saturday, june 25, 2016 the commercial review full pdf_layout 1.pdf · $150.50; evan m. dowell,...

10
By DEBANINA SEATON The Commercial Review North of Pennville, a stone monument stands on the east side of Indi- ana 1 near county road 650 North. The driveway nearby leads to a small cabin, surrounded by trees with a water pump to the east. Lore has linked it to a famous piece of litera- ture. It sits in an area that was active in the Underground Railroad and has been the object of renovations over the years. Balbec cabin, a restored pioneer home at 6703 N. Indiana 1 was once a two-story struc- ture and is said to be a location from the famous book Uncle Tom's Cabin, written by Harriet Beecher Stowe. Its closest neighbor is about a quarter mile away, a large country house at 7005 N. Indiana 1. There lives William Hurst, the cabin's landowner. He acknowl- edged the cabin was a stop on the Underground Railroad but not a fre- quent location, and it is difficult to determine how often it was used. Hurst said the area was settled by Quakers who were highly active in the abolition movement. One of them, Levi Cof- fin, called president of the Underground Rail- road, aided many run- aways in the region. “You have to under- stand that there was at that age (the govern- ment) would confiscate everything you owned if you aided and abetted slaves that were escap- ing,” he said. “So people only knew where the escapees had come from and where they were going.” Hurst's ancestors gained possession of the landmark in the 1920s when his great aunt, Minerva “Minnie” Arminta Eberly, bought the land from the Irey family. In the 1840s, Mahlon Irey died and left the land to his children and wife, Rachel. She later married a widower named James Silliban and lived in the cabin with about 19 children. Hurst recalls the origi- nal cabin was a two-story building wider than the current structure, possi- bly equipped with a chimney, and had several additions but lacked any foundation. It was also used as a Quaker meet- ing place. The building’s fame comes from a character in Uncle Tom's Cabin, Eliza Harris, who is said to have rested at the loca- tion before making her flight to Canada with her young infant. Hurst said, when Rachel Silliban read the book, she made the comment “that woman stayed here.” Though the Sillibans were involved in using the area to aid slaves, Hurst noted that it's just oral history. J Ja an ne et t M Me ei ih hl ls s, 65, Bryant Details on page 2. The temperature in Port- land peaked at 83 degrees Fri- day. Skies will be sunny today with a high of 87. Tonight’s low will be 66. Sunday’s fore- cast calls for a chance of show- ers and thunderstorms after 3 p.m. The high will be 88. For an extended forecast, see page 2. Jay County Public Library's book mobile will be available Monday from noon to 2 p.m. at Portland Water Park and 2:30 to 4 p.m. at Shwanda’s Greenhouse, Wednesday from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. at Redkey Elementary and 2 to 4 p.m. at Hudson Family Park and Thursday from 9 to 11 a.m. at Bryant Wesleyan Church and 1 to 3 p.m. at Salamonia Park. M Mo on nd da ay y Photos from weekend events, including the crowning of the Jay County Fair Queen. W We ed dn ne es sd da ay y Coverage of the Jay County Summer Swim Team’s meet against South Adams. Deaths Weather In review Coming up www.thecr.com 75 cents Portland, Indiana 47371 The Commercial Review Saturday, June 25, 2016 Historic hideaway By ANTHONY FAIOLA and MICHAEL BIRNBAUM The Washington Post BERLIN — European leaders went into crisis mode Friday after the sur- prise vote by Britain to exit the European Union, locking themselves inside emergency meetings even as nationalists across the region issued rallying cries to follow in London’s footsteps. From Dublin to Paris to Berlin, governments con- fronted their worst-case scenarios and scrambled to form a consensus on how to now extricate Britain from the 28-nation bloc as British Prime Min- ister David Cameron said he planned to step down in defeat. Top leaders of the E.U.’s executive and leg- islative branches, mean- while, met Friday morn- ing in Brussels. E.U. ambassadors — all 28 of them, for now — convened in the afternoon in Lux- embourg. Foreign minis- ters from the six founding E.U. nations were set to meet in Berlin today. The flurry of diplomacy was laying the ground- work for a previously planned E.U. summit on Tuesday, when talks on how to handle what could be a painful, messy process of a British exit are set to start. Cameron said he did not plan to immediately trigger the clause of the European treaty that would start up to two years of exit negoti- ations. He indicated that he would leave exit decisions to his successor. Even as key political fig- ures reacted with shock — “Damn! It’s a sad day for the E.U.,” tweeted German Vice Chancellor Sigmar Gabriel others cau- tioned that it was now up to the E.U. to prove its worth to the people of the continent. See B Be eg gi in ns s page 2 TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas legislators passed an education funding plan Friday after top Republi- cans rewrote it to gain broad, bipartisan support so that it would satisfy a court mandate and end a looming threat that public schools might shut down. The votes were 116-6 in the House and 38-1 in the Senate, sending the meas- ure to Republican Gov. Sam Brownback, who told reporters he would sign it. The legislature met for two days in a special session forced by a state Supreme Court ruling last month. Lawmakers struggled with how to pay for a $38 million increase in aid to poor school districts for 2016-17 — in a dispute that ultimately focused on less than 1 percent of what the state already spends. Kansas is embroiled in a lawsuit filed by four school districts, and legislators were fashioning a one-year funding fix ahead of a potentially more con- tentious battle over schools next year. By SHELBY MULLIS TheStatehouseFile.com INDIANAPOLIS — Republican U.S. Rep. Todd Young has said he will partic- ipate in two debates ahead of the November election for the open U.S. Sen- ate seat. “We enthusiastically have accepted the debate commission’s invitation to do two debates,” Young said. “We think the commission does a great job and we’re going to work with them.” On June 7, Democrat Baron Hill chal- lenged his two opponents —Young and Libertarian Lucy Brenton — to partici- pate in a series of four debates and five town hall meetings. “The very future of our democracy depends on open, honest and spirited faith focused on the future of Indiana and the United States,” Hill said in June. “But right now, the American people simply don’t have faith in the political process, and the current landscape makes it diffi- cult for voters to get the answers they’re demanding and to hold politicians accountable.” The Indiana Debate Commission has not set dates yet, but they are traditionally planned for late September and October. Kansas passes plan The Commercial Review/Debanina Seaton Biker bash This moped laid on the highway Friday morning after its driver failed to see another vehicle and struck it, getting injured in the process. The rider, a Portland teen, was not seriously injured from the collision. For more, see Capsule Reports on page 2. Frezy begins after vote in Britain The Commercial Review/Debanina Seaton Balbec cabin, located at 6703 N. Indiana 1, was active in the Underground Railroad in the 1800s. The current structure has been restored in the 1980s. Cabin was part of slave escape route Balbec cabin at a glance B Ba al lb be ec c c ca ab bi i n n 6703 N. Indiana 1, Pennville B Ba al lb be ec c d da ay ys s Annual festival that features a flea market, tractor pull and kettle-cooked ham and beans is regularly held in late September. The Balbec cabin north of Pennville was a stop on the Underground Railroad during the abolition movement in the 1800s. It is open to the public and plays host to the annual Balbec Days festival. Young agrees to debates

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Page 1: Saturday, June 25, 2016 The Commercial Review full pdf_Layout 1.pdf · $150.50; Evan M. Dowell, Provi-dence, Rhode Island, speeding 74 miles per hour in a 55 mile per hour zone, $152.50;

By DEBANINA SEATONThe Commercial ReviewNorth of Pennville, a

stone monument standson the east side of Indi-ana 1 near county road650 North.The driveway nearby

leads to a small cabin,surrounded by trees witha water pump to the east.Lore has linked it to afamous piece of litera-ture. It sits in an areathat was active in theUnderground Railroadand has been the objectof renovations over theyears.Balbec cabin, a

restored pioneer home at6703 N. Indiana 1 wasonce a two-story struc-ture and is said to be alocation from the famousbook Uncle Tom's Cabin,written by HarrietBeecher Stowe.Its closest neighbor is

about a quarter mile

away, a large countryhouse at 7005 N. Indiana1. There lives WilliamHurst, the cabin'slandowner. He acknowl-edged the cabin was astop on the UndergroundRailroad but not a fre-quent location, and it isdifficult to determinehow often it was used.Hurst said the area wassettled by Quakers whowere highly active in theabolition movement.One of them, Levi Cof-

fin, called president ofthe Underground Rail-road, aided many run-aways in the region.“You have to under-

stand that there was at

that age (the govern-ment) would confiscateeverything you owned ifyou aided and abettedslaves that were escap-ing,” he said. “So peopleonly knew where theescapees had come fromand where they weregoing.”Hurst's ancestors

gained possession of thelandmark in the 1920swhen his great aunt,Minerva “Minnie”Arminta Eberly, boughtthe land from the Ireyfamily. In the 1840s,Mahlon Irey died and leftthe land to his childrenand wife, Rachel. Shelater married a widowernamed James Sillibanand lived in the cabinwith about 19 children.Hurst recalls the origi-

nal cabin was a two-storybuilding wider than thecurrent structure, possi-bly equipped with a

chimney, and had severaladditions but lacked anyfoundation. It was alsoused as a Quaker meet-ing place.The building’s fame

comes from a characterin Uncle Tom's Cabin,Eliza Harris, who is saidto have rested at the loca-tion before making her

flight to Canada with heryoung infant. Hurst said,when Rachel Sillibanread the book, she madethe comment “thatwoman stayed here.”Though the Sillibanswere involved in usingthe area to aid slaves,Hurst noted that it's justoral history.

JJaanneett MMeeiihhllss, 65, BryantDetails on page 2.

The temperature in Port-land peaked at 83 degrees Fri-day.Skies will be sunny today

with a high of 87. Tonight’slow will be 66. Sunday’s fore-cast calls for a chance of show-ers and thunderstorms after 3p.m. The high will be 88.For an extended forecast,

see page 2.

Jay County Public Library'sbook mobile will be availableMonday from noon to 2 p.m. atPortland Water Park and 2:30 to4 p.m. at Shwanda’s Greenhouse,Wednesday from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m.at Redkey Elementary and 2 to 4p.m. at Hudson Family Park andThursday from 9 to 11 a.m. atBryant Wesleyan Church and 1to 3 p.m. at Salamonia Park.

MMoonnddaayy —— Photos fromweekend events, including thecrowning of the Jay CountyFair Queen.

WWeeddnneessddaayy —— Coverage ofthe Jay County Summer SwimTeam’s meet against SouthAdams.

Deaths Weather In review Coming up

www.thecr.com 75 centsPortland, Indiana 47371

The Commercial ReviewSaturday, June 25, 2016

Historic hideaway

By ANTHONY FAIOLAand MICHAEL BIRNBAUMThe Washington PostBERLIN — European

leaders went into crisismode Friday after the sur-prise vote by Britain toexit the European Union,locking themselves insideemergency meetings evenas nationalists across theregion issued rallyingcries to follow in London’sfootsteps.From Dublin to Paris to

Berlin, governments con-fronted their worst-casescenarios and scrambledto form a consensus onhow to now extricateBritain from the 28-nationbloc as British Prime Min-ister David Cameron saidhe planned to step down indefeat. Top leaders of theE.U.’s executive and leg-islative branches, mean-while, met Friday morn-ing in Brussels. E.U.ambassadors — all 28 ofthem, for now — convenedin the afternoon in Lux-embourg. Foreign minis-ters from the six foundingE.U. nations were set tomeet in Berlin today.The flurry of diplomacy

was laying the ground-work for a previouslyplanned E.U. summit onTuesday, when talks onhow to handle what couldbe a painful, messyprocess of a British exitare set to start. Cameronsaid he did not plan toimmediately trigger theclause of the Europeantreaty that would start upto two years of exit negoti-ations.He indicated that he

would leave exit decisionsto his successor.Even as key political fig-

ures reacted with shock —“Damn! It’s a sad day forthe E.U.,” tweeted GermanVice Chancellor SigmarGabriel — others cau-tioned that it was now upto the E.U. to prove itsworth to the people of thecontinent.

See BBeeggiinnss page 2

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) —Kansas legislators passedan education funding planFriday after top Republi-cans rewrote it to gainbroad, bipartisan supportso that it would satisfy acourt mandate and end alooming threat that publicschools might shut down.The votes were 116-6 in

the House and 38-1 in the

Senate, sending the meas-ure to Republican Gov. SamBrownback, who toldreporters he would sign it.The legislature met for twodays in a special sessionforced by a state SupremeCourt ruling last month.Lawmakers struggled

with how to pay for a $38million increase in aid topoor school districts for

2016-17 — in a dispute thatultimately focused on lessthan 1 percent of what thestate already spends.Kansas is embroiled in a

lawsuit filed by four schooldistricts, and legislatorswere fashioning a one-yearfunding fix ahead of apotentially more con-tentious battle over schoolsnext year.

By SHELBY MULLISTheStatehouseFile.comINDIANAPOLIS — Republican U.S.

Rep. Todd Young has said he will partic-ipate in two debates ahead of theNovember election for the open U.S. Sen-ate seat.“We enthusiastically have accepted

the debate commission’s invitation to dotwo debates,” Young said. “We think thecommission does a great job and we’regoing to work with them.”On June 7, Democrat Baron Hill chal-

lenged his two opponents —Young andLibertarian Lucy Brenton — to partici-

pate in a series of four debates and fivetown hall meetings.“The very future of our democracy

depends on open, honest and spirited faithfocused on the future of Indiana and theUnited States,” Hill said in June. “Butright now, the American people simplydon’t have faith in the political process,and the current landscape makes it diffi-cult for voters to get the answers they’redemanding and to hold politiciansaccountable.”The Indiana Debate Commission has not

set dates yet, but they are traditionallyplanned for late September and October.

Kansas passes planThe Commercial Review/Debanina Seaton

Biker bashThis moped laid on the highway Friday morning after its

driver failed to see another vehicle and struck it, getting injured in theprocess. The rider, a Portland teen, was not seriously injured from thecollision. For more, see Capsule Reports on page 2.

Frezybeginsaftervote inBritain

The Commercial Review/Debanina Seaton

Balbec cabin, located at 6703 N. Indiana 1, was active in the Underground Railroad in the 1800s. The currentstructure has been restored in the 1980s.

Cabin was part of slave escape routeBalbec cabin at a glance

BBaallbbeecc ccaabbiinn6703 N. Indiana 1, Pennville

BBaallbbeecc ddaayyssAnnual festival that features a flea market,

tractor pull and kettle-cooked ham and beansis regularly held in late September.

The Balbec cabin north of Pennville was a stop on theUnderground Railroad during the abolition movement inthe 1800s. It is open to the public and plays host to theannual Balbec Days festival.

Young agrees to debates

Page 2: Saturday, June 25, 2016 The Commercial Review full pdf_Layout 1.pdf · $150.50; Evan M. Dowell, Provi-dence, Rhode Island, speeding 74 miles per hour in a 55 mile per hour zone, $152.50;

Continued from page 1The E.U., critics say, has

veered too far from its ini-tial concept as a customsand economic union, med-dling in national budgetsand labor laws while beingviewed as a remotebureaucracy by manyacross the region it serves.German Chancellor

Angela Merkel, who bearsmost of the burden ofholding the E.U. together,called Britain’s departurea “turning point inEurope and of Europeanintegration” and offeredan impassioned plea forthe rest of the bloc to stick

together. She also calledfor swift but fair breakupnegotiations with Londonthat maintain Germany’spartnership with “asclosely as possible.”The rest of the E.U.

nations, she said, shouldnot forget that at the coreof the bloc was a missiongreater than economics orpolitics. She called for theremaining states to sticktogether in globalizedtimes.With a nod to history,

she emphasized that Ger-many has a “responsibili-ty” to ensure Europe’speaceful future with or

without Britain in the E.U.“We should never forget,especially in these times,that the idea of the Euro-pean Union was an idea ofpeace,” she said. “Aftercenturies of most terriblebloodshed, the founders ofthe European integrationfound the way to reconcili-ation.”E.U. leaders now face

the challenge not only ofmanaging the mechanicsof a British exit but alsoof making the bloc feel

more relevant to theregion’s grass roots, inorder to ensure its sur-vival.Meanwhile, Austrian

foreign minister Sebast-ian Kurz told state broad-caster ORF on Friday that“a domino effect on othercountries can’t be ruledout.”Donald Tusk, president

of the European Council,said E.U. law will stillapply in Britain until itofficially leaves.

Moped injuryA Portland teen was injured in

an collision Friday morning whileriding on a moped in Wayne Town-ship.Braden C. McIntire, 14, 3466 W.

75 South, suffered a cut to his legafter colliding with a 1997 Ply-mouth Voyager while riding hismoped.McIntire was traveling west on

county road 75 South and stoppedat the stop sign at its intersectionwith Indiana 67. He failed to seethe Voyager and continued west on

the 2003 Tomo moped he was rid-ing, striking the driver’s side ofthe van driven by Connie J. Truex,57, 3103 W. 400 North, Portland.The moped is registered to Sher-

ri L. McIntire, same address as thedriver. Damage in the 11:42 a.m. crash is

estimated between $2,500 and$5,000.

Bike stolenA Portland resident reported at

6:14 p.m. Thursday that her bikewas stolen.

Hannah Beth Hampshire, 411 E.Walnut St., told a Portland policeofficer her bike, an adult Huffy,was stolen out of her garage some-time Wednesday.

In area courtsThe following were fined and

assessed court costs for speedingor failure to wear a seat belt inCelina Municipal Court:Thomas M. Welling, 26, 138

Siegrist-Jutte Road, Fort Recovery,$35; Gregor G. Westgerdes, 59,Portland, $30.

Judge Donald GillespieFined and sentencedJohnothan Fischer, Union

City, expired plates, $158.50;Grace D. McIntosh, Anderson,speeding 76 miles per hour in a55 mile per hour zone, $169; Des-tiny T. Miller, Dunkirk, falseregistration, $158.50, no validlicense, $25; Matthew M. Gris-wold, Celina, Ohio, minor con-sumption, $250; Hector Hernan-dez, Portland, public intoxica-tion, $250, warrant served: fail-ure to appear-public intoxica-tion, $250; Mark O. Eaton, FortRecovery, speeding 72 miles perhour in a 55 mile per hour zone,

$150.50; Evan M. Dowell, Provi-dence, Rhode Island, speeding 74miles per hour in a 55 mile perhour zone, $152.50; Michael A.Brown, Fort Recovery, speeding70 miles per hour in a 55 mileper hour zone, $148.50; Christo-pher J. Hudson, Portland, speed-ing 71 miles per hour in a 55mile per hour zone, $149.50;Ramiro Espejel-Lopez, Celina,Ohio, speeding 69 miles perhour in a 55 mile per hour zone,$147.50; James D. Woolums,Dunkirk, speeding 70 miles perhour in a 55 mile per hour zone,$148.50; Ashley K. Blackwell,Portland, ordinance violation-dog at large, $158; Kelly A. Stipp,

Portland, speeding 66 miles perhour in a 55 mile per hour zone,$143.50; Sherry D. Hambrock,Portland, disregarding stopsign, $158.50; Emily L. Smith,Dunkirk, seat belt violation, $25;Stacy Y. McCrosson, Portland,seat belt violation, $25; ConnieL. Barnaby, Upland, speeding 70miles per hour in a 55 mile perhour zone, $148.50; Tanner M.Hawk, Loveland, Ohio, speeding73 miles per hour in a 55 mileper hour zone, $151.50.

Pre-trials setShonda L. Harris, Pennville,

driving while suspended, Aug. 3;Paggy L. Englehardt, Bryant,

false registration; Terra S.Ogan, Bryant, driving while sus-pended, driving while suspend-ed, Aug. 3; Taylor E. Redwine,Parker City, speeding 74 milesper hour in a 55 mile per hourzone, Aug. 3; Jared A. Alig, Port-land, disorderly conduct, Aug. 3.

Failure to appearJessy W. Mann, Muncie, ordi-

nance violation-overgrownweeds; Barbara J. Adcock, St.Marys, Ohio, speeding 77 milesper hour in a 55 mile per hourzone; Jessica A. Beaty, Redkey,expired plates; Colondra R. Ben-son, Redkey, speeding 85 milesper hour in a 55 mile per hour

zone; Ellysa L. Duquette,Dunkirk, expired plates; RobertW. Edgeman, Bluffton, speeding71 miles per hour in a 55 mileper hour zone; Kurtis W. Fields,Montpelier, speeding 50 milesper hour in a 35 mile per hourzone; Randy E. Hutzler, Port-land, false registration; Christo-pher M. Lessing, Fort Recovery,speeding 83 miles per hour in a55 mile per hour zone; Kandi J.McCord, Portland, speeding 70miles per hour in a 55 mile perhour zone; Maria S. Murphy,Bryant, speeding 65 miles perhour in a 55 mile per hour zone;Michael S. Stonestreet, Port-land, no valid license.

Page 2 Local/World The Commercial ReviewSaturday, June 25, 2016

RReeiiggnniinngg QQuueeeenn ––AAnnddrreeaa

BBrruuggggeemmaann

The PortlandBreakfast Club2016 Miss

Jay County FairQUEENPAGEANTWill Be held

Sunday, June26th - 7:30 pm

Doors open @6:30 pm

Jay County H.S. Auditorium

Mega MillionsEstimated jackpot:

$363 million

HoosierMiddayDaily Three: 3-0-8Daily Four: 4-7-6-3Quick Draw: 02-12-16-

20-30-34-35-36-39-41-46-50-51-53-54-62-66-77-78-80

OhioMiddayPick 3: 5-2-3

Pick 4: 1-1-5-4Pick 5: 7-6-1-0-2Evening (still needs to

be updated)Pick 3: 6-1-9Pick 4: 5-9-0-9Pick 5: 6-9-0-6-1Rolling Cash 5: 04-14-

25-35-37Estimated jackpot:

$193,00

PowerballEstimated jackpot:

$203 million

Trupointe Fort RecoveryCorn ........................3.84July corn ................3.88Beans ....................10.75July crop ..............10.75Wheat ......................4.54Sept. crop ................4.54

Cooper Farms Fort RecoveryCorn ........................3.90July corn ................3.90Oct. corn ................3.79Wheat ......................4.50

POET BiorefiningPortlandCorn ........................3.86July corn ................3.94

Aug. corn ................4.06Sept. corn................4.06

Central StatesMontpelierCorn ........................3.81July corn ................3.82Beans ....................10.94July beans ............ 10.94Wheat ......................4.50New crop ................4.50

The AndersonsRichland TownshipCorn ........................3.81July corn ................3.85Beans .................... 10.91July beans ............10.91Wheat ......................4.50July wheat ..............4.50

Closing prices as of Friday

Jay CountyHospitalPortlandAdmissionsThere were three

admissions to the hospi-tal on Friday.

DismissalsThere were three dis-

missals.

EmergenciesThere were 19 treated

in the emergency roomsof JCH.

Monday9 a.m. — Jay County

Commissioners, com-missioners’ room, JayCounty Courthouse, 120N. Court St., Portland.11:30 a.m. — Jay

County DevelopmentCorporation annualmeeting, conferencerooms A and B, JayCounty Hospital, 500 W.Votaw St., Portland.3 p.m. — Jay County

Solid Waste Manage-ment District, districtoffice, 5948 W. Indiana67, Portland.6 p.m. — Fort Recov-

ery Village Council, vil-lage hall, 201 S. MainSt.7 p.m. — Dunkirk

City Council, city build-ing, 131 S. Main St.

Wednesday6 p.m. — Jay County

Soil and Water Conser-vation District, USDAService center, 1331 W.Indiana 67, Portland.

July 59 a.m. — Jay County

Commissioners, com-missioners’ room, JayCounty Courthouse,120 N. Court St., Port-land.5:30 p.m. — Portland

City Council, councilchambers, fire station,1616 N. Franklin St.6 p.m. — Geneva

Town Council, townhall, 411 E. Line St.7 p.m. — Portland

Park Board, councilchambers, fire station,1616 N. Franklin St.7 p.m. — Pennville

Town Council town hall,105 N. Washington St.,Pennville.7 p.m. — Salamonia

Town Board, School-house Community Cen-ter.

July 67 a.m. — Jay County

Board of Health, healthdepartment, 504 W.Arch St., Portland.

Markets

Hospitals

Citizen’s calendar

CR almanac

Weather courtesy of American Profile Hometown Content Service

Lotteries

Janet MeihlsNov. 9, 1950-June 24, 2016

Janet Meihls, 65, Bryant, died Fri-day at her home.The daughter of

Henry and Norma(Wells) Alberding, shewas a member of Way-nesfield BaptistChurch in Waynes-field, Ohio, and BryantWesleyan Church.She was married on

June 28, 196,9 to DavidLee Meihls. He died Nov. 27, 1995.

She was a member of WaynesfieldGoshen Home Economics Club,Waynesfield Goshen 4-H Club, andWaynesfield Goshen Choir.Surviving are her companion,

Joseph Selsor, Bryant; two sons,Charles William Meihls (wife: Eliza-beth) and Shawn David Meihls, bothof Lima, Ohio; a daughter, KatinaLee Miller (husband: Jonathan),Bryant; two sisters, MarySchoonover and Connie Blakley,both of Lima, Ohio; two brothers,Benjamin Ruff, San Diego, Califor-nia, and Bob Alberding, Lima, Ohio;

one step-daughter, Brianna Rum-baugh, Cridersville, Ohio; 18 grand-children; one great-grandchild; andfour step-great-grandchildrenVisitation will be from 5 to 7 p.m.

Monday at Williamson andSpencer Funeral Home, Portland,with services following at 7 p.m.Burial will be at Memorial ParkCemetery, Lima, Ohio.Memorials may be directed toward

the family in care of the funeralhome. Condolences may be expressedathttp://www.williamsonspencer.com.

Meihls

Portland City Court

Capsule Reports

Obituaries

Continued from page 1Jay County Historical

Society holds documentsfrom The Muncie Star thatsay Rachel did meet Eliza,and helped her make it tothe next location. Despite the oral tradi-

tion, stories were not sav-ing the structure. As achild, Hurst witnessed thewear and tear on theblighted structure. AfterThe Great Depression,keeping up the propertywas difficult and eventual-

ly the cabin rotted. At onepoint, the farm on the landonly made a $1 profit, hesaid.“Even when I was a little

boy in the 1950s, the origi-nal was so dilapidated theywere frightened I shouldgo in because it was rot-ting so badly,” he said.Other documents show

reconstruction of thecabin began in 1981. Twoand a half years prior, thebuilding was dismantled— hickory logs, timbers

and a door were takenaway. Now it is a smallerreplication, without anyadditions.A group of residents, the

Balbec History Club,raised funds for the recon-struction and mainte-nance through their annu-al Balbec Days festival.Even with renovations, thecabin roof and wood isdeteriorating and moremoney is needed to keepup the property.Hurst said no state funds

have ever been used for thebuilding, which he feels ismore like a communityproject because club mem-bers are contributors. Hisown feelings toward thecabin express the signifi-cance that it is not oneindividual’s property but acommunity landmarkwith a history of aidingothers.“I might own the land,

but I don’t feel I own thecabin,” he said. “I just getto mow it.”

Hideaway ...

Begins ...

Page 3: Saturday, June 25, 2016 The Commercial Review full pdf_Layout 1.pdf · $150.50; Evan M. Dowell, Provi-dence, Rhode Island, speeding 74 miles per hour in a 55 mile per hour zone, $152.50;

Notices will appear inCommunity Calendar asspace is available. To sub-mit an item, email Vir-ginia Cline at

[email protected].

TodayALCOHOLICS ANONY-

MOUS — Will meet at 10

a.m. upstairs at TrueValue Hardware, NorthMeridian Street, Port-land. For more informa-tion, call (260) 729-2532.FARMERS MARKET —

Will be held from 8 a.m.until noon each Saturdayat the Jay County CourtHouse.

Monday PORTLAND BREAK-

FAST OPTIMISTS — Willmeet at 7 a.m. for break-fast at Richards Restau-rant.BRYANT AREA COM-

MUNITY CENTER —Walking from 9 to 10 a.m.every Monday, Wednesdayand Friday.WEST JAY COMMUNI-

TY CENTER GROUP —Doors open at 10:30 a.m.Bring a sack lunch fortalk time. Bingo is at 11a.m. At 12:15 p.m. is birth-day cake and ice creamfor April, May and Junebirthdays. Euchre beginsat 1 p.m. There is a $1donation for center’s

expenses. For more infor-mation, call (765) 768-1544.PREGNANCY CARE

CENTER of Jay County— Free pregnancy testingwith ongoing support dur-ing and after pregnancy.The center is located at216 S. Meridian St., Port-land. Hours are 1 to 5 p.m.Monday through Friday.For more information oran appointment, call (260)726-8636. Appointments orwalk-ins accepted.JAY COUNTY DRUG

PREVENTION COALI-TION — Will meet at 3:30p.m. the third Monday ofeach month at East JayMiddle School communi-ty room, Portland. BREAD OF LIFE COM-

MUNITY FAMILY MEAL— Will be served from 5:30to 6:30 p.m. at AsburyUnited Methodist Church,204 E. Arch St. in Port-land. Everyone is wel-come. TAKE OFF POUNDS

SENSIBLY (TOPS) — Willmeet for weigh-in at 5:30

p.m., with the meeting at 6p.m., in the fellowshiphall at EvangelicalMethodist Church, 930 W.Main St., Portland. Newmembers welcome. Formore information, call(260) 726-5312.

TuesdayBRYANT COMMUNITY

CENTER EUCHRE — Willbe played at 1 p.m. eachTuesday. The public iswelcome.JAY COUNTY CANCER

SUPPORT GROUP — Willmeet from 5 to 6:30 p.m. inconference room C at JayCounty Hospital. Opendiscussion for cancerpatients, survivors, fami-ly members, or anyoneinterested in helping withthe group. For more infor-mation, contact Deb

Arnold at (260) 726-1809,Bev Inman at (260) 726-4641, or Linda Metzger at(260) 726-1844. JAY COUNTY CIVIC

THEATER — Will have itsannual meeting at 6:30p.m. Tuesday at Jay Coun-ty Public Library. Formore information, call(786) 314-6761. JAY COUNTY HISTORI-

CAL SOCIETY — Willhave a program meetingat 7 p.m. Tuesday at themuseum at 903 E. Main St.in Portland. Excerptsfrom the WIPB video“Now Entering Portland”will be shown. JAY COUNTY 4-H

COUNCIL — Will meet at7:30 p.m. Tuesday in theexhibit hall small meet-ing room in the Jay Coun-ty 4-H Building.

The Commercial ReviewSaturday, June 25, 2016 Family Page 3

© 2009 Hometown Content

Sudoku Puzzle #4055-M

Medium

1 2 3 44 5 6

7 8 3 23 4 85 7 6 1

4 2 9

5 2 9 74 3 2

6 1 8 5

© 2009 Hometown Content

Sudoku Solution #4054-M

7 1 8 9 2 5 6 3 44 9 5 1 3 6 2 8 73 6 2 7 4 8 5 9 19 2 3 6 5 7 4 1 81 4 7 8 9 2 3 6 58 5 6 3 1 4 9 7 2

5 7 1 2 6 9 8 4 32 8 9 4 7 3 1 5 66 3 4 5 8 1 7 2 9

Friday’s Solution

The objective is to fill anine-by nine grid so thateach column, each row, andeach of the nine three-by-three boxes (also calledblocks or regions) containsthe digits from 1 to 9 onlyone time each.

Sudoku

* Camp is FREE ** For kids ages 3 mo-5 years ** Snacks & meals provided *

* Parent/Guardian will need to attend with child(ren)For more information or to register, please call/text Terri at

Youth Service Bureau (260) 251-2021

Portland: June 27- July 1, 2016Location: Jay County Fairgrounds

106 East Votaw Street, Portland, INCamp hours 10am-2:30 pmRegistration/free play 9-10

Community Calendar

Wed on June 11th

AlyssaGreeneand

Devon RoosaAlyssa Cheyenne Greene and

Devon Lee Roosa were wed in aJune 11 ceremony at Jay CountyFairgrounds Roundhouse with Pas-tor Mike Clark receiving the cou-ple’s vows.Alyssa, who was given in mar-

riage by her father Doug Greene,wore a strapless A-line silhouettedress with a fitted bodice thatflowed into a chiffon skirt. Theempire waist was accented withhand-beaded lace and ruching andthe back featured a corset. She carried a bouquet of blue

daisies with white hydrangeas andbaby’s breath. Serving as maid of honor for

Alyssa was her friend Taylor Rey-nard of Redkey. She wore jeans, ablue plaid shirt and cowboy bootsand carried white daisies with bluebaby’s breath.Bridesmaids were Katie Westfall,

sister of the groom, Portland; Bai-ley Roosa, sister of the groom, Win-chester; Tiffany Jones and DarahHabegger, both friends fromMuncie. They all dressed identicalto the maid of honor.The flower girl was Alison

McGraw and ring bearer was Adri-an Berry and Chelsea Blankenshippulled a wagon with the couple’sdaughter Alex inside.Performing the duties of best

man was Devon’s brother EricHersberger, Winchester. Grooms-men were Jonathan Blankenship

and Gabriel Blankenship, bothcousins of the groom fromDunkirk, Trenton Woolum, Eaton,and Kyle Freeman, Muncie, bothcousins of the bride.Alyssa is the daughter of Kelly

Greene and Doug Greene, both ofMuncie. She is a 2015 graduate ofJay County High School and is astay-at-home mom.Devon is the son of Kristy

Rigney, Portland, and Tony Roosa,Crossville, Tennessee. He graduat-ed from Jay County High School in2014 and works for Astral Indus-tries in Lynn. A reception followed the ceremo-

ny at Jay County Fairgrounds andthe couple is planning a weddingtrip to Gatlinburg, Tennessee. They reside in Portland.

Devon and Alyssa Roosa

DEAR ABBY: I have a goodfriend I have traveled with formany years. The last few yearsshe has been showing increas-ing signs of confusion and for-getfulness. She has difficultymanaging her paperwork fortravel and remembering whatour plans are for the next day. On the most recent trip she

picked up other people’s coatsand insisted they were hers. Myattempts to discuss this with heronly made things worse and ledto her accusing me of destroy-ing her confidence. I believe thisis the onset of dementia. Howcan I help her? — NOTICINGTHINGS IN CALIFORNIA DDEEAARR NNOOTTIICCIINNGG:: YYoouu aarree

ddeessccrriibbiinngg aa sseerriioouuss aanndd pprroo--ggrreessssiivvee pprroobblleemm.. IIff yyoouurr ggooooddffrriieenndd hhaass aa ssppoouussee,, cchhiillddrreenn oorrssiibblliinnggss,, tthheeyy sshhoouulldd bbee nnoottiiffiieeddaabboouutt wwhhaatt yyoouu hhaavvee oobbsseerrvveedd..

IIff sshhee hhaass nnoo oonnee,, tthheenn ssoommee--oonnee aatt SSoocciiaall SSeerrvviicceess oorr AAdduullttPPrrootteeccttiivvee SSeerrvviicceess sshhoouulldd bbeeccoonnttaacctteedd bbeeffoorree yyoouurr ffrriieennddggeettss hheerrsseellff iinnttoo sseerriioouuss ttrroouubblleebbyy ffoorrggeettttiinngg ttoo ppaayy hheerr bbiillllss,, oorrggeettttiinngg lloosstt wwhhiillee ddrriivviinngg hheerrccaarr.. DEAR ABBY: Have you any

suggestions about letting go? Aformer friend is involved in aNew Age sex group. He can nolonger hold a casual conversa-tion without expounding ontheir practices and “theology,”as he considers it. My rational

self understands that his life ishis to do with as he wishes, butmy emotional self grieves thathe is distancing himself fromfamily and friends. I know I’m not my brother’s

keeper, but he was like a brotherto me, and I blame myself that Iwas unable to reach him whenthis was merely something hewas curious about instead of aradical new lifestyle. How do Iaccept that he’s a lost cause andquit worrying about him? —NOT MY BROTHER’S KEEPER DDEEAARR NNOOTT:: BBeeccaauussee yyoouu aarree

hhaavviinngg ttrroouubbllee aacccceeppttiinngg tthhaattyyoouurr ffoorrmmeerr ffrriieenndd iiss aa ““lloossttccaauussee,,”” vviieeww iitt aass hhiiss hhaavviinnggttaakkeenn aa ddiiffffeerreenntt ppaatthh tthhaann yyoouuhhaavvee cchhoosseenn.. IIff yyoouu pprreeffeerr nnoott ttoohheeaarr aabboouutt yyoouurr ffrriieenndd’’ss aalltteerr--nnaattiivvee lliiffeessttyyllee,, yyoouu sshhoouulldd ssaayyssoo.. IIff hhee rreessppeeccttss yyoouurr ffeeeelliinnggss,,

hhee wwiillll ssttiicckk ttoo ssuubbjjeeccttss tthhee ttwwooooff yyoouu hhaavvee iinn ccoommmmoonn aanndd qquuiitt““eexxppoouunnddiinngg..”” IIff hhee ccaann’’tt ddootthhaatt,, tthheenn rreeccooggnniizzee tthhaatt aassmmuucchh aass yyoouu mmiigghhtt wwiisshh ttoo,, yyoouuccaann’’tt lliivvee ssoommeeoonnee eellssee’’ss lliiffee,,aanndd tthheenn mmoovvee oonn bbeeccaauusseeffrriieennddsshhiippss eeiitthheerr eevvoollvvee oorr tthheeyywwiitthheerr.. DEAR ABBY: My 16-year-old

son and I are having a debateand would love your take on thematter. I think if you stand in agrocery store checkout line andread a magazine without buyingit that it’s stealing. He doesn’tagree. What do you say? — JUSTLOOKING DDEEAARR JJUUSSTT:: IIff yyoouurr ssoonn iiss

rreeaaddiinngg tthhee mmaaggaazziinnee ffrroommccoovveerr ttoo ccoovveerr,, tthheenn II aaggrreeee hhee’’sshheellppiinngg hhiimmsseellff ttoo ssoommeetthhiinngghhee’’ss nnoott eennttiittlleedd ttoo.. IIff hhee iiss oonnllyy““ssaammpplliinngg”” ttoo sseeee iiff tthheerree aarreeeennoouugghh aarrttiicclleess iinn tthhee mmaaggaazziinneetthhaatt hhee tthhiinnkkss iitt’’ss wwoorrtthh bbuuyyiinngg,,

II wwoouullddnn’’tt ccaallll iitt tthheefftt.. UUssiinnggyyoouurr yyaarrddssttiicckk,, jjuuddggiinngg ffrroomm tthheennuummbbeerr ooff ppeeooppllee II hhaavvee sseeeenn aattcchheecckkoouutt ccoouunntteerrss wwiitthh tthheeiirrnnoosseess bbuurriieedd iinn tthhee ttaabbllooiiddss,,tthhaatt wwoouulldd mmaakkee uuss aa nnaattiioonn oofftthhiieevveess..

———Dear Abby is written by Abi-

gail Van Buren, also known asJeanne Phillips, and was found-ed by her mother, PaulinePhillips. Contact Dear Abby atwww.DearAbby.com or P.O. Box69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.For an excellent guide to

becoming a better conversation-alist and a more sociable per-son, order “How to Be Popular.”Send your name and mailingaddress, plus check or moneyorder for $7 (U.S. funds) to: DearAbby, Popularity Booklet, P.O.Box 447, Mount Morris, IL 61054-0447. (Shipping and handlingare included in the price.)

DearAbby

Confusion could be a sign of dementia

Marriage applicationsThe following couples

applied for a marriagelicense recently in theclerk’s office of Jay Coun-ty Courthouse.Daniel Kristopher Crow,

21, and Katherine NicoleBird, 21, both of 310 N.Oak St., Redkey. Noah Paul Earle, 23, and

Natalie Anne Sharman,22, both of 234 E. WalnutSt., Apt. A, Portland. David Allen De Morrow,

34, and Holly Marie Stew-art, 32, both of 415 E. MainSt., Portland. Joshua Douglas Miller,

35, and Ashley ReneeEsparza, 33, both of 870 S.Washington St., Pennville.

Adam Craig Alfont, 21,695 W. Seventh St., Port-land, and Billie Lee AnnaValdez-Stember, 27, 1237 N.U.S. 27, Lot 84, Portland.Chadrick Gregor Miller,

28, 1557 E. 300 North, Port-land, and Kristin MaureenBrown, 27, 221 E. NorthSt., Portland.Elvis Ruiz Carreno, 33,

918 W. Race St., Portland,and Tiffany Marie Four-man, 22, 817 E. Arch St.,Portland.James Thomas Strohl,

22, and Bristal NatashaAnn Hill, 21, both of 1237N. U.S. 27, Portland.Dustin Allen Lee, 31,

and Vanessa Marie West-

lake, 28, both of 402 W.North St., Portland.Rusty Alan Inman, 45,

812 S. Jean Drive, Port-land, and Elizabeth ElaineUpp, 42, 302 W. 12th St.,Portland. In Mercer County Pro-

bate Court:Brian Allen Hemmel-

garn, 24, 310 George St.Fort Recovery, and HunterRenae Shannon McAbee,22, 208 N. First St., FortRecovery.David Mark Osterholt,

25, 1289 Burrville Road,Fort Recovery, and MeganCelia Hardesty, 23, 00427Clover Four Road, NewBremen, Ohio.

Photo provided

Fireworks donationMitch Sutton of The Portland Fire Department, at left, recently

accepted a check for $1,000 from Breakfast Optimist Club president DaveCramer. The money will be used to purchase fireworks.

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“Were it left for me to decide whether we shouldhave government without newspapers or newspaperswithout government I should not hesitate to prefer thelatter.” – Thomas Jefferson

VOLUME 144–NUMBER 47SATURDAY MORNING, JUNE 25, 2016

Subscription rates: City carrier rates $10 per month.City delivery and Internet-only pay at the office rates: 13weeks – $30; six months – $58; one year – $106. Motorroute pay at the office rates: 13 weeks – $37; six months– $66; one year – $122; Mail: 13 weeks – $43; sixmonths – $73; one year – $127.

Home delivery problems: Call (260) 726-8144.

The Commercial Review is published daily exceptSundays and six holidays (New Years, Memorial Day,Fourth of July, Labor Day, Thanksgiving, andChristmas) by The Graphic Printing Co. Inc., 309 W.Main St., Portland, Indiana 47371. Periodical postagepaid at Portland, Indiana. Postmaster: Send addresschanges to The Commercial Review, 309 W. Main St., P.O.Box 1049, Portland, Indiana 47371 or call (260) 726-8141.

We welcome letters to the editor. Letters should be700 words or fewer, signed and include a phone numberfor verification purposes. We reserve the right to editletters for content and clarity. Email letters [email protected]. www.thecr.com

The Commercial ReviewHUGH N. RONALD (1911-1983), Publisher EmeritusUS PS 125820

JACK RONALDPresident and Publisher

RAY COONEYEditor

Page 4 Opinion The Commercial ReviewSaturday, June 25, 2016

JEANNE LUTZAdvertising Manager

By NATHAN RUBBELKE The Commercial Review It might be hard to believe, but

there is more than one electionthis fall. If you turn on any cable news

network, it’d be easy to think oth-erwise. It’s constantly Hillarythis or Trump that. Don’t let thepresidential frenzy confuse youinto thinking it’s the only racethat matters. In Indiana, there are also

statewide races for Governor,lieutenant governor, U.S. Senate,attorney general and schoolschief that carry large implica-tions.And then there are the races

for state legislature. Yes, theymatter, too. This year alone, 5,917 state leg-

islative seats are on the ballotacross the country. In Indiana,125 are up. While national and statewide

elections will dominate the air-

waves, the elections for state leg-islative seats may matter most tothe rank-and-file voter.It’s these lawmakers that’ll

handle legislation that oftenimpacts the daily lives of theirconstituents far more than mostbills on Capitol Hill.That’s why I met with both of

Jay County’s two state legisla-tors, Sen. Travis Holdman andRep. Greg Beumer, this week tointroduce myself and get a han-dle of their role in Indiana poli-tics. In Monday’s paper, you’ll find

an article that details which

interim study committees theyare serving on this summer. I hope the article is the first of

my work at The CommercialReview that strives to keep tabsevery so often on the two law-makers’ actions in Indianapolis. Why I am looking to add extra

work by covering these two? First, because in their role as

elected officials, I believe theydeserve to be held accountable totheir constituencies. However, such reporting is

also intended to keep you, thevoter, accountable. While there are more than

5,000 statehouse seats up forgrabs this year, only an extreme-ly tiny fraction will actually be areferendum on individual legis-lators.That’s because voters often

aren’t actually voting on the can-didates or race at hand. It is one’s opinion of the presi-

dent that best predicts their vote

for state representative or sena-tor. That’s the message my former

political science professor SteveRogers told me earlier this week. Rogers, who teaches at Saint

Louis University, is working on abook that looks into how statelegislators are held accountable— or aren’t held accountable. For better or worse, statehouse

lawmakers ride the coattails oftheir national colleagues. With the 2010 and 2014

midterm elections, that meanttremendous gains for Republi-cans in statehouses across thecounty, especially here in Indi-ana. In 2016, as Donald Trump

seems to become more unpopu-lar by the week, those sameRepublicans could be sent pack-ing at no fault of their own. This cruel system runs on the

ignorance of voters. Approximately half of the vot-

ers across the county don’t knowwhich party controls their ownstate capital, Rogers notes in anoutline of his book. In Ten-nessee, for instance, only 11 per-cent can even name their ownlegislator. Therefore, voters instead use

their opinions of the two partiesas a cue to make their decision inthe voting booth.How do we fix this problem? My solution is report more on

our local officials.Will it work? “Increased media coverage

can help some,” said Rogers. He’s found evidence that more

media does raise knowledge andincreases accountability of thelegislators. However, he quicklyadded the effect is very small. So, a few articles in a small

daily newspaper definitely won’tsolve the overall lack of account-ability, but maybe it can leave asmall dent here in Jay County.

A little more info can always helpOff andRunning

The Miami-HeraldThe U.S. government is

taking a tougher stanceon Venezuela’s socialistgovernment, but alsooffering to help rescuethe country from its cur-rent economic crisis.Quite the juggling act.Last week, U.S. Secre-

tary of State John Kerryannounced high-leveltalks will take place toease tensions withVenezuela’s socialist gov-ernment. This came justhours after he alsobacked calls for a referen-dum that could forcePresident NicolásMaduro from office. Thispresident has dodged andbullied his way out ofholding any vote on hisfuture, so the UnitedStates must be preparedto play hardball.“The United States

joins the Secretary Gen-eral of the OAS, LuisAlmagro, and others inthe international com-munity calling on thegovernment of Venezuelato release political pris-oners and respect free-dom of expression andassembly,” Mr. Kerrysaid.Mr. Maduro, a tone-

deaf and incompetentleader who has broughthis country to the brinkof chaos, last monthdeclared a state of emer-gency granting himselfpretty much full authori-ty.Coupled with the colos-

sal military exercisesdesigned to intimidatethe Venezuelan people,and it’s clear the presi-dent is out of ideas.The latest round of

talks would start immedi-ately in Caracas. Lastyear, when relationsbetween the two ideologi-cal foes were at theirworst, dialogue attemptsstalled.The talks would also be

aimed at fostering com-munication betweenVenezuela’s governmentand the opposition tocarry out a “timely recallreferendum that is partof the constitutionalprocess,” Mr. Kerryadded.The regional body will

debate the issue in Wash-ington on June 23 anddecide whether to applythe charter, introducing agradual process thatcould lead to diplomaticefforts to resolve the cri-sis in Venezuela and, ulti-

mately, to its suspensionfrom the OAS.Therefore, it is more

than appropriate thatWashington press to seeka remedy to the crises inVenezuela. The humani-tarian crisis has put thecountry on the brink of apopular revolt. Within atwo-week period, threepeople died during riotsas people clamor for food,medicine and othernecessities.These stunning short-

ages plague a once-richoil-producing countrythat enjoyed high oilprices during the yearsof the Hugo Chávezadministration.Venezuelan Foreign

Minister Delcy Rodriguezresponded to Mr. Kerry’sconcerns and demandsby saying that the inter-nal affairs of Venezuelaare the business ofVenezuelans. Not a veryencouraging start, or onethat’s very realistic.If Venezuela’s condi-

tion deteriorates intochaos, the consequenceswill breach its borders.The international com-munity, in this case theOAS, should take steps tocontain it.Mr. Almagro’s proposal

and Mr. Kerry’sannouncement are thelogical responses to apolitical, economic andsocial crisis that Mr.Maduro’s governmenthas been unable — andunwilling — to resolve.In took Mr. Chávez 17

years to dismantle theproductive apparatusthat was once Venezuela.And Mr. Maduro seemshellbent on finishing thejob. The era of astronom-ical oil profits is over, andnow Venezuelans are pay-ing for the lack of fore-sight of an administra-tion that continues tomake crude attempts tosurvive.Mr. Kerry did well to

demand becoming part ofthe solution, and Wash-ington must continue toinsist that Venezuelansbe able to express them-selves and define theirfuture in a recall referen-dum.

U.S. should bepart of solution

By ANNE APPLEBAUMThe Washington PostLike everybody else in London, I

woke up this morning, after notmuch sleep, to graphic depictionsof the pound crashing, the stockexchange collapsing and marketsall over the world in turmoil.I have no doubt that tomorrow,

or the next day, the story will bedifferent. Traders will take a stepback and notice that nothing, actu-ally, has happened yet. There willbe cheap assets to pick up. Marketswill stabilize. The true impact, on Britain and

on Europe, will not be visible formany years. In a certain sense, itwill not be visible at all, for thereal damage will be done by thethings that will now not happen.The slow agony of the divorce pro-ceedings will take up preciouspolitical time and energy in Lon-don and other European capitals,so Europe’s leaders will not uniteto cope with other crises. The U.K.will turn farther in on itself, soBritish energy and talent will notbe dedicated to pushing backagainst the Islamic State, reset-tling migrants, resisting Russia.The situation of the U.K. will beunstable and uncertain for a longtime to come, so investments willnot take place. Money will not bespent. Opportunities will not becreated.It is not an exaggeration to say

that there are tens of thousands ofdecisions to be made in the U.K.,on legal issues, on joint foreignpolicy, security and diplomacyand, if Britain leaves the Euro-

pean single market altogether, ontariffs and trade. Scotland voted overwhelmingly to

stay in Europe, and so the questionof Scottish independence necessari-ly returns. Nicola Sturgeon, Scot-land’s first minister, has called thereferendum result “democraticallyunacceptable” for Scots, and onesees her point. Northern Ireland voted to stay in

Europe, and so the unification ofnorthern and southern Irelandbecomes a live issue again. Minutesafter the referendum result wasannounced, Sinn Fein, the Irishnationalist party, declared that“This British Government has for-feited any mandate to represent theeconomic or political interests ofpeople in Northern Ireland,” and soit has. It can only be a matter of timebefore a movement calling for anorthern Irish referendum takes off.Other European countries may

now face political instability as well.The British vote has, in just a fewhours, energized the supporters ofanti-European — and in some casesanti-democratic — parties elsewherein Europe. Not just in the smallerEuropean nations but in big coun-tries — France, the Netherlands,Italy and possibly even Germany —the political scene may shift dramat-

ically, particularly given the likeli-hood of slower economic growth.Once again, much of the damagewill be invisible, taking the form ofthings that will not happen. TheDutch prime minister, the Germanchancellor or the French president,consumed with fighting off newpolitical challenges at home, will nothave time to think creatively abouttheir own economies or Europe’sinstitutional structures, let alonethe outside world. Finally, I do realize that it’s facile

to talk about the impact on a U.S.election which is still many monthsaway, that it’s too simple to say “firstBrexit, then Trump.” But there is away in which this election has to beseen, at the very least, as a possibleharbinger of the future.This referendum campaign, as I

wrote a few days ago, was not foughton the issues that are normally cen-tral to British elections. Identity pol-itics trumped economics; argumentsabout “independence” and “sover-eignty” defeated arguments aboutBritish influence and importance.The advice of once-trusted institu-tions was ignored. Elected leaderswere swept aside.If that kind of transformation can

take place in the U.K., then it canhappen in the United States, too. Wehave been warned.

••••••••••Applebaum writes a biweekly for-

eign affairs column for The Wash-ington Post. She is also the Directorof the Global Transitions Programat the Legatum Institute in London.Follow her on Twitter @anneapple-baum.

British exit vote is a warningAnne

Applebaum

GuestEditorial

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The Commercial ReviewSaturday, June 25, 2016 Business Page 5

Talk to us today about yourinsurance needs.

Farm • Auto • HomeSteve Arnold • Kyle Champ

260•726•9345115 E. Main St. Portland, IN www.portins.com

ProtectingYour Investment

Rain barrels still available.Pick yours up today, while supplies last.

Jay County Solid Waste Management District5948W SR67 - Portland, IN

260-729-5071

Now AvailableRecycle

Bins

Call Todayto reserveyour bin

260-729-5071

For sporting events, parties and festivals.

Recycle Plastic & glass bottles or aluminum

I&M power lines being checkedIf you see trucks labeled

Osmose and crews lookingat electrical lines, restassured it’s just a matterof maintenance andinspection by IndianaMichigan Power.The company said this

week it is conductinginspections of overheadand ground-level equip-ment throughout its serv-ice area to make sureeverything is both safeand reliable.Crews in the Osmose

trucks will have a magnetidentifying the truck as“Indiana Michigan PowerContractor.”The visual inspections

are done on foot as well asfrom slow-moving vehi-cles with flashers on.Pole inspections by a

company called GeoForceare also ongoing.Anyone with questions

or concerns about thework can contact I&M at(800) 311-4634.

PromotedRoberta L. Leverich has

been promoted to the posi-tion of assistant branchmanager of the NorthMeridian Street branch ofCrossRoads Financial Fed-eral Credit Union.She has been with

CrossRoads for six years,serving most recently assenior member servicesstaff. Her promotion wasannounced by CrossRoadspresident and chief execu-tive officer Janet Bantz.

Attends seminarScott Bollenbacher, cer-

tified public accountantfrom Bollenbacher and

Associates of Portland,recently attended theannual American Insti-tute of Certified PublicAccountants’ conferenceon tax strategies for high-income individuals.The conference, held in

Las Vegas, was attendedby more than 800 of thecountry’s CPAs.

Brand focusExecutives from Tyson

Foods Inc., parent compa-ny of Tyson MexicanOriginal of Portland,spoke to investors at theJefferies 2016 Global Con-sumer Conference thisweek and said the compa-ny is focusing on morebranded, protein-centricfoods.“We’re investing in our

retail packaged brands,and we’re seeing the pay-off,” Tyson president TomHayes told the group.Hayes cited higher and

more stable profit margins

in the company’s chickensegment as a key factor inits overall improved per-formance.

More researchPOET, parent company

of POET Bio-refiningPortland, is expanding itscover crop research atEmmetsburg, Iowa, aspart of soil sustainabilitywork for cellulosic ethanoldevelopment.“Agriculture is the solu-

tion to so many of theworld’s challenges, andthere’s an enormousopportunity in cellulosicethanol,” POET CEO JeffBroin said in a preparedstatement. “As this indus-try starts to grow, we’reworking to make sure thatit’s done in a way that is assustainable as possible.”Emmetsburg has been

the center of Project Lib-erty, the joint venturebetween POET andNetherlands-based DSM

that is spearheading cellu-losic ethanol development.At that site, researchers

from Iowa State Universi-ty and the U.S. Depart-ment of Agriculture havebeen working for eightyears to monitor the soilunder different residueremoval practices.Last year researchers

added two fields of covercrops (a mix of tillageradish and oats) to ascer-tain what impact fieldcover has when pairedwith a variety of tillagepractices and residueremoval rates. This yearthey are planting rye as acover crop and adding athird field to expand thevariety of cover cropspecies and mixes toassess their specific soilbenefits and the economicimplications, the companysaid.“One year of data is too

soon to make any boldSee BBuussiinneessss page 6

BusinessRoundup

Nancy C. Champ,deceased, to Gregory O.Champ, Bridget Vore,Amanda Vannote, andOwen Champ, deed affi-davit — lot 55, 56 and 57,Daugherty Addition, Red-key. Bridget Vore, Amanda

Vannote and Owen Champto Gregory O. Champ, quitclaim deed — Lot 55, 56and 57, Daugherty Addi-tion, Redkey. Friends of the Limber-

lost State Historic Site Inc.to State of Indiana andDepartment of NaturalResources, corporate war-ranty deed — 26.034 acres,Section 11, Jackson Town-ship.Lowell N. Menchhofer

and Martha A. Mench-hofer, both deceased, toAnita L. Enyart, Brenda L.Bradley, Marla J. Laux andCarol D. Orr, deed affidavit— .66 acres, Section 27,Wayne Township.Anita L. Enyart to Don-

ald R. Enyart, quit claimdeed — .66 acres, Section27, Wayne Township.Ilene F. Chapman,

deceased, and Gerald D.Chapman Sr. to ArthurChapman, deed affidavit— Lot 17, South PortlandAddition, Portland.Thomas E. and Gwen-

dolyn Sue Dunn toAndrew M. and Patricia W.Stevens, warranty deed —.763 acres, Section 18,Wayne Township.Curtis D. Foreman to

Brandon and AmandaForeman, warranty deed— Lot 12, 13 and 14, Merid-ian Heights, Portland.Curtis D. Foreman to

Brandon and Amanda

Foreman, warranty deed— .5636 acres, Section 29,Wayne Township.Caressa Runyon and

John G. Runyon to WellsFargo Bank NA, sher-iff/marshall deed — 1.25acres, Section 32, GreeneTownship.Caressa Runyon and

John G. Runyon to WellsFargo Bank NA, sher-iff/marshall deed — 1acre, Section 32, GreeneTownship.Pennymac Holdings

LLC to Pennymac Corpo-ration, warranty deed —Lot 29 and 30, HaynesAddition, Portland.Pennymac Corporation

to James D. Gilbert, Lot 29and 30, Haynes Addition,Portland.Gary L. Jones, deceased,

and Theresa A. Jones, toTheresa A. Jones, deathdeed — 30 acres, Section15, Greene Township.Gary L. Jones, deceased,

and Theresa A. Jones, toTheresa A. Jones, deathdeed — 13 acres, Section14, Greene Township.Teresa G. Horner to

Shayne Branham andJohn R. Mizner, warrantydeed — Max Peters Addi-tion, Redkey.Jay and Karen Homan

to Eric J. and Jani L.Siegrist, warranty deed —8.94 acres, Section, 10,Knox Township.Robert A. Howell and

Nathaniel A. Howell toDavid A. Stoner, warrantydeed — Lot 7 and 7A,Houcks Subdivision, Port-land.McKinley Bullard to

Tori Ruiz, quit claim deed— Lot 1 and 2, Coon First

Addition, Redkey.Elvin L. Rees to Tori

Ruiz, warranty deed — Lot1 and 2, Coon First Addi-tion, Redkey.Matthew A. Billington

and Jennifer L. Billingtonto Dignan LLC, easement— Section 8 and 9, WayneTownship.Ruth A. Arnold to Ruth

A. Arnold, death deed —Section 33, Wayne Town-ship.Gerald W. Boxell Revoca-

ble Trust to Mary D. Box-ell, trustee deed — Section29, Wayne Township.Dan L. Dirksen Revoca-

ble Trust and Tina M.Dirksen Recovable Trustto Kraig G. and Emily E.Homan, trustee deed —70.935 acres, Section 35,Know Township.Rachel F. Dunmoyer to

Dan L. Dirksen RevocableTrust and Tina M. DirksenRevocable Trust, warran-ty deed — 82.58 acres, Sec-tion 26, Greene Township.Barbara J. Stolz to Jef-

frey D. and Jill Knisely,warranty deed — 3.06acres, Section 16, KnoxTownship.Barbara J. Stolz to Jef-

frey D. and Jill Knisely,warranty deed — .03acres, Section 16, KnoxTownship.Jerry Milton Adams,

deceased, and BeatriceAdams to Beatrice Adams,death deed — Lot 4, Head-ington and LafolletteAddition, Portland.Rebecca L. Thompson,

deceased, and Megan R.Demien to Tony E. andElasha R. Lennartz, war-ranty deed — .18 acres,

See DDeeeeddss page 6

Deeds

The Commercial Review/Debanina Seaton

Ready and renovatedPlant manager John Eady prepares to cut the ribbon Thursday morning celebrating the

extensive remodeling and updates at Coca-Cola Bottling Company, 1617 N. Meridian St. Cityofficials, members of the Jay County Chamber of Commerce and Coca-Cola employees stand inthe crowd.

Photo provided

100 yearsSecretary of State Connie Lawson traveled from Indianapolis

to present Moser Motor Sales with Indiana’s Century Certificate, anhonor awarded for “100 Years of Being in Good Standing with theState of Indiana.” Pictured presenting the award is Lawson, flanked byowners Jim Eicher and Linda Eicher, with State Representative MattLehman (left) and Moser Motor Sales Service Manager Bracton Eicher(right). The fourth-generation family-owned Ford dealership is in its112th year of business, founded by A.J. Moser in 1904.

Page 6: Saturday, June 25, 2016 The Commercial Review full pdf_Layout 1.pdf · $150.50; Evan M. Dowell, Provi-dence, Rhode Island, speeding 74 miles per hour in a 55 mile per hour zone, $152.50;

Judge Max LudyFined and sentencedZachary L. K. Williams,

20, Portland, was foundguilty to operating a vehi-cle while intoxicated, aClass C misdemeanor —Sentenced to 60 days inJay County Jail with allbut two days suspended,given two days credit forone day served, fined $100,assessed court costs of$183.50, ordered to pay analcohol and drug counter-measures fee of $200 andsubstance abuse program

fee of $400 and placed onformal probation for oneyear.Andrew L. Batten, 37,

Pennville, pled guilty to anamended charge of operat-ing a vehicle with an bloodalcohol concentrationequivalent of 0.15 percentor more, a Class A misde-meanor — Sentenced toone year to Jay CountyJail with all but 10 dayssuspended, given two dayscredit for one day served,ordered to serve theremaining eight days of

his sentence beginningJuly 2 and receive day forday credit, ordered to payan alcohol and drug coun-termeasures fee of $200and pay a substance abuseprogram fee of $400 andplaced on formal proba-tion for 11 months. As partof the plea agreement, thecharge of operating avehicle while intoxicatedwas dismissed.Travis L. Stone, 41, Port-

land, was found guilty ofpossession of parapherna-lia, a Class C misde-meanor — Sentenced to 56days in Jay County Jail,given 56 days credit for 28days served and assessedcourt costs of $183.Kenneth R. Piercy, Jr.,

42, Portland, was foundguilty of driving whilesuspended, a Class A mis-demeanor — Sentenced to60 days in Jay County Jailto be served consecutive tothe sentence after a con-viction of driving whilesuspended, given 60 dayscredit for 30 days servedand assessed court costsof $183.50. The court rec-ommends the IndianaBureau of Motor Vehiclessuspend his driver’slicense for 180 days.He also violated the

terms of his probationoriginally imposed June

12, 2012 for a charge ofdriving while suspended— Sentenced to serve anadditional 60 days of theone year sentence origi-nally imposed for drivingwhile suspended charge,given 32 days credit for 16days served and ordered toserve the remaining 28days of his sentence at JayCounty Jail beginningJune 16.Michael L. Brown, 20,

Portland, was found guiltyof the possession of mari-juana, a Class B misde-meanor — Sentenced to180 days in Jay CountyJail to be served consecu-tive to the sentenceimposed after a convictionof theft, with all but 30days suspended, given twodays credit for one dayserved, ordered to servethe remaining 28 days ofhis sentence, which beganJune 20, and receive dayfor day credit, fined $100,assessed court costs of$183, ordered to pay a drugabuse, prosecution, inter-diction and correction feeof $200 and placed on for-mal probation for oneyear.He was also found guilty

of theft, a Class A misde-meanor — Sentenced toone year in Jay CountyJail with all but 10 days

suspended, given two dayscredit for one day served,ordered to serve theremaining eight days ofhis sentence, which beganJune 16, and receive dayfor day credit, fined $100,assessed court costs of$183, ordered to pay a sub-stance abuse program feeof $400 and placed on for-mal probation for 11months.

Cases filedState of Indiana vs.

Casey J. Cline, a criminalmisdemeanorPortfolio Recovery Asso-

ciates LLC vs. LaynaByrge, civil collectionsCapital One Bank (USA)

vs. Michael A. Jacobs, Jr.,civil collectionsCapital One Bank (USA)

vs. Kyle W. Bushman, civilcollections

JudgmentsState of Indiana was

granted $448 from RebeccaL. Harris, PennvilleThe Huntington Nation-

al Bank was granted$6,906.81 from Taylor M.Kongar, PortlandLVNV Funding LLC

was granted $1,081.64from Bev Maynard,DunkirkState of Indiana was

granted $558.50 from Mar-

tin Murillo-Torres, Port-land

DismissalsSherry L. Jarrett, Port-

land, leaving the scene ofan accident, a Class B mis-demeanor.Michele L. Foster,

Ridgeville, resisting lawenforcement, a Class Amisdemeanor, publicintoxication, a Class Bmisdemeanor. Freedom. D. Green, New

Weston, Ohio, batteryresulting in bodily injury,a Class A misdemeanor.Andrew P. Smith,

Muncie, operating a vehi-cle while intoxicated, aClass C misdemeanor.Michael D. King, Union

City, possession of mari-juana, a Class B misde-meanor, possession ofparaphernalia, a Class Amisdemeanor.Jordan M. Allen,

Dunkirk, possession ofmarijuana, a Class B mis-demeanor, and drivingwhile suspended, a Class Amisdemeanor.Alexis Raszkowski, Port-

land, operating a vehiclewhile intoxicated, a ClassC misdemeanor, and oper-ating a vehicle with a bloodalcohol concentration of0.15 percent or more, aClass A misdemeanor.

Continued from page 5Section 17, RichlandTownship.Carl R. Imel Jr., Rose-

mary Armantrout, Carl R.and Donna G. Imel, to KyleSibray, warranty deed —Section 32, Greene Town-ship.

Gladys S. Clutter,deceased, to Tom Clutter,Lot 65, Votaws First Addi-tion, Portland. Kyle Cline and Todd Cline

to Joseph Miller, warrantydeed — Lot 43 and 44, HaynesAddition, Portland.Dillon and Chelsey

Staver to Verretta L. Bar-ton, quit claim deed — 1.291 acres, Section 34, KnoxTownship.Patty Ann and Dale

John Kuhlman to PattyAnn and Dale JohnKuhlman, quit claim deed— 56.43 acres, Section 2,Richland Township.Secretary of Housing

and Urban Development toBank of America NA, quitclaim deed — Lot 6 and 7,Webster First Addition,Dunkirk.Robert G. and Sharon M.

Bell to Chad R. and Shan-na M. Young, warrantydeed — 1.309 acres, Section13, Jefferson Township.Robert G. and Sharon M.

Bell to Chad R. and Shan-na M. Young, warrantydeed — easement, Section13, Jefferson Township.Robert G. and Sharon M.

Bell to Chad R. and Shan-na M. Young, warrantydeed — 1.558 acres, Section13, Jefferson Township.Robert G. and Sharon M.

Bell to Chad R. and Shan-na M. Young, warrantydeed — 2.588 acres, Section13, Jefferson Township.Angela D. Hudson to

Steven Massey, quit claimdeed — 6 acres, Section 12,Richland Township.Angela D. Hudson to

Steven Massey, quit claimdeed — 2.54 acres, Section11, Richland Township.Steven D. Massey to

Angela D. Hudson, quitclaim deed — Lot 1, Cad-wallader Addition, Red-key.Patricia A. Sheffer

Daniels to Bradley A. andPatricia A. Daniels, quitclaim deed — Lot 5, HaynesAddition, Portland.

Page 6 Local The Commercial ReviewSaturday, June 25, 2016

Business ...Continued from page 5

statements, but we’re cer-tainly optimistic aboutpairing cover crops withbiomass harvesting forcellulosic ethanol in thefuture,” said associate bio-mass research scientistAlicia ElMamouni in aprepared statement.

Going healthierDrugstore giant CVS

dropped tobacco productsin late 2014. Now it’s shifting its

retail line to include abroader assortment ofhealthier snacks and bev-erages.The company said it

plans to enhance 100stores with a “curatedselection of national andniche better-for-youbrands that make healthi-er eating on the go conven-ient and affordable.”

New strategyWal-Mart has apparent-

ly made a major shift in itsChina strategy.The news agency

Reuters reported thisweek that the companyhas sold its Chinese onlinegrocery store in return foran interest in China’snumber-two e-commercefirm.Reuters said the compa-

ny will swap its Yihaodianplatform for a five percent

stake in JD.com, worthabout $1.5 billion.JD.com is the rival of

Chinese e-commerceleader Alibaba.Wal-Mart operates more

than 400 brick-and-mortarstores in China, but it hasbeen struggling to find itsfooting.“The reality is that e-

commerce is hyper-com-petitive in China and it istough for any platform tomake money,” said BenCavender, Shanghai-basedprincipal of China MarketResearch Group, toldReuters. “Selling up inreturn for a 5 percentstake in JD.com is a goodway of staying in thespace while reducing therisk.”

Bad veggiesConsumers are being

advised to throw out orreturn some frozen veg-etables sold at Walmartand Target stores.Included in a Food and

Drug Administrationwarning about listeria arefrozen green peas andmixed vegetables soldunder Walmart’s “GreatValue” brand and Target’s“Market Pantry” brandbetween Sept. 2, 2015 andJune 2, 2016.“Consumers should not

consume these products.Consumers who pur-

chased affected productsmay return them to theplace of purchase for a fullrefund,” the FDA stated.There are as yet no

reports of illness relatedto the frozen vegetables.

Reorganizing?

Motherson Sumi Sys-tems, parent company ofMSSL Wiring Systems ofPortland, responded thisweek to Indian mediaspeculation that the com-pany was going to mergewith Samvardhana Moth-erson Automotive Systems

Group, in which it holds a51 percent stake.The company said while

there have been frequentrequests and suggestionsfrom investors that itsgroup structure be simpli-fied and streamlined, thelatest round of specula-

tion is premature.Any proposal for

restructuring would beevaluated first by a com-mittee, then by the boardof directors. If approved,it would then make all nec-essary legal disclosures tothe Indian stock exchange.

Photo provided

Event center eventMembers of the Jay County Chamber of Commerce gathered recently for a ribbon-

cutting ceremony at the Jay County Event Center, located in a portion of the former Jay Garmentbuilding in Portland.

Deeds ...

Jay Superior Court

Judge BrianHutchisonMortgageforeclosuresU.S. Bank Trust vs., Carl

D. Turner, Sr.

JudgmentsState of Indiana was

granted $1,548 from DallasK. Wilburn, Avon.

Cases filed

Michael Markham vs.Misty Markham, divorceCarole Leonhard vs.

Michael Leonhard,divorceWilmington Savings

Fund Society vs. David D.Dotson and Hanni Plumb-ing, mortgage foreclosureJames T. Paxton vs.

Michelle S. Paxton,divorce

Jay Circuit Court

Page 7: Saturday, June 25, 2016 The Commercial Review full pdf_Layout 1.pdf · $150.50; Evan M. Dowell, Provi-dence, Rhode Island, speeding 74 miles per hour in a 55 mile per hour zone, $152.50;

STATEWIDECLASSIFIED ADS

STATEWIDE40 NOTICES

30 LOST, STRAY ED60 SERVICES

STATEWIDE

The Commercial ReviewSaturday, June 25, 2016 Page 7

CLASSIFICATIONS010 Card of Thanks020 In Memory030 Lost, Strayed orFound040 Notices050 Rummage Sales060 Services070 Instruction, Schools080 BusinessOpportunities090 Sale Calendar100 Jobs Wanted110 Help Wanted120 Wearing Apparel/Household130 Misc. for Sale140 Appliances150 Boats, SportingEquipment160 Wanted to Buy170 Pets180 Livestock190 Farmers Column200 For Rent210 Wanted to Rent220 Real Estate230 Autos, Trucks240 Mobile Homes

CLASSIFIED ADS260-726-8141

ADVERTISING RATES20 Word MinimumEffective 1/01/2013:Minimum charge....

$10.401 insertion.........52¢/

word2 insertions.......71¢/

word3 insertions.......86¢/

word6 insertions.... $1.04/

word12 insertions. $1.32/

word26 insertions. $1.37/word Circulator.......$1.50 per insertionClassified Display

$6.40/ per column inchNo borders or logosallowed on Classified

PageCard of Thanks Up to100 words.... $12.00In Memory Up to 100words.... $12.00

Advertising Deadline is12:00 p.m. the day priorto publication. The

deadline for Mondayspaper is 12:00 p.m. Fri-

day.Pre-Payment requiredfor: Rummage sales,business opportunities,jobs wanted, boats andsporting equipment,wanted to rent, motor-ized vehicles, realestate and mobile

homes.

30 LOST, STRAYEDOR FOUND

ATTENTION! LOST APET or Found One? TheJay County HumaneSociety can serve as aninformation center. 260-726-6339

40 NOTICES

CIRCULATIONPROBLEMS?After hours, call:260-726-8144The Commercial

Review.

PLEASE NOTE: Besure to check your adthe first day it appears.We cannot be responsi-ble for more than onedays incorrect copy. Wetry hard not to make mis-takes, but they do hap-pen, and we may notknow unless you call totell us. Call before 12:00pm for corrections. TheCommercial Review,309 W Main, Portland,Indiana 260-726-8141.

CLASSIFIED ADDEADLINES In order foryour advertisement toappear in the next day’spaper, or for a correctionor stop order to be madefor an ad alreadyappearing, we mustreceive the ad, correc-tion or cancellationbefore 12:00 p.m. Mon-day-Friday. The deadlinefor Monday is 12:00 pmon the previous Friday.

Deadline for The Circu-lator and The News andSun is 3:00 p.m. Friday.The Commercial Review309 W Main Portland,Indiana 260-726-8141

FORYOURCONVENIENCE

We accept Visa andMastercard, in personor over the phone,for the many services

we offer:Subscriptions,Advertising,

Commercial Printing,Wedding or

Graduation Orders,Classifieds.Call today!

260-726-8141

ADVERTISERS: Youcan place a 25-wordclassified ad five days aweek M-F in more than50 daily newspapersacross Indiana reachingmore than 1 millionreaders each day foronly $590. ContactHoosier State PressAssociation 317 803-4772.

BARB’S BOOKS 616 SShank, Portland. Sellpaperbacks. Low Prices!Tuesday and Saturday10:00-1:00. Barb Smith,260-726-8056.

FUNERAL & BURIALPLANS Today We Live!Plan For Tomorrow! Pre-need Cremation -Freeze Cost - Free Esti-mates - Local Agent [email protected] 260-726-5766

50 RUMMAGE SALES

97 S 200W. FRI 9-5 SAT9-4 Babyequipment/clothes NB-6, toys, power tools,men/women clothessmall-large, householditems.

1226 BOUNDARY PIKESaturday, 9-4. Boys24m-2T, girls 7-8, menmed-2XL, women med-2XL, lots of misc. andhousehold. Coca-colaitems.

60 SERVICES

J. L. CONSTRUCTIONAmish crew. Custombuilt homes, newgarages, pole barns,interior/ exterior remod-eling, drywall, windows,doors, siding, roofing,foundations. 260-726-5062, leave message.

KEEN’S ROOFING andConstruction. Standingseam metal, paintedsteel and shingle roof-ing, vinyl siding andreplacement windows.New construction andremodeling. CharlesKeen, 260-335-2236.

LARRY VANSKYOCKAND SONS Siding, roof-ing, windows, drywalland finish, kitchens andbathrooms, laminatedfloors, additions. Call260-726-9597 or 260-729-7755.

HANDYMAN MIKEARNOLD Remodeling;garages; doors; win-dows; painting; roofing;siding; much more. 28years experience. Freeestimates. 260-726-2030; 260-251-2441.

STEPHEN’S FLOORINSTALLATION carpet,vinyl, hardwood, andlaminate installed; 15years experience; workguaranteed. Free esti-mates call Stephen Ping260-726-5017

WENDEL SEAMLESSGUTTERING For allyour guttering and leafcover needs. Call us fora free quote. Call Jim at260-997-6774 or Steveat 260-997-1414.

ADE CONSTRUCTION.Foundations, concrete,roofing, siding, residen-tial remodeling and newconstruction, pole barns,garages, homes. Freeestimates. Amos D.Eicher Owner. Call Mike260-312-3249

J G BUILDERS Newconstruction, remodel-ing, pole barns, garages,new homes, concrete,siding doors, windows,crawl space work. Call260-849-2786.

PORTLAND CLOCKDOC. REPAIRS 525North Meridian, Port-land, IN 47371. 260-251-5024, Clip for reference.

POWERWASHING Fer-guson & Sons; vinyl sid-ing, decks, fences,walks, drives, masonry.Single story vinyl ranchtype house- $200. 260-729-1732.

GOODHEW’S ALLSEASON Construction-Specializing in standingseam metal roofs. WhenQuality Counts, CountOn US. A company youcan trust. Member of theBBB. New Installationand repairs. Call RodneyThornbury, owner 765-509-0191

W. S. CONSTRUCTIONAMISH CREW MetalShingle Roofing/Siding,Old Barn Restoration,Foundation & ConcreteWork, New Construction& Room Additions. FreeEstimates. 260-251-8004

Dave’sHeating & Cooling

Furnace,Air ConditionerGeothermal

Sales & Service

260-726-2138Now acceptingMC/Disc/Visa

Comics

Little JJ’sTree Service

Tree Trimming, Removal,StumpGrinding.Firewood available

765-509-1956

(765)768-1559E & T

Tree & Landscaping Serviceand Snow Removal

We Do It AllJust Call!Toll Free

1-866-trim-tree

ROCKWELLDOOR SALES(260) 726-9500

GarageDoors Sales& Service

GABBARDFENCE

FARM • COMMERCIAL• INDUSTRIAL

RESIDENTIAL • VINYL“SINCE 1969”

Ph. (765) 584-4047(765) 546-8801

Tree Trimming • Tree Removal

CoverallTree Service

419-852-5562

Hi and Lois

Agnes

Rose is Rose

Peanuts

SPEED BUMP Dave Coverly

Beetle Bailey

Snuffy Smith

Blondie

Funky Winkerbean

Senior Health Since 1978

Medicare SupplementsMedicare Drug PlansMedicare AdvantageSenior Life Insurance

Call:260-726-6470Dave PetersI make house calls

Visit Us At:thecr.com

CCoonnttrraaccttBBrriiddggee By Steve Becker�

����

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70 INSTRUCTION,90 SALE CALENDAR

7O INSTRUCTION,110 HELP WANTED

70 INSTRUCTION,130 MISC. FOR SALE

150 BOATS, SPORTING

150 BOATS, SPORTING200 FOR RENT

190 FARMERS200 FOR RENT

190 FARMERS230 AUTOS, TRUCKS

70 INSTRUCTION,

70 INSTRUCTION,230 AUTOS, TRUCKS

220 REAL ESTATEESTATE AUCTIONSaturday, June 25, 2016

9:00 amLocated: 5802 Meeker

Ave., MuncieReal Estate 12pm5+ acres w/30’x72’shop, 20’x20’ and12’x20’ detached

garages, well/septic.Major Equipment 1PMConstruction/Farm/Shop/Concrete equipment:

mini, dozer,crawler/loader, backhoe;trucks; trailer; powertools, welder, hand-

tools, saws;100+ farm and con-

struction miniature toys;Nascar collection;portable building;

antiques; new portable2-person cedar sauna,

much more.Ronald Lee Estate

Connie Shreves, Admin-istrator

Pete ShawverAU01012022

Pete D. ShawverAU19700040260-726-5587Zane ShawverAU10500168260-729-2229

PUBLIC AUCTIONSaturday, June 25, 201610am (10:30 double-

ring)4H Building, Jay County

Fairgrounds2006 Chevy Uplander;1991 Geo Metro (1000miles on rebuilt motorand clutch) convertible.Appliances; kitchen-

ware; furniture; gas grill;bikes; patio set; Pyrex;Dynex 38” and Sanyo26” flat screen TVs.Quilt racks; AtlantaStove Works #60 castiron pot-belly stove.Baseball cards; key-

board; guitar; amp; shoptools; camping gear.

more.www.auctionzip.com

#42900Grube Auctioneering,

LLCAdrian Grube#2016000056419-305-9202Brian Rismiller#2006000036

PUBLIC AUCTIONSaturday, June 25, 2016

9:00 am1656 N 100 W, Decatur,

INReal Estate: 5.814acres w/2 story unfin-ished home, 30x60 barnw/grain bins. Severalcollectible guns; someantique furniture items;collectible cars, includ-ing old Mercedes con-vertible, 1958 Lincolnconvertible and manycar parts; Simplicity rid-ing mower; Indian arti-

facts, more.Carolyn Michaels,

OwnerSale conducted byGreen Auction260-589-8474

www. Auctionzip.comwww. SoldonGreen.com

Rob GreenAU19500011Bill LiechtyAU01048441

100 JOBS WANTED

AMISH GIRLS WILLCLEAN FOR YOUweekly or Spring/Fall.Will babysit or stay withelderly. 245 W 650 NBryant. Contact driver at765-509-085

110 HELP WANTED

MANPOWER PORT-LAND Hiring for produc-tion workers. 609 N.Meridian St. 260-726-2888

NOW TAKINGRESUMES for part-timehelp days and nights.Must be 21 years of ageor older; must be able towork weekends; musthave references. Wages$8.50 to $10.00. North-side Carry Out, Attn:Ruth, 1226 N. Meridian,Portland, IN 47371.

BRICKMASON/MASON TEN-DER, ELECTRI-CIAN/ELECTRICIANHELP, CARPENTERpositions open at BrunsBuilding & Develop-ment. Apply in person at1429 Cranberry Road,St. Henry, OH 45883.EOE

LOOKING FOREMPLOYMENT? ProResources has posi-tions starting immedi-ately at JD Norman andFrank Miller Lumber. Formore details, call theoffice at 765-584-2164or stop in our office inWinchester at 111 SMain St.

JINNY’S CAFE -BRYANT, IN WeekendWaitress day shift. Applybetween 6 am & 2 pm.260-997-8300.

EXPERIENCEDSANDER for PennvilleCustom Cabinetry. Start-ing wage is $10.50/hourand day shift. Apply inperson at 600 E. VotawStreet, Portland, IN oremail resume [email protected]

DOCTOR’S ASSIS-TANT 37 hours perweek, including Satur-day morning. Must havecomputer skills. Benefitsinclude insurance and401k. Send resume to:Box 476 c/o The Com-mercial Review, PO Box1049 Portland, IN 47371

DRIVERS-CO &O\OP’S. Earn GreatMoney Running Dedi-cated! Great Benefits.Home Weekly. MonthlyBonuses. Drive NewerEquipment! 855-582-2265

MULTIPLE POSITIONSMig Welders, RoboticProgrammer(Motoman), OperationsManager. Apply at Tru-Form Steel & Wire 1204Gilkey Ave. Hartford CityOr call 765-348-5001

CLASSROOMFLOATER HEADSTART Based in Port-land. For more informa-tion go to CFS Website:communityandfamilyser-vices.org, or Facebook:Community & FamilyServices, Inc. EOE

DRIVERS: BE HOMEEVERY DAY! Full TimeDrivers. Apply Todaywww.careers.firstfleet-inc.com $1500 Sign OnBonus. $1500 ReferralBonus for Limited Time!Schedule: Monday thruFriday and every otherSaturday. $1000+ Aver-age Weekly Pay. Pal-letized Freight. Paidodometer Miles. FuelBonus, Safety Bonus,Holiday Bonus. Immedi-ate Openings! Call BretToday 260-824-4612

130 MISC. FOR SALE

PLACE YOUR OWNCLASSIFIED AD

ONLINE!Go to www.thecr.com

and click the “Classifieds” link.

Next, you enter your information, create your ad, review it, and pay with a credit card.

Proper grammar, punctuation and

spacing is necessary. All ads must be approved prior to

appearing online and in the newspaper.

Our Classified Deadline is noon the day before you want the ad to run, and noon on Friday for Monday’s paper. Call us with questions,

260-726-8141.

ALUMINUM SHEETS23”x30”,.007 thick.

Clean and shiny on oneside..35 cents each orfour for $1.40, plus tax.The Commercial

Review, 309 W Main,Portland 260-726-8141.

NEED EXTRA CASH?Sell unwanted items inThe CR Classifieds. Call260-726-8141 or go

online to www.thecr.comSimply click on “Classi-fieds” to place your ad!

JAY COUNTYANTIQUE MALL 500 S.Meridian, Portland. 10%off after $20 purchaseper booth. Must ask fordiscount. Space for rent!260-766-4030

FOR SALE: Black &brown mulch. Top soil.Will deliver. 260-251-1596. Donnie

FRESH SOUTH CAR-OLINA PEACHES Free-stone; good for canningand freezing; WillowCreek Store; 5160 W400 S, Berne, Indiana260-334-5080

150 BOATS, SPORT-ING EQUIPMENT

2012 40’ TRAVELTRAILER Grand Lodgew/3 slideouts and muchmore. Can be seen atLot# 304 Paradise Point765-744-4335

170 PETS

CHIHUAHUA PUPPIES6-7 weeks old. $50.4189 East 500 North,Portland.

190 FARMERS COL-UMN

AG RENTAL Spreaders:DDI, Artsway Vertical.New Holland 228 skidloader w/full cab,heat/ac. Fort Recovery419-852-0309

INMAN U-LOC Storage.Mini storage, five sizes.Security fence or 24 houraccess units. Gate hours:8:00-8:00 daily. PearlStreet, Portland. 260-726-2833

LEASE SPACE avail-able, Coldwater, OH.Manufacturing, ware-housing, assembly, distri-bution, offices, inside andoutdoor storage. Easyaccess to major high-ways and railroad accesswith loading docks andoverhead cranes avail-able. Contact SycamoreGroup, 419-678-5318,www.sycamorespace.com

WHY RENT when youmay be able to buy forzero money down. Callfor more information.Heather Clemmons. 765-748-5066.

MAPLE HEIGHTSAPARTMENTS at 701 SWestern Avenue, Port-land, Indiana, is now tak-ing applications for oneand two bedroom apart-ments. Rent based on30% of adjusted grossincome. Barrier free units.260-726-4275, TDD 800-743-3333. This institutionis an Equal OpportunityProvider and Employer.

NEED MORE STOR-AGE? PJ’s U-Lock andStorage, most sizes avail-able. Call 260-726-4631.

TIRED OF NON-PAYINGRENTERS? For just 10%of monthly rent/ life couldbe 100% better. Propertymanaging. HeatherClemmons 765-748-5066 clemmonsproper-tiesllc.com

PORTLAND 2 bedhouse, 1& 1/2 baths, per-fect for retirement withplenty of room to hostfamily events.Washer/dryer hookups.Walk-in, heated,whirlpool tub and sepa-rate shower, ada toiletwith grab bar. Attachedgolf cart garage withautomatic door. Outsidestorage building. Electricstove & refrigerator. Highefficiency gas heat andcentral air. One yearlease agreement.$640.00/ month plus utili-ties and $640.00 deposit.Must have references.Prefer applicants 61 andolder, no pets, no smok-ing. Call for application —Jayland Properties 260-729-2045.

11 W HIGH, REDKEY 1bedroom $350mo, waterincluded. 941-662-9056

504 W RACE Nice clean1 bedroom upstairsapartment. Refrigera-tor/stove, water fur-nished. No pets, Dam-age deposit/referencesrequired. $550 month.260-729-5000

1 BEDROOM MobileHome in Pennville. $200mo. References anddeposit required. CallBrandon 765-639-4391.

VERY NICE MOBILEHOME IN Bryant, withporches and carport,some utilities included.$350 per month, depositrequired. 419-305-2674.

220 REAL ESTATE

REAL ESTATE Beforeyou list your Real Estateor book your Auction CallMel Smitley’s RealEstate & Auctioneering260-726-0541 cell, 260-726-6215 office. LaciSmitley 260-729-2281,or Ryan Smitley 260-729-2293

FOR RENT/RENT TOOWN Jay, Blackford,Randolph, Delaware,Madison, Henry Coun-ties. Over 300 Housesand apartments. HeatherClemmons 765-748-5066 clemmonsproper-tiesllc.com

HOME FOR SALE BYOWNER 2770 S South-town Place; 4 bedroom,2 1/2 bath, basement.Large lot, rural but closeto town. 260-729-1323 or260-729-2410

NICE, 2 BEDROOMRANCH STYLE house inPennville on large lot.Completely remodeledwith new roof, windows,bath, carpet, paint. 1 carattached garage plus stor-age building. Asking$49,000. No land con-tracts. 260-726-5288

HANDY-MAN SPECIAL!With some TLC you canhave a 2 bedroom homeof your own. OakwoodMobile Park 260-726-7705

WELCOME HOME!Newly remodeled 2 and 3bedroom homes for sale.260-726-7705. OakwoodMobile Park

MOBILE HOME ON50’X120’ FENCED in lot inSebring, Forida. 12’x24’shed. Enclosed Floridaroom. 3 bedroom/1bath.Call 765-744-5335

THE CLASSIFIEDSFind it - Buy It - Sell It!

260-726-8141

FUQUA CHRYSLERDODGE JEEP RAM:New and Pre-ownedcars, trucks, minivans,SUV’s. Full service andparts department 127East Commerce Street,Dunkirk, 765-768-6224.Monday- Friday 8-6; Sat-urday 8-2 www.FuquaChrysler.com

CA$H PAID FOR JUNKCARS Any year, anycondition. Running ornot. We tow away. 765-578-0111 or 260-726-5143 Massey’s Towing

’07 CHEVY EQUINOXLT SUV 101k miles; greyleather; non-smoker; allwheel drive;cd/mp3/satellite radio;great shape. $6,750,obo; Portland; call/textDave 219-477-9885

Page 8 The Commercial ReviewSaturday, June 25, 2016Classifieds

√ OutThe CR

Classifiedswww.thecr.com

Walking & MotorRoute subs

apply at

The Commercial Review

309 W Main St Portland, IN 47371

Pick up application or call 260-726-8141

from 8:00 to 6:00 pm

Ask for Kim or Tonia

or email [email protected]

APARTMENTFOR RENT

Above the News &Sun in Dunkirk. 1 1/2 bedroomWater furnished.Call 765-768-6022

200 FOR RENT

THE COMMERCIAL REVIEW We have a full-time opening in our

newspaper pressroom operating a GossCommunity web offset press.

Looking for someone who is self-motivated and quality-driven. Strongmechanical skills and the ability to work in ateam environment a must. Graphic arts andprinting experience preferred.

Pick up an application at 309 W. Main St., Portland,

or send resume to P.O. Box 1049,

Portland, IN 47371. No phone calls, please.

PUBLIC AUCTIONLocated at the Jay County Fairgrounds in theMarion & Irene Bubp Hall on Saturday Morning

JULY 2, 2016 10:00 A.M.

ANTIQUES –PRIMITIVESOLD & COLLECTORS ITEMSHOUSEHOLD GOODS - TOOLS

Cherry chest, very nice; Walnut large primitivecorner cupboard; Walnut chimney cupboard; Oakround table; (4) Oak pressed back chairs; Oak 4drawer commode; Oak 3 stack bookcase; Oak dropleaf table; Oak wash stand; Oak gentleman’sdresser; Walnut primitive single door wallcupboard; 3 drawer dresser with handkerchiefdrawers; Oak primitive cabinet; pump organ;1850’s Coverlet; primitive hand carved rockinghorse; large cemetery urn; President Lincolnassassination newspaper; Oak setee with matchingchair; kneehole desk & chair; Oak drop head desk;pineapple top twin bed; (2) Jenny Lind twin beds;4 pc. full size bedroom suit; hump back trunk;occasional tables; Oak plant stand; Oak rocker;child’s school chair; Kenmore side by siderefrigerator; Kenmore stove; Kenmore washer &dryer; (2) Burgundy wing back chairs; couch;loveseat; drop leaf end tables; RCA TV: RCADVD; window air conditioner; sewing cabinet; 3drawer stand; printer’s trays; (2) ImperialMahogany leather top end tables; hall tree; rockinghorse; (2) utility cabinets; piano bench; quilt rack;bookshelf; decorative side chair; Roseville basket;McCoy vases; Hull vases; Fostoria candy dish;Sailboat pitcher & glasses; glass eggs; mantelclock; Aladdin lamp; chenille bed spreads;Cranberry lamp; wrought iron wall hanger;Bavarian Imperial china, service for 12; BlueDanube covered jar; parlor lamps; coffee grinder;child’s cupboard; metal eagle; hump back trunk;steamer trunk; primitive tool chests; 15 galloncrock; 12 gallon crock; crockery churn; DesertRose service for 12 dishes; bisque figurines; woodbowl; butter paddle; doilies; embroidered linens;doll heads; Cranberry Hobnail pitcher, basket, andvase; several Scotty dog figures; Fiesta ware;France pitcher; china shoes; Carnival; Germancreamer & sugar; crock ink jugs; Flow Blue plate;marbles; wood tote; Nier red globe lantern;porcelain pan; pictures; frames; old albums;Willow figurines; Longenberger baskets; WestMoreland; Fenton; large wood bowl; cigarhumidor; primitive star items; old cameras; oldartwork; cast iron stars; milk cooler; old sewingmachines; vintage jewelry; buttons; Mobility Plateflatware set with case; Ironstone pitcher & teapot;mini washboard; all types of lamps; cast iron Icewagon; John Deere and Fordson tractors; toysewing machine; china doll; clear CambridgeGlass; Pepsi & Coke case; sun catchers; blue crockbowl; cookbooks; concave pictures; mirrors;Griswold “0” skillet; flat irons; berry pail; LogCabin bank; cast iron birds; cast iron Amishfigurines; pink depression cookie jar; bakingdishes; Corelle; Pyrex bowls; plastic ware; flatirons; Electrolux canister sweeper; small kitchenappliances; Club Aluminum; kitchen stool;paintings; USA pottery; Forest Green; severalcrocks and jugs; lamp stands; marble base floorlamps; chenille bedspreads; cutter quilts; quilt tops;stereo; bedding; towels; games; vintage mail orderpatterns, 1920’s and up; luggage; fans; fishingpoles; wood folding chairs; gas cans; hose & reel;rakes; shovels; trimmers; lawn chairs; Craftsmanwrenches; drill bits; 6 drawer metal tool chest; golfclubs; jumper cables; weed eater; toys; cooler;aluminum step ladder; extension ladder; toolboxes; metal table with chairs; Oreck sweeper;shop vac; tarps; circular saw; Craftsmanrechargeable saw set; Fisher Price toys; bug zapper;Columbia & Fugi bicycles; cast iron pot; cementpieces; Black Boy figure; small hand tools; andmany other items not listed.CAR – 1997 Chevrolet Lumina LS 4 door car with174,559 miles. AUCTIONEERS NOTE: This is nice auction witha wide variety of items.

Visit Auction Zip for photos.AUCTION PREVIEW: Friday July 1st from

1:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m.Terms of Sale: Cash, Check or Credit Card

Not Responsible for Accidents JANET FARBER, DeceasedLOY AUCTION AND REAL ESTATE

AUCTIONEERSGary Loy AU 01031608 Ben Lyons AU 10700085Travis Theurer AU 11200131Aaron Loy AU 11200112

CR 6-25-2016

Public NoticeSUMMONS - SERVICE BY

PUBLICATIONDLC#:X272-69

STATE OF INDIANACOUNTY OF JAY, SS:

IN THE JAY SUPERIOR COURT 1

CAUSE NO.:38D01-1605-MF-000013

BRANCH BANKING ANDTRUST COMPANY,

Plaintiff,vs.

THE UNKNOWN HEIRS ATLAW OF CHARLES ALBERTJACKSON, DECEASED ANDTHE UNKNOWN HEIRS ATLAW OF THELMA DEANNAJACKSON, DECEASED,

Defendants.NOTICE OF SUIT

The State of Indiana to theDefendants above named, andany other person who may beconcerned: You are notifiedthat you have been sued in theCourt above named. The natureof the suit against you is a Com-plaint on Note and for Foreclosure of Mortgage on thefollowing described real estate:

Lot numbered thirteen (13)in the Hugh's Second Addi-tion, being an addition in apart of the East Half of theNortheast Quarter of Section19, Township 23 North,Range 14 East, Wayne Town-ship, now in the City of Port-land, Indiana.And Commonly known as:108 Silvers Ln, Portland, IN47371This Summons by Publica-

tion is specifically directed tothe following named Defen-dants whose whereabouts areknown to me:

NONEThis Summons by Publica-

tion is also specifically directedto the following named Defen-dants whose whereabouts areunknown to me:The Unknown Heirs at Law ofCharles Albert Jackson and The Unknown Heirs at Law ofThelma Deanna Jackson

In addition to the abovenamed Defendants beingserved by this Summons, theremay be other Defendants whohave an interest in this lawsuit.

If you have a claim for reliefagainst the Plaintiff arisingfrom the same transaction or oc-currence, you must assert it inyour written answer.

You must answer the Com-plaint in writing, by you or yourattorney, on or before the 6 dayof August, 2016 (the same beingwithin thirty (30) days after theThird Notice of Suit), and if youfail to do so, a judgment will beentered against you for what thePlaintiff has demanded.

DOYLE & FOUTTY, P.C.By

Anthony L. MannaATTEST:

Clerk of the Jay County Supe-rior Court 1

S. Brent Potter (10900-49)Tina M. Caylor (30994-49)Stacy J. DeLee (25546-71)

David M. Johnson (30354-45)Heather L. Grimstad (32356-49)Anthony L. Manna (23663-49)Matthew L. Foutty (20886-49)Craig D. Doyle (4783-49)DOYLE & FOUTTY, P.C.

41 E Washington St., Suite 400Indianapolis, IN 46204Telephone (317) 264-5000Facsimile (317) 264-5400

CR 6-25,7-2,7-9-2016 -HSPAXLP

Public NoticeJAY COUNTY ZONING ADMINISTRATION PUBLIC NOTICE

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVENTHAT: Joseph J Schwartz, 7727N 250 E, Bryant, Indiana 47326has filed a petition with theJay/Portland Building & Plan-ning Department for an Intentto Build / Confined Feeding Per-mit, #CFINT2016-06-16, to con-struct one (1) 550 - 580 headswine confined feeding build-ing on said property.

Parcel ID: 38-03-10-200-006.000-020 Location: 7727 N 250 E,Bryant, Indiana, between ESR 67 and CR 800 N, on theEast side, Bearcreek Township, Section 10

The petition and file on thismatter are available for publicinspection in the Jay/PortlandBuilding & Planning Depart-ment, 118 South Meridian Street/ Suite E, Portland, Indiana,47371. Public comments, in writ-ing only, will be accepted by theZoning Administrator for a pe-riod of 30 days from the date ofthis notice. Public commentsare to be sent to the Jay/Port-land Building & Planning De-partment.

Jay/Portland Building & Planning Department By: John Hemmelgarn, Administrator/Director

Date: 6/21/16CR 6-25-2016 -HSPAXLP

NOW HIRING RN’S AND LPN’S

Flexible Schedule (will work around work and school)

Casual and PRN Shifts

If interested contact:Christine Crain, Recruiting Specialist

(260) [email protected]

Or apply at Pediatric Nursing Specialists6523 Constitution Dr.Fort Wayne, IN 46804

110 HELP WANTED

250 PUBLIC NOTICE

260 PUBLIC AUCTION

Page 9: Saturday, June 25, 2016 The Commercial Review full pdf_Layout 1.pdf · $150.50; Evan M. Dowell, Provi-dence, Rhode Island, speeding 74 miles per hour in a 55 mile per hour zone, $152.50;

WACO, Texas (AP) — Baylorand Art Briles have mutuallyagreed to part ways, almost amonth after the release of ascathing report over the universi-ty’s handling of sexual assaultcomplaints against football play-ers and the coach being suspendedby school regents “with intent toterminate.”A statement released by the uni-

versity Friday night said Baylorand Briles “agreed to terminatetheir employment relationship.”The move was effective immedi-ately.“Both parties acknowledge that

there were serious shortcomingsin the response to reports of sexu-al violence by some student-ath-

letes, including deficiencies inUniversity processes and the dele-gation of disciplinary responsibil-ities with the football program,”said part of what was called ajoint statement from Baylor andBriles.That came a week after Briles

had withdrawn a demand for newlawyers in a federal civil rightslawsuit against him and the uni-versity amid reports he had set-tled a contract dispute with theschool.Briles’ lawyers had told a feder-

al court June 16 that he wantedattorneys separate from Baylorand had no intention of settlingthe lawsuit filed by a woman whowas raped by a Baylor football

player. The filing suggested a bit-ter court fight was brewingbetween Baylor and the coach whoclaimed his May 26 firing waswrongful termination.Baylor, a private school, didn’t

provide any financial details forthe settling of Briles’ contractwhich was for eight more seasons.“Baylor wishes Coach Briles

well in his future endeavors,” thestatement Friday read. “CoachBriles expresses his thanks to thecity of Waco and wishes the Bay-lor Bears success in the future.”Jim Grobe was hired May 30 as

Baylor’s acting coach for the 2016season. But all of Briles’ formerassistants, including son Kendaland son-in-law Jeff Lebby, remain

on staff. Kendal Briles is theBears’ offensive coordinator.Baylor is facing at least three

federal lawsuits brought bywomen who claim the school wasindifferent to or ignored claims ofsexual assault and didn’t enforcefederal gender discrimination pro-tections under Title IX.A 13-page finding of fact from

the Pepper Hamilton law firmreleased by the university lastmonth accused football coachesand staff of interfering withinvestigations into sexual assaultcomplaints against players, andeven impeding potential criminalproceedings. But the report didnot identify Briles or any coach byname.

The Commercial ReviewSaturday, June 25, 2016 Sports Page 9

By JENNA FRYERAP Auto Racing WriterSONOMA, Calif. —

Over the last 20 days, KyleLarson went to victorylane in NASCAR’s secondtier Xfinity Series andpicked up a pair of winsin his sprint car. Heknocked off several podi-um finishes during OhioSprint Speedweek and fin-ished third in NASCAR’smain event at Michigan.Now it’s time for Larson

to produce in his full-timejob.He wouldn’t mind doing

it at Sonoma Raceway onSunday.Larson is riding a wave

of momentum intoNASCAR’s first roadcourse race of the season,and he believes it couldtranslate into his longoverdue first careerSprint Cup series win. Itmay seem odd that Larsonwould choose a roadcourse as the potentialsite of his breakthroughwin considering his lackof experience on any-thing other than an oval.But Larson is quite

comfortable on the pictur-esque 10-turn, 1.99-milecourse in California winecountry.“I really enjoy road

course racing, especiallyhere with friends andfamily,” said Larson, whogrew up less than twohours away from thetrack in Elk Grove, Cali-fornia, and was a regularfan in attendance every

time NASCAR came totown.Yet, Larson is the first to

admit, “I don’t have hardlyany road course experi-ence,” and his first realexperience turning leftand right on a race trackcame in 2013 when hemade the full-time move toNASCAR.But he’s progressively

improved and was a road-course best fourth at

Watkins Glen, the onlyother road course on theCup schedule, in 2014.Some of his experience

comes from running the 24Hours of Daytona sportscar event with his ChipGanassi Racing team-mates, and he went froman overwhelmed rookie in2014 to winner in 2015. Helikens the feel of racing ona road course to the sensa-tion he’s used to in a

sprint car, where Larsonhoned his racing skills.“I’m getting more expe-

rience, but still I probablyran only a little over 10road course races in mylife,” Larson said Friday.“But I like them becauseyou can feel the car kindof move around a lotmore. You can feel the sus-pension, so it feels moresimilar to kind of a dirttrack.

“I don’t know if it’s thedirt track, but just sprintcars and stuff the suspen-sion moves around a lotand you can feel the bal-ance of the car. On thisstuff you can, too, whereon the ovals our cars areso stiff and rigid you can’treally feel a whole lot withthem. I think that is why Ican feel a little bit better,and these tracks get reallyslick and you have to hityour marks every lap,which is something I feellike I’m OK (doing).”He wasted no time show-

ing how comfortable he’sbecome by leading thefield after Friday’s firstpractice session, followedby Ganassi teammateJamie McMurray. BothGanassi drivers are com-peting this week under thewatchful eye of teamowner Chip Ganassi, whocelebrated his first entriesat Le Mans with a classvictory in the prestigious24-hour event last week-end. Ganassi’s teams wentfirst and third at Le Mansin a dominating perform-ance for the newcomers.So Larson is certainly

feeling some pressure todeliver in his third fullseason in Cup, eventhough Ganassi doesn’tlay it on his young driver.“I don’t think I put any

pressure on him,” Ganassisaid. “He knows what’s up,he knows he has to win.He knows what it takesand what is expected ofhim.”

Larson eyes Sonoma for first victory

Associated Press/Chuck Burton

In ths May 26 photo, Kyle Larson talks to a crew member beforepractice for the NASCAR Sprint Cup series auto race at Charlotte MotorSpeedway in Concord, N.C. Larson has yet to win a Sprint Cup series race, andis hoping the road course at Sonoma will bring his first victory.

Baylor, Briles mutually part ways

By DAVE HOGGAssociated PressDETROIT — Jason Kipnis hit

two of Cleveland’s four triples andthe Indians continued their sea-son-long dominance of the DetroitTigers with a 7-4 victory Fridaynight.The AL Central-leading Indians

are now 7-0 against the Tigers thisseason. Detroit had won 16 of 20 athome and was coming off a four-game sweep of the SeattleMariners.Danny Salazar (9-3) struggled

with his command, walking five in

5 2/3 innings, but held the Tigersto three runs on four hits.Jordan Zimmermann (9-5)

allowed seven runs on nine hits ina season-worst 3 2/3 innings. Afterposting a 1.50 ERA in his firstseven starts, Zimmermann hasallowed at least six runs in four ofhis last seven.Cleveland led 7-3 going into the

ninth, but Andrew Rominereached on a one-out strikeoutwhen catcher Chris Gimenez hithim in the back with a throw. IanKinsler and Cameron Maybin sin-gled off Cody Allen, with Rominescoring.

Miguel Cabrera hit a liner todeep right-center, but Rajai Davismade a juggling catch and Maybinwas doubled off second to end thegame.Salazar struggled with his con-

trol early, walking three batters inthe first two innings, but pitchedaround it. Cleveland then took thelead in the third, putting togetherthree hits, including a two-runtriple down the right-field line byKipnis.Cleveland hit three more triples

in the fourth. Jose Ramirez hit thefirst with one out, then after Zim-mermann hit Juan Uribe with a

pitch, Lonnie Chisenhall hit a linedrive to right-center that eludedSteven Moya’s awkward lunge androlled to the wall.Gimenez followed with a single

through the drawn-in infield togive the Indians a 5-0 lead. CarlosSantana added an RBI double laterin the inning before Kipnis chasedZimmermann with his secondtriple.The Tigers came back with three

runs in the fifth, but Cabrera’s bidfor a two-run homer game died onthe warning track and Salazarescaped the jam. Cabrera alsogrounded into two double plays.

Kipnis triples twice, Indians top Tigers

StandingsNNAASSCCAARR SSpprriinntt CCuupp

1. Kevin Harvick, 5262. Kurt Busch, 4963. Brad Keselowski, 4804. Carl Edwards, 4725. Joey Logano, 4556. Chase Elliot, 4537. Jimmie Johnson, 4418. Martin Truex Jr, 4339. Kyle Busch, 41710. Matt Kenseth, 40911. Dale Earnhardt Jr, 38312. Austin Dillon, 38113. Denny Hamlin, 38014. Jamie McMurray, 37415. Ryan Newman, 36916. Ryan Blaney, 36417. Kasey Kahne, 35318. Trevor Bayne, 34519. Kyle Larsen, 34120. AJ Allmendinger, 337

Local scheduleTTooddaayy

Portland Rockets doubleheader atMishawaka Brewers – 1 p.m.

SSuunnddaayyPortland Rockets doubleheader at

South Bend Cardinals – 1 p.m.

MMoonnddaayyFort Recovery Eels vs. Union City –

6:30 p.m.

TTuueessddaayyJay County Summer Swim vs. South

Adams – 6 p.m.Fort Recovery Eels at Greenville – 7

p.m.

WWeeddnneessddaayyPortland Rockets at Northeast Kekion-

ga – 7 p.m.

TThhuurrssddaayyJay County Summer Swim vs. Adams

Central – 6 p.m.

TV scheduleTTooddaayy

8:30 a.m. — Soccer: 2016 UEFA Euro-

pean Championship – Round of 16,Switzerland vs. Poland (ESPN)

11:30 p.m. — Soccer: 2016 UEFAEuropean Championship – Round of 16,Wales vs. Northern Ireland (ESPN)

2:30 p.m. — Soccer: 2016 UEFA Euro-pean Championship – Round of 16, Croat-ia vs. Portugal (ESPN)

3 p.m. — PGA Tour Golf: QuickenLoans National – Third round (CBS-4,7,15)

3 p.m. — College Baseball: NCAAWorld Series – Game 13 (ESPN2)

3:30 p.m. — Motorcycle Racing: AMAMotocross Series (NBC-2,13,33)

4 p.m. — Major League Baseball:Chicago Cubs at Milwaukee Brewers(WNDY-23)

4:30 p.m. — U.S. Olympic Trials: Div-ing (NBC-2,13,33)

5 p.m. — Major League Soccer: NewYork City FC at Seattle Sounders (ESPN)

7 p.m. — Major League Baseball: LosAngeles Dodgers at Pittsburgh Pirates(FOX-45,55,59)

7 p.m. — Arena Football: ClevelandGladiators at Jacksonville Sharks (ESPN2)

8 p.m. — U.S. Olympic Trials: Diving(NBC-2,13,33)

8 p.m. — College Baseball: NCAAWorld Series – Game 14 (ESPN)

8 p.m. — Soccer: 2016 Copa AmericaCentenario – Third place match (FX)

9 p.m.— U.S. Olympic Trials: Men’sgymnastics (NBC-2,13,33)

9 a.m. — Boxing: Premier BoxingChampions (CBS–4,7,15)

10 p.m. — CFL Football: Calgary Stam-peders at BC Lions (ESPN2)

SSuunnddaayy8:30 a.m. — Soccer: 2016 UEFA Euro-

pean Championship – Round of 16, Francevs. Republic of Ireland (ESPN)

11:30 a.m. — Soccer: 2016 UEFAEuropean Championship – Round of 16,Germany vs. Slovakia (ESPN)

2 p.m. — Major League Baseball:Toronto Blue Jays at Chicago White Sox(WISH-8)

2:30 p.m. — Soccer: 2016 UEFA Euro-pean Championship – Round of 16, Hun-gary vs. Belgium (ESPN))

3 p.m. — Beach Volleyball: AVP SanFrancisco Open (NBC_2,13,33)

3 p.m. — PGA Tour Golf: QuickenLoans National – Final round (CBS-4,7,15)

4:30 p.m. — U.S. Olympic Trials: Div-ing (NBC-2,13,33)

6 p.m. — Major League Soccer: Hous-ton Dynamo at Portland Timbers (ESPN2)

7 p.m. — U.S. Olympic Trials: Diving(NBC-2,13,33)

8 p.m. — U.S. Olympic Trials: Swim-ming finals (NBC-2,13,33)

8 p.m. — Major League Baseball: LosAngeles Dodgers at Pittsburgh Pirates(ESPN)

9 p.m. — Gymnastics: P&G Champi-onships (NBC-2,13,33)

MMoonnddaayy7 a.m. — Tennis: 2016 Wimbledon

Championships – Day 1 (ESPN)11:30 a.m. — Soccer: 2016 UEFA

European Championship – Round of 16,Italy vs. Spain (ESPN2)

2:30 p.m. — Soccer: 2016 UEFA Euro-pean Championship – Round of 16, Eng-land vs. Iceland (ESPN2)

7 p.m. — Major League Baseball:Chicago Cubs at Cincinnati Reds (WNDY-23)

7 p.m. — College Baseball: NCAAWorld Series Championship – Game 1(ESPN)

8 p.m. — U.S. Olympic Trials: Swim-ming (NBC-2,13,33)

Local notesTToouurrnnaammeennttss wwiillll bbee iinn JJuullyy

The Ohio Hawks baseball and softballprograms will hold its third-annual StarSpangle Shootout from July 1 through 3 atKC Geiger Park in St. Marys, Ohio.

There are tournaments ranging from10-and-younger to 18-and-younger.

For more information, contact MikeShort at (419) 738-3795 [email protected].

GGiirrllss hhooooppss ccaammpp iiss JJuullyy 1111The Fort Recovery High School girls

basketball team will be hosting a basket-ball camp for girls in second and thirdgrades.

The camp will run from 4 to 6 p.m. July11 through 15 at the middle school gym.

Cost is $30, and checks should be

made payable to Fort Recovery Girls Bas-ketball. Each player will receive a t-shirtand basketball.

For more information, contact BrianPatch at (419) 375-2815 or [email protected].

CChhaalllleennggee ccoonnttiinnuueess JJuullyy 1111The Adams County Run/Walk Chal-

lenge will continue July 11 in Geneva.The next race is the Hope Run for Haiti

5K. The race is at 8:30 a.m. July 11 atAmishville, 844 E. 900 South, Geneva.

For more information, contact Deb Ger-ber (260) 849-3622.

FFoooottbbaallll ccaammpp iiss JJuullyy 1188The Jay County High School football

team will be hosting a camp from July 18through 21.

The camp will run from 5:30 to 7 p.m.each day.

Cost is $20, and it includes a t-shirt.Brochures are available at the JCHS

office, Patriot Sportswear and AMX Motor-sports.

For more information contact TimMillspaugh at (260) 251-0670.

SSttaarrffiirreess hhoossttiinngg ffoooottbbaallll ccaammppThe South Adams High School football

team is hosting a youth football camp inJuly.

The camp will be from July 25 to July27 at Starfire Field, and is open to boyswho will be in first through sixth grades forthe 2016-17 school year.

First through third graders will be from5 to 6 p.m., with fourth through sixthgraders from 6 to 7 p.m.

Cost is $20 per camper.For more information, contact SAHS

football coach Grant Moser [email protected].

GGeett yyoouurr qquueessttiioonnss aannsswweerreeddDo you have a question about local col-

lege or pro sports?Email your question to

[email protected] with “Ask Ray” in thesubject line for a chance to have itanswered in an upcoming column.

••••••••••To have an event listed in “Sports on

tap”, email details to [email protected].

Sports on tap

CINCINNATI (AP)— Wil Myers drove infive runs and MelvinUpton Jr. had a pair oftwo-run homers onFriday night as theSan Diego Padresscored in each of thefirst eight innings of a13-4 victory thatspoiled the start ofCincinnati’s Big RedMachine weekend.The National

League’s top-scoringteam in June kept at it,piling up four homers.San Diego is averaging5.86 runs in the month.Myers had a solo

shot off Cody Reed (0-1) in the first, singledhome a run and had abases-loaded double.Adam Rosales also hada solo homer. Three ofSan Diego’s fourhomers came offCincinnati’s bullpen,which has given up 57this season, by far themost in the majors.San Diego has won

11 of its 14 gamesagainst Cincinnati inthe last three seasons.Colin Rea (4-3) got

the win by going fiveinnings and allowingfour runs, only oneearned.The Reds honored

their 1976 World Serieschampionship team onthe field pregame, andplayers wore throw-back uniforms to thedays of the Big RedMachine. Pete Rose,who will be inductedinto the team’s Hall ofFame and have his No.14 officially retiredover the weekend, wasthe last player intro-duced.Reds players got into

the spirit of the throw-back weekend. Firstbaseman Joey Vottowore red stirrup sockslike those from the BigRed Machine days.Billy Hamilton tripledand went into thirdbase with a headfirstslide reminiscent ofRose.By the late innings,

the 40,713 fans werebooing as the Padreskept scoring.Myers’ 17th homer

in the first inningextended his torridmonth. The first base-man has 10 homers inJune, the most in amonth by a Padresplayer since ChaseHeadley hit 10 duringAugust 2012. Myersalso singled home arun in the fourth anddoubled with the basesloaded in the eighth.

Redslose toPadresagain

Page 10: Saturday, June 25, 2016 The Commercial Review full pdf_Layout 1.pdf · $150.50; Evan M. Dowell, Provi-dence, Rhode Island, speeding 74 miles per hour in a 55 mile per hour zone, $152.50;

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Frank Vignola &

Vinny Raniolo, guitarists

Gonzalo Bergara Quartet

Carrie Newcomer

Tessa Lark,

Violinist

California Guitar Trio

9/29/16 to9/29/16 to10/2/1610/2/16

Season Subscribers add Cole Porter’s High

Society, a musical

for only $5.00A collaboration with Jay County Civic Theatre, in commemoration of The Indiana Bicentennial:

September 29-October 2

makin g the arts happen

www.thecr.com The Commercial ReviewPage 10

SportsSaturday, June 25, 2016

Padres beat Reds inback-to-back games,see story page 9

JCHS football campslated for July 18,see Sports on tap

MainSource Bank is one winaway from a league title.In the Willie Mays division of

Portland Junior League, No. 2seed MainSource Bank came frombehind to defeat PG-14 by a scoreof 14-12 Thursday in the tourna-ment semifinal.It advances to the championship

game at 5:30 p.m. Tuesday, againstthe winner of top-seeded MinnichArchitecture & Construction andNo 4 Inman U-Loc. That semifinalgame is slated for 5:30 p.m. Mon-day.PG-14 had a three-run lead

twice, and clung to a 12-10 advan-tage after the third inning. Notwanting its season to end, Main-Source tied the game at 12 apiecein the bottom of the fourth inningbefore taking the lead and neverlet it go.Jayden Hartzell was a home run

shy of the cycle for MainSource ashe drove in four runs. Brady Davisripped a double and smacked apair of singles to also drive in fourruns. Cody Rowles notched twoRBIs on a double and a single,while Kenny Carducci chipped inwith a double, a single and an RBI.Ryne Goldsworthy paced PG-14

in the loss. He had two doublesand drove in three runs, and TylerManor notched three RBIs. TonyWood and Conner Specht each hada double and two RBIs in the sea-son-ending loss.

MainSourcerallies toreach PJLtitle game

Hartzell leadscomeback winwith three hitsand four RBIs

Football FridaysThe Jay County High School football team welcomed

the Richmond Red Devils to Harold E. Schutz Stadium onFriday night for a scrimmage. Above, JCHS sophomore RyanSchlechty, left, is tackled out of bounds by a Richmonddefender after gaining about 10 yards. At right, senior IvanHemmelgarn throws a pass as a Red Devil defensive linemanprovides pressure. The Patriots open the 2016 season Aug.19 at home against the Delta Eagles.

The Commercial Review/Chris Schanz