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DELPHOS

The
50 daily www.delphosherald.com

Enrollment in online schools in Ohio surpasses 30,000, p3

Telling The Tri-Countys Story Since 1869

Monday, October 1, 2012

HERALD
Delphos, Ohio

Jays lose volleyball marathon to Big Green, p6

Clubs offer health screenings


The Delphos Kiwanis and Rotary clubs will hold the 33rd annual blood screening program on Oct. 6 and Oct. 13. Both will last from 7-9 a.m. in the Jefferson High School cafeteria. Tests include blood screening for $30, PSA (prostate-specific antigen) test for $35, pre-diabetic screen (A1C) for $15 and a thyroid stimulating hormone test for $20. The tests will be conducted by MedLab, Inc.

Upfront

Green Energy Tour to visit Van Wert County


BY ED GEBERT DHI correspondent VAN WERT No place in the Buckeye State has as much to offer in the way of working wind energy as Van Wert County. On Thursday, this county, along with Paulding County, will host persons wanting to get a look at the utility-scale wind turbines in action. Green Energy Ohio is hosting a Wind Farm Tour this week in cooperation with the Ohio Farm Bureau, bringing a busload of people to the area from Urbana, Bellefontaine, and Wapakoneta. Those taking the free tour will spend the afternoon visiting three sites of interest to those who have questions about the large turbines or just want an up-close look. The first site is near Cooper Farms Cooked Meats near the intersection of U.S. 127 and Convoy Rd. Cooper Farms already has two Goldwind 1.5 MW turbines fully functioning, supplying about half of the electric energy needed to power the plant. Ground was broken just two weeks ago for a

Blood drive set Wednesday

The American Red Cross will hold a blood drive from 2-7 p.m. Wednesday at the Knights of Columbus hall on Elida Avenue in Delphos. Individuals who are 17 years of age, weigh at least 110 pounds and are in good general health can donate. Call 1-800-RED-CROSS to make an appointment.

Church celebrates 80 years with youthful offerings

Stacy Taff photos

First Assembly of God Childrens Pastor Angie Chung helps Nathan Brown while he plays Oh Rats! during the churchs 80th anniversary celebration Sunday.

Warning siren test Wednesday

The 48 Allen County community warning sirens will be tested at noon on Wednesday. In the event of an actual emergency, the sirens are an indication persons in the affected area should go indoors and tune to a local news media for additional information and instructions on emergency action to be taken.

Medicare to fine hospitals for readmitted patients


By RICARDO ALONSO-ZALDIVAR The Associated Press WASHINGTON If you or an elderly relative have been hospitalized recently and noticed extra attention when the time came to be discharged, theres more to it than good customer service. As of today, Medicare will start fining hospitals that have too many patients readmitted within 30 days of discharge due to complications. The penalties are part of a broader push under President Barack Obamas health care law to improve quality while also trying to save taxpayers money. About two-thirds of the hospitals serving Medicare patients, or some 2,200 facilities, will be hit with penalties averaging around $125,000 per facility this coming year, according to government estimates. Data to assess the penalties have been collected and crunched, and Medicare has

third turbine, which company officials say should provide 75 percent of the plants power needs. From the Cooper site, the tour will get a look at the 152 Gamesa 2 MW turbines that make up the Blue Creek Wind Farm spread across northeastern Van Wert County and into Paulding County. Wind farm Operations Manager Neil Voje will be on hand, as well as Van Wert County Commissioner Clair Dudgeon to answer questions. The third stop is Haviland Drainage Products where three Goldwind 1.5 MW wind turbines are currently being installed. The energy from the three turbines will be used by the manufacturing facility. Local residents can join the tour at Cooper Farms at approximately 1 p.m. Although there is no cost for the tour, reservations are needed to insure bus space. Contact Emily Sautter at 216789-5248 or Emily@greenenergyohio.org and let her know where you will board the bus. A boxed lunch is available for those boarding in Urbana, Bellfontaine and Wapakoneta for $10.

DJ, SJ selling FB tix Football Friday pre-sale tickets for the Jefferson home game (Columbus Grove) and the St. Johns away game (Fort Recovery) are on sale. Prices for the Wildcats (normal office hours at all four District offices and the Admin. Building) are $5 for adults, $4 for students (all tickets at the gates $6). Fans can buy reserved seats for $5 at the AB. Prices for the Blue Jays (normal HS office hours and until noon Friday) are $6 for adults (for all tix at the gate), $4 for students. TODAY Boys Soccer: NK at Spencerville, 5 p.m.; Van Wert at Wapak (WBL), 5 p.m.; Bath at Elida (WBL), 7 p.m. Girls Soccer (5 p.m.): Ottoville at Kalida (PCL); Ada at Lincolnview (NWC). Girls Golf: Division II District at Sycamore Springs (Lincolnview), 9 a.m. Volleyball (5:30 p.m.): Columbus Grove at St. Johns; Ottoville at Ayersville; Spencerville at LTC.

Sports

Children enjoy the bouncy house.

Nathan Brown tries his hand at Frog Frenzy while Maggie Cripe looks on.

shared the results with individual hospitals. Medicare plans to post details online later in October, and people can look up how their community hospitals performed by using the agencys Hospital Compare website. It adds up to a new way of doing business for hospitals, and they have scrambled to prepare for well over a year. They are working on ways to improve communication with rehabilitation centers and doctors who follow patients after theyre released, as well as connecting individually with patients. There is a lot of activity at the hospital level to straighten out our internal processes, said Nancy Foster, vice president for quality and safety at the American Hospital Association. We are also spreading our wings a little and reaching outside the hospital, to the extent that we can, to make sure patients are getting the ongoing treatment See MEDICARE, page 2

Its My Job

Butchers been putting food on the table for 16 years


BY STACY TAFF staff@delphosherald.com hand out recipes, he said. We point customers toward cooking spices and supplies to help get them set up for new meal ideas. We answer questions about food safety tips and cooking temperatures, things like that. As manager of the meat department, Beining does more than just cut meat. On a typical day, Im ordering the meat, making sure all of the cases are working and figuring out what needs to be cut first based on what sold the day before, he said. I also help unload palettes and take orders, whether over the phone or in person and I promote signage for new products. When it comes to cutting the meat, we all rotate working Sundays and some evenings we work later hours and well still be in here cutting at 6 p.m. When your job revolves around fresh meat, a sudden rise in demand can prove to be a nightmare. One of the hardest

DELPHOSIf you want to know what the most popular cut of meat is at your local supermarket, Forecast theres no better person to Cloudy ask than the meat managTuesday. er. At Chief Supermarket Showers likely in Delphos, that person is in the morning, Jerry Beining. then chance of Ground beef is always showers and a the biggest seller. Locally, slight chance of a thunderstorm thats followed by beef in the afternoon. Highs in the roast and then probably upper 60s. Lows in the upper T-bones and Delmonicos, 50s. Chance of precipitation he said. Whats selling the 50-60 percent. See page 2. most really depends on the time of year. In the sumIndex mer, people are doing a lot Obituaries 2 of grilling, so youre going State/Local 3 to be selling more of those Politics 4 items. Having spent 16 years as Community 5 meat manager, 10 years as a Sports 6-8 Announcements 9 meat cutter and a previous 10 years at a butcher shop, TV 10 Beining can also advise Classifieds 11 customers on meat preparation. We give cooking suggestions; sometimes we

things is special orders from a funeral or something else like that, he said. Things like that are usually last-minute and you have to scramble to fit it into your schedule. When theres bad weather, sometimes the trucks will be late. When theres bad weather coming in, we have more people coming in and it can get pretty busy around here. Even factoring in the occasional inconveniences, Beining enjoys going to work every day. I think we all enjoy the challenges we encounter every day, he said. It can be hard at times because its a fresh product, so you have to order what you think you can use so there isnt any Stacy Taff photo waste. Theres a lot of variJerry Beining has been meat manager at Chief ety in what we do here, so it doesnt get boring. I Supermarket in Delphos for the last 16 years. also enjoy working with talk with. Its nice working Beining lives in Ottoville these people. We have just with the customers, too, you with his wife, Sue. They a handful of employees in see people you know and have four children: Nick, the meat department, so you you get to talk and mingle 27, Troy, 24, Nathan, 21 have people you can really with them. and Rachel, 18.

2 The Herald

Monday, October 1, 2012

www.delphosherald.com

WASHINGTON (AP) Convicted D.C. sniper Lee Boyd Malvo said in a newspaper interview published Sunday that the devastated reaction of a victims husband made him feel like the worst piece of scum. Malvo expresses remorse in the interview with The Washington Post and urged the families of victims to try and forget about him and his partner John Allen Muhammad so they can move on. Tuesday marks the 10th anniversary of the beginning of the deadly spree in the Washington area carried out by Malvo and John Allen Muhammad. The pair has been linked to 27 shootings across the country, including 10 fatal attacks in the Washington area. Malvo, 27, told the Post in a rare interview that the look on the face of victim Linda Franklins husband right after she was shot stands out in his memory of the rampage. Franklin, a 47-year-old FBI analyst, was killed as she and her husband loaded supplies

Newspaper: Malvo like worst piece of scum


outside a Home Depot in Falls Church, Va. They are penetrating, Malvo said of Ted Franklins eyes. It is the worst sort of pain I have ever seen in my life. His eyes ... Words do not possess the depth in which to fully convey that emotion and what I felt when I saw it. ... You feel like the worst piece of scum on the planet. Malvo is serving a life sentence with no parole at a prison in southwest Virginia for killing Franklin. Muhammad was executed in Virginia in 2009 The sniper-style attacks all but paralyzed the nations capital, as people were shot at random while going about their everyday life pumping gas, buying groceries, and for one young boy, as he went to school. The shooters used a high-powered rifle, firing from the trunk of a modified Chevy Caprice until they were tracked down at a Maryland rest stop. Malvo also repeated previous assertions that he was manipulated by the older Muhammad during the string of attacks that took place when Malvo was 17. But he acknowledges: I was a monster. Malvo has declined to respond to many media requests, including letters from The Associated Press. He was interviewed in 2010 for a cable TV special. When asked by the Post what he would say to victims families, the remorseful Malvo said theres no way to properly convey an apology. We can never change what happened, Malvo said. Theres nothing that I can say except dont allow me and my actions to continue to victimize you for the rest of your life. He added: Dont allow myself or Muhammad to continue to make you a victim for the rest of your life. It isnt worth it. Linda Franklins father, Charles Moore, was incredulous about the idea that victims relatives would be able to forget about what Malvo and Muhammad did.

For The Record felt Medicare

(Continued from page 1)

Severe damage to trailer in Sunday night fire


Staff reports The call came in to the Delphos Fire Department around 11 p.m. Sunday despite the fact the blaze was in the territory of Middle Point Fire Department. Crews from both departments responded, as did a tanker from the Van

MIDDLE POINT A house trailer at 21842 Gerdeman Road and owned by Dave Liles, southeast of Middle Point was severely damaged by fire late Sunday night.

Wert Fire Department. No one was reported injured at the scene. The structure suffered extensive damage from the smoke and flames. No other information is yet available.

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they need. Still, industry officials say they have misgivings about being held liable for circumstances beyond their control. They also complain that facilities serving low-income people, including many major teaching hospitals, are much more likely to be fined, raising questions of fairness. Readmissions are partially within the control of the hospital and partially within the control of others, Foster said. Consumer advocates say Medicares nudge to hospitals is long overdue and not nearly stiff enough. Its modest, but its a start, said Dr. John Santa, director of the Consumer Reports Health Ratings Center. Should we be surprised that industry is objecting? You would expect them to object to anything that changes the status quo. For the first year, the penalty is capped at 1 percent of a hospitals Medicare payments. The overwhelming majority of penalized facilities will pay less. Also, for now, hospitals are only being measured on three medical conditions: heart attacks, heart failure and pneumonia. Under the health care law, the penalties gradually will rise until 3 percent of Medicare payments to hospitals are at risk. Medicare is considering holding hospitals accountable on four more measures: joint replacements, stenting, heart bypass and treatment of stroke. Excessive rates of readmission are only part of the problem of high costs and uneven quality in the U.S. health care system. While some estimates put readmission rates as high as 20 percent, a congressional agency says the level of preventable readmissions is much lower. About 12 percent of Medicare beneficiaries who are hospitalized are later readmitted for a potentially preventable problem, said the Medicare Payment Advisory Commission, known as MedPAC.

Betty L. Hoverman

OBITUARY

Betty L. Hoverman, 84, of Delphos, died Sunday at St. Ritas Medical Center. Arrangements are incomplete at Harter and Schier Funeral Home.

The Delphos Herald


Nancy Spencer, editor Ray Geary, general manager, Delphos Herald Inc. Don Hemple, advertising manager Tiffany Brantley, circulation manager
Vol. 142 No.79

Drivers leave scene of accident; both claim right-of-way

REPORT

POLICE

No citations were issued following a two-vehicle accident reported at 10:20 a.m. Sunday to the Delphos Police Department. Both drivers arrived at the police department at that time to file accident reports. Elizabeth Raabe, 60, of Delphos said she traveling southbound on Canal Street and was stopped at the fourway stop at Canal and Third streets and then proceeded to turn eastbound onto Third Street when her vehicle was struck by a vehicle driven by James Joseph, 65, of Van Wert. Joseph told officers he was westbound on Third Street and was stopped at the four-way stop and proceeded into the intersection and was struck by the Raabe vehicle. No one was injured. The Raabe vehicle sustained functional damage and the Joseph vehicle sustained non-functional damage.

The Daily Herald (USPS 1525 8000) is published daily except Sundays, Tuesdays and Holidays. By carrier in Delphos and area towns, or by rural motor route where available $1.48 per week. By mail in Allen, Van Wert, or Putnam County, $97 per year. Outside these counties $110 per year. Entered in the post office in Delphos, Ohio 45833 as Periodicals, postage paid at Delphos, Ohio. No mail subscriptions will be accepted in towns or villages where The Daily Herald paper carriers or motor routes provide daily home delivery for $1.48 per week. 405 North Main St. TELEPHONE 695-0015 Office Hours 8 a.m.-5 p.m. Mon.-Fri. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to THE DAILY HERALD, 405 N. Main St. Delphos, Ohio 45833

ST. RITAS A girl was born Sept. 28 to Caitlin and Nick Jones of Delphos. A boy was born Sept. 28 to Jennifer and Aaron Trentman of Elida.

BIRTHS

High temperature Sunday in Delphos was 67 degrees, low was 45. High a year ago today was 52, low Was 40. Record high for today is 87, set in 1971. Record low is 29, set in 2003. WEATHER FORECAST Tri-county The Associated Press TONIGHT: Chance of showers in the evening, then showers likely overnight. Lows in the lower 50s. Northeast winds 5 to 10 mph. Chance of precipitation 70 percent. TUESDAY: Cloudy. Showers likely in the morning, then chance of showers and a slight chance of a thunderstorm in the afternoon. Highs in the upper 60s. Northeast winds 5 to 15 mph. Chance of precipitation 60 percent. TUESDAY NIGHT: Cloudy with a 50 percent chance of showers. Lows in the upper 50s. East winds 5 to 10 mph shifting to the south overnight. EXTENDED FORECAST WEDNESDAY: Cloudy with a 50 percent chance of showers. Highs in the upper 60s. Southwest winds 10 to 15 mph.

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pitched his last game at the age of 59, was the oldest player in the history of major league baseball. Edward Teller, the father of the hydrogen bomb, inspired the creation Dr. Strangelove. Todays questions: How were Presidents Theodore and Franklin Roosevelt related?` Tommy Milton was the first man to win what race twice? Answers in Wednesdays Herald. Todays words: Eroteme: the question mark Pelagic: pertaining to or living in the ocean

www.delphosherald.com

Monday, October 1, 2012

The Herald 3

Ohio gas prices holding steady

BRIEFS

Ohio church dedicates iconic Jesus statue

COLUMBUS (AP) Ohio motorists will see gas prices holding steady as they begin a new work week. The average price for a gallon of regular gas in the state was $3.72 in Mondays survey from auto club AAA, the Oil Price Information Service and Wright Express. Thats just a penny higher than a week ago. Prices at the pump have dropped in the past few weeks after several factors pushed them to near the $4 mark last month. A month ago, the average gas price in Ohio was $3.89. This time last year, the Ohio average was $3.22. The national average today was $3.78, down 3 cents from a week ago.

Enrollment in online schools passes 30,000


CLEVELAND (AP) Enrollment in online schools in Ohio has passed 30,000, more than 12 times the number in 2000 when the first virtual school opened in the state. Only Arizona had more students enrolled full time in online schools in 201011, according to an annual report by the Evergreen Education Group. Online students attend classes online and do lessons by computer, often at home, typing in tests and papers to be reviewed by a teacher elsewhere. Most Ohio students enrolled in virtual schools, about 90 percent, attend one of the seven statewide online schools, according to a story Sunday by The (Cleveland) Plain Dealer and the StateImpact Ohio collaboration among National Public Radio and Ohio public-radio stations WCPN, WKSU and WOSU. Although scattered around the state, the online students combined would make up the third-largest district in Ohio about the size of the Cincinnati schools. The online schools are charters, independently operated but publicly funded. Robert Mengerink, head of Cuyahoga Countys Educational Service Center, said online schools are convenient but, You cant sleep in the back of the room in an online course. Ohio has lifted a moratorium on creating new online schools, which had been imposed in 2005. In 2013, up to five new online schools can start in the state, though the Ohio Department of Education says none has yet announced plans. Gary Miron, co-author of national studies about online schools and their operators for the National Education Policy Center, which receives some funding from the National Education Association, said Ohio has fewer requirements for online schools than most other states. He cited items like financial reporting, student-to-teacher ratios, and how long students have to stay in a school or pass state tests in order for schools to receive state money. Ohio legislators have postponed establishing rules about how online schools should teach and be

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MONROE (AP) A southern Ohio church has drawn a standing-room crowd for the dedication of a giant likeness of Jesus Christ that replaced a similar iconic statue destroyed two years ago in a lightning fire. The Dayton Daily News reports that the Solid Rock Church in Monroe, north of Cincinnati, dedicated the 51-foot statue at a service Sunday night. Nicknamed Hug Me Jesus, the lighted statue depicts a full-bodied Jesus whos standing with open arms. It looms over the adjacent lanes of Interstate 75. The previous statue that was ruined by lightning in 2010 was known as Touchdown Jesus or Big Butter Jesus for its creamy color. It depicted a waist-up Jesus with arms uplifted. Sculptor Tom Tsuchiya received a standing ovation from the crowd Sunday night.

evaluated. Last years state budget set a deadline: If the legislature doesnt take action by January, standards set by the International Association for K-12 Online Learning will automatically take effect. Most of Ohios full-time online schools are operated by local school districts and educational service centers. Ohios online schools have become a big business. The state paid online charter schools $209 million in 2010-11 to educate students, or an average of $6,337 per student. Results are mixed at both for-profit and district-run schools. Online students have lower graduation rates than those at traditional schools. They attend college at a lower rate. At the same time, other measures have shown online students learning as much as, or more than, students in many districts. In 2010-11, all seven statewide online schools met value-added measures, criteria the state has used the last few years to determine if students make a years worth of academic progress in a years time.

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Toledo Zoo Aquarium getting makeover


TOLEDO (AP) The Toledo Zoo Aquarium will get a $25 million, nearly three-year makeover. The renovation shutdown began after Sundays final day open to the public. Its expected to reopen in April 2015. Fishes and invertebrate curator Jay Hemdal says the inside of the building, which opened in 1939, will undergo an extensive renovation. The interior size will stay the same but the water volume of exhibits will more than triple to 178,000 gallons from 46,000 gallons. The largest exhibit will expand to take up an entire rotunda. Hemdal tells The (Toledo) Blade the renovated aquarium will be more interactive and engaging. According to Hemdal, the aquarium will have several hands-on exhibits, and the large tank will include a microphoned diver who will give educational talks while feeding the fish. The brick and stone features of the last of the zoo buildings created by the Works Progress Administration wont be sacrificed in the remodel, said Jeff Sailer, the zoos executive director. The outside of the building will remain mostly untouched, Sailer said. About 80 percent of the money for the project is coming from the proceeds of the 2006 Lucas County tax levy. The remaining 20 percent is coming from private donations. It will be the first major renovation of the building in its 73-year history. Boilers dating from the 1950s were replaced in 1998 with a geothermal heating system, which will be incorporated into the renovation Preparation for the renovation goes back several years when the zoo stopped receiving new fish and started making plans on where to move the fish that would not be staying at the zoo during the move. About 25 percent will be moved and remain at a warehouse on the zoo grounds. The remaining 75 percent have already started off for about a dozen other accredited zoo aquariums.

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Select a news story or a comic strip and cut the panels or paragraphs apart. Help your child arrange the panels or paragraphs in logical order. Read a brief editorial or column together. Have the child underline facts with a blue pen and opinions with a red pen. Have your child choose a headline and turn it into a question. Have the child read the article to see if it answers the question.

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Wendys of Van Wert, Advanced Auto Parts, T&D Interiors, Beauty Unlimited, Delphos Recreation Center, Pats Donuts and Kreme, Golden Corral, Huggy Bear Campgrounds, Pitsenbarger Supply Inc., Smile with Style, Frills and Frogs Mothers Club of Fort Jennings, Black Swamp Farm Bureau Mustang Club, The Adult Sunday School Class at SpencerEndorsed ville Trinity United Methodist Church, Union Trades Lima Refinery, JJs Hair on the Square, Melissa Hall-Partylite, Facebook Shoe Sensation, Auto Zone, Joe and Laura Warnement, www.facebook.com Subway - Delphos, Sandy Rostorfer, Kathy and Doug /peteschlegel Oakman, Pizza Hut of Delphos, Perry and ShirPaid for by committee to elect pete schlegel state representative Rodney (Rod) Mobley, ley Wiltsie, Tractor Supply, Jane Ricker, Raabe treasurer, 13122 Rd. 87, Paulding, Ohio 45879 Ford Lincoln, Touch of Nature, Chik N House, Family Video, Brentilys Steakhouse. MaryAnn Warnement, A&W, Curves. Few things are as stressful as worrying about work. Because

was a huge success! Matt and I would like to start off by saying thank you to Uncle Dan Warnement, owner of The Creamery. Without his generosity, the event would not have been possible. Also, a huge thank you to Mike and Mary Hefner of Grove Dairy for donating all the ice cream and TPC and SWD for donating supplies. We received several items donated by local businesses, family and friends for our silent auction and raffle. Also, thank you to all that gave cash donations.

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A special thank you to our parents, Don and Pat and George Knebel and Nancy Carder, Tom and Laand Delmar and Mary Merricle for all their hard work while planning the Edward remain constant: financial indepenFor many of us, our goals in lifeJones can help. Well start by getting to know your benefit. The event would not have been such a goals. Then well balance between saving dence and providing for family. Striking a sort through your current situation and work success with you face to faceand develop a strategy that can help you without the help of Brent and Kathy to allocating for goals, such as education and retirement, Newland, Tom Warnement, Greg Warnekeep your challenging. But you can money for daily expenses can beretirement on track. do it. ment, Abby Carder, Deb and Eric Kerns, Learn how you can redefine your savings approach Kim and To make sense of your retirement savings alternatives, Guy Miller, Kayla and Jeff Ricker, toward education andor visit today. or visit today. retirement. Call Nathan and Rachel Wiechart, Jeff Warnement, Nikcall ki Cross, Stephanie Stemen, Dale Carder, Breanne Andy North North Carder, Ron and Barb Owens, Elaine, John and KaAndy Financial Advisor Advisor Financial tie Luersman, Shirley Wiltsie, Kara Eickholt, Angie 1122 Elida Avenue Hoehn, Dan Warnement II, Sandy Rostorfer, Stretch 1122 Elida Avenue Delphos, OH 45833 Smith, Julie Smith, Greg Wittler and everyone else Delphos, OH 45833 419-695-0660 419-695-0660 that volunteered their time to help! A huge thank you to Bob Grothouse for his support. He has given us so much hope for Bradens future! During this difficult time in our lives, we are so www.edwardjones.com Member SIPC grateful for the community pulling together for us! www.edwardjones.com Member SIPC Thank you all from the bottom of our hearts! Love, The Knebel family Matt, Michelle, Carder and Braden
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4 The Herald

POLITICS

Monday, October 1, 2012

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Talent alone wont make you a success. Neither will being in the right place at the right time, unless you are ready. The most important question is: Are your ready? Johnny Carson (1925-2005)

Another big Supreme Court term starts today


By MARK SHERMAN The Associated Press WASHINGTON The Supreme Court is starting a new term that is shaping up to be as important as the last one, with the prospect of major rulings about affirmative action, gay marriage and voting rights. Three months after the court upheld President Barack Obamas health care overhaul, the same lineup of justices returns to the bench this morning. Chief Justice John Roberts joined the courts liberals in sustaining the health care law, drawing liberals plaudits and conservatives anger. This terms big cases seem likely to have Roberts in his more accustomed role of voting with his fellow conservatives and leave Justice Anthony Kennedy with his typically decisive vote in cases that otherwise split the courts liberals and conservatives. But Roberts will be watched closely for additional signs that he is becoming less ideologically predictable. A fight over the University of Texas affirmative action program is the first blockbuster case on the courts calendar, with argument scheduled for Oct. 10. Texas By JULIE PACE The Associated Press uses multiple factors, including community service, work experience, extracurricular activities, awards and race, to help fill the last 20 to 25 percent of the spots in its freshman classes. The outcome could further limit or even end the use of racial preferences in college admissions. The court also is expected to confront gay marriage in some form. Several cases seek to guarantee federal benefits for legally married same-sex couples. A provision of the 1996 Defense of Marriage Act deprives samesex couples of a range of federal benefits available to heterosexual couples. Several federal courts have agreed that the provision of the law is unconstitutional, a situation that practically ensures that the high court will step in. A separate appeal asks the justices to sustain Californias Proposition 8, the amendment to the state constitution that outlawed gay marriage in the nations largest state. Federal courts in California have struck down the amendment. The justices may not even consider whether to hear the gay marriage issue until November. Another hot topic with

One Year Ago Vancrest Assisted Living residents traveled to Cincinnati on Sept. 19 for a Reds game against Houston. The game started at 7:10 p.m. and it was filled up with so much excitement WASHINGTON (AP) that the residents were still awake when they arrived back at Citing historically Vancrest at 1:30 a.m. Even though the Reds lost, everyone had low mortgages, President a great time eating hotdogs and watching the game. Barack Obama is pressing Republicans to back hous25 Years Ago 1987 Allen Soil and Water Conservation District presented a ing policies the White House conservation program for Franklin School and Gomer School says would help struggling fifth graders at the nature trail area north of Stadium Park. Gene homeowners refinance their Barickman, biologist with the Soil Conservation Service in Van debts and prevent forecloWert County, talked about fish, owls, hawks, pheasants and fox sures. Obama is blaming conwith Barb Gearys fifth graders at Franklin School. Delphos Chapter 26, Order of Eastern Star will meet gressional Republicans for Thursday night in Masonic Temple for election of officers for not passing legislation he the coming year. Members of the refreshment will be Fern proposed in February that Rinehart and Estella McDonald, assisted by Veda Pollock, would lower lending rates for millions of borrowers who Dean Stemen, Richard Rinehart and Ronald Owens. Ottoville golf team closed its regular season with a 20-4 have not been able to get record after beating Ohio City 173-192 at The Woods, Van out from under burdensome Wert. Greg Kortokrax of Ottoville took medalist honors with mortgages. Republicans have a 39. Other Ottoville golfers were Jason Ricker - 40, Paul objected, citing among other things the estimated $5 bilKroeger - 47 and Brian Altenburger - 47. lion to $10 billion cost of the proposal. 50 Years Ago 1962 Here we are - seven The Delphos Junior Chamber of Commerce received a state outstanding project award for projects at the Ohio Jaycee months later - still waiting on All-State meeting in Columbus Sept. 29-30. The winning Congress to act, Obama said project for the Delphos group was the July 4th Community Day Saturday in his weekly radio at municipal park. The club placed second in the category. Jim and Internet address. Congress has recessed and Mesker was general chairman of the local project. Members of Delphos Junior Court Catholic Daughters is not scheduled to return of America became bird watchers Saturday afternoon as they until after the November toured Cascade Park near Cloverdale on a bird identification elections. Instead of worrying contest. St. Theresa troop was most successful. Members of the troop are Jennifer Shirack, Roselyn Morris, Beverly Best, about you, theyd already Martha Scherger, Pam Neumeier, Jean Helmkamp, Janet gone home to worry about their campaigns, the presiBrandehoff, Connie Kimmet and Kathy Lindeman. The Womens Fellowship of St. Johns Lutheran Church dent said. Obamas push comes at Fort Jennings has made plans for the annual rummage sale on Oct. 6 at Harters Garage in Delphos. The sale will begin in as home prices have been the morning and continue until all articles are sold. Mrs. Doyle rising across the United Leatherman, president of the group and a committee appointed States. National home prices increased 1.2 percent in July, by her will be in charge. compared with the same 75 Years Ago 1937 month last year, according Returning from a trip through the Studebaker factory and to the Standard & Poors/ a sales conference with the Studebaker executives, three men Case Shiller index released from Gerdeman-Swick Motor Sales, local Studebaker dealer, Tuesday. arrived in Delphos driving new 1938 cars, which they will In the Republican weekly use to demonstrate the new line to the public. The cars will be address, Arizona congressiodisplayed at the showrooms of Gerdeman-Swick Motor Sales nal candidate Vernon Parker located at 112-114 N. Main St. said the U.S. corporate tax One of a series of traffic and caution lights to be installed rate is pushing jobs overin Delphos has been placed in operation at the corner of Second seas. He said he agrees with and Pierce streets for the protection of children who attend St. GOP presidential candidate Johns School. Another traffic light will be placed at the corner Mitt Romney and his running of Main and First streets in the near future. A caution light mate, Paul Ryan, that we will be placed in operation at the corner of Cleveland and Clay need to stop all the looming streets. tax hikes and develop a pro Mrs. W. B. Snow, East Fourth Street, entertained the growth tax code that brings members of the Afternoon Bridge Club at her home Wednesday jobs home and keeps jobs afternoon. Her guests were Mrs. A. B. King, Mrs. J. F. Ockuly, here. Margaret Raabe of Fort Jennings, Mrs. Richard Ricker, Mrs. R. He also called for the N. Stippich and Mrs. Otto G. Weger. repeal of Obamas health care law.

IT WAS NEWS THEN

Obama calls on Congress OK refinance plan

Obama, Romney hunker down for debate prep


HENDERSON, Nev. Nearing their first face-off, President Barack Obama and Republican Mitt Romney are hunkering down for intense preparations ahead of Wednesdays presidential debate, where the GOP nominee hopes to change the trajectory of the White House race. Obama was huddling Monday with top advisers at a desert resort in Nevada. Romney had practice planned in Massachusetts, where he also spent most of the weekend working with his debate team. The Republican challenger was then headed to Denver, the site of the first debate, later Monday for a rally and more preparation for the high-stakes event. Five weeks from Election Day, polls show Romney trailing Obama in many of the nine states that will determine the outcome of the White House race. The three October debates give Romney one of his best opportunities to stem Obamas momentum and convince the public to back his vision for the nations future. What Im most concerned about is having a serious discussion about what we need to do to keep the country growing and restore security to hardworking Americans, Obama said during a rally in Las Vegas Sunday night. That is what people are going to be listening for. Thats the debate you deserve. As the candidates prepped for a debate focused on domestic issues, Republicans were keeping up the pressure on Obama on international issues, namely his administrations handling of the attack on a U.S. consulate in Libya that led to the death of the American ambassador and three others. Romney, in an opinion piece in the Wall Street Journal, repeated his criticism of Obama for having called the attack and other unrest in the Middle East bumps in the road. Our country seems to be at the mercy of events rather than shaping them, Romney wrote. Were not moving them in a direction that protects our people or our allies. Romney planned to deliver a major foreign policy speech in the coming weeks. Both candidates were spending the days leading

appeals pending before the high court, and more soon to follow, is the future of a cornerstone law of the civil rights movement. In 2006, Congress overwhelmingly approved, and President George W. Bush signed, legislation extending for 25 more years a critical piece of the Voting Rights Act. It requires states and local governments with a history of racial and ethnic discrimination, mainly in the South, to get advance approval either from the Justice Department or the federal court in Washington before making any changes that affect elections. The court spoke skeptically about the provision in a 2009 decision, but left it mostly unchanged. Now, however, cases from Alabama, North Carolina, South Carolina and Texas could prompt the court to deal head on with the issue of advance approval. The South Carolina and Texas cases involve voter identification laws; a similar Indiana law was previously upheld by the court. It is unclear when the justices will decide whether to hear arguments in those cases. Arguments themselves would not take place until next year.

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LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

Moderately confused

WASHINGTON Gloria Steinem is unmistakable. Across the room surrounded by a clutch of admirers, she is utterly ageless sleek and svelte in black form-fitting pants and top, a gold braided belt with sparkly fleurettes draped along her slender hips. At 78, she looks, well, fabulous. I suppose its not very feminist of us to comment on how great she looks, says the woman next to me, apparently feeling compelled to inject the appropriate corrective. But at a certain age, isnt a woman happy to accept a compliment? And havent we come a long way, baby? Judging by the current debate in some Republican circles, one has occasion to pause and wonder. The purpose of the Thursday evening gathering in a private home was to celebrate Makers: The Women Who Make America, a multiplatform video production from PBS, AOL and Makers. com, which launched in February 2012. The documentary chronicles the history of the womens movement and features women who have, indeed, made things happen so that subsequent generations could do what women were not allowed to do not so long ago to become doctors, lawyers, legislators, secretaries of state and, perhaps, even president.

Among those assembled were seven of the Makers who appear in the film, including, in addition to Steinem, Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, actress Marlo That Girl Thomas, Rebecca Adamson (founder of First Peoples Worldwide), Karen Nussbaum (executive director of Working America and founder of 9to5), Malika Saada Saar (executive director, Human Rights Project for Girls) and Muriel Siebert (the first woman to earn a seat on the New York Stock Exchange and namesake of the investment firm Siebert & Co.). Thats quite a lot of feminine and feminist power in one room. Quoting John F. Kennedy, Steinem said there hasnt been so much talent in one place since Thomas Jefferson was alone in a room. Except now, she cracked, we know Sally Hemings was probably doing the writing. The centerpiece of the evening was a preview of excerpts from the documentary, which is scheduled for release in February 2013, the 50th anniversary of Betty Friedans The Feminine Mystique. In one interview, Ginsburg recalls being one of nine women in a class of 500 men at Harvard Law School. Ginsburg remembered being herded into a room with the other women where a professor asked why they were

G-L-O-R-I-A

up to the debate in battleground states, with Romney in Colorado and Obama in Nevada. Each had just one official event planned during his stay, but they hoped their mere presence in the states would drive local media coverage. Obama left the lakeside resort where he is prepping for the debate briefly Sunday evening for a rally at a Las Vegas high school. The 11,000-person event was focused in part on rallying Hispanics, a key source of support for the president in Nevada, and featured a performance by the popular Mexican rock band Mana. Keeping with his campaigns efforts to lower expectations, Obama told the crowd that while he was just OK at debating, his opponent was a good debater. Romneys team has been playing the expectations game as well, though his allies were sometimes pushing the stakes in opposite directions. GOP running mate Paul Ryan on Sunday shot down the notion that Romney needed to have a breakthrough performance Wednesday night, saying he didnt think one event would make or break the campaign.

KATHLEEN PARKER

Point of View
taking up seats that could be filled with men. She later transferred to Columbia University, where she finished first in her class. Other women tell similar, barrier-breaking tales. All remind us that women really have come a long way, often, one hastens to mention, with the help of enlightened men. Ginsburg paid homage to her husband, who gave up his own successful law practice to follow her to Washington so that she could accept her place on the Supreme Court. He never felt slighted, she said, noting that he was also an excellent cook. The film, which deserves to be a family event and is certain to spark animated conversations, provides recognition along with reminders that womens rights didnt just happen. They were earned by generations of women who refused to accept that they were limited by their sex. Being demure wasnt part of the strategy. Sometimes, one of the interviewees said, you have to kick down the door. The value of the film

cant be overstated. We have lived in a feminist world for decades, yet younger generations have no sense of the struggle. And though we are correctly horrified at the disenfranchisement of women in other parts of the world, it is useful to recall that American womens freedoms are relatively fresh. Steinem, her fire somewhat tempered by time and grace, noted that loss of memory is the source of oppression. For centuries, womens stories werent told. Women had no place at the campfire, as she put it. Had there been a Makers initiative earlier in our history, said Steinem, we might have known that Mozart had a sister, whom Mozart called the talented one. We might have known that before there was Martin Luther King, there was Ella Baker, the African-American civil and human rights activist from the 1930s. That the guide and translator for Lewis and Clark was a woman who made the same trip the men did while pregnant, nursing and carrying a toddler. The story of womens struggle for equality belongs to no single feminist, Steinem insists, nor to any one organization but to the collective efforts of all who care about human rights. Heres to memory. Kathleen Parkers email address is kathleenparker@ washpost.com.

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Monday, October 1, 2012

The Herald 5

LANDMARK

COMMUNITY

Elida High School

CALENDAR OF
TODAY 7 p.m. Delphos City Council meets at the Delphos Municipal Building, 608 N. Canal St. Delphos Parks and Recreation board meets at the recreation building at Stadium Park. Washington Township trustees meet at the township house. 7:30 p.m. Spencerville village council meets at the mayors office. Delphos Eagles Auxiliary meets at the Eagles Lodge, 1600 Fifth St. 8 p.m. The Veterans of Foreign Wars meet at the hall. TUESDAY 11:30 a.m. Mealsite at Delphos Senior Citizen Center, 301 Suthoff Street. 7 p.m. Delphos Coon and Sportsmans Club meets. Al-Anon Meeting for Friends and Families of Alcoholics at St. Ritas Medical Center, 730 West Market Street, Behavioral Services Conference Room 5-G, 5th Floor 7:30 p.m. Alcoholics Anonymous, First Presbyterian Church, 310 W. Second St.

EVENTS

Garden club installs officers

Photo submitted

The Green Thumb Garden Club installed officers at its September meeting. Carol Grothouse, the outgoing president, installed Judy Jester as the new president and Karen Hartman as the new secretary/treasurer for the upcoming year. Laura Roach, club vice president, received the Flower Merit Award for participation in club activities. The club meets monthly at the Delphos Public Library. Anyone interested in joining should contact any current member for information.

Happy Birthday
OCT. 2 Austin Clarkson Kory Mullenhour Lisa Moreo OCT. 3 Luke Bonifas Jeff Mueller Tyler Schroeder Carolyn Stocklin

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6 The Herald

Monday, October 1, 2012

LadyCats 2nd at own cross country invitational


By CHARLIE WARNIMONT DHI Correspondent sports@putnamsentinel.com KALIDA Kalidas girls cross country had a strong showing at the Wildcats Invitational at the Kalida Fish and Game Club Saturday. The Lady Wildcats had three of the top five finishers as they ran to a second-place finish overall in the girls varsity race. They had 79 points as Ottawa-Glandorf won the team title with 68 points. Elida finished seventh in the nine full-team field with 161 points. In the boys division, Kalida finished seventh with 187 points and Elida was 10th with 215 points. St. Marys won the boys team title with 51 points and O-G was second with 70 points. Running on their home course on a cool but sunny morning, the Kalida girls made a run for the team title. Senior Jessica Doepker won the race in a time of 20:18. Doepker went to the front of the field early and pulled away from the rest of the runners as she won by 20 seconds over sophomore teammate Jackie Gardner as she finished in 20:38. Freshman Katelyn Siebeneck finished fifth in 21:07. Katie Schmitz finished 33rd in 23:17 and Becca Brinkman finished 45th in 24:09 for the Wildcats. I was real proud of the girls today, they ran an excellent race for this point in the season, Kalida coach Rob Schnippel said. We had three finishers in the top five and our fourth and fifth runners came in very respectable. Jessica is getting back to being healthy and she is running very well. Jackie did a great job today and Katelyn is right up there and running very well. Tori Bowen led the Elida girls with an eighth-place finish in 21:28 and Aly Turrentine was 17th in 22:07. Kaiti Hinegardner was 44th in 24:05, Rachel Kerber was 58th in 26:13 and Hannah Malone was 59th in 26:13. Megan Joseph finished 10th for St. Johns who did not have enough harriers in either the girls or boys race for a team score in 21:30. Anna Mueller finished 31st in 22:44 and Teresa Pohlman was 55th in 25:13. Grant Zeller led the Kalida boys with a 10th-place finish in 18:08. Eric Warnecke finished 33rd in 19:23 and Jacob Dunn was 43rd in 20:10. The boys ran well, Schnippel said. They continue to get better each team and that is what we are looking for. Curtis Pohlman led the Blue Jays with an eighth-place fin-

Lady Green outlasts Jays in volleyball marathon


We also played well overall. Our youngsters are growing each game and match. A kill by Lady Green OTTOVILLE Ottoville won the first two games of junior Tonya Kaufman (57its volleyball matchup with of-57 setting, 10 assists) St. Johns Saturday morn- started off game 5. It was a back-and-forth game ing/afternoon at L.W. until a 5-0 spurt Heckman Gymnasium. with senior Tammy The Lady Blue Jays Wannemacher (29rallied to win the next of-31 serving, 3 aces) two games and force a serving for four of fifth game. them led by a kill The Lady Green and stuff by junior regained the momenNikki Burgei and tum and finished off a kills by Kaufman 5-set marathon to grab and Annie Lindeman a 25-19, 25-20, 23-25, Vogt (25-of-32 hitting, 15-25, 15-12 win. Both St. Johns coach 8 kills; 12 digs) to take the Kellie Sterling and Ottoville hosts (6-10) from down 7-6 counterpart Kirt Martz were to up 11-7. The visitors (5-12) generally pleased with their retaliated on three hitting errors by the Green and an teams respective efforts. We did get off to a slow ace from Jays junior Kaylie start and fell behind 2-0. Both Youngpeter (4 aces) to notch teams were very scrappy an 11-all tie. A combo stuff today; I played here and I by Lindeman and Burgei and know they teach their girls to a hitting error left a 12-12 tie. not let anything hit the floor A spike off the Blue Jay block if at all possible, Sterling by Kaufman put the serve in observed. We battled back the hands of Ottoville. Senior in the third game and stayed Abby Siefker put one down intense the entire time. We from the middle position and capitalized on their mistakes Wannemacher pushed one in the third and fourth games deep into the left corner that and also had our share of good the back row could not dig up successfully to finish the hits. I thought we had the marathon. The first game was backmomentum in the first two games but St. Johns then and-forth for most of the way, really played well the third with Siefker and company and fourth games. They battling the likes of St. Johns played phenomenal defense senior Heather Vogt (12 and we couldnt get anything blocks, 5 kills) and her mates. down, Martz explained. It After a stuff by St. Johns wasnt that we didnt play junior Alicia Buettner (11 well; it was to the credit of kills, 8 blocks) tied the opener how well St. Johns played. at 18, a hitting error gave the
jmetcalfe@delphosherald.com

SPORTS

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By JIM METCALFE

The Associated Press NL PITTSBURGH The Pirates ensured theyd finish with a record 20th straight losing season Sunday when they blew a ninth-inning lead in a 4-3 defeat to the Reds. Pinch-hitter Xavier Paul led off the ninth with a home run off Joel Hanrahan (5-2) and Zack Cozart had a go-head double for Cincinnati, who clinched home-field advantage in the NL division series. The Pirates extended their major North American professional sports record. Pittsburgh was 16 games over .500 on Aug. 6 but has lost 18-of-23 to fall to 77-82. Sean Marshall (5-5) got two outs for the win in relief of 19-game winner Johnny Cueto and Aroldis Chapman had to work hard in the ninth inning for his 37th save. CARDINALS 10, NATIONALS 4 ST. LOUIS Carlos Beltran homered from both sides of the plate for the ninth time in his career and drove in five runs as the St. Louis Cardinals closed in on the NLs second wild-card berth by beating the Washington Nationals 10-4 Sunday. Lance Lynn (18-7) allowed four runs and six hits in 5 1/3 innings. Beltran hit a pair of 2-run homers, connecting right-handed off Ross Detwiler (10-8) in the second and left-handed against Chien-Ming Wang in the fourth. BRAVES 6, METS 2 ATLANTA The Atlanta Braves won for a major-league record 23rd straight time in games started by Kris Medlen, beating the Mets in the regular-season home finale for Chipper Jones. Medlen (10-1) gave up one unearned run and three hits in six innings. According to STATS LLC research going back to 1921, only two other teams won 22 straight starts by a pitcher: the New York Giants with Carl Hubbell (1936-37) and the Yankees with Whitey Ford (1950-53). David Ross hit a 3-run homer in the second off Jenrry Mejia (1-3). DODGERS 7, ROCKIES 1 LOS ANGELES Josh Beckett earned his first victory in his last five starts and the Los Angeles Dodgers

MLB CAPSULES

St. Johns senior Teresa Pohlman runs through the nature trail at the Kalida Cross Country Invitational Saturday, finishing the 5K course with a time of 25:13 for a new personal record. Also running in the girls race was Megan Joseph 21:30 for a 10th-place finish out of 80 runners and Anna Mueller 22:44. Curtis Pohlman led the boys with an 8th-place finish out of 90 runners with a new PR time of 18:05, Aaron Hellman 20:14 and Anthony Hale 21:19. ish in 18:05. Aaron Hellman finished 44th in 20:14 and Anthony Hale 66th (18:05). We ran really well today with two personal records and two others running their season-best times, St. Johns coach Steve Hellman said. We are in a stretch of three meets in six days, so this was a good start. Curtis keeps getting closer to his goal of getting under 18 minutes. Megan is starting to get back in shape after some time off due to injuries and had a very good race today. Gaerid Littler led Elida with a 29th-place finish in 19:12. Josh Bull finished 53rd in 20:39 and Eric Anthony finished 45th in 20:44. Ottawa-Glandorfs Matias Trampe-Kindt won the boys race in a time of 16:25. Kalida runs in the Old Shoe Invitational at Ottawa at 4 p.m. Tuesday, while St. Johns and Elida are in the Allen County Invitational 4:30 p.m.

Photo submitted

backed him with three homers, beating Colorado for their fifth straight win to stay in contention for an NL wild-card spot. Matt Kemp, Luis Cruz and A.J. Ellis each hit 2-run homers. Beckett (2-3) allowed one run and six hits in six innings, struck out five and walked three. Jorge De La Rosa (0-2) gave up four runs and five hits in four innings. PHILLIES 4, MARLINS 1 MIAMI Cole Hamels struck out eight and allowed one run over seven innings to finish his season with a flourish as the Phillies beat the Marlins. Hamels (17-6) allowed five hits and walked only one. Marlins starter Nathan Eovaldi (4-13) gave up three runs all in the first and struck out seven in six innings. ASTROS 7, BREWERS 0 MILWAUKEE Jordan Lyles pitched his first major-league shutout and hit his first home run as Houston eliminated the Brewers from wildcard playoff contention. The 21-year-old Lyles (5-12) threw a 4-hitter. Mike Fiers (9-10) struck out 10 in six innings but also gave up Houstons four home runs. GIANTS 7, PADRES 5 SAN DIEGO (AP) Pinch-hitter Xavier Nady homered off Huston Street to tie the game with one out in the ninth and Hunter Spence hit a go-ahead, 2-run shot as the Giants rallied to beat San Diego. Tim Lincecum gave up a seasonhigh three homers. Shane Loux (1-0) pitched one inning for the win. With the Giants trailing 5-4, Nady drove a 1-0 pitch from Street (2-1) into the sandy play area beyond the fence in right-center. CUBS 7, DIAMONDBACKS 2 PHOENIX Anthony Rizzo had three hits, David DeJesus homered and the Chicago Cubs ended a 7-game losing streak, beating the Diamondbacks. Chris Rusin (2-3) allowed one earned run and three hits in five innings. Brian LaHairs 2-run single capped a 4-run sixth inning against Bryan Shaw (1-6) and two other Arizona relievers.

See MLB, page 8

Lady Musketeers shut out Dawgs FORT JENNINGS Fort Jennings controlled its non-league girls soccer match with Elida Saturday as the Musketeers collected a 4-0 win at home. Seniors Kristen Maag, Elaina Maag and Macy Schroeder and junior Marissa Mesker all had a goal for the Musketeers. Elaina Maag and Kristen Maag both had an assist. Fort Jennings outshot the Bulldogs 13-8 and won the corner kicks 4-1 as senior Gabbie German had eight saves and senior Rachel Foust had six saves for the Bulldogs. We controlled the game from the start; we went to every 50/50 ball and won almost every challenge. Our first goal was scored with 34 minutes on the clock when Elaina chipped it over the keeper to Marissa, who was sprinting past the defense and the keeper; Marissa walked the ball into the goal, Musketeer mentor Rodney Wagner explained. Our second goal came with 32:41 left in the first half; Kristen took a corner kick and Macy charged into the box and volleyed the ball from about the 12-yard line. The ball was moved back and forth to both ends of the field and neither team got a good look the rest of the half. In the second half, the scoring started at 25:43 when we took about three shots inside the 6-yard mark and the ball was mishandled; Elaina took a shot from less then six yards out and slid the ball past the keeper. The final score came at 1:43 when Kristen took the ball down to the touch line and fired a shot that slid past Foust for the last goal. The host won the junior varsity match 3-0. Fort Jennings (8-1-3) visits Allen East 5 p.m. Tuesday, Elida (5-7-1) is at Celina 7 p.m. ----Roughriders ride past Musketeers ST. MARYS Saturday evenings boys soccer bout between Fort Jennings and St. Marys Memorial was decided early as the host Roughrider grabbed a 4-0 non=league victory at home. Eight minutes into the match, Tyler Kovar crashed through the 6-yard box, winning the cross driven by Zach Wilker for Memorials first goal. Six minutes later, Brenan Brown collected two goals in two minutes for the Roughriders: off a cross and another corner kick.

Ottoville boys individuals (top 20): 1. Luke Schimmoeller 18:57.28; ... 8. Mark Waldick 20:16.56; ... 11. Ryan Kimmet 20:27.81. Ottoville girls finishers (top 20): 8. Elizabeth Luersman 24:51.72; ... 19. Kara Hoersten 28:01.88.

With nine minutes left in the first half, St. Marys Rodriguez tapped in a nonclear by the Musketeer defense to the wide-open far post on the goal line for a 4-0 lead. The second half was much different. The Musketeers dug down deep and found the will to win the ball. That will battled incessantly throughout the half, resulting in a clean sheet for both teams. The Musketeers even created a few chances to score but unfortunately could not. Ft. Jennings (6-7-1) hosts Lima Temple Christian 5 p.m. Thursday. St. Marys is 9-0-3. ----Ottoville 2nd at Bath invite BATH TOWNSHIP Luke Schimmoeller won the boys race at the Bath Invitational Saturday morning but his Ottoville team came in second to WaynesfieldGoshen 39-62. North Baltimore was third (79), the host Wildcats fourth (79.5) and Kenton fifth (84). Lima Senior and Upper Scioto Valley did not have team scores. On the girls side, only two teams had enough runners for a score: North Baltimore and Waynesfield-Goshen tied at 28. Elizabeth Luersman was the Lady Greens highest finisher at eighth. Ottoville is in the Old Shoe Invitational 4 p.m. Tuesday at Ottawa.

SATURDAY ROUNDUP

Green and Gold the serve. two Martz timeouts couldnt An ace by Wannemacher con- stop the momentum as two solidated the lead and a hit- aces by Youngpeter, a stuff ting miscue on game point put and a bomb by Buettner, a kill by Hulihan and a dig winOttoville up 1-0. The second game was very ner by senior Madison Zuber much like the first, with only (plus four Ottoville errors) put the visitors up 19-11. one major run a 6-0 It was inevitable from spurt by the hosts on then on and the Jays four hitting miscues forced a fifth game as by the Jays, an ace by an Ottoville mis-hit Wannemacher and a on game point forced kill by Lindeman a fifth and deciding that put the Green game. up 19-14. That was The fifth game just enough as the Blue came down to a couple and Gold could never recover. A missed Wannemacher of mistakes, Sterling added. When you spike by the visitors put Ottoville in control at 2-0. only go to 15, mistakes are The Jays got off quickly even more crucial and hardin the third game 4-0 on er to overcome. We didnt two kills from senior Lauren get tired at all; our girls are Utrup, an ace by senior Bailie very well conditioned, so that Hulihan and a stuff by Vogt wasnt an issue. Overall, we but the hosts responded played well; we just made one with a 7-0 span, capped by too many hitting mistakes in a tip from Kaufman, to go the end. We didnt quit when up 8-5. From then on, it was we easily could have in the a battle for supremacy. The third; we battled to the end. St. Johns senior libelead went back and forth until a hit off the Ottoville front ro Katrina Etzkorn led the line by Buettner tied it at 23. defense with 32 digs. That fifth game, we just Consecutive aces by senior Christie Carder (20 assists, split it up in four parts, Martz 3 aces) kept the Jays hopes added. We told the girls we alive and resulted in a fourth wanted to beat them to five points, then eight, then 12 and game. The fourth installment 15. When we got off to the started off very much likes first point, it really helped us its predecessors, with the focus and relax some. Overall, teams countering point for we had a very good match. Jays junior varsity grabbed point. The Jays built a 9-6 edge before the hosts pieced a 25-16, 25-21 victory. Both teams return to action together a 5-0 span all on either an ace, kills or stuffs today, both with JV starts at to lead 11-9 before the 5:30 p.m.: St. Johns hosting Jays had the biggest run of the Columbus Grove and Ottoville entire match 10-0. Even visiting Ayersville.

----Kalida 3rd at VW invite By Nick Johnson DHI Correspondent sports@timesbulletin.com VAN WERT - Eight area teams came to Van Wert High School on Saturday afternoon for the annual Van Wert Volleyball Invitational. Van Wert Cougars finished fourth in the invitational after winning their first match and losing the next two matches. Van Werts first match came against the Elida Bulldogs in the Van Wert Middle School gym. The Cougars beat the Bulldogs in two sets 25-23, 25-23. The first set featured ties at 6, 14, 18, 20 and 23. Elida was led by solid play Torie McAdams (7 kills) and Bethany Koch, and Van Wert was led by Sydney Collins and Taylor Doidge. With the game tied at 23, Van Wert got a kill from Collins which led the Cougars to the first-set victory.

In the second set, Van Wert jumped out to a high lead with the play from Alexa Dunlap, Claire Gamble and Melissa Bono before Elida fought back to a tie at 18 behind good play from Summer Grogg and Kali Cahill. Van Wert used a timeout to kill the momentum and it worked; a Dunlap kill gave the Lady Cougars the game and the match. Erika Kiel led the Lady Bulldogs with 26 digs and two aces and Katie Hawk had 18 assists. The Cougars took on the Versailles Tigers in their second match, which took place in the high school gym and lost 25-18, 25-13. The first set was a battle, which saw ties at 1, 6, 8, 10, 12, 13 and 14. The Tigers got good play from Lauren Bruns and Taylor Winner, where Van Wert got good play from Collins and Bono. After the tie at 14-14, Versailles went on an 11-4 run to finish off the first set behind Lauren Monnin. The second set was more of the same for Versailles as Van Wert had trouble keeping up with the top-ranked team in the invitational. After a Cougar timeout with the score 8-4, Tigers, Versailles went on a 17-9 run to put the Cougars away. The Cougars got strong play from Doidge and Ashlee Dowdy but couldnt prevent the Tigers from winning the match. With a 1-1 record in the invitational, the Cougars took on the Kalida Wildcats, the second seed, in the third-place game. Kalida started the first set with an 11-4 run led by Amy Smith, Kayla Siefker and Bailey Dangler, which forced a Van Wert timeout. After that, Van Wert played a more balanced game as they matched the LadyCats. In the second part of the set, Van Wert got strong play from Riley Jones, Dowdy and Collins but Kalida had too big of a lead for the Cougars to overcome. The second set started out well for the Cougars as Ashlee Dowdy had multiple kills to lead Van Wert to a 7-3 led. Kalida fought back to bring the game to a 13-11, Cougars, led with great play from Siefker and Carrie Gerding. Van Wert got kills from Jones and Ashlee Dowdy to jump out to a bigger lead but the Wildcats fought back with kills from Siefker and Dangler to bring the score to 17-17. The two teams fought to ties at 18, 19 and 22. After the tie at 22, the Wildcats scored three unanswered points to win the set and the match. In its second match, Elida lost 17-25, 25-20, 26-24 to St.

Marys Memorial. Leading the effort were Torie McAdams (11 kills, 3 blocks), Kiel (16 digs, 3 aces), Hawk (30 assists) and Aubrey Williams (10 kills). In the Lady Dawgs final match of the day, they moved to 9-9 with a 22-25, 26-24, 25-13 loss to Shawnee. Tops for the match were Hawk (18 assists, 4 aces), Kiel (14 digs) and Kali Cahill (6 kills). Elida hosts OttawaGlandorf 6 p.m. Tuesday. ---Elida boys double-up on Spartans ELIDA Elidas boys soccer unit handed Lima Senior 4-2 in non-league play Saturday afternoon at the Elida Soccer Complex. Elida hosts Bath 7 p.m. today. ----LadyCats whitewash Pirates KALIDA Kalidas girls soccer team remained undefeated with a 5-0 non-league win over Bluffton Saturday. Summer Holtkamp and Jackie Gardner both had two goals for the Wildcats (100-1). Joni Kaufman added a goal and Justine Verhoff had an assist. Kalida outshot the Pirates (3-8-0) 24-1 for the match. Wildcat goalie Sarah Verhoff had a save and Abbey Heslep had 17 saves. Kalida welcomes in Ottoville 5 p.m. today. ---Kalida, Defiance tie KALIDA Kalida and Defiance battled to a 1-1 tie in boys soccer action Saturday night at Kalida Soccer Stadium. Grant Unverferth netted the Wildcats (9-1-3) only goal, while the Bulldogs (5-7-2) had their only tally from Jordan Tobias. Kalida outshot their guests 12-8; Brent Hovest had seven saves for the home team and Zach Kesler 10 for the guests. Kalida hosts Cory-Rawson 5 p.m. Tuesday. ---Grove routs Continental in PCL net play COLUMBUS GROVE It was deja vu all over again Saturday morning at Columbus Grove as the host Bulldogs swept Continental 25-8, 25-8, 25-8 in Putnam County League volleyball. Julia Wynn led the way (10 kills, 3 blocks), along with Rachel Schumacher (26 assists), Kelli Vorst (15 digs) and Emily Tabler and Briana Glass (3 aces). The Bulldogs visit St. Johns 5:30 p.m. tonight.

www.delphosherald.com

Monday, October 1, 2012

The Herald 7

Kalida Wildcat Invitational At Kalida Fish and Game Club Boys Team Scores: St. Marys Memorial 51, Ottawa-Glandorf 70, Wapakoneta 86, Van Buren 113, Ada 136, Patrick Henry 180, Kalida 187, Bluffton 200, Paulding 205, Elida 215. St. Johns no team score. Top 10 Individuals: 1. TrampeKindt (O) 17:03.00; 2. Wehrle (V) 17:15.00; 3. Schumacker (V) 17:16.00; 4. Durkee (SM) 17:39.00; 5. Mielke (SM) 17:56.00; 6. Pracht (O) 17:57.00; 7. Armbrecht (A) 18:02.00; 8. Curtis Pohlman (SJ) 18:05.00; 9. Escobedo (O) 18:07.00; 10. Grant Zeller (K) 18:08.00. Other Local Finishers (95 Runners): 29. Gaerid Littler (E) 19:12.00; ... 33. Eric Warnecke (K) 19:23.00; ... 43. Jacob Dunn (K) 20:10.00; 44. Aaron Hellman (SJ) 20:14.00; ... 53. Josh Bull (E) 20:39.00; ... 55. Eric Anthony (E) 20:44.00; ... 64. Glenn McVey (E) 21:09.00; ... 66. Anthony Hale (SJ) 21:19.00; ... 68. Jordan Coulter (E) 21:33.00; ... 72. Trevor Maag (K) 21:40.00; ... 77. Jordan Wurth (K) 22:28.00; 78. Asa Swihart (E) 22:37.00; ... 81. Mitchell Kerner (K) 22:50.00; ... 84. Alex Dukehart (E) 23:33.00; ... 87. Logan Malone (E) 24:11.00; ... 89. Austin Vorst (K) 24:21.00. Girls Team Scores: OttawaGlandorf 68, Kalida 79, St. Marys Memorial 97, Bluffton 118, Wapakoneta 139, Pandora-Gilboa 145, Elida 161, Van Buren 165, Paulding 174. St. Johns no team score. Top 10 Individuals: 1. Jessica Doepker (K) 20:18.00; 2. Jackie Gardner (K) 20:38.00; 3. Martin (W) 20:39.00; 4. Althaus (B) 20:56.00; 5. Katelyn Siebeneck (K) 21:07.00; 6. Flanagan (V) 21:22.00; 7. Meyer (O) 21:27.00; 8. Tori Bowen (E) 21:28.00; 9. McCullough (P-G) 21:29.00; 10. Megan Joseph (SJ) 21:30.00. Other Local Finishers (80 Runners): 18. Aly Turrentine (E) 22:07.00; ... 31. Anna Mueller (SJ) 22:44.00; ... 33. Katie Schmitz (K) 23:17.00; ... 44. Kaiti Hinegardner (E) 24:05.00; 45. Becca Brinkman

Cross Country results Comeback complete,


MEDINAH, Ill. Europe buried the memory of that American comeback at Brookline in 1999 with one that was even better. Medinah was filled with sheer madness Sunday, the matches so close for so much of the day that even when Martin Kaymer stood over a 6-foot par putt on the 18th hole to clinch it, the Ryder Cup was up in air. The putt was pure and the celebration was on. It will go down in the history books of the Ryder Cup, said European captain Jose Maria Olazabal. The size of the comeback was equal to what the Americans pulled off at The Country Club but at least they had help from endless cheers of the home crowd. Not many gave Europe much of a chance until Justin Rose and Sergio Garcia turned what looked to be certain losses into improbable wins, filling the scoreboard with European blue. What you did out there today was outstanding, Olazabal told his team at the closing ceremony. You believed and you delivered. And Im very proud that you have kept Europes hands on this Ryder Cup. All men die but not all men live. And you made me feel alive again this week. Then, Olazabal bowed his head and closed his eyes as they filled with tears and the (Corbin 6-8), 9:40 p.m. San Francisco (Zito 14-8) at L.A. European fans sensed what Dodgers (Capuano 12-11), 10:10 p.m. was coming next. ----He didnt have to say a American League East Division word. They said it for him. W L Pct GB Seve, Seve, Seve, they z-Baltimore 92 67 .579 began to chant. z-New York 92 67 .579 Tampa Bay 88 71 .553 4 Seve Ballesteros. Toronto 70 89 .440 22 Olazabal walked down the Boston 69 90 .434 23 row and hugged every playCentral Division W L Pct GB er until he saved the longest Detroit 86 73 .541 embrace for Lee Westwood, Chicago 83 76 .522 3 the only player who was Kansas City 71 88 .447 15 Cleveland 67 92 .421 19 on that 1997 team when Minnesota 66 93 .415 20 Ballesteros was the captain, West Division W L Pct GB the last visible role he played z-Texas 93 66 .585 at the Ryder Cup. He died in Oakland 91 68 .572 2 May 2011 at age 54 of a brain Los Angeles 88 71 .553 5 Seattle 73 86 .459 20 tumor. Westwood, Garcia and Paul z-clinched playoff berth Lawrie were the only players Saturdays Results on the 99 team that blew a Toronto 3, N.Y. Yankees 2 10-6 lead and all of them won Detroit 6, Minnesota 4 matches. Oakland 7, Seattle 4, 10 innings Tampa Bay 10, Chicago White Sox 4 The Americans were simL.A. Angels at Texas, ppd., rain ply stunned. Baltimore 4, Boston 3 Three times they came to Kansas City 7, Cleveland 6, 14 innings the 17th hole with a chance to Sundays Results win a match, only for Europe Cleveland 15, Kansas City 3 to deliver the key shots that L.A. Angels 5, Texas 4, 1st game N.Y. Yankees 9, Toronto 6 win the Ryder Cup. Ian Poulter Baltimore 6, Boston 3 won the last two holes and so Detroit 2, Minnesota 1 Tampa Bay 6, Chicago White Sox 2 did Rose, a birdie-birdie finish Oakland 5, Seattle 2 to beat Phil Mickelson. Garcia Texas 8, L.A. Angels 7, 2nd game won the last two holes with Todays Games Boston (Buchholz 11-7) at N.Y. pars to beat Jim Furyk. Yankees (Sabathia 14-6), 7:05 p.m. Furyk had beaten Garcia at Chicago White Sox (H.Santiago 3-1) at Brookline in a pivotal match. Cleveland (Kluber 2-4), 7:05 p.m. Minnesota (Vasquez 0-2) at Toronto That was fun, Furyk said. (Laffey 4-6), 7:07 p.m. This was pretty miserable. Baltimore (W.Chen 12-10) at Tampa If Kaymer had missed the Bay (Cobb 10-9), 7:10 p.m. Detroit (Porcello 9-12) at Kansas City putt and halved his match with (B.Chen 11-13), 8:10 p.m. Texas (M.Perez 1-3) at Oakland Steve Stricker, the Americans would have been one point (J.Parker 12-8), 10:05 p.m. L.A. Angels (C.Wilson 12-10) at Seattle away from winning with (F.Hernandez 13-8), 10:10 p.m. Your full service scrap recycling facility Tiger Woods in the fairway Tuesdays Games Boston (LesterFor over 80 years, Kohart has been buying 9-14) at N.Y. Yankees and 1 up over Francesco (Nova 12-8), 7:05 p.m. Molinari. Chicago White Sox (Peavy of ferrous & non-ferrous metals. all grades 11-12) Woods wound up missing at Cleveland (Masterson 11-15), 7:05 a 3 1/2-foot for metals conp.m. Also offering container servicepar putt and and trash Minnesota (Swarzak 3-5) at Toronto ceded a par to the Italian from (roll-off boxes, van, dump & low-boy trailers). (Villanueva 7-7), 7:07 p.m. Baltimore (Mig.Gonzalez 8-4) at the same distance to halve their Tampa Bay (Shields 15-9), 7:10 p.m. match. to extra half-point 3 convenient locationsThatserve you! Detroit (Fister 10-9) at Kansas City made it a clear-cut win for (Guthrie 4-3), 8:10 p.m. PAULDING, OHIO Texas (M.Harrison 18-10) at Oakland Europe, 14 1/2-13 1/2. Woods E. - Stricker, the anchors in (Blackley 5-4),State Route 613 and 419-399-4144 10:05 p.m. L.A. Angels (Haren 12-12) at Seattle the lineup, didnt win a single (Iwakuma 8-5), 10:10 p.m. FOSTORIA, OHIO match at Medinah. 634 Spruce St. - 419-435-7792 the first to Poulter was DELPHOS, OHIO embrace Olazabal, which was only fitting. 905 S. Main St. - 419-692-4792 who gave It was Poulter Sundays Results Europe hope Saturday evening Houston 38, Tennessee 14 when he made five straight San Diego 37, Kansas City 20 birdies to turn a loss into a St. Louis 19, Seattle 13 New England 52, Buffalo 28 win and swing momentum in Minnesota 20, Detroit 13 Europes favor. Poulter was Atlanta 30, Carolina 28 up to his fist-pumping, eyeSan Francisco 34, N.Y. Jets 0 Arizona 24, Miami 21, OT bulging tricks again on the Denver 37, Oakland 6 final day, winning the last Cincinnati 27, Jacksonville 10 two holes in his match against Green Bay 28, New Orleans 27 Washington 24, Tampa Bay 22 U.S. Open champion Webb Philadelphia 19, N.Y. Giants 17 Simpson. Open: Indianapolis, Pittsburgh And he had plenty of help. Todays Game Europes top five players in Chicago at Dallas, 8:30 p.m.
K) 24:09.00; ... 55. Teresa Pohlman (SJ) 25:13.00; ... 58. Rachel Kerber (E) 26:13.00; 59. Hannah Malone (E) 26:13.00; ... 65. Torrye Brinkman (E) 27:12.00; ... 73. Helena VanSickle (E) 28:29.00; 74. Katelyn Kortokrax (K) 29:06.00; ... 76. Erica Honigfort (K) 29:22.00. -----Best of the West Botkins Invitational At Botkins Community Park Boys Team Scores: Minster 53, Anna 98, Versailles 100, Botkins 147, Jackson Center 159, Sidney 190, Lehman Cath. 199, New Knoxville 228, Parkway 235, Ft. Loramie 237, Lakota 271, Houston 289, Arcanum 310, Bradford 368, Fairlawn 415. Spencerville no team score. Top 10 Individuals: 1. Prakel (V) 16:22.6; 2. Fuller (LC) 16:45.1; 3. Dahlinghaus (M) 16:48.0; 4. Kuntz (N) 17:12.0; 5. Albers (M) 17:16.4; 6. Larger (AN) 17:26.7; 7. Tangeman (SI) 17:35.2; 8. Jester (H) 17:37.7; 9. Elchert (J) 17:39.8; 10. Slonkosky (M) 17:44.1. Spencerville Finishers (186 Runners): 19. Aaron Hefner 18:11.0; ... 87. Jacob Cook 20:46.5; ... 110. Caleb Vogt 21:39.1; ... 120. Matthew Hurles 22:14.2; ... 179. Keith Lenhart NT; 180. Kyle Sawmiller NT; 181. Joe Wisher NT. Girls Team Scores: Minster 56, Ft. Loramie 59, Versailles 62, Spencerville 98, Botkins 173, Lakota 186, Anna 188, Bradford 233, Sidney 234, Parkway 247, Arcanum 327. Top 10 Individuals: 1. Boyle (New Knoxville) 20:18.8; 2. Westerheide (F) 20:38.9; 3. Cierra Adams (SV) 20:51.3; 4. Reese (L) 20:54.7; 5. Warvel (V) 20:59.7; 6. Schmitmeyer (F) 21:00.2; 7. Bornhorst (M) 21:03.3; 8. Sherman (M) 21:04.3; 9. Pothast (V) 21:06.1; 10. Gaerke (P) 21:16.1. Other Spencerville Finishers (204 Runners): 20. Karri Purdy 21:46.0; ... 24. Tori Hardesty 22:00.9; ... 42. Schylar Miller 23:13.3; ... 50. Jennifer Burnett 23:33.9; ... 58. Kacie Mulholland 23:52.7; ... 77. Tesa Horton 24:54.9; ... 92. Ashley Keiber 26:01.9.

Europe wins Ryder Cup


By DOUG FERGUSON The Associated Press

The Associated Press National League East Division W L Pct GB z-Washington 96 63 .604 z-Atlanta 93 66 .585 3 Philadelphia 80 79 .503 16 New York 73 86 .459 23 Miami 67 92 .421 29 Central Division W L Pct GB x-Cincinnati 96 63 .604 St. Louis 86 73 .541 10 Milwaukee 81 78 .509 15 Pittsburgh 77 82 .484 19 Chicago 60 99 .377 36 Houston 53 106 .333 43 West Division W L Pct GB x-San Francisco 93 66 .585 Los Angeles 84 75 .528 9 Arizona 80 79 .503 13 San Diego 75 84 .472 18 Colorado 62 97 .390 31 z-clinched playoff berth x-clinched division Saturdays Results Pittsburgh 2, Cincinnati 1 Milwaukee 9, Houston 5 Atlanta 2, N.Y. Mets 0 Philadelphia 9, Miami 5 Washington 6, St. Louis 4, 10 innings Arizona 8, Chicago Cubs 2 San Diego 7, San Francisco 3 L.A. Dodgers 3, Colorado 0 Sundays Results Philadelphia 4, Miami 1 Cincinnati 4, Pittsburgh 3 Atlanta 6, N.Y. Mets 2 Houston 7, Milwaukee 0 St. Louis 10, Washington 4 San Francisco 7, San Diego 5 Chicago Cubs 7, Arizona 2 L.A. Dodgers 7, Colorado 1 Todays Games Atlanta (Maholm 13-10) at Pittsburgh (Locke 0-3), 7:05 p.m. Philadelphia (K.Kendrick 10-12) at Washington (Lannan 4-0), 7:05 p.m. N.Y. Mets (Familia 0-0) at Miami (Jo. Johnson 8-14), 7:10 p.m. Houston (Harrell 10-11) at Chicago Cubs (Berken 0-2), 8:05 p.m. San Diego (Richard 14-13) at Milwaukee (Marcum 6-4), 8:10 p.m. Cincinnati (Arroyo 12-9) at St. Louis (J.Garcia 6-7), 8:15 p.m. Colorado (D.Pomeranz 2-9) at Arizona (Miley 16-11), 9:40 p.m. San Francisco (M.Cain 16-5) at L.A. Dodgers (Harang 10-10), 10:10 p.m. Tuesdays Games Atlanta (Hanson 13-9) at Pittsburgh (Correia 11-11), 7:05 p.m. Philadelphia (Undecided) at Washington (G.Gonzalez 21-8), 7:05 p.m. N.Y. Mets (Dickey 20-6) at Miami (Ja. Turner 1-4), 7:10 p.m. Houston (B.Norris 6-13) at Chicago Cubs (Volstad 3-11), 8:05 p.m. San Diego (C.Kelly 2-3) at Milwaukee (Thornburg 0-0), 8:10 p.m. Cincinnati (Latos 13-4) at St. Louis (C.Carpenter 0-1), 8:15 p.m. Colorado (Chacin 3-5) at Arizona

MLB GLANCE

the lineup all won, including Rory McIlroy, who was lucky to be playing. McIlroy thought his match was at 12:25 p.m. it was listed in Eastern time, not Central and needed a police escort to get to the course with 10 minutes to spare. Then, he came up with key birdies to hand Keegan Bradley his first loss of the week. The biggest match might have belonged to Rose. He was on the verge of losing to Mickelson when Rose holed a 12-foot par putt to halve the 16th, made a 35-foot birdie putt from the back of the 17th green to win the hole and then closed out Mickelson with a 12-foot birdie on the last hole. Six of the 12 matches went to the 18th hole on Sunday. The Americans won only one of them. Today was certainly not what we expect, U.S. captain Davis Love III said. Were all kind of stunned. We know what it feels like now from the 99 Ryder Cup. Its a little bit shocking. We were playing so well, we figured it didnt matter how we sent them out there. We got a couple of Dena Martz photo matches flipped there in the middle that cost us. Love became the first U.S. captain to sit every player The Delphos Reds Brenen Auer gets the corner at least once before Sunday, against the St. Marys Stallions en route to a 47-yard wanting them to be fresh for the decisive day. Instead, the touchdown run Sunday afternoon at Stadium Park. Americans faltered at the Earlier, he had a 55-yarder as the Reds defeated the end especially Furyk and Stallions 30-6 in TCMFA action. Also at Stadium Park, Stricker, two of his captains the Delphos Raiders shut out the St. Marys Colts 30-0. Elsewhere, it was Uniopolis Browns 22, Delphos Vikings picks. The only U.S. points came 0; Delphos Mohawks 28, St. Marys Rams 22; St. Marys from Dustin Johnson, who Broncos 14, Columbus Grove Bulldogs 0; Spencerville went 3-0 in this Ryder Cup, Black 30, Shawnee Seminoles 0; and Spencerville Red Zach Johnson and unheralded had a bye. Jason Dufner. Love thought all along the Ryder Cup would be decided Q: What NFL footballer saw his weight reach a leaguein the ninth match by Dufner. leading 340 pounds in 1988? It was most appropriate that A: William The Refrigerator Perry. Europe won the cup thanks to Kaymer. Kaymer gave German Serving the Van Wert area for more than 40 years golf some redemption from Kiawah Island in 1991, when countryman Bernhard Langer missed a par putt from about the same length that allowed the Americans to win. It was a collapse the Attorneys At Law Americans wont soon forget. Just 24 hours earlier, they had Family Law a 10-4 lead with two team C. Allan Runser Probate Estate Planning Personal Injury matches still on the course they were ahead in one Criminal Real Estate of them, while Woods and Corporations Stricker were closing in on the other. Its hard to believe they 111 East Main St. Suite 105 would only win 3 1/2 points the rest of the way. Van Wert McIlroy never trailed in his 419-238-2200 match, making two straight www.runserandputman.com birdies late to knock off Shaun A. Putman Bradley.

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The Associated Press AMERICAN CONFERENCE East W L T Pct PF N.Y. Jets 2 2 0 .500 81 New England 2 2 0 .500 134 Buffalo 2 2 0 .500 115 Miami 1 3 0 .250 86 South W L T Pct PF Houston 4 0 0 1.000 126 Indianapolis 1 2 0 .333 61 Jacksonville 1 3 0 .250 62 Tennessee 1 3 0 .250 81 North W L T Pct PF Baltimore 3 1 0 .750 121 Cincinnati 3 1 0 .750 112 Pittsburgh 1 2 0 .333 77 Cleveland 0 4 0 .000 73 West W L T Pct PF San Diego 3 1 0 .750 100 Denver 2 2 0 .500 114 Kansas City 1 3 0 .250 88 Oakland 1 3 0 .250 67 NATIONAL CONFERENCE East W L T Pct PF Philadelphia 3 1 0 .750 66 Dallas 2 1 0 .667 47 N.Y. Giants 2 2 0 .500 111 Washington 2 2 0 .500 123 South W L T Pct PF Atlanta 4 0 0 1.000 124 Tampa Bay 1 3 0 .250 82 Carolina 1 3 0 .250 80 New Orleans 0 4 0 .000 110 North W L T Pct PF Minnesota 3 1 0 .750 90 Chicago 2 1 0 .667 74 Green Bay 2 2 0 .500 85 Detroit 1 3 0 .250 100 West W L T Pct PF Arizona 4 0 0 1.000 91 San Francisco3 1 0 .750 104 St. Louis 2 2 0 .500 79 Seattle 2 2 0 .500 70

NFL GLANCE
PA 109 92 131 90 PA 56 83 97 151 PA 83 112 75 98 PA 71 83 136 125 PA 83 54 84 123 PA 76 91 109 130 PA 72 50 81 114 PA 61 65 91 58

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Keselowski emerges late to win at Dover


By DAN GELSTON The Associated Press DOVER, Del. Brad Keselowski had fuel to spare for a couple of victory burnouts. Those few splashes of gas left down the stretch were just enough for a checkered flag and a sign Keselowski is a championship favorite. With other contenders battling fuel woes and limping toward pit road, Keselowski had enough gas in the No. 2 Dodge to win Sunday at Dover International Speedway for his second win in three weeks. Keselowksis stout start to the Chase for the Sprint Cup Championship allowed him to swipe the points lead from Jimmie Johnson. Keselowski holds a 5-point lead over Johnson as the Chase shifts to Talladega Superspeedway. Keselowski, who won the Chase opener at Chicagoland, has deftly avoided the famed Big Ones that strike the Alabama track to win twice there in seven career starts. He held off a late push from runner-up Jeff Gordon to match Denny Hamlin for the season victory lead with five. I cant state loudly enough how much longer this battle is, Keselowski said. Keselowski, Johnson and Hamlin have staked their claim through the first three of 10 Chase races as the drivers to beat. Johnson and Hamlin each led a chunk of laps on the mile concrete oval but failed to stretch their fuel to the end. Johnson, who has seven career wins at Dover, was ordered to back off the gas and salvaged a fourth-place finish. Hamlin pitted with 10 laps left, opening the door for Keselowski, and denying him his first win at the Monster Mile. Hamlin faded to eighth after starting from the pole. Theyre not going to beat us on the track, thats just plain and simple, Hamlin said. Were just too fast right now and I feel like everything is going well. These strategy games and the way these cautions are falling its illtimed. There was a caution at the end of a cycle of green-flag pit stops only 69 laps into the race that quickly dropped drivers a lap back. Amazingly, most of the field couldnt ever get that lap back; only six drivers finished on the lead lap. Non-Chase drivers Mark Martin finished third and Carl Edwards was fifth. Kyle Busch led a race-high 302 laps until his own battles with the pump cost him what would have been a nice victory in a season where he failed to make the Chase. He finished seventh. There were some rough finishes for the rest of the Chase field. Martin Truex Jr. was sixth, Clint Bowyer was ninth,
by allowing Torii Hunters 2-run double with two outs in the ninth, Joe Nathan worked the ninth in the nightcap for his 37th save. Derek Holland (12-6) got the win. Los Angeles took a quick 4-0 lead in the nightcap that Ervin Santana (9-13) quickly squandered. In the opener, Garrett Richards (4-3) retired Nelson Cruz with two runners on in the eighth and Ernesto Frieri pitched a perfect ninth for his 24th save. Mike Trout became the first major-league rookie to reach 30 homers and 40 stolen bases in the same season. ATHLETICS 5, MARINERS 2 OAKLAND, Calif. Yoenis Cespedes broke a 2-2 tie in the eighth with a home run off Shawn Kelley (2-4) as Oakland closed on its first playoff berth in six years. Josh Reddick connected with a 2-run shot for his team-leading 32nd homer two batters later. Sean Doolittle (2-1) pitched a perfect eighth for the win and Grant Balfour finished for his 22nd save. TIGERS 2, TWINS 1 MINNEAPOLIS Prince Fielder hit a 2-run, opposite-field homer to left off Jared Burton (3-2), his 30th of the season, and Detroit opened a season-high, 3-game lead over the second-place Chicago White Sox in the AL Central. Miguel Cabrera, who is trying to become the first player since 1967 to

8 The Herald

Monday, October 1, 2012

www.delphosherald.com

(Continued from Page 6) AL BALTIMORE The Baltimore Orioles clinched their first playoff berth since 1997, extending their winning streak to four by beating the Boston Red Sox 6-3 Sunday as Nate McLouth, J.J. Hardy and Chris Davis hit solo homers. Joe Saunders (3-3) allowed three runs, eight hits and no walks in 7 1/3 innings; Jim Johnson worked the ninth for his 50th save. Zach Stewart (0-2) gave up five runs and seven hits in 2 2/3 innings. YANKEES 9, BLUE JAYS 6 TORONTO Eduardo Nunez drove in the go-ahead run with an eighth-inning sacrifice fly and the Yankees overcame a 5-1 deficit for their 17th playoff berth in 18 years. Toronto took a 5-1 lead in the fifth against Phil Hughes but the Yankees closed in the sixth on a run-scoring pitch by Henderson Alvarez and tied it an inning later on Ichiro Suzukis sacrifice fly, Robinson Canos RBI double against Steve Delabar and Aaron Loups run-scoring wild pitch. ANGELS 5, RANGERS 4; RANGERS 8, ANGELS 7 ARLINGTON, Texas Mike Napoli homered twice and drove in six runs as Texas clinched its third straight playoff berth. Napolis second homer in the nightcap was a go-ahead 3-run shot in the third. After blowing a save in the opener

MLB

Dale Earnhardt Jr. 11th, Kevin Harvick 13th, Kasey Kahne 15th, Greg Biffle 16th, Tony Stewart 20th and Matt Kenseth was knocked out of the race and was 35th. There are seven races left in the Chase. While crew chief Paul Wolfe didnt want to reveal too much of his fuel-saving strategy, he conceded the car was within a lap or two or running on fumes. Keselowski raced the last 89 laps without a stop. Johnson had his record eighth win at Dover in sight until he was forced to start saving fuel with about 15 laps left. Crew chief Chad Knaus told Johnson to yield the lead so the No. 48 could at least salvage a top-5. I wish we could have raced for it, said Johnson, a 5-time Cup champion. We finally got control of the race late but it just didnt unfold like a normal race here. Hamlin won the pole and seemed in position to pull off a breakthrough win until fuel issues forced him down pit road behind Busch, his Joe Gibbs Racing teammate. That left it to Gordon and Keselowski with 10 laps left to duel for the lead over the closing laps. Gordon followed his third place last week at New Hampshire with another strong run at Dover. He needed it after a 35th-place finish in the opener at Chicagoland. Gordon is 10th in points.

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win the triple crown, went 0-for-3 with an intentional walk. RAYS 6, WHITE SOX 2 CHICAGO David Price (20-5) allowed two runs and five hits in seven innings to become Tampa Bays first 20-game winner, B.J. Upton hit his 27th and 28th homers and Tampa Bay (88-71) remained three games behind Oakland for the ALs second wild-card berth. Jose Quintana (6-6) gave up four runs and six hits in four innings. INDIANS 15, ROYALS 3 CLEVELAND Asdrubal Cabrera capped a 10-run fifth inning with a grand slam as Cleveland tied season highs for runs and hits (19), improving to 2-1 under interim manager Sandy Alomar Jr. Zach McAllister (6-8) pitched 5-hit ball over 6 2/3 innings, allowing three runs. Royals starter Luke Hochevar (8-16) was tagged for nine runs over 4 2/3 innings.

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The Herald 9

Engagement

Anniversary

Hotel Transylvania checks in with $43M debut


By DAVID GERMAIN The Associated Press LOS ANGELES Adam Sandlers monster mash-up Hotel Transylvania has brought the weekend box office back to life after a late-summer slump. The animated comedy from Sony Pictures debuted at No. 1 with $43 million, one of the strongest starts ever for a movie opening in September, according to studio estimates Sunday. Hotel Transylvania set a new high for September debuts in terms of actual dollars, beating the previous record of $35.7 million for 2002s Sweet Home Alabama. But factoring in todays higher admission prices, Sweet Home Alabama sold more tickets. This weekends box office was further strengthened by a solid No. 2 debut for another Sony release, Bruce Willis and Joseph Gordon-Levitts time-travel thriller Looper, which took in $21.2 million. Hollywoods overall grosses rose for the first time in a month compared to the same weekend last year. Revenues totaled $120 million, up 21 percent from the same weekend a year ago, when Dolphin Tale led with $13.9 million, according to box-office tracker Hollywood.com. Sony really kind of saved the day here, turning things around after a full month of less-than-stellar box office, said Hollywood.com analyst Paul Dergarabedian. The post-summer period didnt exactly set the world on fire. Its rare for one studio to open two wide releases over the same weekend, but Sony had two movies that complemented each other well without overlapping their audiences. Locking up the family

John and Lynn Miller of Delphos announce the engagement of their daughter, Kristen Elizabeth, to Ian Albert Weber, son of Sid and Kathy Weber of Delphos. The couple will exchange vows on Oct. 27 at St. John the Evangelist Catholic Church in Delphos. The bride-elect is a 2006 graduate of St. Johns High School and a 2009 graduate of Rhodes State College of Nursing. She is employed by OBGYN Specialists of Lima as a registered nurse. Her fiance is a 2002 graduate of St. Johns High School and a 2011 graduate of Rhodes State College of Nursing. He is employed by St. Ritas Medical Center as a registered nurse.

Miller/Weber

Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Schafer of Delphos will celebrate 13 years of marriage on Oct. 2. Joseph Schafer and the former Michelle Osting were married on Oct. 2, 1999, at St. John the Evangelist Catholic Church by the Rev. Dan Borgelt. They have three children, Cassidy, 11, Jada, 10, and Camden, 4. Mr. Schafer is employed by K&M Tire of Delphos. His wife is employed by First Financial Bank of Delphos.

Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Schafer

Thousands attend NYC concert highlighting poverty


By LOU FERRARA The Associated Press
NEW YORK Neil Young, the Black Keys, Foo Fighters and others wowed thousands who turned out Saturday night for a free concert in Central Park to call attention to poverty worldwide. Dubbed the Global Citizen Festival, the concert also featured Knaan, John Legend and Band of Horses, with Youngs performance capping off the evening. Video of the event was streamed worldwide as about 60,000 music fans crowded the parks Great Lawn, the midtown Manhattan skyline twinkling behind them. Legend made a surprise appearance, playing one song Imagine at a piano on stage, a short walk from where the songs author, John Lennon, once lived. The five-hour show was a mix of tight sets from the bands, roughly an hour each, mixed with videos and information from guest speakers about global povertyrelated problems like infant mortality and polio. Feels good to be here, Foo Fighters lead singer Dave Grohl told the crowd during a break between hits like Learn to Fly, Best of You and My Hero. Grohl, members of the Black Keys and others joined Young on stage for the finale, his anthem Rockin in the Free World. The concert was scheduled around the meeting of the United Nations General Assembly in New York this month and organizers used an innovative approach to ticket distribution so that many concert-goers were forced to learn about an array of global problems in order to get a ticket. Anyone wanting free tickets had to register at globalcitizen.org, which then required users to watch videos or read information about poverty-related issues. Each time material was consumed, users

could earn points toward a drawing for tickets. Points were also accumulated by sharing information by way of Twitter or Facebook. Our social media campaign has been off the charts, said Hugh Evans, CEO and co-founder of the Global Poverty Project. The approach demonstrates a new model for harnessing digital tools that might be repeated for other big events with political or social messages. Organizers said more than 71,000 people had signed up online, resulting in more than 3.5 million page views. On average, they spent just over six minutes consuming content or sharing information. Nearly 200,000 pieces of information were shared on Facebook, and just a bit more than that on Twitter. About 170,000 people signed petitions via the site, and there were 98,000 videos viewed to completion.

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1. Hotel Transylvania, $43 million. 2. Looper, $21.2 million. 3. End of Watch, $8 million. 4. Trouble with the Curve, $7.5 million. 5. House at the End of the Street, $7.2 million. 6. Pitch Perfect, $5.2 million. 7. Finding Nemo, $4.1 million. 8. Resident Evil: Retribution, $3 million. 9. The Master, $2.75 million. 10. Wont Back Down,

crowds, the PG-rated Hotel Transylvania features Sandler providing the voice of Count Dracula as proprietor of a resort catering to Frankenstein, the Wolfman and other monsters. The R-rated Looper pulled in male action fans. Set in 2044, the film stars Gordon-Levitt as a hit man assigned to kill victims sent back in time including his future self (Bruce Willis). The previous weekends No. 1 movie, Open Road Films police story End of Watch, fell to No. 3 with $8 million, raising its domestic total to $26.2 million. In narrower release, Universal Pictures music tale Pitch Perfect opened strongly at No. 6 with $5.2 million. The movie stars Anna Kendrick as a college freshman who joins an a cappella singing team and livens up the groups conservative style. Playing in 335 theaters, Pitch Perfect averaged an impressive $15,560 a cinema. That compared to an average of $12,840 in 3,349 theaters for Hotel Transylvania and $7,086 in 2,992 cinemas for Looper. The weekends other new wide release, Maggie Gyllenhaal and Viola Davis school drama Wont Back Down, flopped at No. 10 with $2.7 million, averaging just $1,074 in 2,515 theaters. The movie centers on two mothers who organize a campaign to save a failing elementary school. For Sandler, Hotel Transylvania was a return to hit status after his summer dud Thats My Boy and so-so results on last years comedy Jack and Jill. Sandlers audience of young males generally has waned as he ages. But Sony, which has released most of his movies, remains eager to stay in the Sandler business. I have said that many times, and it still holds in a big way, said Rory Bruer, head of distribution for Sony. Estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at U.S. and Canadian theaters, according to Hollywood. com. Where available, latest international numbers are also included. Final domestic figures will be released today.

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10 - The Herald

Monday, October 1, 2012

www.delphosherald.com

Tomorrows Horoscope
By Bernice Bede Osol
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 2, 2012 With three important new friends coming into your life, the year ahead should be a far more active one for you socially. There is also a strong possibility you might do a bit more traveling than in the past. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) -- Dont worry if things have been a bit dull lately on the social front. A series of exciting developments are in the making and youll get wind of them soon. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) -Circumstances are starting to intervene on your behalf, turning several iffy situations into something quite lucrative. They could all occur simultaneously. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) -- An exciting new project that has a lot of promising potential is likely to capture your fancy at this time. Itll be the kind of endeavor that will be a pleasure to undertake. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) -Try to devote as much time and effort as possible to some of your more ambitious objectives. Your chances of realizing fulfillment look to be exceptionally good. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) -Engaging in mundane routine is likely to bore you to distraction. However, developments that challenge your ingenuity will bring out your championship qualities. PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) -Something advantageous of a business nature is developing for you at this time. You might learn about part of it today, but there will be much more manifesting tomorrow. ARIES (March 21-April 19) -- Dont attempt anything on your own that can be better accomplished with a competent ally. Youll be far more fortunate doing things with a partner than by yourself. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) -Something wonderful could happen for you where your work or career is concerned. However, youll need to be on your toes, because what develops will require an instant response. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) -- Youll be on the minds of several friends who are making some out-of-the-ordinary plans of a social nature. Lucky you, because youll be penciled into their arrangements. CANCER (June 21-July 22) -Influences that have a direct effect on your basic requirements and material security are both unique and favorable at present. Youre likely to profit from a strange set of circumstances. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) -- Your inclination to attempt to please everybody will end up working to your ultimate benefit. Friends and colleagues whose lives you brighten will, in turn, try to brighten yours. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) -There are all kinds of indications that you are likely to be luckier than usual in arrangements that have profitable potential. What you gain will not be of a temporary nature. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 3, 2012 It looks like youre about to make some critical changes in your life that will spill over and have a positive effect on your financial affairs. In doing so, theres a chance youll be able to fulfill a longstanding desire. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) -- Do your very best not to disrupt anything that is presently running smoothly, because you could be all thumbs and make matters worse. Let your motto be: If it isnt broke, dont fix it. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) -Youre asking for all kinds of trouble if you deliberately play up to someone in order to make another person whom you dont like jealous. Dont play games. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) -Only if you are tenacious and consistent will success be within your reach. However, the odds are against you if you try to gamble your way to greener pastures. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) -Friends and associates arent likely to have any respect for your ideas or opinions if they sense that you have little regard for theirs. Be sure to keep an open mind and avoid premature judgment. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) -Dont allow anybody whos notorious for being unable to manage his or her resources to handle your own. This error in judgment could turn out to be very expensive. PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) -Things you envision can be brought into being, if you work at it. However, this does not mean you could succeed teaming up with another. Go it alone. ARIES (March 21-April 19) -- You wont mind going out of your way to assist a friend. However, it will really irk you if the recipient has a total lack of acknowledgement and appreciation. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) -- If your old standbys arent available to do something fun with you, it might be best to go it alone. Involvements with substitutes arent likely to work out too well. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) -- Once you successfully have achieved something, let it go and move on to something new. If you keep trying to improve it, you could unravel your own accomplishment. CANCER (June 21-July 22) -- Your keen imagination can be a very big plus, provided you remain positive and channel it constructively. Once you start to think negatively, it will be a different story. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) -- Avoid any speculative involvements, especially those that require you have to dip into your savings in order to participate. Chances are what starts out wrong will end up wrong. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) -- This might not be one of your better days for decision-making, but what could make it even worse is that the persons to whom you go for counsel could be even more inept than you. COPYRIGHT 2012 United Feature Syndicate, Inc.

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Real Time/Bill Maher The Change-Up Dexter

Extremely Loud Homeland

Matrix Revol. Dexter

Boxing Homeland

2009 Hometown Content, listings by Zap2it

8:00

8:30

Cable Channels
A&E AMC

WOHL/FOX Raising Ben-Kate ION Criminal Minds

Dancing/Stars NCIS: Los Angeles Go On Normal New Girl Mindy Criminal Minds

9:00

9:30

Private Practice Vegas Parenthood Local Criminal Minds

10:00

10:30

Local Local Local

11:00

Nightline Jimmy Kimmel Live Late Show Letterman Ferguson Tonight Show w/Leno J. Fallon Flashpoint

11:30

October 2, 2012
12:00 12:30

Strike Ba Mike Epps Presents

Flashpoint

Storage Storage Storage Storage Shipping Shipping Shipping Shipping Storage Storage The Fifth Element The Fifth Element ANIM Oceans Crimson Wing Crimson Wing BET Cypher Diary-Black Sleep! The Game Wendy Williams Show BRAVO Housewives/NJ Flipping Out Flipping Out Happens Housewives/NJ NYC CMT Reba Reba Redneck Rehab Redneck Rehab Bayou Bayou Bayou Billionaires CNN Anderson Cooper 360 Piers Morgan Tonight Anderson Cooper 360 E. B. OutFront Piers Morgan Tonight COMEDY Work. Tosh.0 Tosh.0 Tosh.0 Tosh.0 Brickle. Daily Colbert Tosh.0 Brickle. DISC Last Frontier Last Frontier Yukon Men Last Frontier Yukon Men DISN Austin Gravity Good Luck ANT Farm Code 9 Phineas ANT Farm Vampire Wizards Wizards E! Jonas Jonas Must Love Dogs Chelsea E! News Chelsea ESPN 30 for 30 World/Poker World/Poker SportsCenter ESPN2 WNBA Basketball Baseball Tonight SportCtr Best/NFL Baseball Tonight FAM My Best Pretty Woman The 700 Club Prince Prince FOOD Cupcake Wars Chopped Chopped Chopped Chopped FX Taken Sons of Anarchy Sons of Anarchy Sons of Anarchy HGTV Love It or List It Property Property Hunters Hunt Intl Million Dollar Rooms Property Property

Premium Channels
HBO MAX SHOW

Pawn Pawn Dance Moms MTV Jersey Shore NICK Full H'se Full H'se SCI Face Off SPIKE Jurassic Park III TBS Big Bang Big Bang TCM Affair-Rememb. TLC Breaking Amish TNT The Mentalist TOON Looney Adventure TRAV Travel Like a Presid TV LAND Cosby Cosby USA Law & Order: SVU VH1 Footloose WGN How I Met How I Met
HIST LIFE

Playboy- the World Dance Moms Jersey Shore Full H'se Full H'se Face Off

America's Book Pawn Pawn Dance Moms Prank Mom Prank Mom Dance Moms Teen Mom Teen Mom The Nanny The Nanny Friends Friends Friends Friends Hot Set Face Off Hot Set Jurassic Park III Tenants Tenants Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Conan Office Office A Patch of Blue Butterfly 19 Kids 19 Kids Abby Abby 19 Kids 19 Kids Abby Abby The Mentalist Rizzoli & Isles Leverage The Closer King/Hill King/Hill Amer. Dad Amer. Dad Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Chicken Aqua Teen Airport 2 Airport 2 Mysteries-Museum Mysteries-Museum Airport 2 Airport 2 Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond King King The King of Queens Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Rehab With Dr. Drew Basketball Wives LA T.I.-Tiny Chrissy How I Met How I Met WGN News at Nine 30 Rock 30 Rock Rules Rules Treme Boardwalk Empire Fight Anchorman: Legend of Ron Strike Back Homeland Dexter Gigolos Unstoppbl Skin-Max Wet Hot

Sports The Sitter Running Final Destination 5 Homeland Dexter

2009 Hometown Content, listings by Zap2it

BORN LOSER

FRANK & ERNEST

BIG NATE

GRIZZWELLS

PICKLES

Classifieds
www.delphosherald.com

Minimum Charge: 15 words, 2 times - $9.00 Each word is $.30 2-5 days $.25 6-9 days $.20 10+ days Each word is $.10 for 3 months or more prepaid

www.delphosherald.com

To place an ad phone 419-695-0015 ext. 122


FREE ADS: 5 days free if item is free or less than $50. Only 1 item per ad, 1 ad per month. BOX REPLIES: $8.00 if you come and pick them up. $14.00 if we have to send them to you. CARD OF THANKS: $2.00 base charge + $.10 for each word.

DELPHOS
THE

Monday, October 1, 2012

Telling The Tri-Countys Story Since 1869

HERALD

The Herald - 11

Deadlines: 11:30 a.m. for the next days issue. Saturdays paper is 11:00 a.m. Friday Mondays paper is 1:00 p.m. Friday Herald Extra is 11 a.m. Thursday
We accept

THANKS TO ST. JUDE: Runs 1 day at the price of $3.00. GARAGE SALES: Each day is $.20 per word. $8.00 minimum charge. I WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR DEBTS: Ad must be placed in person by the person whose name will appear in the ad. Must show ID & pay when placing ad. Regular rates apply

005 Lost & Found


Buy your new or used vehicle from someone you know and trust!
FOUND: DACHSHUND Male- found Sunday evening near The Creamery in Delphos. Call 419-695-0116

080 Help Wanted


Are you looking for a child care provider in your area? Let us help. Call YWCA Child Care Re source and Referral at: 1-800-992-2916 or (419)225-5465

080 Help Wanted


HELP WANTED: Experienced Automated Embroidery Machine Operator. Part Time. Excellent working conditions. Reply to: Kchenille P.O #184 Middle Point, OH 45863

080 Help Wanted


Would you like to be an in-home child care pro vider? Let us help. Call YWCA Child Care Re source and Referral at: 1-800-992-2916 or (419)225-5465.

340 Garage Sales


MIDDLE POINT Community-Wide Garage Sales. Fri. October 5th 9am-6pm, Sat. October 6th 9am-4pm

810 Parts/Acc.

Auto Repairs/

Lisa Williams
3500 Elida Road, Lima Phone:(419) 331-0381 Fax: (419) 331-0882 Email: LisaW@allannott.com

010 Announcements
ADVERTISERS: YOU can place a 25 word classified ad in more than 100 newspapers with over one and a half million total circulation across Ohio for $295. It's easy...you place one order and pay with one check through Ohio Scan-Ohio Statewide Classified Advertising Network. The Delphos Herald advertising dept. can set this up for you. No other classified ad buy is simpler or more cost effective. Call 419-695-0015, ext 138.

580 For Rent or Lease


SECURE 1-1/2 car garage on .10 acre. $65/month. Call 419-996-9870

Midwest Ohio Auto Parts Specialist


Windshields Installed, New Lights, Grills, Fenders,Mirrors, Hoods, Radiators 4893 Dixie Hwy, Lima

Do you need to know what is going on before anyone else? Do you have a burning need to know more about the people and news in the community?
The Delphos Herald, a ve-day, award winning DHI media company with newspapers, website, and niche product in Delphos, Ohio, is looking for an energetic, self-motivated, resourceful reporter to join its staff. The right candidate will possess strong grammar and writing skills, be able to meet deadlines, have a working knowledge of still photography. A sense of urgency and accuracy are requirements. Assignments can range from hard economic news to feature stories. Send resumes to: The Delphos Herald Attn. Nancy Spencer 405 N. Main St., Delphos, Ohio 45833 or email to: nspencer@delphosherald.com

CDL-A DRIVERS for delivery route and shuttle, based in Delphos. 1yr and 50,000mi CDL-A experience required. Full-Time with full benefits, 401K, health and more. Apply today at www.liparifoods.com or send resume to: craig_spenney @liparifoods.com

120 Financial
IS IT A SCAM? The Delphos Herald urges our readers to contact The Better Business Bureau, (419) 223-7010 or 1-800-462-0468, before entering into any agreement involving financing, business opportunities, or work at home opportunities. The BBB will assist in the investigation of these businesses. (This notice provided as a customer service by The Delphos Herald.)

HIRING DRIVERS with 5+ years OTR experience! Our drivers average 42cents per mile & higher! Home every weekend! $55,000-$60,000 annually. Benefits available. 99% no touch freight! We will treat you with respect! PLEASE CALL 419-222-1630

590 House For Rent


2 BEDROOM, 1Bath house available soon. No pets. Call 419-692-3951

1-800-589-6830

840 Mobile Homes


1 BEDROOM mobile home for rent. Ph. 419-692-3951. 2 BDRM house trailer, appliances included. Available November 1st. $3000/OBO. Phone 419-692-4861 RENT OR Rent to Own. 2 bedroom, 1 bath mobile home. 419-692-3951.

600 Apts. for Rent


NICE 1BR, appliances, some furnishings, No pets. $300 plus deposit. 332 N. Pierce St. (419)236-4497

040 Services
LAMP REPAIR Table or floor. Come to our store. Hohenbrink TV. 419-695-1229

OPEN HOUSE

TIRE WAREHOUSE DRIVERS WANTED: Local limousine company needs Night Shift Superviseeking Part-time drivers sor to work with & oversee both with and without loading of route trucks. CDL-ClassB. C a l l Hours: Sunday-Thursday 3pm-2am or when work is 419-692-2854 finished. Requirements include: 2+ years supervisor ELITE NATURESCAPES is accepting applications experience; able to endure heavy lifting up to 100lbs. and resumes for Land daily; able to plan, organscape Crew Leader and ize & ensure accuracy. Crew Member positions Visit www.kmtire.com to for this fall. Please send/or access employment applidrop of resume at: 10740 cation. Send work experiElida Rd., Delphos, OH ence to: K&M Tire 45833 965 Spencerville Rd, PO Box 279, Delphos, OH 45833. HR@kmtire.com FAX 419-879-4372

290 Wanted to Buy

620 Duplex For Rent


2 BDRM Duplex for rent. Stove, refrigerator, washer/dryer, dishwasher, all electric, $450/mo. and deposit and utilities. No pets. 567-204-0347

Raines Jewelry
Scrap Gold, Gold Jewelry, Silver coins, Silverware, Pocket Watches, Diamonds.

920 Merchandise

Free & Low Price

Cash for Gold


2330 Shawnee Rd. Lima (419) 229-2899

FOR SALE: Wood Oak Door. 30x79-1/2. $20. Call 419-695-6730

REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS


Van Wert County Carl I. Smith, Janette Smith to Venedocia Farms, LTD, portion of section 16, 9, Jennings Township, portion of section 36, Liberty Township, portion of sections 31, 25, 25, 30, 8, 13, York Township. Carl I. Smith Trust, Janette Smith Trust to Alex M. Smith, Taylor A. Smith, portion of section 19, York Township. Shaun M. Balliet, Bethany J. Balliet to Theresa A. Mengerink, portion of section 35, Pleasant Township. Louis E. Haines Family Trust, Beatrice. O. Haines Family Trust to Daniel L. Cline, Catherine J. Cline, inlot 3246, Van Wert. Timothy Fern Mengerink, Timothy F. Mengerink, Theresa A. Mengerink to Thomas J. Zura, Sara B. Zura, portion of section 16, Pleasant Township. Robert L. Niemeyer, Jill L. Niemeyer to K&M Business Services, portion of section 5, Jennings Township. Estate of Harold E. Hunsaker to Helen Hunsaker, portion of section 6, York Township. Estate of Bud L. Shively ot Patricia A. Shively, portion of section 22 Harrison Township. Jerry L. Doner, Carla J. Doner to Doner Revocable Living Trust, portion of section 27, Pleasant Township. Carla J. Doner, Jerry L. Doner to Doner Revocable Living Trust, portion of section 28, Pleasant Township. Estate of Peggy L. Fortney (Peggy Fortney), portion of section 19, Tully Township. Estate of Harold . Fortney to Fortney Family Trust, portion of section 19, Tully Township. David F. Kiggins to Delphia Kiggins, inlot 280, Delphos. Donna J. Brezovacki to Tony E. Crawford Jr., Miranda L. Crawford, portion of section 1, Tully Township. Stephen Cowling, Debora A. Cowling to Mandy R. Hoaglin, Justin M. Owens, portion of section 20 Ridge Township. Andy V. Wreath, Mimi J. Wreath to Saundra K. Wagner, portion of section 8, Ridge Township. James R. Chick, Janet M. Chick to James R. Chick, Janet M. Chick, portion of inlots 121, 122, inlot 531, portion of inlot 533, Ohio City, portions of section 29, Liberty Township. Sean P. Ford, Hollie J. Ford to Kyle A. Oberlin, inlot 3661, Van Wert. Federal Home Loan Mortgage to Shon E. McConnell, inlot 591, Ohio City. Robert J. Minnig, Jean Ann Minn to Robert J. Minnig, Jean A. Minnig, inlot 3807, Van Wert.

9am-5pm Fri., Sat. & Sun.


19176 Venedocia-Eastern Rd., Venedocia
Beautiful country 4 bedroom, 1 1/2 bath, oversized 2 car garage. Updated everywhere. Must See! $89,900. Approx. monthly payment - $482.60
www.creativehomebuyingsolutions.com

HELP WANTED
Growing commercial printer Looking for

PRESS TRAINEE
Applicant must pass a series of tests to qualify Send resume to: Dennis Klausing

ALL NEW! FUN TO DRIVE! GREAT FUEL ECONOMY


2013 CHEVY SP ARK
ONLY 2 AVAILABLE or ORDER YOURS TODAY
1.2 4 cyl., front wheel drive, aluminum wheels, rear spoiler, daytime running lamps, MyLink stereo w/bluetooth & Pandora, smart phone compatible with 7 color touch screen. Steering wheel radio controls, PW, PL, remote entry, cruise control, air, theft deterrent system, stable track, stability control, 10 air bags.

Eagle Print
111 E. Fourth St. Delphos, OH 45833

HELP WANTED
Growing commercial printer Looking for

ALL THIS ONLY

w/5 spd. manual transmission

14,495
ONLY

EXPERIENCED SINGLE WIDTH PRINTING PRESS OPERATOR


Second Shift or Third Shift Wages based on experience Benefits include Health Insurance Dental Insurance Life Insurance 2 weeks vacation after 1 year 3 weeks vacation after 5 years 401K w/partial employer match Send resume to: Dennis Klausing

with automatic transmission

15,420

up to

38 M PG EP A MILEAGE RATING
Stock #

Eagle Print

PREOWNED VEHICLES
2012 Chevrolet Impala. ............................ 12I97 2012 Chevrolet Captiva 14K mi. ................... 12I96 2012 Chevrolet Cruze ............................. 12G51A 2012 Chevrolet Impala LTZ ...................... 12F69 2012 Chevrolet Malibu..............................12C24 20111 Hyndai Sante Fe ....................... 2 available 2011 Chevrolet Impala LT.........................12D33 2011 Buick Regal CXL ..............................12G20 2011 Chevrolet Impala LT.........................12D35 2011 Chevrolet Impala LT....................... 12G55A 2011 Chevrolet Impala LT........................11K152 2011 Chevrolet Malibu ............................. 11I125 2011 Chevrolet Silverado 1500 ............... 12B12 2011 Chevrolet Traverse 8 pass. ............. 12I94 2011 Chevrolet Silverado LTZ................. 12H90 2010 Chevrolet Avalanche LTZ ................ 12I95 2010 Chevrolet Equinox LT..................... 12F71 2010 Chevrolet Impala LT ....................... 12E58 2010 Chevrolet Impala LT ....................... 11I108 2009 Buick Lacrosse CXL ........................ 12A1 2009 Chevrolet HHR ................................. 12I93 2009 Pontiac G6 ....................................... 12E66 2009 Ford Focus ...................................... 12E65 2008 Buick Enclave CXL ......................... 12H78 2008 Chevrolet HHR .............................. 12G73A 2008 Pontiac G6 ....................................... 12E67 2007 Chrysler Town & Country LWB ..... 12H88 2007 Buick Rendezvous CX................... 11L163 2007 Chevrolet Colorado Z71 4X............ 12D32 2006 Chevrolet Trailblazer ...................... 12D59 2005 Buick Rendezvous CX.................... 12F70 2004 Chevrolet Silverado 4X4 ............... 12H74A 2003 Buick Park Avenue .......................... 12I98 2003 Dodge Ram 3/4 ton 4x4 ......................... 12I92A 2003 Chevrolet Silverado 1500 4X4 ...... 12H68A 2003 Chevrolet Trailblazer ..................... 12E42A 2003 Ford Explorer ................................. 12F42B 2001 Ford Focus ..................................... 12H92A 2000 Pontiac Grand Prix ....................... 12E33C 1998 Chevrolet Blazer ............................ 07H53A 1998 Chevrolet Lumina .......................... 12H96A 1966 Buick 225 Electra ........................... 06G134

S
950 Car Care

111 E. Fourth St., Delphos, OH 45833

ervice
POHLMAN POURED
CONCRETE WALLS
Residential & Commercial Agricultural Needs All Concrete Work

AT YOUR

950 Miscellaneous

Geise
Transmission, Inc.
automatic transmission standard transmission differentials transfer case brakes & tune up
2 miles north of Ottoville

Foresters Hall
LANDECK
for the upcoming holiday season and all special occasions
Accommodates up to 80 Full kitchen, bathrooms, heating & air.

SAFE & SOUND


SELF-STORAGE
Security Fence Pass Code Lighted Lot Affordable 2 Locations
Why settle for less?

DELPHOS

Mark Pohlman

419-339-9084 cell 419-233-9460

is available to rent

419-692-6336

419-453-3620

950 Construction

POHLMAN BUILDERS
ROOM ADDITIONS
GARAGES SIDING ROOFING BACKHOE & DUMP TRUCK SERVICE FREE ESTIMATES FULLY INSURED

950 Tree Service

TEMANS
OUR TREE SERVICE
Trimming Topping Thinning Deadwooding Stump, Shrub & Tree Removal Since 1973

Joe Miller Construction


CHEVROLET BUICK
1725 East Fifth Street, Delphos VISIT US ON THE WEB @ www.delphachevy.com
Service - Body Shop - Parts Mon., Tues., Thurs. & Fri. 7:30 to 5:00 Wed. 7:30 to 7:00 Closed on Sat. Sales Department Mon. & Wed. 8:30 to 8:00 Tues., Thurs. & Fri. 8:30 to 5:30; Sat. 8:30 to 1:00
Experienced Amish Carpentry Roofing, remodeling, concrete, pole barns, garages or any construction needs. Cell

BIG BACK YARD

Mark Pohlman

419-339-9084 cell 419-233-9460

Rent $90/day Contact Jim Miller

419-692-7261
Bill Teman 419-302-2981 Ernie Teman 419-230-4890

567-644-6030

950 Home Improvement

419-692-9867

IN DELPHOS 419-692-3015 TOLL FREE 1-888-692-3015

419 695-0015

Place Your Ad Today

COMMUNITY SELF-STORAGE
GREAT RATES NEWER FACILITY

L.L.C.

Trimming & Removal Stump Grinding 24 Hour Service Fully Insured

419-692-0032
Across from Arbys

KEVIN M. MOORE

(419) 235-8051

12 The Herald

Monday, October 1, 2012

www.delphosherald.com

s before. nd new

ng on?

565-3274

If you own a pole building, chances are youve seen rotten posts before. Our pre-cast concrete post solves the problem for both repair and new construction. Perma-Column offers the economy of post-frame construction and the durability of concrete. What are you building on?

Call us for all of your construction needs.

Meyer Building

blems?

Toll-Free: 1-800-742-2861 Phone: 260-565-3274 Visit us on the web at www.meyerbuilding.com

DICK HEITZ
We salute you for making sure the customer was always satisfied.

years of service at our Kossuth Facility.

23

for

rotten posts before. th repair and new post-frame e you building on?

needs.

UNITED ding

one: 260-565-3274 g.com

EQUITY, INC.

104 S. Main St., Delphos 419-692-0811 110 E. North St., Spencerville 419-647-4148 8731 St. Rt. 197, Neptune 419-586-2196 5276 SR 197, Kossuth 419-657-6788

Craigville, IN 260-565-3274 toll free 800-742-2861

Rotted Post Problems?

MEYER BUILDING
The Building People

Visit us on the web at

www.meyerbuilding.com

Church & Activity Centers Farm Shops Suburban Garages Residential Equestrian
If you own a pole building, chances are youve seen rotten posts before. Our pre-cast concrete post solves the problem for both repair and new construction. Perma-Column offers the economy of post-frame construction and the durability of concrete.

Repair & Renovation Work?


Commercial & Industrial Mini-Warehouse
Re-roof & Re-Siding Work Storm & Wind Damage Post Replacement Door Installation & Repair Barn & Garage Additions

What are you building on?


Call us for all of your construction needs.
Building with....
New Construction

Perma-Column
A pre-cast concrete column for your new Meyer building or to replace rotted posts in your old building.

Meyer Building
Toll-Free: 1-800-742-2861 Phone: 260-565-3274 Visit us on the web at www.meyerbuilding.com

Trust in the LORD with all your heart, And lean not on your own understanding; In all your ways acknowledge Him, And He shall direct your paths. Proverbs 3:5-6

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