Banner Graphic, Volume 14, Number 245, Greencastle, Putnam County, 21 June 1984 — Page 12
A12
The Putnam County Banner-Graphic, June 21,1984
Shelly Jessup is new Miss IDGA
Susan Michelle Jessup, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Dale Jessup, Route 3, Greencastle, was named Miss Indiana Dairy Goat Queen at the recent Hoosier Classic Dairy Goat Show in Indianapolis. HER SELECTION was based on her interest in the dairy goat industry, personality and a written resume, as well as written recommendations. As Miss IDGA, Miss Jessup will represent the Indiana Dairy Goat Association at the Hoosier Classic, Marion County Fair and the Indiana State Fair. Shelley has been showing Dairy Goats for six years and has been active in 4-H. Her Dairy Goat demonstration was the Animal Science winner at last year’s State Fair 4-H demonstration contest.
Hoosier Salon art exhibit at CNB Fifty-two works of art from the 60th annual Hoosier Salon Exhibit have arrived in Greencastle for a showing through Friday, June 29 at the Central National Bank lobby. Three of the works chosen for the Indiana tour were Greencastle artists Barbara F. Poor and Donna Rosser working in the medium of watercolor. IN ADDITION, Rebecca Aker, formerly of Greencastle and now living in Indianapolis, has a pastel entitled “Homeward” which is touring in an exhibit in northern Indiana and thus was unavailable for the local showing. The pieces were selected to tour from 217 works chosen for exhibit, merit awards, and purchase awards, at a larger showing at L.S. Ayres in Indianapolis last month. More than 600 artists are members of the Hoosier Art Salon which held its first exhibit of works by Indiana artists in Chicago in 1925. Most of the works are available for purchase at prices ranging from $l2O to $2,700 and many have been sold from this 60th showing. THE SALON promotes art by Indiana artists by statewide exhibits and by maintaining a gallery in the Morrison Opera Place at 47 South Meridian in Indianapolis. The local show, being co-sponsored by Central National Bank and Taylor Graphics Corp., is open to the public during regular banking hours.
Civil War
“We’ll have relatively small programs (15-20 minutes) with emphasis on study,” he explained. “It will be discussion rather than a form of entertainment.” ALTHOUGH SKIDMORE says there will be more than “blood-and-guts” military history discussed, Pierson added that the group will also study the political and social effects of the war. “Initially the subject will be Gettysburg,” Pierson said, who will conduct a discussion on “Why Did Lee Invade Pennsylvania” at the June 26 meeting. “But nothing is concrete. There is plenty of room for suggestions.”
Patter
night and the calves ate it. ALL RIGHT: GO AHEAD and say it. This could explain a lot of things such as elaborating on a hot summer which many of you will not remember. But there was something about that summer that is the whole truth and
Band-
engagement is expected to feature an appearance by Mike Wanchic, who still plays off and on with the House Band when he gets a break from his duties as lead guitarist for the John Cougar Band.
WANCHIC IS CONSPICUOUS in Cougar
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Gareld Stone puts some finishing touches on his remodeled car wash facilities at 707 N. Jackson St., Greencastle. Stone says the car wash now features all new equipment, including a coin changer and improved lighting for night-time washing. Three bays are available for
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SHELLEY JESSUP Dairy goat queen MISS JESSUP will be a senior at North Putnam this fall.
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Eventually, the organization hopes to become actively involved in providing local resources for people wishing to trace the story and value of Civil War memorabilia. A related project currently under way is the renovation of two graves of Confederate soldiers buried in the old Greencastle cemetery near Blackstock Stadium. "THE PURPOSE OF the club is not to collect artifacts,” Pierson added. “But members are willing to assist people in indentifying possible Civil War momentoes and contacting experts in appraising them.
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nothing but. Survival before insulation, air conditioning, mechanical refrigeration, electric fans and ice cubes was bearable, but just barely. Heat in that upstairs bedroom was slightly less than that inside an oven, but the difference wasn’t enough to mention.
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videos and appearances by his guitar solos that feature the leaping antics of John Cougar Mellencamp. The Hoosier-born singer likes to jump up and ride on Wanchic’s shoulders as the former Average House Band member continues to play.
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ANNE CLARK: Opens Anne's Fashion Corner location in Cloverdale
Anne adds Cloverdale 'annex' to Fashion Corner business/ /
CLOVERDALE--“lt’s a kind of an annex,” Anne Clark of Greencastle says of her new Anne’s Fashion Corner shop on Main Street (U.S. 231) in the heart of Cloverdale. THE SHOP, located adjacent to the post office, features “basically the same” items as the Greencastle version of An-
“I just know there may be letters sitting in somebody’s attic from Confederate soldiers,” Pierson offered. “We’d like to assist people in getting information about them.” He added, “We don’t know how much of the Civil War is lost to history.” AN ADDITIONAL BENEFIT to those in terested in participating in the roundtable is the exposure to information on the Civil War from various sources. “Members can get information that they may not otherwise get about some things going on in the country relative to Civil War,” Skidmore concluded.
SO THE NEXT TIME someone bumps into you and opens up with: “Is it hot enough for ya’?”, give him a snow job on how things used to be. There’s a smidgen of truth in some of these observations. Let him figure them out. It might take his mind off today’s hot weather.
It was hoped that Wanchic and Sandy Williams could both return for Friday night’s benefit at the Legion, but Hamm said that couldn’t be worked out. Williams, another longtime House Band member, is now playing guitar for the Henry Lee Summer Band.
washing cars, while a truck bay can accommodate semis and other large vehicles. Vacuuming machines are also available at the car wash. (Banner-Graphic photo by Bob Frazier).
ne’s Fashion Corner, namely women’s sportswear, accessories, swimsuits and a few shoes. However, with the new apparel shop located in the old McCoy residence, Mrs. Clark has arranged each room to feature its own character. "One room features dresses; one room has sportswear...it has kind of an
VI I /V/ ” antique said. Mrs. Clark’s twin daughters, Betsy and Jenny, are operating the Cloverdale outlet. THE CLOVERDALE shop, like the main Greencastle Anne’s Fashion Corner, will keep the following hours: 10 a m. to 5 p.m. Momday-Saturday. The shops close at noon on Wednesdays.
Obituaries Lucile Pauley
Services were held Sunday in Thorntown for Lucile Pauley, 79, who died June 14 at Witham Memorial Hospital. Born April 23, 1905 at Cayuga, she was the daughter of Dr. M.R. and Ida May (Stroube) Pollom. In April 1926 at Thorntown, she married Adrian Cleo Pauley, and he preceded her in death May 8,1959. A longtime educator, Mrs. Pauley had taught school for 22 years, retiring in 1966. Among her teaching stops was Roachdale School. Survivors include two
Robert Emmet Buster
Services were held June 7 in Scottsburg for Robert Emmet Buster, 78, Lexington, who died June 4. Born in Greencastle on Nov. 11,1905, he was the son of David and Lauretta Jane (O’Hair) Buster. He married the former Mary Bowlin, and she survives. Mr. Buster was a civil service employee. He had retired from Bakalar Air Force Base as an aircraft
Bible talks scheduled at Madison firehouse
Non-denominational Bible talks will be conducted at the Madison Twp. Volunteer Fire Dept, at 7:30 p.m. each Sunday and Thursday from June 21 through July 8. The department is located about 3>£ miles west of Greencastle on West Walnut
FRIDAY X-TRA SPECIAL BASKET BONUS 15-pc. SHRIMP BASKET* 2 for s 6 9s ‘includes French fries, slaw, relishes, cinnamon biscuit. Reg. *5.35 or *3-95 ROAST BEEF MANHATTAN 0 , with mashed potatoes and gravy. l only f or DOUBLE DECKER DRIVE-IN Curb end Curry-Out Only, 653-4302
Everyday Living Farm life can be stressful, too
Submitted by Barbara Lane, executive director, Putnam County Mental Health Assn. The Mental Health Association in Indiana conducted a workshop on June 4 to instruct executive directors and association board members on how to conduct their own workshops dealing with stress on the farm. The MHA in Minnesota began these workshops a year ago and found that public response to them was overwhelmingly in their favor. Agricultural magazines recently have been publishing articles on farm stress. It is a real thing. It can be both good and bad. FIVE AREAS OF DISCUSSION came up most often: 1. The general economic uncertainly of agriculture these days. The economic side of farming needs little elaboration before it’s placed into the category of stress. Farmers attending the meetings are most certainly experts on its tensions and pressures-inflation, markets, transporation difficulties, national and international farm policies, and the vulnerability of crops and livestock to all sorts of influences, from disease and injury to pollutants, acid rain, mining and mineral exploration and development, and a host of other factors. But these economic realities are only the most universal and most common causes. Some of the others are more subtle. The total effect of a number of these factors is the critical problem. 2. The weather and its effects on people who depend on it much more closely than almost anyone else. Consider the weather. Not only does it affect the farmer’s production (and occasionally threatens total and impersonal destruction of a year’s efforts), it also affects moods, mobility, and family affairs. 3. Isolation, both by the rhythm of the farm family members’ lives and by distance, sometimes.
Hospital notes
Putnam County Hospital Dismissed Wednesday: Cecil Baugh, Eva Craggs, Paula Dickerson and son, and Lisa Monnett and son. *** New Arrival Dr. and Mrs. Martin Baker,
sons, Ross Pauley, Lebanon, and Richard Pauley, Mt. Vernon, 111.; a daughter, Mrs. John (Claribel) Albitz, Jefferson; a sister, Imogene Azbell Burk of Tucson, Ariz., and Greencastle, and a brother, Morry Pollom, Elkhart. Also surviving are 11 grandchildren and eight great-grandchildren. She was preceded in death by her husband, two sisters and a great-grandchild. Interment in Cox Cemetery followed services at Russell and Hitch Funeral Home, Thorntown.
electrician. In addition to the wife, survivors include two daughters, Virginia Lee Gilbert and Jane Ann Williams, both of Syracuse, Ind.; a son, Robert Jr., Glendale, Ariz.; seven grandchildren and three greatgrandchildren. He was preceded in death by a brother, six sisters, a granddaughter and a son, William.
Street Road. All meetings are open to the public and will feature Geri Weiner and Janet Klenk as speakers. No literature will be distributed and no collections taken.
ISOLATION CREATES MORE than logistic problems. It can cause loneliness. It can cause depression. It can be a prime reason for “cabin fever,” with families at each other’s throats for no good reason. It heightens other problems that would be routine on sunny, bracing days. 4. The problems of 24-hour togetherness with family members and in some cases, hired employees, who not only work, but spend their leisure time in close proximity to one another Togetherness, like most causes of stress, has the same good and bad sides. When a family lives and labors together, they share a common purpose and grow closer, but also, on occasion, feel stifled, unappreciated, misunderstood. Normal woes of family life sometimes are magnified on the farm, where it’s far more difficult to get away from them. 5. The conflicts (and pleasures) of being perhaps the last segment of American society to live and work in multi-generational units. When the family includes several generations, those problems are even more potent. A father-and-son farming operation leaves plenty of room for showdowns over new ways of doing things versus the old, clashes of will, misunderstandings, feelings of uselessness or dependence, or all the characteristics of any differences that cross between family members. ALL OF THESE PROBLEMS ARE related directly to farm life. The rewards (mirror images) come from a realization that the problems exist. Farming is, of course, much more than just a set of problems. It’s a way of life, with rich reward for those who work the land-tradition, family closeness and pleasing work close to nature. --Compliments Mental Health Association in Indiana *** The Putnam County Mental Health Association is a volunteer agency of the Putnam County United Way.
Indianapolis, are the parents of a baby boy, Benjamin Lyon Baker, born June 13 at St. Vincent Hospital, Indianapolis. Maternal grandparents are Mrs. Robert Fletcher and the late Mr. Keith H. Lyon. Paternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Russell Baker.
MEADOWBROOK Drive-In Theatre INTER. 36 & 231 739-6323, 653-3626 522-3506, 739-6182 Fri., Sat., Sun., June 22, 23, 24 Splash (pg) and To Be Or Not To Be <pg> with Mel Brooks and Anne Bancroft
Classifieds get results
BAINBRIDGE TAP DANCE Fri. and Sat., June 22,23 9:30-1:30 music by: Rhythm Makers
® Putnam County Playhouse Round Barn Road - Greencastle EXPERIENCE PCP! prevent. June 21, 22, 23 8 p.m. performance /‘llllir*) Tickets available at ( T Gjesvold Photo & Art Center
Friday and Saturday June 22nd and 23rd PARK AVENUE 10 p.m. to 2 a.m. *I.OO cover charge per person us i& §a»v
Legal Notice STATE OF INDIANA COUNTY OF PUTNAM SS: IN THE PUTNAM CIRCUIT COURT 1984 TERM GREENCASTLE FEDERAL SAVINGS 4ND LOAN ASSOCIATION vs. THOMAS J. BOWMAN VIARY J. BOWMAN. TREASURER. PUTNAM COUNTY INDIANA CV: 84-11 NOTICE OF SHERIFF S SALE ON DECREE OF MORTGAGE FORECLOSURE By virtue of a Decree of Foreclosure to me directed by the Clerk of the Putnam Circuit Court in the above cause, requiring me to make the sum of ‘9,024.72. with 12% interest thereon from date of Decree and with costs, and further, ordering the sale of the real estate to make assets for payment of said ludgment, I will expose for sale at public auction to the highest bidder on the 16th day of July. 1984, at 10:00 a m. o'clock, at Putnam County Jail in Putnam County, Indiana, the following described real estate in Putnam County. Indiana, to wit: A part of the west half of the Northeast quarter of Section 9. Township 14 North. Range 3 West, described as follows: Beginning 229 feet East of a stone on the northwest corner of the said northeast quarter section and running thence south 110 feet; thence west 75 feet; thence north 110 feet; tHence east 75 feet to the place of beginning, without relief from valuation or appraisement laws. A Sheriff 's Deed will issue to the purchaser thereof Terms of sale will be CASH. DATED at Greencastle, Indiana, this 12th day of June. 1984. Gerry Hoffa. Sheriff Putnam County Indiana June 14/21/28/3T
