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The Star Press from Muncie, Indiana • Page 18

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The Star Pressi
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Muncie, Indiana
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18
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PAGE 18 Deaths and Stella L. Stewart Former Yorktown resident Stella L. Stewart died Monday after an extended illness. She was a lifelong resident of Delaware County and graduated from Center Township School No. Eugene Field School, on Middletown Pike.

She also graduated from Indiana Business College and what is now Ball State University. Mrs. Stewart was a bookkeeper and worked in the Delaware County clerk's office, the Delaware County treasurer's office, for the Collegienne Shoppes and for C. Cree Gable Furniture. She also had owned and operated The Betty Shoppe, an apparel shop at 110 E.

Jackson St. She was a member of Mount Pleasant Farm Bureau, Business and Professional Women, and Eleanor Rebekah Lodge 837 in Yorktown. She was a 50-year member of Order of Eastern Star Chapter 104 in Muncie. She attended Yorktown United Methodist Church. Surviving are a daughter, Jane (Mrs.

Frank) Italiano; a grandson, Frank Italiano, Muncie, and two great children Services will be at 11:30 a.m. Wednesday in Meeks Mortuary, with Rev. William Kaiser officiating. Entombment will be in Elm Ridge Mausoleum. Calling hours at the mortuary are 3-7 p.m.

today and before the service Wednesday. John M. Arnold, 73 John M. Arnold, 73, formerly of Muncie, died Sunday in Cincinnati, Ohio where he had lived for 10 years. He was born in Muncie and live here until moving to Cincinnati.

He was associated with his father, Benjamin Arnold, in the painting and decorating business for nearly 30 years. For 10 years before his retirement in 1974, he was foreman of painters at Ball State University. He was a member of Lutheran Church of the Cross and Ball State Sympathy Club and a former member of Cowan Lions Club and Hartford City Moose Lodge. Surviving are his wife, Martha Barth Arnold; a son, Walter E. (Bud) Arnold, Jonesboro, a daughter, Joan Ramos, Fremont; a foster son, Charles Sites, Muncie; his father and stepmother, Benjamin and Elizabeth Arnold, Cowan; three sisters, Dorothy (Mrs.

William) Havens, Healdsburg, Martha (Mrs. Howard) Epperson, Stuart, and Alta May (Mrs. Arden) Painter, Sandpoint, Idaho; nine grandchildren, and 10 great grandchildren. He was preceded in death by his first wife, Virginia Miller Arnold, a daughter, Judy Hudson, and two sisters, Betty Jane Arnold and Mary (Mrs. Paul) Cromer.

Mr. Arnold's grandmother, Sarah Wright Arnold, was first cousin of Orville and Wilbur Wright. Services will be at 1 p.m. Wednesday in Meeks Mortuary chapel. Burial will be in Elm Ridge Cemetery.

Calling hours at the mortuary are 3-9 p.m. today or before services Wednesday. Memorials may be sent to the Heart Association. Donald E. Heath, 62 Donald Earl Heath, 62, a former resident of Muncie, died Sunday in the family residence in Martinsville after a long illness.

He was born in Danville, moved to Muncie as a child with his parents, attended city schools and graduated from Central High School. He was in the Navy during World War II, serving with the Seabees in the Pacific Theatre. Mr. Heath was employed with Ontario Corp. for 6 years and later with General Motors in Indianapolis for more than 23 years before his retirement a few years ago.

He was a member of St. Martin's of Tours Catholic Church, Lions Club, Elks Club, American Legion and Junior Chamber of Commerce, all in Martinsville. Surviving are his wife, June Wood Heath; four children, James Robert Heath, Joseph Brooks Heath, Nancy Heath Hicks and Beth Ann Heath Hicks, all of Martinsville; his mother, Ruth Embree, Muncie; two sisters, Patty (Mrs. Dale) Smith, Brookville, and Betty (Mrs. James) Freshwater, Muncie, and seven grandchildren.

Services will be at 2:30 p.m. Wednesday in Meeks Mortuary, with Father Louis Heitz officiating. Burial will be in Beech Grove Cemetery, where military rites will be conducted. Calling hours at the mortuary are an hour before services Wednesday. Memorials may be sent to Morgan County Shrine Club or School of Hope, both in Martinsville.

Brother Dies in Florida Frances Justice, 72, brother of Muncie resident Clell Douglass, died Feb. 17 in Tampa, Fla. She had lived in the Tampa area since in 1956. Her husband, Arthur Justice, died in 1976. Surviving, in addition to Mr.

Douglass, are a son, Roger, Irvine, two brothers, Roy Douglass, Indiana, and Stanley Douglass, Fort Lauderdale; a sister, Inez Pratt, Zephyrhills, and two grandchildren. Services and burial were in Tampa. Arla Stephens, 77 WINCHESTER, Ind. Arla Stephens, 77, 608 Englewood Drive, died Saturday in Reid Memorial Hospital, Richmond. Mr.

Stephens was a native of Randolph County and was a veteran of World War II. He retired from the Postal Service in Muncie. Surviving are his wife, Mary Staggs Stephens; a daughter, Carol Wren, Joshua Tree, a stepson, W.C. Staggs, Winchester, four stepgrandchildren and a stepgreat-grandchild. Services will be at 10:30 a.m.

today in Walker Funeral Home, with Rev. Rex Collins and Rev. Richard Cupp officiating. Burial will be in Mooreland Cemetery. THE MUNCIE Funerals Barbara A.

Sallee, 53 Barbara A. Sallee, 53, 101 S. Delawanda died Monday in Ball Hospital after a brief illness. She was born in Jamestown, grew up there, and came to Muncie in 1952. Mrs.

Sallee was a member of the Mayor's Council of Women, a volunteer for the P.A.L. Club and a member of Eastside Neighborhood Association. Surviving are her husband, Ray C. Sallee; three children, Connie Sallee, Richard A. Sallee and Steven W.

Sallee, all of Muncie; her parents, Cletis and Lela Delk, Jamestown, five grandchildren, Jeremy Walling, Melissa Sallee, Justin Sallee, Ashley Sallee and Suzanne Sallee, all of Muncie; six sisters, Kathaleen Conatser, Georgia, Carol Cooper, Sneed, Maxine Conatser, Chicago Heights, and Judy Gore, Linda Dishman and Sherry Beaty, all of Jamestown, and several nieces and nephews. Services will be at 11:30 a.m. Thursday in Meeks Mortuary Chapel, with Rev. Dennis Trimble, pastor of True Light Baptist Church, officiating. Burial will be in Gardens of Memory.

Calling hours at the mortuary are 3-5 and 7-9 p.m. Wednesday or before services Thursday. Edith M. Weir, 89 Edith M. Weir, 89, 705 N.

Eastwood died Sunday in her daughter's home in Middle- town after a long illness. She was born in Delaware County most of her life in the Eaton area. She later moved to Upland and then to Muncie. Her husband, Joseph, died in 1960. Surviving are three daughters, Ruby (Mrs.

Fred) Harmon, North Palm Beach, Marjorie (Mrs. Leroy) Bell, Okeechobee, and Beatrice (Mrs. Albert) Dickey, Middletown; three sons, Joseph Weir, Marion, Harold Muncie, and Franklin Weir, Mesa, grandchildren, 48 great-grandchildren, great-great-grandchildren. Services will be at 1 p.m. Thursday Pitman-Richman Funeral Home, Eaton, Pastor Ron Drown officiating.

Burial will Eaton Cemetery. Calling hours at the funeral home and 7-9 p.m. Wednesday and before Thursday. Keith E. Anderson, 53 NEW CASTLE, Ind.

Keith E. Anderson, 53, R.R. 4, died Monday in Henry County Hospital after a brief illness. He was a lifelong resident of New Castle and had retired in 1980 after 26 years of employment at Chrysler where he had worked in areas of management and personnel. He was a veteran of the Air Force.

He was a member of First Christian Church. Survivors include his wife, Marian Williams Anderson; two daughters, Sue (Mrs. Tony) Russell, New Castle, and Alice Anderson, at home; a son, Gary E. Anderson, New Castle; his father, Cleo Anderson, New Castle; a brother, Cleo San Antonio, Texas; four half-brothers, Michael and Terry Anderson and Bobby Dishman, all of New Castle, and Jackie Dishman, Knightstown; a half-sister, Darla Warner, New Castle; two grandchildren, and many nieces, nephews and cousins. He was preceded in death by his mother, Mary Louise Cooper Dishman, and a sister, Wanda Jean.

Services will be at 10:30 a.m. Thursday in Macer-Hall-Pasco Funeral Home, with Dr. Robert Stauffer officiating. Burial will be in Green Hills Memory Gardens. Calling hours at the funeral home are 3-5 and 7-9 p.m.

Wednesday. Webster Cavanaugh, 58 PORTLAND, Ind. Webster W. (Bill) Cavanaugh, 58, 1124 N. Franklin died Sunday in Jay County Hospital.

He was born born in Hartford City. He worked in the Jay County surveyor's office and was an Army veteran of the Korean War. He was a member of Jay County REACT. He is survived by his wife, Needra; his mother, Helen Cavanaugh, Albany; two sons, Stephen, Portland, and Rocky, Clovers, Texas, and two sisters, Betty Northcut, McMinnville, and Mary Hager, Crystal River, Fla. Services will be at 1 p.m Thursday in BairdFreeman Funeral Home, with Rev.

Jim McConnell officiating. Burial will be in Hartford City 100F Cemetery. Calling hours at the funeral home are 2-4 p.m. and 6-9 p.m. Wednesday.

Estella Morgan, 87 RIDGEVILLE, Ind. Estella Morgan, 87, 308 W. Fourth died Sunday in Reid Memorial Hospital, Richmond. Mrs. Morgan was a native of Randolph County and a member of Calvary United Methodist Church and WCTU.

Survivors include a son, Charles Ridgeville; a brother, Charles E. Morgan, Ridgeville; a sister, Thelma Hearn, Fort Wayne, and two grandchildren, five great grandchildren, five great-great grandchildren, and two stepgreatgrandchildren. Services will be at 11 a.m. Thursday in Calvary United Methodist Church, with Rev. Gene Hart officiating.

Burial will in Lawndale Cemetery. Calling hours are 2-4 and 6-8 p.m. Wednesday at Walker Funeral Home, Winchester, and an hour before services at the church. Father Dies in Michigan Thomas DeFouw, 88, Grand Rapids, father of Muncie resident Theodore S. DeFouw, died Saturday in Lowell Medical Care Center, Lowell, Mich.

Other survivors include another son, Thomas Grand Rapids, two sisters, Trudy (Mrs. Frank) Holman, Florida, and Nellie Osband, Grand Rapids; seven grandchildren; two great-grandchildren, and several nieces and nephews. Services are at 1 p.m. today in Reyers North Valley Chapel, Grand Rapids, Mich. STAR, TUESDAY, MARCH 10, 1987 William Robert Bailey, 65 Former Muncie resident William Robert Bailey, 65, Maryville, Tenn, died Sunday.

Mr. Bailey was a 32nd degree Mason and belonged to Lodge 443 in Muncie. He was also a member of the Shriners Egyptian Temple of Tampa, Fla. Survivors include his wife, Mary Bailey; a son, Michael Bailey of Florida; a daughter, Lexie Heath, Markleville; four sisters, Eva Reed of Florida, Roberta Poland of Muncie, Meluina Fauble of Idaho and Ethel Zebelle of California; two brothers, Roy and Jim of Indiana; two stepdaughters, Cindy Bonar, Greenback, and Sally Forester of Florida; two stepsons, Linwood Farr of Pennsylvania and Harry Farr of Florida; five grandchildren, and seven stepgrandchildren. Masonic services will be at 8 p.m.

today in Harrill Funeral Home Chapel in Maryville. Burial will be at 10 a.m. Wednesday in Clark's Grove Cemetery in Maryville. William T. Dale, 69 DUNKIRK, Ind.

William T. Dale, 69, R.R. 4, Hartford City, died Monday in Lutheran Hospital, Fort Wayne, after an illness of several months. Mr. Dale was retired from Indiana Glass Dunkirk, and he was an Army Air Corps veteran of World War II.

He was a member of Dunkirk Lions Club. Survivors include his wife, Gerri Neal Dale; three sons, Terry Dale, Indianapolis, Jack Dale, Honolulu, Hawaii, and Robert Dale, Bluffton; a daughter, Kathy (Mrs. Mark) Yotter, Larwill; a brother, Walter 1 Dale of Florida; a sister, Clara Hatch, Dunkirk, and 10 grandchildren. Services will be at 2 p.m. Thursday in Whetsel Funeral Home, with Rev.

Joel Blanton presiding. Burial will be in Gardens of Memory, north of Muncie. Calling hours are 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. Wednesday at the funeral home. Mother Dies Edna M.

Raines, 77, mother of Rev. Ray S. Raines, executive director of the Muncie Mission, died Monday in Beaver Valley Medical Center in Beaver, Pa. Mrs. Raines was a lifelong resident of the Beaver Valley-Rochester, area and was a member of St.

John's Church in Zelinople. Surviving besides her son in Muncie are another son, Rev. Richard L. Raines, Industry, three sisters, Emma Allman, Clara Mace and Ruth Goehring, and three brothers, George, Benjamin, and Floyd Young, all of the Beaver Valley, area, and six grandchildren. She was the widow of Raymond R.

Floyd. Services will be at 11 a.m. Thursday in 'St. John's Church in Zelinople, with burial there. Calling hours at Campbell Funeral Home, New Brighton, are 7-9 p.m.

today and 2-5 and 7-9 p.m. Wednesday. Memorials may be sent to the Muncie Mission, 520 S. High Muncie 47305. Services COOLEY, Marie 10:30 Pasco Funeral TUESDAY Marcer Home, New Castle.

CORLE, Avaline 10 a.m., Williamson Spencer Funeral Home, Portland. DeFOUW, Thomas, 1 p.m., Reyers North Valley Chapel, Grand GOODMAN, Rapids, Michest 2 p.m., Pitman-Richman Funeral Home, Eaton. ROTH. Roger 10 a.m., Meeks Mortuary. STEVENS, Arla, 10:30 a.m., Walker Funeral Home, Winchester.

STEVENS, Bernice 1:30 p.m., Williamson-Spencer Funeral Home, Portland. THARP, Guy Arley, 1:30 p.m., Miller Mortuary, Farmland. WHITE, John 2 p.m., Devine Colonial Mortuary, Marion. Indiana Deaths FROM WIRE AND OTHER REPORTS Retired Editor Dies BLOOMINGTON, Ind. Services for Henrietta Thornton, 85, a former associate editor of the Indiana University News Bureau, will be at 9:30 a.m.

today in the St. Paul Catholic Center. She retired from the university in 1967 after 44 years of service. Mrs. Thornton, a native of New Albany, earned her bachelor's and master's degrees from the university in 1924 and 1936.

Indiana Youth Hit By Car; Driver Charged by Police TAMPA, Fla. (AP) A 20-year-old on spring break with seven Indiana fraternity brothers was in critical condition Monday after being run down outside a bar, authorities said. Tom Wiese of South Bend, was in intensive care at University Community Hospital. He was hit early Sunday. Shawn William Wilbur, 25, of Tampa, was charged with attempted second-degree murder and aggravated battery in connection with the incident, according to an arrest affidavit.

Police said Wilbur turned himself in Sunday. He was released under $12,500 bond. Wiese and his friends, members of Phi Delta Theta from Valparaiso University, in Valparaiso, arrived in Tampa on Friday and were staying with parents of one of the students. They stopped at a bar, but it was closed. They were headed back to their cars when a 1986 Buick came out of the darkness, students said.

Former Teacher Held in Rape of Ex-Students LAPORTE, Ind. (AP) A former LaPorte High School teacher was arrested Monday on four counts of rape and two other sex charges involving two former students, authorities said. Peter Ulrich, who taught special education, was fired Jan. 27 after the teenage girls accused him of molesting them. He pleaded not guilty to the rape and criminal deviate conduct charges and was freed on $7,500 bond.

His trial was set for July. Ulrich, 40, has consistently denied the allegations and earlier termed his firing a "political assasination." He is vice president of the LaPorte teachers' union and its chief labor negotiator. LaPorte County Deputy Prosecutor Craig Braje said the state would show that the two students were raped and that they were "too mentally deficient" to consent to the alleged sex acts, which took place in 1981, 1985 and 1986. Five Nations Asked to Help Devise Verification System WASHINGTON (AP) The United States, moving to complete a proposed treaty eliminating medium-range nuclear missiles from Europe, summoned defense experts from five allied nations Monday to help devise a verification system to present to the Soviets. Representatives from Belgium, the Netherlands, West Germany and Italy met at the State Department to study details of proposals the United States will make to the Soviets at Geneva arms talks.

The five countries invited to the talks were those providing sites for the U.S. intermediate-range missiles that would be eliminated under the proposed treaty. Department spokesman Charles E. Redman said the participants discussed "verification provisions of an intermediate nuclear force draft treaty. These verification provisions obviously have a direct interest to the basing countries." "Given the importance of verification we envision future meetings similar to today's, as needed," Redman said.

He said the United States was represented at the meeting by H. Allen Holmes, director of the State Department's bureau of politicomilitary affairs. The European delegates were identified as officials with expertise in missile deployment and other technical problems. Their names were not given. President Reagan and Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev agreed in principle at their Reykjavik, Iceland, summit last October to eliminate all but 100 U.S.

Pershing 2s, cruises and Soviet SS-20s. The remaining Soviet missiles would be deployed only in the Asian part of the country and the U.S. weapons would be brought home from Europe. Gorbachev revived Soviet acceptance of the plan earlier this month and the United States submitted most of a draft treaty for discussion at arms talks in Geneva. Verification sections of the draft were omitted, to give the Reagan administration more time to decide on the toughness of the measures.

Among the provisions reportedly under consideration are stringent on-site inspections that would allow each side to be certain that the opposing weapons have been dismantled and to allay suspicions that the missiles have been redeployed. If such measures were adopted and the U.S. said it won't agree to a pact if they were not Western European countries basing the missiles would need to open their facilities to Soviet inspectors. The missiles are under the control of U.S. forces in those countries, but the surrounding bases are the property of the allied countries.

Since destruction or withdrawal of the missiles would take place over a 5-year period, a treaty would presumably grant the Soviets periodic access to the bases. Members of the U.S. negotiating team in Geneva gave a general briefing last week to the entire 16-nation North Atlantic Treaty Organization, but Redman said further talks on verification details were needed with the five basing countries. Under the plan devised in 1979, 108 Pershing 2 and 96 cruises were to be placed in West Germany, 112 cruises in Italy, 160 cruises in Britain and 48 each in the Netherlands and Belgium. The plan called for deployment through 1988, so not all the missiles have been installed.

In addition to seeking stringent verification measures, the United States has expressed concern about what it says is a Soviet superiority in shorter range missiles in Europe. Deaths Elsewhere FROM THE WIRE SERVICES Hawaii House Speaker Dies LANAI CITY, Hawaii Hawaii House Speaker Richard Kawakami died Sunday of an apparent heart attack while on a deer-hunting trip on Lanai Island. He was 56. Kawakami was pronounced dead in Lanai Community Hospital about hours after telling friends had chest pains and was having a hard time breathing, police Sgt. Louis Romero said.

Kawakami, a 10-term Democrat and the senior member of the state House of Representatives, replaced Rep. Henry Peters as speaker in January at the start of this year's legislative session. Vice Speaker Emilio Alcon will serve as speaker until House Democrats decide who will replace Kawakami. Kawakami was first elected to the House in 1968. He became majority leader of the House in 1984.

Kawakami was the president of Big Save grocery stores on Kauai and a director of a Toyota car dealership. Kawakami was born in Waimea and graduated from the University of Hawaii 1953. He received a master's degree in business from New York University in 1961. Kawakami is survived by his wife and three children. Spanish Painter Dead MADRID, Spain Painter Manuel Viola died Sunday in his home near Madrid after a long illness, his family said.

He was 70. Viola, who was born in 1917 in Zaragoza, northeastern Spain, was known for his abstract-impressionist works that hang in the museums of Guggenheim in New York, Bellas Artes of Buenos Aires, Modern Art in Liege, Belgium and others around the world. Viola went into self-exile in France at the end of the Spanish Civil War in 1939. There, he joined the French Foreign Legion and took part in the French Resistance in World War II. After the German defeat of the French Army, he resided in Paris where he collaborated with Spanish painter Pablo Picasso and wrote poems and articles for clandestine publications of a surrealist group.

His paintings were exhibited in French galleries after 1957, in Madrid and several other cities in Western Europe. Viola returned to Spain in 1951 and resided in the Mediterranean town of Torremolinos. At the time of his death, Viola lived in seclusion in San Lorenzo de El Escorial, where he had resided since 1965. He is survived by his wife and three children. Screenwriter Succumbs LOS ANGELES Screenwriter Waldo Salt, whose career spanned five decades and included the Oscarwinning scripts for Midnight Cowboy and Coming Home, died Saturday.

He was 72. Salt's writing career started in 1938 with a remake of Shopworn Angel. He wrote 20 films, including Rachel and the Stranger, Taras Bulba and The Gang That Couldn't Shoot Straight. Auto-Van Crash Kills Passengers and lived Weir, 27 and two in with be in are 2-5 services on THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Two people were killed and nine were injured in a threevehicle collision southeast of Goshen, authorities said. The accident at Elkhart County Roads 27 and 38 occurred Sunday evening when one of the drivers allegedly ran a stop sign, authorities said.

Authorities identified the victims as Bryan K. Miller, 19, and Ryan M. Nichols, 3, both of Goshen. Miller was a passenger in a car driven by Larry M. McCreary, 18, of Goshen.

Police said McCreary's car struck a van driven by Stanley M. Nichols, 34. Both vehicles then collided with a motorcycle driven by Glen A. Hoover, 20, who was in fair condition Monday in Goshen General Hospital. Authorities said the child was thrown from the van.

Two other Nichols children were in fair condition in the hospital. A fourth child did not require hospitalization. Charges were pending against McCreary, state police said. A Portage woman and a rural Valparaiso man were killed in another accident Sunday when a car and motorcycle collided at an Ind. 49 intersection near Chesterton.

Authorities identified the victims as Donald S. Lawrence, 23, the driver of the motorcycle, and Kelleen Szostek, 29, a passenger in the car. A Martinsville woman was killed early Sunday in an accident north of Bloomington, authorities said. The victim was identified as Kim Smith, 25. Police said Smith was thrown from a vehicle driven by Guy Christie, 27, Harold Legal Notices ESTATE NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION Cause No.

18C01-8703-ES-51 In the Delaware Circuit Court In the Matter of the Estate of LUTHER C. BRANDON, deceased. Notice is hereby given that Larry E. Spangler was on the 6th day of March, 1987, appointed Personal Representative of the Estate of Luther C. Brandon, deceased.

All persons having claims against said estate, whether or not now due, must file the same in said Court within five (5) months from the date of the first publication of this notice or said claim will be forever barred. Dated Muncie, Indiana, this 6th day of March, 1987. (SEAL) SCOTT A. HOLE Clerk of Delaware County Kenneth P. Schuck Cross, Marshall.

Schuck, DeWeese, Cross and Feick Professional Corporation 200 East Washington St. P.O. Box 2389 Muncie, IN 47307-0389 Attorneys for Estate S19136 NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING On March 26, 1987, the DelawareMuncie Metropolitan Board of Zoning Appeals will hold a public hearing on the matter of an appeal filed by Charles W. Bainter, 7104 S. RR 10, Box 304-B, Muncie, IN 47302 requesting an extension temporary use permit and varilance under the terms of the City of Muncie, Delaware County Zoning Ordinance.

The premises involved are generally known as CR 50E. approximately 0.4 miles south of CR 400S, and more accurately described as follows, to-wit: Part of the NEW of Section 3, Township 19N, Range 10E, as follows: Beginning 514.36' from the SW corner of said section with assumed bearing of N.00°44'36 then N. 214.23%: then E. 996.04'; then S. 218.73'; then W.

1037.49' to beginning, containing 5.0 acres, more or less. subject to right-of-ways and easements. The purpose of the appeal is to permit continued (temporary) residence in mobile home. The public hearing will begin at 7:30 p.m., on the above date, in the Basement Conference Room, Delaware County Building, Muncie, Indiana. Interested persons may appear and voice their opinions.

Copies of the appeal may be examined at the Office of the Delaware-Muncie Metropolitan Plan Commission, Room 206, Delaware County Building. Muncie, Indiana, 747-7740. DAVID BRUCE BALDWIN. Secretary 19135 NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S SALE Cause No. By virtue of a certified copy of a Judgment and Decree to me directed from the Clerk of the Superior Court of Delaware County, Indiana.

in Cause No. wherein WATERFIELD MORTGAGE COMPANY, INCORPORATED was Plaintiff, and JERRY E. CONNER AND MARY J. CONNER were Defendants, requiring me to make the sum as provided for in said Decree with interest and costs, I will expose at Public Auction to the highest bidder, on Wednesday, the 8th of April, 1987, between 10:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m., of said day, at the door of the Sheriff's Office of said County, the fee simple of the whole body of Real Estate in Delaware County, Indiana, described as follows, to-wit: Lot Number Twenty-three (23) in Block number Nine (9) in the Rochester and Utica Land Company's Addition to Muncie, Indiana.

More commonly known as 1606 West 8th Street, Muncie, Indiana 47302. Together with rents, issues. income. and profits thereof, said sale will be made without relief from valuation or appraisement laws. DAN ELLIOTT Sheriff of Delaware County Theodore F.

Smith, Jr. Attorney for plaintiff Date: February 20, 1987 SP19107.

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