidewalks
Block & Brick Work
Footings Chimneys
Any Masonry Repairs
Insured
Home: (231)775-7409
Cell: (231)429-4325
Lon Reddy Builders
25 Years in Business
Licensed & Insured
New Construction
Remodeling
Custom Tile Work
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Additions
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231-775-4626
lonreddybuilders.com
POLE
BUILDINGS
Labor, Materials & 2 Doors
24x32x8 - $7,350
24x40x8 - $8,350
30x40x10 - $9,850
We Also Do Concrete
Call John
Romine Builders
(231)885-1813
Specializing in
Pole Barns
Remodeling
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6397 20 Mile Road
Marion, MI
(231)743-6537
Fax (231)743-2090
Visit us on the web
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Ad in Yellowbook page 69C
Stump
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Tree Removal & Trimming
(231) 775 - 0000
Dale Brinks
LAWN CARE
Brinks Landscaping
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James & Melody Brinks
Professional Work at a Price
You Can Afford!
Specializing in:
Commercial &
Residential Snow Plowing
& Mowing
Spring & Fall Cleanup Top
Soil Work Landscaping &
Lighting Ponds Irrigation
Paver Walk Ways and
Patios Retainer Walls
(231)775-1058
Cell (231)846-1908
PAINTING
Kens Painting &
Power Washing
Cleaning, Sealing & Staining
of Decks, Wood
Siding & Log Homes
Cleaning Vinyl & ALL Other
Types of Siding
Power Washing of Concrete,
Driveways & Sidewalks
Painting of Interior & Exterior
Areas.
For a FREE Estimate
Call Ken Lizotte
(231)775-3658
REPAIR SERVICES
Clock Repair Now at
Wexford Jewelers
801 N. Mitchell
New England
Clock Shop
(231)947-8234
Factory Authorized
Service Center for All
Major Brands
New or Antique
We Do House Calls
HEATING/PLUMBING
*Cadillac Residents*
Any plumbing service available
Water & Drain Experts
Drain Cleaning
Water and Sewer Main Repair and
Replacement
Camera Work Available
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Licensed Master Plumber
A Booth Plumbing
& Heating Service
(231)775-6378
Affordable & Quality Guaranteed!
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Support Your Local Businesses
DRYWALL
Miller
Drywall
Priming &
Finish
Painting
Inside or Out
(231)768-4992
TREE SERVICE
AFFORDABLE
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(231)NO-STUMP
(231)667-8867
We will beat any competitors
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EXCAVATING
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Licensed & Insured
Basements
Demolition
Driveways
Septic Systems
Stump Removal
Site preparation-cleanup
(231)779-0183
SMALL ENGINE
SERVICES
Rays Landing
Storage & Repair
Boats
Chainsaw & ATV
Snowmobiles
Snow Blowers
Service & Repair
Shrink Wrapping
51,000 SQ.FT.
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Call us at:
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Lake City
SELF STORAGE
MINI STORAGE
OF MANTON
(231)824-6406
Climate Controlled
Standard Units
Outside Storage
Many sizes to choose from:
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Best rates in area
Prepaid discounts available
Foster Bros.
Moving
Local And Long
Distance Moving
Seasonal Rates
Boats & Campers
$10 per linear ft.
Cars $175
(800)581-8895
Mini Storage Units
ROOFING
FLYNNS
ROOFING
New Construction
Tear Offs Barns
Reroof & Repairs
Siding
Quality Work at a
Reasonable Price
Free Estimates
Shawn (231)825-9833
RB Roofing
All Exterior Work
Roofing Siding
Windows Doors
Sofit Facia
3 Generations of
Experience
FREE ESTIMATES
(231)920-8069
(231)825-8069
Owner Robert Bigelow
Son of Glen Bigelow
GUTTERS/DOWN
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S E A M L E S S G U T T E R S
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