Banner Graphic, Volume 15, Number 309, Greencastle, Putnam County, 14 August 1985 — Page 14
A14
The Putnam County Banner Graphic, Wednesday .August 14,1985
Putnam scanner City Police Christ Apostolic Church, 315 N. Jackson St.. Greencastle, was the scene of a breakin sometime overnight Tuesday, police reported. Nothing was apparently taken, but a window on the northeast comer of the church was broken out, Capt. Ernie Newby reported. The office door to the pastor’s office sustained SSO damage, police said. Wilbur Douglas, 46, 835 Tennessee St., Greencastle, was issued a citation for speeding at 5:43 a.m. Wednesday by Capt. Newby. Putnam County Court Criminal cases filed: Monday, Aug. 12- Phyllis M. Gibson, operating a motor vehicle while privileges suspended; James C. Stewart, operating a motor vehicle while intoxicated, operating a motor vehicle with blood-alcohol content .10 per cent or higher and driving while license suspended; Donald J. Tyson, public intoxication; Herbert R. Carey, operating a motor vehicle while intoxicated; Robin R. Hood, driving while suspended. Tuesday, Aug. 13- Charles G. Pettit, operating a motor vehicle while intoxicated and operating a motor vehicle with blood-alcohol content .10 per cent or higher; David L. Rumley, operating a motor vehicle while intoxicated and operating a motor vehicle with bloodalcohol content. 10 per cent or higher. Putnam Circuit Court Mary C. Fueglein, petition for change of name. Citizens Bank Mooresville vs. Sandra M. Thacker and Ronald L. Thacker, complaint upon promissory note and to foreclose security interest and for temporary restraining order. Lee Hubbard and Son Farm Services Inc. vs. Phil Pierson, complaint on account stated (change of venue). Marriage Licenses Michael William Girton, Reelsville, and Mitzi Starr Dudley, Greencastle. Chester Earl Blake, Greencastle, and Barbara Sue Ferguson, Greencastle. Real Estate Transfers Estena M. Smith to Ronald E. York, et ux, warranty deed, 0.46 and 0.138 acres, Greencastle. Van Bibber Lake to George A. Jackson, et ux, corporate warranty deed, Van Bibber Lake. J. Junell Page, et ux, to Tri-County Bank and Trust Co., quit claim deed, Jackson Twp. Tri-County Bank to Junell Page, et ux, corporate warranty deed, 1 acre, Jackson Twp. Gary P. Myers to Paul M. Edwards, et ux, warranty deed, Jefferson Valley. Michael L. Ratts, et ux, to Sharon L. Ratts, quit claim deed, Grantham’s addition. Eva K. Wallen to Arnold H. Wallen, quit claim deed, Mill Springs. George C. Dubin, et ux, to Arnold H. Wallen, warranty deed, Mill Springs. Edna H. Hamm, Harriett Hood, John Hood, Timothy Hood, Terri Hood Jackson, James Hood and Judy Elwell Knight to Douglas R. Cowart, et ux, warranty deed, Madison Twp. James D. Wilson to Frederick P. Franklin, et ux, warranty deed, Edwin Peck Enlargement. Paul Blue, et ux, to Paul Blue, et ux, and Paul Blue Jr., quit claim deed, 15.9 acres, Greencastle. Paul Blue to Jonathan Blue, et ux, warranty deed, Greencastle. Cecil L. Wright to Daniel W. Boiler, et ux, warranty deed, 7.64 acres, Russell Twp. Ellen J. Nichols to James C. Nichols, et ux, guardian’s deed, 0.39 acres, Monroe Twp. Ellen J. Nichols to James C. Nichols, et ux, warranty deed, 0.39 acres, Monroe Twp. Cassel A. Skinner, et ux, to Lowell C. Snapp, et ux, warranty deed, Greencastle. Charlotte E. Patterson to Elizabeth P. Weadock, warranty deed, Greencastle Old Plat. Margaret Jane Thompson Gowan to Robert D. Browning, et al, quit claim deed, 4 and 1 acres, Cloverdale. Margaret Jane Thompson Gowan to Thompson Construction Co. Inc., quit claim deed, Cloverdale. Leona Smith to Max F. Smith, quit claim deed, 40 acres, Cloverdale. Aloe vera products awarded at fair Putnam County fair drawing winners at the Sasco Aloe Vera products booth have been announced. Winning aloe vera products were Barb Rice, Richa Douglas, Joan Parker and Joyce Wood. Smiley smiling now Irene Smiley, Greencastle, won the ceiling fan given away by Tri County Refrigeration during a drawing Aug. 2 at the Putnam County Fair.
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The Town and County Extension Homemakers held a bon voyage party for Barbara Brookshire (center) at their August meeting. Mrs. Brookshire will be leaving for Scotland, representing the Indiana Extension Homemakers Association as an exchange homemaker. She will be living in Scottish homes for about six weeks in a program
Cloverdale teen-ager is TV video contest winner
CLOVERDALE - When 13-year-old Steve Archer starts the eighth grade later this month at Cloverdale JuniorSenior High School, he can tell everyone he had a “Thriller” of a summer. The son of Mr. and Mrs Jack Archer, 251 N. Main St., Cloverdale, recently won third prize in a national music contest. The teen-ager correctly picked the order of the top three all-time music videos. FOR HIS MUSICAL expertise, Ar cher won a typewriter from the syndicated Casey Kasem TV program, “American Top Ten.” Winners actually were notified earlier this summer, Archer said, but the music special is currently airing over such stations as WTWO, Terre Haute, and WGN, Chicago. “They asked you to pick your three favorite videos of all time,” Archer
City Council
“It’s kind of a bleak concrete desert area right now,” Councilman Bob Sedlack said in support of the plan. The Council gave Main Street the authority to proceed with its plans as long as it doesn’t remove the meters. “We hope by the time we’re ready to actually proceed, we’ll have the dollars to turn over to the city to retire the bond issue (on the meters),” Main Street president Eitel added. IN OTHER BUSINESS Tuesday night: - Three bids were received on the city’s old 1974 Ford trash truck, with a bid of $3,100 by Ray’s Trash Service, Clayton, accepted. Other bids came from Jerry Schlueter, $1,200, and Baker’s RemoveAll, SI,OOO. Auctioneer De Eilar was on hand to give the bidders a chance to increase their figures before the Council awarded the truck to the Clayton firm. - Mayor Warren reported that a system of trash collection billing has been instituted successfully. The $5 fees are coming in and he promised a report at the September meeting on the amount of savings in personnel and the monthly collection totals under the new system of contracted trash collection with Baker’s Remove-All. - THE MAYOR READ a letter from the Environmental Protection Agency, detailing the awarding of a $168,825 federal grant for the construction of an equalization basin (holding tank) at the city’s $6.4 million wastewater treatment plant site. As reported in last Friday’s Banner-Graphic, the federal grant represents 75 per cent of the funding for the holding tank. The city’s share is 15 per cent, while the state will provide 10 per cent. The Council voted unanimously to accept the federal grant and uniformly adopted a resolution to continue PRC ConsoerTownsend (which no longer has a local office) as the consulting engineers on the project. The design has been completed for some time, City Engineer Cliff Norton said, adding that changing engineering consultants now would only serve to delay the project. PRC will receive $29,000 in engineering fees for its work on the holding tank. - City Engineer Norton reported issuing 12 building permits during July with an estimated $163,950 in construction commencing. To date, estimated construction projects for 1985 in Greencastle total $8.2
unique to Indiana. Marguarite McBride (left), president of the Town and County Club, and Deloris Risk present Mrs. Brookshire with gifts for the trip. Mrs. Risk was a former exchange homemaker who went to Colombia, South America, in 1978. (Banner-Graphic photo by Bob Frazier).
said Monday, adding that his winning postcard was chosen from thousands of entries. The youngster correctly picked Michael Jackson’s “Thriller” and “Beat It” as one-two and put “When Doves Cry” by Prince third. ARCHER’S PERFECT entry might have won him a new car, but the luck of the draw put him third with nine other third-place winners in the national contest. Ten 19-inch color TV’s were awarded to second-prize winners A pop music fan. Archer would rather be listening to his favorites on that car’s radio or watching videos on a new TV, but he’ll settle for the typewriter, content that it will help with his education the next few years. “Yeah, I guess,” was all he could add.
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million, Norton said. - Police Chief Jim Hendrich told the Council that the Homer the Owl security program has been nominated for a state exemplary award in the adult education category. The department’s dunk tank at the recent Putnam County Fair provided $325 to be used for the Homer program, Hendrich said. - HENDRICH ALSO presented the Council copies of a proposed ordinance providing for the implementation of city police reserves into the 28-day police department schedule cycle. No action was taken on the ordinance Tuesday night. During the Monday evening’s budget meeting, Hendrich said the reserves would augment the regular force and enable the department to curb overtime. He asked for a S4OO appropriation to cover the costs of uniforming the police reserves, who will wear light blue police shirts instead of the dark blue worn by regular officers. - The mayor announced three appointments to city board, naming Rev. Keith Geckeler of the Presbyterian Church to the City Plan Commission and Henry Mitchell to the Board of Zoning 1 Appeals. Those vacancies were caused by the resignation of Jim Grimes, who cited jobrelated time limitations in his decision to resign. The third appointment, announced previously in the Banner-Graphic, was the naming of Reid Leslie to the Park Board to replace Steve Schanke, who was transferred by IBM. -- No action was taken on advertised item from the City Plan Commission of the zoning ordinance. No one representing the Plan Commission was present and the Council had no paperwork on the proposal. PRESENT TUESDAY NIGHT were Mayor Warren, Councilmen Bobby Albright, Bob Sedlack, Larry Taylor, John Stevens and Flossie Harmless, Chief Hendrich, Assistant Fire Chief Wayne Jones, City Attorney Jerry Calbert, ClerkTreasurer Janice Inman, Engineer Norton and department heads Leon Phillips, water; Charlene Nichols, sewage; and Jim Wright, street. The next regular monthly Council meeting is slated for 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, Sept. 10 at City Hall. However, a preadoption hearing on the 1986 city budget is slated for 7:30 p.m. Monday, Aug. 19, with a formal adoption meeting set for 7:30 p.m. Monday, Aug. 26.
State Fair to get national TV exposure INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - An ABC “Good Morning America” television crew was taping a profile of Indiana from the State Fair. “They’ll be around the Indianapolis area, but not in the city,” said Mellen O’Keefe, an associate producer for the early morning program. Friday’s two-hour broadcast will highlight the state fair’s livestock and 4-H Club activities, Ms. O’Keefe said in a telephone interview from New York. Also on the schedule are segments by cohost Joan Lunden on square dancing and sheep shearing, the producer said, as well as a look at Indiana cuisine by humorist Erma Bombeck. The videotaped state profile will last about five minutes, Ms. O’Keefe said. “They’ll meet some farmers, talk about catfish, and, even though it’s not the season, get up a game of basketball.” Ms. O’Keefe said she was assigned to coordinate much of the remote broadcast because of her familiarity with the state. “My mom is from Indiana, which is why I got this project.” She recalls visiting relatives in Lawrenceburg while growing up, and spending a year in college in Terre Haute. She said the state’s image is one of “corn and the Indy 500” to many people. “Basically, the idea is to disprove some of those ideas people have about Indiana.” Organizers say the Indiana fair is the seventh largest in North America and say they are pleased with the network show’s plans to showcase the event. “They said our fair is really different,” said Jane Schuler, publicity supervisor of the fair. “It’s really an exposition, and not just a festival.” The 12-day, $7 million event was attended by 1,328,476 people last year, Ms. Schuler said. The ABC program will be much different than the recent NBC Today Show segment that recently aired from Indianapolis as part of a railroad tour across the country, Ms. O’Keefe said. “The Today Show didn’t show off the state. You really just sat down at that train station with them. We hope to be able to give you a real feeling of the agriculture of the state ... basically the people who make the place tick.” Leak — Continued from page 1 the old Greencastle Depot on North Madison Street. “You don’t know until you actually have a situation,” Hendrich said. “I think what this thing taught us was timing.” Unlike the mock drill, police officials were deluged with calls from the public asking about the leak and evacuation procedures. “WHAT THE PUBLIC doesn’t realize is that they hinder our dispatchers who are trying to respond to the emergency,” Hendrich offered. The other hindrance was the lack of equipment and the long waiting period for Conrail officials to arrive and repair the leak. “If we had a man down in there, we couldn’t have gone in to help him,” the police chief explained. “We’re not there to add to the statistics.”
Hospital notes Putnam County Hospital Dismissed Tuesday: Helen Cummings, Goldie Evens, Mary Goodpasture, Beverly O’Conner, Larry Phipps and Ethel Williamson.
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Obituaries Everett Eugene Harris
Everett Eugene Harris, 69, Route 1, Greencastle, passed away Tuesday afternoon at Methodist Hospital, Indianapolis. Born Aug. 14, 1916 in Fairmount, Ind., he was the son of Joseph and Nancy Catherine (Strine) Harris. On March 13,1967, he married Mary Katherine (Kate) Gardner, and she survives. Mr. Harris retired from Mallory Capacitor Corp., Greencastle, in 1979. He was an Army veteran of World War 11, serving in the Asiatic and Pacific theaters. A member of the Roachdale Christian Church, he was also a member of the Hoosier Campers of Greencastle.
Roger Carter, 43, Coatesville, died Tuesday at his residence. Born Aug. 6,1942 at Indianapolis, he was the son of Joseph and Marian McClure Carter. On June 23, 1963, he married Sue Dean, and she survives. Mr. Carter was a 1960 graduate of Amo High School. Mr. Carter was a life resident of the Amo-Coatesville area. He was a 25-year employee of Clark Paper Products Co., Indianapolis. He was a member of the Coatesville Christian Church, where he served as deacon. He also was a member of the
Madonna Robinson passed away Wednesday at Methodist Hospital, Indianpolis.
South Putnam yearbooks can be picked up now South Putnam High School yearbooks arrived Tuesday and can be picked up Wednesday, Thursday or Friday this week between 8 a.m. and 4 p.m. Yearbooks can be picked up in room D--11. Those unable to pick them up this week will have to wait until after school starts to claim them. It is necessary to bring a receipt to pick up the yearbook. Those picking them up for someone else must have the signature of the buyer.
ALL-YOU-CAN-EAT BUFFET
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In addition to the wife, survivors include two stepsons, Fredrick E. Foxworthy, Crawfordsville, and James E. Foxworthy, Rockville; two daughters-in-law, Charlotte R. Foxworthy, Ladoga, and Deana Foxworthy, Rockville; two sisters, Lillie Maxine Bailey, Roanoke, Ind., and Lillian May Secor, Warsaw; four grandchildren and several nieces and nephews. He was preceded in death by his parents, eight brothers and three sisters. Services will be conducted at 10:30 a.m. Friday from Hopkins-Rector Funeral Home, Greencastle. Interment will be in Brick Chapel Cemetery. Friends may call 2-8 p.m. Thursday at the funeral home.
Roger Carter
Coatesville Masonic Lodge and the Amo Cemetery Board. In addition to his wife, he is survived by two children, Lisa and Brent Carter, both at home; his mother and a brother, Dale Carter, rural Coatesville. Services will be conducted at 2 p.m. Friday at Wingler Funeral Home, Coatesville, with Rev. Frank Bunn officiating. Burial will follow at Amo Cemetery. Friends may call after 2 p.m. Thursday at the funeral home. Masonic services are scheduled at 7:30 p.m. Thursday at the funeral home.
Madonna Robinson
Funeral services are pending at Hopkins-Rector Funeral Home, Greencastle.
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presents Never Too Late at 8:00p.m. Hazel Day Longden Theatre Round Barn Rd., Greencastle August 15,16,17 Tickets S 3 OO Tickets available at Gjesvold Photo & Art Center and at the door.
Putnam County Playhouse
