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The circle of life at the vets,

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High school gridders,


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DELPHOS
The

HERALD

Telling The Tri-Countys Story Since 1869

75 daily

www.delphosherald.com

Friday, August 8, 2014

Delphos, Ohio

Vol. 145 No. 39

Allen County gearing up for Too Big to Miss fair

Upfront
Veterans Council
sets annual
summer meeting

The Delphos Veterans


Council will conduct its
Summer Annual Meeting at
8 p.m. on Wednesday at the
VFW hall at Fourth and Canal
streets.
The purpose of the meeting will be to discuss Veterans
Day activities, election of
officers and any other business that may come up.
All Delphos veterans are
welcome to attend.

Middle school
sets registration

Jefferson Middle School


has announced fall registration and school picture
dates. Students are to dress
appropriately for pictures.
The school office will
be open Monday with
new family registration on Wednesday.
Eighth-graders will
register on Aug. 15; seventh-graders; Aug. 18 and
sixth-graders, Aug. 19.
Registration is offered
from 9-11 a.m. and 1-3 p.m.

BY NANCY SPENCER
DHI Media Editor
nspencer@delphosherald.com

LIMA The Allen County Fairgrounds were


abuzz with activity Thursday evening for the Too
Big To Miss Allen County Fair public relations
dinner. The event was held in the newly-renovated
Youth Activities Building.
Fair Manager David Grimm welcomed everyone and gave an overview of the 2014 edition of
the county fair.
Along with hundreds of 4-H and FFA members
participating in dozens of events and free offerings
from open to close, the fair will close with one of
the most successful songwriter/artists of all time,
Toby Keith.
Weve really got something special with Keith
closing out our fair this year. This is an opportunity
for people to see Toby in his only appearance in
northwestern Ohio and eastern Indiana, he said.
I expect to see people from surrounding states on
our fairgrounds for this concert.
This event will be a major undertaking and
were also planning a special military send-off
for those in the county who will be entering our
armed forces. Keiths people are working with us
on that and its going to take everyone to make
this happen. We are extremely grateful for all our
directors, officers, staff and volunteers who give
their time to make this one of the best county fairs
in the state.
Keith will take the grandstand stage after
special guest John Pardi performs at 7 p.m. Aug.
23. Tickets are priced from $42 for grandstand
and bleachers, $52 for track, and $65 for Tobys

The 2014 Allen County Fair royalty were crowned Thursday during the public relations
dinner. They include, from left, Prince Forrest Hager, Princess Maddison Rex, Queen
Elizabeth Goedde and King Tyler Begg. The four will serve as hosts of many livestock
and other youth competitions and hand out awards to winners during this years fair
that begins Aug. 15 and concludes Aug. 23. (DHI Media/Nancy Spencer)
Party Zone Pit area (standing), which is the closest to the stage and features a special runway
in front of the stage. Ticket holders may buy
gate admission tickets at the time of purchasing

Keith tickets, which are necessary to enter the


fairgrounds.
See FAIR, page 12

High school
registration

St. Johns High School


has set registration for the
2014-15 school year.
The schedule
is as follows:
9-11 a.m. Tuesday
7th grade
1-3 p.m. Tuesday
8th grade
9-11 a.m.
Wednesday frosh
1-3 p.m.
Wednesday sophs
9-11 a.m.
Thursday juniors
1-3 p.m. Thursday
seniors
Parents should check
their e-mail for information
and registration forms. If
the email was not received,
contact the high school
office with an alternative
and/or new email address.
As a reminder, St. Johns
does not provide any type
of accident insurance for
students or athletes. To
purchase basic accident
insurance for a student, contact the Ministry Center.

Curth

Bargains galore at garage sales

These items are an example of the treasures the Delphos Herald found Thursday afternoon during
the Lincoln Highway Bi-Way Sales. Above: an antique settee; below left; a colorful ceramic rooster
collection; and below right: a vintage student desk. The sales continue today and Saturday. (DHI
Media/Stephanie Groves)

School supplies to
be distributed
Community Unitys
School Supplies On Us will
hold its annual school supply
distribution on Wednesday.
Parents must accompany
children to pick up packaged
school supplies between 10
and 11:30 a.m. at Trinity
United Methodist Church.

Forecast

Obituaries
State/Local
Religion
Community
Sports
Television
Classifieds
Comics and Puzzles
World News

BY STEPHANIE GROVES
DHI Media Staff Writer
sgroves@delphosherald.com
DELPHOS

The
Delphos Senior Citizens
Center has hired Alice Curth
as its new executive director
effective Aug. 1.
Curth is settling in and getting busy with re-organizational plans, vehicle inspections, record checks and promoting what the center can do
for the community.
She said there are a lot of
people who dont know what
the center offers and some dont
even know it is in Delphos.
We want to attract more
people, she said. Currently,
we are working on an exercise program with a different
format.
The administration has a
list of ideas to try including
computer classes and day trips
and want to draw the younger
group of seniors the Baby
Boomers.
See DIRECTOR, page 12

Partly cloudy
today and
tonight. Highs
in the upper
70s and lows
in the lower
60s. See page 2.

Index

Curth new
senior center
director

Ohio ranks 44th in long-term care and services for 65+


BY STEPHANIE GROVES
DHI Media Staff Writer
sgroves@delphosherald.com

2
3
4
5
6-8
9
10
11
12

Ohio ranks 44th compared to


other states in AARPs Raising
Expectations 2014: A State Scorecard
on Long-Term Services (LTSS) and
Supports for Older Adults, People
with Physical Disabilities, and
Family Caregivers report.
According to the AARP Solutions
website, on a national level, the
median annual home care private
pay cost as a percentage of median
household income for those age
65+ is 84 percent and in Ohio, the
median is 87 percent.
The scorecard measures system
performance from the viewpoint of

service users and their families. It is


designed to help states improve the
performance of their LTSS systems
so that older people and adults with
disabilities in all states can exercise
choice and control over their lives,
thereby maximizing their independence and well-being. State policymakers often control key indicators
measured and can influence others through oversight activities and
incentives.
The report highlights where
Ohio is making progress and where
we should continue to secure
improvements in serving individuals and families with long-term
care needs, says Jane Taylor, state
director for AARP Ohio. It is noteworthy that of the 26 measures,

Ohio improved on eight measures,


remained the same on 10 measures
and declined only on one measure.
The other seven measures are new
for the 2014 report.
The five dimensions measured
by the scorecard include:
Affordability and Access
including the relative affordability
of private pay LTSS, the proportion
of individuals with private longterm care insurance, the reach of
the Medicaid safety net and the
Medicaid LTSS safety net to people
with disabilities, who have modest
incomes, and the ease of navigating
the LTSS system;
Choice of Setting and Provider
includes the balance between
institutional services and home

and community based services


(HCBS), the extent of participant direction, and the supply and
availability of alternatives to nursing homes;
Quality of Life and Quality
of Care includes level of support,
life satisfaction, and employment of
people with disabilities living in the
community, and indicators of quality in nursing homes;
Support for Family Caregivers
includes legal and system supports
available in states and localities, the
extent to which registered nurses are
able to delegate health maintenance
tasks to nonfamily members, and
aspects of caregiver well-being; and
See OHIO, page 12

2 The Herald

www.delphosherald.com

Friday, August 8, 2014

For The Record

BIRTH

ST. RITAS
A girl was born Aug. 6 to
Angela and Adam Eickholt of
Delphos.

Hawaii bracing as hurricane


draws closer to island
AUDREY McAVOY
Associated Press

residents to still take proper precautions


to prepare themselves to keep everyone
safe.
Hundreds of people flowed into emergency shelters set up at high schools on
the Big Island, and Mayor Billy Kenoi
told KHON-TV that no major injuries or
damage from the first bits of wind and
rain have been reported.
Others got ready by making lastminute trips to the store and boarding up
windows at their homes.
Its getting more windy, and its raining pretty good, said Denise Laitinen
on the Big Island. But Im ready for it.
Everything outside is secured, and Ive
boarded up the picture windows. I feel
good about being prepared for anything
these storms bring us.
Meanwhile, Hurricane Julio, a
Category 2 storm, followed Iselles path
with sustained maximum winds of 105
mph. It was about 1,000 miles behind
Iselle and projected to head just north
of the islands sometime early Sunday
morning.

HONOLULU Barely holding


on to hurricane strength, Iselles outer
edges brought rain and wind to Hawaii
on Thursday as it approached landfall,
poised to become the first hurricane or
tropical storm to hit the island chain in
June Total: 114
22 years and whose path another hurFirst responder: responded ricane closely followed.
to 113 of the calls
Hurricane Iselle was expected to pass
Fire: 6
overnight across the Big Island, one of
2 Structural
the least populated islands that is known
1 Grass
for coffee fields, volcanoes and black
3 Rubbish
sand beaches, then send rain and high
EMS: 90
winds to the rest of the state on Friday.
7 MVAs
The storms predicted track had it skirtCalls for service: 13
ing just south of the other islands.
False alarms: 4
Forecasters were analyzing storm
Water rescue: 1 (mutual aid data before making possible changes
with Ottoville FD)
to its categorization, National Weather

Service meteorologist Eric Lau said.


July Total: 107
But were not really too concerned
First responder: 107
about the track or the intensity of the sysFire: 12
tem, Lau said. Were primarily urging
3 Mutual Aid (1
Spencerville, 2 ATFD)
1 machine fire in building
2 Rubbish/ Grass
6 False alarms
One Year Ago
Ems: 89
Delphos resident Dan Meyers has a voice and an original song that few have
9 MVAs
heard. On Saturday, when he sings at the opening ceremony for the American Huey
Calls for service: 6
369 Homecoming at Grissom Reserve Air Force Base in Indiana, many will hear a
voice echoing their own feelings of patriotism.

EMERGENCY
RUN TOTALS

FROM THE ARCHIVES

I-90/94
Challenge results
INFORMATION
SUBMITTED

COLUMBUS The
I-90/94 Challenge, a multistate, multi-jurisdictional
initiative concluded Monday,
August 4 after four days
of increased law enforcement on the entire corridor,
stretching 5,000 miles coast
to coast. Troopers from the
Ohio State Highway Patrol
responded to 19 crashes
within the target area, one
of which was fatal.
Troopers made 629
enforcement contacts and
268 Commercial Motor
Vehicle (CMV) contacts
during the four day period
as part of an increased focus
on the area.
Ohio banded together with 14 other states to
complement and enhance
the effectiveness of existing
local, state and federal highway safety efforts. Friday
through Monday of each
week traditionally experiences the most fatal crashes of any four day period
along I-90/94, according to
data of the last three years.
Troopers urge motorists
to slow down, wear safety
belts, drive sober and pay
attention.
I want all citizens of
Ohio to get home safely
every day, said Paul A.
Pride, Patrol superintendent.
By slowing down, paying
attention and eliminating
distractions, you significantly decrease your chance
of getting into a crash.
The challenge supports the International
Association of Chiefs of
Police initiative The Drive
Campaign to reduce traffic deaths and injuries
across the U.S. by 15 percent nationwide. It will be
led by the Minnesota State
Patrol.

25 Years Ago 1989


Delphos Self Storage, a new self-service storage facility, located one and one-half
miles west of Delphos on Old Route 30 will hold a grand opening of its new facilities
9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday. Owners Kevin and Dan Clark of Delphos said, Come out
to inspect our new facility Saturday and register for six months of free storage rental,
a 5x6-foot space, that will be given away then.
Ottoville won the Tri-County Little League championship by defeating the
Delphos Reds 14-0. Team members include Joe Boecker, Pat Miller, Chad Eickholt,
Mark Knippen, Todd Schmersal, Kurt Ruen, Matt Hilvers, Jon Langhals, Eric
Beining, Mark Schnipke, Brad Calvelage, Chad Beining, Brad Honigford, Pat
Horstman, batboy Rusty MacDonald and coaches John Eickholt and Virg Schnipke.
STG-3 Thomas G. Wrocklage, son of Tom and Mary Lou Wrocklage of Delphos,
has completed a two-year tour of duty with the U.S. Navy in Yokosuka, Japan. While
he was based in Japan, his ship spent two months in the Indian Ocean and the Persian
Gulf. His ship was attached to the battle group supporting the aircraft carrier U.S.S.
Midway.
50 Years Ago 1964
A former Fort Jennings man and his wife, Jack and Anna Mae Calvelage, at the
respected and respective ages of 76 and 70, are now caring for their 54th child in
their home in Wagoner, Okla. Jack and Anna Mae have reared three daughters of their
own, plus an adopted son and daughter. The rest of their family are foster children
youngsters in custody of the state Child Welfare Division.
Aug. 30 has been selected as the date for the annual Delphos Firemens
Homecoming Picnic, with Fire Chief Paul Clinger in charge of activities. The picnic
will be held at Waterworks Park. Prizes, refreshments, games, rides and entertainment that includes the Eagles Band are on the days program.
Ottoville Up-to-Date 4-H Club held a meeting recently with winners of the county
safety contest presenting their talks. Marcia Fischbach gave an illustrated talk on Toys
for Tots and Mrs. Devitt, adviser, told of the demonstration contest to be held Aug. 11.
75 Years Ago 1939
W. D. Swihart won the Democratic nomination for mayor of the city of Delphos
at the primary election Tuesday by defeating three other candidates, John B.
Lehmkuhle, William B. Taylor and Frank Kurber. In the contest for city treasurer,
Walter Remlinger, present office holder, defeated Arthur O. Wulfhorst. John A.
Shenk defeated Clarence Marsh, incumbent, for city solicitor.
An effort will be made at once to secure action for the construction of the Delphos
projects, the swimming pool, comfort station and stadium, under the WPA. The
status of this matter was discussed at the weekly meeting of the Delphos Kiwanis
Club Tuesday evening. Mayor Baringer and Service Director Myers were present as
guests at the meeting.
The final band concert of the present season will be held in the business district
Thursday night. The concert will be given by the Jefferson High School band at the
corner of Main and Third streets. The concerts have been provided by the Delphos
Jefferson band, under the direction of Dane Heitzman. The entertainments were
given under the auspices of the Delphos Civic Club.

WEATHER
WEATHER FORECAST
Tri-County
Associated Press
TODAY: Partly cloudy.
Highs in the upper 70s.
East winds 5 to 10 mph.
TONIGHT:
Partly
cloudy. Lows in the lower
60s. East winds 5 to 10
mph.

SATURDAY: Partly
cloudy. Highs in the lower
80s. East winds 5 to 15
mph.
SATURDAY NIGHT:
Mostly cloudy. Lows in
the mid 60s. Northeast
winds 5 to 10 mph.
SUNDAY
AND
SUNDAY NIGHT: Partly
cloudy. Highs in the lower

80s. Lows in the mid 60s.


MONDAY:
Partly
cloudy with a 40 percent
chance of showers and
thunderstorms. Highs in
the lower 80s.
MONDAY NIGHT:
Partly cloudy with a 20
percent chance of showers
and thunderstorms. Lows
in the mid 60s.

OBITUARY

The Delphos
Herald
Nancy Spencer, editor
Ray Geary,
general manager
Delphos Herald, Inc.
Lori Goodwin Silette,
circulation manager

Moletus F. Osting
July 23, 1918
Aug. 5, 2014
DELPHOS Moletus F. Osting,
96, of Delphos died at 1:30 p.m.
Tuesday at Vancrest Healthcare Center.
He was born July 23, 1918, in
Delphos to Frank and Veronica (Elwer)
Osting, who preceded him in death.
On June 13, 1942, he married
Dorothy Gasser, who died on Feb. 17,
2002.
Survivors include two sons, Jerry
(Gail) Osting of Ottawa and Donald
(Judy) Osting of Spencerville; two
daughters, Carolyn (Tom) Pittner of
Delphos and Diane (Gary) Miller of
Fort Jennings; two sisters, Donnie
(Leo) Schmelzer and Earline (John)
Williams of Delphos; three brothers,
Alvin (Marilyn) Osting and Norm
(Karen) Osting of Troy and Roger
(Ricki) Osting of Cridersville; grandchildren, Robin (Jerry) Levin of
Grand Rapids, Michigan, Amy Pittner
Kuhlman of Ottoville, Scott Osting of
Ottawa, Anita (Rich) Ross of Ottawa,
Ericka (Cam) Aller of St. Marys, Trent
(Shelly) Osting of Spencerville, Travis
(Melanie) Pittner of Florida, Ross
(Randie) Miller of Michigan and Jason
(Cindy) Osting of Leipsic; brother
and sisters-in-law, Robert (Dorothy)
Gasser of Ottoville, Leona (Len)
Bruskotter and LaDonna Ostendorf of
Fort Jennings, Rita Miller of Indiana,
Alvera (Gene) Kleman of Kansas,
Mary Ann Grote and Deloris (Tony)
Schulte of Kalida, Mary Sergeant of
Fort Jennings, Ruth Osting of Middle
Point, Betty Osting of Delphos and
Toni Osting of Cloverdale; and 16
great-grandchildren.
He was also preceded in death
by a grandchild, Ryan Miller; brothers, Gene, Earl, Ed, Urban and Louis
Osting; and sisters, Marie Osting, Vera
Koester and Gerrie Grubenhoff.
Mr. Osting was a beekeeper for
more than 60 years and retired from
the Delphos Bending Company after
47 years. He also served in the U.S.
Army as a technical sergeant. He was
a member of St. John the Evangelist
Catholic Church, VFW Post 3035, K
of C 1362, Eagles Lodge 471, the
Delphos Coon and Sportsman Club,
where he was the oldest member, and
he was a life member of the Ottawa
American Legion. He was an avid
hunter and fisherman; he especially
enjoyed coon hunting and taking many
trips to Rice Lake and Lake Erie. He
was an excellent pitcher in fast-pitch
softball, playing for the Delphos Food
Locker.
Mass of Christian Burial will begin
at 11 a.m. Monday at St. John the
Evangelist Catholic Church, the Rev.
David Reinhart officiating. Burial will
be Resurrection Cemetery, with military graveside rites conducted by the
Delphos Veterans Council and Ottawa
American Legion.
Friends may call from 2-8 p.m.
Sunday at Harter and Schier Funeral
Home, where a Parish Wake will begin
at 7:30 p.m.
Preferred memorials are to St.
Johns Cemetery for a tree fund in
memory of Osting.
To leave condolences, visit harterandschier.com.

The
Delphos
Herald
(USPS 1525 8000) is published
daily except Sundays, Tuesdays
and Holidays.
The Delphos Herald is delivered by carrier in Delphos for
$1.48 per week. Same day
delivery outside of Delphos is
done through the post office
for Allen, Van Wert or Putnam
Counties. Delivery outside of
these counties is $110 per year.
Entered in the post office
in Delphos, Ohio 45833 as
Periodicals, postage paid at
Delphos, Ohio.
405 North Main St.
TELEPHONE 695-0015
Office Hours
8 a.m.-5 p.m. Mon.-Fri.
POSTMASTER:
Send address changes
to THE DELPHOS HERALD,
405 N. Main St.
Delphos, Ohio 45833

CORRECTIONS

The Delphos Herald wants


to correct published errors in
its news, sports and feature
articles. To inform the newsroom of a mistake in published
information, call the editorial
department at 419-695-0015.
Corrections will be published
on this page.

FUNERALS
SMITH, Clyde Ed,
67, of Delphos, visitation will be from 2-6
p.m. Saturday at Harter
and Schier Funeral Home
with a memorial service
at 6 p.m. At Eds request,
his body has been cremated. In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may be made to the
Delphos Jefferson boys
basketball program. Harter
and Schier Funeral Home,
Delphos, is in charge of all
arrangements.
WISCHMEYER,
Ralph E., 84, of Ottawa,
Mass of Christian Burial
will begin at 9:30 a.m.
Saturday at Sts. Peter and
Paul Catholic Church, the
Rev. Matt Jozefiak officiating. Burial will follow
in the church cemetery
with military rites by the
Ottawa American Legion,
VFW
and
AMVETS.
Visitation will be from
2-8 p.m. today at Love
Funeral Home, Ottawa,
where there will be a K
of C Rosary at 7:30 p.m.
and a Scripture service at
7:50 p.m. Memorials can
be made to Sts. Peter and
Paul School Education
Foundation. Condolences
can be expressed at lovefuneralhome.com.

LOCAL
GRAINS

Wheat
Corn
Soybeans

$5.57
$3.35
$12.66

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CLEVELAND (AP)
These Ohio lotteries were
drawn Thursday:
Mega Millions
Estimated jackpot: $115
million
Pick 3 Evening
1-4-7
Pick 3 Midday
8-0-6
Pick 4 Evening
7-3-6-9
Pick 4 Midday
8-4-7-1
Pick 5 Evening
2-5-8-1-0
Pick 5 Midday
5-9-1-9-5
Powerball
Estimated jackpot: $90
million
Rolling Cash 5
05-07-10-23-26
Estimated
jackpot:
$120,000

www.delphosherald.com

Friday, August 8, 2014

The Herald 3

STATE/LOCAL

BRIEFS

Tand
his

Spaghetti supper
open to public
INFORMATION
SUBMITTED
VAN WERT From 4-8
p.m. Sunday at the Masonic
Center located at the corner
of Main and Market streets in
Van Wert, there will be an all
you can eat spaghetti supper
sponsored by the young men
of Van Wert DeMolay.
In addition to spaghetti,
there will be a salad, garlic
bread, dessert and drink. The
cost is only $8 for a delicious
Italian meal. Carry-out will be
offered as well. Everyone is
welcome to this event.
The DeMolays have tickets available for advance
sales but walk-ins are also
most welcome. Please come
to support these fine young
men raise funds for their service projects and recreational
events.

ArtSpace/Lima
receives Ohio Arts
Council grant
INFORMATION
SUBMITTED
LIMA ArtSpace/Lima
is pleased to announce that
it has received a grant of
$12,083 for FY 2014 from the
Sustainability Grants Program
of the Ohio Arts Council.
The Ohio Arts Council
Sustainability program provides grants for organizational
operating support. This program supports Ohio organizations that plan and conduct
ongoing arts programs.
Recipients of sustainability
grants must be incorporated
as non-profit 501(c) 3 organizations in Ohio and produce
programs of high artistic quality, appropriate for the stated
mission of the organization.
Organizations often choose
to dedicate sustainability
funds to artistic or administrative expenses. Other allowable
expenses include marketing,
program planning, education
and evaluation.

That

by HELEN KAVERMAN
In 1914 the conflicts and ambitions of the major powers of
Europe touched off a war that
would involve 29 nations before
the war ended in 1918. It was a
time of colonization. Nearly all
European countries had colonies
in Africa or elsewhere. When the
war ended in 1918, several of the
old empires had collapsed. The
Communists took over Russia,
which once was a dynasty of
the Romanovs. The Hapsburgs no
longer ruled in AustriaHungary
and the Hohenzollerns lost their
power in Germany. It also brought
an end to the Ottoman Empire.
The spark that really touched
off the war was the assassination
of Archduke Francis Ferdinand,
heir to the throne of Austria
Hungary. The gun-shots also
killed his wife, Sophie. The
assassin was Gavrilo Princip, a
young Bosnian student who had
lived in Serbia. This incident took
place on 28 June 1914, while
Ferdinand and Sophie were riding in a motorcade through the
streets of Sarajevo, the capital of
the Austrian Province of Bosnia.
AustriaHungary suspected that
Serbia was aware of the plot
to kill the Archduke, so they
declared war on Serbia almost
immediately.
By October 30, the Central
Powers AustriaHungary,
Germany and the Ottoman Empire
were at war with the Allies
Belgium, France, Great Britain,
Russia and Serbia.
President Woodrow Wilson

State senator
urges Indians
to change name
COLUMBUS (AP) An
Ohio state senator says its
time for the Cleveland Indians
to drop their offensive name
and Chief Wahoo mascot.
Eric Kearney, a Democrat
from Cincinnati, introduced
a resolution that if passed by
the Legislature would encourage the baseball team to adopt
a new name and mascot.
He also sent a letter to the
Indians owner.
With the Indians in the
midst of a four-game series
with the Cincinnati Reds,
Kearney says its the right
time to introduce the resolution. The Legislature is currently on summer break.
Indians President Mark
Shapiro says the Chief Wahoo
mascot represents the teams
heritage and will remain in place.

Anniversary of
World War I

Henry Frank Rode

tried to stay neutral and work


for peace but the American
Tanker, Gulflight, was sunk by a
German sub on 1 May 1915 and
on May 7, they sank the British
Liner, Lusitania, off the Irish
coast, killing 1,198, including
128 Americans. As time went by,
Germany sank several merchant
ships and in October 1916 the
German sub, U-53, arrived off
Newport, Rhode Island, and sank
nine British merchant ships in
international waters.
Then the United States got
word Germany tried to influence Mexico to join the Central
Powers in return for New Mexico,
Texas and Arizona. Then in
March 1917, a German sub sank
an unarmed U.S. merchant ship,
the Algonquin. President Wilson
issued an executive order to arm
U. S. merchant ships. Again,
German subs sank three more
American merchant ships.
Finally, Wilson addressed a
special session of congress and
asked for a declaration of war
against Germany. He stated The
World must be made safe for
democracy.
By April 6, both houses of
Congress had concurred and
shortly after one that afternoon,
Wilson signed the proclamation
declaring a state of war.
In May the first officers training camps opened and Congress
passed the Selective Service Act,
calling for the enrollment of all
men, between 21 and 30, who
would then be drafted by lot
into the army. In June the first
American combat troops began
to disembark in France, under the
leadership of General Pershing.
On 21 October 1917 the first U.
S. troops entered the frontlines
at Sommervillier; they are under
French command. With this, the
United States was in the thick
of it.
The following letter was written by Henry Hank Rode to his
parents, north of Delphos on 16
June 1918: Somewhere in France,
My dear Folks: How are you? I
am just fine and hope the same to
you. Well, I suppose you were out
automobile-riding or having some
kind of goodtime today. It surely
has been a nice day here today.
If it would be that nice Sunday in
the States, Id have a little bit of
Sunday too. But where I am now,
its work everyday. I havent had
a chance to go to church anymore
since Palm Sunday. I guess you
are pretty busy by this time. Its
just about clover hay making time
now and it is always corn plowing, too at the same time. Were
surely having nice weather here,
now. For about two months now,
it has been nice and sunshiney
every day. At first when we got
here it rained every day, but that
was early in the spring, and then
it is raining in the States, too. I
hope you got my other letters that
I wrote to you. I am just wondering if they passed the censor or
not. Some of the boys said their
folks wrote and said that almost
all that was left of their letters
was their names and address.

The set of three pictures tells the story of the funeral procession of George
Nolte in World War I. The bottom picture is at Third and Main streets in
Delphos. (Submitted photos)
Well, if my letters get through at
all, I am sure you have the first
one by this time. The first one I
wrote from the Supply Company
was about the 16 of April. I
havent had any letters yet, but
I am in hopes that I will get one
pretty soon. I am in hopes that
this war will be over and we can
all be back home soon. But still
we can never tell how long it will
last. Well, dont worry about me.
I am alright and I hope that some
day, I can come back again and
then I wont have to write. I was
just telling one of the boys this
morning I wish I could be home
now. Everything is just fine this
time of the year at home. This
is about clover hay making time
now and that would be just sport
for me to get in back of the hayloader and work in the hay again.

Well, lets hope that by next year,


Ill be at it again. This war cant
last forever, that is sure. Its
funny, I dream about home almost
every night and I hope my dreams
will come true before long. I
havent had any letters from home
yet. I havent had any mail at all,
since the middle of April. I have
a notion to subscribe to a newspaper over here so that Ill have
a little something to read. I never
got a one of those Heralds after I
left Camp Sherman. Well, this is
enough for this time, I am hoping
this will reach you all in the best
of health and spirits as it leaves
me, and dont forget to write. I
remain as ever, Henry.
(To be continued)

Ohio official: Man shot at Wal-Mart had air rifle


CINCINNATI (AP) A man who was fatally shot by
police in a Wal-Mart store in a Dayton suburb after officers
say he waved a weapon at customers was carrying an air rifle,
Ohios attorney general said Thursday.
Attorney General Mike DeWine released a brief statement
after the states crime bureau said it had taken over the investigation of the shooting at the request of Beavercreek police.
Police had said John Crawford, 22, waved a rifle at customers
Tuesday night and was fatally shot when he wouldnt drop the
weapon. DeWine said the man had a variable pump air rifle
made by Crosman Corp.
The owners manual for the MK-177 BB/Pellet rifle warns
that misuse can result in serious injury or death. And it specifically warns about waving it in public. Police and others may
think it is a firearm, the manual states.
There was no immediate response to an email seeking
comment sent Thursday to the Rochester, New York-based
manufacturer.
Bureau of Criminal Investigation spokeswoman Jill
Del Greco declined to elaborate on DeWines statement.
Authorities didnt say whether the man grabbed the air rifle in
the store or had brought it in.
A man who witnessed the scene told a 911 dispatcher that a
man with a rifle was near the pet supplies section and appeared
to be loading it.
Family members and friends of Crawford had said earlier
that he didnt have a real gun and suggested that the purported
rifle was a toy.
Del Greco said the BCI sent a crime scene unit and special
investigators to Beavercreek. She said Beavercreeks police
chief requested that BCI act as independent investigator in

the case. When done, BCI will turn its findings over to the
Montgomery County prosecutor. Del Greco said theres no
timetable for completion, and it will be up to the county prosecutor to decide whether the case should go before a grand jury.
Beavercreek police referred questions Thursday to the
BCI. Authorities said both police officers involved are on paid
administrative leave.
Wal-Mart spokeswoman Brooke Buchanan said by email
Wednesday that the company is working with investigators
and is deeply saddened about the loss of life.

Open House &


Registration
Sat. Aug. 9th
10:00 - 1:00
Sat. Aug. 16th
10:00 - 1:00

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of Dance

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419.331.3511

www.lynsacademyofdance.com

Dr. Jacob Mohr


General Dentist

419.692.GRIN (4746)
www.mohrsmilesohio.com
664 Elida Ave, Delphos, OH

www.delphosherald.com

Friday, August 8, 2014

4 The Herald

Blessed Are the


Poor in Spirit

It may seem odd that the very first of the beatitudes bestows a blessing on the poor in
spirit and promises that the kingdom of heaven is theirs (Matthew 5:3). Should we not
seek spiritual riches rather than spiritual poverty? One chapter later we are told to store
up treasure in heaven, for where your treasure is, there your heart will be also (Matthew
6:21).
The blessing for the poor in spirit is not meant to denigrate spiritual treasures but rather
to elevate the spirit of poverty and humility. Jesus says repeatedly that he did not come
to call those who are already saved, but rather to save the lost. The healthy do not need a
doctor, but the sick do. We would do well to remember here that the scribes and Pharisees
were paradigms of virtue, rich in spirit and proud of their piety, but, didnt seem to need
or heed Jesuss message. Jesus had vastly more to offer the weeping adulteress who was
thrown at His feet than he did to her accusers. And He had more respect for the impoverished widow who humbly put her two small coins in the temple treasury than the wealthy
who made a show of putting in larger amounts.
God loves the poor, and those who are poor in spirit even more, so we should count it
a blessing when we are feeling lowly and humbled.
- Christopher Simon

Be wretched and mourn and weep. Let your laughter be turned to mourning
and your joy to gloom. Humble yourselves before the Lord, and he will exalt you.
James 4:9-10

Our local churches invite you to join them for their activities and services.

DELPHOS

DELPHOS BAPTIST CHURCH


Pastor Jerry Martin
302 N Main, Delphos
419-692-0061 or 419-302-6423
Sunday - 10:00 a.m. Sunday
School (All Ages) , 11:00 a.m.
Sunday Service, 6:00 p.m Sunday
Evening Service
Wednesday - 7:00 p.m. Bible
Study, Youth Study
Nursery available for all services.
FIRST UNITED PRESBYTERIAN
310 W. Second St. - 419-692-5737
Pastor Harry Tolhurst
Sunday: 11:00 Worship Service
- Everyone Welcome
Communion first Sunday of
every month.
Communion at Van Crest Health
Care Center - First Sunday of each
month at 2:30 p.m., Nursing Home
and assisted living.

MARION BAPTIST CHURCH


2998 Defiance Trail, Delphos
419-339-6319
Services: Sunday - 11:00 a.m.
and 6:00 p.m.; Wednesday - 7:00
p.m.
FIRST ASSEMBLY OF GOD
Where Jesus is Healing Hurting Hearts!
808 Metbliss Ave., Delphos
One block so. of Stadium Park.
419-692-6741
Lead Pastor - Dan Eaton
Sunday - 10:30 a.m. - Worship
Service with Nursery & Kids
Church; 6:00 pm. Youth Ministry
at The ROC & Jr. Bible Quiz at
Church
Monday - 7:00 p.m. Teen Bible
Quiz at Church
Wednesday
7:00
p.m.
Discipleship Class in Upper Room
For more info see our website:
www.delphosfirstassemblyofgod.
com.

TRINITY UNITED
METHODIST CHURCH
211 E. Third St., Delphos
Rev. Rich Rakay, Pastor
Week beginning August 10, 2014
Sunday - 8:15 a.m. Worship
Service; 9:30 a.m. Adult Sunday
School; 10:30 a.m. Worship
Service; 11:30 Radio Worship
on WDOH; 6:00 p.m. Outreach
Committee; 7:30 p.m. Ladies Bible
Fellowship.
Monday - 8:00 a.m.-12 noon
Summer Office Hours.
Tuesday - 8:00 a.m.-12 noon
Summer Office Hours.
Wednesday - 8:00 a.m.-12 noon
Summer Office Hours.; 10:00 a.m.11:30 a.m. Distributing School
Supplies; 11:30 a.m. UM Womens
Picnic @ Sally Kiggins; 4:00 p.m.7:00 p.m. Ice Cream Social @
Ridge UMC
Thursday - 8:00 a.m.-12 noon
Summer Office Hours; 4:30 p.m.6:30 p.m. Suppers On Us.
Friday - 8:00 a.m.-12 noon
Summer Office Hours.
ST. JOHNS CATHOLIC CHURCH
331 E. Second St., Delphos
419-695-4050
Rev. Dave Reinhart, Pastor
Fr. Ron Schock &
Fr. Daniel Johnson.

Deacons: Fred Lisk, Dave Ricker


and John Sheeran
Mary
Beth
Will,
Liturgical
Coordinator;
Tom
Odenweller, Parish Council President;
Lynn Bockey, Music Director

Celebration of the Sacraments


Eucharist Lords Day
Observance; Saturday 4:30 p.m.,
Sunday 7:30, 9:15, 11:30 a.m.;
Weekdays as announced on
Sunday bulletin.
Baptism Celebrated first
Sunday of month at 1:00 p.m. Call
rectory to schedule Pre-Baptismal
instructions.
Reconciliation Tuesday and
Friday 7:30-7:50 a.m.; Saturday
Anytime by
DELPHOS WESLEYAN CHURCH 3:30-4:00 p.m.
request.
11720 Delphos Southworth Rd.
Matrimony Arrangements
Delphos - Phone 419-695-1723
must be made through the rectory
Pastor Rodney Shade
six months in advance.
937-397-4459
Anointing of the Sick
Asst. Pastor Pamela King
Communal celebration in May
419-204-5469
Sunday - 10:30 a.m. Worship; and October. Administered upon
9:15 a.m. Sunday School for all request.
ages.
ANDECK
Wednesday - 7 p.m. Service
and prayer meeting.

DELPHOS CHRISTIAN UNION


Pastor: Rev. Gary Fish
470 S. Franklin St.,
(419) 692-9940
9:30 Sunday School
10:30 Sunday morning service.
Youth ministry every Wednesday
from 6-8 p.m.
Childrens ministry every third
Saturday from 11 to 1:30.
ST. PAULS UNITED
METHODIST
335 S. Main St. Delphos
Pastor - Rev. Rich Rakay
Sunday
9:00
a.m.
Worship Service

ST. JOHN THE BAPTIST CHURCH

Landeck - Phone: 419-692-0636


Rev. Dave Reinhart, Pastor
Administrative aide: Rita Suever
Masses: 8:30 a.m. Sunday.
Sacrament of Reconciliation:
Saturday.
Newcomers register at parish.
Marriages: Please call the parish house six months in advance.
Baptism: Please call the parish.

SPENCERVILLE

ST. PATRICKS CHURCH


500 S. Canal, Spencerville
419-647-6202

Saturday
4:30
p.m.
Reconciliation; 5 p.m. Mass, May
1 - Oct. 30. Sunday - 10:30 a.m. Mass

ST. PETER LUTHERAN


CHURCH
422 North Pierce St., Delphos
SPENCERVILLE FULL GOSPEL
Phone 419-695-2616
107 Broadway St., Spencerville
Rev. Angela Khabeb
Pastor Charles Muter
Sunday 9AM Worship
Home Ph. 419-657-6019
Service.
Sunday: Morning Services Monday - 8AM Kids Breakfast 10:00 a.m. Evening Services - 7:00
M-F/ 8-9 AM
p.m.
Tuesday - 6PM Mission:
Wednesday: 7:00 p.m. Worship
SLIMpossible.
Wednesday - 9:00AM Quilting service.
Day; 7:00 PM Worship Service;
SPENCERVILLE CHURCH
7:45PM
InReach/OutReach
OF THE NAZARENE
Meeting
317 West North St.
Thursday - 4:00 p.m Suppers
419-296-2561
On Us at Trinity UMC
Pastor Tom Shobe
Saturday - 8:00AM Prayer
9:30 a.m. Sunday School; 10:30
Breakfast.
a.m. Morning Worship; 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday Service

RAABE FORD
LINCOLN

11260 Elida Road


DELPHOS, OH 45833
Ph. 692-0055
Toll Free 1-800-589-7876

Alexander &
Bebout Inc.

419-238-9567

10098 Lincoln Hwy.


Van Wert, OH
www.AlexanderBebout.com

TRINITY UNITED METHODIST


Corner of 4th & Main,
Spencerville
Phone 419-647-5321
Rev. Jan Johnson, Pastor
Christmas Eve services: 6:3 p.m.
Message - Christmas
Uncensred
Sunday - 9:30 a.m. Sunday
School; 10:30 a.m. Worship service.
UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST
102 Wisher Drive, Spencerville
Rev. Michael Cassady,
Pastor
Sunday 9:30 a.m. Cafe; 10:00
a.m. Worship Service.

AGAPE FELLOWSHIP
MINISTRIES
9250 Armstrong Road,
Spencerville
Pastors Phil & Deb Lee
Sunday - 10:00 a.m. Worship
service.
Wed. - 7:00 p.m. Bible Study

HARTFORD
CHRISTIAN CHURCH
(Independent Fundamental)
Rt. 81 and Defiance Trial
Rt. 2, Box 11550, Spencerville
Rev. Robert King, Pastor
Sunday - 9:30 a.m. Sunday
school; 10:30 a.m. Worship
Service; 7:00 p.m. Evening worship and Teens Alive (grades 7-12).
Wednesday - 7:00 p.m. Bible
service.
Tuesday & Thursday 7- 9
p.m. Have you ever wanted to
preach the Word of God? This
is your time to do it. Come share
your love of Christ with us.

ELIDA/GOMER
IMMANUEL UNITED
METHODIST CHURCH
699 Sunnydale, Elida, Ohio
Pastor Bruce Tumblin
Sunday - 8:30 a.m. traditional;
10:45 a.m. contemporary
CORNERSTONE BAPTIST CHURCH

2701 Dutch Hollow Rd. Elida


Phone: 339-3339
Rev. Frank Hartman
Sunday - 10 a.m. Sunday
School (all ages); 11 a.m. Morning
Service; 6 p.m. Evening Service.
Wednesday - 7 p.m. Prayer
Meeting.
Office Hours: Monday-Friday,
8-noon, 1-4- p.m.
GOMER CONGREGATIONAL
CHURCH
7350 Gomer Road, Gomer
419-642-2681
gomererucc@bright.net
Sunday 10:00 a.m. Worship
NEW HOPE
CHRISTIAN CENTER
2240 Baty Road, Elida
Ph. 339-5673
Rev. James F. Menke, Pastor
Sunday 10 a.m. Worship.
Wednesday 7 p.m. Evening service.
ZION UNITED
METHODIST CHURCH
Corner of Zion Church & Conant
Rd., Elida
Pastor: David Howell
Sermon: Do You?
Special music: Don Hohenbrink
and Jennifer Long
Sunday - Service - 9:00 a.m.
LIGHTHOUSE
CHURCH OF GOD
Elida - Ph. 222-8054
Rev. Larry Ayers, Pastor
Service schedule: Sunday
10 a.m. School; 11 a.m. Morning
Worship; 6 p.m. Sunday evening.

HARTER
& SCHIER
FUNERAL
HOME
209 W. 3rd St.
Delphos, Ohio 45833
419-692-8055

PIKE MENNONITE CHURCH


3995 McBride Rd., Elida
Phone 419-339-3961
FAITH BAPTIST CHURCH
4750 East Road, Elida
Pastor - Brian McManus
Sunday 9:30 a.m. Sunday
School; 10:30 a.m. Worship, nursery available.
Wednesday 6:30 p.m.
Youth Prayer, Bible Study; 7:00
p.m. Adult Prayer and Bible
Study; 8:00 p.m. - Choir.

VAN WERT COUNTY


BREAKTHROUGH
101 N. Adams St., Middle Point
Pastor Scott & Karen Fleming
Sunday Church Service - 10
a.m, 6 p.m.
Wednesday - 7:00 p.m.
CALVARY EVANGELICAL
CHURCH
10686 Van Wert-Decatur Rd.
Van Wert
419-238-9426
Rev. Clark Williman. Pastor
Sunday- 8:45 a.m. Friends and
Family; 9:00 a.m. Sunday School
LIVE; 10:00 a.m.
SALEM UNITED
PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
15240 Main St. Venedocia
Rev. Thomas Emery, Pastor
Church Phone: 419-667-4142
Sunday - 8:30 a.m. - Adult
Bell Choir; 8:45 a.m. Jr. Choir;
9:30 a.m. - Worship; 10:45 a.m. Sunday school.
Monday - 6 p.m. Senior Choir.
ST. MARYS CATHOLIC CHURCH
601 Jennings Rd., Van Wert
Pastor: Rev. Stan Szybka
Sunday 8:30 a.m., 10:30 a.m.;
Monday 8:30 a.m.; Tuesday 7
p.m.; Wednesday 8:30 a.m.;
Thursday 8:30 a.m. - Communion
Service; Friday 8:30 a.m.;
Saturday 4 p.m.
VAN WERT VICTORY
CHURCH OF GOD
10698 US 127S., Van Wert
(Next to Tracys Auction Service)
Pastor: E. Long
Sunday worship & childrens
ministry - 10:00 a.m.
Wednesday Service: 7:00 p.m.
www.vwvcoh.com
facebook: vwvcoh
GRACE FAMILY CHURCH
634 N. Washington St.,
Van Wert
Pastor: Rev. Ron Prewitt
Sunday - 9:15 a.m. Morning
worship with Pulpit Supply.
KINGSLEY UNITED
METHODIST
Ohio 709 and Mendon Rd.Phone:
419-965-2771
Pastor Anthony Perry
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.;
Worship - 10:25 a.m.
Wednesday - Youth Prayer and
Bible Study - 6:30 p.m.
Adult Prayer meeting - 7:00
p.m.
Choir practice - 8:00 p.m.
MIDDLE POINT UNITED
METHODIST
Corner of Jackson and Mill
streets
Pastor - Tim Owens
TRINITY FRIENDS CHURCH
605 N. Franklin St., Van Wert
Ph: (419) 238-2788
Sr. Pastor Stephen Savage
Outreach Pastor Neil Hammons
Sunday - Worship services at
9:00 a.m., 10:30 a.m. & 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday-Ministries at 7:00
p.m.

PITSENBARGER
SUPPLY

234 N. Canal St.


Delphos, O.
Ph. 692-1010

TRINITY LUTHERAN
303 S. Adams, Middle Point
Rev. Tom Cover
Sunday 9:30 a.m. Sunday
School; 10:30 a.m. Worship service.
FIRST BAPTIST
CHURCH
13887 Jennings Rd., Van Wert
Ph. 419-238-0333
Childrens Storyline:
419-238-3476
Email: fbaptvw@bright.net
Pastor Steven A. Robinson
Sunday 9:30 a.m. Sunday
School for all ages; 10:30 a.m.
Family Worship Hour; 6:30 p.m.
Evening Bible Hour.
Wednesday - 6:30 p.m. Word
of Life Student Ministries; 6:45
p.m. AWANA; 7:00 p.m. Prayer
and Bible Study.
MANDALE CHURCH
OF CHRIST
IN CHRISTIAN UNION
Rev. Justin Sterrett, Pastor
Sunday 9:30 a.m. Sunday
School all ages. 10:30 a.m.
Worship Services; 7:00 p.m
Worship.
Wednesday - 7 p.m. Prayer
meeting.
PENTECOSTAL WAY CHURCH
Pastors: Bill Watson
Rev. Ronald Defore
1213 Leeson Ave.,
Van Wert 45891
Phone (419) 238-5813
Head Usher: Ted Kelly
10:00 a.m. - Sunday School
11:10 a.m. - Worship 10:00 a.m.
until 11:30 a.m. - Wednesday
Morning Bible Class 6:00 p.m.
until 7:00 p.m. - Wednesday
Evening Prayer Meeting
7:00 p.m. - Wed. Night Bible
Study.
Thursday - Choir Rehearsal
Anchored in Jesus Prayer
Line - (419) 238-4427 or (419)
232-4379.
Emergency - (419) 993-5855

HOLY FAMILY
CATHOLIC CHURCH
Rev. Robert DeSloover, Pastor
7359 St. Rt. 109 New Cleveland
Saturday Mass - 7:00 p.m.
Sunday Mass - 8:30 a.m.

IMMACULATE
CONCEPTION
CATHOLIC CHURCH
Ottoville
Rev. Jerry Schetter
Mass schedule: Saturday - 4
p.m.; Sunday - 10:30 a.m.
ST. JOSEPH
CATHOLIC CHURCH
135 N. Water St., Ft. Jennings
Rev. Charles Obinwa
Phone: 419-286-2132
Mass schedule: Saturday 5
p.m.; Sunday 7:30 a.m. and 9:30
a.m.
ST. MICHAEL CHURCH
Kalida
Fr. Mark Hoying
Saturday 4:30 p.m. Mass.
Sunday 8:00 a.m. & 10:00
a.m. Masses.
Weekdays: Masses on Mon.,
Tues., Wed. and Friday at 8:00
am; Thurs. 7:30 p.m.

PAULDING COUNTY
GROVER HILL
ZION UNITED METHODIST
CHURCH
204 S. Harrision St.
Grover Hill, Ohio 45849
Pastor Mike Waldron
419-587-3149
Cell: 419-233-2241
mwaldron@embarqmail.com

Worship this week at the


church of your choice.

PUTNAM COUNTY
CHURCH OF GOD
18906 Rd. 18R, Rimer
419-642-5264
Rev. Mark Walls
Sunday - 9:30 a.m. Sunday
School; 10:30 a.m. Worship
Service.
ST. BARBARA
CHURCH
160 Main St., Cloverdale 45827
419-488-2391
Rev. Jerry Schetter
Mass schedule: Saturday 5:30
p.m., Sunday 8:00 a.m.
FAITH
MISSIONARY
BAPTIST CHURCH
Road U, Rushmore
Pastor Robert Morrison
Sunday
10 am Church
School; 11:00 Church Service;
6:00 p.m. Evening Service
Wednesday - 7:00 p.m. Evening
Service
ST. ANTHONY OF PADUA
CATHOLIC
CHURCH
512 W. Sycamore,
Col. Grove
Office 419-659-2263
Fax: 419-659-5202
Father Tom Extejt
Masses: Tuesday-Friday - 8:00
a.m.; First Friday of the month
- 7 p.m.; Saturday - 4:30 p.m.;
Sunday - 8:30 a.m. and 11:00
a.m.
Confessions - Saturday 3:30
p.m., anytime by appointment.

BALYEATS
Coffee
Shop
133 E. Main St.
Van Wert
Ph. 419-238-1580
Hours: Closed Mondays
Tuesday-Saturday
6:00 a.m.-10:00 p.m.

We thank
the sponsors
of this
page and
ask you to
please
support them.
Vanamatic
Company
AUTOMATIC
AND HAND
SCREW MACHINE
PRODUCTS
701 Ambrose Drive
Delphos, O.

www.delphosherald.com

LANDMARK

Friday, August 8, 2014

COMMUNITY

Paws to Consider

At the movies ...

The circle of life at the vets

Van Wert Cinemas


10709 Lincoln Hwy., Van Wert
Guardians of the Galaxy (PG-13) Fri.-Sat.: 3:30/8:30; Sun.:
4:30; Mon.-Tues.: 2:00/7:00; Wed.-Thurs.: 4:30
Guardians of the Galaxy 3D (PG-13) Fri.-Sat.: 1:00/6:00;
Sun.: 2:00/7:00; Mon.-Tues.: 4:30;
Wed.-Thurs.: 2:00/7:00
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (PG-13) Fri.-Sat.:
1:00/5:00/9:00; Sun.: 2:00/6:00; Mon.-Tues.: 4:00/8:00; Wed.Thurs.: 2:00/6:00
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 3D (PG-13) Fri.-Sat.:
3:00/7:00; Sun.: 4:00/7:00; Mon.-Tues.: 2:00/6:00; Wed.Thurs.: 4:00/8:00
Lucy (R) Fri.-Sat.: 1:00/3:00/5:00/7:00/9:00; Sun.-Thurs.:
2:00/4:00/6:00/8:00
The Purge: Anarchy (R) Fri.-Sat.: 9:00; Sun.-Thurs.: 8:00
Planes: Fire and Rescue (PG) Fri-Sat.: 1:00/3:00/5:00;
Sun.-Thurs.: 2:00/4:00/6:00
Into the Storm (PG-13) Fri.-Sat.: 1:00/3:00/5:00/7:00/9:00;
Sun.-Thurs.: 2:00/4:00/6:00/8:00

BY DR. JOHN
JONES, DVM

Allen County
Courthouse

CALENDAR OF
EVENTS

TODAY
7:30 a.m. Delphos
Optimist Club, A&W DriveIn, 924 E. Fifth St.
10 a.m.-3 p.m. The
Delphos Museum of Postal
History, 339 N. Main St., is
open.
11:30 a.m. Mealsite
at Delphos Senior Citizen
Center, 301 Suthoff St.
1-4 p.m. Interfaith
Thrift Store is open for shopping.
SATURDAY
8:30-11:30 a.m. St.
Johns High School recycle,
enter on East First Street.
9 a.m. - noon Interfaith
Thrift Store is open for shopping.
St. Vincent dePaul Society,
located at the east edge of the
St. Johns High School parking lot, is open.
Cloverdale recycle at village park.
10 a.m.-2 p.m. Delphos
Postal Museum is open.
12:15 p.m. Testing of
warning sirens by Delphos
Fire and Rescue.
1-3 p.m. Delphos Canal
Commission Museum, 241 N.
Main St., is open.
7 p.m. Bingo at St.
Johns Little Theatre.
SUNDAY
1-3 p.m. The Delphos
Canal Commission Museum,
241 N. Main St., is open.
1-4 p.m. Putnam
County Museum is open, 202
E. Main St. Kalida.
TUESDAY
10 a.m. to 3 p.m. The
Delphos Museum of Postal
History, 339 N. Main St., is
open.
11:30 a.m. Mealsite
at Delphos Senior Citizen
Center, 301 Suthoff St.
7:30 p.m. Ottoville
Emergency Medical Service
members meet at the municipal building.
Ottoville VFW Auxiliary
members meet at the hall.
Fort Jennings Local School
District board members meet
at the high school library.
Alcoholics Anonymous,
First Presbyterian Church,
310 W. Second St.
Elida village council meets
at the town hall.
WEDNESDAY
9 a.m. - noon Putnam
County Museum is open, 202
E. Main St. Kalida.
10 a.m.-3 p.m. The
Delphos Museum of Postal
History, 339 N. Main St., is
open.
11:30 a.m. Mealsite
at Delphos Senior Citizen
Center, 301 Suthoff St.
Noon Rotary Club
meets at The Grind.
4 p.m. Delphos Public
Library board members meet
at the library conference
room.
6 p.m. Shepherds of
Christ Associates meet in the
St. Johns Chapel.
7 p.m. Bingo at St.
Johns Little Theatre.
THURSDAY
9-11 a.m. The Delphos
Canal Commission Museum,
241 N. Main St., is open.

Fri Aug 8-thu Aug 14

CINEMA 1: 2D/3D: Guardians of the Galaxy PG13


CINEMA 2: 2D/3D: Teenage Mutant
Ninja Turtles PG13
CINEMA 3: Planes: Fire & Rescue PG
The Purge: Anarchy R
CINEMA 4: Lucy R
CINEMA 5: Into the Storm PG13
Coming Soon:
The Expendables 3 | Lets Be Cops
Sin City: A Dame to Kill For
Admission before 6pm: $5 After 6pm: Adults-$7/
Children 11 and under and seniors-$5. 3D seats
before 6pm: $7 3D after 6pm: Adults $9/Children
11 and under and seniors $7
WE DO NOT ACCEPT CREDIT OR DEBIT CARDS OR CHECKS!

VAN-DEL DRIVE-IN
Fri Aug 8-Sun Aug 10

SCREEN 1: Into the Storm PG13


Lucy R
SCREEN 2: Planes: Fire & Rescue PG
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles PG13
SCREEN 3: Guardians of the Galaxy PG13
Hercules PG13

Admission: 5 and under FREE. Children 6-10 $5


Ages 11-62 $7. Seniors 63 and up $5.
Gates open at 7pm; Showtime is at dusk.

We have a new picture in


our waiting room. A Norman
Rockwell print, At the Vets
depicts a young boy holding a Beagle puppy with a
make-shift bandage around
its head. Surrounding the pair
is a colorful bunch of clients
and pets only Mr. Rockwell
could create.
This picture was the first
thing I saw when I entered
the office of Dr. E. F. Laman
on a cold Saturday morning in December nearly 20
years ago. I was a 24-year-old
senior veterinary student who
made the trek from Columbus
to Delphos to ask him about a
job. Edward Franklin Laman
was a big man then, a rather
imposing figure to this nervous, skinny kid. He proved
to be as warm and friendly as
they come, though, and made
me feel very welcome.
Although I didnt get the
job that day, I didnt give
up. The reason for that was
simple there was no place
else I wanted to be.
Last Friday was a complex day for me. To borrow
from Dickens, it was the
best of days; it was the worst
of days. In the morning, I
was given a message to call a
young man named Cory who
had a problem with some
sheep. Two of his ewe lambs
had died suddenly and he was
quite concerned.
His last name was
Eickholt. Heck, half the population of Putnam County are
Eickholts. To which clan he
belonged, I hadnt a clue until
he gave me directions to the
farm.
It was his late grandpa
Orvals place and now the
house and buildings belonged
to Cory. I hadnt been there
in years. His dad and uncles
used to raise hogs together and were known as the
Eickholt Pork Producers.
They didnt have a lot of hogs
but they took good care of
them and were proud of what
they raised.
Corys dad, Tim, was there
when I arrived and I joked
with him how glad I was that
one of them finally had the

Drs. Ed Laman and John Jones, DVM

sense to raise sheep. With the


history Cory gave me the
lambs had been on pasture
until a couple of weeks ago
and hadnt been de-wormed
for two to three months I
suspected a parasite problem.
When Tim showed me the
lambs, that assumption was
quickly borne out. When I
pulled down their lower eyelids, the inner conjunctival
tissues of both lambs were
as white as a sheet. This was
the work of a nasty parasite
known as Hemonchus contortus, the barber pole worm,
a voracious blood-sucker and
the killer of many sheep in
this part of the world. I gave
Cory instructions on what
products to use and how to
strategically de-worm the
flock to keep this from happening again.
It was great to be back
there and even greater to see
a new generation take interest in agriculture, especially
sheep production, as Cory
had done. As I drove out the
driveway, I waved to Tim as
he was climbing aboard the
old Farmall tractor, a dj vu
moment from 20 years before
when Id wave to Orval.
Sadly, my euphoria didnt
last long. A few hours later,
we received a call that Dr.
Laman, now a resident at
Vancrest in Delphos, was
nearing the end of his welllived life. The Rockwell
print, of course, resided there,
too, not far from his bed.
Eds wife, Anne, was by
Aug. 9
Chris Carder
Jacob Mueller
Orrie Spring
Aug. 10
Melissa Wrasman
John Deitering
Adam Laudick
Mary Carder
Abby Buettner
Devon Schoffner
Lynk Klinefelter
Ethan Koester

Happy
Birthday

Aug. 11
Ashley Moffitt
Bob Ditto
Iva Schmit
Vera Kill-Edmonds
Matt Bockey

Cant Seem to put us Down?

Neither can the subscribers who read our newspaper daily


for local news, information and so much more!
Get a heads-up on whats happening locally and beyond;
call 419-695-0015 to subscribe to the Delphos Herald!

Description

The Herald 5

his side when Bonnie and I


arrived and we had a heartfelt
visit with her as we celebrated his life. Ed loved being a
veterinarian. He loved caring for animals in need, but
he loved helping their people
even more. That was the most
important thing he taught me
and the boy with the puppy
perfectly defined his lifes
work.
Before we left, Anne told
me to take the picture. Ed
wanted you to have it, she
said. Walking down the long
hallway with the treasured
print, I was overcome with
a sense of loss I hadnt felt
since the death of my own
mother.
Ed also gave me my life.
Not the heartbeat, breathing
kind my parents provided,
but the life I have now
my career, my farm even all
of those darn sheep. If he
hadnt given me the job or
sold his practice to us so
Bonnie could join me, none
of that would have been possible. To say thank you for
all that he did for us doesnt
seem adequate.
After the picture was
hung in its new location,
I stepped back for a better look and for some reason my mind drifted to the
climactic battle scene from
the movie, Saving Private
Ryan, where the gravely
wounded Capt. Miller gives
his final order to the young
Ryan: Earn this!
I hope I can.

Van-Del Drive In
19986 Lincoln Hwy.,
Middle Point
Thursday-Tuesday
Screen 1
Into the Storm (PG-13)
Lucy (R)
Screen 2
Planes:
Fire
and
Rescue (PG)
Teenage Mutant Ninja
Turtles (PG-13)
Screen 3
Guardians of the
Galaxy (PG-13)
Hercules (PG-13)
American Mall Stadium 12
2830 W. Elm St., Lima
Saturday and Sunday
Into the Storm (PG-13) 11:25/1:55/4:35/7:20/10:00
Step Up All In 3D (PG-13) 11:20/2:05/7:50
Step Up All In (PG-13) 5:00/10:30
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 3D (PG-13)
11:40/2:15/4:50/7:40/10:10
Teenage
Mutant
Ninja
Turtles
(PG-13)
11:10/1:40/4:20/7:10/9:40
The Hundred-Foot Journey (PG) 11:50/3:45/6:45/9:45
Get On Up (PG-13) 11:55/3:30/6:40/9:50
Guardians of the Galaxy 3D (PG-13) 11:00/12:10/1:50/3:2
5/4:40/6:30/7:30/9:20/10:20
Guardians of the Galaxy (PG-13) 11:30/4:10/7:00/9:55
Hercules 3D (PG-13) 11:15/4:15/7:05
Hercules (PG-13) 1:45/10:15
Lucy (R) 11:45/2:10/4:45/7:45/10:25
The Purge: Anarchy (R) 11:05/4:25/10:05
Dawn of the Planet of the Apes (PG-13) 1:30/6:55
Shannon Theatre, Bluffton
Through Aug. 14
Guardians of the Galaxy (PG-13) 2D show times are at
7 p.m. every evening and 1:30 p.m. Saturday and Sunday
matinees. 3-D show times are at 9:30 p.m. every evening and
4 p.m. Saturday and Sunday matinees.

Check us out online: delphosherald.com

When
you
see
us at
an event, look for a
photo gallery
online.

STOCKS

Quotes of local interest supplied by


EDWARD JONES INVESTMENTS
Close of business August 7, 2014
LastPrice

AmericanElectricPowerCo.,Inc.
49.84
AutoZone,Inc.
517.26
BungeLimited
79.96
BPplc
47.36
CitigroupInc.
48.06
CenturyLink,Inc.
38.95
CVSCaremarkCorporation
76.11
DominionResources,Inc.
65.76
EatonCorporationplc
66.72
FordMotorCo.
16.82
FirstDefianceFinancialCorp.
28.02
FirstFinancialBancorp.
16.43
GeneralDynamicsCorp.
114.39
GeneralMotorsCompany
33.11
TheGoodyearTire&RubberCompany 24.22
HuntingtonBancsharesIncorporated
9.46
HealthCareREIT,Inc.
63.09
TheHomeDepot,Inc.
80.47
HondaMotorCo.,Ltd.
33.99
Johnson&Johnson
99.93
JPMorganChase&Co.
55.91
KohlsCorp.
54.45
LowesCompaniesInc.
47.92
McDonaldsCorp.
93.31
MicrosoftCorporation
43.23
Pepsico,Inc.
89.90
TheProcter&GambleCompany
80.14
RiteAidCorporation
5.99
SprintCorporation
5.88
TimeWarnerInc.
72.06
UnitedBancsharesInc.
14.75
U.S.Bancorp
40.68
VerizonCommunicationsInc.
48.65
Wal-MartStoresInc.
73.95
DowJonesIndustrialAverage
16,368.27
S&P500
1,909.57
NASDAQComposite
4,334.97

Change

+0.56
-2.34
-0.04
-0.49
-0.08
+0.18
-0.92
+0.85
-0.04
-0.16
+0.06
-0.23
-0.36
-0.29
-0.02
-0.10
-0.22
-0.05
-0.07
-0.78
-0.32
-0.28
-0.18
-0.16
+0.49
-0.61
-0.95
+0.01
-0.02
-2.18
-0.03
-0.40
-0.48
-0.25
-75.07
-10.67
-20.08

DELPHOS
The

HERALD

Telling The Tri-Countys Story Since 1869

405 N. Main Street


Delphos, OH 45833-1598
visit our website at: www.delphosherald.com
News
419-695-0015 Ext. 134
nspencer@delphosherald.com
Fax 419-692-7704

6 The Herald

Friday, August 8, 2014

SPORTS

www.delphosherald.com

Its clobberin time!

With Thursday being the first day of full-scale hitting of the 2014 football pre-season, both St. Johns (left), during the morning session, and Jefferson (right),
later in the afternoon, took advantage of it as preparations continue toward the scrimmages next week. (DHI Media/Jim Metcalfe)

High School Golf Previews

By JIM METCALFE
Staff Writer
jmetcalfe@delphosherald.com

ST. JOHNS
ST. JOHNS St.
Johns head golf coach John
Klausing had an extremely
young team last fall one
senior and one junior and
paid for it with a 1-14 mark.
That crew finished eighth out of nine
Midwest Athletic Conference units and
ninth at the Division III Sectional at
Auglaize Country Club.
With four starters back and a few more
younger options the Blue Jays dont
have a single senior and only one junior
Klausing hopes for a much-improved
Blue Jay crew for 2014.
We improved by 10 strokes per player by the end of last season, Klausing
said. We knew it was going to be tough
for us last year, having three freshmen
play varsity, but the kids stayed positive
and improved throughout the year.
The experience and the knowledge
we received last year will help our team
see improvements this year. The short
game is always the last part that gets
pulled together. We need to just keep
the attitude of fighting for the end result,
which is improving up in the MAC tournament and the sectional.
Back for another season are lone
junior Brandon Slate, sophomore Austin
Lucas, sophomore Steve Leathers and
classmate Ryan Dickman.
Austins average fell by 20 strokes
during the season last year; Brandon has
improved from last year and will be the
leader of the team for the next two years,
the coach continued.
Having only to replace last years
lone 12th-grader, 3-year varsity player
T.J. Hoersten, the head coach will turn to
the likes of sophomore Derek Klausing,
sophomore Elliott Courtney, freshman
Robbie Buescher and classmate Matt
Dickrede.
We have gained the experience of a
young group last year playing varsity and
the lessons they learned on never giving
up, Coach Klausing added. This will
help them in building success for this
year. We will achieve the goals we set
for this year and prepare for the year-end
tournaments.
The Jays opened 2014 Wednesday.
SPENCERVILLE
SPENCERVILLE
Spencerville head golf
coach Mike Harmon has put
together a strong Bearcat
program in his nine seasons as the head
man, compiling a 144-83 overall mark
(99-53 in the Northwest Conference) in

the Division III ranks.


That includes last falls 15-13
mark a year ago, 10-6 in the
NWC, good for fourth place.
However, this years crew will have
the double whammy only two returning lettermen and only three others on the
varsity roster.
The lone senior is fourth-year man
Chance Campbell (42.8 per-9 average)
and the lone junior is third-year player
Mitchell Youngpeter (42.2).
Our guys really enjoy playing the
game; they have come together well as
a team so far this year, Harmon began.
We had three of our players participate
in a lot of tournaments this summer; they
hit a lot of range balls and even go out
after practice to continue playing.
However, because we have such a
small squad in terms of numbers, consistency will be important for us. Most
high school golfers really need to work
on course management, so we will focus
on improving that, as well as getting the
guys to make good decisions on the golf
course. Our mental and short games will
be a big focus this year.
The other three golfers are freshman
Sam Reed, freshman Collin Davis and
classmate Lydia Dunlap.
Sam is a freshman who should have a
great impact this season; he was the medalist in our first match this season, Harmon
explained. He had a great summer in
junior tournaments and is capable of shooting pretty good scores. Collin also has a lot
of potential, really enjoys the game and is
working hard at getting better.
That crew will be needed to replace
All-NWC honorable-mention pick James
Schaad, the teams third scorer, who graduated, as well as a couple of expected experienced hands that elected to sit out 2014.
Our goal is to win every time we play
but we also want to play the game properly and with etiquette. I think we could
win every match if we can get the guys
rolling, he added. Our goal is to win the
conference I anticipate that my group,
Allen East, Bluffton and Lincolnview
will be atop the NWC and I feel we
have a chance to get out of sectionals
this year.
I am excited for the season; we have
a pretty good group of golfers and I think
with some fine-tuning, we can shoot
some pretty good scores this season.
There will be some good competition in
the NWC this year; there are quite a few
good golfers scattered around the various
teams.
The Bearcats have commenced the
new season.
ELIDA
Denny Thompson has coached the
Elida boys golf team for three decades.

He begins his fourth decade


season number 31 in 2014
with three returning starters back
from last falls 7-8 edition of
Bulldog linksters, including a fifth-place
finish in the Western Buckeye League.
Senior Jimmie Ebling beginning
his fourth varsity season is the leading
golfer back for the Division I crew, scoring at an average of 40 per nine holes a
year ago.
Junior Brett Shook (42) and sophomore Drew Sarno (43) also return.
However, he has to replace a pair of
top 3-year varsity golfers due to graduation Trent Cutlip and Nate Cellar as
well as veteran senior Max Stambaugh.
Lack of experience will hurt us this
year. We will be counting on Jimmie,
Brett and Drew to lead the way,
Thompson said.
Thompson expects senior Patrick
Brockert and sophomore Kayler
Yoxheimer to be key newcomers this fall.
Elida has already opened its campaign.
VAN WERT
VAN WERT Fifthyear Van Wert boys golf
coach Jeff Hood had a
down year in 2013, with
his Cougars finishing
5-7 in duals, ninth in the
Western Buckeye League and eighth
out of the 12 teams at the Division II
Sectionals.
He hopes to get back on track with
a 4-year 44-14 mark in duals but has a
very green unit to do so with only a pair
of letterwinners back.
Lone senior entering his third varsity campaign Brandon Hernandez is
his top returnee and expected leader in
2014, coming off his All-WBL honorable-mention pick as a freshman.
As well, junior Jacob Covey is back.
Having to replace a trio of All-WBL
performers in the graduated Adam
Jurczyk, Justin Price and Lucas Etzler is
a task he figures will be an uphill challenge.
We have a young, inexperienced
team that cannot realistically compete
for a WBL title as we have in years
past, Hood assessed. We must focus
on improvement and learning the game.
Finishing sixth or higher in the WBL
would be big accomplishment at this
stage of our development.
He will need the quick development
of promising newcomers to do just that:
sophomore Carter Eikenbary, sophomore Gabe Rollins, sophomore Colton
Deschner, freshman Jared Hernandez,
freshman Tim Mankey and classmate
Daniel McGowan.
The Cougars new season has begun.

The King still rules NASCAR in retirement


Associated Press

porate pitchman and team owner in the sport hes called home
since he was a boy. Now 77, Petty shows no signs of easing
LONG POND, Pa. Richard Petty tried resting on the off the gas as he bounds around the track, all in the name of
green artificial turf that covered the stage used for driver good business and giving back to the sport that helped make
introductions.
him a household name.
It didnt last long: At a NASCAR track, The King never
Im just idling along, trying to keep up with what they
goes unnoticed.
want me to do, Petty said.
Richard! Richard! King! King!
There are few fans at the track these days who
Petty craned his neck and waved toward fans who
even remember Petty from his final season in 1992.
couldnt resist shouting at the races grand marshal
It doesnt matter. Petty is still an A-lister around the
garage, a bigger star than drivers on his race team
from the 3-level structure at Pocono Raceway that
or even the rest of the field for a Sprint Cup race.
rises high over the front stretch.
Behind those sunglasses, a design caught Pettys
Petty commanded a crowd during an appearance
eye. Yes, fans from kids to seniors had seats in
at a makeshift bowling alley set up inside a fan zone
the section labeled the Richard Petty 200 Victory
at Pocono by sponsor GoBowling.com.
On his first roll, he knocked down three pins.
Circle. The words were flanked by two images of
With fans snapping pictures, Petty left no pin standPetty in his feathered Stetson hat and dark glasses.
Well, look at that, Petty said, eyes fixed on the
ing on his second attempt.
sign. I didnt know that. Thats the first time I ever
After bowling another quick frame, its time for
Petty
paid attention.
Petty to split, but not before he has to pilot his way
Petty had no idea some of the best seats in the house had through a clog of autograph hounds who want just one autograph, one photo, from the driver who has had to have signed
long been named in his honor.
But you dont need to sit in a pricey suite to know The and posed more than anyone in NASCAR history.
King.
Hes got a crazy life. He cant go nowhere, one fan
Long removed from his era as perhaps the greatest driver remarked.
in NASCAR history, Petty sill serves as an ambassador, corSee NASCAR, page 8

Auto Racing Glance

Associated Press
NASCAR
SPRINT CUP
CHEEZ-IT 355
Site: Watkins Glen, New York.
Schedule: Today, practice (Fox Sports 1, 12:30-2 p.m., 4:30-6
p.m.); Saturday, qualifying (ESPN2, 11:30 a.m.-1 p.m.); Sunday,
race, 1 p.m. (ESPN, noon-4 p.m.).
Track: Watkins Glen International (road course, 2.45 miles).
Race distance: 220.5 miles, 90 laps.
Last year: Kyle Busch raced to the third of his four 2013
victories.
Last week: Dale Earnhardt Jr. completed a season sweep at
Pocono for his third victory of the year.
Fast facts: Race winners get first priority for the 16-driver
Chase as long as they are in the top 30 in the standings and
attempted to qualify for every race. With five regular-season
races left, Earnhardt, Jimmie Johnson and Brad Keselowski
lead the series with three victories. Jeff Gordon, Carl Edwards,
Kevin Harvick and Joey Logano each have two wins. Busch,
Aric Almirola, Denny Hamlin and Kurt Busch also have won.
Earnhardt leads the standings. Tony Stewart has a record five
victories at the track. Hes winless this year. Gordon has a
Cup-record nine victories on road courses, winning four times at
Watkins Glen and five at Sonoma. Marcos Ambrose won at
the track in 2011 and 2012. Edwards won at Sonoma in June.
Next race: Pure Michigan 400, Aug. 17, Michigan International
Speedway, Brooklyn, Michigan.
Online: http://www.nascar.com
___
NATIONWIDE
ZIPPO 200
Site: Watkins Glen, New York.
Schedule: Today, practice (Fox Sports 1, 9:30-11 a.m., 2-3:30
a.m.); Saturday, qualifying (ESPN2, 9:30-11 a.m.), race, 2:15
p.m. (ABC, 2-5 p.m.).
Track: Watkins Glen International (road course, 2.45 miles).
Race distance: 200.9 miles, 82 laps.
Last year: Brad Keselowski raced to the fourth of his seven
2013 victories.
Last week: Keselowski won at Iowa Speedway, holding off
Michael McDowell.
Fast facts: The race is the second of three road-course events
this year. Brendan Gaughan won at Road America in June.
Kyle Busch has three victories in 15 starts this year to extend his
series-record victory total to 66. Hes racing along with fellow
Sprint Cup drivers Keselowski, Marcos Ambrose, Joey Logano,
Matt Kenseth and Paul Menard. Chase Elliott leads the season standings, two points ahead of JR Motorsports teammate
Regan Smith and 12 in front of Elliott Sadler and Ty Dillon.
Next race: Nationwide Childrens Hospital 200, Aug. 16,
Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course, Lexington, Ohio.

AP sources: Cavs, Wolves


set for Love-Wiggins deal
Associated Press

shoes. The Wolves could use


the first-round pick they get
LeBron James and Kevin from the Cavaliers to help
Love won Olympic gold med- entice the Sixers to part with
als together. Theyre about to the 26-year-old Young but
team up again, this time to try talks continue on that front,
and end Clevelands 50-year the person added.
championship drought.
For now, the deal will
Love will soon be on unite Love, James and Allhis way from Minnesota to Star point guard Kyrie Irving
Cleveland after the teams in a new-look Big 3 in
reached an agreement in prin- Cleveland and give the citys
ciple to a trade
long-suffering
that will send the
sports fans realisAll-Star forward to
tic chance to celthe Cavaliers for
ebrate a first title
Andrew Wiggins,
since 1964, when
Anthony Bennett
the Browns won
and a first-round
the NFL title.
draft pick, two
The Cavs, who
people
with
havent been to
knowledge
of
the playoffs since
the deal told The
James left in
Associated Press
2010, are certainly
on Thursday.
expected to be one
Love
They
spoke
of the leagues top
on condition of anonymity teams. Although theyre givbecause no official agreement ing up Wiggins and Bennett,
can be reached until Aug. 23, they have promising role playwhen Wiggins, this years No. ers in Dion Waiters, Tristan
1 overall draft pick, becomes Thompson, Mike Miller and
eligible to be traded.
Anderson Varejao, giving
By that point, the deal them more than enough talcould be expanded to include ent to challenge anyone in the
a third team, according to one Eastern Conference.
of the people familiar with
Love withdrew from his
the talks. The Timberwolves planned participation with
have had discussions with Team USA at the FIBA World
the Philadelphia 76ers about Cup of Basketball to avoid an
acquiring forward Thaddeus injury that could derail the deal
Young to help fill Loves that is now on the fast track.

www.delphosherald.com

The Herald 7

Friday, August 8, 2014

College Football Previews


Associated Press
MAC
N Illinois hopes to bounce back
after losing title
A bump in the road or a
changing of the guard?
Northern Illinois arrived
in Detroit for last years MidAmerican Conference championship game with an undefeated
record but the Huskies lost 47-27 to
Bowling Green, ending their shot at a
third straight league title.
Star quarterback Jordan Lynch has
moved on to the NFL and Northern
Illinois is expected to face a significant
challenge in the MACs West division
from Toledo.
The Huskies have represented the
conference well, reaching the Orange
Bowl at the end of the 2012 season
but the rest of the MAC has to feel as
if theres an opening at the top after
Northern Illinois looked so formidable
for a while.
This year is so much different than
last year because we have so many
people in different roles, Huskies coach
Rod Carey said. Were always changing. Hopefully its a good change.
Dont write off Northern Illinois just
yet. The showdown with Toledo
which may decide the division title
will be a home game for the Huskies.
And although Lynch is gone,
Northern Illinois has had to replace top
talent before and succeeded anyway.
Chandler Harnish of the Huskies was
the MACs offensive player of the year
in 2011 before Lynch won the award the
past two seasons.
Here are 10 things to watch in the
MAC this year:
NEW STARS?: Lynch was outplayed
in last seasons title game by Matt
Johnson and now the Bowling Green
quarterback is the man dealing with
all the hype as the season approaches.
Johnson is on the preseason watch list
for the Walter Camp Award, which goes
to the nations best player. Also keep an
eye on Ball State running back Jahwan
Edwards.
TOUGH ACT TO FOLLOW: Lynch
finished third in the Heisman Trophy
vote in 2013, part of a remarkable 12
months in which the MAC also had a
team (Northern Illinois) in a BCS bowl
and a player (Central Michigans Eric
Fisher) picked No. 1 in the NFL draft.
That stretch will be tough to top.
HOME COOKING: MAC schools
always play their share of big-name opponents but its not every day one of them
has a chance to do so at home. Toledo
hosts Missouri on Sept. 6 and Buffalo
hosts Baylor on Sept. 12. Massachusetts
will play at home against Boston College
and Colorado early in the season.
TAKING OVER: There are four new
coaches in the MAC since the end of the
2013 regular season Dino Babers at
Bowling Green, Chuck Martin at Miami of
Ohio, Chris Creighton at Eastern Michigan
and Mark Whipple at Massachusetts.
Babers takes over the defending MAC
champion after leading Eastern Illinois to
a quarterfinal appearance in the Football
Championship Subdivision.
ON THE RISE?: Akron had lost 19
straight conference games before winning 4-of-5 down the stretch last season
a breakthrough that was perhaps
foreshadowed by the Zips near-upset of
Michigan in September. Eight offensive
starters return for coach Terry Bowdens
team.

WEST RACE: Northern Illinois has


played in the MAC title game the past
four seasons, largely at the expense of
Toledo, which has had its share
of good teams as well over that
span. Can the Rockets unseat the
Huskies atop the West? Toledo
returns 10 starters on defense and
Northern Illinois returns nine on
offense. The teams meet Nov. 11.
ANOTHER GAME TO WATCH:
Bowling Green hosts Buffalo on Oct. 4;
if Buffalo wins that game, the Bulls may
have a good shot to win the East since
their schedule does not include Northern
Illinois or Toledo.
SOLICHS STREAK: Coach Frank
Solich has led Ohio to five straight bowl
appearances. Only Northern Illinois
with a league record six appearances in a
row has a longer streak going.
MICHIGAN MALAISE: Since
Central Michigans division title in
2009, the three Michigan schools have
fallen off the pace in the West. Western
Michigan and Eastern Michigan are
going through particularly tough times,
having each gone 1-7 in conference play
last season.
EARLY START: So much for scheduling a few nonconference games before
the MAC season starts. Kent State will
host Ohio on Aug. 30 in the seasonopener for both teams and the loser
will already be facing an uphill climb
in the East.
Predicted order of finish:
EAST 1. Bowling Green, 2.
Buffalo, 3. Akron, 4. Kent State, 5.
Ohio, 6. Miami (OH), 7. Massachusetts.
WEST 1. Northern Illinois, 2.
Toledo, 3. Ball State, 4. Central
Michigan, 5. Western Michigan, 6.
Eastern Michigan.
Title game winner: Northern Illinois
-

AMERICAN
Overlooked no more: Cincinnati favored in
American
Being overlooked wont be a problem for Cincinnati
this season.
The Bearcats are favored to win the American
Athletic Conference and loving it.
As my teammates would say, Its about time,
Cincinnati cornerback Adrian Witty said. Since weve
been here, its no respect. Were winning. What else
more do you want?
Here is the Big East. Or at least it was the Big
East. This is Year 2 of the American, the re-incarnated
Big East. Cincinnati relocated from Conference USA to
the Big East in 2005 and has had only
two losing seasons. Every other year,
the Bearcats have won at least eight
games. Theyve won double-digits five
times, played in two BCS bowls and are
29-9 in the last three years.
So, yes, when the Bearcats bring
back 17 starters and hand the quarterback job to former 5-star recruit and
Notre Dame transfer Gunner Kiel, they
are a deserving favorite to win the
conference. And with a couple of tough nonconference
road games at Ohio State and Miami, the Bearcats set
themselves up for a chance to earn a spot in a New
Years bowl.
Things to know about the American Athletic
Conference this season.
NO SHOWDOWN: Cincinnati and defending conference champion Central Florida wont play this season.
The 11-team league plays eight conference games, so
each team misses two league foes. And the conference
championship game doesnt start until next season,
when Navy joins to give the AAC two 6-team divisions.
The Bearcats seemed to draw the smoothest path
to a title among the top contenders with no UCF and
Houston and East Carolina at home.
REPLACING BLAKE: UCF QB Blake Bortles was
the No. 3 overall pick in the NFL draft. Hell be tough to
replace. Likely getting the first crack will be sophomore
Justin Holman. Also getting a look are redshirt freshman
Pete DiNovo, freshman Tyler Harris and Boise State
transfer Nick Patti, who is from Orlando. SMU is the
other team in the American replacing a star quarterback
after Garrett Gilberts departure.
WELCOME: Tulane, Tulsa and East Carolina join
the American this season, three more Conference USA
imports. Tulsa is coming off a tremendously disappointing season, going 3-9 after being picked as one of the

favorites in C-USA. Tulane was one of last seasons


surprises, going 7-6. East Carolina has some retooling
to do but is expected to be the best of the newcomers,
a league title contender.
PITCH AND CATCH: East Carolina features one of
the most productive quarterback-receiver combos in the
country in Shane Carden and Marcus Henry. Carden
threw for 4,139 yards and accounted for 43 touchdowns
(33 TD passes) last season. Henry needs 84 catches
(he had 114 last year) to become the FBS career leader.
Oklahomas Ryan Broyles had 349.
HOLD THAT LINE: Memphis is taking small steps
forward under third-year coach Justin Fuente. If the
Tigers take a big leap, theyll be led by one of the
better defensive lines outside the Big Five conferences. DE Martin Ifedi had 11 1/2 sacks last season;
DE Ricky Hunter and NT Terry Redden are potential
all-conference players.
SOPHOMORE STARS: Big things are expected
from two sophomore quarterbacks who burst onto the
scene as freshmen in 2013. Houstons John OKorn
threw for 3,117 yards and 28 touchdowns as the
Cougars bounced back from a down 2012 to win eight
games. He also has the best group of receivers in the
conference, led by Deontay Greenberry.
Temples P.J. Walker threw for 2,082 yards and 20 TDs
and ran for 332. He gives the Owls hope for a big bounce
back from 2-10 in coach Matt Rhules first season.
HUSKIES HOPE: Connecticuts Bob Diaco, the
former defensive coordinator at Notre Dame, is the
only first-year coach in the conference; he starts with
a couple of marquee home games in the first month.
The Huskies open against BYU and host Boise State
on Sept. 13.
GOOD SIGN: Year 1 under coach Willie Taggart
was ugly at times for South Florida (2-10). However, the
Bulls signed the top recruiting class in the conference.
STRANGE SCHEDULE: Cincinnati does not play its
first game until Sept. 12 against Toledo. Most teams will
have played twice by then.
Predicted order of finish: 1, Cincinnati. 2, Houston.
3, UCF. 4, USF. 5, East Carolina. 6, Memphis. 7, SMU.
8, Tulsa. 9, Temple. 10, Tulane. 11, Connecticut.

C-USA
Marshall favored in C-USA and top bowl game
Marshall
coach Doc
Holliday likes
all that he is
hearing about his Thundering Herd in Conference USA.
People are talking about us the way we want
to be talked about, said Holliday, whose team is the
overwhelming C-USA favorite this season. We have
embraced those expectations as players and coaches
but we also understand that along with those expectations come responsibility.
Especially in the new College Football Playoff. The
highest-ranked team from the five mid-major leagues is
guaranteed a spot in one of the CFPs six bowl games
with teams from the five power conferences.
Weve got a seat at the table if we just take care of
business, Holliday said.
Marshall is led by quarterback Rakeem Cato and
defensive lineman James Rouse, the C-USA preseason
players of the year.
Cato has 10,176 yards passing in his career, with
touchdowns in 32 consecutive games and he worked
this offseason to improve his deep throws. Rouse is one
of eight returning starters on a defense that drastically
improved last season, when Marshall won 10 games
and the C-USA East title but lost at Rice in the league
championship game.
Here are 10 other things to watch in Conference
USA:
MORE CHANGES: For the third season in a row,
Conference USA has a different makeup. There are
13 football teams this season, with the additions of Old
Dominion and Western Kentucky after the departures
of Tulsa, Tulane and East Carolina to the American
Athletic Conference. Charlotte will make it 14 teams
next season.
SOARING OWLS: Defending C-USA champion
Rice has won 15 of its last 19 games since October
2012. It is the Owls best stretch since winning 15 of 17
games from November 1952 to October 1954.
GREEN PROTECTION: Four of the five returning
offensive starters for North Texas are linemen. The
Mean Green are coming off a 9-4 season that included
a victory in their first bowl appearance since 2004. On
defense, three of the four returning starters are defensive backs.
NEW COACHING TRIO: The leagues three new
coaches are all in the East Division. Jeff Brohm replaced
Bobby Petrino after his only season at league newcomer WKU; Bill Clark took over at UAB; and Charlie
Partridge is new at Florida Atlantic, which won its final
four games last season to finish 6-6.
SECOND TIME AROUND: Four C-USA coaches
head into their second year after rough starts. Louisiana
Tech was 4-8 in the debut of Skip Holtz, with the three
league wins coming against the other teams with
first-year coaches UTEP (Sean Kugler), FIU (Ron
Turner) and Southern Miss (Todd Monken). Former NFL
assistant Kugler was 2-10 in his return to his alma mater
25 years after his playing days in El Paso. FIUs only
win was over Southern Miss, which in its 2013 finale
snapped a 23-game losing skid.

See COLLEGE, page 8

NCAA board hands 5 biggest conferences more power


By MICHAEL MAROT
Associated Press
INDIANAPOLIS The biggest schools in college sports
are about to get a chance to make their own rules.
Up first is likely finding a way to spend millions of dollars
in new money either in the form of stipends or fatter scholarships on athletes across the country.
The NCAA Board of Directors voted 16-2 on Thursday
to approve a historic package of changes that allows the five
richest football conferences the ACC, Big Ten, Big 12,
Pac-12 and SEC to unilaterally change some of the rules
that have applied to all Division I schools for years. The 65
universities in those leagues will also benefit from a new,
weighted voting system on legislation covering the
350 schools in Division I.
It does provide degrees of autonomy for the
five high-resource conferences, said Wake Forest
President Nathan Hatch, the board chairman and a
key architect of the plan. This is not complete autonomy. Were still part of Division I but I think it allows
us to provide more benefits to student-athletes.
A handful of university presidents who spoke at
NCAA headquarters after the vote agreed on one
thing: Paying athletes to play is off the table. And its very
unlikely that the five leagues will design their own policies
when it comes to infractions.
But theres a good chance the five leagues will take steps to
add money to scholarships or craft an athlete stipend intended
to help cover the so-called full cost of attending college
costs beyond tuition, room and board and books and supplies.
That will be millions more in spending by leagues that are
already partners in multimillion-dollar TV contracts to show
off their top sports of football and basketball, raising fresh
concerns about an arms race in college athletics.
It is certainly a dramatic new start for an organization that
has come under increasing criticism.
Already this year, the NCAA has agreed to settle two
lawsuits for a combined $90 million and still awaits a judges
decision on a federal lawsuit in which plaintiffs led by Ed
OBannon have argued college sports amateurism rules are
anti-competitive and allow the organization to operate as an
illegal cartel. Also pending is a decision by the National Labor
Relations Board on whether Northwestern football players can
form what would be the first union for college athletes in U.S.
history.
While NCAA leaders acknowledge the new system may
not quash every legal case or argument, those who helped
draft this proposal believe it will give prominent schools
greater leeway in addressing the amateurism model and other

concerns.
The power conferences contend they need more flexibility
to solve the days hottest controversies, including recruiting
and health insurance, and complained long and loud over the
past two years that change was critically important.
If the decision survives a 60-day override period, the transition to the new system could begin in January. Commissioners
and school leaders from the power conferences have until Oct.
1 to create a wish list of areas where they want autonomy.
Any items that make the list would require majority approval from three of the five leagues and still will need the OK of
at least 12 of the 20 presidents or chancellors on the expanded
board of directors. Then, one representative from each of the
65 schools in the power-5 leagues and three student-athletes
from each conference would vote on each item.
Passage would require 48 of the 80 votes and a
simple majority of support from schools in at least
three of the five conferences or a simple majority of
all votes (41) and a simple majority from schools in
four of the five leagues to pass.
NCAA President Mark Emmert added the board
could veto an autonomous rule change if it goes too
far. He described that situation as rare.
The No. 1 priority heading into October is
expanding scholarships to cover up to the full cost of attendance. Legislation to give athletes an additional $2,000 to
cover college expenses was approved by the board in October
2011 but was overridden later after complaints from smaller
schools, spurring the effort to pass the autonomy reforms.
South Carolina President Harris Pastides also said he will
support limitations on practice times and contact in football
workouts. UCLA Chancellor Gene Block wants to provide better counseling for athletes who are contemplating turning pro
and helping those who do turn pro and later return to school.
The big question now is whether another override movement could derail the changes. If 75 schools sign the override
measure, the board must take a second look at the plan. If 125
schools oppose the plan, it would be suspended until the board
schedules a vote to reconsider.
The new system gives the five richest leagues nearly twice
as much voting power (37.5 percent) as any other group on
the new council, where most legislation will be approved or
rejected. The five other Football Bowl Subdivision leagues
would account for 18.8 percent while the second-tier Football
Championship Subdivision and non-football playing schools
would split up another 37.5 percent of the vote. Athletes and
faculty will account for the rest.
Critics worry that the impact will create an even greater
split between wealthy leagues and everyone else in the college
athletics arms race.

Wildcat golfers win over Ottoville


Jefferson senior Nick Fitch tees off on No. 3 during the Wildcats 186-197 non-league victory over
host Ottoville Thursday morning on the par-35 front
9 of the Delphos Country Club. Fitch shot a 49 for
the Red and White (2-0), while Carter Mox was the
low man with a 41, Zack Wannemacher 46, Jacob
Hamilton 63, Andrew Foust 50 and Tristan Moore
54. Ottoville (0-2) senior Wesley Markward was the
medalist with a 38, followed by Brendon Schnipke at
49, Andy Schimmoeller 52 and Kaleb Hanicq 58. (DHI
Media/Jim Metcalfe)

Racing Glances
Associated Press
NASCAR Sprint Cup schedule and
standings
x-non-points race
Feb. 15 x-Sprint Unlimited (Denny
Hamlin)
Feb. 20 x-Budweiser Duel 1 (Matt
Kenseth)
Feb. 20 x-Budweiser Duel 2 (Denny
Hamlin)
Feb. 23 Daytona 500 (Dale
Earnhardt Jr.)
March 2 The Profit on CNBC 500,
Avondale, Ariz. (Kevin Harvick)
March 9 Kobalt 400, Las Vegas
(Brad Keselowski)
March 16 Food City 500, Bristol,
Tenn. (Carl Edwards)
March 23 Auto Club 400, Fontana,
Calif. (Kyle Busch)
March 30 STP 500, Ridgeway, Va.
(Kurt Busch)
April 7 Duck Commander 500, Fort
Worth, Texas (Joey Logano)
April 12 Bojangles Southern 500,
Darlington, S.C. (Kevin Harvick)
April 26 Toyota Owners 400,
Richmond, Va. (Joey Logano)
May 4 Aarons 499, Talladega, Ala.
(Denny Hamlin)
May 10 5-hour ENERGY 400,
Kansas City, Kan. (Jeff Gordon)
May 16 x-Sprint Showdown,
Concord, N.C. (Clint Bowyer)
May 17 x-NASCAR Sprint All-Star
Race, Concord, N.C. (Jamie McMurray)
May 25 Coca-Cola 600, Concord,
N.C. (Jimmie Johnson)
June 1 FedEx 400, Dover, Del.
(Jimmie Johnson)
June 8 Pocono 400, Long Pond, Pa.
(Dale Earnhardt Jr.)
June 15 Quicken Loans 400,
Brooklyn, Mich. (Jimmie Johnson)
June 22 Toyota/Save Mart 350,
Sonoma, Calif. (Carl Edwards)
June 28 Quaker State 400, Sparta,
Ky. Brad Keselowski)
July 6 Coke Zero 400, Daytona
Beach, Fla. (Aric Almirola)
July 13 Camping World RV Sales
301, Loudon, N.H. (Brad Keselowski)
July 27 The John Wayne Walding
400, Indianapolis (Jeff Gordon)
Aug. 3 GoBowling.com 400, Long
Pond, Pa. (Dale Earnhardt Jr.)
SUNDAY Cheez-It 355 at the Glen,
Watkins Glen, N.Y.
Aug. 17 Pure Michigan 400,
Brooklyn, Mich.
Aug. 23 Irwin Tools Night Race,
Bristol, Tenn.
Aug. 31 Atlanta 500, Hampton, Ga.
Sept. 6 Federated Auto Parts 400,
Richmond, Va.
Sept. 14 Chicagoland 400, Joliet, Ill.
Sept. 21 Sylvania 300, Loudon, N.H.
Sept. 28 AAA 400, Dover, Del.
Oct. 5 Hollywood Casino 400,
Kansas City, Kan.
Oct. 11 Bank of America 500,
Concord, N.C.
Oct. 19 GEICO 500, Talladega, Ala.
Oct. 26 Goodys Headache Relief
Shot 500, Ridgeway, Va.
Nov. 2 AAA Texas 500, Fort Worth.
Nov. 9 Quicken Loans Race for
Heroes 500, Avondale, Ariz.
Nov. 16 Ford EcoBoost 400,
Homestead, Fla.
Driver Standings
Through Aug. 3
1. Jeff Gordon, 757.
2. Dale Earnhardt Jr., 740.
3. Brad Keselowski, 687.
4. Matt Kenseth, 668.
5. Ryan Newman, 642.

6. Jimmie Johnson, 633.


7. Joey Logano, 633.
8. Carl Edwards, 618.
9. Clint Bowyer, 617.
10. Kyle Busch, 611.
11. Kevin Harvick, 608.
12. Kyle Larson, 595.
13. Greg Biffle, 590.
14. Kasey Kahne, 589.
15. Austin Dillon, 588.
16. Paul Menard, 562.
17. Marcos Ambrose, 541.
18. Brian Vickers, 539.
19. Tony Stewart, 537.
20. Jamie McMurray, 536.

NASCAR Nationwide Series


Feb. 22 DRIVE4COPD 300, Daytona
Beach, Fla. (Regan Smith)
March 1 Blue Jeans Go Green 200,
Avondale, Ariz. (Kyle Busch)
March 8 Boyd Gaming 300, Las
Vegas (Brad Keselowski)
March 15 Drive To Stop Diabetes
300, Bristol, Tenn. (Kyle Busch)
March 22 TreatMyClot.com 300,
Fontana, Calif. (Kyle Larson)
April 4 OReilly Auto Parts 300, Fort
Worth, Texas (Chase Elliott)
April 11 VFW Sport Clips Help a
Hero 200, Darlington, S.C. (Chase Elliott)
April 25 ToyotaCare 250, Richmond,
Va. (Kevin Harvick)
May 3 Aarons 312, Talladega, Ala.
(Elliott Sadler)
May 18 Get to Know Newton 250,
Newton, Iowa (Sam Hornish Jr.)
May 24 History 300, Concord, N.C.
(Kyle Larson)
May 31 Buckle Up 200, Dover, Del.
(Kyle Busch)
June 14 Ollies Bargain Outlet 250,
Brooklyn, Mich. (Paul Menard)
June 21 Gardner Denver 200,
Elkhart Lake, Wis. (Brendan Gaughan)
June 27 John R. Elliott HERO
Campaign 300, Sparta, Ky. (Kevin
Harvick)
July 4 Subway Firecracker 250,
Daytona Beach, Fla. (Kasey Kahne)
July 12 Sta-Green 200, Loudon,
N.H. (Brad Keselowski)
July 19 EnjoyIllinois.com 300, Joliet,
Ill. (Chase Elliott)
July 26 Lilly Diabetes 250,
Indianapolis (Ty Dillon)
Aug. 2 U.S. Cellular 250, Newton,
Iowa (Brad Keselowski)
SATURDAY Zippo 200, Watkins
Glen, N.Y.
Aug. 16 Nationwide Childrens
Hospital 200, Lexington, Ohio
Aug. 22 Food City 250, Bristol, Tenn.
Aug. 30 Great Clips 300, Hampton,
Ga.
Sept. 5 Virginia 529 College Savings
250, Richmond, Va.
Sept. 13 Jimmy Johns Freaky Fast
300, Joliet, Ill.
Sept. 20 VisitMyrtleBeach.com 300,
Sparta, Ky.
Sept. 27 Dover 200, Dover, Del.
Oct. 4 Kansas Lottery 300, Kansas
City, Kan.
Oct. 10 Charlotte 300, Concord, N.C.
Nov. 1 OReilly Auto Parts Challenge,
Fort Worth, Texas
Nov. 8 Phoenix 200, Avondale, Ariz.
Nov. 15 Ford EcoBoost 300,
Homestead, Fla.
Driver Standings
Through Aug. 2
1. Chase Elliott, 714.
2. Regan Smith, 712.
3. Elliott Sadler, 702.
4. Ty Dillon, 702.
5. Trevor Bayne, 673.

The Trophy Center


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8 The Herald

Friday, August 8, 2014

MLB Glance
Associated Press
American League
East Division
W L
Pct
GB
Baltimore 65 49
.570

New York 60 54
.526
5
Toronto
61 55
.526
5
Tampa Bay 55 59
.482
10
Boston
50 63
.442
14
Central Division
W L
Pct
GB
Detroit
62 50
.554

Kansas City 59 53
.527
3
Cleveland 57 58
.496
6
Chicago 55 60
.478
8
Minnesota 51 61
.455
11
West Division
W L
Pct
GB
Oakland 69 44
.611

L Angeles 67 46
.593
2
Seattle
59 54
.522
10
Houston 47 68
.409
23
Texas
45 69
.395
24
___
Wednesdays Games
San Diego 5, Minnesota 4, 10 innings
Texas 3, Chicago White Sox 1
Tampa Bay 7, Oakland 3
Seattle 7, Atlanta 3
N.Y. Yankees 5, Detroit 1
Philadelphia 10, Houston 3
Toronto 5, Baltimore 1
Cincinnati 8, Cleveland 3
Boston 2, St. Louis 1
Kansas City 4, Arizona 3
L.A. Dodgers 2, L.A. Angels 1
Thursdays Games
N.Y. Yankees 1, Detroit 0
Philadelphia 6, Houston 5
Baltimore 2, Toronto 1
Cincinnati 4, Cleveland 0
Boston at St. Louis, 7:15 p.m.
Kansas City at Arizona, 9:40 p.m.
L.A. Dodgers at L.A. Angels, 10:05 p.m.
Minnesota at Oakland, 10:05 p.m.
Chicago White Sox at Seattle, 10:10 p.m.
Fridays Games
Tampa Bay (Archer 7-6) at Chicago Cubs
(Wada 1-1), 4:05 p.m.
Cleveland (Bauer 4-6) at N.Y. Yankees
(Rogers 1-0), 7:05 p.m.
St. Louis (Masterson 1-0) at Baltimore
(Tillman 8-5), 7:05 p.m.
Detroit (An.Sanchez 8-5) at Toronto
(Dickey 9-11), 7:07 p.m.
San Francisco (Bumgarner 13-8) at
Kansas City (J.Vargas 8-5), 8:10 p.m.
Texas (Mikolas 1-4) at Houston
(Oberholtzer 4-7), 8:10 p.m.
Boston (Webster 1-1) at L.A. Angels
(Weaver 12-6), 10:05 p.m.
Minnesota (Gibson 10-8) at Oakland
(Kazmir 12-4), 10:05 p.m.
Chicago White Sox (Quintana 6-7) at
Seattle (Iwakuma 9-6), 10:10 p.m.
Saturdays Games
Cleveland at N.Y. Yankees, 1:05 p.m.
Detroit at Toronto, 1:07 p.m.
St. Louis at Baltimore, 4:05 p.m.
Tampa Bay at Chicago Cubs, 4:05 p.m.
San Francisco at Kansas City, 7:10 p.m.
Texas at Houston, 7:10 p.m.
Boston at L.A. Angels, 9:05 p.m.
Minnesota at Oakland, 9:05 p.m.
Chicago White Sox at Seattle, 9:10 p.m.
Sundays Games
Cleveland at N.Y. Yankees, 1:05 p.m.
Detroit at Toronto, 1:07 p.m.
St. Louis at Baltimore, 1:35 p.m.
San Francisco at Kansas City, 2:10 p.m.
Texas at Houston, 2:10 p.m.
Tampa Bay at Chicago Cubs, 2:20 p.m.
Boston at L.A. Angels, 3:35 p.m.
Minnesota at Oakland, 4:05 p.m.
Chicago White Sox at Seattle, 4:10 p.m.

__
National League
East Division
W L
Pct
GB
Washington 62 51
.549

Atlanta
58 56
.509
4
Miami
55 59
.482
7
New York 54 61
.470
9
Philadelphia 52 63
.452
11
Central Division
W L
Pct
GB
Milwaukee 63 52
.548

St. Louis 60 52
.536
1
Pittsburgh 61 53
.535
1
Cincinnati 59 56
.513
4
Chicago 49 64
.434
13
West Division
W L
Pct
GB
L Angeles 65 50
.565

San Fran 62 53
.539
3
San Diego 52 61
.460
12
Arizona
49 65
.430
15
Colorado 45 69
.395
19
___
Wednesdays Games
San Diego 5, Minnesota 4, 10 innings
Seattle 7, Atlanta 3
Philadelphia 10, Houston 3
Pittsburgh 7, Miami 3
Washington 7, N.Y. Mets 1
Cincinnati 8, Cleveland 3
San Francisco 7, Milwaukee 4
Boston 2, St. Louis 1
Colorado 13, Chicago Cubs 4
Kansas City 4, Arizona 3
L.A. Dodgers 2, L.A. Angels 1
Thursdays Games
Washington 5, N.Y. Mets 3, 13 innings
Milwaukee 3, San Francisco 1
Chicago Cubs 6, Colorado 2
Philadelphia 6, Houston 5
Pittsburgh 7, Miami 2
Cincinnati 4, Cleveland 0
Boston at St. Louis, 7:15 p.m.
Kansas City at Arizona, 9:40 p.m.
L.A. Dodgers at L.A. Angels, 10:05 p.m.
Fridays Games
Tampa Bay (Archer 7-6) at Chicago Cubs
(Wada 1-1), 4:05 p.m.
N.Y. Mets (B.Colon 10-9) at Philadelphia
(A.Burnett 6-11), 7:05 p.m.
San Diego (Kennedy 8-9) at Pittsburgh
(Worley 4-1), 7:05 p.m.
St. Louis (Masterson 1-0) at Baltimore
(Tillman 8-5), 7:05 p.m.
Miami (Eovaldi 5-6) at Cincinnati (Leake
9-9), 7:10 p.m.
Washington (Strasburg 8-9) at Atlanta
(E.Santana 10-6), 7:35 p.m.
L.A. Dodgers (R.Hernandez 6-8) at
Milwaukee (Lohse 11-6), 8:10 p.m.
San Francisco (Bumgarner 13-8) at
Kansas City (J.Vargas 8-5), 8:10 p.m.
Colorado (Matzek 2-6) at Arizona
(C.Anderson 6-4), 9:40 p.m.
Saturdays Games
St. Louis at Baltimore, 4:05 p.m.
Tampa Bay at Chicago Cubs, 4:05 p.m.
N.Y. Mets at Philadelphia, 7:05 p.m.
San Diego at Pittsburgh, 7:05 p.m.
L.A. Dodgers at Milwaukee, 7:10 p.m.
Miami at Cincinnati, 7:10 p.m.
San Francisco at Kansas City, 7:10 p.m.
Washington at Atlanta, 7:10 p.m.
Colorado at Arizona, 8:10 p.m.
Sundays Games
Miami at Cincinnati, 1:10 p.m.
N.Y. Mets at Philadelphia, 1:35 p.m.
San Diego at Pittsburgh, 1:35 p.m.
St. Louis at Baltimore, 1:35 p.m.
L.A. Dodgers at Milwaukee, 2:10 p.m.
San Francisco at Kansas City, 2:10 p.m.
Tampa Bay at Chicago Cubs, 2:20 p.m.
Colorado at Arizona, 4:10 p.m.
Washington at Atlanta, 8:05 p.m.

NASCAR

(Continued from page 6)

Its a circus life Petty would never trade for weekends at


home, certainly not after his fame got fresh juice when he voiced
Strip The King Weathers in the 2006 hit movie Cars. Petty is
warmly greeted by children in awe of the man they only know as
the voice in a cartoon, not the 7-time NASCAR champion who
won a record 200 races. Kids address the man in the hat as Mr.
The King. He recalled a time in England when a boy approached
and asked how many times he won the Piston Cup. The Piston
Cup, of course, was the championship awarded to those frisky
cars from the movie.
Pettys true home is among the drivers, crew and fans that surround him at tracks from Daytona to Dover. He skipped a month
this season because of the March death of his wife, Lynda, from
cancer. The Pettys were married for almost six decades.
Coming back to the racing blanked out some of the bad parts
that I was having, Petty said. It was easier for me to get back.
Instead of starting a new routine, I stayed in the same one. Its just
a little bit different.
Petty has pushed past the pain and found comfort at the track.
Its always been the spot where he could be himself and hang up
his hat in his case, a Charlie 1 cowboy hat with a tuft of feathers in the front. Petty started wearing the hats around 1979 when
he struck a deal with a manufacturer who sold them at a store
operated by son Kyle Petty. Richard Petty wasnt just trying to
create an iconic fashion statement; hed just grown weary of worrying hed offend the wrong sponsor with the standard baseball
cap most drivers wear around the track.
I just really liked them because it was different, he said.
Pettys matted hair had a few stray curls when he removed the
hat and sunglasses during a chat in his motorhome. He did wear a
baseball cap under his headset when he stood atop an RPM hauler
and had a birds-eye-view for last Sundays race. Petty was the
lone figure standing on any of the 43 haulers, keeping tabs on the
race through a scoring monitor and a close eye on the cars when
they whizzed past the start/finish line a few hundred feet away.

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Woods struggles to 74;


Westwood, Chappell lead PGA
Associated Press

LOUISVILLE, Ky. Maybe Tiger Woods should have


stayed at home.
Looking much like a guy who could barely bend over last
weekend, Woods sprayed shots all over Valhalla and faced a
daunting deficit at the PGA Championship before heavy favorite Rory McIlroy even teed off Thursday.
That wasnt very good, said Woods, who made only one
birdie and had to hole out from the fairway to do that on
the way to a 3-over 74. A lot of bad shots.
One landed in a creek. Another sent the gallery
scrambling. Yet another rolled into a fenced-off area
where fans can use cellphones, a good 30 yards right
of the fairway.
Too bad Woods couldnt call for help.
I didnt play as well as I wanted to. I didnt get a
putt to the hole, he said. Thats not a good combo.
Lee Westwood, shooting his best score ever at the
PGA Championship, and little-known Kevin Chappell both
posted 65s to leave Woods nine shots off the lead. Jim Furyk
and Edoardo Molinari were one stroke back after shooting 66.
Woods main objective today will be making the cut, though
he insisted he still has a chance to capture his 15th major title.
McIlroy, coming off wins at the British Open and at
Firestone, teed off shortly after Woods finished up.
Woods didnt arrive at Valhalla until Wednesday, having
been in Florida undergoing treatment for a back injury that
forced him to withdraw at Firestone on Sunday. He struggled
to pick up his tee or change his shoes but insisted that he was
fit by the time he got to Kentucky.
Its a little bit stiff, he added of his back, but thats about it.
Still, Woods was playing just his 11th competitive round
since undergoing back surgery March 31. The rustiness
showed as he grappled with his swing and never figured out
the speed of the greens.
Woods had to sit out the first two majors of the year and

Bailey leads Reds over Indians 4-0


CINCINNATI (AP) Homer Bailey
went seven innings, singled and scored,
and knocked down a liner coming right
at his head. Quite a lot went into ending
this losing streak.
Bailey pitched seven innings to
end his slide against Cleveland, and
Billy Hamilton had an RBI triple and
scored a run Thursday night, leading the
Cincinnati Reds to a 4-0 victory over the
intrastate rival Indians.
The Reds won three of four in the
annual series, splitting two games in
Cleveland and sweeping a pair
at Great American Ball Park.
Bailey (9-5) had lost his last
three starts against the Indians.
After pitching out of trouble
in the first, he settled in and
allowed four hits while fanning
eight. He also singled and scored.
He pitched a really great game, manager Bryan Price said. He scuffled early
with his command, but he came back
strong and gave us a great chance to win.
Bailey overcame an unsettling
moment in the fifth inning, when Jose
Ramirez lined a pitch directly at his
face. The right-hander turned away and
knocked down the ball with his glove,
recovered and threw to first from his
knees. Three times, Bailey shook his
head as he regained his composure.
Ive been bit harder by bedbugs, he
said. I saw it pretty late. I almost caught
it in my arm. It glanced off my glove a
little bit.
Hamilton had a hand in two of the
four runs off left-hander T.J. House
(1-3), who made his 11th career start.
House gave up eight hits while pitching into the seventh and remained win-

College

less on the road, falling to 0-3 in seven


games.
The Reds have gone 8-12 since the
All-Star break, leaving them stranded
in fourth place in the NL Central with
a 59-56 record. The Indians are 10-11
since the break, leaving them 57-58
overall.
Hamilton singled in the first and
scored on first baseman Carlos Santanas
throwing error. Ryan Ludwicks RBI
single made it 2-0.
Bailey singled and scored on
Hamiltons triple in the second inning. Hamilton rounded
third too far and was caught
in a rundown for the final out
of the inning, leaving it 3-0.
Kristopher Negron added an
RBI single in the sixth.
E-3, E-3, E-3
The first basemen combined for three
errors. Clevelands Santana also dropped
a popup, and Cincinnatis Todd Frazier
dropped a throw from Bailey.
ALL-OHIO WRAPUP
The Indians lead the intrastate
series 45-44. They have lost eight
straight games in Cincinnati, with
their last win at Great American
Ball Park coming on July 2, 2011.
The home team has won 14 of last
15 games in the series.
STATS
Cleveland is 9-9 in interleague play
this season, only 3-7 on the road without the designated hitter. The Indians
have lost 10 of their last 13 in NL
ballparks. The Reds are 6-9 against
AL teams this season. C Yan Gomes
extended his hitting streak to 13 games,
the second-longest by an Indian this sea-

(Continued from page 7)

ROLLING ROADRUNNERS: UTSA carries a league-best five-game winning


streak into this season, when coach Larry Cokers team has nine returning starters
on offense and 10 on defense. Since going 4-6 in the program debut in 2011, the
Roadrunners have had consecutive winning seasons (8-4 and 7-5).
BIG-PLAY AVERAGE: UAB senior receiver Jamarcus Nelson has averaged 20
yards per reception, gaining 1,618 yards on 81 catches the past three seasons. Nelson
had four 100-yard receiving games last year, when he also scored touchdowns on
kickoff and punt returns.
ARE YOU EXPERIENCED?: Rick Stockstill is the leagues longest-tenured coach
going into his ninth season at Middle Tennessee. The Blue Raiders, who won their
final five regular-season games last season before a bowl loss, are in their 100th
season of football.
HAPPY 19th: Going into C-USAs 19th football season, Southern Miss is the only
team remaining from the original 6-team lineup in 1996. That was a year after the
www.edwardjones.com
all-sports league was formed with 11 schools. UAB was also an original conference
member but didnt start playing C-USA football until 1999. Marshall, Rice and UTEP, all
www.edwardjones.com
members since 2005, are the only other teams that joined before 2013.
FRIDAY NIGHT LIGHTS: The C-USA season kicks off with games Friday, Aug. 29.
UTSA plays at former C-USA team Houston, and WKU hosts Bowling Green.
Predicted order of finish:
www.edwardjones.com
www.edwardjones.com
EAST 1. Marshall; 2. Middle Tennessee; 3. Florida Atlantic; 4. WKU; 5. UAB;
6. Old Dominion; 7. FIU.
WEST 1. North Texas; 2. Rice; 3. UTSA; 4. Louisiana Tech; 5. Southern Miss;
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Title game winner: Marshall.

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posted his worst 72-hole finish in a major at the British Open.


Looks like more of the same at the PGA.
Westwood carried over the momentum from a closing
63 at Firestone, his best round of the year. The 41-year-old
Englishman made nine birdies helping offset a doublebogey and eclipsed his best round in 17 PGA appearances,
a 66 on the first day at Oak Hill in 2013.
The golf course was all there in front of me. I just play it
as I see it, said Westwood, whos had numerous close calls
but never won a major championship. Last week, I felt like I
turned a corner.
Chappell, a 28-year-old Californian in his fourth
year on the PGA Tour, turned in a bogey-free round.
The final major of the year has produced some unlikely
champions remember Shaun Micheel? and
Chappell hopes to be the latest.
I cant complain about being in the lead of any golf
tournament, said Chappell, whose only professional
win came on the Web.com Tour in 2010. I just look
forward to keeping it rolling.
Furyk is off to another strong start in a tournament he
nearly won in 2013.
He took a lead to the final day at Oak Hill, only to lose to
Jason Dufner by two strokes.
Phil Mickelson, mired in his longest winless streak since
2003, was paired with Woods for one of the rare times at a
major. Lefty was 1 over midway through his round, struggling
just like his playing partner, but fought back on the second
nine for a 69.
Woods needs a similar turnaround today.
Starting on the back side, he bogeyed both of the par-3s after
missing the green, though he did salvage an unlikely birdie at
the 16th by holing out a wedge from more than 100 feet away.
Woods missed a chance to make up more ground at the easy
18th, knocking his drive into a fairway bunker at the par-5
hole, and things really took a turn for the worse after the turn.
He just couldnt find any accuracy off the tee.

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son behind Michael Brantleys 15-game


streak. Reds C Brayan Pena has an
11-game hitting streak, one shy of his
career high from 2009. Negron was
voted the series most valuable player.
He went 7 for 13 with a homer.
TRAINERS ROOM
Indians: Right-hander C.C. Lee was
called up from Triple-A Columbus. Lee
pitched two scoreless innings against
Cincinnati and is 0-0 with a 3.68 ERA in
16 games over four stints with Cleveland
this year. Starter Danny Salazar was
optioned to Columbus, where hell make
one start before the Indians consider
bringing him back.
Reds: Theres still no estimate for
when second baseman Brandon Phillips
will be able to resume hitting. He tore a
ligament in his left thumb on July 9. The
Reds hope to have him back by the end
of the month.
UP NEXT
Indians: The Indians open a threegame series at Yankee Stadium, where
they are 3-8 since the new ballpark
opened. Theyve lost five in a row
there. Trevor Bauer (4-6) makes
his first career start at Yankee
Stadium. Manager Terry Francona
said reliever Carlos Carrasco
would start Sunday in New York,
taking Salazars spot.
Reds: The Reds open a weekend series against Miami, with Mike
Leake (9-9) facing Nathan Eovaldi (5-6).
Leake is 3-0 in three career starts against
the Marlins with a 1.93 ERA. The Reds
will induct Ken Griffey Jr., Ron Oester,
Dave Parker and the late Jake Beckley
into their Hall of Fame before the game
on Saturday.

We know now, being the favorite, were going to get everybodys best shot every
week, so we better come to play to match that intensity and hopefully surpass it,
Hudspeth said. Its going to be quite a challenge, but I really believe with the veteran
team we have were up to that challenge.
Those veterans include senior dual-threat quarterback Terrance Broadway, the
league preseason offensive player of the year, who also made the Davey OBrien
Award watch list.
Also returning on offense is running back Alonzo Harris, a Doak Walker watch
list candidate.
The league now consists of 11 teams after losing Western Kentucky and gaining
Appalachian State, Georgia Southern, Idaho and New Mexico State.
Here are 10 things to watch in the new-look Sun Belt Conference in 2014:
MOMENTUM: South Alabama was in only its first season of bowl eligibility last
season and went 6-6 after closing 2013 on a 3-game winning streak, including a 30-8
demolition of Louisiana-Lafayette. Now the Jaguars are among the favorites to challenge ULL for the league title.
FAMOUS NAME: The Sun Belt lost one Petrino after last season but gained
another. Bobby Petrino was with Western Kentucky in 2013 before heading back to
Louisville as the Hilltoppers left the league. But Idahos arrival as a full Sun Belt member brings Petrinos brother, Paul. The Vandals, picked ninth in the preseason coaches
poll, are banned from postseason play because of past academic performance.
ON THE RUN: In addition to ULLs Harris, the preseason Doak Walker Award
watch list includes three other Sun Belt running backs: Appalachian States Marcus
Cox, Arkansas States Michael Gordon and Texas States Robert Lowe.
MOVING UP: Two of the Sun Belts newest members, Appalachian State and
Georgia Southern, have moved up after decades as dominant forces at the Football
Championship Subdivision level. Georgia Southern won six national titles, while
Appalachian State won three.
COACHING CAROUSEL: Arkansas State, which tied ULL for the conference title last season, has its fourth new coach in four years. Former North
Carolina offensive coordinator Blake Anderson takes over for Bryan Harsin,
who left for Boise State. The Red Wolves were coached by Mississippis
Hugh Freeze in 2011 and Auburns Gus Malzahn in 2012.
SEEKING RESPECT: In 2013, the Sun Belt was among the top mid-major
conferences, going 8-1 against Conference USA, the Mountain West and
MAC. This year, the Sun Belt champion is eligible for a New Years Day bowl
but will have to also play well outside the conference to get such a bid. Nonconference
games involving Sun Belt favorites include: Louisiana-Lafayette at Mississippi (Sept.
13) and at Boise State (Sept. 20); Arkansas State at Tennessee (Sept. 6) and Miami
(Sept. 13); and South Alabama playing at home against Mississippi State (Sept. 13)
and on the road against South Carolina (Nov. 22).
BOWLING: When Sun Belt football began in 2001, it had one bowl tie-in: the
New Orleans Bowl. Now, with the new College Football Playoff bringing the chance
for a New Years Day bowl bid, the Sun Belt has affiliations with up to four bowls this
season. The New Orleans, GoDaddy and Camellia bowls are the other three. The
league adds the Cure Bowl in 2015 and the Miami Beach and Bahamas bowls in 2016.
GOOSE EGG: Georgia State went 0-12 in 2013, its first Sun Belt season. Still,
coach Trent Miles got a second year to try to make the Panthers more competitive.
TAKE TWO: Former TCU, Alabama and Texas A&M coach Dennis Franchione
enters the second season of his second tenure with Texas State. The first came
when it was called Southwest Texas State from 1990-91. The Bobcats beat Southern
Mississippi and Wyoming last year but faded in conference play, finishing 6-6.
FALLEN TROJANS: Troy has struggled through three straight sub-par seasons
since a string of five consecutive years of winning or sharing the conference crown.
This season, the Trojans look to improve with a new quarterback after the departure
of prolific passer Corey Robinson.
Predicted order of finish: 1, Louisiana-Lafayette. 2, Arkansas St. 3, South
Alabama. 4, Troy. 5, Louisiana-Monroe. 6, Texas State. 7, Appalachian State. 8,
Georgia Southern. 9, Idaho. 10, Georgia State. 11, New Mexico State.

Friday, August 8, 2014

www.delphosherald.com

10:30

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The Big Band Years

| Bee Gees One Night Only

10:00

10:30

BROADCAST
CABLE
PREM

11:00

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The Big Band Years

50s & 60s Rock Rewind (My Music)

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MONDAY EVENING
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Hometown Content,
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AUGUST
11,Listings
2014

9:00

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My Weight (N) HD
Major Crimes (N) HD
Murder in the First (N) (:02) Major Crimes HD Murder in the First HD
Major Crimes HD
Bizarre Foods America Bizarre Foods America Bizarre Foods
Bizarre Foods America Bizarre Foods (N)
Cleveland Queens
Queens
Queens
Candid Camera HD
Cleveland Falls HD
Candid Camera (N) HD
Rush : We Are Family
Graceland : The Ends
WWE Monday Night Raw HD
Love & Hip Hop HD
Dating Naked HD
Love & Hip Hop HD
Love & Hip Hop (N) HD Hit the Floor (N) HD
Home Videos HD
Manhattan : The Hive
Manhattan : The Hive
Parks HD Parks HD
Home Videos HD
(:35) True Blood HD
Leftovers
Cheshire Murders (13) Getaway (13, PG-13) Ethan Hawke.
Hard Knocks 14 HD
The Knick : Method
The Knick : Method
The Godfather (72, R) aaaa Marlon Brando, Al Pacino. HD
Ray Donovan HD
Masters of Sex HD
Ray Donovan HD
Kings of Summer (13) Masters of Sex HD

Elvis, Aloha From Hawaii

9:30

10:00

10:30

11:00

11:30

12:00

12:30

20/20 : From Hell (N)


Local
Jimmy Kimmel Live HD Nightline
Extreme Weight Loss : Sara (N) HD
Person of Interest HD Local
(:35) Late Show HD
Late Late
NCIS : Better Angels
NCIS: Los Angeles HD
Americas Got Talent : Quarter Finals 3" (N) HD
Local
Tonight Show (N) HD
Late Night
Food Fighters (N) HD
Local Programs
Local Programs
Family Guy Brooklyn New Girl
Mindy HD Local Programs
Criminal Minds HD
Criminal Minds HD
The Listener (N)
The Listener
Criminal Minds HD
Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
Brandi & Cement
Wahlburger Wahlburger Storage
Storage
Fast & Furious (06) HD 4th and Loud (N) HD
4th and Loud HD
The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift (06) aa HD
Wild Russia : Arctic
Wild Russia : Urals
Wild Russia : Siberia
Wild Russia : Arctic
Wild Russia : Urals
Apollo Live HD
Wendy Williams HD
Why Did I Get Married? (07, PG-13) Tyler Perry.
Apollo Live (N) HD
Real Housewives (N)
Below Deck (N)
The Singles Project (N) Watch What Below Deck
Singles
Dad HD
Family Guy Family Guy Robot
Squid HD
King Hill
King Hill
Cleveland Cleveland Dad HD
Blazing Saddles (74, R) aaac HD
Tombstone (93, R) aaa Kurt Russell, Val Kilmer. HD
Anderson Cooper 360 CNN Special Report
Anderson Cooper 360 CNN Special Report
CNN Tonight (N)
Colbert HD midnight Drunk His
Tosh.0 HD Tosh.0 HD Tosh.0 HD Tosh.0 HD Drunk His Nathan (N) Daily HD
Lair of the Mega Shark Shark After Dark Live Alien Sharks HD
To Be Announced
Alien Sharks (N) HD
(:40) Blog Jessie HD Austin HD Good Luck Good Luck
Jessie HD Dog Blog 16 Wishes (10, G) Debby Ryan. HD
Botched HD
Botched : Gone Wildd
C. Lately E! News HD
C. Lately
Botched HD
2014 WSOP (Taped)
Sports Special HD
SportsCenter HD
SportsCenter HD
2014 WSOP (Taped)
Olbermann HD
Olbermann HD
Softball
Sports HD Amateur Softball : Little League (Live)
Pretty Little Liars (N) HD Chasing Life (N) HD
Pretty Little Liars HD
The 700 Club (TV G)
Chasing Life HD
Chopped : Peri Peri
Chopped (N) HD
Chopped HD
Chopped : Peri Peri
Chopped HD
Tyrant HD
The Bridge HD
(6:30) Transformers: Dark of the Moon (11) aac Tyrant (N) HD
Flop
Flop
Flop
Flop
Flop
Flop
Flop
Flop
Now? (N) Hunters
Cars HD
Cars (N)
Cars (N)
Dark Horse Dark Horse Biker Battleground (N) Cars HD
Cars HD
Cars HD
Dance Moms (N) HD
Raising
Raising
Raising
Raising
(:02) Dance Moms HD
Dance Moms HD
Virgin Territory
Finding Carter
Girl Code Girl Code Finding Carter
Finding Carter (N)
Full Hse
Full Hse
Full Hse
Full Hse
Full Hse
Full Hse
Friends
Friends
Friends
Friends
Cops HD
Cops HD
Cops HD
Cops HD
Cops HD
Cops HD
Cops HD
Cops HD
Jail HD
Cops HD
Face Off (N) HD
Wheaton
Wheaton
Face Off HD
Wheaton
Wheaton
Face Off HD
Sullivan & Conan HD
Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Sullivan & Big Bang Conan (N) HD
Gentleman Jim (42, NR) aac Errol Flynn.
Any Number Can Play (49, NR) aa Clark Gable.
Constant Nymph (43)
Next Great Baker (N)
The Little Couple HD
Next Great Baker HD
The Little Couple HD
Next Great Baker HD
Rizzoli & Isles HD
Rizzoli & Isles (N) HD
(:01) Perception (N) HD (:02) Rizzoli & Isles HD Perception : Silence
Food Paradise (N)
v Food HD v Food HD BBQ Challenge
Bizarre Foods America BBQ Challenge (N)
Queens
Queens
Candid Camera HD
Falls HD
Cleveland
Candid Camera (N) HD Cleveland Queens
(:01) Covert Affairs (N) Modern
Modern
(:02) Royal Pains HD
Law & Order: SVU HD Royal Pains (N) HD
Love & Hip Hop HD
Boyz n the Hood (91, R) aaac Laurence Fishburne. HD
Light It HD
Love & Hip Hop HD
What Lies Beneath (00, PG-13) Harrison Ford.
(:10) MLB Baseball: Chicago White Sox at San Francisco Giants (Live) HD
Hard Knocks 14 HD
The Leftovers HD
True Blood HD
The Internship (13) HD The Leftovers HD
The Knick : Method
The Conjuring (13, R) aaac Vera Farmiga. HD
(7:30) Man of Steel (13, PG-13) Henry Cavill. HD
Ray Donovan HD
Masters of Sex HD
Ray Donovan HD
7 Deadly
Baytown
Masters of Sex HD

WBGU

Return to Downton Abbey

Elvis, Aloha From Hawaii

Burt Bacharachs Best (My Music)

8:00

8:30

9:00

AUGUST 13, 2014


9:30

10:00

10:30

11:00

11:30

12:00

12:30

ABC
CBS
NBC
FOX
ION
A&E
AMC
ANIMAL
BET
BRAVO
CARTOON
CMT
CNN
COMEDY
DISCOVERY
DISNEY
E!
ESPN
ESPN2
FAMILY
FOOD
FX
HGTV
HISTORY
LIFETIME
MTV
NICK
SPIKE
SYFY
TBS
TCM
TLC
TNT
TRAVEL
TV LAND
USA
VH1
WGN
HBO
MAX
SHOW

Middle HD Goldbergs Modern


Modern
Motive (N) HD
Local
Jimmy Kimmel Live HD Nightline
Criminal Minds : Fatal Extant (N) HD
Local
(:35) Late Show HD
Late Late
Big Brother (N) HD
Local
(:35) Tonight Show HD Late Night
Americas Got Talent
Americas Got Talent
Taxi Brooklyn (N) HD
Local Programs
Local Programs
So You Think You Can Dance (N) HD
Cold Case HD
Cold Case : Bullet HD Cold Case HD
Cold Case : Shattered
Cold Case HD
Duck HD
Duck HD
Duck Dynasty (N) HD
Wahlburger Big Smo
Wahlburger Duck HD
Duck HD
Duck HD
(:01) Repo Men (10, R) aac Jude Law. HD
Van Helsing (04, PG-13) aac Hugh Jackman, Kate Beckinsale. HD
Treehouse Masters HD Treehouse Masters HD Treehouse Masters HD Treehouse Masters HD Treehouse Masters HD
The Best Man (99, R) aa Taye Diggs, Nia Long.
Game HD Wendy Williams HD
Apollo Live HD
Watch What (:31) Top Chef Duels
Top Chef
Real Housewives
Dollar Listing Miami (N) Top Chef Duels (N)
Dad HD
Family Guy Family Guy Robot
Squid HD
King Hill
King Hill
Cleveland Cleveland Dad HD
Cops HD
Cops HD
Legends of the Fall (94, R) aac Anthony Hopkins, Brad Pitt.
Cops HD
Anderson Cooper 360 Anthony
CNN Tonight (N)
Anderson Cooper 360 Anthony
Colbert HD midnight Meltdown
Key; Peele Key; Peele South Park South Park South Park South Park Daily HD
Spawn of Jaws (N) HD
Shark After Dark Live Zombie Sharks HD
To Be Announced
Zombie Sharks (N) HD
Austin HD Jessie HD A.N.T. HD So Raven So Raven
Jessie HD Dog Blog Spy Kids (01, PG) aa HD
The Soup The Soup C. Lately E! News HD
C. Lately
#RichKids #RichKids Kardashians HD
Baseball Tonight HD
SportsCenter HD
SportsCenter HD
(7:00) MLB Baseball: New York vs Baltimore HD
Olbermann HD
Olbermann HD
(7:00) NWSL Soccer
Amateur Softball : Little League Champ. (Live)
Death Becomes Her (92, PG-13) Meryl Streep.
The 700 Club (TV G)
Hungry HD Mystery
Hungry (N) Mystery
Restaurant Stakeout
Restaurant Stakeout
Restaurant: Impossible Restaurant: Impossible Restaurant Stakeout
The Bridge : Harvest
Tyrant HD
Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen (09) aac HD The Bridge (N) HD
Property Brothers HD Property Brothers HD
Property Brothers HD Property Brothers (N) Now? (N) Hunters
American Pickers (N)
American Pickers HD
American Pickers HD
American Pickers HD
American Pickers HD
Bring It! : A New Rival Bring It! (N) HD
BAPs (N) HD
Raising
Raising
Bring It! : A New Rival
Teen Mom 2 HD
Teen Mom 2 (N) HD
Virgin Territory (N)
Teen Mom 2 HD
Teen Mom 2 HD
Full Hse
Full Hse
Full Hse
Full Hse
Full Hse
Full Hse
Friends
Friends
Friends
Friends
The Expendables (10, R) aac Sylvester Stallone. HD
Universal Soldier (10)
(7:00) The Expendables (10, R) HD
Sharknado (13, NR) HD Sharknado 2: The Second One (14, NR)
Sharknado (13, NR) Tara Reid. HD
The Office Conan HD
Family Guy Family Guy Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Conan (N) HD
Hot Saturday (32, NR) Cary Grant.
Mr. Blandings Builds (48, NR) aaa (:15) Gunga Din (39, NR) aaac Cary Grant.
Who You Are (N) HD
Who You Are HD
Who You Are HD
Who You Are HD
Who You Are HD
Franklin & Bash HD
The Bourne Identity HD Legends : Pilot (N) HD Franklin & Bash (N) HD Legends : Pilot HD
BBQ Crawl BBQ Crawl v Food HD v Food HD American Grilled
Bizarre Foods America American Grilled (N)
Queens
Cleveland Falls (N)
Candid Camera HD
Cleveland Falls HD
Candid Camera (N) HD Queens
Law & Order: SVU HD Suits : Gone (N) HD
Graceland : Gratis (N) Modern
Modern
(:02) Suits : Gone HD
Make or Break: (N) HD Dating Naked HD
Make or Break: HD
Clueless (95, PG-13) aaa Alicia Silverstone. HD
Rules HD Rules HD Rules HD Rules HD Manhattan : The Hive Manhattan : The Hive Rules HD Rules HD
The Heat (13, R) aac Sandra Bullock. HD
Hard Knocks 14 HD
Oliver HD Blood HD
True Blood HD
The Knick : Method
Rush (13, R) Chris Hemsworth, Olivia Wilde. HD
In Bed HD Red 2 (13)
The Rock (96, R) HD
Save the Last Dance (01, PG-13) Julia Stiles. HD
Hustle & Flow (05, R) aaa Terrence Howard. HD History of The (13) HD

WBGU

The Big Band Years

PBS

50s & 60s Party Songs (My Music)

Hometown Content, Listings by FYI

THURSDAY EVENING
8:00

8:30

AUGUST 14, 2014

9:00

9:30

10:00

10:30

11:00

11:30

12:00

12:30

The 700 Club


| Inside FoylesDiners
War
Diners
Thor
Hunters
Hunt Intl

Prince
Diners

Prince
Diners

Beach

Beach

Rookie Blue (N) HD


NY Med (N) HD
Local
Jimmy Kimmel Live HD Nightline
The Quest (N) HD
ABC
(:01) Big Brother (N) HD Elementary HD
Local
(:35) Late Show HD
Late Late
Big Bang Mom HD
CBS
Local
(:35) Tonight Show HD Late Night
Hollywood Game Night Last Comic Standing : Top 3 to 1" (N) HD
NBC
Gang Related (N) HD
Local Programs
Local Programs
Sleepy Hollow HD
FOX
Criminal Minds HD
Cold Case HD
Cold Case HD
Cold Case : Gleen HD
Criminal Minds HD
ION
The First 48 (N) HD
(:01) To Be Announced (:02) The First 48 HD
(:01) The First 48 HD
The First 48 HD
A&E
Uncle Buck (89, PG) aac John Candy.
(:15) Weird Science (85, PG-13) aac
(:15) 4th and Loud HD
AMC
Ice Lake Rebels HD
Alaskan Bush
Ice Lake Rebels HD
Alaskan Bush
Alaska: Last HD
ANIMAL
(7:00) Stomp the Yard (07, PG-13)
Waist Deep (06, R) aa Tyrese Gibson.
Game HD Wendy Williams HD
BET
Dont Be
Watch What Real Housewives
Dont Be
Dont Be
Dont Be
Dont Be
Extreme Guide (N)
BRAVO
Family Guy Black (N) Family Guy Hospital
NTSF:SD
King Hill
King Hill
Cleveland Cleveland Dad HD
CARTOON
Party Down South HD
Party Down South (N)
Party Down South HD
Cops HD
Cops HD
Party Down South HD
CMT
The Sixties
Anderson Cooper 360 The Sixties
Anderson Cooper 360 The Sixties (N)
CNN
Colbert HD midnight Tosh.0 HD
Chapplle
Sunny HD Sunny HD Tosh.0 HD Tosh.0 HD Tosh.0 HD Daily HD
COMEDY
Sharkageddon (N) HD
Shark After Dark Live I Escaped Jaws II HD
I Escaped Jaws II (N)
DISCOVERY To Be Announced
Dog Blog Austin HD Good Luck Good Luck
Jessie HD Dog Blog Spy Kids 2: Lost Dreams (02) aac Mickey
DISNEY
Kardashians HD
C. Lately E! News HD
C. Lately
Society X Society X Kardashians HD
E!
SportsCenter HD
SportsCenter HD
Monday Night Football : Preseason: Jacksonville vs Chicago (Live) HD
ESPN
(7:00) Little League
2014 Western & Southern Open : Round of 16"
2014 Western & Southern Open : Round of 16"
ESPN2
The 700 Club (TV G)
Prince
Prince
A Cinderella Story (04) Step Up 3D (10, PG-13) aac Rick Malambri. HD
FAMILY
Beat Bobby Beat Bobby Diners HD Diners HD Chopped HD
Chopped : Ambitious
Chopped HD
FOOD
(7:30) The Other Guys (10, PG-13) Will Ferrell.
Married
The Worst Married
The Worst The Worst Married
FX
Big Family Big Family Fixer
Upper 2, 2014
Fixer Upper
Fixer Upper
Now? (N) Hunters
HGTV Evening
Friday
May
Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars American American American American Pawn Stars Pawn Stars
HISTORY
8:00
8:30
9:00
9:30
10:00
10:30
11:00
11:30
12:00
12:30
Project Runway : Remixing
an (N)
Undone
Govs Wife Govs
Wife Project RunwayNightline
HD
Project Runway HD
LIFETIME
WPTA/ABC Shark Tank: Swimming Shark Tank
20/20
Local
Jimmy Kimmel Live
Ridiculous Ridiculous
Ridiculous
Ridiculous
Ridiculous
Snack-Off
Cannon
Ridiculous
Ridiculous
Snack-Off
MTV Unforgettable
WHIO/CBS
Hawaii Five-0
Blue Bloods
Local
Late Show Letterman Ferguson
Full Hse
Full Hse Local
Friends
Friends
Friends
Friends
Haunted
Instant HD Dad Run Hannibal
NICK DatelineThunderman
WLIO/NBC
NBC
Grimm
Tonight Show
Meyers
HD
Cops HD
Impact Wrestling (N) HDLocal
Cops HD
Cops HD
Cops HD
Cops HD
SPIKE KitchenCops
WOHL/FOX
Nightmares
Blood and Sand
(:05) Blood and Sand
(:08) Defiance
(:08) Blood and Sand
SYFY
Cable
ChannelsDefiance (N)
(N) 48
HD
The
Office
Conan HD
Family
Guy First
Big Bang
Big Bang TheBigFirst
Bang48 Big Bang The
Conan
A &TBS
E
The First
48 Guy Family The
48
First
The
First 48
Chaplin (14, NR)
Lights
(31)
Chaplin
NR)
Dogs Life
(:45) The Kid (21, NR)
The Idle Class (TV G)
AMC
TCM Die Hard
With (14,
a Vengeance
Speed
Town
Town
ANIM
L. Remini L. Remini Great
HoneyBarrier
Boo Boo HD
L. Remini L. Remini
Honey Boo Here Comes Honey Boo Boo (N) HD Tanked
TLC Great Barrier
BET
B.A.P.S
Wendy Williams
HD
(:02) Castle HD
Murder in the First HD Perception
: Silence Show
Castle HD II: The Klumps(:01) Castle
TNT Nutty Professor
BRAVO
Switch: Taipei
How to: Hong
LoseKong
Bizarre Foods
Layover : Hong Kong TheLayover
v Food HD v Food HD Layover
TRAVELThe Switch
CMT
'70s Show
Show
Paul Blart:
The
Cable
GuyHD
(N) HD
QueensMall Cop
Queens
Queens
Queens
Candid
Camera
Cleveland Raymond
Candid'70s
Camera
TV LAND
CNN
Smerconish
Spotlight
P Walker
Inside
Man
Inside
Man
Rush (N)
(:01) Satisfaction
(N)
(:02) Rush
(:03)
Satisfaction
LawCooper
& Order:360
SVU HD
USA Anderson
COMEDY White Chicks
Comedy
Central
Roast
The Improv:
50 &
Years
Candidly The
LeAnn
&
Dating
Naked
HD
Candidly
LeAnn
Think Like a Man (12) Dating Naked (N) HD
VH1
DISC
Guns:
SonsHow
of Guns
West
Guns
Wild
WestHow
Alaska
I MetLocked
How I Met
I Met How I MetWild
How
I MetAlaska
How I Met Sons
How Iof
Met
How I Met How
I Met
I Met
WGN Sons ofHow
DISN
Party
2014 Radio Disney Music Awards Austin
Good Luck Dog
Austin
Dog
Good Luck
Baggage Claim (13, PG-13) HD
First Look Cathouse The Leftovers HD
Killers HD
Leftovers HD
HBO GiulianaThe
E!
& Bill
Fashion Police
Fashion Police
Hello
E! News
Chelsea
HD
The
Purge
(13,
R)
Ethan
Hawke.
HD
Sexual
Wish
List
(14,
NRAO)
c
HD
Prv.
Parts
The
Waterboy
(98,
PG-13)
aac
MAX
ESPN
NBA Basketball
NBA Basketball
HD
INXS:
Never
Tear
Us
Apart
(14)
HD
7
Deadly
Ray
Donovan
HD
7
Deadly
INXS:
Never
Tear
Us
Apart
(14)
SHOW
ESPN2
NBA Basketball
NBA Basketball
SportsCenter

PBS
FAM

Matilda

FOOD
WBGUDiners
FX
HGTV

Thor
Beach

Cloudy-Mtballs

Burt Diners
Bacharachs Best
(My Music)
Return toDiners,
Downton
Abbey
Diners
Diners
Drive
Beach

Beach

Beach

Hunters

Hunt Intl

Hometown Content, Listings by FYI

Burt Bacharachs Best (My Music) 50s & 60s Party Songs (My Music)
HIST
LIFE
Hometown Content, Listings by FYI

AUGUST 12, 2014


9:00

WEDNESDAY EVENING

Hometown Content, Listings by FYI

11:30

8:30

Hometown Content, Listings by FYI

AUGUST 10, 2014


9:00

8:00

ABC
CBS
NBC
FOX
ION
A&E
AMC
ANIMAL
BET
BRAVO
CARTOON
CMT
CNN
COMEDY
DISCOVERY
DISNEY
E!
ESPN
ESPN2
FAMILY
FOOD
FX
HGTV
HISTORY
LIFETIME
MTV
NICK
SPIKE
SYFY
TBS
TCM
TLC
TNT
TRAVEL
TV LAND
USA
VH1
WGN
HBO
MAX
SHOW

PBS

Return to Downton Abbey

Rising Star (N) HD


Castle : Teen Spirit
Local Programs
Local Programs
Wipeout (N) HD
Reckless (N) HD
Local Programs
(:01) Big Brother (N) HD Unforgettable (N) HD
Local Programs
Dateline NBC HD
(7:00) Ninja Warrior HD Americas Got Talent HD
Teen Choice 2014 HD
Local Programs
Local Programs
Leverage HD
The Listener
The Listener : Missing
Leverage : Order 23"
Leverage HD
Duck HD
Duck HD
Duck HD
Wahlburger Wahlburger Wahlburger Wahlburger Duck HD
Duck HD
Duck HD
(:40) Breaking Bad HD
Breaking Bad : Crazy Handful HD
Breaking Bad HD
Break. Bad Breaking Bad HD
Wildman
Wildman
Ice Lake Rebels (N) HD Wildman
Wildman
Ice Lake Rebels HD
Gator Boys (N) HD
Sunday Best HD
McDonalds 365 (N) HD Sunday Best HD
BET Inspiration
Sunday Best (N) HD
Real Housewives
Game of Crowns (N)
Watch What Real Housewives
Housewives
Real Housewives (N)
Bobs HD
Rick Morty Family Guy Family Guy Superjail! Squid HD
Black
King Hill
King Hill
Bobs HD
Skull Challenge HD
Cops HD
Cops HD
Dog & Beth HD
Skull Challenge HD
Skull Challenge (N) HD
The Hunt : Under the
The Hunt (N)
Death Row Stories
The Hunt : Under the
The Hunt
(:11) Katt Williams HD
Key; Peele Key; Peele
Thunder
(:35) Tropic Thunder (08, R) aaa Robert Downey Jr. HD
Shark After Dark Live Shark of Dark HD
Air Jaws: Fin of Fury
Shark of Darkness: Wrath of Submarine (N) HD
Liv HD
Jessie HD Dog Blog
Good Luck Good Luck
Austin (N) I Didnt (N) Girl Meets Jessie HD Dog Blog
Kardashians (N) HD
#RichKids Botched (N) HD
Kardashians HD
Botched
Kardashians HD
SportsCenter Sports news. HD
Sports HD
MLB Baseball: Washington Nationals at Atlanta Braves (Live) HD
MLS Soccer: Houston vs Seattle (Live) HD
ESPN FC
Arena Football League: San Jose vs Arizona (Live) HD
The Lucky One (12, PG-13) aaa Zac Efron.
Just Like Heaven (05, PG-13) aaa
Osteen
Meyer
Cutthroat Kitchen
Food Network Star HD
Guys Grocery Games Food Network Star (N) Cutthroat Kitchen (N)
(:03) The Strain HD
(:04) The Strain HD
Final Destination 5 (11, R) Nicholas DAgosto.
The Strain (N) HD
Hunt (N)
Hunt
Flipping the Block (N)
Hunters
Hunters
Hunters
Hunters
Flipping the Block
Mountain Men (N) HD
Ice Road Truckers (N)
Dark Horse Dark Horse (:01) Mountain Men HD
Mountain Men HD
Maid in Manhattan (02) Witches of East End
(:01) The Lottery (N) HD Maid in Manhattan (02, PG-13) Jennifer Lopez.
Stomp the Yard (07, PG-13) aa Columbus Short.
ATL (06, PG-13) ac T.I., Evan Ross.
Full Hse
Full Hse
Full Hse
Full Hse
Full Hse
Full Hse
Friends
Friends
Friends
Friends
Hungry Investors (N)
Gym Rescue (N)
Bar Rescue HD
Hungry Investors
Bar Rescue HD
Vikingdom (13, NR) a
Matrix Reloaded (03)
The Matrix Revolutions (03, R) Keanu Reeves, Laurence Fishburne. HD
Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy (04)
Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy (04)
(:01) Arthur (11, PG-13)
To Be or Not to Be (42, NR) Carole Lombard.
True Confession (37, NR)
(:45) Nothing Sacred (37, NR) aaa
Escaping Alaska HD
Long Island Medium
Long Island Medium
Escaping Alaska (N) HD Long Island Medium
The Last Ship (N) HD
Falling Skies (N) HD
(:02) The Last Ship HD (:03) Falling Skies HD
National (07, PG) HD
Big Time R Big Time R Boardwalks Boardwalks Xtreme HD Xtreme HD v Food HD v Food HD Boardwalks Boardwalks
Cleveland
Cosby
Cosby
Queens
Queens
Queens
Queens
Raymond Raymond Falls HD
NCIS : Life Before HD
Modern
Modern
Satisfaction
NCIS : Engaged (P.2)
NCIS HD
Love & Hip Hop HD
Love & Hip Hop HD
Dating Naked HD
Hit the Floor HD
Love & Hip Hop HD
Manhattan : The Hive
Manhattan : The Hive
(7:30) The Big Lebowski (98, R) Jeff Bridges.
Manhattan (N)
The Leftovers (N) HD
Oliver (N) True Blood HD
Leftovers
Baggage Claim (13) HD True Blood (N) HD
Private Parts (97, R) Howard Stern.
Carnal Awakening (13, NRAO) c HD
Red 2 (13, PG-13) Bruce Willis. HD
Ray Donovan (N) HD
Masters of Sex (N) HD
Ray Donovan HD
Masters of Sex HD
Ray Donovan HD

8:00

TUESDAY EVENING

AUGUST
9, Listings
2014
Hometown Content,
by FYI
9:30

20/20 (N) HD
20/20 (N) HD
Local Programs
Local Programs
S.H.I.E.L.D. HD
Person of Interest HD 48 Hours HD
Local Programs
Unforgettable HD
Law & Order: SVU HD Local
(:29) Saturday Night Live HD
Dateline Saturday Night Mystery (N) HD
Local Programs
School HD School HD Local Programs
Brooklyn Brooklyn Gang Related HD
Law & Order CI HD
Law & Order CI HD
Law & Order CI HD
Law & Order CI HD
Law & Order CI HD
Criminal Minds HD
Criminal Minds HD
(:01) Criminal Minds HD (:01) Criminal Minds HD
Criminal Minds HD
Hell on Wheels (N) HD
TURN Wash Spies HD
(:01) Hell on Wheels HD Josey Wales (76) HD
Josey Wales (76) HD
Super Vet HD
Super Vet HD
Bad Dog! HD
Super Vet HD
Bad Dog! (N) HD
Eva (03)
Meet the Browns (08, PG-13) ac Tyler Perry, David Mann.
Daddy Day Camp (07, PG) Cuba Gooding Jr. HD
(7:00) Pearl Harbor (01, PG-13) ac Ben Affleck.
Pearl Harbor (01, PG-13) ac Ben Affleck, Josh Hartnett.
Dad HD
Boondcks Boondcks Family Guy Attack (N) Bleach (N) Dandy (N)
King Hill
King Hill
Dad HD
Dysfunctional (N) HD
Skull Challenge HD
Cops HD
Cops HD
(6:00) Speed (94, R) HD Dog & Beth (N) HD
The Sixties
The Sixties : 1968"
The Sixties
The Sixties
The Sixties : 1968"
South Park South Park South Park South Park South Park South Park South Park South Park (:10) Katt Williams HD
Naked and Afraid (N)
Naked Afraid (N) HD
Naked and Afraid HD
Naked and Afraid HD
Naked and Afraid HD
Dog Blog I Didnt
Good Luck A.N.T. HD
Isabelle
Disney (N) Jessie HD Jessie HD Lab Rats HD
Kardashians HD
Kardashians HD
Shutter Island (10, R) aaac Leonardo DiCaprio, Mark Ruffalo. HD
SportsCenter HD
SportsCenter HD
(7:00) Little League HD 2014 Little League Baseball Tournament (Live)
Baseball Tonight HD
E:60 : Perfect HD
Baseball Tonight HD
ATP Tennis : Rogers Cup - Semifinal #2" (Live)
New Years Eve (11, PG-13) aac Halle Berry, Jessica Biel.
A Walk to Remember (02, PG) aac Shane West. HD
Chopped HD
Chopped : Breakfast
Chopped HD
Chopped : An Egg Up
Chopped HD
The Strain : Box HD
The Strain
The Sitter (11, R) aac Jonah Hill, Max Records.
The Strain : Night Zero HD
Hunters
Hunters
Property Brothers HD
Property Brothers HD Property Brothers HD House Hunters (N) HD
Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars
Time Traveler Wife HD
The Time Travelers Wife (09, PG-13) aaa HD Movie
Confessions of a Teenage Drama Queen (04) ac Ridiculous Ridiculous Ridiculous Ridiculous Stomp the Yard (07)
SpongeBob SquarePants Movie HD Sponge
Instant HD Dad Run
Friends
Friends
Friends
Friends
Cops HD
Cops HD
Cops HD
Cops HD
Cops HD
Cops HD
Cops HD
Cops HD
Jail HD
Cops (N)
(6:30) The 6th Day (00) The Darkest Hour (11, PG-13) aa Emile Hirsch.
Predator 2 (90, R) aac Danny Glover. HD
Hulk (03)
Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Sullivan & Funniest Wins HD
The Thin Man (34, NR) aaac
(:45) After the Thin Man (36, NR) William Powell.
Crossroads (42, NR) Hedy Lamarr.
Untold ER : Dr. Epi
Untold Stories HD
Untold ER : Skewered Untold ER : Dr. Epi
Untold Stories HD
Pirates of the Caribbean: At Worlds End (07, PG-13) Johnny Depp. HD
The Last Ship : SOS
The Time Machine (02)
Ghost Adventures HD
The Dead Files (N) HD
The Dead Files HD
Ghost Adventures HD
Ghost Adventures HD
Cosby
The King of Queens
Queens
Queens
Queens
Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond
(6:30) Lose a Guy (03) Failure to Launch (06, PG-13) aa HD
Modern
Modern
Law & Order: SVU HD
Candidly
70s Show 70s Show 70s Show 70s Show Dazed and Confused (93, R) aaa Jason London. HD
Home Videos HD
Bones HD
Bones HD
Rules HD
Rules HD
Home Videos HD
The Knick : Method
The Leftovers : Guest Baggage Claim (13) HD
Baggage Claim (13, PG-13) Paula Patton. HD
The Knick : Method
Rush (13, R) Chris Hemsworth, Olivia Wilde. HD
The Knick : Method
Red 2 (13, PG-13) HD
Donovan
Deep Impact (98) aa Showtime Championship Boxing : Garcia vs. Salka (Taped)

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20/20 (N) HD
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Jimmy Kimmel Live HD Nightline
Shark Tank HD
Hawaii Five-0 HD
Blue Bloods HD
Local
(:35) Late Show HD
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CSI: Crime Scene HD
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(:01) Criminal Minds HD (:01) Criminal Minds HD (:02) Criminal Minds HD (:01) Criminal Minds HD
Criminal Minds HD
Volcano (97, PG-13) aa Tommy Lee Jones.
The Shawshank Redemption (94, R) Tim Robbins, Morgan Freeman. HD
Treehouse Masters HD
Redwood Kings (N) HD Redwood Kings (N) HD Treehouse Masters (N) Redwood Kings HD
Apollo Live HD
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Wendy Williams HD
Malibus Most (03) aa Apollo Live HD
(:20) American Pie 2 (01, R) aa Jason Biggs.
(:23) American Pie 2 (01, R) aa Jason Biggs.
Hes Not
Dad HD
Family Guy Family Guy Robot
Squid HD
King Hill
King Hill
Cleveland Cleveland Dad HD
Cheerleaders HD
CMA Music Festival: Countrys Night to Rock
Miss Congeniality (00) Cheerleaders (N) HD
Anderson Cooper 360 Our Nixon
The Sixties
The Sixties
Key; Peele Key; Peele Key; Peele Tosh.0 HD Tosh.0 HD Tosh.0 HD South Park South Park Harold and Kumar (04)
Deadliest Catch (N) HD Deadliest Catch HD
Deadliest Catch HD
Deadliest Catch: On Deck : Know My Name (N)
I Didnt
Liv HD
Jessie HD A.N.T. HD Jessie HD Dog Blog
Jessie (N) Girl Meets Gravity (N) Yonder
Fashion Police (N) HD
Fashion Police HD
C. Lately E! News HD
The Soup
Kardashians HD
SportsCenter HD
SportsCenter HD
(7:00) Little League HD 2014 Little League Baseball Tournament (Live)
Olbermann HD
Olbermann HD
(7:00) ATP Tennis (Live) Friday Night Fights : Willie Nelson (Live) HD
The 700 Club (TV G)
Bel-Air
Prince
Grease
Grease 2 (82, PG) ac Maxwell Caulfield, Michelle Pfeiffer. HD
Diners, Drive-Ins HD
Diners HD Diners HD
Diners HD Diners HD Diners HD Diners HD Diners (N) Eating
How to Train Your Dragon (10, PG) aaac Jay Baruchel.
How to Train Your Dragon (10, PG) aaac Jay Baruchel.
Love It or List It, Too
Love It or List It, Too
Hunters
Hunters
Hunters
Hunters
Love It or List It, Too
American Pickers HD
American Pickers HD
American Pickers HD
American Pickers HD
American Pickers HD
You Again (10, PG) aac Kristen Bell. HD
Laws of Attraction (04, PG-13) Pierce Brosnan.
You Again (10, PG) HD
Catfish: The TV Show
Catfish: The TV Show
Elf (03, PG) aaa Will Ferrell, James Caan.
Happy Gilmore (96)
Witch Way A Fairly Odd Summer (14, NR)
Full Hse
Full Hse
Friends
Friends
Friends
Friends
Cops HD
Cops HD
Cops HD
Glory Kickboxing : Last Man Standing (N) HD
Cops HD
Cops HD
Face Off HD
The Almighty HD
Dominion
WWE SmackDown HD
Funniest Wins HD
Lottery Ticket (10) aa
Family Guy Family Guy Family Guy Family Guy Funniest Wins (N) HD
The Trial (63, NR) aaac Anthony Perkins.
(:15) Elevator to the Gallows (58, NR) aaac Jules and Jim (62)
Atlanta HD Atlanta HD Say Yes to the Dress
Atlanta HD Atlanta HD Atlanta (N) Atlanta (N) Say Yes to the Dress
(:01) Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time (10, PG-13) aaa HD Justice HD
Journey Center (08) HD Cold Justice (N) HD
Mysteries
Monumental Mysteries Greatest Mysteries (N) Mysteries
Monumental Mysteries
Queens
Queens
Queens
Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond
Griffith HD The King of Queens
Modern
Modern
Modern
Modern
Modern
Modern
Modern
Modern
Covert Affairs
Coming to America (88, R) Eddie Murphy, Arsenio Hall. HD
Trading Places (83, R) aaa Dan Aykroyd, Eddie Murphy.
How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met
The Leftovers : Guest Jonah (N) Jonah (N) Jamie HD Jamie HD True Blood HD
The Leftovers HD
The Knick (N) HD
The Knick : Method
The Knick : Method
Rush: Edited Version (13, R) HD
L Word Mississippi: Hate the Sin
The Impossible (12, PG-13) Naomi Watts. HD
L Word
Masters of Sex HD

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Classifieds
10 The Herald

www.delphosherald.com

Friday, August 8, 2014

DELPHOS HERALD

555

Garage Sales/Yard
THE
Sales

555

Garage Sales/Yard
Sales

577 Miscellaneous

Shop the classifieds and


grab a great deal on a
great deal of items!

640
W I L L I A M Ave 828 N. Elm St., Aug. 8-9, LAMP REPAIR, table or
9am-6pm.
Housewares,
(Menke Ad.) Thurs-Fri Telling
The Tri-Countys
Story Sincefloor.
1869 Come to our store.
TV.
9am-5pm, Sat 9am-1pm. lamps, skeet thrower, H o h e n b r i n k
Girls newborn-6X. Boys books, VHS & DVD mov- 419-695-1229
newborn-2T, toys, baby ies, Jazz & Classical mugear, furniture, house- sic CDs & Cassettes.
592 Wanted to Buy
patio furniture,
hold
items.
Priced
to Wooden
TO ST. JUDE: Runs 1 day at the
FREE
ADS:
5 days
free if item
is free THANKS
Minimum
Charge:
15
words,
Deadlines:
Garage
Sales/Yard
105 Announcements
235 Help Wanted
office
chairs,
wine
Sell!
240 Healthcare
555
or less than $50. Only 1 item per ad, 1 price of $3.00.
2 times - $9.00
Salesissue.
11:30 a.m. for the next days
glasses,GARAGE
air compressor,
SALES: Each day is $.20 per
ad per month.
4-drawer metal file cabiEach word is $.30 PT
2-5CLEANING
days position in Saturdays paper is 11:00 a.m. Friday BOX7590
LEHMAN
Road.
word. $8.00
minimum charge.
REPLIES: $8.00 if you net,
come4-shelf
1311
J O S H U A St.
bookcase,
8/7 5pm-7pm, Fri6-9 daysGreat part-time
VAN WERT $.25 Ottoville.
WILL NOT
BE RESPONSIBLE FOR
andThurs
pick them
up. $14.00 if we have
to Icurtains,
Wednesday
2pm-6pm,
games,
roll-up
Mondays
paper
is
1:00
p.m.
Friday
day 8/8 10am-8pm, SatCOA Warehouse Sale!
Tues/Thurs eve $.20 hours,
10+ days
Thursday & Friday
DEBTS:
Ad
must
send
them
to
you.
b
l
i
n
d
s
,
m
i
n
i
f
r
i
d
g
e
, be placed in person by
urday 8/9 9am-11am.
Thursday, August 7
RNs & LPNs
needed
nings from 4-9 pm at
Herald
Extra
is 11 a.m.
ThursdayWebkinz,CARD
9am-6pm.
person
whose name
willGold,
appear
the ad.
OF
THANKS:
$2.00 womens
base thebike,
miscellaEach
word
is
$.10
for
3
months
Scrap
GoldinJewelry,
Girls
and
boys
clothes,
$8/hr.
Perfect
for
extra
inFriday, August 8
Dancewear, toys, bedfor
various
shifts,
plus
Must
show
ID
&
pay
when
placing
ad.
Regucharge
+
$.10
for
each
word.
neous
tools,
wall
clocks,
Silver
coins,
Silverware,
Kenmore
washer,
cockcor
o mmore
e,
sprepaid
tay-at-home
8am 4pm
We accept
ding, household items,
humidifier,
lar rates
apply
weekends.
Must be
Pocket Watches, Diamonds.
tail and end tables, girls magazines,
moms, or students! Office
Saturday, August 9
nice clothing: junior girls,
school uniforms, bikes, vehicle bike rack,
Pride Commercial Clean2330 Shawnee Rd.
8am-12pm
flexible to work on
ladies & mens, some
ing.
Please
call
Nancy
at
Christmas, bathroom de- wooden snack trays &
Lima
MANY NEW ITEMS!
childrens.
2hp-20
gallon
short
notice
at
times.
260-403-5080.
cor, tupperware, kitchen much more!
Also the Optimist Club
(419) 229-2899
Ingersoll Rand air comHospice
experience
a
items, some toys.
will be serving
pressor, bar-b-que grill,
Rager!s Sausage
plus, training provided. resin paper, childs oak
MATTS HEATING AND
Sandwiches
Van Wert Manor, a 99 bed skilled nursing
Submit application to: table & chairs. McCoy, 8005 BAKER RD, MidCOOLING IS LOOKING TO
T h u r s - F r i DOWNSIZING SALE! 301
Roseville and other d l e p o i n t .
facility, is seeking a
glassware and dish sets. 8/7-8/8 8am-8pm and W. 1st St. House and gaHIRE AN EXPERIENCED
235 Help Wanted
rages
cleaned
out!
Lots
of
Flexible
d u c t w o r k , Sat 8/9 8am-Noon. Adult
HVAC TECHNICIAN
Christmas and lots, lots and kids clothes, toys, miscellaneous items. Evewith experience and knowledge in building
We are an established Heating
air hockey table, ar- rything priced to sell!
and Cooling Company in Spencermore.
maintenance in a health care setting.
ADMINISTRATIVE
ville with a strong and growing base
cade-style basketball
Position will provide maintenance support
seeking
to
hire
an
experienced
and
Van
Wert
Inpt.
Hospice
322
EASTWOOD
Ave
game, appliances, tools,
ASSISTANT
professional HVAC Technician.
and 11250 Dutch Rd. shingles, and other ESTATE SALE. 715 N. to the facility grounds, building and
1155
Westwood
Dr.
Scheduling travel
Must have experience in InstallaToo large for one loca- honey-do materials. Water St., Ft. Jennings. equipment. Individual must be reliable,
Van Wert, OH 45891
tion/Service/Estimating.
and expense
tion! Estate items, furni- Lots of miscellaneous!
Thurs-Sat. Furniture - flexible in scheduling seasonal activities
Competive wages and a Full Benwww.ComHealthPro.org
reporting. Coordination
ture, bedding, kitchen,
efit Package.
household - crafts - Fen- and perform tasks with minimal assistance.
lots of miscellaneous. 807 Fairlane Drive. Thurs- ton - Pampered Chef.
of offsite meetings,
Interested candidates may forward their
Send Resume to:.
Priced to sell! Thurs 8/7 day 8/7 8am-7pm, Friday
i.e. booking rooms,
resume with cover letter to:
MATTS HEATING
and Fri 8/8, 8am-6pm 8/8 8am-6pm, Saturday
developing agendas,
275
Work
Wanted
and
Sat
8/9,
8am-2pm.
8/9 9am-1pm?. Stereo, FRIDAY ONLY! 9245 W.
AND COOLING
Van Wert Manor
send your cover letter
1000 S. Defiance Trail,
snow blower, basketball State Rd., Delphos,
Attn: Administrator
Spencerville, Ohio 45887
and salary
backboard, license plates,
160 Fox Road
Amish Construction Crew. 527 N CLAY ST (30 wood cabinets, cook - 9am-6pm. Bicycles,
or Call: 419-647-1095
expectations to:
New Home Construction, steps off Lincoln High- books, queen bedspread, moon chairs, oak televiVan Wert, Ohio 45891
risean8@gmail.com
Home Remodeling, Pole way!). Thurs-Fri, 8/7-8/8, various sizes kids cloth- sion stand, dorm refrigFax #: 419-238-6696
LABORER AND Class A
9am-5pm.
Victorian
seterator,
Longaberger
basBarns, Garages, Concrete
ing, childrens books,
Apply online at
Floors, Roofing, Re-Side tee, antique chest of kitchenware, vintage jew- kets, Jillian Michaels
CLASS A CDL Truck CDL. Apply in person at
www.vanwertmanor.com
Koharts
Recycling,
drawers,
Iroquois
China
Bodyshop,
Shark
steam
&
Re-Roof
Old
Barns,
Drivers wanted for local
elry, toys, glassware, baby
Window & Door Replace- Set (nutmeg), Boos items, high chair, & mis- blaster, and misc. No
work. One full-time, one 15360 SR 613, Paulding.
pre-sales!
ment, much more. No Job Butcher Block, maple cellaneous.
part-time position availToo Small, Free Esti - sewing machine, antique
able. Home daily, round
mates.
Call
D a v i d chairs, large plastic pet 933 N. Washington St.,
BLUE STREAM
trip runs. Ottoville and
Schwartz,
260-223-8604
house, rock collection, Delphos. Friday 8/8 MULTI-FAMILY SALE!
DAIRY, INC.
Columbus Grove locacomputer desk, tv and 8am-6pm and Saturday 10816 Holdgreve Rd.
tions preferred. Excellent
microwave stands, flax 8/9 8am-3pm. 0-3 thru Thursday and Friday
pay. Call 419-707-0537.
spinning
wheel, turnta- 12 boys. 0-3 thru 6 girls. 8/7-8/8 8am-6pm and
320 House For Rent
bles,
CD
&
VHS player, Miscellaneous baby and Saturday 8/9 8am-1pm.
ELITE
NATURESspeakers, copy stand other items. Something Push and riding mowers,
CAPES is accepting apfor everyone.
Full Time
SEVERAL MOBILE and much more!
baby and childrens
plications for full and
Valid Drivers License
Homes/House for rent.
clothing, baby stroller
part-time landscape
BAKE SALE, 1008 William
18+ years old
View homes online at
and baby items. Foosball
crew positions. Please
Avenue, Aug. 7th & 8th,
www.ulmshomes.com
or
Please apply in person
9:00am-5:00pm. Catholic table, filing cabinet, tricysend resume to 10740
533 CAROLYN Drive.
inquire at 419-692-3951
from 8am-5pm at
Daughters of America cle, piano, Christmas
Elida Rd., Delphos, OH
Thursday-Saturday Aug. offer Homemade pies, and household items,
The Delphos Herald, a five-day, award
45833.
7, 8, 9, 8am-? Hand- cookies, breads, cakes, miscellaneous, too!
3242 Mentzer Church Rd.
winning DHI media company with
Convoy, OH
Garage Sales/Yard made doilies, potholders, snacks.
newspapers, website, and niche
555
kids hats & jewelry.
Sales
NEEDED PART time ofKids clothes, kids toy BARN SALE with Two Es- THREE-FAMILY SALE!
product
in Delphos, Ohio, is looking for
fice assistant for local 1306 HEDRICK St. fire truck, chipper shred- tates! 9840 Lincoln High- 404 W. 4th St. Thursday,
an
energetic,
self-motivated, resourceful
Friday
&
Saturday
10am
way,
One
Mile
East
of
Delbusiness Monday thru Thurs-Fri 9am-7pm, Sat der, household items &
Full & Part Time
phos. August 7th-9th, until ???. Alto sax clarin
Friday. Reply to Box 9am-?. Adult and chil- misc.
reporter/photographer
to join its staff.
Thurs-Sat 9am-5pm. Lots et, home decor, toys, hot
128,,c/o Delphos Herald, d r e n s
clothes,
of everything!
wheels, infant and other
405 N. Main St., Del- Pack-n-Play, Stroller,
with 5+ OTR experience.
The right candidate will possess strong
clothes.
Computer
604 N. Franklin St. Aug
phos, Ohio 45833.
toys, car seat, clothes
LTL loads are 99%
DANCEWEAR,
BRAND
games
and
educational,
7-8,
8am-6pm.
Hip,
hip,
grammar and writing skills, be able to
no-touch freight.
hamper, single head
hooray! Community Ga- new, all sizes, half price! music CDs, books, unHome on weekends &
board, bed frame, Kemeet deadlines, have a working
rage Sales are here to- Hundreds of tights, leo- opened kids meal toys
occasionally mid -week.
Miscellaneous
netico water softener
Pay avg $0.42/mile,
knowledge
of still photography. A sense
235
l e g w a r m e r s . (pre-2002), aquarium,
day! Grandkids have t a r d s ,
(Mach4040S), camping
For Sale
$50,000-$60,000 per year.
grown, sizes have Fri-Sat, 912 Ft Jennings wedding gown, some
of
urgency
and accuracy are requirecords, hoses, etc., Blue
Call 419-222-1630
furniture, bikes.
changed. Lots of good Rd., Delphos.
Monday-Friday
Playstation 3: 2 Con- Ox tow bar (Aladdin
ments.
Assignments
can range from
8am to 5pm
trollers, 7 Games, $250. model) and braking sys- items priced to sell!
Tools,
books,
clothing,
Looking for a career in
hard economic news to feature stories.
Innovative Logistic
419-692-6102 or 419- tem (BX88193), Federal
toys, crafts, pool heater.
Concepts
860-8889
the field of
Pacific circuit breakers.
Bargains galore!
Send resumes to:
Helping Others?

www.delphosherald.com

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


Raines
Jewelry

PRN Nurses

Cash for Gold

Autos Appliances
Clothing Electronics
Furniture Jewelry
Musical Instruments
THE DELPHOS
HERALD

(419) 695-0015

Maintenance Assistant

Do you need to know what is


going on before anyone else?

Utility/
Maintenance

Do you have a burning need to


know more about the people
and news in the community?

Hiring
Drivers

ervice
SERVICE DIRECTORY

610 Automotive

Geise

Transmission, Inc.
automatic transmission
standard transmission
differentials
transfer case
brakes & tune up

2 miles north of Ottoville

419-453-3620
625 Construction

Home Repair
and Remodel

665

Hohlbeins

Home
Improvement
Lifetime Warranty

WINDOWS

299

installed
(up to 101 united inches

POHLMAN
BUILDERS
ROOM ADDITIONS

GARAGES SIDING ROOFING


BACKHOE & DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
FREE ESTIMATES
FULLY INSURED

POHLMAN
POURED
CONCRETE WALLS

655

Denny

Also call us for


Doors - Siding
Roofing - Awnings
Ph. 419-339-4938
or 419-230-8128
660 Home Services

Metzgers

Appliance Service

Lawn, Garden,
Landscaping

TEMANS
OUR TREE
SERVICE

Trimming Topping Thinning


Deadwooding
Stump, Shrub & Tree Removal
Since 1973

419-692-7261

Bill Teman 419-302-2981


Ernie Teman 419-230-4890

DAYS PROPERTY
MAINTENANCE
LLC
Mowing
Landscaping
Lawn Seeding

Brent Day
567-204-8488

www.dayspropertymaintenance.com

Jon
Residential
419.286.8387
800.686.3537
& Commercial
Washers Dryers Refrigerators Freezers
Agricultural Needs Ranges Dishwashers Icemakers Microwaves
All Concrete Work
We service Kenmore appliances
and most major appliance brands

Mueller Tree
Service

Metzgers Metzger
Trees
Trimming,
Topping & Removal,

Mark Pohlman
Denny

Denny
Jon
Denny |Appliance
Jon
419.286.8387
419.692.8387
Appliance
Service
Service 800.686.3537
419-339-9084
419.286.8387
419.286.8387 800.686.3537
800.686.3537
Washers Dryers
Brush Removal
cell 419-233-9460
Washers Dryers Refrigerators
Freezers
Washers
Dryers Refrigerators Freezers
Refrigerators
Freezers Icemakers Microwaves
Ranges Dishwashers Icemakers
Microwaves
Ranges
Dishwashers

419-203-8202

Ranges Dishwashers
We service Kenmore appliances
We service Kenmore
appliances
bjpmueller@gmail.com
Icemakers Microwaves
and most major appliance brands
and most major appliance brands
Fully insured
WE SERVICE MOST
419.286.8387 | 419.692.8387
419.286.8387
| 419.692.8387
MAJOR APPLIANCE
BRANDS INCLUDING
800.686.3537
800.686.3537
KENMORE
Experienced Amish Carpentry
APPLIANCES
Roofing, remodeling,
670 Miscellaneous
concrete, pole barns, garages
or any construction needs.

Joe Miller
Construction

Cell

655

567-644-6030
Home Repair
and Remodel

Harrison
Floor Installation
Carpet, Vinyl, Wood,
Ceramic Tile

Reasonable rates
Free estimates
harrisonfloorinstallation.com
Phil 419-235-2262
Wes 567-644-9871
You buy, we apply

419-286-8387
419-692-8387

665

Lawn, Garden,
Landscaping

L.L.C.

COMMUNITY
SELF-STORAGE
GREAT RATES
NEWER FACILITY

419-692-0032
Across from Arbys

Trimming & Removal


Stump Grinding
24 Hour Service Fully Insured

KEVIN M. MOORE

(419) 235-8051

For all the news that matters,


subscribe to
The Delphos Herald
419-695-0015

GESSNERS
PRODUCE
CANNING SEASON
STARTS NOW!
NOW TAKING BUSHEL
ORDERS FOR ROMA &
FIELD TOMATOES
& PEACHES
ORDER HOMEGROWN
FREEZER CORN!
Located 714 E. Main St., Van Wert
939 E. 5th St., Delphos
9:00 AM-6:00 PM DAILY

9557 St. Rt. 66, Delphos, OH 45833

419-692-5749 419-234-6566

670 Miscellaneous

SAFE &
SOUND

DELPHOS

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

419-692-6336

Quality

Please apply at
Van Wert Manor
We currently have a Full Time Nursing
Assistant Position Open:
Van Wert Manor is looking for state tested
nursing assistance for part time and full
time positions. Full time positions include
health benefits, vacation benefits, and 401K
options.
If interested, applicants
can apply in person at:
Van Wert Manor
160 Fox Road
Van Wert, Ohio 45891
EOE

Quality
Mechanical
Services

The Delphos Herald


Attn. Nancy Spencer
405 N. Main St., Delphos, Ohio 45833
or email to: nspencer@delphosherald.com

The
KeyKey
The

The
Key
ToToBuying
The
Key
Buying
To
Buying
ToOrOr
Buying
Selling
Selling
Or
Or Selling
Selling

940
E.
FIFTH
ST.,
940
E.
FIFTH
ST., DELPHOS
DELPHOS
940
E.
FIFTH
DELPHOS
940
E.
FIFTH ST.,
ST.,
DELPHOS
419-692-7773 Fax 419-692-7775
419-692-7773 Fax
Fax
419-692-7773
Fax419-692-7775
419-692-7775
419-692-7773
419-692-7775
www.rsre.com
www.rsre.com
www.rsre.com
www.rsre.com

1 OPEN HOUSE SATURDAY 1-3 PM

00099246

AT YOUR

OPEN HOUSE
SATURDAY
1 Rd.
Open
House 1-31-3
1 OPEN
HOUSE
SATURDAY
19074
19,
Ft.
11OPEN
HOUSE
SATURDAY
1-3PMPMPM
19074
Rd.
Ft. -Jennings
Jennings
Sunday
1:0019,P.M.
3:00 P.M.
Price Reduced!

Price
Reduced!
19074
19,
Ft.Delphos
Jennings
19074
Rd.
19,
Jennings
$164,900-Ft
Jennings
SD
5324Rd.
Redd
Rd.,
$164,900-Ft
Jennings
SD
Price
Reduced!
33 bedroom,
2
bath
brick/vinyl
ranch
home
with
Price
Reduced!
bedroom,
2
bath
brick/vinyl
ranch
home
with open
open
$169,500-Elida
SD
floor
plan
on
1.24
acre
lot.
Many
updates.
rication & Welding Inc.
b
$164,900-Ft
Jennings
SDIncludes
Fa
$164,900-Ft
SD
floor plan on
1.24 acre lot.Jennings
Many updates.
Includes
419-339-0110
Price
Reduced!-Extremely
Motivated
Sellers!
24x24
attached
garage
and
36x24
Morton
building.
2 bath
brick/vinyl
ranch
homebuilding.
with
open
attached
garage
and 36x24
Morton
HVAC & Plumbing Services 3 bedroom,
3 24x24
bedroom,
2 bath
brick/vinyl
ranch
home
with
open
Move
ready!
(42)
Brad
Stuber
419-236-2267/Derek
GENERAL REPAIR
Move in
in
ready!
(42)
Bradlot.
Stuber
419-236-2267/Derek
3BR/1
419-303-3313
BTH
ranch
with
4th
BR
and full
bath
floorfloor
plan
on
1.24
acre
Many
updates.
Includes
plan
on
1.24
acre
lot.
Many
updates.
Includes
Watkins
SPECIAL BUILT PRODUCTS
Technicians Needed
419-303-3313
inWatkins
attached,
suite,
apx.
24x24
attached
garage
and
Morton
building.
24x24
attachedprivate
garagemother-in-law
and 36x24
36x24 Morton
building.
TRUCKS, TRAILERS
*401K Program
*Top Wages
1
OPEN
HOUSE
SUNDAY
1-2:30
PM
Move
in
ready!
(42)
Brad
Stuber
419-236-2267/Derek
2,529
total
sq.ft.,
2
car
attached
garage.
Move
in ready!HOUSE
(42) BradSUNDAY
Stuber 419-236-2267/Derek
1 OPEN
1-2:30 PM
FARM MACHINERY
*Tool Program
*Paid Holiday
Watkins
419-303-3313
7040
Elida
Elida
Beautiful
country
on 2.6
acre corner lot
RAILINGS & METAL GATES
Watkins
419-303-3313
7040setting
Elida Rd.,
Rd.,
Elida
*Paid Uniforms
*Paid Vacation
$112,000-Elida
SD
CARBON STEEL
$112,000-Elida
SD
between
Delphos
&
Lima.
*Company
Vehicle
*Cell
Phone
Brick
with
and
RemodSTAINLESS STEEL
Brick ranch
ranch
with 33 bedrooms
bedrooms
and 11 full
full bath.
bath.
Remod-PM
1 (137)
OPEN
HOUSE
SUNDAY
1-2:30
Miller
419-236-3014
eled
2004.
22 car
*Bonus
*Spiff Program
ALUMINUM
eled in
inSandy
2004. Detached
Detached
car garage
garage built
built in
in 2008.
2008.
(51)
Mike
Reindel
419-235-3607
Larry McClure
7040
Elida
Elida
(51) Mike Reindel
419-235-3607
7040
Elida Rd.,
Rd., Elida
906 W. Lima St.
1190 E. Kibby St.
5745 Redd Rd., Delphos
BY
APPOINTMENT
$112,000-Elida
SDSD
$189,500-Lincolnview
BY
APPOINTMENT
$112,000-Elida SD
Kenton, OH Brick ranch with
Lima, OH
3
bedrooms
and
1
fullbath.
bath.RemodRemod$65,000-Elida
SD
Just$65,000-Elida
ofand
Delphos
SD
Brick
ranch
with
31outside
bedrooms
1 full
33 bedroom,
bath

story
on
nice
66x132
lot.
inCute
2004.
Detached
211 car
garage
built
in 2008.
419-675-2518 eledeled
Cute
bedroom,
1
bath

story
on
nice
66x132
lot.
419-229-9781
4BR/2BTH,
historical
brick
2 living
storyarea,
on 3+
acres,
inin
2004.
Detached
2sq.
carft.
garage
built
inenclosed
2008.
Built
1920,
appx.
1378
of
Built
in
1920,
appx.
1378
sq.
ft.
of
living
area,
enclosed
(51)
Mike
Reindel
419-235-3607
715 Blacktop/Cement
breezeway.
(122)
Bonnie
Shelley
419-230-2521
(51)
Mikesq.ft.
Reindel
419-235-3607
2,744
Natural
woodwork
& hardwood
breezeway.
(122)
Bonnie
Shelley
419-230-2521
$74,000-Delphos
SD
BY
APPOINTMENT
$74,000-Delphos
SD w/ water &
floors
throughout.
60x100
outbldg.
1-1/2
home
with
1-1/2 story
story BY
homeAPPOINTMENT
with 3BR/1BA
3BR/1BA and
and over
over 1800
1800 sq
sq ftft
$65,000-Elida
SD
living
Many
updates
including
updated
bath
small
grain bldg.
w/
electric.
Well-kept
home!
L&B CONCRETE
living space.
space.
Many
updates
including
updated
bath
SD
w/whirlpool
tub/shower,
windows,
roof
&
water
The Delphos Civil Service Commission will be CuteSeller
3 bedroom,
1$65,000-Elida
bath
1newer
story
on nice
66x132
lot.
w/whirlpool
tub/shower,
newer
windows,
roof
&
water
providing
home
warranty.
SERVICING, LLC
heater.
Basement.
Detached
garage
w/loft.
conducting an open examination for position of BuiltCute
3
bedroom,
1
bath
1

story
on
nice
66x132
lot.
Basement.
Detached
w/loft.
inheater.
1920,
appx.
1378
sq.
ft.garage
of living
area, enclosed
(67)
Bonnie
Shelley
419-230-2521
(75)
Barb
Coil
419-302-3478
RECORDS
CLERK

in
the
Delphos
Police
DepartCONCRETE
Built
1920,
1378 Shelley
sq. ft. of living
area, enclosed
(75)inBarb
Coilappx.
419-302-3478
419-230-2521
FARM
FOR
SALE
ment. The examination will be held at 7:00 p.m. on breezeway. (122) Bonnie
FARM
FOR
SALE
INSTALLATION
breezeway.
(122)
Bonnie
Shelley
419-230-2521
$74,000-Delphos
SD
Approx.
30
acres
in
Union
Twp,
Van
Wert
County.
Wednesday, August 27, 2014. It will take place at the
Approx. 30$79,000-Spencerville
acres in Union Twp, Van WertSD
County. ApApSpecializing in
$74,000-Delphos
SDover
prox.
20home
ac tillable
tillable
w/ balance
balance
wooded.
Jefferson High School cafeteria.
1-1/2 prox.
story20
with
3BR/1BA
and
1800 sq ft
ac
w/
wooded.
Concrete Stamping
(188)
Devin
Dye
A grade of 70% is required to successfully pass the living
New
Listing!
1-1/2
story
with
3BR/1BA
and overupdated
1800 sq bath
ft
(188)
Devinhome
Dye 419-303-5891
419-303-5891
space.
Many
updates
including
examination. The passing scores will also serve as
living
space.
Many
updates
including
updated
bath
3BR/1BTH
ranch,
built
in
1962,
apx.
1,176
Commercial & Residential
w/whirlpool
tub/shower,
newer
windows,
roof
&
water
an eligibility list. This eligibility list shall be valid for a
w/whirlpool
newer garage
windows,
roof & water
sq.ft.,
2 tub/shower,
car det.
garage.
Homew/loft.
completely
heater.
Basement.
Detached
period of one year.
11 Years Experience
Basement.
garage
w/loft. Great
(75)heater.
Barb Coil
419-302-3478
remodeled
07. AllDetached
appliances
included.
CLASSIFICATION
Free Estimates
(75)
Barb near
Coil 419-302-3478
POSITION: Records Clerk,
FARM
FOR SALE
Fully insured
location
new school.

Delphos Police Department
FARM
FOR
Approx.
30
acres
in
Union
Twp,SALE
Van Wert County. Ap419-233-2916
(175) Jon Henry 419-235-2675
STARTING SALARY: $12.00 per hour
Approx.
30
acres
in
Union
Twp,
Van
Wert County. Approx.
20
ac
tillable
w/
balance
wooded.
HOURS: Part-time (Hours will be variable between
(188)
Devin
419-303-5891
prox.
20 acDye
tillable
w/ balance wooded.
3:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m.)
$59,000-Delphos
BENEFITS: Sick leave, vacation, holiday pay and
(188) Devin Dye
419-303-5891 SD
OPERS
Price Reduced!
BENEFICIAL QUALIFICATIONS: This is a clerical
3BR/1BTH,
1

story home, 1800+ sq. ft. Bath


work-data entry position. This position includes
w/whirlpool tub/shower, newer windows, roof
filing, bookkeeping, typing, computer data input
and record keeping assignments.
& water heater. Basement. Detached garage

40 custom colors of
You may be required to pass a physical examiw/loft. (75) Barb Coil 419-302-3478
seal coat available
nation, psychological examination, a background
Residential
check, drug screening and any examination that
dRiveways
would be required by the City of Delphos Police
COMMERCIAL
Department. Graduation from high school or GED
CommeRCial
High
traffic
location
just off SR 309 in Elida!
equivalency is also required. The candidate must
paRking lots
reside in Allen or Van Wert County or a county con3 parcels totaling .925 acres. Two separate
tiguous to Allen or Van Wert.
ConCRete
buildings-one currently occupied & the other
Applications and job descriptions can be obsealing
tained at the Municipal Building August 11 through
vacant. Would make a great restaurant.
asphalt seal
August 15, 2014, during regular business hours or
(45) Devin Dye 419-303-5891
Coating
on-line at www.cityofdelphos.com.

All
applications
must
be
mailed
to:
The
DelCustom line
phos Civil Service Commission, P.O. Box 45, DelstRiping
LOTS
phos, Ohio 45833. All applications which are postFully insuRed
marked after this date shall be considered invalid
Three
one
acre
parcels,
will sell as whole or
Our prices will nOt be beat!
and will not be accepted.
individual
parcels.
Located
on Lincoln Hwy. on
A Star-Seal Preferred
Applicants, on the night of the examination, you
Contractor
must bring a valid Ohio Drivers license and proof
the West edge of Delphos. $20,000 per lot.
of military service, if applicable.
(184) Devin Dye 419-303-5891
Fabrication & Welding Inc.

1 OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY 1-2:30 PM

NOTICE OF EXAMINATION

567.204.1427

www.delphosherald.com

Comics & Puzzles


Zits

Todays
Horoscope
By Eugenia Last

Friday, August 8, 2014

Blondie

For Better or Worse

Beetle Bailey

If you remain positive,


youll discover that the
challenges you face are part of
a learning process to help you
move forward. Your full effort
will be required to get you
where you want to go. Dont
hold back when you should
be doing all you can to make
things happen.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) -Consider your actions before
putting the blame elsewhere.
You are in greater control of
the outcome than you realize.
If you havent lived up to your
promises, complaints will be
forthcoming.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept.


22) -- Participate in events
that bring you into contact
with creative people. Your
contributions will be rewarded,
allowing you to compare and
share your ideas in order to
accomplish more.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct.


23) -- Your plans arent likely
to play out as planned. Think
on your feet and be prepared
to change directions quickly
when an unexpected turn of
events takes place.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) -- Stay in control and stick
to your own agenda. A snap
decision will prove costly, so
stand your ground if anyone
tries to push you in a direction
you dont want to go.

Pickles

The Herald 11

Friday, August 8, 2014

Crossword Puzzle

ACROSS
1 Escapade
5 Codgers
queries
8 Slightly
gamy
11 Grad school
exams
13 -- -- long
way
14 Open
meadow
15 Underway
16 Very very
18 Warty critter
20 Bring cheer
21 Stubble
remover
23 Form 1040
info
24 City conveyance
25 Nannys
vehicle
27 Lhasa -31 Mae West
role
32 Long story
33 Barn neighbor
34 Between
ports
36 -- and void
38 Designer
-- Claiborne
39 Just
40 Big celebration
41 Author -Tan
42 -- whiz!
44 Uplift
46 Go around
49 Waterless
50 Kimono
wearers
52 Spooky
56 PC linkup
57 Yale athlete
58 Weighs
anchor
59 Joule fraction
60 TKO official
61 Whatever
-- Wants

stroke
2 -- you serious?
3 Dust cloth
4 Stumblebum
5 Mild rejoinder
6 By what
means
7 Hotel conveniences
8 Clay pot
9 Sensed
10 Dunaway of
films
12 Gets nosy
17 Arm bones
19 Do the flowers
21 Union demand
22 Better
trained
23 More petite
24 Chowder
tidbit
26 Water, in
Tijuana
28 Rice dish
29 Like a snails

Yesterdays answers
trail
30 Squishy
35 Auspices
37 Word on
a door
43 Bygone
anesthetic
45 Role
model
46 Give the
eye
47 Broncos

DOWN
1 Badminton

SAGITTARIUS
(Nov.
23-Dec. 21) -- Sharing your
newest ideas will bring you a
once-in-a-lifetime opportunity.
Be ready to take a leap of faith.
Actions speak louder than
words.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22Jan. 19) -- Take some personal
time to figure out what you
want to do next. Feelings of
uncertainty or doubt are best
dealt with by mulling over your
thoughts and considering what
works best for you.

Garfield

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20Feb. 19) -- Trust your intuition.


Indecision and insecurity are
holding you back. Constantly
dwelling on past issues will
prevent you from reaching your
goals.

PISCES (Feb. 20-March


20) -- Let your voice be heard.
Joining an organization or
community group will lead
to beneficial and worthwhile
connections. Be a participant
and make a difference.

Born Loser

Hagar the Horrible

Barney Google & Snuffy Smith

ARIES (March 21-April


19) -- Excessive spending
wont help you shake the
blues. Involve yourself in a
physical activity that will free
your mind from your current
problems. Keeping busy will
help you avoid obsessing over
minor issues.
TAURUS
(April
20May 20) -- An emotionally
charged situation will turn out
positively. Share your plans and
discuss your intentions. Dont
take unnecessary risks; get the
facts straight before you make
a move.

GEMINI (May 21-June


20) -- Financial gains are
looking good. You have much
to offer, and an innovative
idea is sure to capture a lot of
favorable attention. Bask in the
spotlight.
CANCER (June 21-July
22) -- Its time to make some
improvements. In addition to
updating your appearance,
consider making some changes
to your living space that will
add comfort and convenience.
You will be proud of the results.
COPYRIGHT 2014 United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

DISTRIBUTED
BY
UNIVERSAL UCLICK FOR
UFS

Answer to Sudoku
Hi and Lois

Marmaduke

The Family Circus By Bil Keane

do it
48 Sweet
cherry
49 Yeah,
right! (2 wds.)
51 Pub
order
53 Sugarloaf locale
54 Not well
55 NASA
counterpart

12 The Herald

Friday, August 8, 2014

Hamas rejects
disarmament
proposal

www.delphosherald.com

Obama authorizes
renewed airstrikes in Iraq

MAGGIE MICHAEL
Associated Press

ROBERT BURNS
Associated Press

GAZA CITY, Gaza City


With a deadline looming hours away, Hamas on
Thursday rejected Israeli
demands it disarm and threatened to resume its rocket
attacks if its demands for lifting a crippling blockade on
Gaza were not met.
The hard-line stance,
voiced by a senior Hamas
official at the groups first
rally since a cease-fire in
the Gaza war took effect on
Tuesday, signaled that indirect negotiations in Cairo over
a permanent truce in Gaza
were not making headway. It
was an ominous sign ahead
of Fridays expiration of a
temporary three-day truce that
ended a month of fighting.
A text message from
Hamas military wing, the
Izzedine al-Qassam Brigades,
warned there would be no
extension of the cease-fire if
there was no agreement to
permanently lift the blockade
enforced by Israel and Egypt
since the militant group overran Gaza in 2007.
Abu Obeida, the al-Qassam
spokesman, appeared on the
groups Al-Aqsa TV station
and said Hamas was ready to
go to war again. He threatened to launch a long-term
war of attrition that would
cripple life in Israels big cities and disrupt air traffic at
Israels international airport in
Tel Aviv.

WASHINGTON President Barack


Obama authorized U.S. airstrikes in northern Iraq Thursday night, warning they
would be launched if needed to defend
Americans from advancing Islamic militants and protect civilians under siege. His
announcement threated a renewal of U.S.
military involvement in the countrys long
sectarian war.
In a televised late-night statement from
the White House, Obama said American
military planes already had carried out
airdrops of humanitarian aid to tens of
thousands of Iraqi religious minorities
surrounded by militants and desperately in
need of food and water.
Today America is coming to help, he
declared.
The announcements reflected the deepest American engagement in Iraq since
U.S. troops withdrew in late 2011 after
nearly a decade of war. Obama, who made
his remarks in a steady and somber tone,
has staked much of his legacy as president
on ending what he has called the dumb
war in Iraq.
Obama said the humanitarian airdrops
were made at the request of the Iraqi
government. The food and water supplies
were delivered to the tens of thousands
of Yazidis trapped on a mountain without food and water. The Yazidis, who
follow an ancient religion with ties to
Zoroastrianism, fled their homes after the
Islamic State group issued an ultimatum to
convert to Islam, pay a religious fine, flee
their homes or face death.
Mindful of the publics aversion to
another lengthy war, Obama acknowledged that the prospect of a new round

of U.S. military action would be a cause


for concern among many Americans. He
vowed anew not to put American combat
troops back on the ground in Iraq and said
there was no U.S. military solution to the
crisis.
As commander in chief, I will not
allow the United States to be drawn into
fighting another war in Iraq, Obama said.
Even so, he outlined a rationale for
airstrikes if the Islamic State militants
advance on American troops in the northern city of Irbil and the U.S. consulate
there. The troops were sent to Iraq earlier this year as part of the White House
response to the extremist groups swift
movement across the border with Syria
and into Iraq.
When the lives of American citizens
are at risk, we will take action, Obama
said. Thats my responsibility as commander in chief.
He said he had also authorized the use
of targeted military strikes if necessary
to help the Iraqi security forces protect
civilians.
Obama spoke following a day of urgent
discussions with his national security
team. He addressed the nation only after
the American military aircraft delivering
food and water to the Iraqis had safely left
the drop site in northern Iraq.
The Pentagon said the airdrops were
performed by one C-17 and two C-130
cargo aircraft that together delivered a
total of 72 bundles of food and water.
They were escorted by two F/A-18 fighters from an undisclosed air base in the
region.
The planes delivered 5,300 gallons of
fresh drinking water and 8,000 pre-packaged meals and were over the drop area
for less than 15 minutes at a low altitude.

Fair
(Continued from page 1)
The grandstand will also offer the
annual Kewpee Showcase of Bands
on Aug. 16; the Demolition Derby at 6
p.m. Aug. 17; the Truck, Tractor Semi
Sled Pull at 7 p.m. Aug. 18 (preceded
by the Golf Car Pull at 6 p.m.); the
Truck Tug Pull at 7 p.m. Aug. 19; harness racing at 7 p.m. Aug. 20 and 21;
and Nashville Crush at 8 p.m Aug. 22.
Fair royalty was crowned with
Elizabeth Goedde and Tyler Begg
named queen and king and Maddison
Rex and Forrest Hager princess and
prince.
Goedde is the daughter of Jan and
Russ Goedde and a Lima Central
Catholic graduate. She is involved in
the Luck of the Irish 4-H Club and
plans to attend Rhodes State College to
major in radiographic imaging.
Begg is the son of Alan and Janet
Begg, Bluffton Cattle 4-H Club member and a Bluffton High School graduate. He plans to attend Wittenberg
University, majoring in psychology.
Rex is the daughter of Kreg and
Joanne Rex and will be a senior at Allen
East High School. She is a member of
the Allen County Feather Fanciers. She
plans to seek a degree in biology after
high school.
Hager is the son of Candy and Matt
Hager and will be a senior at Allen
East High School. He is active in the
LaFayette Boys and Girls 4-H Club
and after high school, plans to attend
college and major in pharmacy.
Delphos Kylie Fritz, daughter of
Eric and Gina Fritz, and Megan Joseph,
daughter of Kim and Norm Elwer,
earned Allen County Agricultural
Society scholarships. Both are 2014 St.
Johns High School graduates.
Potash Corp., Tuttle Construction
and Touchstone were recognized for
the recent improvements to the four
commercial buildings on the grounds.

Delphos Kylie Fritz, left, daughter of Eric and Gina Fritz, and Megan Joseph,
daughter of Kim and Norm Elwer, earned Allen County Agricultural Society
scholarships Thursday evening. Both are 2014 St. Johns High School graduates. (DHI Media/Nancy Spencer)
Potash donated the $300,000 for the
renovations and Tuttle and Touchstone
served as project managers.
We are extremely grateful for the
gift from Potash to do some work on
these buildings and make them look

Saturday, Aug. 16, 2014

Delicious Fish Dinner

(Hamburgers Optional)
Ice Cream and Beverage included!
Cost: $6.50 adults $3.50 children 10 & under
Complimentary
COTTON CANDY & SNOWCONES!

Served by the Wapakoneta Lions Club

Entertainment
Under the tent

11:30am-12:30pm
Grand Lake Sound Waves
1pm-3pm PANTASIA Findlay Steel Drum Band

OTTERBEIN
ST. MARYS
(419) 394-2366
(800) 628-9341

11230 State Route 364


St. Marys, Ohio 45885

www.otterbein.org

The 65 ft. trackless passenger train,


The Freedom Train, is back again this year.

Fun for Everyone!


a Bake Sale
a Pontoon Boat Rides
a Grandmas Attic BIG sale

a Door Prizes
a Campus Tours
a Open Houses

Take a tour of Otterbein St. Marys Life Enrichment Center


SM-FishFry2014.indd 1

General Motors troubles with safety recalls has surfaced in


another case, this time with the company recalling a group of
SUVs for a third time to fix power window switches that can
catch fire.
The problem, revealed in documents posted by federal
safety regulators this week, is so serious that GM is telling
customers to park the SUVs outdoors until they are repaired
because they could catch fire when left unattended.
The vehicles will be left outside for a while. Parts wont be
ready until October at the earliest, according to GM. The automaker also has ordered its dealers to stop selling the SUVs as
used cars until they are fixed.
The recall covers about 189,000 vehicles in North America,
mainly from the 2006 and 2007 model years. Models affected
include the Chevrolet TrailBlazer, GMC Envoy, Buick Rainer,
Isuzu Ascender and Saab 97-X. The recall was one of six
announced by GM on June 30 that covered 7.6 million vehicles.
GM is in the midst of the biggest safety crisis in its history,
touched off by the delayed recall of 2.6 million older small
cars to fix faulty ignition switches. The company has issued a
record 60 recalls this year covering nearly 29 million vehicles.

CDC director: Scale of


Ebola crisis unprecedented
WASHINGTON (AP)
The current Ebola crisis in
West Africa is on pace to
sicken more people than all
other previous outbreaks of
the disease combined, the
health official leading the
U.S. response said Thursday.
The next few weeks will
be critical, said Dr. Tom
Frieden, director of the
Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention, which is
sending more workers into
the affected countries to help.
It will be a long and hard
fight, Frieden told a congressional committee Thursday.
In his prepared testimony,
he estimated it would take at
least three to six months to
end the outbreak, under what
he called a best-case scenario.
Frieden said the outbreak,
which began in March, is
unprecedented in part because
its in a region of Africa that
never has dealt with Ebola
before and has particularly
weak health systems. He said
the outbreaks two main drivers are lack of infection control as both health workers
and families care for the sick
and risky burial practices.
More than 1,700 people
have been sickened in the
current outbreak, in Guinea,
Liberia, Sierra Leone and
Nigeria. Nearly 1,000 have
died, according to the World
Health Organization, or WHO.

On Thursday Frieden said


theres no way to know exactly how accurate that count is,
or whether some cases are
going unreported.
The data coming out is
kind of a fog-of-war situation, he said.
A medical charity told the
House Foreign Affairs subcommittee that the world was
too slow to react to the crisis,
until recent headlines about
two American aid workers who became infected in
Liberia and were flown to the
U.S. for care.
Ebola is out of control in
West Africa, and we are starting to see panic now around
the world, said Ken Isaacs,
vice president at Samaritans
Purse.
The two American aid
workers, who were flown to
Emory University Hospital in
Atlanta, seem to get a little
better every day, Isaacs said.
Frieden didnt rule out
the possibility that a traveler could arrive in the U.S.
unknowingly infected with
Ebola. But he said he is
confident there will not be
a large Ebola outbreak here.
The CDC has put hospitals
on alert for symptoms and
to check whether people are
recent travelers so that they
can promptly isolate any suspected cases until proper testing can be done.

(Continued from page 1)

FISH FRY

Associated Press

Director

annual

11 a.m. to 3 p.m.

GM issues third recall on


SUVs that can catch fire

6/27/2014 2:10:49 PM

as nice as they do. It would have taken


us years and years to do this with
our funds. Grimm said. Tuttle and
Touchstone made sure everything was
done in a timely manner and within the
budget.

Trivia

Answers to Thursdays questions:


The extremely rare, reclusive snow leopard
of central Asia is known as the ghost of the
mountain.
Three of Giuseppe Verdis operas were based
on plays by William Shakespeare: Macbeth,
Otello and Falstaff.
Todays questions:
How many years did Facebook founder
Mark Zuckerberg spend as a student at Harvard
University? How about Microsoft founder Bill
Gates?
What did President Barack Obama do during
a 2009 TV interview that was condemned as an
execution by PETA?
Answers in Mondays Herald.
The Outstanding National Debt as of
Thursday at $17, 654,008,618,305.
The estimated population of the United
States is 318,768,640, so each citizens share
of this debt is $55,382.
The National Debt has continued to increase
an average of $2.35 billion per day since Sept.
30, 2012.

She said the key focus is to keep seniors independent at


home.
We need to add quality to their lives with programs that
interest them,she said. Well be trying alot of new things and
welcome suggestions from the community.
Curth is no stranger to the facility. She has worked parttime for nine years as the outreach worker fielding questions
from seniors on Medicare, insurance and HEAP and helping
them with understanding application details. Curth will maintain the responsibilities of the outreach worker until a replacement is found to fill the open position.
Curth graduated from Delphos St. Johns in 1980 and
earned a degree in psychology from the Ohio State University
in 1984. She and her husband moved back to Delphos from
Columbus to raise their four sons and care for her parents. She
said she wanted to be in a small town and felt more comfortable raising her kids here.
A man came into the meal site and I realized that when I
was a kid, I played with his kids, she explained. Its wonderful that I can help serve the people who watched over me. It
comes full circle.
Curth replaces long-time Executive Director Joyce Hale.

Ohio
(Continued from page 1)
Effective
Transitions
includes measures of hospitalization and institutionalization that should be minimized in a high-performing
LTSS system.
Today, older Americans
want to live independently, at
home, as they age. In Ohio,
they do so as a result of
expansion and improvements
in at-home care and with the
support of more than 1.6 million family caregivers who
provide the majority of daily
care, on an unpaid basis.
Most
important
to
Ohioans is the ability to live
at home for as long as possible and this report shows
Ohio has strengthened policies in support of that goal,
Taylor said.
Taylor notes the Scorecard
findings can help Ohio identify areas for improvement
today and prepare for the
future as the Baby Boom gen-

eration begins to hit its 80s in


just over a decade.
It is essential that we
study this report and use it
as a guide to drive all system improvements, Taylor
added. AARP will work
with Ohios leaders to identify policies that allow us to
improve quality and access to
long-term care services. Ohio
must address the growing
needs of family caregivers.
Long-term services and
supports (also called longterm care) are a diverse set
of services designed to help
older people and those with
disabilities; services can be
provided in a persons home,
in a community setting such
as an adult day center, or in a
group residential facility like
a nursing home.
The full LTSS State
Scorecard, along with an
interactive map of state rankings and information, is available at www.longtermscorecard.org.

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