RECORDER T H E
R I S I N G
www.theohiocountynews.com
S U N
Thursday, May 10, 2012
Issue No. 19
75¢
SUBMITTED PHOTOS
An old barn and well are among the safety concerns at the Denver Siekman Environmental Park which prompted the Rising Sun Ohio County Park Board to halt all activities at the park until the issues have been addressed.
Park closed for safety issues Tim Hillman Recorder-News Editor risingsun@registerpublications.com
The Denver Siekman Environmental Park has been officially closed to the public after a special meeting of the Rising Sun Ohio County Park Board on Tuesday, May 1. Board member Dale Shultz shared photos taken at the park
which raised safety and liability concerns after the park board voted to take over the environmental park at the request of the county commissioners who own the land. A concrete well had already been filled in by county workers prior to the meeting. In addition to that well, three additional wells are located on the property located off Ind. 56 south of Rising Sun.
There are other buildings of concern including an old barn and house, all of which are safety issues. Board member PG Gentrup acknowledged the concern but noted that once the issues are solved it will make a better park. Commissioners Connie Brown, Todd Walton and Shane Koons were in attendance at the meeting along with attorney John Stroup and county councilmen Doug Baker, Tammy
Elbright and April Hautman. Once all is cleaned up then address the liability issue. Koons noted that the county highway workers have a three week period to work on resolving the safety problems. Safety overrides everything, noted board member Laurie Stegemiller. Larry Bailey, member of the Denver Siekman Environmental Park
Board, said their continues to be a lack of communication between the two boards. Bailey asked that boards the barn be salvaged that have historical value. After the decision to suspend activities, Janie Eldridge, DSEP director, was busy cancelling upcoming events including an Alternative Energy Workshop originally scheduled for this weekend.
Phelps named to school board TIM HILLMAN RECORDER-NEWS EDITOR
The Rising Sun Ohio County School Board reviewed four letters of interest before selecting Tim Phelps as replacement for Mike Hussong during a special board meeting Tuesday, May 1. Phelps, a former candidate for school board, was selected after his letter of interest was reviewed in executive session along with those by James Jenkins, Tom McKay and Kim Hussong. There was no public discussion and no interviews were conducted of the interested candidates. However, in Phelps’ letter, he noted that “my having my own children enrolled in the school system will motivate me to perform any and all duties required of the position.” McKay’s letter of interest included his employment with the Dearborn-Ohio
SEE PHELPS, PAGE 12
WEATHER TODAY
Partly cloudy
Friday
Mostly clear
TIM HILLMAN
John Maxwell Sr. above left, watches as John Maxwell Jr., above right, explains how things went during the big push which is shown completed at right.
Big ‘push’ for boat ramp completed Tim Hillman Recorder-News Editor risingsun@registerpublications.com
The Rising Sun riverfront was packed with spectators on Friday, May 4 as a near world record concrete “push” was made by Maxwell Construction. The Dearborn County based contractor pushed one of the largest boat ramp slabs ever to be completed and
10 feet shy of a world record. The new 9 lane boat ramp is 145’ X 45’, 8” thick and nearly 300 tons of concrete pushed by 1600 horsepower of eight Caterpillars. John Maxwell Sr. deferred comment to son John Jr. who said the new boat ramp should be operational for the July 4 holiday. He credited great weather in April for the successful completion of the project thus far. Maxwell poured the boat ramps at
HIGH .......68 LOW......43 HIGH .......70 LOW.....44
Saturday
Clear
Sunday:
Partly cloudy
Monday:
Partly cloudy
HIGH .......74 LOW.....48 HIGH .......73 LOW.....52 HIGH ........74 LOW.....51
INSIDE COMMUNITY DEATHS SPORTS
5 4 7-9
Copyright Register Publications, 2012
129th Year, No. 19 TIM HILLMAN
Eight Caterpillars made the big push of the boat ramp with local contractors, including Randy Robinson Excavating, shown at right, taking part.
Lawrenceburg but this is the biggest and most unique project. “ I saw it being done on U-Tube and deciding this was the definite way, to go,” said John Maxwell Jr., who has since posted the company’s own U-Tube video on the internet done by Randy Maxwell. Helping out with the big push was Woody Bucher. Maxwell said,” I think he was as nervous as I was.” Afterward, Bucher praised the joint effort in making the push a
success. “seeing local contractors working together is kinda neat,” he noted, as Robinson Excavating and McGraw Excavating supplied help. “Maxwell is great,”he added. “We’ve done a lot of firsts together including the flood gate on US 50.” Many members of the Ohio Valley River Cats Catfish Anglers Club were in attendance as they host an annual catfish tournament in September. Also in attendance were SEE ‘PUSH’, PAGE 12
PAGE 2
THURSDAY, MAY 10, 2012
RECORDER & NEWS
PARK DEPARTMENT RECITAL SATURDAY
Lions
Carousel Horses
Bottom from left; Vanessa Woodruff, Cloe Ballard, Avery Boes, Keira Holbrook, Nora Powell. Standing; Cheyenne Wagner, Justice Cravens, Mallory Banschbach, Caydence Morris, Lilly Woytsek, Abigail Kremer.
Ringmasters
Bottom from left: Shelby Lillie, Emma Davis, Allee Howlett, Emily Kendrick, Emily Widner, Allyson Kunkel. Middle row: Alex Courter, Bay Hinkle, Emma Levi, Sarah Camden, Skylar Durham, Allison Steele. Standing; Keira Oser, Jena Bovard, Miranda Hall, Kassidy Widner, Caroline Stapleton, Carly Siekman, Zion Burnett.
Dance recital has Circus theme The Rising Sun Ohio County Parks Board ninth annual dance recital will be Saturday, May 12 at 1 p.m. and 3 p.m. at Rising Sun High School under the direction of Laura Baresel. The “Circus” theme will have dancers performing such feats as lion-taming, sharpshooting, tight-rope walking and ribbon dancing.
There will be clowns, cotton candy, a magical carousel and it all ends with a big celebration of balloons and confetti. Free Dance Day will be at the Senior Center on May 17. For more details and to reserve your spot; please call Laura Baresel at 438-9281. Fall classes will begin on Aug. 20.
Rabies Clinic Saturday Moore’s Veterinary Clinic will be hosting a Rabies Clinic from 1 to 3 p.m. on Saturday, May 12.
Can’t wait until next week to see what’s happening? Subscribers can get the latest news by logging onto www.theohiocountynews. com
The offices are located at 119 1/2 North Walnut Street in Rising Sun. Call 438-2207.
Bottom from left: Kaylee Ferarri, Cloe Ballard, BreeAnn Bennett, Caydence Morris. Standing; Gracie Carrigan, Rachel Schwing, Julia Hon, Kenzie Bruce, Sonora Wagner
Cotton Candy
From left; Julia Hon, Hannah Warr, Delia Dunagan, Ashley Bowne, Arynn Kunkel, Lillie Davis, Emily Camden, Zane Huss PHOTOS BY TOM CAPPEL
Redi-Reference & Crossword
NEAMAN FLORAL — Flowers For Any Occasion—
Balloons Greenhouse Yankee Candles Virgil Neaman Owner
438-2342 Rising Sun 1319 SR 262
The Rising Sun Recorder USPS 466520 The Rising Sun Recorder is published each Thursday at Rising Sun, Indiana, 47040, phone 1-812-438-2011. Annual subscription prices are $20 for Ohio County; $25 for Kentucky, Ohio and out-of-county Indiana; $37 for all other locations. Single-copy price is 75 cents. Periodicals postage paid at Rising Sun, Indiana. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to The Rising Sun Recorder, P.O. Box 128, Rising Sun, IN 47040.
C & J Jewelry
STORAGE “Don’t Waste Your Space” Indoor Storage units from 5x10 to 10x30 Outdoor Storage for motor homes, campers and boats Security Lighting, Cameras & Fencing
Rising Sun Store and Lock Smart Dr. Rising Sun
812-438-9659 Enterprise Store and Lock 9 McCreary Ridge East Enterprise
Brad Henry Greg Hummel
Sunrise Store and Lock East Bellview Ln. Rising Sun
Bev Koons
All Work Completed On Site Jewelry Sales Appraisals 425 Third Street, Suite 101 Aurora, Indiana 47001
Repairs Stone Setting 812-926-4002 www.CandJ-Jewelry.con
“For all of your insurance needs and mores” Home • Farm • Business • Auto & High Risk Auto • Life • Health Ira’s • Annuities • Mutual Funds • 401K Rollovers Package & Senior Discounts Available 204 Main St. Rising Sun 812-438-2630
ADVERTISING: This newspaper is liable for errors in advertising only for the space occupied for the error and not the entire portion of the advertising.
Thanks to all who visited me and sent me cards during my stay in the hospital. May God bless you.
-Thelma E. Kelley PUBLIC AUCTION at Lutz Auction Center
Take I-74 to St. Leon-Lawrenceburg exit, then south on SR 1 for 3 miles to Dover, IN. East on N. Dearborn Rd for 1.4 miles to Auction Ln. From Lawrenceburg, follow SR 1 to Dover, East on N. Dearborn Rd for 1.4 miles to Auction
Saturday, May 12, 2012 • 9:00AM Doors open at 8:00 AM
Ford 16hp lawn mower; large selection of Antiques and Collectibles; 2 antique wood burning pot belly stoves; 40 yr collection of Disney memorabilia; Coke memorabilia; Coke picnic cooler; beer signs and mirrors; gumball machine; fishing rods and reels; older tools and garage items from an Estate.AUCTIONEERS NOTE: Not a complete listing. Our building will be full. Check lutzauctions.com for details, pictures and late additions. Various Consignors – Owners Dale & Randy Lutz – Auctioneers 513-266-1859 / 513-266-1860 AU01030327 / AU10100126 / AH29900027 TERMS: Cash or check with ID.
No Buyers Premium.
Advertise here for just $12 per week For information call Joe Grace: 812-537-0063 or 812-438-2011
THURSDAY, MAY 10, 2012
PAGE 3
RECORDER
PARK DEPARTMENT RECITAL SATURDAY
Confetti and Balloons
Clowns
Bottom from left; Natalie Fisk, Olivia Cate, Shelby Williams, Addison Radcliff, Jade Cravens. Standing: Hannah Kremer, Hillary Lambert, Aubree Witte, Erica Sizemore.
Bottom from left: Marissa Vecchiola, Ashley Bowne, Frankie Seals, Anabel Lillie. Middle from left: Arynn Kunkel, Abby Woytsek, Ivy Hinkle, McKenzie Ferarri, Lillie Davis, Hannah Warr. Standing: Anastasia Faddis, Ryleigh McAllister, Julia Meyer, Jessica Dresmann, Delia Dunagan, Emily Camden.
Ribbon Dancers
Sharpshooters
Skylar Durham, Allee Howlett, Emma Davis, Carly Siekman, Allyson Kunkel, Sarah Camden, Bay Hinkle.
Bottom from left; Kenzie Lageman, Makenzie Arnold, Kailyn Blackburn, Elizabeth Purdom, Caroline Barnard, Shealyn Bell. Standing: Sara Hopkins, Marissa Vecchiola, Lillian Northcutt, Magdalini Manologlou.
Tightrope-walkers
Bottom from left; Anabel Lillie, Lillie Davis, Delia Dunagan, Emily Camden, Frankie Seals, Hannah Warr. Standing: Emma Taylor, Ashley Bowne, Jessica Dresmann, Allison Steele, Miranda Hall, Julia Meyer, Ryleigh McAllister, Emma Davis, Shelby Lillie.
PHOTOS BY TOM CAPPEL
SERVING INDIANA AND KENTUCKY RESIDENTS
Stephenson
DISABILITY SERVICES Social Security Claims & Appeals No Fee Unless You Win Village Square Center - Unit 0 220 Clifty Drive • Madison, IN 47250 Donna L. Stephenson Representative
(812) 273-9701
www.stephensondisability.com
(toll free) 1-866-781-1133
You’re Invited!
Sparta Baptist Church is celebrating their
190th Anniversary!
No Closing Costs1 Competitive Rates
Sunday, May 20, 2012 You, your family, and friends are invited to celebrate the 190th anniversary of the Sparta Baptist Church, Sparta, Indiana! Feel free to join us for any part of the celebrations, or spend the day!
10:30a • Worship Service 12:15p • Meal 2:00p • Homecoming Celebration
Open a
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y t i u q E e Hom a and receive
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LIMITED TIME oNLY Visit MainSourceBank.com for a location nearest you. 1 Special offer available for Home Equity Line of Credit and Loan. For Home Equity Line of Credit, Annual Percentage Rate is 3% for a 10 year loan. APR is variable. Maximum APR is 18%. $50 annual fee. You must carry insurance on the property that secures this plan. Your minimum payments will not repay the principal that is outstanding on your line. You will be required to pay the entire outstanding balance in a single payment. Restrictions apply. Subject to credit approval. See branch for details. 2To receive gift card, customer must make a minimum draw of $20,000 and maintain that balance for 30 days for Home Equity Line of Credit. Draw must be taken within 90 days of account opening. For Home Equity Loan, customer must have a minimum opening loan balance of $20,000. Gift Member cards will be mailed after loan balance is verified. Offer expires July 14, 2012. Requires automatic debit for payment from a MainSource checking account. Subject to credit approval. FDIC See branch for details.
PAGE 4
RECORDER & NEWS
Death Notices
JUNE KINNETT, 84, of Aurora, Ind., passed away Monday, May 7, 2012 in Lawrenceburg, Ind. Surviving are Son, Brent Fleek of Washington, DC; Daughters, Robin (Rick) Kinnett of Aurora, Ind., Johnna Kinnett of West Chester, Ohio. Friends will be received 6 to 8 p.m., Thursday, May 10, 2012 at the Rullman Hunger Funeral Home, Aurora, Ind. Services will be held at the Funeral Home, Friday, at 1 p.m. Interment will follow in the Rising Sun New Cemetery, Rising Sun.
THURSDAY, MAY 10, 2012
EDNA FAYE TAYLOR, 69, of East Enterprise, Ind., passed away at 6:30 a.m., Saturday, April 28, at Kings Daughters’ Hospital, Madison, Ind. In addition to her devoted husband Norman, Edna is also survived by a daughter, Trish (Junior) Lozier, of Lawrenceburg; two sons Norman A. (Kim) Taylor, Jr., of East Enterprise; Robert Taylor, of East Enterprise; by a sister, Anna Louise Bledsoe, of West Harrison, Ind.; two brothers, Thomas Allen Ramey, of Harrison, Ohio; Danny Ramey, of Lawrenceburg. Funeral Service at Markland Funeral Home, Rising Sun, at Wednesday, May 2.
Friends called Wednesday 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. at Markland Funeral Home. A private family graveside was held at New Liberty Cemetery, East Enterprise.
Chan’s Plant Sale
LESLEY MARGARET TULLY(NEE DOLPHIN) of Rising Sun, Ind. passed away on May 3, 2012. Loving wife of nearly 49 years of Thomas Tully. Devoted mother to her daughter Allison Paige Tully (Johnny); Loving sister of Jan Hancock. She had requested no services be held. Arrangements by Markland Funeral Home, Rising Sun.
109 N. High St. (SR 56) • Rising Sun, IN 812-438-3182
May 10 - 11 - 12 & 19
(Close to the traffic light at Main & High Streets)
Herbs
Thyme, Sweet Woodruff, Lavender (special: 1-year-old plants, starting to bloom, $1,50), Lemon Balm, Mint, Pineapple Mint, Comfrey, Garlic Chives, Costmary, Garlic, Sweet Flag, Rosemary (50 cents each and up), Bronze Fennel, Moneywort, Chives, Sage, Catnip, Catmint, Orange Mint, Sarsaparilla (used to make root beer), Perilla, Lemon and Lime Basil, Osimum Large-leaf Basil, Sweet Marjoram, Pennyroyal (used as a flea repellant), Parsley, Anise Hyssop, Rue, Winter Savory, Wormwood, Southernwood, Greek Oregano, Stevia, Red Rubin Basil, Spearmint, Orange-scented Thyme, Russian Sage, Roman Chamomile, Salad Burnet, Lemon and Silver Dollar Eucalyptus, Cinnamon and Round Midnight Basils, Bush Basil, Chervil, Cilantro, Fenugreek, Wild Ginger, Marcelka and Common Marjoram, Peppermint, Lemon Thyme.
Perennials
Columbine, Baby Sun and Earty Sunrise Coreopsis, Japanese Anemone, Tall Phlox, Hostas, Bellflowers, Lily of the Valley, Day Lilies, Resurrection Lilies, Sweet Autumn Clematis, Pink and Yellow Epimedium (fairy wings - great for shade), English Ivy, Chinese Forget-Me-Not, Black-eyed Susan, Burgundy and Mixed Colors Gaillardia, Pinks, Shasta Daisy, Double Yellow Buttercups, Purple Fall Aster, Cranesbill Geranium, Grape Hyacinth, Passion Flower, Wisteria, Radar Love Clematis, Blue Salvia, Hardy Fern, Pink and True Evening Primrose, Hardy Begonia (pink-flowered), Purple Coneflower, Disco Belle Hardy Hibiscus, Red and Coral Reef Oriental Poppies, Lamb’s Ear, Red Beebalm.
Wildflowers
Bloodroot, Trout Lilies, Virginia Bluebells (Mertensia), White Violets, Oxeye Daisies, Jewel Weed, Sarsaparilla, Cranesbill Geranium, Large Red Trilliums (Toadshade), Tall Evening Primrose, Spring Beauties. Mayapple Special: 50¢ per plant!, Celandine Poppies.
Other
Some Red Cherry and Sungold Tomatos, Yellow Sweet Peppers, Ribbon (striped) Grass, Sea Oats, Walking Onions, Forsythia, Black Raspberry Plants ($2.50 each), House Plants including Sensitive Plants, Pencil Plant, Eucalyptus, and Citrus Tree. Tree Seedlings including Mimosa, Redbud, Tulip, Dogwood, Persimmon and Linden. Annuals: Scarlet Runner and Hyacinth Bean, Castor Bean. Fresh bundles of Catnip - for your kitties, $1.00.
Fresh GREEN Eggs! Most plants are on the porch!!
Organically Grown 9 to 5 - These Days Only!
LIMITED QUANTITIES ON SOME ITEMS
Special Board Meeting Notice The Board of Directors of the Ohio County Convention, Tourism and Visitor’s Commission will be having a special meeting of the Board of Directors Thursday, May 10, 2012 at the Rising Sun Tourism Office, located at 120 Main Street. The meeting will begin at 4:00pm. This notice is posted in compliance with IC 5-14-1.5-5(d).
Remember those who lost their battle and celebrate with those who have survived!
D. White Construction Post Frame Buildings Decks - Room Additions, Etc. Quality Work at a Fair Price Free Estimates Amish Work Crew
812-701-1006
Register Publications is inviting the public to take part in the Relay for Life Special Section that will be published on June 14, 2012. We are offering 1 column by 2 inch tribute ads for just $10. Deadline for entry: June 1, 2012 Stop by one of our offices or email your information to jgrace@registerpublications.com
HOSANNA ASSEMBLY OF GOD: 501 W. Conwell St., Aurora; Pastor Pete Byrk, 926-0400. Sunday School, 9:00 AM; Sunday Morning Worship, 10:00 AM; Sunday Evening, 6:00 PM; Wednesday Evening Adult BIble Study and Youth Ministry, 7:00 PM. ABUNDANT LIFE BAPTIST CHURCH: 12667 Lenover St. (50+ Plus Center), Dillsboro (next to library). Sunday School, 10:00 AM; Worship 11:00 AM; Sunday evening worship, 6:00 PM. Pastor Jim Upchurch. AURORA BAPTIST CHURCH: Church Street, Aurora; Ron Stimson, Pastor; Sunday School, 9:30 AM; Morning Worship, 10:30 AM; Evening Worship, 6:00 PM; Wednesday Evening Worship, 7:30 PM. BETHEL UNITY BAPTIST CHURCH: (Southern Baptist); 306 Main St., Rising Sun, Sunday School, 9:00 AM; Worship Service, 10:00 AM. Verve Youth, Sunday, 5 PM. Bible Study, Wed., 7 PM FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH: Fourth and N. Mulberry streets, Rising Sun; Pastor, Bro. Jim Jenkins; Sunday School, 9:30 AM; Morning Worship, 10:30 AM; Youth Fellowship, 5:30 PM; Wednesday Prayer & Bible Study, 7:00 PM. Phone 438-2361.
GRANT’S CREEK INDEPENDENT BAPTIST CHURCH: Bro. Eric Moore, Pastor; Sunday School, 10:00 AM; Worship Service, 11:00 AM; Evening Worship, 7:30 PM; Prayer Meeting, Wednesday, 7:30 PM. NEW LIBERTY (AMERICAN) BAPTIST CHURCH: 1400 SR 250, near East Enterprise; Sunday School, 9:30 AM; Worship, 10:30 AM. OLIVE BRANCH BAPTIST CHURCH: 2250 Milton-Bear Branch Rd., Dillsboro 47018; Summer Hours: Sunday School 9:00 AM; Morning Worship 10:00 AM. Winter Hours: Sunday School 9:00 AM. Worship Service 10:00 AM. PATRIOT BAPTIST CHURCH: Pastor, Ray Carroll; Sunday School, 10:00 AM, Sunday; Church Service, 11:00 AM, Sunday. SHILOH BAPTIST CHURCH: N. Walnut Street; Rev. Thomas Gannaway; Sunday School, 9:30 AM; Worship Service, 10:45 AM; Prayer Service, Wednesday, 7:30 PM. TEMPLE BAPTIST CHURCH: Patriot, Indiana; Bro. Richard Grubb, Pastor; Sunday School, 10:00 AM FT; Morning Worship, 11:00 AM FT; Evening Services, 6:00 PM FT.
Humphrey-Taylor-Detmer Funeral Home Fred A. Taylor, Director 131 N. Poplar Street 438-3434, www.humphreytaylordetmer.com
Register Publications
The Harrison Press
126 West High Street Lawrenceburg, IN 812-537-0063
307 Harrison Ave. Harrison, OH 513-367-4582
TRINITY BAPTIST CHURCH:1298 Hwy. 250, East Enterprise; Rev. Tom Miller, pastor, 5343690/655-1003; Sunday school, 10:00 AM; Sunday Morning Worship, 11:00 AM; Sunday Evening Service, 6:00 PM; Wednesday Evening Service, 7:00 PM. SAINT MARY’S CATHOLIC CHURCH: 203 Fourth St., Aurora; Father Chris Craig; MASSES: Saturday, 5:00 PM; Sunday, 8:30 AM and 11:00 AM; Week Day, Tues. & Thurs., 5:15 PM, Wed. & Fri., 8:15 AM; Confession: Saturday 4-4:30 PM (or by appointment). CONCORD COMMUNITY CHURCH: 196 Concord road, Patriot; Rev. Stephen G. Ward, Pastor; Sunday School, 9:30 AM; Worship Service, 10:30 AM; Community Bible study, Wed. Eve. 6:30 PM; Concordia class meets 3rd Wednesday evening of each month. FIRST UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST: and Kids Corner Preschool: Fifth and High streets, Rising Sun; Phone 438-2944; John Heckman, pastor; Time for Fellowship and Concern, 9:45 AM. Time for Worship, 10:00 AM. Open Communion served the first Sunday of the month. Bible Study on the first and third Sunday evenings of the month at 6 PM. FIRST EVANGELICAL UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST: 111 Fifth Street, Aurora; Phone 9262777; Rev. John Heckman, Pastor; Worship at 11:30 AM. HOLMES HILL CHURCH OF CHRIST: Old SR 56, two miles southwest of Aurora; Tommy Johnson, Evangelist; Phone 438-2930; Bible School, 9:30 AM; Worship Service and Lord’s Supper, 10:30 AM; Sunday Evening Services, 6:30 PM; Bible Study and Prayer Meeting, Wednesday, 6:30 PM.
Attend The Church of Your Choice PLEASANT RIDGE CHURCH OF CHRIST: 7250 Salem RIdge, Ohio County. Phone 4382903 Parsonage, 438-9550; Devon Huss, Minister; Bible, 9:30 AM; Worship, 10:20 AM; Sunday Evening, 7:00 PM; Evening Youth, 6:00 PM; Wednesday Bible Study, 7:00 PM. RISING SUN CHURCH OF CHRIST: 430 Fifth St., Rising Sun; Phone 438-3805; Senior Minister, Greg Matthew;, Youth Minister Brandon Bogue; Lori Matthew, Director of Children’s Ministry; First Worship, 8:30 AM; Sunday School and Adult Bible Fellowship, 9:45 AM; Second Worship, 10:45 AM; Youth Groups & Adult L.I.F.E. Groups - 6:00-7:30 PM; Daycare Ministry, 438-4502; Christian Outreach (Free Store), 438-2183; Prayer Line, 438-3963. TRINITY CHRISTIAN CENTER: 18860 Pribble Road, Lawrenceburg, above Perfect North Ski Slopes. Pastor Bob Brigmon, Sunday School, 10:00 AM, Sunday morning worship, 11:00 AM, Sunday evening worship, 6:30 PM, Wednesday evening service, 7:00 PM. TRINITY EPISCOPAL CHURCH: Lake and Center streets, Lawrenceburg; Mary Taflinger, Vicar; Holy Eucharist, 10:30 AM; Children’s Sunday School, 10:30 AM.
KINGDOM HALL OF JEHOVAH’S WITNESSES: Highway 350, Aurora; Philip Peace, Overseer; Public Talk, 10:00 AM; Watchtower Study, 11:00 AM; Bible Study, Tuesday, 8:00 PM; Ministry School, Thursday, 7:30 PM; Service Meeting, 8:30 PM. THE CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST OF LATTER-DAY SAINTS: 6168 Martha North Drive, Aurora, IN 47001, 812-926-6004. Hours - Sunday Sacrament Meeting - 10:00 AM. ST. PETER LUTHERAN CHURCH: 3958 Bear Branch Rd. at South Fork, Dillsboro; Phone 6675881; Sunday School, 9:30 AM; Worship Service, 10:30 AM.
QUERCUS GROVE UNITED METHODIST CHURCH: Rev. Keith Chanley, pastor; 438-4431. Worship, 9:00 AM; Sunday School, 10:00 AM; Bible Study Wednesday nights at 6:30 PM. (call 534-3223 for directions). THE RISING SUN UNITED METHODIST CHURCH: Rev. Keith Chanley, pastor; 438-4431. Worship, 10:30 AM; Sunday School, 9:30 AM; Bible Study at church 6:15 PM. Wednesday nights. CHURCH OF NAZARENE: Burgess avenue, phone 438-3411; Rev. Chris Robinson, Minister; Sunday School, 9:30 AM; Worship Service, 10:30 AM; Sunday evening worship, 6:00 PM; Wednesday Prayer and Bible Study, 7:00 PM.
UNITED METHODIST CHURCH: Aberdeen, 2168 Allensville Road, Bennington; Rev. Roger RISING SUN WESLEYAN CHURCH: Sunday Parrott, pastor; 10:30 AM, Sunday School; 9:15 School, 9:30 AM; Morning Worship, 10:30 AM; AM Worship. Evening Worship, 6:00 PM; Prayer UNITED METHODIST CHURCH; East Meeting, Wednesday, 6:00 PM. Enterprise; John Scudder, pastor; Worship Service, 9:30 AM; S.S. 10:30 AM. WILMINGTON HILLS WESLEYAN CHURCH: State Road 350 and Wilmington; Rev. Rev. Darin UNITED METHODIST CHURCH: Fairview; John Gary; Sunday School, 9:30 AM; Morning Worship, Scudder, pastor; Worship, 8:15 AM; Sunday 10:30 AM; Sunday Evening Service, 6:00 PM; School, 9:30 AM. Wednesday Evening, 7:00 PM.
THURSDAY, MAY 10, 2012
Community
RECORDER
PAGE 5
Send us your news c/o P.O. Box 128, Rising Sun, IN 47040; drop off at 235 Main Street; e-mail to risingsun@registerpublications.com. Deadline: 9.a.m Wednesday one week prior to event.
Clifton and Steward awarded scholarships Leah L. Clifton and Morgan L. Stewart have each been selected to receive a $1300 Masonic Scholarship from the Scholarship Board of the Grand Lodge of Indiana, Free and Accepted Masons, according to Ris-
SUBMITTED
Peggy Dickson, Ohio County Community Foundation Executive Director and Cynthia Schmid-Perry, Library Director of the Ohio County Public Library,
Library receives grant Cynthia Schmid-Perry, Library Director of the Ohio County Public Library, recently accepted a $1,000 grant check from Peggy Dickson, Ohio County Community Foundation Executive Director. The check was a distribution from the John Roeder Library Enrichment Fund. The purpose of the fund is to provide a means through which to enhance and enrich library materials and programs at the Ohio County Public Library. The grant money will be used to purchase Playaway Views. Playaway Views are an all-inone video player exclusively for
libraries. They are designed to fit in small hands and come preloaded with educational and fun learning videos, packed with bright colors and child-friendly programming. These will be used to promote early literacy in pre-school patrons. If you have any questions concerning the John Roeder Library Enrichment Fund or the Ohio County Community Foundation, feel free to contact the Foundation at 438-9401 or pdickson@occfrisingsun.com. For questions concerning the Playaway Views, please contact the Ohio County Public Library at 438-2257.
Extra service added for summer Olive Branch Baptist Church has announced that it will be holding Sunday evening services through the summer. Beginning this Sunday, May 13, Olive Branch will be holding a service at 5 p.m. in addition to its regular 10 a.m. Sunday morning service. The evening service is designed for families who may
miss a Sunday morning church service because of summer activities such as camping; children in sports; swing shift work hours; or other situations. Everyone is invited to come and attend the service. Olive Branch Baptist Church is located on Bear Branch Road approximately one-half mile south of the Bear Branch community.
Huge church yard sale May 18, 19 The Rising Sun United Methodist Church will be collecting items for their Mission Trip Yard Sale. Items can be dropped off at the church after May 13. Contact Connie Hueber at 655-1664 or leave a message at the church at 4384431 to make arrangements. The Mission Team sponsors this Annual Yard Sale to raise money to purchase materials to be used during their Yearly Mission Trip to South Carolina. The profits will be used to provide building materials, appliances, and other items needed by the impoverished homeowners. The Team always sells items at rock-bottom prices to help out people in the Rising Sun Community and still always comes away with a
nice profit for Mission work. Any yard-sale worthy article is welcome (left overs from your own community yard sale, spring cleaning or just trying to control your household clutter) to help our Mission Fundraising efforts! Any items leftover from the Church Yard Sale will be going to the United Methodist Mountain Missions. If you don’t want your items to be included in the Church Yard Sale, plan to bring them to the church between June 1 and June 5 packed in boxes whenever possible to go straight onto the Mt. Mission trucks. Call to make arrangements for dropping things off. Due to weather concerns, do not leave anything outside. The church is located at 110 S. Walnut Street here in Rising Sun.
Coming Events Sponsored by
Sunday, May 13 - Happy Mother’s Day. Tuesday, May 15 at 6:30 p.m. - Monthly Rising Sun Ohio County Park Board meeting at the Senior Community Building which was originally scheduled for May 22. Friday, May 18 from 7 to 9 p.m. - Music on Main in downtown Rising Sun featuring music by Rusty Bladen. Cruise in your classic car from 6 to 10 p.m. Tuesday, May 22 at 6 p.m. - Commissioners regular monthly evening meeting which is usually the third Tuesday of the month.
NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS
The spring installment of real estate, mobile home & personal taxes are due Thursday, May 10, 2012. Office hours are 9:00 - 4:00 on Mon., Tue., Thur. and Fri.; 9:00 - 12:00 on Sat. Taxes may be paid at the Ohio County Courthouse or by mail. We accept cash, checks or money orders; credit/debit cards may be used in the office, on-line at www. paygovllc.com or by phone at 1-866-480-8552; a convenience fee will be charged for using credit/ debit cards, ca11 438-2724 for details. Payments by mail must be postmarked on or before May 10, 2012. Mail to: Ohio County Treasurer, P. O. Box 187, Rising Sun, IN 47040. You must include a selfaddressed, stamped envelope for your paid receipt to be returned. After hours you may use the payment drop box located to the left of the main Courthouse entrance. Payments made after November 10, 2012 will incur penalties. The office will close for settlement of taxes May 11, 2012 and re-open on May 25, 2012 for regular business.
Deedee Brown
Treasurer of Ohio County
Happy Birthday
May 10 Josh Uhlmansiek Rachel Romans Sarah Horstman May 11 Doug Sheets Adam Keith May 12 Sheila Walton Robert Shinn Amber Fish Sheila Walton KayEdwards May 13 Jodi Cole-Mulle May 14 Whitney Shell Joshua Simons Mable Carver Whitney Shell May 15 Sadie Black Thelma Wainscott Camilla Coy May 16 Randy Scott Katrina Head May 17 Brandon Fisk Christina Williamson
ing Sun Lodge # 6 F.&A.M. The Grand Lodge of Indiana Scholarship Board distributes earnings from an endowment, making ti one of the largest fraternal scholarship funds in the country.
Spaghetti Supper Saturday, May 19 There will be a benefit “All You Can Eat” spaghetti supper on Saturday, May 19, at the Bear Branch Firehouse. The event will be held from 5 to 8 p.m., and all proceeds will go to benefit a group
of teenagers from Ohio and Switzerland counties who are attending Bigstuf Christian Camp in Panama City Beach, Florida, this summer. The dinner will feature all you can eat spaghetti, salad,
In the years of operation, over $6 million in scholarships have helped over 6,000 Hoosier students realize their educational goals. Clifton and Stewart were two of 293 selected from almost 400 applicants. garlic bread, and drinks, as well as homemade desserts. A $5 donation per person is requested. There will also be a silent auction during the evening, and special music. Everyone is invited to attend and support this important cause.
Happy Anniversary
May 11 Corey & Leann Nowlin May 14 Tom & Kathy McKay Andrew Tyler Conley Mike & Kim Courter May 15 Jamie & Mike Elliott May 16 Mark & Shawna Uhlmansiek May 17 Rick & Amy Works Jamie & Tanya Cappel
PUZZLE ANSWERS
Fast Track a Career in...
Culinary Arts or Hotel & Motel Management • • • • • •
Earn College Credits Receive Certification Classes Meet Evenings Registration deadline June 1st! Designed for the Working Professional Financial Aid available through FAFSA
Classess offered beginning
August 6
CLASSES PROVIDED THROUGH VINCENNES UNIVERSITY BUSINESS & INDUSTRY!!!
Classes meet once a week in the evenings for 10 weeks. First session runs from 8/6/12 to 10/19/12 Second session runs from 10/22/12 to 12/20/12
The Education Center of Rising Sun For More Information Contact: Deborah Thomason, Director Education Center of Rising Sun PO Box 170, 591 Smart Dr. Rising Sun, IN 47040 812-438-2437 dthomason@occfrisingsun.com
PAGE 6
THURSDAY, MAY 10, 2012
RECORDER & NEWS
Editorial
Send us your thoughts c/o P.O. Box 128, Rising Sun, IN 47040; drop off at 235 Main Street; e-mail to risingsun@registerpublications.com.
LOOKING BACK
GUEST COLUMN
The truth about postal reform Now that US Senate has passed a bill, S 1789, to reform the ailing US Postal Service, critics are trying to disable the bill on its way to the House of Representatives. Business Week recently catalogued unhappy stakeholders, including postal unions, postal management and some Republicans who wrongly think the bill burdens taxpayers. Rep. Darrell Issa, R-CA, whose own bill awaits action in the House, blasted “special interests.” But Business Week says, “Considering how many people are unhappy with the bill, it isn’t clear which special interests Issa is referring to.” Some see Senate bill as the inevitable product of the sausage machine. But it is neither a budget buster nor processed meat. It is the expression of a better vision of the Postal Service. If you consider that survival of the service means maintaining the circulatory system for a $1.1 trillion mailing industry - or in other words, making sure cash, greeting cards, packages and newspapers and magazines arrive on time, the Senate bill is good medicine. Consider some of the alternative fixes. Issa’s bill would let USPS immediately end Saturday mail, close half the mail processing centers and thousands of post offices, and put a new board of political appointees in charge. The new board would be expected to trim workers’ benefits and maybe wages, and direct the Postmaster General to favor profit over service. At the other extreme might be Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-VT, who wanted to keep everything open. Labor unions backing him say that USPS will heal as the economy heals. Then there is the White House’s notion: to raise postage rates. For Sens. Susan Collins, R-ME, and Joe Lieberman, I-CT, neither extreme is suited to long-term survival of USPS. To many experts, Issa’s approach is likely to frighten away businesses that mail. The Lieberman-Collins bill agrees that USPS needs a more flexible, less costly workforce. It keeps mail flowing through today’s network while cost-cutting is underway. For example, they would end Saturday mail delivery in two years, but only if USPS has taken other big steps toward financial viability. They would allow the closing of postal plants now, if USPS preserves local mail delivery speed. Is their bill the product of compromise, or of a different vision? Consider: --The Postal Service’s plantclosing plan is based on a desire to amass more mail at automated urban centers, where costly machines sit idle much of the day. To optimize machines, USPS would haul mail much farther. But the hauling would slow the mailstream, particularly in small towns and rural areas that are far from mail plants and create a set of second-class citizens who would get and send mail more slowly than urban dwellers. It would also hamper smaller communities’ quests for economic development. - Many Americans say they wouldn’t miss Saturday mail. But USPS builds its system around senders, not receivers. Who would be hurt by a 5-day delivery regime? Anyone who depends on timely mail delivery. Shutting down the system two days a week—three when Monday holidays occur— would create delay, according to the Postal Regulatory Commission. Then there are those who need prescriptions delivered when they are at home; small-town citizens who get the newspaper by mail and businesses needing 6-day cash flows. - Closing small post offic-
es seems a no-brainer to city dwellers who spot those oneroom POs at the roadside on the way to the beach. Surely not all are needed. But rather than closing them entirely, USPS could have circuit-rider postmasters to open them a few hours a day. That is affordable if worker benefits are brought into line with the private sector. For those communities, a circuit rider could continue their links to the world. - The Congressional Budget Office says the Senate bill would cost $33.6 billion, adding to the federal deficit. But postage-payers, not taxpayers, carry that burden. Taxpayers face a liability as the funderof-last resort only if postage revenues dry up - which is more likely to happen if the mail slows to a crawl. Finally, members of Congress may differ on how they see USPS. Is it a corporation? Is it a government agency responsible for binding the nation together? Fact: it is a GovernmentSponsored Enterprise or GSE, more like Fannie Mae than like IBM or the Defense Department. It has to use business tools, but carry out a public mission. And it has enormous power in the marketplace. Consider, for example, its new Every Door Direct Mail program, which directly competes with many private businesses. Members of Congress who mistakenly see postal reform as an exercise in deregulating a company may actually unleash a powerful federal agency, while those who look to raising postage so generous worker benefits can continue could pull the plug on the economic engine that keeps jobs alive. It isn’t compromise that is needed, but a clear-eyed vision based on a full understanding of the needs of all whom the Postal Service serves. Postal management today has an impossible task, expected to accomplish business goals without the cost-controlling tools businesses have, and expected to achieve government ends without federal support. Congress owns this confusion. Only Congress can fix it and it will continue to need to finetune its solutions as communications cultures change. No bill passed today will avoid the need for legislation in the future. Neither “deregulating” it nor hiking rates will get USPS to stability. Nor will abrupt and disruptive approaches to labor costs. Senators Collins and Lieberman, along with co-sponsors Tom Carper, D-DE, and Scott Brown, R-MA, have devoted endless hours to understanding the challenge and to crafting the next steps toward fixing it. Their approach deserves considerably more respect than it is getting. Reed Anfinson is president of the National Newspaper Association, and publisher of the Swift County (MN) Monitor-News.
Rising Sun High School has winners May 10, 1962 50 years ago
band uniforms, outfitted two drum majors, three flag twirlers, and provided two buses as transportation for 54 band Rising Sun High School is making a members to each of the marching events. Contributors were American Legion, tremendous display of their talented stuBaptist Church, Junior Women’s Club, dents in music as well as in sports. Phi Beta Psi sorority, Rotary, EastThe track team won their ern Star, Legion Auxiliary, Pleasfirst Ohio River Valley Conferant Ridge Christian Church, the ence since 1953 by defeating Ladies Guild of the United Church area teams by a large margin. of Christ and other individual conSeveral events found the Shintributors. ers close to breaking conferThe fourth grade classes of Mrs. ence meet records. Helen Sheldon and Mrs. Austin Felicitations are also due the Collins have been touring the Rising Sun band and direc- MAVIS News and Recorder office for two tor Morgan Drescher on their wonderful band concert Sun- UHLMANSIEK weeks to gain first hand information on the “goings-on” in the day afternoon. The music was newspaper field. selected to satisfy everyone as they “Round town: Rising Sun streets have presented marches, Dixieland, popular music, Japanese themes, Parisian music, received a new coat of paint at cross walks and many other familiar themes. The and in the parking areas….Miss Paula president of the band boosters stated Neaman sang with the Bethesda School that the funds purchased 20 complete of Nursing Glee Club Sunday at their
annual spring concert and open house…. The latest sad song on the juke box is, “I Said My Heart to the Junk Man.” A Honor roll students for the fifth six-weeks grading period include: Audrey Clifton, senior; Judy Dennis, junior; Karolyn Housemeyer, freshman; and Thomas Brown, Paula Cook, Nada Huron, Trudy Keith and Gwen Salyer, eight grade. Police Chief Joe Cunningham submitted his resignation Wednesday morning after serving over two years in that office. Mr. Cunningham stated that he resigned because he felt he could no longer work under the conditions that have prevailed during the past several months. *********************** May 10 our grandson Josh Uhlmansiek will celebrate his 19th birthday. We wish him a very HAPPY BIRTHDAY, and wish him good luck at Franklin College. Keep up the good work.
YARD SALES A CRAZE IN RISING SUN
TIM HILLMAN
Mor than 80 yards throughout Rising Sun and Ohio County were filled with items of all sorts during the annual spring Yard Sale Extravaganza held in Rising Sun last weekend. A September Fall Yard Sale will be held if you missed this one.
LETTERS
Thanks to band and businesses
Editor, The Ohio County Soil and Water Conservation District would like to thank everyone who attended the annual meeting. Thank you to the Rising Sun High School Jazz Band for the entertainment. A big thank you to the following for donating door prizes or placing an ad or both: Neaman Floral, Farm Bureau, Friendship State Bank, Snappy Pizza, Ohio County Community Foundation, MainSource Bank, Brown Implement, Laughery Valley Co-op, Fletcher Feed, Rising Sun Municipal Utilities, Back to Health Chiropractic, Bear Branch Supply, Zimmer Tractor, Hummel Insurance, Aurora Tire Center, Moore’s Vet Clinic, Aurora Lumber, Consolidated Grain Company, City of Rising Sun,. A special thank you to Belinda Schraeder for your many years of service as secretary/ treasurer. Ohio County SWCD
The Ohio County News USPS 404400
Rising Sun Recorder USPS 466520
Published every Thursday by Register Publications/ Delphos Newspapers of Indiana Editor ................................................ Tim Hillman ...................................................... 812-438-2011 .................... risingsun@registerpublications.com Advertising ........................................... Joe Grace ...................................................... 812-537-0063 ......................... jgrace@registerpublications.com Publisher..........................................Tom Brooker ...................................................... 812-537-0063 .................... publisher@registerpublications.com Publishers Emeritus ....................... Gene McCann ........................................................ Dale McCann Website .............................. ohiocountynews.com
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THURSDAY, MAY 10, 2012
RECORDER
Sports
PAGE 7
Send us your sports news c/o P.O. Box 128, Rising Sun, IN 47040; drop off at 235 Main Street; e-mail to risingsun@registerpublications.com.
10-run rule wins vault RS to #1 Tim Hillman Recorder-News Editor risingsun@registerpublications.com
The Rising Sun Lady Shiners continued its dominance of Ohio River Valley Conference foes by winning a trio of games this past week, all by the 10-run mercy rule. That success has awarded them the Class A number one ranking in the latest coaches poll. Rising Sun defeated Southwestern 14-0 after pounding out 13 hits on Wednesday, May 2 at Hanover. Freshman Alix DeDreu was 3-for-4 with three runs scored in her leadoff spot while classmate Bailee Bostic hammered out two hits in three at bats and scored twice. Shelby Armstrong added two runs while Kennedy Oser doubled and scored in the win. Rising Sun scored a total of 10 runs in the fifth inning with all coming after two were out. Rising Sun defeated Switzerland County 18-1 on Friday in the completion of a suspended game which Rising Sun was leading 11-1 in the fifth when lightning and rain delayed the finish. The Lady Shiners added seven more runs in the fifth after two were out then DeDreu got the Pacers 1-2-3 in the bottom of the inning. Oser started the game with DeDreu coming in relief.
TIM HILLMAN
Rising Sun junior Jenna Kendrick puts down a successful bunt against Switzerland County as the Lady Shiners completed a season sweep of their ORVC rivals on Friday.
Ali Bostic and Taylor Mullen had three hits each for Rising Sun while Sydney Elliott, Kelsey Baillie, Sydney Willhite, Jenna Kendrick, Kendra Hudson and DeDreu added doubles including Willhite’s tenth. Kendrick and Willhite had two RBIs each. In the regularly scheduled contest, Rising Sun was a 12-1 winner. DeDreu struck out 11 while allowing just four hits. Rising Sun scored five runs in the second and third innings and two in the fourth. Bailee Bostic’s two run homer in the fourth (her second HR of the season) gave Rising Sun the 10-run lead. Bostic had a double along with Armstrong and Hudson. Elliott led the Shiners with three RBIs. The win improved Rising Sun to 17-1 on the season and 9-0 in ORVC play. They were to play Batesville on Monday but it was rained out. They close out the home season Tuesday against Lawrenceburg, Friday against Shawe and a doubleheader with North Decatur Saturday at 10 a.m. They can wrap up a perfect ORVC season with contests at South Ripley Monday and Jac-CenDel Wednesday. The sectional draw is today (Thursday) as Rising Sun looks to repeat its sectional and regional titles.
DAVE BOWMAN
Rising Sun freshman Tyler Roberts and senior Adam Hummel shown at left, helped build a lead for the Shiners and Zack Scudder, above, battled with Switzerland County Clint Swanson in the 200 as the Shiners edged South Dearborn to win the RSIT.
Rising Sun wins RSIT boys title Tim Hillman Recorder-News Editor risingsun@registerpublications.com
South Dearborn girls and boys teams were announced as winners, trophies were handed out and team photos snapped but a scoring error was discovered and Rising Sun was the actual winner with a 137 to 132 score over the Knight boys. Rising Sun's individual firsts came from Brent Jackson in discus (130''8-1/2”), Zach Scudder in long jump (19'7-1/2”) and Adam Hummel in 400-meter dash (52.67). While the Knight boys took nine of 13 events, Rising Sun took advantage of its depth. SD's 3,200-meter relay won a close one over Rising Sun, 8:51.408:51.45, to start the night. Then seniors Jackson and Scudder won their final events on their home track and the Shiners never trailed again. After a third place by Jackson in the shot put (36'6”), Scudder and freshman Tyler Roberts went 2-3 in the 100 (11.65 and 11.94) behind Clint Swanson of Switzerland County which placed third in the meet with 104 points. Next, Austin Martin and Briar Miller were 2-3 behind SC's Alex Curran in the high jump followed by Miller and Billy Nierlich 2-4 in the 1600 behind SC's Braden Burk. The lead swelled to 43 points as senior Adam Hummel won the 400 (52.67) with Roberts second (53.78). Peter Ramsey placed third in the 300 hurdles with Martin fourth after Martin was runner up in the high hurdles. SD went 1-2 in the 800 but Brandon Browning and Nierlich were 4-5.
DAVE BOWMAN
Rising Sun’s Jaclyn Kolodzik and Switzerland County’s Eve Galbreath battle to the finish of the 100 high hurdles with Kolodzik winning her final meet at Rising Sun on May 3 Scudder added a sixth in the 200 Senior Jesse Adams led SD with and adding the 300 hurdles crown and Miller was third in the 3200 to three individual firsts. He cruised (43.08) later. hold off SD's strong finish as they to wins in both hurdles events, his That record, initially set by Sunscored more than half their team specialty – tying the meet record man High School's James Horstpoints in the final five events. with a 15.30-second 110-meter race man (1972) was later tied by Swit-
zerland County's Cody Cole (2001). Two events after completing the 300, Adams ran his first 200-meter dash final of the season, winning ahead of Switzerland County speedster Clint Swanson (22.68-23.12). Adams then capped a full night by anchoring SD's third winning boys relay, the 1,600-meter, for a time of 3:35.7. Knights also got individual boys firsts from junior Trey Grubbs in shot put (40'6”), senior Kyle Hall in 800-meter run (2:01.60) and sophomore D.J. Sander in the 3,200 (11:01.29). SD's Lady Knights enjoyed a comfortable 167-122 victory margin over Southwestern (Hanover) in their half of the meet Thursday. Coach Jeremy Baney's girls, also with nine of 13 firsts, were led by double-event winners Crystal Nichols and Makenzie Wheat. Wheat, a junior, won both throwing events, breaking the school record in discus (121'6”) formerly held by Kelly Elder. She also took shot put (42'9-1/2”) after breaking that school standard a week earlier at the East Central Invitational. Sophomore Nichols converted the distance sweep, winning both the 1,600-meter run (5:47.79) and the 3,200 (12:49.0). South Dearborn girls individual winners included freshman Morgan Zoller in 400-meter dash (1:02.37), senior Alexis Brasier in 800-meter run (2:37.24) and junior Brittany Getz in 200 dash (26.92). Lady Knights won two of three relays at Rising Sun, including the 3,200 (10:57.73) and 400 (52.15). South Dearborn's 299 total points still were enough to capture the Rising Sun Invitational combined title SEE RSIT, PAGE 8
PAGE 8
THURSDAY, MAY 10, 2012
RECORDER & NEWS
Rising Sun sweeps Swiss
RSIT,
FROM PAGE 7
Tim Hillman Recorder-News Editor risingsun@registerpublications.com
A pair of wins over Switzerland County on Friday, May 4 pushed Rising Sun back into a tie for first place in the Ohio River Valley Confernce baseball standings. Rising Sun fell to second place in the ORVC with a 3-2 loss at Southwestern on Wednesday, May 2. They bounced back with an 8-1 win over the Pacers in the completion of a suspended game. The Shiners then defeated the Pacers in a regular scheduled game to win 7-1. Nathan Hannan had 10 strikeouts in the first game before giving way to Cody Beckett who finished the suspended game on the mound. Hannan struck out 10 in the second contest as the Shiners put four runs on the board in the third and added three in the fifth. Beckett and Ryan Dugan walked in the third and Jake Willhite and Austin Armstrong singled with Hannan’s
TIM HILLMAN
TIM HILLMAN
Nathan Hannan had 10 strikeouts in two games against Switzerland County last week as Rising Sun bounced back from a conference loss to Southwestern.
Rising Sun catcher Ryan Dugan applies the tag at the plate against Switzerland County. rbi double and a sacrifice fly the final Shiner run. by senior Greg Duvall roundSwitzerland County scored ing out the inning. an unearned run in the fourth. Dugan and Hannan reaced Meanwhile, Southwesten safely in the fifth wih Bran- split a pair of games with don Turner having an RBI Jac-Cen-Del to pick up its single and Alex Oser reach- second loss of the season. ing on an error and scoring
Bayne’s Raiders nip alma mater for ORVC title TIM HILLMAN RECORDER-NEWS EDITOR
Former Shiner Andrew Bayne’s South Ripley Raiders won the final 4x400 relay to push past Rising Sun to win the Ohio River Valley Conference Junior High Boys Track title on Monday, May 7 at Rising Sun. The meet, which was delayed one half hour by lightning saw the Raiders, score 80.5 point with Rising Sun second at 76.5 after placing fifth in
the final relay. Tristan Brown led Rising Sun with wins in the 100 (12.37) and 200 (26.0) while Claudio Gallegos was a double winner in the 1600 (5:16.93) and 800 (2:23.78). Brown added a sixth in the long jump (16’). Derrick Eldridge was second in the discus ((107’9”) and high hurdles. The 4 x 100 relay placed third (54.43) and fifth in the 4 x 400 (4:38.94).
Tyler Camden placed fifth in the discus (96’) while tying for sixth in the high jump and 800 (2:39.1). Switzerland County placed third with 69 followd by ilan with 67, JacCen-Del 39, Shawe 26, and Southwestern 14. Switzerland County won the girls meet with 127 followed by South Ripley 67, Jac-Cen-Del 61,5, Milan 42, Rising Sun 34.5, Shawe 30 and Southwestern six. Kinzie Scott returned from a half
Golfers compete at Batesville Rising Sun placed ninth in the Batesville Inviational on Saturday, May 5 at Hillcrest Country Club. Bryce Murray led RS with an 85. Jake Willhite had a 91 followed by Jordan King with 97, Austin Armstrong
113, and Brandon Turner 123. Columbus North led the team standings with 311 followed by Connrsville 321, Madison 325, East Central 339, Franklin 340, Batesville 362, Mt. Vernon 365, Brown-
stown 366, Rising Sun 386, Shelbyville 382, and Greensburg 390. The Shiners were runner up in a four way meet at Spring Hills on May 3. Southwestern won the match with 170 followed by
hour delay to win the 1600 (5:41.03). Katie Cummings was second in the discus (71’8”) and third in the shot put (25’2.5”). Kelsey Helms was fifth in the hurdles (19.12) with Kasey Baker fourth in the 1600 (6:31.5), Anna Slack in the 400 (1”13) with the 4 x 400 relay. Also scoring in sixth place were Hannah Markland in the high jump, Lucy Carrigan in the long jump (12’9) an Baker in the 800 (3:02.01).
Rising Sun with 186, Milan 187 and Switzerland County 225. Brynen Chitwood was medalist with a 39. Murray led RS with a 44 with King 46, Willhite 47, Armstrong 49 and 59 by Turner and Alex Oser.
over the Shiners (182). Rising Sun placed fourth in the meet with 45 points. Jaclyn Kolodzik capped her senior career with wins in the high jump (5') over SC's Olivia Hewitt (4'11”) and first in the high hurdles (16.12) ahead of SC's Eve Galbreath (16.53). Teammate Ashley Hammond was fifth (18.51). Kolodzik missed a third win by a hair as he was second in the 300 hurdles (49.43). Other scoring for Rising Sun included Jamie Williams fourth in the discus (86'4”) and Jessica Huber sixth in the discus (83'1”). The 3200 and 1600 relay teams placed fourth and 400 relay team was fifth. Rising Sun competes in the Ohio River Valley Conference meet tonight at Madison.
5K run June 9
Believers Against the Abuse of Alcohol and Drugs (B.A.A.A.D) will be hosting a 5K Run/Walk on June 9 at 8 a.m. Pre-registration is required by May 26. Entry fee is $20 in advance or $35 the day of the race. Check in will be at 6:30 a.m. at Rising Sun High School. Prizes will be awarded to overall male and female plus top and female in each age group. A team trophy will be awarded to one male and one female school sports team that has the three highest placed finishers.
All sports banquet set for June 5 The end of the year Rising Sun High School Athletic Banquet is on Tuesday, June 5 at 6 p.m. in the RSHS cafeteria. The cost of the banquet is free to coaches and ath-
letes but there will be a cost to parents of $5 per person with a limit of two guests per athlete. Payment of guests and their RSVP is due in the athletic office by May 18.
In Observance of
Memorial Day Register Publications' offices will be CLOSED Monday, May 28 The following Early Deadlines will be in effect for advertising:
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TO REACH THIS EXCLUSIVE COMMUNITY! ey Lake Hidden Vall 2011-2012
The 2012-2013
HIDDEN VALLEY LAKE Property Owners Association Endorsed
Telephone Directory
ociation wners’ Ass Property O IRECTORY PHONE D
is in production now for the 2,000+ Hidden Valley Lake Homes!
JOURNAL PRESS: Classified Ads: Thursday, May 24, 10a.m. Retail Ads: Friday, May 25, 9a.m. HARRISON PRESS: Classified Ads: Thursday, May 24, 10a.m. Retail Ads: Thursday, May 24, 5p.m. RISING SUN PAPERS: Classified Ads: Friday, May 25, 3p.m. Retail Ads: Friday, May 25, 3p.m.
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THURSDAY, MAY 10, 2012
RECORDER
PAGE 9
Miller, Murray, Kolodzik POWs ORVC Weekly Report Summary (April 23 – April 28) Baseball Varsity Standings ORVC Overall Rising Sun 4-1 10-3 Southwestern 4-1 5-11 Switzerland County 2-2 5-8 Shawe Memorial 2-2 4-9 South Ripley 3-2 5-10 Jac-Cen-Del 1-3 4-8 Milan 0-5 0-11 Top Performers Brandon Sizemore (SR) 7 hits in 4 games Joe Dicken (SR) 6 hits in 4 games Hunter Jordan (SC) 7 hits, 6 RBI’s, 3 runs, 3 2B, SB in 3 games Josh Yeary (SC) 5 hits, 2 runs, RBI, 2B in 3 games Jesse Ball (SM) 5-13 with 4 2B, 3B in 4 games Kyle Daugherty (SM) 4-12 with 2 2B, HR / 1st W of season – 6 solid IP Nathan Hannan (RS) 4-5 with 2 2B’s, 5 RBI’s in week
Brandon Turner (RS) 4-5 in week Trent Smith (JCD) 4 hits, 3 RBI’s, 2 SB in 3 games Trey Brown (JCD) 5 1/3 IP, 5 hits, 2 runs, ER, 4 K’s, 2 BB in W vs. Trinity Mackenzy Withered (SW) 4 hits, 4 runs, 3 RBI’s, 2B for the week ORVC Baseball Player of the Week: Hunter Jordan, Switzerland County Softball Varsity Standings ORVC Overall Rising Sun 5-0 13-1 South Ripley 3-2 6-6 Milan 2-3 6-5 Southwestern 3-3 7-9 Jac-Cen-Del 2-3 3-9 Shawe Memorial 0-4 2-6 Switzerland County 0-0 0-0 NR NR – No Report Received This Week Top Performers: Aliex DeDreu (RS) 5 hits, 4 RBI’s, 2 runs / 13 IP, 8 hits, 2 runs, 15 K’s, 2 W’s, 2 hit shut-out vs. South
Dearborn / both hits were infield Sydney Willhite (RS) 2 hits, 2 runs, 2 RBI’s, 2B, SB in 3 games Liz Anderson (SW) 6 runs, 5 hits, 3 SB’s for the week Austin Courtney (SW) 6 hits, 4 runs, 2B, SB for the week Lindsey Sutton (JCD) 4 hits, 2 runs, RBI, 3B in 3 games Brooklyn Ronsheim (JCD) 4 hits, 2 runs, 5 SB’s, RBI in 3 games Ashley Josephsen (SM) 8-12, 4 2B’s for the week Allie Linkmeyer (SR) 6 hits, 6 RBI’s, 4 runs, 2 SB’s, 2B, HR in 3 games Whitney Walker (SR) 6 hits, 5 RBI’s, 3 runs, 3 SB’s, 2 2B’s, 3B in 3 games McKenna Prakel (SR) 5 runs, 4 hits, 2 RBI’s, 2 SB’s, 2B in 3 games ORVC Softball Players of the Week: Whitney Walker, South Ripley Boys Golf
Top Performers: Jake Willhite (RS) 46 @ Shadowood / 42 @ Spring Hills / 45 @ Sunrise Bryce Murray (RS) 41 @ Spring Hills / 39 @ Sunrise Michael Perry (SW) 40 @ Spring Hills / 45 @ Shadowood Ashton Hill (SW) 43 @ Shadowood Joey Waldron (SR) 41 @ Pine Hills Devin Tankersley (SR) 42 @ Pine Hills / 47 @ North Branch ORVC Boys Golfer of the Week: Bryce Murray, Rising Sun Boys Track Girls Track Brent Jackson (RS) 139’6” Discus Alicia Kasper (SW) 80’9” Cody Federman (SR) 45’10 ½” Shot Put Bethani Kloepfer (SW) 36’3” * Quinn Meyer (SC) 20”5 ½” Long Jump Savannah Reuda (SW) 14’9” Alex Curran (SC) 6’2” High Jump Jaclyn Kolodzik (RS) 5’1” Austin Martin (RS) :17.14 High Hurdles Jaclyn Kolodzik (RS) :16.75
ORVC Performers of the Week: Briar Miller – Rising Sun, Braden Burk Switzerland County. Jaclyn Kolodzik – Rising Sun, Savannah Reuda - Southwestern * - school record
Brookville native named to IHSAA TIM HILLMAN RECORDER-NEWS EDITOR
The IHSAA Executive Committee approved two personnel moves last week announcing Sandra Walter and Chris Kaufman as assistant commissioners. Walter, athletic director at Lawrence Central High School in Indianapolis, will be new to the IHSAA staff while Kaufman was promoted to his new position having served as Communications Director since joining the IHSAA in 2006. Both appointments are effective June 4, 2012. Walter, 42, was one of four finalists interviewed earlier this month to fill the vacancy left by Assistant Commissioner Theresia Wynns who is leaving the IHSAA staff
to join the National Federation of State High School Associations (NFHS) as Director of Sports and Officials Education. “I am extremely pleased to welcome Sandra Walter to the IHSAA Executive Staff,” said Commissioner Bobby Cox. “Her experience as a leader in the field of athletic administration in our state will prove invaluable as we move forward in our efforts to promote the ideals of education-based athletics for Hoosier students. Our organization is most fortunate to add Sandra to a talented and passionate staff already in place at the Association office.” Walter has spent 12 years at Lawrence Central, the last 10 as athletic director and two years as assistant athletic director. Prior to
that she was the women’s sports director at Hamilton Southeastern (1999-00), athletic director at Knightstown (1998-99) and began her career at Rushville (1992-98) as a mathematics teacher. She added responsibilities as assistant athletic director (1993-98) and also coached the women’s varsity track and field team (1995-98). “I am extremely excited about the opportunity to join the IHSAA as an assistant commissioner,” said Walter. “I have a great deal of respect for the staff, assistant commissioners, and Bobby Cox. I believe in high school athletics and the opportunities they provide for our young people. I am looking forward to stepping into the role as an assistant commissioner and I’m acutely aware that we are an organi-
Pete Ramsey (RS) :45.95 Low Hurdles Savannah Hubbard (SW) :49.77 John Herzog (M) :11.32 100 Morgan Mahoney (SW) :13.22 Cord Comer (JCD) :23.05 200 Tasha Melton (SW) :27.75 Adam Hummel (RS) :53.08 400 Morgan Mahoney (SW) 1:02.3 Braden Burk (SC) 2:08 800 Savannah Reuda (SW) 2:32.8 Braden Burk (SC) 4:46 1600 Savannah Redua (SW) 5:51.5 Briar Miller (RS) 10:54.9 3200 Cass Lawson (SW) 12:57 Milan :46.40 400 relay Southwestern :53.26 Milan 3:42.46 1600 relay Southwestern 4:29.4 Rising Sun 8:57.15 3200 relay Southwestern 10:45
zation formed to serve our membership and our student athletes.” Walter earned a bachelor’s degree in mathematics from Ball State University in 1992 and completed her master’s in athletic administration in 1997. She is a 1988 graduate of Brookville High School in southeastern Indiana where she lettered in track and field. She has served as tournament director for 18 IHSAA sports during her career and also is an active 16year member of the National Interscholastic Athletic Administrators Association (NIAAA) and Indiana Interscholastic Athletic Administrators Association (IIAAA). Kaufman has overseen the IHSAA’s marketing efforts with corporate partners, served as an Association spokesperson, helped form
the IHSAA Champions Television Network and provided support at all state championship events among other responsibilities. Previously, the 45-year old had worked 16 years at Cathedral High School in Indianapolis as its Director of Marketing and Communications. “Chris has demonstrated excellence in his role at the IHSAA and has earned an opportunity to expand his leadership capabilities in the administration of four of our sports and other Association initiatives,” said Cox. “This change of responsibility for Chris now allows the Association to embark on new areas of pursuit which will continue to forward the mission of the organization. I am equally pleased for Chris and the Association at this development and I look forward to the accomplishment of several organizational goals.”
Belle River travels north to find friendly competiton Rising Sun’s Belle River base ball team traveled to Huntington (near Fort Wayne) on Saturday, May 5 and played the Huntington Hilltoppers ina rematch of a game 4 years ago (the first Belle River game ever). The game this time was a good contest, but like four years ago, the Hilltoppers came out on top by a score of 12 to 9 (much closer than our original meeting which was 15 to 1). The second game of
the day, the Belle River’s played a team from the West Lafayette ‘Courriers’, a very young team, ran the bases well, and they won 5 to 2 in a game that was scorelass thru four. Their captain was a young man named ‘Possum’ Wainscott who told therising Sun team they wanted to play them for a long time since he has relatives that live in Rising Sun ( Siekmans -Whites and Bungers). They hope to set up a game with the Belle Rivers next
year in Rising Sun. Dustin ‘Hands” Lamkin the regular centerfielder for the games, who did not make this roadtrip, will soon marry and the young lady from the Keith family of Rising Sun, who Possum Wainscott said is also a distant relative of his. Small world. The next game is on the road, May 12 at Sharon Woods Park (Heritage Village Field ) in Cincinnati. They will face
the Cincinnati Redlegs, one of the oldest vintage base ball teams in the country. They will play two games with them using the 1869 base ball
rules. They are a fine team and a great bunch of guys, an old-style dinner will follow the second game.
Golf Guide The Jewel of Southern Indiana
Dearborn Country Club “Community Day” Now open to the public on Mondays
CALL 812-926-0487 FOR A TEE TIME!
Weekday Special $29
Regular 18 Holes w/cart $27.00 9 Holes $20.00 Seniors (50+) $25.00
Round of Golf, with cart / 2 people
18 Hole • Championship • Pro Shop Restaurant • Sports Bar • Banquet Facility 9799 Prechtel Rd. Cincinnati, OH 45252 513.385.4442
Your Guide to Local Links 20 Mem 12 bersh Now Avail ips able
Weekdays $25 Round of Golf, with cart / 2 people 7211 Hyland Rd. Guilford, IN • 812.576.5000
Weekday Golf 9 Holes - $9 • 18 Holes $16 Weekend & Holiday Golf 9 Holes - $11 • 18 Holes $19 Please call to verify
22087 Pocket Rd. Batesville IN • 812.934.6348
bg’s grill open to the public 7 days a week
170 Country Club Lane, Aurora, IN
Regular 18 holes w/cart
$29 Check out specials at www.sugarridgegc.com 21010 Stateline Road Lawrenceburg, IN 513-333-0333
KEEP YOUR TEE BOX FILLED THIS GOLF SEASON! CALL 812.537.0063 OR 513.367.4582 TO ADD YOUR COURSE TO OUR GOLF GUIDE!
PAGE 10
RECORDER & NEWS
THURSDAY, MAY 10, 2012
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FOR 14 ACREAGE 21 APARTMENTS 21 APARTMENTS SALE FOR RENT FOR RENT 3 acres, 3 bedroom doublewide home. 2 out buildings, storm shelter, located in Okeana, Ohio. $68,000. Call for details. (513)907-5944. River lots Great Miami River in New Baltimore Ohio. River fromtage easy access to water. Large trees. Almost 3/4 acres $13,000. 513-353-4114 Large concrete slab.
RENTAL
21 APARTMENTS FOR RENT
tion only.
REAL ESTATE
0 steps! Large 1 or 2 bedroom at Village Square Apartments in downtown Harrison. Free heat! $425 and up. (513)367-6366.
FOR 11 HOUSES SALE
0 steps! Miamitown, large 1 or 2 bedroom at Via Manor Apts. Private patio, Abandoned DW W/land, lovely grounds. $395 and please take over, $2,000 u p . Free heat! deposit. 888-221-4503. (513)353-0398. 1 & 2 bedroom apartments For sale by owner. 146 in Aurora. $650 and $750, Flintstone Drive, Harrison. all utilities paid. Call Ranch, 3 bedroom, 1 bath, 812-926-0468 1 car garage. $95,000. 1 bedroom, large LR, (513)484-6206. kitchen, bath, big closets, upstairs apartment. Refrigerator/stove furnished. No pets. $485 rent, $200 deposit. 407 1/2 Poplar St., Rising Sun, 926-2258. 16x80 trailer for sale or lease option to buy, 3 2 bedroom apt., in Harribedroom, 2 bath, available son, $500/month plus elecin G r e e n d a l e . tric. (513)479-5155. 812-577-0781 2 Bedroom duplexes for rent in Aurora, $500 & Holiday Homes - 10642 $600/month. No utilities inEddy Dr. 3 bedroom, 2 full cluded. References re baths, fireplace, shed, quired. Call 812-926-0256 deck, carport. Asking $28,000. (513-706-4677 A 3 bedroom, Dillsboro, refrigerator & stove fur nished, by grade school, Owner Financing - 1967 sewer & water furnished. Holly Park, 2 bedroom. HUD applicants accepted. $9,500, $1,500 down, $575/month, $600 deposit, $200/month. Hazelhurst s t u d i o apartment MHP 8001 Hamilton Ave., $350/month, $400 deposit lot #71. Mt. Healthy, Ohio. references required. Call (513)678-3360. 812-438-2640.
HOMES 12 MOBILE FOR SALE
Aurora 1BR, furnished, Owner Financing - 1990 2nd floor. No pets/smokFleetwood, 2 bedroom, 1 ing. Utilities paid by tenant. full bath, $9,500, $1,500 Free laundry room down, $200/month. Hazel- short/long term. Prime lohurst MHP lot #45. Mt. cation office retail space Healthy, Ohio. also. Leave message (513)678-3360 (812)926-1083
FOR RENT NO-TILL DRILL FOR PASTURE/HAYLAND Or
WILDLIFE HABITAT PLANTS AND SMALL GRAINS Ohio County Soil & Water Conservation District Call to Rent 812-584-1276
Aurora, large 1BR, no pets, upstairs, $425/ month, you pay utilities, or a separate unit, $650/ month, all utilities paid. 812-216-8477
New Haven - Near Harrison. 1 bedroom apart ment. Equipped kitchen, central heating/AC, private parking and laundry facilities. Nice condition. $450/month. AURORA-1 BR APT. (812)623-2524. LEASE-221 SECOND ST. AURORA. G R O U N D Rising Sun large 1 bed FLOOR. STOVE & room apartment, off street FRIDGE. UTILITIES IN- parking, water/sewage inCLUDED! $575/ MONTH. cluded, large yard. $385 $600 DEPOSIT. NO m o n t h + deposit. PETS. 584-1616, 9A-6P. 8 1 2 - 9 2 6 - 2 3 0 3 or MAYBERRYPROPER513-615-4318 TIES@EMBARQMAIL.CO Small 2 bedroom apart M ment in West Harrison, Country Hill Apartments. Ind. $650 per month. All Studio $380, no steps car- utilities included. No pets. ports, laundry on site. First and last months rent Across from Ludlow Hill required. (513)235-0869. Park. 812-539-4339 St. Leon, 2nd floor apartEfficiencies in Aurora, all ment, 2 bedroom, 1 bath, utilities included, + satellite $ 4 3 0 a month. and phone, furnished. $85 (513)616-8701. to $100 weekly + deposit. 812-926-3641 West Harrison / Bright, Ind. Attached apartment at Efficiency - 1 bedroom private residence, nice 4 apartment. Utilities paid. room, 1 bath, fridge, Lawrenceburg area. De- range, washer & dryer, gaposit required. Call rage. Must have refer (812)438-4883. ences. You pay electric. For rent when available, $600 a month, deposit the 2 and 3 room furnished same. (513)200-0058. apartments, utilities included, AC, no pets. Deposit required. Call (812)537-5796, (812)432-9605, or 9878 HARRISON AVE, 3 (812)584-3822. BED, 1 NEW BATH, 2 Greendale - 1 bedroom CAR ATTACH GARAGE, apartment, 2nd floor, CENTRAL AIR COND, equipped kitchen, FULL BASEMENT, washer/dryer hook-up, car- LARGE FENCED YARD, KITCHEN, peted, $450 + deposit & N E W utilities. Call evenings $ 9 7 5 . 0 0 M T H CALL 812-623-41130. (513)617-7845 Harrison - 1 bedroom apartment in quiet 12 unit brick building, heat fur - Aurora- Large 1BR, new nished. $ 4 3 0 / m o n t h . windows and roof, washer (513)845-4141. and dryer hook-up, $500/ month, you pay utilities. Harrison - 1 bedroom 812-216-8477 apartment heat, water, garbage paid. $425/month Clean Brick Ranch Farmplus $425 d e p o s i t . house. Very private, 3br, (513)886-3828. 1bath, central air, appli ances, attached garage, Harrison - Nice large, 2 storage building, St. Leon/ bedroom apt. in 3-family Lawrenceburg. house. Electric/heat not in- $975/month plus deposit. cluded. $550/month. 515 L e a v e message Park Ave., Do Not Disturb 765-647-5908 Tenants, call owner @ (513)845-4141. Harrison - 3 bedroom, 1bath, ranch, fenced yard, Harrison a/c, w/d. $850/month, Move-in special. Newly $850/deposit. remodeled 1-2 bedroom (513)403-7829. w/patio or balcony, pool, wooded area $470 and up. Harrison - Beautiful 2.5 No pets. (513)202-0715. bedroom, 1 bath, family Section 8 accepted. room with fireplace, 2 car detached garage. Asking Harrison, 1 and 2 bedroom $980/month plus deposit. apt., Leasing special, (513)673-1093. $495, $595/month incl. water, sewer, garbage. Laun- HVL - main floor of very dry on site. Security de- secluded 2 bedroom on 3 posit r e q u i r e d . wooded lots, great room (513)205-5555. w/beam cathedral ceiling, large master bedroom and Harrison, 1-2 bedroom. carport, wraparound deck Paragon West Apts. Pri- o v e r l o o k i n g woods. vate patio with breathtak- Washer/dryer and gym ing view of the valley. Free down. $975 includes all heat! $450 and up. No utilities, cable, lawn mainpets. V i s i t tenance, snow removal paragonwest.viviti.com and trash pick-up. No (513)845-4141. smoking, ideal for profesHarrison, OH-Tippeca- sional or empty nester. No noe Apartments, Spa - short term renters or cious remodeled 1BR co-habitators. $800 de $545.00, 2BR $640.00 posit and references. dishwasher, balcony, 812-537-9305. very, very clean. Water & Manchester, 3 bedroom sewer included, no pets. country farmhouse, 1 bath, 812-637-1787, kitchen with stove, fridge, 513-574-4400 w/d hook-up, central In Harrison, efficiency, HVAC, large yard, $700. $395/month heat and wa- 513-604-7983/513-255ter paid. Laundry facilities 7032
22
on site. Call for move in specials. (513)515-2569.
Rising Sun (L273264) 4br home w/barn,Quonset bldg, outbldgs, & 2 ponds, on no-outlet rd. 17+/- acs for $224,900 or 61+/- acs for $349,900 or more ac avail. MLS# 273264 $224,900 Patrick Martini Vevay (L274830) 3br, 2bath home on 7.5 acres. Pole barn, Lang blg & more! $198,000 Ken Greive Rising Sun (L274842) Nice level 11 acres with woods. No single or doublewides allowed. $ 45,900 Ken Greive
438-3966
www.huff.com
TRI-STATE LAND COMPANY
859-485-1330 1 ¾ ac. Northern Switzerland Co.-3 bd & 2 ba single wide, 2 decks, flat pasture, city water, $59,900.00, $4,000.00 down, $535 per mo. 11 ac. East Enterprise - pasture, woods, small creek, semi-private, fronts Hwy 250, city water, $42,900.00, $2,000.00 down. 2 ac. Vevay area - Hwy 129, larger brick farmhouse, 4 bd & 1 ba, fixer upper, 2 car detached garage, $75,900.00, $5,000 down, $667 per mo. 4 1/2 ac. Patriot area - partly wooded, small pond, mobiles welcome, city water avail., $28,900.00, $1,000.00 down.
Many other properties to choose from. Can’t list all properties. Call today to find out the other land we have for sale.
23
HOUSES FOR RENT
MOBILE HOMES FOR RENT
Large 1 bedroom apt., in Harrison, $435/month plus 2 bedroom $475 + utilities, electric. (513)479-5155. 3 bedroom $525 + utilities. Large 2 bedroom apart- Switzerland County, HUD ment, Dillsboro, A/C, heat, accepted. Country living water. Appliances fur - year lease. 812-623-4454 nished. C a l l or 859-240-0126 (812)438-3519. Shown by appointment and for an ap- West Harrison, IN 2 bedroom on 2 acres, $600 plication. plus deposit. No pets. Miamitown, 2 bedroom, 1 812-637-1773 bath, $520.00 per month + deposit, 8418 Harrison Avenue. 513-549-3418
PARK PLACE APARTMENTS SR 48 to Bellaire Dr. Lawrenceburg, IN 1 Bedroom $500/month 2 Bedroom $600/month 3 Bedroom/Townhouse $775/month Call for availability 1 year lease, Deposit same as rent. No pets, washer / dryer hookup. Lawrenceburg schools Close to Ludlow Hill Park. Apartments also available in downtown Lawrenceburg.
CALL 812-221-0425
BUSINESS PROP. 24 FOR RENT/LEASE
Economic location(s) in area qualifying for grant assistance. Two-small adjoining easy-access locations, Walnut Street. Lease one/both @ $450 each 812-584-4853. Available July 1 or sooner. Garage space for rent small medium and large $275 and up 220 electric business or storage Call Tom (513)477-8848
BUSINESS PROP. 24 FOR RENT/LEASE 31 Lawrenceburg nr. - Randall Ave off Route 50 150acres, 8,000sqft. bldg+720sqft office under construction next to Dearborn Co bldgs & South eastern Beverages bld to suit, financing available, sale or lease I-74 & N.Bend-6 ofc bldgs, land avail, 7 locs. Realtors welcome websitewww.vgrackco.com V & G Rack 513-574-7661. Office / warehouse / retail space for lease in Law renceburg, 1500 sqft to 5000 sqft. 812-537-1100.
28
MISCELLANEOUS FOR RENT
Call for an appointment * Foreclosure Special * Equipped kitchens * Laundry facilities * Heat included * 24 hour emergency maintenance * Minutes from I-275
* Ask about Deposit Special * Lots of closet space * Children play area * Walk to Ludlow City Park * Extra Storage * Pets Welcome
NOW LEASING 1 & 2 bedroom apartments
Experienced Tanker/Flatbed Drivers! *Strong Freight Network *Stability *Great Pay Every Second Counts! Call Today! 1-800-277-0212 www.primeinc.com
Flatbed Drivers. New Pay Scale - Start @ .37 cpm. Up to .04cpm Mileage bonus. Home weekends. Insurance & 401k. Apply @ Boydandsons.com 800-648-9915 FULL TIME DAY WORK AVAILABLE MALE/FE MALE WORKERS WHITEWATER PROCESSING 513-367-4133
Hair Stylist wanted, hourly wage or commission. Must be upbeat, with a good attitude, experience necesGreendale, 30x40 Garage sary. Heads Up Hair Salon For Rent, 12x12 garage Dearborn Plaza. door, heat, water, bath - 812-537-0752 room, $550.00/month. Call Hiring you and your 3/4 Tom 513-460-2660. tom or larger (or Pasture for rent. Call Semi-tractor) to deliver 812-744-5536 trailers around North America. Get paid well to set your own schedule and see the U.S.A. Call 1-866-764-1601 or go to ForemostTransport.com Housing needed for 8 today! adult professionals for June and July in HVL, NEW TO TRUCKING? Lawrenceburg, or Green- Your new career starts dale. Furnished or unfur- now! *$0 Tuition Cost *No nished. 513-284-9021 Credit Check *Great Pay & Benefits Short employ ment commitment required call: 866-660-8684. www.joinCRST.com
29
WANTED TO RENT
EMPLOYMENT
Now hiring busers, part-time at Woodlands, 9680 Cilley Rd., Cleves, Ohio 45002. Call for appointment, (513)353-2593. $1,200 New Driver bonus Supplement your income. for CDL drivers! Great Part time pool attendant rates, quick settlement, needed at local commuflexible schedule. Call nity. Will train the right 1-866-764-1601 or go to www.QualityDriveAway.co candidate. Weekends required. To apply call m today! (513)367-9824 ask for **Able to travel** Hiring 10 Meg. people, work-travel all states, resort areas. No Regional and Flex Fleet exp. paid training/transpor- Opportunities available! tation provided. 18+ Martenʼs Flex Fleet posi1-888-853-8411 www.pro- tions offer more Hometime 7 Days On, 7 Days Off. tekchemical.com We also have Regional 25 Driver T r a i n e e s runs with Excellent Pay & Needed! Learn to drive for Benefits. Recent increase Stevens Transport! Earn on Automatic Detention $800 per week! No experi- Pay! Join Marten Transence needed! Local CDL port-Certified Top Pay cartraining job ready in 15 rier! 866-322-4039 or days! 1-877-649-3156. www.drive4marten.com AVERITT has great oppor- CDL-A, 6 mos. Exp. Retunity for CDL-A drivers! quired. EEOE/AAP 42.5 cpm w/1+ yearʼs ex- RG Transport is Hiring perience (depends on lo- Class A-CDL. Full time, cation). Weekly hometime/full benefits! Part time and owner opPaid refresher course erators, *Great Pay & *Weekend Home available. 888-362-8608 Benefits Time *No Touch Freight Averittcareers.com EOE *Paid Holidays & Vaca -
31
HELP WANTED
Baldwin Cleaning Service Residential cleaners needed. Location: Bright, Ind. Hours: 7:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. M-F Part-time $7.50 per hour. Call Leesa Baldwin (812)637-5861.
Bartender/Pro-shop attendant, some weeknights, all weekend nights and some weekend days. Bartending, cleaning, pro-shop duties, and some cooking required. Apply at Country View Gof Course. 812-576-5000 “Can You Dig It” We will train, certify & provide lifetime assistance landing work. Hiring in Indiana. Start digging as a heavy equipment operator. 866-362-6497 AC1213
tions *Let Your Great CSA Score Earn You a $0.03 CPM. Call us!!! 866-275-1454 or apply onl i n e a t : www.rgtlogistics.com
Roofing help needed. Must have experience and valid drivers license, transportation and cell phone. Call (812)637-2062. Seeking front desk and housekeeping person. Full and part time. Experience needed. Apply in person: 391 Comfort Dr., Harrison.
31
HELP WANTED
Telemarketer needed in East Enterprise. Experience with computers a must. Excellent phone skills. Call 812-534-3822.
31
HELP WANTED
“You got the drive, We have the Direction” OTR Drivers - APU Equipped Pre-Pass EZ-pass. Pets/passenger policy. Newer equipment. 100% Tool and Die Designer N o T o u c h . w/5-10 yrs. Experience in 1-800-528-7825. Stamping Die Design Solidworks Preferred or Any 3D Design Package. Also a CNC Mill Programmer and CNC Wire Programmer w/experience. 1st Shift Excellent Benefits and Pay. Please call only if Aurora- own your own resGas and y o u h a v e taurant! experience.765-647-3451 water/sewer paid, $900/ month. Serious inquires or 765-265-7768. only. 812-216-8477
BUSINESS 32 OPPORTUNITIES
Unemployed? Need a Stable Career? You could be on the road to financial stability in a few short weeks! Obtain your CDL with Professional 16-day training w/Roadmaster! Job Placement Assis tance, Pre-Hires if qualified! Approved for Veterans Training. Call Now For More Info! 1-866-467-1836 AC-0205
34 JOB TRAINING AIRLINE CAREERS - Become an Aviation Maintenance Tech. FAA ap proved training. Financial aid if qualified. Housing available. Job placement assistance. AC0901 Call Aviation Institute of Maintenance. 888-242-3197.
EVENT COORDINATOR
The City of Rising Sun Bicentennial Committee is currently seeking an Event Coordinator. The position is part-time and on a contractual basis. Candidates must have good communication skills, possess skills in Word and Excel, have knowledge of Rising Sun and Ohio County and be detail oriented. Please send a resume with references and a cover letter stating why you would qualify for this position to City of Rising Sun Clerk Treasurer’s Office, PO Box 172, Rising Sun, IN 47040 by May 29, 2012.
REGISTERED NURSES HHA’s and CNA’s We are growing!!
Full Time position available Great salary & full benefit package for FT! Make a difference as an employee of
PERSONAL TOUCH HOME CARE of INDIANA
Call Pam or Sheila @ 812-637-5428 for info. pharden@pthomecare.com • Fax 812-637-5439
LOCAL GM DEALER
NOW HIRING
STATE OF THE ART BODY SHOP
Frame & sheet metal technicians (I-CAR or ASE Certified Preferred) Four years experience recommended Competitive pay with benefits
Stable help needed after school and weekends. Need hard working, reliable, motivated local teen preferably near Rising Sun area. $12 to $17 a day. CLASS A CDL DRIVERS 812-438-2992 NEEDED 3 Years of Verifiable Experience. Home weekends/Canada a plus. Local/Regional/$1,000wkly Flat/Step deck/van. Call 888-544-4285 x2125 www.buchananhauling.co m
Call Jeff Kramer at 812-654-3001 Email resume to: collisioncenter@tomtepe.com Mail your resume to: Tom Tepe Auto Center, Inc. ATTN: Body Shop • P.O. Box 426 Milan, IN 47031
ADMINISTRATIVE POSITION
Driver needed, CDL Class A. Van leased to Landstar. 1 year experirence. (513)315-2213. Drivers - CDL-A Drivers Needed! Up to $3,000 Sign-On Bonus for qualified drivers! 6mo. OTR exp. reqʼd. Call or Apply Online 877-521-5775 www.USATRUCK.jobs
Small uniform and linen service in Harrison searching for a quality minded self-starter to fill an Admin. Position. This is a very responsible position with full time hours. All salary & benefits discussed during interview. Apply at 123 Harrison Ave, Harrison, OH 45030 or send resume to danweethee@gmail.com
Drivers - CDL-A OTR DRIVERS Premium Pay Package! Start up to .46 cpm Home Most Week ends! Call today! 800-441-4271 IN-100 HornadyTransportation.com Drivers - CDL-A Team with Total! Miles *Equipment *Benefits .50 cents/mile for Hazmat Teams. Solo drivers also needed! 800-942-2104 ext. 7307 or 7308 www.Drive4Total.com Drivers - Knight offer hometime choices: Ex press lanes, 7/ON-7/Off, 14/ON-7/OFF, weekly. Full and part time. Daily pay! CDL-A, 3 months recent e x p e r i e n c e required. 800-414-9569 www.driveknight.com DRIVERS! Stone Belt Freight puts drivers first! Competitive pay! Home weekends! Excellent benefits! Pre-loaded trailers. Call Kelsy, 888-272-0961.
Lawrenceburg currently rents as a barbershop. Great business location, or can be 1-bedroom apartment all utilities included. $500 month. Call 926-3739. Available May Drivers: Getting Home is Easier. Chromed out 8, 2012. trucks w/APU's. Chromed out pay package! 90% Drop & Hook CDL-A, 6mos Exp. (888) 247-4037
812-537-2108
HELP WANTED
Drivers: Local! Shuttle operation out of Hebron, KY! Good Pay, Benefits, Equipment! CDL-A, 2yrs, 23yoa req. John: (937)773-9280 Experienced landscaper: Retaining walls, pavers, installation, maintenance, and equipment operating. Valid drivers license/clean driving record. Send re sume to Cutter Landscaping P.O. Box 3943, Lawrenceburg.
DEARBORN COUNTY HOSPITAL
Neighbors Caring For Neighbors
NURSING
RN - Part time opening on Nights in the Birthing Center. One year Med/Surg experience required. Monitoring telemetry experience preferred.
CLINICAL SERVICES
EKG/EEG TECHNICIAN - Part time Day shift opening. EKG/EEG experience preferred.
IMAGING SERVICES
ULTRASOUND TECHS - Two part time openings on Days.
SUPPORT SERVICES
FOOD SERVICE ASSISTANT - One full time (36 hours per week) opening 11:00am - 7:30pm. for dishwashing and food prep. Includes some weekends and holidays. AVAILABLE FOR FULL & PART-TIME EMPLOYEES
• Vacation at 6 months • 403(b) program • Health & dental insurance • Tuition reimbursement • Competitive Salary
• 3 WEEKS VACATION AFTER 1 YEAR FOR FULL TIME
600 Wilson Creek Rd. Lawrenceburg, IN 47025
(812) 537-8120 (513) 564-8000 ext. 8120 FAX (812) 537-1977
For an up-to-date listing of job opportunities at DCH, visit our website at www.dch.org or call our JOB HOTLINE at 537-8121 or 1-800-676-5572, 24 hours a day. EOE.
THURSDAY, MAY 10, 2012
SERVICES/ NOTICES
41 ANNOUNCEMENTS
Diabetics: several plants available at Chan's Plant Sale are recommended for diabetics: stevia, a plant used as a sweetener with NO carbs; fenugreek, whose seeds have been used to help blood sugar levels; and Jerusalem artichokes, which contain inulin and were recommended for diabetics by Edgar Cayce. Thurs.-Sat, May 10-11-12, & Sat., May 19, at 109 N. High St., Rising Sun. 812-438-3182, leave message. Adopt: “Our life will be complete when we adopt a new born to share our home, security and endless love.” Expenses Paid. Call Jill and Irv at 1-866-201-2874. ADOPTION: Devoted Family promises to cherish your child unconditionally. Financially secure, ex penses paid. Your child is already loved in our hearts! Susan/Patrick 1-877-266-9087. www.susanandpatrickadopt.com
41 ANNOUNCEMENTS 42
Adopt: Loving 1st time parents promise to give your baby a safe, happy home. Expenses paid. Olivia & Matt, 1-866-664-1213. Edgar Cayce Search For God study group will be reforming in the Lawrenceburg area in June. If interested, please call Shawn at 812-438-3182 and leave a message.
CHILD CARE
Come play with us at Kidz Are Us Daycare. Full & Part-time openings available for summer fun! Call 539-2854, Michelle Neace. Home daycare in Bright Indiana has immediate openings for your child. Call anytime 513-582-7380 Openings at daycare on Mt. Tabor Road, 6A-6P. Snacks lunch, before/after school care. Dearborn Schools - bus 37. Reasonable rates. 812-655-9367
Seeking adoptive-parent candidates to accept infants into their home in next 60 days. Prefer completed home studies. Call Heck Law Offices 1-A Landscaping - Dump 317-822-8220. truck services, yard debris Take the thyme to come removal, mowing & tree to Chan's Plant Sale for work. Veteran owned and great prices on perennial operated. Licensed and inflowers, herbs, wildflow- sured. Member Cincinnati ers & more! Oriental BBB. poppies, orange, lemon www.lawnshark.yolasite. & English thyme, salad com burnet, Greek oregano, (513)607-8672. coreopsis, basils, bloodA.B.C. Lawn Service. root, bluebells, pinks, Mowing, lawncare, etc. May 10, 11, 12 & 19 seeding work at 109 N. High St., Rising (513)738-4410. Sun. Questions? Call 812-438-3182, leave mes- Achs Services - Heating sage. Or check the Bugs, and Air conditioning. All Blooms & Vittles blog on types and models, hot wathis paper's website for ter heaters, light electrical and plumbing. Licensed listing. and insured. (513)668-3775 (765)647-0439.
Regional Drivers Needed! $500 Sign-On Bonus
300 - 400 Mile Radius Mostly Out and Back Same Day! 1-2 nights out a week Requirements: 18 months Tractor Trailer experience CDL-A with Tanker and Hazmat Highway Transport Offers: Paid Orientation Excellent Benefits TWIC Assistance Available SAFETY FOCUSED QUALITY DRIVEN “Our CSA rating reflects our commitment” EOE/M/F/V/D Apply Online Now! www.hytt.com/jobsForDrivers Call 800-800-5856 x4
CNC MILL OPERATOR
Are you a mold maker or machinist with 3-5 years experience in CNC Milling? Qualified candidates should be able to set-up, program and run machines. Familiarity with Haas, Mori/Seiki or Mazak machines and Fanuc, Haas, Heidenhain, Mazatrol control is a plus. Blue print reading, usage of precision measuring devices, keeping close tolerances and performing own parts inspection are a must. Applicants have to have good work ethics and a perfect attendance record. We are a high-tech tool and die shop and are looking for self motivated individuals that are able to work efficient and independently and are willing and flexible to learn. We offer competitive wages, a generous benefits package and a clean, safe, and air conditioned work environment. Interested candidates please submit your resume to: info@steinkamp-molding.com or fax to: 859-647-1682 Steinkamp Molding L.P. Mold & Tool 3436 Turfway Road • Erlanger, KY 41018 859-647-1801 www.steinkampmold.com
43
BUSINESS SERVICES
43
BUSINESS SERVICES
Durbinʼs Construction Interior/Exterior, home remodeling, competitive pricing, 30 years experience. The one call for all your home repairs. Big or small. Owner: Ralph Durbin (513)628-5952. Epure Quality Masonry Brick, block, stone, chimney and fireplaces. 30 years experience. (812)637-1523.
44 LOST & FOUND 58 MISCELLANEOUS
Black Lab/Retriver w/white chest/front paws, approx. 120lbs, has tags on black/orange/yellow collar, named Sam. Lost 12-28-2011, Kaiser Dr., Manchester. Reward, if found call 812-290-6301 anytime.
45
Handyman services, carpentry, decks, concrete, remodeling, drywall, no job to small, dump truck services, mulch, top soil, gravel, water hauling, yard debris, pressure washing. 812-637-2128
INSTRUCTIION
GENERAL MERCHANDISE
53
FARM/PRODUCE
Black raspberry plants, fresh catnip $1 bundle, forsythia $2.50, seedling and divided perennial flowers and herbs, from 50 cents up. Nothing overpriced, all locally grown, at Chan's Plant Sale, May 10, 11, 12 & 19 at 109 N. High St., Rising Sun.Check the Bugs, Blooms & Vittles blog on this paper's website for listing. Or call 812-438-3182, leave message.
Are you feeling over whelmed and stressed from debt? Do you find yourself avoiding your mail or cringe when your phone rings? Let us help you. Small family business since 1932 credit counseling -BBB A+ rating 859-426-7374 help@fuquafinancial.org www.fuquafinancial.org ASW Lawn Care - Now accepting new customers for the 2012 mowing season. Commercial/residential grass cutting, weed eating, blow, mulching, general clean ups, vacation cuts, senior discounts. In business since 2006. Free estimates. (513)307-6449.
Harrison Treeworx, Senior and local discounts. Tree removal, grass cutting, storm damage, brush removal, yard clean-up, stump re moval, mulching. Free estimates, fully insured Chris OʼHarra, (513)490-8102.
Bowman Tree Service. Trimming, topping, tree removal, lot clearing, storm damage, fully insured and free estimates. Call (812)537-4677.
Kings Landscaping fall and spring cleanup, mulch, new installs, pavers, retaining walls. Call Jeff Ace Appliance, 150 Front St., Lawrenceburg, 812-532-0437. 812-537-0032. RefrigeraL.M. Improvements tors, ranges, washers/dryFully insured, free esti - ers, freezers. Recondi mates, light construction, tioned with warranty. Delivdriveways, p a t i o s , ery available. Parts and restamped concrete side - pairs also. Financing availwalks, garage floors, re- able. taining walls. Call (812)290-3981.
Bowman Painting and general contractor. Interior /exterior painting, commercial and residential. Roofing and remodeling, custom staining, high pressure washing. Free estimates. Call (812)689-6771 or (812)537-4677.
Charles Gray Construction general construction & concrete, roofs to driveways, free estimates. 812-594-2318 513-348-7155
Color Me Clean Window Washing and yard work. Streak free guarantee, best prices in town, free estimates. Call Michael anytime at 513-593-0706. 20 years experience.
Monroe Excavating, Hauling, LLC Limestone, Topsoil, Fill Dirt, Mulch, Sand, Gravel, Driveways Demolition, Digging, Basements, Dump Truck, Bobcat, Track Hoe Work Call (812)926-1995 or (513)310-0835 Do you need help with your weekly house cleaning? Call: 812-290-4247 Gennyʼs Cleaning Service. 30 Years experience and plenty of good references.
Hers & His Professional Services grass cutting, trash removal & home cleaning, partners in life and in business. We are honest, dependable people working for you. Please give us a chance to earn your business. Thank You Bonnie & Steve. Call 513-703-4416 & 513-309-9460.
Do you have clay soil? Selling-sand to improve & loosen your soil. $90 single axle load, $140 tan dem load. Deliver locally Lost Bridge. 812-537-3970
Extreme Bushhog, fits skid loader with hoses, hydraulic motor and fittings. Brand new. 6 ft. cut. $3,500. Gabbard Feed Jim Jones Painting. Sec- Mill, 1084 Carolina Trace ond generation painting a R d . (513)623-4266 tits best. Interior/ exterior, (812)637-3452. pressure washing, decks, we spray finish, cedar sid- Wanted to buy cattle and ing, vinyl, aluminum siding, horses. Crippled or sound. log homes. Local refer - Also buying wild cattle. ences. Residential com- W i l l pay cash. mercial HVL resident. Fully (859)620-5860. insured. 812-539-4929 or 513-379-4204.
54 FURNITURE/APPL HOUSEHOLD
Mike Miller Decorating Interior & exterior painting, drywall repair, wallpaper removal, paper hanging. 25 years experience. Free estimate. (513)205-0797. Residential Cleaning, you make the mess, weʼll do the rest. Insured/Bonded. Specializing in construction and estates. “Clean is my middle name” 812-290-4490 . Gift Certificates. Thinking of You - Cleaning services and more. Residential and business cleaning. Call for more information. Kathy (812)637-0083.
POST FRAME BUILDINGS BUILT ON YOUR LOT 50 Years Experience Superior Construction Over 10,000 Buildings Constructed Trusses 4' or 5' on Center No 8' or 9' Spacing Poles Double Plated • #1 Metal 15 Colors Available We Sell Sliding Door Track & Windows Pole Building Packages Available 24 x 24 with 2 doors • $3,887 40 x 50 with 2 doors • $10,500 GOSMAN INC. 812-265-5290 www.gosmanbuildings.com
PAGE 11
LEGALS
HOMEOWNERS WANTED!! Kayak Pools is looking for Demo Homesites to display our virtually maintenance-free Kayak Pool. Save thousands of $$$ with our pre-season Sale! CALL NOW!! 800-315-2925 kayakpoolsmidwest.com Discount Reward - $1,000 leading Code: 607-L16. to the arrest for theft at SAWMILLS from only Comfort Inn, Harrison, $3997.00 - MAKE & SAVE Ohio, Sat., April 28, 2012. MONEY with you own Call (740)727-2991. bandmill - Cut lumber any
GEOFFʼS ROOFING AND PAINTING New Roofs and repair, roof inspections, interior painting, gutters cleaned, lots of other odd Guitar, piano, harp, home jobs, free estimates. school, music theory and 812-577-2907 pre-school music lessons. Grayʼs Excavation & Land- All Ages. 812-537-5193 scaping. Lawn grading, bobcat work, clearing, High School Diploma! driveways, bush hogging, Graduate in 4 weeks! Free garden tilling, demolition Brochure. Call Now seed & s t r a w . 1-866-562-3650 ext. 837 www.SoutheasternHS.com 812-654-2562 Greendale Self - Storage Indoor storage available 24 hour access. Call (812)537-3131 or (812)637-1787.
RECORDER
55
GARAGE & YARD SALES
Cilantro, chervil, eucalyptus, chives, many mints, and much more at Chan's Plant Sale! May 10, 11, 12 & 19 at 109 N. High St., Rising Sun. Want to know more? Call 812-438-3182, leave message. Or check the Bugs, Blooms & Vittles blog on this paper's website for listing. Moving Sale- Fri. 5/4 & Sat. 5/5 8am-2pm, everything must go. 5312 Yorkridge Rd. Guilford, IN.
57
PETS
AKC Sheltie puppy (toy collie) male, 8 weeks. Beautiful. Vet checked, shots, wormed, house breaking training started. (765)647-3337.
58 MISCELLANEOUS
30ft. round above-ground pool 52in. deep, $500 513-600-2099. Bad teeth? Extractions and immediate dentures while you sleep. Take one small pill. Low fees. Dr. Levin. Info and photos www.sleepdental.net. Call (317)596-9700. GUN SHOW!! Indianapolis, IN - May 12th & 13th, Fort Benjamin Harrison National Guard Armory, 9920 E. 59th St., Sat. 9-5, Sun. 9-3. For information call 765-993-8942. Buy! Sell! Trade!
Metal Roofing & Trim 12 Colors • Custom Trim Available Next Day Service • Buy Factory Direct & Save $1.99 SF #1 • $1.69 Surplus #1 • $.99 SF Scratch & Dent MADISON METALS 812-273-5214 • madisonmetalsinc.com
LEGAL NOTICE DUKE ENERGY INDIANA, INC. Public notice is hereby given that on April 30, 2012, Duke Energy Indiana, Inc. filed an Application with the Indiana Utility Regulatory Commission for approval of a change in its Midwest Independent System Operator Management Cost and Revenue Adjustment Factor under its Standard Contract Rider No. 68 for approval of an alternative regulatory plan, to the extent required, to permit the exclusion of certain revenues related to Duke Energy Indianaʼs transmission projects from the earnings test in fuel adjustment proceedings. DUKE ENERGY INDIANA, INC. By: DOUGLAS F ESAMANN, President dimension. In stock ready C-5-8-JP-1t to ship. FREE info/DVD: C-5-10-R-1t www.NorwoodSawmills.co C-5-10-RSR-1t m 1-800-578-1363 Ext.300N ORDIANCE NO. 2012-2 FIRST AMENDMENT TO ORDINANCE REGULATING THE USE OF THE RISING SUN PUBLIC LANDING, BOAT RAMP AND PUBLIC DOC (Amending Ordinance No. 2005-1) Always buying antiques, WHEREAS, the Rising Sun public landing, boat collectibles, jewelry, old ramp and public docks are designed for enjoyment coins, old military, uni by the public; and, forms, medals, weapons, WHEREAS, open flames, including fires in grills, swords, helmets etc. ,27 years experience. Call Bob create a danger when located in close proximity to gasoline and gasoline vapors; and, at (812)637-5369. WHEREAS, to protect the rights of all patrons and visitors, it is necessary to amend Ordinance No. 2005-1 to prohibit open flames, including fires in grills, on the public docks or in boats within One Hundred Fifty feet (150) of the public docks. NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT ORDAINED BY THE COMMON COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF RISING SUN, INDIANA, that the Rising Sun Code of Ordinances is hereby amended by adding the following provision: Save your back, Call Open flames, including fires in grills, are prohibited Scrappin Jack, picking up on the public docks or in boats within One Hundred appliances, metal, cars, Fifty feet (150) of the public docks. etc. Call 812-571-0962. All other provisions of Ordinance No. 2005-1, in We buy and haul junk cars cluding regulations referred to therein, shall remain & trucks with titles. Call in full force and effect. 812-621-0961 or email Effective Date. This ordinance shall be in full force davesautosalvage@dishand effect immediately after its passage and ap mail.net. proval by the Mayor of the City of Rising Sun, Indiana, and after proper publication and posting as required by law. PASSED AND APPROVED by the Common Council of the City of Rising Sun, Indiana this 3rd day May, 04 Honda 1100 Shadow, 2012. Steve Slack 8500 miles, 1 owner Dennis Radcliff $3500.00. Call Mike Padgett 513-309-4471. Roy Powell Honda 250RX dirt bike Gary Kinnett (1989) runs great, excellent condition and new Presented by me to the Mayor of the City of Rising tires, $925 C a l l Sun, Indiana, for his approval and signature this this 3rd day May, 2012. (765)647-3337. Rae Baker Gipson, Clerk- Treasurer This Ordinance duly approved and signed by me on this this 3rd day May, 2012. Branden Roeder, Mayor ATTEST: 2008 Chevy Silverado, Rae Baker Gipson, Clerk-Treasurer V-8, 65,000 miles, C-5-10-RSR-1t 4-wheel, crew cab, bedC-5-10-OCN-1t liner, power everything, keyless entry & remote TO THE OWNERS OF THE WITHIN DESCRIBED start, new tires, $23,900. REAL ESTATE AND AILL INTERESTED PARTIES 513-502-4780 IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF Hirlinger Motors OHIO COUNTY RISING SUN, INDIANA For Great deals on CAUSE NO. 58C01-1006-MF-0015 new and used trucks, STATE OF INDIANA check out: COUNTY OF OHIO) SS: hirlingerchevrolet.com BAC HOME LOANS SERVICING, LP PLAINTIFF vs Daniel L. Maloy a/k/a Daniel Maloy; Kimberly N. Maloy a/k/a Kim Maloy; DEFENDANTS Hirlinger Motors N0TICE OF SHERIFF'S SALE OF REAL ESTATE By virtue of an Order of Sale, directed to me from For Great deals on new the Clerk of the Ohio Circuit Court and pursuant to and used cars, check out: a Judgment of Foreclosure entered on September 3, 2010, I will expose to public sale to the highest bidhirlingerchevrolet.com der for cash in hand, at the office of the Sheriff of Will Buy & Haul Scrap Ohio County, in Ohio County, Indiana, located at Cars & T r u c k s 123 S. Mulberry, Rising Sun, IN on July 3, 2012 at (812)716-0781. 10:00 AM Local Time, the fee simple title together with the rents, profits, issues and income or so much thereof as may be sufficient to satisfy said judgment, interest, costs and accruing costs of the following described real estate located in Ohio No hunting. No trespass- County, Indiana, to-wit: ing. No fishing. No entry The following described real estate situated in on the property of Kath- Ohio County, State of Indiana, to-wit: leen Holland. 2485 Salem All that certain lot or parcel of ground situated in Ridge Road. Rising Sun. Henry James Addition to the Town, now City of Ris9-27-12 ing Sun, Indiana, bounded as follows: No trespassing, no fishing, Commencing on High Street at the West side no hunting, no trapping. thereof, at the Northeast corner of a Lot of ground Not responsible for acci- heretofore conveyed by Henry James to Elizabeth dents or injuries. Violators and Rachel Close and running thence with High will be prosecuted. Rick Street Northwardly Fifty-six (56) feet to (formery) DeCamp, 2703 Salem Beymer,s Lot; thence at a right angle Westwardly Ridge, Rising Sun, IN ten and one-half (10 1/2) rods to an alley; thence at 47040 1-13 a right angle Eastwardly to the place of beginning, No trespassing, no fishing, Ohio County, Indiana. no hunting or artifact hunt- Commonly known as: 115 North High Street, Rising ing. Nick Domaschko, Sun, IN 47040-1021 Ohio County, 9748 St. Tax ID Number: 58-06-02-014-052.000-004 Rd. 56 N., Aurora, In This sale is to be made in all respects pursuant to 47001 an act of the General Assembly of the State of IndiNot responsible for acci- ana, approved March 7, 1931, and entitled An act dents or injuries. No hunt- concerning proceedings in actions to foreclose real ing, no fishing or trespass- estate mortgages, providing for the sale and cusing on the properties of: tody of the mortgaged premises and repealing all Paul E. & Clara Lou Fre- laws conflicting therewith (see Indiana Code). denburgh, State Road It is further provided by law that there shall be no 262 and Cass-Union redemption from such sale, and the purchaser at Road. 1-13 such sale, upon complying with the terms of his There is absolutely no purchase, shall be entitled to immediately receive hunting or trespassing on from the undersigned, Sheriff of Ohio County, a Walcott property, not re- deed conveying to him, the purchaser, the fee simsponsible for what might ple title in and to said real estate. happen to you. Trespass- Taken as the property of the Defendant(s) stated ers will be prosecuted. above at the suit of BAC Home Loans Servicing, Raymond Walcott. A tree LP.. Said sale to be without relief from valuation stand was stolen & owner and/or appraisement laws. is looking. The Sheriffʼs Department does not warrant the accuracy of the street address published herein. Eldon Fancher, Sheriff of Ohio County Attorney for Plaintiff Unterberg & Associates, P.C. 8050 Cleveland Place Merrillville, IN 46410 (219) 736-5579 Atty File: 9971619 This communication is from a Debt Collector. This is an attempt to collect a debt and any information obtained will be used for that purpose. C-5-10-RSR-3t
59
WANTED TO BUY
AUTOMOTIVE
61 AUTOS WANTED
66 MOTORCYCLES FOR SALE
68
TRUCKS FOR SALE
69
AUTOS FOR SALE
70 Posted Column
Call 537-0063 to place a classified ads.
“In good times, people want to advertise; in bad times, they have to.”
-Bruce Barton
Member Advertising Hall of Fame
www.thedcregister.com • www.thejournal-press.com www.theharrison-press.com • www.theohiocountynews.com
812.537.0063 • 513.367.4582
PAGE 12
RECORDER & NEWS
THURSDAY, MAY 10, 2012
OPEN HOUSE AT CUTTER’S
TIM HILLMAN AND SUBMITTED PHOTOS
At left, Marcella Cutter, seated, talks with friends and customers at the 30th Anniversary Open House at Cutter’s Mower on Saturday, May 5. Above, Allen Cutter meets with customers and product rep Dick Clements of EFCO during his open house. Below, Jeff Coniff of Country Clipper talks with Eric and Erma Siekman and Dan Kolodzik. Cutter talks with Richard Hilinski of Briggs & Stratton and Core trimmer rep. Over 75 people attended the open house with Shirley Gregory of Patriot winning the gas power leaf blower and Rick Wainscott of Rising Sun winning an Oregon jacket.
‘PUSH’, FROM PAGE 1
several elected officials including Mayor Branden Roeder and former Mayor Bill Marksberry along with Land Consultants who took place in the ground breaking in November. The new ramp will make it quicker to launch boats at the local tournament, which had 102 boats in the water in three hours using the current dock. In addition to having an economic impact the new ramp will help address an erosion problem at the site,located near the curve at Front and Plum Street. The project is part of the Phase IV riverfront development.
PHELPS, FROM PAGE 1
County Prosecutor’s office, director of the Special Crimes Unit and 24 years of service including his time with the Rising Sun Police Department. Jenkins letter noted that “A great school system is an asset to a community and I would like to strengthen what we currently have.” In Hussong’s letter, she noted she had attended a conference with her husband Mike and learned a lot and as a stay at home mom, she is available whenever needed.
SENIOR MENU LifeTime Resources, Inc. invites adults ages 60 and over to visit the Senior Nutrition Activity Center in their community. The Senior Nutrition Activity Centers and their directors are: Madison Senior Center, Karen Lewis at 1-812-265-5376; Buckeye Village, Dee Huskey at 1-812-689-4234; Rising Sun Senior Citizen Bldg., Beth See at 1-812-438-2468; Switzerland Co. Senior Center, Debbie Cox at 1-812-427-3626. Monday May 14-Meatballs with gravy or fiesta chicken, macaroni and cheese, diced beets, peaches; diet - same. Tuesday, May 15-Apple glazed pork or pepper beef patty, yellow rice, mixed vegetables, fresh banana, chocolate pie diet - chocolate pie. Wednesday May 16- Baked Chicken/gravy or Salisbury beef, brown gravy, green beans, whole grain bread, scalloped apples diet - hot apple slices. Thursday May 17-Pork tenderloin/gravy or BBQ chicken, whipped potatoes, California vegetables, fresh fruit diet same. Friday May 18-Potato crusted fish or turkey ham, oven roasted potatoes, spinach, glazed fruit, frosted birthday cake;diet - cake