The Press-Dispatch

August 29, 2018

The Press-Dispatch

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C-8 Wednesday, August 29, 2018 The Press-Dispatch OBITUARIES Submit obituaries: Call: 812-354-8500 Email: obits@pressdispatch.net or bring in a hard copy: 820 E. Poplar Street, Petersburg Deadline: 5 p.m. on Monday REBELLION Continued from page 4 REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS Elisa Hernandez Osuna quitclaims to Brien Fred- erick Lagle, real estate as recorded in Pike County. Susan M. Fox conveys to Randy M. Fox and David F. Fox, real estate as recorded in Pike County. Willard Meyerholtz, Jr. and Vicki R. Meyerholtz con- vey to Chase Logan Nordhoff and Michaela Jean Nor- dhoff, real estate as recorded in Pike County. Mary M. Curtis, Terenda A. Wyant Personal Rep, and Trea L. McCandless Personal Rep convey to House Chef, LLC, real estate as recorded in Pike County. Michael L. Bateman and Cindy L. Bateman NK A Cindy L. Adams quitclaim to Kevin Bateman, real es- tate as recorded in Pike County. JP Homes, Inc. conveys to Smith Investment Proper- ty, LLC, real estate as recorded in Pike County. Rodger K. McCandless conveys to Jeremy McCand- less, real estate as recorded in Pike County. David P. Gladish and Terry L. Gladish convey to Ter- ry L. Gladish and Sharon Gladish, real estate as record- ed in Pike County. Terry L. Gladish quitclaims to David P. Gladish, re- al estate as recorded in Pike County. James R. Hill conveys to The James R. Hill Irrevo- cable Trust, real estate as recorded in Pike County. Reginald Paul Austin conveys to The Reginald Paul Austin Revocable Trust, real estate as recorded in Pike County. Sheriff of Pike County, Adam J. Seger and Terra S. Seger convey to Jeremy R. Beier, real estate as record- ed in Pike County. LELAH G. PANCAKE Lelah G. Pancake, 92, of Marshall, Ill., passed away at 7:15 p.m. Thursday, Aug. 23, 2018, at her home, sur- rounded by family. She was born Aug. 26, 1925, in Petersburg, the daughter of Floyd Hunter and Inez Parker Willis. She married Wayne L. Pancake on Oct. 18, 1942, and he pre- ceded her in death on Sept. 7, 2007. Prior to retirement, she taught in the Marshall School District for 30 years and served as a substitute teacher for an additional 10 years. She was a faithful member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints of Par- is. She was a member of the Clark County Retired Teach- ers, Friends of the Marshall Library and the Marshall Women's Club. Surviving are her chil- dren, Jack (Phyllis) Pan- cake, Floyd (Barb) Pancake, Brenda Ellington, Terry (Carole) Pancake and Ron Pancake, all of Marshall; grandchildren, Todd, Larry, Tony Tracy, Blue, Beth, Ja- son, Jeremy, Wendy, Nathan, Lena, Griff and McKayla; great-grandchildren, Chloe, Cory, Bobby, Michael, Mi- randa, Allie, T.J., Trent, Ana- belle, Andrew, Cody, Nick, Luke, Cassie, C.J., Addie, Bentley, Ellie, Emma, Ors- en, Sean, Journey, Haven, Lakelyn, Dragann, Mat- thew, Ally, Chris and Hold- en; great-great-grandchil- dren, Conner, Taylor, Row- en, Layla, Addelyn and Ken- drick; and the spouses of the above who came to love Gam and to be like her own sons and daughters. She was preceded in death by a grandson, Jason Pancake; son-in-law, Ron El- lington; five brothers, Imel Willis, Wesley Willis, James Willis, Morris Willis and Or- ace Wayne Willis; and a sis- ter, Marybelle Gray. Services in honor of her life were at 10 :30 a.m. Tues- day, August 28, 2018, at Pearce Funeral Home. Buri- al followed in the Marshall Cemetery. Visitation was from 4-8 p.m. Monday. For those de- siring, memorial contribu- tions may be made to the Marshall Cemetery Asso- ciation or to the Friends of the Library. Online condo- lences are being accepted at pearcefuneralservices.com. able agriculture, he traveled to A frica, Asia and Central America. He served in the Peace Corps in Grenada. He shared a love for hunting, fishing, trapping, gardening, beekeeping and reading. Surviving are his wife, Evalyn Walton, of Clay City; children, Daniel (Kris- ti) Walton, of Indianapo- lis, Hannah Walton, of Clay City; parents, Jim and Mar- tha Walton, of Mitchell; and sister, Jamie (Troy) Young, of Mitchell. Funeral services will be at 11 a.m. Wednesday, Au- gust 29, 2018, at the Free Methodist Church in Bed- ford, with Pastor John Lane officiating. Burial will be in Mitchell Cemetery. Visitations was from 3- 7 p.m. Tuesday and from 10 a.m. until services on Wednesday at the church. The family requests memo- rial gifts, to commemorate his passion to missions, be made at www.gofundme. com/david-walton-memo- rial. (Kay) Terwiske, Robert Terwiske Jr., Jay (Ann) Ter- wiske and George (Kristi) Terwiske, all of Ireland, Paul Terwiske, of Jasper, and Jo- el Terwiske, of Velpen; many nieces, nephews, great-niec- es and great-nephews. Preceding him in death besides his parents are one brother, John; and one brother-in-law, Bill Johan- nigsmeier. A Mass of Christian buri- al will be at 10 a.m. on Fri- day, August 31, 2018, at St. Mary's Catholic Church in Ireland, with burial to follow in the church cemetery. A visitation will be from 1- 8 p.m. on Thursday, at Bech- er-Kluesner North Chapel in Jasper. St. Mary Parish will pray a rosary at 12:45 p.m. at the funeral home. In lieu of flowers, memo- rial contributions may be made to the St. Mary Catho- lic Church Building Fund or to a favorite charity. Online condolences may be made at www.becherkluesner.com. JEMMA R AE THORNE Jemma Rae Thorne, in- fant daughter of Skylar Lee and Natalya Shae ( Joyce) Thorne, of Princeton, passed away August 6, 2018, at 8:06 a.m. at Women's Hos- pital in Newburgh. She is survived by grand- parents, Kris and Chris- tina McDonald, and Wil- liam and Lisa Thorne; great-grandparents, Shir- ley Joyce, Rick and Joyce Hayes, and Lorene Terry; and great-great-grandpar- ent, Catherine Russell. Graveside services were at 10 :30 a.m. on Thursday, August 9, 2018, at Williams Cemetery in Winslow, with Pastor Paul McGee officiat- ing. KENNETH JAY BAKER Kenneth Jay Baker, 78, of Westfield, passed away on Thursday, August 23, 2018, at St. Vincent Hospice in In- dianapolis. He was born on July 19, 1940, to Minor and Bernice (Murphy) Baker in Michi- gan City, Ind. He grew up in Lebanon, and enjoyed racing go karts, scouts, wrestling, basket- ball, football and baseball. He graduated from Lebanon High School. He proudly served in the United States Army during the Vietnam War. He enjoyed hunting, fishing, boating, Indy 500 races and NASCAR racing. He was involved in Westfield Youth Sports, Inc., as well as any sport or activity with which his children or grand- children were involved. He enjoyed building things, col- lecting neon signs and at- tending auctions. He cher- ished the holidays with his family. He is survived by his wife of 50 years, Dorothy Baker; daughters, Tracey (Scott) Townsend and Stacey Jones; son, Kerry Baker; grandchil- dren, Tanner, Ashley, Shane, Mackenzie and Kristin; sis- ter, Mina (Sam) Payne; and several nieces and nephews. In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by his granddaughter, Brittney Sue Jones; and sister, Janet Kelso. ROY J. "QUIG" TOLBERT Roy J. "Quig" Tolbert, 89, of Giro, passed away Sun- day, August 26, 2018, at Good Samaritan Hospital in Vincennes. He was born on Septem- ber 2, 1928, in Gibson Coun- ty, to Walter and Ruth ( Whit- tington) Tolbert. He was a lineman with the CSX Railroad. He served in the U.S. Army during W WII. He participated in parades with his wife and their Belgium horses all over the area. They were in the Palestine Parade on La- bor Day for 32 years in a row. He is survived by his brothers, John (Marie) Tol- bert, of Hazleton, and Royce "Chuck" ( Joyce) Tolbert, of Noble, Ill.; sisters, Jen- nie Tolbert, of Giro, Susie (Cotton) Bringwald, of Sa- lem, Ill., and Ruth "Midge" Baehl, of Haubstadt; sever- al nieces and nephews; and special friends, the David- son Family. He was preceded in death by his parents; wife, Helen Faye Tolbert, on May 27, 2018; brother, Bertis Tol- bert; nephew, Aaron Bae- hl; a niece, Janice Tolbert Hartman; and a brother-in- law, Jerome Baehl. Funeral services will be at 11 a.m. on Saturday, Septem- ber 1, 2018, at Colvin Funer- al Home in Princeton, with John Davidson officiating. Burial will follow at David- son Cemetery in Giro. Visitation will be from 4 until 8 p.m. on Friday at Col- vin Funeral Home. Military graveside services will be conducted by Retired Mili- tary Veterans. Memorial contributions may be made to the David- son Cemetery. Envelopes will be available at the fu- neral home. You may leave a message of sympathy or light a memorial candle at www.colvinfuneralhome. com. e family of Donald Warner would like to thank everyone for the many acts of kindness during the illness and following the death of Don. A special thank you to Harris Funeral Home, to John Manges and Tony Simms for their part in the service. To Michael Cochren for the beautiful music, to Brenton Chapel Church for the wonderful dinner following the service and to the First Christian Church for their love and concern. ank you to our wonderful neighbors, friends and family for the food, cards, flowers, gis and visits during Don's illness and following the funeral service. ank you to Heart to Heart Hospice Care, Gary Keepes and to those who gave to the Community Foundation Angie Warner Fund in memory of Angie's dad. Our love to each and everyone of you. Donnie will be missed so very much by so many. PEACE of MIND Let our 130 years of experience aid you in your selection of a meaningful memorial. SCHUM MONUMENTS, INC. Dale, Indiana www.SchumMonuments.com 812-937-4921 Local Representative RONALD WOODS 812-789-2009 opinion, healthy — even the completely unhealthy ones that kids and adults engage in, such as sneak- ing a bowl of ice cream for breakfast. Ice cream, the most scandalous of all dairy products, seems to be the epicenter of micro-rebel- lions — a point my friend Brian drove home when he had his own micro-re- bellion at our friend's wedding last weekend. The ceremony and recep- tion took place on a cruise ship that was docked to load its new passengers for the week-long travels. The wedding couple were signed up for the seven days of disco nights and buffets. The wedding guests, however, had only a few hours on the boat to attend the ceremony, cut the cake and get kicked off. There was an hour or so, though, when the wed- ding guests were allowed to walk freely around the boat prior to attending the ceremony. And that's when the unlimited ice cream bar was discovered. Soft serve your heart out! Brian has always had a soft spot for soft serve. We were in college together, and I saw him on many oc- casions holding off break- fast until 11 a.m. — when they'd open up the soft serve machine — simply so he could use vanilla ice cream instead of milk in his breakfast cereal. It was an act of 18 -year-old defi- ance against what his par- ent-paid meal card was in- tended for. When it comes to ice cream, all rules are off. On the cruise, he made himself and demol- ished four cones before the guests were called in for the ceremony. Immediately after the reception, the wedding guests were escorted via security guard off the boat. The crew was care- ful to not have any stowa- ways for the disembarka- tion an hour later. Brian had assumed the recep- tion would have more soft serve. It did not. And here he was, so close to his fa- vorite thing in the world but being pushed off the boat by rules and time- lines. It could not stand! Brian was last in line of our friends exiting the boat, and before he stepped onto the plank, he made a run for it, scream- ing behind him, "I need one more cone! " It took him 20 minutes to run up two decks and to the complete other side of the boat, fill up a fat cone, and make it back down to the plank. The sound of his name being called over the loudspeaker caused him to grin, chocolate soft serve in the corners of his mouth. He wore it with pride as he stepped off the boat. His wife smacked his arm and said, "Crazy per- son! What'd you do that for? " But Brian felt amaz- ing. And it wasn't just the ice cream that made him feel good. It was the spe- cific kind of joy you have as a 6 -year-old when your mom tells you to get the pillow off her face and you hold it a millimeter away. I reluctantly welcome these micro-rebellions from my kid, but I have a feeling I'm going to need to pour myself a lot of ice cream for breakfast to sur- vive them. Like Katiedid Langro- ck on Facebook, at http:// www.facebook.com/katie- didhumor. DAVID ALAN WALTON David Alan Walton, 57, passed away on Thursday, August 23, 2018, at his resi- dence surrounded by his lov- ing family. He was born June 27, 1961, in Bedford, the son of James and Martha (Har- rison) Walton. He married Evalyn Adamson Novem- ber 21, 1987. Due to his devotion of Je- sus Christ, he dedicated his life to the ministry. His mis- sion work included the Free Methodist Church, Medical Ambassadors Internation- al and SIFAT. With an em- phasis on teaching sustain- JEREMY "JERRY" D. TERWISKE Jeremy "Jerry" D. Ter- wiske, 60, of Ireland, passed away at 5:50 p.m. on Sunday, August 26, 2018, at the fami- ly lake in Duff, Ind. He was born in Jasper on June 17, 1958, to Robert, Sr. and Catherine "Betts" (Steinhart) Terwiske. He was a 1976 graduate of Jasper High School. He mar- ried the love of his life, Kath- leen "Kathy" Hassfurther on August 8, 1981, in St. Celes- tine Catholic Church. To- gether, they were blessed with their three children, Kade, Klayton and Kyra. He was a friend to every- one who knew him and was a shining example of a loving husband, father, grandpa, brother, uncle and son. His many loves in life include his lifelong business at Bob's Auto, gardening, watch- ing his grandkids grow up, pheasant hunting with his brothers and sons, and trav- eling with his wife. He was a member of the Jasper Ri- fle and Gun Club, Moose Lodge, Ireland Sportsman's Club, and St. Mary's Catho- lic Church in Ireland. Surviving are his wife of 37 years, Kathy Terwiske, of Ireland; children, Kade (Me- lissa) Terwiske and Klay- ton (Mallory) Terwiske, all of Jasper and Kyra ( Jake) Brown, of Ireland; five grandchildren, with one ex- pected in March; four sis- ters, Becky (Alan) Matheis and Gina (Mike) Scherle, all of Ireland, Marcia Johannig- smeier, of Haubstadt, and Angie (Bill) Hochgesang, of Celestine; nine brothers, Stan ( Julie) Terwiske, of Oakland City, Rolly (Kath- leen) Terwiske, of Hunt- ingburg, Dave (Cindy) Ter- wiske, of Haysville, Bruce Services were at 2 p.m. on Tuesday, August 28, 2018, at Randall & Roberts Funeral Center in Noblesville, with Don Campbell officiating. Visitation was from noon until service time at the fu- neral home. Burial will be at Hamilton Memorial Park Cemetery in Westfield. Memorial contributions may be made to American Cancer Society, 5635 West 96th Street, Suite 100, Indi- anapolis, IN 46278.

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