Sie sind auf Seite 1von 12

DELPHOS

The
50 daily www.delphosherald.com

ACME sectional action, p6

Telling The Tri-Countys Story Since 1869

Tuesday, July 5, 2011

HERALD
Delphos, Ohio

Anti-tax diehard looms in spending showdown, p4

Families Take Action to meet on Thursday


Families Take Action will meet at 5 p.m. Thursday at the Delphos City School District administration building. The group supports the board of educations .5 percent income tax measure to appear on the Aug. 2 ballot to bring in revenue for the districts general fund.

Upfront

Sports
St. Johns hosting soccer camp The St. Johns girls soccer program will host a soccer camp on behalf of the Delphos Soccer Association July 16-17 at the St. Johns Annex soccer fields. The ages and times are as follows: 5 to 10-yearolds, 9-11 a.m.; 11 years and up, 1-3 p.m. The cost is $25 per person, which includes a camp T-shirt. Registration will be 9-10 a.m. Saturday at the Annex. Kristy Hasenkamp will be the camp director, so if there are any questions, interested players can call her at (567) 204-2745 or e-mail her at siefk30@yahoo. com. Make checks payable to Lady Jays Soccer. DC softball summer camps The Defiance College softball program has its series of camps slated for July 27-29 at Sal Hench Field on the campus of Defiance College. For more information on the DC summer softball camps, please visit www. dcsoftballcamps.com. July 27: Hitting Session I, 9-11 a.m. (grades K-6); Hitting Session II, noon2 p.m. (grades 7-12). July 28: Defense Session I, 9-11 a.m. (grades K-6); Defense Session II, noon2 p.m. (grades 7-12). July 29: Pitching Session I, 9-11 a.m. (grades K-6); Pitching Session II, noon2 p.m. (grades 7-12). As well, DC has released a schedule for the 2011 Fall Softball League. The league is open to girls entering a high school grade in the fall. Registrations for the league are being accepted on a firstcome, first-served basis. The fifth annual fall league will be hosted on Sundays from September 11 through October 23 at Hench Field. The 8-team league will be limited to 112 participants and there is a cost for the league. The schedule consists of a skill-development clinic, five doubleheaders and a single-elimination tournament. For additional information about the DC Fall Softball League, including fees, visit the web site above.

This years festival added a dunking tank. St. Johns basketball coach Dan Grothouse volunteered to the delight of residents who paid just $1 for a chance to dunk the coach in the hour he volunteered. Kiwanis K-Kids raised $630 for Garfield Park.

Mike Ford photos

4th of July fest goes off with a bang


BY STACY TAFF staff@delphosherald.com Wisher said. The weathers been really generous to us this year. The crowds died down a little during the day but with the long weekend we expected that. It always picks back up in the evening. The kickball tournament has been a great addition and a big success. Aside from that and the dunking booth, everything has pretty much stayed the same except the celebration just keeps getting bigger and bigger each year. Even with all of the people and alcohol at Stadium Park, things went smoothly with minimal complications. There were no major issues and I guess you could say that everything went off without a hitch, Craig Mansfield of the Parks and Recreation Department said. The new additions have gone over really well, the dunk tank and kickball the Kiwanis did; and of course the weather has cooperated beautifully. As for the fireworks, Wishers said they would be just as good, if not better than last year.

Perennials such as miniature golf, rides and games of chance were also part of the event as Jared Lucas played the ring toss.

DELPHOS Its impossible to imagine more perfect weather for the Independence Day celebrations Delphos residents enjoyed over the weekend. According to the Delphos Kiwanis Club and Parks and Recreation Department, the weather wasnt the only thing that was perfect. The whole weekend just went really well, Kiwanis member Jamey

The donations we received have been great, he said. We spent about $8,000 on the fireworks display this year. It should be a good show. Mansfield expressed the Parks and Recreation Departments gratitude to the Kiwanis for making their job easy. We really appreciate the Kiwanis taking the lead this year, he said. Theyve put in a lot of volunteer hours and a lot of work and I think its really paid off. The community is very happy with it.

Fishing Derby winners

Forecast
P a r t l y c l o u d y Wednesday; 20 percent chance of showers; high in upper 80s. See page 2.

VFW Post 3035 Commander Jim Weeden stands with the overall winners and presents them with bikes donated by the VFW. Overall Girl Winner: Lydia Hablitzel, age 5; Overall Boy Winner: Caden White, age 4 Prizes were also awarded to the individuals who caught turtles; $10 went to Noah Rinehart for catching the first fish and $5 went to Emma Will for catching the smallest fish.

Stacy Taff photos

Boys and girls ages 2-12 and their families gathered around the canal at Stadium Park Monday morning to compete in the Kiwanis Fishing Derby, which concluded at 10:30 a.m. with an awards ceremony. Winners were as follows: In the 2-4 age group (above, right) Heath McNeal, right, 1st Place Boys Division, age 4; Noah Rinehart (not pictured), 2nd Place Boys Division, Aubree Bayman, center, 1st Place Girls Division, age 4 and Chelsea Brotherwood, left, 2nd Place Girls Division, age 2. 5-8 age group (bottom, left) Joseph Haynor, right, 1st Place Boys Division, age 5; Daniel Meyers, 2nd Place Boys Division, age 6; Carson White, 3rd Place Boys Division, age 5, Makenna Cooley, 1st Place Girls Division, age 7, Julia Schleeter, 2nd Place Girls Division, age 6 and Erin Colhoun, 3rd Place Girls Division, age 8 (not pictured). 9-12 age group (bottom, right) Tom Catlin, right, 1st Place Boys Division, age 11, Evan Querry, 2nd Place Boys Division, age 11 (not pictured), Justin Sterling, 3rd Place Boys Division, age 10, Brittney Schleeter, 1st Place Girls Division, age 11, Katlynn Schleeter, 2nd Place Girls Division, age 11 and Reagan Clarkson, 3rd Place Girls Division, age 9.

Index

Obituaries State/Local Politics Community Sports Classifieds TV 4th of July pictures

2 3 4 5 6-7 9 10 12

2 The Herald

Tuesday, July 5, 2011

www.delphosherald.com

Fireworks, parades: US celebrates 4th of July


By KAREN ZRAICK Associated Press NEW YORK The nations most extravagant display of July 4 fireworks Monday was a triumphant celebration that turned sober briefly to commemorate the 10-year mark since the Sept. 11 attacks. Tens of thousands of people from around the world streamed to Manhattans West Side to see the pyrotechnics show over the Hudson River between New York and New Jersey, featuring more than 40,000 shells exploding in choreographed, multicolored progression. Its beautiful, said Rosa Riveras, a 57-year-old health educator from Manhattan, as bursts of light filled the sky. Its amazing. Im loving it. NBC ran an exclusive broadcast from a pier along the river, with Nick Lachey of the show The Sing-Off hosting. Viewers got prerecorded performances by Beyonce, filmed in front of the Statue of Liberty, and country music star Brad Paisley. Then the fireworks lit up the sky, tightly choreographed to a half-hour soundtrack from Katy Perry, LeAnn Rimes, Jennifer Hudson and other artists. Beth Cochran of Scottsdale, Ariz., was with two childhood friends from Fishkill, N.Y. The group of three periodically broke into renditions of God Bless America and other patriotic songs. We do not take friendship or freedom for granted, said Cochran, wearing an American flag tank top. Im proud to be an American. John Woods, a 52-yearold information technology consultant from Wimbledon, England, said he appreciated the diversity of the crowd, which included many immigrants and tourists from around the country and abroad. I think its just a celebration of being an American, he said. The show, sponsored by Macys, paid tribute to the 125th anniversary of the Statue of Libertys debut in New York Harbor. Fireworks blasted off from six barges along the river to heights of 1,000 feet. As Amazing Grace was sung, bursts of golden fireworks lit up the sky to pay tribute to victims of 9/11. Big cheers broke out in the crowd during the finale. All across the country, Americans marked the 235th anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independence with parades, fireworks, barbecues plus presidential campaigning, a White House birthday and competitive eating. Thousands showed up near the Washington Monument to eagerly await the annual fireworks show on the National Mall, while others were throwing on Hawaiian shirts and shorts to ski the stillsnowy slopes at resorts from California to Colorado. Earlier in the day on New Yorks Coney Island, the annual Nathans Famous July Fourth hot dog-eating contest brought out the biggest names in competitive eating for a clash that was short in timespan but high in calories. Joey Jaws Chestnut, of San Jose, Calif., wolfed down 62 hot dogs and buns during the 10-minute contest, winning his fifth straight title. Sonya The Black Widow Thomas chowed her way to victory in the first-ever women-only contest, eating 40 hot dogs, one shy of her 2009 total. In Boston, the annual Boston Pops concert was a must. In Akron, Ohio, the Rib, White & Blue Food Festival was enticing. And then, there were Nevadas casinos, which promised a pyrotechnics extravaganza that could be a gamblers best bet. At the mountaintop home of Thomas Jefferson in Charlottesville, Va., officials continued a nearly five-decade-old tradition of swearing in new U.S. citizens. Seventy-seven people took their oaths during a naturalization ceremony at Monticello. The holiday is celebrated as the nations birthday, but it also was Malia Obamas 13th birthday. The presidents eldest daughter had to share her parents with hundreds of others as Barack Obama and first lady Michelle Obama invited troops and their families to attend a special barbecue and USO concert on the South Lawn. Speaking to U.S. troops, Obama told them, America is proud of all of you. You represent the latest in a long line of heroes who have served our country with honor, who have made incredible sacrifices to protect the freedoms that we all enjoy, the president said. Some of the Republicans hoping to replace Obama in the White House spent part of the day campaigning in states where presidential politics are as much a part of the holiday as fireworks and barbecues U.S. Rep. Michelle Bachmann, of Minnesota, marched in a parade in Clear Lake, Iowa. In New Hampshire, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney and former Utah Gov. Jon Huntsman both marched in the Amherst parade. Businessman and GOP hopeful Herman Cain skipped the parades but threw out the first pitch at a minor league baseball game in Manchester, N.H. Aside from the politicking and the handshaking and the enthusiasm that our campaign is determined to generate in this state, were going to reflect on what it means to be an American, Huntsman told reporters. To share inalienable rights, to share our Constitutional privileges. There were also fireworks mishaps Monday, including at least one death in Oklahoma after fire officials said a 20-year-old man was struck in the throat by a rocket-type firecracker. In Kansas, fireworks were blamed for starting at least one house fire in the Topeka area.

For The Record


Delphos Weather

WEATHER

OBITUARY

The high temperature Monday in Delphos was 87 and the low was 69. A year ago today, the high was 89 and the low was 72. The record high for today is 100, set in 1955 and the record low of 47 was set in 1968. WEATHER FORECAST Tri-county Associated Press TONIGHT: Mostly clear. Lows in the mid 60s. West winds around 5 mph shifting to the southwest after midnight. WEDNESDAY: Partly cloudy with a 20 percent chance of showers and storms. Highs in the upper 80s. Northwest winds around10 mph. WEDNESDAY NIGHT: Partly cloudy. A 20 percent chance of showers and storms in the evening. Lows in the mid 60s. Northeast wind 5 mph. EXTENDED FORECAST THURSDAY: Mostly sunny. Highs in the lower 80s. Northeast winds5 to 10 mph. THURSDAY NIGHT, FRIDAY: Mostly clear. Lows around 60. Highs in mid 80s. FRIDAY NIGHT: Clear. Lows in the lower 60s. SATURDAY-SUNDAY NIGHT: Mostly clear. Highs in the upper 80s. Lows in the mid 60s. MONDAY: Partly cloudy. Highs around 90.

The Delphos Herald


Ray Geary, general manager Delphos Herald Inc. Don Hemple, advertising manager Tiffany Brantley, circulation manager The Daily Herald (USPS 1525 8000) is published daily except Sundays and Holidays. By carrier in Delphos and area towns, or by rural motor route where available $2.09 per week. By mail in Allen, Van Wert, or Putnam County, $105 per year. Outside these counties $119 per year. Entered in the post office in Delphos, Ohio 45833 as Periodicals, postage paid at Delphos, Ohio. No mail subscriptions will be accepted in towns or villages where The Daily Herald paper carriers or motor routes provide daily home delivery for $2.09 per week. 405 North Main St. TELEPHONE 695-0015 Office Hours 8 a.m.-5 p.m. Mon.-Fri. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to THE DAILY HERALD, 405 N. Main St. Delphos, Ohio 45833
Vol. 142 No. 18 Nancy Spencer, editor

William H. Ludwig
Nov. 28, 1936June 2, 2011 William H. Ludwig, 74, of Van Wert, died at 5:50 p.m. Saturday at Vancrest Healthcare Center in Van Wert. He was born Nov. 28, 1936, in Van Wert, to Owen and Dorthea (OLeary) Ludwig. On Aug. 26, 1959, he married Evelyn (Mason) Ludwig, who survives in Van Wert. Other survivors include daughter Sue (Daniel) Jones of Delphos; son Jeff Ludwig of Delphos; eight grandchildren and three great-grandchildren. He was preceded in death by a son, Michael Ludwig, and a brother, Richard Ludwig. Mr. Ludwig was a United States Navy veteran who was retired from Federal Mogul and the Van Wert County Sheriffs Dept. He was a member of the Van Wert Elks, had served on the Hospital Commission Board for many years, and was a life member of the Van Wert VFW. He was a member of the former Calvary United Methodist Church and was a 1954 graduate of the HoaglinJackson High School. Services will be held at 10:30 a.m. Wednesday at Alspach-Gearhart Funeral Home and Crematory in Van Wert. The Rev. Paul Miller will officiate. Burial will be in Mohr Cemetery in Van Wert County with military graveside rites by the combined units of the Van Wert American Legion & VFW Posts. Friends may call from 2-8 p.m. today at the funeral home. Preferred memorials to Vancrest Health Care Center Activities Fund.

Just far enough to be away

LAKE CODY
5775 Ottawa Rd. Elida, OH 45807 (St. Rt. 65 & 30) 419-641-3782 www.lakecody.com

15 Acre Lake Swimming & Fishing Full Hook Up Tent Sites Playground & Basketball Court Walk Path Activities Most Weekends
WITH THIS AD RECEIVE BUY 2 NIGHTS CAMPING AND GET THE THIRD FREE ~AND/OR~ BUY ONE SWIMMING PASS (DAILY OR SEASONAL) GET THE SECOND ONE FREE

7 missing after boating accident


By MARIANA MARTINEZ Associated Press TIJUANA, Mexico Mexican rescuers were scouring the Gulf of California for seven Americans whose fishing boat capsized two days ago, saying they were extending their search because the missing tourists could still be alive in the warm, calm waters. One American has been confirmed dead in the accident, which came after a flash storm upended the boat before dawn Sunday, spilling dozens of tourists and crew members into the water. The identity of the dead man was not released. By early Monday, 19 of the tourists and all 16 crew members had been picked up by the navy or other fishing boats after clinging to coolers, rescue rings and life vests for more than 16 hours. Mexican Navy, army and state officials met late Monday to discuss the search and there were reports they would call off rescue efforts. But instead they announced the search would continue over an extended area. Mexican navy Capt. Benjamin Pineda Gomez said that with the warm weather and water temperature in the Gulf of California, its still possible that the missing tourists are alive. A person who casts away can survive many days. That

CLEVELAND (AP) These Ohio lotteries were drawn Monday: Classic Lotto 06-16-20-37-42-43 Estimated jackpot: $36.79 million Mega Millions Estimated jackpot: $12 million Pick 3 Evening 3-8-1 Pick 4 Evening 4-9-9-2 Powerball Estimated jackpot: $25 million Rolling Cash 5 19-22-25-27-33 Estimated jackpot: $100,000 Ten OH Evening 03-06-08-10-22-23-26-3034-40-48-50-60-61-62-65-6770-79-80

LOTTERY

We would like to send a special thank you to everyone who supported our recent chicken dinner fund-raiser. A number of individuals worked countless hours planning and preparing for this event to make it a huge success. As a result, we will be able to purchase supplies and pay for additional expenses during the 2011-2012 sports seasons. Sincerely, St. John Blue Jay Cheerleaders

THANK YOU

LOCAL PRICES
Corn: Wheat: Beans: $6.45 $5.52 $13.26

Allen County Refuse provides garbage and recycle collection in Delphos. The Allen County portion of Delphos is collected on Thursdays, with residents placing garbage containers on the curb Wednesday evening. The Van Wert County portion of Delphos is collected on Friday, with residents placing garbage containers at the curb on Thursday evening. Recycle is collected this Thursday and Friday. Recycle containers should also be placed at the curb. If a holiday falls during the week, collection is pushed back a day. For example, the week of Memorial Day, collection in Allen County will be Friday and in Van Wert County it will be Saturday. Big item collection is held from 8 a.m.-noon the first Saturday of each month in the parking lot across from the city building. Participants need to show proof of residency like a city utility bill. See the full schedule at cityofdelphos.com.

TRASH TALK

sea is calm, he said. The U.S. Coast Guard offered Mexico help in the search and rescue operation and said it will continue its operations. The 115-foot (35-meter) vessel, the Erik, sank about 60 miles (100 kilometers) south of the port of San Felipe around 2:30 a.m. local time Sunday, the second day of a weeklong fishing trip the group had organized for several years each Independence Day holiday. The boat capsized less than two miles (three kilometers) from shore, but the navy extended its search 60 miles (100 kilometers) deeper into the gulf later Monday after searching the area by helicopter and airplane and finding nothing, Pineda said. Most of the 27 men on the fishing excursion are from Northern California and had made the trip before. Im beyond concerned, said Kristina Bronstein, who is engaged to missing tourist Mark Dorland of Twain Harte, California. She heard about the accident Monday morning from a trip organizers wife, who told her Dorland, 62, was one of the first people to fall into the water. He wasnt wearing a life vest. The couple are to be married next month.

VANCE STREET APARTMENTS


Want to live independently and still save money? NOWS THE TIME! Our Waiting List Has Never Been Shorter!
Independent living for Seniors 62 & Older Spacious Efficiency & 1 BR HUD Section 8, Rental Assistance for Qualified Individuals Hot Water and Trash Service Included Contact us at: 137 Vance

Attention Folks 62 and older:


Sign up now and receive:

SUMMER SEALERS

419-358-7795 TDD 1-800-750-0750

St., Bluffton, OH 45817

24 Hour Emergency Maintenance On Site Managers On Site Laundry On Site Elevator Off-Street Private Parking for Residents and Guests Walking Distance to Downtown
Professionally Managed by Showe Management Corp.

DRIVEWAYS COMMERCIAL LOTS PROFESSIONAL STRIPING HOT RUBBER CRACK FILLER

419-238-2266

By The Associated Press Today is Tuesday, July 5, the 186th day of 2011. There are 179 days left in the year. Todays Highlight in History: On July 5, 1811, Venezuela became the first South American country to declare independence from Spain. On this date: In 1865, William Booth founded the Salvation Army in London. In 1911, French President Georges Pompidou was born in Montboudif. In 1935, President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed the National Labor Relations Act. In 1946, the bikini, created by Louis Reard (ray-AHRD), was worn by Micheline Bernardini during a poolside fashion show in Paris. In 1947, Larry Doby made his debut with the Cleveland Indians, becoming the first black player in the American League. In 1948, Britains National Health Service Act went into effect, providing governmentfinanced medical and dental care. In 1971, President Richard Nixon certified the 26th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, which lowered the minimum voting age from 21 to 18. In 1975, Arthur Ashe became the first black man to win a Wimbledon singles title as he defeated Jimmy Connors. In 1984, the Supreme Court weakened the 70-year-old exclusionary rule, deciding that evidence seized in good faith with defective court warrants could be used against defendants in criminal trials. In 1991, a worldwide financial scandal erupted as regulators in eight countries shut down the Bank of Credit and Commerce International. Actress Mildred Dunnock died in Oak Bluffs, Mass., at age 90. Ten years ago: President George W. Bush named veteran prosecutor Robert Mueller (MUHL-ur) to take over the FBI. Five years ago: North Korea test-fired seven missiles into the Sea of Japan, including at least one believed capable of reaching the U.S. mainland. Enron founder Kenneth Lay, who was facing decades in prison for one of the most sprawling business frauds in U.S. history, died in Aspen, Colo., at age 64.

TODAY IN HISTORY

www.delphosherald.com

Tuesday, July 5, 2011

The Herald 3

Handicapped parking tags in higher demand

Briefs

Kasich pushes change in battleground Ohio


JULIE CARR SMYTH AP Statehouse Correspondent COLUMBUS Ohios new Republican Gov. John Kasich is a study in contradictions. He is candid yet secretive. He is acerbic yet person Gov. John Kasich able. He quibbles over media access yet is omnipresent on Twitter and Fox. Hes made Peter Brown, assistant direc- through his days with the a cause of taking on public tor of the Quinnipiac Polling demeanor of the young man workers after spending most Institute. he was when he arrived at of his life as one. Indeed, Kasich, appear- the Statehouse in 1978, makCritics call Kasichs incon- ing Sunday on CBS Face the ing history as the youngest sistencies arrogance. Fans Nation, said doing whats state senator Ohioans had see him as bold and endear- right trumps any consideration ever elected at 26. His youthingly human. Polls have of his political popularity. ful self-image shows through found mounting dissatisfacAt the end of the day you when he declares hell change tion among voters. One thing look yourself in the mirror the color of Ohios pink drivshines through regardless: and you say to yourself, Did ers licenses or restore snow John Kasich is a man in a I do what was right for fami- days schoolkids were losing hurry. lies and for children? If I paid in a legislative battle. He likes Six months into a four- a political price, so what? Lady Gaga, Spiderman and year term, Kasich has dumped Kasich said. wants Ohio to be cool. his Democratic predecessors And the former congressYet a Quinnipiac Poll high-speed rail initiative and man and chairman of the found voters disapproval of education overhaul. Hes House Budget Committee in Kasich rose from 46 percent moved to privatize Ohios job the Clinton administration in March to 49 percent in creation operation, state pris- admonished Washington law- May. Majorities disliked his ons and the Ohio Turnpike. makers to re-evaluate their handling of the state budget Hes signed a bill limiting own motivations. and said his policies are unfair bargaining rights for 350,000 I mean, theres too much to people like them. unionized public work- posturing. Theres too much Kasich is among a handful ers thats even stricter than thinking about your party, of new Republican governors Wisconsins polarizing first- yourself. around the country includin-the-nation restrictions. Looking almost shell- ing Floridas Rick Scott and The state budget he signed shocked on Election Night Wisconsins Scott Walker on Thursday closes a yawning after squeaking out a victory who are trying a new aggresIndependently Owned and Operated budget gap that approached over Ted Strickland, a once- sive approach, often to the $8 billion while cutting estate, popular Democrat, Kasich displeasure of the public. income and investment taxes. tossed two victorious fists Public Policy Polling The pros and cons of in the air. He grabbed his declared Kasich and Scott the Kasich have both Democrats running mate, Mary Taylor, two most unpopular goverand fellow Republicans see- for a twirl to the music, and nors in America in May. ing the possibility that his grinned. Guess what? Im Protests dog Kasich wherimpact could be important gonna be governor of Ohio! ever he goes. Last week, as President Barack Obama He punctuates his procla- thousands of teachers, fireseeks to retake Ohio in 2012. mations with a pointed fin- fighters, police officers and Obama won with 51.5 percent ger, a verbal jab and a nod other unionized workers of the vote in 2008, but it is of his head of brown tousled paraded through the streets essentially a race between the hair. Long-time Statehouse of Columbus against Ohios parties to see whose ideas lobbyist Gayle Channing new collective bargaining law Obamas stimulus and health Tenenbaum says its a rare many chanting, O-H-I-O, care policies, or Kasichs day when Kasich doesnt say John Kasichs got to go! business incentives and cuts something that surprises. On a recent afternoon at Port to government do more, Its interesting to watch ColumbusInternationalAirport, faster for average Ohioans. him because you just dont Bill Parizek, a Republican Both know that to Ohio know what particular thing from suburban Dublin, tried to voters, the economy is king. hes going to be grabbing onto explain the phenomenon, comUltimately John Kasichs at that particular moment, she paring Kasich to New Jersey popularity will not be the said. When its something you Gov. Chris Christie, a fellow most important number to are really interested in, such Republican and fiscal conserdetermine whether Obama as mental health or autism, it vative. carries Ohio. It will be the always pleases you. They have that cold, justunemployment rate, said Now 59, Kasich moves the-facts kind of approach.

STATE/LOCAL

COLUMBUS (AP) Ohios aging population has brought a surge in the number of handicapped parking tags given out in the state. The Columbus Dispatch reports the Bureau of Motor Vehicles last year issued more than 320,000 of the placards greater than the number issued in 2001 and 2002 combined. The tags allow vehicles to park in special spaces closer to businesses and facilities. Nearly 1.2 million Ohio residents, or 10 percent of the states population, held valid handicapped parking permits in 2010. A doctors prescription is needed for obtaining a placard. The Dispatch reports the tags are issued only for specific reasons laid out in state law, such as a motorist or passenger not being able to walk 200 feet without needing to rest.

At the end of the day you look yourself in the mirror and you say to yourself, Did I do what was right for families and for children? If I paid a political price, so what?

Loose mountain lion reported in northeast Ohio

Organ donations down, yet donor SW OH counties charge jail fees, had drawn lawsuit sign-ups rise CINCINNATI (AP) there is worth going after, them, sheriffs spokesman
DAYTON (AP) More Ohioans are registering as organ donors, while donations are down in the state this year. Organ procurement agency Life Connection of Ohio says 2011 figures show nearly 58 percent of Ohio motorists have declared themselves organ donors on their driver licenses. Thats up from less than 48 percent in 2002. Meanwhile, the Dayton Daily News reports 13 people have donated organs in Ohio through June 1 of this year, Two southwest Ohio counties that had been sued in federal court over jail reception fees have resumed making inmates pay something for their stays, to help with jail costs. But this time, fees are being charged only to inmates who have been convicted, not those merely awaiting trial. The sheriffs office in suburban Butler County began charging convicts a $20 booking fee on Friday, the Cincinnati Enquirer reported Monday. Any revenue stream out Chief Deputy Anthony Dwyer told the newspaper. Operating the jail is about a $5 million annual expense for Butler County, which has laid off nearly 100 sheriffs office employees during the last two years. Hamilton County, which includes Cincinnati, has been charging convicted inmates $40 each since 2008 to help offset the Independently Owned and Operated costs of housing Steve Barnett said. According to county financial data, the program has raised close to $200,000 per year. Earlier inmate reception fee programs in Hamilton and Butler counties became the target of federal lawsuits more than a decade ago, and the counties were ordered to reimburse some of the money as part of settlements.

CANTON (AP) Authorities in northeast Ohio are searching for a loose mountain lion. Police in Canton say sightings of the animal were reported Monday in Canton and nearby Louisville. A dispatcher told The Associated Press early Tuesday that police believe the mountain lion escaped from an exotic animal farm in the area. Police Sgt. Les Marino tells The Repository newspaper of Canton that residents should be cautious and call 911 if they see the big cat. He says police are being helped in the search by sheriffs deputies, county park rangers and state troopers using a Highway Patrol helicopter.

They do what they think they need to do to right the ship, and theyre not as warm and fuzzy as probably a lot of people would like, said Parizek, 49, who works for a New York investment fund. I think thats the profile of the kind of person you need to make really tough, fundamental structural change. Kasich exudes confidence when he enters a room, even being so bold as to deliver his State of the State address without a script. His style can lend itself to verbal gaffes. At Ohio Memory Day, a day of advocacy for people with Alzheimers disease, he told the crowd he drew a blank trying to write his remarks. He called a police officer who once pulled him over an idiot in front of a gathering of Ohio EPA workers. Kasich later apologized. George Tucker, an AFLCIO union leader for the Toledo region, interprets such misstatements by Kasich as a disregard for other people. He said the governor is just out of touch. I dont think he has any feelings or sympathy for working people, Tucker said. He doesnt have to look people in the eye who are being put out of their jobs like we do and tell them, Youre not going to get that assistance you were counting on. Kasich, known in Congress for fighting for a balanced budget, ran for president in 2000 but dropped out before the Republican primary. His work as a speaker, best-selling author of books on his conservative philosophies, former Fox News commentator and managing director at since-failed investment bank Lehman Brothers helped make him a millionaire so he says hes not worried about being a one-term governor. He says hes trying to fix Ohios economy and cant be distracted by lousy poll numbers, Statehouse protests and critics who parse his every word. By clashing with wellfunded unions and special interests such as nursing homes and casinos, he says he never expected to be liked. In fact, his

is almost a holy mission. Do you have any idea the pounding Ive taken in six months? he asked a group of reporters and Cabinet directors at a Friday event. I kind of like it, I think it accrues to my benefit not in this world, but by doing the right thing, I get points, OK? He started taking on reporters even before he took office denying them records and attempting to bar them from his ceremonial inauguration. After he was criticized, he went beyond changing his mind to hosting the largest midnight swearing-in anyone could remember with more than 150 onlookers and his entire Cabinet. Two months later, Kasich tried to bar recording equipment at the medias technical briefing on his budget, hoping to focus attention on a public budget unveiling that evening that starred Ohios budget as Apples latest iPad and Kasich as Steve Jobs. Confronted again, Kasich relented but not before the political blogosphere lit up with allegations that he was becoming a serial obstructionist. Kasich has often answered his critics bloggers, unions, Ohio Democrats and latenight comedians with a well-timed appearance on Fox News, where he used to host From the Heartland with John Kasich, or upbeat Twitter posts like this one from Wednesday: Proud of my partners in the legislature. Together, we closed an $8 billion budget gap and cut taxes! With the Ohio vote so closely divided between the parties, the question will be whether Kasich can ultimately win over the state with his bold approach. Right now, it seems for every Ohioan who appreciates what hes attempting, there is another who disagrees, like Democrat John Hisey, a 60-year-old retired manufacturing worker from Newark. Criticizing Kasich and his fellow Republicans, Hisey said the governor is bad for Ohio.

INDUSTRIAL COMMERCIAL RESIDENTIAL OH LIC. #13661 BONDED INSURED Jerry Hesseling Paul Wagner Over 55 Years Experience PO Box 306 Delphos, OH 45833

Hesseling ELECTRIC INC.


Office 419-692-2108

Independently Owned and Operated

419-227-3882 www.re-bath.com

Independently Owned and Operated

cuts
41
regrowth

Independently Owned and Operated

Bathtubs Bathtub Liners Shower Bases & Liners Wall Surrounds Exclusive Tile Patterns Full Remodel A
FAP-1942H-A APR 2011

*ECONOMY ROLLBACK!
Full Set..............................................$380 Full Upper or Lower Denture..........$250 Upper or Lower Partial Denture.....$265
A SAVINGS OF $15 per partial
Fees effective January 10, 2011 each

A SAVINGS OF $15

A SAVINGS OF $15 per arch

each

Travelwithchoice.com MOTORCOACH TRIPS


OHIOSTATEFAIR w/2concerts -August2-$78 WISCONSINTOUR -August8-13-$1195
GreenBaysLambeauField,Dells,HouseontheRock,Milwaukee,DoorCo.,NewGlarus&more

waxing blonding

pedicure WE DO IT ALL!
conditioning
419.692.9871 or 419.69COLOR
www.studio320salon.com

AFFORDABLE DENTURES-LIMA, WILLIAM W. CLINE, DDS, INC.


1951 Bellefontaine Road Lima, OH 48504

Hi-Lites foils

Be Tax-smart
Independently Owned and Operated
Independently Owned and Operated

(419) 228-6680

General Dentist William W. Cline, DDS

1122 Elida Avenue Delphos, OH 45833 419-695-0660


www.edwardjones.com Member SIPC

10049-4

manicure

with Your Investments.


average American until April 12 this year to earn enough to pay 2011 income taxes.

41 According to the Tax Foundation, it took the

color

This year, aim to be above average. Start by evaluating whether you can benefit from tax-smart investing strategies, such as:
Tax-advantaged investments and retirement accounts (e.g., IRAs) 529 college savings plans Holding stocks for the long term
Keep in mind that tax implications should only be one consideration when making investment decisions, not the driving factor.

Custom Full Set Dentures....................$695 Custom Full Upper or Lower................$440 Premium Full Set Dentures...............$1,030 Ultra Full Set Dentures......................$1,325 Reline (each)..........................................$150 Simple Extraction (each).........................$75 Full-mouth X-ray (required for extractions).........$70 NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY FIRST-TIME DENTURE WEARER PACKAGES ON-SITE DENTAL LAB

*SAME DAY SERVICE IF IN BEFORE 9 A.M. DENTURE REPAIR EMERGENCY EXTRACTIONS

Checkourwebsitefortripinformation

AIRFORCEMUSEUM,JETMASTERS,DAYTONDRAGONS-August 4-$66

VALUABLE COUPON

MOTORCITYSOUNDS -August24-25-$255
DetroitPrincesslunchcruise,overnightatMotorCityCasino,lunch&showatTurkeyville

Call or visit today to learn more about these investing strategies.

Offer good only at: Affordable Dentures- Lima, William W. Cline, DDS, Inc.

CHURCHBASEMENTLADIES2ndHelping w/casino -Sept.7-$82 CHURCHBASEMENTLADIESSecondHelping -Sept.11-$76 NATIONALQUARTETCONVENTION -Sept.16-17-$320 COUNTRYLIVINGFAIR (Columbus) -Sept.18-$85 GERITOLFOLLIES -Sept.22-$94 GUY&RALNA (fromLawrenceWelkShow) -Oct.2-$99 SHENANDOAHVALLEYFALLFOLIAGE -Oct.7-10-$695

Andy North

Financial Advisor

on Premium Complete or Partial Denture

SAVE $50

per denture

on Custom Complete or Partial Denture


Expires 08/31/11

SAVE $25

per denture

Coupon must be presented when services are provided.

We gladly accept Cash, Checks, Visa, MasterCard and Discover as payment for our services.

ChoiceTravel

BuckeyeCharters

1235E.HanthornRd. Lima,OH45804

(419)222-2455

For more information please call 1-800-DENTURE (1-800-336-8873) or visit our web site at www.affordabledentures.com

4 The Herald

POLITICS

Tuesday, July 5, 2011

www.delphosherald.com

Aim above morality. Be not simply good, be good for something. Henry David Thoreau (1817-1862) Aim above morality. Be not simply good, be good for something. Henry David Thoreau (1817-1862)

Anti-tax diehard looms in spending showdown


By CHARLES BABINGTON Associated Press WASHINGTON Without a bipartisan agreement this summer to reduce the federal deficit and raise the debt limit, the economy could suffer a horrendous blow, leaders of both parties say. If that happens, some will point fingers at a bearded, slightly disheveled man whos barely known outside political circles in Washington. For two decades, Grover Norquist has been the driving force in pushing the Republican Party toward an ever-more rigid position of opposing any tax increase, of any kind, at any time. He has been so successful that some GOP officials fear theyve let Norquist squeeze them into a corner where theyll be unable to declare victory even if they win the great majority of their budget demands in negotiations with congressional Democrats and President Barack Obama. Democrats, meanwhile, use Norquist to paint the GOP as an unreasonable party that kowtows to billionaires at the expense of middle-class Americans. Obama is insisting that even if a deficit-reduction accord relies overwhelmingly on spending cuts, it also must By ALAN FRAM Associated Press have some revenue increases. Democrats say they should start with eliminating some not-so-popular tax breaks that Norquist and his allies stoutly defend. Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell has decided to walk out on the same limb as Grover Norquist, Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., told reporters last week. It seems leader McConnell is willing to tank the economy for the sake of protecting tax breaks for oil companies and corporate jets. Obama didnt name Norquist in his feisty news conference Wednesday, but he cited the same tax breaks. Ive said to some of the Republican leaders: You go talk to your constituents, the Republican constituents, and ask them, are they willing to compromise their kids safety so that some corporate-jet owner continues to get a tax break? Obama said. Republican lawmakers scoff at the notion that killing a $3 billion tax break for small jets would make a dent in the $14 trillion debt. But they have complicated their ability to parry the Democrats on such matters by signing the famous anti-tax pledge of Americans for Tax Reform, which Norquist heads. All but a handful of House and Senate Republicans have

One Year Ago Delphos FFA participated at the 2010 Putnam County Fair. Member Luke Wrasman showed two beef feeder calves WASHINGTON (AP) and placed third and fourth in his respective classes. Wrasman The Federal Aviation also exhibited two market goats and placed second in both of Administration is creating a his classes. new air traffic system that officials say will be as revolution25 Years Ago 1986 ary for civil aviation as was Vanamatic Company was recently honored by Aeroquip the advent of radar six decades Corporations Industrial Division with a presentation for the ago. But the program is at a One Year Outstanding Supplier Award for the seventh crossroads. consecutive year. Those attending from Vanamatic were Jim Its getting harder to pry Wiltsie, Sr., president; Jim Wiltsie, Jr., vice present and sales money out of Congress. The manager; Jeff Wiltsie, vice president and superintendent; and airline industry is hesitating Perry Wiltsie, vice president and production control manager. over the cost of equipping its Winners of the Fourth of July fishing derby were Brent planes with new technology Zerkel, first place with a 19-inch carp, who received a atro- necessary to use the system. phy, a U.S. Savings bond and a $25 gift certificate from And some experts say the U.S. Hittles Taxidermy. Second place was Brian Laudick and Matt could lose its lead in the manufacture of high tech aviation Gerdeman received third place. Mary Kay Core, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Z. equipment to European comSchulte and the late Geri Schulte received the Outstanding petitors because the FAA is Nurse Award and top honors, with a grade point average moving too slowly. Seventy-five years ago this of 3.96, during recent graduation ceremonies from Lima Technical College. She has accepted a staff position in the week the federal government, spurred by the nascent airline emergency room at St. Ritas Medical Center. industry, began tracking planes at the nations first air traf50 Years Ago 1961 After more than 50 years as a railroad employee, Charles fic control centers in Newark, (Elmer) Dray of Delphos, will retire as agent and operator for N.J., Chicago and Cleveland. The original group of 15 the Akron, Canton and Youngstown Railroad on July 11. He controllers, relying on radioed received training in telegraph and agents work in Ottoville in 1909, and in February of 1910, he started to work for the Erie position reports from pilots, Railroad in Spencerville. In June of that he transferred to the plotted the progress of flights Cincinnati, Hamilton and Dayton Railroad in Spencerville. In using blackboards, maps and 1921, he went to work for the Nickel Plate Railroad and later boat-shaped weights. Air trafworked for the Pennsylvania. In May 1923 he began to work fic control took a technologifor the A C & Y and he has been with that company ever cal leap forward in the 1950s with the introduction of radar. since. City police are investigating a breaking and entering at the Thats still the basis of the technology used today by Delphos Kart Track concession stand which was discovered more than 15,000 controllers at 11:30 a.m. Sunday. The stand was fully stocked because to guide 50,000 flights a day. of Sunday races. Stolen were 12 bottles of pop, one carton of Under FAAs Next chewing gum, seven bags of potato chips, six bags of caramel Generation Air Transportation corn and one bag of pretzels, two dozen assorted candy bars System program, known as and $$2.50 to $3.00 in change. NextGen, ground radar stations The Rt. Rev. Msgr. Carl F. Reineck, superintendent of St. will be replaced by satelliteJohns schools, has announced the resignation of B. William based technology. Instead of Ricco as head football coach and teacher at St. Johns High flying indirect routes to stay School. Coach Ricco has been associated with St. Johns for within the range of ground stathe past three years. He replaced former coach Tom Zimmer. tions, as planes do today, pilots will use GPS technology to fly 75 Years Ago 1936 directly to their destinations. A large number of people interested in barnyard golf went Planes will continually to the Waterworks Park courts Thursday night to witness an broadcast their exact posiexhibition given under the auspices of the Delphos Recreation tions, not only to air traffic Association. The exhibition was given by Chas. Casey Jones controllers, but to other simiof Waukesha, Wisconsin, and Aden Swinehammer of Aurora, larly equipped aircraft within Illinois. The youthful experts gave a program of fancy and hundreds of miles. For the first trick pitching. time, pilots will be able to see Leslie C. Peltier, Delphos astronomer, continues to receive on cockpit displays where they much attention from the press and the radio. Peltier will broad- are in relation to other planes cast over Station WTAM, Cleveland, on July 15. The day and what the flight plans are following the broadcast is Delphos Day at the exposition and for those other aircraft. That Peltier and his wife plan to remain over for that day. will enable planes to safely fly A meeting of Units 51 and 24, National Union for Social closer together. When planes approach airJustice, Allen County side, was held Thursday night at the Jefferson High School auditorium. Charles Hoelderle was ports, precise GPS navigation named as delegate of Unit No. 51 and John Bergfeld was will allow them to use more named as alternate. F. E. Smith was named as delegate and Dr. efficient landing and takeoff procedures. Instead of timeF. A. Young as alternate of Unit No. 24. consuming, fuel-burning stairstep descents, planes will be able to glide in more steeply with their engines idling. Aircraft will be able to land and take off closer together and more frequently, even in poor weather, because pilots will know the precise location of other aircraft and obstacles on the ground. Fewer planes will be diverted. Pilots and airline dispatchers will be able get realtime weather information. Computers will spot potential weather conflicts well in advance so that planes can be rerouted. And, controllers will do a lot less talking to pilots. Many instructions now transmitted by radio will instead be sent digitally to cockpits, reducing the chance of errors. Together, the suite of new technologies and procedures being phased in will significantly increase the systems traffic capacity, FAA officials predict. Thats critical if the number of passengers traveling annually on U.S. airlines grows from an estimated 737 million this year to over 1 billion a year in the next decade, as the FAA forecasts.

IT WAS NEWS THEN

New air traffic control system at crossroads

GOP uses budget, other tools to sap financial law


WASHINGTON President Barack Obamas financial overhaul law is nearly a year old. For congressional Republicans, the fight to weaken it is just starting. Wary of trying to repeal the entire statute and being portrayed as Wall Streets protectors banks rank among the countrys least popular institutions GOP lawmakers are trying to nibble away at the behemoth measure. Its a crusade theyve waged all year, despite lacking the White House and Senate control they need to prevail. Days ago, one Republicanrun House committee approved bills diluting parts of the law requiring reports on corporate salaries and exempting some investment advisers from registering with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Another House panel voted to slice $200 million from Obamas $1.4 billion budget request for the SEC, which has a major enforcement role. Meanwhile, Senate Republicans are continuing a procedural blockade that has By ADAM GOLDMAN and MATT APUZZO Associated Press helped prevent Obama from putting Elizabeth Warren or anyone else in charge of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, which opens its doors in two weeks. The law hurts the formation of capital, the cost of capital and access to capital, and you cant have capitalism without capital, said Rep. Jeb Hensarling, R-Texas, a leader of the House Financial Services Committee. So Republicans in the House will be examining each and every one of the 2,000-plus pages of the law, which he called a job creators nightmare. Confident that Obama and the Democratic-controlled Senate can prevent the House from doing major damage, Democrats view the Republican drive as a political exercise for now. Its mostly setting a marker for the election. And it helps with their campaign contributions, said Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass., who chaired the Financial Services Committee last year and was a chief author of the law. But it also tells people in the financial community that if they win the next election, theyll be able to undo it all. their names linked to the bin Laden operation. The Associated Press has agreed to the CIAs request not to publish his full name and withhold certain details so that he would not become a target for retribution. Call him John, his middle name. John was among the hundreds of people who poured into CIAs Counterterrorism Center after the Sept. 11 attacks, bringing fresh eyes and energy to the fight. He had been a standout in the agencys Russian and Balkan departments. When Vladimir Putin was coming to power in Russia, for instance, John pulled together details overlooked by others and wrote what some colleagues considered the definitive profile of Putin. He challenged some of the agencys conventional wisdom about Putins KGB background and painted a much fuller portrait of the man who would come to dominate Russian politics. That ability to spot the importance of seemingly insignificant details, to weave disparate strands of information into a meaningful story, gave him a particular knack for hunting terrorists. From 2003, when he joined the counterterrorism center, through 2005, John was one of the driving forces behind the most successful string of counterterrorism captures in the fight against terrorism: Abu Zubaydah, Abd al-Nashiri,

signed it. By doing so, they vow to oppose any effort to increase marginal income tax rates and any net reduction or elimination of deductions and credits, unless matched dollar for dollar by further reducing tax rates. In other words, even a temporary tax cut cannot be undone. Even a tax break that seems to have lost its purpose, when economic conditions change, cannot be touched unless it is offset elsewhere. Some Senate Republicans have grown weary of Norquists strict interpretation of the pledge, and a minirevolt occurred in mid-June. Thirty-four of the Senates 47 Republicans voted to end a tax break for ethanol production, which has come under political fire in recent years. Norquist strongly opposed the move, and denounced its leader, conservative Sen. Tom Coburn, R-Okla. Coburn, who says some revenue increases must join deep spending cuts to reduce the deficit, claimed a turning point. Youve got 34 Republicans that say theyre willing to end this, regardless of what Grover says, he told reporters. Thats 34 Republicans that say this is more important than a signed pledge to Norquists group.

CIA analyst spent 10 years hunting Osama bin Laden


WASHINGTON After Navy SEALs killed Osama bin Laden, the White House released a photo of President Barack Obama and his Cabinet inside the Situation Room, watching the daring raid unfold. Hidden from view, standing just outside the frame of that now-famous photograph was a career CIA analyst. In the hunt for the worlds most-wanted terrorist, there may have been no one more important. His job for nearly a decade was finding the alQaida leader. The analyst was the first to put in writing last summer that the CIA might have a legitimate lead on finding bin Laden. He oversaw the collection of clues that led the agency to a fortified compound in Abbottabad, Pakistan. His was among the most confident voices telling Obama that bin Laden was probably behind those walls. The CIA will not permit him to speak with reporters. But interviews with former and current U.S. intelligence officials reveal a story of quiet persistence and continuity that led to the greatest counterterrorism success in the history of the CIA. Nearly all the officials insisted on anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to reporters or because they did not want

The financial industry leans Republican in its campaign contributions but not overwhelmingly. Sixtyone percent of the $9 million that commercial banks gave federal candidates for the 2010 elections went to Republicans, while 54 percent of the securities and investment industrys $9 million went to Democrats, according to the nonpartisan Center for Responsive Politics. Democrats are using the GOP drive for their own fundraising. In one email sent last week under Franks name soliciting money for House candidates, the party wrote that Republicans want to bring back the days of unrestrained excess, deception and de-regulation of Wall Street. The mailing called it payback to their big contributors in the financial services industry. Obama signed the banking and consumer protection measure last July 21, a keystone achievement that responded to the biggest financial crisis and most severe recession since the 1930s. It passed Congress with solid Democratic support and near-uniform GOP opposition. Khalid Sheik Mohammed, Ramzi bin Alshib, Hambali and Faraj al-Libi. But there was no greater prize than finding bin Laden. Bin Laden had slipped away from U.S. forces in the Afghan mountains of Tora Bora in 2001, and the CIA believed he had taken shelter in the lawless tribal areas of Pakistan. In 2006, the agency mounted Operation Cannonball, an effort to establish bases in the tribal regions and find bin Laden. Even with all its money and resources, the CIA could not locate its prime target. By then, the agency was on its third director since Sept. 11, 2001. John had outlasted many of his direct supervisors who retired or went on to other jobs. The CIA doesnt like to keep its people in one spot for too long. They become jaded. They start missing things. John didnt want to leave. Hed always been persistent. In college, he walked on to a Division I basketball team and hustled his way into a rotation full of scholarship players. The CIA offered to promote him and move him somewhere else. John wanted to keep the bin Laden file. He examined and reexamined every aspect of bin Ladens life. How did he live while hiding in Sudan? With whom did he surround himself while living in Kandahar, Afghanistan? What would a bin Laden hideout look like today?

Moderately confused

www.delphosherald.com

Tuesday, July 5, 2011

The Herald 5

LANDMARK

Allen County Museum

CALENDAR OF
TODAY 6 p.m. Weight Watchers meets at Trinity United Methodist Church, 211 E. Third St. 7 p.m. Delphos Coon and Sportsmans Club meets. Delphos City Council meets at the municipal building, 608 N. Canal St. 7:30 p.m. Alcoholics Anonymous, First Presbyterian Church, 310 W. Second St. WEDNESDAY 9 a.m. - noon Putnam County Museum is open, 202 E. Main St., Kalida. 11:30 a.m. Mealsite at Delphos Senior Citizen Center, 301 Suthoff Street.

EVENTS

A few weeks ago, I was speaking to the father of one of my patients. He was concerned with his 6-year-old sons frequent lies and he was unsure of how to deal with it. He told me, Its not even logical. I can actually see him do something and he will still look right at me and deny it! I told him that to his son, it would be completely logical. If his goal is to get out of being punished, the only chance he would have is to lie about it. The problem is, telling the truth isnt logical. The truth isnt the logical thing to do, it is the right thing to do. We tell the truth because it makes us feel better inside. We tell the truth because telling a lie is like a heavy weight that you carry around on your soul. We tell the truth because no matter who you fool with your lies, you will never fool yourself. We tell the truth because the freedom of the truth will

Truth and Consequences In the Waiting Room ...


advocate of the theory that you should tell your child that if they tell you the truth, that they wont be punished. You did get your child to tell the truth, but they still only did it to get out of being punished, not because it is the morally correct thing to do. There are two major problems with this lesson. 1. We only make this type of deal with our child when we already know they are always feel better than the weight of a lie. I have never been an lying, which means the child learns that they can still lie to their parents most of the

COMMUNITY

with Dr. Celeste Lopez


time, but if they get caught if they tell their parents what they want to hear they will still get away with it. 2. We are ignoring the immorality of the lie. I dont want my son to tell the truth because I might catch him in a lie. I want him to tell the truth because I might not catch him. I want my son to understand that there is no punishment that I could give him that is worse than the loss of his self-respect. I want him to know that

Ground Fresh Daily 85% Lean

2 Day Sale
Local Favorite
Arps

accepting the consequences of his actions and knowing that he is a person of honor is the best reward I can give him. I have told my son from the time he was very little to Do the right thing, not the fun thing. What I want him to understand is that he will be faced throughout his life with options and I will not always be there to guide him. It is not always fun to do the right thing. It is not always easy. That is why they call it strength of character. I know this is pretty heavy stuff for a child to grasp and I know my son has lapses just like every other person. My hope is that by consistently emphasizing this with him, he will understand how important this is. If I can raise him to always try to do the right thing and to take responsibility when he does the wrong thing, it is the best I can hope for. It is the best any of us can hope for.

Happy Birthday
July 6 Michelle Brotherwood

Story idea... Comments...

News releases...

nspencer@delphosherald.com

email Nancy Spencer, editor at

Ground lb. Chuck Save up to $1.50

Eckrich

$ 99
Packaged 3 lbs or more

Limit 4 packages with $25 addt purchase

Grocery

Milk 1%, Skim Whole, 2%,

Franks or Bologna Selected Varieties

$ 77
gal.

lb.

Grocery
12 pk. cans; or 6 pk 24 oz. bottles selected varieties

Deli

99
Meat
$ 99 $ 99
Fresh Boneless Skinless

Limit 4, Addtls 2/$3; Save up to $2.00

16 oz.

24 pk. 16.9 oz. Super Chill

Water

Save $8.00 on 2; Additionals $3.99 Limit 2 with $25 addl purchase

$ 99

Pepsi

Soft Drinks

$ 50

FINAL COST - 4/$10

Must be purchased in quantities of 4 Less or More than 4 - $3.25 ea.

lb. FreshMarket Homemade Classic


Save up to $1.00 lb.

Potato Salad
per lb. Walnut Creek
Save up to 50 lb.

USDA Choice Beef Loin


Regular, Thick Cut

T-Bone Steaks
Save up to $3.80 lb.

$ 99
lb.

6 1

Cooked Ham
30 oz. selected varieties Kraft Mayo or

Miracle Whip
8 pk. Flavorite Hot Dog or Hamburger

$ 49

Save up to $3.10; Additionals $3.49 Limit 1 Please w/Coupon available in store

ea. Rotisserie 12 pk. 12 oz. cans or 6 pk. 24 oz. bottles selected varieties

Big Chicken

Coke

Soft Drinks

$ 50

Buns

Save 50

99
BUY 1 GET 1

FINAL COST - 4/$10

Save up to $1.00

4 $ 99 5

Must be purchased in quantities of 4 . Less or More than 4 - $3.25 ea.

Produce

Chicken Breast Save up to $1.00 lb


Chief Smokehouse Fresh
Save up to $1.00 lb.

$ 99
lb.

Bratwurst Links $

349
lb.

10.5 oz. select varieties Lays


Save $3.99

Potato Chips

FREE
$ 49

Frozen
12 pk. Big Roll Angel Soft

Bakery
selected varieties Special Recipe

Bath Tissue
Save $3.38 on 2

Cookies
Save $1.00

11 Paper Towels 2/$ 11


2/$
8 rl. Sparkle
Save $6.98 on 2

ea. Whole Seedless

Watermelon
Save up to $1.00 ea.

$ 99 3/$

12 oz. Dole Classic


Save 97 on 3

Iceberg Salad

48 oz. Breyers
All Varieties Save $7.98 on 2

Ice Cream

2/$
Available at Delphos!
Chief

Prices good 8am Tuesday, July 5 through midnight Wednesday, July 6, 2011 at all Chief & Rays Supermarket locations.

Pick-59 $ 99 1
for

Choose from items such as:


USDA Choice Beef

Boneless Ribeye Steak


USDA Choice

All Natural Pork Loin

Boneless Chops
Fresh 80% Lean

Smokehouse Brats
Boneless, Skinless

Ground Chuck Patties

Ground Beef

Chicken Breast Fillets

Choose any ve items from our Meat Department that carry the Pick-5 label and theyre yours for only $19.99.

www.ChiefSupermarkets.com

www.facebook.com/ChiefSupermarket

6 The Herald

Tuesday, July 5, 2011

recorded another RBI single, plating Harmon. The Knights got two more in the bottom of the third when Holden singled and Jared Hallfeldt drew a walk, followed by a Brown 2-run single. After three complete, the Knights led 5-1. Terrin Contreras started the Van Wert fourth off with a single and Krugh followed by reaching on an error; an Andrew Todd walk then loaded the bases and set up a 2-run single by Henry. Crestview countered with a run in the bottom of the fourth when Rolsten drew a walk and later came around to score on a passed ball. Van Wert rallied again in the fifth with three runs Brian Bassett photo as Cucciarre walked and St. Johns Jordan Bergfeld gets low to field this slow Contreras reached on error. roller from a Van Wert batter Saturday at Smiley Park. Krugh reached on a botched The Blue Jays hammered the Cougars 19-2 to earn a berth fielders choice to load the bases. Andrew Todd then hit in next weekends ACME Celina District tournament. went to bat in the top of the into a fielders choice that platBy JIM METCALFE, fifth and came away with ed Cucciarre. Lucas Sullivan BRIAN BASSETT and CHARLIE WARNIMONT 13 runs in the inning. Ryan came through with a 2-run Buescher led the inning off single but was tagged out at While Fourth of July activi- with a single and ended up second to end the inning. Henry came on in relief ties were going on, the Van coming around to score, as Wert and Putnam/Paulding did the following 10 Blue Jay for the Cougars and recorded county ACME baseball tour- batters. The Blue Jays collect- three strikeouts in the bottom nament got rolling hot and ed five hits in the inning and of the fifth. At the end of five, heavy Saturday and Sunday, drew four walks. Calvelage, the game was tied, 6-6. Crestview pitcher Alec with St. Johns and Van Wert Bergfeld, Kundert, Klausing, clinching berths at next week- Buescher and Reindel all col- Heffner recorded two quick ends Celina District. lected RBIs in the inning for outs to start the sixth inning before Hurless picked up a sinAfter winning their first the Blue Jays. two games of the ACME Van T.J. Hoersten came on gle and stole second. Cucciarre Wert County sectional Friday to relieve Blue Jay starter singled to bring Hurless around night in Delphos, Van Wert Klausing on the mound in the to score, giving the Cougars played St. Johns in the win- bottom of the fifth and closed their first lead since the first ners bracket at Smiley Park the door on the Cougars, seal- inning, 7-6. The Knights couldnt get Saturday. Van Wert had their ing the win and the trip to the hands full with the 2-seed, sectional championship game anything going in the bottom of the sixth and were held however, and lost 19-2. today. The Cougars came back Klausing got the win for scoreless. Van Wert plated three fighting in the losers brack- St. Johns, going four innings, et final Sunday, taking out allowing two earned runs while insurance runs in the top of Crestview 10-6 to advance to striking out five and walking the seventh when a Contreras walk, a Krugh infield single the tournament final, a rematch five. with St. Johns at Crestview Leading hitters for the and a Todd walk set up a today; first pitch is 4 p.m. Cougars were Hurless, who Sullivan 3-run double to clear Both teams advance, no went 2-2 with an RBI, and the bases and give the Cougars matter the outcome. Adelblue, 1-2 with two runs a 10-6 lead. Henry retired the side in the Van Wert won the coin flip scored. for home team Saturday and Leading hitters for the bottom of the seventh to give St. Johns went to work early, Blue Jays were Reindel, 3-3 the Cougar the victory. The winning pitcher for plating four runs in the top of with three RBIs and two runs the first inning. Austin Jostpille scored, and Kundert, 2-3 the Cougars was Henry, who led things off for the Blue Jays with two RBIs and three runs pitched three innings, allowing no runs while striking out four with a single, advancing to scored. With their ACME sea- and walking none. second on a passed ball. Jordan Leading hitters for the Bergfeld followed suit with a sons on the line Sunday, the single of his own, followed by Cougars squared off with Knights were Rolsten, 2-3 a Troy Warnecke walk to load Crestview at Smiley Park on with an RBI and a run scored; the bases. A walk by Cody Sunday and responded with a and Holden, 2-4 with two runs Kundert brought Jostpille come-from-behind 10-6 vic- scored. Leading hitters for the home and put the Jays on the tory over the Knights. The Knights won the coin Cougars were Sullivan, 3-4 board. The next batter, Isaac Klausing, hit into a fielders flip for home team, so the with five RBIs; and Krugh, choice to plate another run. Cougars led off the game in 2-4 with an RBI and three runs Ryan Buescher was then hit the top of the first. Hurless scored. Jeffersons ACME baseby a pitch before an Austin drew a walk, followed by a Reindel 2-out single scored Vincent Moreland single. A ball team had been putting up Mason Krugh single brought numbers galore in the first 13 Warnecke and Kundert. The Blue Jays got anoth- Hurless home from third to games of the summer season. The last two, they scored a er run in the third but the give Van Wert and early 1-0 total of four runs but unfortuCougars countered when Cody lead. The Knights countered in nately, those were in the secAdelblue and Brandt Henry lined consecutive singles, fol- the bottom of the frame when tional tournament. The Wildcats were elimilowed by a Joey Hurless walk Matt Holden got a single, stole and a Matt Cucciarre walk to second and third and scored on nated as Jared Hallfeldt, who a passed ball. was rehabbing from Tommy bring home Adelblue. Crestview took the lead John surgery in the spring and Each team plated a run in the fourth as well: St. Johns on with two runs in the bottom of pitched limited innings, outdua Jostpille RBI single, which the second as Nick Leary began eled Drew Kortorkax in a 2-1 brought Tanner Calvelage the frame by drawing a walk. Knight victory at Lincolnview home from third; and Van Wert Alex Brown laid down a sacri- High School on a brilliant on an RBI single by Hurless, fice bunt and Jake Harmon and Saturday afternoon. Kortokrax (3-1), with his which brought Adelblue home Jacob Wortman followed with consecutive singles, the sec- dominant fastball, was brilfrom third. Van Wert wouldnt score ond of which brought Leary liant, tossing a 2-hitter in his again, however, as St. Johns home from third. Kole Rolsten 116-pitch (71-strike) effort,

Jays, Cougars earn Celina District ACME berths


walking three and whiffing 13. However, Hallfeldt (1-0), using a mix of fastball and offspeed stuff, was even better, tossing a 1-hitter in his 101pitch outing (72 strikes), walking three and fanning 11. With runs at a premium, Crestview scored in the top of the first on typical smallball fashion: a leadoff walk to Rolsten, consecutive stolen bases and an error on the latter, putting them up 1-0. The Wildcats (10-5) tied it in the second. With one out, Justin Rode walked and swiped second. Kyle Anspach walked. An out hence, Jeff Schleeter sliced a hit to right to get Rode home and put runners on the corners. Schleeter swiped second but the next batter fanned. After striking out the side in the Knight second, the Knights went up 2-1 in the third, again on small-ball. With one gone, Blake Meyer walked and advanced on a passed ball. An out later, Brown walked; a wild pitch put runners on the corners. Holden lined a 3-2 single to right to get Meyer in and again put runners on the corners. Holden stole second. However, Kortokrax induced a pop-up to leave the damage at 2-1. Hallfeldt sent down the next 12 batters. The Knights (9-9-1) got a leadoff infield single by Jake Wortman to start the fifth. Meyer sacrificed him to second and a Rolsten bounceout put him at third. However, he was left stranded. Crestview got a 2-out baserunner in the seventh; an error on a ball hit by Wortman; but left him on. Weve been tearing it up offensively until the last two games; for some reason, we stopped hitting, Jefferson coach Mark Jettinghoff said. Drew pitched a great game and we were solid enough defensively. We just couldnt hit the last two nights. We were looking to find our upthe-middle defense starting the summer we lost our shortstop and second baseman to graduation and we got some younger kids some innings pitching. The Wildcats threatened in the home seventh. With one out, Rode was hit by a pitch and Anspach walked, with Zavier Buzard pinch-running at second. However, Hallfeldt induced a pair of pop-ups to end the game. Jared established his fastball early and then got his breaking ball going, Crestview coach Matt Perkins noted. Kortokrax was unbelievable, too; he has a great arm. This was just a great game to watch. We got just enough offense. Kalida didnt quite get the pitching performance they had in game 1 of the PauldingPutnam County ACME sectional tournament. The Wildcats made up for what they didnt get on the mound at the plate. Kalida pounded out 11 hits as they defeated Ottawa-Glandorf 10-4 in the winners-bracket semifinals of the tournament. The win sends the Wildcats (114) to the championship game tonight against Columbus Grove (8-10) at Miller City. The winner advances to the district tournament at Lima Central Catholic. After riding the arm of Jordan Laudick in the sectional opener, the Wildcats went with Jared Zeller Sunday. Zeller didnt enjoy that kind of success but was able to leave with a lead as the Wildcat bats picked up the slack. After a scoreless first inning, the Wildcats struck for three runs in the second inning with two outs. With one out, Eric Kahle reached on an error at third base and stole second. Ben Von der Embse then dropped a single into short left as Kahle had to hold up to see if the ball was caught. With Zeller at bat, Kahle was caught trying to steal third base for the second out as Von der Embse took second. Zeller gave the Wildcats two base runners as he walked and Neil Recker put them on the scoreboard with a double down the left-field line. A double over the left fielders head by Paul Utendorf scored two runs, giving the Wildcats a 3-0 lead. Getting the lead was big for us, Kalida coach Joel Rampe said. We need to get the lead. The mentality of our team changes when we get the lead and our pitchers just seem to settle in and come through pretty nice once we get the lead. Kalida had a 3-0 lead going to the bottom of the third when O-G scored a run. Zeller retired the first seven O-G batters he faced before he walked opposing pitcher Tyson Yungmann. Zeller went on to load the bases as Logan Borgelt and Matt Stechschulte walked to load the bases before Drew Schierloh hit a slow roller down the third-base line to score a run before Zeller regrouped to get a strikeout and a fly ball to left to end the threat. Kalida answered the O-G rally with two runs in the top of the fourth inning. With one out, Nate Kortokrax walked before doubles by Jordan Ellerbrock and Nathan Jorrey scored two runs to make it a 5-1 game. Seven of our first eight runs all came with two outs, Rampe said. We had a bunch of clutch hitting. Jordan Ellerbrock had some big hits, Nate had a good 2-out double, Paul hit the ball well. We spread it out again today. O-G answered in the bottom of the inning as Tyler Ellerbrock opened the inning with a walk. After he took second on a groundout, a pair of wild pitches allowed him to score. Once again, the Wildcats answered back as they scored three runs in the fifth inning. With one out in the Kalida fifth, Von der Embse singled to right and took second on an error. After the second out, Recker walked before Utendorf lined a double off the right-field wall to score two runs, making it a 7-2 game. A single to left by Kortokrax gave Kalida an 8-2.

SPORTS

www.delphosherald.com

After throwing a lot of pitches in four innings, Kalida made a pitching change, bringing in Utendorf. The Titans nearly rallied as Matt Stechschulte singled, stole second and moved to third on a wild pitch before scoring on an error. The Titans loaded the bases after an out as Jake Hashbarger walked, Tyler Zender was hit by a pitch and Ellerbrock singled. A popup to second base and a strikeout ended the threat. O-G added a run in the sixth as Yungmann doubled to start the inning and scored on two straight groundouts. Leading 8-4 going to the seventh, Kalida added two runs as Kortokrax had a 2-run double that scored pinch-runner Kehres and Utendorf. In the bottom of the inning Utendorf gave up a 2-out single to Matt Samuelson before getting the final out. Zeller picked up the win for Kalida as he went four innings, allowing two runs on two hits with five strikeouts and four walks. Utendorf finished the game, allowing two runs on five hits with two strikeouts and with a walk and hit batter. Pitching-wise, I dont know how you explain Jared. Hed get up in the count, then let them back in it and then finish it off. He had five strikeouts in the four innings, Rampe said. You cant complain about that. He had a nice game. Utendorf led Kalida at the plate with two doubles, a single and four RBIs. Kortokrax, Ellerbrock and Von der Embse all had two hits. Yungmann took the loss for O-G as he went the distance in allowing 10 runs on 11 hits. Schierloh and Yungmann both had two hits for the Titans. We didnt play well, O-G coach Ryan Zender said. That is a good team and they came up with the clutch hit when they had runners on base.

VAN WERT CRESTVIEW (2) ab-r-h-rbi Kole Rolsten ss 2-1-0-0, Alex Brown 2b 2-0-0-0, Matt Holden cf 3-0-1-1, Nick Adam lf 3-0-0-0, Jared Hallfeldt p 3-0-0-0, Nick Leary rf 3-00-0, Jake Harmon 1b 3-0-0-0, Jake Wortman 3b 3-0-1-0, Blake Meyer c 1-1-0-0. Totals 23-2-2-1. JEFFERSON (1) ab-r-h-rbi Tony George ss 3-0-0-0, Mike Joseph cf 3-0-0-0, Austin Jettinghoff 2b 3-0-0-0, Curtis Miller 1b 3-0-0-0, Justin Rode c 1-1-0-0, Zavier Buzard pr 0-0-0-0, Kyle Anspach lf 1-0-00, Drew Kortokrax p 2-0-0-0, Zach Kimmet ph 1-0-0-0, Jeff Schleeter 3b 3-0-1-0, Shayn Klinger rf 2-0-0-0. Totals 22-1-1-1. Score by Innings: Crestview 1 0 1 0 0 0 0-2 Jefferson 0 1 0 0 0 0 0-1 E: Rode, Schleeter; LOB: Crestview 4, Jefferson 4; Sac: Myers; SB: Rolsten 2, Holden, Rode, Schleeter. IP H R ER BB SO CRESTVIEW Hallfeldt (W, 1-0) 7.0 1 1 1 3 11 JEFFERSON Kortokrax (L, 3-1) 7.0 2 2 1 3 13 HBP: Rode (by Hallfeldt); PB: Rode. Game 1 St. Johns 4 0 1 1 (13) - 19 12 0 6 Van Wert 0 0 1 1 0 - 2 7 1 10 WP - Klausing; LP - Krugh. 2B - (DSJ) Bergfeld, Reindel, (VW) Sullivan. Game 2 Van Wert 1 0 0 2 3 1 3 - 10 10 1 5 Crestview 122 100 0- 6 6 2 8 WP - Henry; LP - Heffner PUTNAM/PAULDING Kalida 0 3 0 2 3 0 2 10 11 1 Ott.-Glan. 001 111 0 4 7 4 WP-Zeller; LP-Youngmann; SV-Utendorf.

The Associated Press National League East Division W L Pct GB Philadelphia 54 32 .628 Atlanta 50 36 .581 4 New York 43 42 .506 10 1/2 Washington 43 43 .500 11 Florida 38 47 .447 15 1/2 Central Division W L Pct GB St. Louis 46 40 .535 Milwaukee 45 41 .523 1 Pittsburgh 44 41 .518 1 1/2 Cincinnati 43 43 .500 3 Chicago 35 51 .407 11 Houston 29 57 .337 17 West Division W L Pct GB San Francisco 48 38 .558 Arizona 46 40 .535 2 Colorado 41 44 .482 6 1/2 San Diego 39 47 .453 9 Los Angeles 37 49 .430 11 Mondays Results Washington 5, Chicago Cubs 4, 10 innings Pittsburgh 5, Houston 3 Arizona 8, Milwaukee 6

419-236-1496 419-692-5143 home/office/fax


Call Dave at

Concrete leveling of floors, sidewalks, patios, steps, driveways, pool decks, etc.

NEVEN ETE? U ORaise itR Dont tear it up! C NC up & save money!
FREE ESTIMATES

San Diego 5, San Francisco 3 Philadelphia 1, Florida 0 St. Louis 1, Cincinnati 0 Atlanta 4, Colorado 1 N.Y. Mets 5, L.A. Dodgers 2 Todays Games Chicago Cubs at Washington, 7:05 p.m. Houston at Pittsburgh, 7:05 p.m. Cincinnati at St. Louis, 7:09 p.m. Colorado at Atlanta, 7:10 p.m. Philadelphia at Florida, 7:10 p.m. Arizona at Milwaukee, 8:10 p.m. N.Y. Mets at L.A. Dodgers, 10:10 p.m. San Diego at San Francisco, 10:15 p.m. Wednesdays Games Arizona (Collmenter 4-5) at Milwaukee (Gallardo 9-5), 2:10 p.m. Chicago Cubs (R.Wells 1-3) at Washington (Gorzelanny 2-6), 7:05 p.m. Houston (Norris 4-6) at Pittsburgh (Morton 7-4), 7:05 p.m. Colorado (Cook 0-3) at Atlanta (Jurrjens 11-3), 7:10 p.m. Philadelphia (K.Kendrick 4-4) at Florida (Ani. Sanchez 6-2), 7:10 p.m. Cincinnati (Arroyo 7-7) at St. Louis (Westbrook 7-4), 8:15 p.m. N.Y. Mets (Niese 7-7) at L.A. Dodgers (Kuroda

MLB

6-9), 10:10 p.m. San Diego (Moseley 2-8) at (Bumgarner 4-9), 10:15 p.m. -----American League East Division W L New York 50 33 Boston 49 35 Tampa Bay 47 38 Toronto 42 44 Baltimore 36 46 Central Division W L Cleveland 45 38 Detroit 45 41 Chicago 43 43 Minnesota 37 46 Kansas City 34 51 West Division W L Los Angeles 45 41 Texas 45 41 Seattle 42 43 Oakland 38 48 Mondays Results Toronto 9, Boston 7 Minnesota 7, Tampa Bay 0

San Francisco

Pct .602 .583 .553 .488 .439 Pct .542 .523 .500 .446 .400 Pct .523 .523 .494 .442

GB 1 1/2 4 9 1/2 13 1/2 GB 1 1/2 3 1/2 8 12 GB 2 1/2 7

Seattle 2, Oakland 1 Cleveland 6, N.Y. Yankees 3 Chicago White Sox 5, Kansas City 4 Texas 13, Baltimore 4 L.A. Angels 5, Detroit 1 Todays Games N.Y. Yankees at Cleveland, 7:05 p.m. Toronto at Boston, 7:10 p.m. Baltimore at Texas, 8:05 p.m. Kansas City at Chicago White Sox, 8:10 p.m. Tampa Bay at Minnesota, 8:10 p.m. Detroit at L.A. Angels, 10:05 p.m. Seattle at Oakland, 10:05 p.m. Wednesdays Games Tampa Bay (W.Davis 7-6) at Minnesota (Liriano 5-7), 1:10 p.m. Kansas City (Chen 4-2) at Chicago White Sox (E.Jackson 5-6), 2:10 p.m. Detroit (Penny 5-6) at L.A. Angels (Chatwood 5-5), 3:35 p.m. Seattle (Vargas 6-5) at Oakland (Moscoso 2-4), 3:35 p.m. N.Y. Yankees (P.Hughes 0-1) at Cleveland (Masterson 6-6), 7:05 p.m. Toronto (R.Romero 7-7) at Boston (Wakefield 4-3), 7:10 p.m. Baltimore (Guthrie 3-10) at Texas (Ogando 8-3), 8:05 p.m.

WOMENS WORLD CUP


The Associated Press FIRST ROUND (Top two nations in each group advance) x-advanced to quarterfinals GROUP A GP W D L GF GA Pts x-France 2 2 0 0 5 0 6 x-Germany 2 2 0 0 3 1 6 Nigeria 2 0 0 2 0 2 0 Canada 2 0 0 2 1 6 0 Todays Games At Moenchengladbach, Germany France vs. Germany, 2:45 p.m. At Dresden, Germany Canada vs. Nigeria, 2:45 p.m. GROUP B GP W D L GF GA Pts x-Japan 2 2 0 0 6 1 6 England 2 1 1 0 3 2 4 Mexico 2 0 1 1 1 5 1 New Zealand 2 0 0 2 2 4 0 Todays Games At Augsburg, Germany England vs. Japan, 12:15 p.m. At Sinsheim, Germany New Zealand vs. Mexico, 12:15 p.m. GROUP C GP W D L GF GA Pts x-United States2 2 0 0 5 0 6 x-Sweden 2 2 0 0 2 0 6 Colombia 1 0 0 2 0 4 0 North Korea 2 0 0 2 0 3 0 Wednesdays Games At Wolfsburg, Germany Sweden vs. United States, 2:45 p.m. At Bochum, Germany North Korea vs. Colombia, 2:45 p.m. GROUP D GP W D L GF GA Pts x-Brazil 2 2 0 0 4 0 6 Australia 2 1 0 1 3 3 3 Norway 2 1 0 1 1 3 3 Eq. Guinea 2 0 0 2 2 4 0 Wednesdays Games At Frankfurt Equatorial Guinea vs. Brazil, Noon At Leverkusen, Germany Australia vs. Norway, Noon

YOUR HOME IMPROVEMENT STORE


THE PROFESSIONALS

New Customer Special!!


Residential Locally owned & Commercial operated Agricultural COMPETITIVE Motor Fuel PRICES! Portable Cylinders filled on-site

WINDOWS ROOFING SIDING FENCING


Garage Doors & Operators Entrance & Storm Doors Wood Steel Painting Available Insulation Aluminum Railing Awnings Rubber Roofing Decks Fence
1034 Westwood Dr. Van Wert, Ohio 45891 Phone: (419) 238-9795 Fax: (419) 238-9893 Toll Free: (800) 216-0041

The Quality Door Place

Pre-Buy & Budget Plans Available

CALL fo free quo r & comp te are!

FT. JENNINGS
PROPANE, INC.
460 W. Fourth Street Ft. Jennings, Ohio

nc e1 96 0

VONDERWELL CONTRACTING, INC.

419-238-9795

419-286-2775

10763 U.S. 127 South Van Wert, Ohio 419-238-2681

Si

www.delphosherald.com

Tuesday, July 5, 2011

The Herald 7

4th of July at the ballpark

City League Championship

The Delphos Braves, runners-up in the City League tourney, are made up of, front row, left to right, Gerrett Brock, Isaac Williams, Wyatt Place, Trey Gossman, Cory Kaverman The Delpha Chevy Reds defeated the Delphos Braves 3-2 in the July Fourth Delphos and Evan Grothouse; and back, Chase Harman, Alex Rode, Tim Kreeger, Eric Vogt and City League championship game. The Reds consist of, front row, left to right, Dominic Tyler Bratton. Coaches are Jeff Koverman, Greg Gossman and Ken Kreeger. Estrada, Gavin Holdgreve and Jared Lucas; middle row, Brennen Auer, Andrew Foust, Collin Will, Darius Shurelds, Eli Lucas and Curtis Schwinnen; third row, Curan Shawnahan, Austin Lucas, Jacob Pulford, Eli Edie and Braden Hammons; and back, coaches Matt Suever, Dick Will, James Lucas, Ed Holdgreve (absent) and Mike Will.

Jim Metcalfe photos

Minor League Championship


The Dodgers downed the Mets 5-2 to take the Delphos Minor League July Fourth tournament. The team has, front from left, Logan Herron, Wyatt Hart, batboys Wesley Schier and Nate Gable, Isaac Gable and Braxton Huttis; row 2, coach Riley Claypool, Braden Lewis, Johnathon Brooks, Jaylen Jefferson, Jared Lucas, Tyler Ruda and coach Zach Gable; row 3, Jesse Culp, Grant Csukker, Chandler Skym, Evan Mox, Devin Cairo and Joey Schier; and back row, coaches Rob Ruda, Denny Hile, Jim Skym, Dale Metzger and Eric Schier. The Delphos Minor League runner-up Mets consist of, front from left, Darnell Simpson, Chase Bailey, batboys Jack Gerker and Landon Grothaus, John Pseekos and Adam Gerker; second row, Alex Theobald, Brady Grothaus, Derek Hettegheimer, Taylor Kunkleman, Isaac Schuck and Logan Hubert; and back, coach Jason Klint, Tyler Klint, Hunter Bonifas, coach John Klausing, Devin Ricker, Patrick Stevenson, Keaton Jackson and coach Mark Gerker.

Girls softball

Softball Championship
The AMS Uniforms team went late into the evening to grab the Delphos Fourth of July 2932-3022adslicks5x4.125.r1 2/3/03 11:52 AM Page 8 mens slow-pitch softball tournament, downing Wade Wrights team 15-11.

The Newest Woods BATWING

BW180 Batwing

The Original And Still The Best


You know the difference between an imitation and an original, so when choosing a standardduty, folding wing rotary cutter, start with the BW180, an authentic Batwing from Woods. Everything you need from a utility cutter is a standard feature on the durable, reliable BW180: 15-foot cutting width Smooth, sloped top deck 11-inch side depth 160/120 hp gearboxes Five-year gearbox warranty Category 5 CV or equal angle drive Greaseable pivot points All this and more is available in the BW180. Stop in today to discover why a Woods Batwing is the original and still the best.

DELPHOS, OH OPERATION HOURS OF (419) 695-2000

2010 WOODS COMPANY NAME TOP 100 ADDRESS LINE 1 H.G. VIOLET EQUIPMENT ADDRESS LINE 2 2103 NORTH MAIN STREET DEALER PHONE & FAX NUMBERS hgviolet@bright.net

Ph. 419-695-2000
Same Family Same Location for 3 generations
www.hgviolet.com

2103 N. MAIN ST. DELPHOS, OHIO

Regular Business Hours Monday thru Friday 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Saturday 8:00 a.m. until Noon APPOINTMENTS ARE AVAILABLE.

8 The Herald

Tuesday, July 5, 2011

www.delphosherald.com

Anniversary

Anniversary

Engagement

Mr. and Mrs. Don Hoehn will celebrate 50 years of marriage on July 9. Don and the former Angie Renner were married on May 13, 1961, at St. John the Evangelist Catholic Church, the Rev. Thomas Gorman officiating. A small dinner party is planned. They are the parents of three sons, Jeffrey Hoehn of Middle Point, Mark (Jennie) Hoehn of Aurora, Colo., and Stephen (Deb) Hoehn of Forrest; and a daughter, Suzanne (Norm) Kellam. They also have seven grandchildren. Don is retired from Ford Motor Co. in Lima. Angie is retired from The Creamery.

Mr. and Mrs. Don Hoehn

Engagement

Tom R. and Jacki Grothous of Delphos will celebrate their 40th wedding anniversary on July 9. An anniversary trip to Australia is planned. Tom and the former Jacki Klaus were married July 9, 1971, in the St. John The Evangelist Catholic Church, the Rev. John Blaser officiating. They are the parents of two daughters, Toma Williams of Lima and Tara (Jeff) Peterman of Marysville. They also have three grandchildren, Michaela and Tanner Williams and Cole Peterman. Tom is a dean at the University of Northwestern Ohio and also employed by Clear Channel Radio as Mr. Wheels. Jacki is retired from Key Bank formerly Peoples National Bank and also Holland Binkley Corp. formerly Fruehauf Corp.

Mr. and Mrs. Tom Grothous

Robert and Elaine Wehri of Fort Jennings announce the engagement of their daughter, Stephanie Janet, to Nathan Joseph Bockrath, son of Larry and Janet Bockrath of Glandorf. The couple will exchange vows on July 16 at St. John the Baptist Catholic Church in Glandorf. The bride-elect is a 2006 graduate of Fort Jennings High School and a 2010 graduate of Bowling Green State University. She is an accountant with Homier and Sons Inc., in Continental. Her fiance is a 2005 graduate of Glandorf High School. He is an operator at Pro-Tec Coating Company.

Wehri/Bockrath

Anniversary

Judy and Mark Devereaux of Jackson, Mich., announce the engagement of their daughter, Katy Lynn Devereaux of Bangkok, Thailand, to Adam Andrew Metzger, stationed at Peterson Air Force Base, Colorado Springs, Colo. He is the son of Cindy Metzger of Delphos and Carl R. Metzger or Grove City. The couple will exchange vows Aug. 6 at Cascades Baptist Church, Jackson, Mich. The bride-elect is a 2003 graduate of Jackson Christian High School, Jackson, and a 2007 graduate of Grace College, Winona Lake, Ind., with a B.A. in English. She is employed as an English teacher at International Community School in Bangkok. Her fianc is a 2005 graduate of St. Johns High School and a 2009 graduate Grace College, Winona Lake, Ind., with B. A. in life science. He is an Airman First Class, Aerospace Medical Technician, United States Air Force.

Devereaux/Metzger

Mr. and Mrs. Gene Lenhart of Spencerville observed 50 years marriage on May 30. A family dinner was held at the Lock 16 to celebrate. Gene and former Marilyn Kroeger were united in marriage on May 30, 1961, at St. John the Evangelist Catholic Church in Delphos. They are the parents of two sons, David Lenhart of South Korea and Ron (Karen) Lenhart of Wapakoneta; and two daughters, Bev (Bill) Wisher and Nancy (Brian) Settlemire of Spencerville. They also have 14 grandchildren. Gene retired after 28 years with the Lima News. He also

Mr. and Mrs. Gene Lenhart

owned Lenhart Auto Sales in Spencerville until 2005. Marilyn retired after 18 years with K-Mart at Westgate in Lima. She is currently employed at the Top Hat Market in Spencerville.

Mr. and Mrs. Lenhart 1961

Check out these ads on www.delphosherald.com

KNIPPEN CHRYSLER-DODGE-JEEP
877-476-6406
www.knippenchrysler.com

www.raabeford.com
11260 Elida Rd., Delphos

August 31 thru September 5


Entry Forms & Info. Available at www.vanwertcountyfair.com

419-692-0055
The #1 Name in Home Standby Power

800 W. Fifth St. Delphos, OH 45833

Robert D. Gamble
1951 St. Rt. 66 Cloverdale, OH 45827

Broker & Auctioneer, CAI Business: 419-238-5555 Mobile: 419-605-8300


122 N. Washington St. Van Wert, Ohio 45891 www.BeeGeeRealty.com

Phone 419-453-3809 Fax 419-453-3806 mfiedler@fiedlerelectricaltech.com

Your Full Service Generac Generator Dealer

Phone: (419) 238-3944 756 W. Ervin Rd. Van Wert, OH www.grevechryslerjeepdodgeofvanwert.com

Greve

Classifieds
www.delphosherald.com
Minimum Charge: 15 words, 2 times - $9.00 Each word is $.30 2-5 days $.25 6-9 days $.20 10+ days Each word is $.10 for 3 months or more prepaid

www.delphosherald.com

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


FREE ADS: 5 days free if item is free or less than $50. Only 1 item per ad, 1 ad per month. BOX REPLIES: $8.00 if you come and pick them up. $14.00 if we have to send them to you. CARD OF THANKS: $2.00 base charge + $.10 for each word.

DELPHOS
THE

Tuesday, July 5, 2011

Telling The Tri-Countys Story Since 1869

HERALD

The Herald - 9

Deadlines: 11:30 a.m. for the next days issue. Saturdays paper is 11:00 a.m. Friday Mondays paper is 1:00 p.m. Friday Herald Extra is 11 a.m. Thursday
We accept

THANKS TO ST. JUDE: Runs 1 day at the price of $3.00. GARAGE SALES: Each day is $.20 per word. $8.00 minimum charge. I WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR DEBTS: Ad must be placed in person by the person whose name will appear in the ad. Must show ID & pay when placing ad. Regular rates apply

005 Lost & Found


FOUND: WHITE Kitten near Slane & Feasby Wisener Rd. Call 419-587-3584.

080 Help Wanted


Are you looking for a child care provider in your area? Let us help. Call YWCA Child Care Re source and Referral at: 1-800-992-2916 or (419)225-5465 DRIVERS HOLDING CDL looking for weekend work . Send replies to Box 157 c/o Delphos Herald, 405 N. Main St., Delphos, OH 45833 DRIVERS-REGIONAL: Home Weekly! Start .40cpm. 4wks Vacation! 401K. CDL-A, 1yr exp. Recruiting: 800-497-2100 Apply: www.continentalexpressinc.com

120 Financial
IS IT A SCAM? The Delphos Herald urges our readers to contact The Better Business Bureau, (419) 223-7010 or 1-800-462-0468, before entering into any agreement involving financing, business opportunities, or work at home opportunities. The BBB will assist in the investigation of these businesses. (This notice provided as a customer service by The Delphos Herald.)

300 Household Goods 800 House For Sale


VERY NICE Burgundy/Green sofa sleeper. Ph. 419-204-9537. 502 S Pearl, Spencerville 0 down, 0 closing cost, home warranty, and free appliances. Several homes to choose from in Van Wert, Lima, Ohio City areas. Pictures and addresss at: www.creativehombuyingsolutions.com. LAND CONTRACT or Short term Rent to own homes. Several available. Addresses and pictures at www.creativehomebuyingsolutions.com. 419-586-8220

010 Announcements
ACCEPTING NEW dance, cheer, and tumbling students. Save money-register by June 30th! Summer classes start July 6th! Check us out at thedancerbygina.com or call today (419)692-6809. 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. It's easy...you place one order and pay with one check through Ohio Scan-Ohio Statewide Classified Advertising Network. The Delphos Herald advertising dept. can set this up for you. No other classified ad buy is simpler or more cost effective. Call 419-695-0015, ext 138.

501 Misc. for Sale


CENTRAL BOILER outdoor wood furnaces starting at $4995.00. Up to $1,000 Rebate, limited time. (419)358-5342

580 For Rent or Lease


DELPHOS SELF Storage on Gressel Drive: Maximum security achieved inside our fenced facility with access via your personal gate code. Why settle for less? Phone anytime 419-692-6336.

270 Auctions
AUCTION WILL be held at Delphos Self Storage on Gressel Drive on Thursday July 7, at 6:00pm. Banjo, old records, pressure washer, fire D ELE place CANC mantel, pocket racer motorcycle, trunk, love seat, 2 chairs, 2 bar stools, cabinet, misc. Property of Rich Thees: 908 E. Second St., Delphos

810 Parts/Acc.

Auto Repairs/

OFFICE VOLUNTEERS Needed to assist with phones and general office work. Mon. Fri. Hours flexible. Nonprofit agency. Community Health Professionals 602 E Fifth St., Delphos 419-695-1999 SCALE CLERK - FULL TIME WITH BENEFITS M-F DAYTIME TRUCK SCALE OPERATION, MULTI-LINE PHONE, DATA ENTRY & FILING. $9 TO $11 D.O.E. IF INTERESTED PLEASE EMAIL RESUME TO: info@d-dfeed.com Would you like to be an in-home child care pro vider? Let us help. Call YWCA Child Care Re source and Referral at: 1-800-992-2916 or (419)225-5465.

590 House For Rent


2 OR 3 BR House with attached garage. Available immediately! Call 419-692-3951.

Midwest Ohio Auto Parts Specialist


Windshields Installed, New Lights, Grills, Fenders,Mirrors, Hoods, Radiators 4893 Dixie Hwy, Lima

ACROSS 1 Explosion 6 Lumpy fruits 11 Heir to the throne 12 Clobber 13 Haphazard 14 Beethovens Third 15 Plain as day 16 Not shallow 17 Currycomb target 18 ! A mouse! 19 Proof word 23 Wish for 25 Oil-well capper Red 26 Weathervane dir. 29 Covered with suds 31 Rural elec. provider 32 Chinese dynasty 33 Pirouette 34 Conger 35 Watchdog breed 37 Truckers haul 39 Like some screens 40 Hardly any 41 Boats like Noahs 45 Social dud 47 Not authentic 48 Michener novel 51 Like lava 52 Lurch 53 Bright songbird 54 Qatar rulers 55 Get going DOWN
1 11 13 15 17 23 24 29 33 36 2 3 4

Todays Crossword Puzzle


1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 16 18 20 21 22 24 25 26 27 28 30 36 38 40 42 43 44 46 47 48 49 50 51

600 Apts. for Rent


2 BR, 1 BA, Apt. at Kalida Golf Course. Garage. W/D Hook-up. No pets. 419-302-7724

1-800-589-6830

Cheer for a diva Nubby fabric Fergies ex Bagpipes player Speaker pro Fix potatoes Fled to wed Rope-a-dope boxer Transport for Sinbad Workout locale Gym event Part of a month Spelled out Plenty, to a poet Loan figure Perform publicly, as a play Vaccine type Thin Mans terrier Jean Auel heroine Pygmalion author Munro penname Oklahoma town Stern opposite Less relaxed Shaggy blossom Kuklas friend Generator part Paid homage New Years Eve word Really skimps Harbor Poker card Go on the Jackies second Aug. and Jan.
7 8 9 10

5 12 14 16 18

040 Services
LAMP REPAIR Table or floor. Come to our store. Hohenbrink TV. 419-695-1229

290 Wanted to Buy

840 Mobile Homes


RENT OR Rent to Own. 2 bedroom, 1 bath mobile home. 419-692-3951.

Raines Jewelry
Scrap Gold, Gold Jewelry, Silver coins, Silverware, Pocket Watches, Diamonds.

620 Duplex For Rent


1006 MARSH. 2 Bdrm brick ranch, all appliances, electric heat, c/a, garage with opener, lease/deposit $575/mo. Ph. 419-204-9537.

419 695-0015
Stop i n at

Place Your Ad Today

Cash for Gold


2330 Shawnee Rd. Lima (419) 229-2899

890 Autos for Sale


$

19 25 30

20

21

22

50 REBATE

26 32 35 39

27

28

31 34

920 Merchandise

Free & Low Price

WHEN YOU PURCHASE FOUR TIRES

300 Household Goods


NEW, QUEEN pillow-top mattress, never used, still sealed in original wrapper. $75. Call (260)749-6100.

37 40

38 41 47 51 53 55 42 43 44

FREE WOOD for camp fires and kindling. Behind Westrich Furniture WESLO EXERCISE bike with digital display. Excellent condition. Asking $45. Call 419-231-1010.

45 48 49 50

46

& see how I can p u t a SMILE ON

YOUR FACE!

419-223-3673
1360 Greely Chapel Rd. Lima, Ohio

JOHN BENSMAN

ON THESE NAME BRANDS: MICHELIN AND BFGOODRICH


See dealer for details. Expires 8-31-11

52 54

H OUSE FOR SALE


Auglaize River, 2 bdrm Bungalow
Sunroom & large covered deck overlooking river. $81,000

RAABE
11260 Elida Rd., Delphos
M 7:30-8 ; T-F. 7:30-6:00; Sat: 9-2

419-692-0055
Over 85 years serving you!

www.raabeford.com

950 Miscellaneous

Service
larryacameron@hotmail.com

419-393-4378

2003 PT Dream Cruiser, Limited Edition. Copper Color. 81,000 miles. $7,500. Great Condition Call 419-203-7606

Van Wert County Brent L. Harman and Gayle L. Harman to Brent L. Harman Living Trust, portion of section 9, York Township. Gayle L. Harman and Brent L. Harman to Gayle L. Harman Living Trust, portion of section 9, York Township. Kay C. Okuley and Roger J. Okuley to Kay C. Okuley Living Trust, inlot 4157, Van Wert,

REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS


portion of section 32, Union Township. Gary L. Thomas and Roberta L. Thomas to Gary L. Thomas and Roberta L. Thomas, portion of section 5, Ridge Township. Ricky L. Burk, Rick L. Burk and Robin A. Burk to Andrew M. Bittner and Allison N. McGarvey, portion of section 22, Union Township. US Bank, master

AT YOUR
950 Car Care

RAABE
FORD, LINCOLN, INC.

www.raabeford.com
PRE-OWNED CARS
6960 6970 6935 6898 6952 6890 6956 6947 6972 6930 6926 6971 6961

ASPHALT PAVING & SEAL COATING


Commercial-Residential FREE ESTIMATES SENIOR DISCOUNTS

TNT

AMISH CREW
31 years experience reference Framing Siding Roofing Remodeling Garages Attention Farmers Pole Barns Painting New Barns Repair Work Clean Fence Rows Ditch Banks

Geise
Transmission, Inc.
automatic transmission standard transmission differentials transfer case brakes & tune up
2 miles north of Ottoville

419-733-6309

567-825-2157

419-453-3620
Construction

COMMUNITY 950 SELF-STORAGE Hohlbeins


GREAT RATES NEWER FACILITY

POHLMAN BUILDERS
ROOM ADDITIONS
GARAGES SIDING ROOFING BACKHOE & DUMP TRUCK SERVICE FREE ESTIMATES FULLY INSURED

Lawn Maintenance Lawn Treatments Mulch Installation Shrub Trimming New Landscapes New Lawn Installs Retaining Walls Bulk Compost Bulk Mulch
ElwerLawnCare.com
Visit website for photos and details of services

2011 MERCURY MILAN 2008 CADILLAC DTS 2011 FORD FOCUS SES 2008 LINCOLN MKZ 2008 MERCURY SABLE PREM. FWD 2009 MERCURY MILAN PREMIER 2008 TOYOTA CAMRY LE 2007 MERCURY MILAN 2007 FORD MUSTANG 2009 FORD FOCUS SE SEDAN 2005 LINCOLN TOWNCAR 1994 TOYOTA CAMRY XLE 2001 MERCURY SABLE LS

one owner, clean Carfax, sync, alloy wheels, moonroof, spoiler, red fire, 3K mi...... $22,495 4 dr., loaded, bluetooth, full power, white pearl, 51K mi. ...................................... $22,495 4 dr., moonroof, alloy wheels, wing, black, 3K mi. ............................................... $18,595 Heated leather, one owner, clean carfax, lt. sage, 34K mi. ................................. $18,995 sync, heated leather, chrome wheels, lt. ice blue, 55K mi.................................... $16,995 4 cyl, heated leather, moonroof, black 33K mi. .................................................... $16,195 4 dr., 4 cyl., cloth, power, red, 57K mi. ................................................................. $15,995 4 dr. sdn, FWD, pre, red, 22K mi. ......................................................................... $15,495 2 dr., V6 coupe, silver, 46K mi. ............................................................................. $14,995 Alloy wheels/remote keyless entry, full power, amber gold, 34K .......................... $12,995 Signature, cartier/dual climate control, steering wheel controls, ivory..................... $7,995 6 cyl., 4 dr., FWD, roof, CD player, green, 145K mi..................................................... $5,995 4 dr., chrome wheels, leather, one owner, clean Carfax, silver,.................................... $3,995

PRE-OWNED TRUCKS - SUV - VANS


6951 2010 F150 LARIAT SUPERCREW CAB 4x4, leather, heated & cooled seats, sync., loaded, red/tan, 32,101 mi. ............. $34,695 6964 2010 FORD F-150 XLT 4x4, supercrew, chrome step bars, sync, trailer tow, bedliner, red, 30K mi. ........ $27,495 6941 2008 FORD SPORT TRAC 4x4 Sport Trac LTD 4x4, black, 33K mi. ..................................................................... $24,795 6955 2009 MERCURY MARINER PREMIER 4x4, navigation, moonroof, leather, sangria red, 11K mi. .................................... $22,995 6896 2008 JEEP COMMANDER LIMITED leather, navi, DVD, remote start, red, 48K mi., 3rd row moonroof ....................... $22,495 6946 2009 FORD TAURUS X 4 dr., wgn, FWD, Ed Bauer, leather, 1 owner, clean CarFax report, white, 43K mi. ..... $22,295 6893A 2006 HONDA PILOT EX-L local trade in, clean Carfax, 5 dr., 4 WD, leather, blue, 37K mi. ......................... $20,995 6917 2009 FORD RANGER S.CAB 4D 4x4, toneau, bedliner, aux. audio input, running boards, red, 10K mi. ................ $19,595 6936 2006 FORD F-150 S. CAB 4x4, F. glass cap & running boards, 1 owner, clean Carfax, gold, 34K mi........... $18,595 6954 2008 DODGE GRAND CARAVAN SXT, dual DVD, stow & go, red, 39K mi. .............................................................. $18,995 6872A 2008 FORD ESCAPE LIMITED 4 WD Ltd., moonroof, new chrome wheels, heated leather, light sage, 65K mi. .... $18,295 6829C 2007 CHEVROLET SILVERDO 1500 S. cab, 2 WD, work truck, blue, 35K mi. .............................................................. $16,995 6839 2010 FORD ESCAPE XLT FWD, V6, cloth interior, Blue, 1-owner, 41K miles............................................... $16,995 6899 2007 LINCOLN TRUCK MKX 4DR, AWD, owner, clean carfax, white, 121K mi................................................. $16,995 6963 2006 CHEVROLET TRAILBLAZER LT EXT, one owner,clean Carfax, 4 dr., 4 WD, leather, 3rd row, DVD, Onstar ..... $13,995 6944A 2002 JEEP WRANGLER 2 dr. Sahara, 4x4, removable hard top & soft top, green, 87K mi........................ $12,995 6968 2005 FORD F-150 reg. cab, 4x2, sty, silver, 49K mi. ......................................................................... $11,995 6969 2008 FORD RANGER reg. cab, 4x2, 5-speed, white, 74K mi. ................................................................ $11,495 6858A 2003 FORD RANGER SUPERCAB 4x2 4D, white, 38K mi. ............................................................................................... $10,995 6902 2007 MERCURY MONTEREY Leather, quad seating, pwr sliding doors, remote keyless entry, dune pearl ...... $12,295 6940 2005 FORD FREESTAR SEL Beige, keyless remote, alloy wheels, 1 owner, clean CarFax, 112K mi.................. $7,595 6904 2007 CHRYSLER PT CRUISER 4 cyl., FWD, keyless entry, full power, med. red, 44K mi........................................ $8,595

419-692-0032
Across from Arbys

Home Improvement
Windows, Doors, Siding, Roofing, Sunrooms, Kitchens & Bathroom Remodeling, Pole Buildings, Garages

Mark Pohlman

419-339-9084 cell 419-233-9460

(419) 235-3708

950 Lawn Care

950 Tree Service


OUR TREE SERVICE Trimming Topping Thinning
Deadwooding Stump, Shrub & Tree Removal Since 1973

GOLD CANYON CANDLES


Gina Fox 419-236-4134
www.candlesbygina.com The worlds finest candles, candle scents, home decor. Ask how to earn for FREE

SPEARS TEMANS
LAWN CARE
Total Lawncare & Snow Removal
21 Years Experience Insured

TAX REBATE ON WINDOWS


Ph. 419-339-4938 or 419-230-8128

30%

Commercial & Residential

Asset Backed Securities and Wells Fargo Bank to Douglas M. Akom, inlots 57, 58, Scott. Estate of Richard J. Miller to Colleen J. Miller, inlot 3718, Van Wert. Eldon W. Medaugh and Catherine M. Medaugh to Ronald D. Medaugh, portion of section 22, Willshire Township. Rodney E. Klinger to Nathan R. Stant and Kristin M. Stant, inlot 1209, Delphos. Luanne Hiser, Lu Ann W. Hiser and Thomas J. Hiser to Hiser Living Trust, portion of section 15, Liberty Township. Creative Home Buying Solutions to 407 W. South Trust, inlots 254, 255, 256, 257, 258, Willshire. Creative Home Buying Solutions to 612 W. Carmean Trust, inlots 388, 389, Ohio City. Fannie Mae to John E. Ryder and Amy P. Ryder, inlot 3088, Van wert. Investacorr Inc. to Van Wert County Council, lot 463, Van Wert subdivision. Fannie Mae to James T. Garrett and Brenda B. Garrett, portion of inlot 403, Van Wert. Estate of Colleen M. Clark to Ronald J. Clark, portion of section 20, Ridge Township. Patricia A. Baldauf and Alfred E. Baldauf to Robert E. Baldauf and Dottie M. Baldauf, portion of section 32, Washington Township. Estate of Helen C. Dickman to Tricia L. Martz and Michael D. Martz, inlot 1286, Delphos. Estate of Helen C. Dickman to Dean T. Schwinnen Joint Trust and Christina M. Schwinnen Joint Trust, inlots 1289, 1290, Delphos. Dean T. Schwinnen Trust and Christina M. Schwinnen Trust to Dean T. Schwinnen Joint Trust and Christina M. Schwinnen Joint Trust, inlot 1282, Delphos.

950 Car Care


OIL - LUBE FILTER

$
Only

22.95*

POHLMAN POURED
CONCRETE WALLS
Residential & Commercial Agricultural Needs All Concrete Work

FLANAGANS CAR CARE


816 E. FIFTH ST. DELPHOS Ph. 419-692-5801 Mon.-Fri. 8-6, Sat. 8-2

*up to 5 quarts oil

LAWN MOWING FERTILIZATION WEED CONTROL PROGRAMS LAWN AERATION FALL CLEANUP MULCHING & MULCH DELIVERY SHRUB INSTALLATION, TRIMMING & REMOVAL
Lindell Spears

419-692-7261
Bill Teman 419-302-2981 Ernie Teman 419-230-4890

Kevin Lindeman

Dave Wilgus

Edward Ditmyer

John Roby

Where You Come in a Customer & Leave a Friend.

Answer to Puzzle

L.L.C.

Service/Parts/Bodyshop: M-7:30-8:00, T-F - 7:30-6:00, Sat. - 9:00-2:00 Sat. Service: No Appt. Oil Changes As time allows per service hours Sales - M - 8:00-8:00, T-F - 8:00-6:00, Sat. - 9:00-2:30

Trimming & Removal 24 Hour Service Fully Insured

419-695-8516

KEVIN M. MOORE

Mark Pohlman

(419) 235-8051

RAABE
FORD, LINCOLN, INC.
419-692-0055 800-589-7876

www.raabeford.com

419-339-9084 cell 419-233-9460

Place Your Ad Today

11260 Elida Rd., Delphos

BLAST PEARS P R I NC E WA L L OP R A NDOM E RO I C A OVERT DEEP MANE E E K ERGO WA N T A D A I R SSE SOAPY TVA HAN TW I R L E E L AK I TA LOAD W I D E F EW A R K S NERD PHONY A L A S K A MO L T E N CAREEN OR I OL E EM I RS START

Woman thinks male nurse tried to violate her

10 - The Herald

Tuesday, July 5, 2011

www.delphosherald.com

Tomorrows Horoscope
By Bernice Bede Osol
Wednesday, July 6, 2011 Several social contacts could play important roles in your affairs in the year ahead. Depending on the issues, decide between which ones would be a big help to you business-wise and which ones will help enhance your popularity. CANCER (June 21-July 22) -- Because youre both curious and observant, there isnt too much thatll escape your attention, including things everybody else has missed. Youll share your insights with others. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) -- Keep your wits about you at all times, especially when engaged with financial or commercial matters. You should be able to take what you learn and improvise on it profitably. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) -- You have a talent that sometimes enables you to juggle several projects simultaneously. What baffles others, however, is your ability to do an equally good job on each task. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) -- If you hope to fulfill an ambitious objective, keep all the essentials to yourself. The fewer people who interfere, the easier it will be for you to do a good job completing all the details. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) -In order to save a bit of money, you need to be able to stay on budget. It behooves you not to go shopping with a good friend who always gives their credit cards a good workout. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) -- One of your greatest gifts is being able to use your mental agility to meet and overcome complicated challenges and obstacles. Youre likely to use it quite a bit at this juncture. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) -- When dealing with people under most conditions, it isnt wise to offer unsolicited advice. At this point however, if you have a suggestion that could help a confused friend, speak up. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) -As long as all of the partners involved are making an equal contribution, joint ventures have a better than usual chance of working out quite well at this time. Speedy results are probable. PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) -There is a good chance that you will be required to decide an issue where all of the alternatives appear to be of equal value. Look favorably upon options that have worked in the past. ARIES (March 21-April 19) -- The perfect opportunity to put down someone who hasnt treated you too kindly lately might pop up at last. Regardless of how great the temptation is to do so, be above it all. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) -Taking a bit of a recreational break when possible could prove to be valuable to you and your work. The more relaxed you are, the better you will be able to perform. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) -Two huge matters that you left hanging and are very anxious to wrap up will at last approach the final stages. Once you finish what youve been working on, go ahead and get em done, son.
Copyright 2011, United Feature Syndicate, Inc. Dist. By Universal Uclick for UFS

HI AND LOIS

Dear Annie: Im 22 years last time he was ill, I had old and recently needed an promised to let her know. operation in the only hos- Frankly, I had forgotten. I pital in our area. I am an was also exhausted and feel extremely shy and modest my first loyalty is to my female and would never go spouse. But I apologized. to a male doctor except in an She followed up with a long emergency. Luckily, I was e-mail detailing her future able to arrange for a female notification requirements. Ive been married to her surgeon and an all-female dad for three years. Both of surgery team. However, while I was in his daughters have been kind and welcoming, the recovery room, and I do not want to a young male create a rift. At the nurse -- a guy with same time, I do not whom I had gone want to go against to high school -my husbands wishcame into the room es. Please help me and told me he was keep peace in the there to remove family and do what my catheter. I was is right for all those stunned. I told I love. -- Sleepless him there was no in Syosset way I would allow Dear Syosset: him to do that. He tried to con- Annies Mailbox Your stepdaughters worry about their vince me, saying, Im a nurse. Its OK, but father and dont want anyone I wouldnt back down. He withholding information. It finally found a female nurse frightens them. Talk to your after I threatened to sue him husband. Ask his permission to keep his girls up-to-date in if he came any closer. Am I wrong to feel that a a timely manner. It will reasyoung male my age, especial- sure them. Dear Annie: The other ly someone I know, should not have access to the most morning, I woke up at 5 a.m. intimate and private parts of with the feeling that my husmy body, especially since band was in the house. I knew removing a catheter is not an it wasnt true and burst into tears. He died seven years emergency? I made a pact with my ago. When I opened up the boyfriend that no male will see me undressed until I newspaper, there was Norbert marry, and then only my hus- Tackmans letter in your colband. When I told my boy- umn. It was meant for me friend about this nurse, he that day. I know the sadness was ready to knock the guys and loneliness will always be a small part of my life. But block off. The idea that this nurse now, whenever it starts to believes he has the right to overwhelm me, I will reread violate me in such a way is his comforting letter. Thank keeping me from going back you, Annie, for printing it. in for a follow-up operation. -- L. Dear L.: Norberts piece Do I have the right to forbid a male nurse from attending has comforted many peome? I was told that since ple, and we are grateful he female nurses can examine allowed us to share it. Annies Mailbox is written male patients, a male nurse should be able to do the same by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy with females. The anxiety Sugar, longtime editors of the is killing me just thinking Ann Landers column. about it. What should I do? -- Modest in Iowa Dear Modest: Most health professionals have no prurient interest in their patients. A nurse, male or female, who removes a catheter is acting solely in a medical capacity. He was not violating you. However, you are entitled to request only female nurses if the hospital can provide them. Please dont let your anxiety keep you from follow-up treatment. Talk to your doctor about your concerns. Dear Annie: My husband is in the hospital. When I called his daughter in another state, she became upset that I hadnt phoned as soon as he was admitted instead of waiting 36 hours. I explained that Id asked her father whether I should call his adult children, but he said hed rather wait until he knew his diagnosis. She reminded me that the

BLONDIE

BEETLE BAILEY

SNUFFY SMITH

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

BORN LOSER

FRANK & ERNEST

Tuesday Evening
8:00

WPTA/ABC Wipeout WHIO/CBS NCIS

8:30

Cable Channels
A&E AMC

WOHL/FOX Kitchen Nightmares ION Without a Trace

WLIO/NBC America's Got Talent

Game Show NCIS: Los Angeles America's Got Talent MasterChef Criminal Minds Family Jewels

9:00

9:30

Combat Hospital The Good Wife Local Criminal Minds Jewels

10:00

10:30

Local Local Local

11:00

Nightline Jimmy Kimmel Live Late Show Letterman Late Tonight Show w/Leno Late Criminal Minds Jewels Jewels

11:30

July 5, 2011
12:00 12:30

BIG NATE

Criminal Minds

Jewels Jewels The Matrix ANIM Yellowstone BET Deliver Us From Eva BRAVO Housewives/NJ CMT The Singing Bee CNN In the Arena COMEDY Kevin Hart DISC Deadliest Catch DISN Good Luck Shake It E! Sex and t Sex and t ESPN MLB Baseball ESPN2 SportsNation FAM Pretty Little Liars FOOD Cupcake Wars FX The Soloist HGTV First First

Decorators CMT Music Piers Morgan Tonight Tosh.0 Tosh.0 Deadliest Catch Tinker Bel E! Special WNBA Basketball Nine Lives Chopped Property Property

Family Jewels The Matrix Wild Amazon Yellowstone Toya: A F Toya: A F The Mo'Nique Show Decorators Decorators Cribs Anderson Cooper 360 Tosh.0 Work. Daily Colbert After the Catch Deadliest Catch Good Luck Deck Deck Chelsea E! News Baseball Tonight SportsCenter NFL Yrbk. NFL Yrbk. Pretty Little Liars The 700 Club Chopped 24 Hour Rest. Battle The Soloist House Hunters For Rent Property

Jewels

Wendy Williams Show Housewives/NYC Smarter Smarter Piers Morgan Tonight Tosh.0 Tosh.0 After the Catch Wizards Wizards Chelsea Baseball NFL Live SportsNation Whose? Whose? Chopped Property Property

GRIZZWELLS

Premium Channels
HBO SHOW MAX

How the States American Pickers MTV Teen Mom Teen Mom NICK My Wife My Wife SCI Star Trek II SPIKE Auction Auction TBS Office Office TCM The Sea Hawk TLC I Kid I Kid TNT Law & Order TOON Looney Gumball TRAV Bizarre Foods TV LAND AllFamily AllFamily USA Law & Order: SVU VH1 Single Ladies WGN Chris Chris
HIST LIFE

How the States American Pickers

Modern Marvels How the States How I Met How I Met Chris Chris Teen Mom The Challenge George Lopez The Nanny The Nanny The Nanny The Nanny Star Trek Gen Star Trek III: Search-Spock Auction Auction Auction Auction Auction Auction Ways Die Ways Die Office Office Office Office Conan Lopez Tonight The Thief of Bagdad 19 Kids 19 Kids Couple Couple I Kid I Kid 19 Kids 19 Kids Memphis Beat HawthoRNe Memphis Beat HawthoRNe King/Hill King/Hill Amer. Dad Amer. Dad Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Chicken Aqua Teen Bizarre Foods Bizarre Foods Bizarre Foods Bizarre Foods Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond Cleveland Divorced Roseanne Roseanne White Collar Covert Affairs Necessary Roughness Collar Celebrity Rehab Celebrity Rehab Shocking Breakups How I Met How I Met WGN News at Nine Scrubs Scrubs South Pk South Pk Charlie St. Cloud The Nutty Professor The Big C Weeds The Big C Episodes True Blood Inception Femme Voyeur's Web The Real L Word Desperado

How the States How I Met How I Met Teen Mom '70s Show '70s Show

PICKLES

Despicable Me The Relic Adventures of Power

Weeds

2009 Hometown Content, listings by Zap2it

www.delphosherald.com

Tuesday, July 5, 2011

The Herald 11

Casey Anthony jury deliberations to resume


By KYLE HIGHTOWER Associated Press ORLANDO, Fla. Jurors were to resume deliberations today in the murder trial of Casey Anthony a day after spending about six hours dissecting it following a rebuttal summation by the prosecution. Judge Belvin Perry separated the main jury of seven women and five men from five alternates and sent them into the deliberation room just after noon Monday. They did not return a verdict by the time the judge released them for the evening just after 6 p.m. The alternates are being sequestered in a separate part of the Orlando courthouse. Prosecutors argued Monday morning the 25-yearold killed her 2-year-old daughter Caylee in June 2008 because the toddler interrupted her carefree partying and love life. The jury received the more than 400 pieces of evidence in the jury room that have been by both sides in the case since the trial began in late May. But jurors will be brought into open court should they request to view any of the video evidence, a court official said. Equipment for video viewing is not available in the deliberation room. The jury has the ability to send questions to Judge Perry via the court deputies, but had yet to do so. In their rebuttal closing argument, the prosecution said the defenses assertion that Caylees death was an accident made no sense. Anthonys attorneys say the girl drowned in the familys pool. They have said Anthony panicked and that her father, a former police officer, decided to make the death look like a homicide by placing duct tape over the childs mouth and dumping the body in some nearby woods. George Anthony has denied that. Prosecutor Jeff Ashton told the jurors no one makes an innocent accident look like murder. Thats absurd. Nothing has been presented to you to make that any less absurd, Ashton said. He also spent significant time reminding jurors about forensic evidence that he said links Anthony to her daughters death, including the smell and chemical signature of decomposition in her car. Anthony is charged with first-degree murder and six other charges. If convicted of first-degree murder, she could be sentenced to death or life in prison. The jury was chosen from the Tampa Bay area because of pretrial media coverage and have been sequestered in an Orlando hotel. They listened to 33 days of testimony and another two days of closing arguments. Lead prosecutor Linda Drane Burdick followed Ashton, telling the jurors that prosecutors presented every piece of evidence they promised in May during opening statements. Without saying it, she was pointing out that defense attorneys never presented direct evidence backing up their contentions that the child drowned. She then hammered on the lies Anthony, then 22, told from June 16, 2008, when her daughter was last seen, and a month later when sheriffs investigators were notified. Those include the single mother telling her parents she couldnt produce Caylee because the girl was with a nanny named Zanny a woman who doesnt exist; that she and her daughter were spending time in Jacksonville, Fla., with a rich boyfriend who doesnt exist; and that Zanny had been hospitalized after an out-of-town traffic crash and that they were spending time with her. Responses to grief are as varied as the day is long, but responses to guilt are oh, so predictable, Drane Burdick said. What do guilty people do? They lie. They avoid. They run. They mislead, not just to their family, but the police. They divert attention

Answers to Saturdays questions: Fish do drink some water but most of the liquid they need they get through osmosis through the skin. Your chances of being struck by a meteorite are 1 in 200 million. Todays questions: When were the words Once upon a time first used in a book? What was the only professional sport banned in the U.S. during World War II? Answers in Wednesdays Herald. Todays words: Bradyarthria: slow talking Quelquechose: a mere trifle

away from themselves and they act like nothing is wrong. Thats why you heard about what happened in those 31 days. Burdick concluded the states case by showing the jury two side-by-side images. One showed Casey Anthony smiling and partying in a nightclub during the month Caylee was missing. The other was of the tattoo which meant beautiful life she got a day before her family and law enforcement first learned of the childs disappearance. At the end of this case, all you have to ask yourself is whose life was better without Caylee? Burdick asked. This is your answer. Anthony sat stone faced during much of the prosecutors arguments, but occasionally shook her head in disagreement and spoke under her breath. Defense attorneys claimed Anthonys lies and erratic behavior were brought on by her grief over her dead child and the sexual abuse she suffered as a child from her father.

These fine businesses invite you to

Lloyds Auto Service


We Service All Makes and Models
419-238-3583 Fax 419-238-6579
M - F: 8-5:30

707 E. Main Street Van Wert, Ohio 45891

They are proud of the community and offer the best in service and quality!
pasta pizza subs stromboli cowzone salad bar Deliver Dine In Pickup 209 S. Washington Van Wert, OH

VAN WERT

Bad Credit? No Credit? WE CAN HELP YOU!


TRACY BISHOP

Special Credit Finance Location Manager tracy@statewideford.com

Home of Van Werts BEST FRIED CHICKEN


719 Fox Rd., Van Wert OPEN 6am TO MIDNIGHT 7 DAYS A WEEK

phone

419-238-5255
fax 419-238-3485

419.238.9000

Visit us on the web ... www.picknsavefoods.com

(419) 238-5304

1003 West Main Street, Van Wert, OH 45891

Deep in your neck a pair of blood vesVertebral sels (vertebral arteries) pass through Arteries the openings in your neck bones. These vessels supply 30% of your brains blood supply. Any twisting or misalignment of your neck bones will kink those arteries and slow the blood flow to your brain, (the start of a migraine). Dr. Reed, D.C. can gently re-align your spine without popping or twisting your neck. Get the relief you are searching for at 419-238-2701 or visit www.ReedSpinalCare.com Neck Bones

Headaches? Migraines?
Laudicks Jewelry
419-238-2266

HOME Sweet HOME

IMPROVEMENT

Hours: Mon.-Fri. 10-5:30; Sat. 9-1

1244 S. Shannon St. Van Wert, Ohio

CHINESE RESTAURANT DINE IN & CARRY OUT


BUFFET

349 Towne Center Blvd. Van Wert, Ohio 419-238-5888

1825 Scott St. Napoleon, Ohio 419-592-1888

For Roofing, Siding, Windows, Doors, Spouting, Awnings, Patio Enclosures & More.
Over 36 years of reliable local service! Weve got you covered!

Kitchens Baths Appliances

BUFFET

BUFFET

Your dream, our goal. Kitchens & Baths is what we do!

$1.00 off of 2 Reg. Lunch Buffet


Expires 7-30-11

$2.00 off of 2 Reg. Dinner Buffet


Expires 7-30-11

Bebout and Houg


Roofing and Siding, Inc.
116 N. Walnut St., Van Wert, Ohio

All You Can Eat Super Buffet MORE THAN Best Chinese Restaurant in Town 100 ITEMS

419-238-4100

Over 45 YEARS of building Northwest & West Central Ohio ... one project at a time
Commercial Site Selection Industrial Design Institutional Engineering Churches State Permits Complete Turnkey Operation

419-238-5650
10098 LINCOLN HWY. VAN WERT, Ohio 45891

Alexander & Bebout, Inc.


Engineering Design Construction
10098 Lincoln Highway Van Wert, Ohio

419-238-9567

www.AlexanderBebout.com

12 The Herald

Tuesday, July 5, 2011

www.delphosherald.com

DELPHOS CELEBRATES

$220

419.224.0117 4299 ELIDA ROAD LIMA, OH 45807 WWW.BIOLIFEPLASMA.COM

JOIN US AS WE CELEBRATE 10 YEARS!


FOR A LIMITED TIME, NEW PLASMA DONORS OR PREVIOUS DONORS WHO HAVENT DONATED IN SIX OR MORE MONTHS, PRESENT THIS COUPON FOR AN ADDITIONAL BONUS! SUPERVISED PLAYROOM AVAILABLE! CALL OR VISIT US ONLINE FOR DETAILS.

$100

Must present this coupon prior to the initial donation to receive $40 on your first and $60 on your second successful donation. Initia l donation must be complete by 7.30.11 and subseque d nt donations within 30 days . May not be combined with any other offer. Only at parti cipating locations. Expires 8.31.11 DH

NEW DONORS OR PREVIOU DO WHO HAVENT DONATED INSSIX NORS OR MORE, PRESENT THIS COUP MONTHS RECEIVE $100 IN JUST TWO DOON AND NATIONS.

Das könnte Ihnen auch gefallen