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The Daily Journal from Franklin, Indiana • Page 12
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The Daily Journal from Franklin, Indiana • Page 12

Publication:
The Daily Journali
Location:
Franklin, Indiana
Issue Date:
Page:
12
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

A10 WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1997 DAILY JOURNAL, JOHNSON COUNTY, IND. OBITUARIES WEATHER The AccuWeather forecast for noon, Wednesday, Oct. 22. -i 1 tta 20 3te 40 -10 -0 0a COLD WARM STATIONARY Band separate rai FRONTS: ttmparetur zones rot ooy. i ii NJ HL Ei 0 Hl HIOH tOW SHOWERS RUN T-SFCWMS FlUflfleS SNOW IC SUNNY PT CLOUDY CLOUDY a.m.

today at the church. Burial will be at Vernon Cemetery in Vernon. Dove-Sharp Rudicel Funeral Home is handling the arrangements. GREENSBURG Gene E. Linville Gene E.

Linville, 63, died Monday, Oct. 20, 1997, in Greensburg. He was a resident of Greensburg. He was born June 26, 1934, in Decatur County. His parents were James Orlia and Margaret Flora (Wolford) Linville.

He married LaVonne M. (Fisher) Linville July 30, 1960, in ShelbyvUle. She survives. Other survivors include three sons, James Robert "J.R." Linville of Walkerton, Ontario, Canada, Bryan L. Linville of Milroy and Ricky G.

Linville of Atlanta, two daughters, Margaret "Maggie" Linville of Yorktown and Cheryl A. Clark of Whiteland; two brothers, William Rex Linville of New Castle and James O. Linville of Canton, Ohio; and 10 grandchildren. He was preceded in death by two brothers. He was a rural mail carrier in Milroy for 3314 years, retiring in 1996.

He owned Market in Milroy for 18 years and had a Jewel Route for eight years. He was also a farmer, owned County Line Crafts and had worked at a Standard Food Store in Indianapolis. He was a member of Milroy Christian Church, Milroy Lodge 139 and Murat Shrine. Ron Simbro will conduct a service at 10 a.m. Thursday at Milroy Christian Church.

Friends may call from 4 to 8 p.m. today at Carmony-Ewing Broadway Funeral Home in ShelbyvUle and from 8:30 a.m. to time of service Thursday at the church. Burial will be at Forest Hill Cemetery in Shelbyville. Memorial contributions may be made to Grand Care Hospice in Indianapolis or Milroy Christian Church.

Mooresville; a sister, Charmon Macaluso of Acton; eight grandchildren; and two great-grandchildren. He was preceded in death by a daughter, Pamela Kay Means; and two brothers, Dale Means and Raymond Means. He was owner and president of Alger Pattern Works in Indianapolis from 1956 until his retirement in 1995. He was a member of Englewood Masonic Lodge 714. A service will be conducted at Thursday at G.H.

Herrmann Madison Avenue Funeral Home in Indianapolis. Friends may call from 5 to 8 p.m. today at the, funeral home, where a Masonic memorial service will be conducted at 7:30 p.m. today. Burial will be at Forest Lawn Memory Gardens in White River Township.

Memorial contributions may be made to the American Lung Association or the American Heart Association in Indianapolis. INDIANAPOLIS Mildred 0. Ross Mildred O. Ross, 93, died Tuesday, Oct. 21, 1997, at St.

Francis Hospital in Beech Grove. She was a resident of Indianapolis. She was born 6, 1904, in Seymour. Her parents were Asbury and Minnie Manuel. She married George Ross.

He survives. Other survivors include a granddaughter, Beverly Bell; and two great-grandchildren. She was preceded in death by a daughter, Norma Ross; and a sister, Thelma Ruth DeMoss. She was a homemaker and a member of Glenns Valley United Methodist Church. A service will be conducted at 11 a.m.

Thursday at Singleton Herr Mortuary. Friends may call from 5 to 8 p.m. today at the funeral home. Burial will be at Mount Pleasant Cemetery in Glenns Valley. MORGANTOWN Haylee Morgan Brehob Haylee Morgan Brehob was stillborn Monday, Oct.

20, 1997, at Community Hospital South in Indianapolis. Her parents are Steven Andrew and Tina Marie (Woodall) Brehob of Morgantown. Other survivors include a brother, Jacob Brehob at home; and grandparents Kenneth and Virginia Woodall of New Whiteland and Joe and Carolyn Buzasa of Lebanon. She was preceded in death by a grandfather, Larry Brehob. Brother Ed Pearson will conduct a service at 2 p.m.

today at Flinn and Maguire Funeral Home in Franklin. Friends "may call from 10 a.m. to time of service today at the funeral home. Burial will be at East Hill Cemetery in Morgantown. NORTH VERNON William Oliver Clark William Oliver Clark, 80, died Sunday, Oct.

19, 1997, at Todd-Aik-ens Health Center in Franklin. He was a resident of North Vernon. He was born July 7, 1917, in Jackson County. His parents were Amel and Mabel (Greer) Clark. He married Grace Pauline (Findley) Clark.

She preceded him in death. Survivors include a son, Joe Clark of Edinburgh; two sisters, Edith Pfaffenberger and Dottie Burkhart, both of Seymour; and seven brothers, Ray Clark and Francis Clark, both of Seymour, Robert Clark, Jim Clark, Don Clark and Dale Clark, all of Columbus, and Harold Clark of Colorado. He was preceded in death by a sister, Ruth Bauer. He retired in 1985 from Muscatatuck State Developmental Center, where he was a-supervi-sor in the power plant. He was a member of the Wesleyan church in North Vernon.

The Rev. Wilbert Vandervort will conduct a service at 10:30 FRANKLIN Lucien C. Martin Lucien C. Martin, 84, died Monday, Oct. 20, 1997, at Franklin United Methodist Community Health CenteF.

He was a resident of Franklin and a former resident of Indianapolis. He was born July 2, 1913, in Sumner County, Tenn. His parents were Clarence and Cassie (Kirkham) Martin. He married Elizabeth Inez (Cole) Martin. She survives.

Other survivors include a daughter, Nancy E. Anders of Greenwood; a son, Ronald C. Martin; a sister, Louise Cowan; and four grandchildren. He was employed by Link Belt (FMC) as a supervisor in the final inspection department for 35 years, retiring in 1975. He was a member of Grace United Methodist Church and the Men's Club of the church.

A service will be conducted at 10 a.m. Thursday at the Shirley Brothers Washington Memorial Chapel in Indianapolis. Friends may call from 3 to 8 p.m. today at the chapel. Burial will be at Washington Park East Cemetery in Indianapolis.

Memorial, contributions may be made to Grace United Methodist Church. NINEVEH Herman Edgar Means Herman Edgar Means, 70, died Monday, Oct. 20, 1997, at Audubon Hospital in Louisville, Ky. He was a resident of Nineveh and Indianapolis. He was born Oct.

9, 1927, in Indianapolis. His parents were Leslie E. and Lanie (Bramwell) Means. He married Charlotte Ruth (Miller) Means Dec. 30, 1949, in Indianapolis.

She survives. Other survivors include two sons, Herman Edgar Means Jr. of Greenwood and Raymond Lee Means of Indianapolis; a daughter, Cynthia Sue Grubbs of A INDIANA A mun kltoWt. iZSiTi i 'i i EXTENDED Thursday Partly sunny. High 45 to 55.

Low in the 30s. Friday 47 'fir OHO lndiMpoligj IL. Chance of High in the Low 35 to rain. 50s. 45.

MARKETS FROM PAGE ONE -t 1 I I. -I SO 0( 70 Sta 100 110 1997 AceuWeatftT, Inc. JOHNSON COUNTY Tuesday's high 56 Tuesday's low 41 ucjwoy 9 IW Temperature at 6 p.m. 47 None FORECAST Today Partly sunny. Very cool.

High in the middle 40s. Tonight Partly cloudy and cold. Low 25 to 30. OUTLOOK Saturday Chance of rain. High in the 50s.

Low in the 40s. 34.00-36.00, few 33.50; 400-500 lbs 36.00-38.00; 500-600 lbs 38.00-40.00; few over 600 lbs 41 .00, some to 42.00. Boars: 32.00-34.00, Wall Street Four p.m. report by Hilliard and Lyons, local stockbrokers: price change -x Corp. 49 up2W Alumax 37 916 up Ameritech 68 up Amoco 961116 up 1316 Arvin Ind.

38 716 up 116 BancOne 53 1116 up Cinergy Corp. 35 716 up CNB Bancshares 41 116 up 916 Cummins 65 downl Cypress Amax 23 down Duff Phelps 9 up Mi Exxon Corporation 65 316 up 316 General Motors 71516 up 1716 Grand Metropolitan 41 down Guidant 64 316 up 1)4 Heartland Bancshares 10.37 n.c. Indiana Energy Inc. 29 down 1316 IBM 10514 up 7 IPALCO Ent. 347a n.c.

Kmart 13'4 down 316 KeyCorp. 65 1516 up 1 516 Kimball Int'l CIB 41'2 n.c. Lilly Co. 66 716 up 1 1316 Marsh Class 15 up Musicland Stores 7ft up 316 National City Corp. 63 916 up 1 916 Pepsico '40 up 1 ft Lee Corp.

52 916 up 1 1316 Schlumberger 92K up 2 So In Gas and El 25 Vb down Sprint Corporation 56 up 114 Wal-Mart 36116 up Watt Disney 831116 upV4 IS 18 18 18 18 18 18 18 18 It 18 HAPPY 18TH BIRTHDAY 18 18 mm rimnrin mn it aaron mm i8 18 18 18 18 18 18 18 18 18 18 18 18 18 18 18 18 We Love You! Mom Dad 18 18 18 18 18 18 18 18 18 -tn 1 The Associated Press Indianapolis livestock Tuesday's market: Hogs 400. Barrows and gilts steady to weak. US 1-3 230-260 lbs 42.00-44.00. US 2-3 230-260 lbs 40.00-42.00. Sows: 1.00 lower.

Under 450 lbs 33.00; US 1-3 450-500 lbs 34.00-35.00; 500-600 lbs 36.00-39.00; over 600 lbs 40.00. Boars: All weights 33.00. Cattle: Bulk of supply slaughter, Slaughter steers, Slaughter heifers and Holsteins active to .50 higher. Slaughter cows and Slaughter bulls .50 lower. Slaughter steers: Yield grade 2-4 1025-1350 lbs 65.00-67.00.

Yield grade 3-4 1000-1450 lbs 64.00-67.00. Choice steers 900-1050 lbs 63.00-66.50. Slaughter heifers: Yield grade 2-4 950-1250 lbs 63.00-66.50. Yield grade 3-4 1000-1250 lbs 64.00-66.50. Choice heifers 800-950 lbs 58.00-65.50.

Mixed select and choice 2-3 1200-1350 lbs 59.00-65.00. Holsteins: Yield grade 2-4 1250-1450 lbs 53.50-63.50. Yield grade 2-3 1100-1200 lbs 52.00-56.00. Slaughter cows: Canner and cutter 1-2 28.00-32.50. Utility and commercial 35.00-37.50.

High dressing 38.00-41.00. Slaughter bulls: Yield grade 1, 1250-2050 lbs 39.00-44.50. Yield grade 2, 1250-1650 lbs 40.00-45.50. Indiana-Ohio direct hogst Indiana-Ohio direct hog market Tuesday. Barrows and gilts: Steady to .50 lower.

Demand moderate with a moderate movement. US 1-2 230-260 lbs country 44.00-45.00, few 45.50; plants 45.00-46.50. US 2-3 230-260 lbs 41 210-230 lbs 37.50-41 .50. Sows: steady, instances .50 lower under 400 lbs. US 1-3 300-400 lbs LOTTERY Her are the winning numbers elected Tuesday In the Hoosler Lottery: Doily ThrM: 9-0-6.

Doily Four 5-0-4-6. Midcy Rv! 11-25-29-32-36. Doily Red: 13-16; White: 17-21; Blue: 7-21. Hootiar Lotto jackpot: $13 million. Poworball jackpot: $31 million.

year-round schedules. "There are pros and cons to going to that kind of year-round school," he said. "We know it's available, but there are a number of things we would have to work out with the (teachers') union to do that." The school board president said he believed Center Grove offered parents a compromise by operating one of the largest summer school programs in the state. "We have a very good, highly used summer enrichment program," Wong said. "It's a compromise because we're not forcing all the students to do one thing or another parents can choose whether they want their child to participate or not." homicide) site is," Furrer said.

"Finding the shoes brings us closer." Police are exploring several theories about why the shoes were discarded, but the chief declined to comment on them. "We have to look at all of them," he said. "We're trying to be as thorough as we possibly can." Tim Davis, the county park superintendent, said 50 to 200 campers use the park's campgrounds on a typical weekend. "It varies, depending on the events going on," he said. "For the most part, it's the same people frequenting the park every weekend," Davis said.

"We don't have a lot of new faces coming in." The Franklin Police Department offers a $10,000 reward and Crime Stoppers offers a separate, $1,000 reward for information leading to the arrest of the killer or killers. that is that it's a break in tradition," he said. Summer break was an economic necessity years ago, when many families worked in agriculture and children were needed to help in the fields during summer months. In recent years, however, public school systems around the country have experimented with year-round classes as a more efficent way to educate children. But Wong said the teachers' union might not be willing to comply with year-round schooling, because many teachers hold summer jobs.

It would also disrupt families whose children might be in different schools or school systems that do not have the lines of witnesses on that registry," Furrer said. Anyone who saw a vehicle stop at the outhouse between midnight and 6 a.m. Saturday, Sept. 27, is urged to call the Franklin police hotline, 736-6915. Also, campers who stayed at the county park anytime that weekend are asked to contact police.

Anonymous tips can also be made to Crime Stoppers of Central Indiana, (800) 92-ALERT or 262-TIPS. "If we solve this case, it will be because the public helped us solve this case," Furrer said. More than 600 tips have been phoned in by the public so far. It's unknown whether Eckart was killed near the outhouse or if the killer merely dumped the shoes there. The site is not far from State Road 252 roughly the halfway point from Franklin, where Eckart was abducted, to Helmsburg, near where her body was found.

"We don't know where (the CG hearings on year-round schooling as part of its $12-million to $13-million renovationaddition project at Center Grove Middle School. He said state law requires school corporations to investigate year-round schools, as an altemv tive to building a new building or renovating an existing one. A committee formed by the school board two years ago researched the issue, he said, and found there were two types of year-round schools being implemented. One type is operated under a tracking schedule where the school building was in use year-round and the students' schedules, 'were staggered with students) receiving a summer break at dif- Shoes Eckart, an 18-year-old Franklin College freshman, was abducted from her car in Franklin Sept. 26 as she was driving home to Boggstown.

On Sept. 30, her body was found, strangled to death, in the remote Brown County hills. No arrests have been made. On Friday, Furrer held a press conference to request the public's help in locating Eckart's missing shoes and socks, which he said were important clues in the case. After seeing news coverage about the search, a woman who wished to remain anonymous called police Saturday.

She reported she had visited the park Sept. 27, went to the restroom and noticed the shoes in the pit. "She looked down and saw what she thought was a new pair of shoes and wondered why would throw away a new pair of shoes.r Furrer said. Those shoes are the same size and style of the white Nike sneak- Census sua)," Henderson said. "We are looking at getting at least a half-million extra dollars." Greenwood receives money back from the state and federal government from various taxes.

The money is dispersed with a formula based on the population. The larger the population, the more money a city receives. The city would receive at least $30 extra per person or a maximum of $90 per person, Henderson said. CORRECTION Name omitted Tuesday's obituary for Robert L. Harris omitted the name of one survivor, his half-brother Mike Harris of Indianapolis.

ferent times of the year. "There was no real educational benefit to that," Wong said, in addition to the increase in the costs of building maintenance and administration personnel. The second year-round school, which Wong said had been implemented at New Augusta Academy in Pike Township, required the students to attend all year with several shorter breaks instead of one long summer break. The advantage to that type of schooling is students would be less apt to forget what they had learned, and students in need of remediation could receive it throughout Ithe year instead of waiting for summer school. "One problem in implementing ers that Eckart was wearing when she disappeared.

The socks that were found anklet-style with a sewn-in pattern also match the victim's. "We are very confident that they are her shoes and socks," Furrer said. He declined to comment on their condition. "The whole area was processed for fingerprints," Furrer said. Detectives with bloodhounds searched the park area.

"Now there are a lot of follow-up interviews to do," Furrer said. The outhouse is at the corner of Schoolhouse Road and North Street at the county park, near shelters and the park's tent and RV campgrounds. All campers are required to register. Police obtained the park's registry in hopes of contacting people camping there that weekend. "We're not ruling out that the suspect may be on that registry, but we're thinking more along The mayor added that he wish-esjtow that he had pursued taking an early census last year, Henderson doesn't want to wait until 2000, because results wouldn't be back until at least 2001 or even 2003.

An early census would meanv the city could start receiving extra funding by 2000, he said. nc'j tV for Jim Williams You're invited Oct. 25 Whiteland VFW 0 ALL-VINYL INSULATED ENERGY-SAYING MAINTENANCE FREE WINDOWS SALES SERVICE INSTALLATION STORM WINDOWS DOORS ALUM. VINYL SIDING CARPORTS AWNINGS A SOFFITS GUTTERS THE AFFORDABLE WINDOW OVER 49 YEARS OF SERVICE Bettor by Design LICENSED BONDED INSURED Votldng together for a safer commonity; McDonald's Restaurant, Martin Drive Center Grove School Corp. Meijer Store NBD Bank, Smith Valley Road Grand Rental Station Marsh Supermarket, St Rd.

135 Members of the White River Township Fire Department The White River Township Fire Department would like to extend it's sheerest appreciation to the Center Grove School Corporation as well as the Greenwood area businesses of McDonald's Restaurant, Meijer Store, NBD Bank, Grand Rental Station, and Marsh Supermarket for their exceptional support and cooperation during Fire Prevention Week '97. generous support of our community's residents' and business owners make this program work. Thank you, once again for a very successful Fire Prevention Week. NO COMMISSION PAID SALESMEN Ha WINDOW rut VOrWS lb GOOD bit LOOKS. 4.

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