Sie sind auf Seite 1von 10

Monday, May 19, 2014

DELPHOS HERALD
The
75 daily Delphos, Ohio
Telling The Tri-Countys Story Since 1869
Man drives cross-country rescuing
dogs, p3

NWC track results,
p6
Upfront
Forecast
Obituaries 2
State/Local 3
Entertainment news 4
Community 5
Sports 6-7
Classifieds 8
Comics and Puzzles 9
World news 10
Index
www.delphosherald.com Vol. 144 No. 241
Tender Times administration, staff and students help break ground for Trinity United Methodists Family Life Center that will be constructed at 702 Ambrose
Drive. The 14,768-square-foot facility will house the Tender Times Child Development Center; provide space for UPWARD Basketball and Cheerleading, Girls
Scouts, Boy Scouts; and a meeting place for the churchs many groups, including, Methodist Women, Methodist Men, Methodist Youth Fellowship and Mustard
Seeds. (dhi MEDIA/ Nancy Spencer)
A rendering shows what the Family Life Center will look like once completed.
(Submitted photo)
BY NANCY SPENCER
dhi MEDIA Editor
nspencer@delphosherald.com
DELPHOS Sunday was an historic day
for Trinity United Methodist Church as its
leaders and members broke ground for the
churchs Family Life Center at 702 Ambrose
Drive. The Rev. David Howell led the cel-
ebration.
What started in 1933 as a desire of mem-
bers to build a new church with a family life
center is finally coming true, Howell said.
In the 30s, the church voted to move west
of the canal and even purchased property on
West Third Street but it wasnt meant to be.
Today, we start what will become the reality
of that dream.
Former church pastor, the Rev. John
Medaugh, Northwest Plains District
Superintendent the Rev. Dr. Steve Bennett,
Phase I Building Committee Co-Chair Andy
North and Delphos Mayor Michael Gallmeier
all marked Trinitys Journey.
Trinity breaks ground for Family Life Center
Thirty-three members of the Ottoville High School class of 2014 received diplomas Sunday in the high school gymnasium. Above
left: Alex Horstman, Lucas Maag and Luke Schimmoeller are excited to become alumni. Above right: Melissa Burgei and her
classmates change their tassles after receiving their sheep skins. (dhi MEDIA/Dena Martz)
Ottoville holds gradation for 33 Sunday
Mostly sunny
today with
highs in the
lower 70s.
Partly cloudy
tonight with
a chance of showers after
midnight. Lows in the
lower 50s. See page 2.
Flag flying over veterans graves
Veterans Council President John Grothouse places a flag on a veterans
grave Saturday morning in Westside Cemetery. More than a dozen volun-
teers distributed between 1,400 and 1,500 flags through 10 local cemeter-
ies. (dhi MEDIA/Nancy Spencer).
Osteoporosis causes
2M fractures a year
BY STEPHANIE GROVES
dhi MEDIA Staff Writer
sgroves@delphosherald.com
The Na t i ona l
Osteoporosis Foundation
(NOF) reports 52 million
Americans have low bone
density or osteoporosis and
about one in two women and
up to one in four men over
the age of 50 will break a
bone due to osteoporosis. By
2020, half of all Americans
over age 50 are expected to
have low bone density or
osteoporosis.
May is National
Osteoporosis Prevention
Month and an ideal time to
educate people of all ages on
the disease which remains
silent until it is complicat-
ed by fractures that occur
following minimal trauma
or, in some cases, with no
trauma.
The National Institutes
of Health (NIH) reports
that osteoporosis causes
nearly 300,000 hip frac-
tures, 547,000 vertebral
(spine) fractures, 397,000
wrist fractures and almost
675,000 other fractures each
year and results in more than
432,000 hospital admis-
sions, 2.5 million physician
visits and 180,000 nursing
home admissions annually.
Allen County Health
Department Director of
Nursing Becky Dershem
said the key is to develop
enough bone density in our
early years.
People should try to
reach peak bone mass (den-
sity) in their mid to late 20s
and maintain it, Dershem
explained. People keep los-
ing it from that point on.
See FRACTURES, page 10
See TRINITY, page 10
Spencerville
Summerfest
accepting
parade entries
Spencervilles
Summerfest Parade
Committee is accept-
ing entries for the parade
at 6:30 p.m. June 28,
The festival boasts an
impressive parade gener-
ally featuring over 90 units.
The committee is hop-
ing to register most of the
parade units by June 1.
Registration forms can
be downloaded from the
Village of Spencervilles
website at spencervilleoh.
com/Summerfest/2014sum
merfestparadeforms.pdf.
Council today
Delphos City Council
will meet in regular ses-
sion at 7 p.m. today.
Items on the agenda
include adopting the
new income tax rate
and water/sewer rates
for Lakeview Farms.
2
BOULDERS DECORATIVE RIVER ROCK GRAVEL
BLACK MULCH PEAT MOSS COMPOST
TOPSOIL SAND LIMESTONE
B & K TRUCKING
1415 N. MAIN, DELPHOS, OH
419-692-4155
Open M-F 7:00am-5:00pm; Sat. Hours (Weather permitting) - 8-noon
www.bktruck.com
AVAILABLE IN OUR YARD
IN BULK SUPPLY!
HAULING FIXING EXISTING
DRIVEWAYS & PARKING LOTS
NEW DRIVEWAYS & PARKING LOTS

Pickup or Delivery
BUCKEYE FARM ANTIQUE, INC.
(Non-profit)
ANTIQUE TRACTOR AND
GAS ENGINE SHOW
Auglaize Co. Fairgrounds Wapakoneta
Not responsible items bought, sold, no show or accidents on grounds. Golf carts & all riding vehicles welcome
$5.00 fee. $5 maint. fee for all campers. No rain date on any tractor or truck pulls.
Visit us on the web at: www.buckeyefarmantiques.com

HOSTING:
NORTHWEST 2 CYL & OHIO 2 CYL CLUBS
CRAFTS & FLEA MARKETS 9AM TO 8 PM
Daily Demonstrations:
Antique Working Machinery & Crafts
Thurs. Eve. 6 p.m. Preview Parade
Downtown (weather permitting)
FREE ENTERTAINMENT:
Friday:
Div. 2 John Deere 2 cyl tractor pull.
Weigh in 9am
Non-Exhibitors...$2.00
12 & under...FREE w/adult; Exhibitors Free
FEATURING: JOHN DEERE TRACTORS EQUIP. & GAS ENGINES
25
May
23-24-25,
2014
INFO: 419-628-4807 OR
937-596-6812
Div. 2 All Brands tractor pull.
Weigh in at noon
Kettering Banjo Society 7:30pm
Saturday:
Consignment Auction 9 am
Pickup Truck & Semi Tractor Sled Pull
Weigh in 12 noon, pull 3pm
Micah Nicole (band & unicycle) 1pm-4pm
Freudemacher Polka Band 7pm
Sunday:
Antique Car-Truck-Motorcycle Show 11am
Antique Tractor Pull
(Exhibit 2 days) -Weigh in 9am
Western Ohio Garden Tractor Pull
following National Kiddie Tractor Pull,
weigh in at noon
Clowns & Micah Nicole entertaining
NOW
OPEN
D&L
Small Engine Repair
Tractors Mowers Snow Blowers
Chain Saws Generators & More
202 W. Tird St., Delphos 419-741-9065
Open: M-T-W-F 8:5:30, Tur. 8-7:30, Sat. 8-1
Parts, Sales, Sharpening.....Fast Friendly Service
2 The Herald Monday, May 19, 2014
For The Record
www.delphosherald.com
OBITUARIES
FUNERAL
BIRTHS
LOTTERY
WEATHER
TODAY IN
HISTORY
FROM THE ARCHIVES
POLICE REPORT
The Delphos Herald wants
to correct published errors in
its news, sports and feature
articles. To inform the news-
room of a mistake in published
information, call the editorial
department at 419-695-0015.
Corrections will be published
on this page.
CORRECTIONS
2
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
$1.48 per week. Same day
delivery outside of Delphos is
done through the post office
for Allen, Van Wert or Putnam
Counties. Delivery outside of
these counties is $110 per year.
Entered in the post office
in Delphos, Ohio 45833 as
Periodicals, postage paid at
Delphos, Ohio.

405 North Main St.
TELEPHONE 695-0015
Office Hours
8 a.m.-5 p.m. Mon.-Fri.
POSTMASTER:
Send address changes
to THE DELPHOS HERALD,
405 N. Main St.
Delphos, Ohio 45833
ST. RITAS
A girl was born May 15 to
Karen and Ryan Horstman of
Cloverdale.
A girl was born May 15 to
Chelsea and Brett Schnipke of
Cloverdale.
A girl was born May 16 to
Dana and Travis Schnipke of
Kalida.
A girl was born May 16
to Ashley Ebeling and Duane
Baird of Elida.
William Bill D.
Daulbaugh
Aug. 24, 1927
May 16, 2014
DELPHOS William
Bill D. Daulbaugh, 86,
of Delphos died at 8:15
p.m. Friday at Vancrest of
Delphos.
He was born Aug. 24,
1927, in Maryland to Charles
M. and Elva A. (Gainer)
Daulbaugh, who preceded
him in death.
He married to Mildred
Killian on Sept. 4, 1948 and
they were together for over
61 years. She preceded him
in death.
He worked at
Westinghouse in the sales
department, as a sales man-
ager for 11 years at Neon
Products and then he retired
from Friendlys Automotive
where he also worked in
sales. He was a well-known
car salesman working at sev-
eral local dealerships. He
was best known for his hon-
esty and integrity.
He served in the U.S.
Navy. He was a member of
Trinity United Methodist
Church, Eastern Star #26,
past member of the Masonic
Hope Lodge #214 for over
60 years, the Delphos
Chapter #105 where he was
very active and officer of
both. He was a high school
graduate of Jefferson.
His true passion in life
was his family, especially
his grandchildren and great-
grandchildren.
Survivors include a son,
Douglas D. Daulbaugh of
Mansfield; a daughter, Susan
(Charles) Wilkin of Delphos;
a brother, Richard M. (Sue)
Daulbaugh of Akron; a
daughter-in-law, Linda
Daulbaugh; 10 grandchil-
dren; and four great-grand-
children.
He was also preceded
in death by a son, William
Bill G. Daulbaugh; and a
great-granddaughter, Aubrey
Lynn Klausing.
Funeral service is at 2
p.m. today at Harter and
Schier Funeral Home, the
Rev. David Howell officiat-
ing, and calling one hour
prior to the service. Burial
will be at Walnut Grove
Cemetery.
Memorial contributions
may be made to Delphos
Rotary Club: Music in the
Park or to the First Candle
for SIDS research.
To leave condolences for
the family, visit www.hart-
erandschier.com.
At 2:30 p.m. May 10, officers responded to
the 1000 block of Lima Avenue after receiv-
ing a complaint of a vehicle being broken into.
Upon arrival, officers met with the victim and
were told that someone unknown to her had
entered her unlocked vehicle and stole mul-
tiple items from inside. This incident is under
investigation.
At 4:40 p.m. May 10, officers took a report
from a resident in the 800 block of Hudson
Street who reported that someone had entered
his residence while he was outside and stole
an iPad. The police department has a possible
suspect and the incident is currently being
investigated by the Detective Bureau.
At approximate-
ly 7 p.m. May 10, a
Delphos police officer
on patrol observed a
vehicle being operat-
ed on North Jefferson
Street and knew the
driver to be 26-year-old
Andrew Cavanaugh of
Delphos. The officer
also had prior knowl-
edge that Cavanaughs
driving status as sus-
pended. The officer con-
ducted a traffic stop and issued Cavanaugh a
citation for driving under a 12-point suspen-
sion. He will appear in Van Wert Municipal
Court to face the charge.
On May 12, officers were dispatched to the
200 block of Holland Avenue to investigate a
male removing items from a property in that
area. Upon arrival, the officers did locate the
male and found that he did not have permis-
sion to be on the property. The male, 44-year-
old Scott Mox of Delphos, will be charged
with criminal trespass and will appear in Lima
Municipal court on the charge.
At 11:41 p.m. Tuesday, the police depart-
ment received a call from a resident in the
800 block of West Skinner Street to report
a male sleeping on
their front porch. Upon
arrival, officers located
the male identified as
52-year-old Johnny
Ray Foust of Delphos.
Foust had recently
been served a crimi-
nal trespass order for
this property and was
advised at that time not
to return. Due to this,
Foust was arrested for
criminal trespass and
transported to the Van
Wert County Jail.
At 2:13 p.m. Friday, the department
responded to a business in the 100 block
of South Main Street to take a theft report.
Responding officers were told that three indi-
viduals were seen taking items that were out-
side of the business. The Detective Bureau is
reviewing video surveillance of the suspects
and the incident remains under investigation.
At 9:11 p.m. Friday, an officer on patrol
observed a vehicle
being operated with
an equipment viola-
tion. The officer con-
ducted a traffic stop
near the intersection of
South Canal Street and
West Cleveland Street.
During the investiga-
tion of the equipment
violation, officers
found an occupant of
the vehicle, 18-year-
old Anthony Arriaga of
Delphos, to be in possession of marijuana.
Arriaga was issued a citation for possession
of marijuana and will appear in Van Wert
Municipal Court to face the charge.
At 1:27 a.m. Saturday, an officer on patrol
observed several sub-
jects walking on South
Franklin Street near
Jackson Street. As the
officer approached the
subjects, he observed
them throw items
down and attempt to
run away. The officer
detained two of the
subjects and found that
they had an odor of
an alcoholic beverage
coming from their per-
son and were in pos-
session of alcohol. The
males were identified
as 18-year-old Spencer
Ginter and 19-year-
old Luke MacLennan,
both of Delphos. Both
were arrested and
charged with under-
age consumption of
alcohol. Additionally,
MacLennan was
charged with underage
possession of alcohol.
Both will receive a summons to appear in
Lima Municipal Court to face their charges.
At 7:23 a.m. Saturday, officers were sent
to the 200 block of West Clime Street to
investigate a vehicle that had been damaged.
Upon arrival, officers spoke with the owner of
the vehicle. Officers found that someone had
thrown a cement block through the rear win-
dow of the vehicle. This incident is currently
under investigation.
At 7:03 p.m. Saturday, the department
received a complaint of a male subject with
alcohol, possibly passed out in a restroom at
Stadium Park. Officers responded and found
the male identified as 52-year-old Johnny
Ray Foust of Delphos. Foust was arrested for
disorderly conduct and transported to the Van
Wert County Jail. He will appear in Van Wert
Municipal Court.
LaDonna Faye
Garza
Nov. 3, 1961-May 18, 2014
DELPHOS LaDonna
Faye Garza, 52, of Delphos
passed away Sunday morning
at her home surrounded by
her loving family.
Her Family She was
born Nov. 3, 1961, in Lima.
She is the daughter of Linda
(Edmiston) Stockwell, who
survives, and Jerry Stockwell,
who preceded her in death.
On May 9, 1981, she mar-
ried Jaime Garza, who sur-
vives in Delphos.
She is also survived by
a daughter, Sarah (Michael)
Clune of Chickasaw; two sons,
Gregory Garza and Thomas
Garza, both of Delphos; a
sister, Maria Stockwell of
Delphos; four grandchildren,
Olivia Clune, Georgia Clune,
Rhett Clune and Angel Garza;
a mother-in-law, Delores
Sauceda; six brothers-in-law,
Robert (Lola), Rudy (Debbie),
Frank Jr. (Ondrayah), Edward,
David (Renee) and Joe; three
sisters-in-law, Gloria (Mike)
Benson, Belinda (Mark)
Murphy and Lily (Shawn)
Hester; and many nieces and
nephews.
Her Legacy LaDonna
was a 1980 graduate of
Delphos Jefferson. She was
a member of St. John the
Evangelist Catholic Church.
She was a devoted wife,
mother and grandmother. She
enjoyed gardening, sewing,
music, movies, word games
and especially time with fam-
ily and grandkids.
Her Farewell Services
Mass of Christian Burial
will begin at 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday at St. John the
Evangelist Catholic Church,
the Rev. Chris Bohnsack offi-
ciating. Burial will be held at
a later date.
Visitation will be from
2-4 and 6-8 p.m. Tuesday at
Strayer Funeral Home, 1840
E. Fifth St., Delphos, where
a Parish Wake Service will be
held at 7:30 p.m. Memorial
contributions may be made
to St. Ritas Hospice or St.
John the Evangelist Catholic
Church.
Online condolences may
be shared at www.strayerfu-
neralhome.com.
WEATHER FORECAST
Tri-county
Associated Press
TODAY: Mostly sunny.
Highs in the lower 70s. South
winds 5 to 15 mph.
TONIGHT: Partly cloudy
through midnight. Then mostly
cloudy with a 20 percent chance
of showers after midnight.
Warmer. Lows in the lower 50s.
Southeast winds 5 to 15 mph.
TUESDAY: Partly cloudy. A
20 percent chance of showers in
the morning. Highs around 80.
Southwest winds 10 to 15 mph.
TUESDAY NIGHT: Partly
cloudy. A 40 percent chance
of showers and thunderstorms
toward daybreak. Lows in the
lower 60s. Southwest winds
10 to 15 mph.
WEDNESDAY: Partly
cloudy with a 30 percent chance
of showers and thunderstorms.
Highs in the lower 80s.
Sheriff releases
dog warden report
Information submitted
VAN WERT Sheriff
Thomas M. Riggenbach
has released the Van Wert
County Dog Warden activ-
ity report for April.
The dog warden traveled
1,103 miles while answer-
ing citizens complaints
and assisting other agen-
cies.
The warden handled 74
complaints with one writ-
ten report, received 56 calls
from residents, impounded
24 dogs, seven dogs were
returned to owners and
impounded three cats.
The warden picked up
13 dead animals and adopt-
ed out 18 dogs. There were
three license checks, four
door hangers were left at
residences, discovered four
unlicensed dogs, handled
one wildlife call, provid-
ed three assists to other
departments and issued
two warnings.
HAGEMAN, Richard L.
Sr., 67, graveside service will
be at 11 a.m. today at St. Johns
Catholic Cemetery with mili-
tary grave rites by the Delphos
Veterans Council and Father Dave
Reinhart officiating. To leave con-
dolences online, visit www.hart-
erandschier.com.
Associated Press
Today is Monday, May 19,
the 139th day of 2014. There
are 226 days left in the year.
Todays Highlight in
History:
On May 19, 1864,
American author Nathaniel
Hawthorne, 59, died in
Plymouth, New Hampshire.
One Year Ago
Columbus Grove High School will hold its
commencement ceremonies Friday in the high
school gymnasium. Speakers are Malerie Baldazo,
Darrion Gant and Rachel Schroeder. Baldazo is
the daughter of Guadalupe Baldazo and Christine
Dunlap. Gant is the son of Raymond Gant and
Deandre and Denise Wakefield. Schroeder is the
daughter of Jeff and Louann Schroeder.
25 Years Ago 1989
Since 1945, W. B. (Brownie) Bowersock
and members of his family have been serv-
ing Delphos and the area with quality meat
products from the Delphos Food Locker, 528
N. Washington St. A new phase of the meat
business was officially opened Thursday at
the plant with a ribbon-cutting ceremony. A
new retail sales department is the focus of the
most recent expansion at the business.
The Grand Slam Baseball Card Shop,
a new business at 516 W. Fifth Street, will
hold its grand opening Friday and Saturday.
Owner-managers Randy and Ed Holdgreve
said, Stop in and see our large selection of
baseball cards and memorabilia, available for
the young and older collector.
Brent Reidenbach, a kicker on St. Johns
High School football team, will attend Ashland
College and play football for Coach Fred
Martinelli. A 6-foot 185-pounder, Reidenbach
was honorable mention All-Midwest Athletic
Conference in football as a junior and senior.
Cavanaugh
Foust
Arriaga
Ginter
MacLennan
CLEVELAND (AP)
These Ohio lotteries were
drawn Sunday:
Mega Millions
Estimated jackpot: $149
million
Pick 3 Evening
8-3-7
Pick 3 Midday
1-9-7
Pick 4 Evening
8-5-5-6
Pick 4 Midday
8-6-4-2
Pick 5 Evening
3-9-1-2-6
Pick 5 Midday
5-5-3-3-6
Powerball
Estimated jackpot: $114
million
Rolling Cash 5
01-14-29-33-35
Estimated jackpot:
$140,000
See ARCHIVES, page 10
1

METAL
ROOFING
888-265-4604
www.millennium-home-design.net
C
A
L
L

T
O
D
A
Y
!
25%
OFF!
Lifetime Guarantee
All Materials Made in USA
The Last Roof You Will Ever Need
800-NEW-ROOF
Est.
1997
Honor or remember a loved one...
For a $2.00 donation to The Delphos
Herald Relay for Life team, you can
submit a loved ones name to be a part of
the In Honor and In Memory page
published in The Delphos Herald.
Names will be published in
The Delphos Herald and displayed
in The Delphos Herald office.
To donate please fill in the form
(please print),
include your donation and
bring in or send to:
The Delphos Herald
405 N. Main St.
Delphos, OH 45833
Please publish my loved ones name
____in honor of ____in memory of
Name of loved one
Donated by
Please publish my loved ones name
____in honor of ____in memory of
Name of loved one
Donated by
ONLY ONE LOVED ONES NAME PER FORM PLEASE!
ALL NAMES SUBMITTED WILL BE PUBLISHED IN
THE DELPHOS HERALD ON June 19, 2014.
DEADLINE IS JUNE 13, 2014.
3 The Herald Monday, May 19, 2014 www.delphosherald.com
STATE/LOCAL
BRIEFS
VW Outdoorsmen
hosts Turkey Shoot
Information submitted
MIDDLE POINT
The Van Wert County
Outdoorsmen Association will
host a Turkey Shoot starting
around 1:30 p.m. Sunday. The
club will provide the shotgun
shells for the Turkey Shoot.
Twelve-gauge shotguns only
are to be used. Children and
women may use a 20-gauge
shotgun and the club will also
provide the shells for these.
The club also has 20-gauge
loaner shoguns if they are
needed.
The cost is $3 per round.
The Van Wert County
Outdoorsmen Association
is located at 9065 Ringwald
Road, Middle Point.
For more information, con-
tact 419-203-5419.
Report: Legal guardian
system fails many Ohioans
COLUMBUS (AP) The court-
appointed guardian system created to
help Ohios elderly and mentally dis-
abled residents and children has failed
many it serves and allows unscrupulous
guardians to rob their wards of free-
dom, dignity and money, a newspaper
reported Sunday.
The newspapers investigation of the
system that controls the lives of about
65,000 Ohioans found that even judges
overseeing the system say it is broken,
The Columbus Dispatch reported.
Ohios system has ripped apart fam-
ilies, rendered the mentally ill voice-
less, and left some elderly Ohioans
dying penniless in nursing homes,
according to the newspaper.
Probate judges in Ohios 88 coun-
ties direct the system without detailed
state guidelines and often amid over-
loaded court dockets. The Dispatchs
yearlong investigation showed some
lawyers appointed as guardians have
been allowed to ignore elderly and
mentally ill people while placing them
in the lowest-rated nursing home and
some lawyers have billed wards for
thousands of dollars in questionable
legal fees for routine tasks such as
paying utility bills.
Other failings found included a
severely autistic man whose weight
rose to 513 pounds because his guard-
ian his mother allowed him to
gorge on junk food and microwave
dinners despite caseworkers warn-
ings. One guardians failures also
separated an elderly couple married
for 45 years in their final year, and an
eccentric woman forced into guardian-
ship against her will was left broke and
homeless.
The newspapers survey of Ohios
probate courts found that nearly 90
percent do not require credit checks
for prospective guardians, and as
many as 61 percent dont require crim-
inal-background checks of guardians
entrusted with the assets and care of
vulnerable people.
Guardians are required in most
counties to submit paper status reports
about their wards only every two years
and probate courts are not required to
independently verify reports. A few
counties require monthly visits, but
more than three-quarters of the states
probate courts dont require guardians
to ever meet with their wards.
More than 80 percent of Ohio pro-
bate courts do not conduct financial
audits or random in-home inspec-
tions, according to 72 of 88 counties
responding to the survey. Also, more
than two-thirds of Ohios counties
dont track cases that had been inves-
tigated for possible wrongdoing or
that had been forwarded to local law-
enforcement agencies.
Attorney General Mike DeWine
said he was disgusted by revealed
abuses and lack of court oversight.
I think its certainly crying out for
reform, he said of the system. And
some sort of standards are certainly
very, very much needed.
Demand for guardianships will
grow as the number of people 65 or
older in the United States doubles by
2050, and Ohioans caught in the sys-
tem are expected to see more neglect
and abuse unless there are significant
changes, the Dispatch reported.
A committee designated by the
Ohio Supreme Court nearly eight years
ago to devise new rules has proposed
changes, which the court is scheduled
to decide on after a public comment
period ends June 25.
But Julia R. Nack, one of two
nationally certified master guardians
in Ohio and a former probate court
investigator, said that while the com-
mittees proposals are better than noth-
ing, they dont go far enough.
AG focuses
on problem of
elder abuse
COLUMBUS (AP)
Ohios attorney general
says investigation and
prosecution of elder abuse
cases will be increased
under a new program in
his office.
Attorney General Mike
DeWine says his offices
Crime Victim Services
Section is spearheading the
Elder Justice Initiative.
DeWine says his office
will work with local offi-
cials and advocates to
identify, investigate, and
prosecute elder abuse
cases and increase services
to victims.
Elder abuse can be phys-
ical, sexual, verbal and
emotional. It can include
neglect, abandonment and
financial exploitation.
A Department of Justice
study estimated in 2009
that about one in nine peo-
ple 60 and older are abused
each year. Many cases are
believed to go unreported.
Ohios population of
adults age 60 or older stood
at 2.28 million in 2010 and
is expected to grow signifi-
cantly in coming years.
Cicada researchers: 13-
year cicadas emerge
CINCINNATI (AP) Some cicadas found recently in south-
ern Ohio are emerging after 13 years underground, according to
two cicada researchers.
Gene Kritsky, professor and chairman of biology at the College
of Mount St. Joseph in Cincinnati, and fellow researcher Roy
Troutman say they found the group of cicadas emerging this past
week at the Crooked Run Nature Preserve in Clermont County,
east of Cincinnati.
Kritsky said he suspected the presence of a previously unrec-
ognized 13-year cicada brood in 2001, but had to wait for the
insects to emerge to confirm it.
If I was working on fruit flies, Id have this done in a month,
Kritsky said.
Some cicadas emerge annually, but the researchers say peri-
odical cicadas are only found in the eastern half of the United
States and emerge typically every 13 to 17 years, The Cincinnati
Enquirer (http://cin.ci/1gtAz5w) reported.
Cicadas spend most of their lives underground, living by suck-
ing fluids from plant roots. They mate and die within weeks of
emerging, and the groups that emerge are called broods. Each brood
is numbered, and 13-year periodical cicadas are called Brood 22
Kritsky had seen the cicadas before, in 1988, but he and
other biologists thought they were a different brood that was a
year late.
It is common for broods to stay hidden among the emergence
of other broods, said Joshua Benoit, an assistant professor in
the Department of Biological Sciences at the University of
Cincinnati.
A lot of times theyll emerge with another brood, so some of
these get missed, said Benoit.
Cicadas in large numbers can create a deafening racket and
can harm young trees.
Periodical cicadas have evolved to emerge every 13 or 17
years partially to defend themselves from predators, Kritsky
said.
Their survival strategy when they do come out is to come
out in such great numbers that their predators get tired of eating
them, Kritsky said.
If people really want to see these things, they should wait
about two weeks because the cold weather is slowing them
down a little bit, Kritsky said. In about two weeks theyll be
out there singing and screaming.
YMCA invites
all to take
part in Y-Rides
Information submitted
OTTAWA The Putnam
County YMCA is urging more
Putnam County residents to get
outside and ride their bicycles.
The Y-Rides program began
on May 7 but will continue
into September at 6 p.m. every
Wednesday. Rides will start and
end in the YMCA parking lot.
Registration/waiver forms
available at the YMCA wel-
come desk on Putnam Parkway.
Y-Rides is open and free for
everyone. Riders will meet at
6 p.m. and ride out promptly
as a group at 6:15 p.m. These
rides are led by an experienced
cyclist. All riders must be at
least 16 years old. Helmets are
mandatory: No helmet = no
ride. These rides are not intend-
ed to be Family Fun Rides.
No trailers, carriers or tagalongs
permitted. Riding on aero-bars
is not permitted.
The rides will be approxi-
mately 20-25 miles long. The
pace will vary depending upon
the fitness level of the riders.
The intent is to stay together as
a group. No rider will be left
behind. If necessary, they will
split into two groups, with a
leader for each.
We all look forward to our
Wednesday evening rides. It is
a time to laugh and enjoy the
camaraderie that we have all
discovered on our Y rides,
said Ray Maxson, experienced
cyclist and ride leader.
Ride goals are to promote
interest in road cycling in
Putnam County, to help cyclists
become stronger, safe group
riders and to allow them to
learn more about their bicycles
and cycling while having fun.
For more information, con-
tact the Putnam County YMCA
at 419-523-5233.
2
Dr. Jacob Mohr
General Dentist
419.692.GRIN
(4746)
Yes...We Are
Accepting
New Patients!
SM )E
:
www.mohrsmilesohio.com
This year, evaluate whether you can benet from:
1. Tax-advantaged investments. If appropriate, consider
tax-free municipal bonds to provide federally tax-free
income.*
2. Tax-advantaged retirement accounts. Consider
contributing to a traditional Individual Retirement
Account (IRA) or 401(k) to help lower your taxable
income.
3. Tax-advantaged college savings accounts. Contribute
or gift to a college savings plan for your children or
grandchildren.
*May be subject to state and local taxes and the alternative
minimum tax (AMT).
Edward Jones, its employees and nancial advisors are not estate
planners and cannot provide tax or legal advice. You should consult
with a qualied tax specialist or legal advisor for professional
advice on your situation.
Feeling like you
paid too much in
taxes this year?
Call or visit today to learn more about these
investing strategies.
www.edwardjones.com
Member SIPC
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
This year, evaluate whether you can benet from:
1. Tax-advantaged investments. If appropriate, consider
tax-free municipal bonds to provide federally tax-free
income.*
2. Tax-advantaged retirement accounts. Consider
contributing to a traditional Individual Retirement
Account (IRA) or 401(k) to help lower your taxable
income.
3. Tax-advantaged college savings accounts. Contribute
or gift to a college savings plan for your children or
grandchildren.
*May be subject to state and local taxes and the alternative
minimum tax (AMT).
Edward Jones, its employees and nancial advisors are not estate
planners and cannot provide tax or legal advice. You should consult
with a qualied tax specialist or legal advisor for professional
advice on your situation.
Feeling like you
paid too much in
taxes this year?
Call or visit today to learn more about these
investing strategies.
www.edwardjones.com
Member SIPC
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
Are your stock, bond or other certicates in a
safety deposit box, desk drawer or closet ... or
are you not sure at the moment?
A lost or destroyed certicate can mean
inconvenience and lost money for you and your
heirs. Let Edward Jones hold them for you.
You still retain ownership and make all the
decisions while we handle all the paperwork.
Well automatically process dividend and interest
payments, mergers, splits, bond calls or maturi-
ties, and more. Even better, youll receive a
consolidated account statement and a single form
at tax time.
You Put Them In a Safe Place.
Now, Where Was That?
Call or visit your local Edward Jones
nancial advisor today.
www.edwardjones.com
OPR-1850-A Member SIPC
Andy North
Financial Advisor
.
1122 Elida Avenue
Delphos, OH 45833
419-695-0660
Corey Norton
Financial Advisor
.
1122 Elida Avenue
Delphos, OH 45833
419-695-0660
Are your stock, bond or other certicates in a
safety deposit box, desk drawer or closet ... or
are you not sure at the moment?
A lost or destroyed certicate can mean
inconvenience and lost money for you and your
heirs. Let Edward Jones hold them for you.
You still retain ownership and make all the
decisions while we handle all the paperwork.
Well automatically process dividend and interest
payments, mergers, splits, bond calls or maturi-
ties, and more. Even better, youll receive a
consolidated account statement and a single form
at tax time.
You Put Them In a Safe Place.
Now, Where Was That?
Call or visit your local Edward Jones
nancial advisor today.
www.edwardjones.com
OPR-1850-A Member SIPC
Andy North
Financial Advisor
.
1122 Elida Avenue
Delphos, OH 45833
419-695-0660
Corey Norton
Financial Advisor
.
1122 Elida Avenue
Delphos, OH 45833
419-695-0660
This year, evaluate whether you can benet from:
1. Tax-advantaged investments. If appropriate, consider
tax-free municipal bonds to provide federally tax-free
income.*
2. Tax-advantaged retirement accounts. Consider
contributing to a traditional Individual Retirement
Account (IRA) or 401(k) to help lower your taxable
income.
3. Tax-advantaged college savings accounts. Contribute
or gift to a college savings plan for your children or
grandchildren.
*May be subject to state and local taxes and the alternative
minimum tax (AMT).
Edward Jones, its employees and nancial advisors are not estate
planners and cannot provide tax or legal advice. You should consult
with a qualied tax specialist or legal advisor for professional
advice on your situation.
Feeling like you
paid too much in
taxes this year?
Call or visit today to learn more about these
investing strategies.
www.edwardjones.com
Member SIPC
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
4 The Herald Monday, May 19, 2014 www.delphosherald.com
Godzilla opens with smashing $93.2 million
LOS ANGELES (AP)
Godzilla has smashed its
way to the top of the box
office.
The 3-D monster movie
from Warner Bros. and
Legendary Pictures had the
second-largest debut of the
year this weekend with $93.2
million, according to studio
estimates Sunday.
Godzilla trails Disney-
Marvels Captain America:
The Winter Soldier, which
opened with $95 million in
April, and sits just above The
Amazing Spider-Man 2,
which debuted with $91.6 mil-
lion this month.
Paying homage to the
60-year-old franchise in tone
and spectacle, the latest itera-
tion continues the legend
of 1954 Japanese original
Ishiro Hondas Gojira.
Reviews of the film were posi-
tive it earned a fresh rat-
ing from review aggregator
RottenTomatoes.com, with 72
percent of film critics respond-
ing positively.
Legendary Pictures
President Jon Jashni said the
film did better than expected
partly because it was start-
ing to get sampled even by
those who didnt think it would
necessarily be for them. They
didnt have nostalgic feelings
for it. He said friends or fam-
ily members likely recom-
mended the movie to those
viewers.
Jashni added that the suc-
cess of Godzilla is validat-
ing after last years Pacific
Rim and Jack the Giant
Slayer performed below
expectations for the Warner-
Legendary team.
The film, directed by
Gareth Edwards, also helped
eliminate the bad memory
of another of the franchises
remakes, Roland Emmerichs
Godzilla, released in
1998 and starring Matthew
Broderick. Backed by Sony,
the film opened with $44 mil-
lion.
Two other reboots
Godzilla 1985 and Godzilla
2000 also flopped.
May is prime real estate
for studios looking to launch
or advance franchises. The
top two opening weekends
of all time in North America
occurred in May The
Avengers opened with $207.4
million in 2012 and Iron Man
3 debuted with $174.1 million
in 2013.
Godzilla, starring Bryan
Cranston, Aaron Taylor-
Johnson and Elizabeth Olsen,
marks the largest May opening
ever for Warner.
Its also the years biggest
opening for Imax globally. It
generated $103 million and
14.35 million admissions
from 16,946 screens in 64
markets outside the U.S. and
Canada.
Godzilla knocked last
weekends No. 1 hit, Universal
Pictures (NYSE:GE)
Neighbors, down to No. 2
in its second weekend.
The raunchy Seth Rogen
and Zac Efron-led comedy
earned $26 million, bringing
its domestic total to $91.5 mil-
lion.
Rounding out the top three
was The Amazing Spider-
Man 2, with $17 million. So
far its earned a total of $172
million domestically.
Also opening this weekend
was Disneys feel-good sports
drama Million Dollar Arm,
starring Jon Hamm, which
landed at No. 4 with $11 mil-
lion.
The summer is about
having a diverse lineup, and
this film will have legs, said
Paul Dergarabedian, senior
media analyst for box-office
tracker Rentrak. If superhe-
roes and monsters arent your
pleasure, you can go see a
more character-driven sports
movie.
In its fourth weekend,
Foxs femme-fueled comedy
The Other Woman, starring
Cameron Diaz, Leslie Mann
and Kate Upton, gained $6.3
million, bringing its domestic
total to $72 million.

Estimated ticket sales for


Friday through Sunday at
U.S. and Canadian theaters,
according to Rentrak. Where
available, latest international
numbers are also included.
Final domestic figures will be
released today.
1. Godzilla, $93.2 million
($103 million international).
2. Neighbors, $26 million
($13.5 million international).
3. The Amazing Spider-
Man 2, $17 million ($32 mil-
lion international).
4. Million Dollar Arm,
$11 million.
5. The Other Woman,
$6.3 million ($8.2 million
international).
6. Heaven Is for Real,
$4.4 million.
7. Rio 2, $4 million ($7.6
million international).
8. Captain America: The
Winter Soldier, $3.8 million
($1.3 million international).
9. Legend of Oz, $2 mil-
lion.
10. Moms Night Out,
$1.9 million.

Estimated ticket sales for


Friday through Sunday at
international theaters (exclud-
ing the U.S. and Canada),
according to Rentrak:
1.Godzilla, $103 million.
2.The Amazing Spider-
Man 2, $32 million.
3.Neighbors, $13.5 mil-
lion.
4.The Other Woman,
$8.2 million.
5.Frozen, $7.8 million.
6.Rio 2, $7.6 million.
7.Obsessed, $4.7 million.
8.Transcendence, $4.6
million.
9.Quest ce quon a fait au
Bon Dieu?!, $4.2 million.
10.The Target, $2.5 mil-
lion.
Beautician cuts hair for
free for less fortunate
MUNCIE, Ind. (AP)
As she navigates the clip-
pers expertly around his head,
Heather Luna listens intently
to Bill Johnson.
Wearing jeans that swal-
low his slender waist and
with snow white hair and a
wrinkled face that indicate
a rough 47 years of exis-
tence, Johnson says, My
family left me behind. Id
like to hear from them if I
could.
The 38-year-old Luna
hears her share of positive
and negative stories from
customers as she cuts their
hair for free Thursday in the
Meridian Health Services
Drop-In Center, located next
to the Harvest Soup Kitchen
in the basement of the St.
Vincent de Paul Store. Luna
is a beautician at Identity
Salon, but she stops by the
center each month to offer her
services free of charge, The
Star Press reported.
Meridian contacted Luna
seven years ago about the
possibility of cutting hair at
the Drop-In Center. Her heart
ached at the sight of dozens
of people without the money
to pay for a dinner, let alone
a haircut. She offered her ser-
vices, and seven years later,
she remains committed to
cutting hair there.
They sit in the chair and
tell me on a personal level
what theyve gone through,
Luna says. I owe it to them
because weve become
friends. Theyre the same as
any clients you have.
One of her first customers
Thursday is former profes-
sional boxer Charlie Peterson
Jr. The middleweight fought
in 38 professional bouts
from 1979-81 and says he is
punch drunk from his years
in the ring. He won only nine
of his bouts and lost 15 by
knockout.
The 54-year-old Peterson
eats at the Soup Kitchen vir-
tually every day, and whenev-
er Luna is next door, he is one
of the first in line for a seat in
the salon chair. His friendship
with Luna dates back seven
years to when she first started
cutting hair there.
I like everything about
her, says Peterson, wearing
a white ball cap backward
with a dark blue vest over a
faded University of Illinois
sweatshirt. Ive got nothing
bad to say about her.
Peterson is a self-described
loner, but he is comfortable
around Luna. He flirts with
her, and she laughs off his
advances as she shaves his
head and trims his beard and
mustache.
She wont give me a
date, Peterson says. Ive
been trying to get her since
she come over here.
John Holaday is another
one of the early customers
Thursday morning. Holaday
flips off his black Vietnam
Veteran ball cap and tells
Luna to trim the sides but
leave the top untouched. His
white hair is long on top and
at age 70 he is in no hurry to
lose any hair up there.
Holaday wears a black
American Legion Post 159
jacket that matches his hat. He
walks around with a cane. He
says he first injured his right
leg jumping out of a low-
flying chopper in Vietnam.
He lives off his Social
Security check and he says
paying $15 for a haircut is too
rich for his blood.
My dad paid $1 to get
his haircut, says Holaday,
who has lived in Muncie off
and on for the last 30 years.
Theres nothing for a dollar
anymore.
Luna averages 10 to 12
customers per trip at the
Drop-In Center, and she is on
the high side Thursday morn-
ing with 15. There is nary a
complaint from her spiffed
up customers as they exit the
chair.
Ron Porter, 66, visits each
day for the free food at the
Soup Kitchen and to social-
ize at the center with people
who can relate to what Im
going through.
A free haircut from Luna is
an added bonus.
If you cant afford a hair-
cut, this is the place, Porter
says.
Man drives cross-country rescuing dogs
ZANESVILLE (AP) Every two
weeks, an Ohio man drives 4,200 miles
to save unwanted dogs from overpopu-
lated shelters in the South, packs them
up in a semitrailer and finds them loving
homes in the northeastern United States.
Greg Mahle, 51, begins the five-day
journey in his Zanesville hometown
in eastern Ohio and drives down to
Houston.
He picks up about 80 dogs there
and at stops in Mississippi, Louisiana,
Alabama and Tennessee. He then takes
them to pre-arranged homes in states
including Pennsylvania, New York,
New Jersey, Connecticut and Vermont.
Mahle estimates that he and his
Rescue Road Trips company save about
2,000 dogs from euthanasia every year.
You see the worst of people and
you see the worst situations in the
beginning when youre picking the dogs
up, Mahle told the Zanesville Times
Recorder. By the time you get to New
England, though, you have people cry-
ing for these dogs, these dogs who have
never had anyone to cry for them.
Mahle said he tells the dogs new
owners to go ahead and cry a river for
them.
Theyre a rescue dog, he said. No
one has ever cared for them, theyve
been thrown out like the trash, and now
theyre a precious part of your family.
Mahle said his typical $185 fee
allows him to make a living but requires
him to operate on a shoestring budget to
keep up with gas, maintenance and dog
food costs and pay sanitation workers to
sterilize the semitrailer after each trip.
The journey includes many stops
with assistance from hundreds of dog
lovers across the country who help
feed, water, walk and play with the
dogs.
Mahle said he sleeps on a small mat-
tress in the back of the truck, snuggling
and comforting the more timid dogs.
Mahle saves dogs in the South and
takes them to the Northeast for a num-
ber of reasons.
In the South, fewer facilities spay
and neuter pets, theres a general a lack
of breeder regulation and the winters
are warmer, all leading to an excessive
amount of adoptable dogs at low prices,
he said.
Enterprising souls on both sides
are making this market work, Mahle
explains on his companys website. In
doing so they are not only improving
the lives of northern families but also
saving the lives of southern dogs.
Mahle said overcrowding at south-
ern shelters is so bad, that some dogs
only last a few days before workers
euthanize them to make room for the
constant influx and others are killed on
the spot for fear of disease.
Mahle said he struggles with the
thought that theres no way to save
them all but is overjoyed at the ones
who are spared.
Its like being in a truck full of lot-
tery winners, he said. You can see it
in their eyes and their disposition. They
know something good is going to hap-
pen to them.
Ohio collectors of Yugos proud of their boxy cars
COLUMBUS (AP) Heads turn, jaws drop and accidents
almost happen when Art Hughes drives around the Columbus
area.
One guy almost hit me a few months ago because he was
leaning out the window taking pictures of my car as he was
driving by, said Hughes, 73, of the South Side.
The reactions sometimes are amazing.
Darrell Saunders has attracted similar attention with his car.
Wherever I go, people come up to me and ask: Where did
you get this? said Saunders, of Grove City.
Hughes and Saunders are proud owners of neither luxury
Porsches nor souped-up Corvettes. Their eye-catching model
of choice: the Yugo.
Each, in fact, owns three of the little Slavic sleds that
reached the United States in 1985; were quickly derided for
their lack of reliability; and, before the end of U.S. sales in
1992, became the butt of many a joke (How can you get a
Yugo to go from zero to 60 in 15 seconds? Push it off a cliff).
Everybody was informed that they were the worst thing in
the world, Hughes said. But thats not actually true, at least
not to weirdos like me.
Saunders has spent a career financing car loans for banks.
When the Yugo hit the market, he said, he thought of it as
a car made for a student going to Ohio State who would drive
it for four years and then throw it away.
About five years ago, he said, he got the urge to start a car
collection.
Everybody has a 67 Chevy or an old Camaro or
Mustang, said Saunders, 74. And you have to spend $75,000
or $100,000 to buy and restore those. I didnt want to put that
kind of money into a car.
Then the idea struck him: Why not look for Yugos? he
recalled thinking. Nobody else has those, and I would be the
talk of the town.
Saunders bought his first Yugo in 2009: a blue 1987 model
with an automatic transmission, a rarity in Yugos.
Three years ago, he spotted a rarer find on the Internet: a
yellow 1990 Yugo convertible, supposedly one of only about
70 sold in America. He bought it for his wife, Harriet.
This is the cutest little car I ever saw, she said.
Last year, Saunders made his third purchase: a tan 1991
Sport model, complete with pinstripes down the sides.
He has spent an estimated $25,000 to buy and restore all
three cars, which he enters in shows. He has collected several
dozen trophies.
Im probably the most famous guy at all the car shows I
go to, he said. Everyone either has a joke about one or tells
me they owned one in high school.
Hughes, a lifelong car guy who made a living as a
mechanic, has restored and rebuilt thousands of cars.
He still works part time at Midwest Bayless Italian Auto, a shop
in the South Linden area that specializes in Fiat and Lancia models.
The Yugo got a bad rap, said Hughes, who views the bare-
bones design as untapped potential.
The car is basically a piece of canvas, he said. Because
it is so basic, to me, its a blank piece that I can do with what
I want and make what I want.
To that end, Hughes has modified his dark-blue 1987
model. (He owns two others but plans to sell them soon.)
He added a rear spoiler and a dual-exhaust system, which
he made, and juiced up the 1.1-liter engine a bit. He also
installed a Camaro muffler.
The changes give his Yugo a throatier sound.
Arts car is awesome, said Matt Brannon, who owns the
Midwest Bayless shop.
Hes done some tasteful upgrades. These arent like
Jaguars where you have to keep it absolutely original.
Part of the fun of owning a Fiat or a Yugo is you can tin-
ker with it and hop it up, and you dont feel guilty when you
make those cuts, because its not a Porsche.
Brannon, who recently owned a Yugo, noticed reactions
split along generational lines.
Anybody over 30 is like What the hell are you driving
a Yugo for? the 44-year-old said. And the kids are like
Thats awesome!
Its counterculture now.
1
Monday, May 19, 2014 The Herald 5 www.delphosherald.com
COMMUNITY
Landmark
Calendar of
Events
Happy
Birthday
Pleasant
Township Hall
May 20
Shawn Conley
Dan Williams
Bill Haehn
Donna Rowe
Kaitlyn Cress
May 21
Russ Pohlman
Mary Nichols
Keith Lause
Kecia Kramer
Ashley Kugler
TODAY
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
council meets at the may-
ors office.
Delphos Eagles Auxiliary
meets at the Eagles Lodge,
1600 E. Fifth St.
TUESDAY
11:30 a.m. Mealsite
at Delphos Senior Citizen
Center, 301 Suthoff St.
1-3 p.m. Delphos
Area Visiting Nurses offer
free blood pressure checks
at Delphos Discount Drugs.
DAAG announces summer
programming for all ages
INFORMATION SUBMITTED
DELPHOS The Delphos Area Art
Guild has rolled out a new year-long
endeavor
Artclub@DAAG, a social club for all
levels of artisans who want to learn by talk-
ing, critiquing and creating together, will
meet the last Tuesday of the month begin-
ning June 24.
Some projects will be pure fun, some
will be interactive with others involving
world-wide artists and clubs and other may
be more thought-provoking and challeng-
ing.
Participants bring an art piece to show-
case each month and snacks and drinks will
be rotated. Speakers will occur intermittent-
ly and an artclub@DAAG exhibit can take
place once a year if members are interested.
The annual cost is $20 per month and
participants must be DAAG members.
Open Mic Nite is offered from 6-8 p.m.
on the second Thursday in June and July
and the first Thursday in August. All are
welcome and free entry. This is especially
geared towards families, teens and more
who want to have a place to hang out
and enjoy some local bravery and talent.
Poets, musicians, comedy, theatre all are
encouraged.
The guild will also offer summer pro-
gramming for all ages.
Teen Studio Art Night will be held from
6-10:30 p.m. July 13. The night will include
Manga Drawing with Sarah Pohlman, pizza
and more.
Adults may enjoy the Relay for Life pre-
event Art This! Drink That! from 7-9 p.m.
June 6 at the Delphos VFW Post.
Proceeds will help support the American
Cancer Society.
A Summer Art Day Trip is offered from
8 a.m. to 9 p.m. June 28 with a visit to
the Toledo Museum of Art and Botanical
Gardens, which will host the Crosby
Festival of Arts that weekend. Museum and
gardens are free. Food will be for sale at the
museum cafe and festival or lunch can be
packed. The festival is $8 for entry.
The day trip by chartered bus is $35 for
members, $40 for non-members and chil-
dren 11 and under are $25.
A three-day workshop will be held from
6-9 p.m. June 28-30.
Instruction will be by three award-win-
ning artists: Ruth Ann Sturgill, Anna Talei
Fisher and Tara Herberger, with each focus-
ing on their respected preferred medium
oil painting, claywork and feltmaking.
Art in the Park is a four-week offering
beginning at 5:30 p.m. July 10, July 17, 24
and 31. The class fee is a donation.
Qi gong, hula hooping or similar outdoor
classes will be offered July 10 with artists
and musicians setting up the remaining
three weeks. The prepared art and activ-
ity will last approximately 45 minutes for
these sessions with the open art and music
unlimited.
Children ages 5-10 can enjoy Lego Mania
with Amy Ricker from 6-7:30 p.m. June 16,
23 and 30. The class is $65 with children
keeping their Lego creations. Moms and
dads are welcome.
Guitar Summer Camps with Tim Zerkel
will be held from June 23-26.
Ages 7-12 beginners and intermediate
will have class from 9 a.m. to noon and
students 13 and older intermediate and
advanced will have class from 6-9 p.m.
Both classes are $100.
Other summer activities will include
an Art This! Drink That! at with Alex
Benavidez; Creative Writing for 14+;
Literary Arts Club and Camera Clubs.
For more information, visit delpho-
sareaartgild.com.
COLUMN
Announce you or your family members
birthday in our Happy Birthday column.
Complete the coupon below and return it to
The Delphos Herald newsroom,
405 North Main St., Delphos, OH 45833.
Please use the coupon also to make changes,
additions or to delete a name from the column.
THE DELPHOS HERALD
HAPPY BIRTHDAY COLUMN
Name
Address

Name Birthday
Name Birthday
Name Birthday
Name Birthday
Telephone (for verification)
Check one:

Please add to birthday list

Please delete from birthday list

Please make change on birthday list


1
Prices good May 19 thru midnight May 21, 2014 at all Chief Supermarket locations.
www.chiefsupermarkets.com | www.facebook.com/chiefsupermarket
Fire

$
3
99 10/
2
99
99
4/
10
$
3
99 10/
10
2/
5
$
1
99
$
2
49
$
4
99 2/
10
$
4
29
lb.
18 oz.
$
2
99
lb.
u
p
t
h
e
lb.
99

$
2
49
$
3
99
$
6
99
12-
14 oz.
Memorial Day is Monday, May 26
The Black Label Means
Its Better!
Spectacular Flavor!
Naturally Better
Experts Since 1951
Grill!
Save up to $2.00
Whole Seedless
Watermelon
Save up to $1.50
Eckrich
Franks
jumbo, bun size, cheese
Limit 4 - Addt 2/$3
Save up to $1.00 lb.
All Natural Center Cut
Boneless
Pork Loin Half
Cut and Wrapped FREE
Save up to 80
Chief Fresh
Brats or
Italian Links
selected varieties
Save up to $4.30 lb.
USDA Choice Beef Loin
T-Bone Steaks
Value Pack - Limit 4 Please
Save up to $1.20 lb.
Certifed 85% Lean
Ground Chuck
Ground Fresh Daily
Value Package - Limit 3 Please
Save up to $2.01 on 10
Bi-Color
Sweet Corn
Save 40
Spartan
Hamburger or Hot Dog
Buns
Save up to $13.96 on 4
Pepsi Products
selected varieties
Must purchase 4
More or less 4/$14
Save up to $1.20 lb.
85% Lean
Ground Chuck
Patties
regular, sliders, thick
Save up to $23.90 on 10
Sweet Baby Rays
BBQ Sauce
selected varieties
Save $3.58 on 2
Lays
Potato Chips
selected varieties
Save up to $3.00
Spartan
Spring Water
Save up to 90
Spartan
Shredded Cheese
selected varieties
Save $2.00
Marie Callendars
Fruit & Cream
Pies
selected varieties
Save up to $5.98 on 2
Baked
Chicken
8 ct. wings, thighs, drums & breast
or 10 ct. dark
Save up to 90 lb.
Gourmet Bacon &
Cheddar
Burgers or
Sliders
ea.
8 ct.
lb. 12-18 oz. 9.5 oz. 24 pk.
8 oz.
28-45 oz. lb.
Copper River Salmon!
Copper River Salmon is among the richest, tastiest fsh in
the world and is loaded with heart-healthy Omega-3 oils.
Its not around for long, so stop in & get some!
Available starting SATURDAY at our
Defance, Bryan and S. Cable (Lima) locations
$2.49 -0.50 = $1.99 when you
purchase 6 participating items
$2.99 -0.50 = $2.49 when you
purchase 6 participating items
In the Deli
12 pk. cans
with
with with
with
with
with with with with
with with with with
with
with with with
6 The Herald Monday, May 19, 2014
SPORTS
www.delphosherald.com
Northwest Conference Track and Field
Girls Final Team Rankings: Columbus Grove 152,
Spencerville 137.5, Bluffton 87, Ada 75.5, Allen East 68.5,
Jefferson 46, Crestview 40.5, Lincolnview 28, Paulding 27.
Boys Final Team Rankings: Columbus Grove 134, Bluffton
123, Spencerville 101, Lincolnview 85, Allen East 62,
Crestview 56, Ada 54, Paulding 48. Jefferson no team score.
Points 10-8-6-5-4-3-2-1
Girls 4x800 Meter Relay: 1. Spencerville (Cierra Adams, Tori Hardesty, Kennedy
Sharp, Karri Purdy) 10:15.21; 2. Jefferson (Kenidi Ulm, Brooke Teman, Heather
Pohlman, Rileigh Stockwell) 10:16; 3. Bluffton 10:37.17; 4. Ada 11:03.84; 5. Lincolnview
(Ashton Bowersock, Anna Gorman, Christine Stemen, Katlyn Wendel) 11:08.08;
6. Columbus Grove (Sydni Smith, Leah Myerholtz, Kirsten Malsam, Alexis Ricker)
11:24.7; 7. Paulding 12:21.69; 8. Crestview (Hali Finfrock, Nevada Smith, Sophia
Smith, Brooke Ripley) 13:08.69.
Boys 4x800 Meter Relay: 1. Columbus Grove (Alex Giesege, Colton Grothaus,
Boone Brubaker, Bryce Sharrits) 8:28.57; 2. Lincolnview (Bayley Tow, Trevor Neate,
Alex Rodriguez, Ben Bilimek) 8:33.32; 3. Crestview (Mycah Grandstaff, Dylan
Grandstaff, Charles Thornburg, Justin Gibson) 8:58.95; 4. Bluffton 9:01.12; 5.
Spencerville (Trevor McMichael, Mason Nourse, Brandon Patterson, Grant Goecke)
9:04.89; 6. Paulding 9:09.64; 7. Allen East 9:36.38; 8. Ada 9:49.71.
Boys Shot Put: 1. Logan Vandemark (S) 49-8.5; 2. Evan Pugh (S) 45-7.75; 3.
Smith (B) 45-5.5; 4. Rece Roney (CG) 45-4; 5. Schindler (P) 43-2; 6. Will Vorhees (CG)
42-3.5; 7. Scott Miller (CV)
7 42-2; 8. Agin (AD) 39-10.25.
Girls Discus: 1. Lynea Diller (CG) 127-8; 2. Shania Johnson (S) 118-3; 3. Bekka
Tracey (CV) 100-9; 4. Edgington (B) 95-3; 5. Beth Griffin (S) 94-7; 6. Nelson (AD) 92-0;
7. Courtney Trigg (CV) 80-9; 8. Clapsaddle (P) 79-1.
Girls Long Jump: 1. Schylar Miller (S) 15-5.25; 2. Marshall (AD) 15-3.5; 3. Baker
(B) 14-1.25; 4. Mackenzie Clymer (CG) 13-10; 5. Hallie Malsam (CG) 13-8.25; 6.
Tommi Andersen (CV) 13-6; 7. March (P) 13-5.5; 8. Dangler-Reed (P) 13-0.5.
Boys High Jump: 1. Baily Clement (CG) 5-10; 2. Trevor McMichael (S) 5-10; 3.
Bentley (P) 5-8; 4. (tie) Austin Sealscott (L) and Hunter Blankemeyer (L) 5-8; 6. Willeke
(AD) 5-8; 7. Bailey Croft (S) 5-6; 8. Hernandez (P) 5-6.
Boys Pole Vault: 1. Colton Miller (S) 12-4; 2. Kyle Shafer (CG) 12-4; 3. Clay Wilson
(B) 12-4; 4. Calvin Wilson (S) 11-0; 5. Emerick (AE) 11-0; 6. Carnahan (P) 11-0; 7.
Caiden Grothaus (CG) 11-0; 8. Alex Rodriguez (L) 10-0.
Girls 100 Meter Hurdles: 1. Sydney McCluer (CG) 16.07; 2. Jenna Kahle (S) 16.42;
3. Sheehan (B) 16.72; 4. Schylar Miller (S) 16.87; 5. Silone (AE) 17.04; 6. Haley Roe
(CG) 17.46; 7. Perez (AE) 17.47; 8. Baker (B) 17.81.
Boys 110 Meter Hurdles: 1. Anthony Schuh (S) 14.94; 2. Hunter Blankemeyer (L)
15.39; 3. Hughart (AD) 16.96; 4. Bassitt (B) 17.09; 5. Kleman (AE) 17.32; 6. Alex Tabler
(CG) 17.41; 7. Gipson (AE) 17.68; 8. Doug Hicks (L) 17.96.
Girls 100 Meter Dash: 1. Archer (AD) 12.82; 2. Julia Wynn (CG) 12.95; 3. Raiya
Flores (CG) 13.36; 4. Grace Callow (CV) 13.49; 5. L. Woods (AE) 13.72; 6. Deanna
Wells (CV) 13.89; 7. Taylor Stroh (J) 13.96; 8. Weller (P) 14.02.
Jefferson senior Kenidi Ulm nishes the 1,600-meter
run in fth place at the NWC Track and Field Meet
Saturday at Spencerville. (dhi MEDIA/Jim Metcalfe)
NWC Track and Field Results
MLB Glance
NBA Playoff Glance
Associated Press
CONFERENCE FINALS
(Best-of-7; x-if necessary)
Sundays Results
Indiana 107, Miami 96, Indiana leads
series 1-0
Todays Game
Oklahoma City at San Antonio, 9 p.m.
Tuesdays Game
Miami at Indiana, 8:30 p.m.
Wednesdays Game
Oklahoma City at San Antonio, 9 p.m.
Saturdays Game
Indiana at Miami, 8:30 p.m.
Sundays Game
San Antonio at Oklahoma City, 8:30 p.m.
Monday, May 26
Indiana at Miami, 8:30 p.m.
Tuesday, May 27
San Antonio at Oklahoma City, 9 p.m.
Wednesday, May 28
x-Miami at Indiana, 8:30 p.m.
Thursday, May 29
x-Oklahoma City at San Antonio, 9 p.m.
Friday, May 30
x-Indiana at Miami, 8:30 p.m.
Saturday, May 31
x-San Antonio at Oklahoma City, 8:30
p.m.
Sunday, June 1
x-Miami at Indiana, 8:30 p.m.
Monday, June 2
x-Oklahoma City at San Antonio, 9 p.m.
Associated Press
National League
East Division
W L Pct GB
Atlanta 23 19 .548
Washington 23 20 .535
Miami 23 22 .511 1
New York 20 23 .465 3
Philadelphia 19 22 .463 3
Central Division
W L Pct GB
Milwaukee 27 17 .614
St. Louis 23 21 .523 4
Cincinnati 19 23 .452 7
Pittsburgh 18 25 .419 8
Chicago 15 27 .357 11
West Division
W L Pct GB
San Fran 28 17 .622
Colorado 25 20 .556 3
L Angeles 23 22 .511 5
San Diego 21 24 .467 7
Arizona 18 28 .391 10
___
Saturdays Results
St. Louis 4, Atlanta 1
Chicago Cubs 3, Milwaukee 0
N.Y. Mets 5, Washington 2
N.Y. Yankees 7, Pittsburgh 1
Philadelphia 12, Cincinnati 1
Arizona 18, L.A. Dodgers 7
San Diego 8, Colorado 5
Miami 5, San Francisco 0
Sundays Results
N.Y. Yankees 4, Pittsburgh 3, 1st game
Philadelphia 8, Cincinnati 3
Washington 6, N.Y. Mets 3
Atlanta 6, St. Louis 5
Chicago Cubs 4, Milwaukee 2
San Francisco 4, Miami 1
Arizona 5, L.A. Dodgers 3
Colorado 8, San Diego 6, 10 innings
Pittsburgh 5, N.Y. Yankees 3, 2nd game
Todays Games
Cincinnati (Leake 2-3) at Washington
(Strasburg 3-3), 7:05 p.m.
Milwaukee (W.Peralta 4-2) at Atlanta
(Minor 1-2), 7:10 p.m.
Tuesdays Games
Baltimore at Pittsburgh, 7:05 p.m.
Cincinnati at Washington, 7:05 p.m.
L.A. Dodgers at N.Y. Mets, 7:10 p.m.
Milwaukee at Atlanta, 7:10 p.m.
Philadelphia at Miami, 7:10 p.m.
N.Y. Yankees at Chicago Cubs, 8:05 p.m.
Arizona at St. Louis, 8:15 p.m.
San Francisco at Colorado, 8:40 p.m.
Minnesota at San Diego, 10:10 p.m.
-
American League
East Division
W L Pct GB
New York 23 20 .535
Baltimore 22 20 .524
Toronto 23 22 .511 1
Boston 20 22 .476 2
Tampa Bay 19 26 .422 5
Central Division
W L Pct GB
Detroit 26 12 .684
Kansas City 22 21 .512 6
Minnesota 21 21 .500 7
Chicago 21 24 .467 8
Cleveland 19 25 .432 10
West Division
W L Pct GB
Oakland 28 16 .636
L Angeles 24 19 .558 3
Seattle 21 22 .488 6
Texas 21 23 .477 7
Houston 16 28 .364 12
___
Saturdays Results
N.Y. Yankees 7, Pittsburgh 1
Houston 6, Chicago White Sox 5
Oakland 6, Cleveland 2
Kansas City 1, Baltimore 0
Detroit 6, Boston 1
Minnesota 4, Seattle 3
Toronto 4, Texas 2
L.A. Angels 6, Tampa Bay 0
Sundays Results
Oakland 13, Cleveland 3
N.Y. Yankees 4, Pittsburgh 3, 1st game
Kansas City 8, Baltimore 6
Houston 8, Chicago White Sox 2
Seattle 6, Minnesota 2
Texas 6, Toronto 2
L.A. Angels 6, Tampa Bay 2
Pittsburgh 5, N.Y. Yankees 3, 2nd game
Detroit at Boston, 8:05 p.m.
Todays Games
Detroit (Smyly 2-2) at Cleveland (Kluber
4-3), 7:05 p.m.
Chicago White Sox (Carroll 1-3) at
Kansas City (Vargas 4-1), 8:10 p.m.
Houston (Keuchel 4-2) at L.A. Angels
(Richards 4-0), 10:05 p.m.
Tuesdays Games
Baltimore at Pittsburgh, 7:05 p.m.
Detroit at Cleveland, 7:05 p.m.
Oakland at Tampa Bay, 7:10 p.m.
Toronto at Boston, 7:10 p.m.
N.Y. Yankees at Chicago Cubs, 8:05 p.m.
Seattle at Texas, 8:05 p.m.
Chicago White Sox at Kansas City, 8:10
p.m.
Houston at L.A. Angels, 10:05 p.m.
Minnesota at San Diego, 10:10 p.m.
See RESULTS, page 7
Associated Press
IRVING, Texas Brendon Todd won the Byron Nelson Championship on Sunday
for his first PGA Tour title, closing with a bogey-free 4-under 66 for a 2-stroke victory
over Mike Weir.
It was the 77th career PGA Tour event for Todd. He earned $1,242,000, a 2-year
PGA Tour exemption and a spot next year in the Masters.
Todd finished at 14-under 266. He took the lead for good with birdies at
Nos. 9 and 10 and went on to become the eighth first-time winner this season.
Weir, the 2003 Masters champion who won the last of his eight PGA Tour
titles in 2007, finished with a 67. Charles Howell III and Marc Leishman tied
for third at 10 under.
Weir had his best tournament since finishing second behind Dustin
Johnson at Pebble Beach in 2009. The Canadian left-hander hadnt had a
top-25 finish since 2010, the year he suffered a partial ligament tear in his
right elbow before a stretch when he missed 17 cuts in a row including all
14 events he started in 2012.
KINGSMILL CHAMPIONSHIP
WILLIAMSBURG, Va. Lizette Salas won the Kingsmill Championship for her first
LPGA Tour title, finishing with even-par 71 for a 4-stroke victory.
The 24-year-old former Southern California player was never really challenged in the
final round on the River Course. She started the day with a 3-shot lead and doubled it
with birdies on the par-5 third and par-3 fifth. A bogey 5 on No. 8 was her only hiccup
and only her third bogey in four rounds until she 3-putted the par-3 17th.
She finished at 13-under 271 and earned $195,000.
Yani Tseng, seeking her first victory since 2012, got within three with three birdies in
a 4-hole stretch on the back nine but finished with two pars and a double bogey for a 69.
Tseng tied for second with Kraft Nabisco winner Lexi Thompson and Sarah Jane
Smith. Thompson had a 69 and Smith shot 66 the best round of the day.
REGIONS TRADITION
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. Kenny Perry won his third Champions Tour major in the past
year with a 1-stroke victory over Mark Calcavecchia in the Regions Tradition.
Perry closed with an even-par 72 at Shoal Creek to finish at 7-under 281,
while other contenders had up-and-down days and John Cook lost the lead
with a double hit.
Calcavecchia finished with a 70. Two-time winner Tom Lehman closed
with a 67 to tie Jay Haas at 5 under. Haas closed with a 71. Cooks closing
72 put him three strokes back.
Perry got his sixth victory and became the second player to win in three
consecutive Champions Tour major starts, joining Gary Player, who did it in
1987-88. Perry won the Senior Players Championship and U.S. Senior Open
in consecutive tour starts last year, then skipped the Senior British Open.
Cooks double bogey on a double hit on No. 14 cost him the lead.
SPANISH OPEN
GIRONA, Spain Miguel Angel Jimenez won the Spanish Open to extend his
record as the oldest European Tour champion, winning with a par on the third hole of
a playoff.
Jimenez won at 50 years, 133 days. He closed with a 1-over 73 to match Belgiums
Thomas Pieters and Australias Richard Green at 4-under 284. Green had a 72 and
Pieters shot 75.
Carpenter wins Indy 500 pole for 2nd straight year
Associated Press
INDIANAPOLIS Local driver Ed
Carpenter has made himself at home on the
Indianapolis 500 pole.
The last of nine qualifiers to take the
track, Carpenter bumped James Hinchcliffe
from the top spot, posting a 4-lap average
of 231.067 mph to win the 500 pole for the
second straight year.
I felt that it was harder, Carpenter said.
It was just a different position because
when I made my run last year, we didnt
really have anything to lose. This year,
being the last guy to go out, I think there
was a little bit of pressure to not mess it up.
He didnt mess it up, not at all.
Carpenters No. 20 Chevrolet was the
car to beat all weekend and the hometown
favorite showed no signs of rust in his
first IndyCar Series race of the season. He
owns Ed Carpenter Racing and decided
in November to run only on ovals, where
he excels. He turned his car over to Mike
Conway on road and street courses, and
skipped the first four races of the season.
He knew he had the pole secured when
he nailed the final two corners on the last
lap.
Hinchcliffe will start second after sus-
taining a concussion last weekend in the
Grand Prix of Indianapolis. Will Power will
join them on the front row.
Three-time Indy 500 champion Helio
Castroneves was fourth, followed by
Simon Pagenaud and Marco Andretti.
Carlos Munoz, Josef Newgarden and J.R.
Hildebrand will be on the third row.
Carpenter, the stepson of former speed-
way executive Tony George, was 10th in
last years Indy 500. He is 11th driver to
earn consecutive 500 poles and the first
since Castroneves in 2009-10.
As a single-car team last year, Carpenter
was unable to get help on data and much-
needed setup information. He didnt want a
repeat this May, so he hired Hildebrand to
drive a second car at Indy for Ed Carpenter
Racing. Hildebrand nearly won the Indy
500 as a rookie in 2011 but crashed exiting
the final turn and was passed for the win by
the late Dan Wheldon.
Carpenter thrived in the first year of a
new Indy 500 qualifying format. He posted
the top qualifying speed Saturday when the
fastest nine drivers advanced to Sundays
shootout for the pole.
Juan Pablo Montoya had the fastest
four-lap average (231.007 mph) among
drivers ineligible to win the Indianapolis
500 pole and will start 10th.
Montoya was followed by reigning
series champion Scott Dixon and former
NASCAR champion Kurt Busch.
Busch is set to race 1,100 miles in the
Indianapolis 500 and the Coca-Cola 600
on May 25. Busch raced in NASCARs
All-Star race the night before and flew back
from Concord, North Carolina, on Sunday
morning.
Defending 500 champion Tony Kanaan
will start 16th.
Hinchcliffe appeared to have no prob-
lems in the car days after he was cleared to
return for his concussion. He paced as he
watched Carpenter make his final run, then
his chance at the pole end when Carpenter
found more speed on his final lap.
He was injured last weekend in
Saturdays Grand Prix when debris from
Justin Wilsons car flew into the cockpit,
striking Hinchcliffe in the head. He was
taken away from the track on a stretcher,
transported to a hospital and diagnosed
with a concussion.
The 27-year old Canadian was cleared
to drive Thursday and took the wheel back
from pinch-driver E.J. Viso.
For the first time, IndyCar awarded
points based on qualifying runs. The top
qualifier on Saturday earned 33 points, sec-
ond place got 32 and so on, all the way to
one point for the 33rd-place entrant.
Golf Capsules
MLB Capsules
Associated Press
NL
ST. LOUIS Ryan Doumit scored on a wild pitch and
the Atlanta Braves got two runs in the ninth inning to rally past
the St. Louis Cardinals on Sunday.
Freddie Freeman started a ninth-inning rally with a lead-
off single off St. Louis closer Trevor Rosenthal (0-2).
With two outs, Freeman went to third on pinch-hit-
ter Ryan Doumits double to right. Rosenthal intentionally
walked pinch hitter Evan Gattis to load the bases and then
walked Jordan Schafer to force in the tying run.
Carlos Martinez relieved Rosenthal and had a wild pitch
while facing Ramiro Pena that scored Doumit to make it 6-5.
Dan Carpenter (3-0) pitched 1 1/3 innings of scoreless
relief for the win. Craig Kimbrel pitched a scoreless bottom of
the ninth for his 11th save in 13 chances.
Cardinals starter Jaime Garcia pitched seven innings,
allowing four runs on five hits with five strikeouts in his first
start since 2013 shoulder surgery.
GIANTS 4, MARLINS 1
SAN FRANCISCO Pablo Sandoval homered for the
first time in more than a month, Ryan Vogelsong won for just
the second time in nine starts and San Francisco salvaged a
split of the 4-game series.
Buster Posey hit a sacrifice fly, while Tyler Colvin and
Brandon Hicks each hit RBI singles in a stretch of four
straight base hits with two outs in the first against Jacob
Turner.
Staked to an early lead, Vogelsong (2-2) struck out six
in seven innings.
Turner (0-2) is still searching for his first road win, falling
to 0-11 in 18 career road starts.
CUBS 4, BREWERS 2
CHICAGO Travis Wood pitched 2-hit ball for seven
innings and Chicago got home runs from Welington Castillo
and Mike Olt.
Wood (4-4) allowed two runs and struck out seven for
the Cubs. The left-hander walked three, all in the first inning.
Hector Rondon earned his fifth save in five chances
after allowing a leadoff double to Ryan Braun in the ninth for
Milwaukees third hit.
Marco Estrada (3-2) gave up four runs and seven hits
five doubles and two homers in five innings.
ROCKIES 8, PADRES 6, 10 INNINGS
DENVER Justin Morneau hit a 2-run homer in the
10th inning and Colorado turned the third triple play in team
history in its win over San Diego.
After Carlos Gonzalez singled earlier in the inning,
Morneau lined a 3-2 fastball from Dale Thayer (2-2) to
straightaway center. He was mobbed at home by his team-
mates.
Nick Masset (1-0) pitched a perfect 10th for his first win
with Colorado. LaTroy Hawkins blew his first save of the
season in the ninth as he surrendered a tying 2-run homer
to Everth Cabrera.
Corey Dickerson had a 2-run homer and Troy Tulowitzki
added a solo shot in the fifth.
The triple play in the third was Colorados first since
Tulowitzki turned an unassisted one on April 29, 2007,
against Atlanta.
Local Roundup
Grove sweeps NWC track
By JIM METCALFE
dhi MEDIA Staff Writer
jmetcalfe@delphosherald.com
SPENCERVILLE It might not
have been a great surprise that Columbus
Groves girls track and field team edged
out Spencervilles 152-137 to claim the
conference title Saturday at the Charles D.
Moeller Track in Spencerville.
This has been a long time coming. Its
tough to single out people but I have to
hand it to Julia Wynn for running so many
events out there the 100, 200, 400 and
the 4x4, Grove girls coach Tim Staley
noted. That was the first time this year she
has run that and she anchored us to a win;
she just had a great day. Sydney McCluer
won both hurdles. She is nicked up a little
bit shin splints and she was able to
come out here and win both hurdle events
and the 4x4. I think we scored in every
event and a lot of them we had double
placements which is big. It was about like
last week (PCL) where it was Pandoras
distance against our sprints; today, it was
Spencervilles distance against our sprints.
Our girls did the best they could. Lynea
Diller is really starting to come into her
own as a sophomore; its nice to have
some of these younger girls coming into
their own. The younger girls on the relays
ran really well, Im just very happy.
It likely was that the rebuilding
Bulldog boys who graduated a ton of
State-qualifying and placing individuals
from a year ago defended their title from
a year ago in besting Bluffton 134-123.
Last year, we had the State-caliber
athletes. We dont have those kind of ath-
letes this year but we have a great group
of kids that works hard and accepts chal-
lenges, Grove boys coach Chris Grothaus
said. On the way over to the meet today,
we told the kids that on paper, with where
we anticipated everyone finishing, we
were going to lose by four points. We
challenged them to not let that happen and
they took it. It really helps when you have
some of the guys from last year and years
ago coming around to practice. I really
believe that theres a legacy that has been
established and these kids dont want to
let those guys down. It helps that I have a
great coaching staff around me; we have
every area covered.
On the girls side, Bluffton was
third with 87 points, followed by Ada
(75.7), Allen East (68.5), Jefferson (46),
Crestview (40.5), Lincolnview (28) and
Paulding (27).
Spencerville mentor Bruce McConnell
had a lot to be excited about.
We had a number of personal records
set today and Thursday: pole vault, long
jump, hurdles, the 4x4. We were awful
close in the 4x2, the mile and the 2-mile,
he explained. We are mostly a veteran
team on the girls side, so we know what
were capable of doing.
Lincolnview girls coach Matt Langdon
was very pleased, considering he had two
injuries just this week.
Ashton (Bowersock) suffered a stress
fracture and Abbie (Enyart) also got hurt
this week, so we were a little down as far
as depth, Langdon explained. We had
some girls in events they really havent
run in this year, especially the relays.
They did very well considering. Our 4x4
and 4x1 set their season-bests and we did
well especially in the distance events. The
points are misleading but at the same time,
we are starting to peak. Weve always
been able to peak at the right time and the
NWC is as good a time as any.
Jefferson junior Taylor Stroh n-
ished eighth in the girls 200-me-
ter dash Saturday. (dhi MEDIA/
Jim Metcalfe)
Information Submitted
Raiders bash Lady Jeffcats in soft-
ball
DELPHOS Jeffersons fast-pitch
softball crew finished their 2014 spring
season on the lower end of a 13-2
5-inning loss to Wayne Trace Saturday
morning at Lady Wildcat Field.
E. Linder led the Lady Raider offense
with a 3-for-4 day with five runs batted
in (2 runs scored) including a home
run, while A. Baumle and M. Swary (2
runs scored, 1 RBI) both went 2-for-3.
Sophomore Jessica Pimpas had two
of the three Lady Wildcat hits and both
RBIs, while Kimber Kill had the other
hit (run).
A. Baumle threw four innings of
1-hit, 1-unearned run ball, striking out
six. M. Crosby threw an inning of 2-hit,
1-walk, 1-unearned run relief.
Claire Thompson went the distance
for the hosts (10 hits, 13 runs, 8 earned,
3 walks, 1 strikeout).
Wayne Trace
AB R H RBI
E Linder 4 2 3 5, B Feasby 3 1 1 0, L Stabler 4 1 1
1, B Bergman 3 1 0 1, C Wright 3 1 0 0, A Baumle 3 2 2
1, M Crosby 3 2 1 3, S Critten 2 1 0 0, M Swary 3 2 2 1
0 0 2. Totals 28 13 10 12.
Jefferson
AB R H RBI
Hannah Sensibaugh 3 0 0 0, Claire Thompson 2
0 0 0, Jessica Pimpas 3 0 2 2, Samantha Branham 3
0 0 0, Shayla Rice 1 0 0 0, Madison Jettinghoff 2 0 0
0, Kiersten Teman 2 0 0 0, Danielle Harman 1 1 0 0,
Kimber Kill 2 1 1 0. Totals 19 2 3 2.
Score by Innings
Wayne Trace 7 0 0 0 6 - 13 10 3
Jefferson 0 0 1 0 1 - 2 3 3
2B: Feasby, Crosby. HR: Linder SB: Linder, Feasby,
Stabler, Baumle, Swary. SAC: Thompson, Rice.
IP H R ER BB SO HR
Wayne Trace
A Baumle (W) 4.0 1 1 0 0 6 0
M Crosby 1.0 2 1 0 0 1 0
Jefferson
Thompson (L) 5.0 10 13 8 3 1 1
HBP: Baumle, Thompson. P-S: Baumle 57-47,
Crosby 21-15; Thompson 117-76.
See ROUNDUP, page 7
See GROVE, page 7
Monday, May 19, 2014 The Herald 7
www.delphosherald.com
1
11260 Elida Rd., Delphos
419-692-0055
www.raabeford.com
ANDY NORTH
1122 Elida Ave.
(East Towne Plaza)
DELPHOS, OHIO 45833
Bus. (419) 695-0660
1-800-335-7799
Call or stop by today.
www.edwardjones.com Member SIPC
Pacers pull away from Heat
107-96 to take 1-0 lead
Associated Press
INDIANAPOLIS Indiana is done
talking about home-court advantage.
The top-seeded Pacers are ready
to use it against the 2-time defending
champs.
They took the first step Sunday, when
Paul George finished with 24 points
and seven assists, David West added
19 points and seven rebounds and sud-
denly surging Indiana led wire-to-wire
in a 107-96 victory over the Miami Heat
in Game 1 of the Eastern Conference
finals.
This is just a fun matchup, George
said. Its one that weve been waiting
for all year.
For the first time in this years play-
offs, the Pacers won a series opener. And
for the first time in their last three play-
off battles against the Heat, the Pacers
won Game 1.
Game 2 is Tuesday night. The home
team has won all five games in this
seasons fiercest and most competitive
rivalry, though none was more impres-
sive or important than this one.
All five Indiana starters and backup
C.J. Watson scored in double figures,
helping Indiana produce its highest point
total of the playoffs.
The Pacers limited the Heat to just
four offensive rebounds and 6-of-23
shooting from beyond the arc. LeBron
James went 1-of-5 on 3s and shot just
two free throws and Miami fell so far
behind so fast, it never even had a
chance to tie the score.
Sure, opening this best-of-7 series
at Bankers Life Fieldhouse helped. The
hometown crowd that sometimes ser-
enaded the Pacers with boos during the
first two rounds spent most of the first
half on its feet, chanted De-fense
every time it looked as if the Heat might
come back and finished the game with
its customary chant of Beat The Heat!
But the biggest difference was on the
court.
Indiana shared the ball, limited its
turnovers, maintained its poise and got
contributions from everyone in a game
it had to win. Roy Hibbert finished with
19 points and nine rebounds, Lance
Stephenson had 17 points and eight
assists and George Hill added 15 points
as the Pacers looked more like the team
that was so dominant over the first
half of the season, rather than the one
struggled so mightily in the second half.
The challengers in this matchup insist
they know its only a start.
The toughest part for the Heat
will be figuring out what went
wrong.
Coach Erik Spoelstra used
Shane Battier in the starting
lineup, then replaced him with
Udonis Haslem after the Pacers
took a 55-45 halftime lead. It
made no difference.
James, who had 25 points, 10
rebounds and five assists, and
Dwyane Wade, who had 27 points on
12-of-18 shooting, desperately tried to
rally the Heat but got little help. Chris
Bosh had nine points and two rebounds.
Ray Allen finished with 12 points.
While Bosh thought the primary
problem was Miamis inability to get
stops, James wasnt as sure.
The games still so fresh. Its too
hard to just say, Well, we need to do
this better in Game 2, James said after
the Heat lost for just the second time in
10 playoff games. We need to evaluate
our mistakes and things we did in Game
1 first before I can say what we need to
bring to Game 2.
Clearly, the Pacers werent the same
team that spent most of the last three
months answering questions about their
second-half swoon.
Indiana swarmed the glass, exploited
its size advantage, knocked down six of
its first seven 3-pointers and forced the
Heat into playing catch-up.
When the Heat cut a 10-point, first-
quarter deficit to 41-37 midway through
the second quarter, Stephenson scored
four points in a 5-0 run to make it 46-37.
When James trimmed it to 50-45 with
back-to-back baskets late in the quar-
ter, the Pacers ended the half with five
straight points to make it 55-45.
Hibbert and West then combined
eight of Indianas first 14 points to
open the second half, pushing the lead
to 69-52.
James and Wade rallied the Heat
within 83-74 early in the fourth but the
Pacers opened it up again to 102-84 with
4:11 to go.
Veteran Spurs, young Thunder
ready for West finals
OKLAHOMA CITY When asked
about the oldie-but-goodie San
Antonio Spurs, Oklahoma Citys
Kevin Durant inquired about Tony
Parkers age.
Thirty-two, a reporter
answered.
He is old, Durant quipped,
drawing laughter. He doesnt play
like hes 32 years old.
Tim Duncan and Manu Ginobili
are even older. Duncan just turned
38 and Ginobili is approaching
37. The trio won its first NBA title
together in 2003 and fought back Father
Time to reach the NBA Finals last year.
They will play in their seventh Western
Conference finals together, starting with
Game 1 tonight in San Antonio.
Durant, the leagues MVP, said
theres more to San Antonios success
than some mythical fountain of youth. It
starts with the genius of Gregg Popovich,
the leagues Coach of the Year.
Even with an aging core and numer-
ous injuries throughout the season, the
Spurs finished with the leagues best
record. They did it with consistency and
teamwork that has continued in the play-
offs. San Antonio is shooting 49 percent
from the field as a team in the postsea-
son, with no player averaging 20 points.
Oklahoma City counters with dynamic
individual play from a pair of 25-year-olds.
Durant is averaging 31.4 points and 9.5
rebounds in the playoffs. Russell Westbrook
is averaging 26.6 points, 8.4 assists and 8.0
rebounds in postseason play.
Westbrook, in particular, has San
Antonios attention. While Durants
play has been typical, Westbrook has
improved significantly as a floor general
during the playoffs.
The Thunder will be without Serge
Ibaka, who led the league in blocked
shots. The mobile, athletic forward
injured his left calf in Game 6 of the
conference semifinal against the Los
Angeles Clippers.
By LARRY HEIING
dhi MEDIA Correspondent
news@delphosherald.com
VERSAILLES Unlike in professional sports like the
NBA or the NHL, where the season seems to go on forever, the
high school baseball season is over before you know it. High
school coaches and athletes cram about 25 games into a short
6-week time span sometimes playing five games in a week.
With this tight schedule, it means no time to practice fun-
damentals between games and pitching rotations are stretched
to the limit.
Mother Nature also can wreak havoc on schedules with her
unpredictable spring weather. Rain forced the postponement of
the St. Johns Midwest Athletic Conference battle at Versailles
on consecutive Thursdays but the third time was the charm as
the game was finally played Saturday under partly sunny skies.
Unfortunately for St. Johns, the wait wasnt worth it as they
dropped their season finale 7-1.
The Jays got two runners on base in the first inning against
Versailles starter Kyle McEldowey with a single by senior T.J.
Hoersten and Austin Heiings walk. McEldoweys curveball
gave the Blue Jay batters fits and he escaped the early
jam with the first of his eight strikeouts.
The Tigers hitting got right to work in the home half of
the first with Austin Knapkes leadoff single to center. Daniel
Borchers drilled a liner that carried over Ben Wrasmans head
in center field for a double. Hoersten settled down getting the
final two outs of the inning on groundouts but Knapke scored
for a 1-0 lead.
Versailles kept pounding the ball in its next at-bat. Collin
Peters walked; Jacob Wenning and Jacob Heitkamp hit iden-
tical grounders through the hole at short to load the bases.
Knapke looped a soft liner to shallow right field that Josh
Warnecke nearly made a remarkable over-the-shoulder catch
but instead got the force-out at second as the runner scored for
a 2-0 lead.
The Jays threatened again in the third inning as a pair of
seniors got on base: Wrasman doubled and Hoersten singled
with one out. McEldowey retired the next two.
Wrasman, as he has done all season, made a great running
catch in center on a ball laced by Daniel Borchers for the sec-
ond out of the third inning. After the next two Tigers reached
safely, Collin Peters single to center plated both and
coach Ryan Warnecke moved Hoersten to third base and
Jacob Youngpeter to the hill, stirking out Wenning.
Youngpeter reached as he was hit by a pitch batting in the
fourth and Gage Seffernick followed with a walk. McEldowey
responded with three strikeouts.
The Tigers loaded the bases against Youngpeter in the bot-
tom of the inning but scored only once to push the lead to 4-0.
Versailles made a pitching change in the fifth inning as
McEldowey was replaced by Knapke and the Jays took advan-
tage. Wrasman led off with a single and stole second. Jesse
Dittos hit to shallow center put runners on the corners with
one out. A wild pitch by Knapke scored the speedy Wrasman
and the Jays were on the board. After Heiing was hit by a pitch,
Knapke got the final two outs.
The Tigers tacked on the final two runs in the sixth.
Versailles hit the ball like we expected them to, Coach
Warnecke said. I thought that we played well but our bats
went silent once we got runners in scoring position and
couldnt match their offense.
The Blue Jays left eight runners on base and the Tigers
stranded a dozen.
Versailles improved to 13-9 (6-2 MAC).
St. Johns was led by the first three in their lineup as
Wrasman and Hoersten each had two hits and Ditto had one as
they finish the 2014 campaign with a 2-20 record.
Im sad to see our four seniors go (Wrasman, Hoersten,
Andy May and Kyle Pohlman) but Im also excited about
the future of Blue Jay baseball, explained Warnecke. These
seniors provided leadership for our young team and we gained
some valuable experience for next year. Well have most of
our starting rotation returning next season, so the future looks
bright after a down year.
St. Johns rst baseman Jesse Ditto reaches for
the throw from shortstop Gage Seffernick to get
Kyle McEldowey out by a step Saturday morning at
Versailles. (dhi MEDIA/Larry Heiing).
St. Johns drops season
finale at Versailles
(Continued from page 6)
Boys 100 Meter Dash: 1. Little
(B) 11.33; 2. Wilcox (AD) 11.6; 3.
Thomas (AE) 11.65; 4. M. Shuey (AE)
11.73; 5. Michael Garay (L) 11.78; 6.
Wannemacher (B) 11.8; 7. Logan Jewel
(L) 11.83; 8. Anthony Schuh (S) 12.22.
Boys 100 Meter Dash Wheelchair: 1.
Daniel Klingler (AD) 20.35.
Girls 4x200 Meter Relay: 1.
Columbus Grove (Raiya Flores, Kristin
Wynn, Linnea Stephens, Haley Roe)
1:52.53; 2. Jefferson (Taylor Stroh,
Brooke Gallmeier, Rileigh Stockwell,
Brooke Teman) 1:52.66; 3. Ada 1:54.08;
4. Allen East 1:54.73; 5. Spencerville
(Kennedy Sharp, Jenna Kahle, Emilee
Meyer, Caitlin Wurst) 1:56.05; 6. Bluffton
1:56.18; 7. Paulding 1:57.2.
Boys 4x200 Meter Relay: 1.
Bluffton 1:32.47; 2. Crestview (Michael
Hansard,Isaiah Kline, Malcolm Oliver,
Zack Jellison) 1:36.6; 3. Columbus Grove
(Joey Warnecke, David Bogart, Austin
Price, Baily Clement) 1:36.75; 4. Ada
1:36.91; 5. Spencerville (Colton Miller,
Calvin Wilson, Andrew Emery, Zach
Goecke) 1:37.96; 6. Paulding 1:38.45;
7. Allen East 1:43.27; 8. Lincolnview
(Brayden Farmer, Casey Garay, Scott
Cowling, Nathan Diller) 1:45.65.
Girls 1,600 Meter Run: 1. Tori
Hardesty (S) 5:36.71; 2. Cierra Adams
(S) 5:43.27; 3. Anna Gorman (L) 5:51.28;
4. Nisly (B) 5:53.96; 5. Kenidi Ulm (J)
5:55.98; 6. Sutton (AD) 6:07.68; 7.
Rebekah Geise (J) 6:08.61; 8. Schweyer
(B) 6:13.88.
Boys 1,600 Meter Run: 1. Bayley
Tow (L) 4:28.48; 2. Colton Grothaus
(CG) 4:38.46; 3. Lee Altenburger (CG)
4:39.41; 4. Jones (P) 4:42.56; 5. Harnish
(B) 4:47.15; 6. Ben Bilimek (L) 4:47.9;
7. Shepherd (P) 4:53.78; 8. Charles
Thornburg (CV) 4:58.65.
Girls 4x100 Meter Relay: 1. Ada
53.21; 2. Columbus Grove (Raiya Flores,
Sarah Schroeder, Linnea Stephens,
Haley Roe) 53.26; 3. Bluffton 54.99; 4.
Allen East 55.61; 5. Paulding 55.68; 6.
Spencerville (Katie Merriman, Patricia
Riley, Emilee Meyer, Shania Johnson)
56.68; 7. Crestview (Jamie Moore,
Whitney Smart, Tommi Andersen, Deanna
Wells) 56.71; 8. Lincolnview (Brooke
Thatcher, Savannah Bigham, Michaela
Campbell, Grace Gorman) 57.01.
Boys 4x100 Meter Relay: 1. Bluffton
44.77; 2. Lincolnview (Logan Jewel,
Damon Norton, Michael Garay, Hunter
Blankemeyer) 45.43; 3. Crestview (Sage
Schaffner, Malcolm Oliver, Zack Jellison,
Isaiah Kline) 45.96; 4. Spencerville
(Colton Miller, Calvin Wilson, Zach
Goecke, Anthony Schuh) 46.59; 5.
Columbus Grove (Joey Warnecke, David
Bogart, Alec Gladwell, Austin Price)
46.81; 6. Paulding 47.31; 7. Ada 47.79;
8. Allen East 49.9.
Girls 400 Meter Dash: 1. Julia Wynn
(CG) 1:01.47; 2. L. Woods (AE) 1:02.78;
3. Grace Callow (CV) 1:03.87; 4. Kristin
Wynn (CG) 1:04.54; 5. Brooke Teman
(J) 1:04.62; 6. Kirkendall (AE) 1:05.95;
7. Theisen (B) 1:06.89; 8. Caitlin Wurst
(S) 1:07.27.
Boys 400 Meter Dash: 1. N. Stratton
(B) 49.93; 2. Wilcox (AD) 51.38; 3.
Thomas (AE) 51.67; 4. M. Shuey (AE)
52.02; 5. Demellweek (B) 52.7; 6. Isaiah
Kline (CV) 55.12; 7. Boone Brubaker
(CG) 55.29; 8. Willeke (AD) 55.8.
Boys 400 Meter Dash Wheelchair: 1.
Daniel Klingler (AD) 1:17.25.
Girls 300 Meter Hurdles: 1. Sydney
McCluer (CG) 47.83; 2. Silone (AE)
49.43; 3. VanCleve (P) 50.16; 4.
Sheehan (B) 50.96; 5. Baker (B) 52.31;
6. Schylar Miller (S) 52.41; 7. Mackenzie
Clymer (CG) 53.15; 8. Jenna Kahle (S)
54.58.
Boys 300 Meter Hurdles: 1. Hunter
Blankemeyer (L) 40.96; 2. Anthony
Schuh (S) 41.56; 3. R. Stratton (B)
42.14; 4. Alex Tabler (CG) 43.98; 5.
Kleman (AE) 44.09; 6. Tyler Radabaugh
(CG) 45.34; 7. Haines (B) 46.25; 8.
Austin (AE) 52.75.
Girls 800 Meter Run: 1. Karri Purdy
(S) 2:26.92; 2. Steinmetz (B) 2:29.27; 3.
Sommers (B) 2:33.92; 4. Cierra Adams
(S) 2:36.94; 5. Heather Pohlman (J)
2:38.13; 6. Sydni Smith (CG) 2:42.88;
7. Bagais (AD) 2:43.48; 8. Johanns (P)
2:46.8.
Boys 800 Meter Run: 1. Bryce
Sharrits (CG) 2:03.22; 2. Alex Giesege
(CG) 2:03.49; 3. Trevor McMichael
(SV) 2:05.94; 4. Wilcox (AD) 2:06.61; 5.
Grant Goecke (SV) 2:06.71; 6. Hoff (B)
2:07.76; 7. Trevor Neate (L) 2:08.46; 8.
Dylan Grandstaff (CV) 2:13.46.
Boys 800 Meter Run Wheelchair: 1.
Daniel Klingler (AD) 2:42.38.
Girls 200 Meter Dash: 1. Archer
(AD) 26.91; 2. Julia Wynn (CG) 27.09;
3. Grace Callow (CV) 27.81; 4. L. Woods
(AE) 27.93; 5. C. Marshall (AD) 27.99;
6. Raiya Flores (CG) 28.28; 7. Brooke
Gallmeier (J) 28.93; 8. Taylor Stroh (J)
29.53.
Boys 200 Meter Dash: 1. Little (B)
23.32; 2. N. Stratton (B) 23.34; 3. Zack
Jellison (CV) 23.36; 4. Baily Clement
(CG) 23.62; 5. Michael Garay (L) 24.26;
6. Wilcox (AD) 24.37; 7. Mercer (P)
24.61; 8. M. Shuey (AE) 24.66.
Girls 3,200 Meter Run: 1. Tori
Hardesty (S) 12:40.28; 2. Cierra Adams
(S) 12:55.72; 3. Anna Gorman (L)
12:59.86; 4. A. Marshall (B) 13:12.77;
5. Nisly (B) 13:12.98; 6. Macy McCluer
(CG) 13:49.16; 7. Leah Myerholtz (CG)
13:50.68; 8. Jakuczun (P) 14:01.61.
Boys 3,200 Meter Run: 1. Mycah
Grandstaff (CV) 9:38.38T; 2. Bayley
Tow (LV) 10:05.7; 3. Colton Grothaus
(CG) 10:16.11; 4. Lee Altenburger (CG)
10:17.13; 5. Alex Rodriguez (L) 10:27.99;
6. Harnish (B) 10:47.38; 7. Layman (P)
10:48.78; 8. Thayer (AE) 10:55.39.
Girls 4x400 Meter Relay: 1.
Columbus Grove (Kristin Wynn, Sydney
McCluer, Linnea Stephens, Julia
Wynn) 4:17.31; 2. Allen East 4:18.51;
3. Jefferson (Rileigh Stockwell, Brooke
Gallmeier, Kenidi Ulm, Brooke Teman)
4:20.18; 4. Spencerville (Kennedy
Sharp, Jenna Kahle, Caitlin Wurst, Karri
Purdy) 4:22.68; 5. Bluffton 4:23.32; 6.
Paulding 4:34.06; 7. Ada 4:40.33; 8.
Lincolnview (Hannah McCleery, Grace
Gorman, Christine Stemen, Katlyn
Wendel) 4:44.99.
Boys 4x400 Meter Relay: 1. Allen
East 3:28.61; 2. Bluffton 3:29.79; 3.
Crestview (Michael Hansard, Alex
Cunningham, Zack Jellison, Isaiah Kline)
3:34.96; 4. Columbus Grove (Baily
Clement, Bryce Sharrits, David Bogart,
Alex Giesege) 3:37.25; 5. Paulding
3:39.37; 6. Spencerville (Grant Goecke,
Zach Goecke, Mason Nourse, Evan
Pugh) 3:49.93; 7. Lincolnview (Colton
Snyder, Trevor Neate, Travis Lippi,
Brayden Farmer) 3:51.41.
Girls Shot Put: 1. Lynea Diller (CG)
37-2.5; 2. Katie Merriman (SV) 35-4.75;
3. Becca Endicott (CG) 32-10.75; 4.
Makayla Binkley (J) 30-11.5; 5.
Edgington (B) 30-7.25; 6. C. Shuey (AE)
30-3; 7. Nelson (AD) 29-9.25; 8. Bekka
Tracey (CV) 29-2.25.
Boys Discus: 1. Rece Roney
(CG) 143-0; 2. Smith (B) 141-06; 3.
Dumbaugh (AD) 136-7; 4. Schindler (P)
135-10; 5. Aaron Bremer (CG) 128-5; 6.
Logan Vandemark (S) 127-3; 7. Parkins
(B) 126-8; 8. Scott Miller (CV) 123-11.
Boys Long Jump: 1. Trevor
McMichael (S) 19-9; 2. Thomas (AE)
19-4.5; 3. David Bogart (CG) 19-4.5; 4.
Malcolm Oliver (CV) 19-0.25; 5. Jolliff
(AD) 18-9; 6. Arend (P) 18-2.25; 7.
Hernandez (P) 18-1; 8. Alex Cunningham
(CV) 17-10.5.
Girls High Jump: 1. Hannah
McCleery (L) 5-1; 2. Walden (AD) 5-0;
3. Oberly (B) 4-10; 4. (tie) Karri Purdy
(S) and Mady Vorhees (CG) 4-10; 6. (tie)
Alexis Ricker (CG) and C. Marshall (AD)
4-8; 8. Caitlin Wurst (S) 4-6.
Girls Pole Vault: 1. Schylar Miller
(S) 10-4; 2. Lutes (AE) 8-8; 3. 3. (tie)
Jamie Moore (CV) and Perez (AE) 8-4;
5. Lauren Roose (CG) 8-0; 6. Salinas
(P) 7-6; 7. Megan Langhals (CG) 7-0; 8.
Patricia Riley (S) 7-0.
T - New Meet Record
Results
(Continued from page 6)
Pirates pound Lady
Green
OTTOVILLE
Continental put a 5-spot
on Ottoville in the top of
the first inning and went
on to bash the Lady Big
Green 17-2 in five innings
in Putnam County Leaguye
softball action Saturday.
Emma Recker took the
win on the mound, ced-
ing three hits for the Lady
Pirates.
Alena Horstman took
the loss for the Lady Green,
who committed seven
errors.
Score by Innings:
Continental 5 3 2 1 0 6 - 17 18 1
Ottoville 0 0 1 1 0 0 - 2 3 7
WP: Emma Recker; LP: Alena
Horstman. 2B: Continental - Sloane
Zachrich, Kiana Warnement, Alex
Quigley.
-
Shimp goose-eggs
Flyers
MARIA STEIN Jon
Shimp tossed a 4-hit shut-
out and Spencerville white-
washed Marion Local 3-0
Saturday.
The Bearcats improved
to 10-12, while the Flyers
are 12-13.
J. Bergman took the
loss, only giving up two
hits.
The Bearcats scored
three times in the third.
Score by Innings:
Spencerville 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 - 3 2 0
Marion Local 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 - 0 4 1
WP: Jo Shimp; LP: J. Bergman.
Jefferson freshman Madison Jettinghoff tries to leg out
a hit against Wayne Trace Saturday morning but cant
quite do so. (dhi MEDIA/Randy Shellenbarger)
Roundup
(Continued from page 6)
Jefferson girls coach (the
boys had no team results) fig-
ured his Lady Cats did about as
well as can be expected.
We just dont have the
overall depth to do well at these
big meets, he added. We also
lost Brooke (Culp) to a season-
ending injury and that hurts us
in the relays, especially the 4x1.
We did have a PR in the 4x8
Thursday. We kind of readjust-
ed strategy to see what we could
do as far as advancing people
from Districts to Regionals next
week; that will be our focus this
week. All we want to do is fin-
ish top 4 and move on.
In the boys race, the host
Bearcats were third at 101
points, followed by the Lancers
(85), the Mustangs (62), the
Knights (56), the Ada Bulldogs
(54) and the Panthers (48). The
Jeffcats had no team results.
Weve had our share on
injuries on the boys side all sea-
son, McConnell added. We
did very well in some events,
setting PRs in the shot put, pole
vault, one of the hurdles and
won the long jump. We had a
solid performance and were
starting to click despite those
injuries.
Langdon continues to get
solid performances.
Bayley (Tow) set a school
record in the 1,600 run and
was not far off the 2-mile,
he explained. Hunter
Blankemeyer had a great week-
end: he ran a 40.9 in the 300
hurdles and was second in the
110s, plus he ran in the 4x1 for
the first time ever and we fin-
ished second. Alex Rodriguez
was fifth in the 2-mile and
Connor McCleery did extreme-
ly well in the 100 and 200. I
like how we keep improving
and am excited for this week at
Districts.
Next up for the teams is
the Division III District tourna-
ments: Jefferson, Spencerville,
Lincolnview and Crestview
back at Spencerville and
Columbus Grove, Ada, Allen
East and Bluffton at Liberty-
Benton save for Paulding,
whose teams will be in the
Division II Defiance District.
The prelims and half of the
field event finals will com-
mence Thursday, with the other
field event finals and the run-
ning finals Saturday.
Grove
8 The Herald Monday, May 19, 2014 www.delphosherald.com
Classifieds
To place an ad phone 419-695-0015 ext. 122 or 419-238-2285
COMMUNITY
Connection
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 Work 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
555 Garage Sales
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 Notice
950 Seasonal
953 Free & Low Merchandise
665
Lawn, Garden,
Landscaping
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
TENNESSEE TOMATOES
COMING SOON!
GARDEN FLOWERS,
VEGETABLE PLANTS
AND SEEDS
AVAILABLE NOW!
9am-5pm Daily; Sunday 11am-4pm
9557 State Route 66
Delphos, OH 45833
419-692-5749
419-234-6566
SAFE &
SOUND
Security Fence
DELPHOS
SELF-STORAGE
Pass Code Lighted Lot
Affordable 2 Locations
Why settle for less?
419-692-6336
700 Painting
660 Home Services
419-286-8387
419-692-8387
WE SERVICE MOST
MAJOR APPLIANCE
BRANDS INCLUDING
KENMORE
APPLIANCES
Metzger

s
Appliance Service
Denny Jon
419.286.8387 | 419.692.8387
800.686.3537
Washers Dryers Refrigerators Freezers
Ranges Dishwashers Icemakers Microwaves
We service Kenmore appliances
and most major appliance brands
419.286.8387 800.686.3537
Metzger

s
Appliance Service
Denny Jon
419.286.8387 | 419.692.8387
800.686.3537
Washers Dryers Refrigerators Freezers
Ranges Dishwashers Icemakers Microwaves
We service Kenmore appliances
and most major appliance brands
419.286.8387 800.686.3537
Metzger

s
Appliance Service
Denny Jon
419.286.8387 | 419.692.8387
800.686.3537
Washers Dryers Refrigerators Freezers
Ranges Dishwashers Icemakers Microwaves
We service Kenmore appliances
and most major appliance brands
419.286.8387 800.686.3537
Denny Jon
Washers Dryers
Refrigerators Freezers
Ranges Dishwashers
Icemakers Microwaves
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
DAYS PROPERTY
MAINTENANCE
LLC
Brent Day
567-204-8488
Mowing
Landscaping
Lawn Seeding
www.dayspropertymaintenance.com
650 Health/Beauty
Style
Trends
Hair & Tanning Salon
413 Skinner St. Delphos
(419)692-7002
Tanning
10 sessions $30
15 sessions $35
20 sessions $40
Get 5 FREE
655
Home Repair
and Remodel
Harrison
Floor Installation
Carpet, Vinyl, Wood,
Ceramic Tile
Reasonable rates
Free estimates
harrisonfoorinstallation.com
Phil 419-235-2262
Wes 567-644-9871
You buy, we apply
Hohlbeins
Ph. 419-339-4938
or 419-230-8128
Home
Improvement
Windows,
Doors, Siding,
Roofing,
Sunrooms,
Pole Buildings,
Garages
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
Joe Miller
Construction
Experienced Amish Carpentry
Roofing, remodeling,
concrete, pole barns, garages
or any construction needs.
Cell 567-644-6030
Find a Job. Post a Job.
The Delphos Herald classifieds
419-695-0015
AT YOUR
S
ervice
Fitzgerald
Painting &
Power Washing
419-303-3020
Interior, Exterior, Residential,
Commercial, Decks, Fences,
Houses, Log Homes, Stripping,
Cleaning, Sealing, Staining, Barn
& Building Painting, Barn Roofs
FREE ESTIMATES
Insured References
A+ rating with the Better
Business Bureau
www.OhioPaintPro.com
IS YOUR
AD HERE?
Call 419-695-0015
ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS
Ft. Jennings Propane
is accepting applications for a
FULL-TIME EMPLOYEE.
Must have a Class B CDL with hazmat
or willing to obtain.
Stop in to fll out an application at
FT. JENNINGS PROPANE
460 W. 4th St.
Ft. Jennings, Ohio 45844 or
VAN WERT PROPANE
104763 U.S. Rt. 127S
Van Wert, Ohio 45891
Baughman Tile Company is accepting applica-
tions for Full and Part Time Drivers. Drivers must
have CDL Class B or higher, be willing & capable
of unloading their own loads & the ability to in-
teract positively with customers. Full benefit
package available for full-time employment. Part-
time & seasonal positions have the flexibility to
work with other obligations, such as school bus
routes, agricultural schdules, etc. Please apply
within @ 8516 Twp. Rd. 137, Paulding, OH.
38c3
DRIVERS WANTED
Garver Excavating
419.203.0796
rgarv42@yahoo.com
Locally Owned and Operated | Registered Van Wert Contractor
Registered and Bonded Household Sewage Treatment System Installer
Fully Insured
Call
Today!
Digging Grading Leveling Hauling Fill Dirt
Topsoil Tile and Sewer Repair Stone Driveways
Concrete Sidewalks Demolition
Ditch Bank Cleaning Snow Removal Excavator
Backhoe Skid Loader Dump Truck
Brock Grain Systems
B & S Millwright 419.795.1403
Bucket
Elevators
Dump Pits
Dryers
Brock Grain Systems
Bucket
Elevators
Dump Pits
Dryers
105 Announcements
ADVERTISERS: YOU
can place a 25 word
classified ad in more
than 100 newspapers
with over one and a half
million total circulation
across Ohio for $295. Its
easy...you place one or-
der and pay with one
check through Ohio
Scan-Ohio Advertising
Network. The Delphos
Herald advertising dept.
can set this up for you.
No other classified ad
buy is simpler or more
cost effecti ve. Cal l
419-695-0015 ext. 131
DESIGNER PURSE
BINGO
at the
VW Council on Aging
Friday June 13 @ 6 pm
All purses are authentic
designer handbags!!
Tickets $20 each
Limited quantities
available
For tickets call
419-238-5011
220 Fox Rd, Van Wert
IS IT A SCAM? The
Delphos Herald urges
our readers to contact
The Better Business Bu-
reau, (419) 223-7010 or
1-800-462-0468, before
entering into any agree-
ment involving financing,
business opportunities,
or work at home oppor-
tunities. The BBB will as-
sist in the investigation
of these businesses.
(This notice provided as
a customer service by
The Delphos Herald.)
235 Help Wanted
235 Help Wanted
ACCOUNTING OFFICE
Assistant needed. Duties
include: Payroll & payroll
tax preparation, spread-
sheet work, and small
business accounting.
Part time & flexible hours
available. Must have
payroll and payroll tax
preparation experience
and accounting degree
of bookkeeping experi-
ence. Position is open
and applicant can start
i mmedi atel y. Pl ease
send resume to: Com-
mercial Tax Records,
Inc., PO Box 85, Fort
Jennings, OH 45844
CONSTRUCTION COM-
PANY needs reliable
worker with reliable
transportation. Experi-
ence helpful. Send re-
sume to: 19994 Road
21, Fort Jennings, OH
45844
DELPHOS SENIOR Citi-
zens, Inc. an EEO em-
ployer is seeking an Ex-
ecutive Director. Appli-
cants must have a de-
gree in Social Services
or its equivalency in ex-
perience. Administrative
skills; understanding of
government regulations
in grant writing and re-
ports; awareness of geri-
atrics; and creative abil-
ity in service programs.
Applications available at
Delphos Senior Citizens,
Inc., 301 E. Suthoff St.,
Delphos Ohio 45833. All
applications must be re-
ceived by May 23. No
phone calls accepted.
Fast paced local
business hiring
F/T and P/T
experienced industrial
emboidery operators.
Highly motivated &
energetic applicants
needed.
Health insurance,401k,
paid holidays &
vacations.
Apply in person at
Universal Lettering Company
1197 Grill Road Unit B
Van Wert
235 Help Wanted
Reply to
Delphos Herald
405 N. Main
Box 125
Delphos, OH 45833
PART TIME
KITCHEN
BARTENDING
POSITION
AVAILABLE
Must be able to
work weekends.
LOCAL CO. needs
part-time secretary with
computer skills to work
in their own home. Call
419-203-9006 for inter-
view.
OTR CLASS-A CDL
Semi-driver. Home most
evenings, includes bene-
fits. Send resume to:
AWC Trucki ng, 835
Skinner St., Delphos,
OH 45833 (OR) to
ulmsinc@bizwoh.rr.com,
419-692-3951
PROFESSIONAL COM-
MERCIAL Cleaning
Company i s hi ri ng
part-time evening clean-
ers for accounts in Del-
phos and the west side
of Lima. Must be very re-
liable, mature, profes-
sional, and detail ori-
ented. The ability to fol-
low directions and work
in a team setting is also
required. Please forward
resumes or work histo-
r i e s t o :
pcs2343@watchtv.net
SEEKING AN experi-
enced Truck/Trailer Me-
chanic with a minimum
of 3 years experience to
work at a company in
Delphos, OH. The suc-
cessful candidate must
have their own tools and
willing to be on call for
after hours repairs. Typi-
cal work schedule is:
Monday-Fri day and
some Saturdays. Please
apply in person or send
resume to Dancer Lo-
gistics 900 Gressel Dr.
Delphos, OH 45833
235 Help Wanted
WERE GROWING
Come Join Us! Local
company has as
immediate opening in
our hardwood moulding
department for a
moulder set up person.
Appicants must be
dependable self
motivated indiviuals who
learn quickly and can
wokr in a team setting.
They also must have
good mechanical
aptitude and prior
machine set up
experience is a plus. On
job training will be
provided. Cometitive
wages, Health Care,
401K, paid vacations
and holidays. Please
apply in person at
Teem Wholesale,
200 W, Skinner St.,
Ohio City 45874.
No phone calls please.
305
Apartment/
Duplex For Rent
2 BEDROOM Ranch
Dupl ex i n Del phos.
$425/mo. No pets.
Ne wl y u p d a t e d .
419-286-2816. Call for
details
320 House For Rent
SEVERAL MOBI LE
Homes/House for rent.
View homes online at
www.ulmshomes.com or
inquire at 419-692-3951
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
(5) 7 week old kittens,
free to good home.
24249 Lincoln Hwy, Apt.
10, Delphos
583
Pets and
Supplies
ALL HEALTHY, Happy,
Cuddly PUPPIES from
Garwicks the Pet Peo-
p l e : Ha v a n e s e ,
Parti-poms, Poodles,
Morkies, Chihuahuas.
419-795-5711. garwicks
thepetpeople.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
805 Auto
1994 DODGE Ram box
truck for sale. 3500
Cummins Turbo Diesel.
16L, 92H, 94W overall
box size. Original owner
and perfect for delivery
or construction. All serv-
ice performed by profes-
sional dealership. Call
Mon- Fr i 9am- 5pm
419-303-3596
1998 CHEVY S10 V6.
Very reliable and new
tires. Has bed liner.
$ 1 8 0 0 . P h o n e :
419-605-3510
953
Free and Low
Priced Merchandis
EXERCISE BIKE, Life
Styler 400, good condi-
tion, like-new. $25. Call
evenings: 419-695-8751
Is your ad here?
Call today!
419-695-0015
Wife doesnt want to choose
between husband and kids
Dear Annie: I am in
my second marriage.
My two adult children
were pre-teens when
I married Lenny 15
years ago.
The problem is,
Lenny has a bad
temper and little
patience. He flies off
the handle and gets
upset easily. It makes
life difficult. He
doesnt frighten me,
and I can easily tell
him to stop when these
episodes begin, but
they upset the whole
family.
Now that my kids
are grown, they have
told me that they
always resented my
putting them in this
position by marrying
Lenny. They are
respectful to him,
but have no interest
in sitting down and
having a conversation
with him. When the
kids are in the house, I
often run around trying
to keep everyone
calm. It makes me
nervous. Lenny tried
counseling, but not for
very long. He said it
wasnt helping.
How do I keep a
relationship with my
kids? I dont want to
be divorced a second
time. While I am sure
that Lenny would
never harm me, Im
not certain how he
would react if I asked
him to leave. He
does have some good
qualities, but its hard
to remember them
when he has these
outbursts. Please help
me keep my kids in
my life. What can I
do? -- Helpless
Dear Helpless: You
can call the Domestic
Violence Hotline
(thehotline.org) at
1-800-799-SAFE and
ask about protected
ways to leave your
environment. You
also can ask for help
in discussing ways to
get Lenny to return
for counseling in
anger management.
If you decide to stay
with Lenny, you can
arrange to see your
children outside of
your home, having
a relationship that
doesnt include Lenny.
Do not push them to be
with him.
Dear Annie: Nude
Bodies Are OK says
nude art is not porn,
but you cannot always
control what happens
when viewing nudity. I
have counseled people
who were addicted
to pornography, and
it robs men of their
confidence and self-
respect. Some people
become addicted after
a single viewing. I
have seen couples
divorce and children
separated from parents
because one of them
couldnt stop using
porn.
Suggesting that porn
is OK for any length of
time and in any form
encourages people to
try doing what their
own good sense warns
them is dangerous.
Women should not
be encouraged to
think that a husband
who uses porn is
safe from affairs
and that it will
somehow strengthen
the marriage in
the bedroom. This
is ludicrous. If
he is looking at
pornography, he is
bonding with the
pornography. Brain
chemistry is potent,
and it is both difficult
and unlikely that
people will overcome
the addiction
permanently once it
grabs them. -- Be a
Man
Annies Mailbox
Mr. Know-it-All corrects a mistake
Ask Mr. Know-it-All
Jessica
Simpson
MANUFACTURING OPPORTUNITIES
AAP St. Marys Corp. is a leader in the design and manufacture of cast
aluminum wheels for OEM automakers. As a subsidiary of Hitachi Metals
America, our reputation for high quality products and customer satisfaction
has helped us continue to grow and provide our associates with over 26 years
of steady employment. We now have an opportunity for a Quality Assurance
Engineer to assume the following responsibilities:
Now, we are growing again and looking for individuals with expe-
rience in the following areas to support this expansion:
PRODUCTION OPERATORS
To operate various machines and production processes and perform in-
spection and testing of products.
Qualifications: Related experience preferred.
High school diploma or equivalent
NEW WAGE RATES up to $19.97/hour (top rate w/ bonuses)
MACHINE REPAIR TECHNICIANS
To install, troubleshoot, repair, and maintain various machines, process-
es, and equipment.
Qualifications:
Two plus years of multi-trade experience/training with industrial
electrical, mechanical, hydraulics, and pneumatics
Working knowledge of precision measuring instruments, gauges,test
equipment, and blueprints/schematics
High school diploma or equivalent and related vocational training
NEW WAGE RATES up to $24.73/hour (top rate w/ bonuses)
In addition to a competitive base wage, AAP offers profit-sharing bonuses,
and excellent fringe benefits--medical, dental, life, vision, and disability
insurance, 401(k) retirement plan with Company matching, paid vacation,
holidays, and more. If youre looking for a career opportunity with a grow-
ing company, you may apply in person or send your qualifications to:
AAP St. Marys Corporation
1100 McKinley Road
St. Marys, Ohio 45885
Attention: Human Resource-DH
Is It
Broken?
Find A
Repairman
To fix It
In The
Service
Directory
In
The
Delphos
Herald
by Gary Clothier
OOPS: I was asked if Ronald and Nancy
Reagan ever starred in the same movie together.
I said no, although they did appear in one movie
-- Hellcats of the Navy -- before they were
married. I was wrong. That movie was released
in 1957, and the couple married on March 4,
1952. The correct answer is that this is the first
and only movie the married couple starred in.
They appeared frequently
on the anthology series
G.E. True Theater.
DID YOU KNOW?
Jessica Simpson was a
finalist for a part on The
Mickey Mouse Club
the same year as Britney
Spears and Christina
Aguilera, but she didnt
make it.
DID YOU KNOW? In
the movie Titanic (1997),
Gwyneth Paltrow was up
for the role of Rose Dewitt Bukater, but she lost
to Kate Winslet.
Monday, May 19, 2014
Your insight is sharp,
enabling you to zero in on
valuable information. Your goal
will be to use the knowledge
you discover in such a way that
it will bring positive infuences
and advancement. Reading the
fne print will be a must to avoid
unwanted, costly surprises.
TAURUS (April 20-May
20) -- You will be enticed by the
latest gossip, but if you repeat
it, you will lose credibility.
Dont waste valuable time on
stressful details. Stay focused
on what is most important.
GEMINI (May 21-June
20) -- Embrace intellectual
challenges. If you check out the
latest technology, it could help
generate some ideas. You can
use your quest for knowledge to
increase your hiring potential.
CANCER (June 21-July
22) -- You need to take control
of your fnances and get back
on budget. Its time to clear
up any debts and collect any
money that is owed to you.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) --
Physical and social activities
are highlighted. Mix both by
joining a gym or ftness club.
You will meet new people and
improve your health at the
same time.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
-- Pamper the ones you love.
Be considerate and helpful to
those in need. Your behavior
toward others will strengthen
your ties to them and ensure
assistance when you need it.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23)
-- You can use your discipline
and determination to overcome
any recently acquired bad
habits. By concentrating on
a healthy diet and regular
exercise, you will soon be back
in fghting form.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) -- There may be some
mixed messages coming your
way. You should delay making
any important decisions. Be
wary of anyone who could
mislead you or harbor ulterior
motives.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov.
23-Dec. 21) -- Sometimes it
is easier to talk with friends
than with family. If you are
having issues with a loved one,
wait until the home situation is
more relaxed before making
suggestions.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-
Jan. 19) -- You could use a
vacation. Make room in your
budget for a short getaway. Its
the perfect time to relax and
enjoy your own company or
that of a loved one.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19) -- Dont keep your opinions
bottled up. Your ideas are as
important as anyone elses. You
can win over even a stubborn
opponent if you make your
point persuasively.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March
20) -- You could be in for a
rude awakening if you lend
money to someone you dont
know that well. Consider the
reason behind the request, and
dont be fooled by false fattery.
ARIES (March 21-April
19) -- Children or elderly
relatives will provide a
happy diversion from tedious
problems. The most meaningful
relationships involve common
interests. Increase your circle
of friends by participating in
many things.
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 Bernice Bede Osol
Answer to Sudoku
Crossword Puzzle
now!
7 Right, to Dob-
bin
8 Catch fre
9 Hubbub
(hyph.)
10 Watched
carefully
11 Oats enthusi-
ast
17 Skilled
19 Lunch counter
order
22 Fathers Day
month
23 Do a sewing
chore
24 Black, in
verse
25 Popular
advice giver
26 Kickbacks
27 Clancy hero
Jack --
28 Harden, as
clay
30 Speeders
penalty
32 Pricing word
34 Bumpkin
ACROSS
1 Third-rate
newspapers
5 The --
Bang Theory
8 Part of a list
12 Jai --
13 I-90
14 Spanish
painter
15 Skippers
place
16 Flowering
shrub
18 Frolic
20 Vacuum
tube
21 Moose kin
22 Fast fier
23 Artichoke
morsel
26 Outstanding
29 Flows back
30 Typeface
31 Bark or yelp
33 Swarm
34 Holy cow!
35 Ocean fsh
36 Quick-dry
fabrics
38 Piano fxer
39 Banjo kin
40 Opposing
41 Moth draw
44 Male goose
47 Distant
thunder
49 Blended
whiskeys
51 Toledos
lake
52 Actors
prompt
53 Important
decades
54 Venison
55 Double
curve
56 Jurassic
Park co-star
DOWN
1 Bleacher
shout
2 Shake -- --!
3 Beneft,
often
4 Almost boils
5 Stream
6 -- do for
Saturdays answers
35 Large bill
37 Planks
38 Heavy
weight
40 Ham-
sters digs
41 Mr. Rog-
ers
42 Artifcial
fy
43 Fifs
friend
44 Wilde-
beests
45 Bronte
governess
46 Nurture
48 Kind of
cube
50 W-2 info
Monday, May 19, 2014 The Herald 9
www.delphosherald.com
10 The Herald Monday, May 19, 2014 www.delphosherald.com
Trivia
Answers to Fridays questions:
The island of Madagascar most recently attached
to the Indian subcontinent. Madagascar broke away
from it 88 million years ago to become what is now the
fourth-largest island in the world.
Charles Darwin, John Keats and Giorgio Armani
abandoned medicine to follow the interests that led
each of them to fame in different fields.
Todays questions:
Which is the only U.S. state to have its official motto
written in French?
At what altitude in miles do Global Positioning
System (GPS) satellites orbit the earth?
Answers in Wednesdays Herald.
TODAYS
SMILE
Evander Parent
(Continued from page 2)
50 Years Ago 1964
Mrs. William Syfert was
installed as president of the
Womens Fellowship of the
Ottawa River United Church
of Christ at Rimer Thursday
evening. Mrs. Charles Wood
served as installing offi-
cer. Mrs. Norman Fish of
Columbus Grove took the
group on a tour of the world
as she showed colored slides
of her 1963 trip.
The annual Community
Auction sponsored by
Delphos Junior Chamber
of Commerce will be held
Monday night at the shel-
ter house at Stadium Park.
Tom Osting, chairman of
the project, reports that both
new and used merchandise
will be knocked down to the
highest bidders. Auctioneers
who have donated their ser-
vices for the occasion are
Homer Pollock and Joe G.
Kasler.
Gene Herr, a resident of
Delphos for the past three
years, graduated in April
from R.E.T.S. Electronic
School in Toledo. Herr grad-
uated with excellent grades
in radio, television and
industrial electronics. He is
the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Roy Herr of Beaverdam and
the son-in-law of Mr. and
Mrs. Lee Pitsenbarger of
Delphos.
75 Years Ago 1939
Sheila Kaye-Smith, prob-
ably the best woman novel-
ist of the present period,
and two of her works were
discussed at some length
Wednesday evening when
the Rev. Edward C. Herr,
assistant pastor of St. Johns
parish, gave a book talk at
the Delphos Public Library
under the sponsorship of the
Library Association.
Exercises for the gradu-
ates of St. John the Baptist
School in Landeck will be
held in the school auditorium
June 4. A class play, Black
Derby, will also be pre-
sented at that time. The cast
consists of Arnold Miller,
Anglene Freund, Joseph
Miller, Rosemary Rahrig,
Rita Bonifas, Kathleen
Freund, Richard Schwinnen,
George Bohnlein and Paul
Klaus.
Mrs. William B. Snow,
East Fourth Street, enter-
tained the members of
the Afternoon Bridge
Club and one guest, Mrs.
George Weber, at her home
Wednesday afternoon. Anna
Lindemann held the high,
Mrs. George Laudick sec-
ond and Mrs. Harry Boerger
third. The next meeting
of the club will be in two
weeks at the home of Mrs.
Berheide on North Moening
Street.
Archives
Fractures
(Continued from page 1)
Low bone density is when bone density is
lower than normal but not low enough to be
considered osteoporosis. The latter happens when
people lose too much bone, make too little bone
or both, resulting in bones becoming weak and
breaking from a minor fall. In some cases, bones
can break from sneezing or bumping into furniture.
The disease also causes some people to lose
height. When osteoporosis causes vertebrae to
break or collapse, it affects posture and causes
people to become stooped or hunched.
Bones are living, growing tissue made up of
three major components: collagen, a protein that
gives bones a flexible framework; calcium-phos-
phate mineral complexes that make bones hard
and strong; and living bone cells that remove and
replace weakened sections of bone that make them
flexible and strong.
Bones give the body structure, protects inter-
nal organs and gives an anchor to muscles,
Dershem detailed. Its a multi-functional system.
There are many health problems diseases or
conditions that may increase a persons chance
of getting osteoporosis and can cause bone loss.
Low levels of the hormones testosterone, which
protects bone, and/or estrogen in men suggests
there may be an underlying disorder needing
evaluation. Eating disorders or drinking too much
alcohol can cause these levels to be lower than
normal. People suffering from neurological system
disorders have reduced mobility and their activity
can cause falls, which can lead to low vitamin D
levels.
Vitamin D is the catalyst for bone mass
and people need to eat foods that are vitamin D
-enriched, Dershem detailed.
She said as people age, the need for calcium
increases and eating a diet including green
leafy vegetables, almonds, breads, orange juice
basically foodstuffs calcium-fortified
are going to help provide the mineral that is
important for so many of the bodys functions.
Calcium supplements are another option to get
more of the mineral into the diet.
People between the ages 19 and 50 need
1,000 milligrams a day, Dershem stated. If
over the age of 50, they should take 1,200 mil-
ligrams per day.
Some medicines can be harmful to bone
structure when taken for another condition and
is usually greater when taken in high doses or
for an extended period of time.
Steroid medications and progesterone con-
traceptives like Depo-Provera depletes vitamin
D from the body, Dershem said.
She explained that hospitals offer free bone
-density screenings that will give people an
indication of where they stand. Osteoporosis
and the broken bones it can cause are not part
of normal aging. There are many healthful
preventative measures people young and
old can adopt now which affect bone health
for the rest of their lives, including:
Get enough calcium and vitamin D and
eat a well-balanced diet;
Engage in regular exercise;
Eat foods that are good for bone health,
such as fruits and vegetables;
Avoid smoking and limit alcohol to 2-3
drinks per day.
(Continued from page 1)
Seeing a significant growth
in the church membership in
the early 2000s, the Needs
Analysis Committee was
formed in February 2005 and
on Nov. 5, 2006, the congrega-
tion voted to accept the com-
mittees recommendation to
relocate and form the Building
Committee. On May 10, 2010,
the congregation voted to pur-
chase property on Ambrose
Drive and establish a Capital
Campaign Committee, which
raised $1.5 million in personal
letters of intent. In April 2013,
the Phase I Building Committee
was formed to present a design
for a facility that would house
a community center/kitchen
and daycare/preschool within a
budget of approximately $1.2
million. In November 2013,
the Administrative Council
approved the plans and autho-
rized the committee to hire a
contractor.
We looked at doing the
work on the existing building
and a new building and we just
couldnt see putting that much
money in the building we have
and still end up without the
things we needed for a grow-
ing church young couples
and young families, North
said.Without the support of
the entire church, fundraising
and contributions, this couldnt
have happened.
The 14,748-square-foot
steel and mortar building will
include a fellowship hall, kitch-
en, restrooms, offices and four
classrooms for Tender Times
Child Development Center and
other groups. The parking lot
will hold 100 vehicles with a
hall large enough for 500.
Alexander & Bebout is the
contractor and Ulms, Inc., has
been working on site prepara-
tion.
A tentative deadline is
November so the churchs
annual Christmas Bazaar can
be held at the new facility the
first Wednesday in December.
The project is currently
awaiting permits from the
state, which are expected to
arrive later this month or in
June.
The local UPWARD basket-
ball and cheerleading program
was moved to the Hartford
Christian Church Fellowship
Center east of Spencerville in
the early 2000s and the new
facility will allow that program
to return to Delphos.
Future plans including add-
ing a sanctuary and the entire
church and its activities will be
moved to the Ambrose Drive
location. An additional com-
mitment of $2-$2.5 million is
needed to complete Phase II of
the project.
Ground for the churchs
current home was broken on
April 17, 1955.
Trinity
Coffee fungus raising
prices for high-end blends
WASHINGTON (AP) The U.S. government is stepping
up efforts to help Central American farmers fight a devastating
coffee disease and hold down the price of your morning
cup.
At issue is a fungus called coffee rust that has caused more
than $1 billion in damage across Latin American region. The
fungus is especially deadly to Arabica coffee, the bean that
makes up most high-end, specialty coffees.
Already, it is affecting the price of some of those coffees in
the United States.
We are concerned because we know coffee rust is already
causing massive amounts of devastation, said Raj Shah, head
of the U.S. Agency for International Development.
Today, he was expected to announce a $5 million partner-
ship with Texas A&M Universitys World Coffee Research
center to try to eliminate the fungus.
But the government isnt doing this just to protect our $4
specialty coffees, as much as Americans love them. The chief
concern is about the economic security of these small farms
abroad. If farmers lose their jobs, it increases hunger and
poverty in the region and contributes to violence and drug
trafficking.
Washington estimates that production could be down any-
where from 15 percent to 40 percent in coming years, and that
those losses could mean as many as 500,000 people could lose
their jobs. Though some countries have brought the fungus
under control, many of the poorer coffee-producing countries
in Latin America dont see the rust problem getting better
anytime soon.
Train derailment fuels
sleep apnea screening talks
WHITE PLAINS, N.Y.
(AP) A deadly Metro-North
train derailment last year in
which the dazed engineer
was found to have sleep apnea
has pushed the commuter rail-
road to look into establishing
screening for the condition,
which could include measur-
ing operators necks and asking
them and their spouses about
snoring habits.
Metro-North spokesman
Aaron Donovan confirmed
that the railroad that serves
New York Citys northern sub-
urbs is working with unions
on sleep apnea screening, but
he cautioned nothing has been
decided. Any program, he said,
would be for all employees in
any safety-sensitive positions.
While no cause has been
established for the Dec. 1
derailment in the Bronx that
left four dead and dozens
hurt, apnea has gotten much
of the attention. Even before
the accident, federal railroad
officials had been discussing
requirements related to sleep
disorders. But there is still no
national screening requirement
for apnea, and railroads around
the country have varying prac-
tices.
Any screening program that
emerges is likely to start with
questioning about the subjects
sleep habits and some physi-
cal measurements. Overnight
sleep-observation studies,
which can be time-consuming
and expensive, could follow.
2

Call 7 days a week 8am - 11pm EST Promo Code: MB0114
1-800-913-8178
CALL NOW SAVE UP TO 50%!
mo
Promotional
Packages
Starting At...
DISH TODAY!
Upgrade to
FOR 12 MONTHS
Not eligible for Hopper
or iPad mini oer
Important Terms and Conditions: Promotional Ofers: Require activation of new qualifying DISH service. All prices, fees, charges, packages,
programming, features, functionality and ofers subject to change without notice. After 12-month promotional period, then-current everyday monthly price
applies and is subject to change. ETF: If you cancel service during frst 24 months, early cancellation fee of $20 for each month remaining applies. HD Free
for Life: Additional $10/mo HDfee waived for life of current account; requires continuous enrollment in AutoPay with Paperless Billing. Premium Channels:
3-month premium ofer value is $165; after promotional period, then-current everyday monthly prices apply and are subject to change. Blockbuster @Home
requires online DISH account, broadband Internet to stream content. HD-only channels not available with select packages. Hopper Features: AutoHop
feature is only available with playback the next day of select primetime shows on ABC, CBS, FOX and NBC as part of PrimeTime Anytime feature. Both features
are subject to availability. Installation/Equipment Requirements: Free Standard Professional Installation only. Certain equipment is leased and must be
returned to DISH upon cancellation or unreturned equipment fees apply. Upfront and additional monthly fees may apply. Recording hours vary; 2000 hours
based on SD programming. Equipment comparison based on equipment available from major TV providers as of 9/19/13. Watching live and recorded TV
anywhere requires a broadband-connected, Sling-enabled DVR and compatible mobile device. Miscellaneous: Ofers available for new and qualifed former
customers, and subject to terms of applicable Promotional and Residential Customer agreements. State reimbursement charges may apply. Additional
restrictions and taxes may apply. Ofers end 6/12/14. 2013 DISH Network L.L.C. All rights reserved. HBO, Cinemax and related channels and service
marks are the property of Home Box Ofce, Inc. SHOWTIME is a registered trademark of Showtime Networks Inc., a CBS Company. STARZ and related channels
and service marks are property of Starz Entertainment, LLC. All new customers are subject to a one-time processing fee.
The Hottest Concept in
HAIR REMOVAL
Call: 1-800-391-2258
Introducing


Painless

Easy

Affordable

For Women

& Men
P R O
100%
RISK-FREE
Trial!
(Call for details)
Limit 2. Your 4 (4 oz.) burgers will ship
free per address and must ship with The
Favorite Gift (49377). Not valid with other
offers. Standard S&Hwill be applied per
address. Expires 6/30/14.
2014 OCG | 20180 | Omaha Steaks, Inc.
The Favorite Gift
Reg. $154.00 | Now Only ...
$
49
99
2 (5 oz.) Filet Mignons
2 (5 oz.) Top Sirloins
4 (4 oz.) Boneless Pork Chops
4 (4 oz.) Omaha Steaks Burgers
4 Stuffed Baked Potatoes
4 Caramel Apple Tartlets
49377BRB
Try a Little
TENDERNESS

Perfect for FATHERS DAY


Call 1-800-315-0925 and ask for 49377BRB
www.OmahaSteaks.com/father95

PLUS, 4 More
Burgers FREE!

Das könnte Ihnen auch gefallen