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Wildcats net volleyball win, p6

In the Waiting Room..., p5

DELPHOS
The

HERALD

Telling The Tri-Countys Story Since 1869

www.delphosherald.com

75 daily

Friday, October 3, 2014

Vol. 145 No. 79

No smoke alarms present in


Library board to 37 percent of home fire deaths
meet Wednesday
Upfront

The Delphos Public Library


BY STEPHANIE GROVES
Board of Trustees will meet
DHI Media Staff Writer
in regular session at 4 p.m.
sgroves@delphosherald.com
Wednesday in the board room
at the First Edition Building
DELPHOS According to
at 302 First St. The meeting is the National Fire Protection
open to the public.
Association (NFPA), every 25 seconds, a fire department responds to
a fire somewhere in the U.S. and
when smoke alarms are properly
installed and maintained, they play
The K of C is sponsor- a vital role in reducing fire deaths
ing a public Holy Rosary at and injuries.
The NFPAs Smoke Alarms in
noon on Oct. 11 at Delphos
U.S. Home Fires report from March
Veterans Memorial Park.
The rally will be led by 2014 indicated that no smoke alarms
Captain Lou Hohman with were present in more than one-third
Fourth Degree Knights in (37 percent) of home fire deaths.
Delphos Fire Chief Kevin Streets
Regalia.
The public is welcome to said smoke alarms have become
such a common feature in U.S.
attend.
homes that it is easy to take them
for granted.
Smoke detectors save lives,
Streets said adamantly. Three out
of five home fire deaths resulted Local fire departments in Van Wert County received private donations
from fires in properties without for close to 4,000 smoke detectors. Each K-9 student attending Delworking smoke alarms
phos public and parochial schools who live in Van Wert County should
October 5-11 is National Fire receive one smoke detector, totaling 571 smoke detectors. (DHI MeThe Delphos Rotary Club, Prevention Week and fire personnel
assisted by the Delphos Canal are asking everyone to help them dia/Nancy Spencer)
Commission and the Delphos sound the alarm that working smoke ters (73 percent) of reported home ly homes, apartments or other multiPostal Museum, will spon- alarms save lives.
fires and sounded in half of the family housing.
sor their historical tour of
Between 2007-11, smoke alarms home fires reported, Streets said.
Delphos for approximately were present in almost three-quar- Homes included one and two famiSee FIRE, page 12
146 local high school seniors
from Jefferson, St. Johns and
Vantage Career Center.
The day will begin with
an assembly of all seniors at
Jefferson High School at 8
a.m. Wednesday for breakfast
followed by a half-hour presentation on the history of the
city and the canal.
At 9 a.m., the students will
board buses for a tour of Lock
24. Then the students will go
downtown for the walking tour
which includes the Delphos
Canal Commission Museum,
Delphos Postal Museum,
other historical buildings and
a scavenger hunt.
The VFW will host a lunch
for the students at 12:15 p.m.
at which time a short weekly
Rotary meeting will be conducted.
A presentation at the
Veterans War Memorial will
conclude the afternoon.
The students will conclude
the day at 2:05 p.m. and return
to Jefferson High School at
2:15 p.m.
In the event of a fog delay,
the morning schedule will be
adjusted accordingly.
If you have any questions,
The SilverSneakers celebrated Halloween at Delphos Senior Villas Thursday afternoon with a potluck
contact either high school
lunch including buffalo chicken sandwiches, cheesy-potato dishes and desserts brought in by club
office:
members. After lunch, the group divided up into teams and played the Bean Game, where team memJefferson 419-695-1786
St. Johns 419-692-5371
bers placed a spoon in their mouth, scooped up dry beans from a bowl and traveled 20 or so feet with
a Styrofoam plate between their knees to deliver their beans into another bowl. The team with the
most black beans would win the game. (DHI Media/Stephanie Groves)

Public Rosary set

Rotary to host high


school seniors for
tour of Delphos

SilverSneakers celebrate Halloween

Correction

Fort Jennings senior class


will present Show and
Spell at 7 p.m. on Friday and
Saturday, rather than Saturday
and Sunday, as first reported.

Forecast
S h o w e r s
and isolated
thunderstorms
this morning.
Then chance
of
showers
this afternoon
and tonight. Highs in the upper 60s. Lows around 40. See
page 2.

Index

Obituaries
State/Local
Religion
Community
Sports
Classifieds
Comics and Puzzles
TV
World news

2
3
4
5
6-8
9
10
11
12

Delphos, Ohio

Van Wert County


victims groups
awarded state grants
BY ED GEBERT
DHI Media Editor
news@delphosherald.com
VAN WERT Van Wert
County organizations were
awarded more than $122,000
of nearly $19 million in
crime victim services grants
on Wednesday. Locally, two
organizations received funding, despite requesting more
than received in the past.
Tammy Branham, executive director of the YWCA of
Van Wert County, said, This
is actually the exact amount
that we requested, which is
unusual. We had to give some
pretty detailed rationale as to
why we would need slight
increases. We had justifications for the increases and they
awarded them to us. Were
quite happy about that.
The YWCA received a
grant for $98,758.54 from the
Ohio Attorney Generals office,
which will be used in conjunction with the agencys domestic
violence shelter and services.
That will continue to help
us run our seven rooms available for women and men who
are victims of domestic violence, Branham stated. We
provide case management, support groups, educational groups
that give information on life
skills, the 24-hour crisis hotline
and child or court advocacy
needs referrals. We work closely with Westwood Behavioral
so there is mental health available if they need it. We work
with them to develop safety
plans and several other items.
Also receiving funding was Van Wert County
Victim Services which was
given $27,016.22. Christina
Eversole pointed out that this
figure also represented an
increase over last year.
Across Ohio, the programs
receiving funding include:
domestic violence shelters;
human trafficking outreach
centers; aged-out foster youth
initiatives; sexual, elder and
child abuse programs; legal aid
initiatives; and court-appointed special advocate programs.
The funding was awarded as Victims of Crime Act
(VOCA) and/or State Victims
Assistance Act (SVAA) grant
funding for 2014-15.
My office is pleased to provide these funds to help local
agencies provide the best assistance possible for victims in
Ohio, said Attorney General
Mike DeWine. When a person
is the victim of domestic violence, sexual abuse or any other
type of crime, the agencies supported by these grant funds are
there to help.

The Lady comes home


Exhibit featuring 19th-century canal boat hull
to open at Delphos Canal Commission Museum
BY BOB EBBESKOTTE
Canal Commission
news@delphosherald.com
DELPHOS The grand opening of the Marguerite Canal
Boat exhibit will take place Oct. 12 at the Delphos Canal
Commission Museum, 241 N. Main Street, Delphos. The event
will begin at 1 p.m. with a short program and the christening
of the boat. Guests will be invited to view the exhibit, explore
the rest of the museum and enjoy refreshments.
The Marguerite was one of the last passenger packet canal
boats to ply the Miami and Erie Canal in the Delphos area.
After the Flood of 1913 essentially ended the useful life of the
canal, the Marguerite was moored in the canal, south of First
Street in Delphos, and left to its fate. The old boat became the
playground of neighborhood children and the temporary home
of transients, one of whom lit a small fire that burned the boat
to the waterline. The remains of the hull lay submerged in the
canal and over the years became covered with silt and mud,
forgotten to all.
In 1987, a canal dredging project uncovered planks and bits
of lumber in the canal. The hull of the Marguerite had been
rediscovered. Local historian and Catholic priest, Rev. Chris
Vasko, spearheaded an effort to remove the remains of the
Marguerite from the canal. The project was named Raise the
Lady.
Remnants of the Marguerite are on display at the Delphos Canal Commission
See LADY, page 12
Museum. An open house is set for 1 p.m. Oct. 12. (Submitted photo)

2 The Herald

Friday, October 3, 2014

www.delphosherald.com

For The Record

One Year Ago


On Wednesday, St. Johns and Jefferson senior students were treated to
the Delphos Rotary Clubs 2013 Senior
Tour, a rigorous agenda filled with visits to a multitude of historic landmarks
in the city. Students began the day with
a caf-style breakfast then broke into
groups to tour the sites.

in St. Johns High School parking lot to


load donations for victims of Hurricane
Hugo in South Carolina. A.J. Drummelsmith of Lima will be driving the truck.
He said canned goods are especially
needed but any donation except toys will
be accepted.
50 Years Ago 1964
Jack Rozelle, a sophomore at Taylor
University, has been named a member
of the Taylor University Marching Band,
Professor Jesse Evans, band director,
has announced. Jack will also be a member of the Symphonic Band which will
conduct several concerts throughout the
school. Jack is a drum major and manager of the band and is the son of Mrs.
Paul F. Rozelle of Delphos.
Women of the Church of St. Peter
Evangelical Lutheran Church held a
general meeting Tuesday evening in the
parish hall. The officers elected for the
coming year are: president, Mrs. Robert
Powell; vice president, Mary Steinle;
secretary, Dorothy Arnold; treasurer,
Mrs. Carl Wollett; stewardship secretary,
Mrs. Edward Fritz; and education secretary, Mrs. Fred Zangmeister.
The monthly special Ladies Day luncheon will be held at the Delphos Country Club this coming Tuesday. Reservations are to be made by Monday with
one of the members of the committee in
charge of the affair. Committee members

25 Years Ago 1989


Delphos chapter of Business Professionals of America recently elected
officers for the 1989-90 school year
including: Beth Kiggins, junior parliamentarian; Stacy Lucas, junior vice
president; Maureen Schwinnen, junior
president; Anita Cano, junior secretary;
Shirley Gilbert, junior historian; Laurie
Bonifas, senior parliamentarian; Missy
Clark, senior vice president; Chris Mox,
senior president; Chris Schleeter, senior
secretary; Lori Jettinghoff, senior historian; and Jodi Druckemiller, junior treasurer.
Mark Odenweller, Ottoville village
council president, presented the job description for position of village administrator to council for approval. Applications for the position will be accepted
until noon Oct. 28. In his report to council, Wilbur Altenburger said applications
for an auxiliary policeman for Ottoville
are still being accepted.
A 40-foot semi-trailer arrived today

are Mrs. Harold Manore, Mrs. Harold


Williams and Mrs. Richard Davis.
75 Years Ago 1939
Delphos and Marion Township are to
have a Red Cross chapter of their own
and the local Red Cross organization
will no longer be merely a branch of the
Allen County Chapter. At a meeting held
Monday afternoon, a temporary organization was effected with the election of
Mrs. George Horine as chairman, Mrs.
W. B. Snow as vice chairman, W. J.
Steinle as treasurer and Mrs. John Marsh
as secretary.
Work has been started on the construction of a new modern front on the Anna
Krieft building on North Main Street
now occupied by the Kurtsch Peoples
Market. The new front will be of black
glass block construction with a tan strip
running between the base and the windows. The new front was designed by
Henry H. Ricker and Syl Kaverman has
the contract for the work.
The members of the Ella Huber
Delphian Chapter held their regular
meeting Monday evening at the home
of Mrs. Oscar A. Kolkmeyer, North
Franklin Street. Mrs. D. F. Imber presented a biography of William Ernest
Henley. A biography of Francis Thompson was given by Mrs. Charles Myers.
Jane Fortener gave a biography of A. E.
Houseman.

FUNERALS
BOCKEY, Julia Ann,
56, of Lima and formerly of
Delphos, Mass of Christian
Burial will begin at 10 a.m.
Saturday at St. John the
Evangelist Catholic Church,
the Rev. Daniel Johnson officiating. Burial will follow in
St. Johns Cemetery. Visitation
will be from 4-8 p.m. today at
Strayer Funeral Home, 1840
E. Fifth St., Delphos, where
a Parish Wake Service will be
held at 7:30 p.m. Memorial
contributions may be made
to the Allen County Humane
Society. Online condolences
may be shared at www.strayerfuneralhome.com.
MARTIN, Debra J., 62,
of Continental, funeral service will be held 11 a.m.
Saturday at Heitmeyer
Funeral Home, Continental,
with Pastor Brent Gibson
officiating. Burial will follow in Cascade Cemetery,
Cloverdale. Visitation will be
from 2-4 and 6-8 p.m. today
and one hour prior to the
service Saturday at the funeral home. Memorials may
be made to a charity of the
donors choice. Condolences
can be expressed at www.
heitmeyerfuneralhome.com.
METZGER, Robert J.,
Sr., 91, of Lakeview, Father
Harold W. Kist will begin a
Mass of Christian Burial at
9:30 a.m. Saturday at St.

HN

Mary of the Woods Church


with visitation one hour prior
to services. Burial is in Glen
Haven Memorial Gardens,
Donnellsville. Arrangements
are in the care of Shoffstall
Funeral Home, Lakeview.
Condolences may be expressed
at shoffstallfuneralhome.com.
KELLER, Gerald D.
Watermelon, 78, of rural
Spencerville, funeral services
will begin at 10:30 a.m. today
at Trinity United Methodist
Church,
Spencerville,
the Revs. David Howell,
John Medaugh and Justin
Fuhrmann officiating. Burial
will follow in the Spencerville
Cemetery. Friends may call
after 9:30 a.m. today at the
church. Memorial contributions are to the Spencerville
Bearcat Athletic Boosters for
the new strength and training
building. Condolences may be
sent to tbayliff@woh.rr.com.
MCGUE, Mary Louise
(Mueller), her friends are invited to share a celebration of
Mary Lous life from 5-7 p.m.
Oct. 16 at the Lima Holiday
Inn or at 4:30 p.m. Oct. 18
in Traverse City, Michigan,
at the Unitarian Universalist
Congregation. Memorials in
her honor should be directed
to the Grand Traverse County
Commission on Aging
(520 W. Front St., Suite B,
Traverse City, 49686).

Delphos St. Johns


Week of Oct. 6-Oct. 10
Monday: Hamburger/whole grain bun/pickle and onion,
sweet potato fries, Romaine salad, peaches, fresh fruit,
milk
Tuesday: Chicken wrap/whole grain/lettuce, tomato/
cheese, black beans, Romaine salad, pears, fresh fruit, milk
Wednesday: Sloppy Jo Sandwich/whole grain bun, peas,
Romaine salad, Mandarin oranges, fresh fruit, milk
Thursday: Italian grilled chicken sandwich/whole grain
bun, broccoli, Romaine salad, mixed fruit, fresh fruit, milk
Friday: Whole grain stuffed crust pepperoni pizza, green
beans, Romaine salad, applesauce, fresh fruit, milk
Delphos City Schools
Week of Oct. 6-Oct. 10
Monday: Potato bowl, fruit, milk
Tuesday: Assorted sandwiches, corn, fruit, milk
Wednesday: Pizza, veggies/dip, fruit, milk
Thursday: Spaghetti and meatballs with meat sauce, garlic bread, Romaine salad, sherbet, milk
Friday: Chicken nuggets, Cheez-Its, green beans, chilled
peaches, milk
Jennings Local Schools
Week of Oct. 6-Oct. 10
High school: Additional fruit and vegetable daily. High
school: A la carte pretzel and cheese every Friday, and
salad bar every Wednesday.
Monday: Spicy chicken strips, red skin potatoes, dinner
roll, fruit
Tuesday: Hamburger sandwich, cheese slice, baked beans,
cinnamon crisp bar, fruit
Wednesday: Salisbury steak, mashed potatoes, mixed
vegetables, dinner roll, fruit
Thursday: Pizza hot pocket, carrots, shape up, fruit
Friday: BBQ pork sandwich, cheese slice, broccoli, cake, fruit
Ottoville Local Schools
Week of Oct. 6-Oct. 10
Monday: Pizza, pretzels, broccoli, peaches, milk.
Tuesday: Ham and egg sandwich, carrots & peas, banana,
brownie, milk
Wednesday: Salisbury steak, mashed potatoes with gravy,
butter bread, pears, milk
Thursday: Cold sub, baked beans, cookie, apple, milk
Friday: Breaded chicken strips, butter bread, steamed carrots, applesauce, milk
Spencerville
Week of Oct. 6-Oct. 10
Daily choices: M-W-F: Peanut butter and jelly sandwich; T-Th: sub sandwich. These choices will include daily
veggie and fruit. 4th grade: Choice of daily salad.
Monday: Stuffed crust cheese pizza, green beans, carrots and dip, applesauce, milk
Tuesday: Cheeseburger sandwich, baked beans, broccoli
and dip, pineapple, milk
Wednesday: Egg and cheese bagel, potato bites, apple
cinnamon muffin, Sunset Sip 100 percent juice, banana,
milk
Thursday: Cavatini, salad with carrots, garlic bread, pears, milk
Friday: Popcorn chicken, cheesy mashed potatoes, fresh
veggies and dip, sweet roll, peaches, milk

Hellman
Nomina
CPA

is proud to announce

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has joined the staff.

Adam has over 10 years of experience specializing


in Individual and Small Business Taxes.

John Nomina Steve Hellman Adam Kruse


202 N. Main St. Delphos

419-692-3637

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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.

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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

TODAY: Showers and isolated thunderstorms in the morning. Then chance of showers in the afternoon. Cooler. Highs in
the upper 60s. Southwest winds 15 to 20 mph shifting to the
west in the afternoon.
TONIGHT: Cloudy. Showers likely through midnight.
Then slight chance of showers after midnight. Much colder.
Lows around 40. West winds 15 to 20 mph. Chance of precipitation 60 percent.
SATURDAY: Partly cloudy in the morning then becoming
mostly cloudy. A 30 percent chance of showers. Cooler. Highs
around 50. Southwest winds 15 to 20 mph.
SATURDAY NIGHT: Partly cloudy. Lows in the upper 30s.
Southwest winds 5 to 15 mph.
SUNDAY: Mostly cloudy with a 20 percent chance of rain
showers. Highs in the mid 50s.
SUNDAY NIGHT: Partly cloudy with a 30 percent chance
of showers. Lows around 40.
MONDAY: Partly cloudy with a 40 percent chance of showers. Highs in the lower 60s.
MONDAY NIGHT: Partly cloudy with a 50 percent chance
of showers. Lows in the upper 40s.

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The
Delphos
Herald
(USPS 1525 8000) is published
daily except Sundays, Tuesdays
and Holidays.
The Delphos Herald is delivered by carrier in Delphos for
$1.82 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 $117 per year.
Entered in the post office
in Delphos, Ohio 45833 as
Periodicals, postage paid at
Delphos, Ohio.

WEATHER FORECAST
Tri-County
Associated Press

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Oct. 31, 1922-Oct. 1, 2014


VENEDOCIA Audrey
V. Granny B Burnett, 91,
of Venedocia passed away
Wednesday at her residence.
She was born Oct. 31,
1922, at home in Venedocia
to Edward and Hazel (Jordan)
Hundley, who preceded her
in death.
She was united in marriage
to Maurice Burnett on Feb.
24, 1941. He preceded her in
death on Jan. 22, 1986.
She is survived by three
sons, Warren Burnett of
Clinton, Oklahoma, David
(Lori) Burnett of Van Wert
and Tim (Keesha) Burnett
of Venedocia; seven daughters, Evelyn (Paul) Martz of
Van Wert, Linda Davis of
Venedocia, Susan Mayes of
Venedocia, Marylin (Jerry)
Foust of Venedocia, P.J.
Burnett of Middle Point,
Millie Fletcher of Wawa,
Ontario, Canada, and Susie
Thompson of Middle Point;
27 grandchildren; 55 greatgrandchildren; and 10 greatgreat-grandchildren.
She was preceded in
death by a daughter, Alice
Burnett; three sons, Jim,
Bill and Ted Burnett; four
brothers, Ed, John, Vernon
and James Hundley; and
five sisters, Charlotte Alfred,
Estella Spence, Gwen Sission,
Blanch McDonald and Bertha
Fickert.
Funeral services will be
held at 3 p.m. Sunday with
one hour of visiting time
prior to the service at Salem
Presbyterian Church in
Venedocia. Reverend Thomas
Emery will officiate. Burial
will follow in Venedocia
Cemetery.
Memorial
contributions can be made to
Delphos Community Health
Professionals or Salem
Presbyterian Church.

ST. RITAS
A boy was born Sept. 30
to Renee Davies and Brandon
Myers of Lima.
A boy was born Oct. 1
to Catherine and Michael
Herman of Fort Jennings.

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Friday, October 3, 2014

The Herald 3

STATE/LOCAL

Library joins The Herald for Read One in October


INFORMATION SUBMITTED
DELPHOS The library is excited to
team up with the Delphos Herald again this
year for the Read One program which
promotes literacy. We are encouraging all
Delphos area residents to visit the library
and check out at least one book this month.
Patrons may send the title and author of the
book to The Herald or may turn in the title
information into the Read One container
at the library. The response last year was
wonderful; we hope to surpass last years
participation.
The Page Turners Book Club will meet
at 10 a.m. Oct. 11 to discuss Girl Singer
by Rosemary Clooney. New members are
welcome at the monthly meeting. At 10 a.m.
Oct. 25, the library will host a program for
adults on holiday decorating with Jen Salazar.
Call or stop by the library to register for this
program.
DVDs added to collection
Belle
Championship Soccer Drills
Divergent
48 Championship Basketball Drills
Jack Ryan: Shadow Recruit
Legendary
Lone Survivor
Octonauts: Here come the Octonauts
The Other Woman
Music CDs
Cheek to Cheek by Lady Gaga
Moonshine in the Trunk by Brad Paisley
Now 51: Thats what I call music
Partner by Barbara Streisand
Sundown Heaven Town by Tim McGraw
Books on CD
Power Play by Catherine Coulter
Let the Dead Sleep by Heather Graham
The Girls of August by Anne River Siddons
A Perfect Life by Danielle Steel
The Winter Lodge by Susan
Wiggs
Fiction
The High Divide by Lin Enger
In 1886, Gretta Pope wakes one
morning to discover that her husband is gone. Ulysses Pope has
left his family behind on the far
edge of Minnesotas western prairie
with only the briefest of notes and
no explanation for why he left or
where hes headed. It doesnt take l o n g
for Grettas young sons, Eli and Danny, to set
off after him, following the scant clues they
can find, jumping trains to get where they
need to go and ending up in the rugged bad-

lands of Montana.
Gretta has no choice but to search
for her sons and her husband, leading her to the doorstep of a woman
who seems intent on making
Ulysses her own. Meanwhile, the
boys find that the closer they come
to Ulysses trail, the greater the perils that confront them, until each is
faced with a choice about whom he
will defend and who he will become.
Engers breathtaking portrait of
the vast plains landscape is matched by the
rich expanse of his characters emotional
terrain, as pivotal historical events the
bloody turmoil of expansionism, the near
total demise of the bison herds and the subjugation of the Plains Indians blend seamlessly with the intimate story of a familys
sacrifice and devotion.
Five Days Left by Julie Lawson Timmer
Mara Nichols is a successful lawyer,
devoted wife, and adoptive mother who has
received a life-shattering diagnosis. Scott
Coffman, a middle school teacher, has been
fostering an 8-year-old boy while the boys
mother serves a jail sentence. Scott and Mara
both have five days left until they must say
good-bye to the ones they love the most.
Through their stories, the author explores
the individual limits of human endurance and
the power of relationships, and shows that
sometimes loving someone means holding on
and sometimes it means letting go.
Burn by James Patterson
At last, Detective Michael Bennett and his
family are coming home to New York City.
Thanks to Bennett, the ruthless crime lord
whose vengeful mission forced the Bennett
family into hiding has been brought down
for good. Back in the city that never sleeps,
Bennett takes over a chaotic Outreach Squad
in Harlem, where he receives an unusual call: a man claims to have seen a
group of well-dressed men holding a
bizarre party in a condemned building. With no clear crime or evidence,
Bennett dismisses the report. But
when a charred body is found in that
very same building, he is forced to
take the demented caller seriously
and is drawn into an underground
criminal world of terrifying depravity.
Nonfiction
Pumpkin pie spice cookbook: delicious
recipes for sweets, treats and other autumnal delights by Stephanie Pedersen
Pumpkin Pie Spice: these three sim-

7th annual Lima Latern


Tours start today
INFORMATION
SUBMITTED
LIMA Lima has a
unique and sordid history all
its own. From historic mobster shootouts, legendary
natives and events to documented haunts of downtown
buildings and quirky folklore,
only on these tours will you
find out how and where these
events took place.
Today and Saturday and
Oct. 17 and 18, Downtown
Lima, Inc, in conjunction
with the Lima/Allen County
Convention and Visitors
Bureau, will conduct the
seventh annual Lantern
Tours of Downtown Lima.
All tours will begin at one
of Downtown Limas newest businesses Limas Premier
Paint and Sip Studio located
at 215 W. Market St. The
walking tours will start at
6:30 p.m. and the train tours
at 7:30 p.m.
For the 7:30 p.m. train
tours today and Saturday, a
special guest, mentalist Bill
Gladwell will share his experiences and demonstrations
and allow attendees a chance
to test out ghost hunting
equipment to detect any spirited visitors while on the tour.
Tickets cost $12 for the
walking tour, $22 for the train
tours and $25 for the special
tour with Gladwell. Tickets
are available at www.limalanterntours.com or at the
Downtown Lima, Inc., offices
at 144 S. Main St., Suite 201
in Downtown Lima.
There will also be a
Childrens Lantern Tour at
4:30 p.m. Saturday. This will
be a walking tour geared
toward children of all ages
with history and fun all mixed
into one. The tour begins at
the same location as the regular tours: Limas Premier
Paint and Sip Studio. The
Childrens Lantern Tour is $5
and tickets can also be purchased online.
The tours will take
approximately two hours and
15 minutes, however guests
are asked to allow at least two
hours and 30 minutes from
arrival. Unless the weather
is deemed unsafe for guests
and guides, the event will
take place rain or shine and
attendees are asked to dress

appropriately. There will


be several stops along the
way to share the stories of
Downtown Limas resident
spirits and historic haunts and
the tour will be done at a leisurely pace.
The regular tour is rated
PG-13 and is not intended
for young children. It is not a
haunted house but it is a historical tour turned completely
on its head. We use historical
facts, local legends, folklore
and creative storytelling to
thrill and entertain our guests.
What you choose to believe is
yours to decide.
Our professional guides
are well versed in all historical and cultural aspects of
the area and will both entertain and educate you as you
explore Downtown Lima.
Call the Downtown Lima,
Inc., for more information at
419-222-2686.

ple words bring joy to fall-loving foodies around the globe. The subtle
alchemy of cloves, ginger, cinnamon, and allspice has developed an
enthusiastic following and now,
thanks to The Pumpkin Pie Spice
Cookbook, fans can enjoy this
flavor sensation all year round.
From chai latte and vegan nog to
waffles, chilis, bisques, breads,
and chutneys, these 40 recipes are
a pumpkin spice cravers delight
A Path Appears: Transforming lives,
creating opportunity by Nicholas Kristof
and Sheryl WuDunn
A Path Appears is a sweeping tapestry
of people who are making the world a better
place and a guide to the ways that we can do
the same whether with a donation of $5
or $5 million, with our time, by capitalizing
on our skills as individuals, or by using the
resources of our businesses.
With scrupulous research and on-theground reporting, the authors assay the art
and science of giving, identify successful
local and global initiatives, and share astonishing stories from the front lines of social
progress. We see the compelling, inspiring
truth of how real people have changed the
world, upending the idea that one person
cant make a difference.
We meet people like Dr. Gary Slutkin,
who developed his landmark Cure Violence
program to combat inner-city conflicts in the
United States by applying principles of epidemiology; Lester Strong, who left a career
as a high-powered television anchor to run
an organization bringing in older Americans
to tutor students in public schools across
the country; MIT development economist
Esther Duflo, whose pioneering studies of aid
effectiveness have revealed new truths
about, among other things, the
power of hope; and Jessica Posner
and Kennedy Odede, who are
transforming Kenyas most notorious slum by expanding educational
opportunities for girls.
Renegade Amish: beard cutting, hate crimes, and the trial of
the Bergholz barbers by Donald
Kraybill
On the night of Sept. 6, 2011,
terror called at the Amish home of t h e
Millers. Answering a late-night knock from
what appeared to be an Amish neighbor, Mrs.
Miller opened the door to her five estranged
adult sons, a daughter and their spouses. It
wasnt a friendly visit. Within moments, the

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men, wearing headlamps, had pulled their


frightened father out of bed, pinned him into
a chair, and ignoring his tearful protests
sheared his hair and beard, leaving him
razor-burned and dripping with blood. The
women then turned on Mrs. Miller, yanking
her prayer cap from her head and shredding it
before cutting off her waist-long hair. About
20 minutes later, the attackers fled into the
darkness, taking their parents hair as a trophy
for their community.
Four similar beard-cutting attacks followed, disfiguring nine victims and generating a tsunami of media coverage. While
pundits and late-night talk shows made light
of the attacks and poked fun at the Amish
way of life, FBI investigators gathered evidence about troubling activities in a maverick
Amish community near Bergholz, Ohio
and the volatile behavior of its leader, Bishop
Samuel Mullet.
Renegade Amish goes behind the scenes
to tell the full story of the Bergholz barbers:
the attacks, the investigation, the trial, and the
aftermath. In a riveting narrative reminiscent
of a true crime classic, scholar Donald B.
Kraybill weaves a dark and troubling story
in which a series of violent Amish-on-Amish
attacks shattered the peace of these traditionally nonviolent people, compelling some of
them to install locks on their doors and arm
themselves with pepper spray.
Memorials
The Creative shrub garden: eye-catching combinations for year round interest
In memory of: Gertrude Gert Gilden by
the Tony Teman Family
Otis by Long
Little Blue Trucks Christmas by
Schertle
In memory of: Dan Schimmoeller by Carl
& Chris Trenkamp
Survival Guide for Coaching
Youth Basketball by Miniscalco
Long Shot by Chris Paul
In memory of: Ed Smith by Carl
& Chris Trenkamp
Beekeeping by Mackenzie
The Backyard Beekeeper by
Flothem
In memory of: Moletus Osting
by Carl & Chris Trenkamp
Finding Love at home by
Eicher
Seeing your face again by Eicher
Wonderful Lonesome by Newport
In memory of: Gladys Cressman by
Delphos Library Staff
See LIBRARY, page 12

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Friday, October 3, 2014

4 The Herald

Asking Questions and


Accepting the Answers
Faithful are the wounds of a friend, but the kisses of an
enemy are deceitful.
Proverbs 27:6
How often do you ask someone a question when you already know the answer and just want
to be reassured that you are on the right track? Sometimes we need feedback from our boss or
our teacher that we are completing a task or doing our work correctly. Getting feedback is prudent if we think we might be going down the wrong path, but having to be constantly reassured
is tiresome and frustrating to those who are being asked the same question over and over again.
When we really dont know the answer to important questions we should be quick to ask, but
also willing to accept that we might not like the answer we get. If we are genuinely interested
in knowing how we look, or how we are doing at work or at school, we should accept the bitter
truth that we might not look so great, or that were performing below par in certain areas of our
lives. Knowledge can be a bitter pill, but if we want to improve, and all of us should certainly
want this, we should ask questions of those who will tell us the truth. We can always ask ourselves these hard questions, but we should realize that we are usually our easiest critics. Its easy
to see the speck in someone elses eye while missing the log in our own.
Christopher Simon

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

dElphos

Meeting
Thursday - 4:00 PM Suppers
On Us at Trinity UMC
Saturday - 8 AM Prayer
Breakfast.

DELPHOS BAPTIST
CHURCH
Pastor Jerry Martin
302 N Main, Delphos
TRINITY UNITED
419-692-0061 or 419-302-6423
METHODIST CHURCH
Sunday - 10:00 a.m. Sunday
211 E. Third St., Delphos
School (All Ages) , 11:00 a.m.
Rev. Rich Rakay, Pastor
Sunday Service, 6:00 p.m Sunday
Week beginning Oct. 5, 2014
Evening Service
Sunday - 8:15 a.m. Worship
Wednesday - 7:00 p.m. Bible
Service; 9:15 a.m. Sunday School
Study, Youth Study
Classes for All Ages; 10:30
Nursery available for all
Worship Service/Communion;
services.
11:30 Radio Worship on WDOH;
12:00 noon Laborers R Us
FIRST UNITED
Celebration Lunch; 1:30 p.m.
PRESBYTERIAN
Vancrest Communion; 5:30 p.m.
310 W. Second St. - 419-692-5737
Jr. High Youth; 7:00 p.m. Sr. High
Pastor Harry Tolhurst
Youth; 7:30 p.m. Ladies Bible
Sunday: 11:00 Worship Service
Fellowship
- Everyone Welcome
Wednesday -1:30 p.m. UMW
Communion first Sunday of
General Meeting; 7:00 p.m.
every month.
Communion at Van Crest Health Chancel Choir, College Ministry
Thursday - 4:30 p.m.-6:30 p.m.
Care Center - First Sunday of each
month at 2:30 p.m., Nursing Home Suppers on Us.
Friday - 3:00 p.m. Mustard Seeds
and assisted living.
Office Hours: Monday thru
Friday - 8:00 a.m.-12 p.m. and 1:00
MARION BAPTIST CHURCH
p.m.-5:00 p.m..
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.
DELPHOS WESLEYAN
CHURCH
11720 Delphos Southworth Rd.
Delphos - Phone 419-695-1723
Pastor Rodney Shade
937-397-4459
Asst. Pastor Pamela King
419-204-5469
Sunday - 10:30 a.m. Worship;
9:15 a.m. Sunday School for all
ages.
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. 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
3:30-4:00 p.m.
Anytime by
request.
Matrimony Arrangements
must be made through the rectory
six months in advance.
Anointing of the Sick
Communal celebration in May
and October. Administered upon
request.

landECk

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
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

SPENCERVILLE FULL GOSPEL


107 Broadway St., Spencerville
Pastor Charles Muter

ST. PETER LUTHERAN


pEnCErVillE
CHURCH
422 North Pierce St., Delphos
Home Ph. 419-657-6019
Phone 419-695-2616
Sunday: Morning Services Rev. Steve Nelson
10:00 a.m. Evening Services - 7:00
Sunday - 9 AM Worship
p.m.
Service; 11:00 AM-1:00PM Pork
Wednesday: 7:00 p.m. Worship
loin dinner carry out only
service.
Wednesday - 10:00 AM good
Monring/Good Shepherd Bible
UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST
Study; 6:30 PM InReach/OutReah
102 Wisher Drive, Spencerville

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

Rev. Michael Cassady, Pastor


Sunday 9:30 a.m. Cafe; 10:00
a.m. Worship Service.
SPENCERVILLE CHURCH
OF THE NAZARENE
317 West North St.
419-296-2561
Pastor Tom Shobe
9:30 a.m. Sunday School;
10:30 a.m. Morning Worship; 7:00
p.m. Wednesday Service

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.
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
Special music: Don Hohenbrink
and Jennifer Long
Sunday - Service - 9:00 a.m.
To Will/To work Phil. 2:1-13
Heritage Day Celebration - 4 p.m.
- Bring something to t hrow in pot
over open fire, egg toss, water

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

balloon, music, fun and fellowship. Eat at 6 (basement, in case


of rain.
PIKE MENNONITE CHURCH
3995 McBride Rd., Elida
Phone 419-339-3961
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.
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.
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

PITSENBARGER
SUPPLY

Professional Parts People

234 N. Canal St.


Delphos, O.
Ph. 692-1010

Worship.
Wednesday - 7 p.m. Prayer
meeting.
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.
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.
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

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.
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. 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. 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.

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

Friday, October 3, 2014

The Herald 5

COMMUNITY

LANDMARK

In the Waiting Room ...


with Dr. Celeste Lopez

Delphos
Vintage Firetruck

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
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.
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.
MONDAY
11:30 a.m. Mealsite
at Delphos Senior Citizen
Center, 301 Suthoff St.
6:30 p.m. Shelter from
the Storm support group
meets in the Delphos Public
Library basement.
7 p.m. Delphos City
Council meets at the Delphos
Municipal Building, 608 N.
Canal St.
Delphos Parks and Recreation
board meets at the recreation
building at Stadium Park.
Washington
Township
trustees meet at the township
house.
Spencerville village council meets at the mayors office.
Delphos Eagles Auxiliary
meets at the Eagles Lodge,
1600 Fifth St.
8 p.m. The Veterans of
Foreign Wars meet at the hall.
TUESDAY
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 Street.
7 p.m. Delphos Coon
and Sportsmans Club meets.
7:30 p.m. Alcoholics
Anonymous,
First
Presbyterian Church, 310 W.
Second St.

Testosterone toxicity
I think testosterone causes brain
damage. At least, that is the impression I get from my son and his
friends.
I remember the show Beavis and
Butthead that used to be televised
years ago. I used to think it was a
cartoon, now I know it was a documentary. The funny thing is, I didnt
even like that show when it was on
and now I am living it.
They laugh at things that only a
14-year-old boy could find funny,
that is to say, any word, phrase or
image that could even remotely be
related to sexual innuendo. Actually,
I should say that it could only be considered sexual innuendo in the mind
of a 14 year old, because to anyone
who doesnt have testosterone toxicity, it would be considered a normal
conversation.
They also seem to lose all sense of
self preservation.
The other day I picked up my son
and another one of his buddies, who
had both spent the night at another friends house. As I was driving
home they casually mentioned that
they couldnt believe how much their
friends foot had bled when he stepped
on the sword. My response was why
in the world are you guys playing
with real swords?
They responded, we werent playing, he was showing us his ninja
moves.
Was he protecting you from an
actual ninja attack? Because if he

wasnt that is playing, and who the heck


plays with real swords!!
My son shook his head and said,
Mom, it wasnt dangerous, he has
all sorts of ninja things and his mom
doesnt care. Judging by the fact that
he nearly cut his foot off, I think it is
dangerous. I have no idea why his parents would choose to arm a teenage boy
with a ninja arsenal, but insanity would
be my first thought.
My son thinks I am overprotective, apparently because I dont have
him armed for the apocalypse. That
is because he has no awareness of the
consequences of his actions and I am
all too aware of the possible consequences.
I am aware that this is because the
frontal cortex isnt fully developed in
teenage boys and this is where judgment comes from. I know he used to
have better judgment though when he
was younger. Which leads to my theory
that testosterone causes brain damage.
Anybody who has ever watched
the YouTube videos of the types
of things teenage boys do to themselves and each other, for unfathomable reasons, will probably
come to the same conclusion. I was
watching a video show with my son
the other day and one of the clips
showed a teenage boy and his two
friends. One boy grabbed each of
his legs and then ran on either side
of a pole so that the boy being carried hit his groin into the pole, while
a group of teenage boys watched and

OCT. 4
Jenny Grogg
Ryan Sevitz
Jaden Lutz
Addy Stewart
Maisie Barr
Ryleigh Sharrits
Missy Miller

obviously recorded the event. They


all thought this was hilarious except
for the boy now lying in a heap on
the ground. I wonder what he told his
mother and his doctor when he went
home.
On the plus side, high testosterone
level may not be a problem for this
boy any longer. Lacking the ability to foresee the consequences of
his actions, it is a dangerous time
for teenage boys, because their brain
hasnt caught up with their body.
Speaking of lack of forethought
and no concern for self preservation did I mention that in 6 months
my son will be old enough to get his
drivers permit? It is a scary thought,
and one I have no cure for but time.
Althoughwe do have a basketball
pole in our front yard

OCT. 5
Reed Hesseling
Traci Moenter
Nikke Minning
Brent Buettner
Jayden Lucas
Matt Metcalfe
Paula Brown
Alecta Baxter
Bob Martin
OCT. 6
Bob German
Elmer Dietering
Jesse Hodgson
Nicholas Feathers
Kali Lindeman
Kevin Stocklin
Isabella Basinger
Lex Martin
Lochlan Shirey

Dr. Celeste Lopez graduated


cum laude from The University
of Utah College of Medicine. She
completed her Pediatric residency
training at the Childrens Hospital
of Michigan. She is certified with
The American Board of Pediatrics
since 1992. Dr. Lopez practiced
pediatrics in the Detroit area for
8 years before moving to Van Wert
in 2000. In 2003 she moved her
practice, Wishing Well Pediatrics,
to Delphos and is located at 154
W. Third Street. Dr. Lopez can be
reached at 419-692-WELL (9355).
She is the proud mother of a 14
year old son.

Like The
Delphos Herald
on Facebook.

At the movies ...


Van Wert Cinemas
10709 Lincoln Hwy., Van Wert
Gone Girl (R) Fri.: 5:00/8:00; Sat.: 1:00/4:30/7:30; Sun.:
2:00/5:00/8:00; Mon.-Thurs.: 5:00/7:30
The Equalizer (R) Fri.: 5:00/8:00; Sat.: 1:00/3:30/6:00/8:30;
Sun.: 2:00/4:30/7:00; Mon.-Thurs.: 5:00/7:30
The Boxtrolls (PG) Fri.: 5:00/9:00; Sat.: 3:00/7:00; Sun.:
4:00/8:00; Mon. and Wed.:5:00/ Tues. and Thurs.: 7:00
The Boxtrolls 3D (PG) Fri.: 7:00; Sat.: 1:00/5:00/9:00;
Sun.: 2:00/6:00; Mon. and Wed.: 7:00; Tues. and Thurs.: 5:00
The Maze Runner (PG-13) Fri.: 5:00/7:30; Sat.:
1:00/3:30/6:00/8:30; Sun.: 2:00/4:30/7:00; Mon.-Thurs.:
5:00/7:15
Annabelle
(R)
Fri.:
5:00/7:00/9:00;
Sat.:
1:00/3:00/5:00/7:00/9:00; Sun.: 2:00/4:00/6:00/8:00; Mon.Thurs.: 5:00/7:00
American Mall Stadium 12
2830 W. Elm St., Lima
Saturday and Sunday
Annabelle (R) 11:10/1:50/4:20/6:50/7:20/9:40/10:05
Gone Girl (R) 11:35/1:30/3:00/6:30/7:00/9:30
Left Behind (PG013) 11:00/1:40/4:30/7:30/10:10
The Boxtrolls 3D (PG) 11:25/4:35
The Boxtrolls (PG) 2:00/7:05/9:50
The Equalizer (R) 11:45/3:30/6:40/9:45
A Walk Among the Tombstones (R) 11:55/3:35/6:45/9:35
The Maze Runner (PG-13) 11:15/1:55/4:40/7:15/9:55
This is Where I Leave You (R) 11:30/2:15/5:00/7:45/10:15
Dolphin Tale 2 (PG) 11:05/1:45/4:15/6:55/9:25
No Good Deed (PG-13) 11:20/4:50/10:20
Lets Be Cops (R) 11:40/2:20/4:55/7:35/10:00
Guardians of the Galaxy (PG-13) 11:50/3:45

Shannon Theatre, Bluffton


Through Oct. 9
The Hundred-Foot Journey (PG) show times are every
WEDNESDAY
9 a.m.-noon Putnam evening at 7 p.m. with 1:30 p.m. and 4:30 p.m. Saturday and
County Museum is open, 202 Sunday matinees.
Lets Be Cops (R) show times are evening at 9:30 p.m.
E. Main St. Kalida.

METAL
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6 The Herald

Friday, October 3, 2014

SPORTS

www.delphosherald.com

Cats rally for 4-set volleyball triumph


By JIM METCALFE
DHI Media Sports Editor
jmetcalfe@delphosherald.com
DELPHOS Both Jefferson and
Allen Easts varsity volleyball teams
have been struggling as of late, trying
to build momentum toward the second
season with Sundays tournament draw
right around the corner.
The host Lady Wildcats spotted the visiting Lady Mustangs the first set and then
came back to take a 22-25, 25-19, 25-18,
25-18 Northwest Conference victory
Thursday night as Jefferson High School.
Both teams dug well and got plenty
of touches on their opponents hits; it
came down to who was more consistent
hitting the ball.
Thats what we worked on all
Wednesday for practice; our offense,
because our digging has been solid all
year. We have been struggling with
just swinging, even if we miss or get it
blocked, Jefferson coach Joy DeVelvis
explained. We also worked on breaking our tendency to do a lot of tipping
and pushing instead of swinging, as
well as transitioning from offense to
defense and vice versa. That was the
difference; we kept it going even if we
made mistakes and we were much better offensively today and we made the
quick transitions.
Allen East coach David Haberman
agreed that hitting was his teams downfall.
We dug well and gave the ball in
good spots to our setters. Our setters
than got the ball to our hitters in good
position, he explained. We did not
finish; we couldnt find the court. Weve
been struggling to find the right combi-

St. Johns senior Sam Wehri knocks away an LCC


scoring try as Lady Jays teammates Rachel Pohlman and Kelsi Gillespie await the outcome. (DHI MeJefferson senior Brooke Culp goes for the kill despite the blocking ef- dia/Kenny Poling)
forts of Allen Easts Aubri Woods and Morgan Niemeyer Thursday night
at home. (DHI Media/Kenny Poling)
nations and we just havent clicked all
year. We started out well in the first set
but then we couldnt maintain that into
the second. Once we lost that, we fell

into our tendency to not want to keep


battling. Its easy enough to do.
See CATS, page 8

Kalida golfers endure further


frustration at District Golf
BY CHARLIE
WARNIMONT
DHI Media Correspondent
news@delphosherald.com

BOWLING GREEN
Kalidas golf team has seen
its share of near misses at the
Division III district golf tournament at the Stone Ridge
Golf Course recently.
The Wildcats have been on
the verge of qualifying a team
to state in recent years only to
come up short. Thursday was
another of those frustrating
days for the Wildcat golfers
in Bowling Green.
Kalida saw their hopes of
competing in the 2014 state
tournament come up four
shots short as they finished
sixth in the 18 team field with
a score of 331. The Wildcats
finished four shots behind
fourth place Lima Central
Catholic as they finished with
a 327 and two shots behind
fifth place Minster with a
329.
Ottawa Hills won the
district title shooting a 311,
while Ashland Crestview was
second with a 323 and Van
Buren was third with a 325.
The top four teams and individuals, not on a qualifying
team, advance to next weeks
state tournament.
Delphos St. Johns individual Derek Klausing finished the tournament with a
91.
Obviously, 331 is probably our high score for the
season. Its not bad but
its just not good enough,
Kalida coach Ken Schnipke
said. We had our share of
disappointment here recently.
Its a hard course. The wind
was blowing a little bit but
not hard enough to throw
them off. You have to be able
to handle the pressure. This
means a lot to the kids and

St. Johns sophomore Derek Klausing (top) chips


onto the green during Division III District Golf action
Thursday at Stone Ridge Golf Course, while Kalidas
Jeffrey Knueve follows his putt. (DHI Media/Charlie
Warnimont)

they put a lot of pressure on


themselves to go out and play
well.

Unlike the four teams that


advanced the Wildcats were
unable to post a score in the

70s, which they had been


doing consistently all season.
Zach Erhart and Jeffrey
Knueve led the Wildcats with
81s and Evan Recker had an
82. Trent Siebeneck was the
Wildcats fourth score with
an 87 and Collin Nartker finished with a 97.
The scores just keep
coming down every year, getting lower and lower. A lot
of these other teams had a
player go real low; 71, 73, 75;
and we didnt have anyone
do that, Schnipke said. It
always seemed like we had
someone in the mid 70s or
two of them, like last week
at the sectional, and we just
didnt do it today.
The good news for Kalida
is that they will have four of
these players back next year
as Erhart was the lone senior,
while the other four are a
junior and three sophomores.
While the Wildcats were
disappointed in not being able
to advance, Klausing was not
totally pleased with his score
but was not totally unhappy
with the way he played in his
first district tournament in his
first year of varsity golf for
the Blue Jays.
His
freshman
year,
Klausing was a member of
the Blue Jay football team
but at 5-9 and 95 pounds, he
decided to give golf a try.
Being here for the first
time, on the front nine he had
a solid 42, the last four holes
kind of got him, Blue Jay
coach John Klausing said. A
91, for a sophomore that just
started playing in July, Ill
take that any day. He wont
realize how well he did today
until he sees all the scores.
For a 91 he shot pretty good
today, he really did.
See GOLF, page 8

Cruz, Hardy HRs carry Orioles past Tigers


By DAVID GINSBURG
Associated Press

BALTIMORE The way Nelson


Cruz and the Baltimore Orioles are hitting this season, it may not matter much
who pitches for the other guys.
Cruz and J.J. Hardy homered and
the Orioles hammered out 12 hits in
defeating Cy Young Award winner Max
Scherzer and the Detroit Tigers 12-3
Thursday in the opener of their AL
Division Series.
Rookie Jonathan Schoop had two
hits and two RBIs for the Orioles, who
turned a close game into a rout with an
8-run eighth inning against Scherzer and
three ineffective relievers.
The 12 runs set a postseason record
for Baltimore, making its second playoff
appearance since 1997.

Game 2 of the best-of-5 series is


today at Camden Yards. Justin Verlander,
the second of three straight
Cy Young winners the Orioles
will face, is set to go against
left-hander Wei-Yin Chen.
Cruz led the majors with
40 homers during the regular
season, a good portion of Baltimores
big league-best 211 long balls. His firstinning drive off Scherzer put the Orioles
up 2-0 before Detroits Victor Martinez
and J.D. Martinez connected off winner
Chris Tillman in the second to tie it.
But Baltimore had too much firepower for the Tigers. Hardy homered leading
off the seventh for a 4-2 lead and Cruz
added his third RBI with a single during
a wild eighth inning keyed by a Detroit
error that kept the boisterous, orangeclad crowd of 47,842 on its feet.

Tillman (1-0) allowed two runs in


five innings before Andrew Miller got
five outs three by strikeout. Darren ODay gave up an
eighth-inning homer to Miguel
Cabrera but the drive followed
a double play.
Baltimore manager Buck
Showalter then called upon closer Zach
Britton, who had 37 saves during the
regular season. Britton got the last out in
the eighth and by the time the ninth inning
rolled around, he wasnt needed anymore.
Miller had a 1.35 ERA in 23 games
with Baltimore, ODay finished at 1.70
and Britton closed at 1.65. Thats one
big reason why the AL East-champion
Orioles were 80-4 when leading after
eight innings.
See ORIOLES, page 8

Speedy T-Birds shut out


Jays on Senior Night
By JIM METCALFE
DHI Media Sports Editor
jmetcalfe@delphosherald.com

DELPHOS St. Johns played on even terms with speedy


and experienced (7 seniors) Lima Central Catholic for the first
25 minutes of Thursday evenings Senior Night girls soccer
matchup at the St. Johns Annex.
That speed was too much for the Lady Blue Jays to hold off
forever and a 3-goal flurry in the next 12-plus minutes carried
the Lady Thunderbirds to a 4-0 victory.
The Jays (2-9-2) had three seniors play their final regularseason match at home: goalkeeper Sam Wehri (12 saves versus
18 shots on-goal), forward/midfielder Liz Winhover and forward/midfielder Emilee Grothouse.
Its been a tough year but the seniors have been great
leaders to help the younger girls get through it. Any improvements we have made and weve come a long way in our
development were because of them and their leadership and
encouragement, Jays coach Katrina Smith began.
The Jays gave up no shots on-goal though LCC had a
few forays deep into its offensive end for the first 25:26.
See JAYS, page 8

St. Johns sophomore Evyn Pohlman looks to stay


ahead of a group of runners during the Coldwater Lions cross country meet. He finished the course with
a time of 23:11. Leading the way for the boys team
that placed 16th out of 22 schools was Curtis Pohlman 27th(17:48), Anthony Hale 81st(19:13) and Nick
Pohlman 85th(19:14). In the girls race Breece Rohr
lead the Blue Jays with a 29th place finish with a
new PR time of 21:27. (Submitted photo)

Local Roundup

Lancers sweep Panthers


in NWC volleyball
By Nick Johnson
DHI Media Correspondent
news@delphosherald.com
MIDDLE POINT
Lincolnview kept the momentum rolling with a 3-set sweep
of conference rival Paulding
on Thursday evening. The
host Lancers won the match
25-17, 25-9, 25-22.
The opening set was backand-forth from the first ball in
the air. Lincolnview got an ace
from Devann Springer and multiple kills from Katlyn Wendel
and Ashton Bowersock, while
Paulding picked up kills from
Jaycie Varner and Brooke
Combs to help bring the game
to the 16-16 tie.
The Lady Lancers domi-

nated from there, however,


running off nine of the games
final 10 points to wrap up the
set. Katie McClure ended the
first set with two straight kills
to give the Lady Lancers a
25-17 victory.
Paulding looked to even the
match as the Lady Panthers
jumped out to an 8-5 lead with
two kills from Sam Meggison,
forcing Lincolnview to use a
timeout. The Lady Lancers
got back into the set with a
Springer ace and Ashley
Teman kill to bring the score
to 10-10. The Lady Lancers
continued to build their lead,
using a Baylee Neate ace and
a McClure kill to bring the
score to 18-12.
See ROUNDUP, page 7

www.delphosherald.com

Delphos Punt, Pass


and Kick held
INFORMATION SUBMITTED
DELPHOS The Delphos Optimist Club sponsored the
2014 NFL Punt, Pass and Kick competition on Sept. 13, where
slightly over 100 area youth participated in a football skills
contest.
Locally, the contest was held at Stadium Park on the football field and has been sponsored by the Delphos Optimist club
since 1997. The event recently become affiliated with the NFL
program to allow winners to advance to a higher level yet recognize their achievement locally with trophies. The event has
also always been provided free to area youth and supported by
fundraising efforts of the club representing the Optimist club
mission of community service and Bringing out the Best in
Kids! Annually the Delphos Optimist club provides numerous
youth-related essay, oratorical and athletic opportunities for
scholarship money and recognition.
For the local competition, trophies were awarded to the
top three placers in five different age groups. In addition, the
1st-place finishers: including Evan Martz (6/7 yrs.), Brayden
Conley (8/9 yrs.), Colin Bailey (10/11 yrs.), Chase Martin
(12/13 yrs.) and Cade Parker (14/15 yrs.); are now eligible
to move on to an upcoming regional competition being held
at Dayton Stebbins High School. If successful at the next
level, the participants will be competing at an upcoming
Cincinnati Bengals game as part of the NFL Punt, Pass and
Kick Competition.
The contest was also open to girls with Aubrey Dugeon (8/9
yrs.) and Rylee Troth (10/11 yrs.) qualifying for the regional
completion.
This years competition attracted a record number of participants given the cooperation and distribution of registration
forms through the Delphos schools and midget football association.
This years event was also blessed with great weather
and ran very smoothly given the many volunteers working
the event, said Optimist member and PPK Chairman Kevin
Wieging.
The Delphos Optimist Club meets every Friday at 7:30 a.m.
for breakfast at Marys A&W Restaurant with membership
open to anyone interested in youth and community service.

2014 Optimist Club of Delphos NFL Punt Pass & Kick


placers (6/7 age group) receiving trophies include
(from left): 1st Evan Martz, 2nd Drake Fittro and 3rd
Kellen Carder. (Submitted photos)

8/9 age group placers receiving trophies include:


1st Brayden Conley, 2nd Mikel Hale and 3rd Camden
Teman.

Friday, October 3, 2014

Minster takes the broom


out versus Lady Jays
By LARRY HEIING
DHI Media Correspondent
news@delphosherald.com
DELPHOS St. Johns
head
volleyball
coach
Carolyn Dammeyer teaches
the fast-paced execution of
the game with her up-andcoming program.
Unfortunately for the
Lady Blue Jays, so do all
the all teams in the Midwest
Athletic Conference and they
are very good at it.
St. Johns played host to
Minster and the two teams
battled it out with dizzyingfast volleys but it was the
Wildcats sweeping the match
25-20, 25-21, 25-22.
We played great defense
tonight against another
tough MAC team, commented Coach Dammeyer.
Our offense hung right with
Minster as we had balanced
scoring with Jessica Geise
(8 kills), Maddie Buettner
(7 kills), Rebekah Fischer (5
kills) and Olivia Kahny (4
kills) with assists by Maya
Gerker (16) and Colleen
Schulte (13).
A return kill by Hayley
Jettinghoff in the first set
was part of a 4-point run by
the Jays to even the score at
10. Then the Wildcats rattled off the next seven points
as Regan Hahn was perfect
on her serves. A backset by
Schulte to Fischer for a kill,
a Madison Ellis ace and a

(Continued from page 6)

12/13 age group) winners include: 3rd Mark Wrasman, 2nd Brady Welker and 1st Chase Martin.

14/15 age group winners receiving trophies include:


1st Cade Parker, 2nd Cameron Fetter and 3rd Curtis
Schwinnen.

St. Johns senior Rebekah Fischer and junior Maddie Buettner provide the block
against a Minster attack Thursday at Arnzen Gymnasium. (DHI Media/Kenny
Poling)
block by the wall of Buettner/
Fischer pulled the Jays back
within 17-15. The Jays would
get kills from Buettner,

Paulding cut the Lady


Lancers lead to 21-18, thanks
to kills from Combs and
Varner. Lincolnview would
end the Lady Panther rally
with a McClure kill, and two
Bowersock slams would bring
an end to the second set.
The Lady Panthers again
started a set strong, as Paulding
jumped out to a 5-1 lead in the
third set getting two kills from
Varner. Lincolnview had to
fight back to bring the score
to even at 12-12, getting kills
from Alana Williams and
McClure along the way.
Paulding went back in
front at 16-12, but a Lancer
run, spearheaded by kills from
Neate and Bowersock re-tied
the game at 18-18.
After a 22-22 tie, the
Lancers reeled off the last
three points, including
a McClure kill, to win the
third set 25-22 and give the
Lady Lancers a 3-0 win over
Paulding.
It was a good conference
win for us. I felt that Paulding
was very scrappy, and we kind
of came out a little slow to
start the game. We have been
working on running a quick
offense and I dont feel we got
our full potential until about
mid-way through the match,
said Lincolnview coach
JaNahn Evans. We started
passing quicker and running
our quick offense I felt like
we were able to take control
of the match,

Fischer and Jettinghoff but


dropped the set by a handful.
St. Johns roared out to a
3-point lead in the second set as

the Wildcats committed three


uncharacteristic errors in a row.
See BROOM, page 8

NLDS Series Previews

Associated Press
A look at the best-of-5 National League Division
Series between the St. Louis Cardinals and Los Angeles
Dodgers:
___
Schedule:
(All times EDT) Game 1, Friday, at Los Angeles
(6:37 p.m.); Game 2, Saturday, at Los Angeles (9:37
p.m.); Game 3, Monday, at St. Louis (TBD); x-Game 4,
Tuesday, at St. Louis (TBD); x-Game 5, Thursday, at
Los Angeles (TBD). (All games on FS1 or MLB Network)
x-if necessary.
___
Season Series: Dodgers won 4-3.
___
Projected Lineups:
Cardinals: 3B Matt Carpenter (.272, 8 HR 59 RBIs),
CF Jon Jay (.303, 3, 46), LF Matt Holliday (.272, 20, 90),
SS Jhonny Peralta (.263, 21, 75), 1B Matt Adams (.288,
15, 68), C Yadier Molina (.282, 7, 38), 2B Kolten Wong
(.249, 12, 41, 20 SBs), RF Randal Grichuk (.245, 3, 8).
Dodgers: 2B Dee Gordon (.289, 2, 31, MLB-leading
64 stolen bases), CF Yasiel Puig (.296, 16, 69), 1B
Adrian Gonzalez (.276, 27, MLB-leading 116), RF Matt
Kemp (.287, 25, 89), LF Carl Crawford (.300, 8, 46), SS
Hanley Ramirez (.83, 13, 71), 3B Juan Uribe (.311, 9,
54), C A.J. Ellis (.191, 3, 25).
___
Projected Rotations:
Cardinals: RH Adam Wainwright (20-9, 2.38, 3 shutouts, 5 complete games), RH Lance Lynn (15-10, 2.74),
RH John Lackey (14-10, 3.82 with Red Sox, Cardinals),
RH Shelby Miller (10-9, 3.74).
Dodgers: LH Clayton Kershaw (21-3, major leaguebest 1.77 ERA), RH Zack Greinke (17-8, 2.71), LH
Hyun-Jin Ryu (14-7, 3.38), RH Dan Haren (13-11, 4.02).
___
Relievers:
Cardinals: RH Trevor Rosenthal (2-6, 3.20, 45/51
saves), RH Pat Neshek (7-2, 1.87, 6 saves), RH Seth
Maness (6-4, 2.91, 3 saves) LH Sam Freeman (2-0,
2.61), RH Carlos Martinez (2-4, 4.03, 1 save), LH Randy
Choate (2-2, 4.50), RH Michael Wacha (5-6, 3.20).
Dodgers: RH Kenley Jansen (2-3, 2.76, 44/49
saves), RH Brandon League (2-3, 2.57), LH Paco
Rodriguez (1-0, 3.86), LH J.P. Howell (3-3, 2.39), RH
Jamey Wright (5-4, 4.35).

Roundup

10/11 age group placers include: 3rd Carson Muhlenkamp, 2nd Cole Binkley and 1st Colin Bailey.

The Herald 7

___
Matchups:
A rematch of last years league championship series
won by the Cardinals in six games behind NLCS MVP
Wacha, who beat Kershaw twice. This will be the teams
fifth meeting in postseason, and third in the last six
years. Cardinals are 3-1 The Dodgers took three of
four in Los Angeles in June, and the Cardinals took two
of three in St. Louis in July. The Dodgers outscored
the Cardinals 17-4 in four home games, while each of
the three games in St. Louis were decided by two runs
or less. The Dodgers are a healthier team heading
into the playoffs compared to last year, when they were
missing Kemp, Andre Ethier was slowed by a bad ankle
and Ramirez broke a left rib after getting hit by a pitch
in Game 1 of the NLCS and wasnt the same for the
remaining games. Kershaw is favorite to win third
Cy Young and dominated in winning both starts against
St. Louis this season, allowing three runs and striking
out 21 in 14 innings. Carpenter is 3 for 6 against
Kershaw this season, 9 for 35 (.257) with 10 BBs and
10 Ks overall. Peter Bourjos is the only Cardinals
player to homer off Kershaw this year. Ethier has
most success against Wainwright for Dodgers. Hes
10 for 39 (.256) with three homers and seven RBIs.
Puig led NL outfielders with 15 assists. Will Molina be
able to slow Gordon? The Cardinals catcher threw out
nearly half the potential base stealers (21 of 44 runner)
against him. Gordan led the majors with 64 steals but
was thrown out 19 times.
___
Big Picture:
Cardinals: St. Louis finished 90-72, two games
ahead of Pittsburgh in the NL Central. Wainwright is
among majors elite starters and was a no-doubt MVP
for team that was on and off offensively, but he might
have to beat Kershaw twice for Cardinals to advance.
Wainwright will be well-rested, scratched from his start
in the regular-season finale after the Pirates lost and
St. Louis clinched its second straight Central crown.
Pitching staff is deep enough that Wacha wont be in
rotation given struggles to regain form after a lengthy
DL stay from a shoulder injury. The 35-year-old Lackey
has come on strong his last few starts and has big game
bonafides, beating the Cardinals twice in World Series
last fall with Boston. The franchise is in the postseason for 10th time in 14 seasons. In first full season as

The
Lady
Lancers
improves to 8-11 on the season and 4-3 in the NWC
which is good enough for fifth
place possibly a tie for fourth
depending on the result of
the Bluffton match. The Lady
Panthers drop to 5-14 on the
year and 2-5 in the NWC
which is good enough for seventh place. Lincolnview next
match is on Monday against
New Knoxville at home.

2014 Lions Invitational 10/2/2014


Cavalier
Stadium,
Coldwater

Boys Team Scores: St. Henry


89, Moeller Gold 97, Coldwater 121,
Lincolnview 122, New Bremen 125,
Greenville 183, Minster 204, Versailles
215, Crestview 255, Shawnee 291,
Newton Local 363, Ft. Loramie 365,
Jackson Center 378, Upper Scioto Valley
425, Van Wert 439, St. Johns 451,
Lehman Cath. 457, Marion Local 464, St.
Marys Memorial 465, Ft. Recovery 488,
Parkway 490, Bradford 591. No Team
Score: Elida.
Local Finishers (276 Runners): 2.
Mycah Grandstaff (CV) 16:17.58; 3. Bayley
Tow (LV) 16:23.9; 10. Alex Rodriguez
(LV) 17:00.81; 27. Curtis Pohlman (SJ)
17:48.3; 28. Trevor Neate (LV) 17:50.96;
39. Colton Snyder (LV) 18:12.71; 42.
Tracey West (LV) 18:14.34; 47. Branden
Clayton (CV) 18:22.3; 59. Adam Saylor
(CV) 18:40.68; 63. Thane Cowan (VW)
18:45.24; 72. Charles Thornburg (CV)
19:05.05; 81. Anthony Hale (SJ) 19:13.58;
85. Nick Pohlman (SJ) 19:14.78; 86. Cody
Mefferd (CV) 19:15.36; 95. Nick White
(VW) 19:19.02; 97. Brayden Farmer (LV)
19:21.9; 100. Zach Jellison (CV) 19:24.3;
101. Cade Chiles (VW) 19:24.78; 104.
Andrew Fickert (LV) 19:28.02; 109. Eric
Anthony (EL) 19:31.99; 112. Ryan Keber
(VW) 19:33.61; 115. Troy Thompson
(LV) 19:36.7; 122. Tyler Nygren (VW)
19:50.11; 123. Austin Elick (LV) 19:52.58;
128. Andrew Boley (CV) 20:00.49;
153. Gabe Smith (CV) 20:28.74; 159.
Stephen Hamblet (VW) 20:34.78; 178.
Noah Daugherty (CV) 21:10.11; 180.

closer, Rosenthal was among majors best, giving hitters


more to worry about than just a fastball that tickles triple
digits. Molinas return for final month from torn thumb
ligament was a plus, even though he wasnt that productive at the plate. Peralta is among majors best-hitting
shortstops and had a big second half. Cardinals were
so-so on road, going 39-42.
Dodgers: Los Angeles (94-68) won the NL West by
six games over San Francisco and begins the playoffs
on a five-game winning streak. The Dodgers have
been one of baseballs best hitting clubs in September,
leading the majors with 156 runs scored. Powering the
offense have been Crawford, Kemp and Gonzalez, who
ended the regular season with 116 RBIs, three short of
his career high set in 2008. Manager Don Mattingly
guided the Dodgers to a second consecutive division
title. He is 354-293 in the regular season during the last
four years. The Dodgers win total has been up every
year since hes been at the helm. Los Angeles swept
St. Louis in the 2009 division series.
___
Watch For:
Ryus Shoulder. The Dodgers left-hander will
make his first start in Game 3 since leaving an
outing on Sept. 12 with shoulder irritation. He missed
nearly a month earlier in the season with the same
problem. In his first game back on May 21 against the
Mets, Ryu pitched six innings and allowed two earned
runs while striking out nine.
Hot Hitters: With four days off before Game 1, the
Dodgers might wonder whether their hot-hitting lineup
can stay that way. Kemp has been tearing it up since the
All-Star break after starting the season slowly. Gonzalez
also struggled early, but has been a consistent run
producer since the break.
Deep Outfield. Grichuk was considered an afterthought in an offseason trade for outfielder Bourjos that
sent 2011 postseason star David Freese to the Angels.
The rookie has done well enough in his second stint
to earn at least a platoon role with fellow rookie Oscar
Taveras, considered the teams top prospect. Jay was
supposed to be the fourth outfielder and got a one-year
deal, a wakeup call thats prompted his strongest overall
season. Hes stepped up particularly on defense.

See PREVIEWS, page 8

Daulton Buetner (EL) 21:10.96; 182.


Dylan Sparks (VW) 21:20.49; 193. Micah
Germann (LV) 21:38.99; 196. Landon
Goins (CV) 21:44.24; 207. Gavin Peare
(EL) 22:04.24; 209. Jacob Gibson (LV)
22:09.01; 217. Dalton Hines (LV) 22:22.99;
221. Patrick Stevenson (SJ) 22:29.18;
228. Caleb Newland (EL) 22:47.21;
232. Griffen Waltmire (CV) 23:00.28;
234. Evyn Pohlman (SJ) 23:11.34; 236.
Noah Daeger (LV) 23:17.58; 243. Noah
Brubaker (VW) 23:41.99; 246. Chandler
Clarkson (SJ) 23:47.93; 248. Brayden Cox
(VW) 23:50.96; 249. Tanner Crowle (CV)
23:57.9; 250. Noah Smith (CV) 24:04.42;
264. Keegan Cowan (LV) 25:17.14; 270.
Jacob Bradford (LV) 26:26.02.
Girls Team Scores: Minster 26,
Coldwater 84, Versailles 115, St. Henry
122, New Bremen 190, Ft. Loramie
199, Van Wert 247, St. Marys Memorial
249, Greenville 251, Lincolnview 296,
Shawnee 348, Ft. Recovery 359, Lehman
Cath. 364, Marion Local 371, Celina 393,
Crestview 411, Bradford 412, Ansonia
434, Parkway 535. No Team Score: St.
Johns, Elida.
Local Finishers (263 Runners): 8.
Ashley Bowen (CV) 20:27.81; 29. Breece
Rohr (SJ) 21:27.84; 30. Schealissa
Williams (VW) 21:28.27; 32. Anna Gorman
(LV) 21:29.24; 34. Alyssa Turrentine (EL)
21:31.08; 37. Abbie Enyart (LV) 21:43.92;
40. Julia Springer (VW) 21:55.43; 68.
Alicia Danylchuck (VW) 22:53.74; 73. Tori
Bowen (EL) 23:02.21; 75. Alena Looser
(LV) 23:09.58; 84. Whitney Meyers (VW)
23:20.65; 86. Nicole Clay (VW) 23:28.46;
89. Morgan Bracke (VW) 23:35.05;
106. Trinity Welch (LV) 24:00.33; 121.
Marissa Sperry (VW) 24:17.74; 122.
Baylee Lindeman (SJ) 24:18.43; 126. Hali
Finfrock (CV) 24:38.43; 141. Matteson
Watts (CV) 25:07.14; 144. Olivia
Gorman (LV) 25:16.18; 155. Chloee
Boroff (VW) 25:53.43; 156. Brooke
Ripley (CV) 25:55.78; 157. Kylee Bagley
(VW) 25:56.65; 160. Nevada Smith
(CV) 26:00.52; 161. Kerstin Roberts
(LV) 26:04.11; 162. Grace Swaney
(VW) 26:05.65; 164. Claira Rhoades
(LV) 26:13.11; 171. Lexi Pohlman (SJ)
26:20.62; 185. Miah Katalenas (LV)
26:54.21; 194. Vicki Callow (CV) 27:13.62;
198. Mikinizie Dull (LV) 27:19.24; 206.
Ryanne Ducheney (LV) 27:44.04; 207.
Meghan Sherman (CV) 27:45.14; 216.
Sam Stevenson (SJ) 28:03.55; 217.
Emma Saylor (CV) 28:08.93; 224.
Madison Sill (LV) 28:41.3; 245. Theresa
Kurtz (LV) 30:56.1; 252. Janie Boroff

(CV) 32:42.76; 253. Aerianna Littler (EL)


32:55.66; 263. Becca Daugherty (CV)
39:20.22.

Musketeers take down


Pioneers
FORT JENNINGS The
Fort Jennings boys soccer
crew downed Lima Temple
Christian 2-0 in non-league
action Thursday at the Fort
Jennings Athletic Complex.
Scoring for the Musketeers
(6-5-4) were Mark Metzger
in the 63rd minute and Troy
Ricker (assist to Evan Ricker)
in the 72nd minute.
The hosts outshot the
Pioneers (3-6-2) 14-2 and
won the corner kicks 6-0.
DJ Clay had seven saves for
the visitors and Ryan Koester
and Kyle Hellman combined
for one for the hosts.
LadyCats,
Swanton
notch 2-2 draw
SWANTON The Kalida
and Swanton girls soccer units
battled to a 2-2 tie Thursday at
Swanton.
Tallying for the LadyCats
(10-2-2) were Makenna Vorst
and Joni Kaufman, while
Swantons goals came from
Morgan Dickman and Maicie
Wheeler.
Brittany Kahle and Jackie
gardner assisted for the guests.
Kalida won the shots ongoal 20-13: Morgan Knapke
had eight saves for the visitors, while Amber Torres
notched 13 for Swanton (104-1).

8 The Herald

Friday, October 3, 2014

www.delphosherald.com

2014 Delphos Raiders team, cheerleaders

The 2014 Delphos Raiders Team has, front from left, waterboy Jaxon Buzard, Tyler Herron, Daniel
Meyers, Coby Anspach, MJ Finkhousen, Jacob Bonifas, Luken Brinkman and Gavin Holdgreve;
Row 2: watergirl Kaylee Buzard, Jaden Lucas, J.J. Bonifas, Logan Dickman, Zane Wertenberger,
Clayton Paddubny, Josh Ringwald, Nathan Ditto and waterboy Troy Pseekos; Row 3: Chris Reed,
Kaleb Catlett, Blake Ricker, Brendon Olson, Troy Smith and Devan Samons; Row 4: Kaden
Overholt, Nathan Kerzee, Ian Wannemacher, Gunner Stemen, Matt Kahny, Kaden Schrader and
John Pseekos; Row 5: Head Coach Steve Buzard, assistant coaches Joe Gorman, Don Ditto, Don
Anspach and Jack DeWitt, Head Coach Jeremie Buzard and assistant coach Jace Metzner. (DHI
Media/Dena Martz)

Broom

Previews

(Continued from page 7)

(Continued from page 7)

Wildcat setter Hahn started pilling up the assists as her team stormed
back to lead 10-4. Kahnys kill along with a pair of Geise slams kept the
Jays close. Buettner began to heat up for the Jays as her two kills and a
trio of blocks helped put St. Johns in the lead 18-17. The Wildcat hitters
began to find holes in the Blue Jay defense as their light touch on tips
fell in for points as Minster took the set.
Minster led 4-0 to begin the next set before Schulte got the assist on a
kill shot by Buettner. Schulte appeared to get another as Kahny smacked
a cross-court kill that was waved off by the officials. Kahny made sure to
get the point on the very next play as the combination hooked up again
for the slam but the Jays trailed 7-3. Minster extended the lead to six until
Elliss kill off of an assist by Gerker stopped the Wildcat run. The junior
Kahny led the Blue Jay comeback with a pair of kills as St. Johns cut the
lead to one. Minster began to pull away as Erica Oldiges launched backto-back kills along with a tip to spark a 5-1 run by the Wildcats. St. Johns
staged a valiant comeback with an Ellis kill (Gerker assist), consecutive
serving aces by Buettner and consecutive kills by Geise with assists by
Gerker forcing a Minster timeout. The Jays could get no closer than one
point as kills by Oldiges and Bridget McGowan finished off St. Johns.
The Blue Jays defense was led by Kestley Hulihan (26 digs),
Buettner (13 digs and 9 blocks), Geise (17 digs and 2 blocks), Fischer
(7 blocks) and Kahny (6 blocks).
With the win, the Wildcats improve to 9-8 and 2-5 MAC. St. Johns falls
to 7-11 and 0-7 M.A.C. and will host Crestview on Saturday at 10 a.m.
Minster took both junior varsity sets from St. Johns 25-11, 25-17.

Closing it Out: Manager Mike Matheny


had a pushbutton approach to the late innings,
with Rosenthal leading staff with 73 appearances,
Maness with 72 and Neshek with 71. Late in the
year, all of them needed rest. The side-arming
Neshek was a first-time All-Star and was nearly
untouchable much of the year with ERA below 1.00
until late August, but had a loss and blown save his
last two outings.
Giants-Nationals NLDS
Schedule: (All times EDT) Game 1, Friday,
at Washington (3:07 p.m.); Game 2, Saturday, at
Washington (5:37 p.m.); Game 3, Monday, Oct. 6,
at San Francisco (TBD); x-Game 4, Tuesday, Oct.
7, at San Francisco (TBD); x-Game 5, Thursday,
Oct. 9, at Washington (TBD). (All games on FS1
or MLBN).
___
Season Series: Nationals won 5-2.
___
Projected Lineups:
Giants: CF Gregor Blanco (.260, 5 HRs, 38
RBIs), 2B Joe Panik (.305, 1, 18), C Buster Posey
(.311, 22, 89), 3B Pablo Sandoval (.279, 16, 73),
RF Hunter Pence (.277, 20, 74), 1B Brandon Belt
(.243, 12, 27), LF Travis Ishikawa (.252, 3, 18 with
Pirates and Giants) or Michael Morse (.279, 16,
61), SS Brandon Crawford (.246, 10, 69).
Nationals: CF Denard Span (.302, 5, 37, 31
SBs, 39 2Bs, tied for NL lead with 184 hits), 3B
Anthony Rendon (.287, 21, 83, 39 2Bs, NL-high 111
runs), RF Jayson Werth (.292, 16, 82), 1B Adam

Orioles

(Continued from page 6)

Meanwhile,
Detroits
revamped bullpen has looked
shaky although it was
shortstop Andrew Romines
error that got the big eighth
inning going.
Pitching against Baltimore
for the first time since 2013,
Scherzer allowed five runs
and seven hits in 7 1/3
innings. The right-hander
was 18-5 during the regular
season but in this one he was
burned by the long ball and
outpitched by the Orioles.
Although he had a 5.56
ERA in the first inning during
the regular season, Tillman
began his initial foray into the
playoffs in impressive fashion by striking out the side on
14 pitches.
Cruz hit an opposite-field
drive to right in the bottom
half after Nick Markakis hit a
leadoff single. It was his 15th
career postseason home run,
tied with Babe Ruth for 10th
place on the career list.
The rollicking, towel-waving fans had barely settled
down when Victor Martinez

Description

led off the second with a towering shot over the right-field
wall. Four pitches later, J.D.
Martinez hit a tying homer in
his first postseason at-bat.
Markakis answered with
an RBI single in the Baltimore
half. At that point, six of 10
batters reached safely against
Scherzer.
After yielding the back-toback homers, Tillman retired
the next 11 batters before
Romine singled with two outs
in the fifth. Another single
and a walk loaded the bases
for Torii Hunter, who hit into
a fielders choice on Tillmans
105th and final pitch.
TRAINERS ROOM
Tigers: CF Rajai Davis
(pelvic strain) was cleared to
play after passing a series of
drills early in the day before
rosters were finalized. Davis
started and batted ninth.
UP NEXT
Tigers: Verlander (15-12,
4.54 ERA) makes his 16th
postseason start following
what manager Brad Ausmus
called a down season overall for the 2011 Cy Young
Award winner.

STOCKS

Quotes of local interest supplied by


EDWARD JONES INVESTMENTS
Close of business October 2, 2014
LastPrice

AmericanElectricPowerCo.,Inc.
52.28
AutoZone,Inc.
513.30
BungeLimited
82.09
BPp.l.c.
43.16
CitigroupInc.
51.25
CenturyLink,Inc.
40.76
CVSHealthCorporation
80.06
DominionResources,Inc.
69.32
EatonCorporationplc
62.04
FordMotorCo.
14.56
FirstDefianceFinancialCorp.
27.40
FirstFinancialBancorp.
15.89
GeneralDynamicsCorporation
121.80
GeneralMotorsCompany
33.18
TheGoodyearTire&RubberCompany 22.34
HuntingtonBancsharesIncorporated
9.68
HealthCareREIT,Inc.
62.30
TheHomeDepot,Inc.
92.24
HondaMotorCo.,Ltd.
32.00
Johnson&Johnson
103.85
JPMorganChase&Co.
58.84
KohlsCorp.
60.83
LowesCompaniesInc.
53.03
McDonaldsCorp.
94.12
MicrosoftCorporation
45.76
Pepsico,Inc.
92.58
TheProcter&GambleCompany
83.05
RiteAidCorporation
4.99
SprintCorporation
6.25
TimeWarnerInc.
73.20
UnitedBancsharesInc.
14.81
U.S.Bancorp
41.29
VerizonCommunicationsInc.
49.29
Wal-MartStoresInc.
76.23
DowJonesIndustrialAverage
16,801.05
S&P500
1,946.17
NASDAQComposite
4,430.19

Change

-0.10
+5.29
-0.72
-0.52
+0.15
+0.34
+0.92
+0.06
-0.64
-0.03
+0.30
+0.09
-2.49
+0.69
+0.23
+0.08
-0.39
+1.22
-1.79
-0.45
-0.53
+0.42
+0.43
-0.07
-0.14
-0.07
-0.09
+0.18
0.00
-0.51
+0.02
+0.03
-0.14
+0.11
-3.66
+0.01
+8.11

Cats

The 2014 Delphos Raiders Cheerleaders include, from left,


kneeling/sitting: Kaitlyn Dickman, Ava Frye, Livi Ricker,
Bailey Wertenberger and Josie Ricker; and Standing: Coach
Lisa Dickman, Melaina Kroeger, Kendall Schrader, Jillian
Dickman and Coach Kelly Hershey. Absent: Ava Hershey.

LaRoche (.259, 26, 92), SS Ian Desmond (.255,


24, 91), LF Bryce Harper (.273, 13, 32), C Wilson
Ramos (.267, 11, 47), 2B Asdrubal Cabrera (.241,
14, 61 with Indians and Nationals).
___
Starting Pitchers:
Giants: RH Jake Peavy (7-13, 3.73 ERA with
San Francisco and Boston), RH Tim Hudson (9-13,
3.57), LH Madison Bumgarner (18-10, 2.98, 219
Ks), RH Ryan Vogelsong (8-13, 4.00).
Nationals: RH Stephen Strasburg (14-11, 3.14,
215 IP, tied for NL lead with 242 Ks), RH Jordan
Zimmermann (14-5, 2.66, 199 2-3 IP), RH Doug
Fister (16-6, 2.41), LH Gio Gonzalez (10-10, 3.57).
___
Relievers:
Giants: RH Santiago Casilla (3-3, 1.70, 19/23
saves), RH Sergio Romo (6-4, 3.72, 23/28 saves),
LH Jeremy Affeldt (4-2, 2.28), LH Javier Lopez (1-1,
3.11), RH Jean Machi (7-1, 2.58, 2 saves), RH Tim
Lincecum (12-9, 4.74, 1 save), RH Yusmeiro Petit
(5-5, 3.69).
Nationals: RH Drew Storen (2-1, 1.12, 11/14
saves), RH Tyler Clippard (7-4, 2.18, 1 save, 82 Ks,
70 1-3 IP), LH Matt Thornton (1-3, 1.75, 0/4 saves
with Yankees and Nationals), RH Tanner Roark (1510, 2.85, 31 starts), RH Craig Stammen (4-5, 3.84),
RH Aaron Barrett (3-0, 2.66), LH Ross Detwiler
(2-3, 4.00, 1 save), LH Jerry Blevins (2-3, 4.87, held
lefties to .160 batting average), RH Rafael Soriano
(4-1, 3.19, 32/39 saves; 0.97, 22/24 saves before
All-Star break).
___
Matchups:
These franchises have never met in the post-

(Continued from page 6)

The first set saw both teams battling and the score indicated that. With it being nip-and-tuck the whole way, it came
down to which unit had the better finish. This night, it was
the Mustangs (1-14, 0-8 NWC). After a hitting error gave the
Lady Wildcats (5-14, 1-6) a 20-18 spread, a kill and a stuff by
Carly Clum tied it. After a trade of points and a 21-21 knot,
a spike off the defense by Sadie Kirkendall gave the visitors
the lead for good in the set and they closed it out on another
Kirkendall spike off the block.
The second set started out like that but for only the first five
points. The Wildcats led the entire time in this frame and used
a strong 8-0 span two kills and a stuff by senior Andrea
Geise (6 kills, 2 aces) leading the way to take a commanding 11-2 edge. The Mustangs did battle back within 19-17 on
a bash off the block by Morgan Niemeyer but a push by senior
Megan Gilden off the back row stopped that. The Wildcats
then had the finishing splurge and tied it up on a hitting error
by the guests on set point.
The third set was generally close, even though both teams
had runs: Jeffersons of 6-0 and Allen Easts of 5-0; to stay
within striking distance. The Red and White took the lead for

season, although the New York Giants did play


the old Washington Senators in the 1924 and 33
World Series, with the Giants losing the first and
winning the second. The Nationals won five of
the seven meetings this season, taking three of
four in San Francisco in June and two of three
at home in August. In the finale of the season
series, Strasburg left in the fourth after allowing five
earned runs, but Washington won 14-6, erasing a
6-3 deficit with 14 hits off Giants relievers. While
the Nationals finished strong, the Giants went only
41-40 in the second half, 13-12 in September.
Giants manager Bruce Bochy has won two
World Series titles; Washington rookie skipper Matt
Williams, a four-time All-Star while playing for San
Francisco from 1987-96, has never managed in the
playoffs. Hudson has a long history of success
against Washington, going 18-5 with a 2.35 ERA
over his career, and only one current Nationals
player has terrific numbers against him: Werth
(.386, 4 HRs, 12 RBIs). Sandoval is batting
.413 vs. Washington the past three seasons.
LaRoche is 0 for 9 with eight Ks and one walk in his
career against Lopez. Desmond is 10 for 15 with
two HRs off Lincecum. Strasburg, who grew up
in San Diego and went to San Diego State, is set to
make his Game 1 start against the former Padres
pitcher he admired most, Peavy.
___
Big Picture:
Giants: After winning the World Series in 2010
and 2012, the Giants (88-74) are hoping to keep up
their every-other-year pattern. San Francisco missed
the playoffs after each of those championships but is
back this season as the second NL wild-card team.

good at 14-13 on a hitting error and used three aces by freshman Macy Wallace and kills by a variety of players to hold off
the visitors. A late 4-0 span a kill by sophomore Danielle
Harman (7 touches), a kill by freshman Sarah Miller and two
Wallace aces gave the hosts the impetus to go up 2-1 as a
net violation ofnset point did the deed.
The Wildcats took advantage of Habermans inability to
find the right combination going deeper into his bench and
even the junior varsity all night long and put it away in the
fourth. Wallace led the effort with four kills (7 overall) and
Geise had three, while the Mustangs had eight hitting errors
to doom their cause.
Senior Brooke Culp had a great all-around match for the
hosts (18/18 serving, 10 assists, 6 digs, 5 saves), while freshman Devyn Carder was 15/15 serving (3 assists) and junior
Claire Thompson was 15/15 serving (9 touches).
Topping the visitors were Kyra Clark (16 digs, 6 kills) and
Taylor Lloyd (14 assists).
In junior varsity action, Allen East secured a 25-17, 25-23
victory.
Jefferson visits Wayne Trace Monday, while Allen East is
at USV Tuesday.

Jays
(Continued from page 6)
That changed at 14:34. Senior Tatum
Wise fed senior speedster Sydney
Santaguida down the middle for a good
run and a 1-on-1 with Wehri; she had
come off her line and couldnt scramble
back to stop the 14-yarder to the right
side for a 1-0 edge.
At 14:21, sophomore Emma
Baumgartner had an opening from
15 yards but her shot hit the crossbar, stayed in play and freshman Lucy
Bonifas kicked it out of danger.
Wehri denied two more chances
including a deflection of Santaguidas
14-yarder but couldnt a third. At
10:41, Baumgartner, off a stolen goal
kick, got possession in the middle and
her 23-yarder was over the top and into
the twine for a 2-0 edge.
LCC who gave up no shots in-goal
in front of sophomore keeper Madison
Stolly (3 saves vs. 4 shots) in the first
half made it 3-0 at 2:29. Senior Liz
Taflinger launched a 28-yarder from
the left wing; the ball bounced and with

the ball slippery from some sprinkles,


it slipped from the grasp of Wehri and
into the net.
With 39 ticks left, the Jays committed
a handball in the box but Santaguida was
high with the penalty kick.
The Blue and Gold did a better job
of containing the speedy LCC attack
in the second half as the weather
turned gloomy and brought rain halfway
through, with the heavier stuff waiting
until the very end.
Either Wehri came up with stops (8
versus 10 the second half) or defenders
got in the way and deflected attempts
away, plus they got a break when
Santaguidas 14-yarder from the middle
hit the left post at 18:44.
That is, until 8:27 remaining.
Santaguida got behind the defense for
a 14-yarder from the right wing that a
diving Wehri deflected to the other side;
senior Frankie Bowersock was right
there to put the orb back to the right side
for a 4-0 edge.
The Jays had their first shot ongoal at 34:16 as sophomore Carleigh

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Ankerman tried a 14-yarder from the left


side but Stolly was there.
The hosts had three more chances:
at 10:40, when Grothouses 28-yard
free kick from the right wing was
just wide to that side; at 3:10, when
Ankermans 16-yarder from the right
wing was stymied by Stolly; and
at :02, when Ankermans shot was
denied.
The three seniors departed the contest
with 1:33 remaining.
LCC has had a strong program for
a number of years: they are fast and
skilled. We stayed with them quite
a bit but their speed just wears you
down, Smith added. I felt we were
much better the second half in all
aspects. That might have been our
most complete half this year. We took
away a lot of their easy openings and
even had a few more chances ourselves. As a coach, thats what you
want to see and cant ask for anything
more.
The Jays visit Ottoville 6 p.m.
Tuesday.

(Continued from page 6)

Klausing was playing well


on the back nine until he three
putted the par-3 15th hole.
He had a birdie opportunity from about 15 feet and
decided to go for it. Then
when he missed the par putt,
I think that affected him the
rest of his round, Coach
Klausing said.
The four individuals to
advance from the district

were Austin Brackman,


Minster, and Peter Campbell,
both with a 75, while Brock
Boyer and Josh Graham both
had a 78.
***

Team Scores
1. Ottawa Hills 311; 2. Crestview
323; 3. Van Buren 325; 4. Lima Central
Catholic 327; 5. Minster 329; 6. Kalida
331; 7. Ayersville 342; 8. Sandusky St.
Marys 344; 9. Stryker 348; 11. New
London 356; 12. Cardinal Stritch 357;
13. Mohawk 361; 14. Allen East 364; 15.
Wayne Trace 370; 16. McComb 375; 17.
North Central 376; 18. Patrick Henry 385.

Friday, October 3, 2014

www.delphosherald.com

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Archer HD Archer HD
Mike Molly Mike Molly Mike Molly Mike Molly Mike Molly Mike Molly Louie HD
Hunters
Hunters
Property Brothers HD
Property Brothers HD Property Brothers HD House Hunters (N) HD
Pawn. HD Pawn. HD Pawn. HD Pawn. HD Pawn. HD Pawn. HD Pawn. HD Pawn. HD Pawn. HD Pawn. HD
The Assault (14, NR) Makenzie Vega. HD
Run for Your Life (14)
Run for Your Life (14, NR) Mark Humphrey. HD
Clueless (95, PG-13) aaa Alicia Silverstone.
Final Destination 3 (06, R) aac
Jeepers Creepers II aa
Thunderman Awesome Prince
Prince
Friends
Friends
How I Met How I Met
Henry (N) Nicky (N)
Cops HD
Cops HD
Cops HD
Cops HD
Cops HD
Walking Tall (04, PG-13) Dwayne Johnson. HD
Cops (N)
(7:00) The Reaping (07) Dark Haul (14) Tom Sizemore, Rick Ravanello.
Hellboy (04, PG-13) aac Ron Perlman.
Big Bang
Big Bang
Big Bang
Big Bang
Big Bang
Big Bang
On the Menu : Chilis
Tower Heist (11) aac
Twentieth Century (34, NR) John Barrymore.
The Lady Vanishes (38, NR) aaac
W/o Reservatns (46)
Outrageous Outrageous Sex Sent Me to HD
Untold ER HD
19 Kids
19 Kids
Untold ER HD
Law Abiding Citizen (09, R) aaa Jamie Foxx. HD (:01) Inglourious Basterds (09, R) aaac Brad Pitt, Mlanie Laurent. HD
Ghost Adventures (N)
The Dead Files HD
The Dead Files HD
Ghost Adventures HD
Ghost Adventures HD
Fam. Feud Fam. Feud Fam. Feud Fam. Feud Raymond Raymond Friends
Friends
The Exes
Queens
NCIS : Affairs HD
The Game Plan (07)
NCIS : Trojan Horse
NCIS : Angel of Death
NCIS HD
Couples Therapy HD
Love & Hip
Napoleon Dynamite HD Two Weeks Notice (02, PG-13) aac Sandra Bullock. HD
Blue Bloods HD
Blue Bloods HD
Blue Bloods HD
Hope HD
Hope HD
Blue Bloods HD
Carmichael (N)
Boardwalk Empire HD
Ride Along (14) aac
Ride Along (14, PG-13) Ice Cube, Kevin Hart. HD
Gravity (13, PG-13) Sandra Bullock.
(:35) The Knick HD
Counselor
The Counselor (13) HD The Knick HD
Shobox Special Edition
Ray Donovan HD
Homeland HD

Antiques Road Show|

Infinity Hall Live |

The Red Green Show

|Austin City Limits


Hometown Content, Listings by FYI

PR EM

CABLE

BROADCAST

SUNDAY EVENING
8:00

8:30

OCTOBER 5, 2014
9:00

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10:30

11:00

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12:00

12:30

Resurrection (N) HD
(:01) Revenge (N) HD
Local Programs
Local Programs
Once Upon a Time (N)
The Good Wife (N) HD
CSI: Crime Scene (N)
Local Programs
60 Min. (N) Madam Secretary (N)
Local
Dateline NBC HD
(:20) Sunday Night Football: Cincinnati Bengals at New England Patriots (Live) HD
Simpsons Brooklyn Family Guy Mulaney
Local Programs
Local Programs
Criminal Minds : P911" Criminal Minds HD
Cold Case HD
Cold Case HD
Criminal Minds HD
Duck HD
Duck HD
Duck HD
Wahlburger Wahlburger Duck HD
Duck HD
Duck HD
Duck HD
Duck HD
Breaking Bad : Granite State HD
Breaking Bad : Felina (:15) 4th and Loud HD
Break. Bad Breaking Bad HD
North Woods Law (N)
Rattle. (N) Rattle. (N) North Woods Law HD
Rattle. HD Rattle. HD
North Woods Law (N)
(7:00) The Cookout (04) Whats Love Got to Do with It? (93, R) aaa Angela Bassett.
BET Inspiration
(:01) Real Housewives
Watch What (:31) Real Housewives
Manzod
The Real Housewives of New Jersey (N)
Bobs HD
Rick Morty Family Guy Family Guy Squid (N)
Black
(:45) Loiter
King Hill
King Hill
Bobs HD
Cops HD
Cops HD
Cops HD
Cops HD
Cops HD
Dog & Beth : Birthday Dog & Beth HD
Cops HD
This is Life (N)
Anthony : Shanghai
Anthony : The Bronx
Anthony : Shanghai
Anthony (N)
(:15) Hot Tub Time Machine (10, R) aac John Cusack. HD
Tosh.0 HD Key; Peele South Park
Hot Tub Time (10) HD
Alaska: Last (N) HD
Tethered : My Way (N) (:01) Alaska: Last HD
Tethered : My Way
Alaska: Last (N) HD
A.N.T. HD A.N.T. HD Good Luck Good Luck
Austin (N) Liv (N) HD I Didnt (N) Girl Meets Jessie HD Dog Blog
Total Divas (N) HD
Beyond Candid (N) HD
Total Divas HD
Beyond Candid HD
Total Divas HD
2014 WSOP (Taped)
2014 WSOP (Taped)
SportsCenter Sports news. HD
Sports HD
Sports HD Champ.
NHRA Lucas Oil HD
ESPN FC HD
NHRA Drag Racing : NHRA Nationals (Taped) HD
Hop (11, PG) James Marsden, Hank Azaria. HD
Osteen
Turn Point
Matilda (96, PG) aac Danny DeVito. HD
Cutthroat Kitchen (N)
Cutthroat Kitchen
Halloween Wars
Guys Grocery Games Halloween Wars (N)
The Strain : Master
(:11) The Strain HD
(7:00) Battleship (12, PG-13) aac Taylor Kitsch.
The Strain (N) HD
Life
Life
Hunt
Hunt
Hunt
Hunt
Hunters
Hunters
Hunt
Hunt
Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars
Witches of East End
Witches of East End
(:02) Killers (10, PG-13) aa Ashton Kutcher. HD
Killers (10, PG-13) HD
The Devil Wears Prada (06, PG-13) aaa Meryl Streep.
Faking It
Awkward. Happyland Girl Code Girl Code
Full Hse
Full Hse
Prince
Prince
Friends
Friends
How I Met How I Met
Instant HD Full Hse
Bar Rescue (N) HD
Catch a Contractor (N) Bar Rescue HD
Bar Rescue : Bug Bite
Bar Rescue HD
House of Bones (10)
Shutter (08, PG-13) aa Joshua Jackson.
Z Nation : Puppies
Z Nation
2014 MLB Playoffs : AL Division Series Game 3": Los Angeles vs Team TBA (Live)
(6:00) 2014 MLB Playoffs (Live)
The Red Shoes (48, NR) aaac Anton Walbrook.
Cameraman: Jack Cardiff (10, NR)
The Blot (21, NR) aac
Angels HD Angels HD
LI Medium LI Medium LI Medium Medium
Angels (N) Angels (N) LI Medium Medium
National Treasure: Book of Secrets (07, PG) Nicolas Cage.
National Treasure: Book of Secrets (07, PG) Nicolas Cage.
Extreme RVs (N) HD
Extreme RVs HD
Extreme RVs HD
Halloween
Extreme RVs (N) HD
Fam. Feud Fam. Feud Fam. Feud Fam. Feud Raymond Raymond Friends
Friends
Queens
Queens
Law & Order: SVU HD
Law & Order: SVU HD
Modern
Modern
Modern
Modern
Law & Order: SVU HD
Behind HD
Love & Hip Hop
Love & Hip Hop
New Jack City (91, R) aac Wesley Snipes, Ice-T. HD
Blue Bloods HD
Manhattan (N) HD
Manhattan : Tangier
Manhattan : Tangier
Blue Bloods HD
True Detective HD
Oliver (N) Boardwalk Empire HD
Oliver HD
Ride Along (14) aac Boardwalk Empire (N)
Lingerie
Lingerie
The Hangover Part III (13, R) Bradley Cooper.
47 Ronin (13, PG-13) aac Keanu Reeves. HD
Homeland Homeland : Drone Queen HD
Homeland
Homeland : The Star
Homeland : Drone Queen (N) HD

ABC
CBS
NBC
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PBS

Masterpiece Classic|

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Masterpiece Mystery!

|Great Estates of Scotland|Austin City Limits


Hometown Content, Listings by FYI

PREM

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MONDAY EVENING
ABC
CBS
NBC
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ION
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AMC
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CARTOON
CMT
CNN
COMEDY
DISCOVERY
DISNEY
E!
ESPN
ESPN2
FAMILY
FOOD
FX
HGTV
HISTORY
LIFETIME
MTV
NICK
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SYFY
TBS
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TLC
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TV LAND
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PBS

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8:00

8:30

OCTOBER 6, 2014
9:00

9:30

10:00

10:30

11:00

11:30

12:00

12:30

Castle : Montreal (N)


Local
Jimmy Kimmel Live HD Nightline
Dancing with the Stars (N) HD
NCIS: Los Angeles (N)
Local
(:35) Late Show (N) HD Late Late
Big Bang
Big Bang
Scorpion (N) HD
The Blacklist (N) HD
Local
(:35) Tonight Show HD Late Night
The Voice : The Blind Auditions, Part 5" (N) HD
Sleepy Hollow (N) HD
Local Programs
Local Programs
Gotham (N) HD
Criminal Minds HD
Blue Bloods (TV14) HD
Blue Bloods HD
Blue Bloods (TV14) HD
Criminal Minds HD
(:01) Dead Again HD
(:02) The First 48 HD
(:01) The First 48 HD
The First 48 : The Case That Haunts Me HD
The Walking Dead HD
The Walking Dead HD
The Walking Dead HD
The Walking Dead HD
Dead HD
Dead HD
Rattlesnake (N) HD
North Woods Law (N)
Gator Boys HD
Rattlesnake HD
Gator Boys HD
(7:00) Menace II Society (93, R) aaa Cradle 2 the Grave (03, R) aac Jet Li, DMX.
Wendy Williams HD
Real Housewives
TBA
TBA
Manzod
Manzod
Watch What Real Housewives
Manzod
Rick Morty Family Guy Family Guy Robot
Squid HD
King Hill
King Hill
Cleveland Cleveland Dad HD
Hope HD
Dog & Beth : Birthday Dog & Beth HD
Cops HD
Cops HD
Cops HD
Cops HD
Hope HD
Anderson Cooper 360 Anderson Cooper 360
Anderson Cooper 360 Anderson Cooper 360 CNN Tonight (N)
Colbert (N) midnight
South Park
Futurama Futurama South Park South Park South Park South Park Daily (N)
Fast N Loud (N) HD
Highway to Sell (N) HD Fast N Loud HD
Highway to Sell HD
Fast N Loud HD
Girl vs. Monster (12, NR) Olivia Holt.
Jessie HD Wolfblood Jessie HD Babysitter Babysitter Good Luck Good Luck
E! News HD
Live HD
Wedding
Live (N) HD Oceans Eleven (01, PG-13) aaa George Clooney. HD
(:20) SportsCenter Sports news. HD
(:15) Monday Night Football: Seattle vs Washington Week 5. (Live) HD
2014 WSOP (Taped)
2014 WSOP (Taped)
(:15) College Ftbll HD
Baseball Tonight HD
World X Games HD
Ella Enchanted (04, PG) aac Anne Hathaway. HD The 700 Club (TV G)
Drama Queen (04) HD
(7:00) Hop (11, PG) HD
Rewrapped Rewrapped Mystery
Mystery
Restaurant: Impossible Restaurant: Impossible Mystery
Mystery
The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn: Part 1 (11, PG-13) aa
The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn: Part 1 (11, PG-13) aa
Love It or List It (N) HD Hunters
Hunters
Love It or List It HD
Love It or List It HD
Love It or List It HD
Cars HD
Cars HD
Cars HD
Pawn Stars Pawn Stars
Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Cars HD
Guilty at 17 (14, NR) Erin Sanders. HD
Stalked at 17 (12) HD
Stalked at 17 (12, NR) aaa Taylor Spreitler. HD
Are You the One? (N)
The One? Are You the One?
The One?
Are You the One?
Teen Mom 2 (N) HD
Full Hse
Full Hse
Full Hse
Full Hse
Prince
Prince
Friends
Friends
How I Met How I Met
Transporter 3 (08, PG-13) aac HD
The Expendables (10)
The Expendables (10, R) aac Sylvester Stallone. HD
(7:00) Shutter (08) aa Dead Still (14) Ben Browder, Ray Wise.
My Soul to Take (10, R) aa Max Thieriot. HD
Pre-Game 2014 MLB Playoffs
Postseason Conan HD
(:45) TCM Presents (N)
TCM Presents (N)
Prince Achmed (26)
TCM Presents : The Cartoons (N)
Breaking Amish: HD
Breaking Amish: HD
Breaking Amish: HD
Breaking Amish: HD
Breaking Amish: HD
(:01) Castle HD
(:02) Major Crimes HD (:03) Law & Order HD
(:03) Law & Order HD
Castle : Disciple HD
Bizarre Foods America Bizarre Foods America Bizarre Foods America Bizarre Foods America Bizarre Foods America
Fam. Feud Fam. Feud Fam. Feud Soul Man The Exes
Cleveland Friends
Friends
Queens
Queens
(:05) Faster (10, R) aac Dwayne Johnson.
WWE Monday Night Raw HD
TI & Tiny TI & Tiny Love & Hip Hop
TI & Tiny TI & Tiny Love & Hip Hop
Love & Hip Hop (N)
Home Videos HD
Home Videos HD
Home Videos HD
Parks HD Parks HD
Home Videos HD
Hunted: Gays (N) HD
Bill Maher: DC HD
Boardwalk Empire HD
Riddick (13, R) aaa HD
Red 2 (13, PG-13) HD
Transporter 2 (05, PG-13) aac HD Oblivion (13, PG-13) aaa Tom Cruise. HD
The Knick
The Knick HD
Homeland Homeland : Drone Queen HD
Soul Plane (04, R) Tom Arnold. HD
Homeland : Drone Queen HD

Antiques Roadshow

PREM

11:00

PBS

9:30

10:00

10:30

11:00

11:30

12:00

12:30

Manhattan S.H.I.E.L.D. (N) HD


Forever (N) HD
Local
Jimmy Kimmel Live HD Nightline
Selfie (N)
NCIS: New Orleans (N) Person of Interest (N)
Local
(:35) Late Show (N) HD
Late Late
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Chicago Fire (N) HD
Local
(:35) Tonight Show HD
Late Night
The Voice : Best of the Blind Auditions (N) HD
New Girl
Mindy (N) Local Programs
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Utopia (N) HD
Criminal Minds HD
Criminal Minds HD
The Listener (N)
The Listener
Criminal Minds HD
Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
The Walking Dead HD
4th and Loud (N) HD
(:02) 4th and Loud HD
The Walking Dead HD
The Walking Dead HD
Wild Russia : Urals
Madagascar HD
Wild Russia : Urals
Madagascar HD
Husbands
Wendy Williams HD
(7:30) White Chicks (04, PG-13) Shawn Wayans.
Husbands (N)
The Peoples Couch
Watch What Below Deck
Housewives
Below Deck
Below Deck (N)
Dad HD
Family Guy Family Guy Robot
Squid HD
King Hill
King Hill
Cleveland Cleveland Dad HD
Hope HD
The Replacements (00, PG-13) aac Keanu Reeves, Gene Hackman. HD
Cops HD
Cops HD
Hope HD
Anderson Cooper 360 CNN Special Report
Anderson Cooper 360 CNN Special Report
CNN Tonight (N)
Colbert (N) midnight
Tosh.0 HD
Chapplle
Tosh.0 HD Tosh.0 HD Tosh.0 HD Tosh.0 (N) Brickle (N) Daily (N)
Ice Lake Rebel (N) HD
Yukon Men HD
Ice Lake Rebel HD
Yukon Men: Revealed
Yukon Men (N) HD
Wolfblood Babysitter Babysitter Good Luck Good Luck
My Babysitters a Vampire (10) aa Star Wars Rebels HD
E! News HD
Live HD
E! News
Live (N) HD The Wedding Planner (01, PG-13) Matthew McConaughey.
30 for 30 : Playing for the Mob HD
(:43) SportsCenter Sports news. HD
SportsCenter HD
E:60 HD
2014 WSOP (Replay)
30 for 30 : Playing for the Mob HD
Baseball Tonight HD
Mike/Mike 2014 WSOP (Replay)
The 700 Club (TV G)
LOL (12, PG-13) a
Enchanted Miss Congeniality (00, PG-13) aac Sandra Bullock. HD
Chopped HD
Chopped HD
Chopped HD
Chopped HD
Chopped HD
Anarchy
(7:00) Snow White and the Huntsman (12) aac Sons of Anarchy (N) HD Sons of Anarchy : Some Eruption
Flip Flop
Jennie (N) Jennie
Hunters
Hunters
Flip Flop
Flip Flop
Jennie
Jennie
Flop (N)
Cars HD
Cars HD
(:03) Top Gear HD
Pawn Stars Pawn Stars
Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Top Gear (N) HD
Dance Moms (N) HD
Kim of Queens (N) HD
(:01) Kim of Queens HD (:02) Dance Moms: HD
Dance Moms: (N) HD
The One? Happyland Faking It
Awkward. Awkward. Faking It
Happyland Awkward. Faking It
Happyland
Nick News Full Hse
Full Hse
Full Hse
Prince
Prince
Friends
Friends
How I Met How I Met
Ink Master HD
Ink Master (N) HD
Tattoo (N) Tattoo
Ink Master HD
Ink Master HD
Face Off (N) HD
Town (N)
Town (N)
Face Off HD
Town of
(:28) Town
Face Off HD
Cougar
Conan HD
Big Bang
Big Bang
Big Bang
Big Bang
Big Bang
Big Bang
Conan HD
In the Cool of the Day (63, NR) ac (:45) Network (76, R) aaac Faye Dunaway, William Holden.
Madding Crowd (67)
19 Kids
Preaching Alabama HD
19 Kids
19 Kids
19 Kids
19 Kids
Preaching Alabama (N) 19 Kids
Rizzoli & Isles : Food
(:02) Rizzoli & Isles HD (:03) CSI: NY HD
(:03) CSI: NY HD
Rizzoli & Isles HD
Resort Rescue (N)
Man v Food Man v Food Hotel Impossible
Hunters
Hunters
Hotel Impossible (N)
Fam. Feud Fam. Feud Fam. Feud Soul Man The Exes
Cleveland Friends
Friends
Queens
Queens
Modern
Modern
Modern
Modern
Modern
Modern
Modern
Modern
Law & Order: SVU HD
Couples Therapy HD
Love & Hip Hop
Love & Hip Hop
Malibus Most Wanted (03, PG-13) aa HD
Hulk (03, PG-13) aa Eric Bana, Jennifer Connelly.
Manhattan : Tangier
Manhattan : Tangier
Beyonc Jay Z HD
The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug (13, PG-13) aaac HD First Look Boardwalk Empire HD
The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey (12) HD
The Legend of Hercules (14, PG-13) Kellan Lutz.
The Knick HD
60 Minutes Sports HD
Inside the NFL HD
Homeland HD
Homeland Homeland Inside the NFL (N) HD

Finding Your Roots |

WBGU

Makers

| Frontline

| Charlie Rose
Hometown Content, Listings by FYI

WEDNESDAY EVENING
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9:30

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9:00

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8:30

9:00

OCTOBER 8, 2014
9:30

10:00

10:30

11:00

11:30

12:00

12:30

black-ish Nashville (N) HD


Local
Jimmy Kimmel Live HD Nightline
Middle (N) Goldbergs Modern
Criminal Minds (N) HD Stalker (N) HD
Local
(:35) Late Show (N) HD Late Late
Survivor (N) HD
Local
(:35) Tonight Show HD Late Night
The Mysteries of Laura Law & Order: SVU (N) Chicago P.D. (N) HD
Red Band Society (N)
Local Programs
Local Programs
Hells Kitchen (N) HD
Cold Case HD
Cold Case HD
Cold Case : Jackals
Cold Case HD
Cold Case HD
Duck HD Duck HD Duck HD Duck (N) Wahlburger Epic Ink
Duck HD Duck HD Duck HD Duck HD
The Walking Dead HD
The Walking Dead HD
The Walking Dead HD
The Walking Dead HD
The Walking Dead HD
Dirty Jobs : Sponge
Gator Boys (N) HD
Dirty Jobs HD
Dirty Jobs : Sponge
Dirty Jobs HD
(7:00) Johnson Family Vacation (04) Like Mike (02, PG) ac Bow Wow, Morris Chestnut.
Wendy Williams HD
Los Angeles (TV14) (N)
Top Chef Duels (N)
Watch What Top Chef Duels
Top Chef
Los Angeles (TV14)
Dad HD
Family Guy Family Guy Robot
Squid HD
King Hill King Hill Cleveland Cleveland Dad HD
Cops HD Cops HD
Hope HD Hope HD Good Will Hunting (97, R) aaa Robin Williams, Matt Damon. HD
CNN Tonight (N)
Anderson Cooper 360 Somebodys
Anderson Cooper 360 Somebodys (N)
Key; Peele South Park South Park South Park South Park Key; Peele Daily (N) Colbert (N) midnight South Park
Fast N Loud HD
Fast N Loud HD
Fast N Loud HD
Fast N Loud HD
Naked and Afraid HD
The Little Vampire (00, PG) aa
Mickey
Wolfblood Jessie HD Babysitter Babysitter Under Wraps (97) aa
Total Divas HD
The Soup The Soup E! News HD
Live HD
The Soup
Live (N) HD Live HD
SportsCenter HD
CrossFit Games
CrossFit Games
CrossFit Games
SportsCenter HD
ESPN Boxing Special : Sam Soliman (Live)
ISKA Karate (Taped)
Baseball Tonight HD
NFL Live HD
The 700 Club (TV G)
Sister Act (92, PG) aac
Miss Congeniality (00) Zookeeper (11, PG) aa Kevin James. HD
Cutthroat Kitchen (N) Cutthroat Kitchen
Cutthroat Kitchen
Cutthroat Kitchen
Chopped (N) HD
(7:30) Men in Black III (12, PG-13) Will Smith.
American Horror Story (N) HD
American Horror Story HD
Property Brothers HD Buying and Selling (N) Hunters Hunters Property Brothers HD Buying and Selling HD
American Pickers HD
American Pickers HD
American Pickers HD
American Pickers HD
American Pickers HD
The Brittany Murphy Story (14, NR) HD
Girlfriend Intervention Girlfriend Intervention Brittany Murphy (14)
Teen Mom 2 HD
Teen Mom 2 (N) HD
Girl Code Girl Code Are You the One?
Teen Mom 2 HD
Full Hse
Full Hse
Full Hse
Full Hse
Prince
Prince
Friends
Friends
How I Met How I Met
Ink Master HD
Cops HD Cops HD
Cops HD Cops HD Impact Wrestling (N) HD
Ghost Hunters (N) HD Ghost Hunters HD
Ghost Hunters HD
Ghost Hunters HD
Ghost Hunters HD
Pre-Game 2014 MLB Playoffs
Postseason Conan HD
Angels in the Outfield (51, NR) aa Paul Douglas. Bye Bye Birdie (63, G) aaa Dick Van Dyke.
Holiday Affair (49) aa
Extreme Extreme Extreme Extreme Outrageous Outrageous Extreme Extreme Outrageous Outrageous
Transformers (07) HD Legends (N) HD
Legends : Identity (N) Legends : Wilderness Legends : Identity HD
Bizarre Foods America Paradise Paradise Jamaica (TVPG)
Man v Food Man v Food Paradise Paradise
Fam. Feud Fam. Feud Fam. Feud Soul Man The Exes Cleveland Friends
Friends
Queens
Queens
NCIS : Gut Check HD
NCIS : Devils Triad
NCIS : Identity Crisis
NCIS: Los Angeles HD
NCIS : Alibi HD
Couples Therapy (N)
I Heart (N) Couples Therapy HD
I Heart
Couples Therapy HD
Couples Therapy HD
Penguins
Weapons | Charlie Rose
Hope HD Hope HD |Nazi
Hope Mega
HD
Hope HD Hope HD Hope HD Hope HD Hope HD
Hope HD Hope HD |NOVA
Oliver HD 50 Year
Boardwalk Empire HD The Secret Life of Walter Mitty (13, PG) aaac Real Time Maher HD
Gravity (13, PG-13) Sandra Bullock.
(:35) Eves Secret (14, NRAO) HD
The Counselor (13) HD The Knick HD
Homeland : Drone Queen HD
Homeland Inside the NFL HD
Hostel (06, R) aac HD
Inside the NFL HD

THURSDAY EVENING
8:00

8:30

9:00

9:30

10:00

10:30

OCTOBER
9, 2014
Hometown Content, Listings by FYI

11:00

11:30

12:00

12:30

How to Get Away (N)


Local
Jimmy Kimmel Live HD Nightline
Greys Anatomy (N) HD Scandal (N) HD
ABC
(:15) Local Late Show with David Letterman (N)
Kickoff HD (:25) Thursday Night Football: Indianapolis vs Houston (Live)
CBS
Local
(:35) Tonight Show HD Late Night
The Biggest Loser (N) Bad Judge A to Z (N) Parenthood (N) HD
NBC
Gracepoint (N) HD
Local Programs
Local Programs
Bones (N) HD
FOX
Blue Bloods : All That Blue Bloods HD
Blue Bloods HD
Blue Bloods : Mercy
Blue Bloods HD
ION
The First 48 (N) HD
(:01) Dead Again (N) HD (:02) Dead Again HD
(:01) The First 48 HD
The First 48 HD
A&E
The Walking Dead HD
The Walking Dead HD
The Walking Dead HD
The Walking Dead HD
The Walking Dead HD
AMC
Monsters Inside Me (N) Raised Wild HD
Raised Wild (N) HD
ANIMAL
Im in Love with a Church Girl (13, PG) Ja Rule.
Husbands
Husbands Husbands Wendy Williams HD
BET
Housewives
Below Deck TBA
Manzod Manzod Real Housewives
Watch What Los Angeles (TV14)
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Family Guy Black
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The Herald - 9

| POV Koch
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Classifieds
10 The Herald

Friday, October 3, 2014

www.delphosherald.com

www.delphosherald.com

HERALD

DELPHOS
THE

Telling The Tri-Countys Story Since 1869

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

Manage gout by preventing


Dads other woman causes attacks in the first place
stress throughout family

FREE ADS: 5 days free if item is free THANKS TO ST. JUDE: Runs 1 day at the
Minimum Charge: 555
15 Garage
words,
Sales/
Deadlines:
Dear
Abby
or less than $50. Only 1 item per ad, 1 price of $3.00.
Yard
Sales
2 times - $9.00
11:30 a.m. for the next days issue.
GARAGE SALES: Each day is $.20 per
ad per month.
Each word
isLLC$.30
2-5
days
BREESE
FARMS
1220
& 1350
Marsh Ave
Saturdays paper is 11:00 a.m. Friday BOX REPLIES: $8.00 if you come word. $8.00 minimum charge.
Class A-CDL
10/2nd-3rd,
9am-5pm.
$.25
6-9 days
and pick them up. $14.00 if we have to I WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR
Mondays paper is 1:00 p.m. Friday
Drivers Needed $.20
Kids,
womens,
mens
10+
days
DEBTS: Ad must be placed in person by
send them to you.
Local company with
clothing, glassware, LonDEAR
DOCTOR
K: What
-- name
Medication
to inhelp
the
Herald Extra is 11 a.m. Thursday
person whose
will appear
the ad.
CARD OF THANKS:
$2.00
base the
Each word
$.10
for 3 31
months
openings
for OTRis
driver
gaberger,
Products,
caused
my
gout?
Will
avoiding
kidneys
excrete
uric acid.
Must
show
ID
&
pay
when
placing
ad.
Regucharge
+
$.10
for
each
word.
running van loads &
Xmas,
Easter, prepaid
Hallowor more
accept has brought nothing find a polite way certain foods prevent flare-ups?
DEAR We
ABBY:
lar rates apply -- Medication to reduce uric
regional driver running een decorations, anMy
father
is
dating
but negativity into to say these phone
DEAR READER: Gout acid production.
hopper loads in Ohio,
tiques, collectibles, bedmy life.
calls can be made is a painful joint condition. I
-Anti-inflammatory
Michigan & Indiana.
ding, wall dcor, lots of a woman who is
Please call
household items.
not only my exI dont know what after hours. I do know, because Ive suffered medication.
Dave @ 419-203-2745
boyfriends mother, to do. I want to still NOT want to ruffle from it. I spoke to
Avoiding certain
Missy @ 419-203-1376 135 SECOND St., Fort but also the woman
have a relationship any feathers. Any my Harvard Medical Dr. Anthony L. foods can help prevent
Jennings. Thurs. & Fri.
advice would be School
11-8, Sat. 10-2. Kitchen he cheated on my with my dad, but
gout attacks. But keep
colleague,
items, bedroom suite, mother with and
my marriage comes greatly appreciated. rheumatologist Dr. Komaroff, M.D. expectations realistic:
CLASS A
much misc.
CDL DRIVERS
left her for. I dont before this. How can -- TOO CHICKEN Robert Shmerling,
Only about 10 percent
Tanker & Hazmat
Ask
Doctor
K
want to be around I keep both? -- IN TO TALK
of the bodys uric acid
to
get
the
latest
Excellent Pay
577 Miscellaneous
her and have told THE MIDDLE IN
comes from food.
information.
419-795-1403
my father this, but PENSACOLA
DEAR
TOO
Avoid
or
Gout
attacks
419-305-5888
LAMP REPAIR, table or he doesnt accept or
CHICKEN:
The come on suddenly,
limit:
floor. Come to our store. respect my feelings.
DEAR IN THE companys policy with sharp pain,
-- All meats,
Hohenbrink
T V . Being around them
MIDDLE:
Your on personal calls often in a single
Well-established insur- 419-695-1229
especially liver
causes stress on my father refuses to during
business joint. The big toe is a
ance agency in Lima is
and sweetbreads
marriage
because acknowledge your hours should be a common target. (Ive
looking for full-time
Pets and
(pancreas, thymus and
583
my husband doesnt feelings
because part of the employee put an illustration
Customer Service Rep
Supplies
other organs)
want to be around he sees you only handbook. If it isnt,
for Personal Lines
-- Meat extracts and
on
my
website,
FREE3
Kittens,
orange,
her either, and we as an extension it should be brought
dept. Must have good
playful, very friendly. Ph.
gravies
AskDoctorK.com.)
Some
work ethic and strong 567-825-7338.
dont want her of himself. Your to the attention of
technical skills. Insuraround our children. opinions surely your employer or people have flare-ups every -- Seafood, especially sardines
ance background preThis is causing must match his own, supervisor so it can few weeks; others go years and anchovies
592 Wanted to Buy
ferred. EEO Please send
so much stress that and if they dont, be included when between attacks. Fortunately, -- Yeast and yeast extracts
resumes to:
at times Im afraid then they must have the handbook is Ive had only two attacks in the -- Beans, peas and lentils
-- Spinach and asparagus
past eight years.
could end our been planted there updated.
Blind Box S
Raines itmarriage.
Gout flares when the -- Cauliflower
When
I
by
someone
else.
Ideally,
the
person
c/o The Putnam
Jewelry try to talk to Dad In his mind, he and to speak to your co- levels of uric acid, a chemical - Mushrooms
County Sentinel
in the body, rise in -- Beer or hard liquor
Cash for Gold about this, he acts his lady friend have worker about this produced
P.O. Box 149
the blood. Some of the uric -- Sugary (fructose-containing)
like
there
is
no
done
nothing
wrong,
would
be
your
boss.
Scrap
Gold,
Gold
Jewelry,
Ottawa, OH 45875
Silver coins, Silverware,
00102080
reason for me to so how could you Because these calls acid leaves the blood and soft drinks
Pocket Watches, Diamonds.
Eating and drinking lowbe uncomfortable possibly
object? are distracting the enters the joints. There, it forms
2330 Shawnee Rd.
fat
dairy products and eating
crystals.
The
crystals
trigger
and
blames
my
That
you
could
have
other
employees,
JOY
OF
Learning
Lima
husband for these a moral compass your boss should be inflammation and severe pain, cherries have been linked in
Pre-School in Elida is hir(419) 229-2899
feelings. Its like he that points in a made aware of it so sometimes with fever and some studies with lower attack
ing two part-time, possibly
full-time teachers. Expericompletely denies different direction is he or she can deal muscle aches. The crystals also rates of gout.
ence/CDA preferred. CPR
Free and
that there is any way not on his radar.
with it.
Finally, losing weight can
can build up in the kidneys and
953
a plus. Interview requires
Low Priced
I
could
feel
the
way
I
Because
your
dad
lower
uric acid levels and
cause
kidney
stones.
resume and fingerprinting.
insists on imposing
TO MY JEWISH
Everyone produces uric attacks of gout. And always
Walk-Ins encouraged.
STROLLER, $30. Call do, even though she
this woman on your R E A D E R S : acid; some people just make drink enough water to avoid
419-692-4372.
family,
recognize Tonight at sundown, too much. In other people, the dehydration.
LOCAL CONSTRUCTION
HIRING
that you probably Yom Kippur, the kidneys dont eliminate enough
company has opening for
My last attack of gout
dependable worker. Excant have one holiest day of the uric acid in the urine. Certain occurred during a family party
FULL
&
PART
TIME
perience helpful. Must
without the other. Jewish
calendar, foods that are rich in a chemical on a hot summer afternoon. I
have reliable transportaDRIVERS
That will mean begins. Its a day of that the body turns into uric had a fair amount of red meat
tion. Reply to Delphos
with 5+ OTR experience.
seeing your father fasting, reflection, acid can set off gout attacks in and beans and a few beers.
Herald, Box 132, 405
LTL
loads
are 99% no-touch freight.
North Main Street, Del far less than you prayer
and people who are already prone I probably also was a bit
Home on weekends & occasionally mid-week.
phos, OH 45833
would like, and away repentance. To all of to them.
dehydrated. Yes, I admit it: I
Pay ave. $0.50/mile,
from your husband you, may your fast
$50,000-$60,000 per year, holiday pay
Gout attacks respond well to dont always follow the advice
and children -- if be an easy one.
LOOKING FOR a depend& benefits package available.
nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory that I give in this column.
able Class A CDL driver.
at all. Under no
To receive a drugs
(Dr. Komaroff is a physician
(NSAIDs).
(The
Driving experience preCall 419-222-1630
c i r c u m s t a n c e s collection of Abbys exception is aspirin, which can and professor at Harvard
ferred and home daily.
Monday-Friday 8am to 5pm
should you allow most memorable -- raise uric acid levels.) A drug Medical School. To send
Send resume to: L&S Exyour
father
to and most frequently
press P O Box 726 Saint
questions, go to AskDoctorK.
Marys, OH 45885 or
destroy
your requested -- poems called colchicine is a mainstay
com, or write: Ask Doctor K,
of
gout
treatment.
A
brief
E - m a i l
t o :
The
KeyKey marriage as he did and essays, send course of oral corticosteroids 10 Shattuck St., Second Floor,
The
lsexpress@bright.net or
his own.
your name and
The
Key
call 419-394-7077
ToToBuying
The
Key
Buying
Boston, MA 02115.)
mailing
address, can also do the job.
To Buying
Buying
To
Or
Selling
The
key
to
managing
gout
Or
Selling
Or
DEAR ABBY: plus check or money
Or Selling
Selling
COPYRIGHT 2014 THE
OTR, CLASS A CDL
I was wondering if order for $7 (U.S. is to prevent attacks in the first
SEMI-DRIVER. Home
PRESIDENT
AND FELLOWS
place.
Preventive
medication
940
E.
FIFTH
ST.,
DELPHOS
940
E.
FIFTH
ST.,
DELPHOS
940
E.
FIFTH
ST.,
DELPHOS
you
could
help
me
funds)
to:
Dear
940419-692-7773
E. FIFTH Fax
ST.,419-692-7775
DELPHOS
most evenings, includes
OF
HARVARD
COLLEGE
can
help
if
you
have
frequent
out with a co-worker Abby -- Keepers
419-692-7773 Fax
Fax
419-692-7773
Fax419-692-7775
419-692-7775
419-692-7773
419-692-7775
benefits. Send resume to
www.rsre.com
DISTRIBUTED
BY
attacks,
severe
attacks,
a
www.rsre.com
who is constantly Booklet,
P.O.
AWC Trucking, 835
www.rsre.com
www.rsre.com
history of kidney stones or gout UNIVERSAL UCLICK FOR
Skinner St., Delphos,
on
her
phone.
Four,
Box
447,
Mount
11 OPEN
HOUSE
SATURDAY
1-3
OPEN
HOUSEHouse
SATURDAY
1-3 PM
PM
1 Open
Sunday
UFS
OH 45833 or to
five,
sometimes Morris, IL 61054- that affects several joints.
1
OPEN
HOUSE
SATURDAY
1-3
PM
19074
Rd.
19,
Ft.
Jennings
1
OPEN
HOUSE
SATURDAY
PM
ulmsinc@bizwoh.rr.com ,
19074 Rd. 19, Ft. Jennings1-3
1130 Walnut, Kansas City,
Three
types
of
medication
eight
times
a
day
0447.
Shipping
1:00Price
P.M.Reduced!
- 3:00 P.M.
Price
Reduced!
419-692-3951
19074
Rd.
19,
Ft. Jennings
Jennings
19074
Rd.
19,
MO
64106; 816-581-7500
can
help
prevent
gout
attacks:
$164,900-Ft
Jennings
SD
she
is
making
and
and
handling
are
5324
ReddReduced!
Rd.,
Delphos
$164,900-Ft
Jennings
SD
Price
33 bedroom,
brick/vinyl
ranch
home
with
open
Price
Reduced!
accepting
personal
included
in
the
price.
bedroom, 22 bath
bath
brick/vinyl
ranch
home
with
open
$169,500-Elida
SD SD
floor
on
1.24
Many
$164,900-Ft
SDIncludes
$164,900-Ft
Jennings
floor plan
plan
on
1.24 acre
acre lot.
lot.Jennings
Many updates.
updates.
Includes
calls.
Its
very
COPYRIGHT
24x24
attached
garage
and
36x24
Morton
Bring
Offers!!
3 bedroom,
2
bath
brick/vinyl
ranch
home
with
open distracting to the 2014 UNIVERSAL
24x24
attached
garage
and
36x24
Morton
building.
3 Move
bedroom,
2 bath
brick/vinyl
ranch
home building.
with
open
in
ready!
(42)
Brad
Stuber
419-236-2267/Derek
VANCREST floorfloor
Move in
ready!
(42)
Bradlot.
Stuber
419-236-2267/Derek
3BR/1
419-303-3313
BTH
ranch
with
4th
BR
and full
bath
plan
on
1.24
acre
Many
updates.
Includes
plan
on
1.24
acre
lot.
Many
updates.
Includes
Watkins
rest of the office. UCLICK
Watkins
419-303-3313
Health Care Centers
24x24
attached
garage
and
Morton
building.
in attached,
suite,
apx.
24x24
attachedprivate
garagemother-in-law
and 36x24
36x24 Morton
building.
When shes not at
1130
Walnut,
We need you... Move
11 ready!
OPEN
HOUSE
1-2:30
PM
in
Brad
Stuber
419-236-2267/Derek
2,529
total(42)
sq.ft.,
car attached
her desk, its then Kansas City, MO
Move
in ready!
(42)
Brad2SUNDAY
Stuber
419-236-2267/Derek
OPEN
HOUSE
SUNDAY
1-2:30garage.
PM
Watkins
419-303-3313
7040
Elida
Elida
my responsibility to 64106;
816-581Watkins
419-303-3313
Beautiful
country
on 2.6
acre corner lot
7040setting
Elida Rd.,
Rd.,
Elida
NOW HIRING!!
$112,000-Elida
SD
$112,000-Elida
SD
cover
for
her.
7500
Delphos
& Lima.and
Extremely
motivated
Brick ranch
with
Remodranch
with 33 bedrooms
bedrooms
and 11 full
full bath.
bath.
Remod-PM
1 between
OPEN
HOUSE
SUNDAY
1-2:30
Part Time
I would like to
1Brick
OPEN
HOUSE
1-2:30
eled
in 2004.
Detached
2SUNDAY
car garage
built
in 2008.PM
sellers.
(137)
Sandy Miller
419-236-3014
00103458

235 Help Wanted

Housekeeper
2 days a week and
every other weekend
6:30 am till 2:30pm
Please apply in
person at

VANCREST OF DELPHOS

eled in 2004. Detached 2 car garage built in 2008.


(51) Mike
Mike Reindel
Reindel
419-235-3607
7040419-235-3607
Elida Rd., Elida
(51)

7040 Elida Rd., Elida


BY
APPOINTMENT
$112,000-Elida
SD
BY
APPOINTMENT
$112,000-Elida
SD
1
Open
Houseand
Sunday
BrickBrick
ranch
with
3
bedrooms
$65,000-Elida
SD1 full bath. Remod$65,000-Elida
SD
ranch
with 31bedrooms
andon
1 full
bath.
Remod33 bedroom,
bath

story
nice
66x132
lot.
2:00
4:00
eled inCute
2004.
Detached
car
garage
built
in 2008.
Cute
bedroom,
1P.M.
bath2112

story
onP.M.
nice
66x132
lot.
eled
in
2004.
Detached
car
garage
built
in
2008.
Built
in
1920,
appx.
1378
sq.
ft.
of
living
area,
enclosed
Built inReindel
1920,603
appx.
1378
sq.
ft. ofDelphos
living area, enclosed
(51) Mike
419-235-3607
W.
5th
St.,
breezeway.
(122)
Bonnie
Shelley
419-230-2521
(51)
Mike
Reindel
419-235-3607
breezeway. (122) Bonnie Shelley 419-230-2521

1425 E 5th St.,


Delphos, OHIO

Public
Auction-Delphos
$74,000-Delphos
SD
BY
APPOINTMENT
$74,000-Delphos
SD SD
1-1/2
story
home
with
3BR/1BA
and
1800
sq
Wednesday,
October
15th
6:30
P.M.
1-1/2
story BY
homeAPPOINTMENT
with
3BR/1BA
and@over
over
1800
sq ftft

SDupdated
living
Many
updates
bath
living space.
space.2$65,000-Elida
Many
updates including
including
updated
bath
SD
story
apx.
2100
sq.ft.,
full
w/whirlpool
tub/shower,
windows,
roof
water
Cute4BR/1BTH
3 bedroom,
1$65,000-Elida
bathhome,
1newer
story
on
nice
w/whirlpool
tub/shower,
newer
windows,
roof &
&66x132
water lot.
heater.
Basement.
Detached
garage
w/loft.
3 bedroom,
11378
bath
1 ft.story
onw/loft.
nice
66x132
lot.
basement,
double
corner
lot,
18x30
barn,
fruit
Basement.
Detached
garage
BuiltCute
inheater.
1920,
appx.
sq.
of
living
area,
enclosed
(75)inBarb
Barb
Coilappx.
419-302-3478
Built
1920,
1378property.
sq. ft. of living
area,
enclosed
(75)
Coil
419-302-3478
trees.
Old
historical
Call
for
terms
&
breezeway.
(122)
Bonnie
Shelley
419-230-2521
FARM
FOR
SALE
PROFESSIONALLY
FARM
FOR
SALE
breezeway.
(122)
Bonnie
Shelley
419-230-2521
$74,000-Delphos
SD
Approx.
30
acres
in
Union
Twp,
Van
Wert
County.
Apconditions.(176)
Mike
Reindel
419-235-3607
REWARDING part-time
Approx. 30 acres in Union Twp, Van Wert County. Ap$74,000-Delphos
SDover 1800 sq ft
ac
w/
wooded.
story20
with
3BR/1BA
and
position for a Registered1-1/2 prox.
prox.
20home
ac tillable
tillable
w/ balance
balance
wooded.
(188)
Devin
Dye
419-303-5891
1-1/2
story
with
3BR/1BA
and overupdated
1800 sq bath
ft
(188)
Devinhome
Dye
419-303-5891
Nurse in Lima Special-living
space.
Many
updates
including
$50,000-Delphos SD
ists Office. Must be de-w/whirlpool
living space.
Many updates
including
updated
bath
tub/shower,
newer
windows,
roof
&
water
Price Reduced!!
tail oriented and able toheater.
w/whirlpool
tub/shower,
newer garage
windows,w/loft.
roof & water
Basement.
Detached
work part-time through
3BR/1BTH,
1

story
home,garage
1800+
sq. ft. Bath
heater.
Basement.
Detached
w/loft.
(75)
Barb
Coil
419-302-3478
the week plus alternate
w/whirlpool
tub/shower,
(75)
Barb Coil 419-302-3478
FARM FORnewer
SALEwindows, roof
Saturday mornings.
&
water
heater.
Basement.
Detached
garageApFARM
FOR
SALE
Approx.
30
acres
in
Union
Twp,
Van
Wert County.
Competitive compensation package with 401K.prox.
w/loft.
(75)
Barb
Coil 419-302-3478
Approx.
acres
in Union
Twp,wooded.
Van Wert County. Ap20 ac30
tillable
w/
balance
Please send resume to(188)
Devin
419-303-5891
prox.
20 acDye
tillable
w/ balance wooded.
Box 131, c/o Delphos
$157,500-Spencerville
SD
(188)
Devin
Dye
419-303-5891
Herald, 405 N. Main St.,
3BR/2

BTH,
1

story
home,
built in
Delphos, OH 45833.
1991, apx. 1,989 sq.ft. Basement, breezeway,
outbldg., & fenced back yard. Possible 4th BR
320 House For Rent
(10x11) on 1st floor.
(140) Mike Reindel 419-235-3607
SEVERAL MOBILE
EOE

Homes/House for rent.


View homes online at
www.ulmshomes.com or
inquire at 419-692-3951

510 Appliance
EMERSON UPRIGHT
deep freezer 14.1 cu. ft.,
$250. Ph. 419695-2601.
UPRIGHT
WATER
Cooler, 5-gal, like new,
$40, 567-204-5536

Building
520
Materials
BRICKS $25! (Approximately
75)
419-692-4861

540 Feed/Grain
CLEANED CEREAL rye
for sale. 419-204-8864

$189,500-Lincolnview SD
Just outside of Delphos
4BR/2BTH, historical brick 2 story on 3+ acres,
2,744 sq.ft. Natural woodwork & hardwood
floors throughout. 60x100 outbldg. w/ water &
small grain bldg. w/ electric. Well-kept home!
Seller providing home warranty.
(67) Bonnie Shelley 419-230-2521
COMMERCIAL
High traffic location just off SR 309 in Elida!
3 parcels totaling .925 acres. Two separate
buildings-one currently occupied & the other
vacant. Would make a great restaurant.
(45) Devin Dye 419-303-5891
LOTS
Three one acre parcels, will sell as whole or
individual parcels. Located on Lincoln Hwy. on
the West edge of Delphos. $20,000 per lot.
(184) Devin Dye 419-303-5891

Check us out at
www.delphosherald.com

S
610 Automotive

419-453-3620
625 Construction

POHLMAN
BUILDERS
ROOM ADDITIONS

GARAGES SIDING ROOFING


BACKHOE & DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

CONCRETE WALLS

Residential
& Commercial
Agricultural Needs
All Concrete Work

Mark Pohlman

419-339-9084
cell 419-233-9460

419-695-0015
Cash in on your collectibles
with the Classifieds.

out with the old.


in with the new.

Sell it in
The Delphos Heralds

CLASSIFIEDS

665

Lawn, Garden,
Landscaping

L.L.C.

Trimming & Removal


Stump Grinding
24 Hour Service Fully Insured

KEVIN M. MOORE

(419) 235-8051
TEMANS

670 Miscellaneous

Quality

Fabrication & Welding Inc.

GENERAL REPAIR
SPECIAL BUILT PRODUCTS

GREAT RATES
NEWER FACILITY

TRUCKS, TRAILERS
FARM MACHINERY
RAILINGS & METAL GATES
CARBON STEEL
STAINLESS STEEL
ALUMINUM

Larry McClure

5745 Redd Rd., Delphos

419-692-7261

Find A
Repairman
To Fix It

Bill Teman 419-302-2981


Ernie Teman 419-230-4890

Mueller Tree
Service

Tree Trimming,
Topping & Removal,
Brush Removal

419-203-8202

bjpmueller@gmail.com
Fully insured

COMMUNITY
SELF-STORAGE

Fabrication & Welding Inc.

Is It
Broken?

Trimming Topping Thinning


Deadwooding
Stump, Shrub & Tree Removal
Since 1973

670 Miscellaneous

419-339-0110

OUR TREE
SERVICE

FREE ESTIMATES
FULLY INSURED

POHLMAN
POURED

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ervice

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Delphos, OH 45833

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Comics & Puzzles


Zits

Friday, October 3, 2014 The Herald 11

Todays
Horoscope
By Eugenia Last

FRIDAY, OCT. 3, 2014

Blondie

Make a pact with yourself.


Keep your life in perspective
and dont get so bogged down
with professional issues that
you neglect personal matters.
Take time to savor the little
things. Nature and music both
have relaxing properties. A
romantic relationship will
bring great fulfillment.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23)
-- Dont let anyone put you
down. Deal with a hurtful
comment quickly if it is
causing you anguish. Make it
clear that you dont appreciate
being treated poorly.

For Better or Worse

Beetle Bailey

Pickles

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.


22) -- Hesitation and selfdoubt will deter you from
making the gains that will
help you feel good about who
you are and what you do.
Stop procrastinating and get
moving.
SAGITTARIUS
(Nov.
23-Dec. 21) -- Show more
determination; you have the
strength to go the distance, so
hit the ground running. Close
a deal or finish a project that
youve left lingering. Dont
fold under pressure.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22Jan. 19) -- You will be able to
coax others into joining your
cause. If you are vigilant, you
will be able to take advantage
of an opportunity. Keep your
emotions in check, and be
firm.

Crossword Puzzle

ACROSS
1 Let off
steam
5 Floor covering
8 Joke
11 Oak nut
13 Melodrama
shout
14 Heating fuel
15 The present
16 Cordial
18 Scheme
20 Licorice
herb
21 Glare protector
23 Tos opposite
24 ATM code
25 Year-end
tune
27 Clammy
31 Hill builder
32 Type of
wrestler
33 Blissful spot
34 Ancient
harp
36 Royal address
38 Yes, in
Kyoto
39 Neatnik
opposite
40 Buffalos
lake
41 Giants hero
of yore
42 Daffodil
digs
44 Big Dipper
neighbor
46 Floated
downriver
49 Wield a
hammer
50 Drought
result
52 Wading bird
56 -- de mer
57 Pool hall
item
58 Employees
hope
59 Moose kin
60 Explosive
letters
61 By Jove!

DOWN
1 Wine cask
2 Kind of system
3 Doze
4 Pitfalls
5 Horse hue
6 TV band
7 Succeed (2
wds.)
8 Mongolian
desert
9 Feels awful
10 Great merriment
12 Some hose
17 Battery post
19 Woke up
21 Upholstery
choice
22 Freshman
course word
23 Keys locale
24 Cronies
26 Mideast VIP
28 Committee
type (2 wds.)
29 Groovy
30 Clingy fabric

Yesterdays answers
35 Waned
37 More
spooky
43 Proclamation
45 Kelp
46 Domesticated
47 EuropeAsia range
48 Defraud

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.


19) -- Strive to be the best you
can be. Keep your options
open in order to take advantage
of promising choices that will
allow you to use your skills
diversely. Master something
that you enjoy doing.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March
20) -- Read between the
lines. False or conflicting
information is apparent. Ask
questions to satisfy your
curiosity and avoid ending up
in a compromising or awkward
position.

Garfield

ARIES (March 21-April


19) -- Reach outside the
family circle if you need help.
Emotions are bound to get in
the way if relatives or friends
try to give you advice. Look
for an unbiased counselor.
TAURUS (April 20-May
20) -- Difficulties may arise
at work if you are drawn
into a battle of wills with a
colleague. Take the high road
and stick to the facts. An
emotional reaction will leave a
bad impression.

Born Loser

Hagar the Horrible

Marmaduke

GEMINI (May 21-June


20) -- It would be a good idea to
revisit places that have special
meaning for you. Conjure up
pleasant memories in order to
gain some thought-provoking
insight into where you are and
where you want to end up.
CANCER
(June
21July 22) -- Trade shows
or conventions will offer
valuable information about
starting your own business.
Put yourself in the loop so
that you can keep abreast of
opportunities to highlight your
skills and services.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
-- Make the most of what you
have. Whiling away the time
hoping Lady Luck will fall
in your lap is not the answer.
Hard work, dedication and
persistence are required to
advance.

Barney Google & Snuffy Smith

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)


-- Be tolerant of other peoples
opinions. There is no need to
get upset if things arent done
your way. Trying to control
everything will work against
you.
COPYRIGHT 2014 United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.
DISTRIBUTED
BY
UNIVERSAL UCLICK FOR
UFS

Answer to Sudoku
Hi and Lois

The Family Circus By Bil Keane

49 No, to
Ivan
51 Large
cask
53 Tractortrailer
54 NASA
counterpart
55 Slugger
-- Williams

12 The Herald

Friday, October 3, 2014

www.delphosherald.com

Obama
touts
economic
76M households hit by
JPMorgan data breach gains under his watch
LOS ANGELES (AP) A huge
cyberattack against JPMorgan Chase &
Co. this summer compromised customer
information for about 76 million households and 7 million small businesses, the
bank said Thursday.
JPMorgan Chase said that names,
addresses, phone numbers and email
addresses were stolen from the companys
servers, but only customers who use the
websites Chase.com and JPMorganOnline
and the apps ChaseMobile and JPMorgan
Mobile were affected.
The New York-based bank said theres
no evidence that the data breach included account numbers, passwords, Social
Security numbers or dates of birth. It also
said it has not seen any unusual customer
fraud stemming from the data breach.
JPMorgan Chase, the nations biggest
bank by assets, has been working with
law enforcement officials to investigate
the cyberattack.
The bank discovered the intrusion on
its servers in mid-August and has since
determined that the breach began as early
as June, spokeswoman Patricia Wexler
said.
We have identified and closed the
known access paths, she said, declining
to elaborate.
She also declined to comment on
whether JPMorgan has been able to determine who was behind the cyberattack on
its servers.
In response to the data breach, the

company has disabled compromised


accounts and reset passwords of all its
technology employees, Wexler said.
In a post on its Chase.com website, the
bank told customers that it doesnt believe
they need to change their password or
account information. It also noted that
customers are not liable for unauthorized
transactions when they promptly alert the
bank.
The breach is yet another in a series
of data thefts that have hit financial firms
and major retailers.
Last month, Home Depot said that
malicious software lurking in its check-out
terminals between April and September
affected 56 million debit and credit cards.
Michaels and Neiman Marcus also have
been attacked by hackers in the past year.
A data breach at Target in December
compromised 40 million credit and debit
cards. TJX Cos.s theft of 90 million
records, disclosed in 2007, remains the
largest data breach at a retailer.
Last year, four Russian nationals and a
Ukrainian were charged in what has been
called the largest hacking and data breach
scheme ever prosecuted in the United
States. They were accused of running
a hacking organization that penetrated
computer networks of more than a dozen
major U.S. and international corporations
over seven years, stealing and selling at
least 160 million credit and debit card
numbers, resulting in losses of hundreds
of millions of dollars.

JIM KUHNHENN
Associated Press

EVANSTON, Ill.
President Barack Obama
acknowledged his pivotal
role in the midterm political campaign Thursday,
arguing that the November
congressional elections are
a referendum on his economic policies and blaming
Republicans for blocking his
efforts to boost wages and
create more jobs.
In a speech at Northwestern
University that marked a
shift in attention from foreign
entanglements to domestic
concerns, Obama laid claim
to an economic recovery
that he said has made steady
progress, yet he conceded
that many families have not
benefited from lower unemployment, beefed-up corporate profits and a pumped-up
stock market.
Obama offered a lengthy
defense of his policies, from
bailing out the auto industry
to his health care law, and he
renewed his call for a higher
minimum wage and equal
pay legislation. He said that
while hes not seeking election in November, these policies are on the ballot, every
single one of them.

Promoting pocketbook
issues in the homestretch of
the midterm election campaign, Obama fluctuated
between bullish assurances
that the recovery was real and
recognition that joblessness
and low wages still afflict
millions of Americans.
These truths arent
incompatible, he said. Our
broader economy in the
aggregate has come a long
way, but the gains of recovery
arent yet broadly shared.
He underscored the political climate just four weeks
before congressional elections, accusing Republicans
of rejecting efforts to increase
the minimum wage, refinance student loans or extend
unemployment benefits and
of pressing for more tax cuts
for the wealthy.
When nearly all the gains
of the recovery have gone
to the top 1 percent, when
income inequality is at as
high a rate as weve seen in
decades, he said, I find that
hard to swallow.
The speech came after
Obama spent weeks consumed with international crises, though the White House
had always planned to refocus on the economy to assure
voters that he hasnt forgotten

about their money struggles.


An Associated Press-GfK
poll released Wednesday
found that the economy is the
top issue for the Americans
most likely to cast ballots in
the midterm elections. Nine
out of 10 consider it extremely or very important in deciding their votes for Congress.
They have just one month
to make up their minds, and
Obama plans to speak out
more during that time on
pocketbook concerns, including a jobs speech today in
Indiana.
Besides
criticizing
Republicans for blocking
his economic proposals, he
also needled his favorite
news media target, saying
that fewer Republicans were
running against his health
care plan because while
good, affordable health care
might seem to be a fanged
threat to freedom on Fox
News, it turns out it is working pretty well in the real
world.
As the economy shows
signs of improving, however, Obamas challenge has
been to walk a delicate line
taking some credit for an
economic recovery without
seeming to disregard continuing hard times.

Protesters pack meeting on education changes Govt website for doc


GOLDEN, Colo. (AP) Students
and teachers fighting a plan to promote
patriotism and downplay civil disobedience in some suburban Denver U.S.
history courses packed a school board
meeting Thursday where the controversial changes could face a vote.
Turnout was so high that the teachers
union streamed video from the meeting
room which holds a couple hundred
people onto a big screen in the parking lot outside.
About 300 students, parents and
teachers opposed to the proposal rallied
in the parking lot and marched along
nearby streets before the meeting.
Carole Morenz, holding a small
American flag and a sign that said
History matters. Know the truth, traveled from Pueblo because she said shes
worried the change in approach to teaching history could be the biggest cultural
shift of our lifetime.
They will lose the knowledge of
what made America great, said Morenz,

Fire

(Continued from page 1)

adding that she has been concerned


about problems in education since she
began homeschooling her children in
the 1980s.
Dozens of students took the podium,
with just a minute each to speak. They
delivered 40,000 signatures they say
they gathered from around the country
in support.
Students in a majority of the 17 high
schools in Colorados second-largest
school district have left classes in droves
over the past few weeks, waving signs
and flags in protests organized by word
of mouth and social media.
Many teachers also have been calling
in sick, forcing school to be canceled
some days.
I respect the right of our students to
express their opinions in a peaceful manner, Superintendent Dan McMinimee
said. I do, however, prefer that our students stay in class. I have met with many
students and answered their questions.
The protests started Sept. 19, the

department.
The number of reported
fires in the United States fell
to a historic low in 2013 and
overall property damage due to
fire declined from 2012but
civilian fire deaths increased.
Even though the number of
structure fires has steadily
declined from their peak in
1977 of 1,098,000 to 487,500
in 2013, last year, there was:
a civilian fire injury every
33 minutes resulting in 15,925
injuries, a decrease of 3.5 percent;
a civilian fire death every

day after the Jefferson County school


board proposed creating a committee to
review texts and course plans, starting
with Advanced Placement history, to
make sure materials promote citizenship, patriotism, essentials and benefits
of the free-market system, respect for
authority and respect for individual
rights and dont encourage or condone civil disorder, social strife or
disregard of the law.
Board member Julie Williams, who
originally proposed the review, and
other backers of the proposal say students are being used as pawns by teachers, who are upset about a plan to base
raises on an evaluation system.
Williams addressed the proposal at
the start of the meeting, saying it was
aimed at making the curriculum fair and
was not censoring anything.
I hope this is a defining moment for
this board, that there is no one on the
board who supports censorship, she
said to some applause.

JACK GILLUM
Associated Press
WASHINGTON Another year, another headache for the
Obama administration over a health care website.
This one is called Open Payments. The goal was to
allow consumers to find out if their doctors are getting drug
company freebies, travel or other financial benefits that could
create ethical conflicts. But since the site launched Tuesday,
complaints have been piling up.
For starters, it lacks a Find Your Doctor button.
Its not a technology meltdown on the scale experienced
last year by HealthCare.gov, the online portal to coverage
under President Barack Obamas health care law. But even
some advocates who support the program are not pleased.
The Obama administration is asking for patience, and says
consumers will start seeing some improvements later this
month, particularly when it comes to navigation.
However, an Associated Press analysis found significant
problems, including large chunks of missing information and
disputed data. Those are not likely to be cleared up soon. The
administration says that could take until next summer.
Disclosure of financial relationships between clinicians and
industry has long been a priority for consumer advocates, who
worry about unseen incentives that may influence prescribing
decisions, the use of high-tech tests and even surgical procedures.
The Open Payments program was required by the presidents health care law. It was envisioned as a searchable
national library of payments to clinicians and teaching hospitals by drug companies and medical device manufacturers. For
now it falls well short.

including alarms that use


10-year batteries and hardHaving a working smoke
wired alarms.
alarm cuts the chances of
Test your smoke alarms
dying in a reported fire in half.
at least every month, using the
Almost two-thirds of home fire
test button.
deaths resulted from fires in
An ionization smoke
homes with no smoke alarms
alarm is generally more
or no working smoke alarms
responsive to flaming fires
missing, disconnected or
and a photo-electric is generdead batteries.
ally more responsive to smolDelphos Fire Rescue also
dering fire. For the best prohas a program in place if restection, or where extra time
idents need a battery for a
is needed to awaken or assist
smoke detector or detectors,
others, both types of alarms
NEW YORK (AP) paper received when it was
Streets said. We offer free
or combination of both are Facebook has tightened its published and have taken
batteries; just stop at the fire
recommended.
research guidelines follow- to heart the comments and
ing uproar over its disclosure criticism, Mike Schroepfer,
this summer that it allowed Facebooks chief technology
researchers to manipulate officer, wrote in a blog post
users feeds to see if their Thursday. It is clear now that
(Continued from page 1)
exhibit revealing the size and design of an actual 19th-century moods could be changed.
there are things we should
canal boat. The addition of a mural of Lock 24, an original
At issue was study in have done differently.
Local schoolchildren and dozens of members of the com- stone lock on Delphos north end, completes the effect of the which Facebook allowed
In the past three months,
munity banded together to carefully and properly remove old canal days. Educational panels documenting the history researchers to manipulate the Schroepfer said, Facebook
the waterlogged planks and to clean and chemically preserve of the Miami and Erie Canal, donated by the Miami and Erie content that appeared in the has given researchers clearer
them. The remains of the Marguerite lay in storage until the Canal Corridor Association, are mounted near the exhibit and main section, or news feed, guidelines on research prosummer of 2012 when they journeyed to their new home in the give context to the era when the Marguerite was a working of small fraction of the social cedures and has created an
Delphos Canal Commission Museum.
vessel on the historic waterway.
networks users. During the internal panel that will review
In the ensuing months, museum trustees and volunteers
Contact the museum at 419-695-7737 or info@delphos- weeklong study in January projects. But there will not be
spent countless hours forming the preserved hull into an canalcommission.com.
2012, data-scientists were an external review process
trying to collect evidence to and Facebook will continue
prove their thesis that peo- to encourage researchers to
ples moods could spread like study how people use its site.
an emotional contagion
We believe in research,
(Continued from page 3)
round pumpkin. The new autumn finally countryside during World War II. They depending on what they were because it helps us build a
better Facebook, Schroepfer
arrives and finds him sitting on a porch fall in love with an orphaned foal named reading.
Although this subject wrote. Like most companies
From the Childrens Corner:
with candle-light streaming from his Hero who is later stolen and taken into
Goodnight Football by Michael very scary jack-o-lantern grin! Boo! the war effort. Years later, Wolfie and matter was important to today, our products are built
Dahl
says a very scary Little Boo.
Hero are reunited when he finds Hero research, we were unpre- based on extensive research,
Do you have a little girl or guy who
Rotten Ralphs Rotten Family by working in the mines under terrible pared for the reaction the experimentation and testing.
lives, breaths and dreams football? Then Jack Gantos
conditions. This is a touching story of
this cute picture book is for you. Lots of
New chapter book readers will get courage, faithfulness and survival.
football terms are used like quarterback, a kick out of another laugh-out-loud
Super
Bowl
Champions:
receiver, goalpost, defense and huddle. Rotten Ralph story. Sarah, Ralphs Indianapolis Colts
This helps the reader gain understand- owner, has grown tired of his rottenSuper Bowl Champions: Green
ing of how the game is played. But ness (like gluing the pages of her book Bay Packers
attention is also paid to the atmosphere together with peanut butter) and sends
Super Bowl Champions: Pittsburgh
of a Friday night under the lights with him to his room to think long and hard Steelers
Answers to Thursdays questions:
cheerleaders, the marching band, mascot about why he is so rotten. So, Ralph
Super Bowl Champions: Chicago
It took David Kunst a little over four years from
and even the much visited concession decides to visit his family, who always Bears
June 10, 1970, to Oct. 5, 1974, to walk around the
stand! Dahl has also written Goodnight let him do whatever he wanted. There,
Super Bowl Champions: New
world.
Baseball, a popular read at the library.
he gets quite the eye-opening experi- Orleans Saints all by Aaron Frisch
You need two teams with four players and a horse
Little Boo by Stephan Wunderli
ence, when he discovers that they are
Its a little early in the season for a
for each to start a polo game.
Little Boo is a pumpkin seed who twice as rotten as he is!
Super Bowl prediction, but not too soon
Todays questions:
longs to be scary. All year long he
Horse Called Hero by Sam Angus
to read up on your favorite teams. These
How does a log cabin figure in the name of Log
rustles up his scariest Boo! only to
In the tradition of War Horse by five titles are written approximately in
Cabin syrup?
be told over and over that hes not Michael Morpugo comes another heart- a 2nd grade reading level, just right for
How did Maxwell House coffee get to be good to
scary at all. Winter comes along, then warming tale of a horse caught up in the young football fan. The books sport
the last drop?
spring. Finally in summer, he turns a World War and separated from those glossy photos of current and notable star
Answers in Mondays Herald.
into a sprout, then a flower (which is who love him. Wolfie and Dodo are players and coaches and an overview of
really not scary) and finally a plump London children forced to go to the the teams history.

Lady

two hours and 42 minutes


which equates to 3,240 civilian deaths, an increase of 13.5
percent; and
a home fire every 85 seconds.
Streets recommends these
tips:
Choose a smoke alarm
that bears the label of a recognized testing laboratory.
Install smoke alarms in
every sleeping room, outside
each separate sleeping area
and on every level of your
home, including the basement.
Replace all smoke alarms,

payments not up to snuff

Facebook tightens
research guidelines

Library

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