sund~ay 0 mcgcizine Page Three inside: page four-hooks page 5-perspective Number 14 January 25, 1976 Snow-covered .graves and plastic flowers Countrj people By LOIS JOSIMOVICH "ACTUALLY, when your body's dead, it's dead. Whatever lives on isn't going to matter, really." Esther Mathia absently fondled a purring, chocolate Siamese cat that lay basking i her lap. A small gray poodle and an equally diminutive black dachshund dash- ed across the kitchen floor and flopped, wrestling, into a low wick- er basket. She continued, "But to me it's more of a sacred thing, I Just feel about my pets the way I would about anyone that's dead." Esther shows her sensibility to- ward animals in a rather unique way. She and her husband, Horst, own and run a pet cemetery, The "Country Pet Cemetery" one of only three such establishments In the tri-county area, became theirs a year after that lucky day in October 1974, when the Mathias et Cemetei take ti won $50,000 in the Michigan lot- tery.. "WE FELT ALMOST numb for a while," recalls Esther. "We went to our kids' house, bought a bottle of booze!" The cemetery, house and -board- ing kennels lie on the verge of an 11 acre lot in Milan, about eight or nine miles from An'n Arbor on Jewel Rd. The snow lies drifted knee-high across the graveyard. Flat and white ag an eiderdown, the field stretches out to the horizon, brok- en hereeand there by clumps of bare trees. A few red plastic flowers droop in the snow, marking the other- wise invisible graves where be- reaved dog owners return regular- ly to pay respects to their animal friends. "I really understand how they feel," said Esther. "The last time one of mine died I couldn't talk to anyone for two weeks." 1 THIS SYMPATHY was one of the reasons that led the Mathias e time to buy the cemetery. It had been open since 1971, but the two wom- en who owned it before them had to close it for "health reasons," ac- cording to Horst. The couple say they can put on a less expensive funeral than most. "There's a lot of ways to make money," shrugged Esther. "But people can't afford to pay a hun- dred and some for a funeral, you know. We can fix 'em up real cute." The average funeral - including hand-crafted wooden casket, num- bered lot, a marker or stone en- graved by Horst, flowers, and the extra care the Mathias take to dress up the coffins with padding and pillows - runs about 60 or 70 dollars. There are also more expensive arrangements which might include a "deluxe" casket lined with satin or lace. These can cost up to about $150, Esther explained, still caressing the long-whiskered Sia- mese in her lap. "RUT WE HAVEN'T had much call for those around here," she said A slightly-built woman, Esther has shoulder-length, mahogany hair that curls over her hollow face in bangs. Frequent smiles cause her brown eyes to crinkle up at the corners, behind a pair of dark-rimmed glasses. Her voice is deep and pleasant, perhaps from almost continuous smoking. Horst smokes as well, and an ashtray on the kitchen table is overflowing with butts. "I tried to quit once for a while," she said, taking another drag with trembling fingers. "I had to smoke again in a month and a half." The Mathias' simple life style Is shown by the clothes they wear - comfortable shirts and corduroy pants tucked into rubber boots. The house is modestly furnished as well. Horst relaxed back into his straight - backed kitchen chair, hands tucked into his waistband and boots rhythmically thumping the floor. Sharp blue-gray eyes narrowed in his sun-reddened face as he turned to the pets still play- ing on the floor. His normally seri- nu demannor vanishe-and nhe ywo to care straight brown hair and a cigarette hung from his lip. SUDDENLY, a riot of barking and yelping mysteriously erupted from one side of the otherwise calm kitchen. "Cool it, you guys, shouted Es- ther to the invisible melee. The din immediately hushed. "We have an intercom system with the kennels over there," she explained, indicating the location of the tidy prefab some distance behind the house. "The dogs uual- ly listen to us. "We reverse it and play music to them at night, Horst added. "We more or less listen to them 24 hours a day. If there's any com- motion, people could, ah . . . ex- cuse me." The phone was ringing. Horst picked it up and began speaking to a granddaughter, while Esther talked about their children. "WJELL, IT'S LIKE this," she said a little shyly. "I have three and he has three. We were married in lat- er years." But now they devote their energies to their often spora- dic business. "Well, sometimes we'll' get a lot of calls, and then for a- week we might not get any," said Esther, adding, "It just seems to go that way, I don't know why." Since October they have buried seven or eight dogs in the field. Business for the kennels is much friskier though. "Right now we can board about 60 dogs and cats," said Horst. The reasons people board them range from vacations to stays in the hos- pital. "This Christmas, why we must have turned 30 away." Most of the pet owners bring their dogs over to be given "basic obedience training" by Horst. The couple has been practicing this trade together since they were caretakers of the AAA Dog and Cat Cemetery in Taylor. "flOGS ARE LIKE people," Horst explained. "They have different temperaments, so you can't train them all alike. It takes a lot of pa- tience, a lot of know-how, and you The burial prcedure is simple. "It's not a religious service of any kind, it's very short," said Horst. "Silent prayer maybe, then we re- peat this verse -' 'All things bright and beautiful, All creatures great and small, All things wise andcwonderful, The Lord God made them all."' "It's really when we start filling in the grave that they start to burst out and cry," he added. "And also when they call to say their pet died, they start crying, and they say, " Well, I suppose you think I'm being silly,"' said Esther. "Well I don't think they're silly a bit!" PEOPLE BURY THEIR dogs and other pets in cemeteries "they want to be able to visit the graves, they want to know it (the pet) is getting a dignified burial," say the Mathias. "You take someone who's Owned ' a dog for 10 or 15 years, they aren't -going to want to throw it away," Horst commented. "But the National Association of Pet Cemeteries says that only one per cent of pets that die get buried in cemeteries-most end up in gar- bage cans," said Horst briefly. tempt to bury them in their back yards, but right now I'd like to see you try to dig a hole." Other people take pets to be cre- mated at the Humane Society, he says, and "that's better, than throwing them in a garbage bag or a ditch." Esther terms cemetery burial for pets a "luxury business" based on her own impressions of what Is proper. "pERSONALLY, I would prefer it," she asserted, "although I can see why some people would prefer cremation just like they would for themselves. Myself, I prefer to know that even if there are only bones left, they're still my dog's bones." The Mathias remember all the pets they have trainedand buried, particularly a dog named Jim-jim which is now in the Taylor ceme- tery. "I didn't even know he had died until I saw it in the paper," said Esther quietly. "I said, 'oh my God, is that Jim-jim Day that we trained?"' "Sure enough, it was. I cried, 'cause the finest people had owned it. I ran around the house real quick and made the cutest little coverlet, and we put a ribbon across, and wrote "Jim-jim" on it in sparkles. Anything to make those people feel better. Esther Mathia and her dog Pe ey Lois Josimivich is a Daily Day Editor. "Some people make a weak at- See COUNTRY, Page 5 } :: >:z ;;ry :;: r' ,i :.'; .. z.:... :. . . "tip"' a :._