The farmhouse was saved, but all in all it was a terrible loss for Calvin Beltzhoover (formerly of Hobart).
(Click on images to enlarge)
I'm having trouble identifying the farm in question. Calvin Beltzhoover was only renting it. The current owner's name is given as "Landfields" by the Gazette (which also describes him as Calvin's brother-in-law; I think he was Henry Landfield, who in 1909 had married Stella Kent, sister of Calvin's wife, Pearl). Previous owners' names include Keilman (Gazette) and D.M. Heiney (News). On the 1908 Plat Map, we do find a large farm in the Turkey Creek area belonging to Phillip Keilman, but it's not south of the creek as described by the Gazette (which may simply have got its geography a little confused); we also find some farms belonging to people by the name of Hein, but not D.M. Heiney.
I can't find Calvin Beltzhoover at all in the 1920 Census. (By the way, I'm now convinced that Calvin and Frank Beltzhoover were two different people, which leaves me deeply confused over which of them owned the Nickel Plate Garage, and whether they were any relation to each other.)
Also, in the "Public Sale" notice under the fire story above, we find James Chester auctioneering again.
Two days early, the roof of the John and Ella Crisman farmhouse, near the village of Deep River, caught fire somehow. Luckily the fire was put out quickly, so the rest of the house was not harmed, and the outbuildings never in danger. The Crismans had insurance to cover the damaged roof.
Sources:
♦ "17 Head of Cattle and Horses Burned Up in a Fire at Turkey Creek." Hobart News 26 May 1921.
♦ 1920 Census.
♦ Indiana Marriage Collection.
♦ "Local and Personal." Hobart News 26 May 1921.
♦ "Two Barns Burn." Hobart Gazette 27 May 1921.
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