Wood and Hannah New Commissioners

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Wood and Hannah New Commissioners 113th Year, No. 28 ST. JOHNS, MICHIGAN — THURSDAY NOVEMBER 7, 1968 2 SECTIONS — 30 PAGES 15 Cents County votes funds to complete soil mapping 'X•^;•^K<<*K•^^^^w<•ww^^!w>^:•>>^^^^^^^^^^^^>^!•^ Federal * * • • • • • • A • • • unit drops TOWN WENT WILD map & Wood and Hannah Supervisors balked Monday but OVER PEACE PACT then voted 13-8 to provide anoth­ er $1,437.45 a year for four years to complete a tri-county CLINTON REPUBLICAN OF NOV. 14, 1918 soil mapping project. What irked them mostwas their DETAILED LOCAL CELEBRATION belief that the soil mapping was / to have been done by now on a new commissioners OF END OF WORLD WAR I 50 YEARS AGO $6,000 total appropriation made by the board back In 1964. Robert Wood and John W. Han-, News that Germany had surrendered was received over nah recorded victories Tuesday William C. Roman of the Tri- 'the telephone by Leslie G. Brown of the Bell company Monday in the all-write-in campaign for County Regional Planning Com­ morning a little after 3, He called up Rev E.A. Armstrong two seats on the St. Johns City mission made the request for ad­ ST. JOHNS, of the Methodist Episcopal church and it was not long before Commission, ditional funds in a letter to the ; the chimes were pealing out the glad news in national airs. Wood polled a totalof592 votes board, and he told them in per­ TOWN WENT WILO Rev John Lynch, of St, Joseph's church) got the news about and Hannah garnered 507 to beat son Monday that unless funds are the same time, did not wait to dress, and had the'honor of out the third write-in candidate, provided to offset a withdrawal OVER PEACE PACT ringing the first bell. Other bells followed, steam whistles, John Lynch, who had a* total of from the project by the Housing ENT WP processions of men, women and children carrying flags, tin n*.. "I * enenov CSFLSDED ir. '"" 247 votes. * •»> and Urban Development agency '' """ SELF IN MAflCMING. FIRING |'(*"- pans and everything that would make a noise. Automobiles (HUD), the soil mapping of the OUIIl.ANDM»*INO*llTHt ,.!,,;, Wood is a St. Johns attorney FO*E. NOISC POltKLE '• - • added to the din by tying tin cans and other noise-making and has formerly been Justice tri-county area-would have to be apparatus on the rear of the auto and driving at breakneck terminated. Z of the peace and associate muni- r E AUTOS, TRUCKS, TRACTORS l speed about town. Men with guns went along the sidewalk ciple judge. Hannah is shop sup­ ' HUD^ along withMichiganState ^"i- WITH BIG LOADS PARADE "" ' firing them, pistols were 'fired, and this performance was erintendent at the Clinton County University, the Tri-County Re­ THE SIHEfH. OlHIRl M1I1CH ™'L, kept up for hours. When the grocers put their wares on the News. Both nrien will attend their gional Planning Commission and In D1.5IMSS iuiPEXDED HAISIH IHIIO «ND SMO'. sidewalk* in front of the stores, the marchers would put the first city commission meeting the Soil Conservation Service goods inside. The banks did not open in me morning, as all next Monday evening. have sponsored the soil mapping. business was suspended temporarily to give full rein to the the last three years. Roman said Wood was the top vote-getter peace celebration. In one of the processions Rev John T. in the two city precincts, with the mapping is just about exactly Lynch carried the bass drum. Old and young, men and women, half done in Ingham-Clinton-Ea­ Hannah holding a one-vote edge little, and big children joined in Thanksgiving service. As in the^ absentee balloting. Here ton area. the morning advanced flags were displayed from every '.*,& is a precinct-by-precinct look at ROBERT H. WOOD ROLAND DUGUAY, HUD has withdrawn from the house, store, apd building possessing one, the flags of our the results: JOHN.W, HANNAH project this year, Rorrian said, ' Allies being freely' shown along, witn others. Truck loads New Commissioner New Commissioner Judgeship Leader tiecause-'of a-jiut-back in'approi of boys "and* meiTjpaf ade'd' th'e^slr^'efs^Autos ~were decorated '";•:'«• • • " HVCfOD: 269 IN-PRECINCT Ijr priations by^Congress. He said with flags and W continuous performance was kept up all 207 in Precinct 2 and 116 in the money ($19,166) would have the forenoon. absent voters precinct; total of to be made up by the local units- 592 votes. Roland Duguay takes county boards and the county road The Afternoon commissions—if the project is to Hannah: 210 votes in Precinct be completed. A total of $57,500 1, 180 in Precinct 2 and 117 The afternoon was a repetition of the morning, but in­ votes in the absent voters pre­ will be needed each year, with terest flagged before night and the crowd was greatly re­ Tri-County paying $9\,548 from cinct; total of 507 votes. lead in district judge race duced by 6 o'clock. Soon after supper, however, the people Lynch: 139 votes In Precinct its annual appropriations from, began coming and the celebration was on again. The streets the three counties. 1, 92 votes in'Preclnct 2 and 16 were soon packed with autos and in front of the court house Roland Duguay appeared to be trlct judgeship as of 4:30 a.m. absentee voter precincts report­ VJ votes in the absentee ballots; SUPERVISOR Derrlll Shina- it was difficult to get along the walks at all. Trucks, tractors total of 247 votes. heading toward victory in his Wednesday, ing,,, Duguay was holding a 3-2 bery of Greenbush Township said and autos equipped with noise-making devices paraded the The results of the city com­ quest for the Clinton County dis- With nine of 30 regular and lead over Harold Reed. Duguay he recalled that the county had streets. A particularly noisy equipment bore a banner, mission race weren't known un­ had 2,515 votes and*Reed had entered into an agreement with "Bengal-can you hear Kaiser Bill now?" The Greenbush band til shortly after 2 a.m. Wednes­ 1,892. Tri-County for $6,000 for the full was here and the Liberty band headed a procession up Clinton day. Precinct workers weren't Bath OKs millage, liquor Duguay, presently the Clinton mapping, and other supervisors Avenue to the court house square, led by Rev E.A. Armstrong able to get started counting the County prosecuting attorney, with his hat full of flags, and Rev John T. Lhnch, resplendent said they were led to believe the ballots — with the exception of All three precincts approved carried most of the precincts in a silk hat. Home guard members and others fired guns BATH — Bath Township voters that had reported at 430. Reed same thing. Roman, who hadn't (Story continued on Page 14-A) approved an additional one-mill the one-mill tax levy, which will Joined Tri-County at the time of at frequent intervals, people carried klaxon horns and every carried Bath 2 and Eagle Town­ variety of squawker. tax for five years and liquor by be spread for five years to pay the agreement In 1964, said all his for the purchase of fire trucks, ship and came within a few votes the glass in the general elect­ of Duguay. In Bengal Township. records Indicated the agreement ion Tuesday. fire equipment and establishment was for the first half of the map­ The Kaiser Tried Clinton The liquor by the glass prop­ of a fire building and site fund.. ping. V osal passed by only three votes ELECTION NOTE A check of the board of super­ On the band stand an image of the Kaiser was stationed -.689-686. It lost In the Bath Township voters also gave Olive Township had a great visors' minutes failed tolurn up between two soldiers and^Prosecuting Attorney Fehling ar­ goes for 1 precinct by 281 yes to 379 no\ Gerald Shepard a rousing 905 turnout. A total of 692 voters any indication of the time limit raigned the culprit, charging liim with every crime in the and by a 19-26 vote in the'ab­ votes for district supervisor (in cast ballots, compared to a reg­ the board was concerned about. decalogue and then some. When he had finished Judge Mpinet sentee voting, but Precinct 2's District 11), including 454 votes istration of about .710. Twenty- After the noon recess the board reviewed the' case, adding to the charges any that the pros­ Nixon overwhelming 389-281 tally was in'Precinct 1, 409 votes in Pre­ five absentee votes were among voted approval of the request, ecuting attorney might have omitted. It was the sentence of just enough to pass the measure. cinct 2 and 42 absentee votes. the total. pointing out they thought it only the court that the Kaiser be s'hot, which was done and his Clinton County went, as expect­ fair to the rest of the townships miserable remains cremated on the big bonfire. Thus ended ed, for Richard M. Nixon for not already mappebS Their the big peace celebration. President of the United States $1,437.45 appropriation for the in Tuesday's election. \ next f^our years, however, doesn't Notes , Although all precincts had not obligate -the Clintbn County Road been reported at press time, Commission which is being asked A heavily loaded truck was run up and down the sidewalks Nixon and running mate Spiro for $479.15 per year. on Clinton Avenue during the forenoon, crushing the flagstone Agnew were enjoying a substant­ ial lead in Clinton County over The vote infayor of an extended and cement walk in places.
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