Vidette-Messenger

March 26, 1991: They’ve come for fun and prizes since 1851

Originally published in The Vidette-Messenger of Porter County on March 26, 1991.

They’ve come for fun and prizes since 1851

by William Thompson

The Vidette-Messenger

Fair Fun?Through the years, 140 of them to be exact, the Porter County Fair has afforded county residents, and others from all over the area, the opportunity to view some of the most unusual and popular acts around. For example, Johnny Rivers’ World…

Fair Fun?

Through the years, 140 of them to be exact, the Porter County Fair has afforded county residents, and others from all over the area, the opportunity to view some of the most unusual and popular acts around. For example, Johnny Rivers’ World’s Only High Diving Mules once amazed fairgoers, as shown above in this photo, provided by former Fair Board vice-president John Poncher of Valparaiso. But he wasn’t sure just when they appeared.

The Porter County Fair will celebrate its 150th anniversary in the year 2001.

Carl Hefner, the summer festival’s longest-serving president, has had a long love affair with fairs, and he traces the evolution of the local event not in cold facts, but in memories.

Former Vidette-Messenger reporter Nancy Shurr recalls the early history of the fair:

The idea for the fair was conceived on June 14, 1851, at a meeting to organize an Agriculture Society and attended by prominent local citizens. The Porter County Fair became a one-day event on the courthouse lawn in Valparaiso.

It was attended by about 400 people and presented $80 in prizes for horses, cattle, sheep, swine, fruits and vegetables,  dairy products and farm equipment.

Following this success, a second fair was held October 14-15, 1852, with prize money increased to $100 and more categories added. By 1853 there was $300 in prize money and competition in butter, cheese, bed quilting and rug carpeting was added.

The fair was held on the courthouse square until 1859, when it moved to the old woolen mill grounds, west of the former Anderson Co. building. This site was used until 1862, when the fair was suspended due to the Civil War.

The fair did not reappear in Porter County until 1871, when the Agricultural Society was reorganized under the leadership of president A.V. Bartholomew. The fair was held in October of that year.

In July 1872, a 20-acre plot north of the Grand Trunk Railroad and just east of state Route 49 was bought by the society from Nathan A. Kennedy for $2,500. A fence was built around the grounds; buildings and stalls were erected; and the first fair was held on this site in 1872.

The parcel was later increased by acquiring nine acres from William Riggs in 1890 and the Old Fairgrounds was created, Shurr said. And it served its purpose will late into the 20th Century.

Because of the Depression, the 1931 fair went broke, and was the last held as a major event for a number of years, Hefner said.

The handsome gentleman at above is Golden Moose Cholak, a big name in professional wrestling in the 1950s and ‘60s. He also performed at the fair, sometime in the early 1960s, when he was the World Champion, according to the belt buckle.

The handsome gentleman at above is Golden Moose Cholak, a big name in professional wrestling in the 1950s and ‘60s. He also performed at the fair, sometime in the early 1960s, when he was the World Champion, according to the belt buckle.

In 1932, it became a two-day event with no entertainment; after that, it was run strictly as a 4-H show until 1943, when the Fair Board was resurrected and reorganized, thanks mostly to a man named John Avala Jones (who was a former treasurer of the Ringling Brothers Circus).

Jones brought the fair back to a five-day schedule.

By 1954, the fair had grown to a six-day affair ー with carnivals and entertainment booked once again. It was during this renaissance that Hefner took an interest in the fair.

He first became involved in 1948, assisting with the hog and swine departments. He happily worked this department until 1956, when he was elected to serve as Fair Board president, replacing Walter Hanrahan, who had served for 14 years. Hefner held the board’s top spot until 1989.

“The Porter County Fair is not a one-man show ー it’s an effort put together by an awful lot of people and I want to stress that,” Hefner said.

“I don’t know why I originally joined. I just love fairs; I never thought then that the fair would get to be the size it is now. I guess you’d say you like to work with people when you work with fairs.”

By the mid-60s, the Fair Board saw the need for more acreage, but city zoning regulations stifled expansion

“Obstructions were put in front of it (one old fairgrounds), so that the county commissioners couldn’t develop it much more,” Hefner recalls.

After years of haggling and in-fighting between the governmental bodies in the ‘70s, the Fair Board was finally able to move into the new Porter County Fairgrounds and Exposition Center in Washington Township in 1985.

The move allowed the fair an expansion from 29 to 80 acres, and it is held there to this day.

Managing the fair has never been easy for Hefner, a Pleasant Township farmer.

His most time-consuming responsibility is supervising all the department heads and coordinating their activities.

Filling empty positions, signing food contracts and booking the entertainment is a year round job.

And the fair is not without its share of bad luck. Though Hefner fails to recall exactly when they happened, he tells of four tragedies.

  • In the early ‘60s, a commercial exhibition tent caught fire due to an electrical shortage. No one was killed or injured.

  • In a freak accident once, a carnival employee had a gun go off when it fell from his pocket. The bullet ricocheted off of a carnival ride bar he was cleaning, and came back to kill him. Police took over the fair office that day, Hefner recalls.

  • Another time a carnival employee died of a heart attack under a truck as he was taking refuge from a rainstorm.

  • Another incident occurred in which a man fatally fell from a double ferris wheel, Hefner said.

But tragedies like these have not kept people away from rides, attractions and rural unity.

The biblical command ー “Thou shalt not judge…” ー certainly never applied to the county fair. It is a festival bent on judging everything, be it human, animal, vegetable or mineral.

Porter County Fair queens have learned grace over the years; a few have gone on to win state fair competition. Diane Lynn Martin, 1981 Miss Porter County Fair went on to participate in the Miss America Pageant as Miss Arizona, and later went on to marry a popular rock star, Hefner said.

March 8, 1951: Instructions On Business Are Praised - Local Teachers Find Plant Tour Is Educational

Originally published in The Vidette-Messenger of Porter County on March 8, 1951.

Instructions On Business Are Praised

Local Teachers Find Plant Tour Is Educational

Valparaiso’s public and elementary grade teachers had high praise today for “instructions” in business and industry they received Wednesday afternoon from representatives of various factory and business establishments in the community.

And businessmen said they are looking forward to the time when they will sit in on academic proceedings at the local schools.

The whole program was initiated by the educational committee of the Valparaiso Chamber of Commerce, with the cooperation of the Valparaiso city, St. Paul’s Catholic and Immanuel Lutheran school administrators. It is planned to hold similar meetings, either at business houses or in the schools, in each of the next two years.

Some 80 teachers of the community toured, in small units, five industrial plants, Continental Diamond Fibre company, McGill Manufacturing company, Indiana Steel Products company. The Robert L. Miller Laboratory and Urschel Laboratories; three stores, J. Lowenstine and Sons, Stambaugh Farm Equipment company and J.C. Penney company; two financial institutions, Farmers’ State and First State banks; Hotel Lembke; and The Vidette-Messenger, Indiana Associated Telephone company and Northern Indiana Public Service company plants.


Spends Entire Afternoon

The teachers reported at their assigned tour place at one o’clock and spent the entire afternoon inspecting the facilities and learning of some of the problems of conducting the particular business that they were visiting.

Climax of the day came when 120 teachers and businessmen attended a banquet at Hotel Lembke sponsored by the C of C. Lester Milne, chairman of the education committee, served as master of ceremonies.

Representatives of the 14 firms who acted as hosts during the afternoon were introduced, as were members of the city school board, committee members who arranged details for the day and James Patricn[sic], C of C secretary-manager.

Featured speaker of the evening was Dr. Virgil M. Rogers, superintendent of schools, Battle Creek, Mich. He was introduced by G. Warren Phillips, superintendent of the local city schools.


Stake In Schools

In his address, Rogers reminded the businessmen that they have a stake in the public schools, which he labeled as the nation’s greatest enterprise today. He said all people in a community have a direct or indirect part in the school, and he warned that if America permits public education to die, democracy will die with it.

He pointed out that the growth of education has aided America to build more cars, more homes, more radios and similar advantages than exists in any other nation.

Rogers advised that the schools should furnish their pupils with a more dramatic meaning of American citizenship, that they must appeal to community leaders to help keep the academic standards on a high level.

As a closing warning the speaker asserted that if totalitarianism ever strangles the American way of life it will because education has lost its objective.

TWO OF THE PLANTS toured Wednesday afternoon by local teacher groups during the Business-Industry-Education event sponsored by the Valparaiso Chamber of Commerce were that of The Vidette-Messenger and the Continental Diamond Fibre company. In the up…

TWO OF THE PLANTS toured Wednesday afternoon by local teacher groups during the Business-Industry-Education event sponsored by the Valparaiso Chamber of Commerce were that of The Vidette-Messenger and the Continental Diamond Fibre company. In the upper photo teachers are viewing the teletype and morgue operations in the editorial department. In this group were the following teachers: Emma R. Food, Mary Miller, Mary Stoner, Mary Phillips, Francis May and Verna Randert. Shown in the mica press room Burton Conklin, Glen Gierke, Milton Marten, Sister Miriam Loretto and Sister M. Juliette. George Nelson and D.K. Appleby were in charge of the tour there.

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Jan. 23, 1961: 2 V-M Carriers Thrilled By Inauguration Rites

Originally published in The Vidette-Messenger of Porter County on January 23, 1961.

2 V-M Carriers Thrilled By Inauguration Rites

The color, vitality, and pulsating throngs of people who milled through Washington, D.C., on the weekend of Jan. 20 will be long remembered by two Valparaiso Vidette-Messenger carrier boys who were fortunate enough to witness the inauguration of the 35th president of the United States, John F. Kennedy.

Ron Oelling, son of Mr. and Mrs. Howard Oelling, RFD 5, Cooks Corners, and Ron Boyer, son of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Weller, 403 Beech, were the two lucky lads who saw the inauguration proceedings from choice seats in the stands of Section B, just to the left of the television platform, and directly opposite the inaugural platform.

Boyer (left) and Oelling (right)

Boyer (left) and Oelling (right)

The boys, winners in a recent contest conducted by The Vidette-Messenger, were taken on a three-day tour of the Capital by Vincent Anderson, V-M circulation manager.

The tour was under the auspices of the Baltimore and Ohio railroad, and included a jam-packed three days of sightseeing, in addition to the inauguration and the inaugural parade.

Through the generosity of Rep. Charles Halleck, minority leader of the House of Representatives, the boys and Anderson were able to obtain tickets to the prized seats just two hours before the swearing-in ceremony was to begin.

Anderson contacted the Congressman early Friday morning and was invited to the Capitol building where the office of the minority leader is located. There they were given tickets for the Inauguration proceedings.

Boys Meet Halleck

While at the Capitol, Anderson was able to introduce the two boys to Congressman Halleck, immediately before he left in his car to pick up Vice President Richard Nixon.

They were also able to see Sen. Mike Mansfield, majority leader of the Senate, as he was leaving his office for the Inaugural.

The bitter cold and heavy snowfall in Washington Friday hampered traffic to the Capital but by 11 a.m. the streets were filled with invited guests and sightseers all converging on the grounds.

The boys, who had gone back to their hotel for Oelling’s camera, were caught in the crush of people and security police on Pennsylvania avenue. The police checked the passes about five times before the group was able to reach their section of the stands by 11:30 a.m., it was noted.

Impressed By Youth

About 50,000 persons filled the available seats and lined the grounds to witness the inauguration.

Anderson stated the speech given by the new president was very well received by those assembled, and the affection of all for poet Robert Frost was evident.

“I was very impressed,” Anderson noted, “by the youth of the men who will make up the administration, and by the number of young governors seen in the parade.”

Anderson and the boys went to the stand to witness the parade and were able to obtain seats on South Pennsylvania avenue, directly in front of the U.S. District court building.

Red Cross and First Aid station personnel worked overtime treating frostbite cases, and others who suffered ill effects in the cold weather.

See Gov. Welsh

During the parade, the group was able to see Gov. Matt Welsh and the units sent from Indiana. They moved down Pennsylvania avenue with the throngs and finally left to eat dinner at 6 p.m.

The boys arrived in the Capital on Thursday morning and toured the Capitol, building, House of Representatives, and the White House; went to the top of the Washington monument, and the Bureau of Printing and Engraving. On Friday night, despite all the excitement of the day, they toured the Lincoln Memorial, National Archives and the Capitol grounds at night.

They checked out of the Annapolis hotel Saturday morning for the final part of their tour, and went to Mount Vernon and Arilington. At Arlington they witnessed the changing of the guard at the tomb of the Unknown Soldier, and visited the Iwo Jima memorial, the Smithsonian Institute, and the National Gallery of Art.

At 6 p.m., they boarded the train for their return trip, tired but happy, excited and exuberant over all the things they had managed to accomplish in three days. They returned to Valparaiso Sunday morning.

Dec. 14, 1955: V-M Plans Drastic Changes Due To Newsprint Shortage

Originally published in The Vidette-Messenger of Porter County on December 14, 1955.

V-M Plans Drastic Changes Due To Newsprint Shortage

As with other daily newspapers from coast to coast, The Vidette-Messenger faces a severe newsprint shortage in 1956 that manufacturers consider more critical than during World War II.

Although The Vidette-Messenger has conserved on its newsprint the past year, only increasing its usage because of a normal growth in circulation, many measures will have to be taken to assure publication of a paper each day.

In the works right now, according to General Manager Avery B. Weaver, are plans to use paper rolls of narrower width, closer editing of stories, closer checks on free copies, fewer tear sheets, and, when possible, fewer pages in an issue.

Closer editing will mean cutting out non-essentials in articles to the best judgment of the managing editor and banning an increase in more features.

What hits the V-M squarely between the eyes is the continual gain in population in both Valparaiso and Porter county, the area of its circulation which it must serve, with both news coverage and advertising.

Because of a delay by its supplier in shipping a carload of newsprint on the scheduled date of Dec. 1, the management has its fingers crossed until next Monday when it is supposed to arrive.

No Relief Seen

While Candian newsprint mills have expanded capacity during 1955, a number of factors have prevented them from producing to the limit, thus cutting down on output and creating a critical situation in almost every newspaper plant which they supply.

Many large newspapers have been notified that shipments expected for the first four months of 1956 will be slashed by 7½%, indicating the clouded horizon, are doing everything possible to obtain newsprint whenever they can, and to reduce its use wherever it is feasible.

Oct. 1, 1955: This Is the Story of The Vidette-Messenger

Originally published in The Vidette-Messenger of Porter County on October 1, 1955.

This Is the Story of The Vidette-Messenger

There Are 8 Departments In Operation

By ROLLIE BERNHART

What do you know about your newspaper today?

As a kick-off to spotlight National Newspaper Week, Oct. 1-8, here are some pertinent facts about The Vidette - Messenger and the departmental organization which daily provides a steady information and advertising source for its more than 7,100 subscribers and their families.

It should be significant during National Newspaper Week to know the various departments of the organization, which unifies itself into a cooperative system to eventually produce your daily Vidette-Messenger.

The Vidette-Messenger is now in its 28th year of operation, more than a quarter century since the merger of The Daily Vidette and The Evening Messenger on July 5, 1927. The publisher is Mrs. L.M. Whipple, and Avery B. Weaver, is the general manager and treasurer.

More than 7,100 of the current total net paid circulation of 7,208, are in the Valparaiso retail trade area.

There are eight full scale departments, all of which directly and indirectly aid in the production of the newspaper. They are: executive, editorial, office, composing room, press and stereotyping departments, display advertising, classified advertising, and circulation department.

The Vidette-Messenger employs 28 full time and five part-time employees throughout the various departments.

In addition to the six-man editorial staff, managed by Herbert Steinbach, there are 11 county and area correspondents, who contribute news regularly to appropriately headed sections of the newspaper.

Members of the editorial staff, in addition to Steinbach, are: Karl Henrichs, city reporter; Miss Betsy MacFie, county reporter; Charles Zulich, sports; Mrs. Irene Bosstick, society; and Rollie Bernhart, reporter-photographer.

County Reporters

County correspondence is received in the editorial rooms from: Boone Grove, Union Center, Wanatah, Wauhob Lake, Wheeler, Chesterton, Boone Grove, Kouts, Hebron, Liberty township, Crocker, Lake Eliza and East Porter.

Two special photographers, Arthur E. Anderson, Chesterton; and Chet Dynewski, Boone Grove, contribute photos on special or spot assignments.

Ever-mindful of the importance of the school as a news source, the V-M has Miss Karen Angle, currently a VHS senior, as its school reporter. James McGill, a VHS junior, and a part-time V-M photography and engraving department employee, doubles in brass as school photographer.

The three employees in the advertising department headed by Robert L. Bibler, make all store contacts, layouts, run proofs and check all copy for the myriad of advertisements which appear in the daily run of The Vidette-Messenger. The assistants are Leo Kinman and Miss Lou Rohr.

No observance of National Newspaper Week would be complete without the recognition of one newspaper section which serves hundreds of readers all over the city and county, the classified section. This department is in the capable hands of Mrs. Wilbur Rothmann, aided by various members of the office force.

Business Department

In the business department, Mrs. John Robertson is the head bookkeeper, with the general department functions under the direction of Weaver. Mrs. Phyllis Voiles aids in this department, and serves as general switchboard operator.

Holding down perhaps one of the “roughest” jobs in the newspaper business is Mrs. Cleve Panter, who proof-reads the majority of the daily news copy eventually printed in The Vidette-Messenger. Miss Jo Anne Muster does this chore Saturdays and is part time assistant in the office.

At the five linotypes there are: Mrs. Robert Muster, Ivan Larson, Paul Reibly, Ward Williamson and Robert Randall.

In the composing room (those experts who can read better up-side-down than some persons can read right-side-up) Jack Allett, superintendent, Joseph Reibl and Kenneth Graham hold forth.

James Mull manages the press and stereotype departments, capably aided by John Parks and Art Wooten.

As reported by Vince Anderson, circulation manager, the net paid circulation of The Vidette-Messenger today, is 7,208. The distributed circulation figure is 7,425. Circulation department assistant is Mrs. Hazel. Russi. Part time employees are Paul Brown, Floyd Turner and Delmar Graham.

65 News Carriers

To carry and distribute these papers throughout the city and county, the V-M has 43 carriers on routes in Valparaiso, and 22 of “the nation’s youngest businessmen” on the out-of-town routes.

In addition to Valparaiso, newsboys deliver the daily V-M to Hebron, Kouts, Chesterton, Porter, Wheeler, Wanatah, Boone Grove, Boiling Springs, Lincoln Hills and the lake areas north of the city.

The Vidette-Messenger is also distributed and delivered by motor route to Liberty and Westchester townships. There is also one contracted motor delivery to dealers, and five special paper pick-ups for neighboring town distribution.

These thumb nail sketches merely brush the surface of the departments and personnel, who undergo a sometimes distracting but efficient daily “deadline” as the gamut is run in order to produce The Vidette-Messenger.

For as an editor of a southern publication recently wrote, “the staff that can survive the dull prosaic nature of day-to-day newspapering, then rise to whatever the challenger might be and perform it brilliantly, boldly and without regard to hours or to self, with nothing more than public service in mind, can really make a newspaper great.”