Celebrate with festive fiesta Family Features

Truth behind the holiday Cinco de Mayo is a celebration held on May 5. The date is observed to commemorate the Mexican army's unlikely victory over F...
8 downloads 6 Views 5MB Size
Truth behind the holiday

Cinco de Mayo is a celebration held on May 5. The date is observed to commemorate the Mexican army's unlikely victory over French forces at the Battle of Puebla on May 5, 1862, under the leadership of General Ignacio Zaragoza Seguín.

Cinco de Mayo

The Paper O F M O N T G O M E RY

COUNTY

 You Should Know:

 TRIVIA

Cinco de Mayo is not Mexico's Independence Day, which is the most important national patriotic holiday in Mexico. Mexico’s Independence Day is Sept. 16.

1) Cinco de Mayo (Spanish for “fifth of May”) is a regional holiday in Mexico, primarily celebrated in the state of Puebla, with some limited recognition in other parts of Mexico. FUN Trivia Quizzes powered by ABE True or False? 2) The holiday commemorates the Mexican army’s unlikely victory over French forces at the Battle of Puebla on May 5, 1862. Who is the Mexican leader? A. General Venustiano Carranza. B. General Ignacio Zaragoza Seguin. C. General Pancho Villa D. General Emiliano Zapata 3) It is significant because since the Battle of Puebla no country in the Americas has been invaded by an army from another continent. True or False? 4) This battle is significant in that the 4,000 Mexican soldiers are greatly outnumbered by the well-equipped French army that had not been defeated for almost 50 years. What is the troop strength of the French army? A. 5,000 B. 6,000 C. 7,000 D. 8,000 5) The city and municipality of Puebla is the capital of the state of Puebla, and one of the five most important colonial cities in Mexico. It is located to the east of Mexico City. It is west of the what port city? A. Itzocan B. Tepeaca C. Huejotzingo D. Veracruz 7) Cinco de Mayo is a regional holiday limited primarily to the state of Juarez, Mexico. There is some limited recognition of the holiday in other parts of the country. For the most part the celebrations combine food, music, and dancing. True or False?

Bonus Page  Wednesday, May 4, 2016

Celebrate with festive fiesta Family Features

For Mexican food lovers everywhere, Cinco de Mayo provides the perfect excuse to host a fiesta. This year, try spicing up your party menu with Mexican-inspired bold flavors and fresh ingredients using these tips and recipe. With a little planning and some key fresh ingredients, you can host a fiesta everyone will enjoy.

Cinco de Mayo Menu Planning

Here are a few authentic dips and dishes to

liven any party spread: • Green, Green Guacamole – This flavorful dip embodies the festive flavors of the holiday. To make fresh guacamole, add green onions, cilantro and Tabasco green jalapeño pepper sauce to ripe, mashed avocados. • Mexican Caviar – Not your average salsa dip, this hearty and zesty recipe combines black beans, corn, avocado, tomatoes and cilantro for a muy bueno party starter that is sure to please. • Spicy Taquitos – Packed with genuine flavor, these savory appetizers can be served

all year long. A satisfying blend of chicken, red beans and shredded cheese is rolled into buttery phyllo dough and baked until golden and crispy. To add more authentic flavor to your table, be sure to serve Fiery Fiesta Empanadas. With a soft cornmeal crust, ground beef, cheese and olive filling, this dish boasts bold notes of cumin, garlic, and mild Tabasco green jalapeño pepper sauce – making these empanadas a sure-fire way to spice up your menu. For more sizzling, south-of-the-border recipes, visit www.tabasco.com.

Fiery Fiesta Empanadas Makes 4 empanadas Cornmeal Crust

2 cups all-purpose flour 1 cup yellow cornmeal 1/2 teaspoon salt 1 cup (2 sticks) butter or margarine, cut into 1-inch pieces 6 tablespoons water Filling 1 pound ground beef 1 clove garlic, crushed 3 scallions, chopped 1/4 cup taco sauce 1/4 cup pitted ripe olives, chopped 4 teaspoons Tabasco green jalapeño pepper sauce, divided 1/2 teaspoon dried oregano leaves 1/2 teaspoon ground cumin 1/2 teaspoon salt 1 cup shredded Cheddar or Monterey Jack cheese 1 large egg, beaten Photo provided

Combine flour, cornmeal and salt in medium bowl. Cut in butter until mixture is crumbly. Sprinkle in water, 1 tablespoon at a time, until dough sticks together. On lightly floured surface with lightly floured rolling pin, roll out half of dough until 1/4-inch thick. Cut dough into two 7-inch rounds. Repeat with remaining dough and scraps. Cover; set aside. Cook ground beef and garlic in 12-inch skillet over medium-high heat until beef is browned on all sides, stirring occasionally to break up beef. Stir in scallions, taco sauce, olives, 3 teaspoons green jalapeño

pepper sauce, oregano, cumin and salt until well blended. Stir in cheese. Preheat oven to 375ºF. Grease large cookie sheet. Spoon about 1/2-cup filling on 1/2 of each round, leaving a 1/2-inch border. Stir together egg and remaining teaspoon green jalapeño pepper sauce. Brush border with egg mixture. Fold dough over filling, pressing out air. Crimp edges with fork or fingers to seal. Place on baking sheet. Bake 25 minutes or until golden.

Answers: 1) True 2) B. 3) True 4) D. 5) D. 6) A. 7) False. Cinco de Mayo is a regional holiday limited primarily to the state of Puebla. There is some limited recognition of the holiday in other parts of the country. For the most part the celebrations combine food, music, and dancing.

WEDNESDAY May 4, 2016

Montgomery County’s only locally owned independent newspaper CRAWFORDSVILLE, INDIANA

 TODAY’S VERSE But seek first his kingdom and his righteousness, and all these things will be given to you as well. – Matt 6:33 (NIV)

 FACES of MONTGOMERY

People who call our community their own.

 TODAY’S JOKE

The boss said an onion was the only food that could make him cry. So we hit him over the head with a coconut.

 TODAY’S QUOTE

“Success is more a function of consistent common sense than it is of genius.” An Wang

 OBITUARIES

SHIRLEY MAE CONKRIGHT Services: 6 p.m. at Rock Point Church Richard Lee Stephenson Arrangements pending BETTY JEAN TURNER Services: 12 p.m. Saturday New Ross Cemetery

 INSIDE TODAY’S EDITION Arnis������������������������������������������� A2 Christi Hubler������������������������������ A1 Davis Material���������������������������� A2 HHSB����������������������������������������� A3 JM Thompson����������������������������� A3

www.thepaper24-7.com

Amazing turnout By Stu Clampitt

Election winners

Commissioner District 1

[email protected]

During an election that saw exceptionall high voter turnout, Indiana Secretary of State Connie Lawson was in Montgomery County. She stopped by Rockpoint Church at 2 p.m. to observe the vote center, the adoption of new equipment and meet with volunteer poll workers. “We have been in central Indiana all day,” Lawson told The Paper. “We chose Montgomery because this is the first time Montgomery County has been a vote center county so we wanted to see how it was working.” The line at Rockpoint church, like the other vote centers in the county, ran at 30 minute to an hour all day. “Obviously this is a popular place for people to come vote,” Lawson said. “I’m told 45 minutes is about what it takes to get from inside the door to the voting room.” Lawson was impressed with the quality of help the volunteers at the Rockpoint voting center were providing to voters.

See TURNOUT Page A4 Crystal Cating, 18, New Ross, was a first time voter. “It’s pretty cool. It’s a good experience to actually be able to do something for your country and know that you contributed.” She said the will be voting in the next election as well. “I think I’ll try to vote at every one that I possibly can.”

50¢

Frey 4,406 votes

Lough 3,308 votes

COUNTY COUNCIL At-Large

The Paper photo by Stu Clampitt

Montgomery County PRIMARY County Clerk VOTES PERCENT Karyn D. Douglas 4,250 60.61 Valerie Howard 2,762 39.39 County Commissioner District 1 VOTES PERCENT John E. Frey 4,406 57.12 Gayle Lough 3,308 42.88 County Council At-Large VOTES PERCENT Gary Booth 3,746 18.08 Bob Campbell 2,711 13.08 Ronald L. Dickerson 3,301 15.93 Terry Hockersmith 4,413 21.30 Greg Morrison 3,627 17.50 John Pickerill 2,923 14.11 County Recorder VOTES PERCENT Jennifer Bentley 3,854 51.44 Sherri Ledbetter 3,638 48.56

Secretary of State Connie Lawson visited the voting center at Rockpoint Church during the election. Full results from the Tuesday election can be found on Page A7 of today's Paper.

Interesting election results

Booth 3,746 votes

Campbell 2,711 votes

Dickerson 3,301 votes

Hockersmith 4,413 votes

Morrison 3,627 votes

Pickerill 2,923 votes

CLERK

By Stu Clampitt

[email protected]

The story of this election is not just about the presidential race. On a local level, high numbers of voters at the polls and a large number of contested races will shape the political future of our county. Karyn Douglas, who won her primary election for Clerk of the Circuit Court told The Paper, “I’m very happy the way it turned out. I think my opponent gave me a run for the money and she tried really hard. All candidates tried really hard this year. No matter how their individual result turned out everybody should be proud of trying to represent the county.” Jennifer Bentley, who just

See RESULTS Page A4

Douglas 4,250 votes

Howard 2,762 votes

Recorder

Bentley 3,854 votes

The Paper photo by Stu Clampitt

John Frey (right) and supporters of the portion of the local Republican Party he belongs to gathered and the Barefoot Burger.

 HONEST HOOSIER Congrats to the winners. Just remember, you were voted in by the people. Try to represent them with honor.

Ledbetter 3,638 votes

voter turnout 42.64 percent

 THE MONTGOMERY MINUTE You can save lives this month

May is Trauma Awareness Month and the American Red Cross urges the community to give blood or platelets to help ensure lifesaving blood products are available for trauma patients and others with serious medical needs. Blood donation opportunities in Montgomery County include: Crawfordsville: 9 a.m. - 1 p.m. May 6, , Hoosier Heartland State Bank, 1661 U.S. 231. Darlington: 1-7 p.m.,May 9, Darlington United Methodist Church, 201 Harrison St.

 TODAY’S HEALTH TIP

Exercising at least five days a week can cut sick days in half.

Today’s health tip was brought to you by Dr. John Roberts. Be sure to catch his column each week in The Paper and online at www.thepaper24-7.com.

The Paper appreciates all our customers. Today, we’d like to personally thank David Shaw of Waveland for subscribing!

Serving Alamo  Browns Valley  Darlington  Crawfordsville  Ladoga  Linden  Mace  New Market  New Richmond  New Ross  Waveland  Waynetown  Whitesville  Wingate  Yountsville

101 W. Main St. Suite 300  P.O. Box 272  Crawfordsville, IN 47933 main: 765-361-0100  classifieds: 765-361-8888 fax: 765-361-5901 www.thepaper24-7.com twitter: @ThePaperNews @ThePaperSports PAGE A2  Wednesday, May 4, 2016

More local radio options

THANK YOU

to my family, friends, and campaign supporters for your hard work, dedication, and generosity. - Greg Morrison Paid for by Greg Morrison for County Council, Steve Zachary Treasurer

Ready Mix Concrete Serving Montgomery, Tippecanoe & surrounding counties 11528 N. US 231 S., P.O. Box 9 Linden, IN 47955 Locally owned & operated

765-339-4055 • Fax 765-339-4088

Photo provided

WCVL radio recently held a ribbon cutting to celebrate the addition of station 92.1 FM. Station staff members along with members of the Crawfordsville/Montgomery County Chamber of Commerce assisted Phil Thompson and Dave Peach in the ceremony.

ThePaper24-7.com

It all sounds so fishy This has been a bad week for people like me who get their medical news from USA Today. A few days ago I read about a scientist who claims pecans (my favorite) may not be as healthy to consume as previously believed. Just when I think I’m eating the right stuff, some nut comes along and ruins everything. It was plenty confusing when coffee was reported to be bad for us, then good for us. Researchers were sure it caused heart attacks, but it prevented strokes—except for decaf, which not only caused strokes, but was related to diabetes. I’m sure I got that all wrong, but so what. It’s all going to change soon, anyway. I was so baffled a few years ago about whether or not peanuts were good for me that it actually drove me to start drinking. That was a good thing because they said alcohol helped your heart, but it ended up as bad news because then they said it wasn’t the alcohol that was beneficial, but the grapes. And I had been drinking beer. A health alert this week took the cake. Cake, by the way, is not good for you, unless it’s chocolate, which has aphrodisiac qualities. But chocolate also has caffeine, which is bad for you (unless it’s the same amount of caffeine that was good for you if you were drinking coffee before August of 2007.) It was this week I learned that some salmon contains way too much mercury. Ever since the first report several years ago that salmon had beneficial Omega fatty acids, I’ve been chowing down on anything that swims upstream to die: Coho, Chinook, King, Alaskan pink and sockeye. I have eaten smoked, fresh and canned salmon. If my heart wasn’t bright red before, it is now. Then I saw this headline last week in USA Today: FARMED SALMON MORE DANGEROUS TO EAT THAN WILD SALMON Of course, statistics about what’s dangerous can be misleading. Maybe some of those people fishing for wild salmon were eaten by bears. That’s the kind of data that gets lost in those fancy university studies. But no, farmed salmon is apparently worse for us. At least today. So I decided to adjust my diet accordingly. In the supermarket it’s hard to tell wild from farmraised. They all look pretty dead to me. My doctor said I could eliminate salmon from my diet altogether and opt instead for fish oil pills, which apparently aren’t made from fish at all, but are made

dick wolfsie Life in a Nutshell

from Docosapentaenoic Acid. Let’s see. Lox and bagels or Docosapentaenoic Acid and bagels? There are no easy choices in life. By the way, I never believed the marketing claims that eating fish regularly was good for your memory. When I was in high school

I ate fish sticks three days a week and tuna sandwiches on weekends. Then I went to college where I spent half my waking hours looking for my car, my spiral notebook or my wallet. I also couldn’t find a date. I’m getting hungry writing about all this food. I think I’ll have smoked salmon on a bagel and for dessert, a handful of chocolate-covered pecans. See you next week…if I live that long. Dick Wolfsie appears weekdays on television sharing his humor, stories and video essays. His column appears weekly in The Paper of Montgomery County. E-mail Dick at Wolfsie@aol. com.

THANK YOU voters, family and friends for all your loyal support!

–Gayle Lough Paid for by the committee to elect Gayle Lough

THANK YOU

to my family, friends, and campaign supporters for your hard work, dedication, and generosity. - Jennifer Bentley Paid for by Jennifer Bentley for Recorder, Mitchell Ray Treasurer

Caring people make the difference!

Come Grow With Us! Seeking CNAs & Nurses 8FFLFOE0QUJPOISTIJGUEJGGFSFOUJBM In honor of Nurses Week, Nurses who stop by and meet our DNS/ ED will receive a free ASC gift bag! At American Senior Communities it’s more than a job, it is a way of life dedicated to servingothers! We are experts at senior health care who are not just doing a job, but following a calling.

Benefits Package Includes: t*OTVSBODFo.FEJDBM%FOUBM7JTJPO4UBSUJOHBTMPXBTBQBZQFSJPE t&NQMPZFF3FGFSSBM1SPHSBNo GPS"MM/VSTFT$/"TSFGFSSFE t5VJUJPO3FJNCVSTFNFOUtL1BJEUJNFPGG t0/&1SPHSBNo1BJE-1/PS3/USBJOJOH t$/"1SFDFQUPSo#FBQSFDFQUPSXJUI"4$FBSODBTI t1PUFOUJBM*ODFOUJWF:FBS&OE#POVT

Ben Hur Health & Rehabilitation

1375 South Grant Ave. Crawfordsville, IN 47933 PH: 765-362-0905

THANK YOU to my family, friends, and campaign supporters for your hard work, dedication, and generosity.

JOHN FREY

Ask for Judy Fifer or Sarah Elliott! For more information contact: Mary Goss: 317-518-5453 [email protected]

EEqual quall Opp Opportunity O pporttEmployer unitity uni ty Employer Employ Empl Emp loyer o oy Equal Equ Opportunity

Paid for by John Frey for County Commissioner, Aaron Morgan Treasurer

The Paper of Montgomery County

Wednesday, May 4, 2016

There is no one Letter to North families easy answer…  Letters

By now, many members of our community are asking themselves the same question, “Why?” Why do these tragic events happen and why can’t we stop them from happening? As with many complex emotional issues, suicide and its prevention does not have just one easy answer. There are so many reasons and factors that lead a person to seeing suicide as the only way out of whatever the situation is. None of us can know everything that is in a person’s mind. As we struggle to come to terms with such a tragic event we want to know WHY, we want to know what caused the young person to take this action so that we can “fix it” and make sure it never happens again. We need to make sense of it, make it a problem to be solved, but it is just not that easy. As Brooke Lowe and Tom Ward have figured out, the problem is bigger than one individual, one family or any one school corporation. As a caring

community who values their children and youth, we do need to come together to create the best plan possible to keep our children safe. They are also right in saying that blame is not going to do anyone any good now. While mourning for the lives lost, we must also look to the larger community and how we can all impact a positive change for our youth and children. We need caring and committed community members who come together and listen to each other and to professionals who deal with this issue through their work. We need to know what each of us can do to help and how we create a culture that is responsive and caring for

See CARE Page A8

 OBITUARIES

Shirley Mae Conkright

May 13, 1946 – May 2, 2016 Shirley Mae Conkright, 69, Crawfordsville, passed away Monday, May 2nd, at 6:28 PM in the Hickory Creek of Crawfordsville Healthcare. She was born May 13th, 1946, in Louisville, Kentucky, to George and Lillie Mae (Graham) Branham. Mrs. Conkright had worked as a Production Worker for Crawford Industries. She attended Rock Point Church; was a Life Member Arrangements of the Crawfordsville VFW and American Legion Posts Calling: 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. Auxiliaries; and loved to Service: 6 p.m. Thursday play Bingo. Location: Rock Point She is survived by her Church son: Larry (Jana) Minks, Online condolences: Crawfordsville; sister: Ruth powerspriebefh.com McDonald, Indianapolis; and grandchildren: Christopher, Michael, and Lauren Minks. She was preceded in death by her parents; and her brothers: George Lee, Jim, Kenny, Earl, Cecil, and Delbert Branham. Cremation was chosen with a Celebration of Shirley’s Life to be held 6 p.m. Thursday at Rock Point Church with Pastor Terry Thompson officiating. The family will greet friends at the church on Thursday from 4 to 6 p.m. Online condolences may be sent to: powerspriebefh. com

Betty Jean Turner

March 8, 1928 – May 2, 2016

Betty Jean Turner, 88, New Ross passed away Monday morning, May 2, 2016 in Homewood Health Campus. She was born March 8, 1928 to Jean and Clara (Loveless) Gorham. She married Paul L Turner, Sr. on August 26, 1946 in Kirklin. She had been a resident of New Ross since 1973. She was a Den Mother for Cub Scouts for several years in Roachdale and she worked for 15 Arrangements years at Turner Electronics. She was a member of the Calling: 10 a.m. to 12 New Ross Christian Church. p.m. Survivors include: sons, Service: 12 p.m. Saturday Paul L Turner, Jr. (DebLocation: New Ross bie) of New Ross; David Christian Church Turner (Melinda), Advance; Online condolences: and Matt Mount (Laurel), www.porterfuneralhome.us Nashville, TN; sister, Judy

Gorham, Frankfort; sisterin-law, Carol Gorham, Lebanon; 13 grandchildren, 18 great-grandchildren and 8 great great-grandchildren. She was preceded in death by her parents, her husband, Paul, a daughter, 3 grandchildren, 3 sisters and a brother. Family and friends will gather 10:00 a.m. until time of service at 12:00 p.m. Saturday at the New Ross Christian Church. Pastor Ivan Brown will officiate. Betty will be laid to rest in the New Ross Cemetery. Memorial contributions may be made to the New Ross Christian Church, PO Box 182, New Ross, IN 47968. Family and friends are invited to visit the website, www.porterfuneralhome.us, where you may sign her online register and leave a personal message.

By now you have learned that we have suffered the tragic loss of another student last week. Since June 2015, we have had three such losses. In my twenty-five years in public education, I have never before experienced three such tragedies in a single school year. I want to make sure you are fully aware of everything we are doing to respond to these devastating losses and to ensure that all of our students are receiving the help they need in dealing with them. I want to assure you that we are drawing on the advice of experts both within and beyond the school. We have enlisted the help of leaders in the mental health world such as Karen Branch, Executive Director of the Youth Service Bureau and Whitney Nixon, Master Trainer, Zero Suicides for Indiana Youth through the Community Health Network. They are helping us mobilize resources across the school district and county by taking a collaborative approach to ensuring the mental health and well-being of our students. Counseling services have been offered to students since we learned of the most recent loss. NMHS counselors and teachers have been meeting with students one-on-one and in small groups to encourage those who need help to seek it, but also to offer a sympathetic ear and a venue for safe conversation. A student-led group encouraged others to share messages of love and care and post them on the NMHS Commons wall on Friday as a way for students to express support for each other. Our students wrote beautiful expressions to classmates and staff. The administration and counselors have provided staff with training and materials provided by the Suicide Prevention Resource Center, the nation’s only federally supported

center for suicide. Continued prevention training will be provided by Whitney Nixon, Zero Suicides for Indiana Youth for all North Montgomery PK-12 staff in June. A Montgomery County Forum addressing suicide prevention will be open to the community on May 11 at 6:00 pm at North Montgomery High School. If you or anyone you know is concerned about a member of the North Montgomery community, please call NMHS at 3625140 or the Central Office at 359-2112. You may also call the 24/7 confidential National Suicide Prevention Lifeline number 1-800273-8255 (TALK) or text HELPNOW to 20121. www.havehope.com is an informational website that has tips for parents, teachers and youth for how to help someone in crisis as well as referral information and supportive videos. Please know that the well-being and safety of our students is our priority during this difficult time. If you have any questions about the actions we are taking, please do not hesitate to contact me or your student’s school. Please also encourage your student to take advantage of the resources offered. Colleen Moran, Superintendent North Montgomery Community School Corporation

THE PAPER OF MONTGOMERY COUNTY

(USPS 022-679) May 4, 2016 Volume 12 Number 106 Published Monday through Saturday (except for holidays) Subscription price: $48/6 mos.; $88/1 year. 101 W. Main St., Suite 300 Crawfordsville, IN 47933 765-361-0100 Periodicals Postage Paid at Crawfordsville, Ind. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to The Paper of Montgomery County, 101 W. Main St., Suite 300, Crawfordsville, IN 47933

THANK YOU

to my family, friends, and campaign supporters for your hard work, dedication, and generosity. - Karyn Douglas Paid for by Karyn Douglas for County Clerk, Tyler Nichols Treasurer

Surb’s Tires 210 N. Walnut St. • 362-0279 Oil$28.95 Change Four Wheel Alignment $59.95 must present coupon must present coupon M-F 8-5; Sat. 8-12 up to 5qts on most domestic vehicles

most domestic vehicles

THANK YOU

to my family, friends, and campaign supporters for your hard work, dedication, and generosity. - Ron Dickerson Paid for Ron Dickerson for County Council, Kent Minnette Treasurer

Richard Lee Stephenson

Richard Lee Stephenson, 81, died following a lengthy illness 12:50 a.m. Tuesday, May 3 2016 in Ben Hur Health and Rehabilitation, Crawfordsville. Arrangements are pending at Family & Friends Funeral Home of Wingate.

J.M. THOMPSON INSURANCE

THANK YOU

to my family, friends, and campaign supporters for your hard work, dedication, and generosity.

One g good name. A team of good people. Insurance, Answers & A Personal Touch 362.8858 121 S. Washington St.

- Bob Campbell Paid for by Bob Campbell for County Council Committee, Jenny Campbell Treasurer

A3

Public Notices TO THE OWNERS OF THE WITHIN DESCRIBED REAL ESTATE AND ALL INTERESTED PARTIES NOTICE OF SHERIFF S SALE By virtue of a certified copy of a decree to me directed from the Clerk of Circuit Court of Montgomery County, Indiana, in Cause No. 54D01-1502-MF000099, wherein Benjamin J. Day and Came K. Day were Plaintiffs and Gregory A. Thompson and Suzanne A. Thompson, et al., were Defendants, requiring me to make the sum as provided for in said Decree with interest and cost. 1 will expose at public sale to the highest bidder, on the 8th day of June, 2016, at the hour of 10:00 a.m. EDT, or as soon thereafter as is possible, at the Montgomery County Sheriffs Office, 600 Memorial Drive. Crawfordsville, IN 47933. the fee simple of the whole body of the following described Real Estate in Montgomery County. Indiana. The north half of the following described real estate: Part of the west half of the northwest quarter of section seventeen (17), township seventeen (17) north, range three (3) west, Montgomery County, Indiana, more particularly described as follows: Beginning 834.24 feet north 00 degrees 28 minutes 40 seconds west of the southeast corner of the west half of said northwest quarter, said point being marked by a railroad spike in the approximate center line of County Road 625E and running thence north 90 degrees 00 minutes 00 seconds west for a distance of 463.32 feet to 1/4-inch reinforcing bar; thence south 00 degrees 28 minutes 40 seconds east for a distance of 306.24 feet to a S/8-inch reinforcing bar; thence north 90 degrees 00 minutes 00 seconds east for a distance of 463.32 feet to an iron railroad spike in the approximate center line of County Road 625E; thence north 00 degrees 26 minutes 40 seconds west for a distance of 306.24 feet to the place of beginning. Subject to all rights-of-way, easements and restrictions of record. More commonly known as: 8349 S 625 E, Ladoga, Indiana 47954 Parcel No. 54-16-17-200-009.002-007 Together with rents, issues, income, and profits thereof, said sale will be made without relief from valuation or appraisement laws. Subject to all liens, encumbrances and easements of record not otherwise extinguished in the proceedings known as Cause No. 54D01-1502-MF000099 in the Superior Court No. 1 of the County of Montgomery, Indiana. Mark Casteel Sheriff of Montgomery County Plaintiffs’ Attorney: J. Lamont Flarris Attorney No. 7487-54 Henthorn, Harris & Weliever 122 East Main Street Crawfordsville, IN 47933 PL2489 5/4, 5/11, 5/18 3t hspaxlp NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING CRAWFORDSVILLE PLAN COMMISSION Notice is hereby given that the Plan Commission of the City of Crawfordsville will hold a public hearing at 5:00 p.m. on Tuesday, May 17, 2016, in the Common Council Chambers, 2nd Floor, Municipal Building, 300 E. Pike Street, Crawfordsville, Indiana, to hear the request for primary subdivision plat approval for Section 3 in the existing Ashton Walk/Run Subdivision. The property location: State Road 32 West, Crawfordsville, Indiana (Parcel No: 54-10-07-200-040.000-030 & 54-10-07-200-038.000-030) The petition is on file and available for examination (and purchase at cost) in the Department of Planning & Community Development on the 2nd floor of the Municipal Building, 300 East Pike Street, Crawfordsville, Indiana 47933 (765.364.5152); office hours are 8:00-12:00 noon and 1:00-4:00 p.m., weekdays except holidays. The public is invited to attend the hearing and to comment on the proposed request. Oral comments concerning the requests will be heard. Written comments and objections to the requests may also be submitted to the Director of Planning & Community Development, City of Crawfordsville, at the address above prior to the hearing and will be considered. In accordance with the Americans with Disabilities Act, if anyone wishes to attend, hear or present evidence at the public hearing and is in need of reasonable accommodation, please contact the Crawfordsville Department of Planning & Community Development at the address or phone number above so accommodation can be made. Department of Planning & Community Development Brandy Allen, Director, City of Crawfordsville PL2490 5/4 1t hspaxlp NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING CRAWFORDSVILLE PLAN COMMISSION Notice is hereby given that the Plan Commission of the City of Crawfordsville will hold a public hearing at 5:00 p.m. on Tuesday, May 17, 2016, in the Common Council Chambers, 2nd Floor, Municipal Building, 300 E. Pike Street, Crawfordsville, Indiana, to hear the request to rezone property from an R-1, Residential, zoning district to a B-3, Business, zoning district. The property location: 3097 E State Road 32, Crawfordsville, Indiana (Parcel No: 54-07-34-400-033.000-024 & 54-07-35-300-029.000-024) The petition is on file and available for examination (and purchase at cost) in the Department of Planning & Community Development on the 2nd floor of the Municipal Building, 300 East Pike Street, Crawfordsville, Indiana 47933 (765.364.5152); office hours are 8:00-12:00 noon and 1:00-4:00 p.m., weekdays except holidays. The public is invited to attend the hearing and to comment on the proposed request. Oral comments concerning the requests will be heard. Written comments and objections to the requests may also be submitted to the Director of Planning & Community Development, City of Crawfordsville, at the address above prior to the hearing and will be considered. In accordance with the Americans with Disabilities Act, if anyone wishes to attend, hear or present evidence at the public hearing and is in need of reasonable accommodation, please contact the Crawfordsville Department of Planning & Community Development at the address or phone number above so accommodation can be made Department of Planning & Community Development Brandy Allen, Director, City of Crawfordsville PL2491 5/4 1t hspaxlp NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING CRAWFORDSVILLE BOARD OF ZONING APPEALS Notice is hereby given that the Board of Zoning Appeals of the City of Crawfordsville will hold a public hearing at 7:00 p.m. on Wednesday, May 18, 2016, in the Common Council Chambers, 2nd Floor, Municipal Building, 300 E. Pike Street, Crawfordsville, Indiana, to hear the request for a use variance from the Schedule of Uses of the City Zoning Ordinance for a restaurant in a R-1, residential zoning district. The property location: 3097 E State Road 32, Crawfordsville, Indiana (Parcel No: 54-07-34-400-033.000-024 & 54-07-35-300-029.000-024) The petition is on file and available for examination (and purchase at cost) in the Department of Planning & Community Development on the 2nd floor of the Municipal Building, 300 East Pike Street, Crawfordsville, Indiana 47933 (765.364.5152); office hours are 8:00-12:00 noon and 1:00-4:00 p.m., weekdays except holidays. The public is invited to attend the hearing and to comment on the proposed request. Oral comments concerning the requests will be heard. Written comments and objections to the requests may also be submitted to the Director of Planning & Community Development, City of Crawfordsville, at the address above prior to the hearing and will be considered. In accordance with the Americans with Disabilities Act, if anyone wishes to attend, hear or present evidence at the public hearing and is in need of reasonable accommodation, please contact the Crawfordsville Department of Planning & Community Development at the address or phone number above so accommodation can be made. Department of Planning & Community Development Brandy Allen, Director, City of Crawfordsville PL2492 5/4 1t hspaxlp NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING CRAWFORDSVILLE BOARD OF ZONING APPEALS Notice is hereby given that the Board of Zoning Appeals of the City of Crawfordsville will hold a public hearing at 7:00 p.m. on Wednesday, May 18, 2016, in the Common Council Chambers, 2nd Floor, Municipal Building, 300 E. Pike Street, Crawfordsville, Indiana, to hear the request for a development standard variance from the Lot and Yard Requirements of the City Zoning Ordinance for an unattached garage in a R-1, residential zoning district. The property location: 1306 W Ridge Road, Crawfordsville, Indiana (Parcel No: 54-06-26-442-015.000-024) The petition is on file and available for examination (and purchase at cost) in the Department of Planning & Community Development on the 2nd floor of the Municipal Building, 300 East Pike Street, Crawfordsville, Indiana 47933 (765.364.5152); office hours are 8:00-12:00 noon and 1:00-4:00 p.m., weekdays except holidays. The public is invited to attend the hearing and to comment on the proposed request. Oral comments concerning the requests will be heard. Written comments and objections to the requests may also be submitted to the Director of Planning & Community Development, City of Crawfordsville, at the address above prior to the hearing and will be considered. In accordance with the Americans with Disabilities Act, if anyone wishes to attend, hear or present evidence at the public hearing and is in need of reasonable accommodation, please contact the Crawfordsville Department of Planning & Community Development at the address or phone number above so accommodation can be made Department of Planning & Community Development Brandy Allen, Director, City of Crawfordsville PL2493 5/4 1t hspaxlp NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING CRAWFORDSVILLE BOARD OF ZONING APPEALS Notice is hereby given that the Board of Zoning Appeals of the City of Crawfordsville will hold a public hearing at 7:00 p.m. on Wednesday, May 18, 2016, in the Common Council Chambers, 2nd Floor, Municipal Building, 300 E. Pike Street, Crawfordsville, Indiana, to hear the request for a development standard variance from the Signage Standards and Regulations of the City Zoning Ordinance for Best Western Hotel located in a B-3, business zoning district. The property location: 2600 Industrial Boulevard, Crawfordsville, Indiana (Parcel No: 54-07-19-100-005.003-028) The petition is on file and available for examination (and purchase at cost) in the Department of Planning & Community Development on the 2nd floor of the Municipal Building, 300 East Pike Street, Crawfordsville, Indiana 47933 (765.364.5152); office hours are 8:00-12:00 noon and 1:00-4:00 p.m., weekdays except holidays. The public is invited to attend the hearing and to comment on the proposed request. Oral comments concerning the requests will be heard. Written comments and objections to the requests may also be submitted to the Director of Planning & Community Development, City of Crawfordsville, at the address above prior to the hearing and will be considered. In accordance with the Americans with Disabilities Act, if anyone wishes to attend, hear or present evidence at the public hearing and is in need of reasonable accommodation, please contact the Crawfordsville Department of Planning & Community Development at the address or phone number above so accommodation can be made Department of Planning & Community Development Brandy Allen, Director, City of Crawfordsville PL2494 5/4 1t hspaxlp

Never miss a public notice on legal proceedings! After it prints in your local newspaper, it goes online:

IndianaPublicNotices.com ThePaper24-7.com

Wednesday, May 4, 2016

A4

The Paper of Montgomery County

Þ TURNOUT  From Page A1

The Paper photos by Stu Clampitt

(Top) The voting line at St. Bernard’s Church spilled outside the building on Tuesday afternoon. (Left) Friendship Baptist Church saw wait times similar to other vote centers throughout Tuesday. (Above) Inside St. Bernard’s Church, voters were waiting an hour or less throughout the day for their chance at the polls.

here of accommodating people with chairs and coffee and donuts while they are waiting,” Lawson said. During the 2 p.m. hour, Lawson told The Paper she thought we had a chance to see record turnout. “ In 2008, which is the unprecedented turnout we had in a presidential primary, Indiana overall voted about 40%,” Lawson said. “It looks like Montgomery County may be on track for that.” Voter registration clerk Karyn Douglas told The Paper the 42.64% voter turnout was impressive.

Þ RESULTS  From Page A1 won her spot on the republic ticket for county recorder by 216 votes (3,854 to 3,638 over Sherri Ledbetter) said she felt “Great” and, “exhausted.” John Frey secured his spot on the ticket for November’s election by defeating Gayle Lough 4,406 to 3,308 Tuesday. “I have to thank the voters of Montgomery County that supported me,” Frey said. “The team: my campaign manager, Aaron Morgan, Taylor and all his guys, they just worked their hearts out for me. I had a lot of citizens financially backing me. I’m really fortunate to have the support I did. I feel really blessed and really lucky.” On the other hand, Frey was concerned about the results of the County Council race. “Terry Hockersmith and Gary Booth have both won the council—two out of the three council races—they are the tea party,” Frey said. “That’s not what I expected personally, but that’s what the voters decided and that’s what we will have to work with. Current Republican Party Chairman John Pickerill lost his seat on the County Council, but his political allies, Terry Hockersmith and Gary Booth, won two of the three spots in the primary election Tuesday. Part of his future will be decided by the republican precinct committeemen. Pickerill is on one side of a split with the local Republican Party. He calls his views, “conservative”

and others call him “tea party.” Whatever label is assigned to that side of the competition, it appears that they will control the county council, but the other camp, calling themselves “the real G.O.P.” will be able to decide if Pickerill will continue to be the party chairman. The Party chair is determined by the precinct committeemen, 18 of whom were not on Pickerill’s side in this election. Pickerill said they (the “real GOP”) have a majority of the central committee now. “It takes 2/3 to remove someone as chairman and they have exactly that,” Pickerill explained. “It means if they are not happy they can remove me. It looks like they have the votes.” Regarding the race for County Council At-Large, Pickerill told The Paper he is very happy with Terry Hockersmith and Gary Booth winning. “That probably the most important race of this election,” Pickerill said. “It may not seem like it but this is actually a victory for us. If it stands in November then conservatives have control of the county council.” As for the future, he is waiting to see if he maintains his seat as the county Republican Party chairman. “We will see what my fate is as county chair and then go from there,” Pickerill said. “It’s probably a little premature to start making plans.”

“We had an amazing turnout,” Douglas said. “I could not be happier. The turnout across the state was like this.” She said she did not expect to see numbers this high. “ I think people we turning out for more national but hopefully also for local reasons too,” Douglas said. “The new machines and poll workers were amazing today. I could not ask for a better group of people to work with.” Norm Reimondo spoke to the Paper for a moment while working at the St. Bernard’s Catholic Church voting cen-

ter. He said the lines started at 6 a.m., as soon as that vote center opened. “It’s been about a half hour wait most of the day,” Reimondo said. “I would say this is significantly more activity than we have had in any previous primary.” Mike Hart spoke to The Paper while waiting in line at Friendship Baptist Church for his chance to vote. “I’ve been waiting about 10 minutes so far,” Hart said. “I am expecting at about another half hour at least.” He said he was surprised by the wait, especially at 2:30 in the afternoon.

Confused about your Medicare Options? Paying too much for your current Supplemental Medicare plan? Save up to 65% by comparing TOP carriers in your area! Call Now!

Get a FREE no obligation review of your Medicare options.

CALL US! WE CAN HELP

800.761.6849

LEARN about the plans, COMPARE the different types of plans, and SAVE on the plan you choice! Speak with a licensed adviser today!

We’ll help you find the right plan and carrier for you! Compare every plan in your area with the lowest rates! Compare top carriers costs and benefits side-by-side! Compare your plan to current market rates! Friendly service, hassle free & no obligation to sign up! This is a solicitation for insurance. Not a branch of Medicare or any other government agency.

Are you 64 and older? MedicareFAQ (Elite Insurance Partners) helps individuals understand all Medicare options, including original Medicare Parts A or B or any of the other Supplemental Medicare plans like; Medicare Supplements (Medigap), Medicare Advantage (Part C) or Prescription Drugs (Part D).

3,590

The Paper of Montgomery County

STK#52097C

SAVINGS TOTAL $

1,697

SAVINGS TOTAL $



STK#52177C

FMCCFinance Retail CustomerCash Friends&Neighbors

FMCCFinance Retail CustomerCash PackageDiscount Friends&Neighbors

1,250 1,250 $ 1,090 $ $

New 2015 C/MAX HYBRI D C/MAX HYBRID

NewFriends2015& Neighbors

$

Package Discount Retail Customer Cash FMCC Finance

1,250 $ 1,250 $

3,590

TOTAL $ SAVINGS

8488420000-CJ

$250 $750 $490 $207

New 2 FIESTA SE H/B FIESTA S

New 2015 1,090

Friends & Neighbors Retail Customer Cash FMCC Finance

Bonus Page

STK# 52177C

TOTAL $ NewSAVINGS 2015 FIESTA SE H/B

New 2015 C/MAX HYBRID Friends & Neighbors $207 2051 Sagamore Pkwy So., Lafayette, • www.Raisor.com Friends & Neighbors IN 47905 1,090• 765-447-9444 • 877-484-4557

New 2015 New 2015 C/MAX HYBRID TOTAL TAURUS $ SEL SAVINGS 3,590

MIKE RAISOR

NewNew 2015 2 FIESTA SE H/B Explorer $

$

Retail Customer Cash FMCC Finance

STK# 52097C

Package Discount Retail Customer Cash FMCC Finance

1,250 $ 1,250 $

STK# 52177C

Friends & Neighbors $2,010 1,090 Friends & Neighbors RetailCash Customer Cash $4,000$1,250 New 2015 Retail Customer $ now It’s an inside deal, TAURUS SEL 1,250 FMCC Finance FMCC Finance Bonus Cash $750 Friends & Neighbors $2,010 STK# 52072C

STK# 52072C

TOTAL 6,760 $ TOTALSAVINGS $ $ TOTAL TOTAL SAVINGS $ SAVINGS SAVINGS 6,760 FMCC Finance Bonus Cash $750

3,590 6,760

Retail Customer Cash FMCC Finance Bonus Cash

$4,000 $750

1,697

Package DiscountDiscount New 2016 Package Retail Customer Cash Explorer 4x4 XLT Retail Customer Friends & Neighbors $2,390 Cash FMCC Finance $800 SAVINGS Package Discount

for everyone.

STK# 52177C

STK# 60373T STK# 60373T STK# 60373T

TOTAL

3,690 FMCC $ Finance

1,693

TOTAL TOTAL$ $250 $ $250 SAVINGS 3,690 SAVINGS

Retail Customer Cash FMCC Finance

FMCC Finance TOTAL $ Cash Retail Customer SAVINGS Package Discount Friends & Neighbors

Retail Customer Cash $4,000 It’s an inside deal, now for everyone. Friends & Neighbors $2,010

JC-0000248848

$490 $750 $250

TOTAL FriendsFriends & Neighbors SAVINGS & Neighbors

$

STK# 52097C

1

$250 $250

$800 $2,390

Newdeal, 2015 2016 ExplorerNew 4x4 XLT TAURUS SEL now for everyone. It’s an inside New 2016 4x4 X TAURUS SEL New 2015 Explorer MIKE RAISOR Friends & Neighbors $2,010 Friends 1,697 & Neighbors SAVINGS $ Discount 3,590 SAVINGS Retail Customer Cash $4,000 TOTAL Package TOTAL $

MIKE RAISOR

2051 Sagamore Pkwy So., Lafayette, IN 47905 • 765-447-9444 • 877-484-4557 • www.Raisor.com NewFinance 2016 FUSION New 2015 EDGE AWD SEL STK# 52097C FMCC Bonus CashSE $750STK# 52177C

6,760

Friends & Neighbors FMCC Finance Package Discount Retail Customer Cash Retail Customer Cash Friends & Neighbors FMCC Finance Bonus

1,242 1,250 $ $ 490 1,250 $$1,500 1,090 $$1,000 $

Retail Customer Cash FMCC Finance $250 $ 2,267 FMCC Finance $1,100$750 $ $490 250 Friends & Neighbors $207 TOTAL SAVINGS $ Friends & Neighbors Retail Customer Cash Package Discount Package Discount Retail Customer Cash

TOTAL $ STK# 60373T TOTAL SAVINGS $ FIESTA SE H/B C/MAX HYBRID 3,617 gamore Pkwy So., Lafayette, IN$3,982 47905 • 765-447-9444 • 877-484-4557 • www.R TOTAL SAVINGS SAVINGS New 2015 STK# 52072C

#60192C

#52515T

New 2015

It’s an inside deal, now for everyone.

New 2015 F150 4X4 S/C

New 2016 ESCAPE SE

Friends & Neighbors Package Discount Retail Customer Cash FMCC Finance

JC-0000248848

#603227

1,064 $ 490 $ 1,000 $ 500 $

Friends & Neighbors Package Discount Special Retail Cash Retail Customer Cash FMCC Finance Bonus Retail Bonus Customer Cash Bonus Customer Cash

MIKE RAISOR 3,054

TOTAL SAVINGS $

3,69

#52342T

3,761 $ 2,000 $ 1,000 $ 500 $ 750 $ 1,000 $ 1,500 $

It’s an inside deal, now for everyone. TOTALSAVINGS $10,511 2051 Sagamore Pkwy So., Lafayette, IN 47905 • 765-447-9444 • 877-484-4557 • www.Raisor.c

MIKE RAISOR

2051 Sagamore Pkwy So., Lafayette, IN 47905 • 765-447-9444 • 877-484-4557 • www.Raisor.com

Sports Wednesday   THE TICKER

A5 May 4, 2016

Maria Leichty’s “Weekly Smorga-Sport” will return next Wednesday. Check A5 for a correction from yesterday’s Larry Rice article.

Tigers deal Chargers first Conference loss By John O. Marlowe

[email protected]

LINDEN – Three Lebanon pitchers combined to scatter six North Montgomery hits, and Caleb Myers ignited the Tigers' bats with a third inning home run off of starting ace Mitch Merica, to hand both he and the Sagamore Athletic Conference leading Chargers their first conference loss of the season. North Montgomery (14-3, 7-1 SAC) hit the ball sharply most of the game, but stranded eleven base runners on the night. “We hit the ball hard,” Chargers coach Matt Merica said. “Those balls were hit right at someone. That's just baseball.” Lebanon (4-8, 3-5 SAC) got stand-out pitching from sophomore Tyler Welborn (WP), who struck out two, and yielded two hits in an inning only once, on his way to the win. “It was great to see Tyler get the victory,” lauded Rick Cosgray, the Tigers' skipper. “He's had two tough losses. He pitched well, and the defense was solid. We made the routine outs behind Tyler, and he got the win.” Jackson Bland earned the save for Lebanon, Merica (4-1) suffered his first loss. Baylee Adams added to his State leading doubles count with the

Game STATS

LEBANON 4, NORTH MONTGOMERY 2 Lebanon 000 100 3-4 7 1 North 000 000 2-2 6 1 2B: (N) Adams, B; Gwynn, V. HR: (L) Myers, C.

Photo provided by Susan Ehrlich

Will Kellerman helped the Athenians stay error free.

North AB R H RBI ZACHARY, D 4 0 1 0 CLARY, J 4 0 1 0 ADAMS, B 2 1 1 0 LEWIS, J 2 1 1 0 FREDERICK, B 4 0 0 0 MERICA, M 2 0 0 0 GWINN, V 4 0 1 0 KNECHT, C 2 0 0 0 MOREHOUSE, R 3 0 1 0 DONAHUE, C 1 0 0 0 MOSELY, T 0 0 0 0 Totals 29 2 6 0

Athenians stay unbeaten in SAC

Lebanon AB R H RBI HUDSON, B 4 1 1 1 STAMBAUGH, E 4 0 1 0 MYERS, C 4 1 1 1 SHEARER, B 3 0 1 2 BLAND, J 3 0 1 0 DAFOE, Z 3 0 1 0 WELBORN, T 3 0 0 0 PARKER, H 2 0 0 0 BLAND, N 2 1 0 0 FARRIS, C 1 1 1 0 Totals 29 4 7 4

Crawfordsville looked to continue their seven-game winning streak, and stay atop the Sagamore Conference, Tuesday evening by playing host to Danville. The Athenians struck for four first inning runs and never looked back in a 5-1 win. “It was a very typical game for us,” Athenian skipper John Froedge said. “It was low scoring, we had good pitching and played solid defense. We really took command with that four-run first.” Brendan Dowell started the rally with a one-out walk. He stole second and scored on Caden Jones single to make it 1-0. Chase Dowell drew a walk and both scored on Weston Evans single. Luke Mangold, who courtesy ran for Evans, scored on Payton Abney’s base hit to make it 4-0. Trent Johnson took command from there. The junior scattered five hits, while walking four and striking out 13. “Trent labored a little

By Scott Smith

[email protected]

North MERICA, M CLARY, J Totals

IP H R ER BB SO 6.1 5 4 4 1 2 .2 2 0 0 0 1 7 7 4 4 1 2

Lebanon WELBORN, T PARKER, H BLAND, J Totals

IP H R ER BB SO 5 4 0 0 4 2 1 1 2 2 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 2 7 6 2 2 5 4

first Charger's hit of the contest. Although most of the outs behind Welborn were routine, one was not. With one out in the third inning, North Montgomery loaded the bases behind Justin Clary's single and Baylee Adams' walk. Jordan Lewis was hit by a pitch, and the table was set for Bryce Frederick. The sophomore hit a shot right at Welborn, who came home for the second out, and catcher Bryce Shearer forced

The Paper photo by Lori Poteet

Riley Morehouse plays the hop to get the out.

Frederick at first, completing an unusual 1-2-3 double play, killing the best Chargers' rally. “Bryce hit the ball hard,” Merica mused. “If that ball gets through, we probably score two runs.” The Chargers (#13) just joined Crawfordsville (#3) in the top 15 of the Indiana Baseball Coaches Association Class 3A state rankings this week, but will likely drop. Still, Merica anticipates a rebound. “There are 14 games

in the SAC. A lot of our goals are still reachable.” Then the coach added, “We've not had to face a lot of adversity yet this season. We'll handle this.” The loss snaps a tengame winning streak dating back to April 16. The Tigers and Chargers meet again in four days on neutral ground, traveling up the road to play at Purdue University. North Montgomery will squeeze in a home contest against Rossville at 6 p.m. Wednesday.

tonight, because he didn’t have his normal command,” Froedge added. “He’s a leader for us and showed great poise.” “The defense played well behind him as we had another error free game,” he continued. “We’ve only committed three errors in our last seven games.” Crawfordsville was led offensively by Evans who finished 2-for-3. Jones, Chase Dowell and Abney each recorded a hit with an RBI, and Josh Blackburn collected the other Athenian hit. “I think the biggest story offensively for us tonight was that we only struck out once,” Froedge said. “When you can put pressure on the opponent by making them make plays, that’s big at this level.” Crawfordsville improves to 15-3 overall and 8-0 in the conference. With North Montgomery’s loss to Lebanon, they take a one game lead over their County rivals. The Athenians travel to Danville (4-7, 2-4 SAC) Thursday to complete the series.

Southmont baseball shutout by Frankfort ace By Maria Leichty

[email protected]

NEW MARKET – The Southmont baseball team was putting runners on Tuesday against Sagamore Athletic Conference foe Frankfort, but they couldn’t get the big hit they needed. Frankfort, on the other hand, chipped away the victory 6-0 for their second SAC win. “They capitalized on a couple of our little mistakes and we were leaving guys on,” Mountie coach Jamie Welliever said. The first inning was similar for each team with a runner getting on from an error but a Mountie passed ball scored Hot Dog Diego Santos while Frankfort pitcher Christian Lopez (WP) drew a fly ball to strand two of South’s runners. Southmont’s Koy Archer had a hard single to start the inning with Brandon Rogers moving him over on a sac bunt. Perfect start to an inning. A Frankfort error put Boone Welliever on, but a pick off at second kept South out of scoring position. Risty Bullerdick’s single put two on again but a fly ball sent the Mounties

Game STATS

FRANKFORT 6, SOUTHMONT 0 Frankfort 110 022 0-6 9 3 Southmont 000 000 0-0 3 1 2B: (F) Miller, Campbell. HR: (F) Miller South ARCHER ROGERS WELLIEVER BULLERDICK WEMER WORM COX CHADD STANLEY (DH) BERRISFORD Totals

AB R H RBI 4 0 1 0 3 0 1 0 3 0 0 0 2 0 1 0 3 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 - - - 25 0 3 0

Frankfort SMITH DI. SANTOS CAMPBELL MILLER CHAVEZ DAVIS DA. SANTOS LOPEZ SHELLEY Totals

AB R H RBI 4 1 1 0 4 2 1 0 3 1 1 1 3 1 2 3 3 0 0 0 4 0 1 0 3 1 1 0 4 0 0 0 4 0 2 1 32 6 9 5

South WEMER ROACH Danville LOPEZ

IP 4.2 2.1 IP 7

H 6 3 H 3

R 4 2 R 0

ER BB SO 3 3 6 2 1 1 ER BB SO 0 2 9

in scoreless after having three baserunners. Frankfort built off their first-inning momentum by stringing together hits and capitalizing off of a few walks. “We’ve been really close,” Hot Dog coach Andy Dudley said. “We had a sloppy start to the season and couldn’t come up with the big hit we

The Paper photo by Lori Poteet

Cole Wemer connected with a long shot in the first inning but could not get it past the Frankfort outfield.

needed. It’s the little things that wins ball games and we did those tonight.” Two hits from the bottom of the lineup in Daniel Santos and Dyllan Shelley scored another in the second. Each team had at least one base runner in the first five innings but South fell off the map in the sixth while Frankfort sealed the deal.

David Miller sent a bomb over right-center for a two-run homerun in the fifth inning, while Frankfort’s one, two, three spots strung together three hits and a fielder’s choice from Miller for two more runs in the sixth. The Mounties only had one hit after the first inning and could not solve Lopez’s breaking ball.

Lopez struck out nine Mounties. “Their pitcher did a good job and he had us off balance,” Welliever said. “We couldn’t come up with the big hit and capitalize and they did.” Archer, Bullerdick and Rogers had South’s three hits with Bullerdick going 1-for-2 and a hit-by-pitch. Cole Wemer got the loss

Extra POINTS On Tap In Montgomery County

On the Air

Today in Montgomery County Sports

Today High School Sports Schedule

• North baseball vs. Rossville, 6 p.m. • C’ville softball at Fountain Central, 5 p.m. • North softball vs. Clinton Central, 5:30 p.m. • C’ville girls tennis at Fountain Central, 4:30 p.m. • North girls tennis vs. McCutcheon, 5 p.m. • South girls tennis at Lebanon, 5 p.m.

May 4, 2006 Crawfordsville’s boys golf team won a triangular meet, defeating Seeger and Attica 167-190-209. The Athenians’ Justin Lourash took medalist honors with a 40 on the Crawfordsville Municipal Golf Course.

Online Exclusives • Wabash baseball: Senior day marred by doubleheader loss to Denison • More photos from Lori Poteet featruing Boone Welliever, Baylee Adams and Stazia Mikalik

giving up six hits, four runs (three earned) and three walks while striking out six. Cole Roach came in relief and gave up three hits, two earned runs and one walk with one strikeout. Southmont (8-4, 4-3 SAC) will face off with Frankfort (4-9, 2-6 SAC) again Thursday at Frankfort.

Pro May 4 May 5 May 6 May 4 May 5 May 6 May 4 May 5 May 6

Cardinals Phillies 7:15 p.m. FS-M Phillies 12:45 p.m. FS-M Pirates 7:15 p.m. FS-M Cubs at Pirates 11:35 a.m. CSN Nationals 7:05 p.m. CSN+ Nationals 1:20 p.m. CSN Reds Giants 12:35 p.m. MLB.TV Brewers 7:10 p.m. FS-O Brewers 7:10 p.m. FS-O

Wednesday, May 4, 2016

A6

The Paper of Montgomery County

Top of the Second

Mounties drop heartbreaker to Frankfort The Paper

NEW MARKET – Hits were abundant in Southmont softball’s match up with Frankfort Tuesday. Frankfort’s 14 hits put the Hot Dogs just above the Mounties’ 12 hits and secured them the 9-7 victory. Frankfort jumped ahead offensively in the top of the first with two runs and three hits. However, Sydney Casteel’s triple plated Avery Hess for the Mounties to put the score at 2-1 at the end of the first. Kaiti Chadd started a big third inning for South as she was followed by hits

from Jordan Crist, Avery Hess and a sacrifice from Paige Knowling. Chadd scored on an error, Hess’s single scored Crist and Hess scored on a wild pitch. Score came to 4-2. Frankfort chipped two away in the third and fifth inning, one off a Southmont error, to tie it up. However, the teams weren’t done as the seventh inning brought an action-packed six outs. Five hits (three doubles) and five runs from Frankfort was countered by four hits and three runs from South, not quite enough to win the game for

the Mounties. Avery Hess led the Mounties going 4-for-5 with two RBIs and three runs. Knowling and Crist had two hits while Casteel, Sheean, Emerson and Chadd had one hit apiece. Castell went 1-for-1 with four walks. Paige Knowling (LP) gave up 14 hits, nine runs (seven earned), one walk while striking out four. Out of 40 batters faced, she threw 31 first-pitch strikes. The Mounties (10-4, 6-2 SAC) face Frankfort (9-4, 4-4 SAC) Thursday at Frankfort for a rematch.

The Paper photo by Lori Poteet

Paige Sheean went 1-for-2 with two walks and one run Tuesday.

 Roundup: Crawfordsville tennis sweeps Western Boone C’ville girls tennis CRAWFORDSVILLE 5, WESTERN BOONE 0 Mia Katzenberger (C) def. Alissa Jahn 6-0, 6-1; Emma Heinhold (C) def. Maggie Klingensmith 6-4, 6-1; Sarah Chalmers (C) def. Katie Collins 7-5, 6-0; Lizzy Katzenberger/Lilly Bushong (C) def. Emma Schaefer/Meg Kinslow 6-2, 6-1; Faith Fyffe/Reilly Dunham (C) def. Kylie Dobbs/Katie Coffman 6-1, 6-2

C’ville softball

DANVILLE 13, CRAWFORDSVILLE 3

Danville C’ville

100 561-13 15 2 000 210-3 3 1

North softball

LEBANON 13, NORTH MONTGOMERY 0

Lebanon North

000 418-13 9 0 000 000-0 0 3

 Correction

South girls tennis GREENCASTLE 5, SOUTHMONT 0 Bailey Zapp (G) def. Kelly Tucker 6-0, 6-4; Rachel Chadd (G) def. Kennady Black 6-0, 6-0; Madison Trout (G) def. Cora Waddell 6-0, 6-1; Lily Spencer/ Lydia Trout (G) def. Katie Rosentreter/Hope Lighty 6-0, 6-1; Madeline Graham/Nicole Newgent (G) def. Olivia Williams/Samantha Dittmer 6-0, 6-0

On May 3, The Paper reported that Larry Rice was from Waynetown. This information is incorrect as he was born and raised in Linden, Ind. Linden-native Rice will be commemorated today in Brownsburg at 2 p.m. The Paper regrets the error.

South track & field

Girls: SOUTHMONT 75, DANVILLE 55 Boys: Danville 70, SOUTHMONT 61

South boys golf CENTRAL CATHOLIC 175, SOUTHMONT 200

Southmont Individuals: Blake Williams 41, Charles Bullerdick 49, Will Bradley 54, Austin Wente/Hunter Hite 56

BABY BLUES

MONTGOMERY MIX-UP

Below is a list of words that can be found in the puzzle below. They may be written forward, backward, or even diagonally. The solution will be in tomorrow’s edition of The Paper.

A C L P AGHH R A C S I WW E S Y P T P L R A R L E R K A A I HC A P T S S R

THATABABY

Ahoy Captain Parrot

MALLARD FILLMORE

CRANKSHAFT

BARNEY GOOGLE

Saturday

R P O A H N U Y T P

Captain Parrot

Ship Scallywag Treasure

Ahoy Pirates Hook

C I A O P P S S A A

S H Y R K I A A I A

Pirates Treasure Scallywag

A S A A R K E H N L

S T L S I O R Y H A

Hook Ship

S I A P R I T A A P

Solution to previous puzzle

E I HF T T ML K K L I E E E T L R KB

B H H E I N R E A K

I E I E CR KB OB I O BR I R B T RR

T S T E L L I F T E

N F T E Y T C T MH R I UC UK OC E K

I A S R E S R E I K

S K Y I E I K P R L

2015 The Paper PrimeRib ©Sirloin Ribeye Steak TBoneof Montgomery Thick Cut Fillet County

The Paper of Montgomery County

Wednesday, May 4, 2016

A7

HOW MONTGOMERY COUNTY VOTED

COUNTY OFFICES republican

Name Votes Percent

PRECINCT COMMITTEEMAN Brown

Rick Dewitt Lynn Ringis

196 135

59.21 40.79

Karen Craig John Stull

129 211

37.94 62.06

Gary Booth Lonnie Jones

192 169

53.19 46.81

Jennifer Bentley James Rivers Neil Barclay Tim Brown Dan Guard Sam Smith Alan Zachary Jim Morris Jennifer Lowe Juan Wilson Todd Barton Luke Denman Kent Priebe

Clark

Coal Creek

Name Votes Percent

Harry Siamas

6,731

100

Karyn Douglas Valerie Howard

4,520 2,762

60.61 39.39

3,854 3,638

51.44 48.56

6,481

100

Jeb Bush Ben Carson Chris Christie Ted Cruz Carly Fiorina John Kasich Rand Paul Marco Rubio Donald Trump

Judge

Clerk

Recorder

Jennifer Bentley Sherri Ledbetter

Coroner

Crawfordsville 1

185 92

66.79 33.21

Tom Cummins

6,311

100

112 192

36.84 63.16

John Frey Gayle Lough

4,406 3,308

57.12 42.88

236

100

Phillip Bane

6,061

100

198 155

56.09 43.91

151

100

128

100

Gary Booth Bob Campbell Ron Dickerson Terry Hockersmith Greg Morrison John Pickerill

3,746 2,711 3,301 4,413 3,627 2,923

18.08 13.08 15.93 21.3 17.5 14.11

221

100

255

100

29 70

29.29 70.71

Phillip Bane Neil Barclay Todd Barton Jennifer Bentley Philip Boots Brett Cating Kathy Crawford Rick Dewitt Karyn Douglas John Frey Jim Fulwider Dan Guard Kent Minnette Aaron Morgan Tyler Nichols Marie Pickerill Kevin Rhodes La’Shar Sharp Rebecca Shelton Daniel Taylor

4,401 3,029 4,941 3,770 4,788 2,657 2,318 2,017 3,079 4,513 4,689 3,573 2,695 3,838 2,219 2,436 2,524 1,710 2,530 3,836

6.71 4.62 7.54 5.75 7.3 4.05 3.54 3.08 4.7 6.88 7.15 5.45 4.11 5.85 3.38 3.72 3.85 2.61 3.86 5.85

Crawfordsville 2 Crawfordsville 3 Crawfordsville 4 Crawfordsville 5 Crawfordsville 6 Crawfordsville 7 Crawfordsville 8 Crawfordsville 9

Crawfordsville 10

108 61

63.91 36.09

George Cox Gregory Lough

194 258

42.92 57.08

John Frey Charles White

159 129

55.21 44.79

Don Mills

189

100

Kimbie Casteel Mitzi Keller

105 81

56.45 43.55

Franklin

Madison Ripley Scott

Sugar Creek

John Gable

124

100

Mark Barclay Jeffrey Birk

156 117

57.14 42.86

Union 1 Union 2

Kathy Crawford Mark McClamroch

60 149

28.71 71.29

Terry Hockersmith Richard Vanarsdel

248 187

57.01 42.99

Tom Cummins Mark Davidson

44 124

26.19 73.81

Union 3 Union 4 Union 5

203 123

Union 6

332 157

67.89 32.11

Tim Fairfield Jim Fulwider

75 275

21.43 78.57

Jerry Chadwick Darcy Crook

158 146

51.97 48.03

Barry Lewis Melvin Vance

169 210

44.59 55.41

Walnut Wayne

Surveyor

Commissioner Dist. 1 Commissioner Dist. 3

Council At Large (Vote for three)

STATE DELEGATE (Vote for 14)

President

55 81 24 2,912 19 632 46 60 4,412

0.67 0.98 0.29 35.34 0.23 7.67 0.56 0.73 53.54

Marlin Stutzman 1,731 Todd Young 5,786

23.03 76.97

Mike Pence Kevin Grant Todd Rokita

6,072 2,359 5,057

100 31.81 68.19

Sharon Negele

771

100

Tim Brown

5,789

100

U.S. SENATOR GOVERNOR

STATE REP DIST. 13 STATE REP DIST. 41

NATIONAL offices democrat

Name

Votes Percent

Hillary Clinton Bernie Sanders

715 966

42.53 57.47

1,354

100

1,449

100

1,373

100

Mike Childress

120

100

Howard Pollchik

1,180

100

President

Baron Hill

GOVERNOR

John Gregg John Dale

U.S. SENATOR

U.S REPRESENTATIVE STATE REP DIST. 13 STATE REP DIST. 41 HOLIDAY BASKET BONANZA NOW $44.99 reg $74.99

COUNTY OFFICES DEMOCRAT

40% OFF

Name Votes Percent

800.296.0388

STATE DELEGATE

Joyce Burnette David Hadley Sheridan Hadley Tamara Meyers Kaidlyne Neukam J. Eric Schronce Kathleen Schronce Virginia Servies

1,028 1,061 1,012 964 870 854 913 1,199

13.01 13.43 12.81 12.2 11.01 10.81 11.56 15.18

USE OFFER CODE: BONANZA030 AT CHECKOUT: DancingDeer.com/ BONANZA CALL: (some restrictions apply)

#1 Doctor-Designed Meal Delivery Program in the U.S.!

FOR

60.6 39.4

Philip Boots Kevin Rhodes

Union 7

NATIONAL OFFICES REPUBLICAN

Name Votes Percent

Darren Forman

Karyn Douglas Rebecca Shelton

Tom Boots Brian Keim

COUNTY OFFICES republican

+ FREE SHIPPING*!

bistromd.com/special | 800-237-9109

REAL RESULTS, NO CONTRACTS SATISFACTION GUARANTEED

school closings?

TAKE NOTICE!

Please visit us online: thepaper24-7.com

It’s Your Right to Know... and it’s the law.

Indiana newspapers are the trusted source that your government uses to inform you about decisions that effect your life. Public notice advertisements - also called legals - provide information about taxes, zoning, new business and other areas your government is involved in. The good news is that this information is easily accessible to you in print and online.

INSERT LOGO HERE

find it here! thepaper

Visit u

thepaper24 For full public notice listings go to:

IndianaPublicNotices.com YourWebsite.com

ThePaper24-7.com

Thanks for voting, Montgomery County!

Wednesday, May 4, 2016

A8

The Paper of Montgomery County

Þ CARE  From Page A3 our youth. North Montgomery also understands this concept of community, caring and responsiveness. Whether or not it is visible to the community, North Montgomery is doing everything they can to prevent these kinds of tragedies and to support the youth and adults who are trying to cope with our most recent loss. I have met with North Montgomery administrators and counselors this week and I can assure you they are doing everything they can. In their efforts to be respectful of their youth and families, they are not publicizing all they are doing, but they are doing it, quietly and with great care and compassion. They are supporting their staff and students, they are providing evidence based, and specialized training and they are planning continued training for staff and resources for parents. I will be at the community meeting that Brooke Lowe and Tom Ward have put together. The Youth Service Bureau wants to be a part of the solution. It is a good first step to working together to protect our most precious resource. As we move forward, there are things all of us can do to help. We can educate ourselves about the most effective prevention programs and then bring those programs to groups we are connected with who work with youth. The more people we reach, the better it will be for all youth in our community. You can also

volunteer, whether at the Youth Service Bureau or other programs where you can support youth. Those kinds of supports make a difference in the life of a child. We can talk about the problem and not be afraid to bring it into the open, let’s remove the stigma from this and other mental health issues, let’s help every person know that treatment and support are always available. We can support and empower families and our community to know that we can do anything together. We can be aware there are some warning signs to pay attention to. The National Suicide Prevention Line lists these as warning signs: • Talking about wanting to die or to kill themselves. • Looking for a way to kill themselves, such as searching online or buying a gun • Talking about feeling hopeless or having no reason to live. • Talking about feeling trapped or in unbearable pain. • Talking about being a burden to others. • Increasing the use of alcohol or drugs. • Acting anxious or agitated; behaving recklessly. • Sleeping too little or too much. • Withdrawing or isolating themselves. • Showing rage or talking about seeking revenge. • Displaying extreme mood swings. If someone is talking about hurting them-

selves, we cannot just assume they are “attention seeking” as they are often labeled. We need to understand that kind of statement is in fact a cry for help and we need to answer the cry with caring, compassion, support and intervention. We need to increase the protective factors that help prevent suicide as well. It is a proactive approach that can have tremendous positive impact. SAMSHA gives us this list of protective factors: • Effective clinical care for mental, physical and substance use disorders • Easy access to a variety of clinical interventions • Restricted access to highly lethal means of suicide • Strong connections to family and community support • Support through ongoing medical and mental health care relationships • Skills in problem solving, conflict resolution and handling problems in a non-violent way (resiliency) • Cultural and religious beliefs that discourage suicide and support self-preservation If we all work together we can make a tremendous difference and create a culture where our vision of striving to have a community that respects, protects and nurtures all of our children and youth is a reality. Karen Branch, LSW Executive Director, Montgomery County Youth Service Bureau

SUPER HERO

NIGHT

AT VICTORY FIELD SATURDAY, MAY 21, 7:05 PM PRESENTED BY

Thanks for reading The Paper!

indyindians.COM Buy. Sell. Rent. Lease.

THE PAPER classifieds. employment

GARAGE SALE

Are You Still Paying Too Much For Your Medications? You can save up to 93% when you fill your prescriptions with our Canadian and International prescription service.

Their Price

Celebrex $

TM

910.20

Typical US Brand Price for 200mg x 100

Our Price

Celecoxib* $

76.67

Generic equivalent of CelebrexTM Generic price for 200mg x 100

Get An Extra $15 Off & Free Shipping On Your 1st Order! Call the number below and save an additional $15 plus get free shipping on your first prescription order with Canada Drug Center. Expires June 30, 2016. Offer is valid for prescription orders only and can not be used in conjunction with any other offers. Valid for new customers only. One time use per household. Use code 15FREE to receive this special offer.

Call Now! 800-307-0253

Please note that we do not carry controlled substances and a valid prescription is required for all prescription medication orders. Use of these services is subject to the Terms of Use and accompanying policies at www.canadadrugcenter.com.

Lighthouse Natural Living

Vitamins, Herbs, Nutritional Counseling

Melody Overfelt

Certified Natural Health Professional

Abigale Pittman

Licensed Massage Therapist

1770 S. US Hwy 231, Ste. 1 Crawfordsville 765-307-2888

~10% off massages for Mothers in May~

HUGE GARAGE SALE Fri + Sat 8:30 - 4 old butcher block, 1950 chambers gas stove, 2 kerosene stoves, antiques, glassware, books, cookie jar collection 203 /school St. Darlington ANNUAL TRI KAPPA COMMUNITY GARAGE SALE Saturday, May 7th 8am-1pm The garage sale will be held at the old fire station in Ladoga All proceeds of the garage sale will be used for South Montgomery High School Scholarships Maps will be distributed at teh fire station Coffing Storage Sale 6356 South St. Darlington Thurs & Fri 8-5 Sat 8-3 (half priced on Sat) porcelain dolls, salt and pepper shakers, battery wheel chair, shower chair, pigs, very old school desk, grafting/art table, red flyer wagon (like new) stuffed animals, Dr. Seuss books, lots of children’s books, 22” push mower, thimbles, bookcases, saxophone, old console type piano, Kenmore upright sweeper, color TVs, marbles, bed & bunk bed, dressers, shot glasses, humidifier, hedge trimmer, 2 welding dresses, bowling ball, Spice Girls/Barbie dolls in original box, Avon plates (‘74-’99) and much more

Bathroom

CLASS A CDL DRIVERS

Full Time DAYS Minimum of 1 Year Experience

GOOD PAY AND BENEFITS Medical, Dental, Vision & 401k Available Paid holidays & vacations! Home nightly. No touch freight. Crawfordsville, IN

Call Jim at 1-800-621-1478 x131 Or apply online at www.fabexpress.com

Real Estate FOR SALE Nice property in Wingate. A building 34x74 has nice garage overhead doors, new paint. $12,000 765-267-0085 2, 3 and 4 bedroom homes, Contract Sales, Hooks, 18-8700 362-0185. www.hookshomesindiana.com

Computer Service

Bathrooms • R • US Locally Owned and Operated

Tub/Shower Conversions Ceramic Tile/Flooring Pedestal Sinks/Vanities Plumbing Repairs Complete Job 25 Years Experience Free Estimates

Bob Berzé 765-366-6665

drain service

230-2132 109 N. Washington St. Crawfordsville, IN 47933 www.phantompoint.com Managed IT



Security



Phone Systems

Looking for a part-time job that doesn't involve the words, Would You Like Fries With That? Do you like to write? Are you good at typing? Are you available in the evenings? If you answered yes, then e-mail us at [email protected] and let us know. We're looking for bright, eager people to report local news and events. Sound like you? Then e-mail us today!



PC Repair

• Turn Key IT Solutions

Septic and Sewer

merchandise Brand NEW Queen Pillowtop Matresses and Box Springs. $200. Still in factory plastic. We can deliver. Call 317-480-6463

ANIMAL Lab Puppies AKC. Silver, champagne, chocolate, white, fox red, black, and charcoal . (765)7446201 or billcrabtreesilverlabs.com Lost Cat White in some areas, tiger striped in others. Lost in Northridge area. Reward. 765-532-8733

Has an entry level business office assistant position available. Must have understanding of Microsoft Office, Quickbooks experience, attention to detail and strong communication skills a plus. Part-time, 10 hrs a week. Apply at jobs@thepaper24-7. com EOE

Construction

Johnson’s Drain Service Septic and Sewer

If your drain won’t flow, just let us know! www.johnsonsdrainservice.com

Tyler Johnson Owner 765-794-4705 Cell: 765-376-8310

Our family serving yours since 1968

Suggest Documents