Beruflich Dokumente
Kultur Dokumente
and 7
HERALD
DELPHOS
The
75 daily
www.delphosherald.com
Delphos, Ohio
Mostly sunny
today and
mostly clear
tonight.
Highs in the
lower 80s.
Lows in the
mid 60s. See page 2.
Obituaries
State/Local
The Next Generation
Community
Sports
Classifieds
Comics and Puzzles
World News
St. Peter Lutheran Church will expand its free childrens breakfast to the community on
Sunday for its Our Work. Our Hands! Sunday. (DHI Media file photo)
Forecast
Index
Judge Steele
Committee.
Steele has the longest tenure
of any current Van Wert County
judge. Van Wert Municipal
Court Judge Jill Leatherman
was appointed by Gov. Ted
Strickland to replace Phil W.
Campbell in 2010 and Common
Pleas Probate and Juvenile
Court Judge Kevin Taylor was
appointed by Kasich to succeed
Rex Fortney in 2012.
Judge Steeles replacement
will be appointed by Kasich from
a list of qualified attorneys submitted to the governor by the Van
Wert County Republican Central
Committee.
BY STEPHANIE GROVES
DHI Media Staff Writer
sgroves@delphosherald.com
2
3
4
5
6-7
8
9
10
scam.
Cook said the second scam involved
an individual posing as an IRS agent who
wanted to verify an individuals information. That individual knew he had not
received any correspondence from the IRS
and realized if it were the IRS, they would
already have all the information they needed.
Some people (the targets of the scam)
are having a rough time financially, they
get scared thinking their utilities will be
shut off and they make the arrangements to
pay the scammer, Cook said. None of the
public utilities work in that manner.
Cook advises anyone experiencing phone
calls of this nature to first call the utility
company using the number on their billing.
They should also call the Better Business
Bureau and their local police department.
Cook said the calls are untraceable and
the thieves use computers to run the scam.
See SCAMS, page 10
at Livestock Auction
BY ED GEBERT
DHI Media Editor
egebert@timesbulletin.com
2 The Herald
www.delphosherald.com
OBITUARY
Frances L. Kaufman
May 3, 1934-Sept. 1, 2014
OTTOVILLE Frances
L. Kaufman, 80, of Ottoville
died 5:30 p.m. Monday at The
Meadows of Kalida.
She was born May 6, 1934,
in Hartford, Connecticut, to
Joseph and Rose (Cannarella)
Cantone, who preceded her in
death.
She is survived by
her three children, Cathy
(Randy) Gasser and Donna
(Dennis) Bendele, both of
Fort Jennings, and Tom (Lee)
Kaufman of Florida.
There will be no services
or visitation.
Arrangements are being
handled by Love-Heitmeyer
Funeral Home, Jackson Twp.
Condolences may be
expressed to: www.lovefuneralhome.com.
FUNERAL
BRABANT,
Richard,
82, of Celina, Funeral services will begin at 2 p.m.
today at Harter and Schier
Funeral Home, with visitation one hour before. Burial
will be at Resurrection
Cemetery with the Delphos
Veterans Council performing Military Burial Rites.
Memorial contributions may
be made to The Alzheimers
Foundation.
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 delivered by carrier in Delphos for
$1.82 per week. Same day
delivery outside of Delphos is
done through the post office
for Allen, Van Wert or Putnam
Counties. Delivery outside of
these counties is $117 per year.
Entered in the post office
in Delphos, Ohio 45833 as
Periodicals, postage paid at
Delphos, Ohio.
405 North Main St.
TELEPHONE 695-0015
Office Hours
8 a.m.-5 p.m. Mon.-Fri.
POSTMASTER:
Send address changes
to THE DELPHOS HERALD,
405 N. Main St.
Delphos, Ohio 45833
CORRECTIONS
the girl said she felt the gun was too much for her and had
hurt her shoulder.
Her family members were focused on the girl because
they thought she was injured by the guns recoil and didnt
immediately realize that Vacca had been shot until one of his
colleagues ran over to him, the reports state.
The shooting set off a powerful debate over youngsters and
guns, with many people wondering what sort of parents would
let a child handle a submachine gun. However, neither the
reports nor the statement by Walsh explains why the parents
let the girl take the Uzi.
The family had taken a shuttle from Las Vegas to the range.
After arriving, the girl, her parents, sister and brother took a
monster truck ride before heading to the shooting range.
The girls father was the first one in the party to handle a
weapon. After he fired shots, Vacca instructed the girl on how
to shoot the gun, showed her a shooting stance, and helped her
fire a few rounds, according to the reports.
SEPTEMBER 18-21
ENTERTAINMENT
THURSDAY
(419) 238-5888
WWW.DELPHOSCHAMBER.COM/CANALDAYS
FRIDAY
SATURDAY
Chinese Restaurant
Dine In & Take-Out
Sushi menu
available for take-out!
1.50 off
2 LUNCH Buffets
$
Big
buffet
selection
too!
2.00 off
2 Dinner Buffets
INFORMATION
SUBMITTED
The
Fort
Jennings
Community Blood Drive will
be held from noon to 6 p.m.
today at the American Legion
hall.
Call Mary Lou Krietemeyer
at 419-286-2148 to make an
appointment.
Walk-ins are welcome.
EMERGENCY
RUN TOTALS
INFORMATION
SUBMITTED
LOCAL GRAINS
Wheat
Corn
Soybeans
$5.39
$3.44
$13.45
LOTTERY
CLEVELAND (AP)
These Ohio lotteries were
drawn Tuesday:
Mega Millions
01-08-54-69-72, Mega
Ball: 1
Megaplier
3
Pick 3 Evening
8-2-1
Pick 3 Midday
4-7-8
Pick 4 Evening
1-2-5-8
Pick 4 Midday
3-5-1-2
Pick 5 Evening
8-5-7-8-1
Pick 5 Midday
3-6-7-6-5
Powerball
Est. jackpot: $100 million
Rolling Cash 5
05-23-28-30-34
Est. jackpot: $120,000
WEATHER
WEATHER FORECAST
Tri-County
Associated Press
TODAY: Mostly sunny. Highs in the lower 80s. Southwest
winds around 10 mph.
TONIGHT: Mostly clear. Lows in the mid 60s. South
winds 5 to 10 mph.
THURSDAY: Partly cloudy. Highs in the upper 80s. South
winds 5 to 15 mph.
THURSDAY NIGHT: Mostly clear through midnight
Then partly cloudy with a 20 percent chance of showers and
thunderstorms after midnight. Lows around 70. Southwest
winds 5 to 15 mph.
FRIDAY AND FRIDAY NIGHT: Mostly cloudy with a
50 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Highs in the
upper 80s. Lows in the lower 60s.
www.delphosherald.com
STATE/LOCAL
GOP lawmakers
seek vote on
photo ID bill
COLUMBUS (AP)
Several Republican lawmakers
hope to force the House to vote
on a bill requiring voters to
show photo identification at the
polls in the political swing state.
Backers of the measure
announced plans Tuesday to
use a legislative maneuver to
pull the bill from a committee,
which hasnt held hearings on
it. The legislation was introduced almost a year ago.
What is the problem that
we cannot have photo ID
required for voting in Ohio?
state Rep. Matt Lynch said at a
news conference in Columbus.
Frankly, there should be no
problem because we cant get
on an airplane we can barely get into a public building
if we dont have such an ID.
Lynch, a Geauga County
Republican, joined three GOP
lawmakers in signing a discharge petition to get the bill
out of committee. The petition
requires 50 signatures from
representatives to force it to
the House floor for a vote.
Its unclear whether the
effort will have much success. State lawmakers are
on summer break, and many
are campaigning ahead of
Novembers election.
The Herald 3
The American Red Cross is seeking volunteers to help at the Van Wert
County Hospital. (Submitted photo)
ingful capacities throughout Van Wert
Hospital and are matched according to
their preferences. The duties of volunteers are varied according to the area of
their assignment. Volunteer duties may
include: providing assistance to staff
and patients; clerical duties answering
phones, completing mail merges, filing;
stocking hospital materials and supplies;
greeting patients; coordinating the hospital prayer list; escorting patients and
providing directions to areas within the
hospital.
Our group of American Red Cross
Volunteers provides highly valued and
dedicated services to our hospital and
community. They provide countless
hours of efforts, and without the help
of local volunteers, our hospital would
Nitrate/Inorganic
Suite $25
Includes nitrate, nitrite,
ammonia, chloride, sulfate, fluoride, soluble
phosphorus, silica, and
conductivity
Pesticide
Immunoassay Screen $60
Detects major herbicides
such as atrazine (Aatrex),
simazine (Princep), alachlor (Lasso), metolachlor
(Dual), and acetochlor
(Harness)
Metals by ICP /MS
$75
Includes antimony, arsenic, barium, beryllium,
cadmium, chromium, lead,
selenium, aluminum, copper, iron, manganese. zinc,
nickel, sodium, calcium,
strontium, cobalt, magnesium, potassium, silica, and
vanadium
The test kits will be for
sale Oct. 6 through Oct. 17.
The samples need returned
to the Van Wert SWCD, 1185
Professional Drive, Van Wert,
on Oct. 20.
Participants
can
expect their confidential
results back in two-four
weeks from Heidelberg
University.
learning a Republican
consultant and appointee
of Gov. John Kasich was
responsible for hiring the
law firm whose challenge
pushed two of their candidates off the statewide
ballot.
Terry Casey worked
for Kasichs 2010 campaign and the governor
has since appointed him
to the $70,000-a-year job
chairing the state personnel review board.
Caseys role hiring
Zeiger, Tigges & Little
emerged in a case in
which Libertarians are
asking federal Judge
Michael Watson to restore
governor
candidate
Charlie Earl and attorney
general candidate Steven
Linnabary to Novembers
ballot.
In a new court filing,
the party also says Bradley
Smith, hired to oversee the disqualification
hearing by Republican
Secretary of State Jon
Husted, didnt disclose he
was working for Ohios
Republican
attorney
general, Mike DeWine,
doing pro bono work at
the time. DeWines office
confirmed Smith held an
appointment from Feb.
00101030
Expelled black
Libertarians tossed from ballot eye GOP ties
students parents sue
COLUMBUS (AP) 27, five days before the tor and other problems
Libertarians in Ohio Libertarians hearing, that made them deficient
Colerain school district
cried foul Tuesday after through June 30. A mes- under state law, Casey
4 The Herald
www.delphosherald.com
Nick Grote of Ottoville works in the lab at Vantage. Grote was one
of two students who had a summer internship at Kennedy Manufacturing throughout the summer. (Submitted photo)
Grote worked in the maintenance department from 6 a.m.-
Participation urged
in Library Card
Sign-up month
INFORMATION
SUBMITTED
DELPHOS Do you
have the most important backto-school supply of all? The
library does.
September is National
Library Card Sign-up month
- a chance to get the card that
opens up a world of information and entertainment. Even
as our culture is shifting to
digital information, todays
libraries are thriving technology hubs that many people
rely on for Internet access and
digital content.
Locally, the Delphos
Public Library is finding new
and innovative ways to extend
their collections and services,
providing access to a wide
variety of tools, both high-tech
and low-tech, to empower the
community. With an online
catalog, access to thousands
of eBooks, the BookMyne
app, a monthly tech night and
an expanding young adult
section, the library is about
more than books, its about
the future.
Stop in to get your card this
month. If you already have
a library card, find someone
who doesnt and ask them to
sign up.
INFORMATION SUBMITTED
Weck
Boer Market Wether Class 2 1st Trophy Won by: Madelyn
Here is a partial list of winners from 4-H shows held through Pohlman
Monday at the Van Wert County Fair:
Boer Market Wether Class 3 1st Trophy Won by: Lillian
Goats
Hempfling
Senior Goat Showmanship Trophy Won by: Colleen Schulte
Boer Market Wether Class 4 1st Trophy Won by: Lillian
Intermediate Goat Showmanship Trophy Won by: Lillian Hempfling
Hempfling
Grand Champion Boer Market Goat Trophy Won by: Lillian
Junior Goat Showmanship Trophy Won by: Derick Dealey
Hempfling
Champion Goat Showman Chair Won by: Amanda Lobsiger
Grand Champion Boer Market Goat Banner Won by: Lillian
Grand Champion Meat Goat Female Trophy Won by: Hempfling
Amanda Lobsiger
Reserve Champion Boer Market Goat Trophy Won by:
Reserve Champion Meat Goat Female Trophy Won by: Joel Amanda Lobsiger
Germann
Reserve Champion Boer Market Goat Banner Won by:
Grand Champion Dairy Goat Female Trophy Won by: Joel Amanda Lobsiger
Germann
Market Goat Best Rate of Gain Feed Scoop Won by: Amanda
Reserve Champion Dairy Goat Female Trophy Won by: Joel Lobsiger
Germann
Market Goat 2nd Best Rate of Gain Feed Scoop Won by:
Grand Champion Dairy Market Goat Trophy Won by: Amanda Lobsiger
Amanda Lobsiger
Beef
Grand Champion Dairy Market Goat Banner Won by:
Senior Beef Showman Trophy Won by: Austin Sorgen
Amanda Lobsiger
Intermediate Beef Showman Trophy Won by: Caden
Reserve Champion Dairy Market Goat Trophy Won by: Joel Ringwald
Germann
Junior Beef Showman Trophy Won by: Adeline Sorgen
Reserve Champion Dairy Market Goat Banner Won by: Joel
Champion Beef Showman Chair Won by: Austin Sorgen
Germann
Champion Supreme Female Overall Banner Won by: Amanda
Lobsiger
Reserve Supreme Female Overall Banner Won by: Austin
Sorgen
Grand Champion Beef Feeder Calf Banner Won by: Adeline
Sorgen
Champion Beef Feeder Cash Won by: Adeline Sorgen
Reserve Champion Beef Feeder Calf Banner Won by: Liliana
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Reserve Champion Beef Feeder Cash Won by: Liliana
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Dairy Steer Best Rate of Gain Feed Scoop Won by: Ronnie
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Dairy Steer 2nd Best Rate of Gain Feed Scoop Won by:
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Grand Champion Dairy Steer Banner Won by: Tanner
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Matthews
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Champion Dairy Steer Trophy Won by: Tanner Matthews
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Reserve Champion Dairy Steer Trophy Won by: Ronnie
Schumm
Reserve Champion Dairy Steer Banner Won by: Ronnie
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Performance Steer 2nd Best Rate of Gain Feed Scoop Won
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The are
Grand Champion Performance Steer Banner Won by: Brett
Schumm
Champion Performance Steer Trophy Won by: Brett Schumm
Reserve Champion Performance Steer Trophy Won by:
Boer Market Wether Class 1 1st Trophy Won by: Zayne
www.edwardjones.com
Caden Ringwald
www.edwardjones.com
Reserve Champion Performance Steer Banner Won by:
Caden Ringwald
Show Steer 1st Weight Class Trophy Won by: Austin Sorgen
Show Steer 2nd Weight Class Trophy Won by: Jordan
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LANDMARK
COMMUNITY
CALENDAR OF
EVENTS
TODAY
9 a.m. - noon Putnam
County Museum is open, 202
E. Main St., Kalida.
10 a.m. to 3 p.m. The
Delphos Museum of Postal
History, 339 N. Main St., is
open.
11:30 a.m. Mealsite
at Delphos Senior Citizen
Center, 301 Suthoff St.
Noon Rotary Club
meets at The Grind.
6 p.m. Shepherds of
Christ Associates meet in the
St. Johns Chapel.
6:30 p.m. Delphos
Kiwanis Club meets at the
Eagles Lodge, 1600 E. Fifth
St.
7 p.m. Bingo at St.
Johns Little Theatre.
Delphos Civil Service
Commission
meets
at
Municipal Building.
7:30 p.m. Hope Lodge
214 Free and Accepted
Masons, Masonic Temple,
North Main Street.
9 p.m. Fort Jennings
Lions Club meets at the
Outpost Restaurant.
THURSDAY
9-11 a.m. The Delphos
Canal Commission Museum,
241 N. Main St., is open.
10 a.m. to 3 p.m. The
Delphos Museum of Postal
History, 339 N. Main St., is
open.
11:30 a.m. Mealsite
at Delphos Senior Citizen
Center, 301 Suthoff St.
3-7 p.m. The Interfaith
Thrift Store is open for shopping.
6:30 p.m. Delphos
Ladies Club, Trinity United
Methodist Church.
7 p.m. Delphos
Emergency Medical Service
meeting, EMS building,
Second Street.
7:30 p.m. Delphos
Chapter 23, Order of Eastern
Star, meets at the Masonic
Temple, North Main Street.
FRIDAY
7:30 a.m. Delphos
Optimist Club, A&W DriveIn, 924 E. Fifth St.
10 a.m. to 3 p.m. The
Delphos Museum of Postal
History, 339 N. Main St., is
open.
11:30 a.m. Mealsite
at Delphos Senior Citizen
Center, 301 Suthoff St.
1-4 p.m. Interfaith
Thrift Store is open for shopping.
SATURDAY
9 a.m.-noon Interfaith
Thrift Store is open for shopping.
St. Vincent dePaul Society,
located at the east edge of the
St. Johns High School parking lot, is open.
The Herald 5
COLUMN
Happy
Birthday
SEPT. 4
Hayley Jettinghoff
Scott Siefker
Karen Sendelbach
Sarah Stemen
Rose Moore
Kurt Bonifas
Todd Rittenhouse
Katherine Watkins
Madison Jettinghoff
Michelle Lindeman
Destiny Coil
Putting Your
World in
PersPective
!
!
!
P
L
HE
Due to technical
issues , we will be
rebuilding our daily
BIRTHDAY
LIST!
6 The Herald
SPORTS
www.delphosherald.com
St. Johns sophomore Nick Pohlman leads senior Anthony Hale through a path at the Spencerville Cross
Country Quad meet Tuesday. Nick finished with a
time of 19:47 and Anthony finished with a new PR
time of 19:57. St. Johns Curtis Pohlman won the
High School boys race with a time of 18:21. For
the team scoring, it was Shawnee 30, St. Johns
53, Spencerville 68 and Perry 77. In the girls race,
Breece Rohr led the way for St. Johns with a 2nd
place finish and Baylee Lindeman was 5th. There
was no team scoring due to Shawnee being the only
school with a team. In the Junior High boys race,
Canyon Scirocco won the race with a time of 13:16.
(Submitted photo)
Local Roundup
INFORMATION
SUBMITTED
Mustangs grab NWC golf
win
DEFIANCE With Parker
Frey registering a 35, Allen
Easts boys golfers grabbed
a 171-189-201-234 Northwest
Conference quad win Tuesday
at Auglaize Golf Course.
Also scoring for the victorious Mustangs were Kayne
Richardson 42, Grant Whitley
44, Logan Ryan 50, Matt Meyer
53 and Harry Kill 55.
For the Panthers, the scores
were Ben Heilshorn 45, Corey
Adkins and Cade McGarvey
47, Ethan Dominique 50, Ellie
Miller 57 and Isaac Baldwin 60.
For the Bearcats, Chance
Campbell 43, Mitchell
Youngpeter 46, Brian Wood
51, Collin Davis 61 and Lydia
Dunlap 75.
For the Bulldogs, Zach Park
54, Brian Quillen 56 and Gage
Dunn and Logan Reedy 62 each.
Kalida bashes Archers,
Rams in golf
KALIDA With Zach
Erhart and Jeff Knueve notching scores of 36, Kalidas boys
golf unit bashed Tinora and
Antwerp 157-186-212 Tuesday
at Country Acres.
Also registering numbers for
the host Wildcats (3-1) were
Trent Siebeneck 39 and Noah
Lambert 46.
For the Rams (1-5), Cole
Woods 43, Brett Camp 44, Tom
Cameron 48 and Ryan Mohr 51.
On behalf of the Archers,
Jeff Coleman 42, Noah Cline
56 and Zeb Getrost and Jacob
Odenell 57.
Associated Press
AP Top 25
The Top 25 teams in The Associated
Press college football poll, with first-place
votes in parentheses, records through
Sept. 1, total points based on 25 points
for a first-place vote through one point for
a 25th-place vote and previous ranking:
Record Pts Pv
1. Florida St. (46)
1-0
1,456 1
2. Alabama (1)
1-0
1,317 2
3. Oregon (5)
1-0
1,314 3
4. Oklahoma (2)
1-0
1,283 4
5. Auburn
1-0
1,186 6
6. Georgia (2)
1-0
1,114 12
7. Michigan St.
1-0
1,093 8
8. Ohio St.
1-0
982 5
9. Texas A&M (2)
1-0
978 21
10. Baylor
1-0
962 10
11. UCLA
1-0
944 7
12. LSU (1)
1-0
926 13
13. Stanford
1-0
886 11
14. Southern Cal
1-0
729 15
15. Mississippi
1-0
525 18
16. Notre Dame
1-0
519 17
17. Arizona St.
1-0
431 19
18. Wisconsin
0-1
364 14
19. Nebraska
1-0
352 22
20. Kansas St.
1-0
325 20
21. North Carolina
1-0
196 23
21. South Carolina
0-1
196 9
23. Clemson
0-1
164 16
24. Missouri
1-0
147 24
25. Louisville
1-0
141 NR
Others receiving votes: Texas 126,
Oklahoma St. 94, Duke 60, Florida 49,
Mississippi St. 49, Penn St. 49, Michigan
38, TCU 29, Washington 27, BYU 21,
Iowa 18, Marshall 18, Virginia Tech 17,
Tennessee 14, Cincinnati 8, Texas Tech
7, West Virginia 7, Rutgers 6, Arizona 4,
N. Dakota St. 2, Louisiana 1, Pittsburgh
1.
VAN WERT Van Wert and Ottoville played two cliffhanger sets Tuesday night, both won by the Cougars, 25-23,
before the home team romped in the third, 25-14. The win
moved Van Wert to 5-1, while the Lady Green fell to 3-3.
The first set saw 11 ties and five lead changes, with
the lead getting as big as four points only once at 19-15,
Van Wert. With the score 22-22, a Landrie Koontz kill put
the Cougars on top 23-22 but Ottovilles Annie Lindeman
trumped that to tie it at 23. With the set hanging in the
balance, a Lady Green kill attempt went into the net, and Van
Werts Alexis Dowdy then blasted the clincher.
The second set was a near duplicate of the first. There
were nine ties and five lead changes, the biggest lead
being three points, which happened three times, all by the
Cougars at 22-19, 23-20 and 24-21. At 24-21, Ottovilles
C.J. Kemper put away two straight to get within one but
the Lady Green then committed a crucial communication
error, letting an easy one drop to the floor to end it.
Van Wert never trailed in the third set, although it was close
until Riley Jones took over the serving duties at 9-7 and reeled
off seven points in a row to make it 16-7, Cougars. The lead
got as big as 12 at 24-12, with Saige Royer administering the
match-ending kill.
College Football Polls Thatcher stout as Lancers shut out Lady Pirates
By BRIAN BASSETT
DHI Media Correspondent
news@delphosherald.com
J.D.
Martinez hit a 3-run homer off
closer Cody Allen in the ninth
inning, helping the Detroit Tigers
rally for a 4-2 win over
the Cleveland Indians on
Tuesday night.
Martinezs 1-out shot over
the center-field wall bailed
out the Tigers, who had been
unable to get a clutch hit for
eight innings. But in the ninth,
Torii Hunter drew a leadoff
walk from Allen (5-4), Miguel
Cabrera singled, and after Victor
Martinez flied out, J.D. Martinez connected for his 19th homer, a crushing
blow to the Indians.
www.delphosherald.com
Fair
Pathfinder 4-H Club raked in the awards at the Van Wert County Fair this year.
From left: Sophia Wilson Black inc. third place in beef and also special achiever
award; Abby Buettner took second place table setting; Jeanelle Bonifas was
third place in horse Black inc. and first place in poultry; and Lillian Hempfling
was third place in poultry, second in goats and third in table setting. Not pictured: Michaela Hoffman, third place clothing development and second place in
food/nutrition; Marie Mueller first place in goats Black inc.; Anna Mueller, third
place in poultry Black inc.; Kurt Hoersten, second in dairy feeder Black inc.; and
Jordan Miller, second in beef Black inc. (Submitted photos)
Priest
Hunter Under Saddle:
14-19 English Pleasure:
Paige Motycka
Hunt Seat Equitation: 9-13:
Cassie Priest
Hunt Seat Equitation:
14-19: Paige Motycka
Western Pleasure: 9-11:
Cassie Priest
Western Pleasure: 12-14:
Paige Motycka
Western Pleasure: 15-19:
Lindsey Motycka
Western Horsemanship:
9-11: Cassie Priest
Western Horsemanship:
12-14: Paige Motycka
Western Horsemanship:
15-19: Emily Bauer
Novice Horsemanship:
9-19: Jeanie Bonifas
Trail: 9-13: Bryce Mihm
Trail:
14-19:
Paige
Motycka
Reining: 14-19: Lindsey
Motycka
Pleasure Driving, Light
Pony/Horse: 9-19: Jeanie
Bonifas
Driving
Reinsmanship
9-19: Jeanie Bonifas
Jr. Fair Horse Contesting
Cloverleaf Barrels: 9-13:
Regan Priest
Cloverleaf Barrels: 14-19:
Amanda Lobsiger
Barrels & Cones: 9-13:
Cassie Priest
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DEAR
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Im
printing your letter not only
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who might be using fire
pits, but also to the parents
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hot buried coals can be a
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ones. Because the coals
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sometimes confuse fire
pits ringed by rocks with
sandboxes,
and
the
results can be tragic.
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Your No. 1
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D E A R
Dr. Anthony
DOCTOR K:
Does eating fish
Komoroff
help
prevent
prostate cancer?
D E A R
READER:
Y o u v e
certainly heard
me encourage
readers to eat
plenty of fish,
particularly fatty fish such as salmon and
mackerel. Thats because many good studies
have found that people who eat fish frequently
have lower rates of many serious diseases,
including heart disease and several types of
cancer.
A recently published study from the Prostate
Cancer Prevention Trial (PCPT) was described
in the media as coming to the opposite
conclusion. I dont agree, but to explain why,
I first need to talk about the substances in fish
that are thought to be beneficial for humans.
Fish contain high levels of two omega-3 fatty
acids, EPA and DHA, which have been shown
to reduce the risk of heart attacks and strokes.
EPA and DHA also calm inflammation -- and
inflammation contributes to the development
and progression of prostate cancer. Thats why
researchers were interested in learning whether
these fatty acids might help prevent prostate
cancer.
The PCPT measured levels of various fatty
acids in the blood of 3,461 men, 1,658 of whom
developed prostate cancer during the PCPT
study. They found that men with the highest
levels of DHA were 2.5 times more likely to
develop aggressive, high-grade prostate cancer
over a seven-year period compared with men
who had the lowest levels of DHA. What could
explain these results?
Its not clear. But the PCPT did not require
men to undergo prostate biopsies before
enrolling in the study. So its possible that
some of the participants already had highgrade cancer before they entered the trial.
Most important, this was not a study of fish
consumption at all. It was a study of the levels
of certain nutrients in the blood, including
omega-3 fatty acids such as DHA. These
omega-3s could have come from supplements,
from food other than fish, or from fish itself.
Its also important to put the results in
perspective. The researchers analyzed blood
samples from the 1,658 men who developed
prostate cancer during the PCPT study. But
only 125 of these men -- about 8 percent of
the total -- developed high-grade tumors. The
vast majority of men developed low-grade
cancer, and DHA levels had no relationship to
low-grade cancer. So while high levels of DHA
may increase risk of developing high-grade
cancer, the actual risk is still low.
Many more men die of heart disease than
from prostate cancer. Eating fatty fish prepared
healthfully (poached, broiled or grilled) in
place of red meat is a good way to protect your
heart. So if you eat fish, do it for your heart and
your overall health.
At this time, there is no evidence that fish
prevents prostate cancer. But this new study
does not say, as was reported by some in the
media, that eating fish increases the risk of
prostate cancer.
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DELPHOS HERALD
THE
www.delphosherald.com
Todays
Horoscope
By Eugenia Last
Blondie
Beetle Bailey
SCORPIO
(Oct.
24Nov. 22) -- Make your
finances a priority. Look into
moneymaking schemes that
will increase your revenue
stream without a major cash
outlay. Dont share personal
matters prematurely. Protect
your reputation.
SAGITTARIUS
(Nov.
23-Dec. 21) -- If others seem
especially trying, look at your
actions and consider if you are
the cause. Perhaps you have
been too demanding or shorttempered. Be honest and strive
to be more considerate.
Pickles
The Herald 9
Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS
1 Feeling
5 Meadow
10 News summaries
12 No-goodnik
13 Hooded
pullover
14 Crater Lake
locale
15 Piece of
chicken
16 Yes, at the
altar (2 wds.)
18 Rand of
fiction
19 Intending
22 Shower
feature
25 Got closer
to
29 Juvenile
30 Further
down
32 Organic
compound
33 Hobby shop
wood
34 Element in
salt
37 German
steel city
38 Is afraid of
40 Drone
43 Elec. unit
44 Impulse
48 Pack scavenger
50 More
creepy
52 Different
ones
53 Lithe
54 Seance
invitee
55 Out on the
briny
7 Tense
8 Zoo favorite
9 Cave, perhaps
10 Untrained,
as recruits
11 Read hastily
12 Noted frontiersman
17 Huge racket
20 Bergman of
old films
21 Talked on
and on
22 Beauticians
coloring
23 Sea in Antarctica
24 Parking lot
sight
26 Gives encouragement to
27 Plumbing
bends
28 Two tablets,
maybe
31 Unnaturally
pale
35 Where Asia
begins
Yesterdays answers
36 Dues
payer: Abbr.
39 Simians
40 House
feature
41 Canyon
reply
42 Is very
thrifty
45 Annoy
46 -- --
DOWN
1 --, vidi, vici
2 Computer
graphic
3 Haggled
4 It banned
DDT
5 Wides
partner
6 Notion
Garfield
Born Loser
DISTRIBUTED
BY
UNIVERSAL UCLICK FOR
UFS
Answer to Sudoku
Hi and Lois
Marmaduke
move on!
47 Sooner
than
48 Slow run
49 Easel
display
51 Zsa
Zsas sister
2
10 The Herald
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Trivia
00099142
Its no longer
safe to recline
your airplane seat
NEW YORK (AP)
Squeezed into tighter and
tighter spaces, airline passengers appear to be rebelling,
taking their frustrations out on
other fliers.
Three U.S. flights made
unscheduled landings in the
past eight days after passengers got into fights over the
ability to recline their seats.
Disputes over a tiny bit of personal space might seem petty,
but for passengers whose
knees are already banging into
tray tables, every inch counts.
Seats are getting closer
together, says Sara Nelson,
president of the Association of
Flight Attendants, which represents 60,000 flight attendants
at 19 airlines. We have to deescalate conflict all the time.
There are fights over overhead bin space, legroom and
where to put winter coats.
We havent hit the end of
it, Nelson says. The conditions continue to march in
a direction that will lead to
more and more conflict.
Airlines today are juggling
terror warnings in Britain, the
Ebola outbreak in Africa and
an Icelandic volcano erupting
and threatening to close down
European airspace. Yet, the issue
of disruptive passengers has
captured the worlds attention.
Its getting to the point
where the pre-flight safety videos need an additional warning: Be nice to your neighbor.
The International Air
Transport Association calls
unruly passengers an escalating problem, saying there
was one incident for every
1,300 flights in the past three
years. The trade group would
not share detailed historical
data to back up the assertion
that this is a growing problem.
Todays flying experience is far from glamorous.
Passengers wait in long lines
for security screening, push
and shove at the gate to be
first on board, and then fight
for the limited overhead bin
space. They are already agitated by the time they arrive
at their row and see how
cramped it is.
Auction
Steele