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| Lake Region Times | |
| Madison Lake , Minnesota More Newspaper Titles | |
| September 1, 2010 | |
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Lake Region Times . All rights reserved.
Lake Region Times * Page 8
Wednesday, September 1, 2010
.... ffiil i
REMEMBERING THE TIMES
I
LAKE REGION TIMES
THE LAKE RE GION TIMES
SERVING MADISON LAKE AND EAGLE LAKE
Patricia J. Will, Publisher
[ 20c_per copy $6.00 per year in the state, $7.00 elsewhere
[ [ 69 t" YEAR NO. 29 WEDNESDAY, Sept. 4, 1985
[ WOLL'S SUPERET'="''*''TE TAKES 2N:'"'D'PL'AC'E IN.
| SOFTBALL TOURNAMENT
' File Photo
Pictured above are the team members of Worrell's Softball Team,
Who took 2 "d place in the MARC Softball League Division VII (front
row I to r) Tom Atwood, John Hobbs, Mike Budach, Jim Beal, Mark
Worrell, Tom (Whitey) Westlund. (back row) Greg Budach, Keith
Hedge, Roy Worrell, Steve Fralish, Steve Weber, Brad Holmberg
and Mike Boike.
at 3 a.m. Friday morning after
her 14 year old daughter was
WOMAN STABBED IN awakened by a cry from her
HER BEDFRIDAYA,M. mother and went to her
No information was being bedroom to find that she had
released over the Holiday been slashed several times on
weekend on the condition of a her legs and lower body.
Madison Lake women, believed
to be m her 40's, who was The assailant was gone by the
time she found her. How the
stabbed in her bed while assailant entered the building,
sleeping at the Pioneer Plaza which has a security system, or
Apartments in Madison Lake on
Friday a.m. what weapon was used had not
IB Joyce Alderman was taken to
I M:g00/iLn :: keel T IME S
Karl R. Edgerton, Publisher Wayne R. Will, Editor
In County $2.50 per year $3.00 elsewhere
Vol. 52 Thursday, September 1, 1960
Published etch and every Thursday from the Heart of Minnesota's Hunting and
Paradise - the Beautiful Madison and
Our clients' needs get
special attention
The indlvMual insurance needs and problems of eacl ,:'. et
him apart from the crowd, Before recommending art in’trance
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provide the proper protection without costly coverage over'np:.ng.
May we provide this service to you?
PEOPLES STATE BANK
IPDIO MADISII
licpresentlng theHartford Fire Ir/surat,e _,. ipany t3 roup '...:
. Hartford, Connecticut i
MaUqda 00les
Making a Will
Your age, health status and
list of assets don't matter --
we all need to have an up to
date will. We never know
what tomorrow will bring.
Writing a will is one of those
projects that you don't want to
do yourself. One of those do-
it-yourself legal packages
might be a place to start, but
only to use as a reference.
Make notes, look at a copy
of any previous will you've
written and pencil in any
changes you'd like. Create a
list of your assets: real estate,
antiques, family heirlooms and
anything else of value.
Decide how your belongings
and money are to be divided
up. Are there children and
grandchildren? Have they
expressed a desire to have
particular items? Do you have
favorite causes?
Your safest course is to find
an attomey to draft up the
Madison LAKE TIMES
d. A. Lilligraven, Publisher T.J. Roomer, Assistant Editor
$1.50 per year in advance $2.00 Foreign and Canada
Volume XX Thursday, August 29, 1935 Number 39
Hear the Junior Band Broadcast
Over WCCO Friday at 9:00 p.m.
Band to Play
Over WCCO
Three Busses Chartered To
Transport Large Group To
Mpls. Friday
Everything is in readiness for
the "Madison Lake Day" at
NicoUet Park tomorrow, Friday,
August 30th., and tickets have
been sold to more than a
hundred boosters who will
follow the band and it is
expected that the delegation will
total at least 200 persons.
Three large busses have been
chartered for the trip and many
private autos will be used to
transport the fans. The busses
are scheduled to leave Madison
Lake at 8:00 a.m. charp, making
stoPs at the Ford plant at St.
Paul where the party will make
a tour inspection, going from
there to Minnehaha Park where
they will have a picnic dinner.
They then go to the Dykemann
Hotel in Minneapolis where
they will register and secure
tickets for "the ball game which
will start at 1:30 p.m. on
account of a double header
between St. Paul and
After registering
at the hotel the band and fans
will make a short march
through downtown Minneapolis
before leaving for the ball park.
Following the game, the party
will again meet at the
Dykemann Hotel where several
rooms have been reserved for
!the use of the children of the
band who rrfight wish to rest
before taking part in the
broadcast at the studios of
WCCO at Nicollet Hotel where
go on the air from 9:00 to
9:15.
Arrangements for the
broadcast were not completed
until Wednesday of this week
and will be unusual in as much.
as the local band has been
organized less than 10 months
and its personnel includes
children as young as eight years
and the average age is but little
over 13 years.
Problem of Whether To-
mato is Fruit or Veget-
able Decided By Courts
Whether the tomato is a fruit
or a vegetable, a debate that
every summer rages hotly up
and down the aisles at
Minnesota county fairs, has
recently been decided by the
Virginia Supreme Court of
Appeals. The court decreed that
the tomato is a fruit.
R.C. Rose, extension potato
specialist, University Farm, St.
Pail, who is one of Minnesota's
popular vegetable judges, says
the question of where to include
tomatoes comes up at almost
every fair, the general tendency
being to class it as a vegetable,
though botanically it is a fruit.
In Virginia, the question arose
when a juryman was excused
from court duty to pick
tomatoes under a statute
permitting exemption to "any
fruit grower who is engaged in
harvesting his crops." First a
lower court and then the
supreme court decided that
tomatoes are a fruit and
therefore that a juryman could
be excused to harvest his
tomatoes.
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final version. An attorney can
advise you on the tax
implications of any steps you
want to take, as well as your
state laws. For example, in
many states the law outlines
how much of the estate must
be left to a spouse, or perhaps
you need to create a trust.
Find an executor. Be sure to
ask if that person is willing to
handle the details. Settling an
estate can be time consuming
(depending on how many
debts you leave and how many
property assets you own). You
may need to find an attorney
to act as executor. Granted, an
attorney will have to be paid
out of the estate, but in most
situations that might be your
best route.
An adult child is 9ften asked
to handle estates, but that can
cause ill feelings if there are
siblings.
No matter which route you
take to produce your will,
remember that you need
witnesses to your signature,
and they can't be anyone who
benefits from your will.
Matilda Charles regrets that she
cannot personally answer reader
questions, but will incorporate
them into her column whenever
possible. Write to her in care of
King Features Weekly Service,
P.O. Box 536475, Orlando, FL
32853-6475, or send e-mail to
columnreply@gmail.com.
© 2010 King Features Synd., Inc.
Eagle Lake * Madison Lake * Pemberton * St. Clair
Jamestown Township * LeRay Township
-- li .....
SENIOR NEWS LINE
in time
On Aug. 30, 31 B.C.,
Cleopatra, queen of Egypt and
lover of Julius Caesar and Mark
Antony, takes her life following
the defeat of her forces against
Octavian, the future first
emperor of Rome. Although
Cleopatra had no Egyptian
blood, she alone in her ruling
house learned Egyptian.
On Aug. 31, 1888, Mary
Ann Nichols, the first victim of
London serial killer "Jack the
Ripper," is found murdered in
Whitechapel's Buck's Row. On
Nov. 7, after a month of
silence, Jack took his fifth and
final victim, Mary Kelly. In
1892, with no leads found and
nomore murders recorded, the
Jack the Ripper file was closed.
On Sept. 1, 1983, Soviet
let fighters Intercept a Korean
Airlines passenger flight in
Russian airspace and shot the
plane down, killing. 269
passengers and crew members.
The KAL flight had veered
onto a course that was close to
one being simultaneously flown
by a U.S. spy plane.
On Sept. 2, 1996, Michael
Jackson earns his 12th and final
solo No. 1 with the R&B ballad
"You Are Not Alone," written
by R. Kelly. A court in Belgium
ruled in 2007 that Kelly had
plagiarized "You Are Not
Alone" from a Belgian song
called "If We Can Start All
Over."
On Sept. 3, 1777, the
American flag is flown in battle
for the first time, during a
Revolutionary War skirmish at
Cooch's Bridge, Maryland. The
national flag, which became
known as the "Stars and
Swipes," was based on the
"Grand Union" flag, a banner
carried by the Continental
Army in 1776.
On Sept. 4, 1951,
President Harry ' Truman's
opening speech before a
conference in San Francisco is
broadcast across the nation,
marking the first time a
television program was
broadcast from coast to coast.
On Sept. "5, 1972, at the
Summer Olympics in Munich,
Germany, a group of
Palestinlan terrorists storms the
Olympic Village apartment of
the Israeli athletes, killing two
and taking nine others hostage.
The terrorists, known as Black
September, demanded that
Israel release more than 230
Arab prisoners being held in
Israeli jails. In an ensuing
shootout at the Munich airport,
the nine Israeli hostages were
killed.
© 2010 King Features Synd., Inc.
ARIES (March 21 to April 19)
Careful Lamb. Taking on too
many tasks at one time can cause
you to create more snarls each
time you try to work your way
through the tangled mass. Best to
handle one job at a lime.
TAURUS (April 20 to May 20)
Making bold moves is what
Bovines do. But the best moves
are made with lots of data to
provide backup just in case you
charge into an unexpected
complication. A new relationship
shows promise.
GEMINI (May 21 to June 20)
Sharing credit for a job well done
is easy for you to do, but not
necessarily for your partner. But
fair is fair. Don't let yourself be
denied the right to have your
contributions recognized.
CANCER (June 21 to July 22)
Communication is important to
help bridge a gap that can lead to
problems at home and/or at the
workplace. Find a way to get
your points across before the
breach becomes a chasm.
LEO (July 23 to August 22)
Relationships, whether business
or personal, need to be watched
carefully for signs of trouble. Any
negative indications should he
dealt with before they become too
burdensome.
VIRGO (August 23 to Sept 22)
Congratulations. A moL ,:,tive
aspect highlights much of the
Virgo's week. You should find
others more receptive to your
suggestions, and also more likely
to act on them.
LIBRA (Sept 23 to Oct 22) All
work and little play could wear
the Libra's usually positive
attitude down. Take some much-
needed time off. Perhaps a short
jaunt with someone special is the
way to go.
SCORPIO (Oct 23 to Nov 21)
This is a good time to expand
your view from the known to the
unfamiliar. Confronting new
situations could be challenging,
but ultimately also could be
extremely satisfying.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov 22 to Dec
21) Giving advice to those who
just want validation for what
they're doing can be unsettling.
So back off and save your
counsel for those who really
appreciate it.
CAPRICORN (Dec 22 to Jan 19)
Cultivating a more positive
attitude not only makes you feel
better about yourself, but also has
an upbeat effect on those around
you, especially that certain
someone.
AQUARIUS (Jan 20 to Feb 18)
Keeping the lines of
communication open and
accessible is the key to
establishing the right foundation
on which to build an important
and meaningful relationship. Stay
with it.
PISCES (Teb 19 to March 20)
Before agreeing to act on a
request, consider using your
perceptive Piscean talents to see
what might lie hidden beneath its
surface and co!d possibly cause
problems later on.
BORN THIS WEEK: You're a
friend who, if you err at all, does
so on the side of concern for
those you care about.
© 2010 King Features Synd., Inc.
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