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DHI Media Staff Reports

DELPHOS The 2014


Canal Days Queen Pageant
will be held at 7 p.m. Sunday
in the Jefferson Middle
School Auditorium.
Tickets are $5 at the door.
Peoples Choice votes will
also be available for pur-
chase at a cost of 2 for $1 or
12 for $5. More than $2,000
in scholarships and prizes
will be awarded.
The event is once again
under the direction of
Kimberly Ousley with the
assistance of Megan Goedde
and Brooke Etzkorn. Rick
Miller will be the Master
of Ceremonies for the eve-
ning. Escorts will be Austin
Heiing, Alex Odenweller,
Brandon Slate and Trey
Smith, with Little Princesses
Avery and Addison Eickholt,
Bailey Hile, Amity Parent
and Madison Schnipke-
Patton.
Here are the contestants:
Kiya Wollenhaupt is
currently a sophomore at
Jefferson High School and
is the daughter of Dave and
Robin Wollenhaupt. She
is a member of the soc-
cer, basketball and softball
teams at Jefferson; she also
works as a soccer official
for the Delphos Soccer
Association. In school,
Wollenhaupt is also a mem-
ber of the concert and show
choirs and the marching and
concert bands. She is active
with the FCA, Student
Council, Quiz Bowl Team,
school musical, Varsity
D-Club and serves as a
class officer. She volunteers
with the Relay for Life and
the Kiwanis Fourth of July
Celebration.
Friday, September 12, 2014 Vol. 145 No. 64
DELPHOS
HERALD
The
75 daily Delphos, Ohio
Telling The Tri-Countys Story Since 1869
Convicted killer escapes Lima
prison, p3

Slow day for Delphos varsity
teams, p6
Upfront
Forecast
Obituaries 2
State/Local 3
Religions 4
Community 5
Sports 6-8
Television 9
Classifieds 10
Comics and Puzzles 11
World News 12
Index
www.delphosherald.com
Clarification: Participants in the After-school Bowling
Program who are not currently riding bus 9 can be dropped
off by a parent or caregiver or they can walk to the bowling
alley. Bus 9 cannot accommodate any more children.
Wollenhaupt Grothouse
Teman Gorman Schrader Berelsman
Fitch Wurst Fischbach
Olmeda
Wehri
11 vying for 2014 Canal Days Queen crown
See QUEEN, page 12
BY STEPHANIE GROVES
DHI Media Staff Writer
sgroves@delphosherald.com
DELPHOS In 1969, Becky
(Williams) Strayer and Phyllis Phud
(Kill) Calvelage were both spurred by
their boyfriends to compete for the
title of Miss Delphos - the first Miami-
Erie Canal Queen Pageant during Old
Fashioned Canal Days.
I was out on a lark and thought to
myself I might as well do it, Strayer
chuckled.
I wanted to win money to fix Jims
(Calvelage, her husband) car, Calvelage
said.
The pageant was held at Jefferson
Middle School. Strayer said they changed
clothing in the gym lockers downstairs.
I wore a brown leather bathing suit,
she said. We walked across the stage
and down a walkway in front of four
judges.
We were interviewed backstage and
asked questions on stage, Calvelage
said. We were judged on our personal-
ity, figure and facial beauty.
Strayer said each of the contestants
were asked why they wanted to be Miss
Delphos.
When I was asked, I responded with
Because my boyfriend wanted me to,
Strayer laughed. Phud gave a superb
answer.
I said The most important thing is
for people to be kind to each other and
kindness goes a long way, Calvelage
added. My mom taught us to be kind to
everyone.
Strayer recalls Miss Delphos
competition, lifetime friendship
A newspaper clipping from the Sept. 11, 1969, Delphos Herald shows the
contestants in the Miss Delphos Pageant held for the first time during that
years Canal Days. (Photo submitted) See STRAYER, page 12
Mostly cloudy today and
tonight. A chance of show-
ers tonight. Highs in the
mid 60s and lows in the
lower 50s. See page 2.
Delphos remembers ...
Flags were at half-staff Thursday in remem-
brance of the terrorist attacks on Sept. 11, 2001,
which killed more than 3,000 on U.S. soil. The
Optimist Club presented its Avenue of Flags at
Veterans Memorial Park and other prominent
location in Delphos. (DHI Media/Nancy Spencer)
1
THURSDAY 5-9
THE TOAST
Reservations Only
WITH JOE DENIM
SUNDAY
10-12 CHEERLEADING
2-3 THE GRAND PARADE
3-6 DUECES WILD
FRIDAY
6-7:30 BATTLE OF THE BUSINESSES
8-12 NASHVILLES JOE DENIM
SATURDAY
2-4 BASKET BINGO
5-9 CAR SHOW/CRUISE-IN
8-12 BROTHER BELIEVE ME
ENTERTAINMENT
SEPTEMBER 18-21
WWW.DELPHOSCHAMBER.COM/CANALDAYS
2
For movie information, call
419.238.2100
or visit
vanwertcinemas.com
Van-Del drive-in
closed for the season
HERALD DELPHOS
The
Telling The Tri-Countys Story Since 1869
405 N. Main Street Delphos, OH 45833-1598
visit our website at: www.delphosherald.com
News
419-695-0015 Ext. 134
nspencer@delphosherald.com
Fax 419-692-7704
When you see us at an
event, look
for a
photo
gallery
2 The Herald Friday, September 12, 2014
www.delphosherald.com
The Delphos
Herald
Nancy Spencer, editor
Ray Geary,
general manager
Delphos Herald, Inc.
Lori Goodwin Silette,
circulation manager
The Delphos Herald
(USPS 1525 8000) is published
daily except Sundays, Tuesdays
and Holidays.
The Delphos Herald is deliv-
ered 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.

405 North Main St.
TELEPHONE 695-0015
Office Hours
8 a.m.-5 p.m. Mon.-Fri.
POSTMASTER:
Send address changes
to THE DELPHOS HERALD,
405 N. Main St.
Delphos, Ohio 45833
For The Record
FROM THE ARCHIVES
WEATHER
FUNERALS
LOTTERY
OBITUARIES
Mary Louise (Mueller)
McGue died peacefully on
Sept. 5, 2014, at home in
Traverse City, Migh., with the
dignity and grace with which
she had lived her entire life.
She was preceded in death
by her husband Louis.
Born in Delphos, she was
the eldest of five siblings and
is survived by two. Her three
children, along with their
spouses and four grandchil-
dren, will forever miss her
humor and wise counsel.
Mary Lou had a long and
varied career, a strong woman
well ahead of her time. She
was a voracious reader,
Scrabble queen and master of
the crossword. She would like
to be remembered for never
suffering fools gladly and that
she rarely met a Republican
she liked but they know who
they are!
Her friends are invited
to share a celebration of
Mary Lous life from 5-7
p.m. on Oct. 16 at the Lima
Holiday Inn or at 4:30 p.m.
on Oct. 18 in Traverse City
at the Unitarian Universalist
Congregation.
Memorials in her honor
should be directed to the
Grand Traverse County Com-
mission on Aging (520 W.
Front St., Suite B, Traverse
City, 49686).
In the night of death,
hope sees a star and listen-
ing love hears the rustle of a
wing. Mary Lou and Louie
are together in peace.
Mary Louise
(Mueller) McGue
Edwina Kay Prine
April 16, 1961-
Sept. 10, 2014
LIMA Edwina Kay
Prine, 53, passed away
Wednesday at her residence.
She was born April
16, 1961, in Lima to Paul
Lehmkuhle, Sr., of Fort
Jennings and Patti Martin
of Lima.
On July 8, 1978, she
was united in marriage to
Rodney Prine, who survives
in Lima.
She is survived by
two daughters, Summer
(Matt) Rora of St. Marys
and Sabrina Gallaspie of
Lima; one son, Nate Prine
of Ada; two brothers,
David (Mindy) Lehmkuhle
of Kentucky and William
Lehmkuhle of Delphos; five
sisters, Penny Watkins of
Lima, Pam (Jim) Geckle of
Elida, Paula (Don) Cox of
Columbus, JoEllen Gross
of Gilboa and Irene (Ron)
Sheets of Lima; and five
grandchildren, Trever and
Christian Triplett, Skylynn
Prine and Dakota and
Savannah Gallaspie.
She was preceded in
death by a brother, Paul
Lehmkulhle, Jr.
Kay was a member of
St. Rose Catholic Church in
Lima. She was also a mem-
ber of the Eagles #370. She
was a driver for the Allen
County RTA and had driven
school buses for both Bath
and Shawnee schools. She
enjoyed camping and col-
lecting angels.
Mass of Christian Burial
will be at 1 p.m. Saturday
at St. John the Evangelist
Church, Delphos, with
Father Dave Reinhart offici-
ating. Burial will follow at
Ridge Cemetery in Middle
Point.
Friends and family may
call from 2-8 p.m. today at
Harter and Schier Funeral
Home where a parish wake
service will be held at 7:30
p.m.
Memorial contributions
may be made to American
Cancer Society or her family.
To leave condolences,
please go to www.hart-
erandschier.com.
Wheat $4.84
Corn $3.21
Soybeans $13.20
Gertrude Gert L.
Gilden
Jan. 12, 1923-Sept. 11, 2014
DELPHOS Gertrude
Gert L. Gilden, 91, passed
away Thursday at Vancrest
Healthcare of Delphos.
She was born Jan. 12, 1923
in Gomer to Guy and Carrie
(Strubel) Hasson. Both pre-
ceded her in death.
On Dec. 16, 1951, she was
united in marriage to Warren
N. Gilden, who preceded her
in death on July 17, 1976.
Gertrude was a homemak-
er. She was also a bookkeeper
and payroll clerk for Pillsbury
Mills and ACME Photo
Company. She volunteered
at St. Ritas Medical Center
and the Interfaith Thrift Shop
for many years. She loved to
read and tend to her flower
gardens. She was a member
of Trinity United Methodist
Church in Delphos. She was
an Eastern Star of the 26th
Order member for over 50
years.
She is survived by one
son, Jerry (Teresa) Gilden
of Delphos; one daughter,
Kerrie (Phil) Harrison of
Spencerville; five grandchil-
dren, Megan Gilden, Jenna
Gilden, Erik Jettinghoff,
Wes (Bryttany) Harrison and
James Harrison; one great-
grandchild, Dalton Harrison;
a niece, Denise (Dan) Cook of
Gomer; and other nieces and
nephews.
She was also preceded in
death by six brothers, Victor,
Paul, Cloyd, Reuben Bud,
Donald Don and Guy; and
three sisters, Dorothy Koch,
Geneva Neva Leis and Nina
Barnes.
Funeral services will begin
at 11 a.m. Monday at Harter
and Schier Funeral Home,
Pastor Andrew Atkins offici-
ating. Burial will be in Walnut
Grove Cemetery.
Funeral services may be
viewed online at www.hart-
erandschier.com at the time of
the service (password: web-
cast9).
Friends and family may
pay their respects from 2-8
p.m. on Sunday and one hour
prior to the service Monday
at the funeral home, where an
Eastern Star service will be
held at 8 p.m. Sunday.
Memorial contributions
may be made to St. Judes in
her name.
To leave condolences, go
to www.harterandschier.com.
KLAUSING, Lenore C.
Nori, 91, of Spencerville,
Mass of Christian Burial
will begin at 10:30 a.m.
Saturday at St. John the
Baptist Catholic Church,
the Rev. David Reinhart
officiating. Burial will be
in the church cemetery.
Friends may call from 2-8
p.m. today at Thomas E.
Bayliff Funeral Home,
Spencerville. Condolences
may be sent to tbayliff@
woh.rr.com.
POHLMAN, Norma J
Nukker, 80, of Delphos,
Mass of Christian Burial
will be held at 11 a.m. today
at St. John the Evangelist
Catholic Church in Delphos,
with Fathers Reinhart and
Johnson officiating. Burial
will follow at Resurrection
Cemetery. Memorial con-
tributions can be made to
Juvenile Diabetes Research
Foundation or American
Lung Association.
PARSONS, Loretta
M., 76, of Spencerville,
funeral services will be
held at 11 a.m. today at
Harter and Schier Funeral
Home, President Michael
Bissegger officiating.
Burial will be in Ridge
Cemetery. Visitation will be
one hour prior to the service
at Harter and Schier Funeral
Home. To view funeral
services online, visit hart-
erandschier.com at the time
of the service (Password:
webcast9). Memorial con-
tributions may be made to
the familys choice.
KOHLER, Dorothy
(Cross) Diltz, 94, funeral
services will be held at
6 p.m. today at Harter &
Schier Funeral Home, the
Rev. Gary Fish officiat-
ing. Burial will be 11 a.m.
Saturday at Walnut Grove
Cemetery. Visitation will
be from 2-6 p.m. today at
the funeral home. Memorial
contributions may be made
to Alzheimers Association
or donors choice. To leave
condolences or view funer-
al service online, visit hart-
erandschier.com at the time
of the service (Password:
webcast9).
Delphos St. Johns
Week of Sept. 15-19
Monday: Lasagna roll ups/garlic toast, green beans, Romaine
salad, applesauce, fresh fruit, milk.
Tuesday: Chicken strips/whole grain roll, broccoli, Romaine
salad, pears, fresh fruit, milk.
Wednesday: Tenderloin sandwich, whole grain bun, creamed
rice, Romaine salad, pineapple, fresh fruit, milk.
Thursday: Coney dog/onions, whole grain bun, carrots,
Romaine salad, peaches, fresh fruit, milk.
Friday: Tacos/ soft/ hard/ lettuce/ tomato/ cheese/ onion,
black beans, Romaine salad, mixed fruit, fresh fruit, milk.
Delphos City Schools
Week of Sept. 15-19
Monday: Breakfast for lunch - Eggo pancakes, waffles or
french toast, oven potatoes, orange juice cup, milk.
Tuesday: Franklin/Landeck: Mini corn dogs; Middle/Senior:
Corn dog on a stick, carrots, fruit, milk.
Wednesday: Cheese quesadilla or pizza, salad, fruit, milk.
Thursday: Chicken and waffles, chicken fingers, eggo
waffle, green beans, pineapple tidbits, milk.
Friday: Nachos with cheese sauce and meat, breadsticks,
carrots, mixed fruit, milk
Jennings Local Schools
Week of Sept. 15-19
High school: Additional fruit and vegetable daily. High
school: Ala Carte pretzel and cheese every Friday, and salad
bar every Wednesday.
Monday: Salisbury steak, mashed potatoes, peas, dinner roll, fruit.
Tuesday: Pepperoni pizza, dinner roll, green beans, fruit.
Wednesday: BBQ pork sandwich, baked beans, cheese slice,
sherbet, fruit.
Thursday: Chicken tetrazinni, breadstick, broccoli, fruit.
Friday: Sloppy Jo sandwich, carrots, cheese slice, cookie, fruit.
Ottoville Local Schools
Week of Sept. 15-19
Monday: Hot dog/chili dog, Romaine blend lettuce, pineapple, milk.
Tuesday: Hamburger with cheese slice and lettuce, French
fries, mixed fruit, cookie, milk.
Wednesday: Chili soup with crackers, butter or peanut butter
bread, carrot stix, cheese stix, applesauce cup, milk.
Thursday: Chicken patty, Romaine blend lettuce, peaches, milk.
Friday: Chicken fajita with cheese, lettuce, tomato, green
beans, Mandarine oranges, milk.
Spencerville
Week of Sept. 15-19
Monday: Grades K-4: Hot dog on a bun, baked beans, car-
rots and dip, pineapple, milk. Grades 5-12: BBQ pork sand-
wich, baked beans, carrots and dip, pineapple, milk.
Tuesday: Doritos taco salad, salsa and sour cream, 100%
juice, milk.
Wednesday: Breakfast pizza, smiley fries, grapes, milk.
Thursday: Salisbury steak, mashed potatoes/gravy, carrots
and dip, sweet roll, applesauce, milk.
Friday: Chicken tenders, green beans, fresh veggies and dip,
brownie bar, peaches, milk.
One Year Ago
If youre looking for an outdoor activity mixed with some
skill and friendly competition on Saturday morning of Canal
Days, there will be a Disc Golf Tournament at Leisure Park
with players meeting at 9 a.m. at the shelterhouse and a shot-
gun start at 9:30 a.m. Disc Golf Tournament Chairs Dana
Sterling and Jim Vaske have been helping with Canal Days
festivities for a few years.
25 Years Ago 1989
Steam locomotive 765 and its accompanying coal tender
and 10 passenger cars attracted interest as it passed through
Delphos Monday afternoon. Approximately 350 people were
waiting to examine and tour the locomotive when it arrived in
Lima for a 40-minute stop. This was the locomotives second
trip to Lima since it was built in 1944 at Lima Locomotive
Works, according to railroad buff Dan Kramer of Delphos.
Ottoville improved its record to 3-2 with a 15-5 and 15-2
volleyball win over Fort Jennings Monday. Service leaders
for Fort Jennings were Amy Howbert, 8 of 8; and Stephanie
Vetter and Jen Geise, 5 of 6. Geise was 3 of 3 and Vicki
Wieging 5 of 6 in receptions.
Just as Marion Catholic began to think it might be in line
to upset undefeated St. Johns, the Blue Jays delivered two
quick jolts that sealed the Irish fate. The Irish evened the
score at 13 with 5:20 left in the first half but were stung
by two Doug Rode touchdowns within the next 3:44 as the
Blue Jays racked up a 27-13 win on a rainy Saturday night
at Marion.
LOCAL GRAINS
See ARCHIVES, page 12
Driver cited after rear-ending vehicle
INFORMATION
SUBMITTED
DELPHOS A driver
was cited for failure to have
assured cleared distance
ahead after rear-ending a
vehicle at 3:11 p.m. Tuesday.
Jane Lehmkuhle, 58, of
Delphos was travelling north-
bound on Clay Street when
she stopped at the posted
stop sign at the intersection at
Second Street.
John Rostorfer, 85, of
Delphos was travelling
northbound directly behind
Lehmkule.
A semi truck began to
turn southbound onto Clay
Street from Second Street
so Rostorfer moved slight-
ly to the east to give it
room to turn. While doing
so, he came too close to
the rear of Lehmkuhles
vehicle and then acceler-
ated. Rostorfer was unable
to brake in time to avoid
striking the vehicle.
He was cited for failure to
have assured cleared distance
ahead to stop.
No injuries were reported
and minor damage was to
both vehicles was reported.
Karl Dean Hirn
LIMA Karl Dean
Hirn, 70, of Perry Township
died at 4:03 p.m. Wednesday
at St. Ritas Medical Center.
Arrangements are incom-
plete at the Thomas E. Bayliff
Funeral Home in Spencerville
where friends may call after 2
p.m. Monday.
CLEVELAND (AP)
These Ohio lotteries were
drawn Thursday:
Mega Millions
Estimated jackpot: $52
million
Pick 3 Evening
4-0-2
Pick 3 Midday
7-8-7
Pick 4 Evening
9-6-0-8
Pick 4 Midday
4-2-5-2
Pick 5 Evening
2-8-7-2-4
Pick 5 Midday
3-6-1-8-2
Powerball
Estimated jackpot: $149
million
Rolling Cash 5
03-06-15-19-39
Estimated jackpot:
$348,000
WEATHER FORECAST
Tri-County
Associated Press
TODAY: Mostly cloudy.
Highs in the mid 60s.
Northeast winds 5 to 15 mph.
TONIGHT: Mostly cloudy
with a 30 percent chance of
showers. Lows in the lower
50s. North winds 5 to 10 mph.
SATURDAY: Partly
cloudy in the morning then
becoming mostly sunny.
Highs in the mid 60s. North
winds 5 to 10 mph.
INFORMATION SUBMITTED
LIMA Attorney General Mike
DeWine, Lima Police Chief Kevin
Martin, and Allen County Sheriff
Samuel Crish announced Thursday
an aggressive plan to try to stop the
fast flow of heroin along I-75 through
Allen County. Grant money from
the Ohio Attorney Generals Safe
Neighborhoods Initiative will fund
two investigators for two years in
both the Lima Police Department and
the Allen County Sheriffs Office.
The heroin epidemic, unfortu-
nately, continues to invade Lima,
Allen County, and many other Ohio
communities, cultivating drug use
and prompting other crimes, said
Attorney General DeWine. We hope
this extra manpower in Lima and
Allen County can help stop the con-
stant cash and drug pipeline that rolls
through that area on some major
roadways in Ohio.
The Lima Police Department will
receive $272,192.16 and the Allen
County Sheriffs Office will receive
$247,409.78.
Im excited about this grant,
because I truly believe this will have a
big impact in our county and even sur-
rounding counties, said Sheriff Crish.
Were taking an aggressive approach.
We are not going to allow the heroin
epidemic to poison our community.
Were not just attacking the crime
of heroin trafficking, were going
after the off-shoots of heroin: human
trafficking crimes and money laun-
dering as well, said Chief Martin.
We are so fortunate to have this
grant from Attorney General DeWine
to give us resources that I know will
make an impact.
Law enforcement tactics that are
being used in Lima and Allen County
with this new heroin grant money have
proven to be effective in other areas
of the state with task forces under the
Ohio Attorney Generals Office. In fis-
cal year 2014 Ohio Organized Crime
Investigations Commission (OOCIC)
task forces seized 46 pounds of heroin
worth a street value of more than $2
million dollars.
In August, Lucas County received a
$650,000 grant to fund a pilot program
that will utilize partnerships and resourc-
es throughout the area to assist those
suffering from a heroin addiction. Based
on the effectiveness of the program, a list
of best practices will be established for
other communities around Ohio.
Based on statistics collected from
county coroners in Ohio, approxi-
mately 17 people died every week
from a heroin overdose in 2013.
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Friday, September 12, 2014 The Herald 3
STATE/LOCAL
www.delphosherald.com
Attorney General DeWine announces
grant money to combat heroin epidemic
Attorney General Mike DeWine was in Lima Thursday to announce
Lima and Allen County will receive grant money from the Ohio At-
torney Generals Safe Neighborhoods Initiative to try to stop the
heroin epidemic. (DHI Media/Anne Coburn-Grifs)
City water department to flush hydrants
INFORMATION SUBMITTED
DELPHOS The City of
Delphos Water Department will
perform hydrant flushing begin-
ning Monday for two weeks.
Workers will begin flushing at
8 a.m. and continue until the
last hydrant on that days list
has been flushed. Resident may
notice cloudy or discolored water
and should be cautious washing
clothing without running water
first.
The schedule is as follows:
Monday
South Main at Clime Street;
Clime Street at the canal; South
Jefferson and Annex Drive; South
Clay and King Street; South Erie
and Skinner, Wayne and Superior
streets; and West Jennings and
Hudson Street.
Tuesday
The end of Davis Street; South
Clay and Central Street; South
Bredeick and Cleveland Street;
South Cass and Cherry Street; South
Bredeick and Skinner Street; South
Bredeick and Southridge Road; end
of South Clay Street; end of South
Erie Street; and the flush out on
South Cass Street.
Wednesday
Franklin and Suthoff Street;
Main Street between Cleveland and
Suthoff Street; South Canal and
Central Street; Main Street between
railroad tracks; South Jefferson
and Cleveland Street; Franklin and
Jackson Street; Pierce and Euclid
Street; Pierce and Cleveland Street;
Spencerville Avenue and Allen
Avenue; South Cass at the railroad
tracks; and the flush out on East
Cleveland Street.
Thursday
Amanda Avenue and South
Adams Street; Holland Avenue
trailer court second hydrants;
Spencerville Avenue and Suthoff
Street; Dewey and Euclid Street;
Harmon and Grant Street; Jackson
Street and Eastwood; Jackson
Street between Grant and Pierce
Street; and the last hydrant south on
Spencerville Avenue.
Sept. 19
South Clay and First Street;
Pierce Street and First Street north
of the railroad tracks; Summers
Lane and Elida Avenue; East
Second and Adams Street; the flush
out on Summers Lane; Main and
Second Street; West Second and
Maple Street; West Second and
West Street; and the flush out on
Westbrook.
Sept. 22
East Second and Douglas; East
Third and Scott Street; East Fourth
and Main; West Third and Canal
Street; West Fifth and Jefferson
Street; West Fifth and Bredeick
Street; and East Fourth Street east
of the creek.
Sept. 23
North Clay and Sixth Street;
North Bredeick and Sixth Street;
North Bredeick and Seventh Street;
North Canal at the Municipal
Building; West Eighth and Metbliss
Avenue; the Old Lincoln Inn; West
Fifth Extended; Short Street; Rose
Avenue in the Menke Addition; the
flush out St. Rt. 66 (north of bridge/
east side).
Sept. 24
North and North Jefferson
Street; North Main and Seventh
Street; North Main and 11th
Street; North Main at Tent and
Awning; North Washington and
12th Street; North Franklin and
Ninth Street; North Pierce and
Sixth Street; the flush at 11th and
North Franklin Street; and 13th
and North Washington Street.
Sept. 25
Craig Avenue and Ninth Street;
North Scott and Seventh Street;
North Moening and Sixth Street;
East Sixth Street west of Fort
Jennings Road; East Seventh Street
west of Fort Jennings Road; East
Fifth and Carolyn Drive; Carolyn
Drive at the 1000 block Fairlane
Drive; the flush out on Fort Jennings
Road and Carolyn Drive; and Marsh
Avenue and Hedrick Street.
Sept. 26
West Seventh and Jefferson
Street; hydrant behind Gressels
building (now K and M Tire) on
Gressel Drive; 1000 block of Fort
Jennings Road; East Fifth Street
east of Arbys; the east hydrant on
Grothause Street; Ambrose Drive
at the last hydrant; Gressel Drive
at Toledo Molding & Die; the 700
block of Caroyln Drive; Ricker
and Rozelle; Gressel Drive last
hydrant; and St Rt 190 500
feet north of Krieft St at Helen
Kavermans.
New Wassenberg exhibit to open
The Wassenberg Art Center will open its next exhibit, The Symphony of
My Heart, featuring over 500 art postcards by Iowa City artist Saffron
Goetschius. The postcards will hang from the trusses in the Wendel Gallery,
signifying the fragile balance of life and relationship. The exhibit will open
at 6 p.m. Saturday with a free public opening reception where members
of the public can meet the artist. Free gourmet refreshments and a cash
bar will be available. The exhibit runs through Sept. 28. During the last
week of the show, Saffron encourages visitors to cut down a postcard they
nd meaningful and take it home as a gift. For information on exhibits,
classes and programs check out the art centers website. The Wassenberg
Art Center is located at 214 S. Washington St. (former Van Wert Armory).
(Photo submitted)
Like The
Delphos Herald
on Facebook
and follow us
on Twitter.
Police: Convicted
killer of three
students escapes
LIMA (AP) The con-
victed killer of three Ohio
students at a high school
cafeteria escaped from a
Lima prison Thursday, and a
search was underway, police
said.
Nineteen-year-old T.J.
Lane escaped along with two
other inmates and one of the
inmates was captured, Lima
police Sgt. Andy Green said.
A search was underway in
woods and a residential area
near the prison, he said, and
the two escapees are consid-
ered dangerous.
Authorities said they do
not believe the two men are
armed, however. They had
no further information on
how the inmates escaped
from prison. Green said the
police were notified about 8
p.m. Thursday evening.
Lane pleaded guilty last
year to shooting three stu-
dents in February 2012 at
Chardon High School, east
of Cleveland. He said he
didnt know why he did.
He was given three life sen-
tences.
Authorities identified the
other inmate as Clifford E.
Opperud, 45, and said he
was serving a sentence for
aggravated robbery, bur-
glary, and kidnapping.
Prosecutors say Lane
took a .22-caliber pistol and
a knife to the school and
fired 10 shots at a group
of students in the cafete-
ria. Daniel Parmertor and
Demetrius Hewlin, both 16,
and Russell King Jr., 17,
were killed.
Lane was at Chardon
waiting for a bus to the alter-
native school he attended,
for students who havent
done well in traditional set-
tings.
Before Lanes case went
to adult court in 2012, a
juvenile court judge ruled
that Lane was mentally com-
petent to stand trial despite
evidence he suffers from hal-
lucinations, psychosis and
fantasies. At his sentencing,
Lane was defiant, smiling
and smirking throughout,
including while four rela-
tives of the victims spoke.
Storm damage west of
Delphos not from a tornado
INFORMATION
SUBMITTED
VAN WERT COUNTY
On Thursday afternoon, Van
Wert Emergency Management
Director Rick McCoy met
with several officials from
the National Weather Service
Office in Northern Indiana
to conduct a complete dam-
age survey from Wednesday
afternoons storms that moved
through the county.
What was originally
thought to be a 1.5-mile path
turned out to be a 6-mile path
of damage affecting main-
ly corn and soybean fields.
Several barns sustained dam-
age in the path.
The path began in a field
west of Morgan Road and
moved northeast across State
Road and continued just west
of Delphos and ended near
US Rt. 30 and State Route 66.
In addition to the damage
reported Wednesday, Chad
Overholt on Middle Point-
Wetzel Road reported minor
damage at his property from
the strong winds and a num-
ber of trees were discovered
snapped north of State Road
in a wooded grove west of
Middle Point-Wetzel Road.
The Weather Service will
prepare its report and issue a
statement but it appears from
preliminary reports the dam-
age was caused from a com-
bination of microburst winds
with embedded gustandoes.
The microburst winds were
caused by the storm pulsing
and pushing intense winds
towards the ground and at the
same time with its forward
movement, was causing gus-
tandoes to quickly spin up
and add to the damage.
There were no indica-
tions from the preliminary
survey that a tornado was
actually present during the
event and once National
Weather Service Officials
have reviewed all of their
radar data and findings, the
report will be issued, McCoy
said.
PITSENBARGER
SUPPLY
234 N. Canal St.
Delphos, O.
Ph. 692-1010
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209 W. 3rd St.
Delphos, Ohio 45833
419-692-8055
Vanamatic
Company
AUTOMATIC
AND HAND
SCREW MACHINE
PRODUCTS
701 Ambrose Drive
Delphos, O.
DELPHOS BAPTIST CHURCH
Pastor Jerry Martin
302 N Main, Delphos
419-692-0061 or 419-302-6423
Sunday - 10:00 a.m. Sunday
School (All Ages) , 11:00 a.m.
Sunday Service, 6:00 p.m
Sunday Evening Service
Wednesday - 7:00 p.m. Bible
Study, Youth Study
Nursery available for all ser-
vices.
FIRST UNITED PRESBYTERIAN
310 W. Second St. - 419-692-
5737
Pastor Harry Tolhurst
Sunday: 11:00 Worship
Service - Everyone Welcome
Communion first Sunday of
every month.
Communion at Van Crest
Health Care Center - First
Sunday of each month at 2:30
p.m., Nursing Home and assist-
ed living.
MARION BAPTIST CHURCH
2998 Defiance Trail, Delphos
419-339-6319
Services: Sunday - 11:00 a.m.
and 6:00 p.m.; Wednesday -
7:00 p.m.
FIRST ASSEMBLY OF GOD
Where Jesus is Healing
Hurting Hearts!
808 Metbliss Ave., Delphos
One block so. of Stadium Park.
419-692-6741
Lead Pastor - Dan Eaton
Sunday - 10:30 a.m. -
Worship Service with Nursery
& Kids Church; 6:00 pm. Youth
Ministry at The ROC & Jr. Bible
Quiz at Church
Monday - 7:00 p.m. Teen
Bible Quiz at Church
Wednesday - 7:00 p.m.
Discipleship Class in Upper
Room
For more info see our web-
site: www.delphosfirstassem-
blyofgod.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. PETER LUTHERAN CHURCH
422 North Pierce St., Delphos
Phone 419-695-2616
Rev. Angela Khabeb
Sunday - 10 AM Worship
Service.; 11:00 Am Council meet-
ing.
Tuesday - 6 PM Mission:
SLIMpossible.
Wednesday - 9 Am Quilting
Day.
Saturday - 8 AM Prayer
Breakfast;.
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 ser-
vice.
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 wor-
ship 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.
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 ser-
vice.
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.
Sunday - Sept. 13th From Your
Heart - Matt 18:21-35
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 eve-
ning.
FAITH BAPTIST CHURCH
4750 East Road, Elida
Pastor - Brian McManus
Sunday 9:30 a.m. Sunday
School; 10:30 a.m. Worship, nurs-
ery available.
Wednesday 6:30 p.m.
Youth Prayer, Bible Study; 7:00
p.m. Adult Prayer and Bible
Study; 8:00 p.m. - Choir.
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
Worship.
Wednesday - 7 p.m. Prayer
meeting.
TRINITY UNITED
METHODIST CHURCH
211 E. Third St., Delphos
Rev. Rich Rakay, Pastor
Week beginning Sept. 14, 2014
Sunday - 8:15 a.m. Worship
Service; 9:15 a.m. Sunday School
Classes for All Ages; 11:30
Radio Worship on WDOH; 11:30
a.m. Youth Service Day Adopt-
a-Highway; 6:00 p.m. Outreach
Committee; 7:30 p.m. Ladies Bible
Fellowship.
Monday - October Newsletter
Deadline.
Wednesday - 7:00 p.m. Chancel
Choir; Staff/Pastor Parish.
Thursday - 8:00 a.m. Pie Crust
Making Day; 4:30 p.m.-6:30 p.m.
Suppers on Us.
Friday - 8:00 a.m. Pie Baking
Day.
Saturday - 8:00 a.m. Set up for
Tastes of Trinity; 9:00 a.m.-3:00
p.m. Working Shifts; 3:00 p.m.
Tear Down.
Office Hours: Monday thru
Friday - 8:00 a.m.-12 p.m. and 1:00
p.m.-5:00 p.m..
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.
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 par-
ish 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
Home Ph. 419-657-6019
Sunday: Morning Services -
10:00 a.m. Evening Services - 7:00
p.m.
Wednesday: 7:00 p.m. Worship
service.
UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST
102 Wisher Drive, Spencerville
Rev. Michael Cassady, Pastor
Sunday 9:30 a.m. Cafe; 10:00
a.m. Worship Service.
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.
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
Elida/GomEr
Van WErt County
landECk
dElphos
spEnCErVillE
Our local churches invite you to join them for their activities and services.
We thank
the sponsors
of this
page and
ask you to
please
support them.
4 The Herald
www.delphosherald.com
RAABE FORD
LINCOLN
11260 Elida Road
DELPHOS, OH 45833
Ph. 692-0055
Toll Free 1-800-589-7876
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 ser-
vice.
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
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
Cofee
Shop
133 E. Main St.
Van Wert
Ph. 419-238-1580
Hours: Closed Mondays
Tuesday-Saturday
6:00 a.m.-10:00 p.m.
putnam County
pauldinG County
10098 Lincoln Hwy.
Van Wert, OH
www.AlexanderBebout.com
419-238-9567
Alexander &
Bebout Inc.
Friday, September 12, 2014
Worship this week at the
church of your choice.
There are two ways to enhance our chances of survival: robustness and resiliency. Robustness is a
measure of how much damage can be done to an organism and it will still function. Plants are robust
because they can lose their leaves and the majority of their limbs and yet survive. Resiliency refers to
the ability of an organism to adapt to changing circumstances. A tropical plant may be robust, but it
wont survive in a harsh environment such as a desert. Human beings are hardy because we combine
robustness with resiliency. We are robust insofar as we can survive without our teeth, could lose a few
limbs, and some of our vital organs are paired, such as the kidneys and lungs, allowing us to survive
with just one of them. Though not as robust as plants, we are more resilient, since we adapt well to
change, as evidenced by our living in virtually every environment on the planet. Religion is one of the
tools that help us to adapt. The Bible is full of advice on how to get along under trying circumstances.
The early Israelites were enslaved in Egypt and then had to survive in the desert, and even once they
were established as a nation, they were surrounded by hostile neighbors. This remains true for them
today, and there is a lesson here on the value of resiliency and robustness. Increase your robustness
by staying healthy and increase your resiliency by being adaptive.
- Christopher Simon
Teach them his decrees and instructions, and show them the way they are to live and how they are
to behave.
Exodus 18:20
Robustness and Resiliency
Friday, September 12, 2014 The Herald 5
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TODAY
7:30 a.m. Delphos
Optimist Club, A&W Drive-
In, 924 E. Fifth St.
10 a.m. to 3 p.m. The
Delphos Museum of Postal
History, 339 N. Main St., is
open.
11:30 a.m. Mealsite
at Delphos Senior Citizen
Center, 301 Suthoff St.
1-4 p.m. Interfaith Thrift
Store is open for shopping.
SATURDAY
8:30-11:30 a.m. St.
Johns High School recycle,
enter on East First Street.
9 a.m. - noon Interfaith
Thrift Store is open for shop-
ping.
St. Vincent dePaul Society,
located at the east edge of the
St. Johns High School park-
ing lot, is open.
Cloverdale recycle at vil-
lage park.
10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Delphos Postal Museum is
open.
12:15 p.m. Testing of
warning sirens by Delphos
Fire and Rescue.
1-3 p.m. Delphos Canal
Commission Museum, 241 N.
Main St., is open.
7 p.m. Bingo at St.
Johns Little Theatre.
SUNDAY
1-3 p.m. The Delphos
Canal Commission Museum,
241 N. Main St., is open.
1-4 p.m. Putnam County
Museum is open, 202 E. Main
St. Kalida.
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. Washington
Township Trustees meet at the
township house.
Delphos City Council
meets at the Delphos
Municipal Building, 608 N.
Canal St.
7:30 p.m. Jefferson
Athletic Boosters meet at the
Eagles Lodge, 1600 E. Fifth
St.
Spencerville village coun-
cil meets at the mayors office.
Delphos Eagles Auxiliary
meets at the Eagles Lodge,
1600 E. Fifth St.
TUESDAY
10 a.m. to 3 p.m. The
Delphos Museum of Postal
History, 339 N. Main St., is
open.
This
and
That
by HELEN KAVERMAN
The Walterick Hemme Post 3035 of
the Veterans of Foreign Wars was formal-
ly installed on 6 June 1934. The installa-
tion meeting was held at the Eagles Hall
in Delphos. The officers installed at this
time were: Post Commander Charles Bevans;
Senior Vice Commander, Isadore Bonifas;
Junior Vice Commander August Ebbeskotte;
Post Advocate Med Granger; Post Surgeon
Dr. H. P. Davis; Quartermaster Doit Swihart;
Chaplain Alfred Schaffer; Adjutant J.
R. Compton; Officer of the Day William
Eichenhorst; and Trustees Norman Edwards,
Howard Maxson and John Fossel.
There are now 37 names on the roster of
the new post.
The new post was named in honor of the
last two Delphos boys who were killed in the
service overseas. They were Claude Walterick,
killed 31 October 1918; and George Hemme,
killed 1 November 1918. The war ended just
a few days later on Nov. 11.
Hemme was the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Joseph Hemme of West Second Street. He
was killed in action in France on Nov. 1. He
was a mechanic and member of Company
L, 334th Infantry. He is also survived by:
Joseph and John Hemme of Delphos and
Otto Hemme in the U. S. Service in France;
and two sisters: Mrs. Mary Gast of Delphos
and Mrs. Theresa Dasch of Lima. Hemme is
buried in the St. Johns Cemetery in Delphos.
Claude Walterick was killed in action 1
November 1918. One source said he died
of wounds suffered in battle on Oct. 31. His
brother, Charles Walterick, who was about
20 miles farther to the front, was permitted
to come back from the front line to attend
the funeral. Claude Walterick was buried in
Flanders Field, in Belgium. (See poem at the
end). Waltericks parents were Mr. and Mrs.
Edward Walterick of Terre Haute, Indiana.
Other young men from Delphos killed in
action were: Thomas Callahan, 14 June 1918;
Raymond V. Patton, 30 September 1918;
George J. Nolte, 8 November 1918; Glenn
Truesdale, 30 September 1918; William
A. Sheeter, 18 September 1918; Ferrell R.
Swink, 5 October 1918; and Clifford Lambert,
Herman Weaver and Joseph Niemeyer. Two
other young men died of disease while serv-
ing in the war. They were Alfred J. Schramm
and Edwin C. Smith. Many people at home
in the United States and overseas died of the
1918 flu.
IN FLANDERS FIELDS
By Captain John D. McCrae
In Flanders fields the poppies grow
Between the crosses, row on row,
That mark our place; and in the sky
The larks, still bravely singing, fly
Scarce heard amid the guns below.
We are the Dead, Short days ago
We lived, felt dawn, saw sunset glow,
Loved and were loved, and now we lie
In Flanders fields.
Take up our quarrel with the foe!
To you from failing hands, we throw
The torch-Be yours to hold it high!
If ye break faith with us who die
We shall not sleep, though poppies grow
In Flanders fields.
My thanks to Mary Grothause and Jo
Briggs for providing me with the information
on our local heroes and the VFW.
World War I (Part 3)
Troops marching through Luxemburg after the war ended. (Submitted photo)
For all the news that matters,
subscribe to The Delphos Herald, 419-695-0015
Check us out online: delphosherald.com
1
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419-695-0660
Corey Norton
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1122 Elida Avenue
Delphos, OH 45833
419-695-0660
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Delphos, OH 45833
419-695-0660
Corey Norton
Financial Advisor
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1122 Elida Avenue
Delphos, OH 45833
419-695-0660
www.edwardjones.com
Member SIPC
Having More Retirement
Accounts is Not the Same
as Having More Money.
When it comes to the number of retirement
accounts you have, the saying more is better is
not necessarily true. In fact, if you hold multiple
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Financial Advisor
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Delphos, OH 45833
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Financial Advisor
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1122 Elida Avenue
Delphos, OH 45833
419-695-0660
To learn more why consolidating our retirement accounts to
Edward Jones makes sense, call your local fnancial advisor today.
www.edwardjones.com
Member SIPC
Having More Retirement
Accounts is Not the Same
as Having More Money.
When it comes to the number of retirement
accounts you have, the saying more is better is
not necessarily true. In fact, if you hold multiple
accounts with various brokers, it can be difcult to
keep track of your investments and to see if youre
properly diversied.* At the very least, multiple
accounts usually mean multiple fees.
Bringing your accounts to Edward Jones could
help solve all that. Plus, one statement can make it
easier to see if youre moving toward your goals.
*Diversication does not guarantee a prot or protect against loss.
To learn why consolidating your
retirement accounts to Edward Jones
makes sense, call your local nancial
advisor today.
IRT-1435B-A
Corey Norton
Financial Advisor
.
1122 Elida Avenue
Delphos, OH 45833
419-695-0660
Andy North
Financial Advisor
.
1122 Elida Avenue
Delphos, OH 45833
419-695-0660
Happy
Birthday
SEPT. 13
Sarah Meisler
Cassie Saum
Brooke Gallmeier
Brooke Hellman
Trent Lindeman
Kaylee Heitmeyer
Jeff Joseph
Jackson Reid
SEPT. 14
Anita Sorrell
April Mills
Kayla Moore
SEPT. 15
Alexa Plescher
Tom Berelsman
Bev Berelsman
Stephanie Pohlman
Rhonda Barnhart
Julie Kramer
Amy Wehri
6 The Herald Friday, September 12, 2014
SPORTS
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House, Indians sweep
doubleheader from Twins
Associated Press
CLEVELAND A long day at the ballpark was well worth
it for the Cleveland Indians.
Doubleheaders are hard to win, manager Terry Francona
said after Cleveland swept Minnesota on Thursday. It worked
out pretty well for us. Thats exactly what we hoped for.
Another strong performance by Corey Kluber and a 2-run
homer by Carlos Santana sparked an 8-2 victory
in the first game.
Santana homered again and drove in both
runs while rookie T.J. House and the bullpen
combined on a 4-hitter in a 2-0 win in game
two.
Cleveland moved closer in the races for
both the AL Central title and the wild card.
The Indians trail Detroit by 3 1/2 games for the
second wild-card spot and visit the Tigers for a 3-game series
starting tonight.
Right now weve got to try to win every night, Kluber
said. We cant worry about the other teams because that
takes away from our focus. Until were eliminated weve got
a chance.
Clevelands pitchers ruled the day, holding the Twins to 12
hits, striking out 17 and allowing one walk, which came in
the ninth inning of game two. As has been the case all season,
Kluber (15-9) set the tone. The right-hander allowed two runs
and struck out seven in 8 1/3 innings in becoming the Indians
first 15-game winner since Cliff Lee went 22-3 in 2008.
For one of the few times this season, the offense gave
Kluber some cushion. Yan Gomes homered and drove in three
runs, Michael Brantley had two RBIs and Cleveland put the
game away with a 4-run third inning.
Corey was outstanding, Francona said. Once he got the
lead he pounded the zone. It seems like hes always in a 1-run
game. With all the innings hes pitched, it seems like every
inning he pitches there is no margin of error.
Kyle Gibson (11-11) lasted only three innings, allowing
seven runs and seven hits, including two homers
House (3-3) pitched seven sharp innings in game two. The
left-hander held Minnesota to four hits, struck out eight and
didnt walk a batter.
Bryan Shaw pitched the eighth and Cody Allen worked the
ninth for his 20th save. Allen walked pinch-hitter Joe Mauer,
the Twins only free pass of the day, but Trevor Plouffe flied
out and Kennys Vargas bounced into a double play.
Santana has 27 home runs, matching his career high. His
leadoff homer on a 1-2 pitch in the fourth was the only mistake
Ricky Nolasco (5-11) made in seven innings.
Santana added an RBI single in the eighth.
Kluber didnt walk a batter for the second straight outing.
He broke his 3-game losing streak with a 5-hitter in a complete
game win over the White Sox on Saturday.
Vargas 2-out RBI single put Minnesota ahead in the first.
Kluber retired the next 10 hitters, a stretch that was broken
when Oswaldo Arcia led off the fifth with a single.
Kluber regained control by getting Kurt Suzuki to bounce
into a double play that began a stretch when he retired eight
in a row.
Associated Press
NASCAR
SPRINT CUP
MYAFIBSTORY.COM 400
Site: Joliet, Illinois.
Schedule: Today, practice (Fox
Sports 1, 1-2:30 p.m.), qualifying
(ESPN2, 6:30-8 p.m.); Saturday, practice
(Fox Sports 1, 11 a.m.-noon; Fox Sports
2, 2-3 p.m.); Sunday, race, 2 p.m. (ESPN,
1-5:30 p.m.).
Track: Chicagoland Speedway (oval,
1.5 miles).
Race distance: 400.5 miles, 267
laps.
Last year: Matt Kenseth won the
Chase opener for the sixth of his seven
2013 victories.
Last week: Brad Keselowski won the
regular-season finale at Richmond for his
series-leading fourth victory of the year
and the top spot in the Chase.
Fast facts: The 16 drivers in the
10-race Chase for the Sprint Cup were
seeded by season victories, giving
Keselowski a 3-point lead over 3-time
winners Jeff Gordon, Dale Earnhardt
Jr., Jimmie Johnson and Joey Logano.
Two-time winners Kevin Harvick and Carl
Edwards are six points backs; 1-time
winners Kyle Busch, Denny Hamlin, Kurt
Busch, Kasey Kahne, Aric Almirola and
AJ Allmendinger nine points behind; and
the winless Kenseth, Greg Biffle and
Ryan Newman 12 points back. The
Chase field will be cut to 12 after the third
race, to eight after the sixth and to four
after the ninth. Championship-eligible
drivers will get a spot in the next round
with a victory. Points will be reset after
each round and the championship will be
decided by finishing order in the Nov. 16
finale at Homestead.
Next race: Sylvania 300, Sept.
21, New Hampshire Motor Speedway,
Loudon, New Hampshire.
___
NATIONWIDE
JIMMY JOHNS FREAKY FAST 300
Site: Joliet, Illinois.
Schedule: Today, practice (Fox
Sports 1, noon-1 p.m., 4:30-6 p.m.);
Saturday, qualifying (Fox Sports 2, noon-
1:30 p.m.), race, 3:30 p.m. (ESPN2,
3:30-6 p.m.).
Track: Chicagoland Speedway (oval,
1.5 miles).
Race distance: 300 miles, 200 laps.
Last year: Kyle Busch raced to the
10th of his 12 2013 series victories.
Last week: Busch led all 250 laps
at Richmond for his fourth victory of the
year and record-extending 67th career
series win.
Fast facts: Busch is racing along with
fellow Sprint Cup stars Kevin Harvick and
Denny Hamlin. Chase Elliott leads
the standings, 19 points ahead of JR
Motorsports teammate Regan Smith.
Elliott won at Chicagoland in July for the
last of his three season victories.
Next race: VisitMyrtleBeach.com
300, Sept. 20, Kentucky Speedway,
Sparta, Kentucky.
___
CAMPING WORLD TRUCK
LUCAS OIL 225
Site: Joliet, Illinois.
Schedule: Today, qualifying (Fox
Sports 1, 3-4:30 p.m.), race 8:30 p.m.
(Fox Sports 1, 8-11 p.m.).
Track: Chicagoland Speedway (oval,
1.5 miles).
Race distance: 225 miles, 150 laps.
Last year: Kyle Busch raced to fourth
of his five 2013 series victories.
Last race: Ryan Blaney won the road
race in Bowmanville, Ontario, on Aug. 31
for his first victory of the season.
Fast facts: Busch has five victories in
seven Truck starts this year. He has 40
victories in 122 career series starts.
Johnny Sauter leads the season stand-
ings, seven points ahead of 2013 cham-
pion Matt Crafton. Blaney is third, 13
points back.
Next race: UNOH 175, Sept. 20, New
Hampshire Motor Speedway, Loudon,
New Hampshire.
___
NHRA MELLO YELLO DRAG
RACING
NHRA CAROLINA NATIONALS
Site: Concord, North Carolina.
Schedule: Today, qualifying (ESPN2,
11 p.m.-midnight); Saturday, qualifying
(ESPN2, Sunday, 2-3:30 a.m.); Sunday,
final eliminations (ESPN2, 8:30-11:30
p.m.).
Track: zMAX Dragway.
Last year: Robert Hight topped the
Funny Car field in the Countdown open-
er. Morgan Lucas won in Top Fuel, Jeg
Coughlin in Pro Stock and Andrew Hines
in Pro Stock Motorcycle.
Last event: Alexis DeJoria beat John
Force in the U.S. Nationals on Sept. 1
in Clermont, Indiana, to became the first
female Funny Car driver to win three
times in a season. Richie Crampton won
the Top Fuel final in the regular-season
finale. Shane Gray topped the Pro Stock
field and Eddie Krawiec won in Pro Stock
Motorcycle.
Fast facts: The event opens the
6-race NHRA Countdown to the
Championship playoffs. The top 10 in
each class qualified for the playoffs.
Points have been reset, with the gap from
first to second 30 points and the other
places separated by 10 points. Doug
Kalitta leads in Top Fuel, the 65-year-
old Force in Funny Car, Jason Line
in Pro Stock and Hines in Pro Stock
Motorcycle. In April at the track in the
Four-Wide Nationals, Hight won in Funny
Car, Antron Brown in Top Fuel, Jimmy
Alund in Pro Stock and Hines in Pro
Stock Motorcycle.
Next event: Texas NHRA
FallNationals, Sept. 19-21, Texas
Motorplex, Ennis, Texas.
Knights bounce back with sweep of Jeffcats
By BRIAN BASSETT
DHI Media Correspondent
news@delphosherald.com
CONVOY - The Crestview
Lady Knight volleyball team
bounced back from its first
loss of the season in a big
way Thursday evening,
downing the visiting Delphos
Jefferson Lady Wildcats at
Ray Etzler Gymnasium in
3-sets-to-0 fashion (25-18,
25-8, 25-13).
Crestview controlled the
match from start to fin-
ish and never trailed.
The matchs lone tie set
at 16-all in the first set.
Its been an emo-
tional roller coaster
this week, explained
Crestview coach Tammy
Gregory.
The Lady Knights (6-1,
1-1) picked up a win against
cross-county rival Parkway
Monday but fell to Ada in
the Northwest Conference
opener Tuesday.
I felt like the girls adjust-
ed really well and came back
(from the loss) - I wasnt so
sure (they would) after prac-
tice yesterday. But I think
they needed this boost of con-
fidence to take into Saturday
because we have two more
matches (this week), contin-
ued Gregory.
Crestview came out click-
ing on all cylinders Thursday,
opening the match with a
kill from senior middle hit-
ter Courtney Trigg and rolling
to an 8-point lead. The run
included two more points from
Trigg and three from senior
hitter Megan Hartman, who
had a big night for Crestview.
An ace from junior setter
Brady Guest gave Crestview
a 13-6 lead and, following
a Jefferson timeout, junior
outside hitter Claire Zaleski
gave the Lady Knights their
biggest lead of the set, 14-6.
The Lady Jeffcats (3-5,
0-2) came fighting back
however. An ace from
junior Claire Thompson
and a tip from freshman
Macy Wallace spurred a
Jefferson run which cul-
minated in the visitors
tying the set at 16.
It was great, said Jefferson
coach Joy Early of the Lady
Wildcat run. It would have
been nice to pull that first set
out and give us some confi-
dence going into the second
and third. Unfortunately, it
didnt go our way.
A Trigg kill stopped
the Lady Wildcat rally
and returned the lead to
Crestview.
Crestview extended the lead
to 20-16 thanks to two Jefferson
errors and a tip from senior set-
ter Mackenzie Riggenbach and
never looked back. A Hartman
kill ended the set in favor of
Crestview, 25-18.
I think we played great
in the first set. said Early,
after her first match back off
maternity leave. It was nice
to see the girls come out so
strong, so confident and play
with them really well. Theyre
a great team.
Jefferson never really
threatened again,
however, scoring
only 21 combined
points over the next
two sets.
Coach Gregory
noted that the Lady
Knights have been work-
ing on getting out to fast
starts - and it showed: Thats
huge because we kind of get
back on our heels if we dont
(come out strong). If we get
that good jump, we just play
with a lot more confidence.
Trigg had four points early
in the second set to help the
Lady Knights out to a 14-5
lead. Eight points was as
close as Jefferson could get
throughout the remainder of
the set and Zaleski had two
points to help Crestview pull
out the 25-8 lead.
They hit the ball really
well, continued Early. So we
need to work on our back row.
We need to stay low to the
ground and transition (better).
The third set was almost
a mirror image of the sec-
ond. An ace from Wallace
helped Jefferson pull within
one, 3-2, but the the powerful
Lady Knight offense was too
much and the host rolled to a
25-13 set win.
Theyre a great offensive
team, concluded Early. They
hit our holes well.
Trigg and Hartman had 18
and 14 kills, respectively, but
the win was a team effort for
the Knights. Guest
got into the action
with five kills, while
Zaleski and junior
outside hitter Haley
Helm each recorded
three.
We go to our middles a
lot but it was nice to spread
it around because there are
going to be times when we
are going to have to use
(everybody). I thought every-
one stepped up in those three
games to build our confi-
dence, added Gregory.
Guest also added 18
assists and Riggenbach 14,
while junior libero Tianna
Rager had six digs and was
13/13 on serve-receive.
The Lady Knights will be
back in action on Saturday as
they travel to Kalida for a tri-
match with Antwerp & Kalida.
The day begins at 10am with
Crestview competing in the
2nd and 3rd matches.
Jefferson is at home
Tuesday night versus Ada.
Crestviews JV was also
victorious in two games
26-24 and 25-23. Crestview
JV is 3-4 overall and 1-1 in
conference play.
LadyCats take measure of Lady Wildcats
By JIM METCALFE
DHI Media Sports Editor
jmetcalfe@delphosherald.com
KALIDA Both Jefferson and
Kalida have been cruising along in the
early part of the 2014 girls soccer sea-
son, so Thursdays showdown at Kalida
Soccer Stadium would be a good test of
both units.
The host LadyCats proved to be
better at this juncture, registering a 2-0
shutout.
This is a gauge match, where you
find out how good you really are and
what you need to work on. We lost
to a quality program year after year,
Jefferson coach Josiah Stober began.
I am proud of our girls intensity and
effort, especially defensively. They were
communicating well and really battling.
We did give up some shots but not in
droves like perhaps in the past. We
fought to the end and thats as much a
positive as anything.
Kalida mentor Dave Kehres figures
his unit is starting to put things together.
We had some early injuries and
those girls are starting to come back,
he explained. It takes some time to
meld them back into the rotation and to
get them back into the flow, as well as
get their conditioning. For us, we figure
to be playing our best come tournament
time because of those returnees, while
still playing good soccer right now.
The hosts (4-2-1) did own the ball
possession, the corner kicks 10-0 and
the shots on-goal (officially 29-3)
with Lady Wildcat (5-1-1) junior keep-
er Jessica Pimpas grabbing 20 saves
and sophomore Kalida keeper Morgan
Knapke three.
The Maroon and Gold kept the
Jefferson keeper and back lines busy,
controlling the orb in their offensive end
and peppering the goal or wide of it
with attempts.
After a scoreless tie at the half, the
hosts had a great chance off a corner
kick from the left side at 32:30 when
junior Makenna Richeys boot got over
the top of Pimpas but senior Bailey
Miller headed it out of danger before it
crossed the goal line.
The Red and White had a foray into
their offensive third at 31:35 as Miller
got a look from 18 yards outside the left
post but Knapke tracked it down.
With 28:06 to go, the Kalida pressure
paid off. Off a corner kick from the right
side by senior Jackie Gardner, she found
junior Joni Kaufman on the right post
and her header got inside that post for
a 1-0 edge.
The home team kept a-coming, forc-
ing Pimpas and the Wildcat defense to
stay strong, but at 23:14, they made it a
2-0 lead. With Gardner deep down the
left sideline, she crossed it to an open
Brittany Kahle and the junior blasted
a 10-yarder from the middle into the
cords.
Pimpas and her defense kept the
hosts off the board the rest of the way.
Delphos had one last chance to break
into the scoring column at 12:12 when
senior Kylee Haehn, on a kick from just
outside the 18 on the left wing, found
junior Logan Hamilton on the right post
but her 8-yard header was gobbled up
by Knapke.
We didnt have many scoring chanc-
es but it wasnt for lack of effort,
Stober added. The two goals we gave
up were defensive breakdowns we
forgot to mark a runner. We found out
some things we need to address were
still improving and still can improve
and well keep working at it the next
couple of days.
Kalida had a few scoring chances
the first 40 minutes, with the best at
38:21 when junior Laine Laudick got
a close-range effort that almost fooled
the keeper but Pimpas scrambled for the
save; at 35:50, when Pimpas deflected
a 20-yard laser by Gardner; at 23:36,
when Pimpas knocked away a curling
corner kick from the right side by senior
Makenna Vorst; and at 7:01, when the
keeper knocked away a 20-yarder by
Gardner.
The visitors had one scoring effort:
at 7:40, when Millers 25-yarder was
denied by Knapke.
The first half, it was frustrating
because I felt we owned 90 percent of
the possession and had nothing to show
for it, Kehres added. We know at
times we get rid of it too quickly when
we have time and then hold it too long.
I want the girls to keep shooting but at
times, we need to be more patient and
get better shots; at others, we need to be
quicker. Its something we work on all
the time and we are getting there.
Kalida visits Cory-Rawson 1 p.m.
Saturday; Jefferson hosts Ada 5 p.m.
Monday.
Jeffersons Bailey Miller tries to maneuver up the pitch against the
defense of Kalidas Hannah Warn Thursday at Kalida Soccer Stadium.
(DHI Media/Charlie Warnimont)
Auto Racing Glance
Local Roundup
Cavs hand Blue Jays MAC loss
By LARRY HEIING
DHI Media Correspondent
news@delphosherald.com
COLDWATER After winning
three out of their last four matches,
the St. Johns volleyball team traveled
to Coldwater for a Midwest Athletic
Conference match.
St. Johns track record in M.A.C. vol-
leyball is weak and that trend continued
Thursday evening as the Blue Jays lost
in three sets: 25-14, 25-15, 25-19.
The Lady Cavs began the match
strong with a kill and an ace by Danielle
Welsch. The Jays battled back to tie
the score at deuces but the Cavs scored
the next five points highlighted by a
kill and a block by Paige Hartings. A
bad set by Coldwater broke the run as
a strong spike by Hartings and another
by Tasha Kahlig ignited another rally
for the Cavs as they led 20-8. Finally
the Jays offense got on track as Maddie
Pohlman smacked the kill off a set by
Rebekah Fischer. Junior outside hitter
Olivia Kahny muscled one over the
net with a strong kill shot from another
assist by Fischer. The Jays cut
the lead in half 22-11 as Maddie
Buettner blocked a Cavs shot and
followed with more great defense
with her second block in three
serves. The St. Johns offense for
set one ended with a Kahny kill.
The second set began just like
the first with a Coldwater kill and ace. St.
Johns got on the scoreboard with a set
by Ellie Csukker to Hayley Jettinghoff
for the kill. The Lady Jays knotted the
game at three with a block by Buettner/
Pohlman and an ace by Pohlman. In fact,
St. Johns stayed even with Coldwater
with kills by Buettner and Kahny along
with a soft tapper by Csukker. Kahny
continued to play strong at the net with
a kill to even the score at seven. The
Cavs went on a mini-run scoring the next
handful of points to gain control of the
contest. St. Johns played well on their
side of the net as unforced errors by the
Cavs allowed the Jays to fight
back 15-11. Pohlmans kill cut
the lead down to three but thats
as close as they would get.
St. Johns first lead of the
evening occurred with a Kahny
kill (Colleen Schulte assist)
and another kill by Buettner
(Madison Ellis assist) to lead 3-2. Both
teams battled back and forth as the Geise
scored for the Jays with a soft tapper
and a hard kill. St. Johns largest lead
of the night as Fischer/Buettner teamed
up for a block to go up 11-8. Coldwater
came back with three straight points to
even the score at 11 as St. Johns coach
Carolyn Dammeyer called a timeout.
See ROUNDUP, page 8
Friday, September 12, 2014 The Herald 7
www.delphosherald.com
Cueto outlasts Lynn as
Reds slow Cardinals 1-0
By MARK SCHMETZER
Associated Press
CINCINNATI St. Louiss drive toward a Central
Division championship hit a Cincinnati speed bump.
Johnny Cueto pitched eight scoreless innings to beat Lance
Lynn and send the Cardinals to their third consecutive loss,
1-0, Thursday.
Cueto (18-8) allowed just three hits and hit a batter to help
the Reds win their second series in the last 13 against Central
Division-leading St. Louis. The Cardinals have lost three
straight for the first time since a 4-game losing streak Aug.
26-30 and finished their 8-game road trip 4-4 after winning
three out of four in Milwaukee.
Were heading home, said cen-
ter fielder John Jay, who came up
short of making the crucial play. We
just have to keep playing.
Aroldis Chapman pitched the
ninth for his 33rd save and third in
the last three games.
We created an environment
where we play the spoiler, Reds
manager Bryan Price said. There is
no secret weve struggled with the
Cardinals the last several years.
Lynn (15-9) retired 15 straight
before Brandon Phillips led off the
eighth inning with the Reds first walk of the game. He went
to third on Jay Bruces single to center field and scored on
Ramon Santiagos sinking liner to short center that Jay got a
glove on but couldnt hold. Bruce had to hold up to see if the
ball was caught and was forced at second.
I just missed it, Jay said. I knew I couldnt leave my feet.
If I slide, hes tagging. I tried to be aggressive.
Hes made great plays all year, St. Louis manager Mike
Matheny said. Thats one he makes all the time. That one just
got away.
The Reds have won three straight games for the first time
since August 5-7 against Cleveland. They finished their home
stand 4-3 after losing two out of three against the Mets.
Lynn went into the game 3-0 with a 4.00 ERA in three starts
against the Reds this season. Cueto was 0-2 with a 3.75 ERA
in two starts against St. Louis.
Today, he just outpitched me, Lynn said. Thats part of
it.
Cueto retired the last 14 batters he faced after Matt Adams
led off the fourth inning with a single and was eliminated in a
double play. Cueto finished with seven strikeouts.
Lynn allowed three hits and a walk with six strikeouts in
eight innings.
Bruce kept the game scoreless with a leaping catch at the
right-field fence to rob Adams of a home run leading off the
seventh inning. Adams appeared to doff his batting helmet to
salute Bruces play.
K MAN: Cuetos seven strikeouts give him 220 this sea-
son, the most since Jose Rijo led the National League with
227 in 1993.
HIT MAN: Jay was hit by a pitch for the 19th time this
season, the most in the majors. He was plunked for the third
consecutive game.
TRAINERS ROOM: Cardinals: Catcher Yadier Molina got
Thursdays game off after playing all of Wednesdays night
game. Molinas surgically repaired right thumb still is an issue,
Matheny said. You can see the splint, Matheny added. Hes
still protecting it and doing things to strengthen it.
Reds: Catcher Brayan Pena was scratched from the origi-
nal starting lineup with an illness. Devin Mesoraco started in
Penas place.
UP NEXT: Cardinals: Adam Wainwright starts as St. Louis
opens a 10-day, 9-game home stand with the first of three
against Colorado.
Reds: Mat Latos strives for his first career win at Miller
Park as the Reds open a 10-day, 9-game road trip with the first
of three at Milwaukee. Latos is 0-4 in six starts at Miller.
Owners say Rice investigation
will be independent
Associated Press
NEW YORK The two NFL own-
ers overseeing the investigation into
how the league pursued and handled
evidence in the Ray Rice domestic vio-
lence case pledged Thursday to make
the findings of the probe public and their
goal was to get the truth.
New York Giants co-owner John
Mara and Pittsburgh Steelers owner Art
Rooney, both close confidants of NFL
commissioner Roger Goodell,
said they would not be con-
ducting or directing the inves-
tigation, adding it would have
no timeline and that former
FBI director Robert Mueller
was set to begin work imme-
diately.
They said the inquirys
focus will be on what efforts
were made to obtain video evi-
dence of the 3-time Pro Bowl
running back striking his fian-
cee; if the video arrived at
the league office; and what
happened to it after it was
delivered.
Our sole motive here is
to get the truth and then share Mr.
Muellers findings with the public,
Rooney and Mara said in a joint state-
ment.
The probe which the league has
called independent was announced
Wednesday hours after The Associated
Press reported that a law enforcement
official, who spoke on condition of
anonymity, sent a video to an NFL
executive in April of Rice striking Janay
Palmer at an Atlantic City casino.
Goodell has claimed repeatedly the
NFL didnt see a full account of the fight
until Monday, when TMZ posted it. Rice
was released by the Baltimore Ravens
after the video went viral. The team had
previously stood by him.
The law enforcement official said he
wasnt authorized to release the video
but wanted the NFL to have it as it
decided on the Rice case. He played a
12-second voicemail confirming receipt
of the video. A female voice expresses
thanks and says: Youre right. Its ter-
rible.
As Mueller begins to examine the
case, he will likely start with Goodells
top administrators, who help him run
Americas most popular and profitable
sport. Baltimore Ravens owner Steve
Bisciotti could also be under the lens.
Anyone at NFL headquarters could
have known months ago that the video
of Rice punching his then-fiancee in
a hotel elevator had been sent to the
league. To figure it out, Mueller will
have access to anyone he wants to talk
to, as well as internal NFL documents.
Those on the roster of Goodells
inner circle and those likely to be
on Muellers radar are NFL general
counsel Jeff Pash; director of football
operations Troy Vincent; security chief
Jeffrey Miller; executive vice president
of human resources Robert Gulliver; and
senior vice president of labor policy and
government affairs Adolpho Birch.
John M. Dowd, the attorney from Akin
Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld who was
with another firm when he was retained
by Major League Baseball in 1989 to
investigate Pete Roses gambling, says
Mueller must have full authority and that
thoroughness is paramount.
You talk to the police and the person
that sent it to them and you do what-
ever you have to do to find out what
people knew and when, Dowd told
The Associated Press. Theres always
more people to talk to than you think
initially. We ended up in Rose with over
100 witnesses and we talked to all of
them three times, just to double-check
ourselves because we had paper coming
in all the time. Here you got videos and
youll probably want to talk to Rice and
his girlfriend.
Mueller, who led the FBI for 12
years, is a partner at WilmerHale, a
Washington, D.C.-based law firm with
deep ties to the NFL and
sports world. Familiar
with the NFL, the firm
has sent several members
on to jobs with teams.
Partner David
Donovan spent 20 years
at the law firm before
joining the Washington
Redskins, where he was
general counsel and
chief operating officer.
From 1997 to 2004, cur-
rent Cleveland Browns
President Alec Scheiner
was at WilmerHale, where
he advised on various
sports transactions, worked
for current Baltimore Ravens President
Dick Cass and did work for the Dallas
Cowboys.
The league has turned a critical lens
on itself before. In two high-profile
investigations under Goodells admin-
istration, the league found the Patriots
guilty of spying on the New York Jets
defensive signals and the Saints were
found to have run a 3-year bounty sys-
tem for hits by defensive players.
Both of those probes were conducted
by the NFL, although several player
suspensions in the Saints case eventu-
ally were overturned by an indepen-
dent appeals officer Paul Tagliabue,
Goodells predecessor.
The National Organization for
Women said Goodell should resign and
an independent committee should be
appointed to suggest lasting reforms,
calling the Mueller investigation just
window dressing.
Prosecutor defends Ray Rice investigation: New
Jersey law advises that those who commit violent
crimes should generally be rejected from the program
Rice was allowed into instead of potentially facing jail
time for knocking his then-fiancee unconscious.
But the prosecutor who handled the case says he
signed off on this course of action after reviewing the
circumstances and consulting with Janay Palmer, now
Rices wife.
While the reaction of Goodell has been the target of
much of the firestorm since video was released by TMZ
Sports showing the punch at an Atlantic City casino, the
case has raised questions about why the former Ravens
star was accepted into the pretrial intervention program.
Rice was initially suspended from two games. But
since the TMZ video, he was released by the Ravens
and barred indefinitely by the league. In the criminal
case, he can avoid prosecution and a criminal record by
completing the pretrial intervention program.
Advocates for victims of domestic violence have
accused investigators of being too lenient to Rice
and lawmakers have called for a review of the case,
while defense attorneys and experts disagree that his
stardom led to leniency and some say Rices case was
given more scrutiny because of his fame.
A domestic violence scenario with the same fact
patterns would be a simple assault case in munici-
pal court, said New Jersey defense attorney James
Leonard Jr. He was actually treated more harshly
because he was Ray Rice.
Atlantic County Prosecutor Jim McClain has
defended Rices entry into the program and told The
Press of Atlantic City that Rice likely wouldnt have
faced jail time if he had gone to trial on third-degree
aggravated assault charges.
Just like it is not just or fair to go easier on some-
body because of who they are, neither is it fair or just
to go heavier on somebody because of who they are,
McClain told the newspaper. I felt, and still feel, this
disposition was appropriate.
McClain declined to be interviewed Thursday by
The Associated Press.
Kathy Boyle, the criminal division manager in
Atlantic County, said she also stands by the decisio,
saying program administrators spoke to Palmer, now
Janay Rice, and took her wishes into account. She
said no one has asked that Rice be terminated from
the program.
The law says any defendant charged with a crime is
eligible for enrollment in a pretrial intervention program.
If accepted, candidates must obey several conditions
and, upon completion, have no record of conviction and
no mark on their criminal record.
The law goes on to describe four circumstances
when the defendants application should generally be
rejected. The four include an offense that is part of
organized crime, part of a continuing criminal business,
deliberately violent, or a breach of the public trust
where admission to a PTI program would deprecate the
seriousness of defendants crime.
Erin OHanlon, of the Womens Center of Atlantic
County, said its fairly unusual to see a violent crime of
this nature go to pretrial intervention.
It makes you look at it and (say) What was the
prosecutor thinking, said Donna DAndrea, a legal
advocate for the womens center.
Attorney John Tumelty said the video is inflamma-
tory, but the prosecutor needs to look at the facts of the
case and Rices past behavior when weighing the deci-
sion to go to pretrial intervention. In addition, he said,
what the victim wants can play a large role in determin-
ing whether pretrial intervention is used.
Janay Rice has been supportive of her husband and
criticized his indefinite suspension by the NFL.
Earlier this year, she indicated through her lawyer
that she did not want the case to proceed but prosecutor
Diane Ruberton said at the time that she was confident
she could have gotten a conviction at trial without the
wifes participation.
Ravens fans, men and women, wear No 27 for
Rice
BALTIMORE Music blared from the purple bus,
and Baltimore Ravens fan Racquel Bailey stood with
drink in hand amid her usual tailgate buddies while
making a bold fashion statement: a black, rhinestone-
decorated jersey with the white No. 27.
A Ray Rice jersey.
Theres two sides to every story, said Bailey, a
23-year-old waitress from Baltimore. I saw the video.
Thats their personal business and it shouldnt have
affected his career. I dont agree with domestic violence
but shes still with him, so obviously it wasnt that big of
a deal. Everyone should just drop it.
Ravens fans male and female, young and old,
arrived for Thursday nights game against the Pittsburgh
Steelers debating the events that have affected their
team over the last few days. Their once beloved run-
ning back has been kicked off the team and indefinitely
banned by the NFL after a video surfaced that showed
him punching his then-fiancee and now wife inside
an Atlantic City hotel elevator.
All condemned Rices actions but there was little
consensus as to what his punishment should be.
The NFL did the right thing by suspending him, some
said, but the Ravens shouldnt have terminated his
contract as well. Or maybe the suspension should have
remained at two games, where it stood before the latest
video became public.
Meanwhile, those who wore Rice jerseys were get-
ting heckles and high-fives.
You support a wife-beater! one female fan yelled
at male fan wearing a No. 27 about 90 minutes before
kickoff.
Outside of at least one entrance, a memo explained
the Ray Rice Jersey Exchange policy, aimed at
particularly families, women and children who wish
to exchange a Rice jersey for that of another Ravens
player. The Ravens are no longer selling Rice jerseys
but at least one independent vendor had some Rice
action figurines on sale next to his collection of vintage
Baltimore Colts wares.
Paul Kilduff, 65, put two pieces of duct tape over the
letters Ray R on the back of his faded shirt so that it
read Be Nice instead of Ray Rice. But the tape kept
falling off, so he took off the jersey, then put it back on
without the tape while uttering, Ah, I might as well.
Everybody deserves a second chance, he added,
a refrain heard often in the parking lot.
This, after all, is the franchise of Ray Lewis, who
was charged in a murder case in 2000 but now has a
statue outside the stadium. His No. 52 remains arguably
the most visible jersey among tailgaters.
But there were plenty of No. 27s and many of them
said they were deliberately making a statement.
I took the bus here, so people were, like, Good,
Im glad to see to someone out here showing support,
said Gage Friend, 18, as he leaned against the barrier
by the players entrance. But Ive also seen a lot of
people giving me dirty looks and people saying stuff to
me like, I cant believe youd wear that. Dont you know
what he did?
Yeah, Im pretty aware of what he did. And, yes, it
was awful and it was definitely a mistake on his part but
he deserves a second chance. People have done so
much worse in this league.
Johnson opens Chase seeking record-tying 7th title
Associated Press
CHICAGO Its been 11 weeks since Jimmie Johnsons
last victory and he suffered through one of his typical summer
swoons.
But as the defending NASCAR champion prepares for the
start of the Chase for the Sprint Cup Championship, he feels
as confident as ever that hell once again be hoisting the prize
at the end of the year. Johnson goes into the Chase opener
Sunday at Chicagoland Speedway attempting to kick off a
record-tying seventh title run. Only Hall-of-Famers Richard
Petty and the late Dale Earnhardt have won seven.
I feel good. Weve come through some tracks that histori-
cally arent good for us with top-10s, top-five runs, he said.
I feel like weve gotten rid of the bad luck; were running
where we should. Were getting to the finish line
and coming into seven or eight of my best tracks.
Were definitely going in the right direction.
I honestly feel better about our chances this
year than I did last year on this same day.
Johnson, who won three races this season and is tied for
the second seed in the Chase, stumbled through July with con-
secutive 42nd-place finishes at Daytona and New Hampshire
and was 39th at Pocono and 28th at Watkins Glen.
Hes since rebounded as he prepared for the Chase with
four consecutive top-10 finishes, including his eighth-place
run last week at Richmond, where he had to be treated for
dehydration after the race because of a problem with his hel-
met cooling system.
So had Johnson been playing possum over the summer and
lying in wait for the Chase to begin? He scoffed at the idea
Thursday that he or crew chief Chad Knaus would deliberately
sabotage a portion of the season.
Chad would kill me if he thought I was playing possum,
Johnson replied. It hasnt been fun. The truth of the matter is
some of the tracks are just tough for us and frustration sets in
and it just drags us down and affects us.
Yet it seems to be the same story every year for Johnson,
who is just average in the weeks leading into the Chase and
then turns it up a notch when the championship is on the line.
Matt Kenseth opened the Chase last year with back-to-back
wins, but Johnson surged ahead of him for the title with nine
top-10 finishes in the Chase.
When everything is on the line, Johnson and the No. 48
team seem to always kick it into a higher gear.
So he prepared Thursday to open the Chase, which for the
first time features a 16-driver field and will have three rounds
of eliminations. The entire field will be trying to grab one of
the four slots for the season finale at Homestead, where it will
be winner-take-all for the title.
His Hendrick Motorsports organization has all four of its
drivers in the Chase, which Johnson acknowledged could
bring an intensity to the race teams hes never seen before.
Hell be seeking a record title, while Jeff Gordon wants a fifth
championship and Dale Earnhardt Jr. and Kasey Kahne are
each vying for his first Cup.
Johnson said the communication and data sharing at
Hendrick is as open and helpful and team-oriented as its
ever been. He pointed to how all the drivers went to Victory
Lane at Atlanta two weeks ago to celebrate Kahnes Chase-
qualifying win. But as the Chase progresses, it could get tense.
Championship battles are difficult among teammates,
he added. Ive been in that situation a bunch and
weve always handled it well. But it is so much
harder to race a teammate for a championship than
someone else. Its easy to race someone else and
get angry and use it in a positive manner. But its hard to be
angry with somebody you respect and sit down next to at a
team debrief.
Its a great problem to have and well just see how it all
unfolds.
Sheriff: Investigation of Stewart crash complete: Three-time NASCAR cham-
pion Tony Stewart will find out no later than next week whether authorities will pursue
charges in the death of a driver he struck during a sprint car race in upstate New York
last month.
Ontario County Sheriff Philip Povero said Thursday that his office has completed
its investigation and submitted it to the district attorneys office for review. He did not
release the findings.
The District Attorneys Office, which has been meeting throughout the investiga-
tive process with members of the Sheriffs Office, will make a statement late next week
advising what action will be taken regarding the investigation, the statement added.
Stewarts car struck and killed 20-year-old Kevin Ward Jr. at Canandaigua
Motorsports Park during a nighttime race Aug. 9. Ward had climbed out of his car and
walked onto the dirt track to confront Stewart after he spun out while the two raced
side by side.
Povero said early on that his initial findings turned up nothing that would indicate
criminal intent in the crash but legal experts have said that does not mean Stewart
is in the clear.
Stewart could be charged with second-degree manslaughter under New York
law if prosecutors believe he recklessly caused the death of another person, with
negligent homicide another possibility, criminal law professor Corey Rayburn Yung of
the University of Kansas School of Law said in the days after the crash.
The district attorney also could decide there is not enough evidence to support
charges and decide against presenting it to a grand jury for an indictment.
In his statement, Povero wrote his office had submitted to the prosecutor the
entire thorough investigation, including a forensic video enhancement recently
received from state police, adding neither Povero nor District Attorney R. Michael
Tantillo would comment further.
Rice
Cueto
Buckeyes have dominated
games vs. in-state schools
By RUSTY MILLER
Associated Press
COLUMBUS After this
season, Ohio State only has
two games scheduled against
other teams from the state.
Even though the Big Ten
is adding a game to its con-
ference schedule in 2016
eliminating one more possibil-
ity per year of the Buckeyes
taking on an in-state opponent
Ohio State athletic director
Gene Smith has no plans for
his football team to stop play-
ing schools from within the
states borders.
Ab s o l u t e l y
not, he said
Thursday. The fre-
quency will prob-
ably diminish as we
move from eight
to nine conference
games. And, frank-
ly, well try and add
in some different-
branded schools, like a Tulsa
in 16, or Oregon State in 18.
When we get into scenarios
like that, it makes it more
difficult to schedule a MAC
school (or Cincinnati). But it
will not go away.
The Buckeyes have won
their last 38 meetings with
other colleges from the state
heading into Saturdays game
against Kent State. They also
host Cincinnati in their next
game on Sept. 27.
Not since a 7-6 setback
to Oberlin in 1921 have the
Buckeyes lost to an in-state
opponent. For years they
didnt even deign to play one,
ignoring them from 1933-91.
However, Ohio State has
played at least one in-state
opponent in 18 of the last 23
seasons. It currently has plans
to play only Bowling Green in
2016 and Cincinnati in 2019.
When we get to the 20s,
well schedule some Ohio
schools, Smith said. Itll
happen.
Such backdoor rivalries
add some interest because of
ties between the teams play-
ers, coaches and fans. Many
high school teammates face off
against each other. The same
connection goes for coaches.
Second-year Kent State head
coach Paul Haynes, who was an
All-Mid-American Conference
defensive back for the Golden
Flashes, was a valued assistant
at Ohio State for seven years
before taking the job at his alma
mater.
More than
most, he has
an idea of what
his team is up
against.
Its going to
be a huge chal-
lenge for our
guys. We know
that, he said.
But our guys are looking for-
ward to going into the Shoe
and playing our best game.
Similarly, Ohio State head
coach Urban Meyer is an Ohio
native who got his first head-
coaching position at the MACs
Bowling Green in 2001.
He has vivid memories of
playing against major opponents
during his two seasons there.
Its a great opportunity,
especially in that conference,
because you recruit all the
same players. Thats why
I love the MAC, he said.
Usually the team with the
quarterback wins that con-
ference and there have been
some phenomenal quarter-
backs come out of the MAC,
really good players. But they
dont have the depth. But
its a really good coaching
league because for the most
part theyre all about the same
talentwise.
8 The Herald Friday, September 12, 2014 www.delphosherald.com

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EDWARD JONES INVESTMENTS
Close of business Spetember 11, 2014
Kirk, Horschel share lead at Tour Championship
Associated Press
ATLANTA Chris Kirk and Billy
Horschel have little in common except a clean
card of 4-under 66 at the Tour Championship
and their chances at the biggest payoff in golf.
Kirk and Horschel, the top two seeds
going into the FedEx Cup finale at East Lake,
played in the final group and traded birdies
neither of them made a bogey over four
hours in steamy weather to share the lead.
They need only to win the Tour
Championship to claim the FedEx Cup and
its $10 million bonus.
Billy has obviously been play-
ing some pretty incredible golf
with winning last week and fin-
ishing second the week before,
Kirk said. And Ive been doing
all right myself.
Kirk is a 29-year-old who went
to Georgia and plays golf without
a pulse. Even when he chipped
in from 80 feet on the 17th hole,
he simply smiled and bowed his
head before slapping hands with
his caddie.
Horschel is a 27-year-old who
went to Florida, brash enough to
wear octopus prints on his pants in
the final round at a U.S. Open, to
flip his cap around backward and to pump his
fist for routine pars.
They grew up playing amateur golf against
each other. They were teammates in the
Walker Cup.
And they are leading the race to the FedEx
Cup.
Were probably two completely opposite
people in the sense that he just looks like
hes moving very slow and nothing affects
him, Horschel said. I look like Im run-
ning around the golf course literally last
Sunday. But Chris and I get along very well.
We seem to always play well when were
paired together.
Horschel won the BMW Championship
last week and was seen sprinting off the
fairway toward a portable toilet because
he couldnt hold it anymore. Kirk won the
Deutsche Bank Championship the previous
week and surprised even himself when twice
a career high he pumped his fist after
making a putt.
They didnt have the course to themselves.
Masters champion Bubba Watson made
seven birdies to offset a few mistakes, such as
trying to hit a shot through a gap in the trees.
It worked at Augusta National two years ago.
His ball clipped a branch Thursday, leading to
double bogey.
A bogey from the bunker on the par-3 18th
hole gave him a 67, leaving him in reasonable
shape. Watson was tied with Patrick Reed,
Jim Furyk and Jason Day.
The top five seeds need only to win the
Tour Championship to claim the FedEx Cup.
Watson is third.
Rory McIlroy is at No. 4 and
didnt hurt himself. McIlroy
wasnt at his best, though he
made enough birdies and key par
saves for a 69 that kept him very
much in the hunt.
You can really shoot yourself
out of it, McIlroy said. Even
though I didnt play great, I kept
it together.
Hunter Mahan might have shot
himself out of it. Mahan is seeded
fifth and opened with a 74. Only
one other player in the 29-man
field Geoff Ogilvy, who is
just happy to have made it to the
Tour Championship had a worse
score.
Mahan, one of three captains picks for the
Ryder Cup, has broken par once in his last
nine rounds since winning The Barclays.
Kirk was left off the Ryder Cup team, even
though he has two wins this season and had
just won a FedEx Cup playoff event the day
before U.S. captain Tom Watson announced
his three picks. Horschel might be the hottest
in golf at the moment. He is prone to go on
big streaks like this.
They have only one cup in mind and they
took a big step toward it Thursday.
This is my sixth week in a row. I havent
played more than three events in a row this
year, Horschel added. But I have no issues
with that. Listen, this is the FedEx Cup play-
offs. If you cant get yourself in shape and get
up for it on a daily basis, they why are you
playing this game?
Its our playoffs. Its like the World Series
or the NBA championships and NFL playoffs.
And were all tired and weve just got to fig-
ure how to put it out of our mind and go out
and play golf.
Horschel has more on his mind than just a
$10 million bonus. His wife is expecting their
first child in two weeks. He said
even if she were to go into labor
early, they agreed that he should
stay in Atlanta and try to win the
FedEx Cup.
DIVOTS: Jason Days coach
and caddie, Colin Swatton, had
to stop after eight holes when his
back locked up on him. Days
mental coach caddied the rest of
the way. Cameron Tringale
made his debut in the Tour
Championship with a 68 but it
wasnt his first time at East Lake.
He played at Georgia Tech, which
has a corporate membership at
East Lake. The average score
was 69.8.
EVIAN CHAMPIONSHIP
EVIAN-LES-BAINS, France South Korean teen Hyo-Joo
Kim made history look easy, with barely a glitch as she posted
the lowest score ever in a major with a 10-under 61 to open the
Evian Championship on Thursday.
To boot, the first round of her major debut achieved perfect
symmetry, with five birdies each on the front and back nine.
If she didnt sound fussed about the 61, its because the 19
year old did it last year on Japans JLPGA circuit.
Her good experience exceeded the previous best score
in a major of 62, by Minea Blomqvist of Finland in the third
round of the 2004 British Open also when she was 19
and Lorena Ochoa in the first round of the 2006 Kraft Nabisco
Championship. In a mens major, 63 is the lowest and it has
been achieved multiple times.
Kim is ranked 20th in the world and leads the Korean LPGA
money list with three wins. She takes a 4-shot lead over veteran
Karrie Webb into the second round of the last major of the year.
Korean Mi-Jung Hur was five behind Kim in third after a
round of 66, while defending champion Suzann Pettersen of
Norway and Brittany Lincicome of the U.S. were six behind.
Inbee Park, bidding for back-to-back majors after defend-
ing her title at the LPGA Championship, was tied for 12th at
2 under.
Meanwhile, Michelle Wies bid for a second major ended
early as she retired after just 13 holes, clearly still feeling the
effects of a recent finger injury.
Wie had two double bogeys and was 5 over when she
pulled out. The U.S. Womens Open champion was returning
after five weeks out and missing four tournaments following a
stress reaction in her right index finger. She wore blue strapping
around her hand.
The 39-year-old Webb had eight birdies but was undone
by two bogeys.
KLM OPEN
ZANDVOORT, Netherlands Defending champion Joost
Luiten fired a 5-under-par 65 to take a shared clubhouse lead
at the KLM Open after a first round interrupted when Fabrizio
Zanotti was hit on the forehead by a wayward tee shot on
Thursday.
Zanotti was driven off the Kennemer course in an ambu-
lance for checks at a nearby hospital after being hit. The
Paraguayan later tweeted he was discharged from the hospital
and would be taking a couple of weeks off.
The nearly 2-hour suspension caused by Zanottis injury did
not faze Luiten, who was even par when play stopped. He shot
three birdies and an eagle over his last seven holes.
Jamie McLeary of Scotland was also at 5 under when his
round was suspended by darkness with two holes to finish
early today.
McLeary birdied his final hole of the day,
the seventh, to draw level with local favorite
Luiten.
Former French amateur champion Gary
Stal and Italians Edoardo Molinari and Andrea
Pavan were a shot back at 4 under.
Zanotti was playing the 16th hole, his
seventh of the opening round at the Kennemer
club, when he was struck by a ball hit from the
14th by Alexandre Kaleka.
Players Felipe Aguilar and Ricardo
Gonzalez accompanied Zanotti to the hospital.
All three players withdrew from the tournament.
Zanotti, who won the BMW International
Open in June, had one bogey and a birdie to
put him at even par when he was hit.
WORLD AMATEUR
KARUIZAWA, Japan Georgia sopho-
more Jaime Lopez Rivarola shot a 5-under
66 on Thursday to help Argentina take the
second-round lead in the World Amateur Team
Championship.
Alejandro Tosti added a 67 on Karuizawa 72
Golf Easts Oshitate Course to give Argentina an 18-under 268
total. Matias Simaski had a 70, with only the top two scores
counting in the team total.
The United States was a stroke back along with Sweden
and Switzerland. Beau Hossler shot 66, Bryson DeChambeau
67 and Denny McCarthy 68.
Hossler, a sophomore at Texas, was tied for fourth in the
individual standings, three strokes behind Swedens Marcus
Kinhult.
Kinhult had a 66 for Sweden and Adam Blomme added
a 69. Benjamin Rusch shot 66 for Switzerland and Mathias
Eggenberger had a 69.
Canada was fifth at 16 under. Taylor Pendrith had a 67, and
Corey Conners and Adam Svensson shot 69.
The top teams will play Oshitate today and finish Saturday
on the Iriyama Course.
US MID-AMATEUR
BETHLEHEM, Pa. Scott Harvey won the U.S. Mid-
Amateur on Thursday to earn a spot in the Masters, beating
Brad Nurski 6 and 5 in the 36-hole final.
The 36-year-old Harvey, a real estate property manager
from Greensboro, North Carolina, had a 4-up lead after the
morning round on Saucon Valleys Old Course.
Harvey overcame back pain with help from friend and cad-
die Rocky Manning.
Nurski, a 35-year-old railroad conductor and switchman
from St. Joseph, Missouri, was trying to become the first left-
hander to win the event.
The match marked only the second time that co-medalists
have met in the final in the 34-year history of the event for
players 25 and older.
US WOMENS MID-AMATEUR
NOBLESVILLE, Ind. Margaret Shirley won the U.S.
Womens Mid-Amateur on Thursday, beating defending cham-
pion Julia Potter 5 and 3 at Harbour Trees.
The 28-year-old Shirley, a former Auburn player from
Atlanta, lost to Potter in 19 holes in the 2013 title match in
North Carolina.
Potter, a 26-year-old reinstated amateur from Granger,
Indiana, was trying to become the fourth player to successfully
defend a title.
Shirley became the fourth stroke-play medalist to win the
event, following Carol Semple Thompson in 1997, Ellen Port in
2000 and Potter in 2013.
In the rain-delayed semifinals, Shirley beat Meghan Stasi
of Oakland Park, Florida, 5 and 4; and Potter topped Tara Joy-
Connelly of Palm Beach Gardens, Florida, 2 and 1.
Kirk
Horschel
(Continued from page 6)
After the break in the
action, Coldwater continued
to smoke on offense reel-
ing off five straight points
forcing another time out by
the Jays. With Coldwater up
18-12, Buettner landed a dink
shot and an ace serve pulled
St. Johns closer. Kills by
Allison Sudhoff and Lauren
Leugers put Coldwater back
on track as their lead grew
to six points. St. Johns made
two more big plays with a
kill by Pohlman and a wall
block by Buettner/Fischer
that fell in for a point. With
Coldwater holding the advan-
tage at match point, the Cavs
dropped in an ace to win
game three 25-19.
We got better as the night
went on but struggled with
serves and ball control,
said Dammeyer. Our serve-
receiving was a lot better and
so was our defense in the
third game. Coldwater is a
fundamentally strong team
and they took us out of our
offense tonight.
Kahny led the offense
with six kills. Maddie
Buettner had five kills and
four blocks while Maddie
Pohlman also had five with
two aces. Kennedy Clarkson
and Kestley Hulihan each
recorded 10 digs.
In the J.V. match,
Coldwater downed the Jays
25-20, 25-18.
-
I N F O R M A T I O N
SUBMITTED
Rockets triple up Blue
Jays in girls soccer
ANNA St. Johns trav-
eled down I-75 to tangle with
Western Ohio Soccer League
foe Anna Thursday afternono
and came home on the wrong
end of a 3-1 loss.
The Rockets got tal-
lies by Alexis Phillips,
Rylie Edwards and Raquel
Bollheimer as they dominat-
ed the shots on-goal 25-10.
The Lady Blue Jays (1-4-
2, 0-2-0) got a goal from
Ashlyn Troyer (assisted by
Carleigh Ankerman).
Samantha Wehri had 11
saves for the visitors, while
Annas Hannah Aufderhaar
had seven.
St. Johns next match is 1
p.m. Saturday at Elida.

Lady Green, Wildcats tie


in girls soccer
OTTOVILLE Ottoville
and Miller City battled to a
1-1 draw in Putnam County
League girls soccer
action under the lights
of Ottoville Soccer
Stadium Thursday
night.
Scoring for the Lady
Green was Haley Landwehr
on a penalty kick in the first
half to tie the match.
Ottoville visits Lima
Senior 6 p.m. Monday.

Lady Musketeers white-


wash Crestview
FORT JENNINGS
Scoring an even four goals in
both halves, the Fort Jennings
girls soccer team white-
washed Crestview
8-0 in non-league
action Thursday at the
Fort Jennings Soccer
Complex.
Tallying for the
Lady Musketeers
(2-3-2) in the first half
were Brandi Kaskel (assist
to Keri Eickholt), Eickholt
(29:13), Kaskel (Eickhotl) at
20:52 and Kasidy Klausing
(Hannah Clay at 8:17).
In the second half, Erin
Eickholt (Jordan Horstman at
31:32), Kaskel (30:23), Abby
Von Sossan (Lydia Mesker
at 19:29) and Hailey Young
at 11:12.
The Musketeers outshot
the Knights 29-0 and had
eight corner kicks to none.
Abby Clouser had 21
saves for the visitors and Erin
Osting five for the hosts.
This game was one of
those we could work on
things such as passing and
finishing. We moved the ball
well the first half and looked
to improve on these the sec-
ond half, Jennings mentor
Rodney Wagner explained.
Our first goal came when
Keri Eickholt dribbled the
ball from the defensive end
of the field to the offensive
end and passed the ball in to
Brandi Kaskel for the goal.
Keri then followed a deflec-
tion and ripped a 25 yard
shot for the goal. The next
goal came much like the first
goal only Keri didnt dribble
as far. She made another pass
to Brandi who slide the shot
passed the keeper. The final
goal of the first half came
when Hannah Clay crossed
the ball from the left side of
the field into Cassiy Klausing
who one touched the shot
past the keeper for the final
goal of the first half. The
first goal of the second half
was a beautiful cross from
Jordan Horstman who lofted
the ball in the air and Erin
Eickholt headed it past the
keeper. At 30:23 left in t he
half Brandi Kaskel was in
the right spot inside the 6
yard box to poke her third
goal in for the game. Abby
VonSasson got the second
last goal when Lydia Mesker
crossed the ball into her and
she put it to the far post for
the goal. The last goal came
with 11:12 left on the clock
when Hailey Young chipped
the ball from the right corner
of the field and put it in over
the out stretched hands of the
keeper.

Lady Raiders knock


off Big Green in volleyball
marathon
HAVILAND Wayne
Trace outlasted Ottoville
23-25, 25-21, 25-22, 23-25,
15-11 in a 5-set volley-
ball marathon Thursday
at Wayne Trace.
Leading the Lady Big
Green (5-4) were Annie
Lindeman (25 kills; 7
blocks), Nicole Kramer
(20/20 serving; 15 digs) and
Lexie Thorbahn (117/123
setting, 48 assists).
Leading the Lady Raiders
(5-4) were Blair Baumle (12-
12 serving; 126-127 setting,
31 assists), Erin Mohr (37-
40 hitting, 14 kills), Danae
Myers (4 blocks; 23-28 hit-
ting, 8 kills) and Sarah Young
(19-20 serving; 27-30 hitting,
9 kills; 3 blocks).
WT won the junior varsity
match 28-26, 25-22.
Ottoville hosts Columbus
Grove 6 p.m. Monday.
-
Continental pirates
away soccer win
CONTINENTAL
Continental scored three sec-
ond-half goals Thursday eve-
ning as the Lady Pirates ral-
lied for a 3-1 non-league girls
soccer win over Lincolnview.
The Lancers had a 1-0
halftime lead on a goal by
Hannah McCleery.
Continental over-
came that deficit
thanks in part to two
second-half goals by
Caitlin Geckle and one by
McKenna Scott.
Continental outshot the
Lancers 39-8 for the contest
as Emma Recker had two
saves and Ashley Mansfield
four saves for the Pirates in
goal
Claire Clay had 24 saves
for the Lancers.
Lincolnview hosts
Coldwater Thursday.
-
Ada sweeps Spencerville
in net action
ADA Thursday night
in Northwest Conference vol-
leyball action at The Kennel,
Spencerville fell to Ada
25-20, 25-15, 25-20.
Megan Miller had a great
night with 22 digs
and seven kills,
along with Schylar
Miller (11 assists;
4 kills; 10 digs;
2 aces) and Katie
Merriman (14 digs; 4 blocks;
2 aces).
Ada also won the junior
varsity 25-9, 25-13.
Spencerville hosts Allen
East Tuesday.

Pioneers down Bearcats


in WOSL boys action
SPENCERVILLE In a
Western Ohio Soccer League
boys matchup Thursday at
Spencerville, Lima Temple
Christian gained a 3-2 victory.
Tallying for the Bearcats
(2-2, 1-1) were David Wisher
and Justin Thiery, with Jaret
Montenery registering an
assist. Byron Gay had six
saves in goal.
Spencerville hosts Botkins
Thursday.

Lady Dawgs pound


undermanned Cougars
ELIDA Both Elida and
Van Wert have had their share
of injuries in the 2014 girls
soccer season but the young
Lady Cougars have been
stymied even more, causing
the teams junior var-
sity match to be can-
celed Thursday night
at the Elida Sports
Complex.
The host Lady Bulldogs
proceeded to pound that same
Cougar unit 10-0 in Western
Buckeye League action.
We have battled some
early-season injuries this
yeasr, so it was good to give
our girls some rest. We know
Van Wert is down due to
injuries as well, Elida coach
Brady Overholt said. We
played our varsity about 40
minutes and our JV the rest
about half the time each
half. We scored six goals
in the first 10 minutes
but they were all on soc-
cer plays: crosses, good
passes, all that stuff, and
not on bad habits; thats what
you most worry about in a
match like this when you
know your opponent is beat-
up. Even our JV got some
good action.
Scoring for the Lady
Bulldogs (4-2, 3-1 WBL)
were a hat trick from Brett
Pauff (1 assists), two by
Jenna Halpern (1 assist) and
Shyah Wheeler and singles
each by Jaydon Hollstein
(assist), Hope Carter and
Mychaela Johnson.
We know its a process
and will take time. We have
three somewhat healthy
seniors and they know were
building for the future,
Cougar coach Rich Nouza
explained. We have 13
freshmen on this roster
and they are all playing.
They keep playing hard
the effort has been
great even with our
adversity this year. We were
much better the second half
overall and had a 20-minute
span there in the first when
we shut them out. We have
to remain positive and keep
working to get better; thats
what is happening. Plus, we
play in a very good league
with teams like Elida.
Elida hosts St. Johns 1
p.m. Saturday.
The Lady Cougars (0-6,
0-4) hosts Bath Tuesday.
-
Titans down Bulldogs
OTTAWA Ottawa-
Glandorf claimed its first
Western Buckeye League
golf win of the season as
they defeated Elida Thursday
177-191 at Pike Run.
O-G is now 1-7 in the
WBL and 3-9 overall, while
Elida is 0-9 in the league and
0-11 overall.
Eric Parys was the medal-
ist for the Titans with a 40.
Adam Siefker finished with a
43, Erik Verhoff had a 46 and
Jake Yant a 48.
Jimmy Ebling led
the Bulldogs with a 45,
Drew Sarno had a 46,
Carson Hurst a 47 and
Kaven Hurst a 53.
Kalida 161, Miller City
187, Columbus Grove 205,
Leipsic 211
KALIDA Kalida post-
ed four solid scores Thursday
as the Wildcats won a 4-team
Putnam County League golf
match.
Collin Nartker led the
Wildcats (3-0, 7-4) with a
37 for medalist honors. Jeff
Knueve followed with a 40,
while Noah Lambert and
Zach Erhart both had a 42.
Davis Lammers led Miller
City (4-1, 9-6) with a 44 and
Jacob Schimmoeller had a
45. Cody Sheets had a 46 and
Adam Schroeder a 52.
Brandon Hoffman led
the Bulldogs (1-4, 5-16)
with a 42. Logan Hardeman
followed with a 49, Wyatt
Mayberry had a 56, while
Kyle Welty and Gage
Gerdeman both had a 58.
Alex Ellerbrock led the
Vikings (1-4, 4-13) with
a 43. Nick Goedde had a 52,
Tyler Selhorst a 57 and Justin
Ellerbrock a 59.

Wapak boys
shut out Kalida
KALIDA
Kalida lost to Wapak in boys
varsity soccer Thursday eve-
ning 4-0.
Three of the four Wapak
goals were scored by Will
Hinegardner (1 of them
assisted by Sam Hinegardner,
the other 2 were unassisted)
and the 4th goal was scored
by Kaden Ware (assisted by
Luke Williams).
Kalida had five shots on
goal while Wapak also had five.
Kalida keeper Brent Hovest
had a save. Wapak keeper
Tristan Meyer had five.
Halftime score was 2-0.
Roundup
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AMC Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines (03, R) aac HD Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines (03, R) aac HD
ANIMAL To Be Announced Redwood Kings (N) HD Redwood Kings (N) HD Redwood Kings HD Redwood Kings HD
BET ComicView ComicView Why Did I Get Married? (07, PG-13) ac Tyler Perry, Sharon Leal. Wendy Williams HD
BRAVO To Be Announced To Be Announced To Be Announced To Be Announced To Be Announced
CARTOON King Hill King Hill Cleveland Cleveland Dad HD Dad HD Family Guy Family Guy Robot Squid HD
CMT Steel Magnolias (89) Cheerleaders (N) HD Cops HD Cops HD Cops HD Cops HD Cops HD Cops HD
CNN Anderson Cooper 360 Anthony : Detroit CNN Spot Unguarded Anthony Anthony : Detroit
COMEDY Key; Peele Key; Peele Key; Peele Tosh.0 HD Tosh.0 HD Tosh.0 HD South Park South Park South Park South Park
DISCOVERY Bering Sea Gold (N) Bering Sea Gold (N) HD Airplane Repo (N) HD Bering Sea Gold HD (:04) Airplane Repo HD
DISNEY Blog (N) Girl Meets Gravity (N) Yonder (N) I Didnt Liv HD A.N.T. HD Jessie HD Austin HD Jessie HD
E! Secrets Who Wore Fashion Week (N) Fashion Week E! News HD Fashion Week
ESPN College Football: Baylor Bears at Buffalo Bulls from UB Stadium (Live) SportsCenter HD SportsCenter HD
ESPN2 2014 WNBA Finals : Game 3" (Live) HD Sports HD NHRA Qualifying (Live) Baseball Tonight HD
FAMILY Matilda HD The Goonies (85, PG) aaa Sean Astin, Josh Brolin. HD The 700 Club (TV G) Home Alone 3 (97) a HD
FOOD Diners HD Diners HD Diners HD Diners HD Diners (N) Eating Diners HD Diners HD Diners HD Diners HD
FX We Bought a Zoo (11, PG) aaa Matt Damon. We Bought a Zoo (11, PG) aaa Matt Damon.
HGTV Love It or List It, Too Love It or List It, Too Hunters Hunters Hunters Hunters Love It or List It, Too
HISTORY American Pickers HD American Pickers HD American Pickers HD American Pickers HD American Pickers HD
LIFETIME The Brittany Murphy Story (14, NR) HD 28 Days (00, PG-13) aac Sandra Bullock. HD Brittany Murphy (14)
MTV (:55) Napoleon Dynamite (04, PG) Jon Heder. HD Scary Movie 2 (01, R) ac Shawn Wayans. HD Harold and Kumar (04)
NICK TMNT (N) TMNT HD Friends Friends Friends Friends How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met
SPIKE Cops HD Cops HD Bellator MMA (N) HD Cops HD Cops HD Cops HD Jail HD
SYFY WWE SmackDown HD Z Nation : Puppies (N) Gods of the Arena Z Nation : Puppies
TBS Family Guy Family Guy Family Guy Family Guy Blades of Glory (07, PG-13) aac Will Ferrell. Get Smart (08) aac
TCM Red Dust (32, NR) aac Clark Gable. Design for Living (33, NR) aaa (:15) Trouble in Paradise (32, NR) Dr. Jekyll
TLC 19 Kids 19 Kids Four Weddings (N) HD Four Weddings (N) HD (:02) Four Weddings HD (:03) Four Weddings HD
TNT The Replacements (00, PG-13) aac Keanu Reeves. HD Legends : Rogue HD Franklin & Bash HD Zombieland
TRAVEL Mysteries Mysteries (N) Mysteries Mysteries Mysteries : Brassiere
TV LAND Hillbillies Cleveland Queens The King of Queens Queens Queens Raymond Raymond Raymond
USA Modern Modern Modern Modern Modern Modern Modern Modern Law & Order: SVU HD
VH1 Space Jam (96, PG) aac Michael Jordan. HD I Heart Couples Therapy HD Love & Hip Hop HD Love & Hip
WGN How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met
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HBO The Leftovers HD Real Time Maher (N) Bill Maher: DC HD Real Time Maher HD Bill Maher: DC HD
MAX The Legend of Hercules (14, PG-13) Kellan Lutz. The Knick (N) HD The Knick HD The Knick Girls Gui
SHOW Masters of Sex HD Adult World (14, R) Emma Roberts. (:35) Dark Skies (13, PG-13) aac HD (:15) Masters of Sex HD
Hometown Content, Listings by FYI
PBS
WBGU Antiques Roadshow Infnity Hall Live | The Red Green Show | Austin City Limits
SATURDAY EVENING SEPTEMBER 13, 2014
8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00 12:30
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ABC (:07) College Football : Teams TBA (Live) HD Local Local Programs
CBS Reckless (N) HD Reckless (N) HD 48 Hours HD Local Programs
NBC (7:30) College Football: Notre Dame vs Purdue (Live) HD Local (:29) Saturday Night Live HD
FOX College Football: UCLA Bruins vs Texas Longhorns from AT&T Stadium (Live) HD Golan HD Golan HD Local
ION Law & Order CI HD Law & Order CI HD Law & Order CI HD Law & Order CI HD Law & Order CI HD
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A&E Criminal Minds : JJ Criminal Minds HD Criminal Minds HD (:01) Criminal Minds HD Criminal Minds : JJ
AMC (6:30) Big Jake (71) HD Hell on Wheels (N) HD TURN Wash Spies HD (:01) Hell on Wheels HD Apollo 13 (95, PG) HD
ANIMAL Too Cute! Too Cute! Too Cute! Too Cute! Pit Bull Parol (N) HD Too Cute! Too Cute! Too Cute! Too Cute!
BET Love and Hate (96) ac Diary of a Mad Black Woman (05, PG-13) ac Kimberly Elise. I Think I Love My Wife (07, R) aac
BRAVO American Pie 2 (01, R) aa Jason Biggs. American Pie 2 (01, R) aa Jason Biggs. Office Space (99) HD
CARTOON King Hill King Hill Dad HD Dad HD Boondcks Boondcks Family Guy Attack (N) Bleach (N) Dandy (N)
CMT Dog & Beth HD Dog & Beth (N) HD Dog & Beth HD Cops HD Cops HD Cops HD Cops HD
CNN Death Row Stories Death Row Stories Death Row Stories Death Row Stories Death Row Stories
COMEDY (6:22) Yes Man (08) HD Dumb & Dumber (94, PG-13) Jim Carrey, Jeff Daniels. HD (:38) Tropic Thunder (08, R) aaa
DISCOVERY Fast N Loud HD Fast N Loud HD Redwood Kings (N) HD Fast N Loud HD Redwood Kings HD
DISNEY I Didnt I Didnt Dog Blog Dog Blog Lab Rats Mighty Med Austin HD Liv HD Jessie HD Austin HD
E! Scary Movie 3 (03, PG-13) ac Anna Faris. HD Anaconda (97, PG-13) ac Jennifer Lopez. HD Scary Movie 3 (03) HD
ESPN College Football : Teams TBA (Live) HD SportsCenter HD SportsCenter HD
ESPN2 (6:00) College Football College Football: Rice Owls at Texas A&M Aggies from Kyle Field (Live) Scoreboard HD
FAMILY Despicable Brave (12, PG) aaa Kelly Macdonald. HD The Princess and the Frog (09, G) aaa HD Dumbo HD
FOOD Diners HD Diners HD Diners HD Diners HD Diners, Drive-Ins (N) HD Diners, Drive-Ins HD Diners HD Diners HD
FX American Reunion (12, R) aaa Jason Biggs. American Reunion (12, R) aaa Jason Biggs.
HGTV Property Brothers HD Property Brothers HD House Hunters (N) HD Hunters Hunters Property Brothers HD
HISTORY Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars
LIFETIME Deliverance Creek (14, NR) Lauren Ambrose. HD Deliverance Creek (14, NR) Lauren Ambrose. HD Deliverance Creek (14)
MTV Harold and Kumar Go to White Castle (04) aaaWhite Chicks (04, PG-13) ac Shawn Wayans. All About Benjamins
NICK Henry (N) Nicky (N) Thunderman Awesome Friends Friends How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met
SPIKE Cops (N) Cops HD Cops HD Cops HD Cops HD Cops HD Cops HD Cops HD Jail HD Jail HD
SYFY Troy (04, R) Brad Pitt, Eric Bana. HD 10,000 B.C. (08, PG-13) ac Steven Strait, Camilla Belle. Star Trek II (82) HD
TBS Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Sullivan & The Heartbreak Kid (07, R) aa HD
TCM Belle de Jour (67, NR) aaac Catherine Deneuve. Walk on the Wild Side (62, NR) aaa (:15) Frisco Jenny (33)
TLC Undercover Boss HD Undercover Boss HD Undercover Boss HD Undercover Boss HD Undercover Boss HD
TNT Red (10, PG-13) aaac Bruce Willis. HD (:16) Tower Heist (11, PG-13) Ben Stiller, Eddie Murphy. HD Transport3
TRAVEL Ghost Adventures HD Ghost Adventures HD The Dead Files (N) HD The Dead Files HD Ghost Adventures HD
TV LAND Cosby Cosby Queens The King of Queens Queens Queens Raymond Raymond Raymond
USA Law & Order: SVU HD Law & Order: SVU HD Modern Modern Modern Modern Cheaper Dozen (03)
VH1 Love & Hip Hop HD Love & Hip Hop HD Love & Hip Hop HD Love & Hip Hop HD Love & Hip Hop HD
WGN (7:00) MLB Baseball: Minnesota vs Chicago HD Home Videos HD Home Videos HD Home Videos HD
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HBO Dallas Buyers Club (13, R) aaac HD The Leftovers HD Boardwalk Empire HD Dallas Buyers Club HD
MAX Now You See Me (13) The Knick HD The Legend of Hercules (14) ac HD (:40) The Knick HD Fast 6 HD
SHOW Fruitvale Station (13, R) aaac HD The Impossible (12, PG-13) Naomi Watts. HD Ray Donovan HD 7 Deadly
Hometown Content, Listings by FYI
MONDAY EVENING SEPTEMBER 15, 2014
8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00 12:30
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ABC Dancing with the Stars (N) HD (:01) Castle HD Local Jimmy Kimmel Live HD Nightline
CBS Big Bang Mom HD 2 1/2 Men Big Bang Under the Dome (N) HD Local (:35) Late Show HD Late Late
NBC American Ninja Warrior : USA vs. The World (N) HD Local (:35) Tonight Show HD Late Night
FOX MasterChef : Top 3; Winner Chosen (N) HD Local Programs Local Programs
ION Criminal Minds HD Criminal Minds HD Criminal Minds HD Criminal Minds HD Criminal Minds HD
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A&E Duck HD Duck HD Wahlburger Wahlburger Love Prison (N) HD (:02) Love Prison HD Duck HD Duck HD
AMC (7:00) The Mummy Returns (01, PG-13) aac HD Deja Vu (06, PG-13) Denzel Washington, Paula Patton. HD Own Night
ANIMAL Treehouse Masters HD Treehouse Masters HD Redwood Kings HD Treehouse Masters HD Treehouse Masters HD
BET Im in Love with a Church Girl (13, PG) Ja Rule. Black Coffee (14, PG) Darrin Dewitt Henson. HD Wendy Williams (N) HD
BRAVO Real Housewives Real Housewives Jersey Belle (N) Watch What Real Housewives Jersey
CARTOON King Hill King Hill Cleveland Cleveland Dad HD Rick Morty Family Guy Family Guy Robot Squid HD
CMT Trading Places (83, R) aaa Dan Aykroyd, Eddie Murphy. Cops HD Cops HD Cops HD Cops HD
CNN Anderson Cooper 360 Anthony : Mexico City CNN Tonight (N) Anthony Anthony : Mexico City
COMEDY Futurama Futurama South Park South Park South Park South Park Daily (N) Colbert (N) midnight South Park
DISCOVERY Fast N Loud (N) HD Fast N Loud (N) HD Highway to Sell (N) HD (:03) Fast N Loud HD Highway to Sell HD
DISNEY Dog Blog I Didnt Gravity HD Dog Blog Dog Blog Good Luck I Didnt A.N.T. HD Good Luck Good Luck
E! Live (N) HD Keeping Up with the Kardashians Kardashians HD E! News HD Live HD #RichKids
ESPN (:15) Monday Night Football: Philadelphia vs Indianapolis (Live) HD (:20) SportsCenter Sports news. HD
ESPN2 (7:00) USA Wom. (Live) City Slam Baseball Tonight HD (:15) College Ftbll HD Baseball Tonight HD
FAMILY (7:00) Hop (11, PG) HD Zookeeper (11, PG) aa Kevin James. HD The 700 Club (TV G) Sister Act (92, PG)
FOOD Rewrapped Rewrapped Diners HD Diners HD Diners HD Eating (N) Diners HD Diners HD Diners HD Diners HD
FX Sweet Home Alabama (02, PG-13) aac Reese Witherspoon. Sweet Home Alabama (02, PG-13) aac Reese Witherspoon.
HGTV Love It or List It HD Love It or List It HD Hunters Hunters Urban Oasis 14 (N) Love It or List It HD
HISTORY Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Cars HD Cars HD Cars HD Cars HD Pawn Stars Pawn Stars
LIFETIME The First 48 HD The First 48 HD Hoarders HD Unsolved Mysteries HD (:02) The First 48 HD
MTV To Be Announced To Be Announced Ridiculous Ridiculous
NICK Full Hse Full Hse Full Hse Full Hse Full Hse Full Hse How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met
SPIKE Jail HD Cops HD Cops HD Cops HD Cops HD Cops HD (:18) Jail HD Jail HD Jail HD
SYFY (6:30) Chronicles (04) High Moon (14, NR) Jonathan Tucker. Paul (11, R) aaa Simon Pegg, Nick Frost.
TBS Family Guy Family Guy Family Guy HD Big Bang Big Bang Conan (N) HD The Office Conan HD
TCM Private Screenings To Have and Have Not (44, NR) aaac The Big Sleep (46, NR) aaac Humphrey Bogart.
TLC 90 Day Fiance HD 90 Day Fiance HD (:01) 90 Day Fiance HD (:02) 90 Day Fiance HD (:03) 90 Day Fiance HD
TNT Castle HD Dallas : Boxed In (N) Dallas : Boxed In HD (:02) Castle HD Law & Order : Ghosts
TRAVEL Bizarre Foods America Bizarre Foods America Bizarre Foods America v Food HD v Food HD Bizarre Foods America
TV LAND Hillbillies Cleveland Queens The King of Queens Queens Queens Cleveland Raymond Raymond
USA WWE Monday Night Raw HD Rush : Dirty Work Graceland : Faith 7"
VH1 Love & Hip Hop (N) TI & Tiny Atlanta Exes (N) HD Love & Hip Hop TI & Tiny Atlanta Exes HD
WGN Home Videos HD Home Videos HD Home Videos HD Home Videos HD Parks HD Parks HD
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HBO Enders Game (13) HD Terror at the Mall (14) Runner Runner (13, R) aac HD Cathouse Boardwalk Empire HD
MAX The Knick (:50) Red 2 (13, PG-13) Bruce Willis. HD Commando (85, R) Arnold Schwarzenegger. HD The Knick
SHOW Ray Donovan HD Masters of Sex HD Ray Donovan HD Masters of Sex HD Kings of Summer (13)
Hometown Content, Listings by FYI
SUNDAY EVENING SEPTEMBER 14, 2014
8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00 12:30
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ABC Miss America (N) HD The 2015 Miss America Competition HD Local Programs Local Programs
CBS 60 Min. (N) Big Brother (N) HD Unforgettable (N) HD Unforgettable (N) HD Local Programs
NBC (:20) Sunday Night Football: Chicago Bears at San Francisco 49ers Week 2. (Live) HD Local Dateline NBC HD
FOX Simpsons Simpsons American Dad! (N) HD Local Programs Local Programs
ION Leverage (TVPG) HD Leverage HD Leverage HD The Listener The Listener : Jericho
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A&E Duck Dynasty HD Duck HD Duck HD Wahlburger Wahlburger (:02) Love Prison HD (:01) Duck Dynasty HD
AMC Break. Bad Breaking Bad HD (:40) Breaking Bad HD (:50) Breaking Bad : Hermanos HD Breaking Bad : Bug
ANIMAL Gator Boys (N) HD Wildman Wildman Ice Lake Rebels (N) HD Wildman Wildman Ice Lake Rebels HD
BET (6:30) Diary (05) ac Set It Off (96, R) aa Jada Pinkett Smith, Queen Latifah. BET Inspiration
BRAVO Real Housewives (N) Real Housewives Real Housewives Watch What Real Housewives Dont Be
CARTOON King Hill King Hill Bobs HD Bobs HD Rick Morty Family Guy Family Guy Superjail! Black (:45) Loiter
CMT Cops HD Cops HD Cops HD Cops HD Cops HD Cops HD Cops HD Cops HD Cops HD Cops HD
CNN Chicagoland Chicagoland Chicagoland Chicagoland Chicagoland
COMEDY Dumb & Dumber (94, PG-13) aaa Jim Carrey. HD Zack and Miri Make a Porno (08, R) aaa Seth Rogen. HD Tosh.0 HD
DISCOVERY Treehouse Masters HD Naked and Afraid (N) Naked and Afraid (N) Naked and Afraid HD Naked and Afraid HD
DISNEY How to Build a Better Boy (14) HD Toy Story Jessie HD (:25) Blog Jessie HD Austin HD Good Luck Good Luck
E! Bringing Down (03) HD Total Divas (N) HD #RichKids Total Divas HD #RichKids Total Divas HD
ESPN MLB Baseball: New York Yankees at Baltimore Orioles (Live) HD SportsCenter Sports news. HD Sports HD
ESPN2 Sports HD NHRA Drag Racing : NHRA Carolina Nationals (Taped) HD NASCAR Sprint Cup (Taped) HD
FAMILY Brave (12, PG) aaa Kelly Macdonald. HD The Princess and the Frog (09, G) aaa HD Osteen Turn Point
FOOD Rachael vs. Guy (N) Great Food (N) Cutthroat Kitchen (N) Cutthroat Kitchen Great Food : St. Louis
FX (7:00) The Amazing Spider-Man (12, PG-13) aaa The Strain (N) HD The Strain HD The Strain HD
HGTV Lakefront Lakefront Hunt Hunt House for Free (N) Hunters Hunters Hunt Hunt
HISTORY Mountain Men HD Mountain Men (N) HD Ice Road Truckers (N) (:03) Mountain Men HD (:01) Mountain Men HD
LIFETIME Unauthorized (14) HD Witches of East End (:01) The Lottery (N) HD The Unauthorized Saved by the Bell Story (14)
MTV Ridiculous Ridiculous Ridiculous Ridiculous Ridiculous Ridiculous Maze (N) Ridiculous Ridiculous Ridiculous
NICK Full Hse Full Hse Friends Friends Friends Friends How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met
SPIKE Bar Rescue HD Hungry Investors (N) Bar Rescue HD Bar Rescue HD Hungry Investors
SYFY Pitch Black (00, R) HD The Chronicles of Riddick (04, PG-13) aac Vin Diesel. Star Trek VI: Country (91) aaa HD
TBS Hall Pass (11, R) aac Owen Wilson. Hall Pass (11, R) aac Owen Wilson. Anchorman (04) aaa
TCM The Old Maid (39, NR) aaa Bette Davis. Old Acquaintance (43, NR) aaa Bette Davis. A Lady of Chance (28)
TLC LI Medium LI Medium LI Medium LI Medium Angels (N) Angels (N) LI Medium LI Medium Angels HD Angels HD
TNT National Treasure: Book of Secrets (07, PG) Nicolas Cage. National Treasure: Book of Secrets (07, PG) Nicolas Cage.
TRAVEL Extreme Hotels (N) Bizarre Foods America Bizarre Foods America Bizarre Foods Bizarre Foods America
TV LAND Cosby Cosby Queens The King of Queens Queens Queens Cleveland Raymond Raymond
USA Law & Order: SVU HD Law & Order: SVU HD Law & Order: SVU HD Modern Modern Satisfaction
VH1 Love & Hip Hop HD Love & Hip Hop HD Love & Hip Hop HD Love & Hip Hop HD Love & Hip Hop HD
WGN (7:30) E.T.: The Extra-Terrestrial (82, PG) Manhattan (N) Manhattan Manhattan
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HBO Dallas Buyers Club HD Boardwalk Empire (N) True Detective HD Oliver (N) Boardwalk Empire HD Oliver HD
MAX Taken 2 Bullet to the Head (13, R) aac HD Grudge Match (13, PG-13) Robert De Niro. HD Skin Max 4 Top HD
SHOW Ray Donovan HD Ray Donovan (N) HD Masters of Sex (N) HD Ray Donovan HD Masters of Sex HD
Hometown Content, Listings by FYI
WEDNESDAY EVENING SEPTEMBER 17, 2014
8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00 12:30
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ABC Middle HD Goldbergs Modern Modern Nashville HD Local Jimmy Kimmel Live (N) Nightline
CBS Big Brother (N) HD Criminal Minds HD Extant : Ascension (N) Local (:35) Late Show HD Late Late
NBC Americas Got Talent : Finale (N) HD The Mysteries of Laura Local (:35) Tonight Show HD Late Night
FOX Hells Kitchen (N) HD Red Band Society (N) Local Programs Local Programs
ION Cold Case : Static HD Cold Case : The Key Cold Case : Fireflies Cold Case : Hearts HD Cold Case HD
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A&E Duck HD Duck HD Duck HD Duck (N) Wahlburger Epic Ink Epic Ink Epic Ink Duck HD Duck HD
AMC Men in Black (97, PG-13) aac Will Smith. HD Lara Croft Tomb Raider: The Cradle of Life (03, PG-13) HD Men Black
ANIMAL Treehouse Masters HD Treehouse Masters HD Redwood Kings HD Treehouse Masters HD Treehouse Masters HD
BET (7:00) I Think I Love My Wife (07, R) ComicView ComicView ComicView To Be Announced Wendy Williams HD
BRAVO Los Angeles (TV14) Los Angeles (TV14) (N) Top Chef Duels (N) Watch What (:31) Top Chef Duels Top Chef
CARTOON King Hill King Hill Cleveland Cleveland Dad HD Dad HD Family Guy Family Guy Robot Squid HD
CMT Crazy Heart (10, R) aaa Jeff Bridges, Maggie Gyllenhaal. HD Cops HD Cops HD Cops HD Cops HD
CNN Anderson Cooper 360 Anthony CNN Tonight (N) Anderson Cooper 360 Anthony
COMEDY Key; Peele Key; Peele South Park South Park South Park South Park Daily (N) Colbert (N) midnight Meltdown
DISCOVERY Naked and Afraid HD Naked and Afraid HD Naked Afraid (N) HD Naked and Afraid HD Naked and Afraid HD
DISNEY Holes (03, PG) aaa Henry Winkler, Jon Voight. (:05) Blog Good Luck I Didnt A.N.T. HD Cheetah Girls 2 (06) a
E! Live (N) HD #RichKids Total Divas HD The Soup The Soup E! News HD Live HD The Soup
ESPN (7:00) MLB Baseball: Washington vs Atlanta HD MLB Baseball: Seattle Mariners at Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim (Live)
ESPN2 2014 WNBA Finals : Game 5": Chicago vs Phoenix (Live) HD SportsCenter Sports news. HD SportsCenter HD
FAMILY (7:00) Liar Liar (97) HD Billy Madison (95, PG-13) aac Adam Sandler. HD The 700 Club (TV G) Lovestruck: Musical HD
FOOD Mystery Mystery Mystery Mystery Restaurant: Impossible Restaurant: Impossible Mystery Mystery
FX (7:00) The Amazing Spider-Man (12, PG-13) aaa The Bridge (N) HD The Bridge : Beholder The Bridge : Eidolon
HGTV Buying and Selling HD Buying and Selling (N) Hunters Hunters Property Brothers HD Buying and Selling HD
HISTORY American Pickers HD American Pickers HD American Pickers HD American Pickers HD American Pickers HD
LIFETIME Bring It! HD Bring It! (N) HD Girlfriend Intervention Girlfriend Intervention (:02) Bring It! HD
MTV Teen Mom 2 HD Teen Mom 2 HD Teen Mom 2 (N) HD Virgin Territory (N) HD Teen Mom 2 HD
NICK Full Hse Full Hse Full Hse Full Hse Full Hse Full Hse How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met
SPIKE Cops HD Cops HD Impact Wrestling (N) HD Ink Master HD Cops HD Cops HD
SYFY Friday the 13th (80) a Friday the 13th, Part II (81, R) aa Betsy Palmer. Friday the 13th, Part III (82, R) ac Dana Kimmell.
TBS Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Conan (N) HD The Office Conan HD
TCM Billy Budd (62, NR) aaa Robert Ryan. The Great Sinner (49, NR) aac Gregory Peck. That Uncertain (41)
TLC Race Against Time HD Britains Fattest Man: Last Chance To Live (N) Half-Ton Killer? HD Half-Ton Killer? HD
TNT Fast & Furious (09) HD Legends : Gauntlet (N) Franklin & Bash (N) HD Legends : Gauntlet HD Franklin & Bash HD
TRAVEL Bizarre Foods America American Grilled (N) Food Paradise Man v. Food : Miami American Grilled
TV LAND Hillbillies Cleveland Cleveland Cleveland The Exes The Exes Candid Camera HD Raymond Queens
USA Law & Order: SVU HD Law & Order: SVU HD Law & Order: SVU HD Modern Modern Law & Order: SVU HD
VH1 Couples Therapy HD Couples Therapy (N) I Heart (N) Couples Therapy HD I Heart Couples Therapy HD
WGN Rules HD Rules HD Rules HD Rules HD Rules HD Rules HD Manhattan Manhattan
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HBO Boardwalk Empire HD Dallas Buyers Club (13, R) aaac HD Real Time Maher HD Bill Maher: DC HD
MAX Gothika (03, R) aa HD The Knick The Legend of Hercules (14, PG-13) Kellan Lutz. R.I.P.D. (13, PG-13) Jeff Bridges.
SHOW Inside the NFL HD Ray Donovan HD Masters of Sex HD Inside the NFL HD 60 Minutes Sports HD
Hometown Content, Listings by FYI
TUESDAY EVENING SEPTEMBER 16, 2014
8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00 12:30
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ABC Dancing with the Stars S.H.I.E.L.D. HD 20/20 : From Hell (N) Local Jimmy Kimmel Live (N) Nightline
CBS Big Brother (N) HD NCIS: Los Angeles HD Person of Interest HD Local (:35) Late Show HD Late Late
NBC Americas Got Talent Americas Got Talent : Finale (N) HD Local (:35) Tonight Show HD Late Night
FOX Utopia (N) HD New Girl Mindy (N) Local Programs Local Programs Local Programs
ION Criminal Minds HD Criminal Minds HD Criminal Minds HD The Listener (N) The Listener (N)
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A&E Storage Storage Storage Storage Brandi & Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage
AMC The Fugitive (93, PG-13) aaac Harrison Ford. HD 4th and Loud (N) HD 4th and Loud HD Walking Tall (04) aa
ANIMAL Africa : Congo (:01) Africa : Kalahari Africa : The Future (:03) Africa : Congo (:04) Africa : Kalahari
BET Why Did I Get Married Too? (10, PG-13) ac HD ComicView ComicView ComicView ComicView Wendy Williams HD
BRAVO Below Deck Below Deck (N) The Singles Project (N) Watch What Below Deck Housewives
CARTOON King Hill King Hill Cleveland Cleveland Dad HD Dad HD Family Guy Family Guy Robot Squid HD
CMT Bruce Almighty (03, PG-13) aac Jim Carrey, Morgan Freeman. HD Cops HD Cops HD Cops HD Cops HD
CNN Anderson Cooper 360 CNN Special Report CNN Tonight (N) Anderson Cooper 360 CNN Special Report
COMEDY Chapplle Tosh.0 HD Tosh.0 HD Tosh.0 HD Tosh.0 (N) Brickle (N) Daily (N) Colbert (N) midnight Tosh.0 HD
DISCOVERY Yukon Men: Revealed (:01) Yukon Men (N) HD Ice Lake Rebel (N) HD (:03) Yukon Men HD (:04) Ice Lake Rebel HD
DISNEY Tarzan (99, G) aaa Nigel Hawthorne. Austin HD Dog Blog Good Luck I Didnt A.N.T. HD Good Luck Good Luck
E! Live (N) HD The Back-Up Plan (10, PG-13) aa Jennifer Lopez. HD E! News HD Live HD Sex & City
ESPN MLB Baseball: Milwaukee Brewers at St. Louis Cardinals (Live) HD SportsCenter HD SportsCenter HD
ESPN2 E:60 HD SEC Storied HD SportsCenter HD E:60 HD Baseball Tonight HD
FAMILY Zookeeper Home Alone 2: Lost in New York (92, PG) Macaulay Culkin. The 700 Club (TV G) Sister Act II: Back (93)
FOOD Chopped HD Chopped HD Chopped (N) HD Chopped : Thirsty For Chopped HD
FX (7:30) Captain America: The First Avenger (11) Sons of Anarchy (N) HD Sons of Anarchy : Toil and Till HD Anarchy
HGTV Flop Flop Jennie (N) Jennie (N) Hunters Hunters Flop Flop Jennie Jennie
HISTORY Cars HD Cars HD Cars HD Cars HD Cars HD Cars HD Cars HD Cars HD Cars HD Cars HD
LIFETIME Dance Moms: (N) HD Dance Moms (N) HD Kim of Queens (N) HD (:01) Kim of Queens HD (:02) Dance Moms: HD
MTV Finding Carter Finding Carter Finding Carter (N) Awkward. Awkward. Awkward. Awkward.
NICK Full Hse Full Hse Full Hse Full Hse Full Hse Full Hse How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met
SPIKE Ink Master HD Ink Master HD Ink Master (N) HD Nightmares Nightmares Ink Master HD
SYFY Face Off HD Face Off (N) HD Wizard Wars (N) Face Off HD Wizard Wars
TBS Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Conan (N) HD The Office Conan HD
TCM Hill 24 Doesnt Answer (55, NR) aaa Sallah (64, NR) aaa Topol, Geula Noni. Sword in Desert (49)
TLC 19 Kids 19 Kids 19 Kids 19 Kids Little People (N) HD 19 Kids 19 Kids (:03) Little People HD
TNT Rizzoli & Isles HD (:01) Rizzoli & Isles HD (:02) Rizzoli & Isles HD (:03) CSI: NY HD (:03) CSI: NY HD
TRAVEL Bizarre Foods America Worlds Most Extreme Extreme Houseboats v Food HD v Food HD Worlds Most Extreme
TV LAND Candid Camera (N) HD Cleveland Queens Queens Queens Candid Camera HD Raymond Raymond
USA Modern Modern Modern Modern Modern Modern Modern Modern Law & Order: SVU HD
VH1 TI & Tiny TI & Tiny Love & Hip Hop Space Jam (96, PG) aac Michael Jordan. HD TI & Tiny Love & Hip
WGN MLB Baseball: Cincinnati Reds at Chicago Cubs from Wrigley Field (Live) Parks HD Parks HD Parks HD Rules HD
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HBO The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug (13, PG-13) aaac Ian McKellen. HD Fight Game Boardwalk Empire HD Gumbel
MAX Fast & Furious 6 (13, PG-13) aaac Vin Diesel. HD The Knick (:50) Getaway (13, PG-13) ac Ethan Hawke. HD Talk Sex
SHOW Masters of Sex HD Inside the NFL (N) HD Ray Donovan HD Inside the NFL HD 7 Deadly Sinister
Hometown Content, Listings by FYI
THURSDAY EVENING SEPTEMBER 18, 2014
8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00 12:30
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ABC Greys Anatomy HD Scandal HD Scandal HD Local Jimmy Kimmel Live (N) Nightline
CBS Kickoff HD (:25) Thursday Night Football: Tampa Bay vs Atlanta (Live) (:15) Local Late Show with David Letterman HD
NBC The Biggest Loser : The Knockout (N) HD The Mysteries of Laura Local (:35) Tonight Show HD Late Night
FOX Sleepy Hollow HD Sleepy Hollow HD Local Programs Local Programs
ION Criminal Minds HD Criminal Minds HD Cold Case HD Cold Case HD Cold Case : Blackout
E
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A&E The First 48 HD The First 48 (N) HD (:01) Killer Kids HD (:02) The First 48 HD (:01) The First 48 HD
AMC Sixteen Candles (84, PG) aac Molly Ringwald. HD Weird Science (85, PG-13) aac The Break-Up (06) HD
ANIMAL Alaskan Bush People Ice Lake Rebels HD Ice Lake Rebels HD Ice Lake Rebels HD Ice Lake Rebels HD
BET Jumping the Broom (11, PG-13) Angela Bassett. Black Coffee (14, PG) Darrin Dewitt Henson. HD Wendy Williams HD
BRAVO Dont Be Dont Be Dont Be Extreme Guide (N) Dont Be Watch What Real Housewives Dont Be
CARTOON King Hill King Hill Cleveland Cleveland Dad HD Family Guy Black (N) Family Guy Bedtime Awesome
CMT Elf (03, PG) aaa Will Ferrell, James Caan. HD Cops HD Cops HD Cops HD Cops HD
CNN Anderson Cooper 360 Whitey: United States of America v. Bulger (14) Whitey: United States of America v. Bulger (14)
COMEDY Jeff Dunham: Spark of Insanity HD Jeff Dunham: Controlled Chaos HD Daily (N) Colbert (N) midnight A. Devine
DISCOVERY Alaska: Last HD Alaska: Last HD Alaska: Last HD Alaska: Last HD Alaska: Last HD
DISNEY Radio Rebel (12, NR) Debby Ryan. Austin HD (:05) Blog Good Luck I Didnt A.N.T. HD Good Luck Good Luck
E! Untold with Maria (N) Total Divas HD Total Divas HD E! News HD Kardashians : Design
ESPN (7:30) College Football: Auburn vs Kansas State (Live) HD SportsCenter Sports news. HD SportsCenter HD
ESPN2 (7:00) Womens Soccer High School Football: Cooper Pirates at Stephenville Yellowjackets (Live) Baseball Tonight HD
FAMILY Billy Madison (95) HD Accepted (06, PG-13) aac Justin Long. HD The 700 Club (TV G) Teen Wolf (85, PG) HD
FOOD Chopped HD Chopped : Celebrities Beat Bobby Beat Bobby Diners HD Diners HD Chopped : Celebrities
FX Friends with Benefits (11, R) Justin Timberlake. Married The Worst Married The Worst The Worst Married
HGTV Fixer Upper Fixer Upper Hunters Hunters Fixer Upper Fixer Upper
HISTORY Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars
LIFETIME Project Runway HD Project Runway (TVPG) (N) HD Project Runway : The History of Project Runway HD
MTV Ridiculous Ridiculous Ridiculous Ridiculous Ridiculous Snack-Off Ridiculous Ridiculous Ridiculous Fighting a
NICK iCarly : iGoodbye HD Instant HD Dad Run Full Hse Full Hse How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met
SPIKE Cops HD Cops HD Cops HD Cops HD Cops HD Cops HD Kiss of the Dragon (01, R) aac Jet Li. HD
SYFY (7:50) Gods of Arena (:55) Gods of the Arena Haven (N) Gods of the Arena (:05) Haven
TBS Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Conan (N) HD The Office Conan HD
TCM The Learning Tree (69, PG) aaac Kyle Johnson. Thomasine & Bushrod (74, PG) aa Max Julien. Shaft (71, R) aaa
TLC Gypsy Sisters HD Gypsy Sisters (N) HD Breaking Amish: (N) HD Escaping Alaska (N) HD Breaking Amish: HD
TNT Castle : Knockdown Castle : Lucky Stiff HD Castle : The Final Nail Dallas : Boxed In HD Hawaii Five-0 HD
TRAVEL Bourdain Layover : Amsterdam Layover Bourdain : Cuba Layover : Amsterdam
TV LAND Hillbillies Cleveland Queens The King of Queens Queens Queens Raymond Raymond Raymond
USA Law & Order: SVU HD Rush (N) (:01) Satisfaction (N) Rush : Bitter Sweet (:03) Satisfaction
VH1 Dating Naked HD Dating Naked (N) HD Couples Therapy HD Dating Naked HD I Heart I Heart
WGN How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met Rules HD Rules HD
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HBO The Best Man Holiday (13, R) Morris Chestnut. Boardwalk Empire HD Undercover (:50) 12 Years a Slave (13, R) HD
MAX Grudge Match (13, PG-13) Robert De Niro. HD Rush Hour (98, PG-13) aac HD Hidden Treasures (13, NRAO) c HD
SHOW (7:25) Cocaine Cowboys: Reloaded (14, R) HD Ray Donovan HD 7 Deadly B.S.! 7 Deadly Donovan
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BG on TV | The Roosevelts: An Intimate History The Rising Road, Part 5
10 The Herald Friday, September 12, 2014 www.delphosherald.com
HERALD DELPHOS
THE
Telling The Tri-Countys Story Since 1869
Classifieds
To place an ad phone 419-695-0015 ext. 122
www.delphosherald.com
100 ANNOUNCEMENTS
105 Announcements
110 Card Of Thanks
115 Entertainment
120 In Memoriam
125 Lost And Found
130 Prayers
135 School/Instructions
140 Happy Ads
145 Ride Share
200 EMPLOYMENT
205 Business Opportunities
210 Childcare
215 Domestic
220 Elderly Home Care
225 Employment Services
230 Farm And Agriculture
235 General
240 Healthcare
245 Manufacturing/Trade
250 Office/Clerical
255 Professional
260 Restaurant
265 Retail
270 Sales and Marketing
275 Situation Wanted
280 Transportation
300 REAL ESTATE/RENTAL
305 Apartment/Duplex
310 Commercial/Industrial
315 Condos
320 House
325 Mobile Homes
330 Office Space
335 Room
340 Warehouse/Storage
345 Vacations
350 Wanted To Rent
355 Farmhouses For Rent
360 Roommates Wanted
400 REAL ESTATE/FOR SALE
405 Acreage and Lots
410 Commercial
415 Condos
420 Farms
425 Houses
430 Mobile Homes/
Manufactured Homes
435 Vacation Property
440 Want To Buy
500 MERCHANDISE
505 Antiques and Collectibles
510 Appliances
515 Auctions
520 Building Materials
525 Computer/Electric/Office
530 Events
535 Farm Supplies and Equipment
540 Feed/Grain
545 Firewood/Fuel
550 Flea Markets/Bazaars
555 Garage Sales
560 Home Furnishings
565 Horses, Tack and Equipment
570 Lawn and Garden
575 Livestock
577 Miscellaneous
580 Musical Instruments
582 Pet in Memoriam
583 Pets and Supplies
585 Produce
586 Sports and Recreation
588 Tickets
590 Tool and Machinery
592 Want To Buy
593 Good Thing To Eat
595 Hay
597 Storage Buildings
600 SERVICES
605 Auction
610 Automotive
615 Business Services
620 Childcare
625 Construction
630 Entertainment
635 Farm Services
640 Financial
645 Hauling
650 Health/Beauty
655 Home Repair/Remodeling
660 Home Service
665 Lawn, Garden, Landscaping
670 Miscellaneous
675 Pet Care
680 Snow Removal
685 Travel
690 Computer/Electric/Office
695 Electrical
700 Painting
705 Plumbing
710 Roofing/Gutters/Siding
715 Blacktop/Cement
720 Handyman
725 Elder Care
800 TRANSPORTATION
805 Auto
810 Auto Parts and Accessories
815 Automobile Loans
820 Automobile Shows/Events
825 Aviations
830 Boats/Motors/Equipment
835 Campers/Motor Homes
840 Classic Cars
845 Commercial
850 Motorcycles/Mopeds
855 Off-Road Vehicles
860 Recreational Vehicles
865 Rental and Leasing
870 Snowmobiles
875 Storage
880 SUVs
885 Trailers
890 Trucks
895 Vans/Minivans
899 Want To Buy
925 Legal Notices
950 Seasonal
953 Free & Low Priced
670 Miscellaneous
SAFE &
SOUND
Security Fence
DELPHOS
SELF-STORAGE
Pass Code Lighted Lot
Affordable 2 Locations
Why settle for less?
419-692-6336
C
a
r
d
e
rs Custom
C
a
r
t
s
Specializing in Stock and
Custom Golf Carts
Tim Carder
567-204-3055
Delphos, Ohio
665
Lawn, Garden,
Landscaping
DAYS PROPERTY
MAINTENANCE
LLC
Brent Day
567-204-8488
Mowing
Landscaping
Lawn Seeding
www.dayspropertymaintenance.com
419-203-8202
bjpmueller@gmail.com
Fully insured
Mueller Tree
Service
Tree Trimming,
Topping & Removal,
Brush Removal
670 Miscellaneous
COMMUNITY
SELF-STORAGE
GREAT RATES
NEWER FACILITY
419-692-0032
Across from Arbys
GESSNERS
PRODUCE
NOW TAKING BUSHEL
ORDERS FOR ROMA &
FIELD TOMATOES
& PEACHES
ORDER HOMEGROWN
FREEZER CORN!
9:00 AM-6:00 PM DAILY
9557 St. Rt. 66, Delphos, OH 45833
419-692-5749 419-234-6566
CANNING SEASON
STARTS NOW!
Located 714 E. Main St., Van Wert
939 E. 5th St., Delphos
655
Home Repair
and Remodel
Hohlbeins
Ph. 419-339-4938
or 419-230-8128
Home
Improvement
Lifetime Warranty
WINDOWS
$
299
installed
(up to 101 united inches
Also call us for
Doors - Siding
Roofing - Awnings
665
Lawn, Garden,
Landscaping
L.L.C.
Trimming & Removal
Stump Grinding
24 Hour Service Fully Insured
KEVIN M. MOORE
(419) 235-8051
TEMANS
OUR TREE
SERVICE
Bill Teman 419-302-2981
Ernie Teman 419-230-4890
Since 1973
419-692-7261
Trimming Topping Thinning
Deadwooding
Stump, Shrub & Tree Removal
610 Automotive
Geise
Transmission, Inc.
419-453-3620
2 miles north of Ottoville
automatic transmission
standard transmission
differentials
transfer case
brakes & tune up
625 Construction
POHLMAN
BUILDERS
FREE ESTIMATES
FULLY INSURED
Mark Pohlman
419-339-9084
cell 419-233-9460
ROOM ADDITIONS
GARAGES SIDING ROOFING
BACKHOE & DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
POHLMAN
POURED
CONCRETE WALLS
Residential
& Commercial
Agricultural Needs
All Concrete Work
655
Home Repair
and Remodel
Quality Home
Improvements
Roofing &
siding
Seamless
gutters
Decks
Windows &
doors
Electrical
Complete
remodeling
No job too small!
419.302.0882
A local business
AT YOUR
S
ervice
Check The
Service
Directory
to Find A
Repairman
You Need!
Shop the
classifieds and
grab a great
deal on a
great deal of
items!
Autos
Appliances
Clothing
Electronics
Furniture
Jewelry
Musical
Instruments
Toys
THE
DELPHOS
HERALD
(419)
695-0015
TIMES BULLETIN
MEDIA
700 Fox Road | Van Wert, Ohio
419.238.2285 | timesbulletin.com
Print-production graphic designer
with a side of marketing genius,
all wrapped up into the perfect
computer whiz bundle that can
begin training/work on Sept. 18th.
Works well under pressure and meets deadlines.
Friendly demeanor - from customers to co-workers.
Relevant design background.
Quick and accurate typist & grammar pro!
Prior/Current Adobe Creative Suite experience.
Web ad building, site design and maintenance.
Pre-production to numerous print facilities.
Typography and Marketing knowledge.
MUST be computer and internet savvy.
If you have the skills we are seeking...
send your resum and a cover letter (digitally) to:
TIMES BULLETIN MEDIA
Marabeth Null, Regional Creative Director
MNull@timesbulletin.com
Full-Time Position
AVAILABLE
DHI Media ofers a comprehensive
compensation package including
health, dental and vision benets;
401K, vacation, and paid holidays.
Delpha Chevrolet Buick
has an opening
for an experienced
Body Shop
Technician
We offer competitive wage,
401k, medical and vacation.
See
Dan Wiseman or Bob Grothouse
IN DELPHOS 419-692-3015 TOLL FREE 1-888-692-3015
CHEVROLET BUICK
1725 East Fifth Street, Delphos
VISIT US ON THE WEB @ www.delphachevy.com
105 Announcements
TEXAS HOLD!EM
every Monday evening
at the COA.
Play starts at 6 pm
$15 buy in.
220 Fox Rd, VW
419-238-5011
235 Help Wanted
BREESE FARMS LLC
Class A-CDL
Drivers Needed
Local company with
openings for OTR driver
running van loads &
regional driver running
hopper loads in Ohio,
Michigan & Indiana.
Please call
Dave @ 419-203-2745
Missy @ 419-203-1376
RECRUITING OPEN HOUSE!
Stop by our offce to
register and schedule an
orientation while enjoy-
ing snacks, refreshments
and surprise drawings!
WHEN:
SEPTEMBER 18, 2014
TIME: 10AM-3PM
LOCATION:
7746 CTY. RD. 140
FINDLAY, OHIO 45840
TIME: 2-5PM
LOCATION:
216 N. ELIZABETH ST.
LIMA, OHIO 45801
MULTIPLE POSITIONS
AVAILABLE
WWW.SPHERION.APPONE.COM
QUESTIONS?
CALL 419-227-0113
00101585
PART- TI ME HELP
wanted. Mornings and
afternoons. Drug screen
contingent upon hiring.
Good work history re-
quired. Apply at Pats
Donuts, 662 Elida Ave,
Delphos
SEARCHI NG FOR
part-time caterers. Apply
in person at Lock Six-
teen Catering in Ottoville
Mon-Fri 8am-4pm
THE CITY of Delphos,
Ohio is accepting re-
sumes for the position of
Maintenance Superin-
tendent. The Mainte-
nance Superintendent
shall be appointed by the
Board of Control. Candi-
dates must live in Allen,
Van Wert County or a
county contiguous to Al-
len or Van Wert County.
This is an administrative
position responsible to
ensure work in the con-
struction, maintenance
and repair of utilities and
public work facilities is
performed. This position
is also responsible for
planning, scheduling and
assigning work for the
maintenance personnel,
during the construction,
maintenance and repair
of city streets, alleys,
curbs, gutters, signs and
signals, sewer collection
system, water distribu-
tion system, fire hy-
drants, sidewalks, public
lands and buildings, city-
owned equipment and
major projects in the
City. The Superinten-
dent shall work closely
with the Safety/Service
Director, the Mayor and
other department heads
in determining work pro-
ject methods and priori-
ties. The Maintenance
Superintendent is re-
sponsible for insuring full
utilization of all mainte-
nance personnel and
equipment in the best in-
terest of the City; while
at the same time make
certain that all safety
procedures are strictly
maintained.
Must have a valid Class I
Wastewater Collection
License or higher. Upon
the request of the City,
must be willing to obtain
a Class II Wastewater
Col l ect i on Li cense,
Class 1 Water Distribu-
tion License or higher
and a pesticide license.
The Maintenance Super-
intendent will be the Op-
erator of Record with the
Ohio Environmental Pro-
tection Agency for sani-
tary sewer collection.
Salary is set by city
council.
A full copy of the job de-
scription is available on
line at www.cityofdel-
phos.com.
Resumes must be re-
ceived no later than
noon September 22,
2014 and be addressed
to:
City of Delphos
Attn: Mayor
608 N. Canal St.
Delphos, OH 45833
275 Work Wanted
HOMETOWN HANDY-
MAN A-Z SERVICES
doors & wi ndows
decks plumbing dry-
wall roofing concrete
Compl et e r emodel .
567-356-7471
POHLMAN HANDYMAN
Exterior Painting, Electri-
cal, Plumbing, Interior/Ex-
terior Home Repair, Minor
HVAC. No job too small!
Call Matt for free estimate
567-259-7149
320 House For Rent
SEVERAL MOBI LE
Homes/House for rent.
View homes online at
www.ulmshomes.com or
inquire at 419-692-3951
555
Garage Sales/
Yard Sales
10160 ELIDA Rd. Del-
phos, Th 3-7pm, Fri 9-5,
Sat 9-12. 6v Barbie jeep,
6v ATV, crib, crib bed-
ding, Step2 playhouse,
bunk beds, wei ght
bench/wei ghts, toys,
sand box, clothing: girls
3T-5T, womens and
maternity 1x-3x, mens
Lg-2x, coats, shoes,
craft supplies, misc. Sell-
ing craft show inventory:
bows, headbands, baby
shoes, bow holders.
1309 PAMELA Circle,
Thurs-Sat, 9/11-9/13,
9am-? Kenmore washer &
dryer, computer, computer
desk, furniture, Kindle Pa-
perwhite 3G, rug sham-
pooer/floor polisher, vac-
uum cl eaners, tool s,
lamps, dishes, appliances,
craft supplies, and much
more!
227 E Fourth St., Del-
phos Saturday 9/13
8am-5pm. Gas range,
refrigerator, shelving
units, TV, holiday deco-
rations, lots of misc.
items!
477 S. Main St. in Rear.
Thursday-Friday 9/11-9/12
8am-2pm. Saturday 9/13
8am-Noon. Crafts, PS2
games, nursing scrubs,
nice mens and womens
clothes, shoes, coats,
mens rock-n-roll Ts, cam-
eras, printers, billiard ac-
cessories, air conditioners,
other miscellaneous items.
Brand name make up,
iPods, jewelry, lamps, tv.
905 N. Main St. Fri
9am-5pm, Sat 9am-3pm.
Antiques, glassware,
tools, clothes, toys, fire-
wood, racing go-cart
frame and miscellane-
ous.
CORNER OF SR116/
117 Spencerville. Lots of
everything. Low prices!
Weds-Thurs 9/10-9/11
9am-7pm, Fri 9/12
9am-4pm
FOUR-FAMILY! 26440
Road P, Ft. Jennings
(1/2-mile outside Otto -
v i l l e ) . Th u r s - Sa t ,
9/ 11-9/ 13, 9am-7pm.
Something for everyone!
FRI., SEPT.12, 10am to
5pm. Sat., Sept. 13,
9am to 2pm. 18487
Road 27, Delphos (Ot-
toville area). One road
west of Delphos Coun-
try Club. Childrens &
adult clothing, toys,
dishes, furniture, misc.
items.
577 Miscellaneous
LAMP REPAIR, table or
floor. Come to our store.
Ho h e n b r i n k TV.
419-695-1229
583
Pets and
Supplies
PUPPY SALE! Beagles,
$99; Dachshunds, $199;
Chi/Terriers, $199; Morkie,
$329. Chihuahuas-$299.
Garwick's the Pet People.
419-795-5711.
garwcksthepetpeople.com
592 Wanted to Buy
Raines
Jewelry
Cash for Gold
Scrap Gold, Gold Jewelry,
Silver coins, Silverware,
Pocket Watches, Diamonds.
2330 Shawnee Rd.
Lima
(419) 229-2899
Looking for a
house to buy
or rent?
Check the
classified
section of
The Delphos
Herald
Dear Abby
Parents persist in thinking gay son will straighten out
DEAR ABBY: Im a gay male college
student who is out and comfortable with who I
am -- 99 percent of the time. When I was in high
school, I tried to come out to my parents and
it didnt go smoothly. They had an emotional
crisis for a day, then shrugged it off as just
another teenage phase. After the panic mode
was over, they bought me off with an expensive
car and continued believing Im straight.
I make no attempt to hide who I am because
I expect to be treated the same, regardless. But
its awkward whenever I am asked by either
parent, Do you have a girlfriend? or, How
are you doing with the ladies?
Do you have any advice on what I should
say in response, given my parents emotional
reaction? -- ITS WHO I AM IN CALIFORNIA
DEAR WHO I AM: It is obvious that your
parents are in denial. If you havent told them
again about your sexual orientation, you should.
If you are unable to summon up the words
to tell them what they are waiting for isnt
going to happen, then contact PFLAG (Parents,
Families and Friends of Lesbians and Gays --
pflag.org), not only for your own sake, but also
for theirs. In light of your parents reaction the
last time you leveled with them, they may need
emotional support to accept that you are gay,
and PFLAG can provide it.
DEAR ABBY: I have been married to
my husband for a year. We dated for four
years before the wedding, and we have a son
together. The child and I have never met any of
my husbands immediate family. I have never
spoken to any of them over the phone, either.
He has met all of my family members. I have
asked repeatedly to meet his, and he tells me
hes planning a family trip to visit. He seemed
annoyed when I brought it up. What should I
do? -- LEFT OUT IN FLORIDA
DEAR LEFT OUT: That you have had
no contact with these people in the five years
youve been in the picture is, frankly, beyond
strange. It appears there may be some things
your husband hasnt told you. He may be
ashamed of his family, on the outs with them,
or they were never told about you and/or the
existence of their grandchild.
Because you have now been a member of
their family for a year, pick up the phone, call
your in-laws and introduce yourself.
DEAR ABBY: Please help to settle a debate
between my husband and me. Is it all right for a
woman to give relationship advice to her friend?
I have a friend who is struggling in her
relationship, and I have tried to help with advice
I feel is appropriate and positive. Is this wrong,
or should I stay out of it like my husband
suggests? -- GOOD FRIEND IN TEXAS
DEAR GOOD FRIEND: Part of female
friendship is sharing experiences and advice
with each other. However, remember that if
your friend is struggling in this relationship,
in the final analysis, shes going to have to
resolve the problems herself. If she is unable to
do that without coming back to you again and
again, then her relationship probably wont last
in spite of your best efforts.
Dear Abby is written by Abigail Van Buren,
also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was founded
by her mother, Pauline Phillips. Contact Dear
Abby at www.DearAbby.com or P.O. Box
69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.
Abby shares more than 100 of her favorite
recipes in two booklets: Abbys Favorite
Recipes and More Favorite Recipes by Dear
Abby. Send your name and mailing address,
plus check or money order for $14 (U.S. funds)
to: Dear Abby, Cookbooklet Set, P.O. Box 447,
Mount Morris, IL 61054-0447. (Shipping and
handling are included in the price.)
COPYRIGHT 2014 UNIVERSAL UCLICK
A county fair tale
My 8- and 10-year-old
nephews visiting from the
Big City had never been
to a county fair. Maybe in
their rich county in their
rich state, they didnt have
them.
What would a county
fair look like in their well-
to-do suburban part of the
country? All the carnies
probably wear khaki
slacks and have degrees
in child psychology, while
ours all look like theyre
sex offenders hiding from
their parole officers. You
dont have to go into a
tent to see the tattooed
man; hes running the
Whack-a-Mole booth and
seems quite disappointed
that the marks, I mean the
customers, dont get to
whack real moles. In the
leafy suburbs, fairgoers
may actually win some of
the large stuffed animals
at the ring-toss wagon. At
a real county fair, no one
ever wins.
And the rides! The
nephews had never seen
such rides. Apparently
Disney World and Six
Flags dont have rusty,
old, shaky contraptions
that look as if the peeling
paint is the only thing
holding them together.
They didnt seem to
notice any difference
between Disneys ultra-
modern Space Mountain
and the aging, battered,
used-looking king of our
midway, the Scream-a-
Thon. I looked around to
see if there was a sign on
it that said, Guaranteed
to make you vomit or your
money back!
No doubt the county
fair ride inspector gave the
Scream-a-Thon a thorough
going-over before it was
approved to be operated
by the finest temp worker
minimum wage could buy.
It probably takes years and
years of training, as well
as passing a tough test,
to earn a license to run
something like this. Then
I remembered that we
voted to cut things like ride
inspectors in last years
election to lower property
taxes.
Well, if an 8-year-old
can ride it, how bad can
it be? Ill get on with
him. What a baby ride, I
thought, not very fast but a
little bit jerky. By the time
I realized it had just been
loading other suckers,
it really started to spin.
The centrifugal force was
trying to rip the pacemaker
right out of my chest. As
our cage violently spun
around, we went from
queasy weightlessness to
queasy multi-G forces in
milliseconds. My lunch
was screaming, Whats
the matter with you? What
were you thinking?! A
week later and Im still
queasy, but the 8- and
10-year-old went on to
do all the other the rides.
Twice.
Then they asked me,
Whats a Demolition
Derby?
Oh, you dont want
to see that, I told them,
steering them away
from the grandstand and
towards Fried Dough
Alley. I carefully explained
to them how noisy and
smoky and crowded and
dangerous it is to watch
guys crash cars into each
other as fast and as hard as
they could. Half the time
the cars burst into flames
and the firemen run to put
them out, I said. The more
I told them how violent
and life-threatening it
was, the more they wanted
to go. They insisted that
if they didnt see the
Demolition Derby they
would surely curl up and
die, that their lives would
never be worth living, that
they would never live up to
their potential and would
probably end up going to
a state school instead of
Harvard.
But first, I said, We
have to get something to
eat. Your parents
will kill me if I
dont feed you.
When the healthiest
thing at the fair is
a deep-fat-fried
avocado, theres
not much point in
trying to eat healthy. The
kids went for the donut
sundae. Now Im thinking,
maybe their parents will
kill me because I fed them.
Arent you afraid that
will spoil your dessert?
I asked, but no one
answered.
The Demolition Derby
was everything I told them
it would be and worse.
After half an hour of solid
engine noise and the crunch
of metal on metal, I was
longing for peace and quiet
of the Scream-a-Thon.
On the drive home,
through their yawns, they
both pledged to become
derby drivers instead of
hedge fund managers, no
matter what their parents
thought.
(Contact Jim Mullen at
JimMullenBooks.com.)

DISTRIBUTED BY
UNIVERSAL UCLICK FOR UFS
Jim Mullen
Te
Village
Idiot
Friday, September 12, 2014
Satisfy your needs. You
will be faced with unfamiliar
or unaccustomed events this
year, which will require you to
improvise as you move forward.
Dont sell yourself short by
thinking someone else is better
than you. Believe in your
abilities, and you will prosper.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept.
22) -- Dont hesitate to ask for
advice if you are having trouble
making up your mind. Look
to people you admire and fnd
out what options will bring the
desired results.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23)
-- Get together with people
who appreciate your talents.
Having supportive people in
your corner will give you the
confdence you require to sell
your abilities and ideas.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) -- Be persistent. If a current
concept or method is faltering,
take a different approach. Let
go of whatever or whoever is
holding you back, and move
forward.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov.
23-Dec. 21) -- A physical or
mental challenge will allow
you to show off your assets.
Friendly competition will help
you gain favorable attention
from someone you want to
impress.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-
Jan. 19) -- Youll face trials
and tribulations. An attempt at
a quick fx isnt going to work.
Take your time and face each
issue in a methodical, practical
manner for best results.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19) -- Health and lifestyle
improvements will pay off.
Keep a sensible balance
between work and family life
in order to achieve a happier
and healthier environment.
Make love a priority.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March
20) -- Dont fall into the trap
of impulse buying or untested
investments. Unexpected bills
will take a toll on your bank
account if you arent realistic
regarding your budget. Visit
your fnancial adviser.
ARIES (March 21-April
19) -- There may be minor
skirmishes at work. You will
come out the winner if you
can stay calm and in control.
Patience will work in your
favor.
TAURUS (April 20-May
20) -- Your stubborn nature
will lead to trouble. Try to
be agreeable, and work out
a compromise with whoever
opposes you. Dont say
something you will live to
regret.
GEMINI (May 21-June
20) -- Financial benefts are
on the horizon. Put your plans
into play in order to advance.
A creative concept will gain
the approval of someone with
clout. Its a good time to get
your ideas out there.
CANCER (June 21-July
22) -- Someone from your past
will send you on an emotional
rollercoaster ride. Keep your
feelings a secret for now.
Delays and disappointment
will surface if you are too open.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
-- Do something special with
someone you love. Consider
a day trip that will bring you
closer together. The experience
will lead to plans that will
make your life better.
COPYRIGHT 2014 United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.
DISTRIBUTED BY
UNIVERSAL UCLICK FOR
UFS
Zits
Blondie
For Better or Worse
Beetle Bailey
Pickles
Marmaduke
Garfeld
Born Loser
Hagar the Horrible
The Family Circus

By Bil Keane
Comics & Puzzles
Barney Google & Snuffy Smith
Hi and Lois
Todays
Horoscope
By Eugenia Last
Answer to Sudoku
2 Marshal
Wyatt --
3 Ask a ques-
tion
4 Prank
5 Moor vista
6 H.H. Munro
7 Evita or Juan
8 Library tome
9 Lunch hour,
often
12 Boxing jabs
13 Travel bag
18 Big carnival
city
22 Sage or basil
23 Large green
parrot
24 -- be an
honor!
25 Kind of PC
screen
27 St. Louis
landmark
29 Do magazine
work
31 Gladiators
hello
32 FBI counter-
ACROSS
1 Kind of rally
4 Happy sighs
7 Kitchen
utensil
10 Philosopher
-- -tzu
11 Shaquille
O--
13 Nix
14 Um cous-
ins
15 Capture
16 A Guthrie
17 Before-
dinner drink
19 Type of
shark
20 I, in Berlin
21 Prunes
23 Metric
pound
26 Relieves
28 And so on
29 Go wrong
30 Contact
34 Did arithme-
tic
36 Semi front
38 Through
39 Feathery
41 Protein
source
42 Grapefruit
holder
44 -- kwon do
46 Play the
trumpet
47 Summer
pastime
52 Actor Cro-
nyn --
53 Peeved
54 Fish organ
55 Mellowed
56 Pizzeria
need
57 Gator Bowl
site
58 Sci-f Doctor
59 Double
curve
60 Evergreen
DOWN
1 Court state-
ment
Crossword Puzzle
Yesterdays answers
part
33 Straw item
35 Filled with
joy
37 Gets
dressed
40 Fresco
base
41 Dues
payer, for
short
42 Flu symp-
tom
43 Mercutios
pal
45 Revival
shouts
46 Defrost
48 Used a
loom
49 Doubtful
50 Pharaohs
river
51 Chew on
Friday, September 12, 2014 The Herald 11
www.delphosherald.com
12 The Herald Friday, September 12, 2014
www.delphosherald.com
Answers to Thursdays questions:
The FBI has been in operation since 1908, when it
was called the Bureau of Investigation under President
Theodore Roosevelt. It was renamed the FBI in 1932.
The first blood bank was opened in 1940 in New York
City. It was designed and operated by American surgeon
Richard Charles Drew, who because he was black, could
not contribute blood to the bank.
Todays questions:
Why is Persia now called Iran?
Where is the Pole of Inaccessibility?
Answers in Mondays Herald.
The Outstanding National Debt as Thursday was
$17,756,345,149,137.
The estimated population of the United States is
318,997,518, so each citizens share of this debt is
$55,663.
Trivia
(Continued from page 2)
50 Years Ago 1964
After an undefeated 1963 grid season,
the Spencerville Bearcats continued their
winning ways Friday night by defeating
the Columbus Grove Bulldogs, 18-8
at Spencerville. Rex Schroluckes aim
cinched the game for Spencerville in
the third quarter when he ripped off two
11- yard passes, one to Bob Simindinger
for six points and the second to Boyer to
send the Bearcat score to 18.
Members of the Catholic Ladies of
Columbia at Fort Jennings who have
volunteered with the preparation or serv-
ing of banquets for the council, will be
the guests of honor Oct. 7 at the Knotty
Pine Restaurant in Fort Jennings. Final
plans for the event were made at the
Sept. 9 meeting of the council.
Landecks Catholic Ladies of
Columbia met this week with 31 mem-
bers present. President Rita A. Miller
discussed the trip planned for Sept.
16 to Toledo to visit the art museum
and Cinerama. Prizes were awarded to
Rita A. Miller, Norma Jean Ditto, Irene
Youngpeter and Bertha Reindel.
75 Years Ago 1939
Further plans for a Harvest Moon
Dance were discussed at a regular meet-
ing of the CYO conducted in the club-
rooms on East First Street Monday
evening. The dance will be given Sept.
28 in St. Johns auditorium. Norman
Geier and his eight-piece orchestra will
play for the dancing and will feature
Wally Peters, speciality dancer from the
Paramount Theater in Fort Wayne.
The initial meeting of the Tourist
Club for the new season was held
Monday evening at the home of the
president, Henrietta Eysenbach, East
Fifth Street. Mrs. J. V. DeWeese and
Grace Hartshorn gave readings. Bridge
was played during the social session.
Lucile Werner held high score in bridge
and Mrs. Guy Tilton was second.
The organization of an inter-city
Knights of Columbus bowling league
was discussed at a business meet-
ing of the Delphos council conducted
Monday evening in the council rooms.
It is planned to have eight teams in the
league and to play the games at Lima
each Sunday afternoon. Any persons
who wish to join the league are asked
to notify Hubert Burger or John Shenk.
Flowers transplanted by snowplow
Edna Haunhorst of East Third Street got a surprise this summer when vol-
unteer petunia plants sprung up in her driveway behind her home. Haun-
horst believes winter plowing transplanted the owers from their origi-
nal home. (Submitted photo)
Archives
(Continued from page 1)
Samantha Wehri is the daughter of Tony
and Amy Wehri and is a senior at St. Johns
High School. She is involved in numerous
school activities and community events. She
is a member of the soccer and basketball
teams for the Blue Jays and has received
All-District Honors the last two years for soc-
cer. Wehri serves as president of the Mission
Society and SADD, as well as secretary in
the National Honor Society. She is also on the
honor roll. Wehri is employed as a lifeguard at
the Delphos Municipal Swimming Pool and
volunteers with the Canal Days Festival, as
well as at the Sarah Jane Living Center and is
a lector at her church.
Sydney Fischbach is the daughter of Keith
and Carolyn Fischbach and a junior at St.
Johns. She is very involved in her church,
school and community. She is a member of the
CRESPI Society, SADD, FTA, Liturgy Team,
Mission Society and Quiz Bowl. Fischbach is
also a very active member of the volleyball,
basketball and track teams for the Blue Jays.
She has been named to 2nd-Team All-MAC
for basketball while maintaining a 3.97 GPA.
She enjoys volunteering her time tutoring and
working with Landeck Community events.
Fischbach is employed at Pats Donuts and
Crme and works in catering at the Knights
of Columbus hall.
Emma Wurst is currently a senior at
Jefferson and is the daughter of Scott and
Elizabeth Wurst. She is very talented musi-
cian and keeps herself active in her schools
music program. She is a member of the
Jefferson Marching and Concert bands, choir
and show choir and has also participated
in Solo and Ensemble contests. Wurst has
also been featured in the talent competition
Ohios Got Talent and has been selected as
a member of the Lima Area Youth Orchestra
and the OMEA District III Honors Choir. She
volunteers with Elidas theater program doing
stage makeup and Relay for Life. Wurst is
employed at the Milano Caf.
Sarah Fitch is the daughter of Doug and
Julie Fitch and is currently a sophomore at
Jefferson. She has very diverse interests and
is involved in many programs throughout the
community. She is a member of the Delphos
FFA, where she holds the office of treasurer
and has received her Greenhand Degree. She
is also very active with the Jefferson Show
Choir and school musical and is a member
varsity cheerleading squad. Fitch enjoys act-
ing and volunteering at her church, especially
with the Vacation Bible School Program and
at the Interfaith Thrift Store.
Emilee Grothouse is currently a senior
at St. Johns and is the daughter of Jim and
Cathie Grothouse. She has been a mem-
ber of the Blue Jay basketball and soccer
teams for the last four years and is also
very involved in Junior Optimists, SADD,
FTA and Student Council. Grothouse has
also been elected as her class president for
all four years of high school. She volun-
teers with her church as both a greeter and
Eucharistic minister, in addition to the time
she gives to Canal Days, the school festival
and the area soup kitchen. She also finds
employment as a babysitter.
Tatiana Olmeda, daughter of Tim and
Rachel Olmeda, is currently a junior at
Jefferson and is involved in many activi-
ties through school, her church and the
community. She is a member of the junior
varsity football cheer squad and is active in
tumbling. Olmeda is also very active in the
FFA, where she currently holds the office
of Sentinel and is involved in taking live-
stock to the fair as her SAE. She has also
earned numerous wildlife and officer awards
through the FFA and has been a member
of the Parliamentary Procedure and Farm
Business Management teams, and assisted
with Highway Clean Up project. Olmeda
attends church at Restoration Temple and
is a member of its youth group. She is
employed at McDonalds of Delphos.
Katie Berelsman is currently a senior at
Jefferson and is the daughter of Dennis and
Sandy Berelsman. She is a very active vol-
unteer throughout the community as she
supports the Relay for Life, volunteers at the
Interfaith Thrift Store and has assisted in rais-
ing money for Juvenile Diabetes. Berelsman
is also a member of the Jefferson football
cheerleading squads, involved with 4-H and
has been on the prom committee, Senior Class
Executive Committee, FCA, NHS, Honor
Roll and the Varsity D Club. She enjoys
sewing and has even made her own evening
gown for the competition. She is employed at
McDonalds of Delphos.
Brittany Schrader is a junior at St. Johns
and very active in her school in many aspects.
She is a member of the Liturgy Team, Future
Teachers of America, choir and SADD, as
well as JCDA. She has also participated in
the school musicals, Once Upon a Mattress
and Godspell. Schrader is a basketball and
competition cheerleader for the Blue Jays and
is on the Honor Roll and is very artistic and
enrolled in many fine arts classes in school.
She is the daughter of Jim and Susan Schrader
and Gina Schrader.
Bailey Gorman is the daughter of Joe
and Annette Gorman and is a junior at
Jefferson. She enjoys spending her time on
the course and the court as a member of
both the Jefferson golf and basketball teams.
She is involved with the Junior Optimists,
Fellowship of Christian Athletes and has
volunteered with Jeffersons Prom. Gorman
is on the Honor Roll and has been named as
Top Spanish I Student. She enjoys spending
time with family and friends and is employed
at the Creamery in Delphos. In the future,
she would like to pursue a career as a news
reporter.
Kiersten Teman is a junior at Jefferson
and is the daughter of Dan and Maureen
Teman. She is extremely involved with
cheerleading and is currently a member of
the Wildcat varsity football squad and the
Van Wert All Stars. She is also a member
of the varsity softball team and is involved
with the FFA, FCA and the Varsity D Club.
Teman has been elected as the Delphos FFA
Chapter Reporter and was a member of
the state-qualifying Parliamentary Procedure
Team. She spends her time volunteering
for the Highway Clean Up Program, Relay
for Life and service at Franklin Elementary
School. Teman is employed by Heather
Marie Photography, as photography is anoth-
er of her many passions.
(Continued from page 1)
Strayer said all of the con-
testants kinda looked at each
other wondering why we
didnt think of that?
If I were asked that
question today, my response
would be that I would want
to influence people in a posi-
tive way to help and encour-
age them to realize and reach
their full potential, Strayer
said.
Calvelage said she was
very surprised when she won
the title, which included a
trophy, prizes from many of
the downtown businesses and
a $50 savings bond from one
of the banks.
I rode on the Queens
Float during the parade and
presided over all of the Canal
Days activities throughout
the rest of the celebrations,
Calvelage detailed. Along
with Mayor Harold Weiging,
I lit the towns Christmas
tree.
After the pageant, Strayer
said the highlight was rid-
ing in the back of a convert-
ible car during the parade
down Main Street with Rosie
Morris, who became a very
good friend.
I was just enjoying it,
Strayer said. Waving at
everyone, smiling and taking
it all in.
The Keystone Cop Cage
was in front of the car she and
Rosie were riding in.
There was a jail bird
(man) in the cage dressed in
stripes and Keystone Cops
all around, she said. They
called it Jail & Bail where the
cops would pick up men over
the age of 21 who did not
have a beard or moustache
(Brothers of the Brush).
Strayer said Old
Fashioned Canal Days was
fun. Dressing in clothing
from an era unlike our own
was exciting. Pretending like
that kind of takes you back to
your childhood.
My mom made my cos-
tume, which was a long,
straight, light pink dress with
a lace blouse, lace umbrella
and a wide brimmed hat,
Strayer reminisced. My
shoes were an old pair of
low- heeled shoes decorated
with lace.
I made my Old Fashion
Canal Days costume with my
mom, Calvelage explained.
We rigged an outfit I wore in
a class play with lace.
Calvelage said after win-
ning the title of Miss Delphos,
she was asked to participate
in the Miss Ohio Pageant.
Jim (her husband now)
asked me if Id rather be Miss
Ohio or Mrs. Calvelage, she
chuckled. I told him Mrs.
Calvelage and we were mar-
ried the next June.
Calvelage said the experi-
ence meant a lot to her. She
believes it gave her much
more confidence and empow-
ered her to be in charge and
do things she never thought
she could do.
Queen
Strayer
Residents pick sweet revenge
This past week, Vancrest Healthcare staff challenged residents in
assisted living to vote for the staff members they would like to see
get a whipped creme pie in the face. After the vote, residents chose
maintenance employee Russell Wilhelm, R.N. Marsha Recker, Director of
Assisted Living Rene Mueller, Director of Activities Barbie Brotherwood
and Activities Assistant Kerrie Buettner to get pies in the face Thursday
afternoon. Having a fun time with whipped topping are, from left, resi-
dents Irene Miller and Herb Hempfling and Brotherwood and Buettner.
(DHI Media/Stephanie Groves)
New terror fight casts shadow
over 9/11 ceremonies
NEW YORK (AP) The nations gathering
war against a new upsurge in Islamic terror hung
heavy over the 13th anniversary of the Sept. 11
attacks Thursday, stirring both anxiety and deter-
mination among those who came to ground zero
to remember their loved ones.
The familiar silence to mark the attacks and
the solemn roll call of the nearly 3,000 dead came
just hours after President Barack Obama told the
country he is authorizing stepped-up airstrikes in
Iraq and Syria against Islamic State extremists.
Its an ongoing war against terrorists. Old
ones die out and new ones pop up, Vasile
Poptean said as he left the ceremony, where
he had gone to remember his brother, Joshua
Poptean. If we dont engage them now, theres
a possibility there will be another 9/11 down the
road.
Victims relatives and dignitaries gathered in
the plaza where the twin towers once stood, an
area of shimmering new skyscrapers, including
the soon-to-open 1,776-foot One World Trade
Center.
The attacks were also commemorated in
Shanksville, Pennsylvania, where former House
Speaker Dennis Hastert gave the flag that flew
atop the U.S. Capitol on 9/11 to the Flight 93
National Memorial.
At the Pentagon, where Obama spoke at a
wreath-laying ceremony, he didnt mention the
rise of Islamic State extremists specifically but
noted: We cannot erase every trace of evil from
the world.
That was the case before 9/11, the president
said, and that remains true today.
Obamas nationally televised announcement
of his plans to degrade and ultimately destroy
the militants, coming on the eve of the anniver-
sary, sparked mixed feelings among 9/11 victims
relatives. Some saw it as a sign of determination,
others as bad timing.
Were all walking out the door today with
tragic and sad and scary memories on us. ... Its
an invitation to fight on a day where we lost,
said Ellen Mora, who lost her cousin, Robert
Higley. But she noted that her mother felt differ-
ently, seeing the speech as us standing tall on the
anniversary.
So did Tom Langer, who lost his pregnant
sister-in-law, Vanessa Langer.
Thirteen years later, it feels like the world is
still paying attention, he said.
Still others lamented that the U.S. was still
battling terrorists 13 years after the attacks.
Were fighting for nothing. We lost so many
already, and we will lose so many more, said
Gary Lanham, whose father, Michael Lowe, died
at the World Trade Center.
While little about the annual ceremony at
ground zero has changed, much around it has.
When the underground National Sept. 11
Memorial Museum opened this spring, fences
around the memorial plaza above it came down,
making it more easily accessible to visitors and
passers-through.
On Thursday evening, crowds of people gath-
ered around the reflecting pools, where the names
of the dead are etched. Some took photos of
the buildings, including an almost finished One
World Trade Center.
Diane Hartel of Chicago, in the city on a busi-
ness trip, said the plaza being open to the public
lets other people share in what has happened
here.

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