ϴ ͘D͘Ͳϲ W͘D͘ DŽŶĚĂLJͲ&ƌŝĚĂLJ ϴ ͘D͘ͲEŽŽŶ ^ĂƚƵƌĚĂLJ dŚĞ ĂƌĞ zŽƵƌ Ăƌ ĞƐĞƌǀĞƐ
67 -2+1·6 /87+(5$1 &+85&+ $1' '$1·6 ),6+ )5< 35(6(176
&$55< 287 21/<
),6+ $1' 7(1'(5/2,1 )5< 2&72%(5
CAR/TRUCK BATTERIES
TAX SERVICE
7+ $118$/
FREE BRAKE INSPECTIONS!
AUTO REPAIR!
ϱϬϬ K&&
ĂƌůLJ ŝƌĚ Ψ ^ƉĞĐŝĂů
ĞĨŽƌĞ ϭϬ͗ϬϬ ͘D͘
TIRE ROTATION DƵƐƚ ƉƌĞƐĞŶƚ ĐŽƵƉŽŶ Žƌ ŵĞŶƟŽŶ ĂĚ͘ 'ŽŽĚ dŚƌƵ KĐƚŽďĞƌ ϯϭ͕ ϮϬϮϭ
202 Apache Drive, Rochester, IN • Behind Burger King • 574-223-9984
3 0 $W 7KH )XOWRQ &R +LVWRULFDO 6RFLHW\ 0XVHXP ( 1 2II 2I 8 6
0($/6 $5(
($&+
Individual | Business | Farm
,QFOXGHV &ROH 6ODZ &KLSV &RRNLHV
574-505-0813
&$// $+($' )25 7,&.(76 25 3$< $7 7+( '225
By Appointment Only 9581 E. 100 N., Akron, IN 46910 E-mail: tom@tombauterscpa.com
Wednesday, October 6, 2021
Vol. 64, Issue No. 40
0DLQ 6WUHHW 5RFKHVWHU ,1 3KRQH
www.shoppingguidenews.com
ELECT
FULTON COUNTY • FAIR • HARDWORKING • DEVOTED Paid for by the Committee to Elect Matt Craig for Sheriff
Support Local Youth!
6($621$/ :$5(6 ³ Alysha Sly, an associate with Webb÷s Pharmacy in downtown Rochester, adjusts an item in an autumn display of merchandise. Many commercial outlets add such items to their inventory this time of year.
The five senses of autumn
7H[W DQG 3KRWRV %\ 5$< %$/2*+ 6WDII :ULWHU
Rochester
Optimist Club Pumpkin Stand 803 E. 9th St.
Fall Decoration Packages Available Call Becky Mahoney 574-529-3266
The Papers Inc. P.O. Box 188 Milford, Indiana 46542
ECRWSS
RESIDENTIAL CUSTOMER
PAID
Milford, IN Permit No. 2
PRSRT STD U.S. POSTAGE
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
)$925,7( 7,0( ³ Sarah Reynolds, store manager of Flirt Boutique in Rochester, said fall is her ”favorite time of the year‘ for sales. ”Everybody looks good in the fall,‘ she said, noting the store carries various clothing, jewelry, accessories and other items for men, women, children and babies. In the fall they also stock seasonal candles, T-shirts, decoration and snacks.
“Winter is an etching, spring a watercolor, summer an oil painting and autumn a mosaic of them all.” —Stanley Horowitz. Between the reluctant goodbyes to summer and the apprehension of another frigid winter lies an almost magical season, fleeting in its transitions but worthy of a slow and deliberate appreciation as it unfurls its unique, unrivaled beauty. And what fuller way to oblige one’s admiration than through one’s own mosaic of sight, sound, hearing, taste and touch. On a crisp, cloudless Friday morning as October introduced itself to the area, several area residents weighed in with their favorite memories of autumns past and anticipation for the season which just began. LeeAnn Pollock summed up the most often mentioned favorite sight of the fall, “The changing colors of the leaves all over.” Several seniors — John Werner, Sue Vanata, Pat Pomeroy, Ruth Campbell, Larry Maibauer and
AT YOUR SERVICE
24/7
Ocelia Conklin — took a short break from their weekly bingo game at the Community Resource Center to express their opinions and largely concurred with Pollock’s assessment, variously describing the leaves as “pretty,” “beautiful” and “gorgeous.” Janet Hackworth of Akron remembers her family “driving around in the country” to catch a glimpse of the kaleidoscopic foliage. She said her favorite color was burnt orange and “I look forward to it every year.” Her friend Darlene Drudge, also from Akron, cited another captivating sight to be found during autumn evenings. “I think the sunsets against the leaves of the trees are incredible this time of the year” and noted she also enjoys “a bright clear fall day when there is no humidity.” As for taste, Monte Hoffman listed his favorite fall menu items, “chili, apple cider and pumpkin pie. That would work as a whole meal for me. And coffee tastes better when the weather gets cold.” Brad Long drove in from Crawfordsville to visit Hoffman and offered his preferred autumn im-
bibements. “I like when (the local brewhouses) change to the new craft beers in the fall,” he said, citing Oktoberfest, apple cider and spice as memorable seasonal flavors. John Golba admitted he can eat “a plateful of pumpkin cookies” his mother, Jenny, still bakes during the season. “It’s a fall family tradition,” he said. Jenny remembers making a variety of treats — pies, pie filling, applesauce and dehydrated chips — from the apples the Golba family has picked for many decades. “We went up to a Niles, Mich., orchard. We’re still carrying on the tradition and we take the grandkids now.” She noted a pragmatic benefit in taking the little ones along. “They fill up on apples and we don’t have to feed them.” John Werner listed the dual benefits of tasting apple pie “and smelling the pie cooking.” Josh Taylor said he enjoys the “kind of earthy smell” of the leaves, and his wife, Ashley, likes to hear the “rustling of the leaves in the wind” and their crunching sound as someone walks on them.
Josh told of a meteorological phenomenon he finds beautiful: freezing fog, whose tiny water droplets freeze instantly on exposed surfaces when surface temperatures drop quickly, making the tree branches glisten brightly in the sunlight. Nora Delworth is retired from her deputy auditor position for the county. Her late husband, John, was an attorney and retired as city judge. She recalled “tent camping in the fall for many, many years with our five children in southern Indiana. We did buy a travel camper, and we always had a lot of campfires. That is what I really miss as far as having family around.” Conklin lives next to a farm and loves to watch the growing season progress and come to its yearly end with the harvest of hay and other crops. Several persons, such as Sue Little, mentioned the temperature. “It feels crisp and you wake up in the morning when it is real fresh.” Vanata, from Fulton, said, “The air is light and fresh and I like a little bit of the chill on my cheek.”
KITE & ULERICK &
574-223-6307 Family Owned & Operated
Residential & Commercial ~ Licensed & Insured ~
Est. 1985
NO
INFLATED WEEKEND S FEES FOR ERVICE CALL S!