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BY NANCY SPENCER

DHI Media Editor


nspencer@delphosherald.com
DELPHOS The Delphos Public
Library is pulling out all the stoppers in
the beakers for the Fizz! Boom! Read
Summer Reading Program. With a sci-
ence theme, children will participate
in experiments and learn fun science
facts with a variety of offerings from
Tuesday through July 22.
Childrens Librarian Denise
Cressman is ready to spend time with
the little readers. Signup averages 300
children with the library seeing more
than 2,000 throughout the five-weeks.
Im excited to start the summer
program, Cressman said. Right now
a lot of little pieces are still coming
together but its a lot of fun. As soon
as I get in the room with the kids Im
ready; the details and the preparation
fall away. Were having a good time.
The program will kick off with reg-
istration from 9:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m.
Tuesday with come-and-go activities
and science-related concoctions.
Science experiments like Food
Lab, Theres No Place Like Space
from the Neil Armstrong Museum and
fire cracker floats are on the Bunsen
burner for the Super Science Squad
including grades K-5 at 2:30 p.m. and
6:30 p.m. June 17, July 1, July 8
and July 15. Back by popular demand
are the Minnetrista Puppets for Furry
Tails With a Twist at 6:30 p.m. July 1.
Preschoolers ages 3-4 will be
Reading Robots at 11:30 a.m. on
Mondays and 6:30 p.m. on Thursdays
with activities like Robot Rainbows,
Robot Rumba, Robots on a Sunny
Day and Robots Love Magic. New
this year is the 2s and 3s preschool
storytime at 9:30 a.m. on Mondays
beginning June 16.
Teens will Spark a Reaction with
Movie Mondays from 2-4 p.m. June
16, 23 and 30 and from 2-4 p.m. on
Wednesdays, special programming
in June includes Experimenting with
Candy (June 11), The Science of
Bouncy Balls (June 18) and The Art
of Henna (June 25).
The Teen Room will also host open
houses from 2-4 p.m. on Tuesday, 17
and 24 and 9 a.m. to noon on June 21
and 28.
Adults will not be left out of the
fun with Literary Elements. Director
Kelly Rist has prepared an elements
table with 103 different things that
can be done at the library. After each
one is completed, patrons can put their
name in for a drawing for a Kindle or
a Nook. Many other prizes will also be
awarded.
Family Nights are a huge draw for
the program. Preschoolers and parents
will enjoy Tyler Nygren and his magic
show at 6:30 p.m. July 17 and the
Super Science Squad will see science
come alive with Mr. Molecule at 6:30
p.m. June 24 at Jefferson Middle School
Auditorium. This program is sponsored
by the Kiwanis Club of Delphos.
Readers should know the reading
requirements have changed due to a
shorter program because of an extended
school year. Reading requirements are
100 hours a week for a total of 500 hours.
The program culminates with a
pool party for grades K-5 who have
completed the reading requirements.
Families are welcome; sorry no friends.
Non-swimmers are free and parents
and siblings are $1. The party will be
held at 8 p.m. on June 22 with a rain
date of June 24.
The library will also offer a Movie
Friday at 2 p.m. June 20 (Nut Job)
and July 18 (LEGO Movie). Children
can bring their own snack and those 6
and under need to be accompanied by a
parent or caregiver.
Upfront
Sports
Obituaries 2
State/Local 3
Religion 4
Community 5
Sports 6-8
Television 9
Classifieds 10
Comics and Puzzles 11
World news 12
Index
Friday, June 6, 2014 75 daily Delphos, Ohio
Forecast
DELPHOS HERALD
The
Telling The Tri-Countys Story Since 1869
Knights eliminated in state semis,
p6
Whats new at the library, p3
www.delphosherald.com
Vol. 144 No. 254
INFORMATION SUBMITTED
VAN WERT Medical assis-
tance are not the only needs many
senior citizens face. For some,
a good conversation helps keep
them thinking straight and feeling
better.
With that in mind, Community
Health Professionals, Inc., is
beginning a pilot program later
this month. It is a new, non-med-
ical senior companion service
called Hometown Helpers.
The companionship program
offers caregivers who will spend
time with seniors, providing
socialization and assistance with
living tasks like grocery shopping,
errands, playing games, reading,
transportation to appointments,
eating a meal together, feeding a
pet and more.
Whether you live across the
country or across the street from
your aging family members, it
helps to know they have some-
one nearby who can check in and
spend time with them, said CHP
President/CEO Brent Tow. We
hope to provide piece of mind
for family members knowing they
have a friendly companion who
visits their loved one regularly.
CHP offering
companionship
service
Mostly sunny
today and
mostly clear
tonight.
Highs in the
upper 70s
and lows in
the mid 50s. See page 2.
BY MANUEL VALDES and PHUONG LE
Associated Press
SEATTLE A lone gunman armed with a
shotgun opened fire Thursday in a building at
a small Seattle university, killing one person
before a student subdued him with pepper
spray as he tried to reload, Seattle police said.
Police say a student building monitor at
Seattle Pacific University disarmed the gun-
man and several other students jumped on
top of him and pinned him down until police
arrived at the Otto Miller building.
A man in his 20s died at the hospital and
a critically injured 20-year-old woman was
taken to surgery, Harborview Medical Center
spokeswoman Susan Gregg said. A 24-year-
old man and a 22-year-old man were in sat-
isfactory condition. None of the victims was
immediately identified.
The afternoon shooting came a week
before the end of the school year, and the
situation was particularly tense when police
initially reported that they were searching for
a second suspect. They later said no one else
was involved.
The university locked down its campus for
several hours, and alerted students and staff to
stay inside. Some students were taking finals
in the same building where the shooter was.
The school canceled classes Thursday eve-
ning, and planned to hold a prayer service.
Were a community that relies on Jesus
Christ for strength and well need that at this
time, said Dan Martin, president of Seattle
Pacific University, which is located at the
edge of a leafy Queen Anne neighborhood
about 5 miles from downtown Seattle.
Martin choked up when he talked about the stu-
dent who put himself in harms way to protect others.
Jillian Smith was taking a math test on
the second-floor of Otto Miller Hall when a
lockdown was ordered.
She heard police yelling and banging on
doors in the hallway. The professor locked
the classroom door, and the 20 or so students
sat on the ground, lining up at the front of the
classroom.
We were pretty much freaking out, said
Smith, 20, a sophomore. People were texting
family and friends, making sure everyone was
OK.
Police: College student
disarms gunman
Library presents Fizz! Boom! Read! Summer Reading Program
82 headed to Jefferson High School
Devin Carder, center, receives her eighth-grade diploma from Jefferson
Middle School history teacher Jeff Stant Thursday afternoon as fellow
eighth-grader Tanam Brown looks on. The school graduated 82 students.
(DHI Media/Nancy Spencer)
See GUNMAN, page 12
See CHP, page 12
Schools out for summer
After an early dismissal Thursday afternoon, Franklin Elementary School teachers say good-
bye to students as they spring from the halls and out the doors anticipating a fun-filled sum-
mer vacation. (DHI Media/Stephanie Groves)
Survivor T-shirt
pickup, team
meeting Tuesday
The next Relay for Life
team meeting is sched-
uled for 6:30 p.m. Tuesday
at the Delphos Eagles.
Team representatives need
to provide information about
what they will have at Relay
and if they need electricity.
Themes are also needed.
Survivor T-shirts are also
ready and will be avail-
able for pickup from 6-7
p.m. that night. T-shirts
will also be available June
20 at the Community
Track the day of Relay.
Survivor Gift Bags will be
out and teams are asked to
bring an item like a coupon
for a discount at their tent, a
ticket for a drawing at their
tent, a free gift, an inspira-
tional saying, etc. There will
be approximately 85 bags.
Knothole leagues start-
ing Monday
Delphos Summer
Recreation Director Chris
Mercer announced that Boys
Knothole will start 9:30 a.m.
Monday and Girls Knothole
9:30 a.m. Tuesday, both on
the Minor League diamond.
All information and
updates are available on face-
book.com/delphosknothole
Delphos Minor League
Baseball Thursdays Results
Orioles 10, Reds
6; Indians 14, Mets 8;
Dodgers 10, Cubs 9;
Pirates 3, Tigers 2
2 The Herald Friday, June 6, 2014
For The Record
www.delphosherald.com
OBITUARY
LOTTERY
WEATHER
TODAY IN HISTORY
FROM THE ARCHIVES
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
Regina E. Boehmer
June 17, 1921-June 4, 2014
FORT JENNINGS -
Regina E. Boehmer, 92, of
Fort Jennings died at 10:55
p.m. Wednesday at Vancrest
of Delphos.
She was born June 17,
1921, in Ottoville to William
and Mary (Ricker) Gasser,
who preceded her in death.
On June 17, 1944, she
married Leonard Boehmer,
who died Oct. 6, 1974.
She is survived by four
children, James (Mary)
Boehmer of Fort Jennings,
Mary Lou Hoersten of
Ottoville, Suzanne (Robert)
Trentman of Delphos and
Pamela Wagner of Fort
Jennings; 11 grandchildren;
nine great-grandchildren; one
brother, Robert (Dorothy)
Gasser of Ottoville; and six
sisters, LaDonna Ostendorf
and Leona (Len) Bruskotter
both of Fort Jennings, Rita
Miller of Warsaw, Indiana,
Alvera (Gene) Kleman of
Derby, Kansas, and Mary
Ann Grote and Delores (Troy)
Schulte both of Kalida.
She was also preceded in
death by two sons, Daniel
and Joseph Boehmer; two
grandchildren, Blaine and
Brenda Hoersten; a son-in-
law, Robert Bob Hoersten;
two brothers, Art and Bill
Gasser; and four sisters, Anna
Knippen, Dorothy Osting,
Agnes Knippen and LaVera
Hanf. Regina was a seam-
stress and a homemaker. She
had worked for her brothers at
the Old Fort in Fort Jennings.
Regina was a member of St.
Joseph Catholic Church, Fort
Jennings, and its Rosary Altar
Society and a member of
the Fort Jennings American
Legion Ladies Auxiliary.
A Mass of Christian Burial
will be 10:30 a.m. Monday
at St. Joseph Catholic
Church, Fort Jennings, with
Fr. Charles Obinwa officiat-
ing. Burial will follow in the
church cemetery.
Visitation will be from
2-8 p.m. Sunday at Love-
Heitmeyer Funeral Home,
Jackson Township and one
hour prior to the Mass at
church on Monday.
Memorials may be made
to St. Joseph Catholic Church
Building Fund.
Condolences can be
expressed at: lovefuneral-
home.com.
One Year Ago
The Peony Festival celebration will once
again host the 9th annual ArtRageous on Main
Friday and Saturday. The all art-related festival
will take place in Fountain Park Friday and
Saturday. During the two days, the park will be
filled with artists exhibiting their work which will
consist of a variety of mediums.
25 Years Ago 1989
Spencerville discus thrower Jason Oakman
came up 6 feet short of one goal he had set for
himself but in the process reached a far greater
one. Oakmans toss of 163 feet, 6 inches won
the Class A state discus championship by more
than eight feet Saturday at Ohio Stadium. He
accounted for 18 (with a second-place finish
in the shot put) of his teams 22 points as the
Bearcats finished third overall.
Scott Suever, Scott Noonan and Jeff Sever
received special awards when St. Johns baseball
team held its awards program. Suever was rec-
ognized for having the best earned run average,
Noonan for the best on-base average and Sever
as the best fielder. Four players were honored for
receiving Midwest Athletic Conference recogni-
tion: Bruce Odenweller, first team, and Noonan,
Brent Reidenbach and Suever, honorable men-
tion.
Mike Minnig and Stephanie McClure were
presented the Marine Scholar-Athlete Award
at the recent annual senior awards assembly
held at Jefferson Senior High School. Julie
Mosier received the D.E.A. Scholarship, Rotary
Scholarship and the Ohio Board of Regents
Scholarship. Salutatorian Ryan Sakemiller was
awarded the Ohio Board of Regents Scholarship.
50 Years Ago 1964
Three sisters of the Order of St. Francis: Sister
M. Emma, Sister M. Alberta and Sister M. Joan;
celebrated their silver jubilee with a solemn High
Mass at 10 a.m. June 3 in St. Francis convent cha-
pel at Tiffin. Sister Alberta is the daughter of the
late Mr. and Mrs. Frank Etzkorn and Sister Emma
is the daughter of Henry Pothast.
Mrs. John A. Metzner, Sr., was hostess to the
members of the Charity Workers Club Wednesday
evening in her home on West Cleveland Street.
Games of 500 were played with first prize being
awarded to Mrs. Wilbur Mueller and the traveling
prizes to Mrs. Arthur Mueller and Mrs. Joseph
Wehinger. Mrs. Carl Maas will be hostess to the
club at its next meeting.
Next Tuesday, the Ohio Annual Conference
of the Methodist Church will meet for its 153rd
annual meeting of organized Methodism in
Western and Southern Ohio. Sessions will be
held in Hoover Auditorium at Lakeside-on-Lake
Erie. Attending the conference from Delphos
will be Rev. Don R. Yocom, pastor of Delphos
Trinity Methodist Church, his family and the lay
delegate, Mrs. Howard Sadler.
75 Years Ago 1939
Richard Wulfhorst, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Frank Wulfhorst, North Pierce Street, will have
a chance at big-time baseball. He leaves Delphos
late Tuesday afternoon to go to Charlotte, North
Carolina, to join up with the Richmond, Virginia
team in the Piedmont League. He received his
notification from a Chicago White Sox scout late
Monday. He will sign his contract as a catcher on
Wednesday.
Plans are now being completed for the fourth
annual field meet sponsored by the Tri-County
Beekeepers Association. The field meet will be
held June 18 at Leiningers Walnut Grove bee
yard, two miles east of Delphos on U. S. Route
30-S. Among the speakers will be E. R. Root of
Medina, one of the most noted authorities on bees
in the United States.
In Monday nights Delphos Recreation League
kittenball games played, Millers Opticians
swamped the Lutherans at the Waterworks Park
by a score of 13 to 2. Crede and Fuller formed
the battery for the Lutherans and W. Briggs and
E. Briggs were in the points for Millers.
Associated Press
Today is Friday, June 6, the 157th day of 2014. There are
208 days left in the year.
Todays Highlight in History:
On June 6, 1944, Allied forces stormed the beaches of
Normandy, France, on D-Day, beginning the liberation of
German-occupied western Europe during World War II.
On this date:
In 1799, American politician and orator Patrick Henry died
at Red Hill Plantation in Virginia.
In 1844, the Young Mens Christian Association was
founded in London.
In 1912, the greatest volcanic eruption of the 20th century
took place as Novarupta in Alaska began a series of explosive
episodes over a 60-hour period.
In 1925, Walter Percy Chrysler founded the Chrysler Corp.
In 1934, the Securities and Exchange Commission was
established.
In 1939, the first Little League game was played as Lundy
Lumber defeated Lycoming Dairy 23-8 in Williamsport,
Pennsylvania.
In 1955, the U.S. Post Office introduced regular certified
mail service.
In 1966, black activist James Meredith was shot and
wounded as he walked along a Mississippi highway to encour-
age black voter registration.
In 1968, Sen. Robert F. Kennedy died at Good Samaritan
Hospital in Los Angeles, a day after he was shot by Sirhan
Bishara Sirhan.
In 1978, California voters overwhelmingly approved
Proposition 13, a primary ballot initiative calling for major
cuts in property taxes.
In 1984, government forces in India stormed the Golden
Temple in Amritsar in an effort to crush Sikh extremists; at
least 1,000 Sikhs and 200 soldiers were killed.
In 1994, President Bill Clinton joined leaders from Americas
World War II allies to mark the 50th anniversary of the D-Day
invasion of Normandy. A China Northwest Airlines passenger
jet crashed near Xian, killing all 160 people on board.
Ten years ago: World leaders, including President George W.
Bush and French President Jacques Chirac, put aside their dif-
ferences to commemorate the D-Day invasion that broke Nazi
Germanys grip on continental Europe. Avenue Q won best
musical at the Tony Awards, while I Am My Own Wife was
named best play; Phylicia Rashad, who starred in a revival of A
Raisin in the Sun, became the first black actress to win a Tony
for a leading dramatic role. Unseeded Gaston Gaudio upset
Guillermo Coria 0-6, 3-6, 6-4, 6-1, 8-6 to win the French Open.
Five years ago: President Barack Obama visited the
American cemetery at Omaha Beach in France to commemo-
rate the 65th anniversary of D-Day. Summer Bird won the
Belmont Stakes, rallying past Mine That Bird to spoil jockey
Calvin Borels attempt at winning all three legs of the Triple
Crown. Svetlana Kuznetsova beat top-ranked Dinara Safina
6-4, 6-2 in an all-Russian final at the French Open.
One year ago: Director of National Intelligence James
Clapper moved to tamp down a public uproar spurred by the
disclosure of secret surveillance programs involving phone and
Internet records, declassifying key details about one of the pro-
grams while insisting the efforts were legal, limited in scope and
necessary to detect terrorist threats. Russian President Vladimir
Putin and his wife, Lyudmila Putina, announced they were
divorcing after nearly 30 years of marriage.
WEATHER FORECAST
Tri-county
Associated Press
TODAY: Mostly sunny.
Highs in the upper 70s. East
winds around 5 mph.
TONIGHT: Mostly clear.
Lows in the mid 50s. South
winds 5 to 10 mph.
SATURDAY: Mostly
sunny. Highs in the lower 80s.
Southeast winds 5 to 10 mph.
SATURDAY NIGHT:
Mostly clear through midnight.
Then partly cloudy with a 20
percent chance of showers and
thunderstorms toward daybreak.
Lows in the lower 60s. Southeast
winds 5 to 10 mph.
SUNDAY: Mostly cloudy
with a chance of showers and a
slight chance of a thunderstorm.
Highs in the upper 70s. Chance
of measurable precipitation 50
percent.
SUNDAY NIGHT
THROUGH TUESDAY:
Partly cloudy. Lows in the upper
50s. Highs in the upper 70s.
TUESDAY NIGHT
THROUGH WEDNESDAY
NIGHT: Partly cloudy with a
30 percent chance of showers
and thunderstorms. Lows in the
lower 60s. Highs around 80.
THURSDAY: Mostly
cloudy with a 30 percent chance
of showers and thunderstorms.
Highs in the lower 80s.
CLEVELAND (AP)
These Ohio lotteries were
drawn Thursday:
Mega Millions
Estimated jackpot: $45
million
Pick 3 Evening
8-0-6
Pick 3 Midday
6-7-3
Pick 4 Evening
2-7-5-3
Pick 4 Midday
1-5-0-8
Pick 5 Evening
8-6-2-0-3
Pick 5 Midday
8-1-6-7-4
Powerball
Estimated jackpot: $221
million
Rolling Cash 5
19-24-31-34-38
Estimated jackpot:
$120,000
Week 10: Jennifer Koester
is the winner with ticket #184.
PARK
GIVEAWAY
Residents relieved no one injured by military jet
SAN DIEGO (AP) Military crews
on Thursday mopped up the debris of
an exploded fighter jet that struck a
Southern California neighborhood, as
authorities launched an investigation
into the latest crash of the Cold War
aircraft with a history of problems.
The Harrier AV-8B had taken off
from the Marine Corps Air Station in
Yuma and was almost at his destination
at Naval Air Facility El Centro when
it went down Wednesday afternoon,
going up in flames and destroying two
homes and badly damaging a third.
The pilot who was ejected landed in a
nearby field and suffered only scrapes
and bruises.
There were no injuries in the neigh-
borhood, which is near a county airport
and the El Centro training facility.
We have air traffic every day from
big military helicopters to Osprey to
Blue Angels flying over us, said resi-
dent Leonardo Olmeda, 25, who was
racing remote-controlled cars in a street
where children were playing when they
saw the pilot eject and the jet ignite.
Everybody seems relieved and thankful
that the outcome of this was not worse.
Two of the displaced families in the
newer neighborhood of Imperial a
small desert city of about 15,000 people
about 90 miles east of San Diego
went to stay with friends or relatives,
while the Red Cross put up one couple
in a hotel Wednesday night. Officials
were assessing whether any of the
families would need longer-term help,
such as rental assistance or other items,
said Red Cross spokeswoman Courtney
Pendleton.
Marine Capt. Anton Semelroth said
the military was investigating to deter-
mine whether human error, a mechani-
cal failure or some other reason caused
the jet to crash. The probe could take
months to complete.
It was the second crash in a month
of a Harrier jet from the Yuma air base.
On May 9, a pilot was able to eject
safely before his jet crashed in a remote
desert area near the Gila River Indian
Community, south of Phoenix. No one
was injured.
In July 2012, another AV-8B Harrier
crashed in an unpopulated area 15
miles from the air base, which is among
the busiest training aviation centers in
the world for the Marine Corps.
The Harrier, built by McDonnell
Douglas, is a single-engine attack
jet that can land and takeoff verti-
cally hence its nickname, Jump Jet.
Military officials say the aircraft is
being replaced by the F-35 because it
has been in use for more than 40 years
and has reached the end of its life cycle.
It also has had a problematic safety
record over the years.
Official: US moving ahead with Guantanamo closure
MIAMI (AP) President Barack Obama is moving ahead
with his push to close the Guantanamo Bay prison despite the
uproar over the exchange of five Taliban prisoners for a captured
American soldier, an administration official said Thursday.
The government has been working to reduce a backlog of pris-
oners already approved after a security review for transfer to their
homeland or repatriation elsewhere, the official told reporters.
The official said a significant number of prisoners are on
their way toward release, but he declined to say precisely how
many or when they would leave Guantanamo. The remarks
were made on condition of anonymity amid fierce criticism in
Congress over the decision to swap the five Taliban for Sgt.
Bowe Bergdahl.
The U.S. holds 149 men at Guantanamo. Most have been there
without charge since the detention center opened in January 2002
to hold prisoners suspected of links to al-Qaida or the Taliban.
Among the total are 78 who have been cleared for transfer
to their homeland or repatriation to another country if the U.S.
can get required security assurances.
Obama came into office pledging to close the detention
center within a year but was thwarted by Congress, which
adopted restrictions on transfers abroad and a ban on transfer-
ring prisoners to the United States for any reason.
Last year, Congress eased the restrictions on transfers
abroad but left in place a 30-day notice requirement that the
Obama administration chose to skip in exchange for rescuing
Bergdahl from captivity after five years.
Several Republicans in Congress are determined to keep
Guantanamo open and bar Obama from transferring any prisoners.
Sen. Kelly Ayotte, a Republican from New Hampshire who is a
member of the Senate Armed Services Committee and a chief pro-
ponent of keeping the prison operational, said the Bergdahl swap
represents a real-case example that she and other lawmakers can
use in arguing for tougher restrictions on Guantanamo detainees.
2
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FRI JUNE 6 - THUR 12
CINEMA 1: Fault in our Stars PG13
CINEMA 2: 3D: Edge of Tomorrow PG13
Malecent PG
CINEMA 3: Blended PG13/Neighbors R
CINEMA 4: Xmen Days of Future Past PG13
CINEMA 5: Malecent PG
Edge of Tomorrow PG13
COMING SOON: How to Train Your Dragon
2-Transformers: Age of Extinction-Dawn of the
Planet of the Apes---Admission before 6pm: $5
After 6pm: Adults-$7/Children 11 and under and
seniors-$5. 3D seats before 6pm: $7 3D after 6pm:
Adults $9/Children 11 and under and seniors $7
WE DONOT ACCEPT CREDIT OR DEBIT CARDS OR CHECKS!
VAN-DEL DRIVE- IN
FRI JUNE 6 - TUES 10
SCREEN 1: Malecent PG - Blended PG13
SCREEN 2: Edge of Tomorrow PG13
Xmen: Days of Future Past PG13
SCREEN 3: A Million Ways to Die in the West R
Neighbors R
Admission Prices: 4 and under FREE. Children 5-10 $5 /
Ages 11-61 $7 / Seniors 62 and up $5. Gates open at 7pm
- Showtime is at dusk.
MON SPECIAL: BYOB(bag or bowl ) for FREE Popcorn.
TUES: BOGO Free (Buy ticket @reg. price, get 1 free -
equal or lesser value)
Friday, June 6, 2014 The Herald 3
STATE/LOCAL
www.delphosherald.com
INFORMATION SUBMITTED
Summer is here! We are excited to
have summer arrive here at the library. We
have been busy preparing for our Summer
Reading programs for children, young
adults and adults. There have been many
activities planned and prizes to be awarded
this summer. These programs are only pos-
sible through the generosity of community
businesses, organizations and individuals.
The children will be learning about science
with the theme Fizz, Boom, and Read,
the teens are going to Spark
at Reaction this summer
with many activities planned
and the adults will learn many
Literary Elements of the
library from Tuesday through
July 26. Come join the fun at
the library!
DVDs add to the collection
this month:
American Hustle
Dallas Buyers Club
Labor Day
The Nut Job
Philomena
The Pirate Fairy
The Secret Life of Walter Mitty
Sofia the First: The Floating Palace
Music CDs
Divergent Movie Soundtrack
Sara Evans-Slow me down
Mercy Me- Welcome to the new
Nickel Creek- A dotted line
Shakira-Shakira
Books on CD
The target by David Baldacci
The Columbus Affair by Steve Berry
Fear Nothing by Lisa Gardner
Moving Target by J.A. Jance
Live to see tomorrow by Iris
Johansen
Nonfiction
Great Lakes Folklore
by Charles Cassady, Jr.
Over the years, the Great
Lakes Superior, Michigan,
Huron, Erie, and Ontario have
carried Native Americans,
explorers, immigrants, bandits,
miners, warriors, and entrepre-
neurs and have inspired great
tales of life on and around the
water. What secrets do the Great
Lakes, also known as the Five
Sisters, hold deep? With nearly
60 images and illustrations, Great Lakes
Folklore aims to answer that question.
Relive the saga and tragedy of maritime
ships the Success and Griffin. Meet the
nefarious Lake Erie monster. Learn the
story of Oliver Hazard Perry and the Battle
of Lake Erie. These stories and more await.
May they take you to places you have never
been before.
A View from the buggy by Jerry
Eicher and Nathan Miller
Most of us want a simpler life, and
theres no better example of the simple life
than found among the Amish. But what is
it really like to be Amish? In this delight-
ful compilation of stories by more than
30 Amish men and women, youll get the
inside story on the daily life of Amish fami-
lies. With humor, grace, and charm, these
plain people tell their stories; bringing
tears, laughter, and an occasional dose of
Amish wisdom to your heart. Youll learn
how the Amish love their animals, the
joys of a community-wide barn-raising, the
ways the Amish handle great tragedy and
how the Amish find happiness in giving
more than receiving.
Fiction
Lincoln Myth by Steve Berry
September 1861: All is not as it seems.
With these cryptic words, a shocking secret
passed down from president to president
comes to rest in the hands of Abraham
Lincoln. And as the first bloody clashes of
the Civil War unfold, Lincoln alone must
decide how best to use this volatile knowl-
edge: save thousands of American lives, or
keep the young nation from being torn apart
forever?
The present: In Utah, the fabled
remains of Mormon pioneers whose
nineteenth-century expedi-
tion across the desert met with
a murderous end have been
uncovered. In Washington,
D.C., the official investigation
of an international entrepre-
neur, an elder in the Mormon
Church, has sparked a
political battle between the
White House and a pow-
erful United States sena-
tor. In Denmark, a Justice
Department agent, miss-
ing in action, has fallen
into the hands of a dan-
gerous zealota man
driven by divine visions to
make a prophets words reality. And in
a matter of a few short hours, Cotton
Malone has gone from qui-
etly selling books at his
shop in Denmark to dodging
bullets in a high-speed boat
chase.
The One and Only by
Emily Giffin
Thirty-three-year-old Shea
Rigsby has spent her entire life
in Walker, Texasa small col-
lege town that lives and dies by
football, a passion she unabashed-
ly shares. Raised alongside her best
friend, Lucy, the daugh-
ter of Walkers legendary
head coach, Clive Carr,
Shea was too devoted to
her hometown team to leave.
Instead she stayed in Walker
for college, even taking a job in
the university athletic depart-
ment after graduation, where
she has remained for more
than a decade. But when an
unexpected tragedy strikes
the tight-knit Walker com-
munity, Sheas comfortable
world is upended, and she
begins to wonder if the
life shes chosen is really
enough for her. As she finally gives up
her safety net to set out on an unexpected
path, Shea discovers unsettling truths about
the people and things she has always trusted
mostand is forced to confront her deepest
desires, fears, and secrets.
Ghost Ship by Clive Cussler
When Kurt Austin is injured attempt-
ing to rescue the passengers and crew
from a sinking yacht, he wakes with frag-
mented and conflicted memories. Did he
see an old friend and her child drown, or
was the yacht abandoned when he came
aboard? For reasons he cannot explain,
Kurt doesnt trust either version of his
recollection.
Determined to know the truth, he
begins to search for answers, and soon
finds himself descending into a shadowy
world of state-sponsored cybercrime, and
uncovering a pattern of vanishing scien-
tists, suspicious accidents, and a web of
human trafficking. With the help of Joe
Zavala, he takes on the sinister organi-
zation at the heart of this web, facing
off with them in locations ranging from
Monaco to North Korea to the rugged
coasts of Madagascar. But where he will
ultimately end up even he could not begin
to guess.
Young Adult
#16thingsithoughtweretrue by Janet
Gurtler
Like most teenagers, Morgans life isnt
perfect. And her summer is getting off to
a rough start. An embarrassing
moment was posted online.
Her mom is suddenly in
the hospital and her dad has
never been a part of the pic-
ture, until this summer. But
who cares if people at work
are whispering and pointing.
Morgans Twitterverse is grow-
ing. Shes about to hit 5,000 fol-
lowers and shes hoping that will
change everything. Janet Gurtlers
novel, #16thingsithoughtweretrue,
is a great summer book featuring a
believable and likable main charac-
ter thats facing issues readers will
relate to their own lives. Besides a
cool summer road trip, Morgan is o n
another kind of journey. Its one of friend-
ship, and discovery, where her beliefs are
constantly being tested. Gurtlers work
has been compared to Sarah Dessen, Jody
Piccoult and Judy Blume.
Seeing and believing
(Mike and Riel Mysteries)
by Norah McClintock
In this fourth installment
of Norah McClintocks
mystery series, the action
starts on page one. The
main character, Mike,
is questioned by the
police about his friends
involvement in a rob-
bery and shooting at
a local convenience
store. One person is
dead, another is in
the hospital. Even
though Mike and his
friend Vin havent talked since
an incident months before, Mike really
wants to believe Vin was not involved in
the crime. With the help of ex-cop, Riel, it
becomes Mikes mission to find an elusive
alibi and prove Vin innocent.
McClintocks story addresses
all the complexities of murder,
friendship and mystery.
Memorials
The Illustrated encyclopedia
of tractors and farm machinery by
John Carroll
Johnny Cash: an illustrated
biography by Life Books
Legends and Lost Treasure of
Northern Ohio by Wendy Koile
New England Notebook: One
Reporter, Six Uncommon States by
Ted Reinstein
In Memory of Richard Bonifas by
Dr. and Mrs. Nicholas Schmit
Country Style by Anna Ornberg
Happy Feet: unique knits to knock your
socks off by Cathy Carron
Master Tatting by Lindsay Rogers
In Memory of Janet Wilhelm by Roger
Wilhelm
Baseball Road Trips: the Midwest and
Great Lakes by Timothy Mullin
Official Rules of Major League Baseball
In Memory of Kenneth Dickrede by
Dave and Bea Schnipke
Cuddly Princess Pals by Amy Koster
The Invisible Boy by Trudy Ludwig
Magic Puppy: Spellbound at School by
Sue Bentley
The Matchbox Diary by Paul Fleischman
Papa is a Poet by Natalie Bober
In memory of Betty Jean Conley by
Denny, Debbie & Jason Altenburger,
Adam and Jena Rostorfer
The Book Thief by Markus Zusak
In memory of Donna Garza by Jaime
Garza
From the Childrens Corner
Oh No! (Or How My Science Project
Destroyed The Earth)
Oh No! Not Again (Or How I Built
A Time Machine To Save
History) (Or At Least My
History Grade) both by Mac
Barnett
These two books are
graphic picture books, writ-
ten for the elementary set,
with outstanding illustra-
tions and very little text.
The story is mostly told
in the illustrations. In
the science project story,
the ambitious little girl
builds a giant robot
with ensuing chaos
and destruction. In the
time machine story, the
same little girl, who is too smart for
her own good, builds a time machine hop-
ing to alter history and therefore, make
the answer correct on her history test.
Santat, the illustrator, has given the books
a steam punk appearance.
Things That Float And Things That
Dont by David A. Adler
The librarys summer theme is all about
science and this book fits right in. A little
science, plus a little water, throw in a few
toys and you have a lot of fun. Readers
can learn all about flotation, density, and
water displacement in this entertaining and
informative picture book. Learn why a ball
of aluminum foil sinks, but a sheet of foil
floats on the water. Also, why does a cube
of solid steel sink, but a boat made of steel
does not? Summer is a great time to play
in the water and learn science at the same
time.
Firefly July, A Year Of Very Short
Poems by Paul Janeczko
When I was ten, one summer night,
the baby stars that leapt among the
trees like dimes of light, I cupped, and
capped and kept (The Firefly July by
J. Patrick Lewis). These may be rela-
tively short poems but they
conjure up beautiful images
of all four seasons. None
of the poems are longer
than ten lines. Illustrator
Melissa Sweet uses bright
hues and child-like water
colors to harmonize with
the well-chosen poems.
What We Found In
The Sofa And How It
Saved The World by
Henry Clark
Three quirky
friends find a sofa sit-
ting at their bus stop
with a crayon, a single
domino and a weird coin under the
cushions (they were looking for loose
change). What do these innocent things
have in common? Well, they are going to
help the three friends save the world from
evil invaders from another dimension, of
course. This is truly a wacky story, the best
kind to appeal to young readers with a lazy
summer day ahead of them.
Miniature World Of Marvin & James
by Elise Broach
Marvin is a young boy and James is his
best friend and a beetle, of the insect type.
Marvin is going on vacation, leaving James
to spend the week with his annoying cousin
Elaine, also a beetle. When Marvin returns,
will he have to find a new best friend?
Written in short chapters, it is just right for
the emerging readers. This just may turn
into a popular series.
Summer at the library has something for everyone
1
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Ottoville Hardware & Furniture
Furniture Appliance Television Floor Covering & Mattress Gallery
145 3rd Street, Ottoville 419-453-3338
Mon, Wed & Thur 9am-7pm Tues & Fri 9am-5:30pm Sat 9am-3:30pm Closed Sunday
Doing Business in Ottoville for 79 Years!
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Ph. 692-1010
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209 W. 3rd St.
Delphos, Ohio 45833
419-692-8055
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PRODUCTS
701 Ambrose Drive
Delphos, O.
A.C.T.S.
NEW TESTAMENT FELLOWSHIP
8277 German Rd, Delphos
Rev. Linda Wannemacher-Pastor
Jaye Wannemacher
-Worship Leader
For information contact:
419-695-3566
Thursday - 7:00 p.m. Bible Study
with worship at 8277 German Rd,
Delphos
Sunday - 7:00 p.m. For Such
A Time As This. Tri-County
Community Intercessory Prayer
Group. Everyone welcome.
Biblical counseling also avail-
able.
DELPHOS BAPTIST CHURCH
Pastor Jerry Martin
302 N Main, Delphos
Contact: 419-692-0061 or
419-302-6423
Sunday - 10:00 a.m. Sunday
School (All Ages) , 11:00 a.m.
Sunday Service, 6:00 p.m Sunday
Evening Service
Wednesday - 7:00 p.m. Bible
Study, Youth Study
Nursery available for all services.
FIRST UNITED PRESBYTERIAN
310 W. Second St. - 419-692-5737
Pastor Harry Tolhurst
Sunday: 11:00 Worship Service -
Everyone Welcome
Communion first Sunday of
every month.
Communion at Van Crest Health
Care Center - First Sunday of each
month at 2:30 p.m., Nursing Home
and assisted living.
MARION BAPTIST CHURCH
2998 Defiance Trail, Delphos
419-339-6319
Services: Sunday - 11:00 a.m.
and 6:00 p.m.; Wednesday - 7:00
p.m.
FIRST ASSEMBLY OF GOD
Where Jesus is Healing Hurting
Hearts!
808 Metbliss Ave., Delphos
One block so. of Stadium Park.
419-692-6741
Lead Pastor - Dan Eaton
Sunday - 10:30 a.m. - Worship
Service with Nursery & Kids
Church; 6:00 pm. Youth Ministry at
The ROC & Jr. Bible Quiz at Church
Monday - 7:00 p.m. Teen Bible
Quiz at Church
Wednesday - 7:00 p.m.
Discipleship Class in Upper Room
For more info see our website:
www.delphosfirstassemblyofgod.
com.
DELPHOS WESLEYAN CHURCH
11720 Delphos Southworth Rd.
Delphos - Phone 419-695-1723
Pastor Rodney Shade
937-397-4459
Asst. Pastor Pamela King
419-204-5469
Sunday - 10:30 a.m. Worship;
9:15 a.m. Sunday School for all
ages.
Wednesday - 7 p.m. Service
and prayer meeting.
DELPHOS CHRISTIAN
UNION
Pastor: Rev. Gary Fish
470 S. Franklin St.,
(419) 692-9940
9:30 Sunday School
10:30 Sunday morning service.
Youth ministry every Wednesday
from 6-8 p.m.
Childrens ministry every third
Saturday from 11 to 1:30.
SPENCERVILLE FULL GOSPEL
107 Broadway St., Spencerville
Pastor Charles Muter
Home Ph. 419-657-6019
Sunday: Morning Services -
10:00 a.m. Evening Services - 7:00
p.m.
Wednesday: 7:00 p.m. Worship
service.
SPENCERVILLE CHURCH
OF THE NAZARENE
317 West North St.
419-296-2561
Pastor Tom Shobe
9:30 a.m. Sunday School;
10:30 a.m. Morning Worship; 7:00
p.m. Wednesday Service
TRINITY UNITED METHODIST
Corner of 4th & Main,
Spencerville
Phone 419-647-5321
Rev. Jan Johnson, Pastor
Christmas Eve services: 6:3 p.m.
Message - Christmas
Uncensred
Sunday - 9:30 a.m. Sunday
School; 10:30 a.m. Worship ser-
vice.
UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST
102 Wisher Drive, Spencerville
Rev. Elaine Mikesell,
Interim Pastor
Sunday 9:30 a.m. Cafe; 10:00
a.m. Worship Service.
AGAPE FELLOWSHIP
MINISTRIES
9250 Armstrong Road,
Spencerville
Pastors Phil & Deb Lee
Sunday - 10:00 a.m. Worship
service.
Wed. - 7:00 p.m. Bible Study
HARTFORD
CHRISTIAN CHURCH
(Independent Fundamental)
Rt. 81 and Defiance Trial
Rt. 2, Box 11550
Spencerville 45887
Rev. Robert King, Pastor
Sunday - 9:30 a.m. Sunday
school; 10:30 a.m. Worship
Service; 7:00 p.m. Evening wor-
ship and Teens Alive (grades 7-12).
Wednesday - 7:00 p.m. Bible
service.
Tuesday & Thursday 7- 9
p.m. Have you ever wanted to
preach the Word of God? This
is your time to do it. Come share
your love of Christ with us.
IMMANUEL UNITED
METHODIST CHURCH
699 Sunnydale, Elida, Ohio
Pastor Bruce Tumblin
Sunday - 8:30 a.m. traditional;
10:45 a.m. contemporary
PIKE MENNONITE CHURCH
3995 McBride Rd., Elida
Phone 419-339-3961
CORNERSTONE BAPTIST
CHURCH
2701 Dutch Hollow Rd. Elida
Phone: 339-3339
Rev. Frank Hartman
Sunday - 10 a.m. Sunday
School (all ages); 11 a.m. Morning
Service; 6 p.m. Evening Service.
Wednesday - 7 p.m. Prayer
Meeting.
Office Hours: Monday-Friday,
8-noon, 1-4- p.m.
GOMER CONGREGATIONAL
CHURCH
7350 Gomer Road,
Gomer, Ohio
419-642-2681
gomererucc@bright.net
Sunday 10:00 a.m. Worship
NEW HOPE
CHRISTIAN CENTER
2240 Baty Road, Elida
Ph. 339-5673
Rev. James F. Menke, Pastor
Sunday 10 a.m. Worship.
Wednesday 7 p.m. Evening ser-
vice.
ZION UNITED
METHODIST CHURCH
Corner of Zion Church & Conant
Rd., Elida
Pastors: Mark and D.J.
Fuerstenau
Sunday - Service - 9:00 a.m.
LIGHTHOUSE
CHURCH OF GOD
Elida - Ph. 222-8054
Rev. Larry Ayers, Pastor
Service schedule: Sunday
10 a.m. School; 11 a.m. Morning
Worship; 6 p.m. Sunday evening.
FAITH BAPTIST CHURCH
4750 East Road, Elida
Pastor - Brian McManus
Sunday 9:30 a.m. Sunday
School; 10:30 a.m. Worship, nurs-
ery available.
Wednesday 6:30 p.m.
Youth Prayer, Bible Study; 7:00
p.m. Adult Prayer and Bible
Study; 8:00 p.m. - Choir.
BREAKTHROUGH
101 N. Adams St., Middle Point
Pastor Scott & Karen Fleming
Sunday Church Service - 10
a.m, 6 p.m.
Wednesday - 7:00 p.m.
CALVARY EVANGELICAL
CHURCH
10686 Van Wert-Decatur Rd.
Van Wert, Ohio
419-238-9426
Rev. Clark Williman. Pastor
Sunday- 8:45 a.m. Friends and
Family; 9:00 a.m. Sunday School
LIVE; 10:00 a.m.
SALEM UNITED
PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
15240 Main St. Venedocia
Rev. Wendy S. Pratt, Pastor
Church Phone: 419-667-4142
Sunday - 8:30 a.m. - Adult
Bell Choir; 8:45 a.m. Jr. Choir;
9:30 a.m. - Worship; 10:45 a.m. -
Sunday school; 6:30 p.m. - Capital
Funds Committee.
Monday - 6 p.m. Senior Choir.
ST. MARYS CATHOLIC CHURCH
601 Jennings Rd., Van Wert
Sunday 8:30 a.m., 10:30 a.m.;
Monday 8:30 a.m.; Tuesday 7
p.m.; Wednesday 8:30 a.m.;
Thursday 8:30 a.m. - Communion
Service; Friday 8:30 a.m.;
Saturday 4 p.m.
VAN WERT VICTORY
CHURCH OF GOD
10698 US 127S., Van Wert
(Next to Tracys Auction Service)
Pastor: E. Long
Sunday worship & childrens
ministry - 10:00 a.m.
Wednesday Service: 7:00 p.m.
www.vwvcoh.com
facebook: vwvcoh
TRINITY LUTHERAN
303 S. Adams, Middle Point
Rev. Tom Cover
Sunday 9:30 a.m. Sunday
School; 10:30 a.m. Worship ser-
vice.
GRACE FAMILY CHURCH
634 N. Washington St.,
Van Wert
Pastor: Rev. Ron Prewitt
Sunday - 9:15 a.m. Morning
worship with Pulpit Supply.
ST. PAULS UNITED METHODIST
335 S. Main St. Delphos
Pastor - Rev. David Howell
Sunday - 9:00 a.m.
Worship Service
ST. PETER LUTHERAN CHURCH
422 North Pierce St., Delphos
Phone 419-695-2616
Rev. Angela Khabeb
Sunday - 9 AM Worship Service.
Monday - 8:00 AM Kids Breakfast
starts M-F/8-9 AM
Tuesday - 6 PM Mission:
SLIMpossible.
Wednesday - 7 PM Worship
Service.
Saturday - 8:00 AM Prayer
Breakfast.
Sunday - 9:00 AM Worship.
TRINITY UNITED
METHODIST CHURCH
211 E. Third St., Delphos
Rev. David Howell, Pastor
Week beginning June 8, 2014
Sunday - 8:15 a.m. Worship
Service; 9:30 a.m. Adult Bible
Study; 10:30 a.m. Worship Service;
11:30 Radio Worship on WDOH;
7:30 p.m. Ladies Bible Fellowship.
Monday - Conference at
Lakeside.
Tuesday - Conference at
Lakeside.
Wednesday - Conference at
Lakeside; 7:00 p.m. Staff/Pastor
Parish Committee.
Thursday - 4:30 p.m.-6:30 p.m.
Suppers On Us; Conference at
Lakeside.
Friday - Conference at Lakeside.
ST. JOHNS CATHOLIC
CHURCH
331 E. Second St., Delphos
419-695-4050
Rev. Dave Reinhart, Pastor
Rev. Chris Bohnsack,
Associate Pastor
Fred Lisk, Dave Ricker and
John Sheeran, Deacon
Mary Beth Will,
Liturgical Coordinator; Tom
Odenweller, Parish Council President;
Lynn Bockey, Music Director
Celebration of the Sacraments
Eucharist Lords Day
Observance; Saturday 4:30 p.m.,
Sunday 7:30, 9:15, 11:30 a.m.;
Weekdays as announced on
Sunday bulletin.
Baptism Celebrated first
Sunday of month at 1:00 p.m. Call
rectory to schedule Pre-Baptismal
instructions.
Reconciliation Tuesday and
Friday 7:30-7:50 a.m.; Saturday
3:30-4:00 p.m. Anytime by
request.
Matrimony Arrangements
must be made through the rectory
six months in advance.
Anointing of the Sick
Communal celebration in May
and October. Administered upon
request.
ST. JOHN THE BAPTIST CHURCH
Landeck - Phone: 419-692-0636
Rev. Dave Reinhart, Pastor
Administrative aide: Rita Suever
Masses: 8:30 a.m. Sunday.
Sacrament of Reconciliation:
Saturday.
Newcomers register at parish.
Marriages: Please call the par-
ish house six months in advance.
Baptism: Please call the parish.
ST. PATRICKS CHURCH
500 S. Canal, Spencerville
419-647-6202
Saturday - 4:30 p.m.
Reconciliation; 5 p.m. Mass, May 1
- Oct. 30. Sunday - 10:30 a.m. Mass.
ST. ANTHONY OF PADUA
CATHOLIC CHURCH
512 W. Sycamore,
Col. Grove
Office 419-659-2263
Fax: 419-659-5202
Father Tom Extejt
Masses: Tuesday-Friday - 8:00
a.m.; First Friday of the month
- 7 p.m.; Saturday - 4:30 p.m.;
Sunday - 8:30 a.m. and 11:00 a.m.
Confessions - Saturday 3:30
p.m., anytime by appointment.
HOLY FAMILY
CATHOLIC CHURCH
Rev. Robert DeSloover, Pastor
7359 St. Rt. 109 New Cleveland
Saturday Mass - 7:00 p.m.
Sunday Mass - 8:30 a.m.
IMMACULATE CONCEPTION
CATHOLIC CHURCH
Ottoville
Rev. Jerry Schetter
Mass schedule: Saturday - 4
p.m.; Sunday - 10:30 a.m.

ST. JOSEPH
CATHOLIC CHURCH
135 N. Water St., Ft. Jennings
Rev. Charles Obinwa
Phone: 419-286-2132
Mass schedule: Saturday 5
p.m.; Sunday 7:30 a.m. and 9:30
a.m.
ST. MICHAEL CHURCH
Kalida
Fr. Mark Hoying
Saturday 4:30 p.m. Mass.
Sunday 8:00 a.m. & 10:00 a.m.
Masses.
Weekdays: Masses on Mon.,
Tues., Wed. and Friday at 8:00
am; Thurs. 7:30 p.m.
GROVER HILL
ZION UNITED METHODIST
CHURCH
204 S. Harrision St.
Grover Hill, Ohio 45849
Pastor Mike Waldron
419-587-3149
Cell: 419-233-2241
mwaldron@embarqmail.com
Elida/GomEr
Van WErt County
landECk
dElphos
spEnCErVillE
Our local churches invite you to join them for their activities and services.
We thank
the sponsors
of this
page and
ask you to
please
support them.
4 The Herald
www.delphosherald.com
RAABE FORD
LINCOLN
11260 Elida Road
DELPHOS, OH 45833
Ph. 692-0055
Toll Free 1-800-589-7876
KINGSLEY UNITED
METHODIST
15482 Mendon Rd., Van Wert
Phone: 419-965-2771
Pastor Chuck Glover
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.;
Worship - 10:25 a.m.
Wednesday - Youth Prayer and
Bible Study - 6:30 p.m.
Adult Prayer meeting - 7:00
p.m.
Choir practice - 8:00 p.m.
TRINITY FRIENDS
CHURCH
605 N. Franklin St.,
Van Wert 45891
Ph: (419) 238-2788
Sr. Pastor Stephen Savage
Outreach Pastor Neil Hammons
Sunday - Worship services at
9:00 a.m., 10:30 a.m. & 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday-Ministries at 7:00
p.m.
FIRST BAPTIST
CHURCH
13887 Jennings Rd., Van Wert
Ph. 419-238-0333
Childrens Storyline:
419-238-2201
Email: fbaptvw@bright.net
Pastor Steven A. Robinson
Sunday 9:30 a.m. Sunday
School for all ages; 10:30 a.m.
Family Worship Hour; 6:30 p.m.
Evening Bible Hour.
Wednesday - 6:30 p.m. Word
of Life Student Ministries; 6:45
p.m. AWANA; 7:00 p.m. Prayer
and Bible Study.
MANDALE CHURCH
OF CHRIST
IN CHRISTIAN UNION
Rev. Justin Sterrett, Pastor
Sunday 9:30 a.m. Sunday
School all ages. 10:30 a.m.
Worship Services; 7:00 p.m
Worship.
Wednesday - 7 p.m. Prayer
meeting.
PENTECOSTAL WAY CHURCH
Pastors: Bill Watson
Rev. Ronald Defore
1213 Leeson Ave.,
Van Wert 45891
Phone (419) 238-5813
Head Usher: Ted Kelly
10:00 a.m. - Sunday School
11:10 a.m. - Worship 10:00 a.m.
until 11:30 a.m. - Wednesday
Morning Bible Class 6:00 p.m.
until 7:00 p.m. - Wednesday
Evening Prayer Meeting
7:00 p.m. - Wed. Night Bible
Study.
Thursday - Choir Rehearsal
Anchored in Jesus Prayer
Line - (419) 238-4427 or (419)
232-4379.
Emergency - (419) 993-5855
CHURCH OF GOD
18906 Rd. 18R, Rimer
419-642-5264
Rev. Mark Walls
Sunday - 9:30 a.m. Sunday
School; 10:30 a.m. Worship
Service.
ST. BARBARA CHURCH
160 Main St., Cloverdale 45827
419-488-2391
Rev. Jerry Schetter
Mass schedule: Saturday 5:30
p.m., Sunday 8:00 a.m.
FAITH MISSIONARY
BAPTIST CHURCH
Road U, Rushmore
Pastor Robert Morrison
Sunday 10 am Church
School; 11:00 Church Service;
6:00 p.m. Evening Service
Wednesday - 7:00 p.m. Evening
Service
BALYEATS
Cofee
Shop
133 E. Main St.
Van Wert
Ph. 419-238-1580
Hours: Closed Mondays
Tuesday-Saturday
6:00 a.m.-10:00 p.m.
putnam County
pauldinG County
10098 Lincoln Hwy.
Van Wert, OH
www.AlexanderBebout.com
419-238-9567
Alexander &
Bebout Inc.
Friday, June 6, 2014
TERRY MATTINGLY
On
Religion
Worship this week at the
church of your choice.
Pope, patriarch, primacy and the press
The Holy Land pilgrimage by Pope Francis
contained plenty of symbolic gestures, photo
ops and soundbites crafted to slip into broad-
casts, ink and Twitter.
There was his direct flight into the West
Bank, the first papal State of Palestine ref-
erence and the silent prayer with his forehead
against the concrete security wall between
Bethlehem and Jerusalem -- near graffiti
pleading, Pope we need some 1 to speak
about justice. He also prayed at a memorial
for suicide-bombing victims and put a wreath
on the tomb of Zionism pioneer Theodor
Herzl.
The backdrop for the Manger Square Mass
included an image of the infant Christ swad-
dled in a black-and-white keffiyeh, the head-
dress made famous by the late Palestinian
leader Yasser Arafat. And, of course, the
world press stressed the popes invitation
to presidents Shimon Peres of Israel and
Mahmoud Abbas of the Palestinian Authority
to visit the Vatican for prayers, and surely pri-
vate talks, about peace.
After days of statecraft, Francis arrived --
drawing little attention from major American
media -- at the event that the Vatican insisted
was the key to the trip. This was when
Pope Francis met with Ecumenical Patriarch
Bartholomew I for a historic evening prayer
rite in the ancient Church of the Holy
Sepulchre, a setting long symbolic of bitter
divisions in world Christianity.
The symbolic leader of the worlds Eastern
Orthodox Christians, the successor to the
Apostle Andrew, had earlier invited Francis,
the successor to the Apostle Peter, to join him
in Jerusalem to mark the 50th anniversary of
the breakthrough meeting between Pope Paul
VI and Ecumenical Patriarch Athenagoras
I. Their embrace ended 900-plus years of
mutual excommunication in the wake of the
Great Schism of 1054.
Clearly we cannot deny the divisions
which continue to exist among us, the dis-
ciples of Jesus: This sacred place makes us
even more painfully aware of how tragic they
are, said the pope, at the site of the tomb
the ancient churches believe held the body
of Jesus. We know that much distance still
needs to be traveled before we attain that
fullness of communion which can also be
expressed by sharing the same Eucharistic
table, something we ardently desire. ...
We need to believe that, just as the stone
before the tomb was cast aside, so too every
obstacle to our full communion will also be
removed.
Patriarch Bartholomew stressed that, even
as barriers fall between Christians in the East
and West, its crucial to remember that violent
conflicts -- including threats to religious free-
dom -- shape the lives of millions of believers.
This means shedding another modern fear,
he said, the fear of the other, fear of the dif-
ferent, fear of the adherent of another faith,
another religion, or another confession. ...
Religious fanaticism already threatens peace
in many regions of the globe, where the very
gift of life is sacrificed on the altar of reli-
gious hatred. In the face of such conditions,
the message of the life-giving Tomb is urgent
and clear: Love the other, the different other,
the followers of other faiths and other confes-
sions.
The rite surrounding these sermons was
full of symbolic touches, beginning with
Bartholomew entering the basilica -- shared
by six different Christian bodies -- from
the east and Francis from the west. The
Gospel was chanted in both Latin and Greek.
Bartholomew entered the tomb ahead of the
pope, but Francis led the way to the site where
church tradition indicates Jesus was crucified.
When Bartholomew finished his remarks,
Francis took his hand and kissed it -- an act
that in these ancient churches shows respect
for a mans priesthood, since he holds the
consecrated bread and wine during the Holy
Eucharist. This was a striking gesture because
in 1437, Patriarch Joseph II had been forced,
as a sign of subservience, to kiss the feet of
Pope Eugene IV.
Every time we put behind us our long-
standing prejudices and find the courage to
build new fraternal relationships, we confess
that Christ is truly risen, said Francis.
Here I reiterate the hope already expressed
by my predecessors for a continued dialogue
... aimed at finding a means of exercising
the specific ministry of the Bishop of Rome
which, in fidelity to his mission, can be open
to a new situation and can be, in the present
context, a service of love and of communion
acknowledged by all.
(Terry Mattingly is the director of the
Washington Journalism Center at the Council
for Christian Colleges and Universities and
leads the GetReligion.org project to study
religion and the news.)
COPYRIGHT 2014 Universal Uclick
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Friday, June 6, 2014 The Herald 5 www.delphosherald.com
COMMUNITY
Landmark
Calendar of
Events
Happy
Birthday
Putnam County
Courthouse
June 7
Kenneth S. Smith
Jason Miller
T.J. Kohorst
Kristi Rhoads
Stephanie Lindeman
June 8
Audrey Richardson
Donna Horn
Christy Hammond
Christen Makara
Kevin Siefker
Dee Helms
Leo Schmelzer
Baylen Kill
June 9
Joyce Kill
Lee Lauck
Helen L. Boroff
Shelly Holland
Dan Kramer
Kevin Fuerst
Chrystal Patterson
Serenna Moening
Josh Osting
Jason Osting
At the movies ....
Van Wert Cinemas
10709 Lincoln Hwy., Van Wert
Fault in Our Stars (PG-13) Fri.-Sat.: 1:00/3:30/6:00/8:30;
Sun.-Thurs.: 2:00/4:45/7:30
Edge of Tomorrow 3D (PG-13) Fri.-Sat: 3:00/7:30; Sun.:
2:00/6:30; Mon.-Tues.: 4:00; Wed.-Thurs.: 2:00/6:30
Edge of Tomorrow (PG-13) Fri.-Sat.: 1:00/5:15
Maleficent (R) Fri.-Sat.: 3:15/7:30; Sun.: 2:00/6:30; Mon.-
Tues.: 4:15; Wed.- Thurs.: 2:00/6:30
Maleficent 3D (R) Fri.-Sat.: 1:00/5:15; Sun.: 4:15; Mon.-
Tues.: 2:00/6:00; Wed.-Thurs.: 4:15
X-Men: Days of Future Past (PG-13) Fri.:-Sat.:
1:00/3:30/6:00/8:30; Sun.-Thurs.: 2:00/4:45/7:30
Neighbors (R) Fri.-Sat.: 8:00; Sun.-Thurs.: 7:00
Blended (PG-13) Fri.-Sat.: 1:00/3:15/5:30; Sun.-Thurs.:
2:00/4:30
Van-Del Drive In
19986 Lincoln Hwy.,
Middle Point
Friday-Sunday
Screen 1
Maleficent (PG)
Blended (PG-13)
Screen 2
Edge of Tomorrow
(PG-13)
X-Men: Days of
Future Past (PG-13)
Screen 3
A Million Ways to
Die in the West (R)
Neighbors (R)
American Mall Stadium 12
2830 W. Elm St., Lima
Saturday and Sunday
Edge of Tomorrow 3D (PG-13) 11:55/7:35
Edge of Tomorrow (PG-13) 3:50/4:30/7:05/9:50/10:20
The Fault in Our Stars (PG-13) 11:30/12:10/4:10/6:45/7:1
5/10:10
A Million Ways to Die in the West (R)
11:05/1:50/4:40/7:45/10:30
Maleficent 3D (PG) 2:10/4:50/7:25/10:00
Maleficent (PG) 11:00/11:20/1:40/4:20/6:55/9:30
Blended (PG-13) 11:10/1:55/4:35/7:20/10:05
X-Men: Days of Future Past 3D (PG-13) 3:30
X-Men: Days of Future Past (PG-13) 11:45/6:50/9:55
Godzilla (PG-13) 11:40/3:40/6:40/9:45
Million Dollar Arm (PG) 11:15
Chef (R) 11:35/2:15/4:55/7:40/10:25
Neighbors (R) 11:25/2:00/4:25/7:00/9:40
The Amazing Spider-Man 2 (PG-13) 3:35/10:15
Shannon Theatre, Bluffton
Through June 5
The Amazing Spider-man 2 2D (PG-13) show times are at
7 p.m. every evening with a 1:30 p.m. Saturday and Sunday
matinee.
The Amazing Spider-man 2 3D (PG-13) show times are at
4 p.m. Saturday and Sunday.
Neighbors (R) show times are at 9:30 every evening.
I hit a deer last week while I was driving
home on the freeway. There were two deer
in the road: one saw me and continued to
run towards the median, the other started to
follow then suddenly reversed direction and
headed back towards the side of the road and
what it perceived as safety. That is the deer
I hit.
I wonder about those deer. I presume they
were headed towards what they thought must
be a delicious feeding ground that was well
worth risking their lives for. The irony that the
food is the same on both sides of the road will
likely not be noticed by the deer.
It is the opportunity that draws them, not
the reality. I think of this because this is the
time of year that many of our kids are gradu-
ating from school and making their next steps
towards college and adulthood. Their choices
must seem similar to the choices that the deer
have. They can stay close to the safety and
security of home or they can venture towards
new towns and cities for new opportunities
and experiences.
For some kids this move will be effort-
less. They will just take off for new pastures
without drama, set up their new life and move
forward easily. Other kids will try to move to
new pastures many times, hesitate and return,
sometimes once, sometimes several times
before finally transitioning to their new life.
Allowing our kids, and in some cases
pushing our kids, to move towards this transi-
tion can be scary and difficult. We are used to
providing our children with a nice safe home,
so the idea of watching them go towards some
place that is not as safe goes against all of our
parental instincts. It is also a step we have to
take, and take with confidence. They have to
know that we think that they will succeed.
You have already taught them everything
they need to succeed, they just have to remem-
ber the rules that they have been taught since
they were little. For instance, look both ways
before you cross the street can transition to
mean that you dont rush into a situation until
you are aware of the risks associated with it
and decide the best way to proceed safely.
Dont trust strangers with candy also
means that they should understand that every-
one is not looking out for their best interest.
Many people will try to lure them into a situ-
ation that they know in their hearts isnt safe
but they want to be part of the crowd. They
should know that the crowd isnt always
right. In fact, the crowd is usually the place
where most trouble starts.
And, of course, treat others the way you
want them to treat you. If they remember this
rule, it can prevent a number of problems as
well as help them find the friends that they
can count on to help them out of a bad situa-
tion when they get into one.
The most important thing that they should
remember is that their family is still there for
them no matter how old they get or how far
away they are. They are stepping forward into
a new world for them, but it doesnt mean that
they have to leave their old world behind.
Dr. Celeste Lopez graduated cum laude
from The University of Utah College of
Medicine. She completed her Pediatric resi-
dency training at the Childrens Hospital of
Michigan. She is certified with The American
Board of Pediatrics since 1992. In 2003 she
moved her practice, Wishing Well Pediatrics,
to Delphos and is located at 154 W. Third
Street. She is the proud mother of a 14-year-
old son.
A new world
TODAY
7:30 a.m. Delphos
Optimist Club meets at the
A&W Drive-In, 924 E. Fifth
St.
11:30 a.m. Mealsite
at Delphos Senior Citizen
Center, 301 Suthoff St.
1-4 p.m. Interfaith
Thrift Store is open for shop-
ping.
SATURDAY
9 a.m.-noon Interfaith
Thrift Store is open for shop-
ping.
St. Vincent dePaul Society,
located at the east edge of the
St. Johns High School park-
ing lot, is open.
10 a.m.-2 p.m. Delphos
Postal Museum is open.
12:15 p.m. Testing of
warning sirens by Delphos
Fire and Rescue.
1-3 p.m. Delphos Canal
Commission Museum, 241 N.
Main St., is open.
7 p.m. Bingo at St.
Johns Little Theatre.
SUNDAY
1-3 p.m. The Delphos
Canal Commission Museum,
241 N. Main St., is open.
1-4 p.m. Putnam County
Museum is open, 202 E. Main
St. Kalida.
MONDAY
11:30 a.m. Mealsite
at Delphos Senior Citizen
Center, 301 Suthoff St.
In the Waiting
Room ...
with Dr. Celeste Lopez
Our local, national and international news
coverage is insightful and concise, to keep you in the
know without keeping you tied up. It's all the information
you need to stay on top of the world around you,
delivered straight to your door everyday.
If you aren't already taking advantage of our
convenient home delivery service, please call us at
419-695-0015.
THE DELPHOS HERALD
405 N. Main St. Delphos
PUTTING YOUR
WORLD IN
PERSPECTIVE
Visit: delphosherald.com
6 The Herald Friday, June 6, 2014
SPORTS
www.delphosherald.com
Associated Press
NASCAR
SPRINT CUP
POCONO 400
Site: Long Pond, Pennsylvania.
Schedule: Today, practice (Fox
Sports 1, noon-1:30 p.m.), qualifying
(Fox Sports 1, 4:30-6 p.m.); Saturday,
practice (Fox Sports 1, 9-10 a.m., 11:30
a.m.-12:30 p.m.); Sunday, race, 1 p.m.
(TNT, noon-4:30 p.m.).
Track: Pocono Raceway (triangle,
2.5 miles).
Race distance: 400 miles, 160 laps.
Last year: Jimmie Johnson raced to
the third of his six 2013 victories en route
to his sixth season title. He swept the
2004 races at the track.
Last week: Johnson won at Dover
for the record ninth time. He won the
Coca-Cola 600 the previous week in
North Carolina.
Fast facts: The 10-race Chase for the
NASCAR Sprint Cup has been expanded
to 16 drivers, with race winners getting
first priority as long as they are in the top
30 in the season standings and attempt-
ed to qualify for every race. Johnson,
Kevin Harvick and Joey Logano are tied
for the series victory lead with two. Jeff
Gordon, Carl Edwards, Dale Earnhardt
Jr., Kyle Busch, Brad Keselowski, Denny
Hamlin and Kurt Busch also have won.
Matt Kenseth leads the standings.
Kasey Kahne won in August at the track.
Gordon has a record six Pocono
victories. Hamlin has won four times
at the track.
Next race: Quicken Loans 400, June
15, Michigan International Speedway,
Brooklyn, Michigan.
Online: http://www.nascar.com
___
CAMPING WORLD TRUCK
WINSTAR WORLD CASINO AND
RESORT 400
Site: Fort Worth, Texas.
Schedule: Today, race, 9 p.m. (Fox
Sports 1, 8:30-11:30 p.m.).
Track: Texas Motor Speedway (oval,
1.5 miles).
Race distance: 250.5 miles, 167
laps.
Last year: Jeb Burton raced to his
first series victory.
Last week: Kyle Busch won at Dover
for his fourth victory in four series starts
this season. He has five straight series
wins dating to last season and 39 overall.
Fast facts: Erik Jones, missing
his high school graduation to race, is
driving Buschs No. 51 Toyota in his
intermediate track debut. Jones won in
November in Phoenix in the No. 51 to
become the youngest winner in series
history at 17 years, 4 months. Kyle Busch
Motorsports Nos. 51 and 54 have com-
bined to win seven of the last nine races
dating to Darrell Wallace Jr.s victory at
Martinsville in November. Wallace is driv-
ing the No. 54. Timothy Peters leads
the standings, a point ahead of defending
series champion Matt Crafton.
Next race: Drivin for Linemen 200,
June 14, Gateway Motorsports Park,
Madison, Illinois.
Online: http://www.nascar.com
___
NATIONWIDE
Next race: Ollies Bargain Barn
250, June 14, Michigan International
Speedway, Brooklyn, Michigan.
Last week: Kyle Busch won at Dover
for his third victory of the season. He
extended his series-record victory total
to 66.
Online: http://www.nascar.com
___
VERIZON INDYCAR
FIRESTONE 600
Site: Fort Worth, Texas.
Schedule: Today, practice, qualify-
ing (NBC Sports Network, 6:30-8 p.m.);
Saturday, race, 8:45 p.m. (NBC Sports
Network, 8-11 p.m.).
Track: Texas Motor Speedway (oval,
1.5 miles).
Race distance: 372 miles, 248 laps.
Last year: Helio Castroneves raced to his
fourth victory at the track. Team Penske was
fined $35,000 and docked 15 entrant points
because the underwing on Castroneves car
didnt meet specifications.
Last week: Team Penske swept the
Detroit Grand Prix doubleheader. Will
Power took the opener and Castroneves
won the second race.
Fast facts: The race is the second
of six oval events. Andretti Autosports
Ryan Hunter-Reay won the Indianapolis
500 two weeks ago in the oval opener.
Power, also the winner in the season-
opening race in St. Petersburg, leads the
season standings 19 points ahead
of Castroneves. Power won a double-
header race at the track in 2011 for the
first of his two career oval victories.
Next races: Grand Prix of Houston, June
28 and 29, Streets of Houston, Houston.
Online: http://www.indycar.com
___
FORMULA ONE
CANADIAN GRAND PRIX
Site: Montreal.
Schedule: Today, practice (NBC
Sports Network, 2-330 p.m.; Saturday,
practice, qualifying (NBC Sports
Network, 1-2:30 p.m.); Sunday, race,
2 p.m. (NBC, 2-4:30 p.m.; NBC Sports
Network, 7-9:30 p.m.).
Track: Circuit Gilles Villeneuve (road
course, 2.71 miles).
Race distance: 189.7 miles, 70 laps.
Last year: Red Bulls Sebastian
Vettel raced to the third of his 13 2013
victories en route to his fourth straight
season title.
Auto Racing Glance
State Track and Field beckons
for Tri-County athletes
By JIM METCALFE
DHI Media Staff Writer
jmetcalfe@delphosherald.com
The Tri-County area will be well-rep-
resented starting this morning and after-
noon, as well as Saturday morning, in the
Ohio High School Athletic Association
State Track and Field Championships
at venerable Jesse Owens Memorial
Stadium.
Most of them are in the Division III
ranks.
St. Johns has one junior Tyler
Conley in the boys 800-meter dash in
Saturdays finals.
Conley has a family his-
tory in the State meet: his dad,
Steve, was runner-up in what
was then the half-mile (1973)
and also qualified in the 4x4 relay.
His time then is better than mine
right now but he was a senior then and I
have a year left. I dont feel any pressure
to live up to what he did, the younger
Conley asserted. I really dont get ner-
vous anyway; I just try to go out and run
as fast and hard as I can.
Even though I run Saturday, we
came down early. I wanted to get a prac-
tice run at the stadium before the race.
Im just going to relax and watch the
other races.
This week of preparation had all the
elements that hampered the track and
field athletes all during March, April and
early May: wind Monday, rain Tuesday
and then nice weather Wednesday and
Thursday.
Since I run in the morning Saturday,
the coaches had me come in and train
during the mornings this week to get
me used to it, so I missed most of the
bad weather earlier this week. However,
I am not a morning person, Conley
added. The first couple of days, we
trained decently hard; Curtis (Pohlman)
ran with me. The last two days, we
really backed off so I could be as fresh
as I could.
Ottoville has a foursome
of girls going, all in the
4x400-meter relay and half
of them in individual events.
Two of them are seniors:
Taylor Mangas (300-meter hurdles) and
exchange student Karin Wendeberg; and
the other two are freshmen: Brooke
Mangas (high jump) and Madison
Knodell.
Weve tried to treat this like any
other week and any other track meet.
Weve kept it pretty low-key and arent
getting too excited, Lady Green head
coach Vaughn Horstman explained. We
brought the whole girls team down
the night before so the girls dont feel
rushed getting ready in the morning;
they can relax and be well-rested and
dont have to worry about the long ride
there.
As for the week itself, Horstman
noted how it was more about technique
and staying fresh.
Were at that point in the season
when the girls have what they have in
the tank. They physically know what
they have to do; were just topping it
off, he added. Its more technique,
shortening the distances and just keep-
ing them fine-tuned and sharp rather
than working them hard and them not
having anything left for the race. Weve
talked to them some about what to
expect and stuff but weve basically kept
it low-key.
It helps that you have four girls par-
ticipating, rather than only one or two.
Its nice to have a group.
Lincolnview has a trio: junior Bayley
Tow (boys 1,600-meter run),
junior Hannah McCleery
(girls high jump) and sopho-
more Hunter Blankemeyer in
the 110-meter high (39-inch)
hurdles.
Spencerville has one boy and
one girl, both juniors: Trevor
McMichael (boys long jump)
and Shania Johnson (girls discus).
Columbus Grove has 11 members
combined from its track and field units
heading to Owens.
For the Lady Bulldogs,
they are led by senior Megan
Verhoff (discus), junior
Sydney McCluer (100-meter
hurdles) and sophomore Lynea Diller
(shot put), along with three relays: the
4x100-meters (McCluer, senior Julia
Wynn and sophomores Raiya Flores
and Linnea Stephens), the 4x2 (Flores,
Stephens, Wynn and junior Kristin
Wynn) and 4x4 (K. Wynn, McCluer,
Flores and J. Wynn).
For the Bulldog boys, there is a quar-
tet: the 4x800-meter relay of senior Lee
Altenburger, juniors Colton Grothaus
and Bryce Sharrits and sophomore Alex
Giesege, with Sharrits also in the 800-
meter run.
The Crestview boys have a solo per-
former junior Mycah Grandstaff in
the 3,200-meter run and two relays:
the 4x1 of juniors Malcolm
Oliver and Zack Jellison and
sophomores Sage Schaffner
and Isaiah Kline and the 4x4 of
Jellison, Kline, senior Michael Hansard
and junior Alex Cunningham.
In Division II, Elida has a single girl:
sophomore Tori Bowen in the pole vault;
and the boys 4x1 of senior anchor Avery
Sumpter and juniors Desmend
White, Clark Etzler and Corbin
Stratton.
Van Werts Lady Cougars have a duo:
juniors Whitney Meyers (300-meter
hurdles) and Alexis Dowdy (shot put).
The Van Wert boys is led by a dual-
qualifer: junior Nicholas Krugh (200-
meter dash) that is also the second leg
of the 4x4, along with juniors
Quincy Salcido and Hunter Perl
and sophomore Tymon Moore.
Ottawa-Glandorfs girls unit
has three individuals: double-qualifier
Madison Stechschulte (100- and 200-
meter dashes), Anna Bellman (discus)
and Elissa Ellerbrock (800-meter run).
Stechschulte and Ellerbrock also quali-
fied in two relays: the 4x2 (Megan
Siefker and Michelle Maag); and the
4x4 (Maag and Bellman).
The Titan boys have six: the 4x800-
meter relay (Brad Recker, Sid Moening,
Trevor Ellerbrock and Matias Trampe-
Kindt), Trampe-Kindt
(1,600-meter run) and Colin
Laubenthal (pole vault).
The Division II field
events (boys long jump, boys shot put,
boys pole vault, girls discus and girls
high jump) commence at 9 a.m. today,
while the Division III track events, com-
menced by the 4x800-meter relay finals
and followed by the sprints and relays,
start at 9:30 a.m. The Division III field
events will begin at noon (boys high
jump, boys shot put, girls discus, girls
long jump and girls pole vault). The
other five (boys discus, boys long jump,
boys pole vault, girls high jump and
girls shot put) start at 3 p.m.
The Division II track races, including
the 4x8 finals and the sprint and sprint
relay prelims, start at 1:30 p.m., with
Division I starting later that afternoon.
Saturdays other Division II field
events (boys discus, boys high jump,
girls long jump, girls shot put and girls
pole vault) start at 9 a.m., with the track
finals all sprints, sprint relays and
middle distance/distance finals begin
at 9:30 a.m. The Division II track finals
start at 1 p.m.
Rams steal State
baseball semi vs. Knights
By BRIAN BASSETT
DHI Media Correspondent
news@delphosherald.com
COLUMBUS The Crestview Knight baseball team had
its chance at a state title stolen away by the Defiance Tinora
Rams Thursday morning at Huntington Park in Columbus -
literally.
The Rams stole home twice en route to a 4-3 win over the
Knights in the Division IV state semifinal matchup, including
the game-tying and -winning runs.
It takes an effort like that, with two stolen bases at home,
to beat a kid whos as good as Damian (Helm) and a team
thats as good as this group of kids, said Crestview coach Jim
Wharton after the tough loss.
Down one in the hime sixth, Tinora tied the game at three
when senior shortstop Derek Drewes stole home while Knight
pitcher Helm was in his windup.
The Rams got the chance to walk away with the win in
the home seventh and 9-hitter and senior left fielder Logan
Dickerson ripped a leadoff double to open the frame. A sacri-
fice bunt moved Dickerson to third, before the Crestview ace
induced senior center fielder Reid Renollet to pop out to the
catcher for the second out of the inning.
With the winning run at third the 3 and 4 hitters coming
to the plate, Wharton made the easy decision to walk senior
pitcher Clay Pittman and Drewes to load the bases.
Its hard to ever prepare, especially (for a situation) like
that, explained Wharton. We had a situation where they had
three all-state kids (in their lineup). Were going to walk those
two and put the ball in Damians hands.
With Dickerson still at third, Helm worked from the windup
as sophomore second baseman Brevin Renollet came to the
plate. Dickerson broke for home on the second pitch of the at
bat, at the Knights got a pretty good read on the steal.
Helm delivered a strike to junior catcher Nate Owens but
after a collision at the plate, the ball popped out and Dickerson
touched home to score the game-winning run.
We anticipated that and we talked about their aggressive-
ness on the bases, Wharton said. Its just a matter of when
the game is on the line the ball is coming in, the catcher is
coming out for the ball - it just popped out of his glove.
Nates a great catcher and I wouldnt want any other catch-
er in the state of Ohio catching for the Crestview Knights.
The Knights actually controlled the game almost from the
get-go. Junior first baseman Jordan Roop singled with two
outs in the top of the first and advanced to second on an errant
pickoff attempt. Owens then plated Roop with an RBI single
to give Crestview and early 1-0 lead.
Crestviews Isaiah Simerman slides into third base
safely as Tinoras third baseman has troubling han-
dling the ball on a steal during Thursdays Division
IV State seminal. (DHI Media/Charlie Warnimont)
See KNIGHTS, page 8
See GLANCE, page 7
Bumgarner wins 6th straight, Giants beat Reds 6-1
Associated Press
CINCINNATI The Giants bid goodbye
to Cincinnati with high-fives. They havent
done that very often.
Left-hander Madison Bumgarner got
his career-high sixth straight win and San
Francisco beat the Reds 6-1 on Thursday
afternoon, taking a series in Cincinnati for the
first time in five years.
San Francisco moved a season-high 18
games over .500 with its 11th win in 14
games. The Giants have the best record in the
majors at 39-21.
After making four errors in the series
opener and falling 8-3, the Giants were
reminded that theyve had a tough time in
Great American Ball Park the last couple of
years. They won the next two games and
moved on with smiles for a change.
Its been a tough park for us, man-
ager Bruce Bochy said. Gosh, between our
defense and our pitching, we hadnt had a
lot of success here. Of course we did bounce
back at a critical time in 2012 (playoffs), but I
know weve had some of our worst baseball
here.
So it was good, particularly after losing
the first game the way we did, to bounce back
and play the type of ball we did the next two
days.
Cincinnati has been one of their
most dreaded stops.
The Giants won a series in
Cincinnati for the first time since
August 18-20, 2009. Theyve dropped 11 of
their last 14 in Cincinnati during the regular
season. The one bright moment was their
division series win in Cincinnati in 2012, the
starting point for their World Series title.
Bumgarner (8-3) gave up three hits in
eight innings, including Todd Fraziers homer,
and retired the last 16 batters he faced. Hes
6-0 in his last seven starts, the best such streak
of his career.
Michael Morse hit a 2-run homer and
Brandon Crawford broke out of a slump with
a 3-run shot off Mike Leake (3-5), who had
overwhelmed the Giants the last four times
he faced them.
Bumgarner was the NLs Pitcher of the
Month in May and carried it into June with
another stingy performance on the road.
Bumgarner has allowed three or fewer runs
in each of his last 20 road starts, a franchise
record.
The Reds came out swinging and got
two of their three hits in the first inning.
Once Bumgarner saw what was hap-
pening, he changed his approach early
in the count and got them hitting the ball on
the ground.
They came out aggressive, said
Bumgarner, who retired 23 of the last 24 he
faced. After that first inning, when they came
out swinging, I made some adjustments and
the defense was phenomenal. They made a
lot of good plays.
Today was the best you can hope for,
really. I got a lot of quick outs and got the
team back in the dugout.
George Kontos retired the side in the ninth
as the final 19 Reds went in order. Cincinnati
didnt have a base-runner after Frazier singled
with two outs in the third inning.
Paulding sweeps Jays in ACME DH
By LARRY HEIING
DHI Media Correspondent
news@delphosherald.com
PAULDING High school ACME baseball is like no
other in sports because there is no pre-season to prepare.
One week a player is an underclassman playing a short
6-week spring schedule with senior teammates. The next
week, the seniors have graduated and the player is suddenly
another class older playing with a different line up
with no time to prepare for the summer season.
Thats what is called training under fire in the
real world.
The St. Johns ACME baseball team ran into fire
at Paulding Thursday night and it came from the
arm of the Panthers starting pitcher, Damion Agner.
Agner struck out 15 batters as the Panthers won the
first game of the doubleheader 6-1.
Blue Jay bats were silent to start the contest as
Agner struck out the first five batters he faced to open
the game.
St. Johns starter, senior-to-be Gage Seffernick,
was was nearly as effective, holding the Panthers
scoreless while surrendering only one hit in the first
two innings.
Agner struck out three more Jays in the third inning as
the Jays got their first base-runner of the game with a Josh
Warnecke walk.
The Panthers jumped out to a 3-0 lead in the bottom of the
inning with four consecutive hits by Lupe Martinez, Corbin
Edwards, Treston Gonzales and Agner. A walk to Jarrett Sitton
plated another run and an error brought home the third run of
the inning.
The Jays finally got their first hit of the game as Seffernick
tried to help his own cause with a single to right field but
Agner whiffed two more Jays to maintain the shutout.
St. Johns got on the scoreboard in the fifth as J.R Keirns
and Josh Warnecke singled. Sophomore Timothy Kreeger
grounded out to second and the throw to first was high as
Keirns came around to score.
Paulding added more runs in the fifth inning to chase
Seffernick after back-to-back walks. Senior Austin Heiing
came in as relief and Agner came home on a double steal. The
Panthers extended the lead to 6-1 as Alex Estrada
popped to shallow right field to score the runners.
Agner used his fastball clocking up to 93 m.p.h.
to keep the Jays scoreless the rest of the way for the
5-run victory.
The Jays had four hits in the game with Seffernick,
Keirns, Warnecke and Jacob Youngpeter all notching
singles against Agner.
The second game of the night saw both teams dou-
ble their offensive run production from the first game
as the Panthers rolled 12-2 in five innings.
The Jays scored in the first inning as Youngpeter
reached base, stole second and came home on a single
by Jesse Ditto to give St. Johns a brief 1-0 lead.
The Panthers came roaring back, pounding out six
hits to score 10 runs in the first two innings for a 10-1
lead.
Paulding added a run in the third and fourth innings to
extend the lead.
The Jays used the steal again in the fifth inning to manu-
facture a run as Ryan Hellman walked, swiped second, went
to third on a balk and scored on a groundout by Warnecke to
make the final score 12-2.
See JAYS, page 7
Friday, June 6, 2014 The Herald 7
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7
Logano believes NASCAR safer than football
By JENNA FRYER
Associated Press
CHARLOTTE, N.C. After a stop
to watch the Detroit Lions practice, Joey
Logano felt confident he picked the right
career.
As a race car driver, Logano accepts
the dangers that come with his sport.
He would take that over getting drilled
repeatedly by a linebacker.
Logano, at 6-1, 140 pounds, was
admittedly intimidated as he watched
the Lions practice because I felt really,
really small compared to them. There
are some really big dudes out there.
I feel like my sport is a lot safer.
We may look crazy going 200 mph but
I would much rather hit the wall at 200
than have a 300-pound linebacker com-
ing at me.
The NFL has agreed to a $765 mil-
lion settlement of a head injuries lawsuit
with hundreds of players, though the
deal was rejected by a federal judge in
January. NASCAR, since the 2001 death
of Dale Earnhardt at the Daytona 500,
has made tremendous strides in safety
advancements. In 2012, Dale Earnhardt
Jr. missed two races during the cham-
pionship portion of the season with a
concussion, and NASCAR this year
mandated preseason baseline testing for
all participants.
The safety standards make Logano
feel safe in his race car.
Our hits may be pretty brutal but at
the same time we have done a lot to our
race cars to make them safer, Logano said
during his promotional tour for Michigan
International Speedway. NASCAR has a
constant program of always being able to
move up and test cars and crash cars and
try to figure out what we can do to make
them safer and make the crush zones crush
and if there are parts that need to be stiffer
they make them stiff. I dont think there
are as many areas in football to improve
on. Obviously you have pads and helmets,
but you are still going to get hit every
time.
Asked what position hed play on
a football team, Logano revealed he
performed horribly during a visit with
the New England Patriots in
which he tried to learn how
to kick a field goal.
I wouldnt be good at
any position, he admitted.
I dont really know where I
would fit in. Probably on the
bench somewhere.
___
FROM HIGH TO LOW:
Ryan Hunter-Reay was run
ragged across the country
during a media blitz fol-
lowing his Indianapolis 500
victory and the American didnt get a
chance to relax until he got to the race
track last weekend in Detroit.
But the euphoria from Indy came to a
crashing halt in his first qualifying ses-
sion when Hunter-Reay hit the wall and
damaged the rear suspension. It set the
tone for a miserable weekend at Belle
Isle, where Hunter-Reay logged finishes
of 16th and 19th in the doubleheader
event. Even worse, his point lead van-
ished.
Hunter-Reay left Indy up 400 points
over Will Power but Belle Isle dropped
him to third in the standings, down 27.
It was a long weekend, he said.
Ill try to erase this one from my
memory and move on to Texas. Nothing
we did worked.
Next is a Saturday night race at
Texas Motor Speedway, the second oval
on the IndyCar schedule. Hunter-Reay
was second at Texas last year, his first
podium in seven career starts.
It is such a big track but it is so chal-
lenging, Hunter-Reay added. Right
now, with our (aero) package the way
it is, the tracks condition the way it
is with our Firestone tires, its racing
like a shorter oval at higher speeds. Its
got every kind of mixture of difficulty.
It always ends up being one heck of a
show.
___
FAREWELL TO THE MULLET:
The long journey for Jordan Taylors
infamous mullet will soon come to an
end.
The TUDOR United
SportsCar Championship driv-
er has been working on the
business-in-the-front, party-
in-the-back hairstyle for well
over a year and Taylors mullet
has sometimes overshadowed
his on-track accomplishments.
But Taylor is tired of his
hair having its own fame, so
hell cut it later the month
at the Six Hours of Watkins
Glen. Theres a catch, though:
Taylor is trimming the mullet in hopes
of raising $10,000 for Camp Boggy
Creek and Camp Anokijig, which serve
chronically-ill children.
The raffle winner will receive two
paddock passes to Watkins Glen, as well
as a ride around the road course in a
two-seater Daytona Prototype, tours
and the opportunity to help cut Taylors
mullet.
I started growing it in January 2013
and it took a while to get some decent
length out of it, now I just want to get rid
of it, added Taylor, who teamed with
older brother, Ricky, to win last weeks
race at Belle Isle. I think a lot of people
are saying I get a lot of credit for my
hair, more than my driving. So I want to
go back to being a driver again and not
just a guy with weird hair.
__
PACK YOUR PATIENCE: Helio
Castroneves is warning visitors to his
native Brazil to relax and go with the
flow during the upcoming World Cup.
He expects visitors will find his country
to be harried and appear disorganized.
There is going to be a lot of delays,
Castroneves said. The transportation
has got to really get a plan. Remember,
if you want to have fun, thats the place
to be. But dont get upset with the traffic
and craziness. But at the end of the day,
the party is going to be awesome.
Sharapova makes it back
to French Open final
Associated Press
PARIS For the third straight year, Maria Sharapova will
play in the French Open final.
The seventh-seeded Russian again lost the first set Thursday
but again managed to turn things around, this time beating
Eugenie Bouchard of Canada 4-6, 7-5, 6-2.
Sharapova won eight of the last 10 games and has won 19
straight 3-set matches on clay the last three at Roland Garros
after losing the first set.
I would love to win those matches in two sets but I always
feel like I put in the work to be ready to play whatever it takes,
Sharapova said. If it takes three hours to win the match in three
sets, I will be ready for that.
Sharapova completed a career Grand Slam by winning the
French Open in 2012 but lost to Serena Williams in last years
final.
Bouchard, a 20-year-old Canadian
seeded 18th, was playing at Roland
Garros for the only second time. Last
year, she lost to Sharapova in the second
round.
Sharapova will face fourth-seeded
Simona Halep of Romania in Saturdays
championship match. Halep reached her
first Grand Slam final by defeating 28th-
seeded Andrea Petkovic of Germany 6-2, 7-6 (4).
Sharapova struggled a bit with her serve, double-faulting nine
times and getting broken four times. But she made up for her
shaky serving with solid groundstrokes, either going for winners
or waiting out errors from Bouchard.
I dont feel that I played my best tennis but to be in the
semifinals of a Grand Slam and winning a match where I felt
my opponent played extremely well, exceptional tennis, and I
didnt feel that I was playing my best, I fought, I scrambled, and
I found a way to win, Sharapova added.
Bouchard took the early lead with her first break in the third
game, smacking a forehand winner for a 2-1 edge. She made it
3-1 by completing a run of winning 12 out of 17 points.
The pair traded breaks early in the second set, then again
later. But Sharapova managed to stay ahead and broke Bouchard
for the third time in the set to even the set score.
Sharapova served first in the third set and made her move in
the fourth game, converting her third break point to take a 3-1
lead that she held to the end.
Its always disappointing to be a little bit off, Bouchard
said. I felt like I was trying to do what I wanted to do, which
was be aggressive, go for my shots. But often I constructed the
point well and then didnt finish it as well as I could.
Bouchard, who reached the Australian Open semifinals in
January, saved four match points before Sharapova won it with
a forehand that Bouchard missed on the other end.
I felt definitely better on the court than I did in the first
semifinal, Bouchard added. Playing big matches like this, the
more I play, the more Ill feel good out there. I felt good today.
Sharapova won her first Grand Slam title 10 years ago at
Wimbledon. She followed that with major titles at the U.S. Open
in 2006 and the Australian Open in 2008. But since she recov-
ered from having right shoulder surgery in 2008, she has vastly
improved her clay-court game and has won six of her last eight
titles on the red surface.
This year, Sharapova has already won on clay in Stuttgart
and Rome; her six wins so far at Roland Garros give her an 18-1
record on dirt this season.
And like against Bouchard, its been tough to beat her in three
sets on the surface. The last time Sharapova lost a 3-set match
on clay was at Roland Garros in 2010, to Justine Henin in the
third round.
5 things to look for Friday at the French Open: Five
things to look for in the mens semifinals today at the French
Open:
NADALS STREAK: Heading into his semifinal against Andy Murray, No.
1-ranked Rafael Nadals French Open record is a hard-to-believe 64-1, a run that
includes eight titles more than any man has won at any of the Grand Slam
tournaments and a 33-match winning streak. The lone loss came to Robin
Soderling in the fourth round in 2009. Nadal is trying to become the first man to
win five consecutive French Opens.
NADAL VS. MURRAY: Nadal or Murray has participated in each of the last
17 Grand Slam finals, a stretch that dates to the 2010 Australian Open. That will
become 18 major finals in a row at this French Open, of course. But in none of
those instances did Nadal and Murray face each other for the title. Eight of their 19
previous career matchups came at majors, with Nadal holding a 6-2 edge once
in the fourth round, once in a quarterfinal and six in semifinals. Overall, Nadal
leads 14-5. This meeting makes them the only two men in the Open era, which
began in 1968, to have met at least twice at each Grand Slam.
MURRAY ON CLAY: Everyone knows just how good Nadal is on red clay. But
Murray, whose major titles came on grass at Wimbledon and on hard courts at
the U.S. Open, is proving rather adept at handling the slow surface, too. This is
his second French Open semifinal he made it that far in 2011, before losing to
Nadal, naturally and he made clear after his 5-set victory over Gael Monfils in
the quarterfinals that he is not satisfied. Its definitely a big achievement but thats
not what I came here to do. Yeah, my goals are different and my expectations are
different to a lot of people, Murray said. I expect a lot of myself. I put a lot of
pressure on myself to perform well at these events and thankfully I have done OK
so far. Still hopefully a long way to go in the tournament.
DJOKOVIC VS. GULBIS: No. 2 Novak Djokovic meets No. 18 Ernests Gulbis,
the only man from Latvia to enter a Grand Slam tournament, in the opening semi-
final. Djokovic holds a 4-1 lead in head-to-head matches, including a straight-set
win in the 2008 French Open quarterfinals, the only other time Gulbis made it that
far at a major. They go way back: Both attended a tennis academy in Munich in
their early teens.
GLUTEN-FREE: Djokovic, a 6-time major champion, needs a French Open
title to complete a career Grand Slam. Hes talked often and even written a
book about how changes to his eating habits, including dispensing with gluten,
helped him overcome problems with fitness and allergies early in his career. And
Gulbis? He was asked this week why he needed a half-dozen years to get back
to the latter stages of a major after doing so initially as a teenager. What took me
so long? I think I was eating wrong. I had the wrong diet, he replied with a laugh.
Everybody was talking about this gluten-free diet. My diet is full-on gluten. I like
a lot of ketchup, a lot of unhealthy stuff, so there is a balance which I found in the
last couple of years.
Logano
Brad Guzan patiently waits turn in US net
Associated Press
JACKSONVILLE, Fla.
Brad Guzan has been in this
position before.
A few times, too.
So sitting behind U.S.
goalkeeper Tim Howard
and waiting patiently for a
chance to play is nothing new
for the 29-year-old Illinois
native. But that doesnt mean
Guzan is content with his
second-string spot on the
U.S. national team.
Its not ideal, obviously,
when youre not playing,
Guzan said Thursday as the
Americans continued prepa-
rations for their World Cup
send-off series finale against
Nigeria. Everyone wants to
play. Its probably a little bit
more of a difficult situation
for a goalkeeper just because
we know only one of us can
play.
It becomes a bit tricky
but at the same time, you
always have to be prepared
because you get judged on
your performance. And if you
get called into a game in the
fifth minute or the 95th min-
ute, you have to be ready to
step in and do a job.
Guzan has spent more
than his fair share in some-
ones shadow.
He was a backup for most
of four seasons (2008-12) for
Aston Villa in the English
Premier League, a sometimes
frustrating experience that
often tested his persever-
ance. Still, he stayed positive
while learning behind fellow
American Brad Friedel.
He made one appearance
in his first three years with
Villa. He experienced some
success by leading Villa to
the League Cup final against
Manchester United in 2010
only to be replaced by Friedel
in the final.
Guzan was loaned to Hull
City the following year and
played in the second-tier
League Championship for
three months before returning
to Hulls bench for the final
month of the season. When
Friedel left for Tottenham
after the 2011 season, Guzan
figured he would get a pro-
motion.
It didnt happen. Villa
signed veteran keeper Shay
Given.
Guzan remained a backup.
He filled in capably when
Given was sidelined a month
by an injury but
once Given was
healthy, Guzan
returned to the
bench. Frustrated,
Guzan considered
leaving Villa. He
ultimately decid-
ed to stay, re-sign-
ing with the club
and finally got the
starting job.
It may have the best deci-
sion of his career.
Its always nice when
youre linked with other
teams but Ive been very for-
tunate to be at a club like
Aston Villa for so long, said
Guzan, whose latest contract
keeps him there through 2017.
Not many players stick with
one club for as long as I have.
Granted, I didnt play too
much the first four years. But
I feel like now is my time to
give back to them.
Guzan has since blossomed
into one of the best netmind-
ers in the Premier League,
starting nearly every game the
last two seasons.
And he probably could
start for a number of other
World Cup teams.
But for the Americans,
who consistently produce
some of worlds top keepers,
hes behind Howard again.
It goes both ways, Guzan
said. He makes me a better
goalkeeper and I like to think
I make him better as well.
Our training environment,
the atmosphere weve cre-
ated among our goalkeeping
group, its been really good.
Were very competitive. We
all want to play. At the end of
the day, we all support each
other. I think thats important.
So for me, its just a mat-
ter of playing to the best of
ability. And if I can do that, I
leave the rest up to the staff.
Howard is a virtual lock
to start the World
Cup opener against
Ghana on June 16.
How much, or even
if, Guzan plays in
Brazil remains to
be seen. But many
believe this could
be Howards final
World Cup.
Weve talked
and joked about it
a few times, Guzan added.
But I think hell cross that
bridge when he gets there. Im
sure at some point, after the
summers over, hell examine
that more.
Until then, Guzan will
have to wait something
hes gotten accustomed to by
now.
Its huge to have that
kind of depth, U.S. defender
Geoff Cameron said. The
guy (Guzan) plays in the
Premier League every single
week, hes one of the main
guys, was a star for Aston
Villa this year. The guys got
a lot of pedigree, and hes
there to push Tim every single
day. Theyre fighting for posi-
tion and always pushing each
other.
Luck rooting for US, Brazil
at World Cup
INDIANAPOLIS
Andrew Luck is a passionate fan
of American soccer.
If the U.S. cant bring home
the title, he figures the next
best thing would be seeing the
Brazilians hoist the trophy on
home soil.
I have an unconditional love
for U.S. soccer. I have eternal
optimism for the U.S. soccer
team, the Colts quarterback said,
initially predicting breakthrough
win for his home country during
a wide-ranging 26-minute inter-
view Thursday. But wouldnt it
be cool the host country won it,
especially with everything going
on there?
Just last week, indigenous
protesters in traditional headdress
clashed with police in Rio de
Janeiro. On Thursday, transporta-
tion workers also went on strike,
putting at risk the only means
most soccer fans will have to
reach the stadium. The World
Cup is scheduled to open June
12.
That doesnt mean Luck
one of Americans highest-profile
supporters is giving up on his
team.
He helped model the
American uniforms for this
years World Cup, agreed to let
his name be used on a banner
that was placed inside Stanford
Stadium when the Americans
showed up for training camp last
month and in April attended a
game of the Indy Eleven, the
citys new soccer team.
Luck developed his affinity
for soccer in Europe, when his
father, Oliver, was working with
the NFLs developmental league.
His interest never waned.
How much does Luck appre-
ciate the sport?
When one of Lucks sis-
ters told him she worked out
in the same weight room with
Clint Dempsey, the captain of
this years U.S. team, Lucks
response was every bit the fan.
I was very jealous, he
replied, laughing.
(Continued from page 6)
The next game for the Jays will involve
both Delphos ACME teams as St. Johns
travels to Jeffersons Wildcat Field for a 6
p.m. contest.
Game 1
St. Johns (1)
ab-r-h-rbi
Eric Vogt 2b 3-0-0-0, Jacob Youngpeter
lf 2-0-1-0, Jesse Ditto rf 3-0-0-0, Gage
Seffernick p 3-0-1-0, Austin Heiing cf 3-0-
0-0, Buddy Jackson c 2-0-0-0, J.R. Keirns
3b 3-1-1-0, Josh Warnecke ss 1-0-1-0, Tim
Kreeger 1b 2-0-0-0. Totals 22-1-4-0.
Paulding (6)
ab-r-h-rbi
Corbin Edwards 2b 3-1-1-0, Treston
Gonzales cf 3-1-1-0, Damion Agner p 2-1-
2-1, Jarrett Sitton c 1-1-0-1, Alex Arellano
2b 2-1-0-0, Preston Johanns 1b 2-0-0-
0, James Mowery dh 3-0-0-0, Cameron
Doster rf 3-0-2-0, Aaron Mock 3b 3-0-0-0,
Lupe Martinez ss 3-1-1-0, Alex Estrada
1-0-1-1. Totals 22-6-8-3.
Score By Innings:
St. Johns 0-0-0-0-1-0-0 (1)
Paulding 0-0-3-0-3-0-x (6)
SB: Mowery, Sitton, Estrada,
Seffernick.
IP H R ER SO BB
St. Johns
Seffernick (L) 4.1 6 4 3 2 4
Heiing 1.2 2 2 1 2 0
Paulding
Agner (W) 7.0 4 1 0 14 3
BB: Sitton 2, Warnecke, Youngpeter,
Jackson, Agner, Arellano.
-
Game 2
St. Johns (2)
ab-r-h-rbi
Eric Vogt p 1-0-0-0, Jacob Youngpeter
lf 2-0-1-0, Jesse Ditto dh 3-0-1-1, Gage
Seffernick ss 3-0-0-0, Chad Etgen 1b
2-0-1-0, Austin Heiing cf 1-0-0-0, Jorden
Boone 3b 2-0-1-0, Owen Baldauf c 2-0-0-
0, Bradon Slate 2b 2-0-1-0, Ryan Hellman
rf 2-1-0-0, Josh Warnecke 2-0-1-1. Totals
23-2-6-2.
Paulding (12)
ab-r-h-rbi
Corbin Edwards lf 3-2-2-0, Treston
Gonzales cf 3-0-1-0, Damion Agner 2-2-0-
1, Jarrett Sitton c 2-1-1-1, Alex Arellano 2b
0-1-0-0, Preston Johanns p 2-1-1-0, James
Mowery dh 3-0-1-1, Cameron Doster rf 2-0-
2-1, Aaron Mock 3b 2-0-1-0, Lupe Martinez
ss 1-0-1-0, Cody Spencer 1-0-0-0, Alex
Estrada 2-0-0-0. Totals 23-12-10-8.
Score By Innings:
St. Johns 1-0-0-0-1 (2)
Paulding 4-6-1-1-x (12)
WP- Preston Johanns; LP- Eric Vogt.
Jays
(Continued from page 6)
Last race: Nico Rosberg won at Monaco on May 25
to run Mercedes season-opening winning streak to six
and its string of 1-2 finishes to five. Lewis Hamilton was
second after winning the previous four races. Rosberg,
also the winner in Australia, took the points lead.
Fast facts: Hamilton won at the track for McLaren in
2007, 2010 and 2012. The course sits on Ile Notre-
Dame, a landfill island off the southern bank of the St.
Lawrence River. The track was renamed Circuit Gilles
Villeneuve after the Canadian was killed during qualify-
ing for the 1982 Belgian Grand Prix. Villeneuves son,
Jacques, won the 1997 F1 title.
Next race: Austrian Grand Prix, June 22, Red Bull
Ring, Spielberg, Austria.
Online: http://www.formula1.com
___
NHRA MELLO YELLO DRAG RACING
Next event: Thunder Valley Nationals, June 13-15,
Bristol Dragway, Bristol, Tennessee.
Last week: Australias Richie Crampton raced to
his first Top Fuel victory, winning the Summernationals
in Englishtown, New Jersey. Cruz Pedregon won in
Funny Car, Jeg Coughlin in Pro Stock, and Andrew
Hines in Pro Stock Motorcycle.
Online: http://www.nhra.com
___
OTHER RACES
ARCA RACING SERIES: Pocono ARCA 200,
Saturday (Fox Sports 1, 1-3 p.m.), Pocono Raceway,
Long Pond, Pennsylvania. Online: http://www.arcarac-
ing.com
TUDOR UNITED SPORTSCAR CHAMPIONSHIP:
Grand Prix of Kansas, Saturday, Kansas Speedway,
Kansas City, Kansas. Online: http://www.imsa.com
WORLD OF OUTLAWS: Sprint Car: Today, I-80
Speedway, Greenwood, Nebraska; Saturday, Lakeside
Speedway, Kansas City, Kansas. Online: http://www.
worldofoutlaws.com
U.S. AUTO RACING CLUB: Sprint Car: Saturday,
Port Royal Speedway, Port Royal, Pennsylvania;
Sunday, Susquehanna Speedway Park, Pennsylvania.
Online: http://www.usacracing.com
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Do You Prepare
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You Do for College?
For a free, personalized college cost report,
call or visit today.
Having fun with your family is important. But nothing is more
vital than your childs future. Thats why at Edward Jones, we
can help you put together a strategy to save for college.
Using our education funding tool, we can estimate future
expenses at more than 3,000 schools and then recommend a
fnancial strategy based on your unique needs. True, vacations
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www.edwardjones.com
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Andy North
Financial Advisor
.
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Delphos, OH 45833
419-695-0660
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Financial Advisor
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1122 Elida Avenue
Delphos, OH 45833
419-695-0660
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8 The Herald Friday, June 6, 2014 www.delphosherald.com

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EDWARD JONES INVESTMENTS
Close of business June 5, 2014
Associated Press
ZURICH FIFA rank-
ings for June (May positions
in parentheses):
1. Spain (1)
2. Germany (2)
3. Brazil (4)
4. Portugal (3)
5. Argentina (7)
6. Switzerland (8)
7. Uruguay (6)
8. Colombia (5)
9. Italy (8)
10. England (11)
11. Belgium (12)
12. Greece (10)
13. United States (14)
14. Chile (13)
15. Netherlands (15)
16. Ukraine (17)
17. France (16)
18. Croatia (16)
19. Russia (18)
20. Mexico (19).
Associated Press
EASTERN CONFERENCE
W L T Pts GF GA
N England 7 4 2 23 21 16
D.C. 6 4 3 21 18 14
Kansas City 5 5 4 19 19 14
Houston 5 8 2 17 16 27
Columbus 4 5 5 17 18 18
Toronto FC 5 4 1 16 14 13
New York 3 5 6 15 20 22
Philadelphia 3 7 5 14 19 24
Chicago 2 3 8 14 20 22
Montreal 2 6 4 10 11 22
WESTERN CONFERENCE
W L T Pts GF GA
Seattle 9 3 2 29 29 21
Salt Lake 6 1 7 25 24 18
Colorado 6 4 4 22 19 15
Vancouver 5 2 5 20 22 17
FC Dallas 5 7 3 18 23 24
L Angeles 4 3 4 16 15 10
San Jose 4 4 4 16 15 13
Portland 3 4 7 16 23 24
Chivas USA 2 7 4 10 13 25
NOTE: Three points for victory, one
point for tie.
___
Todays Game
Sporting Kansas City at Houston,
8:30 p.m.
Saturdays Games
San Jose at Toronto FC, 4 p.m.
Columbus at D.C. United, 6:30
p.m.
Vancouver at Philadelphia, 7 p.m.
Seattle FC at Chicago, 8:30 p.m.
Colorado at FC Dallas, 8:30 p.m.
Portland at Real Salt Lake, 10 p.m.
Sundays Games
New York at New England, 5 p.m.
Chivas USA at Los Angeles, 8 p.m.
Wednesdays Games
D.C. United at Montreal, 7:30 p.m.
FC Dallas at Portland, 10 p.m.
Major League Soccer Glance
FIFA Rankings List
Associated Press
Browns sign rookie LB Kirksey
CLEVELAND The Browns have
agreed to contract terms with rookie
inside linebacker Chris Kirksey.
The team selected Kirksey in the third
round of last months NFL draft
from Iowa. The 6-2, 235-pound-
er is expected to compete with
Craig Robertson for a starting spot
alongside Karlos Dansby.
Kirkseys deal is worth $3.04 million
and includes a $662,500 signing bonus.
The Browns were weak last season in
covering running backs and tight ends
on pass plays and the team believes
Kirkseys skill sets will help them
improve in that area. Kirksey played
both inside and outside linebacker for
the Hawkeyes.
Kirksey is the second rookie signed
by the Browns. Cornerback Pierre
Desir, selected in the fourth round from
Lindenwood, signed his deal last week.
Giants move on after drug suspensions in
secondary
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. The New York
Giants recently learned two members of their secondary
were suspended by the NFL for failing drug tests during
the offseason.
Starting free safety Will Hill received a 6-game
suspension and the Giants quickly waived the talented
player on Monday after his third drug-related offense in
as many years. On Wednesday, third-year cornerback
Jayron Hosley was slapped with a 4-game suspension
that begins at the start of the regular season.
The loss of Hill and Hosley players who both
started at one point in the Giants secondary last year
was a blow to the Giants.
Third-year cornerback Hosley got six starts in 2012,
collecting 40 tackles and one interception. He saw
plenty of action as the Giants fifth defensive back.
Head coach Tom Coughlin said the situation allows
for others to get on the field, like second-year safety
Cooper Taylor.
Taylor, a second-year player out of Richmond,
worked a lot in the offseason in the weight room to get
bigger and stronger. He says hes at 232 pounds, up
from the 225 he played at last year.
Coughlin added recent free agent signing Quintin
Demps will get the opportunity to gain more playing time
in the secondary, both as a safety and nickel back, as
well as a possible return man.
The Giants will hold OTAs next week for three
straight sessions.
Steelers rookie Archer getting up to speed
PITTSBURGH Dri Archer just kind of laughs. He
cant help it. Spend most of your life as the smallest
player on the football field and you get used to the inces-
sant questions about beating the odds.
Fear is not an option for the 5-8, 173-pound
Pittsburgh Steelers rookie. He doesnt worry about
how his slender frame will hold up to the rigors of the
NFL because it wouldnt do any good. Archer has been
playing football since he was in first grade, when he
would wrap flags around his waist imitate Hall-of-Fame
running back Barry Sanders.
The 22-year-old never met a tackle he couldnt walk
or better yet, sprint away from. Theres no reason
to think it will be any different as a professional.
ArcherS eye-popping 40-yard dash time of 4.26
seconds at the NFL combine earlier this spring was the
second-fastest in combine history.
Its that number and not the ones next to his
height and weight that leapt out to the Steelers.
Archer is just the latest attempt by the Steelers
to find a Swiss Army knife in the backfield. Pittsburgh
grabbed sprinter/running back Chris Rainey in the
fifth round of the 2012 draft. Rainey was ineffective
on the field and a problem off it, eventually getting cut
in January 2013 after being charged with slapping his
girlfriend.
There are no such character concerns with Archer,
who has quickly ingratiated himself with his teammates
no matter which meeting he happens to be in, whether
its with the running backs or the wide receivers.
Archer understands his unique skill set gives the
Steelers a speedy yin to the powerful yang of top run-
ning backs LeVeon Bell and LeGarrette Blount.
The Steelers also signed first-round draft
pick Ryan Shazier to a 4-year contract on
Thursday. Financial details were not disclosed.
Pittsburgh took Shazier with the 15th overall
pick after a standout career at Ohio State.
Ridley focused on eliminating fumbles
FOXBOROUGH, Mass. Fumbles plagued
Stevan Ridley even when the ball was dry. A steady rain
presents another challenge to the New England Patriots
running back.
It wasnt a problem for him Thursday.
The Patriots continued their organized team activi-
ties on a soggy day and Ridley gripped the ball as if his
job depended on it. It might if he keeps fumbling.
Ridley lost fumbles in three consecutive games last
season. After the third, in the first quarter against the
Denver Broncos on Nov. 24, he was benched for the
rest of New Englands 34-31 comeback win in overtime.
He lost a total of four fumbles last season leading to
three touchdowns and a field goal.
The third-round pick from LSU fumbled just once as
a rookie in 2011 but the Patriots recovered it. He lost two
of his four fumbles in 2012 before the problem escalated
last year. And his rushing production dropped from
1,263 yards and 12 touchdowns on 290 carries in 2012
to 773 yards and seven touchdowns on 178 attempts.
So hes concentrating on improving his overall focus
on every play.
LeGarrette Blount emerged as the top back late in
the season, rushing for 431 yards and eight touchdowns
in three straight games before both runners were shut
down in a 26-16 loss at Denver in the AFC champion-
ship game. Blount left for the Steelers as a free agent,
leaving Ridley, Shane Vereen and Brandon Bolden as
coach Bill Belichicks veteran backs.
Saints C Goodwin striving to win back his old job
METAIRIE, La. Jonathan Goodwin figures he
could a better center now than when he left New
Orleans after the 2010 season.
After all, he played in three straight NFC cham-
pionship games and one Super Bowl with San
Francisco during his time away.
Mentally, I am better, Goodwin said Thursday,
following his third offseason practice since he agreed
to a deal bringing him back to New Orleans this week.
What Saints coaches are eager to see now is how the
physical abilities of the 35-year-old Goodwin stack up against
the next generation of centers on New Orleans roster.
Even if Goodwin doesnt win back his old job, hes
confident he can help shore up an offensive line that
has seen significant turnover since he left for the 49ers
as a free agent.
Right guard Jahri Evans is the only starter remain-
ing from 2010.
Goodwins primary competition for a starting job is
second-year pro Tim Lelito, who saw limited action last
season at guard but now is being groomed as the Saints
center of the future if not the present.
The 6-3, 318-pound Goodwin has been a full-time
starter for six straight seasons.
The 6-4, 315-pound Lelito has just two career starts
both at guard in his one NFL season but coaches
say they like his potential.
Raiders sign 3rd-round pick G Gabe Jackson
ALAMEDA, Calif. The Oakland Raiders have
their entire draft class under contract after signing a
deal with third-round pick guard Gabe Jackson.
Jackson became the eighth draftee to sign when
he finalized his deal Thursday. Jackson was taken
81st overall out of Mississippi State and is expected to
compete for a starting job.
The Raiders also signed free agent receivers
David Gilreath and Rahsaan Vaughn and undrafted
free agent kicker/punter Michael Palardy.
Gilreath played three games with Pittsburgh in
2012 and set Big Ten records for kickoff returns (135)
and yards returning (3,025) at Wisconsin.
Vaughn spent time last season on the New York
Jets practice squad.
Oakland waived receivers Jared Green and Noel
Grigsby and punter Daniel Zychlinski.
Chiefs sign Anthony, Rogers, waive Broussard
KANSAS CITY, Mo. The Chiefs signed wide
receiver Deon Anthony and cornerback Justin Rogers
while waiving defensive lineman Risean Broussard on
Thursday as they finished the second week of voluntary
team workouts.
Anthony is attempting to make the switch from quar-
terback, which he played in college at Troy last season.
He should provide depth during the offseason while Kyle
Williams recovers from a knee injury and A.J. Jenkins
deals with a balky hamstring.
Rogers is a former seventh-round pick of Buffalo
who spent parts of last season with Houston and Miami.
Hes appeared in 43 career games, making 64 tackles
and three interceptions.
Broussard has missed the recent voluntary work-
outs because of a knee injury.
Bears sign Clausen to 1-year deal
CHICAGO The Chicago Bears have agreed to
a 1-year contract with former Notre Dame and Carolina
Panthers quarterback Jimmy Clausen.
The move was announced Thursday.
Clausen appeared in 13 games for Carolina from
2010 to 2013 after starring at Notre Dame. He made 10
starts as a rookie and threw for 1,558 yards with three
touchdowns and nine interceptions in a 2-14 season.
The Panthers drafted Cam Newton the following April.
Clausen was waived/injured last August.
Besides signing Clausen, the Bears waived line-
backer Lawrence Wilson.
Cardinals sign first-round pick Deone Bucannon
TEMPE, Ariz. The Arizona Cardinals signed first-
round pick Deone Bucannon to a 4-year deal Thursday.
The Cardinals selected the big-hitting strong safety
out of Washington State with the 27th overall selection
in last months draft after Arizona traded down from the
No. 20 spot, getting New Orleans first-round pick and a
third-round selection.
The contract is worth $7.7 million, including a
$3.9 million signing bonus to be paid in increments of
$981,000 over each of the four years. A total of $6.9
million is guaranteed because he gets the first three
years salary under NFL rules. The contract includes a
fifth year team option.
Bucannon is the highest drafted player from
Washington State since Seattle took cornerback
Marcus Trufant at No. 11 in 2003.
The Cardinals have now signed all seven of their
drafted players.
Julius Thomas isnt resting on breakout sea-
son
ENGLEWOOD, Colo. Pro Bowler Julius
Thomas resume now reads like this: one year of youth
football, one year of high school ball, one season in
college and, essentially, one full season in the NFL.
The 6-5, 255-pound late-bloomer became a bulls-
eye for some of Peyton Mannings biggest moments
last year, like when he caught Mannings 51st TD
throw that broke Tom Bradys single-season record,
one of a dozen touchdown passes he caught, break-
ing Hall-of-Famer Shannon Sharpes team record for
tight ends.
He was Mannings main target in the AFC
Championship, too, with eight receptions for 85 yards
a week after his two clutch third-down catches helped
ice Denvers win over San Diego.
All of this from a guy who entered the season
with just one career catch in his first two injury-filled
seasons.
Thomas isnt acting like a man whos arrived,
though, but like one who knows hes still a work in
progress and has to fine-tune his game.
Thomas doesnt look at film to relish his big
moments but to find the flaws.
Thomas has been keeping tabs on Jimmy
Grahams situation in New Orleans, where the Saints
star received the $7 million tight end franchise tag rath-
er than the $12.3 million wide receiver tag. Graham
contends that the frequency with which he lined up
split out from the line merits the more lucrative des-
ignation.
NFL Roundup
Associated Press
American League
East Division
W L Pct GB
Toronto 37 24 .607
Baltimore 30 27 .526 5
New York 30 29 .508 6
Boston 27 32 .458 9
Tampa Bay 23 38 .377 14
Central Division
W L Pct GB
Detroit 31 25 .554
Chicago 31 30 .508 2
Cleveland 30 30 .500 3
Minnesota 28 29 .491 3
Kansas City 29 31 .483 4
West Division
W L Pct GB
Oakland 37 23 .617
L Angeles 31 28 .525 5
Seattle 31 28 .525 5
Texas 29 30 .492 7
Houston 26 35 .426 11
___
Wednesdays Results
Seattle 2, Atlanta 0
Cleveland 7, Boston 4, 12 innings
Oakland 7, N.Y. Yankees 4
Toronto 8, Detroit 2
Miami 5, Tampa Bay 4
Baltimore 6, Texas 5
L.A. Angels 4, Houston 0
Minnesota 6, Milwaukee 4
St. Louis 5, Kansas City 2, 11 innings
Chicago White Sox 2, L.A. Dodgers 1
Thursdays Results
N.Y. Yankees 2, Oakland 1
Toronto 7, Detroit 3
Miami 11, Tampa Bay 6
Houston 8, L.A. Angels 5
Kansas City 3, St. Louis 2
Baltimore at Texas, 8:05 p.m.
Milwaukee at Minnesota, 8:10 p.m.
Todays Games
Oakland (Milone 3-3) at Baltimore
(W.Chen 6-2), 7:05 p.m.
St. Louis (Lynn 6-3) at Toronto (Stroman
2-0), 7:07 p.m.
Boston (R.De La Rosa 1-0) at Detroit
(Smyly 2-4), 7:08 p.m.
Seattle (C.Young 5-2) at Tampa Bay
(Bedard 2-4), 7:10 p.m.
Cleveland (Bauer 1-2) at Texas (Darvish
5-2), 8:05 p.m.
Houston (Keuchel 6-3) at Minnesota
(P.Hughes 6-1), 8:10 p.m.
N.Y. Yankees (Whitley 0-0) at Kansas
City (Guthrie 2-5), 8:10 p.m.
Chicago White Sox (Rienzo 4-2) at L.A.
Angels (Weaver 6-4), 10:05 p.m.
Saturdays Games
St. Louis at Toronto, 1:07 p.m.
Houston at Minnesota, 2:10 p.m.
Cleveland at Texas, 4:05 p.m.
Seattle at Tampa Bay, 4:10 p.m.
Boston at Detroit, 7:15 p.m.
N.Y. Yankees at Kansas City, 7:15 p.m.
Oakland at Baltimore, 7:15 p.m.
Chicago White Sox at L.A. Angels, 10:05
p.m.
Sundays Games
St. Louis at Toronto, 1:07 p.m.
Oakland at Baltimore, 1:35 p.m.
Seattle at Tampa Bay, 1:40 p.m.
Houston at Minnesota, 2:10 p.m.
N.Y. Yankees at Kansas City, 2:10 p.m.
Cleveland at Texas, 3:05 p.m.
Chicago White Sox at L.A. Angels, 3:35 p.m.
Boston at Detroit, 8:05 p.m.

National League
East Division
W L Pct GB
Atlanta 31 27 .534
Miami 32 28 .533
Washington 30 28 .517 1
New York 28 32 .467 4
Philadelphia 24 34 .414 7
Central Division
W L Pct GB
Milwaukee 35 25 .583
St. Louis 31 29 .517 4
Pittsburgh 28 31 .475 6
Cincinnati 27 31 .466 7
Chicago 23 34 .404 10
West Division
W L Pct GB
San Fran 39 21 .650
L Angeles 31 30 .508 8
Colorado 28 30 .483 10
San Diego 27 33 .450 12
Arizona 25 36 .410 14 1/2
___
Wednesdays Results
Seattle 2, Atlanta 0
San Diego 3, Pittsburgh 2
Washington 8, Philadelphia 4
Miami 5, Tampa Bay 4
San Francisco 3, Cincinnati 2
Chicago Cubs 5, N.Y. Mets 4
Minnesota 6, Milwaukee 4
St. Louis 5, Kansas City 2, 11 innings
Arizona 16, Colorado 8
Chicago White Sox 2, L.A. Dodgers 1
Thursdays Results
San Francisco 6, Cincinnati 1
Washington 4, Philadelphia 2
Miami 11, Tampa Bay 6
Chicago Cubs 7, N.Y. Mets 4
Kansas City 3, St. Louis 2
Milwaukee at Minnesota, 8:10 p.m.
Arizona at Colorado, 8:40 p.m.
Todays Games
Miami (Eovaldi 4-2) at Chicago Cubs
(Hammel 6-3), 4:05 p.m.
Milwaukee (Lohse 7-1) at Pittsburgh
(Cumpton 0-2), 7:05 p.m.
St. Louis (Lynn 6-3) at Toronto (Stroman
2-0), 7:07 p.m.
Philadelphia (Hamels 1-3) at Cincinnati
(Cueto 5-4), 7:10 p.m.
L.A. Dodgers (Ryu 6-2) at Colorado
(E.Butler 0-0), 8:40 p.m.
Atlanta (Teheran 5-3) at Arizona
(McCarthy 1-7), 9:40 p.m.
Washington (Roark 3-4) at San Diego
(T.Ross 6-4), 10:10 p.m.
N.Y. Mets (Niese 3-3) at San Francisco
(M.Cain 1-3), 10:15 p.m.
Saturdays Games
St. Louis at Toronto, 1:07 p.m.
Miami at Chicago Cubs, 4:05 p.m.
Milwaukee at Pittsburgh, 4:05 p.m.
L.A. Dodgers at Colorado, 4:10 p.m.
Philadelphia at Cincinnati, 4:10 p.m.
N.Y. Mets at San Francisco, 10:05 p.m.
Atlanta at Arizona, 10:10 p.m.
Washington at San Diego, 10:10 p.m.
Sundays Games
St. Louis at Toronto, 1:07 p.m.
Philadelphia at Cincinnati, 1:10 p.m.
Milwaukee at Pittsburgh, 1:35 p.m.
Miami at Chicago Cubs, 2:20 p.m.
N.Y. Mets at San Francisco, 4:05 p.m.
Atlanta at Arizona, 4:10 p.m.
L.A. Dodgers at Colorado, 4:10 p.m.
Washington at San Diego, 4:10 p.m.
MLB Glance
(Continued from page 6)
The lefty Helm walked the first two batters of the home
first but forced Pittman into a double play and forced
Drewes to ground out to end the threat.
It was just a situation like last year, Wharton explained
of Helms lack of control early on. Kids get in this venue
and tend to overgrip the baseball a little bit. Damian is just
a seasoned guy. Hes pitched in a lot of big games for us. It
was just a matter of Damian doing what Damian does and
thats settling down and pitching a phenomenal game.
Pittman was tossing a solid game of his own for the
Rams after allowing the early run and the Tinora bats final-
ly came alive in the home third. Junior catcher E.J. Kissel
walked with one out in the frame and scored on a Drewes
sacrifice fly to left field to tie the game at one.
The Knights answered the next frame when senior third
baseman Isaiah Simerman doubled and stole third on an
botched throw-down attempt from the catcher. Senior short-
stop Bryce Richardson singled home Simerman to return
the lead to Crestview, 2-1.
Simerman single-handedly gave the Knights another
run in the top of the sixth when he tripled and scored on a
passed ball to run the lead to 3-1.
I felt we swung the bats well. I thought we got some
key hits in key spots, and we bunted the ball well, contin-
ued Wharton.
Meanwhile, Helm was cruising on the mound and had
retired eight straight batters heading into the sixth inning.
Pittman and Drewes led the frame off with consecutive
singles, however, to return the momentum to Tinora. Reid
Renollet then advanced the runners with a sacrifice bunt.
Sophomore third baseman Dakota Stark brought Pittman
in to score with a sacrifice fly to right field, which moved
Drewes to third and set the table for the game-tying steal
of home plate.
We controlled the tempo really the whole game until
the sixth and we lost it a little bit. Thats what youve got
to do to win a state championship - control it all seven,
added Wharton.
The loss drops the Knights to 20-7 on the season and
ends a magical run which started at Huntington field last
spring.
When the string is over, well look back on things and
have a lot to be proud of. Im so proud of the kids and their
effort. We hung in and battled Theyre quality kids. Their
character is impeccable, Wharton said.
Simerman led the Knights at the plate in his final game
in red-white-and-blue. He went 3-for-3 with a double, a
triple and two runs scored. Helm helped his cause by going
2-for-3 with a triple. On the mound, Helm (7-2) went 6 2/3
innings, allowing four runs, three earned, while walking six
and striking out six.
Pittman (8-1) got the win, going all seven while allow-
ing three runs, two earned, while walking one and striking
out seven.
In total, seven seniors played their last game for the
Knights and will exit as probably the most prolific class in
program history.
These kids are gamers all the way to the end, Wharton
said of his seniors. Youre not going to replace kids like
that.
The win improves the Rams to 24-4 on the season. They
advance to play the winner between Newark Catholic (19-
7) and Berlin Center Western Reserve (19-5).
The Knights baseball team will be welcomed back to
Crestview today in the high school gym at 6 p.m. Fans are
invited to join in the celebration of a great season.
Scoring
Crestview 100 101 0- 3 8 1
Tinora 001 002 1- 4 6 1
Knights
www.delphosherald.com Friday, June 6, 2014 The Herald - 9
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SHOW 12 O'Clock Boys Californ. Boxing Penny Dreadful
2009 Hometown Content, listings by Zap2it
Sunday Evening June 8, 2014
8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00 12:30
WPTA/ABC 2014 NBA Finals NBA Local
WHIO/CBS Tony Awards Local
WLIO/NBC Miss USA 2014: Live Local Dateline NBC
WOHL/FOX Simpsons Fam. Guy Cosmos-Space Local
Cable Channels
A & E Duck Dynasty Duck D. Duck D. Duck D. Duck D. Duck D. Duck D. Duck Dynasty
AMC Shooter TURN Halt and Catch Fire Halt and Catch Fire TURN
ANIM Russian Yeti Finding Bigfoot Wildman Finding Bigfoot Wildman
BET Blue Hill Avenue Kingdom Come Paid Inspir.
BRAVO Housewives/Atl. Married to Medicine Housewives/Atl. Fashion Housewives/Atl. Medicine
CMT Swamp Pawn My Big Re My Big Re Party Down South Cops Rel. Cops Rel. Cops Rel. Cops Rel.
CNN Anthony Bourd. Anthony Bourd. Inside Man Anthony Bourd. Anthony Bourd.
COMEDY Men in Black II Tropic Thunder Tosh.0 Tosh.0 Amy Sch.
DISC Alaskan Bush People Alaskan Bush People Alaskan Bush Alaskan Bush People Alaskan Bush People
DISN Liv-Mad. Liv-Mad. Liv-Mad. Liv-Mad. Jessie Austin Jessie Good Luck Good Luck Good Luck
E! Bridesmaids Kardashian Escape Club Kardashian Escape Club
ESPN MLB Baseball SportsCenter SportCtr
ESPN2 College Baseball College Baseball
FAM Despicable Me Cloudy-Mtballs J. Osteen Airbrush
FOOD Guy's Grocery Games Food Network Star Big Tip Big Tip Cutthroat Kitchen Food Network Star
FX Wanderlust Wanderlust Babylon A.D.
HGTV Beach Beach Brother vs. Brother Hunters Hunt Intl Hunters Hunt Intl Brother vs. Brother
HIST Mountain Men Mountain Men The Hunt Top Gear Mountain Men
LIFE A Walk to Remember Drop Dead Diva Devious Maids A Walk to Remember
MTV Teen Mom Being Amber Being Maci 16 and Pregnant Catfish: The TV Show
NICK Full H'se Full H'se Full H'se Full H'se Full H'se Full H'se Friends Friends Friends
SCI XXX Casino Royale Vikingdom
SPIKE Bar Rescue Hungry Investors Bar Rescue Bar Rescue Hungry Investors
TBS Definitely, Maybe Definitely, Maybe
TCM Incred.-Limpet Anchors Aweigh Wizard-Oz
TLC Sister Wives Sister Wives Return to Amish Sister Wives Return to Amish
TNT Double Jeopardy Red Eye Domestic Disturbance
TOON King/Hill King/Hill Rick Burgers Burgers Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Robot Chicken
TRAV Mysteries-Museum Mysteries-Museum Secrets- Lege. Mysteries-Museum Mysteries-Museum
TV LAND Cosby Cosby Cosby Cosby The King of Queens King King King Jennifer
USA Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU NCIS: Los Angeles NCIS: Los Angeles
VH1 The Bodyguard Hollywood Exes Love, Hip Hop The Bodyguard
WGN Hulk Salem Salem
Premium Channels
HBO Enough Said Game of Thrones Veep Veep Last Week Game of Thrones Veep
MAX 2 Guns Enemy of the State Lingerie
SHOW Penny Dreadful Nurse Californ. Penny Dreadful Penny Dreadful Penny Dreadful
2009 Hometown Content, listings by Zap2it
Sunday Evening June 8, 2014
8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00 12:30
WPTA/ABC 2014 NBA Finals NBA Local
WHIO/CBS Tony Awards Local
WLIO/NBC Miss USA 2014: Live Local Dateline NBC
WOHL/FOX Simpsons Fam. Guy Cosmos-Space Local
Cable Channels
A & E Duck Dynasty Duck D. Duck D. Duck D. Duck D. Duck D. Duck D. Duck Dynasty
AMC Shooter TURN Halt and Catch Fire Halt and Catch Fire TURN
ANIM Russian Yeti Finding Bigfoot Wildman Finding Bigfoot Wildman
BET Blue Hill Avenue Kingdom Come Paid Inspir.
BRAVO Housewives/Atl. Married to Medicine Housewives/Atl. Fashion Housewives/Atl. Medicine
CMT Swamp Pawn My Big Re My Big Re Party Down South Cops Rel. Cops Rel. Cops Rel. Cops Rel.
CNN Anthony Bourd. Anthony Bourd. Inside Man Anthony Bourd. Anthony Bourd.
COMEDY Men in Black II Tropic Thunder Tosh.0 Tosh.0 Amy Sch.
DISC Alaskan Bush People Alaskan Bush People Alaskan Bush Alaskan Bush People Alaskan Bush People
DISN Liv-Mad. Liv-Mad. Liv-Mad. Liv-Mad. Jessie Austin Jessie Good Luck Good Luck Good Luck
E! Bridesmaids Kardashian Escape Club Kardashian Escape Club
ESPN MLB Baseball SportsCenter SportCtr
ESPN2 College Baseball College Baseball
FAM Despicable Me Cloudy-Mtballs J. Osteen Airbrush
FOOD Guy's Grocery Games Food Network Star Big Tip Big Tip Cutthroat Kitchen Food Network Star
FX Wanderlust Wanderlust Babylon A.D.
HGTV Beach Beach Brother vs. Brother Hunters Hunt Intl Hunters Hunt Intl Brother vs. Brother
HIST Mountain Men Mountain Men The Hunt Top Gear Mountain Men
LIFE A Walk to Remember Drop Dead Diva Devious Maids A Walk to Remember
MTV Teen Mom Being Amber Being Maci 16 and Pregnant Catfish: The TV Show
NICK Full H'se Full H'se Full H'se Full H'se Full H'se Full H'se Friends Friends Friends
SCI XXX Casino Royale Vikingdom
SPIKE Bar Rescue Hungry Investors Bar Rescue Bar Rescue Hungry Investors
TBS Definitely, Maybe Definitely, Maybe
TCM Incred.-Limpet Anchors Aweigh Wizard-Oz
TLC Sister Wives Sister Wives Return to Amish Sister Wives Return to Amish
TNT Double Jeopardy Red Eye Domestic Disturbance
TOON King/Hill King/Hill Rick Burgers Burgers Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Robot Chicken
TRAV Mysteries-Museum Mysteries-Museum Secrets- Lege. Mysteries-Museum Mysteries-Museum
TV LAND Cosby Cosby Cosby Cosby The King of Queens King King King Jennifer
USA Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU NCIS: Los Angeles NCIS: Los Angeles
VH1 The Bodyguard Hollywood Exes Love, Hip Hop The Bodyguard
WGN Hulk Salem Salem
Premium Channels
HBO Enough Said Game of Thrones Veep Veep Last Week Game of Thrones Veep
MAX 2 Guns Enemy of the State Lingerie
SHOW Penny Dreadful Nurse Californ. Penny Dreadful Penny Dreadful Penny Dreadful
2009 Hometown Content, listings by Zap2it
Tuesday Evening June 10, 2014
8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00 12:30
WPTA/ABC J. Kimmel NBA 2014 NBA Finals Local Jimmy Kimmel Live
WHIO/CBS NCIS NCIS: Los Angeles Person of Interest Local Late Show Letterman Ferguson
WLIO/NBC America's Got Talent The Night Shift Local Tonight Show Meyers
WOHL/FOX Riot I Wanna Marry Harry Local
Cable Channels
A & E Storage Storage Storage Storage Shipping Shipping Shipping Shipping Storage Storage
AMC The Mummy The Mummy Returns Freakshow Freakshow
ANIM Wild Russia Wild Russia Wild Russia Wild Russia Wild Russia
BET This Christmas Daddy's Little Girls Wendy Williams Show
BRAVO Housewives/Atl. Housewives/NYC The People's Couch Housewives/NYC Housewives/Atl.
CMT Kindergarten Cop Cops Rel. Cops Rel. Cops Rel. Cops Rel.
CNN Anderson Cooper 360 CNN Special Report Inside Man Anderson Cooper 360 CNN Special Report
COMEDY Jeff Dunham: Controlled Chaos Jeff Dunham: Spark of Insanity Daily Colbert At Midnig Tosh.0
DISC Deadliest Catch Deadliest Catch Siberian Cut Deadliest Catch Deadliest Catch Raw
DISN Lemonade Mouth Good Luck ANT Farm Jessie Shake It Good Luck Good Luck
E! Kardashian True Hollywood Story Escape Club Chelsea E! News Kardas
ESPN SportCtr March to Brazil Tomorrow Baseball Tonight SportsCenter
ESPN2 NFL Insiders 30 for 30 March to Brazil Olbermann Baseball Tonight
FAM Pretty Little Liars Chasing Life Pretty Little Liars The 700 Club Chasing Life
FOOD Chopped Chopped Chopped Chopped Chopped
FX Captain America-Avgr Fargo Fargo Fargo
HGTV Flip or F Flip or F Flip or F Flip or F Hunters Hunt Intl Flip or F Flip or F Flip or F Flip or F
HIST Pawn Pawn Top Gear The Hunt Top Gear Pawn Pawn
LIFE True Tori Little Women: LA True Tori Little Women: LA True Tori
MTV Faking It Faking It Faking It Awkward. Awkward. Faking It 9 Days and Nights Awkward. Faking It
NICK Full H'se Full H'se Full H'se Full H'se Full H'se Full H'se Friends Friends Friends
SCI Heroes of Cosplay Heroes of Cosplay Wil Whe. Wil Whe. Heroes of Cosplay Wil Whe. Wil Whe.
SPIKE Iron Man Gladiator
TBS Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Conan Holmes Conan
TCM Woman-Windw Scarlet Street Make Mine Mink
TLC 19 Kids and Counting A Duggar Leaves HomeThe Little Couple 19 Kids and Counting A Duggar Leaves Home
TNT Rizzoli & Isles Rizzoli & Isles Rizzoli & Isles Hawaii Five-0 Cold Justice
TOON King/Hill King/Hill Cleveland Cleveland Amer. Dad Amer. Dad Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Chicken Aqua Teen
TRAV Bizarre Foods Chowdow. Chowdow. Chowdow. Chowdow. Bizarre Foods Chowdow. Chowdow.
TV LAND Roseanne Boss Boss King King Cleveland Jennifer The King of Queens
USA Law & Order: SVU Royal Pains Playing Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Royal Pains
VH1 Hit the Floor Love, Hip Hop Men in Black Hit the Floor
WGN Funniest Home Videos Jurassic Park III Salem Salem
Premium Channels
HBO Fast & Furious 6 Game of Thrones Veep Veep Game of Thrones VICE Veep
MAX Kick-Ass 2 Con Air Banshee Lingerie Topless P
SHOW Penny Alex Cross Penny Dreadful Nurse Californ. Penny Dreadful
2009 Hometown Content, listings by Zap2it
Tuesday Evening June 10, 2014
8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00 12:30
WPTA/ABC J. Kimmel NBA 2014 NBA Finals Local Jimmy Kimmel Live
WHIO/CBS NCIS NCIS: Los Angeles Person of Interest Local Late Show Letterman Ferguson
WLIO/NBC America's Got Talent The Night Shift Local Tonight Show Meyers
WOHL/FOX Riot I Wanna Marry Harry Local
Cable Channels
A & E Storage Storage Storage Storage Shipping Shipping Shipping Shipping Storage Storage
AMC The Mummy The Mummy Returns Freakshow Freakshow
ANIM Wild Russia Wild Russia Wild Russia Wild Russia Wild Russia
BET This Christmas Daddy's Little Girls Wendy Williams Show
BRAVO Housewives/Atl. Housewives/NYC The People's Couch Housewives/NYC Housewives/Atl.
CMT Kindergarten Cop Cops Rel. Cops Rel. Cops Rel. Cops Rel.
CNN Anderson Cooper 360 CNN Special Report Inside Man Anderson Cooper 360 CNN Special Report
COMEDY Jeff Dunham: Controlled Chaos Jeff Dunham: Spark of Insanity Daily Colbert At Midnig Tosh.0
DISC Deadliest Catch Deadliest Catch Siberian Cut Deadliest Catch Deadliest Catch Raw
DISN Lemonade Mouth Good Luck ANT Farm Jessie Shake It Good Luck Good Luck
E! Kardashian True Hollywood Story Escape Club Chelsea E! News Kardas
ESPN SportCtr March to Brazil Tomorrow Baseball Tonight SportsCenter
ESPN2 NFL Insiders 30 for 30 March to Brazil Olbermann Baseball Tonight
FAM Pretty Little Liars Chasing Life Pretty Little Liars The 700 Club Chasing Life
FOOD Chopped Chopped Chopped Chopped Chopped
FX Captain America-Avgr Fargo Fargo Fargo
HGTV Flip or F Flip or F Flip or F Flip or F Hunters Hunt Intl Flip or F Flip or F Flip or F Flip or F
HIST Pawn Pawn Top Gear The Hunt Top Gear Pawn Pawn
LIFE True Tori Little Women: LA True Tori Little Women: LA True Tori
MTV Faking It Faking It Faking It Awkward. Awkward. Faking It 9 Days and Nights Awkward. Faking It
NICK Full H'se Full H'se Full H'se Full H'se Full H'se Full H'se Friends Friends Friends
SCI Heroes of Cosplay Heroes of Cosplay Wil Whe. Wil Whe. Heroes of Cosplay Wil Whe. Wil Whe.
SPIKE Iron Man Gladiator
TBS Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Conan Holmes Conan
TCM Woman-Windw Scarlet Street Make Mine Mink
TLC 19 Kids and Counting A Duggar Leaves HomeThe Little Couple 19 Kids and Counting A Duggar Leaves Home
TNT Rizzoli & Isles Rizzoli & Isles Rizzoli & Isles Hawaii Five-0 Cold Justice
TOON King/Hill King/Hill Cleveland Cleveland Amer. Dad Amer. Dad Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Chicken Aqua Teen
TRAV Bizarre Foods Chowdow. Chowdow. Chowdow. Chowdow. Bizarre Foods Chowdow. Chowdow.
TV LAND Roseanne Boss Boss King King Cleveland Jennifer The King of Queens
USA Law & Order: SVU Royal Pains Playing Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Royal Pains
VH1 Hit the Floor Love, Hip Hop Men in Black Hit the Floor
WGN Funniest Home Videos Jurassic Park III Salem Salem
Premium Channels
HBO Fast & Furious 6 Game of Thrones Veep Veep Game of Thrones VICE Veep
MAX Kick-Ass 2 Con Air Banshee Lingerie Topless P
SHOW Penny Alex Cross Penny Dreadful Nurse Californ. Penny Dreadful
2009 Hometown Content, listings by Zap2it
Saturday Evening June 7, 2014
8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00 12:30
WPTA/ABC Bet on Your Baby Sing Your Face Off Local
WHIO/CBS Blue Bloods Elementary 48 Hours Local
WLIO/NBC Stanley Cup The Blacklist Local Saturday Night Live
WOHL/FOX MLB Baseball Local Animation Domination Local
Cable Channels
A & E Criminal Minds Criminal Minds Criminal Minds Criminal Minds Criminal Minds
AMC Day-Tomorrow Halt and Catch Fire The Perfect Storm
ANIM My Cat From Hell My Tiny Terror Bad Dog! My Cat From Hell My Tiny Terror
BET Gridiron Gang Anaconda Waist Deep
BRAVO The Princess Diaries The Princess Diaries Bee Movie
CMT Movie Swamp Pawn My Big Redneck Famil Cops Rel. Cops Rel. Cops Rel. Cops Rel.
CNN The Sixties Anthony Bourd. Anthony Bourd. The Sixties Anthony Bourd.
COMEDY Talladega Nights: Tropic Thunder Men in Black II
DISC Wild Brazil:Fire Treehouse Masters Treehouse Masters Treehouse Masters Treehouse Masters
DISN Ramona and Beezus Lab Rats Kickin' I Austin Jessie ANT Farm Austin
E! Kardashian Kardashian Kardashian Kardashian Epic Movie
ESPN X Games SportsCenter SportsCenter
ESPN2 College Baseball College Baseball
FAM The Smurfs Hop Gnomeo and Juliet
FOOD Chopped Chopped Iron Chef America Chopped Chopped
FX Red Tails Red Tails
HGTV Property Brothers Property Brothers House Hunters Reno Hunters Hunt Intl Property Brothers
HIST D-Day in HD D-Day in HD D-Day in HD
LIFE Family That Preys Abducted: Carlina White Family That Preys
MTV Catfish: The TV Show Stomp the Yard Scary Movie 2
NICK Sam & Cat iCarly Sam & Cat Full H'se Full H'se Friends Friends Friends
SCI Lockout XXX Drive Angry
SPIKE Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops
TBS Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Deal With Young Adult
TCM On the Waterfront Rumble on the Docks The Mob
TLC Return to Amish Sex Sent Me to the E Strange Strange Sex Sent Me to the E Strange Strange
TNT The Da Vinci Code The Firm
TOON King/Hill King/Hill Amer. Dad Fam. Guy Dynamite Boondocks Boondocks Attack Bleach Space Dan
TRAV Ghost Adventures Ghost Adventures The Dead Files The Dead Files Ghost Adventures
TV LAND Who's the Boss? Boss Boss King King King King Raymond Raymond
USA Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam CSI: Crime Scene CSI: Crime Scene
VH1 Saturday Night Live The Break-Up Anger Management
WGN Funniest Home Videos Funniest Home Videos Funniest Home Videos Bones Bones
Premium Channels
HBO Enough Said Game of Thrones The Purge Enough Sd
MAX Constanti Bullet to the Head Kick-Ass 2
SHOW Penny Dreadful Penny Dreadful The Last Exorcism Part II Penny Dreadful Penny
2009 Hometown Content, listings by Zap2it
Saturday Evening June 7, 2014
8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00 12:30
WPTA/ABC Bet on Your Baby Sing Your Face Off Local
WHIO/CBS Blue Bloods Elementary 48 Hours Local
WLIO/NBC Stanley Cup The Blacklist Local Saturday Night Live
WOHL/FOX MLB Baseball Local Animation Domination Local
Cable Channels
A & E Criminal Minds Criminal Minds Criminal Minds Criminal Minds Criminal Minds
AMC Day-Tomorrow Halt and Catch Fire The Perfect Storm
ANIM My Cat From Hell My Tiny Terror Bad Dog! My Cat From Hell My Tiny Terror
BET Gridiron Gang Anaconda Waist Deep
BRAVO The Princess Diaries The Princess Diaries Bee Movie
CMT Movie Swamp Pawn My Big Redneck Famil Cops Rel. Cops Rel. Cops Rel. Cops Rel.
CNN The Sixties Anthony Bourd. Anthony Bourd. The Sixties Anthony Bourd.
COMEDY Talladega Nights: Tropic Thunder Men in Black II
DISC Wild Brazil:Fire Treehouse Masters Treehouse Masters Treehouse Masters Treehouse Masters
DISN Ramona and Beezus Lab Rats Kickin' I Austin Jessie ANT Farm Austin
E! Kardashian Kardashian Kardashian Kardashian Epic Movie
ESPN X Games SportsCenter SportsCenter
ESPN2 College Baseball College Baseball
FAM The Smurfs Hop Gnomeo and Juliet
FOOD Chopped Chopped Iron Chef America Chopped Chopped
FX Red Tails Red Tails
HGTV Property Brothers Property Brothers House Hunters Reno Hunters Hunt Intl Property Brothers
HIST D-Day in HD D-Day in HD D-Day in HD
LIFE Family That Preys Abducted: Carlina White Family That Preys
MTV Catfish: The TV Show Stomp the Yard Scary Movie 2
NICK Sam & Cat iCarly Sam & Cat Full H'se Full H'se Friends Friends Friends
SCI Lockout XXX Drive Angry
SPIKE Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops
TBS Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Deal With Young Adult
TCM On the Waterfront Rumble on the Docks The Mob
TLC Return to Amish Sex Sent Me to the E Strange Strange Sex Sent Me to the E Strange Strange
TNT The Da Vinci Code The Firm
TOON King/Hill King/Hill Amer. Dad Fam. Guy Dynamite Boondocks Boondocks Attack Bleach Space Dan
TRAV Ghost Adventures Ghost Adventures The Dead Files The Dead Files Ghost Adventures
TV LAND Who's the Boss? Boss Boss King King King King Raymond Raymond
USA Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam CSI: Crime Scene CSI: Crime Scene
VH1 Saturday Night Live The Break-Up Anger Management
WGN Funniest Home Videos Funniest Home Videos Funniest Home Videos Bones Bones
Premium Channels
HBO Enough Said Game of Thrones The Purge Enough Sd
MAX Constanti Bullet to the Head Kick-Ass 2
SHOW Penny Dreadful Penny Dreadful The Last Exorcism Part II Penny Dreadful Penny
2009 Hometown Content, listings by Zap2it
Monday Evening June 9, 2014
8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00 12:30
WPTA/ABC The Bachelorette Hillary Clinton Mistresses Local Jimmy Kimmel Live Nightline
WHIO/CBS 2 Broke G Mom Mike Mike 48 Hours Local Late Show Letterman Ferguson
WLIO/NBC Last Comic Standing Ninja Warrior Local Tonight Show Meyers
WOHL/FOX MasterChef 24: Live Another Day Local
Cable Channels
A & E Criminal Minds Criminal Minds Longmire Longmire Criminal Minds
AMC The Matrix The Matrix Reloaded Matrix Revol.
ANIM Bigfoot Wildman Wildman Wildman Wildman Wildman Wildman Wildman Wildman Wildman
BET Deliver Us From Eva Barbershop Wendy Williams Show
BRAVO Housewives/OC Housewives/OC Ladies of London Housewives/OC Ladies of London
CMT Country Strong Cops Rel. Cops Rel. Cops Rel. Cops Rel.
CNN Anderson Cooper 360 Anderson Cooper 360 CNN Tonight Anderson Cooper 360 Anderson Cooper 360
COMEDY Futurama Futurama South Pk South Pk South Pk South Pk Daily Colbert At Midnig South Pk
DISC Fast N' Loud Vegas Rat Rods BikerLive Fast N' Loud Fast N' Loud
DISN Cloud 9 Austin Good Luck ANT Farm Jessie Shake It Good Luck Good Luck
E! E! News The Soup Escape Club Kardashian Chelsea E! News
ESPN MLB Baseball Baseball Tonight SportsCenter SportsCenter
ESPN2 College Baseball NFL Live Olbermann Baseball Tonight
FAM Despicable Me Cloudy-Mtballs The 700 Club Prince Prince
FOOD Rewrapped Unwrapped Cutthroat Kitchen Mystery D Mystery D Diners Diners Cutthroat Kitchen
FX 21 Jump Street Louie Louie
HGTV Love It or List It Love It or List It Hunters Hunt Intl Love It or List It Love It or List It
HIST Swamp People Swamp People Big Rig Big Rig Swamp People Swamp People
LIFE Hoarders Hoarders Little Women: LA Hoarders Hoarders
MTV 16 and Pregnant 16 and Pregnant 16 and Pregnant Teen Mom
NICK Awesome Full H'se Full H'se Full H'se Full H'se Full H'se Friends Friends Friends
SCI Casino Royale Adjustment Bureau Lost City Raiders
SPIKE Walking Tall The Rundown G.I. Joe: Cobra
TBS Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Big Bang Big Bang Conan Holmes Conan
TCM Robin and Marian Camelot
TLC Untold Stories of ER Sex Sent Me to the E Sex, Lies and Zumba Sex Sent Me to the E Sex, Lies and Zumba
TNT Major Crimes Major Crimes Murder in the First Major Crimes Murder in the First
TOON King/Hill King/Hill Cleveland Cleveland Fam. Guy Boondocks Amer. Dad Fam. Guy Chicken Aqua Teen
TRAV Bizarre Foods Bizarre Foods Hotel Impossible Bizarre Foods Bizarre Foods
TV LAND I Love Lucy Boss Boss King King King King Hot in Cleveland
USA WWE Monday Night RAW The Mechanic
VH1 Love, Hip Hop Hit the Floor Love, Hip Hop Hit the Floor Love, Hip Hop
WGN Funniest Home Videos Funniest Home Videos Funniest Home Videos Salem Salem
Premium Channels
HBO Way Back Last Week Remembering R.I.P.D. Game of Thrones Veep
MAX Two for the Money South Park: Bigger Banshee
SHOW Years of Living Penny Dreadful Nurse Californ. Penny Dreadful Nurse Californ.
2009 Hometown Content, listings by Zap2it
Monday Evening June 9, 2014
8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00 12:30
WPTA/ABC The Bachelorette Hillary Clinton Mistresses Local Jimmy Kimmel Live Nightline
WHIO/CBS 2 Broke G Mom Mike Mike 48 Hours Local Late Show Letterman Ferguson
WLIO/NBC Last Comic Standing Ninja Warrior Local Tonight Show Meyers
WOHL/FOX MasterChef 24: Live Another Day Local
Cable Channels
A & E Criminal Minds Criminal Minds Longmire Longmire Criminal Minds
AMC The Matrix The Matrix Reloaded Matrix Revol.
ANIM Bigfoot Wildman Wildman Wildman Wildman Wildman Wildman Wildman Wildman Wildman
BET Deliver Us From Eva Barbershop Wendy Williams Show
BRAVO Housewives/OC Housewives/OC Ladies of London Housewives/OC Ladies of London
CMT Country Strong Cops Rel. Cops Rel. Cops Rel. Cops Rel.
CNN Anderson Cooper 360 Anderson Cooper 360 CNN Tonight Anderson Cooper 360 Anderson Cooper 360
COMEDY Futurama Futurama South Pk South Pk South Pk South Pk Daily Colbert At Midnig South Pk
DISC Fast N' Loud Vegas Rat Rods BikerLive Fast N' Loud Fast N' Loud
DISN Cloud 9 Austin Good Luck ANT Farm Jessie Shake It Good Luck Good Luck
E! E! News The Soup Escape Club Kardashian Chelsea E! News
ESPN MLB Baseball Baseball Tonight SportsCenter SportsCenter
ESPN2 College Baseball NFL Live Olbermann Baseball Tonight
FAM Despicable Me Cloudy-Mtballs The 700 Club Prince Prince
FOOD Rewrapped Unwrapped Cutthroat Kitchen Mystery D Mystery D Diners Diners Cutthroat Kitchen
FX 21 Jump Street Louie Louie
HGTV Love It or List It Love It or List It Hunters Hunt Intl Love It or List It Love It or List It
HIST Swamp People Swamp People Big Rig Big Rig Swamp People Swamp People
LIFE Hoarders Hoarders Little Women: LA Hoarders Hoarders
MTV 16 and Pregnant 16 and Pregnant 16 and Pregnant Teen Mom
NICK Awesome Full H'se Full H'se Full H'se Full H'se Full H'se Friends Friends Friends
SCI Casino Royale Adjustment Bureau Lost City Raiders
SPIKE Walking Tall The Rundown G.I. Joe: Cobra
TBS Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Big Bang Big Bang Conan Holmes Conan
TCM Robin and Marian Camelot
TLC Untold Stories of ER Sex Sent Me to the E Sex, Lies and Zumba Sex Sent Me to the E Sex, Lies and Zumba
TNT Major Crimes Major Crimes Murder in the First Major Crimes Murder in the First
TOON King/Hill King/Hill Cleveland Cleveland Fam. Guy Boondocks Amer. Dad Fam. Guy Chicken Aqua Teen
TRAV Bizarre Foods Bizarre Foods Hotel Impossible Bizarre Foods Bizarre Foods
TV LAND I Love Lucy Boss Boss King King King King Hot in Cleveland
USA WWE Monday Night RAW The Mechanic
VH1 Love, Hip Hop Hit the Floor Love, Hip Hop Hit the Floor Love, Hip Hop
WGN Funniest Home Videos Funniest Home Videos Funniest Home Videos Salem Salem
Premium Channels
HBO Way Back Last Week Remembering R.I.P.D. Game of Thrones Veep
MAX Two for the Money South Park: Bigger Banshee
SHOW Years of Living Penny Dreadful Nurse Californ. Penny Dreadful Nurse Californ.
2009 Hometown Content, listings by Zap2it
Wednesday Evening June 11, 2014
8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00 12:30
WPTA/ABC Middle Goldbergs Mod Fam Goldbergs Motive Local Jimmy Kimmel Live Nightline
WHIO/CBS Undercover Boss Criminal Minds CSI: Crime Scene Local Late Show Letterman Ferguson
WLIO/NBC Fisher Fisher People vs. O.J. Local Tonight Show Meyers
WOHL/FOX So You Think Local
Cable Channels
A & E Duck D. Duck D. Duck Dynasty Duck D. Big Smo Big Smo Duck D. Duck D. Duck D.
AMC 300 Eragon
ANIM Treehouse Treehouse Masters Treehouse Treehouse Treehouse Masters
BET Get Rich or Die The Message The Message Wendy Williams Show
BRAVO Million Dollar Million Dollar Untying Million Dollar Housewives/OC Untying
CMT Flicka Cops Rel. Cops Rel. Cops Rel. Cops Rel. Cops Rel.
CNN Anderson Cooper 360 Anthony Bourd. CNN Tonight Anderson Cooper 360 Anthony Bourd.
COMEDY Key Key South Pk South Pk South Pk South Pk Daily Colbert At Midnig South Pk
DISC Dual Survival Dual Survival Dual Survival Dual Survival Dual Survival
DISN Tinker Bell and the Lost Austin Good Luck ANT Farm Jessie Shake It Stevens Lizzie
E! E! News Kardashian The Soup The Soup Chelsea E! News Chelsea
ESPN MLB Baseball Baseball Tonight SportsCenter SportsCenter
ESPN2 Inside March to Brazil Inside MLS Soccer World Cup Preview
FAM Melissa Daddy Chasing Life Melissa Daddy The 700 Club Daddy Daddy
FOOD Restaurant Stakeout Restaurant Stakeout Restaurant: Im. Restaurant: Im. Restaurant Stakeout
FX Train Dragon Train Dragon Puss in Boots
HGTV Property Brothers Property Brothers Hunters Hunt Intl Brother vs. Brother Property Brothers
HIST American Pickers American Pickers American Pickers American Pickers American Pickers
LIFE Little Women: LA Little Women: LA Little Women: LA Celebrity Wife Swap Little Women: LA
MTV Catfish: The TV Show Catfish: The TV Show Catfish: The TV Show True Life Catfish: The TV Show
NICK Full H'se Full H'se Full H'se Full H'se Full H'se Full H'se Friends Friends Friends
SCI Paul Splice Isa
SPIKE Wrath of the Titans Guys Choice 2014 Guys Choice 2014
TBS Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Conan Holmes Conan
TCM Ride-High Ctry Deadly Comp. The Wild Bunch
TLC The Little Couple Couple Couple The Little Couple Couple Couple The Little Couple
TNT Castle Castle Castle Hawaii Five-0 Cold Justice
TOON King/Hill King/Hill Cleveland Cleveland Amer. Dad Amer. Dad Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Chicken Aqua Teen
TRAV Bizarre Foods Trip Flip Trip Flip Baggage B Baggage B Food Paradise Trip Flip Trip Flip
TV LAND Roseanne Roseanne Raymond Raymond Cleveland Jennifer Cleveland Jennifer King King
USA Law & Order: SVU Suits Graceland Mod Fam Mod Fam Suits
VH1 Men in Black Hollywood Exes La La Marry Love, Hip Hop Hollywood Exes
WGN Funniest Home Videos How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met
Premium Channels
HBO The Incre Veep Veep Enough Said Real Time, Bill Last Week Thrones
MAX Now You See Me Constantine Banshee
SHOW Penny Dreadful Jim Rome on Showtime Californ. Nurse Jim Rome on Showtime Years of Living
2009 Hometown Content, listings by Zap2it
Wednesday Evening June 11, 2014
8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00 12:30
WPTA/ABC Middle Goldbergs Mod Fam Goldbergs Motive Local Jimmy Kimmel Live Nightline
WHIO/CBS Undercover Boss Criminal Minds CSI: Crime Scene Local Late Show Letterman Ferguson
WLIO/NBC Fisher Fisher People vs. O.J. Local Tonight Show Meyers
WOHL/FOX So You Think Local
Cable Channels
A & E Duck D. Duck D. Duck Dynasty Duck D. Big Smo Big Smo Duck D. Duck D. Duck D.
AMC 300 Eragon
ANIM Treehouse Treehouse Masters Treehouse Treehouse Treehouse Masters
BET Get Rich or Die The Message The Message Wendy Williams Show
BRAVO Million Dollar Million Dollar Untying Million Dollar Housewives/OC Untying
CMT Flicka Cops Rel. Cops Rel. Cops Rel. Cops Rel. Cops Rel.
CNN Anderson Cooper 360 Anthony Bourd. CNN Tonight Anderson Cooper 360 Anthony Bourd.
COMEDY Key Key South Pk South Pk South Pk South Pk Daily Colbert At Midnig South Pk
DISC Dual Survival Dual Survival Dual Survival Dual Survival Dual Survival
DISN Tinker Bell and the Lost Austin Good Luck ANT Farm Jessie Shake It Stevens Lizzie
E! E! News Kardashian The Soup The Soup Chelsea E! News Chelsea
ESPN MLB Baseball Baseball Tonight SportsCenter SportsCenter
ESPN2 Inside March to Brazil Inside MLS Soccer World Cup Preview
FAM Melissa Daddy Chasing Life Melissa Daddy The 700 Club Daddy Daddy
FOOD Restaurant Stakeout Restaurant Stakeout Restaurant: Im. Restaurant: Im. Restaurant Stakeout
FX Train Dragon Train Dragon Puss in Boots
HGTV Property Brothers Property Brothers Hunters Hunt Intl Brother vs. Brother Property Brothers
HIST American Pickers American Pickers American Pickers American Pickers American Pickers
LIFE Little Women: LA Little Women: LA Little Women: LA Celebrity Wife Swap Little Women: LA
MTV Catfish: The TV Show Catfish: The TV Show Catfish: The TV Show True Life Catfish: The TV Show
NICK Full H'se Full H'se Full H'se Full H'se Full H'se Full H'se Friends Friends Friends
SCI Paul Splice Isa
SPIKE Wrath of the Titans Guys Choice 2014 Guys Choice 2014
TBS Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Conan Holmes Conan
TCM Ride-High Ctry Deadly Comp. The Wild Bunch
TLC The Little Couple Couple Couple The Little Couple Couple Couple The Little Couple
TNT Castle Castle Castle Hawaii Five-0 Cold Justice
TOON King/Hill King/Hill Cleveland Cleveland Amer. Dad Amer. Dad Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Chicken Aqua Teen
TRAV Bizarre Foods Trip Flip Trip Flip Baggage B Baggage B Food Paradise Trip Flip Trip Flip
TV LAND Roseanne Roseanne Raymond Raymond Cleveland Jennifer Cleveland Jennifer King King
USA Law & Order: SVU Suits Graceland Mod Fam Mod Fam Suits
VH1 Men in Black Hollywood Exes La La Marry Love, Hip Hop Hollywood Exes
WGN Funniest Home Videos How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met
Premium Channels
HBO The Incre Veep Veep Enough Said Real Time, Bill Last Week Thrones
MAX Now You See Me Constantine Banshee
SHOW Penny Dreadful Jim Rome on Showtime Californ. Nurse Jim Rome on Showtime Years of Living
2009 Hometown Content, listings by Zap2it
Thursday Evening June 12, 2014
8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00 12:30
WPTA/ABC J. Kimmel NBA 2014 NBA Finals Local Jimmy Kimmel Live
WHIO/CBS Big Bang Mom Two Men Millers Elementary Local Late Show Letterman Ferguson
WLIO/NBC Hollywood Game Night Undate Undate Last Comic Standing Local Tonight Show Meyers
WOHL/FOX Hell's Kitchen Gang Related Local
Cable Channels
A & E The First 48 The First 48 The First 48 The First 48 The First 48
AMC National Lamp. Caddyshack Halt and Catch Fire
ANIM Last Frontier North Woods Law North Woods North Woods Law North Woods
BET Why Did I Get Black Coffee Wendy Williams Show
BRAVO To Be Announced Housewives/Atl. TBA Married to Medicine Housewives/Atl. OC
CMT Party Down South Party Down South Party Down South Party Down South Cops Rel. Cops Rel.
CNN Anderson Cooper 360 The Sixties Anderson Cooper 360 The Sixties
COMEDY Tosh.0 Tosh.0 Tosh.0 The Comedy Central Roast Daily Colbert At Midnig Tosh.0
DISC Alaskan Bush People Alaskan Bush People Alaskan Bush People Alaskan Bush People Alaskan Bush People
DISN 16 Wishes Austin Good Luck ANT Farm Jessie Shake It Good Luck Good Luck
E! Escape Club Kardashian Kardashian Chelsea E! News Kardas
ESPN U.S. Open Golf SportsCenter
ESPN2 World Cup ESPN FC Baseball Tonight Olbermann SportsCenter
FAM Zookeeper Accepted The 700 Club Prince Prince
FOOD Chopped Chopped Canada Food Court Wars Diners Diners Chopped Canada
FX Wanderlust Wanderlust Radio
HGTV Rehab Rehab Fixer Upper Hunters Hunt Intl Fixer Upper Fixer Upper
HIST Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn American American American American Pawn Pawn
LIFE Daughter Night Zoe Gone Daughter Night
MTV Ridic. Ridic. Catfish: The TV Show The Challenge: Free Challenge Scary Movie 3
NICK Instant See Dad Full H'se Full H'se Full H'se Full H'se Friends Friends Friends
SCI The Astronaut's Wife The Invasion Red Planet
SPIKE Cops Cops iMPACT Wrestling Cops Cops Jail Jail
TBS Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Conan Holmes Conan
TCM Magnificent All Heaven
TLC Extreme Extreme Extreme Extreme Extreme Extreme Extreme Cheapskates Extreme Extreme
TNT Castle Castle Castle Murder in the First Cold Justice
TOON King/Hill King/Hill Cleveland Cleveland Amer. Dad Amer. Dad Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Loiter The Eric
TRAV Bizarre Foods Bizarre Foods Hotel Impossible Bizarre Foods Bizarre Foods
TV LAND The Brady Bunch Boss Boss King King King King Everybody-Raymond
USA Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam
VH1 SNL in the 2000s Rocky IV The Break-Up
WGN MLB Baseball Funniest Home Videos Funniest Home Videos
Premium Channels
HBO Rise-Guardians Veep Veep Game of Thrones Cathouse: Menage VICE Gangster
MAX Batman Dark Knight Banshee
SHOW Deep Impact Penny Dreadful Teller Californ. Nurse Sunlight
2009 Hometown Content, listings by Zap2it
Thursday Evening June 12, 2014
8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00 12:30
WPTA/ABC J. Kimmel NBA 2014 NBA Finals Local Jimmy Kimmel Live
WHIO/CBS Big Bang Mom Two Men Millers Elementary Local Late Show Letterman Ferguson
WLIO/NBC Hollywood Game Night Undate Undate Last Comic Standing Local Tonight Show Meyers
WOHL/FOX Hell's Kitchen Gang Related Local
Cable Channels
A & E The First 48 The First 48 The First 48 The First 48 The First 48
AMC National Lamp. Caddyshack Halt and Catch Fire
ANIM Last Frontier North Woods Law North Woods North Woods Law North Woods
BET Why Did I Get Black Coffee Wendy Williams Show
BRAVO To Be Announced Housewives/Atl. TBA Married to Medicine Housewives/Atl. OC
CMT Party Down South Party Down South Party Down South Party Down South Cops Rel. Cops Rel.
CNN Anderson Cooper 360 The Sixties Anderson Cooper 360 The Sixties
COMEDY Tosh.0 Tosh.0 Tosh.0 The Comedy Central Roast Daily Colbert At Midnig Tosh.0
DISC Alaskan Bush People Alaskan Bush People Alaskan Bush People Alaskan Bush People Alaskan Bush People
DISN 16 Wishes Austin Good Luck ANT Farm Jessie Shake It Good Luck Good Luck
E! Escape Club Kardashian Kardashian Chelsea E! News Kardas
ESPN U.S. Open Golf SportsCenter
ESPN2 World Cup ESPN FC Baseball Tonight Olbermann SportsCenter
FAM Zookeeper Accepted The 700 Club Prince Prince
FOOD Chopped Chopped Canada Food Court Wars Diners Diners Chopped Canada
FX Wanderlust Wanderlust Radio
HGTV Rehab Rehab Fixer Upper Hunters Hunt Intl Fixer Upper Fixer Upper
HIST Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn American American American American Pawn Pawn
LIFE Daughter Night Zoe Gone Daughter Night
MTV Ridic. Ridic. Catfish: The TV Show The Challenge: Free Challenge Scary Movie 3
NICK Instant See Dad Full H'se Full H'se Full H'se Full H'se Friends Friends Friends
SCI The Astronaut's Wife The Invasion Red Planet
SPIKE Cops Cops iMPACT Wrestling Cops Cops Jail Jail
TBS Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Conan Holmes Conan
TCM Magnificent All Heaven
TLC Extreme Extreme Extreme Extreme Extreme Extreme Extreme Cheapskates Extreme Extreme
TNT Castle Castle Castle Murder in the First Cold Justice
TOON King/Hill King/Hill Cleveland Cleveland Amer. Dad Amer. Dad Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Loiter The Eric
TRAV Bizarre Foods Bizarre Foods Hotel Impossible Bizarre Foods Bizarre Foods
TV LAND The Brady Bunch Boss Boss King King King King Everybody-Raymond
USA Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam
VH1 SNL in the 2000s Rocky IV The Break-Up
WGN MLB Baseball Funniest Home Videos Funniest Home Videos
Premium Channels
HBO Rise-Guardians Veep Veep Game of Thrones Cathouse: Menage VICE Gangster
MAX Batman Dark Knight Banshee
SHOW Deep Impact Penny Dreadful Teller Californ. Nurse Sunlight
2009 Hometown Content, listings by Zap2it
Delphos Herald
TV
Listings
Friday, June 6 to Thursday, June 12, 2014
PBS
PBS
PBS
PBS
PBS
PBS
PBS
WBGU
WBGU
WBGU
WBGU
WBGU
WBGU
WBGU
50s & 60s Party Songs | The Big Band Years
Dominick Labino The Fragile Art | Great Performances - Steve Martin & the Steep Canyon Rangers
Daniel ODonnell Stand by Me | Inside Foyles War | Austin City Limits - Tim McGraw
Antiques Roadshow Brazil w/Michael Palin | Inside Foyles War
Made in America - Lima Locomotive Works | Ed Sullivans Rock and Roll Classics | Americas Wild West
Ed Sullivans Rock and Roll Classics | Rock, Pop & Doo Wop (My Music)
WBGU Cooks: Brazil w/Michael Palin |Brazil w/Michael Palin | Happy
10 The Herald Friday, June 6, 2014 www.delphosherald.com
HERALD DELPHOS
THE
Telling The Tri-Countys Story Since 1869
Classifieds
To place an ad phone 419-695-0015 ext. 122
www.delphosherald.com
100 ANNOUNCEMENTS
105 Announcements
110 Card Of Thanks
115 Entertainment
120 In Memoriam
125 Lost And Found
130 Prayers
135 School/Instructions
140 Happy Ads
145 Ride Share
200 EMPLOYMENT
205 Business Opportunities
210 Childcare
215 Domestic
220 Elderly Home Care
225 Employment Services
230 Farm And Agriculture
235 General
240 Healthcare
245 Manufacturing/Trade
250 Office/Clerical
255 Professional
260 Restaurant
265 Retail
270 Sales and Marketing
275 Situation Wanted
280 Transportation
300 REAL ESTATE/RENTAL
305 Apartment/Duplex
310 Commercial/Industrial
315 Condos
320 House
325 Mobile Homes
330 Office Space
335 Room
340 Warehouse/Storage
345 Vacations
350 Wanted To Rent
355 Farmhouses For Rent
360 Roommates Wanted
400 REAL ESTATE/FOR SALE
405 Acreage and Lots
410 Commercial
415 Condos
420 Farms
425 Houses
430 Mobile Homes/
Manufactured Homes
435 Vacation Property
440 Want To Buy
500 MERCHANDISE
505 Antiques and Collectibles
510 Appliances
515 Auctions
520 Building Materials
525 Computer/Electric/Office
530 Events
535 Farm Supplies and Equipment
540 Feed/Grain
545 Firewood/Fuel
550 Flea Markets/Bazaars
555 Garage Sales
560 Home Furnishings
565 Horses, Tack and Equipment
570 Lawn and Garden
575 Livestock
577 Miscellaneous
580 Musical Instruments
582 Pet in Memoriam
583 Pets and Supplies
585 Produce
586 Sports and Recreation
588 Tickets
590 Tool and Machinery
592 Want To Buy
593 Good Thing To Eat
595 Hay
597 Storage Buildings
600 SERVICES
605 Auction
610 Automotive
615 Business Services
620 Childcare
625 Construction
630 Entertainment
635 Farm Services
640 Financial
645 Hauling
650 Health/Beauty
655 Home Repair/Remodeling
660 Home Service
665 Lawn, Garden, Landscaping
670 Miscellaneous
675 Pet Care
680 Snow Removal
685 Travel
690 Computer/Electric/Office
695 Electrical
700 Painting
705 Plumbing
710 Roofing/Gutters/Siding
715 Blacktop/Cement
720 Handyman
725 Elder Care
800 TRANSPORTATION
805 Auto
810 Auto Parts and Accessories
815 Automobile Loans
820 Automobile Shows/Events
825 Aviations
830 Boats/Motors/Equipment
835 Campers/Motor Homes
840 Classic Cars
845 Commercial
850 Motorcycles/Mopeds
855 Off-Road Vehicles
860 Recreational Vehicles
865 Rental and Leasing
870 Snowmobiles
875 Storage
880 SUVs
885 Trailers
890 Trucks
895 Vans/Minivans
899 Want To Buy
925 Legal Notices
950 Seasonal
953 Free & Low Priced
670 Miscellaneous
SAFE &
SOUND
Security Fence
DELPHOS
SELF-STORAGE
Pass Code Lighted Lot
Affordable 2 Locations
Why settle for less?
419-692-6336
419-339-0110
Fabrication & Welding Inc.
TRUCKS, TRAILERS
FARM MACHINERY
RAILINGS & METAL GATES
CARBON STEEL
STAINLESS STEEL
ALUMINUM
Larry McClure
5745 Redd Rd., Delphos
Fabrication & Welding Inc.
Quality
GENERAL REPAIR
SPECIAL BUILT PRODUCTS
700 Painting
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
715 Blacktop/Cement
40 CUSTOM COLORS OF
SEAL COAT AVAILABLE
RESIDENTIAL
DRI VEWAYS
COMMERCIAL
PARKING LOTS
CONCRETE
SE ALI NG
ASPHALT SEAL
COATING
CUSTOM LINE
S T R I P I N G
567.204.1427
FULLY INSURED
OUR PRICES WILL NOT BE BEAT!
A Star-Seal Preferred
Contractor
665
Lawn, Garden,
Landscaping
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
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
COMING SOON!
STRAWBERRIES
AVAILABLE NOW:
TENNESSEE TOMATOES
SWEET CORN, WATERMELON
& GEORGIA PEACHES
9am-5pm Daily; Sunday 11am-4pm
9557 State Route 66
Delphos, OH 45833
419-692-5749
419-234-6566
655
Home Repair
and Remodel
Hohlbeins
Ph. 419-339-4938
or 419-230-8128
Home
Improvement
Windows,
Doors, Siding,
Roofing,
Sunrooms,
Pole Buildings,
Garages
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
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
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
AT YOUR
S
ervice
dddddd
Find a Job. Post a Job.
419-695-0015
DETAIL PERSONNEL AND
TECHNICIAN NEEDED
Immediate full-time detail personnel and full-
time technician positions available.
Will train if necessary.
1248 S. Shannon St. Van Wert, Ohio
Call 419.238.0125. Ask for Tony Fox.
Pay based on experience
401(k) available
Medical benefts
Paid vacation
A friendly family atmosphere
Knueve & Sons, Inc.
is experiencing growth and has a
HVAC Installer Opportunity. Previ-
ous HVAC installation experience is a
plus. Also knowledge in sheet metal
and duct board installation, installing
furnaces, air conditioners, heat pumps
and geothermal equipment. Electri-
cal and construction experience is
a plus. We offer competitive wages,
health insurance, retirement plan, paid
holidays, paid vacations, and uniforms.
Send resumes to
service@knueve.com. or
Knueve & Sons Inc.
Attn JFK; PO Box 265
Kalida, Ohio 45853.
00093976
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
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
GLM TRANSPORT hir-
ing for our growing fleet.
$700 new driver sign on
bonus. Safety, perform-
ance and referral bonus
programs. 6 paid Holi-
days, 1 week Vacation
after 1 yr. 401(k) and di-
rect deposit. Home on
we e k e n d s . Ca l l
800-957-5442 for details.
www.GLMTransport.com
IMMEDIATE INDUS-
TRIAL Employment, Ot-
toville area. 1-2-3 Shifts.
No Felonies, H.S. Di-
ploma/GED required.
Pre-Employment Drug
Screen and Background
Check required. Apply at
Custom Staffing, 505 W.
Market St . , Li ma,
Mon-Fri 8am-4pm. Must
have valid D.L. and SS
Card.
235 Help Wanted
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
240 Healthcare
PART-TIME/FULL-TIME
NURSING ASSISTANT
POSITIONS
OPEN
Van Wert Manor is
looking for state
tested nursing
assistants (STNAs)
for full- and part-
time positions. If
interested, please
apply in person at
Van Wert Manor
160 Fox Road,
Van Wert, OH 45891
EOE
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
NON-SUBSIDIZED,
SENIOR-CITIZEN
house. 1-1/2 BR, stove,
refrigerator, and garage.
Non-smoking, no pets.
$450, call 419-692-6646
SEVERAL MOBI LE
Homes/House for rent.
View homes online at
www.ulmshomes.com or
inquire at 419-692-3951
555
Garage Sales/
Yard Sales
16413 SR190 Ft. Jen-
nings. Lots of Precious
Moments, dresser w/mir-
ror, guitars, wedding
gown, girls clothes 6-8,
exerci se equi pment,
more! Fri-Sat, 6/6-6/7,
9am-6pm.
409 WAYNE St., Thurs
6-8pm, Fri. 9am-5pm,
Sat. 9am-1pm. Boys
clothes 3T-5/6, womens
& mens clothes, Nin-
tendo DS games, ellipti-
cal, jogging stroller, lots
of toys & misc.
529 E. Jackson Street
Childrens clothes, car
seat, swing, shoes. Adult
cl ot hes $. 50-$1. 00.
Coat s $1. 00-$5. 00.
Nurse uniforms, mens
sui ts, dress pants,
dishes, microwaves, gar-
den rototiller, free Mary
Kay samples. Fri-Sat,
9am-7pm
6565 PELTIER Road,
Delphos. Thurs. 5-8pm,
Fri. 8-5pm, Sat. 8-1pm.
Large selection of fall,
wi nt er decorat i ons,
womens clothing primar-
ily 1X-2X, Vera Bradley
assortment, like new
bedding, kitchen gadg-
ets, sewing machine &
much more.
ALTO SAXOPHONE,
VCR/DVD Player, Gun
Carry Case, Fish Skin-
ner, Computer Monitor
and Speaker, Toy Box,
Ramps, Little Tykes,
Twin X-Long Sheets,
Adult Clothes, Boogie
Boards, and Misc. 6/6
9am-?, 6/7 9am-1pm.
311 W. 7th St., Germans
GIRLS, BOYS, Mens,
Ladies, Ladi es Pl us
Clothing. Lots of baby
items and toys. Girls
bike, Vera Bradley. Most
everything $.25 each.
Thurs & Fri 9am-6pm,
621 Dayton, McCabes
577 Miscellaneous
LAMP REPAIR, table or
floor. Come to our store.
Ho h e n b r i n k TV.
419-695-1229
SPINLIFE.COM PRIDE
Silver Star Backpacker
plus for minivans, power
lift for scooter or power
wheel chai r $1500.00
419-692-7570
583
Pets and
Supplies
PUPPY ROOM full.
Ready now, really cute.
Morki es, Havanese,
Poodle, Shmorkies, Chi-
huahuas, Parti Poms.
Garwicks the Pet Peo-
ple 419-795-5711.
garwicksthepetpeople.
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
Read The
Delphos
Herald
online!
----------
Local news,
national news,
weather, sports,
entertainment,
classifieds,
comics,
business
stories, etc.
----------
www.
delphosherald.com
Dear Abby
Sisters erratic behavior cant
be blamed on deceased Dad
DEAR ABBY: Im the
middle child. Our father died
in the Gulf War. None of
us really knew him, but my
younger sister, Delia, has no
memory of him at all.
She has been acting out for
years now, and has broken our
mothers heart more times
than I can count. Whenever
she messes up, she blames it
on not knowing our father and
the life she could have led.
It has been 20 years, Abby!
The past is the past. Delia
continues to ruin her future
and blame our mom. It has
Mom wondering why she was
able to survive this crisis 20
years ago but cant manage to
deal with my sister.
I think Delia may have a
chemical imbalance, or just
never dealt with our fathers
death. How do you convince
someone to get help? How
do you make her see that Dad
died so she could enjoy the
many freedoms of America? --
DRAINED IN DELAWARE
DEAR DRAINED: Im
sorry for your familys loss,
but we are all responsible for
our own behavior and our
own emotions. You cant force
help on your dysfunctional
sister. Before shell be willing
to accept that she needs it, she
will have to accept that SHE
has been responsible for her
own mistakes and behavior.
If your father had lived, her
life might not have been any
different than it is.
The person who COULD
use some professional help
might be your mother.
Counseling might help her to
quit trying to rescue her adult
daughter, or blaming herself
for the problems Delia has
created for herself. Im not
saying it will be easy -- letting
go rarely is. But it might
improve her emotional and
physical health.
DEAR ABBY: I am an
attractive, physically fit,
well-educated, 41-year-old
divorced woman with two
young children. Recently a
co-worker I have known for
several months asked me to
accompany him on a weekend
hiking trip. (Hes 23.) After
a few conversations, he
confessed that he was deeply
in love with me and hoped
we could begin a serious
relationship.
Abby, hes mature,
good-looking, financially
independent and has a great
sense of humor. Im attracted
to him. Should I pursue this
relationship, or wait until Im
attracted to someone closer to
my own age? Help! -- A.S. IN
SAN DIEGO
DEAR A.S.: Whoa! Slow
down. Regardless of the age
difference, an overnight first
date (with a co-worker, yet)
seems like an awfully speedy
beginning to me. If youre
smart, start with a coffee date,
graduate to a dinner date, and
pursue the relationship from
there. Only time will tell if this
is the real thing.
Dear Abby is written by
Abigail Van Buren, also
known as Jeanne Phillips, and
was founded by her mother,
Pauline Phillips. Contact
Dear Abby at www.DearAbby.
com or P.O. Box 69440, Los
Angeles, CA 90069.
COPYRIGHT 2014
UNIVERSAL UCLICK
The Practical College Entrance Exam
Its been pretty well
established that doing
well on traditional
tests used for college
admissions has no
relationship to how
well a student will do
in college. Students
with the same test
scores often have
different outcomes,
some drop out, some
excel and some
struggle through. If
only there were a test
that would indicate
how well high school
students will do once
they are in college.
Something like:
Math
If a pizza costs
$6.50 and 3 people are
going to share it, how
long should it take to
arrive?
1) 30 minutes 2)
$2.17 3) 10 minutes
4) 2 pieces
If you have a 14
karat gold friendship
ring that weighs four
ounces and your
friend has an 18
karat gold friendship
ring that weighs four
ounces, who is the
better person?
1) you 2) your
friend 3) Im so
jealous 4) 24 karat
What day of
the week does the
Laundry Fairy come
to your dorm room?
1) Saturday 2)
Monday 3) Never 4)
Friday
Current Events
In what state is
Duck Dynasty
filmed?
1) Canada 2)
Louisiana 3) Cuba 4)
Chicago
Where do The
Real Housewives of
New Jersey live?
1) Nebraska 2)
Michigan 3) New
Mexico 4) None of the
above
Who is the most
evil person in The
Game of Thrones?
Literature
W i l l i a m
Shakespeare wrote
which classic?
1) X Men 2) Harry
Potter 3) Romeo and
Juliet 4) Spiderman
Are this sentence
correct?
1) Yes 2) No 3)
True 4) False
If you are bilingual
you
1) cannot marry in
most states 2) have
male and female sex
organs 3) can speak
two languages 4) are
from Bilingua
Spelling
O nvr mnd :). No 1
cn spl inny mor.
Chemistry
Where do babies
come from?
1) Belize 2) Spain
3) South Dakota 4)
Storks
How many times
does a babys diapers
need to be changed
in the first year? 1)
2,190 2) 365 3) 100
4) 10,000
Whose grand-
parents should take
care of the baby while
youre dating?
1) His 2) Hers 3)
Both 4) My step-sister
has her this week.
Science and Nature
Tequila is made
from
1) Worms 2) Hops
3) Limes 4) What was
number 3 again?
How many beers
are there in a 6-pack?
1) Four 2) A keg 3)
Did I tell you youre
beautiful? 4) Now, or
when I bought it?
How much should a
fake ID cost?
1) $10 2) $50 3)
$150 4) $200
The Jurassic Period
came before
1) The book 2) The
movies 3) Cretaceous
4) The Park
History
Abraham Lincoln
wrote
1)The Declaration
of Independance 2)
The Magna Carta
3) The Gettysburg
Address 4) The
Monroe Doctrine
Which of these was
a U.S. President?
1) NSA 2) JFK 3)
IRA 4) IRS
Fort Knox is
famous for
1) Its football team
2) Gelatin 3) Gold 4)
Its School of Hard
Knox.
( C o n t a c t
Jim Mullen at
J i mMul l e nBook s .
com.)
Mullin
The Village
Idiot
The Key
To Buying
Or Selling
940 E. FIFTH ST., DELPHOS
419-692-7773 Fax 419-692-7775
www.rsre.com
19074 Rd. 19, Ft. Jennings
Price Reduced!
$164,900-Ft Jennings SD
3 bedroom, 2 bath brick/vinyl ranch home with open
floor plan on 1.24 acre lot. Many updates. Includes
24x24 attached garage and 36x24 Morton building.
Move in ready! (42) Brad Stuber 419-236-2267/Derek
Watkins 419-303-3313
7040 Elida Rd., Elida
$112,000-Elida SD
Brick ranch with 3 bedrooms and 1 full bath. Remod-
eled in 2004. Detached 2 car garage built in 2008.
(51) Mike Reindel 419-235-3607
BY APPOINTMENT
1 OPEN HOUSE SATURDAY 1-3 PM
1 OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY 1-2:30 PM
$65,000-Elida SD
Cute 3 bedroom, 1 bath 1 story on nice 66x132 lot.
Built in 1920, appx. 1378 sq. ft. of living area, enclosed
breezeway. (122) Bonnie Shelley 419-230-2521
$74,000-Delphos SD
1-1/2 story home with 3BR/1BA and over 1800 sq ft
living space. Many updates including updated bath
w/whirlpool tub/shower, newer windows, roof & water
heater. Basement. Detached garage w/loft.
(75) Barb Coil 419-302-3478
FARM FOR SALE
Approx. 30 acres in Union Twp, Van Wert County. Ap-
prox. 20 ac tillable w/ balance wooded.
(188) Devin Dye 419-303-5891
The Key
To Buying
Or Selling
940 E. FIFTH ST., DELPHOS
419-692-7773 Fax 419-692-7775
www.rsre.com
19074 Rd. 19, Ft. Jennings
Price Reduced!
$164,900-Ft Jennings SD
3 bedroom, 2 bath brick/vinyl ranch home with open
floor plan on 1.24 acre lot. Many updates. Includes
24x24 attached garage and 36x24 Morton building.
Move in ready! (42) Brad Stuber 419-236-2267/Derek
Watkins 419-303-3313
7040 Elida Rd., Elida
$112,000-Elida SD
Brick ranch with 3 bedrooms and 1 full bath. Remod-
eled in 2004. Detached 2 car garage built in 2008.
(51) Mike Reindel 419-235-3607
BY APPOINTMENT
1 OPEN HOUSE SATURDAY 1-3 PM
1 OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY 1-2:30 PM
$65,000-Elida SD
Cute 3 bedroom, 1 bath 1 story on nice 66x132 lot.
Built in 1920, appx. 1378 sq. ft. of living area, enclosed
breezeway. (122) Bonnie Shelley 419-230-2521
$74,000-Delphos SD
1-1/2 story home with 3BR/1BA and over 1800 sq ft
living space. Many updates including updated bath
w/whirlpool tub/shower, newer windows, roof & water
heater. Basement. Detached garage w/loft.
(75) Barb Coil 419-302-3478
FARM FOR SALE
Approx. 30 acres in Union Twp, Van Wert County. Ap-
prox. 20 ac tillable w/ balance wooded.
(188) Devin Dye 419-303-5891
The Key
To Buying
Or Selling
940 E. FIFTH ST., DELPHOS
419-692-7773 Fax 419-692-7775
www.rsre.com
19074 Rd. 19, Ft. Jennings
Price Reduced!
$164,900-Ft Jennings SD
3 bedroom, 2 bath brick/vinyl ranch home with open
floor plan on 1.24 acre lot. Many updates. Includes
24x24 attached garage and 36x24 Morton building.
Move in ready! (42) Brad Stuber 419-236-2267/Derek
Watkins 419-303-3313
7040 Elida Rd., Elida
$112,000-Elida SD
Brick ranch with 3 bedrooms and 1 full bath. Remod-
eled in 2004. Detached 2 car garage built in 2008.
(51) Mike Reindel 419-235-3607
BY APPOINTMENT
1 OPEN HOUSE SATURDAY 1-3 PM
1 OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY 1-2:30 PM
$65,000-Elida SD
Cute 3 bedroom, 1 bath 1 story on nice 66x132 lot.
Built in 1920, appx. 1378 sq. ft. of living area, enclosed
breezeway. (122) Bonnie Shelley 419-230-2521
$74,000-Delphos SD
1-1/2 story home with 3BR/1BA and over 1800 sq ft
living space. Many updates including updated bath
w/whirlpool tub/shower, newer windows, roof & water
heater. Basement. Detached garage w/loft.
(75) Barb Coil 419-302-3478
FARM FOR SALE
Approx. 30 acres in Union Twp, Van Wert County. Ap-
prox. 20 ac tillable w/ balance wooded.
(188) Devin Dye 419-303-5891
The Key
To Buying
Or Selling
940 E. FIFTH ST., DELPHOS
419-692-7773 Fax 419-692-7775
www.rsre.com
19074 Rd. 19, Ft. Jennings
Price Reduced!
$164,900-Ft Jennings SD
3 bedroom, 2 bath brick/vinyl ranch home with open
floor plan on 1.24 acre lot. Many updates. Includes
24x24 attached garage and 36x24 Morton building.
Move in ready! (42) Brad Stuber 419-236-2267/Derek
Watkins 419-303-3313
7040 Elida Rd., Elida
$112,000-Elida SD
Brick ranch with 3 bedrooms and 1 full bath. Remod-
eled in 2004. Detached 2 car garage built in 2008.
(51) Mike Reindel 419-235-3607
BY APPOINTMENT
1 OPEN HOUSE SATURDAY 1-3 PM
1 OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY 1-2:30 PM
$65,000-Elida SD
Cute 3 bedroom, 1 bath 1 story on nice 66x132 lot.
Built in 1920, appx. 1378 sq. ft. of living area, enclosed
breezeway. (122) Bonnie Shelley 419-230-2521
$74,000-Delphos SD
1-1/2 story home with 3BR/1BA and over 1800 sq ft
living space. Many updates including updated bath
w/whirlpool tub/shower, newer windows, roof & water
heater. Basement. Detached garage w/loft.
(75) Barb Coil 419-302-3478
FARM FOR SALE
Approx. 30 acres in Union Twp, Van Wert County. Ap-
prox. 20 ac tillable w/ balance wooded.
(188) Devin Dye 419-303-5891
00094800
1 Open House Sunday 1-3
5324 Redd Rd., Delphos
$179,500-Elida SD
Price Reduced!
4BR/2 BTH ranch on 2.6 acres, apx. 2,529
sq.ft., private mother-in-law suite, 2 car
attached garage. Just minutes from Delphos
off SR 309 & Redd Rd.
(137) Sandy Miller 419-236-3014
$189,500-Lincolnview SD
4BR/2BTH, historical brick 2 story on 3+ acres,
2744 sq.ft. Natural woodwork & hardwood
oors throughout. 60x100 outbldg. w/ water
& small grain bldg.. w/ electric. Very well kept
home! Seller providing home warranty.
(67) Bonnie Shelley 419-230-2521
$59,000-Delphos SD
Price Reduced!
3BR/1BTH, 1 story home, 1800+ sq. ft. Bath
w/whirlpool tub/shower, newer windows, roof
& water heater. Basement. Detached garage
w/loft. (75) Barb Coil 419-302-3478
COMMERCIAL
High trafc location just off SR 309 in Elida!
3 parcels totaling .925 acres. Two separate
buildings-one currently occupied & the other
vacant. Would make a great restaurant.
(45) Devin Dye 419-303-5891
LOTS
Three one acre parcels, will sell as whole or
individual parcels. Located on Lincoln Hwy. on
the West edge of Delphos. $20,000 per lot.
(184) Devin Dye 419-303-5891
Friday, June 6, 2014
Some hard choices will have
to be made this year. You will
encounter resistance at frst,
but once others take note of
your direction, you will win
them over. Your confdence
will increase as your talents
blossom. You will be victorious
if you are determined to
outmatch your competition.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
-- If you have been lazy about
performing your household
chores, you will hear about it.
Do your part without complaint
and avoid squabbles. A little
romance will go a long way.
CANCER (June 21-July
22) -- Show off your sociable
nature. Surround yourself
with friends and family, and
share your positive attitude. An
informal get-together will lift
everyones spirits. Share your
memories.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) --
Strike a better balance between
home and work issues. Let
others do their share without
criticizing their efforts. You
cant do it all, but you also cant
expect others to do things your
way.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
-- You have been on edge lately,
losing sleep over past mistakes
and mishaps. Avoid depression
by making a clear plan for the
future. Your anxiety is holding
you back.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23)
-- Be careful who you confde
in. You may have inadvertently
revealed information that can
be used against you. Minor
setbacks must be overcome
swiftly. Put your best interest
frst.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) -- A creative activity
will generate an interesting
proposal. Be proud of your
talents, and new doors will
open for you. Let everyone
know what you have to offer.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-
Dec. 21) -- Have faith in your
own judgment. Its important
to stay in control. Take advice
from experts, but ultimately
make your decisions based on
what works best for you.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-
Jan. 19) -- Find out more
about whats going on in your
community. Look into projects
and developments that you
can contribute to. Valuable
connections can be made close
to home.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-
Feb. 19) -- You need to better
organize your life. If you fnd
that youre spending too much
time looking for everyday
items, set aside a few hours to
put everything in place today.
Your frustration level will
decrease as a result.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March
20) -- Be extra cautious. A
small injury will turn into
a problem. Use your tools
carefully. Its how you interact
with others that will determine
your success.
ARIES (March 21-April
19) -- Shake off the blues.
Find people who have the
same passions, and plan a joint
project. Have some fun, lighten
up and have a laugh or two.
TAURUS (April 20-May
20) -- It would be wise to
study wealth management
and investment techniques.
Spending your time thusly will
bring you long-lasting benefts
and ensure that you will be less
likely to be conned by a self-
proclaimed expert.
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
Under bird
3 Orchestra
leader -- Baxter
4 In addition
to
5 Got dingy
6 Romance, in
France
7 Rounded
roof
8 Make ends
meet
9 Part of mph
10 NFL scores
12 Wobble
13 Movie ogre
18 Shrill insect
19 Long-wind-
ed
20 TV control-
ler
22 Give a hard
time
23 Slate
24 Locations
25 Adorn
28 Crude metal
30 Travel
choice
31 Crankcase
ACROSS
1 Stall
6 Well-
versed
11 Brunch
favorite
13 Cured ham
14 Rough-
house
15 Four-bag-
gers
16 Grand --
Opry
17 Feel re-
morse
18 EMTs skill
21 Signifcant
--
23 P.D. alert
26 Intense
anger
27 Watery, as
coffee
28 Give the
eye
29 Big waves
31 Great fear
32 Not in a
whisper
33 Kind of fair
35 Morse
signals
36 Show ap-
preciation
37 Holiday
mo.
38 Wood
chopper
39 Food, wa-
ter and shelter
40 Get nosy
41 Coal
scuttle
42 Dog days
in Dijon
44 Martial art
47 Cultivated,
as soil
51 Doted on
52 Nefarious
plan
53 Went off-
course
54 Four-footed
pal
DOWN
1 Speck
2 Down
Yesterdays answers
rod
34 Offcers-
to-be
36 Sur-
rendered
territory
39 Famous
41 Jackrab-
bit
43 K-12
44 Boastful
knight
45 Okla-
homa town
46 Ticket
info
48 Allow
49 911
staffer
50 Tunis
pasha
Friday, June 6, 2014 The Herald 11
www.delphosherald.com
Trivia
Answers to Thursdays questions:
The first pay toilets were installed in ancient Rome, in
the first century AD, by Emperor Vespasian, the man who
built the Colosseum. Vespasians connection to toilets lives
on: urinals in Italy are known as vespasianos; in France
they are known as vespasiennes.
Two ex-wives of what Hollywood leading man Tom
Cruise starred in Batman films: Nicole Kidman was
Batmans love interest in Batman Forever (1995) and
Katie Holmes was Batmans childhood sweetheart in
Batman Begins (2005).
Todays questions:
What U.S. national park is almost six times larger than
Yellowstone?
How did New York Yankee great Joe DiMaggio lose
a chance to earn $10,000 when his record-setting hitting
streak ended at 56 games?
Answers in Mondays Herald.
The Outstanding National Debt as of Thursday eve-
ning was $17,522,088,959,955.
The estimated population of the United States is
318,360,692, so each citizens share of this debt is
$55,039.
The National Debt has continued to increase an aver-
age of $2.38 billion per day since Sept. 30, 2012.
12 The Herald Friday, June 6, 2014 www.delphosherald.com
GM ousts 15 employees
over ignition-switch scandal
DEE-ANN DURBIN
Associated Press
WARREN, Mich. General Motors said Thursday that
it has forced out 15 employees for their role in the deadly
ignition-switch scandal and will set up a compensation fund
for crash victims, as an internal investigation blamed the
debacle on engineering ignorance and bureaucratic dithering,
not a deliberate cover-up.
GM took more than a decade to recall 2.6 million cars with
bad switches that are now linked to at least 13 deaths by the
automakers count.
Group after group and committee after committee within
GM that reviewed the issue failed to take action or acted too
slowly, Anton Valukas, the former federal prosecutor hired by
the automaker to investigate the reason for the delay, said in a
315-page report. Although everyone had responsibility to fix
the problem, nobody took responsibility.
GM CEO Mary Barra said more than half the 15 employees
forced out were senior legal and engineering executives who
failed to disclose the defect and were part of a pattern of
incompetence. Five other employees have been disciplined,
she said, without identifying any of them.
The automaker said it will establish a compensation pro-
gram covering those killed or seriously injured in the more
than 50 accidents blamed on the switches. GM said not say
how much money will be involved, but a Wall Street analyst
estimated the payouts will total $1.5 billion.
Barra called the report brutally tough and deeply trou-
bling.
The report lays bare a company that operated in silos,
with employees who didnt share information and didnt take
responsibility for problems or treat them with any urgency.
Valukas also portrayed a corporate culture in which there
was heavy pressure to keep costs down, a reluctance to report
problems up the chain of command, a skittishness about put-
ting safety concerns on paper, and general bureaucratic resis-
tance to change.
He described what was known as the GM nod, in which
everyone nods in agreement to a proposed plan of action but
then leaves the room and does nothing.
Study: At-home
dads down slightly
since recession
NEW YORK (AP) The
number of U.S. fathers home with
their kids full-time is down, from a
peak 2.2 million in 2010, the offi-
cial end of the recession, to about
2 million in 2012, according to a
report released Thursday by the
Pew Research Center.
The slight decrease in their
ranks from 2010 to 2012 was
driven chiefly by employ-
ment gains since the recession
eased, the report said, defining
stay-at-home fathers as those
not employed for pay at all in
the prior year and living with
children 17 or younger.
The largest share of at-
home dads, 35 percent, said
they were home due to ill-
ness or disability. Roughly 23
percent said it was mainly
because they couldnt find a
job, and 21 percent said it
was specifically to care for
home or family, the research-
ers noted, relying on census
and other government data.
By contrast, 1.1 million men
were at-home dads in 1989, the
earliest year reliable government
figures are available for the sector.
Gretchen Livingston, a
senior researcher who worked
on the report, said fathers
comprised 16 percent of par-
ents at home full time in 2012,
up from 10 percent in 1989.
The 21 percent who cited
caring for home and children as
the specific reason for being out
of the for-pay work force was
up from 5 percent in 1989 and
18 percent in 2007, the start of
the recession, Livingston said.
While unemployment is a
factor overall, Livingston said
Wednesday in a telephone inter-
view from Washington, D.C.,
that the continuing conver-
gence of gender roles between
moms and dads is key.
Vets, visitors flock to
Normandy to remember D-Day
COLLEVILLE-SUR-MER, France (AP)
Ceremonies to commemorate the 70th
anniversary of D-Day are drawing thou-
sands of visitors to the cemeteries, beaches
and stone-walled villages of Normandy this
week, including some of the few remaining
survivors of the largest sea-borne invasion
ever mounted.
World leaders and dignitaries includ-
ing President Barack Obama and Queen
Elizabeth II will gather to honor the more
than 150,000 American, British, Canadian
and other Allied D-Day veterans who
risked and gave their lives to defeat Adolf
Hitlers Third Reich.
For many visitors, the Normandy
American Cemetery and Memorial, with its
9,387 white marble tombstones on a bluff
overlooking the site of the battles bloodiest
fighting at Omaha Beach, is the emotional
centerpiece of pilgrimages to honor the tens
of thousands of men killed on D-Day and
the months of fighting afterward.
D-Day veteran Clair Martin, 93, said
hes come back to Omaha Beach three
times in the last 70 years four if you
count the time they were shooting at me.
The San Diego, California resident land-
ed on D-Day with the 29th Infantry Division
and said he kept fighting until he reached the
Elbe River in Germany the following April.
I praise God I made it and that weve never
had another World War, he said.
Ceremonies large and small are tak-
ing place across Normandy, ahead of an
international summit today in Ouistreham,
a small port that was the site of a strategic
battle on D-Day. Fireworks lit up the sky
Thursday night to mark the anniversary.
French President Francois Hollandes
decision to invite Russian President
Vladimir Putin to participate in the official
ceremony despite his exclusion from the
G-7 summit in Brussels is being seen by
some as justified recognition of the Soviet
Unions great sacrifice in defeating Hitler,
but by others as a distraction given the
Wests dispute with Russia over Ukraine.
Russian paratroopers joined the com-
memorations late Thursday, jumping down
onto the town of Arromanches waving a
Russian flag, in a reminder of their role
fighting the Nazis on the eastern front in
World War II and the millions of lives the
Soviet Union lost. The Russians participa-
tion comes despite tensions between the
U.S. and Russia over Ukraine.
With many D-Day veterans now in their
90s, this years anniversary has the added
poignancy of being the last time that many
of those who took part in the battle will
be able to make the long journey back to
Normandy and tell their stories.
Three minutes after landing a mortar
blew up next to me and I lost my K-rations,
said Curtis Outen, 92, of Pageland, South
Carolina. Outen, making his first return to
Normandy since the war, related the loss of
his military-issued meal packet as though it
happened yesterday. Then I cut my arm in
the barbed wire entanglements. After that I
was all right.
By midmorning hundreds of visi-
tors walked among the cemeterys long
rows of white crosses and stars of David.
Schoolchildren and retirees, soldiers in
uniform and veterans in wheelchairs quietly
move from grave to grave, pausing to read
the brief inscriptions that can only give
hints of the lives laid to rest there:
Edward H. Gesner, Pvt 116 Inf, 29 Div,
Massachussets, July 1 1944.
Richard Frank Geigner, PFC 298 Engr
Combat Bn, Illinois, June 6, 1944.
Louis Carter Jr, Pvt 8 Inf 4 Div, New
Jersey, July 26, 1944.
One young woman stood quietly in soft
rain, hand over her heart, and tearfully
placed a red rose at a tombstone which read
Here Rests in Honored Glory a Comrade
in Arms Known But to God.
I just wanted to pay tribute,said
Marissa Neitling, 30, of Lake Oswego,
Oregon.
VA chief: 18 vets left off
waiting list have died
TERRY TANG
Associated Press
WASHINGTON An
additional 18 veterans in the
Phoenix area whose names
were kept off an official
electronic Veterans Affairs
appointment list have died,
the agencys acting secretary
said Thursday the latest
revelation in a growing scan-
dal over long patient waits
for care and falsified records
covering up the delays at VA
hospitals and clinics nation-
wide.
Acting VA Secretary Sloan
Gibson said he does not know
whether the 18 new deaths
were related to long wait-
ing times for appointments
but said they were in addi-
tion to the 17 reported last
month by the VAs inspector
general. The announcement
of the deaths came as senior
senators reached agreement
Thursday on the framework
for a bipartisan bill making
it easier for veterans to get
health care outside VA hospi-
tals and clinics.
The 18 veterans who died
were among 1,700 veterans
identified in a report last
week by the VAs inspec-
tor general as being at risk
of being lost or forgotten.
The investigation also found
broad and deep-seated prob-
lems with delays in patient
care and manipulation of
waiting lists throughout the
sprawling VA health care sys-
tem, which provides medical
care to about 9 million veter-
ans and family members.
Richard Griffin, the VAs
acting inspector general, told a
Senate committee three weeks
ago that his investigators had
found 17 deaths among vet-
erans awaiting appointments
in Phoenix. Griffin said in
his report last week the dead
veterans medical records and
death certificates as well as
autopsy reports would have to
be examined before he could
say whether any of them were
caused by delays in getting
appointments.
The bill announced
Thursday by Senate Veterans
Affairs Committee Chairman
Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., and
Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz.,
would allow veterans who
wait 30 days or more for VA
appointments or who live at
least 40 miles from a VA
hospital or clinic to use pri-
vate doctors enrolled as pro-
viders for Medicare, military
TRICARE or other govern-
ment health care programs.
It also would let the VA
immediately fire as many as
450 senior regional execu-
tives and hospital adminis-
trators for poor performance.
The bill resembles a mea-
sure passed last month by the
House but includes a 28-day
appeal process omitted by the
House legislation.
The bill is a response to a
building national uproar over
veterans health care since a
retired clinic director went
public in April with accusa-
tions that management at the
Phoenix VA had instructed
staff to keep a secret waiting
list to hide delayed care and
that as many as 40 patients
may have died while waiting
for appointments.
Veterans in Phoenix wait-
ed an average 115 days for
appointments five times
longer than the Phoenix VA
had reported, Griffin said.
Investigators also have found
long waiting times and falsi-
fied records covering them up
at other VA facilities nation-
wide, Griffin said. His office
is investigating more than 40
of the VAs 1,700 health care
facilities nationwide, includ-
ing 150 hospitals and 820
clinics.
Right now we have a
crisis on our hands and its
imperative that we deal with
that crisis, said Sanders.
Obama and allies: Putin faces critical choices
JUERGEN BAETZ
Associated Press
PARIS Laying out clear conditions, President Barack
Obama and Western allies opened a pathway for Russia to
ease tensions in Ukraine on Thursday but pointedly warned
Moscow it could face new sanctions within weeks if Vladimir
Putin fails to go along.
The leaders, who were gathered in Brussels for a wealthy-
nations summit, said the Russian president could avoid
tougher penalties in part by recognizing the legitimacy of the
new Ukrainian government and ending support for an insur-
gency in eastern cities that is widely believed to be backed by
the Kremlin. There was no mention of rolling back Russias
annexation of the Ukrainian region of Crimea, which precipi-
tated the European crisis.
We are at a point where Mr. Putin has the chance to get
back into a lane of international law, Obama said during a
news conference with British Prime Minister David Cameron.
But Obama also said the West cant simply allow drift in
Ukraine, where insurgents continue to clash with government
forces in eastern cities.
From Brussels, Obama and other leaders jetted to France
ahead of events marking todays 70th anniversary of the
D-Day Normandy invasion that paved the way for the Allied
victory in World War II.
This time Putin was on the scene. And Cameron, French
President Francois Hollande and German Chancellor Angela
Merkel each were using the commemorations as a backdrop
for separate meetings with the Russian president, who arrived
in Paris.
Hollande in particular appeared to be embracing the diplo-
matic mantle, hosting Putin at Elysee Palace Thursday night
just after finishing dinner with Obama at a Paris restaurant.
Threat to Bergdahl led to US action, officials say
DEB RIECHMANN
Associated Press
WASHINGTON The Obama
administration told senators it didnt
notify Congress about the pending swap
of Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl for five Taliban
officials because of intelligence the
Taliban might kill him if the deal was
made public.
That fear not just the stated con-
cerns that Bergdahls health might be
failing drove the administration to
quickly make the deal to rescue him,
bypassing the law that lawmakers be
notified when detainees are released
from the U.S. prison at Guantanamo
Bay, Cuba, congressional and adminis-
tration officials said Thursday.
They spoke only on condition of
anonymity because they were not autho-
rized to comment publicly.
Since Bergdahls release on Saturday,
administration officials including
President Barack Obama, Defense
Secretary Chuck Hagel and National
Security Adviser Susan Rice have said
publicly that the key reason for the
secret prisoner swap was evidence that
Bergdahls physical health was dete-
riorating after five years in captivity.
But on Wednesday night, administration
officials told senators in a closed session
that the primary concern was the death
risk if the deal collapsed.
At a news conference in Brussels
on Thursday, Obama said he makes no
apologies for recovering Bergdahl, and
he said the furor in Washington over the
exchange has made the matter a politi-
cal football. He appeared to be refer-
ring to potential danger to Bergdahls
life when he said that because of the
nature of the folks that we were deal-
ing with and the fragile nature of these
negotiations, we felt it was important to
go ahead and do what we did.
There was no overt threat by the
Taliban but rather an assessment based
on intelligence reports that Bergdahls
life would be in jeopardy if news of the
talks got out and the deal failed, said two
senior U.S. officials familiar with the
efforts to free the soldier.
In public comments, State Department
spokesman Marie Harf told reporters
Thursday, There were real concerns that
if this were made public first, his physical
security could be in danger. The risks,
she said, included someone guarding
him that possibly wouldnt agree and
could take harmful action against him.
So as we needed to move quickly, all of
these factors played into that.
Not everyone in Congress was con-
vinced.
(Continued from page 1)
Smith said they sat in the classroom for
about 45 minutes, before police came and
escorted them out of the building. On the
way, they passed the lobby where she saw
bullet casings and what appeared to be blood
in the lobby carpet and splatter on the wall.
Seeing blood made it real, Smith
said. I didnt think something like this
would happen at our school, she added.
Ashley Springer, 26, was in a class-
room with her professor and a few other
students when a woman with a bullhorn
came into the room and told them to
lock the door, pull down the shades and
turn out the lights.
Springer, a senior, called PLU a
really close community.
David Downs, a 22-year-old senior
who is graduating next week, said he
had just left campus 30 minutes before
the shooting.
Im in utter shock, said the Seattle
Pacific basketball point guard player.
Its so unbelievable to me that this
could happen on our campus. Its the last
thing I would have ever thought could
happen here.
It puts things in perspective, he
said. Anything can happen, even on a
small Christian campus.
The incident follows a spate of recent
shootings on or near college campuses.
Last month, according to police,
Elliot Rodger killed six people and
injured seven before turning his gun
on himself in a rampage in Isla Vista,
California, near two universities.
Seven people were killed and three
injured when a 43-year-old former stu-
dent opened fire at a tiny Christian
school, Oikos University, in Oakland,
California, in 2012. A gunman killed five
people and injured 18 when he opened
fire in a Northern Illinois University
lecture hall in 2008.
In 2007, 32 people were fatally shot
in a dorm and classroom at Virginia
Tech in Blacksburg, Virginia before the
gunman, Seung-Hui Cho, killed himself.
Gunman
(Continued from page 1)
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help thats needed, he added.
Families interested in learning more about companionship
services should call (419) 238-3714.
CHP

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