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Weekly Choice, A Choice Publication, Positive News, Sports and Events, Covering 40 Towns in Northern Michigan including Gaylord, Petoskey,
Cheboygan, Grayling, Lewiston, Mancelona, Mio, Indian River and surrounding area.
Weekly Choice, A Choice Publication, Positive News, Sports and Events, Covering 40 Towns in Northern Michigan including Gaylord, Petoskey,
Cheboygan, Grayling, Lewiston, Mancelona, Mio, Indian River and surrounding area.
Weekly Choice, A Choice Publication, Positive News, Sports and Events, Covering 40 Towns in Northern Michigan including Gaylord, Petoskey,
Cheboygan, Grayling, Lewiston, Mancelona, Mio, Indian River and surrounding area.
ed in the eight-team Warrior Invitational held Saturday at Chippewa Hills High School and fared pretty well. The Gaylord girls of coach Jeff Kalember came in third with 114 team points and the boys of coach Matt Warren took fourth. The Blue Devil gals fin- ished behind host Chip Hills, which had a remarkable score of 226 points, and run- ner-up Cedar Springs with 118. Petoskey also participat- ed in the meet and came in sixth with 41 points. [See sep- arate story on Petoskey track in this issue.] For the Gaylord girls, it was the galloping underclassmen leading the way once again. Casey Korte, the fearless flying freshman of the Blue Devils, showed up strong once again, taking first in the long jump with a gravity- defying distance of 15 feet, 11 inches and third in the 200 dash in 28.89 seconds, and she also ran a leg in the win- ning 400 relay and the run- ner-up 800 relay. Fellow freshman Stephanie Davis surged to second in the grueling 300 hurdles, finish- ing in a time of 51.5 seconds and she also ran a leg in the fourth-place 1600 relay. Fellow freshman Bailey Checks ate her Wheaties before going to Remus and ended up hurling the shot put a distance of 31 feet, 8 inches to take second place and tossing the discus 94 feet, 3 inches to claim fourth in a very tough field. Fellow freshman Savannah Krone put the SIZ in sizzle in the 200 dash, taking second place in 28.74 seconds and also teaming with Korte in the winning 400 and 800 relays. Fellow freshman Maddie MacQuarrie strode to fourth in the 100 dash (14.18) and was also part of the success- ful sprint relays. Fellow freshmen Sofia Cabble and Skyler Wickert both rode the air waves to clear 4 feet, 6 inches in the high jump, taking sixth and eighth, respectively. Sophomore Katelyn Smith turned on the juice and took fourth in the 800 run (2:37.14). She and fellow sophomore and twin sister Alexis Smith also shined in the 1600 run, with Alexis tak- ing fifth (5:50.93) and Katelyn taking sixth (5:5158). Alexis and Katelyn teamed with fellow sophomore Mallory Marshall and senior Mai Dao to take third in the 3200 relay (10:35.52). Mallory also motored to sixth in the 800 run (2:41.63). With the amazing number of top-tier freshmen and sophomores on the track ros- ter, you might say coach Kalember has some unlimit- ed potential coming up through the ranks! Korte, Krone and MacQuarrie teamed with junior Grace Sanders to tear up the turf and take first in the 400 relay (53.00) and sec- ond in the 800 relay (1:53.39). Grace also generated a fifth- place time of 14.21 seconds in the 100 dash. Seniors Mai Dao and Erin Borgeson teamed with Stephanie Davis and Krone to take fourth in the 1600 relay (4:36.45). THE GAYLORD BOYS earned 82 points to finish behind Cedar Springs (138), Traverse City West (135) and Chip Hills (103). The Petoskey boys were sixth with 48 points. The Blue Devil relay teams stood out in the large invita- tional. The foursome of Sterling McPherson, Justin Desloover, Jordan Monarch and Zak Goddard teamed to take sec- ond in the 3200 relay (8:58.80) while Collin Watters, Steven Fitzek, Justin Roberson and Jakovon Pryor- McCovery combined to take third in the 1600 relay (3:43.91). The 400 relay crew of Nate Boswood, Justin Roberson, Tyler Eyth and Jake Juranek took fourth in the 400 relay (48.09) and the foursome of Boswood, Fitzek, Austin Kirby and Watters fired out to take fourth in the 800 relay (1:38.93). Watters also launched the discus 116 feet, 10 inches to secure fourth in that event and poured on the juice to take fourth in the 200 dash (24.65) with Kirby (24.77) right behind him in fifth. Boswood, a freshmen, blew out the cylinders on his way to fourth in the 100 dash (12.39) and Jac-Mac, soph- omore Pryor-McCovery, pushed to fourth in the 400 dash (56.03). Fitzek flew to fourth in the 300 hurdles (44.15) and took sixth in the 110 hurdles (16,96). Goddard gobbled up the gravel to take sixth in the 800 run (2:16.84) and McPherson motored to sixth in the 3200 run (10:48.84). Kirby cleared 5-6 to take fifth in the high jump and Roberson also cleared the same height to earn sixth. Strong-armed William Stecker secured sixth in the shot put (36-6). ON WEDNESDAY, April 23, the Gaylord girls captured the double dual meet at home with Cadillac and T.C. West, defeating the Vikings 98-60 and outscoring West 92-66. Sophomore Alexis Smith showed up very strong for Gaylord, earning a team-high 23 points with wins in the1600 run (5:49.83) and 3200 run (12:43.54) plus a fast leg in the 3200 relay (10:55.03). She was closely followed by feisty freshmen Casey Korte with 22 points and Savannah Krone with 21. Stephanie Davis delivered 18 points with Bailey Checks and Grace Sanders each securing 16 points. I was especially pleased with the nice all-around scoring we had today in both wins, Kalember reported. We had points in the field events, sprints and distances. In only our second meet we have had some very fine per- formances. Kalember noted Krones outstanding time of 27.3 sec- onds in winning the 200 dash. Korte also launched herself to first in the long jump (16- 2.25) and took second behind Krone in the 200 dash (28.02). Bailey Checks hurled the shot put 28 feet, 0.75 inches and also reached a formida- ble distance of 95 feet in the discus. Mai Dao motored to a solid time of 1:05.63 in the 400 dash and Katelyn Smith strode to strong times of 12:44.12 in the 3200 run and 5:51.23 in the 1600 run. Kalember also noted the hurdles times of freshman Stephanie Davis, who fin- ished the 100 hurdles in 18.01 seconds and the grueling 300 hurdles in 53.4 seconds. Davis beat out everyone in the 300 hurdles. Sofia Cobble cleared 4 feet, 8 inches to sweep the high jump. Gaylord also swept all four relays. Coach Wenzel has our sprint girls putting up some FAST relay times this early in the season and coach Cavanaugh has a young group of shot/disc girls throwing very well, Kalember said. G#9.13& ,60+13 S5'7'0 F+5:'- 4''0 +0 (.+)*5 +0 5*' 300- /'5'3 *63&.' 3#%'. H' 511- (1635* 2.#%' 10 S#563	 #5 C*+2 H+..4. Photo by Rob DeFoRge oF RDsPoRtsPhoto.com S-9.'3 !+%-'35 3+&'4 5*' #+3 #4 4*' %.'#34 5*' *+)* ,6/2 $#3 51 (+0+4* 4'%10& +0 5*' &16$.'-&6#. /''5 10 A23+. 23. Photo by Rob DeFoRge oF RDsPoRtsPhoto.com F3'4*/#0 D9.#0 O22'3/#0 (.#4*'4 (+0' (13/ #4 *' 0#7+)#5'4 5*316)* 5*' 110-/'5'3 *+)* *63&.'4 +0 5*' A23+. 23 /''5. Photo by Rob DeFoRge oF RDsPoRtsPhoto.com THURSDAY, MAY 1, 2014 Athlete of the Week (989) 705-8284 ###.MainS"!ee"Ga$l!d.cm 236 We#$ Main, Ga(l"d Real Estate One Gaylord would like to congratulate the Athlete of the Week FOR WEEK OF APRIL 20-26 CASEY KORTE GAYLORD HIGH SCHOOL The Blue Devils flying freshman soared to first in the long jump Saturday at Chip Hills and teamed with Grace, Maddie and Savannah for first in 400 and 800 relays. S SECTION B CALL - (989) 732-8160 FAX (888) 854-7441 OR EMAIL: MIKE DUNN - MIKE@WEEKLYCHOICE.COM ANDY SNEDDON - ANDY@WEEKLYCHOICE.COM DENNIS MANSFIELD - DENNISLMANSFIELD@GMAIL.COM SPORTS G#9.13&=4 (+'3%'.9 (#45 (3'4*/'0 S#7#00#* K310', 3+)*5, #0& C#4'9 K135' (.9 51 # 1-2 (+0+4* +0 5*' 200 * 10 A23+. 23. Photo by Rob DeFoRge oF RDsPoRtsPhoto.com Track Gaylord girls take third, boys fourth at large invite; Korte is part of two winning relays and first in long jump Devils fare well at Chip Hills By Mike Dunn TRAVERSE CITY The Gaylord golf team of Coach Tom Johnson competed on Friday and Saturday, April 25-26, in the annual Traverse City Tee-Off Tournament at the Grand Traverse Resort. The Blue Devils finished in the middle of the pack among the 14 teams, taking sixth place overall. On the first day, the Blue Devils posted a team score of 350. Leading the way for Gaylord on both days was veteran Cam Laug, who recorded scores of 81 and 79, very respectable rounds con- sidering the weather. On day one on the Spruce Run course, it was very cool and overcast. On day two on the Wolverine course, it got even colder but at least it did- nt snow. It was a balmy 37 degrees with delightful wind gusts of 15-20 miles per hour. Perfect for a round of Eskimo golf! Laug handled the condi- tions well on both days to lead the way for the Blue Devils. On day one, Jimmy Robb turned in a nice round of 85 to finish as runner-up, fol- lowed by Josh Costello (91), Mike Misiak (93), Robb Trelfa (97) and Leland Huey (103). On the second day, Gaylord came in fifth in the team standings with a score of 344. For both days, the Blue Devils accumulated 694 team points. Grand Rapids Christian (320-321), the reigning Division 2 state champion, won the event with East Grand Rapids (330-333) in second place. Petoskey also fared well, posting scores of 344 and 334 to take third place overall. Scores for Gaylord on day two were: Cam Laug 79, Josh Costello 87, Mike Misiak 88, Jimmy Robb 90, Mike Shryock 92 and Leland Huey 101. Hopefully as we see better weather and get in more practice time, schedule and weather permitting, we will continue to improve, Johnson reported. The most difficult thing for our team is to find quality time to prac- tice. With districts just three- and-a-half weeks away and us just starting the bulk of our season, we may be forced to get better as we play in tournaments. ON WEDNESDAY, April 23, the Blue Devil varsity and JV competed in the Cadillac Invitational at the Cadillac Country Club against 11 other teams and came in sixth place. The meet was also a Big North Conference competition and Gaylord came in fifth out of the seven teams. Cam Laug fired a round of 77, good for a tie for fourth overall, to lead the Varsity A squad. Josh Costello shot 84 with Jimmy Robb and Robb Trelfa each earning scores of 89, followed by Mike Misiak with 89 and Mike Shryock with 107. Petoskey was the overall champion with a score of 322, followed by TC West 327, TC Central 329, Ogemaw Heights 336, Mt. Pleasant 338, Gaylord 339, Big Rapids 341, Cheboygan 342, Cadillac 356, Alpena 386, Manton 416 and Lake City 460. Leland Huey tallied 95 to lead the Varsity B squad for Gaylord, followed by Seth Lashuay (108) and Trent Lashuay (115). Gaylord was scheduled to play at Petoskey on Tuesday, April 29. This Saturday, May 3, the Blue Devils are at Traverse City West. Page 2-B Tell our advertisers you saw their ad in the Weekly Choice May 1, 2014 LOCAL SPORTS On-line at www.weeklychoice.com Bl%e De&il# &ie in Tee-Off Gaylord comes in sixth overall in the 14-team, two-day tourney Golf By Mike Dunn GAYLORD St. Mary stayed tightly in the race for the Ski Valley title with an impressive doubleheader sweep of visiting Inland Lakes on Monday, April 28. Mancelona also swept Forest Area and Onaway defeated Central Lake to keep things very interesting as May comes into view. As of this writing, Mancelona and St. Mary had were 5-1 in the conference and Onaway, which was 7-3 overall, had not been beaten yet. St. Mary outscored I-Lakes by scores of 11-5 and 6-2. Left mound ace Brendon Nowicki came through big time for St. Mary in the open- er, twirling a masterful three- hitter against the hard-slug- ging Bulldogs with five Ks and one earned run. Senior Nick Harrington hammered out two hits, including a two-run double. Anthony Zielinski and Josh Nowicki each rapped two hits as well for the Snowbirds. In game two, junior Jack Lochinski came on in relief and pitched out of a bases- loaded jam to earn the win. Lochinski brought the light- ning with him to the hill, striking out four of the last six batters he faced. Josh Nowicki continued to wave a hot stick, generating three more hits, and Zielinski was zoned in with the alu- minum also, stroking three hits. Harrington was a menace to Bulldog pitchers all day long. He went 4-for-6 and swiped five bases in the twin- bill. Golden-armed sophomore catcher Gage Andrews con- tinues to gun down opposing base stealers. He nailed two more on Monday. St. Mary (5-1, 5-1) is sched- uled to host East Jordan this Thursday, May 1, weather permitting. Mancelona comes to Gaylord on Monday, May 5, in a key league showdown. Mancelona sweeps FIFE LAKE The Ironmen of coach Jim VanWagoner earned a sweep of host Forest Area on Monday, posting scores of 8-1 and 6-2. In the opener, crafty Logan Short took to the hill and the befuddled Warrior batters were struck with Lo-Sho Fever throughout the con- test, a malady that often occurs when batters have to face the cerebral Mancy hurler. Short struck out five and allowed just one earned run. Derrick Conway drilled a pair of hits and knocked in a run to help pace the Mancy attack and speedy sopho- more Chase Wilcox whacked two hits and scored twice. In game two, Griffin Borst got the nod from coach VanWagoner and twirled a gem as the Ironmen improved to 5-1 as they attempt to successfully defend the league title once again. Onaway sweeps CENTRAL LAKE Onaway pushed is overall record to 7-3 and its record in the Ski Valley to 3-0 with a victory at Central Lake on Monday, April 28. Lethal lefty Andrew Prow earned another W on the bump for the Cardinals of coach Mike Crull, securing seven strikeouts along the way and allowing just one walk and one earned run to the Trojans. Cody Whitsitt walloped a pair of hits, including a two- run single, and he tore up the base paths, leaving a trail of smoke behind him as he stole six times. Chris Cleaver added some Crash to the Cardinal attack, cracking a three-run double. Cleaver also stole five bases and scored three times. Tommy Auger was also a force on the bases, stealing four times and scoring twice. Game two was suspended because of darkness with the score knotted at 5. Onaway is scheduled to travel to Johannesburg- Lewiston this Thursday, May 1, in a key league twinbill , weather permitting. J-L vies in Standish tourney STANDISH Johannesburg-Lewiston par- ticipated in a tournament Saturday at Standish- Sterling, losing one and then winning one. In the tourney semifinals, the Cardinals faced host Standish-Sterling and suf- fered an 11-1 defeat facing what Hall of Fame coach Rick Guild said was the best pitch- er hes seen in a while. I was happy with the kids, Guild said. Their pitcher was outstanding but we hung in there with him and hit the ball pretty hard at times. Sophomore Brandon Huff started and pitched pretty well, Guild said, staying around the plate and mixing his pitches. Dangerous Dan Nieman was 2-for-2 to lead J-L in the first game and Coalton Huff hammered out two hits and knocked in the Cardinals lone run with a double. In the consolation finals, J- L faced Gladwin and earned an 8-0 victory behind the heat of Nieman and Sean Paris. Nieman pitched the first four innings to get the win and Paris permitted just one hit over the final two innings. Hunter VanderKerchove cracked two hits against the Flying Gs, including a run- scoring double, and sweet- swinging senior Coalton Huff smote a sizzling two-run sin- gle. Nieman, who was 4-for-5 on the day, delivered two doubles against Gladwin and knocked in two runs. Catcher Brad Kussrow busted two hits and did usual masterful job behind the plate. Overall, I was really happy with the kids, Guild said. We hit the ball hard all the way through the lineup. Snowbirds trim Forest Area FIFE LAKE St. Mary secured a sweep of host Forest Area on Thursday, April 24. One game was razor close and one was a runaway. The scores were 2-1 and 13-0. In game one, Snowbird lefty Brendon Nowicki, con- sistent as the sunrise, served up the smoke and the off- speed stuff, striking out six Warriors and permitting just one run. Adam Nowicki delivered the key hit, a single to chase home Nick Harrington with what would prove to be the game-winning run. Harrington doubled to reach base. In game two, Jack Lochinsku unleashed the lightning, fanning six while securing the shutout. Adam Nowicki was hotter than jalapeno stew with the bat in his hands, going 4-for- 5. Casey Gilling collected two hits, as did Brendon Nowicki and the ever-dangerous Harrington. Onaway outscores Bulldogs ONAWAY Onaway outscored visiting I-Lakes by a 10-7 margin in the first game of a scheduled Ski Valley twinbill on Thursday, April 24. The second game was suspended because of darkness after two innings. Senior slugger Chris Cleaver clubbed a pair of hits, including a whistling two-run double and he also swiped two bases. Ray Self smacked two sin- gles, stole three bases and scored two runs for the Cardinals and lefty Andrew Prow lined a key two-run sin- gle. He also stole two bases and scored three times. Prow earned the W in game one, generating four Ks with has typically efficient use of his different deliveries. Mio and Alcona split LINCOLN The Lincoln- Alcona and Mio baseball teams split a pair Thursday, April 24, with the Thunderbolts outscoring Alcona 9-7 in the opener and Alcona coming back to take a razor-thin 2-1 decision in game two. Brad Rhoads earned the win on the hill for Mio. St. Mary, Mancy and Onaway all sweep to remain among SVC frontrunners; J-L competes in Standish tourney Baseball Report Snowbirds surge to 5-1 mark T*' 2014 G#9.13& )1.( 5'#/ +4 &'(+0+5'.9 015 4*135 1( #5*.'5'4. F3105 318, (31/ .'(5, +4 J14* C145'..1, J'(( H'+0:, S'5* ;L+)*54 O65< L#4*6#9, T3+45#0 G3')139, L'.#0& H6'9, R1$$ T3'.(#, T9 C11031&, M+-' M+4+#-, J+//9 R1$$ #0& M+-' S*931%-. T*' $#%- 318 (31/ .'(5 4*184 H605'3 S%*3#/, T9.'3 S%*3#/, J#%-410 L#0&3+', T9.'3 G3+4*, G#7+0 A5-+04, J#-' L'#%*/#0, T3'05 L#4*6#9, N+%- !'0:'. #0& C1#%* T1/ J1*0410. N15 2+%563'& #3' N+%- B'.&+0), J1'9 R144, B3#& B3+55+0). May 1, 2014 Tell our advertisers you saw their ad in the Weekly Choice Page 3-B LOCAL SPORTS On-line at www.weeklychoice.com By Mike Dunn REMUS Petoskey partici- pated in the Warrior Invitational Meet hosted by Chippewa Hills High School on Saturday, April 26, and both the boys and girls squads came in sixth place in the team standings. The flying feet of hard- pushing freshman Lily Cesario carried her to a solid second-place finish in the 3200 run in 11:35.09 with junior teammate Sarah Goble in fourth place in 11:48.77/ Cesario also teamed with Brittney Bunker, Jalynn Byers and Sydney Hopp to forge an excellent second-place time of 10:33.56. Cesario, Hopp and Goble joined with Isabel Brumleve to take seventh in the 1600 relay (4:46.89). Strong-armed senior Abigail Blanchard also had a big day for the Lady Northmen. She powered to a fourth-place distance of 28 feet, 2 inches in the shot put and she hurled the discus 91 feet to take fourth in that event. Freshman TaiLi Samson also showed up strong in the field events, flying to a fifth- place distance of 13 feet, 11 inches in the long jump. Samson joined forces with Tori Visconti, Deniece Clark and Alexis Knapp to claim seventh in the 800 relay (2:06.61). ON THE BOYS side, strong-striding junior B.J. Chatterson turned on the juice and turned in another stellar performance in his signature event, taking sec- ond overall in the 110-meter high hurdles in a whiplash time of 15.76 seconds. Super sophomore Andy Frampus also had an out- standing day, earning third in the pole vault with a height of 11 feet, 6 inches and motored to third in the 800 run in 2:09.6. Senior teammate Mark Smith finished right behind Frampus in the 800 run, tak- ing fourth in 2:14.48. Smith also claimed sixth in the 1600 run (4:50.55). Patrick Sheperd surged to fifth in the 400 dash (56.85) and teamed with Kyle Hannah, Ethan Taylor and Matt Hentschell to claim sixth in the 800 relay (1:41.98). Junior Thomas VanSlembrouck strode to fourth in the 3200 run in a time of 10:33.86. VanSlembrouck joined forces with Max Myerson, Jacob Kromm and Chase Gregory to capture fourth in the 3200 relay (9:28.27). Hentschell sped to seventh in the 100 dash in 12.55 sec- onds and ninth in the 200 dash (25.89). Chatterson, Frampus shine for Northmen boys, Cesario and Goble for girls Track Pe$#ke( &ie# in Chi! Hill# mee$ By Mike Dunn MANCELONA Senior Dakota Derrer, fresh off sign- ing her letter of intent to play Div. I womens hockey at Syracuse University, iced Ski Valley foe Forest Area twice with a dominating perform- ance in the circle on Monday, April 28. Dakota dazzled and baf- fled the Forest Area hitters throughout the twinbill, fir- ing a no-hitter and a one-hit- ter while securing a 18-3 and 13-0 sweep to help the Lady Ironmen improve to 3-1 in league play. Lindsey Friday was a fear- some force at the plate, whacking hits all over the place. In the opener, she recorded three hits, knocking in four runs and scored three times. And she wasnt alone. Shaina Sizemore was also in Slam Mode with the alu- minum in her hands, striking two hits and driving in three runs for the Ironmen. Logan Allen also laced a pair of hits and knocked in three runs. In the nightcap, Dakota put the Double-D brand on the contest as she drilled three hits to support her own cause. Mancelona (3-1) is sched- uled to host St. Mary on Thursday, May 1, weather permitting. Central Lake sweeps Onaway CENTRAL LAKE Onaway was seeking its first win of the season on Monday at the dia- mond of Ski Valley foe Central Lake but was unable to get it. The host Trojans prevailed by scores of 14-4 and 8-4. Lexi Szymoniak laced the ball for the Cardinals in game one, launching a pair of dou- bles and Morganne Badgero was also in blast mode, belt- ing out a booming RBI dou- ble. Ashley LaLonde lined a pair of hits and scored twice. Olivia McDonald and Lindsay LaLonde also notched hits. Skyler Butler pitched the Cardinals and took the loss. Badgero carried the hot bat for Onaway in game two, going a perfect 3-for-3 with an RBI double and two runs scored. Ashley LaLonde laced two hits while Lindsay LaLonde and Szymoniak each struck for a hit and Szymoniak scored a run. Onaway (0-7, 0-3) travels to Johannesburg-Lewiston on Thursday, May 1. Gaylord wins and ties TRAVERSE CITY The Gaylord gals of coach Abe Cruz traveled west to Traverse City and secured a win and a tie against Big North rival T.C. West on Wednesday, April 23. In game one, the Blue Devils finished strong to post a 6-4 victory. Game two ended in a wild 9-9 tie. The Blue Devils won in extra innings in the opener as senior Lauren Hintz slammed a key hit in the eighth inning and Cierra Woods whacked an RBI sin- gle. Lauren finished a produc- tive game with three hits and Cierra added two with two RBIs. Bri Hartley busted a pair of hits as well to help fuel the offense. Seed-throwing senior Ally Sobeck earned the W in the circle for Gaylord with a grit- ty eight-inning performance, notching eight Ks along the way. It looked for a while that Gaylord might get the sweep but the host Titans staged a late rally to salvage the tie in the nightcap before the game was suspended because of darkness. Joslyn Rider was in Rip City mode in game two, recording three hits for Gaylord and knocking in three runs. Sobeck smashed two hits to help her own cause. The durable Sobeck, dependable as the sunrise, pitched the complete game once again and notched four Ks. Gaylord (3-3-1) had its gave against T.C. Central postponed because of rain on Tuesday, April 29. The Blue Devils are slated to trav- el to T.C. St. Francis on Thursday, May 1, and to Alpena on Tuesday, May 6. Petoskey sweeps T.C. Central TRAVERSE CITY Petoskey got the Big North portion of the schedule off to a promising start on Wednesday, April 23, with a sweep of host Traverse City Central, 8-5 and 5-4. Sweet-swinging sopho- more shortstop Makenna Smith knocked in the game- winning run in the nightcap with a crisp RBI single in the bottom of the seventh. Freshman Emma Williams provided the fire from the circle, earning both wins for the Northmen. She started the opener and went all the way, striking out nine. She won game two in relief. Lily Kingma clubbed a two-run single to help spark the Northmen attack in the opener and Williams wal- loped a booming two-run double to help her own cause. Brianna Marshall muscled an RBI single to chase home Brooke Hebert, who had singled. Marshall banged out three hits and Ashley Lamoreaux laced two. In the nightcap, Hebert walked to lead off the fateful seventh and scored the game-winning run on Smiths screaming single. Petoskey hit the ball hard in game two, sprinkling sin- gles and doubles up and down the lineup. Kate Smielewski smashed a dou- ble and scored a run. Sara Donakowski drilled an RBI double and Smith and Amanda Stinger each stroked a double. Herbert hammered out two hits and Williams whacked two hits also. Marshall started and per- mitted just three hits with one K over six innings. Williams came on in the sev- enth and got the win, striking out two and allowing two hits. J-L, Mancy split twinbill MANCELONA Two teams hoping to have a say in the Ski Valley Conference race this season faced off on Thursday, April 24, and each earned a victory. Johannesburg-Lewiston outslugged host Mancelona in a wild one, 20-10, in the opener before the Lady Ironmen came back to earn a 5-2 win in a somewhat saner contest in game two. In the opener, J-L stormed back from a 5-1 deficit to overtake the home team, fueled by the big bat of junior Emily Aisthorpe, who was throttling the ball. Aisthorpe tagged two towering triples to fuel the Cardinals artillery, knocking in three runs and scoring twice. Miranda Kortman collected two hits and drove in two and junior Haylie Haase hammered a two-run single for coach Ashlie Houses girls. The Lady Ironmen rebounded to take game two behind the effective pitching of long-armed senior Dakota Derrer and the timely hitting Lindsey Friday and Logan Allen. Allison Ellis pitched well in defeat for J-L, striking out three. Chiefs fall to Alpena ALPENA The Chiefs lost a pair of close ones to host Alpena in non-conference action on Thursday, April 23, by scores of 10-9 and 8-4. The Chiefs pounded the ball but had too many field- ing miscues and couldnt generate a win. Brooke Beaubien was a Beast at the plate in game one, belting a majestic two- run home run to help fuel the fireworks in the tough 10-9 defeat and she also blistered an RBI double. Sluggers Haley Stempky and Kamie Ramsay also found the sweep spot on the bat and sent balls sailing over the fence for home runs for Petoskey in the contest. Corrie Bongard added to the onslaught, busting a two-run double. Aleeza Bergstrom belted two hits with two RBIs and Autumn Tallman tagged two hits and knocked in a run and Erica France drilled two hits. Tallman toed the rubber for Cheboygan and pitched better than the score shows. She walked five and the Chiefs struggled defensively, making six errors. Beaubien continued to blister the ball in game two, blasting two more hits and knocking in two more runs. Tallman tore into one and tagged an RBI double. Bridget Blaskowski busted a hit and Bergstrom also had a hit. Macey Charboneau started but had to leave the game with an injury. Bongard pitched in relief for the Chiefs. Derrer dominates in the circle; Onaway falls; J-L and Mancy split; Petoskey sweeps; Gaylord wins and ties in twinbill; Chiefs bow to Alpena Softball Lady Ironmen earn SVC sweep Football MANCELONA -Senior All- State linebacker Luke Smigielski has chosen to con- tinue his education and has committed to play football for the NCAA Division III Bulldogs of Adrian College. The Bulldogs were the 2012 Champions of the Michigan Intercollegiate Athletic Association (MIAA). The Ironmen will literally need to fill big holes on both sides of the ball next season. During his junior and senior seasons the 5-10, 210 pound Smash Mouth Smigielski was a dominating blocker at tight end and split end, in Coach Dan Boo Derrers powerful run-oriented offense. Mancelona posted a 27-5 record during Smigielskis three year varsity career. Luke is a coachs dream, Derrer said, Hes a team player, hes highly dedicated, hes tough and hes smart. I think Luke has made a very good decision, and for all the right reasons. Assuming he stays healthy, I expect him to contribute early and have a really nice career at Adrian. Smigielski was voted the Ski Valley South Conference Defensive MVP for 2013, and also earned First Team All- Area and All-Region post sea- son honors. He was a mem- ber of the Weekly Choice All- Area Dream Team on defense. The future Adrian Bulldog linebacker had this to say about his decision: My choice was about my comfort level on the campus and the education, but of course, being recruited for football was very important to me as well. I want to continue as a student athlete, it just works for me. Smigielski added: The facilities and the atmosphere at Adrian have a Division I feel. The players really respond to that, and the Bulldogs expect to win. An academic all-confer- ence selection throughout his varsity career, who main- tains a 3.9 GPA, Smigielski, plans to major in pre-health science or athletic training while at Adrian. Mancelonas Smash Mouth All-State linebacker will take his talents to next level R6))'& A..-S5#5' .+0'$#%-'3 L6-' ;S/#4* M165*< S/+)+'.4-+ 1( M#0%'.10# 8+.. $' 2.#9+0) %1..')' (115- $#.. #5 A&3+#0. couRtesy Photo Smigielski to play for Adrian Liz Harding Sales We offer...Residential Commercial Carpet Vinyl Rugs Hardwood Ceramic Laminate Window Fashions QUALITY EXPERIENCE EXCELLENCE (989) 731-2003 FX (989) 731-9949 liz@hickersonfloor.com www.hickersonfloor.com 2234 M-32 West, Gaylord, MI 49735 By Mike Dunn CHEBOYGAN The Cheboygan softball squad secured a doubleheader sweep of visiting Straits Area Conference foe Pickford on Monday, April 28, in wind- storm-like conditions, 13-3 and 17-4. Once again it was Bombs Away Brooke Beaubien leading the onslaught for the Chiefs with a pair of monster blasts that cleared the fence and were last seen heading somewhere over Lake Huron. Brookes majestic clouts were part of a 30-run outpouring by the charged up Chiefs of coach Mike Barber. Brooke, who is just a soph- omore, also earned her first varsity pitching win, serving up the sizzle in game two with three Ks. In addition to hitting her two majestic home runs and firing away for her first career victory in the circle, Brooke also led the fans in karaoke between innings (just kidding). Aspen Williams was in wallop mode once again, whacking a double and a single and driving in two runs. Corrie Bongard belted two hits with an RBI and Autumn Tallman tagged a double. Haley Stempky struck an RBI single. In the opener, Bongard went to the circle and blind- ed the Panther hitters with her whistling deliveries, striking out eight and per- mitting just two hits. Bombs Away Brooke belted two doubles in the opener in support of Bongard and she wasnt alone. Meriyah Shampine swung a clean stick and shook out a double and a single with shocking sud- denness and Aleeza Bergstrom busted a double and a single as well. Cheboygan (3-5, 2-0) had its game with Petoskey on Tuesday, April 29, postponed because of rain. The Chiefs are scheduled to play at St. Ignace on Thursday, May 1. By Mike Dunn GAYLORD After a notable four-year varsity prep volley- ball career launching left- handed missiles for Gaylord, senior Dakota Pelach has signed her letter of intent to play next year at Alma College. The silky-smooth 5-foot-9 Pelach, the Blue Devils light- ning strike lefty up front, earned numerous accolades during her years on the court, including being part of the Weekly Choice All-Area volleyball team four years in a row, including being part of the Dream Team in her sen- ior season. She was also a two-time All-Big North selection, the Gaylord Herald Times Player of the Year in 2013, the Gaylord MVP in 2013, and the team captain in addition to earning All-Region honors, She didnt do half bad in the classroom, either. The cere- bral senior earned All- Academic recognition all four years. In the press release issued by Alma College, Dakota explained why she chose Alma. Why wouldn't I choose alma? From the second I stepped foot on campus, it was a home away from home, she said. The people were so welcoming and friendly, the campus itself is beautiful, and the education is phenomenal. Everyone is meant to be someone at Alma, not just another face in the crowd. I cannot wait to start a new journey in my life, being able to continue on with my passion of volleyball and prepare myself for my future life here at Alma. Dakota is the daughter of Paul (deceased) and Kelly Pelach and one of six chil- dren. She said in the press release her Mom Kelly is her role model. My mom is definitely my role model, hands down, Dakota said. She is one of the most caring, understand- ing and hardworking people I have ever met. She is my teacher, my best friend, my rock and my mentor. She has taught me so much in life that I will carry with me for the rest of my life and I couldn't be more grateful and happy to call her my momma. Dakota will major in biolo- gy at Alma. Head Coach Sarah Dehring had this to say about the 2014 recruiting class at Alma: "I am very excited to have this group of young women join our ACVB family. The return- ing group of players has been working extremely hard this off-season and we have set our goals high for 2014. "This freshmen class is a group of hardworking indi- viduals who will challenge our returners and each other with their work ethic and drive. We will be young in experience, but this team is prepared for the challenge." Gaylords lightning lefty hitter will be bringing the fire to Scots program Volleyball Pelach to play for Alma College Page 4-B Tell our advertisers you saw their ad in the Weekly Choice May 1, 2014 LOCAL SPORTS On-line at www.weeklychoice.com CHARLEVOIX The over- all record, so far, isnt proba- bly what the Grayling girls varsity soccer team was hop- ing for after seven games. The Lady Vikings lost to host Charlevoix, 6-0, on Monday, April 28. The loss dropped Grayling to 2-7 overall. We played even with them for the first 20 minutes, but some mental lapses and stabbing at the ball led to multiple scores, said Grayling head coach Craig Cobb. Charlevoix moved the ball very well and took advantage of our mis- takes. The host Rayders took a commanding 5-0 lead at the half. At halftime, we talked about being more disci- plined with our positioning and making sure we jockey the ball, Cobb added. The second half we came out and played much tougher defense, and had some great offensive opportunities. Despite the final score, Grayling goalie Mollie Binert had a nice game with 10 saves. The defeat was the Lady Vikings first in three games, following wins over visiting Boyne City (3-0) and then at Kalkaska (2-0) on back-to- back days April 24-25. The team is growing and improving each game, Cobb said. I have been very happy with their attitudes whether we are winning or losing. These girls have worked very hard, and I am confi- dent that we are going to continue to grow as a team both in our chemistry and discipline on defense, as the season progresses. Of course, the start of the season wasnt exactly kind to the Grayling squad. The Lady Vikes lost their first four games, including defeats to Houghton Lake (1-0), Elk Rapids (4-0), Harbor Springs (5-0) and Traverse City St. Francis (2-0). It was a rough start to our season playing against some experienced teams in the bitter cold, Cobb said. The girls played hard. As a young team with little experience playing together, we are building on our chemistry and confidence each game and practice. We started to develop some of that chemistry last week as we defeated Boyne City and Kalkaska. And, recently, Grayling has benefitted from contribu- tions from a variety of play- ers. Tandy Mitchell, Cortney Hickman and Rachel each scored goals against Boyne City, while Courtney Hatfield and Brie Koves tallied scores to top Kalkaska. We also had a goalie swap, as Laura Simpson is out with an injured arm, Cobb added. Mollie Binert stepped in as a freshman and has been doing an out- standing job. Simpson had recorded 10 saves in each of the teams first four games before her injury. Report by Dennis Mansfield, Buckland News Service. Lady Vikes rebounding from rough start Ga(l"d #eni" Dak$a Pelach, $he ligh$ning-#$"ike lef$( f $he Bl%e De&il#, ha# ch#en $ !la( f" Alma Cllege. CourteSy photo By Mike Dunn TRAVERSE CITY The Gaylord baseball team of coach John Schneider showed plenty of scrap and fight on Wednesday, April 23, but could not pick up a victo- ry in a hard-fought, competi- tive doubleheader at the dia- mond of Big North rival Traverse City West. The Blue Devils lost by scores of 2-1 and 6-3. In the opener, Gaylord had opportunities to tie or pull ahead but could not get the big hit against the Titans tal- ented Paul Soma. Soma and Gaylord fresh- man fireman Levi Irish hooked up in an old-fash- ioned pitchers duel. On this day, the Titans did just enough to pull out the win. Irish turned in a brilliant performance, though, in just his second start, mixing his pitches with lethal efficiency and keeping the West hitters off stride all game long. Irish allowed just four hits and struck out four. Sophomore sluggers Robbie Hansen, Jack Korte and Jacob Freeman each rapped out a hit for the Blue Devils against the hard- throwing Soma. Coach Schneider was impressed with the perform- ance of Irish on the hill and pleased that the Blue Devils showed up defensively behind him, not committing a single error. In game two, it was anoth- er of Gaylords crop of talent- ed underclassmen handling the pitching duties and turn- ing in another notable per- formance. Hansen pounded the strike zone and chal- lenged the Titan hitters all game long. He allowed just five hits and three earned runs. Chase Cavric was Hansens counterpart on the hill for the Titans and he, like Soma, pitched a great game. Cavric allowed Gaylord just three hits and struck out five. Sweet-swinging sopho- more Joseph Miller struck a screaming RBI: single for Gaylord and junior Dante Welch also walloped an RBI single. Hansen hammered a single and scored a run. Schneider liked what he saw of his teams scrappiness and resilience against a tal- ented Titan team that improved to 8-2 on the sea- son and 2-0 in the Big North. Gaylord was slated to host Traverse City Central on Tuesday, April 29. On Thursday, May 1, the Blue Devils play at T.C. St. Francis, weather permitting. On Tuesday, May 6, Gaylord plays at the diamond of Big North foe Alpena. Bl%e De&il# fall $ T.C. We#$ Gaylord shows lots of scrap and fight in twinbill defeat to Titans Baseball Snowbirds trim Forest Area twice Sullivan, Borowiak and Rutkowski combine on two no-hitters Softball Cheboygan pounds on Panthers Softball |s oow ava||ab|e at Johosoo 0|| Narathoo Narathoo
Vara|0oo PF0 90 |s 90 oc|aoe /ead Free 0aso||oe per/ec| /or recrea||ooa| re0|c|es. PE00HHEN0E0 F0P ALL 0APUPETE0 VEh|0LE$ |N0LU0|N0: BOATS ATV'S MOTORCYCLES LAWNMOWERS CLASSIC CARS !0|s 0|y0 oc|aoe /ae| cao a|so be ased |o oener /ae| |ojec|ed re0|c|es FEATUPE$ 0F Th|$ FUEL |N0LU0E: BETTER MILEAGE NO PHASE SEPERATION PROBLEMS MORE PERFORMANCE CONTAINS MARATHON STP ADDITIVES |||||\l|1\| 1||\| \J 502 8. 0860 A. 6AL080 989-732-6014 5021 000 80. 612 LwI80 989-786-3397 J080 0IL MA8A0 Available exclusively at... LwI80 MA8A0 GAYLORD The St. Mary girls dominated their Ski Valley doubleheader with Forest Area on Thursday, April 24, trimming the Warriors by scores of 16-0 and 15-0. The three St. Mary pitchers didnt allow a single hit. Savannah Sullivan served up the S.S. Sizzler medium rare and the Forest Area hit- ters couldnt get a single bite at it. She finished with seven fast Ks in three innings of work. At the plate, it was Gabby Schultz and Caylee Lawnichak each slugging two hits and Caylee cracking a two-run double and knock- ing in three runs altogether. Danica Bebble and Katie Rutkowski also ripped RBI singles. In the other game, it was Kari Borowiak and Katie Rutkowski sharing the pitch- ing duties and both keeping the Warriors bats under con- trol. Kari twirled two perfect innings with three Ks and Katie pitched one inning with one K. Kari also connected for two hits and was a terror with runners in scoring position, chasing home four of St. Marys 16 runs. Schultz was in Slam Mode a well, generat- ing two hits and two RBIs with two runs scored. Rutkowski rapped two more hits with an RBI and Helena Berberian blasted a two-run single. Savannah Sullivan and Caylee Lawnichak also drilled hits for the Snowbirds. St. Mary is scheduled to host East Jordan on Thursday, May 1, weather permitting. On Monday, May 5, the Snowbirds are sched- uled to play at Mancelona. Chiefs sweep SAC foe Pickford behind Beaubiens ballistic blasts MANCELONA Dont let the long, flowing hair and captivating smile fool you. Dakota Derrer of Mancelona is about as tough as they come. She played four years of high school hockey for the Traverse Bay Reps and was a hard-nosed defender in a rugged sport with very few other females. She not only survived but thrived in that unforgiving environment and now all her hard work and perseverance has paid off big time. Dakota, the daughter of Doug and Debbie Derrer of Mancelona, has signed her national letter of intent to play womens hockey for Syracuse University, an NCAA Division I program that will be entering its sev- enth season next year. The smooth-striding, 5- foot-8 Dakota, who is also a star shortstop for the Lady Ironmen with state and national hitting records to her credit, will be joining a Syracuse team that posted a respectable 20-14-3 record in the 2013-14 season. M#0%'.10# 4'0+13 D#-15# D'33'3 +4 (.#0-'& $9 2#3'054 D16) #0& D'$$+' D'33'3 10 T6'4	, A23+. 22, #4 4*' 4+)04 *'3 .'55'3 1( +05'05 51 2.#9 81/'0=4 *1%-'9 #5 S93#%64' U0+7'34+59. S''0 #5 3+)*5 +4 D#-15#=4 *+)* 4%*11. %1#%* T1&& S2#6.&+0). couRtesy oF Amy DeRReR Mancy hard-nosed senior was star defensemen on ice for Traverse Bay Reps Hockey Derrer signs to play Div. I hockey LOCAL SPORTS On-line at www.weeklychoice.com May 1, 2014 Tell our advertisers you saw their ad in the Weekly Choice Page 5-B By Mike Dunn CHEBOYGAN The Cheboygan baseball team of coach Kevin Baller may finally be putting some of the early-season rustiness to the rear. The Chiefs, after stumbling out of the gates and winning just one game in their first five, opened Straits Area Conference play at home on Monday, April 28, and took care of busi- ness, taming the Panthers by scores of 16-0 and 8-4. Zach Socha was zoned in like a laser in game one, mixing his deliveries with lethal efficiency. He notched 10 Ks over four innings of the mercy-shortened con- test and he didnt walk a bat- ter while allowing just two hits. At the plate for Cheboygan, it was the Stempky Stomp leading the way. Josh Stempky and Nate Stempky both showed up strong in the opener. Josh generated two doubles and drove in two runs and Nate nailed an RBI double. Each racked up three hits. Zach Schley struck for two hits and two RBIs and Brady Hiller belted a two- run single among his two hits. Chris Demeuse drilled a single and Cole Williams whacked a hit. In game two, Williams did a similar wipeout number on the Panther batters as Socha, notching nine Ks in five innings of work. The Panthers showed some resilience, though, and made game two a lot more competitive. Williams had plenty of support at the plate, though no one swung a hotter bat than Jared Proctor, who was a perfect 4-for-4 with a tow- ering two-run triple and three runs scored. Mitch Schley stroked an RBI single among his two hits. Williams helped his own cause with a double and Josh Stempky struck for another hit. Tanner Carr reached base four times and was a thorn in the side of the Panthers all game long. Socha knocked in a run with a perfectly executed suicide squeeze and Baller also noted the fundamen- tally sound safety bunt off the bat of Austin Christie. Socha fires shutout in opener, Williams gets W in game two with Pickford By Mike Dunn ALPENA The Cheboygan soccer team of coach Mark Stormzand trav- eled east on Friday, April 25, to take on familiar foe Alpena. The Chiefs took care of business in a big way, scor- ing four second-half goals en route to a 5-1 triumph. The impressive win pushed Cheboygans record to 5-0. The Chiefs were holding onto a slim 1-0 lead when fire-breathing forwards Mandy Paull and Sudden Sierra Kolatski turned up the throttle on the fireworks. Pretty soon the sparks were flying. Paull and Kolatski loaded the cannons and launched two goals apiece in the sec- ond half. They wrent the only ones bringing the thunder, though. Kaylyn Brown loaded the K-Bro rocket and sent a missile screaming past the sprawling Wildcat net- minder to score the other Cheboygan goal. Kaylyn also notched an assist. Claire Woiderski was the Chiefs florist, making sweet deliveries on the day and acquiring two assists. Hannah Granstrom and Addy Pletcher also earned assists. Goalkeeper Jessica Smith did her usual Gibraltar imita- tion in the nets, turning back eight shots from a pretty good Alpena squad. The Cheboygan JV played well in a 1-0 defeat. Cheboygan played at Roscommon in a Northern Michigan Soccer League clash on Tuesday, April 29, as this issue was going to press. Cheboygan will look to remain unbeaten when it travels to Roscommon for a Northern Michigan Soccer League matchup on Tuesday at 5 p.m. On Thursday, May 1, the Chiefs play host to Alpena and on Friday, May 2, they play at Burt Lake Northern Michigan Christian Academy. High-powered Chiefs push to 5-0 Paull, Kolatski fuel second-half fireworks in big victory at Alpena Soccer Blue Devils outscore Alpena Gaylord pushes record to 4-1-1 in Big North with workmanlike 6-1 victory on road Soccer Baseball photomichigan.com Your photos on the web Bob Gingerich bob@danishlanding.com 989-348-5355 1923 Dansk Lane, Grayling, MI 49738 JOHANNESBURG The annual Val Kapture Memorial Tournament at Johannesburg-Lewi ston features a very tough field of competitors, as usual. On the baseball diamond this Saturday, May 3, at 9 a.m., the host Cardinals take on hard-hitting Forest Area in game one and Atlanta, the defending tourney champs, faces always-tough Mancelona in game two starting at 11. The round-one losers then face each other in the consolation game at about 1 p.m., followed by the round- one winners squaring off in the title game around 3 p.m. On the softball diamond, J-L takes on Forest Area in game one with Atlanta and Harbor Light Christian squaring off in game two. The softball games usually take a little less time to com- plete and so their games may be held a little earlier as the day goes along. The late Val Kapture was a longtime assistant J-L base- ball coach and beloved edu- cator who died tragically in a car accident. Since the scholarship fund was estab- lished in 2007, nearly $20,000 in scholarships has been awarded to J-L seniors who played baseball for the Cardinals. The first recipient of the award, 2007 graduate Donald McLean, is today a police officer. Donald will be among the scholarship recipients who will be in attendance at Saturdays games along with members of the Kapture family. This is something that promotes baseball in north- ern Michigan and its a serv- ice to kids who want to go on and do something posi- tive with their lives, said Hall of Fame J-L baseball coach Rick Guild. A lot of our kids have received scholarships since we start- ed this and its nice to help them achieve their goals in memory of Val. The cost is $5 at the gate. Everything raised from the tournament, including the concessions sales, goes to the scholarship fund. The umpires who will be offici- ating the games are donat- ing their time as well. Val Kapture tourney is Saturday Annual tourney at Johannesburg draws strong field, serves as fundraiser for Kapture Scholarship Fund Baseball Chiefs rebound with SAC sweep Classified Ads As Low As $ 2 00 Just log on to: weeklychoice .com Or call: 989-732-8160 By Mike Dunn ALPENA The Gaylord soccer team took care of business, as expected, on Monday, April 28, at Alpena, taming the Wildcats by a 6-1 margin. The victory pushed Gaylords record in the league to 4-1-1 while Alpena, which played scrappy and tough, slipped to 1-5 and 1-4. Senior striker Maddie Hamilla hammered two more goals to fuel the fire- works for Gaylord and silky- smooth sophomore Brandi Wagner walloped the ball while securing two goals as well. Missy Hartmann launched a missile to account for another Gaylord goal and midfielder Brooke Stier, dependable as the times tables, also struck for a goal. Tatiana Burcar scored Alpenas lone goal late in the contest. ON SATURDAY, April 26, Gaylord participated in a tournament at Bay city and tied two times. The Blue Devils first match of the day was a score- less tie against Bay City Western, a match dominated by solid defense at both ends. Western did an excellent job of stuffing Gaylords passing lanes and minimizing the Blue Devils advantage in speed. Abby Haskill was superb in the nets once again in forging the shutout. The second game with Midland Dow was a 1-1 tie. Speedy sophomore Courtney Busch connected squarely to send one past the Dow goalie for what would be Gaylords only goal of the tournament. Courtney was set up perfectly by teammate Brooke Stier. It was a rough, physical contest and both Haskill in the nets and scrappy senior Lexi Mang were forced to leave with concussions. Senior Missy Hartmann put on the goalie shirt for the Blue Devils after Abby was forced to the sidelines and did an outstanding job, pre- serving the tie with several key stops. Gaylord (4-1-3, 4-1-1) hosts Traverse City West this Thursday, May 1. 1 MILE NORTH ON OLD 27 GAYLORD 989.732.5136 HOURS: MONDAY-FRIDAY 7:30AM TO 5:30PM; SATURDAY 8AM TO 2PM; CLOSED SUNDAY PRO-Build Avid anglers are con- stantly looking for tips and tricks to help them have more successful fish- ing trips. Many turn to sonar technology to achieve this goal. Although a bit of an investment (units start at $100 and go up), sonar products offer a variety of benefits on the water. Most units can provide anglers with readings on temperature, vegetation and structure in the water, type of bottom below you, fish in the area, depth, current speed of the ves- sel, GPS navigation, and waypoints for future trips. Some even allow you the opportunity to purchase nautical charts. Need help, besides using sonar, in planning your next fishing trip? Visit www.michigan.gov/ fishing. By Mike Dunn JOHANNESBURG Its been splitsville for the Johannesburg- Lewi st on Cardinals of coach Rick Guild so far this season. The Cardinals have played three quality Ski Vally Conference foes and have split with each of them to date. On Thursday, April 24, the Cardinals engaged defending league champion Mancelona and split a pair at Mancelona and on Monday, April 28, the Cards and Bellaire split a pair at Johannesburg. AT MANCELONA, the Ironmen won game one 4-2 and came back to take game two by a 7-4 count. In the opener, Kody Pinney pitched brilliantly for the Ironmen of coach Jim VanWagoner, striking out four and permitting four hits. Junior catcher Cole VanWagoner whacked two hits and knocked in a run for the victors and Nick Balhorn busted a two-run double. Chase Wilcox also cracked two hits. For J-L in the opener, sen- ior seed thrower Coalton Huff pitched well in defeat, striking out seven and allow- ing five hits and three earned runs while going the dis- tance. Coalton did a good job of keeping the Mancelona hit- ters off balance, Guild reported. Coalton also delivered an RBI single and Joel Kussrow cracked an RBI single. In game two, the Cardinals turned things around to earn the victory and salvage the split. It was the Vlasic Vacuum, slugging junior Trevor Pickelmann, who had the BIG hit in the nightcap, smashing a bases-loaded triple and that clanged off the top of the fence in center field and was very nearly a grand slam. That hit in the top of the fifth inning put the Cardinals on top 7-3. J-L took a 4-3 lead into the turnaround inning. Dangerous Dan Nieman led off with a walk and that was followed by a single through the middle off the bat of Joel Kussrow and a perfectly laid bunt single from speed mer- chant Jac Bandt to fill the bases for Pickelmann. Logan Huff twirled a nice game for the Cardinals, going the first four innings and allowing three runs and three hits. Sean Paris came on in relief and saved the game, issuing one hit and one unearned run in two innings of effective work on the hill. Hunter VanderKerchove hammered out two hits to lead J-L in the nightcap and scored two runs. Paris also recorded a key RBI single and the Vlasic basher Pickelmann produced the three-run triple. It was two good games for two pretty good teams, Guild said. We always like to play Mancelona. Jim does a great job over there and those kids are always ready to play and dont beat them- selves. They played excellent defense and hit the ball pret- ty well and we did too in the second game. The game-two loss has been Mancelonas only defeat so far. After sweeping Forest Area on Monday (see Baseball Report in this issue), the Ironmen improved to 6-1 overall and 4-1 in the Ski Valley. ON MONDAY, the Cardinals took on Bellaire and the scenario was similar. After losing a tense opener 3- 2, J-L came back to win 6-4 in the nightcap. Coalton Huff again pitched well in defeat in the opener, giving up just four hits and striking out four. All three runs scored against him were unearned. Sean Paris came on in relief and got the final two outs in the sixth inning. Brad Kussrow ripped an RBI single for J-L and Coalton went 2-for-2 with an RBI. In game two, sophomore sizzler Logan Huff earned the W on the hill, striking out six and giving up six hits and three earned runs. J-L took a 3-0 lead in the third when Logan Huff locked into one and launched a whistling two- run tripled that clanged off the fence. Pickelmann, who had walked, and VanderKerchove, who had singled, scored on Huffs timely three-bagger. The Eagles went on top 4-3 in the fourth inning after col- lecting two doubles and a single and adding a fourth run on an error. In the bottom of the inning, Logan Huff had another big hit for J-L, this time with the bases loaded, and knocked in two more runs. Coalton Huff also helped the cause with a tow- ering sacrifice fly as the Cardinals went ahead 6-4. Logan finished a produc- tive game with a triple and single and four RBIs. Coalton had an RBI and Brandon Huff belted an RBI single and walked twice. J-L also competed in a tournament at Standish- Sterling on Saturday, April 26. See the Baseball Report in this issue for details. J-L (8-6, 3-3) is scheduled to play Onaway in still anoth- er key SVC clash on Thursday of this week but the forecast doesnt look very promising. This Saturday, May 3, the Cardinals host the annual Val Kapture Memorial Tournament to raise scholar- ship funds for J-L players. The popular annual event features both a baseball and softball tournament on the J- L diamonds. This year, J-L takes on Forest Area in the first round of the baseball tourney and Atlanta and Mancelona hook up in game two. The game-one losers play each other in the conso- lation game and then the winners square off in the title game. On the softball side, J-L plays Forest Area first and then Atlanta plays Harbor Light Christian. The action starts at 10 a.m. J-L #!li$# 'i$h Manc(, Bellai"e Cardinals gain split in game two of twinbills with top-tier SVC foes Baseball Page 6-B Tell our advertisers you saw their ad in the Weekly Choice May 1, 2014 GAYLORD The Department of Natural Resources would like to remind anglers three fishing seasons kicked off Saturday, April 26: The statewide trout sea- son The Lower Peninsula inland walleye, northern pike and muskellunge sea- sons The catch-and-immedi- ate-release bass season for all Lower Peninsula waters including the Great Lakes Anglers are reminded that in Upper Peninsula waters the walleye, northern pike and muskellunge seasons and the catch-and-immedi- ate-release bass season open on Thursday, May 15. Please note most areas of the Upper Peninsula will not have seasonal roads plowed yet and therefore will not be passable. Please contact a local DNR fish- eries management unit for additional details. The possession season for bass opens statewide on Saturday, May 24, except for Lake St. Clair, the St. Clair River and the Detroit River, which open on Saturday, June 21. The new license season began April 1, so anglers need to be sure they have purchased a new fishing license for this fishing sea- son. The 2014 fishing licens- es are valid through March 31, 2015. Michigan's fishing license options were restructured this year; anglers now have five options to choose from when making their pur- chase. All fishing licenses are good for all species. Fishing licenses may be purchased at a local retailer or through E-License. The 2014 Michigan Fishing Guide and Inland Trout & Salmon Maps are available on the DNR web- site at www.michigan.gov/fishing- guide. Fishing season now in full swing Statewide trout season and other seasons are now open LOCAL SPORTS On-line at www.weeklychoice.com DNR biologists estimate minimum of 636 wolves in Michigan this winter The results of Michigan's 2014 wolf population survey indicate no significant change in the estimated number of wolves in the Upper Peninsula compared to the results of last year's survey, Department of Natural Resources Wildlife Division officials said today. DNR wildlife biologists estimate there was a mini- mum of 636 wolves in Michigan this winter, with a confidence interval of plus- or-minus 42 animals. In comparison, the 2013 popu- lation estimate was 658 wolves, with a confidence interval of plus-or-minus 56 animals. "Based on the 2014 mini- mum population estimate, it is clear that wolf numbers in Michigan are stable and have experienced no significant change," said Adam Bump, DNR furbearer and bear spe- cialist. "We also did not see a significant difference in the number and average size of wolf packs as compared to 2013." The wolf population sur- vey is completed by DNR Wildlife Division and U.S. Department of Agriculture- Wildlife Services staff, who search specific zones for wolf tracks and other signs of wolf activity. While the survey is primarily a track survey, it also utilizes radio-collared animals and aerial observa- tion, which when combined with the information from the field work produce a minimum population esti- mate and confidence inter- vals. In 2014, approximately 63 percent of the Upper Peninsula was surveyed. Since wolves returned to the Upper Peninsula in the 1980s, the population steadi- ly grew until recent years when growth began to level off, which is what wildlife biologists expect to see when a recovered population approaches its biological carrying capacity. In the past few years, Michigan's mini- mum population estimate has hovered between 600- 700 wolves. In 2013, the DNR estab- lished a wolf management hunt in the Upper Peninsula, with three designated hunt units and a target harvest of 43 wolves, of which 22 were taken. The hunt was imple- mented to help reduce wolf- related conflicts in areas with persistent issues despite the use of other non- lethal and targeted lethal techniques. Wildlife man- agers specifically designed the hunt to minimize nega- tive behaviors demonstrated by packs at the local level without impacting the over- all population. "The fact that the 2014 estimate is 22 animals lower than the 2013 estimate is purely a coincidence," Bump said. "We are using an esti- mate rather than counting all individual wolves on the landscape. In addition, wolf numbers vary greatly within a single year due to the birth of pups in the spring, and deaths from many causes of mortality other than hunt- ing. What the estimate tells us is that the population has remained stable." The results of the 2014 wolf population survey will be one piece of data consid- ered by DNR wildlife biolo- gists as they evaluate current wolf management strategies, including the management hunt. For more information about wolf management in Michigan, visit www.michi- gan.gov/wolves. W$!f (*'+e- (h$,( #$ big cha#ge( A 4637'9 %10&6%5'& $9 5*' DNR 3'7'#.'& 01 4+)0+(+- %#05 %*#0)'4 51 5*' 81.( 2126.#5+10 +0 M+%*+)#0. Using sonar to find the fish! Many anglers are turning successfully to sonar technology DNR Fishing Tip xxxxxxxxxx May 1, 2014 Tell our advertisers you saw their ad in the Weekly Choice Page 7-B xxxxxx xxxxxx FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 513 Charles Brink Rd. Gaylord Rev. Karen Huddelson Aaron Hotelling, Director of Music Ecumenical Worship Sunday Service and Sunday School 10 a.m. (nursery provided) NEW PHONE NUMBER 989-732-7447 GaylordFPC.org Joy Fellowship Assembly of God 8600 S. Straits Hwy. Located between Indian River and Wolverine. Sunday - Coffee Hour 9 AM Service - 10 AM including services for children Wednesday - 6 PM 231-525-8510 Pastor Bob Moody B!b"e Ba(ed P'eac!$g T'ad!)!%$a" M*(!c F'!e$d",, Ca(*a", A)#%(&e'e C%#e J*() A( Y%* A'e S*$da, Sc%%" 10:00 - M%'$!$g W%'(!& 11:00 E+e$!$g Se'+!ce 6:00 - Wed$e(da, 6:00 A"&!$e V!""age Ba&)!() C*'c 158 N. T$,#!i#e Rd., Ga-!$'d . 989-732-4602 I0IA 8I8 0080M L06 0M8 lf you're not happy...We're NOT Finished!" 00NPLT0 0V8 50 L06 & ST|0k 80|LT h0NS F0|| Log or 1l2 Log S|d|og & 8estorat|oo oo 0|der Log homes. 0|eao & Sta|o proveo to |ast Ior years. 6.8. wo|Igram & Soos, |oc. logs@straitsarea.com (231} 238-4638 (231} 420-3033 Licensed & Insured www.indianriverloghomes.com Friendship Church 415 North Ohio, Gaylord 989-732-3621 Pastor Steve Datema A Christian Reformed Ministry Enjoy the music and message every Sunday morning at 10:00am. Sunday School at 11:15am Our Mission: A Spirit filled family of God united in our fear and love of Christ and committed to the truth of the Bible. A praying church that equips its members to care, serve and reach out to others with the saving grace of Jesus Christ.' FREEDOM WORSHIP CENTER Full Gospel Non Denominational Church 826-8315 Need Prayer or Ride to Church...Give us a call Sunday School - Adults/Kids 9:30 am Sunday Worship 10:30 am Wednesday Back to Basics Bible Study 2 pm 611 Mt. Tom Rd. (M-33) Mio, Michigan Inspirational Living ll5 L. Mun Street (the od move theutre) Dovntovn Cuyord Cer|emjerer t:it eri 'jiri| |illei 'errite Warm Friendly Welcoming Contemporary style service Children`s Church available 9:15 Coffee and donuts 9:00 & 10:30 Sunday Service (1 hr. 20 min.) www.liletltrtljeleri.tem A PASTORS PERSPECTIVE Pastor Steve Scheer Life Church People are always trying to disprove the Bible. Unfortunately most Christians do not study the Bible enough to have a ready answer to those who try to dis- credit the Bible. Archeology largely has involved people who were trying to prove whether the cities and people of the Bible existed. There are many reasons for this. Such as unbelief, or trying to justify sinful behavior, denial, or when one is unhappy with their faith. We, as Christians, need to be ready to answer questions about the Bible. Most questions are easily answered. For instance: Why do the four gospels, Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John, share some different words and events at the cross event? The answer is that it was written from the perspectives and investigations of 4 different authors so there would naturally be 4 different observa- tions. The Bible says in the second letter to Timothy, that we should study the word of God so that we can give a ready response and handle the word of god prop- erly. of Second Timothy 2: 15 Do your best to present yourself to God as one approved, a worker who does not need to be ashamed and who correctly handles the word of truth. I) i( $#e )hi#g )$ (a- )ha) )he'e a'e e''$'( a#d c$#)'adic)i$#( i# )he Bib!e a#d &*i)e a#$)he' )hi#g )$ %'$+e i). Whi!e I be!ie+e )he'e a'e diffi- c*!) %a((age(, I d$#') be!ie+e )he'e a'e a#- e''$'( $' c$#)'adic)i$#(, a#d )ha) ,i)h a !i))!e ,$' a#d 'e(ea'ch, "$() a%%a'e#) c$#)'adic)i$#( a'e ea(i!- 'ec$#ci!ed. The &*e()i$# i( h$, ,e a%%'$ach )he (c'i%)*'e(. I( i) f$' *#de'()a#di#g, ,he'e ,e a'e ,i!!i#g )$ g$ dee%e' )ha# (*'face !e+e! )$ 'ec- $#ci!e )$*gh %a((age(; $' i( i) ,i)h h$()i!i)-, ,he'e ,e a'e !$$i#g )$ fi#d ,a-( )$ *#de'"i#e i) a( G$d'( ,$'d? The Rev. Mike Bridge, New Life Anglican Church A !$) $f )he Bib!e i( )he i#)e'%'e)a)i$# $f )he 'eade' a( i) %e'- )ai#( )$ )hei' !i+e(. I)'( a b$$ ,'i))e# b- "e# ($ #$b$d- i( %e'fec). Tler Laughlin Harbor Springs Daily Word THURSDAY: 2 Timothy 3:15-17 New American Standard Bible (NASB) 15 and that from childhood you have known the sacred writings which are able to give you the wisdom that leads to salvation through faith which is in Christ Jesus. 16 All Scripture is inspired by God and profitable for teaching, for reproof, for correction, for training in righteousness; 17 so that the man of God may be adequate, equipped for every good work. FRIDAY: John 5:44-47 New American Standard Bible (NASB) 44 How can you believe, when you receive glory from one another and you do not seek the glory that is from the one and only God? 45 Do not think that I will accuse you before the Father; the one who accuses you is Moses, in whom you have set your hope. 46 For if you believed Moses, you would believe Me, for he wrote about Me. 47 But if you do not believe his writings, how will you believe My words? SATURDAY: Psalm 119:98-104 New American Standard Bible (NASB) 98 Your commandments make me wiser than my enemies, For they are ever mine. 99 I have more insight than all my teachers, For Your testimonies are my medi- tation. 100 I understand more than the aged, Because I have observed Your precepts. 101 I have restrained my feet from every evil way, That I may keep Your word. 102 I have not turned aside from Your ordinances, For You Yourself have taught me. 103 How sweet are Your words to my taste! Yes, sweeter than honey to my mouth! 104 From Your precepts I get understanding; Therefore I hate every false way. SUNDAY: Jeremiah 9:23-24 New American Standard Bible (NASB) 23 Thus says the Lord, Let not a wise man boast of his wisdom, and let not the mighty man boast of his might, let not a rich man boast of his riches; 24 but let him who boasts boast of this, that he understands and knows Me, that I am the Lord who exercises lovingkindness, justice and righteousness on earth; for I delight in these things, declares the Lord. MONDAY: Hebrews 13:8-9 New American Standard Bible (NASB) 8 Jesus Christ is the same yesterday and today and for- ever. 9 Do not be carried away by varied and strange teachings; for it is good for the heart to be strengthened by grace, not by foods, through which those who were so occupied were not benefited. TUESDAY: Joshua 1:7-9 New American Standard Bible (NASB) 7 Only be strong and very courageous; be careful to do according to all the law which Moses My servant commanded you; do not turn from it to the right or to the left, so that you may have success wherever you go. 8 This book of the law shall not depart from your mouth, but you shall meditate on it day and night, so that you may be careful to do according to all that is written in it; for then you will make your way prosperous, and then you will have success. 9 Have I not commanded you? Be strong and courageous! Do not tremble or be dismayed, for the Lord your God is with you wherever you go. WEDNESDAY: Colossians 4:5-6 New American Standard Bible (NASB) 5 Conduct yourselves with wisdom toward out- siders, making the most of the opportunity. 6 Let your speech always be with grace, as though seasoned with salt, so that you will know how you should respond to each person. No matter where you are in Lifes Journey you are welcomed here. We celebrate diversity 1st Congregational UCC Church 218 West 2nd Street, Gaylord Sunday Service at 10 a.m. Pastor Susan WebeIer 989-732-5726 firstuccgayIord.org. M$'#i#g( ,i)h C'aig 6:00 - 10:00 Thoughts on...How Should Christians Respond to People Claiming Errors and Contradictions in the Bible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LLL.9G>K:CDL123.8DB 2010 C=:KN (6A>7J. 33 (+". *CAN 60 &. $209 6 (*)/# DG '... ->K:GIDLC AJID "GDJE, 989 1!2 -D69, C=:7DN<6C, ($ 231-627-6700. LLL.->K:GAJID.C:I 2010 !DG9 !JH>DC .. .I::G>C< L=::A 8DCIGDAH, AD69:9. 34 (+". .6A: +G>8: $12,995. ->K:GIDLC AJID "GDJE, 989 1!2 -D69, C=:7DN<6C, ($ 231-627- 6700. LLL.->K:GAJID.C:I 2010 !DG9 !JH>DC. 34 (+", DCAN 98 &. )>8: 86G. $199 6 (*)/# DG '... ->K:GIDLC AJID "GDJE, 989 1!2 -D69, C=:7DN<6C, ($ 231-627-6700. LLL.->K:GAJID.C:I AUTOMOBILES 2010 /DNDI6 C6BGN '. CA-!A3 1 DLC:G >C B6G8:ADC6 -:9! DDCRI B>HH I=>H DC:, >IRH 7:6JI>;JA! 'DIH D; ;:6- IJG:H 6C9 NDJ L6CI >C NDJG C:MI 86G 6C9 <G:6I (+". $13,949. D6K: &G>C< C=:KGDA:I-C69>AA68, 1861 0. 31 )DGI=, +:IDH@:N, ($ 231-347-2585. 2011 !DG9 !D8JH .. CA-!A3 1 DLC:G >C .6C<G>6 -:9 6C9 6 HJE:G BJN! +:G;:8I ;DG I=: <G69J6I>C< HIJ9:CI. "G:6I (+"RH 6C9 H6;:IN FJ>EB:CI! A>G, 2'- 4 8NA>C9:G :C<>C:, L>G:A:HH G:BDI: & BDG:! $8,949. D6K: &G>C< C=:KGDA:I- C69>AA68, 1861 0. 31 )DGI=, +:IDH@:N, ($ 231-347-2585. 2011 !DG9 !D8JH. 35 (+". 'DD@H 6C9 9G>K:H A>@: C:L. $189 6 (*)/# DG '... ->K:GIDLC AJID "GDJE, 989 1!2 -D69, C=:7DN<6C, ($ 231-627- 6700. LLL.->K:GAJID.C:I 2012 C=:KN C6EI>K6. ':6I=:G. 1:GN, K:GN C>8:. .6A: +G>8: $15,297. ->K:GIDLC AJID "GDJE, 989 1!2 -D69, C=:7DN<6C, ($ 231-627-6700. LLL.->K:GAJID.C:I 2012 C=:KN (6A>7J 1'/. C6G !6M 1 DLC:G >C BA68@ "G6C>I: 6C9 ADL B>A:H! A <G:6I G>9: 6C9 K:GN :8DCDB>86A ID DLC L>I= >IH 2.4' P 48NA. 169 =E 6 HE::9 6JIDB6I>8! CDB: IGN >I DJI! $15,949. D6K: &G>C< C=:KGDA:I- C69>AA68, 1861 0. 31 )DGI=, +:IDH@:N, ($ 231-347-2585. 2012 !DG9 !JH>DC .. "G:6I (+", HI::G>C< L=::A 8DCIGDAH. )>8: 86G. $249 A (*)/# *- '... ->K:GIDLC AJID "GDJE, 989 1!2 -D69, C=:7DN<6C, ($ 231-627-6700. LLL.->K:GAJID.C:I 2012 !DG9 /6JGJH. .I::G>C< L=::A 8DCIGDAH. 1:GN C>8: K:=>8A:. AH ADL 6H $249 6 BDCI=. DG>K: )DL AJID .6A:H, 2215 0. #><=L6N 31 ), +:IDH@:N. +=DC: 231-347-3200. LLL.9G>- K:CDL123.8DB BAD C-D$/? )* C-D$/? 'DL L::@- AN E6NB:CIH 6K6>A67A: 6I /6>ADG:9 CI:GEG>H:H >C +:IDH@:N. C6AA 231- 347-3332 DG 1-888-774-2264. AH@ 67DJI <J6G6CI::9 8G:9>I 6EEGDK6A. LLL.I6>ADG:9:CI:GEG>H:H.8DB. $ B04 CA-.! 2G:8@:9 DG >C C::9 D; B:8=6C>86A G:E6>G, 1995 6C9 JE. "6NADG9 6G:6. 989-732-9362 BOATS & MARINE 1985 27R B6NA>C:G C67>C CGJ>H:G, HA::EH 6 L>I= IG6>A:G, 9DLC G><<:GH, C::9H HDB: LDG@, $4,000 D.7.D., 989-731-2617 1$)-0D *0/B*A-D (*/*-. 15#+, 7G6C9 C:L. $1,600 ;>GB. 989- 939-8440 CLASSIC AUTO CA.# !*- *'D CA-.. +A:6H: 9DC'I H:C9 ID 8GJH=:G. (>8=:A'H CDAA>H>DC & -:HIDG6I>DC 231-348-7066 !*- .A': 1940 !*-D +$C&0+. 231- 348-7066 FARM ./-A2 !*- .A'. "6NADG9 6G:6 ;6GB. C6AA 989-732-5880 FIREWOOD & WOODSTOVES 100% 2**D #A/, CD LDGG>:H. &::E NDJG ;6B>AN H6;: 6C9 L6GB L>I= 6 *0/D**- 2**D !0-)AC ;GDB C:CIG6A BD>A:G. DDJ7A: ' /68@ $C8. 989-733-7651 !$-2**D, D-4. B. (D:@:. 231- 631-9600 FREE ITEMS #A1 .*(/#$)" /* "$1 A2A4? !G:: >I:BH 8A6HH>;>:9 69H GJC ;G:: D; 8=6G<: >C I=: 2::@AN C=D>8:. C6AA 989-732-8160 DG :-B6>A NDJG 69 ID D6K:1@2::@ANC=D>8:.8DB. FRESH FOOD $6.99 2A''4 (A'. (DC96N 6AA 96N DCAN 6I "D77A:GH D; "6NADG9, 900 .. *IH:<D, "6NADG9. 989-732-9005 B6G7RH D:A><=IH. BJN DC: <:I I=: H:8- DC9 DC: ;G:: L=:C NDJ B:CI>DC I=>H 69. +>:H, 86GGDI 86@: 6C9 BDG:. "D77A:GH D; "6NADG9, 900 .. *IH:<D, "6NADG9. 989-732-9005 GARAGE & YARD SALE "6G6<:/HI6I: H6A: >C8AJ9>C< EDC- IDDC, 7:9GDDB H:I, HD;6H, HI6GI>C< .JC96N, (6N 4 6I 12:00. "JI=G>: '6@:H .J79>K>H>DC, 11396 !6CI6HN DG>K:, D;; (6GA:II:, C:6G 26I:GH, 989- 732-2174. #A1 .*(/#$)" /* .''? .:AA >I L>I= 6 8A6HH>;>:9 69, ?JHI $2.00 ;DG 10 LDG9H. 2=N 7DI=:G L>I= 6 "6G6<: .6A:? .:AA >I I=: :6HN L6N, >C I=: 2::@AN C=D>8:. GARAGE & YARD SALE (A4 2-4. 8A( - 4+(. 343 6C9 277 C=:HI:G -D69, "6NADG9. (-32 6HI 3 B>A:H I=:C )DGI= DC C=:HI:G -9. '6G<: 2 ;6B>AN BDK>C< H6A:. #:6KN 9JIN N6G9 :FJ>EB:CI, G6>AGD69 B:BD- G67>A>6, B>H8. =JCI>C< 6C9 ;>H=>C< :FJ>EB:CI, ;>H=>C< 7D6I 6C9 B6CN DI=:G B>H8. =DJH:=DA9 <DD9H. .A/0-DA4 (A4 3 - !G>96N, (6N 9. 96B - 4EB. 1882 *G6C<: "GDK:, "6NADG9. 989-732-4758. .LDG9;>H= BDJCI, :A@ 6C9 9::G =DGCH, B>C@ ;JG, ED8@:I @C>;:, %>B B:6B 7DIIA: 8DAA:8- I>DC, DA9 LDD9:C EJAA:NH, N6G9 >I:BH, DA9 8:96G 8=:HI, 7:9GDDB H:I, L>H=- >C< L:AA, AK>H EA6I:H, H:6 H=:AAH, EDI- I:GN, 32 ;DDI 6AJB>CJB 9D8@, <A6HH- L6G: >C8AJ9>C< C6GC>K6A, 76G B>GGDGH, IDDAH, ;>H=>C< EDA:H 6C9 AJG:H, HCDL H=D:H, =><= L=::A IG>BB:G, 2 B6C H6LH, 6CI>FJ:H. A 7AJ: 6C9 <DA9:C (686L +6GGDI L>I= K:GN A6G<: 86<:. 'DIH 6C9 ADIH D; B>H8:AA6C:DJH. GUNS AAL6NH 7JN>C< DA9 H6K6<: G>;A:H 6C9 BDHI 22 G>;A:H, 989-390-1529. -($)"/*) .22 '- .:B>-6JID, $210. .I:K:CH .22 '- .:B>-6JID. $85. (6GA>C .22 2(- (6<, 7DAI 68I>DC, $200. (6GA>C 45-70 "J>9: <JC, $490. 20 <6J<: H>C<A: H=DI L>I= EDAN 8=D@:, $65. 989-370-6058 .&2 .357 B6<CJB G:KDAK:G, BD9:A 65-3, L>I= CG>BHDC /G68: A6H:G <G>E H><=I 6C9 HID8@ <G>EH, $595. -J<:G (6G@ $, .22'- H:B>-6JID E>HIDA, :MIG6 8A>EH, $325. "6NADG9. 989-702-2099. HEALTH $! 4*0 0.D /# B'**D /#$))- +-ADA3A 6C9 HJ;;:G:9 >CI:GC6A 7A::9>C<, =:BDGG=6<>C<, G:FJ>G:9 =DHE>I6A>O6I>DC DG 6 ADK:9 DC: 9>:9 L=>A: I6@>C< +G696M6 7:IL::C *8ID7:G 2010 6C9 I=: EG:H:CI. 4DJ B6N 7: :CI>IA:9 ID 8DBE:CH6I>DC. C6AA AIIDGC:N C=6GA:H #. %D=CHDC 800-535-5727 )6IJG6A -:B:9>:H, 6AI:GC6I>K: B:9>- 8>C:, B:9>86A B6G>?J6C6 ;68>A>IN. 1349 .. *IH:<D AK:., .J>I: 1, "6NADG9, AD86I:9 >C I=: +6G@H>9: (>C> (6AA, LLL.C6IJG6AG:B:9>:H420.8DB, 989-748-4420. 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AI I=>H I>B:, EA:6H: CD E=DC: 86AAH DG L6A@->CH; B6>A:9 G:HJB:H DCAN. */."* C*0)/4 (DJCI:9 D>K>H>DC (*C(D) =6H DE:C>C<H ;DG C:L B:B- 7:GH - )DC-+6>9 +DH>I>DC. (JHI E6HH 768@<GDJC9 8=:8@. )DC =DGH: E:DEA: 6AHD 688:EI:9. 0C>;DGBH ;JGC>H=:9. .DB: 8DHI >CKDAK:9 ;DG :FJ>EB:CI, =DGH: :FJ>EB:CI. (::I>C<H 2C9 (DC96N D; I=: BDCI=, 7+(. !DG BDG: >C;D EA:6H: 86AA 231-631-2209. +/*.&4 P !JAA DG +6GI />B: .6A:HE:GHDC. 2: EJ7A>H= 2 L::@AN C:LHE6E:GH, /=: 2::@AN C=D>8: 6C9 I=: C=6GA:KD>M CDJCIN ):LH. 2DG@ NDJG DLC H8=:9JA:. $C9:E:C9:CI CDCIG68IDG. "G:6I CDBB>HH>DC. /=: 7:HI 86C9>96I: L>AA 7: ;G>:C9AN 6C9 :C?DN =:AE>C< AD86A 7JH>C:HH:H 8G:6I: EG>CI 69K:GI>H>C< ID =:AE I=:B G:68= 8DCHJB:GH I=GDJ<=DJI )DGI=:GC (>8=><6C L>I= DJG C:LHE6E:GH 6C9 6HHD8>6I:9 EGD9J8IH. (JHI =6K: 8DB- EJI:G, $CI:GC:I 688:HH 6C9 9:E:C9- 67A: IG6CHEDGI6I>DC. -B6>A >C;D ID D6K: 6I *;;>8:@2::@ANC=D>8:.8DB. -:9>--D8@ $CI:GC6I>DC6A 6C9 >IH G:A6I- :9 8DBE6C>:H 6G: H::@>C< 6 BJAI>-I6A- :CI:9 "G6E=>8 D:H><C:G ID ?D>C DJG <GDL>C< G:6B. /=: >9:6A 86C9>96I: L>AA =6K: 6 IG68@ G:8DG9 D; EGD9J8>C< FJ6A>IN <G6E=>8H ;DG EG>CI, L:7, 6C9 :K:CIH, 6H L:AA 6H 6 ;>GB JC9:GHI6C9- >C< D; I=: 8G:6I>K: EGD8:HH. /=>H E:G- HDC BJHI 7: 6 IDE-CDI8= K>HJ6A 9:H><C:G L=D >H H6KKN 6I 9:H><C, E=D- ID<G6E=N, 6C9 8DBBJC>86I>DCH. 1>9:D :9>I>C< :ME:G>:C8: EG:;:GG:9. /=>H EDH>I>DC >H AD86I:9 >C DJG C=6GA:KD>M, (>8=><6C =:69FJ6GI:GH. LLL.G:9>-GD8@.8DB/86G::GH .:A;-HI6GI:GH C::9:9 ID ;>AA EDH>I>DCH >C 6AA 9:EIH. 2: =6K: >BB:9>6I: DE:C>C<H. 2::@AN E6N 6H L:AA 6H M8:AA:CI 7DCJH EGD<G6B, E6>9 K686- I>DCH, 6C9 ;A:M>7A: H8=:9JA:. (JHI 7: 18. C6AA 989-705-1723 HELP WANTED /=: C>IN D; BDNC: C>IN >H 688:EI>C< 6EEA>86I>DCH ;DG H:6HDC6A HJBB:G =:AE >C I=: E6G@H 9:E6GIB:CI 6C9 I=: BJC>8>E6A B6G>C6 6C9 7D6I A6JC8=. AEEA>86I>DCH 6G: 6K6>A67A: 6I C>IN #6AA DG NDJ 86C 9DLCAD69 6 EG>CI67A: K:G- H>DC 6C9 G:IJGC >I ID C>IN #6AA. /=: "G:6I '6@:H C=6B7:G *G8=:HIG6, 6 CDC-EGD;>I 6GIH DG<6C>O6I>DC, >H H::@>C< 6 E6GI-I>B: M:8JI>K: D>G:8IDG. /=: 9JI>:H 9:B6C9 69B>C>H- IG6I>K: :ME:G>:C8:, <G6CI-LG>I>C< 6C9 ;JC9G6>H>C< :ME:G>:C8:, DG<6C>O6I>DC- 6A H@>AAH, 6C9 8DBEJI:G A>I:G68N. +DH>I>DC HJEEDGI:9 7N 68I>K: BD6G9 6C9 CDBB>II::H. /=>H E6GI-I>B: EDH>- I>DC L>AA 7: 24 =DJGH E:G L::@. B68=:ADGRH D:<G:: 6C9 3 N:6GHR :ME:- G>:C8: >C CDC-EGD;>I B6C6<:B:CI DG :FJ>K6A:CI 6G: G:FJ>G:9. $C;DGB6I>DC 6I LLL.<A8DG8=:HIG6.DG<. $CI:G:HI:9 6EEA>86CIH H=DJA9 H:C9 6 8DK:G A:II:G 6C9 G:HJB: ID %D6C -D7>CHDC, "G:6I '6@:H C=6B7:G *G8=:HIG6, 438 . '6@: .IG::I, +:IDH@:N, (>8=><6C 49770. D:69A>C: ;DG 6EEA>86I>DCH >H (6N 5, 2014. HOMES FOR SALE 2: H:AA C:G<N .I6G BD9JA6G =DB:H, A:I JH 7J>A9 NDJG C:L =DB: DG G:EA68: NDJG ;>G: ADHH. .:: DJG BD9:A, <>K: JH 6 86AA ;DG 6C 6EED>CIB:CI. )DGI=A6C9 #DB:H, 989-370-6058. HOUSEHOLD "-/A'. D-A+-$.: K:GNI=>C< >C 2>C9DL /G:6IB:CIH !G:: :HI>B6I:H 6C9 >C =DB: 6EED>CIB:CIH. HI67A>H=:9 1958. C6AA 989-732- 3340 DG K>H>I DJG H=DLGDDB 6I 2281 .DJI= *IH:<D AK:., "6NADG9. LAND & PROPERTY B:6JI>;JA 40 68G: E6G8:A L>I= =>99:C =6N ;>:A9H 6C9 HIDC: E>A:H, 7DG9:G>C< 30,000 C:LAN EA6CI:9 -:9 +>C: H::9A>C<H. !DG =JCI>C<, ;>H=>C<, =>@- >C<, =DGH:768@ G>9>C< DG ?JHI 6 ;6KDG>I: <:I6L6N. !>AA:9 L>I= 9::G 6C9 :A@. 1:GN 8ADH: ID (JAA:I '6@: 6C9 ;:9:G6A EGDE:GIN. +GDE:GIN AD86I:9 ?JHI HDJI= D; 2634 2=>I>C< -D69, C=:7DN<6C. C6AA 231-414-0044 ;DG >C;D. $70,000. B:6JI>;JA EGDE:GI>:H, C=6GA:KD>M A6@: K>:L 21 68G:H, #6G7DG .EG>C<H 3.8 68G:H, +:IDH@:N 2 9::9:9 ADIH. AAA EGDE:GI>:H 5 B>CJI:H ;GDB IDLC, DE:C 6C9 GDAA>C< A6C9, BJHI H:AA, B6@: D;;:G, L>AA IG69:, 517-304-1923 LEGAL NOTICES !$)A' )*/$C /* D$.+*. *! C*)- /)/. ID H6I>H;N :HI67A>H=:9 A>:CH DC I=: ;DAADL>C< HIDG6<: JC>IH: (>@: !:GG6CI>, 0C>I 55. .IDG6<: JC>I 8DC- I:CIH L>AA 7: :BEI>:9 6C9 DG HDA9 DC (6N 15, 2014 >; 688DJCIH 6G: CDI E6>9 >C ;JAA 6I AAE>C: .IDG6<:, 1868 D>8@:GHDC -9, "6NADG9. 989-732- 7818 MANUAFCTURED HOMES )2 & -+*.: DDJ7A:-2>9:H, 16'H, 14'H. /6@: 6CNI=>C< DC IG69:. !>C6C8>C< 6K6>A67A:. A 8DBEA:I: A>C: D; E6GIH. LLL.B>8=><6C:6HI- H>9:H6A:H.C:I. 989-966-2037 MISCELLANEOUS $3.99 BG:6@;6HI; $5.99 'JC8=; $6.99 D>CC:G. #DB:B69: HE:8>6AH :K:GN 96N DCAN 6I "D77A:GH D; "6NADG9, 900 .. *IH:<D, "6NADG9. 989-732- 9005 BA-B'. #*((AD D..-/.. /G:6I NDJGH:A; ID I=: 7:HI 86GGDI 86@: >C I=: 0.A 6I "D77A:GH D; "6NADG9, 900 .. *IH:<D, "6NADG9. 989-732- 9005 BGDH B>HIGD >H 8JGG:CIAN 8ADH:9 7JI L6I8= ;DG I=: C:L "D77A:GH D; 26I:GH DE:C>C< (6N 8, $-75 M>I 270, 26I:GH. 989-705-1800 ">K: 8=JG8= 6CDI=:G IGN. %D>C JH 106B .JC96N. 1HI CDC<G:<6I>DC6A C=JG8= 0CC, 218 2. 2C9 .I., "6NADG9, 989-732-5726. LLL.;>GHIJ88<6N- ADG9.DG< 'DD@>C< ;DG HDB:I=>C< HE:8>6A ;DG BDB ;DG (DI=:GH D6N? LLL.E6B- E:G:98=:;.7>O/8=6GA:H?6GB6C /0.DA4 )$"#/, AAA NDJ 86C :6I /JG@:N B:6A, DCAN $10. "D77A:GH D; "6NADG9, 900 .. *IH:<D, "6NADG9. 989-732-9005 MOTORCYCLES & ATV 2A)/D %A+A). (*/*-C4C'. &A2A.A&$: 51-900, &5900, &51000, 51-, &6L6H6@> /G>EA:H, "/380, ".400, CB750, (1969-75) C6H=- +6>9, )6I>DCL>9: +>8@JE, 800-772- 1142, 310-721-0726. JH6@8A6HH>- 8GJCC:GH.8DB NATIONAL CLASSIFIEDS 9 ($''$*) C$-C0'A/$*) 68GDHH I=: 0... 6C9 C6C696 L>I= 6 8A6HH>;>:9 69 >C DJG C6I>DC6A C:ILDG@, ?JHI $695. C6AA I=: 2::@AN C=D>8:, 989-732-8160 DG :- B6>A D6K:1@2::@ANC=D>8:.8DB -:69:G A9K>HDGN: I=: )6I>DC6A /G69: AHHD8>6I>DC L: 7:ADC< ID =6H EJG- 8=6H:9 HDB: 8A6HH>;>:9H >C DJG E6E:G. D:I:GB>C>C< I=: K6AJ: D; I=:>G H:GK>8: DG EGD9J8I >H 69K>H:9 7N I=>H EJ7A>86I>DC. $C DG9:G ID 6KD>9 B>HJC- 9:GHI6C9>C<H, HDB: 69K:GI>H:GH 9D CDI D;;:G :BEADNB:CI 7JI G6I=:G HJE- EAN I=: G:69:GH L>I= B6CJ6AH, 9>G:8- IDG>:H 6C9 DI=:G B6I:G>6AH 9:H><C:9 ID =:AE I=:>G 8A>:CIH :HI67A>H= B6>A DG9:G H:AA>C< 6C9 DI=:G 7JH>C:HH:H 6I =DB:. 0C9:G )* 8>G8JBHI6C8: H=DJA9 NDJ H:C9 6CN BDC:N >C 69K6C8: DG <>K: I=: 8A>:CI NDJG 8=:8@- >C<, A>8:CH: $D, DG 8G:9>I 86G9 CJB- 7:GH. AAHD 7:L6G: D; 69H I=6I 8A6>B ID <J6G6CI:: AD6CH G:<6G9A:HH D; 8G:9>I 6C9 CDI: I=6I >; 6 8G:9>I G:E6>G 8DB- E6CN 9D:H 7JH>C:HH DCAN DK:G I=: E=DC: >IRH >AA:<6A ID G:FJ:HI 6CN BDC:N 7:;DG: 9:A>K:G>C< >IH H:GK>8:. AAA ;JC9H 6G: 76H:9 >C 0. 9DAA6GH. 800 CJB7:GH B6N DG B6N CDI G:68= C6C696. A$-'$). #$- *0- "-AD.. ":I !AA 6EEGDK:9 B6>CI:C6C8: IG6>C>C< 6I 86BEJH:H 8D6HI ID 8D6HI. %D7 EA68:- B:CI 6HH>HI6C8: 6C9 ;>C6C8>6A 6>9 ;DG FJ6A>;N>C< HIJ9:CIH. (>A>I6GN ;G>:C9AN. C6AA A$( 877-206-1503 LLL.!>M%:IH.8DB Page 8-B Tell our advertisers you saw their ad in the Weekly Choice May 1, 2014 CLASSIFIEDS Delivered to 40 Towns Each Week! Run for As Low As $ 2 00 CALL: 989.732.8160 | EMAIL: classifieds@weeklychoice.com | ORDER ONLINE: www.weeklychoice.com 1349 S. Otsego, GayIord, MI 49735 (989) 732-2477 www.SmithReaItyGayIord.com daIe j. smith Associate Broker CRS, RAM, ABR Wendie Forman Associate Broker GRI, Property Manager Sandy SouIe ReaItor Associate Mike Perdue ReaItor Associate Professional Of f ice Building featuring 12 individual of f ices, con- ference room(s), a large covered entrance, reception area and plenty of storage space. Currently occupied, this property can be obtained and used for Owner Occupancy, as a strong Com- mercial Investment, or combination of both for the right buyer. Building constructed as fully handicap accessible, including an elevator, this is one of Gaylord's f iner Professional Buildings and could be your ideal location! $489,000 Fantastic location with high visibility near the South Exit for I-75. Perfect for any number of business ventures, this was formerly Bushia's Restaurant. Certain equipment still avail- able. Ideal layout for showroom with space for of f ice, work shop, storage etc. Additional property available and nego- tiable depending upon business needs. $199,900 BUY HERE PAY HERE!! BAD CREDIT BANKRUPTCY REPOS OK Largest seIection of trucks & SUVs in Northern Michigan! |e: |erm:, |ew iewr jemer| e:| mer|ll jemer|: ere trier SZJJ, Z1 mer|l werrer| ereile|le er ell relitle:. Ilet:eri: el lejj tt:|emer: FREE GAS! CALL RICH! CALL RICH! 989-306-3656 Nk0 |rieril, relie|le, leri werlirj emjleee: t:| lere |e tleer! Cell |eie! ?8?-73T-2?63 NATIONAL CLASSIFIEDS #$"# .C#**' +-*!$C$)C4 D$+'*- (A! 4 L::@ EGD<G6B. !G:: 7GD8=JG: & ;JAA >C;DGB6I>DC. C6AA CDL! 866- 562-3650 MI. 55. LLL.HDJI=:6HI- :GC=H.8DB )D 18-24 :C:G<:I>8 E:DEA: ID IG6K- :A L>I= NDJC< HJ88:HH;JA 7JH>C:HH <GDJE. +6>9 IG6K:A. )D :ME:G>:C8: C:8:HH6GN $500-$750 L::@AN. 480- 718-9540 )* (*- 2DGG>:H. 2: EGDK>9: E:G- HDC6A AD6CH, BD7>A: =DB:H. 'D6CH ;GDB $10& ID 200&. )D ;::H, ;G:: 8DCHJAI6I>DCH. ,J>8@, :6HN 6C9 8DC;>- 9:CI>6A, C6AA 96B ID 9EB (800) 236- 2971 /# *CA) CDGE. 10840 -D8@A:N -D69 #DJHIDC, /:M6H 77099. /G6>C ;DG 6 C:L 86G::G. 0C9:GL6I:G 2:A9:G. CDBB:G8>6A D>K:G. )D/ 2:A9 $CHE:8IDG. %D7 EA68:B:CI 6HH>HI6C8:. !>C6C8>6A 6>9 6K6>A67A: ;DG I=DH: L=D FJ6A>;N. 800-321-0298. 2A)/. /* EJG8=6H: B>C:G6AH 6C9 DI=:G D>A & <6H >CI:G:HIH. .:C9 9:I6>AH +* BDM 13557, D:CK:G, CD 80201 4*0 C*0'D 7: !>M>C< %:IH. ":I !AA 6EEGDK:9 IG6>C>C< >C BDCI=H, CDI N:6GH. %D7 EA68:B:CI 6HH>HI6C8:, =DJH>C< 6C9 !>C6C8>6A A>9 ;DG FJ6A>;N- >C< HIJ9:CIH. (>A>I6GN ;G>:C9AN. C6AA A$( 877-202-0386 LLL.!>M%:IH.8DB NOTES OF ENCOURAGEMENT +DH>I>K: )DI:H D; C8DJG6<:B:CI 6G: ;G:: >C I=: 2::@AN C=D>8:. B>GI=96N, ACC>K:GH6GN, 2:99>C<, CDC<G6IJA6I>DCH DG ?JHI 6 +DH>I>K: )DI: 6AA 6G: ;G::. - (6>A NDJG )DI: D; C8DJG6<:B:CI ID *;;>8:@2::@ANC=D>8:.8DB PETS %0D$. D*" >H DE:C .6IJG96NH ;DG 6AA NDJG 9D<'H C::9H. .IDE >C ;DG )6>A /G>B, CD 6EEI. C:8:HH6GN, $8.00. 989-705-1115, 618 2:HI (>I8=:AA .I, "6NADG9 PRIVATE INVESTIGATOR +G>K6I: $CK:HI><6IDG, '>8:CH:9, BDC9:9, 86C ;>C9 6ABDHI 6CNDC:, ADHI ADK:H, 7>D- AD<>86A E6G:CIH, B>HH>C< E:GHDCH, 9:7IDGH, =:>GH. !G:: 8DC;>9:CI>6A E=DC: 8DCHJAI6I>DCH. 989-731-1111. RECREATIONAL VEHICLES 2008 &4./*) +A..+*-/ BJC@=DJH: 0AIG6A><=I. .A::EH 7 ID 8, HA>9:DJI, C:L I>G:H, <G:6I 8DC9>I>DC. $13,800 D7D. C=6GA:KD>M. 231-675- 9694 2014 C6I6A>C6 293,BC& 29' /G6K:A /G6>A:G. $; NDJ 6G: ADD@>C< ;DG 6C 6;;DG967A: A><=IL:><=I IG6K:A IG6>A:G I=6I 86C HA::E I=: L=DA: ;6B>AN 6C9 I=:C HDB: I=:C I=>H >H I=: JC>I ;DG NDJ!!! /=>H JC>I ;:6IJG:H 6C :CDGBDJH HJE:G HA>9: DJI EG68I>86AAN 9DJ7A>C< I=: 6K6>A67A: ;ADDG HE68: >C I=: B6>C A>K>C< 6G:6 6C9 8DCI6>CH 6 =J<: J- H=6E:9 9>C:II: 6C9 6 EJAA DJI HA::E:G HD;6 6ADC< L>I= :MIG6 DK:G=:69 HIDG- 6<: 8DBE6GIB:CIH. .6A: +G>8: $18,995. .6K: $9,000. $CI:GC6I>DC6A -1 2DGA9, 277 ). MEG:HHL6N CDJGI, "6NADG9, ($ 49735. 989-448-8700. #DJGH: (DC96N P .6IJG96N 96B P 5EB. 2014 CD68=B:C !G::9DB MEG:HH 230B# 23' /G6K:A /G6>A:G. 2014 CD68=B:C 230B#. /=>H :MIG:B:AN A><=I L:><=I IG6K:A IG6>A:G >H E:G;:8I ;DG 6 HB6AA:G IDL K:=>8A:. $I 86C 7: EJAA:9 L>I= BDHI 6 8NA>C9:G .01H. $I 8DB:H :FJ>EE:9 L>I= 6AJB>CJB G>BH, EDL:G 6LC>C<, 7A68@ & I6C :MI:G>DG 6C9 BJ8= BDG:. .6A: +G>8: $17,995. .6K: $10,000. $CI:GC6I>DC6A -1 2DGA9, 277 ). MEG:HHL6N CDJGI, "6NADG9, ($ 49735. 989-448-8700. #DJGH: (DC96N P .6IJG96N 96B P 5EB. 2014 !DG:HI ->K:G !A6<HI6;; CA6HH>8 .JE:G '>I: 852 !>;I= 2=::A. $HA6C9 @>I8=:C BD9:A, 9>6BDC9 E68@6<:. .=>:A9:9 6LC>C< 8DK:GH I>CI:9, 7DC9- :9, ;G6B:A:HH L>C9DLH. !G:H= L6I:G I6C@ 43"A' "G6N L6I:G I6C@ 76"A' BA68@ L6I:G I6C@ 38"A'. .ID8@ #!'5409. $35,899. 2014 !DG:HI ->K:G !A6<HI6;; /:CI C6BE:GH 206./. /=: !A6<HI6;; I:CI 86BE:G >H 67DJI ;6B>AN K6AJ:H. $IRH 67DJI :C?DN>C< <DD9 I>B:H ID<:I=:G 6I 6 EG>8: ;6B>A>:H 86C 6;;DG9 L>I=DJI H68G>;>8>C< 8DB;DGI 6C9 8DCK:C>:C8:. +DL:G '>;I, !G>9<:, !JGC68:, %68@H, ALC>C<, *JI9DDG "G>AA, .E6G: />G:. .:AA>C< +G>8:: $8,195, 2014 &D6A6 26.. 26' /G6K:A /G6>A:G. /=>H G:6G A>K>C< GDDB HJE:G HA>9: BD9:A >H HJE:G A>I: 8DCHIGJ8I:9. AI DCAN 5200A7H >I 86C 7: IDL:9 L>I= IGJ8@H DG ;JAA H>O:9 HJKRH L>I= :6H:. /=: G:6G A>K>C< GDDB ;:6IJG: 9J6A 8=6>GH 6C9 A6G<: L>C9DLH. /=: @>I8=:C D;;:GH ADIH D; DK:GH>O:9 867>- C:IH 6C9 9G6L:GH. /=: 76I= >H HE6- 8>DJH L>I= 6 =J<: 8DGC:G H=DL:G 6C9 I=: 7:9GDDB =6H 6 H:8DC9 :CIGN 6C9 L6G9GD7:H DC :>I=:G H>9: D; I=: 7:9. .6A: +G>8: $23,995. .6K: $7,000. $CI:GC6I>DC6A -1 2DGA9, 277 ). MEG:HHL6N CDJGI, "6NADG9, ($ 49735. 989-448-8700. #DJGH: (DC96N P .6IJG96N 96B P 5EB. 2014 .@NA>C: 26A@67DJI 23'C 23' /G6K:A /G6>A:G. .NC:G<N A><=IL:><=I 8DCHIGJ8I>DC, CDG>6C 8DJCI:GIDEH, =:6I:9 =DA9>C< I6C@H, HA>9:DJI, EDL:G 6LC>C< 6C9 ADIH BDG:. 2: 6G: :M8>I:9 67DJI 699>C< I=>H C:L A>C:-JE D; 26A@67DJI IG6K:A IG6>A:GH ID DJG >CK:CIDGN. .6A: +G>8: $19,995. .6K: $8,000. $CI:GC6I>DC6A -1 2DGA9, 277 ). MEG:HHL6N CDJGI, "6NADG9, ($ 49735. 989-448-8700. #DJGH: (DC96N P .6IJG96N 96B P 5EB. 2015 !DG:HI ->K:G .6A:B CGJ>H: '>I: (>9L:HI 241,B /G6K:A /G6>A:G. '><=IL:><=I. *CAN 4300 'B.., ':6I=:G D:8DG, 6 "6AADC #DI 26I:G #IG. 2/D.$, -5 'J7: AMA:H, DDJ7A: DDDG !G><., +DL:G /DC<J: %68@, +DL:G ALC>C<, +DL:G %68@H !GDCI/-:6G, +JH= BJIIDC -:BDI: .NHI:B, D1D/(+3/CD/!( .I:G:D. #.A5037. $13,995. !G::L6N -1. M>I 270 DC $- 75, 26I:GH, ($. 888-731-4198. LLL.!G::L6N-1.8DB RECREATIONAL VEHICLES 2014 /G6>AGJCC:G 26.' 26' /G6K:A /G6>A:G, .JE:G '>I: 9>I>DC. #:6GIA6C9 /G6>A -JCC:G .' BJC@=DJH: /G6K:A /G6>A:G L/-:6G CDGC:G BJC@ B:9H, -:6G CDGC:G B6I= $C8AJ9>C<: /J7/.=DL:G, /D>A:I, .>C@ & '>C:C C67>C:I, .A>9:DJI BDDI= D>C:II: & .D;6 L/*K:G=:69 A7DK: .D;6, CI. C:CI:G, +6CIGN, -:;G><:G6IDG, 3 BJGC:G -6C<:, D7A. &>I8=:C .>C@ & *K:G=:69 .IDG6<:, !GDCI ,J::C B:9 L/.IDG6<: BDI= .>9:H & *K:G=:69 C67>C:I 6C9 (DG:! .6A: +G>8: $17,995. $CI:GC6I>DC6A -1 2DGA9, 277 ). MEG:HHL6N CDJGI, "6NADG9, ($ 49735. 989-448-8700. #DJGH: (DC96N P .6IJG96N 96B P 5EB. 2015 !DG:HI ->K:G .6A:B #:B>HE=:G: 356,B,. BJC@ #DJH: D:H><C 2>I= 2 !JAA B6I=H, !A6I .8G::C /1 2/D1D +A6N:G, *C: /DJ8= A:8IG>8 ALC>C<, C8ADH:9 AC9 #:6I:9 0C9:G7:AAN, .I6>CA:HH .I::A &>I8=:C +68@6<:, 3' '6G<: "G67 #6C9A: (CIG6C8:), 2 *JIH>9: .E:6@:GH, +DL:G !GDCI '6C9>C< ":6G, -:6G A:8IG>8 .I67>A>O:GH, #>9:-A-B:9 .D;6, *JIH>9: &>I8=:C, '699:G, 3-'6G<: DDJ7A: DDDG !G><., 15,000 DJ8I:9 A/C, 26H=:G DGN:G +G:E, 50 ABE .:GK>8:, C:CIG6A 168JJB, -:8:HH:9 .IDK: 2/"A6HH .IDK: CDK:G, 'D ALC>C< '><=IH. .:AA>C< +G>8:: $38,995 ):L 2013 *JI768@ 321/B# /:GG6>C 32' /G6K:A /G6>A:G. 2013 *JI768@ /:GG6>C 321/B#. /=>H A><=I L:><=I AJM- JGN IG6K:A IG6>A:G L>AA HA::E 9 E:DEA: 8DB;DGI67AN 6C9 >I =6H 6AA I=: 8DC- K:C>:C8:H. $I 8DB:H :FJ>EE:9 L>I= 6 16JAI:9 8:>A>C<, HI:G:D HNHI:B L>I= D1D 6C9 BAJ: /DDI=, 3 7JGC:G G6C<: L>I= DK:C, 32>C 'CD /1, H@NA><=I >C 76I=, 13.5 6>G, B>8GDL6K:, 6 <6A <6H :A:8IG>8 L6I:G =:6I:G L/D.$, '6G<: 9DJ7A: 9DDG G:;:G, D:AJM: HA::E:G HD;6, C=6BE6<C: ;>7:G<A6HH, ":A 8D6I 86E, I>CI:9 H6;:IN <A6HH L>C9DLH, /1 6CI:CC6 L 7DDHI:G, 867A: 6C9 H6I:A- A>I: EG:E, DJIH>9: 86BE @>I8=:C, 7A68@ I6C@ ;AJH=, HE6G: I>G: 6C9 :K:C 6C :A:8IG>8 6LC>C<. .6A: +G>8: $23,995. .6K: $12,000. $CI:GC6I>DC6A -1 2DGA9, 277 ). MEG:HHL6N CDJGI, "6NADG9, ($ 49735. 989-448-8700. #DJGH: (DC96N P .6IJG96N 96B P 5EB. ):L 2014 !DG:HI ->K:G -1 C=:GD@:: "G:N 2DA; 26B#. /=: C=:GD@:: "G:N 2DA; 26B# IG6K:A IG6>A:G 7N !DG:HI ->K:G D;;:GH 6 G:6G 7JC@ =DJH:. AH NDJ :CI:G I=: IG6K:A IG6>A:G, ID I=: A:;I >H 6 9>C:II: L>I= 6 'CD /1 BDJCI. *C I=: DEEDH>I: H>9: NDJ L>AA ;>C9 6 HD;6, A6G<: H>C@, I=G:: 7JGC:G G6C<:, B>8GDL6K:, 6C9 G:;G><:G6IDG. /=: G:6G 76I=GDDB =6H 6 IJ7 L>I= H=DL:G 6C9 ID>A:I. %JHI DJIH>9: D; I=: 76I=GDDB I=:G: >H 6 H>C@. /=: G:6G 7JC@ =DJH: =6H 6 9DJ7A: 7:9 DC I=: 7DIIDB 6C9 6 H>C<A: 7JC@ DC IDE. /=:G: >H 6AHD 6 L6G9GD7: >C I=: 8DGC:G. /=: ;GDCI 7:9- GDDB =6H 6 FJ::C 7:9 6C9 ILD L6G9GD7:H, DC: DC :>I=:G H>9: D; I=: 7:9. /=:G: 6G: EA:CIN D; DK:G=:69 867>C:IH I=GDJ<=DJI I=: IG6K:A IG6>A:G, 6H L:AA 6H DJIH>9: HIDG6<:. (6CJ;68IJG:GH .J<<:HI:9 +G>8:: $21,995. 4DJ .6K:: $7,000. .6A: +G>8:: $14,995. +:IDH@:N -1 0.A, 2215 0. #><=L6N 31 ). +:IDH@:N, ($ 49770. +=DC: 231-347-3200. ):L 2014 +6ADB>CD +JB6 253-!B.. .>C<A: .A>9: +JB6 !>;I= 2=::A L/-:6G '>K>C< AG:6, 72 .D;6 .A::E:G, *K:G=:69 C67>C:IH, '6G<: 0-D>C:II: .A>9:DJI, CI. C:CI:G L/*K:G=:69 C67>C:I, DDJ7A: &>I8=:C .>C@, .@NA><=I, 3 BJGC:G -6C<:, -:;G><:G6IDG, +6CIGN, /J7/.=DL:G, '6K. & /D>A:I, '6G<: #6AA 26G9GD7:, !GDCI ,J::C B:9 L/)><=IHI6C9H B:ADL .=>GI 26G9GD7:H BDI= .>9:H D; B:9, '6G<: +6HH-/=GJ .IDG6<: 6C9 (DG:. AK6>A67A: *EI>DCH (6N $C8AJ9:: !G:: .I6C9>C< D>C:II: L/C=6>GH. (6CJ;68IJG:GH .J<<:HI:9 +G>8:: $26,549. 4DJ .6K:: $6,554. .6A: +G>8:: $29,995. +:IDH@:N -1 0.A, 2215 0. #><=L6N 31 ). +:IDH@:N, ($ 49770. +=DC: 231-347-3200. ):L 2015 !DG:HI ->K:G -1 -D8@LDD9 (>C> '>I: 2502.. .>C<A: .A>9: -D8@LDD9 (>C> '>I: //, -:6G B6I= L/26G9. '6K. L/(:9. C67., /D>A:I, .=DL:G L//J7, +DL:G /DC<J: %68@, *K:C, 3 BJGC:G -6C<: L/(>8GD., D7A. &>I8=:C .>C@, -:;G><., BDDI= D>C:II:, 'CD /1 2/A(/!( CD, D1D +A6N:G, *JIH>9: "G>AA, )><=I .=69:H, -6>H:9 -:;:G !GDCI, .D;6 .A>9: *JI, !GDCI D7A. B:9 L/!A>E-0E .IDG6<:, 26G9. L/)><=IHI6C9H B:ADL, MI. .IDG6<:, A:8IG>8 ALC>C<, *K:G=:69 C67. /=GDJ<=DJI, MI. .IDG6<:, 6C9 (DG:. (6CJ;68IJG:GH .J<<:HI:9 +G>8:: $23,358. 4DJ .6K:: $5,363. .6A: +G>8:: $17,995. +:IDH@:N -1 0.A, 2215 0. #><=L6N 31 ). +:IDH@:N, ($ 49770. +=DC: 231-347-3200. 0H:9 2001 CD68=B:C -1 C6I6A>C6 253-& /G6K:A /G6>A:G. -:6G @>I8=:C, !GDCI ,J::C B:9, '6G<: B6I=GDDB, 26G9GD7:, .D;6, '6G<: ALC>C<, !GDCI +6HH /=GDJ<= .IDG6<:, .I67 %68@H, (J8= (DG:. 1/2 /DC IDL67A:. .J<<:HI:9 +G>8:: $6,995. 4DJ .6K:: $2,000. .6A: +G>8:: $4,995. +:IDH@:N -1 0.A, 2215 0. #><=L6N 31 ). +:IDH@:N, ($ 49770. +=DC: 231-347-3200. 0H:9 2005 &:NHIDC: -1 CDJ<6G 286 !. !>;I= 2=::A. DDJ7A: .A>9:, -:6G &>I8=:C .A>9:, .A::EH 6, ,J::C B:9, .D;6 B:9/D>C:II:, C=6>G, -:;:G, -6C<:, (>8GD, ):D AC<A: .=DL:G 6C9 BJ8= BDG:! .J<<:HI:9 +G>8:: $14,295. 4DJ .6K:: $2,300. .6A: +G>8:: $11,995. +:IDH@:N -1 0.A, 2215 0. #><=L6N 31 ). +:IDH@:N, ($ 49770. +=DC: 231-347-3200. RECREATIONAL VEHICLES 0H:9 2009 &:NHIDC: -1 *JI768@ .N9C:N 9>I>DC 29-'. /G6K:A /G6>A:G. .>C<A: .A>9: *JI768@ .N9C:N // (HID8@ DCAN) L/-:6G '>K>C< AG:6, /LD 'DJC<: C=6>GH, CDGC:G CI:GI6>CB:CI C:CI:G, .D;6 & BDDI= D>C:II: .A>9:, D7A. &>I8=:C .>C@, 3 BJGC:G -6C<: -:;G><., *EI. *JIH>9: C6BE &>I8=:C, .>9: A>HA: B6I= L/AC<A: .=DL:G, '6K6IDGN, !GDCI ,J::C B:9 L/D7A. 26G9GD7:H, /1 .=:A;, *K:G=:69 C67>C:IH /=GDJ<=DJI & (DG:! .J<<:HI:9 +G>8:: $21,900. 4DJ .6K:: $3,905. .6A: +G>8:: $17,995. +:IDH@:N -1 0.A, 2215 0. #><=L6N 31 ). +:IDH@:N, ($ 49770. +=DC: 231-347-3200. SERVICES D%/&A-A*& .-1$C 6K6>A67A: ;DG L:99>C<H, 8AJ7H DG E6GI>:H. -:;:G:C8:H 6C9 >C;DGB6I>DC 6I LLL.A6GGN:CI:GI6>CB:CI.8DB. 989- 732-3933 !!$C$)/ #A/$)" A)D C**'$)". !JGC68:H, A>G CDC9>I>DC>C<, .6A:H 6C9 .:GK>8:. ,J6A>IN 2DG@B6CH=>E 989- 350-1857 .+-$)" C'A)0+. %68@DRH +DL:G 26H=>C<, 8DBB:G8>6A & G:H>9:CI>6A, H>9>C<, 9:8@H. '>8:CH:9 6C9 >CHJG:9, 989-390-1111. SNOW REMOVAL B>9H 7:>C< 688:EI:9 ;DG 2014-2015 HCDL EADL>C< >C 2>A9LDD9 A8G:6<:H' HI6I:H, 6EEGDM. 8 B>A:H D; 9>GI GD69. +A:6H: A>HI 6AA :FJ>EB:CI ID 7: JH:9, H:C9 7>9H 7N (6N 15, 2014 ID: 2>A9LDD9 A8G:6<: HI6I:H, +.*. BDM 181, 2DAK:G>C:, ($ 49799. STORAGE A+. (>C>-26G:=DJH: D; "6NADG9 =6H 5M10 JC>IH 6K6>A67A: ;DG ?JHI $35 6 BDCI=. )D ADC< I:GB 8DCIG68I C:8:H- H6GN. $C IDLC, H6;: HIDG6<:. '6G<:G JC>IH 6AHD 6K6>A67A:. C6AA 989-732- 8160. STORAGE #:6I:9 DG CDA9 HIDG6<: 6K6>A67A: ;DG 2>CI:G, .EG>C<, .JBB:G, !6AA, 989- 732-0724 SUV 2001 .JOJ@> 3'-7. 4M4, 3G9 GDL H:6I, 1-6, HJCGDD;. .6A: +G>8: $2,995. ->K:GIDLC AJID "GDJE, 989 1!2 -D69, C=:7DN<6C, ($ 231-627-6700. LLL.->K:GAJID.C:I 2002 /DNDI6 -A1 4. %1C HDJC9, 42D. .6A: +G>8: $8,997. ->K:GIDLC AJID "GDJE, 989 1!2 -D69, C=:7DN<6C, ($ 231-627-6700. LLL.->K:GAJID.C:I 2003 BJ>8@ -:C9:OKDJH C3. )>8: ADD@>C< .01. .6A: +G>8: $5,995. ->K:GIDLC AJID "GDJE, 989 1!2 -D69, C=:7DN<6C, ($ 231-627-6700. LLL.->K:GAJID.C:I 2003 "(C CKDN .'/. 42D, A:6I=:G, HJCGDD;. AH ADL 6H $149 6 BDCI=. DG>K: )DL AJID .6A:H, 2215 0. #><=L6N 31 ), +:IDH@:N. +=DC: 231- 347-3200. LLL.9G>K:CDL123.8DB 2004 !DG9 H86E:. 6 8NA, !GDCI L=::A 9G>K:. AH ADL 6H $199 6 BDCI=. DG>K: )DL AJID .6A:H, 2215 0. #><=L6N 31 ), +:IDH@:N. +=DC: 231-347-3200. LLL.9G>K:CDL123.8DB 2005 C=GNHA:G +68>;>86 /DJG>C<. 3G9 GDL H:6I ;DA9H 9DLC. AH ADL 6H $179 6 BDCI=. DG>K: )DL AJID .6A:H, 2215 0. #><=L6N 31 ), +:IDH@:N. +=DC: 231-347-3200. LLL.9G>K:CDL123.8DB 2006 %::E '>7:GIN '>B>I:9. 4M4, EDL:G HJCGDD;, AD69:9. AH ADL 6H $179 6 BDCI=. DG>K: )DL AJID .6A:H, 2215 0. #><=L6N 31 ), +:IDH@:N. +=DC: 231-347-3200. LLL.9G>- K:CDL123.8DB SUV 2007 !DG9 9<: .' +AJH. A2D, A:6I=:G, 2 HJCGDD;H. AH ADL 6H $199 6 BDCI=. DG>K: )DL AJID .6A:H, 2215 0. #><=L6N 31 ), +:IDH@:N. +=DC: 231-347-3200. LLL.9G>K:CDL123.8DB TRAILERS *E:C .I::A AC<A: $GDC /G6>A:G 7N !DG:HI ->K:G, 5M10 .>C<A: AMA: L/"6I:, 3500 'B AMA:, /G:6I:9 D:8@, !DA9 !A6I -:6G "6I:, D*/ AEEGDK:9 '><=IH, /G>EA: AC<A: /DC<J: & (J8= (DG:. (6CJ;68IJG:GH .J<<:HI:9 +G>8:: $1,995. 4DJ .6K:: $800. .6A: +G>8:: $1,195. +:IDH@:N -1 0.A, 2215 0. #><=L6N 31 ). +:IDH@:N, ($ 49770. +=DC: 231-347-3200. ):L 2014 $CI:GHI6I: 1 6.5' M 12' DJBE /G6>A:G, "G>;;>C 68M12. /6C9:B AMA: #:6KN DJIN DJBE /G6>A:G. /L>C CNA>C9:G, +DL9:G CD6I:9, 2 26N "6I:, #:6KN DJIN -6BEH, (DC6G8= +JBE, $CI:GHI6I: B6II:GN, D ->C<H, 'D69 /6GE, (J8= (DG:. (6CJ;68IJG:GH .J<<:HI:9 +G>8:: $6,995. 4DJ .6K:: $1,500. .6A: +G>8:: $5,495. +:IDH@:N -1 0.A, 2215 0. #><=L6N 31 ). +:IDH@:N, ($ 49770. +=DC: 231-347-3200. ):L 2014 $CI:GHI6I: 1 2:9<: )DH: 6M12 C6G<D /G6>A:GH .!C612.A!.. 2:9<: )DH: C6G<D /G6>A:G 7N $CI:GHI6I: 1, -:6G -6BE DDDG, !GDCI D>6BDC9 +A6I:, 14 +A6I;DGB #:><=I, .EG>C< AMA: & (J8= (DG:. (6CJ;68IJG:GH .J<<:HI:9 +G>8:: $3,695. 4DJ .6K:: $1,000. .6A: +G>8:: $2,695. +:IDH@:N -1 0.A, 2215 0. #><=L6N 31 ). +:IDH@:N, ($ 49770. +=DC: 231-347-3200. TRUCKS 2003 !DG9 -6C<:G MI:C9:9 C67. 4M4, 7:9A>C:G. .6A: +G>8: $7,995. ->K:GIDLC AJID "GDJE, 989 1!2 -D69, C=:7DN<6C, ($ 231-627-6700. LLL.->K:GAJID.C:I 2003 !DG9 -6C<:G 3'/. !34 *;; -D69 E@<, 4M4, :MI:C9:9 867. AH ADL 6H $199 6 BDCI=. DG>K: )DL AJID .6A:H, 2215 0. #><=L6N 31 ), +:IDH@:N. +=DC: 231-347-3200. LLL.9G>- K:CDL123.8DB 2005 DD9<: -6B 1500 .'/. 4M4, IDL E@<, 4 9DDG, =><= B>A:H, <DD9 IGJ8@. .6A: +G>8: $6,497. ->K:GIDLC AJID "GDJE, 989 1!2 -D69, C=:7DN<6C, ($ 231-627-6700. LLL.->K:GAJID.C:I 2005 !DG9 !-350. 4M4, 7:9A>C:G, IDL E@<, /G>IDC 1-10. )DL I=>H >H 6 IGJ8@. .6A: +G>8: $8,495. ->K:GIDLC AJID "GDJE, 989 1!2 -D69, C=:7DN<6C, ($ 231-627-6700. LLL.->K:GAJID.C:I 2006 C=:KN CDADG69D. MI 867. .6A: +G>8: $7,495. ->K:GIDLC AJID "GDJE, 989 1!2 -D69, C=:7DN<6C, ($ 231- 627-6700. LLL.->K:GAJID.C:I May 1, 2014 Tell our advertisers you saw their ad in the Weekly Choice Page 9-B CLASSIFIEDS Delivered to 40 Towns Each Week! Run for As Low As $ 2 00 CALL: 989.732.8160 | EMAIL: classifieds@weeklychoice.com | ORDER ONLINE: www.weeklychoice.com Automotive Review J|m wero|g 0hevro|et 6AL080 68ALI6 6AL080 F08k 6AL080 J|m wero|g 0ad|||ac-6N0 0806A F08k Now AUTO SALES & Petoskey RV USA "Aobod) Sclls Ior Icss" SCHEER MOTORS 68ALI6 Sponsored by The popular automotive website Edmunds.com has named five Chrysler Group vehicles as award winners. The 2014 Ram 1500 full-size and 2500 heavy-duty pickups were named Top Rated Vehicles on Edmunds.com during the 2014 New York International Auto Show press days. Jeep Grand Cherokee and Dodge Grand Caravan, the most awarded SUV and minivan ever, were listed as the 2014 Most Popular on Edmunds.com vehicles in the Midsize Traditional SUV and Minivan categories, respectively. Dodge Durango was named most popular in the Large Traditional SUV category. "Ram pickups earn our top rating on the strength of their excellent chassis and thoughtfully designed cabs," said Scott Oldham, Editor in Chief of Edmunds.com. The Jeep Grand Cherokee, Dodge Durango and Dodge Grand Caravan have no shortage of utility and capability, two very important characteristics that continue to attract customers. Chrysler Group is very proud to accept these awards from Edmunds.com, said Doug Betts, Head of Quality for Fiat S.p.A. and Chrysler Group LLC. The men and women at Chrysler work very hard to create the best vehicles on the market today, and every award received is proof that we are succeeding. Ram 1500 the most recognizable pickup on the road delivers 18 miles per gallon (mpg) city and 25 mpg highway with a truckload of pioneering, fuel-saving systems includ- ing a fuel efficient and powerful 3.6-liter V-6 engine and first-in-segment technologies: TorqueFlite eight-speed auto- matic transmission, stop-start system, thermal management system, pulse-width modulation and active aerodynamics, including grille shutters and air suspension. For 2014, the Ram 1500 offers a new, 3.0-liter EcoDiesel engine that deliv- ers an outstanding combination of best-in-class fuel effi- ciency 28 mpg unsurpassed torque and up to 9,200 lbs. of towing capability. Ram 2500 - The 2014 Ram 2500 adds new powertrain, sus- pension and innovative features that deliver the most pow- erful, capable and comfortable heavy-duty truck in the seg- ment. Rams Heavy Duty line offers an all-new 6.4-liter HEMI V-8 with best-in-class (gas engine) 410 horsepower and 429 lb.-ft. of torque, a 5.7-liter HEMI V-8 and the renowned 6.7-liter Cummins Turbo Diesel I-6, cranking out 370 horsepower and best-in-class (diesel engine) 800 lb.-ft. of torque. An all-new five-link coil rear suspension system, with an available exclusive rear air suspension, allows for best-in-class ride and handling. The two robust options meld with a new front suspension to handle the best-in- class 17,970 lb. towing capacity. Innovative features such as a cargo bed camera, 5th wheel/gooseneck trailer prep pack- age and the popular Uconnect system come together to offer customers the best -ton truck in the segment. Jeep Grand Cherokee completely redefines the premium SUV, delivering an unprecedented combination of best-in- class fuel economy and driving range, available clean-diesel technology, legendary benchmark capability, world-class craftsmanship, and a host of advanced user-friendly tech- nology and safety features. For 2014, Grand Cherokee offers a new EcoDiesel engine with best-in-class 30 mpg highway and an unmatched driving range of more than 730 miles. A new eight-speed transmission drives all Grand Cherokee engines, including the 3.6-liter Pentastar V-6 achieving up to 25 mpg and more than 600 miles driving range and the 5.7-liter V-8, now achieving up to 22 mpg. Dodge Durango - The new 2014 Dodge Durango takes everything that customers love about Durango and adds the latest advancements in technology to enhance its design, capability and functionality. With a new standard eight- speed automatic transmission that improves fuel economy up to 15 percent with the available HEMI V-8 engine and delivers up to 25 mpg with the standard Pentastar V-6 engine, new LED exterior lighting and the Dodge brands signature racetrack taillamps, new available 8.4-inch Uconnect Touchscreen, a new customizable TFT gauge clus- ter and an available high-definition dual-screen Blu-ray entertainment system, the 2014 Dodge Durango reaches even higher levels of sophistication building on its proven performance, utility and comfort. Dodge Grand Caravan, Americas most affordable mini- van, is celebrating its 30th birthday in 2014 with special 30th Anniversary models and unique content. The Grand Caravan offers industry-exclusive Super Stow n Go seating that can be easily operated with one hand, allowing users to convert from carrying seven to hauling cargo in a matter of seconds. The Pentastar 3.6-liter V-6 engine provides best-in- class 283 hp without a penalty at the gas pump, getting up to 25 mpg. The Grand Caravan is equipped with more than 45 safety and security features and is an IIHS Top Safety Pick. T*' 2126.#3 #651/15+7' 8'$4+5' E&/60&4.%1/ *#4 0#/'& (+7' C*394.'3 G3162 7'*+%.'4 #4 #8#3& 8+00'34. T*' 2014 R#/ 1500 (6..- 4+:' #0& 2500 *'#79-&659 2+%-624 (4*180 *'3') 8'3' 0#/'& ;T12 R#5'& '*+%.'4 10 E&/60&4.%1/< &63+0) 5*' 2014 N'8 "13- I05'30#5+10#. A651 S*18 23'44 ^. Photo coPyRight chRysleR gRouP llc. Five Chrysler Group Vehicles Win Awards From Edmunds.com J''2 G3#0& C*'31-'' (4*180 *'3') #0& D1&)' G3#0& C#3#7#0, 5*' /145 #8#3&'& SU #0& /+0+7#0 '7'3, 8'3' .+45'& #4 5*' ;2014 M145 P126.#3 10 E&/60&4.%1/< 7'*+%.'4 +0 5*' M+&4+:' T3#&+5+10#. SU #0& M+0+7#0 %#5')13+'4, 3'42'%5+7'.9. Photo coPyRight chRysleR gRouP llc. As Lou us $ 0 Ooun ACCESS TO OVER 100 VEHICLES A|| \e||c|e Sale|] lrpec|ed ard warrar|ed BY HR PAY HR Bankruptcy, Repos, Bad Credit OK! CALL RANDY: 231-548-2192 ONLINE APPLICATION AT HOODSUSEDCARS.COM Page 10-B Tell our advertisers you saw their ad in the Weekly Choice May 1, 2014 weeklychoice .com www.NorthernRealEstate.com Office: 989-732-1707 Toll Free: 800-828-9372 1738 S. Otsego Ave., P.O. Box 641 Gaylord, MI 49735 NEW PRICE Oldy but a Goody. 3 Bed, 1 Bath usable Cabin with 2 additional fixer upper cabins for the do-it-your-selfer.Another shed and garage currently used for wood storage.All on 1.7 acres within a 1/2 mile of Big Bear Lake. $40,000MLS #287342 25K PRICE REDUCTION! Peaceful Up North Custom Built 3 Bed, 3 Bath Home on 10 Wooded Acres. Private Setting Flourishing with Wildlife (see Elk- Deer in back yard). New Maple Flooring, Field Stone Fireplace,T&G Vaulted Ceiling, Built In Appliances,Wet Bar, Jet Tub, Sauna. Large Deck, Naturally Landscaped, 2 1/2 Car Attached Garage, Car Port and Additional 24x24 Out Building. Close to Gaylord, Petoskey, Boyne Falls. $310,000MLS #280633 FAMILY FRIENDLY Newer ranch close to town. 3 bedrooms, 2 3/4 baths, master suite, open kitchen, attached 2 1/2 car garage, basement, gas fireplace, new ceiling fans, and fenced in back yard. Convenient location but no city taxes. $129,000MLS #289919 DISCOVER UP NORTH LIVING in this Roomy Ranch and Get Your Furniture Too. 3 Beds and 2 Baths. Master Suite. Formal Dining Room, Living Room and Family Room. Spacious Kitchen with Newer Appliances, Newer Main Floor Top- of-the-Line Washer and Dryer. Sits on a Full Basement on 2.3 Acres Surrounded by Trees and Close to State Land, Good Fishing and State Land. $80,000MLS #289775 N E W L I S T I N G N E W L I S T I N G R E D U C E D L O T S O F W IL D L IF E ! Country Estate, Gaylord John Koske, Koske Realty Co., Gaylord (989) 732-1012 Real Estate A Timeline for Your Summer Move Getting prepared to move is half the battle Part 1 of 5 If youre one of the millions of Americans who have picked the summer months to move into a new home, you might see stress in your future. But if youre organized, you can minimize the impact moving has on your family. Moving.com has created a timeline with use- ful tips on how families on the move can quickly get prepared for a seamless transition to their next home. Moving Timeline and Tips for Summer Moves 4 weeks from move date: Get organized and start notifying the right people and companies that youll be moving soon and give them a date to forward or ter- minate service. Start looking for licensed and professional moving companies, moving guides and relevant coupons. Tip: If youre using a professional mover, get quotes from multiple moving companies to get the best deal that is right for you and your needs. Ask plenty of questions, like whether or not they give binding quotes and what kind of insurance is included. Be sure to talk with them about the different options available with full-service moves such as packing and unpacking services and provid- ing boxes and packing supplies. Tip: Important documents such as your childs school records may need to be accessi- ble during your transition. Make sure to put these items aside and make copies of any records for yourself, in case you forget what box theyre packed in. Tip: Use the post office address changer service to save time and to ensure youve cov- ered all the ground necessary to better ensure your move is seamless. Fill out change of address forms for creditors, doctors and per- sonal providers. Schedule account closings for trash removal, gardeners, pest control, etc., and transfer utilities or other services thatll go with you. Country estate near Treetops Resort offers plenty of acreage for horses or cattle Compliments of Ed Wohlfiel CLASSIFIEDS Delivered to 40 Towns Each Week! Run for As Low As $ 2 00 CALL: 989.732.8160 | EMAIL: classifieds@weeklychoice.com | ORDER ONLINE: www.weeklychoice.com By Jim Akans Situated on approximately 27 acres northeast of Gaylord, this wonderful country estate is the perfect place for the family as well as for those with horses, cattle or looking to establish a gen- tlemens farm. A sharp, clean three-bedroom, two-bath ranch home features over 1,300 square feet of main level living space with over an additional 1,300 square feet in the full basement area. The home also has an attached two-car garage, a covered front porch, and a large back patio. Outdoors, the setting is gorgeous, wide-open countryside. The property includes a classic 34 x 46 foot barn with a walkout lower level, and there is a second building on the grounds for additional storage. This country estate is located close to Treetops Resort, just a few miles from down- town Gaylord, and it is listed at just $135,000. Call Koske Realty today for a private showing. (989) 732-1012 or email mmkos@rocketmail.com Feature Home On the Market TRUCKS 2006 !DG9 !-150. 4 9DDG, 7:9A>C:G, !34 *;; -D69 E@<, IDL E@<, H=DGI 7DM, 5.4 ' /G>IDC. *CAN 96 &. .6A: +G>8: $14,997. ->K:GIDLC AJID "GDJE, 989 1!2 -D69, C=:7DN<6C, ($ 231-627- 6700. LLL.->K:GAJID.C:I 2009 "(C .>:GG6 1500. 4M4, 4 9DDG, 7:9A>C:G, IDL E@<, H:6IH 5. .6A: +G>8: $17,997. ->K:GIDLC AJID "GDJE, 989 1!2 -D69, C=:7DN<6C, ($ 231-627- 6700. LLL.->K:GAJID.C:I TRUCKS 2010 !DG9 !-150 3'/. 4M4, IDL E@<, H:6IH 5, ;>7:G<A6HH IDEE:G. .6A: +G>8: $19,995. ->K:GIDLC AJID "GDJE, 989 1!2 -D69, C=:7DN<6C, ($ 231-627- 6700. LLL.->K:GAJID.C:I A//)/$*) 'A)D.CA+-.. 2006 C=:KN .>AK:G69D L>I= 7J>AI >C .EG6N FJ>EB:CI. /DEE:G, ':6I=:G, 4 C:L I>G:H. $229 6 (*)/# DG '... ->K:GIDLC AJID "GDJE, 989 1!2 -D69, C=:7DN<6C, ($ 231-627-6700. LLL.->K:GAJID.C:I VANS 2000 DD9<: -6B CDCK:GH>DC 16C. AH >H. .6K: $50 I=>H L::@. *CAN $2,495. DG>K: )DL AJID .6A:H, 2215 0. #><=L6N 31 ), +:IDH@:N. +=DC: 231- 347-3200. LLL.9G>K:CDL123.8DB 2003 C=GNHA:G /DLC & CDJCIGN. 6 8NA, 4 86EI6>C 8=6>GH, H:6IH 7, D1D. AH ADL 6H $99 6 BDCI=. DG>K: )DL AJID .6A:H, 2215 0. #><=L6N 31 ), +:IDH@:N. +=DC: 231-347-3200. LLL.9G>K:CDL123.8DB VANS 2004 #DC96 *9NHH:N. .:6IH 7, 6JID- B6I>8 HA>9>C< 9J6A 9DDGH, D1D. .6A: +G>8: $5,997. ->K:GIDLC AJID "GDJE, 989 1!2 -D69, C=:7DN<6C, ($ 231- 627-6700. LLL.->K:GAJID.C:I 2004 /DNDI6 .>:CC6. .:6IH 7, 4 86E- I6>C 8=6>GH, 9J6A HA>9>C< 9DDGH, C>8:. AH ADL 6H $139 6 BDCI=. DG>K: )DL AJID .6A:H, 2215 0. #><=L6N 31 ), +:IDH@:N. +=DC: 231-347-3200. LLL.9G>K:CDL123.8DB VANS 2005 DD9<: C6G6K6C. .:6IH 7, 9J6A HA>9>C< 9DDGH. AH ADL 6H $129 6 BDCI=. DG>K: )DL AJID .6A:H, 2215 0. #><=L6N 31 ), +:IDH@:N. +=DC: 231-347-3200. LLL.9G>K:CDL123.8DB 2008 DD9<: "G6C9 C6G6K6C .. .IDL-)-"D, H:6IH 7. .6A: +G>8: $7,997. ->K:GIDLC AJID "GDJE, 989 1!2 -D69, C=:7DN<6C, ($ 231-627- 6700. LLL.->K:GAJID.C:I 2010 DD9<: "G6C9 C6G6K6C .3/. .IDL-)-"D, H:6IH 7. .6A: +G>8: $10,997. ->K:GIDLC AJID "GDJE, 989 1!2 -D69, C=:7DN<6C, ($ 231-627- 6700. LLL.->K:GAJID.C:I VANS 2012 C=GNHA:G /DLC & CDJCIGN /DJG>C<. D6G@ C=6G8D6A +:6GA L/8DB- ;DGI67A: 8=6G8D6A =:6I:9 A:6I=:G H:6I>C<! +:G;:8I ;DG I=: ;6B>AN D1D EA6N:G, .IDL QC "D H:6IH. /=>H DC: NDJ 9DCRI DC: ID B>HH. /6@: >I ;DG 6 I:HI 9G>K:! $20,449. D6K: &G>C< C=:KGDA:I-C69>AA68, 1861 0. 31 )DGI=, +:IDH@:N, ($ 231-347-2585. WANTED 26CI:9: *0/B*A-D (*/*-., 6CN H>O:, GJCC>C< DG CDI. AAHD H:AA>C< *JI7D6G9 (DIDGH. C6AA 231-546- 6000