A
SSOCIATED
N
EWSPAPERS OF
M
ICHIGAN
P
AGE
4
September 4, 2014
TO PLACE YOUR CLASSIFIED AD CALL 734-467-1900 OR EMAIL ADS@JOURNALGROUP.COM
Classified
Deacon James
Donald Eldridge
Sunrise: Jan. 10, 1945
Sunset: Aug. 21, 2014
Deacon James Donald
Eldridge died Aug. 21,
2014.
Among his survivors left to
cherish his memory are his
son, Michael (Shronda)
Webb of Nashville, TN; his
devoted daughters, Tanja
(Calvin) Chatman also of
Nashville, TN, Arteen
(Leonard) Riggins and
Camelle Singleton, all of
Inkster; three grandsons,
Dexter Webb and Myron
Webb, both of Nashville,
TN and David Riggins of
Inkster; three granddaugh-
ters, Tanithia Webb and
Ashley Webb, both of
Nashville, TN and Ayanna
(Robert) Grays of Inkster;
two great-grandchildren,
Shemaya Gregory and
Elijah Crawley Webb, both
of Nashville, TN; two devot-
ed sisters, Evelyn Wright
and Betty Eldridge, both of
Inkster; a sister-in-law,
Gwendolyn Eldridge of
Nashville, TN; two devoted
nieces, Joyce (James)
Williams and Sharon
(John) Perkins, both of
Inkster; a goddaughter,
Veronica
(Derrick)
Goodman of Inkster; a host
of other nieces, nephews,
cousins and other relatives,
and many friends.
Funeral services took place
at the Penn Funeral Home
on Inkster Road in Inkster
with the Rev. Dr. William
Thompson officiating.
Interment was at United
Memorial Gardens in
Plymouth
Sarah Thometta
Grant-Jones
Dec. 20, 1944
Aug. 21. 2014
Sarah Thometta Grant-
Jones died Aug.21.
Among those left to cherish
her memory are her chil-
dren, Joseph Benson,
Renee Benson and Eric
(Rebecca) Benson; four
grandchildren, Eric, Jr.,
Elizabeth, Patrick and
Alexis; three great-grand-
children, William Mateo
and Isabelle; two sisters,
Darlene Wright and Freda
Addie; a daughter-in-law,
Tawanda Grover; a host of
nieces, nephews, cousins
and other family members,
and many friends.
Funeral services took place
at the Penn Funeral Home
on Inkster road in Inkster
with the Rev. Ronald
Benson officiating.
Interment was at Mt. Hope
Memorial Gardens in
Livonia.
Richard Eugene Coleman
Sunrise: Feb. 16, 1021
Sunset: Aug. 20, 2014
Richard Eugene Coleman
died Aug. 20, 2014.
Among those left to cherish
his memory are the love of
his life, his wife, Alma
Coleman; his son, Stanley
A. (Juanella) Coleman of
Texas; his daughters,
Teresa A. Coleman of
Inkster and Barbara J.
Coleman-fisher
of
Romulus; two sisters, Doris
Davis of Livonia and
Constance Rucker of
Detroit; a brother, Donald
Coleman of California;
grandchildren, Juanella I.
(Lowell) Tyler of North
Carolina,
Stanley
A.
Coleman, Jr. of Texas,
Lowell
E.
(Michelle)
Coleman, also of Texas,
Duane M. Fisher of
Westland and Kimberly L.
Fisher of Romulus; great-
grandchildren, Ethan Tyler
and Lauren Tyler of North
Carolina; a host of nieces,
nephews and other rela-
tives, and many friends.
Funeral services took place
at the Penn Funeral Home
on Inkster Road in Inkster.
Interment was at Mt. Hope
Memorial Gardens in
Livonia.
Kim Yaona Dallas
Sunrise: Jan. 28, 1960
Sunset: Aug. 17, 2014
Kim Yaona Dallas died Aug.
17, 2014.
Among those survivors left
to cherish her memory are
her father, Theophilus
Baker; her children, Earl
Johnson, Kimberley Ann
(Ardrell) Dallas and Kaia
Dallas, Four grandchildren,
Mackenzie Seller, Kanyia
Dallas, Delontae Dallas and
Davion Dallas; four sisters,
Wanda Taylor of Inkster,
Yolanda (Jerry) Harlen of
Detroit, Deborah Johnson
of Inkster and Darlene
Baker of Dayton, OH;
brothers,
Michael
(LaSandra) Dallas, Darrell
Baker, Vincent Dallas and
Greg Adams, all of Inkster,
Cedric Dallas, Tyrone
Dallas and Andre Dallas, all
of Detroit; two aunts, Alice
Ruth Fagan and Mary Bass
of Mobile, AL, two uncles,
Harry
Dallas
of
Hattiesburg, MS and
Jimmy Dallas of Mobile,
AL; special loved ones,
Teresa
Kendrick
of
Belleville and Gina Clark of
Romulus; very special
cousins, Rolita Baker of
Belleville and Terri Porter of
Detroit; a goddaughters,
Sheila R. Clegg of Flint and
Tierra Bailey of Detroit; a
godson, Jermaine Taylor of
Inkster; a host of aunts,
uncles, nieces, nephews
and cousins, and many
friends.
Pastor James Jennings, Sr.
of New True Vine Baptist
Church offered the eulogy
and officiated at funeral
services.
Final arrangements were
entrusted to the Penn
Funeral Home on Inkster
Road in Inkster.
Tri County Cremation
Services afforded final
rites.
Country
Auction-1856
Farm House, Saturday,
September 6, 10 a.m. at
44675 Joy Road, Canton
Hundreds of unique very
old items.
Death Notice
Be it known to all men
and’or any interested par-
ties, the Inkster Housing
Commission gives proper
and due notice that any
and
all
possessions
belonging to
HENRY DAVIS
2000 Inkster Road
Inkster, MI 48141
Remaining in unit 4688
who passed away July 23,
2014 will become property
of the Inkster Housing
COmmission, unless other-
wise properly claimed and
removed in five (5) days.
Death Notice
Be it known to all men
and’or any interested par-
ties, the Inkster Housing
Commission gives proper
and due notice that any
and
all
possessions
belonging to
RENEE DAVIS
2000 Inkster Road
Inkster, MI 48141
Remaining in unit 4642
who passed away August
9, 2014 will become prop-
erty of the Inkster Housing
COmmission, unless other-
wise properly claimed and
removed in five (5) days.
(Romulus,
MI)
BMK
Solutions,
LLC
seeks
Business
Intelligence
Application Developer w/
Mast or for deg equiv in Eng
or CS, incl exp w/ Android
applic devp, Artificial intell,
Algorithms, Build automa-
tion tools (gradle), Markup
lang (xml,html), SQLite &
Human Comp Interaction.
Apply to HR, 11977 Harrison
Road, Romulus, MI 48174.
Home health aides. Part-
time help wanted starting at
$8/hour. Golden Home
Health Care 734-697-0888.
Drivers: Carter Express –
CDL-A. Dedicated Routes
Romulus, MI to Smyrna, TN
Average 2695 miles/wk
Solos up to 37 cpm to start.
Dedicated Routes $195 per
day Romulus to Anderson,
IN Home Weekly. No Slip
Seat. No Touch, Newer
Equipment. (855) 219-4838
Drivers, CDL-A: Home Daily!
Eagle Express Lines, Toledo
based Short Haul trips to
Chicago O'Hare. 5 round
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/hr plus $4.80/hr USPS
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Drivers: CDL-A Lots of
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Home more often. (855)
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Dedicated Run, Immediate
Need! Wayne, MI to
Louisville, KY. Company
Driver or Owner Operator.
Ideal candidate will live in 50
miles along route On board
nav. & benefits. Call 877-
999-1464 or pamjobs.com.
VEHICLE
PUBLIC AUCTION
THE FOLLOWING
VEHICLES HAVE BEEN
DEEMED ABANDONED
AND WILL BE SOLD AT
PUBLIC AUCTION,
SEPT. 10, 2014
11:00 AM
AT
J&M TOWING
8964 INKSTER RD
ROMULUS, MI 48174
1999 CHEV
1GNDX03E7XD162884
TRE
N/A
2005 DODGE
2D4FV48T25H533412
1988 HONDA
JHMED3546JS008972
1985 HONDA
JH2HD0405FKF04274
1995 FORD
2FALP74W6SX113901
2011 TOYOTA
JTDBU4EE4BJ093675
2004 BUICK
1G4HP52KX4U139556
FORD
1FTSE34L7WHA18845
2011 GMC
1GTR2VE74CZ240060
1997 FORD
1FALP13P3VW347517
2002 CHEV
1GIND52J02M574292
1999 FORD
1FTZX1723XNA41672
1 & 2 Bedroom Apartments.
$450-$550. Spacious
Middlebelt Rd-Inkster
248-789-2335
Wayne 2 BR Apartment.
Fireplace and garage.
$600/mo.-$600/sec. 734-
645-1890.
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
Need a job?
Looking to buy?
Looking to sell?
Need to rent?
Find it fastin
the Eagle’s
Classifieds.
Call 734-467-1900
to place your classified ad
or email
ads@journalgroup.com
C
ANTON
- N
ORTHVILLE
What to wear?
Historical society plans annual
clothing sale for Victorian Festival
Northville will take the annu-
al step back in time Sept. 21-23
during the annual Victorian
Festival.
City streets will come alive
with costumed characters and
merchants will greet their cus-
tomers in style. Visitors can join
in the celebration by finding the
perfect outfit for everyone in the
family and stroll down Main
Street in elegance and grace.
Hosted by the Northville
Chamber of Commerce, the
annual event is a community cel-
ebration of the era when
Northville was founded as a vil-
lage and features events, enter-
tainment and fun for the whole
family.
The 2014 Festival theme is
The Lumbering Industry, a sig-
nificant feature of the Victorian
Era that largely contributed to
the expansion and growth of the
country, state and community.
Festival highlights include
the Festival Parade at 6:30
Friday, Sept. 12 sponsored by St.
John Providence Hospital; non-
profit booths selling food and
drink; Ryde Park Carnival at
Northville Downs sponsored by
Community Financial Credit
Union; an art fair managed by
Handcrafters Unlimited; a beer
garden and saloon; strolling
entertainers; Eclipse Vintage
baseball; exhibits and activities
at Mill Race Historic Village;
demonstrations and exhibits by
the Great Lakes Timber Show;
the Barnyard Express Animal
Show and Petting Farm and sev-
eral other activities and events.
Events and programs may
have specific hours during the
festival weekend.
Wondering what to wear?
Ladies wear dresses with hoop
skirts or bustles, or skirts with
long sleeves and high necklines,
vests, capes, bonnets, hats, and
reticules (purses). Girls wear
dresses with aprons, pinafores
andbonnets.
Men parade in their trousers,
suspenders, vests, bow ties and
bowler hats. Men can even go
for the old west look with cow-
boy boots, sleeve garters, ban-
dannas, straw hat, derby hat or
bowler hat. Boys look great in
knickers, long argyle socks, sus-
penders, long-sleeved shirts and
newsboy hats.
The Northville Historical
Society is having the annual
Victorian Clothing Sale at Mill
Race Village. Clothing and
accessories will be available for
adults and children from vari-
ous vendors. Some clothing is
new, some gently used and some
vintage. From dresses,
pinafores, bonnets, hats and reti-
cules to knickers, suspenders
and newsboy caps, complete
Victorian outfits will be avail-
able for sale.
The sale will take place from
1-5 Thursday, Sept. 4, from 1 - 5
p.m.; from 10 a.m. until 7 p.m.
Friday, Sept. 5, and from 10 a.m.
until 4 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 6.
Admission is $2 per adult.
For more information, con-
tact the Northville Historical
Society at (248) 348-1845 during
regular hours, 9 a.m. until 1 p.m.
Monday through Friday or visit
www.millracenorthville.org.
Information about the festival
is available from the Northville
Chamber of Commerce at (248)
349-7640.
It's a place of their own.
The B.L.O.C.K., located on the
third floor of the Canton
Administration Building, offers
teens a friendly environment that
features their favorite activities
in a safe, supervised and social
setting.
The youth and teen center is
designed for youths 11-17 and
offers a variety of program
options from 2:30-8:30 p.m. Sept.
2 through Jan. 30. Amenities
include a café, a lounge, a quiet
study room, a pool table, internet
access, a computer lab, and video
games.
The After School Membership
Program will pick students up
fromschool at dismissal time and
transport them to The B.L.O.C.K.
where they can participate in a
variety of supervised activities
until as late as 8:30 p.m. on school
days. Transportation is available
from Achieve, Canton Charter,
Central, Discovery, East, PCEP,
PCA, Pioneer, South Canton
Scholars, and West schools in the
Plymouth Canton district.
Membership in the after-school
program is $225 for residents and
$282 for non-residents.
Students who do not attend
one of the schools included in the
After School Membership
Program can participate in the
Drop-In Membership Program.
Although no transportation is
provided, a parent or guardian
can drop children off as early as
2:30 p.m. and pick up would be
no later than 8:30 p.m. Drop-In
Membership fees are $90 for resi-
dents and $117 for non-residents.
Daily drop-in is available
Monday - Friday on school days
as an alternative for those who
are unsure of their schedules.
Resident fee for Daily Drop-In is
$2 andnon-resident is $3.
The Canton Express Shuttle
can be combined with the After
School Membership Program or
the Drop-In Membership
Program, offering shuttle servic-
es daily starting at 4:30 p.m. With
this service, transportation may
be arranged to and from home;
plus, B.L.O.C.K. staff can even
drive students to practice or any
parent-approved activity. This
shuttle service covers an 11 mile
radius from The B.L.O.C.K.
Semester fees for the Express
Shuttle Program are $152 for res-
idents and $193 for non-residents.
"We are super excited to
announce that we will be
expanding our programming this
fall and offering free classes and
clubs every day from 4:30-5:30
p.m.," said Laura Mortier,
B.L.O.C.K. coordinator. "This
includes: a Newspaper Club, art
classes, tutoring, production of a
Teen TV Cable Show, piano les-
sons, library programming and
muchmore!"
All of the new programs are
available at no additional charge.
Participants will be able to sign
up on the activities board for the
weekly programs. Participants
can also sign up for The
B.L.O.C.K incentive program,
which allows them to build
points for participating in
B.L.O.C.K. programming and
cash them in for fun prizes and
giveaways.
The B.L.O.C.K. is a 3,000
square foot, state-of-the-art Teen
Center, providing after school
programming, transportation and
plenty of fun. Registration is
open year-round and programs
can be pro-rated. To register or
for more information about this
and other B.L.O.C.K. program-
ming, visit www.cantonfun.org or
call (734) 398-5570.
The Canton Administration
Building is located at 1150 S.
CantonCenterRoad.
BLOCK now accepting registrations for programs
The Northville Historical Society has set the annual sale of clothing
for the Victorian Festival for Sept. 6--Sept. 8 this year.