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| Roen, Sievert Summer 1977; Michigan 75 YO | |
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| Tweet Topic Started: Dec 19 2006, 10:47 AM (676 Views) | |
| monkalup | Dec 19 2006, 10:47 AM Post #1 |
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The Old Heifer! An oxymoron, of course.
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Roen mystery never ends 10/26/2000 The Roen house was auctioned off earlier this month, likely ending another chapter in Empire's greatest mystery. Was anyone in the audience who knew where Sievert Roen, who vanished more than 29 years ago, is buried? It was his family home which was sold to the highest bidder. Sievert was 75 years-old when he stomped out the front door of the farmhouse on Bennet Rd. on a stormy summer night in 1977, never to be seen again. Over the years, the disappearance of Sievert and the subsequent death of his two brothers has spurned the kind of speculation and gossip fit for the script of television's Unsolved Mysteries. The lives of the three reclusive brothers were fairly uneventful, yet their deaths had a rippling affect on the inhabitants of the village. Sievert's disappearance not only sparked theories of murder, but a sizable estate drew attention from the national media and was the catalyst behind the village's one-of-a-kind museum. While living, it's likely the spotlight cast on their treasures would have embarrassed the trio. The auction of their family heirlooms in 1985 drew an impressive 5,000 buyers (including a 1960s sitcom star) from 23 states and two Canadian provinces. The most recent auction was held Oct. 7, in which the 6-bedroom, white-sided farmhouse, outbuildings and 10 acres was sold by the brother's niece, Judy Fillingham. She inherited the estate following the deaths of her uncles Benhart and Andrew Roen in 1985. In death, these private men became celebrities of sort, yet no one came to their funeral. They were buried quietly and unceremoniously by a friend. "After they died, I got a call from the funeral home and they told me they had a couple of cremations," said former Empire resident Gary hilts, who was a friend of the brothers. "I was the sexton at the Maple Grove cemetery on M-109 at the time, so I went and got the ashes. I dug the hole and put them in the ground and wished them luck." Andy is buried alone and Hilts put Ben next to his girlfriend. "There they are, in their cardboard boxes-they didn't even get urns," he said. Simple military markers signify their resting places. Past newspaper accounts paint a picture of eccentric, Norwegian-speaking men who lived a solitary life, but Dave Taghon knew the trio better. He said that they spoke perfect English and although solitary, lived honest and frugal lives on their 133-acre fruit farm on the southeast edge of the village. "They weren't always eccentric," said Taghon. "But as they got older, they drew more into the farmhouse. They didn't count on the village for much." Andrew had once worked as a diesel mechanic, Benhart as a teacher and Severt ran the farm. Joan Bolton also knew the brothers, adding that Andy was an active member of the Empire Area Heritage Group. "I think a lot of their eccentricity was made up in the minds of people who didn't visit them and maybe should have," she commented. Fran Hilts worked at the bank then and remembers one of the brothers as a customer. "Andy was smart and very nice, but they kept to themselves. He would come to town and get his mail and come into the bank. He would come to our house to see Gary and they worked on an old Indian motorcycle together," said Fran. Indeed, it was that old motorcycle and a 1956 BMW cycle that forged a friendship between the youngest Roen and Gary. "They were different and I don't know how friendly they were to most people, but one of the brothers (Andy) was a motorcycle rider and I was, too, and we became friends," said Hilts. Hilts recalled the day they got Andy's motorcycle running, and he took him to Meijer's for a helmet and later a cruise on the bike. "He really enjoyed it," said Hilts. Hilts also helped Andy out when he hurt his foot and was unable to mow the yard, and sometimes kept Ben company when Andy had to go to town. So life was relatively uneventful for the three Roens until Severt suddenly disappeared. "He was getting senile," said Taghon. He recalled finding Sievert walking downtown with a shotgun in his hand. Another time Taghon took him home to be met with the fury of brother Ben. "I knocked on the door and when Ben opened it and he saw Severt standing there, the sound of his voice went right through me. He loudly told him to get back to the orchard. Sievert was shaking. It was obvious they didn't show much respect for poor old Sievert." Taghon speculated that they had lost patience with him because of his worsening senility. "Some believed he was killed, but I didn't find anything to indicate that," said Taghon. For three months search parties, including the town's Boy Scout troop and law enforcement officers, scoured the countryside looking for some sign of Severt. Hilda Joy, a 91 year-old friend of the family and self-proclaimed psychic, said that Severt's body might be found in the cistern, an underground water tank on the farm. The lead was a dead-end-the cistern was completely dry and empty. "The empty cistern just adds to part of the mystique of the whole thing," said Taghon. Eventually the search ended and folks waited for a deer hunter or hiker to come across his remains, but that has never happened. A petition to declare Sievert officially dead was filed in 1985, but no official county record of his death had been filed. At the time he would have been 98-years-old. Leelanau County medical examiner Dr. Matthew Houghton, who was also the brothers' personal physician, said Andy thought Sievert had walked to the road and hitchhiked and was still alive, according to a Detroit Free Press article. There are also theories that the brothers killed Sievert and hid the body somewhere on the farm. One theory is that he was buried in a brand new garden bed; another that he could be found in a new septic field created for an additional bathroom that was never hooked up while they lived there. Yet another is that he may be behind what was a fresh patch job on the wall of the basement. Hilts said no one ever looked in any of those places because they weren't mentioned to the authorities. "For all we know he could have gone downstate and died a pauper," said Hilts. The only reason Hilts suspects some sort of foul play in Sievert's death is because of an entry discovered in one of Andy's ledgers. He wrote that he returned Sievert's social security check just one month after his disappearance. "We were all thinking, why would he send it back not knowing if he had been declared dead yet? That's something that always puzzled me," said Hilts. He also questions Andy's motives, because he intensely distrusted the government. "He disliked the government so much (so) why send it back? They had to know something," said Hilts. It was Hilts and Taghon who found the dead brothers Roen-Andrew, 75, and Benhart, 87-on a chilly January morning in 1985. "I had talked to Andy over the weekend and told him my wife was having cataract surgery on Tuesday and they wanted me to call and let them know how everything went," recalled Hilts. "I called them that night at around 7:30 p.m. I knew they went to bed early but I thought that was too early so I called early the next morning and they were early risers and no one answered. I felt as if something just didn't sit right. It's like you have a premonition of something being wrong." Hilts went to Taghon's Amoco station, and they went out to the house together. "I knew from the smell when we opened the door that we were in trouble," said Taghon. He said Andrew had died in bed and they found Benhart out in the living room, lying on the floor looking up at a filthy "stuffed" bald eagle, which is now on display at the museum. "I'll never forget how he looked. I don't know exactly how he died, whether he fell and hit his head or what," said Taghon. "When we walked in, there was milk on the stove in a pan that had been there several days and then we went into the dining room and there were a couple of crackers on the plate and the milk in the glasses was curdled and we knew something was wrong," said Hilts. He said it had looked like Ben had fallen off the couch. "Then I went into the bedroom and found Andy. "I don't know how long they would have been there if we hadn't checked on them," he added. He believes that Ben lost the will to live after Andy died. Houghton, the medical examiner, proclaimed that both died from natural causes. Apparently Andrew, a diabetic, had been dead nearly a week because the last entry in his diary was that he checked his blood sugar level on Jan. 10. Benhart probably died two or three days later. The bodies were discovered on Jan. 17. He thinks Ben, who was senile, tried to revive his brother with orange juice because it had been spilled on the bed. Ben relied on Andrew for his care. "Andy had kept careful track of his blood sugar levels and toward the end his handwriting got shakier and you could tell something was going wrong," said Hilts. The men had drafted wills that were never formally executed, but a search for the heirs produced a nephew, Jack Roen, and his sister, Mrs. Fillingham, who were the children of another brother, Gilbert, and Alita Fisher, who was the daughter of brother Al. Al had been the postmaster in Empire. Neither Ben or Andy had any children. The threesome eventually split the estate between them. Empire National Bank was appointed temporary administrator of the house and outbuildings, sealing the house for a required inventory of the estate. What they found astounded Taghon, who documented all the furnishings with photographs shortly after the deaths "We found more than $100,000 in cash in just the first hour of the first day," said Taghon. He has a photograph of Hilts holding a bag of cash. "There was $20,000 in that bag we found in the filing cabinet," said Taghon. "The rumors that money was stuffed all over the house weren't true. Most of it was in Social Security envelopes neatly stacked in a cabinet. Accounting for the money was written on the front of the envelopes. They kept careful records," he said. They also had money in bank accounts. In fact, they kept detailed financial records in diaries that were uncovered "I was excited to find those at first. I thought the mystery (of Sievert) would be solved," said Taghon. But it wasn't to be. Instead, Taghon found entry after entry of seemingly unimportant transactions. "Everything was documented. One read 'found a quarter on mother's bureau,' another read, 'money found under Sievert's bed after he left.' Everything was related to money. Another entry said they had gone to the drive-in and bought two ice cream cones. It was little stuff, really, but interesting to think that they even went to the drive-in," said Taghon. Both the house and outbuildings were packed with the family's antique furniture, trunks, household items and, most remarkably, the contents of the saloon owned by their father early in the 20th century. Layers of dust covered most everything. The bank's inventory filed with Probate Court included cash, bank accounts, real estate, antiques including vehicles and contents of the house amassing more than $450,000-an astonishing fortune for three bachelors that were hard pressed to spend a quarter. "The antiques were all from the family-it was nothing they ever bought," explained Taghon. Andrew Roen senior came from Norway to Empire in 1892, and has been credited with being one of the founders of Norway Town, a now defunct sawmill settlement near Empire. "He came to pile lumber at the Empire Lumber yard. By 1900, he had bought the saloon on Niagara and ran it until the 1930s-during Prohibition they sold things like sarsaparillas," said Taghon, who is also a member of the Empire Area Heritage Group. "When they closed the bar, they took everything out of it and brought it all home with them." The elder Roen died in 1946. "They never threw anything away. Andy Roen was a member of the Heritage group and they had saved all these things with thoughts of donating them to a museum," said Bolton. "He thought his place could possibly end up as the museum some day." But when Andy unexpectedly died, he hadn't signed his will and the Heritage Group had to make other plans. Bolton said they had already been accumulating local heirloom pieces and displaying them annually in the town hall and eventually turned the Hose House (which was then on Front St.) into a place to display their cache. "We had a nice core of people and that's when Andy was a member," explained Bolton. In the meantime, the members had been collecting funds to start a museum and when the estate auction took place on Labor Day 15 years ago, they were ready. Their largest purchase was the turn of the century bar and fixtures from the saloon for $5,000. They also bought a $1,200 wooden model of a two-masted schooner built by Norwegian immigrants, circa 1900, that had adorned the bar. The heirs also contributed more than $7,000 to the group in the form of items like old letters, pictures and saloon furnishings. Today the museum now houses the tobacco cabinet, table and chairs and entrance mirror from the saloon. as well as the expansive bar. Bolton said several residents also purchased items and donated them to the museum, including a full-color lithograph for Edelweiss Beer in a gold frame for $1,700. The 1917 bar license is also framed and on display at the museum. The heritage group also made nearly $3,000 the day of the auction by selling food and beverages. Rumors that Sievert would show up at the auction flew through the air over the weekend, but no one ever spotted him. Unusual auction items sold that day included a "Dewey" twin floor slot machine in excellent condition which sold for $18,500, a "Judge" slot machine that sold for $8,500 and a music box with metal discs that brought in $5,500. Other items included a 1917 Allen touring car, a Studebaker, a German wind-up toy, a number of lithographs, toys, guns, glassware and rooms full of fabulous furniture such as a Norwegian immigrant trunk and baby cradle. The 1926 Indian Scout motorcycle that Hilts and Andy restored had been stolen out of the barn before the auction. Hilts spent months working in the house sorting and cleaning for the estate sale, during which they uncovered a large safe that had been in the saloon. "Everyone was excited about it-they just knew it was going to be full of $1,000 bills or maybe even Sievert's body," said Hilts. A safecracker was brought out and when it was finally opened, they were disappointed to just find some paperwork relating to the bar. The Roen estate was the catalyst behind the present museum. "That's when we decided we had to have more of a building than we had," said Bolton. Paul and Frances Johnson donated the property it sits on today and the Heritage Group received a state grant to help make their dream a reality. Bolton said, in retrospect, it's probably just as well the Roen property didn't become the museum site. "It might have ended up being more of a family museum there," she said. "We currently have things donated by a lot of residents." Although sale of the Roen farm this month closes an interesting chapter in the history of Empire, the solitary brothers won't soon be forgotten. As for the long-missing Severt, Hilts has some thoughts about his demise. "I can't see one member of a family killing another member of the family, personally. But we'll never know. The secret died with the brothers." by Cymbre Sommerville Foster http://www.leelanaunews.com/archive.php?id=281 |
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Lauran "If you have a chance to accomplish something that will make things better for people coming behind you, and you don't do that, you are wasting your time on this earth." The late, great Roberto Clemente. In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, any copyrighted work in this message is distributed under fair use without profit or payment for non-profit research and educational purposes only. | |
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| monkalup | Dec 19 2006, 10:48 AM Post #2 |
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The Old Heifer! An oxymoron, of course.
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Cottonwood Inn: New Life for Historic Roen Farm By Jane Greiner Sun staff writer Empire’s reclusive Roen brothers never dreamed that one day their three-man bachelor household would be replaced by a mother-daughter duo that would turn their farm into an old fashioned bed and breakfast. Holly Decker never dreamed it either. Not until it occurred to her while enjoying a stay in a bed and breakfast that she would like to have a bed and breakfast of her own, and what better place to have one than in her home town of Empire, Michigan. That the place chosen for the new bed and breakfast turned out to be the historic Roen farm adds a hint of mystery to the charm of the newest Sleeping Bear Dunes area bed and breakfast. The Roen farm has a long and colorful history. Andrew Roen Sr. moved to Empire in 1892 from Norway and was a founder of Norway Town near Empire. He began as a lumber stacker at the local sawmills. He bought a saloon on Niagara Street in Empire around 1900 and ran it for about 30 years. He acquired a 133 acre farm and orchards on Front Street, east of what is now M-22, married and raised five sons there. Two of the Roen boys married and moved on, but the three bachelor brothers lived and worked on the farm until their mysterious deaths many years later. The first to die was Severt Roen who disappeared one day in 1977 when he was 75 years old. Despite intense local interest and many organized searches, he was never found. Some people thought he was senile and just walked away. Others speculated that the other two brothers killed him and hid the body somewhere on the farm or in the basement. No one will ever know, as his body has never been found. He was declared dead eight years later. The two remaining brothers, Andrew and Benhart, also died under unusual circumstances in 1985 when they were 75 and 87 years old. Local men Dave Taghon, then owner of the nearby Amoco station, and Gary Hilts found the two bodies. Hilts theorized from the way they found the bodies that Andrew died first in his bed. His older brother Benhart, who was senile, could not manage without him and died within a day or two. His body was found in the living room. When the last two brothers died over $100,000 in cash was found in the house along with numerous valuable antiques. The unusual deaths plus the large amounts of money and antiques in the estate were enough to attract wide news coverage at the time. The story was even carried on Michigan’s Unsolved Mysteries television show. Andrew had been a member of the Empire Area Heritage Group, which put together the Empire Museum. Many of the items on display there today came from the auction of the Roen estate, including the 1900’s bar and fixtures from the old saloon. Of the original Roen furnishings, only the magnificent old majestic woodstove remains in the bed and breakfast. The impressive black and silver cooking stove sits in a central room in the house, the room Holly calls The Roen Room. “It’s the heart of the house,” she said. “I think of the Roen brothers when I walk through this room.” The B&B women have learned a lot about the history of the Roen farm. They have gathered newspaper clippings describing the strange deaths of the three brothers and will have them available for their guests to read. The Decker women have a considerable history of their own in this area. Holly Decker, owner/proprietor of the bed and breakfast, was born and raised in Empire. Her mother Judy grew up on Old Mission Peninsula but has lived in Empire for over 30 years. And everyone knows her dad Jerry Decker, owner of Decker Pumping. Holly and her mother bought the Roen farmhouse, barn and outbuildings about a year ago. The two women moved in and began the work of converting the spacious old house into a working bed and breakfast. They named it The cottonwood Inn after the magnificent old trees that frame the front yard. Carpenter Glenn Brown and his wife Judy have been helping them “since day one” to get the place ready. Judy said “we couldn’t have done it without them.” Holly and Judy feel that they have had a “huge” amount of support from the community in general in getting their new business off the ground. They expected their first guests on Memorial Day weekend. Holly had said, “we’ve been receiving calls and at this point the guests might arrive before our new sign goes up on Saturday.” The bed and breakfast will offer four large rooms each with a private bath. Two of the upstairs rooms have a connecting doorway and can be made into a suite. The spacious guest room on the main floor, called The Monarch Room, features a huge old antique bed. The room has extra-wide doorways and is wheelchair accessible. The guests will breakfast in the large east-facing room, which Holly likes to call the Sunrise Room. On the opposite side of the house is the L-shaped Sunset Room, which will serve as the common room. The long room has an entire wall of glass so everyone can enjoy the sunsets. The upstairs guestrooms are called The Trillium Room, the Cottonwood Room, and the Sunset Room. Each is decorated around a theme and all include some antique furnishings. Judy pointed out that many of the antiques come from Holly’s grandparents and great grandparents. Those earlier Deckers were originally from Detroit and had a cottage near North Bar Lake on what is now National Park land. The rooms in the bed and breakfast will include the usual amenities of televisions and air conditioners. In addition they will soon have Internet hookups installed in every room. Holly envisions many special activities at the bed and breakfast. “We already have reservations for two receptions and a wedding,” she said. Someday she hopes to have other business functions there such as conferences, spas and women’s weekends. Who knows, they might become a stop on a mystery tour. Of course, most of their guests will come for the attractions that bring so many visitors to the area: the beaches, the sand dunes, the hiking and biking. The staff will consist of Holly and Judy. Neither has any previous experience running a bed and breakfast, but they have stayed in them before and are confident that they can learn. The most fun Holly and Judy have had so far has been in decorating the rooms and seeing everything come together. Meeting new people and hearing their stories has also been a big bonus as they have worked on their project. Holly recalls their first winter in the house when they joked about feeling like characters in Little House on the Prairie. “I’m going out to the pump hose to bring in some wood,” they would laugh, as they bundled up. The hardest part of the bed and breakfast project so far, according to Judy, was the painting. “We painted every room but two,” she said. For a big old farmhouse, that’s a lot of painting. On a serious note, Holly added that the “hard part has been not knowing the outcome of the adventure. It has been a big risk, financially and emotionally.” We wish them all the best. The Cottonwood Inn has a great old farmhouse, a hint of mystery, a grand location, and two enthusiastic and determined women ready to give it their best shot. What more could anyone ask for when looking for a great place to stay? The farm is located on Front Street, less than half a mile east of the village. It is near the corner with Bennet Street, the road opposite the entrance to the Philip Hart Visitors Center. The Cottonwood Inn Bed & Breakfast Empire, Michigan 231 326-5535 www.cottonwoodinnbb.com e-mail: hollydecker@cottonwoodinnbb.com http://www.glenarborsun.com/archives/2003/06/index.html |
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Lauran "If you have a chance to accomplish something that will make things better for people coming behind you, and you don't do that, you are wasting your time on this earth." The late, great Roberto Clemente. In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, any copyrighted work in this message is distributed under fair use without profit or payment for non-profit research and educational purposes only. | |
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| monkalup | Dec 19 2006, 10:51 AM Post #3 |
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The Old Heifer! An oxymoron, of course.
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http://z13.invisionfree.com/PorchlightUSA/...opic=7572&st=0& |
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Lauran "If you have a chance to accomplish something that will make things better for people coming behind you, and you don't do that, you are wasting your time on this earth." The late, great Roberto Clemente. In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, any copyrighted work in this message is distributed under fair use without profit or payment for non-profit research and educational purposes only. | |
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| monkalup | Apr 4 2009, 08:20 PM Post #4 |
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The Old Heifer! An oxymoron, of course.
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The Roen Story Empire’s Unsolved Mystery By KRISTINE MORRIS Contributing Writer The Roen Brothers. Photo Courtesy David Taghon EMPIRE The Empire Area Museum will be presenting the last of its series of “Fun-Filled History Lessons,” Wednesday, March 11 with a big-screen video presentation of “Empire’s Unsolved Mystery: The Roen Story.” The video begins at 7:30 p.m. and will be shown at the Empire Township Hall. The story of the 1977 disappearance of Sievert Roen, whose body was never found, has remained a mystery, and the story was featured on the television show, “Michigan’s Unsolved Mysteries.” The reclusive Roen brothers were three of the five sons of Andrew Roen, Sr., who moved to the Empire area from Norway in 1892. He was one of the founders of “Norway Town,” a group of about a dozen dwellings built on mill property just south of the mill on Lake Michigan; the area is now a residential development called “Storm Hill.” At first, Roen worked as a lumber stacker at the local sawmills, and around 1900 he bought a saloon on Niagara Street and ran it for about 30 years. He was able to purchase a 133-acre farm with orchards on what is now Front Street, and raised his family there. Two of his sons eventually married and moved away from the area, while three - Sievert, Andrew Jr. and Benhart - remained unmarried and stayed to work on the farm until their mysterious deaths. Dave Taghon, president of the Empire Area Heritage Group, has some personal involvement in the mystery, as he and another resident of the village, Gary Hilts, were the ones who found the bodies of Andrew Jr. and Benhart.No one ever found the remains of the first of the brothers to die. Foul play? “Sievert just disappeared in 1977,” said Taghon. “A large search was conducted, but he was senile, and he may have just wandered away … or there could have been foul play by the brothers, who were not very tolerant of him. I‘d had two personal run-ins with Sievert, and he was getting quite bad - always fearful that someone was trying to get him. And his brothers didn’t take very kindly toward him. “There were no other enemies anywhere, so they either found a way to get rid of him, or he just wandered off and died. No bones have ever been found.” A psychic was called in, and thought Sievert’s body was in the cistern, but a search revealed nothing; he was declared dead eight years later. Then, in 1985, Taghon and Hilts found the other two brothers dead in their home, after calls from Hilts had gone unanswered. “There was no foul play in the deaths of Andy and Ben,” said Taghon. “Andy died of a sugar attack; we found him on his bed, and there was some orange juice spilled near his head - it looked like Ben had tried to revive him. Ben, who was also senile, was probably unable to use the phone by then. We found him dead in the living room - he may have fallen and hit his head on the piano, or may just have died there. “We found both of them after they’d been dead seven days. Later, we were appointed administrators by Empire National Bank, and we found about $100,000 in the house in various cabinets.” Andrew Roen had been a member of the Empire Area Heritage Group, which created the Empire Museum; many of the items displayed there came from an auction of the Roen estate, including the bar and fixtures from the 1900s saloon. The mystery of Sievert Roen’s disappearance remains unsolved; the house where the brothers were raised and lived together until their deaths was, for a time, the Cottonwood Inn, a bed-and-breakfast run by Holly and Judy Decker. The house and a couple of acres of the farmland are now rented, and occasionally weddings are held on the grounds. Regarding the Roen presentation and history series, Taghon said, “I thought it would be great to break up the winter a little, and the turnout has been great. I have many helpers, as our museum has 60-plus volunteers and everyone seems to be enjoying the free popcorn, too! We encourage all newcomers as well as the old natives to come out and share your thoughts after the presentation.” There is no admission fee for the program, but a freewill offering will be accepted. The museum is located just off M-22 in Empire. To learn more, contact Taghon at (231) 326-5519. Last Updated: 3/9/2009 2:37:38 PM EST http://www.grandtraverseinsider.com/results.asp?ID=433 |
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Lauran "If you have a chance to accomplish something that will make things better for people coming behind you, and you don't do that, you are wasting your time on this earth." The late, great Roberto Clemente. In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, any copyrighted work in this message is distributed under fair use without profit or payment for non-profit research and educational purposes only. | |
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9:27 AM Jul 11