Page 7 - The Eagle 03 14 13

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A
SSOCIATED
N
EWSPAPERS OF
M
ICHIGAN
P
AGE
7
March 14, 2013
Need a job?
Looking to buy?
Looking to sell?
Need to rent?
Find it fast in the
Eagle’s Classifieds.
Call 734-467-1900
to place
your classified ad.
01. Obituaries
02. In Memoriam
03. Cards of Thanks
04. Monuments
& Cemetery Plots
05. Personals/Announcements
06. Legal Notices
07. Attorneys
08. Entertainment
09. Lost & Found
10. Coming Events
30. Help Wanted
31. Help Wanted Sales
32. Help Wanted Drivers
33. Child Care
34. Specialized Services
35. Situations Wanted
40. Business Opportunity
42. Health and Fitness
43. Money to Loan
44. Music/Art Lessons
45. Adult Care
46. Private Schools/Instruction
47. Riding/Horses/Stables
50. Pets & Supplies
54. Rummage Sales
55. Estate Sales
56. Flea Markets
57. Antiques
58. Garage and Yard Sales
59. Auctions
60. Misc. Sales
61. Misc. Items
62. Building Supplies
63. Business and
OfficeEquipment
64. Lawn & Garden Supplies
65. Tree Service
66. Landscape / Nurseries
67. Garden Plant / Supplies
68. Garden / Produce
70. Masonry / Brickwork
72. Cleaning Services
73. Musical Merchandise
74. Sporting Goods
75. Boats / Accessories
76. Remodeling & Renovations
77. Recreation Vehicles
78. Hunting / Fishing
82. Wanted to Buy
87. Room for Rent
88. Duplexes for Rent
89. Apartments for Rent
90. Condos/Townhouses for Rent
92. Business Places for Rent
93. Banquet Halls
94. Farm Land for Rent
95. Real Estate
96. Houses for Rent
97. Cottages for Rent
98. Manufactured/Mobile Homes
99. Flats for Rent
100. Will Share
101. Wanted to Rent
102. Storage
103. Business Property for Sale
104. Farms & Acreage for Sale
105. Mobile Homes for Sale
106. Houses for Sale
107. Condos/Townhouses for Sale
108. Lake and Resort
109. Income Property
110. Lots for Sale
111. Out of State Property
112. Commercial Lease
113. Real Estate Wanted
114. Auto Accessories
115. Autos for Sale
116. Antique & Classic Cars
117. Trucks & Vans for Sale
118. Freebies
119. Auto Repairs
120. Motorcycles
121. Autos Wanted
Catherine Geraldine Kmet
(nee Courtney)
Catherine Geraldine Kmet
died March 9, 2013.
Mrs. Kmet was the beloved
wife of the late Lazarus Kmet.
The mother of 13 children,
Mrs. Kmet is survived by
Charles, Rose Mary, Lazarus,
Anthony, Edna, Robert,
Kathy, Frank, Terri, Eva, John
and Marvin; a brother,
Robert; two sisters-in-law,
Virginia and Irene; 32 grand-
children, 54 great-grandchil-
dren, and six great-great-
grandchildren.
In addition to her husband,
Mrs. Kmet was preceded in
death by a son, Gary.
A celebration of her life will
take place from 5:30 until 8
p.m. Friday, March 15 at the
Westland Church of the
Nazarene, 38600 Palmer
Road in Westland.
Luther Alexander
McCain, Jr.
Aug. 28, 1933
March 3, 2013
Luther Alexander McCain, Jr.
died March 3, 2013.
Among those left to cherish
his memory are his wife,
Jean; five children, Linda
Darden Lee, Laura McCain
Jones, Connie Akins, Hope
Gaines and Joey McCain;
brothers, Luther (Diana)
Daniel McCain and Howard
McCain; sisters, JoAnn
(John) Carter, Barbara
Fowler and Aisha McCain;
sisters-in-law, Peggy Scott,
Emma
Price,
Gladys
Woodson and Fannie Scott;
brothers-in-law, Benjamin
(June) Scott and Ray Scott;
10 grandchildren; a host of
great-grandchildren, nieces,
nephews and other relatives,
and many friends.
Funeral services were at
Sunset Church of Christ in
Taylor with the Rev. Robert L.
Clemons, Sr. of River road
Church of Christ in Albany,
GA officiating.
Interment was at United
Memorial
Gardens
in
Plymouth.
Final arrangements were
entrusted to the Penn funeral
Home on Inkster Road in
Inkster.
Robert Aldson, Sr.
Sunrise: March 27, 1932
Sunset: Feb. 27, 2013
Robert Aldson, Sr. died Feb.
27, 2013.
Among those survivors left to
cherish his memory are his
sons, Robert F. Aldson, Jr
and Carlos Clark; 11 grand-
children; seven great-grand-
children; sisters-in-law, Ella
Mae Clark and Juanita
Cannon of Columbia, TN; a
host of nieces, nephews,
cousins and other relatives,
and many special friends.
Funeral services were at
parks Memorial AME church
in Romulus with the Rev.
William Phillip officiating.
Final rites were accorded by
Tri-county
Cremation
Services.
Arrangements were entrust-
ed to the Penn funeral Home
on Inkster Road in Inkster.
Darryl Franklin
Sunrise: Feb. 1, 1958
Sunset: March 3, 2013
Darryl Franklin died March 3,
2013.
Among those left to mourn
his passing and cherish his
memory are his wife,
Katherine; his mother, Laura;
brothers, Hosea and Michael
(Mary); an uncle, Harold
(Bonita); aunts, Bertha
(Theodore) Harper, Alyce
(Elmer)
Elliot,
Virginia
(Eugene) Williams, Mary
Franklin, Myrtle Thomas and
Dorothy Thomas; a great
aunt, Jessie I. Barnett of San
Francisco, CA; brothers-in-
law, James Johnson, Samuel
Robinson and Gary (Sheila)
Robinson; sisters-in-law, Gail
(Marvin) Archer, Ruth Ann
Robinson
and
Nina
Robinson; a host of cousins,
nieces and nephews, and
many friends.
Final arrangements were
entrusted to the Penn
Funeral Home on Inkster
road in Inkster where the Rev.
Phillip Franklin officiated at
funeral services for Mr.
Franklin.
Final rites were accorded by
Tri-County
Cremation
Services.
Need caring staff to provide
in home and community
based training and activities
for gentleman with a disabili-
ty. $11.00 hr 734-678-9595
Nurse Aide Needed
Day Shift 6-3
Must Drive
Good Pay - $9/HR
Ypsi Area
woman in wheelchair
734-782-4847
NOTICE OF AUCTION AT
J&T CROVA TOWING
36573 GRANT
ROMULUS, MI 48174
(734) 941-1520
WEDNESDAY,
MARCH 27, 2013
@ 9:00 AM
2001 CHRYSLER TOWN &
COUNTRY
2C4GP54L81R325501
1991 FORD F-150
1FTEF15H7MNA51853
1996 FORD CONTOUR
1FALP6530TK123584
1998 CHEVROLET S-10
1GCCT19X4W8220830
These vehicles were towed
by Romulus Police.
AR-15's NEW IN BOX
****$1,300.00****
DPMS Oracle
Ruger SR-556
S&W MP 15T
Windham WW15
BushMaster XM E2's
Private Sale
Email
GARRAT357@Yahoo.com
or Call (734)277-8860
W e s t l a n d - N o r w a y n e -
Wildwood area. 3 BR, very
clean, nice kitchen, $600/mo,
$600/ sec.dep. References
required. 734-729-6526
Willow Acres
Motel,
Low daily and
weekly rates.
Refrigerator, microwave,
Cable TV, High Speed
Internet.
Call 734-721-1220
Fairlane in Novi
248-347-9999
4 BR in Romulus.
Haggarty/Grant, close to 94.
Good Schools-Secluded
area. Call 734-637-7011 or
734-482-4847. $850/mo.
WAYNE
Near Wayne Rd.,
Quite, Clean, 1 BR,
heat & water included,
No Pets, $475 & up,
w/Approved Credit
Ideal for Seniors.
313-247-2075 or
313-561-9818
$17,900 Double
Spacious Double, Excellent
Continion. All Appliances,
shed, 1st class community.
734-770-2939
$9900
Beautiful 2 bed, 2 bath,
1100 ft
2
, central air,
excellent, community
734-770-2939.
Bank Rep
Was $36,900 Now $24,900
Large double with carport
perimeter lot - woods to rear.
Fireplace, deck, beautiful!!
734-770-2939. Trade-in
Welcome. Land Contact
Available. Mark
C
ALENDAR
Church choirs to perform
The combined choirs of St. Mary
Catholic Church in Wayne and St.
John Neumann in Canton
Township will perform John
Rutter's "Magnificat" with the
accompaniment of a chamber
orchestra at 7 p.m. March 16 St.
John Neumann located at 44800
WarrenRoad inCanton.
The concert is free and open to
all parishioners, guests and friends.
Seating is on a first-come, first-
served basis, and a free-will offer-
ingwill be taken at the event.
Senior bingo scheduled
Bingo, which improves memory
and offers senior a chance to win
money, is offered at 1 p.m. every
second and fourth Thursday at the
WayneCommunity.
The games are a fundraiser for
theGoldenHour Club.
TheWayne Community Center is
located at 4635 Howe Road in
Wayne.
Seniors in Romulus can play
bingo at noon Mondays and
Wednesdays at the Romulus Senior
Center, 36525Bibbins inRomulus.
Reading programunder way
The Adult Winter Reading
Program at the Romulus Library,
Hot Reads for Cold Nights, is cur-
rently under way and will continue
untilMarch 31.
For every book read, partici-
pants will be entered into a weekly
drawing for prizes. Must be 18 or
older to participate.
Register by calling the library at
(734) 942-7589. The program is spon-
soredby theFriends of theLibrary
Channel 7 visitsWayne
Project Healthy Living with
Channel 7 is coming to the Wayne-
Westland Community Center from
10 a.m. until 2 p.m. on Tuesday,
March 19.
Free or low-cost health screen-
ings for ages 18 and up are avail-
able including screenings for breast
and cervical, behavioral health/psy-
chiatric services, senior independ-
ent living services, legal assistance,
information on the Affordable Care
Act and health coverage, substance
abuse prevention resources and
more.
Exhibitors from the health care
field are still welcome and there is
no entry fee. Volunteers are also
being sought to assist with registra-
tion and check ins.
For information, to volunteer or
register as an exhibitor, call Nathan
Adams at (734) 721-700 ext. 1300. For
more
details
go
to
ProjectHealthyLiving.org or visit
facebook at UhoMichigan.
Tax assistance available
Tax assistance is available by
appointment only everyWednesday
through April 3 at the Wayne
Community Center, 4635 Howe
Road inWayne.
No age or residency restriction
applies.
Clients must file basic/simple
forms only to have preparations
done at this site. All taxes will be e-
filed (electronically filed).
For appointments, call (734) 721-
7460.
The Romulus Senior Center pro-
vides free tax services through
AARP from 9 a.m. until noon every
Thursday throughApril 11.
Tax services will also be avail-
able at theRomulus Senior Towers.
Tax services are by appointment
only and no walk-ins will be accept-
ed. To make an appointment for
Romulus services, call (734) 955-
4120
Meditation classes planned
Free classes on meditation will
be offered from 1:30-3:30 p.m.
March 16 and 23 at The Center
Massage, Yoga andWellness Studio,
1200AnnArborRoad inPlymouth.
Topics will include concentra-
tion and relaxation techniques and
creating a meditative lifestyle, self-
awareness through meditation. The
free program is being offered by the
Sri Chinmoy Centre of AnnArbor.
For more information, call (734)
994-7114.
Book club invites readers
The Romulus Library hosts book
discussions from 7-8 p.m. on the
second Monday of each month.
Book discussions are free and open
to all, age 18 andup. No need to reg-
ister. Library staff can assist you in
getting a copy of the book. For more
information, call the library at 734-
942-7589.
Books scheduled for discussion
include:
April 8: O Pioneers by Willa
Cather
May 13: The Light Between
Oceans byM.L. Stedman
June 10: What's Eating Gilbert
Grape by PeterHedges
July 8: The Orientalist by Tom
Reese
Aug. 12: Salvage the Bones by
JesmynWest
Sept. 9: What Alice Forgot by
LianeMoriarty
Fish fries planned
First United Methodist Church
ofWaynewill host Friday FishFries
from4: 30 -7 p.m. untilMarch 22.
ing third-graders threatening to run and tat-
tle.
Grow up, you self-involved, short-sighted
morons.
You are supposed to be responsible for
running a country, for taking care of people
by providing services they can't provide for
themselves. You are supposed to be govern-
ing, not throwing venomous spitballs of criti-
cism, pointing fingers at each other and name
calling on every weekend news show you can
find.
There is no excuse for any of this. None.
We, as a nation, have elected a bunch of fools
who couldn't pass gas, must less an effective
budget or legislation.
But, like the squabbling children they so
convincingly emulate, they have certainly
learned how to lie about the opposite politi-
cal party convincingly. The President blames
Congress, Congress blames the President, the
Democrats blame the Republicans, the
Republicans blame…well, we've all seen it,
right. The only guarantee is that whoever is
talking is not at fault.
Now, both sides have announced that they
don't want another showdown at the end of
this month when it comes time to approve
spending levels to keep Washington operat-
ing. They want to avoid a shut down of the
government, they say. More like they don't
want their $147,000 paychecks and expense
accounts interrupted.
Personally, I think they should just go
ahead and “sequester” the pay for every
elected official until they step up, prioritize
governing this country, take their responsibil-
ity to the rest of us here in the real world seri-
ously and do the job they were elected to do
regardless of what their party officials dictate.
These misbehaving children need a seri-
ous time-out.
achievement.
Santomauro, who retired several years
ago, without question instituted the attitudes
and ethical, responsible professional con-
duct demanded from every employee in
Canton Township today. His example has
been emulated by every police and fire chief
who followed him and by Yack and now
LaJoy, who preserved and added to the pro-
fessional code Santomauro instituted, by the
administrators who judiciously manage the
various departments and the township
employees at every level.
The township may have been lauded
nationally for public safety, but it is contin-
ued good management, respect and profes-
sional responsibility toward the public that
really deserves recognition.
Congratulations.
that the error is with the township and that
all information used in preparing the tax
bills, foreclosure notices and the eventual
sale of the property came from Plymouth
Township.
It is also curious, we think, to realize that
this filing error resulted in the township
being offered this huge parcel of land inte-
gral to the site proposed for the futuristic
technology park at such a bargain rate at a
foreclosure tax sale fromthe county.
The two parcels were on the tax rolls at
one time for $16 million, so $606,000 certain-
ly must have seemed like quite a bargain to
the township board of trustees and adminis-
tration.
Almost too good to be true.
Brats
FROM PAGE 6
Canton
FROM PAGE 6
Plymouth
FROM PAGE 6
See
Calendar,
page 8
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