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DELPHOS

HERALD

The

Telling The Tri-Countys Story Since 1869

www.delphosherald.com

75 daily

Monday, April 13, 2015

Vol. 145 No. 213

Delphos, Ohio

Second shot: Hillary Clinton running again for president


WASHINGTON (AP) Hillary
Rodham Clinton jumped back into
presidential politics on Sunday,
announcing her much-awaited second campaign for the White House.
Everyday Americans need a champion. I want to be that champion,
she said.
As she did in 2007, Clinton began
her campaign for the 2016 Democratic
nomination with a video. But rather
than follow it with a splashy rally,
she instead plans to head to the early-voting states of Iowa and New
Hampshire, looking to connect with
voters directly at coffee shops, day
care centers and some private homes.
So Im hitting the road to earn
your vote. Because its your time.

And I hope youll join me on this


journey, Clinton said at the end of a
video, which features a series of men,
women and children describing their
aspirations.
This voter-centric approach was
picked with a purpose, to show that
Clinton is not taking the nomination
for granted. Only after about a month
of such events will Clinton will give a
broader speech outlining more specifics about her rationale for running.
The former secretary of state, senator and first lady enters the race in
a strong position to succeed her rival
from the 2008 campaign, President
Barack Obama.
Her message will focus on strengthening economic security for the mid-

Clinton

dle class and expanding opportunities


for working families. The campaign is
portraying her as a tenacious fighter
who can get results and work with
Congress, business and world leaders.
Americans have fought their way
back from tough economic times. But
the deck is still stacked in favor of
those at the top. Everyday Americans
need a champion and I want to be that
champion, she said in the video.
So you can do more than just get
by. You can get ahead and stay ahead.
Because when families are strong,
America is strong.
Clintons strategy, described ahead
of the announcement by two senior
advisers who requested anonymity
to discuss her plans, has parallels to

Upfront

CD of A to host
Jitney Auction

Catholic Daughters of
America, Delphos Court will
hold its annual Jitney Auction
at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday in the
Knight of Columbus hall.
This fundraiser is a yearly
event in which the proceeds are
donated to charities, missions
and other organizations that
do service to those in need.
Members are asked to
bring auction items.

Pizza buffet
benefits Post Prom
The Jefferson Post Prom
Committee will hold a Pizza
Buffet from 4-8 p.m. Tuesday
at the Eagles Lodge.
Tickets are available at the
door and the cost of tickets is
$7 for adults and $4 children
10 years old and under.
Included in the price of
tickets will be pizza, breadsticks, salad and drink.
There will also be a 50/50
drawing and several basket
raffles from area businesses.

Fort Jennings
celebrates
2015 prom

Donor Dash
set April 26

The third annual Organ


Donor Dash 5K run/walk
will be held on April 26 at
Jefferson High School north of
Delphos on State Route 66.
Registration fee is $18
with T-shirt before Friday.
Race day registration is $20
and begins at noon with the
race starting at 1:08 p.m.
All organ recipients and
organ donors/families are invited for a Tribute Lap before
the Organ Donor Dash 5K to
celebrate the benefits of organ
donation. There is no charge to
participate in the Tribute Walk.
Memorial spaces
are still available on the
shirt before Friday.
Race forms are available
at Peak Community Fitness
in Delphos or contact Deann
Heiing at 419-230-2963 or
ldheiing6@hotmail.com.
RSVPs for the Tribute Lap
can also be sent to Heiing.
All proceeds benefit
Lifeline Of Ohio for organ
donation awareness.

Forecast

Mostly cloudy
today with
chance of
showers and
thunderstorms. Highs
in the lower 70s. Mostly
clear tonight. Lows in the
lower 40s. See page 2.

Index

Obituaries
State/Local
Announcements
Community
Sports
Classifieds
Comics and Puzzles
World news

2
3
4
5
6-7
8
9
10

Fort Jennings High School hosted one


of the first proms in the area Saturday. Students enjoyed a meal and the
dance at the school. (DHI Media/Dena
Martz)

Obamas approach in 2012. He framed


his re-election as a choice between
Democrats focused on the middle
class and Republicans who sought to
protect the wealthy and return to policies that led the country into recession.
Clinton will face pressure from the
progressive wing of her party to adopt
a more populist economic message
focused on income inequality. Some
liberals remain skeptical of Clintons
close ties to Wall Street donors and
the centrist economic policies of her
husbands administration. They have
urged her to back tougher financial
regulations and tax increases on the
wealthy.
See HILLARY, page 10

Flood plan
costs $66M
FINDLAY (AP) A plan
to reduce flooding along the
Blanchard River in northwestern Ohio, which includes building a 10-mile channel to divert
water away from downtown
Findlay, would cost nearly
$66 million, according to the
federal agency overseeing the
project.
The price tag, though, is
much less than earlier estimates
of well over $100 million.
Much of the cost would go
toward constructing the diversion channel southwest of
Findlay that would send floodwater away from the city before
slowly sending back into the
river.
A levee stretching for 1.5
miles to keep the rivers floodwater from spilling over also
is a part plan released Friday
by The U.S. Army Corps of
Engineers.
The project would not be
finished until at least 2027, The
Courier reported.
Controlling flooding along
the river is a top concern in
Findlay, where five major
floods have caused millions of
dollars in damage since 2007.
Government funds have been
used already to buy flood-prone
property and homes along the
river, but city leaders say a longterm solution is needed.
The Army Corps is planning
a public meeting on April 22 in
Findlay to discuss the project.
It said that flood control will
save the area about $3.8 million
a year.

Slow recall normal


part of aging
BY STEPHANIE GROVES
DHI Media Staff Writer
sgroves@delphosherald.com

Do you ever find yourself forgetting where you put your keys or
not being able to remember the title to a movie youve seen recently or
find yourself standing in the middle of the kitchen not knowing what
you went in there for?
According to the National Institute on Aging (NIA) memory loss
can happen at any age for any number of reasons. For some people,
these simple acts of forgetfulness are scary because they lead to
thoughts of dementia or Alzheimers disease.
Alzheimers of Northwest Ohios Program Manager Linda Pollitz,
LSW, said that as people age; their brains change; it happens to everyone.
Some may forget peoples names or have trouble in recalling the
names as quickly as they used to, Pollitz explained.
There are a variety of conditions, disorders and injuries people can
sustain that causes a lack of oxygen to the brain and contributes to
age-related memory loss.
Sleep Apnea is a treatable sleep disorder which causes breathing to
stop briefly and frequently throughout the night and is linked to memory loss and dementia.
Not enough oxygen gets to the brain and people wake with foggy
brain in the morning, Pollitz explained. After people take the steps
for treatment for the disorder, their memory and overall health increases
and improves.
Symptoms of sleep apnea are waking with headaches from the
hundreds of brain interruptions per night due to the brain being stressed
and having daytime fatigue or if a partner complains of loud snoring.
According to The Journal of Neuroscience, when sleep apnea is
not treated, it affects spatial navigational memory, including the ability
to remember directions or where you put things like your keys. The
research suggests that deep sleep, also known as rapid eye movement
(REM) sleep, plays an important role in memory.
Silent strokes cause vascular cognitive impairments that can develop gradually and change brain function, causing mild to severe memory problems. Blocked or reduced blood flow in the brain deprives it of
oxygen and essential nutrients.
See RECALL, page 10

Peltier hillside alive with color

Bright yellow Winter Aconite and royal blue Siberian Squill carpet the hillside garden behind the Peltier house. As the weather continues to warm, soon the hillside will
be a colorful array of Daylilys, Ferns and many other woodland plantings. Owner
Jack Adams said there is a plan to refurbish the hillside planted by Dorothea Peltier
in the future. In addition, the interior reconstruction is ongoing and Adams is working diligently to complete the project this year. (DHI Media/Stephanie Groves)

2 The Herald

www.delphosherald.com

Monday, April 13, 2015

For The Record

oiU reviews alcohol laws


with prom season in mind
inForMAtion sUBMitteD
COLUMBUS Prom season in
Ohio is upon us and agents with the
Ohio Department of Public Safetys Ohio
Investigative Unit want parents and students to understand Ohios alcohol laws.
Agents hope parents and students make
the decision not to participate in illegal
and dangerous behavior, such as providing
alcohol to minors and consuming underage.
While we know alcohol consumption takes place before prom, most of
the illegal activity happens after prom
has concluded, said OIU Enforcement
Commander Eric Wolf. Either way, the
excitement that comes along with prom
can easily turn into a time of tragedy
because of the increased occurrences of
underage drinking at after-prom parties.
We urge parents not to provide a place or

allow alcohol consumption to take place


on your property.
To help foster good choices, parents
and teens need to understand Ohios
underage drinking laws.
It is illegal to provide a place for your
child and his/her friends to drink in a
safe environment. In fact, parents may
not provide alcohol to children who are
under 21, who are not their own, even in
their own home with the other parents
permission. Those convicted of providing alcohol to a person under 21 years
of age face maximum sentences of six
months in jail and/or a $1,000 fine.
It is illegal to purchase alcohol for
anyone under 21. Anyone who purchases, sells or gives alcoholic beverages to
underage individuals faces a $1,000 fine
and/or up to six months in jail.
If you are under 21 and are caught

driving with a blood alcohol concentration of .02 percent or higher, a level


that can be reached after just one or two
drinks, you can be arrested. Punishment
is suspension of your driver license
for at least 90 days up to a maximum
of two years, plus four points added to
your driving record. Having an open
container of alcohol in a motor vehicle
is also illegal.
Together, we must commit to making
a safer Ohio, by stopping senseless tragedies associated with irresponsible and
illegal underage alcohol consumption. If
you have information about a bar, store
or carryout selling beer and/or liquor to
persons under the age of 21 or you have
information of an underage house party,
please notify the Ohio Investigative Unit
by calling the #677 on your cell phone
and your complaint will be investigated.

FROM THE ARCHIVES


one Year Ago
Libraries and librarians have a powerful and positive
impact on the lives of Americans on a daily basis. On Monday,
the library will officially unveil its new Teen Room. Located
in the basement, the room has been refreshed with new paint,
a chalkboard wall and other details geared toward patrons in
grades 6-12.
25 Years Ago 1990
A tempura painting Shades of Matisse by Jefferson
Senior High School student Rachael Wannemacher has been
selected for inclusion in the 1990 Ohio Governors Youth
Art Exhibition. Wannemacher, daughter of Richard and Patty
Wannemacher of Delphos, will receive a certificate of award
April 29 at the opening of the exhibition at The State Office
Tower, Columbus.
Beth Holmes, a senior at Elida High School, Wednesday
signed a national letter of intent to play collegiate basketball
at the University of Akron. Participating in the signing were
her parents, Bob and Sue Holmes, head coach Vicki Mauk and
assistant coach Sue Skinner.
Three Fort Jennings High School students received a superior rating at District Science Fair held at Defiance College.
They are Rodney Schroeder, son of Mr. and Mrs. Kenny
Schroeder; Lori VonLehmden, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Eugene VonLehmden; and Lisa Swick, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Dan Swick.
50 Years Ago 1965
Dick Davis, manager of the Ohio Power Company, told
the Herald Monday that he was hopeful that power would be
restored to Delphos around 3 p.m. Ten persons were reported
dead in Allen County as a result of a tornado that struck the
area Sunday evening.
Fire of an undetermined origin caused an estimated

$150,000 to $200,000 damage at the Vanamatic Corp. building Saturday. The estimated damages include the building and
its contents. The Elida Fire Department brought a pumper and
a tank wagon. Firemen John Sheeter, Jerome Schmit and Bill
Stallkamp were injured and were treated at the office of a local
physician.
Mrs. Lawrence Dunlap was hostess to the members of the
Ottawa River Churches Ladies Aid the past week with Group
1 serving a covered dish dinner. Mrs. Ray Deffenbaugh, vice
president, presided at the meeting. Plans were made for a
mother-daughter tea to be held in the church social rooms in
May.
75 Years Ago 1940
For the second consecutive year, Margaret Hoffman, a
senior at St. Johns High School, won a gold certificate for
receiving special merit in the international shorthand contest. Rosemary Kill and Elizabeth Weber, seniors, and Leona
Brokamp, Dorothy Lindeman, Alice Kaverman, Jane Kimmet,
Alice Lause, Beatrice Miller, Lucille Rupert, Melba Will and
Betty Yochum, juniors, all were awarded Honorable Mention
Gold Pins.
A dinner meeting of the 1910 Club was held Thursday evening at the Phelan Hotel. Bridge followed at the home of Mrs.
J. F. Ockuly, East Third Street. Mrs. Alex J. Shenk held high
score in the bridge games, Mrs. B. L. Jauman second and Mrs.
Alex F. Stallkamp third.
The inclement weather forced cancellation of the scheduled meeting of the representatives of teams seeking entrance
in the Northwestern Ohio League. An informal meeting was
held by the seven managers who were present: Norman
Etzler of Convoy; Walter Wills of Van Wert; Vincent Mack of
Fort Jennings; Ivan Brubaker of Ohio City; Gilbert Sanders
of Ottoville; Charles Sterling of Middle Point; and L. W.
Kohlhorst of Delphos.

TODAY IN HISTORY
Associated Press
Today is Monday, April 13, the 103rd
day of 2015. There are 262 days left in
the year.
Todays Highlight in History:
On April 13, 1965, 16-year-old Lawrence
Wallace Bradford Jr. was appointed by New
York Republican Jacob Javits to be the first
black page of the U.S. Senate.
On this date:
In 1613, Pocahontas, daughter of
Chief Powhatan, was captured by
English Capt. Samuel Argall in the
Virginia Colony. (During a yearlong

captivity, Pocahontas converted to


Christianity and ultimately opted to stay
with the English. )
In 1742, Handels Messiah had its
first public performance in Dublin, Ireland.
In 1743, the third president of the
United States, Thomas Jefferson, was
born in Shadwell in the Virginia Colony.
In 1861, at the start of the Civil War,
Fort Sumter in South Carolina fell to
Confederate forces.
In 1912, the Royal Flying Corps,
a predecessor of Britains Royal Air
Force, was created.
In 1943, President Franklin D.

Roosevelt dedicated the Jefferson


Memorial in Washington D.C., on the
200th anniversary of the third American
presidents birth.
In 1958, Van Cliburn of the United
States won the first International
Tchaikovsky Competition for piano in
Moscow; Russian Valery Klimov won
the violin competition.
In 1964, Sidney Poitier became the
first black performer in a leading role to
win an Academy Award for his performance in Lilies of the Field. Patricia
Neal was named best actress for Hud;
best picture went to Tom Jones.

WEATHER
WeAtHer ForeCAst
tri-County
Associated Press
toDAY: Mostly cloudy. Chance of showers in the morning.
Then showers likely and chance of thunderstorms in the afternoon. Highs in the lower 70s. Southwest winds 10 to 20 mph
with gusts up to 30 mph. Chance of precipitation 70 percent.
toniGHt: Mostly clear. Colder. Lows in the lower 40s.
North winds around 10 mph.
tUesDAY: Sunny. Highs in the mid 60s. Northeast winds
around 10 mph.
tUesDAY niGHt: Mostly clear. Lows around 40. East
winds around 10 mph.
WeDnesDAY: Mostly sunny. Highs in the mid 60s.
WeDnesDAY niGHt: Mostly cloudy with a 50 percent

Delphos Fire Association

STEAK FEED
with all the trimmings

Tuesday, Apr. 14

FIREMENS
CLUBHOUSE
911 Lima Ave., Delphos

9
$
00
11
$

00

chance of showers. Lows in the upper 40s.


tHUrsDAY: Cloudy with a chance of showers and a
slight chance of a thunderstorm. Highs in the lower 60s.
Chance of measurable precipitation 50 percent.
tHUrsDAY niGHt: Mostly cloudy with a 40 percent
chance of showers. Lows in the upper 40s.
FriDAY: Mostly cloudy with a chance of showers and a
slight chance of a thunderstorm. Highs in the mid 60s. Chance
of measurable precipitation 30 percent.
FriDAY niGHt: Partly cloudy with a 20 percent chance
of showers. Lows in the upper 40s.
sAtUrDAY: Mostly sunny. Highs in the lower 60s.
sAtUrDAY niGHt: Partly cloudy with a 20 percent
chance of showers. Lows around 40.

LOTTERY
CLEVELAND (AP)
These Ohio lotteries were
drawn Sunday:
Mega Millions
Est jackpot: $47 million
Pick 3 evening
2-3-4
Pick 3 Midday
3-8-6
Pick 4 evening
8-2-9-7

Pick 4 Midday
8-5-1-0
Pick 5 evening
3-9-1-7-0
Pick 5 Midday
4-1-4-1-1
Powerball
Est jackpot: $40 million
rolling Cash 5
08-11-17-18-32
Est jackpot: $100,000

Carry Out
No Presale

Serving 6 PM to 8 PM

www.raabeford.com
11260 Elida Rd., Delphos

419-692-0055

The Delphos
Herald
Nancy Spencer, editor
Ray Geary,
general manager
Delphos Herald, Inc.
Lori Goodwin Silette,
circulation manager

roberta Jeanette
Hitchcock
MIDDLE POINT
Roberta Jeanette Hitchcock,
a lifelong resident of Van
Wert County, passed away
Saturday, April 11, 2015,
at Otterbein Senior Living
Community in Cridersville at
the age of 89.
She lived on the family
farm near Middle Point until
recently.
She is survived by three
children, Suzanne Welker
(Rick Witham) of Circleville,
Stan (Kathie) Hitchcock of
St. Marys and Vickie (Robert)
Anderson of Glastonbury,
Connecticut; and seven grandchildren, Tom Hitchcock
(Heather) of Celina, Amanda
Welker (Charley) Meser
of Portland, Oregon, Brian
(Tamara Malecki) Hitchcock
of Middle Point, Gretchen
(Dan) Dorsey of Pittsburgh,
Ashley ( Jeff) Corn of Denver,
Brad Anderson of Washington,
D.C., and Alex Anderson of
Denver. She enjoyed seven
great-grandchildren, Cole and
Ellie Hitchcock, Ian Meser,
Morgan, Maya and Nolan
Dorsey, Keaton Salyers and
Hunter Hitchcock. She is
also survived by sisters-inlaw, Helen Bowersock and
Jaunema Hitchcock; and
brother-in-law,
Clarence
Ringwald.
She was preceded in
death by her husband, Victor
Ulysses Hitchcock; parents,
John W. and LulaMartin
Bowersock of Wetzel; parents-in-law, Roy C. and Laura
Hitchcock; four brothers,
Burnell, Burdette, Virgil and
Lloyd Bowersock; and sonin-law, John B. Welker.
Roberta was a farm wife,
community and church volunteer, teaching assistant,
friend, loving mother and
grandmother. She served as
vice president of the HoaglinJackson Sunrise Club, was
a member of Grace Church
and most recently, Zion
Christian Union Church. She
retired after a 20-year career
as a para-professional-teacher assistant for the Severe
Behavioral
Handicapped
Program for Van Wert County
Schools. In 1990, she was
selected as Para-Professional
of the Year by the Ohio
Council of Children with
Behavioral Disorders for
providing encouragement,
consistency and enthusiasm
for the program.
Roberta was known for
providing encouragement in
all aspects of her life. Her
warm smile, easy laugh and
interest in others inspired
those around her to use their
talents.
Robertas greatest joys
were her family and friends.
She loved cooking, baking,
crafting and being outside.
She liked to meet people, luncheons, learn new things and
throughout the years explored
a variety of experiences with
her children and grandchildren.
Visiting hours are 2-8
p.m. Tuesday at AlspachGearhart Funeral Home, 722
S.Washington Street, Van
Wert.
Funeral services will
be held at Zion Christian
Union Church on ConverseRoselm Road at 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday.
The preferred memorial is
to the Assisted Living area
of Otterbein Senior Living
Community, Cridersville,
Ohio, 45806.

BIRTHS

Dine
In

PUBLIC INVITED

OBITUARY

st. ritAs
A boy was born April 8 to
Ashley and Branden Siefker
of Fort Jennings.
A boy was born April 10
to Roxanne and Todd Utrup
of Delphos.

The
Delphos
Herald
(USPS 1525 8000) is published
daily except Sundays, Tuesdays
and Holidays.
The Delphos Herald is delivered by carrier in Delphos for
$1.82 per week. Same day
delivery outside of Delphos is
done through the post office
for Allen, Van Wert or Putnam
Counties. Delivery outside of
these counties is $117 per year.
Entered in the post office
in Delphos, Ohio 45833 as
Periodicals, postage paid at
Delphos, Ohio.
405 North Main St.
TELEPHONE 695-0015
Office Hours
8 a.m.-5 p.m. Mon.-Fri.
POSTMASTER:
Send address changes
to THE DELPHOS HERALD,
405 N. Main St.
Delphos, Ohio 45833

CorreCtions

The Delphos Herald wants


to correct published errors in
its news, sports and feature
articles. To inform the newsroom of a mistake in published
information, call the editorial
department at 419-695-0015.
Corrections will be published
on this page.

FUNERALS
Gessner, Carl Louis, 92,
of Delphos, Mass of Christian
Burial will begin at 10 a.m.
Tuesday at St. John the
Evangelist Catholic Church,
the Rev. Ron Schock officiating. Burial will follow in
Resurrection Cemetery with
military honors accorded by
the Delphos Veterans Council.
Visitation will be from 2-8 p.m.
today at Strayer Funeral Home,
where a Parish Wake Service
will be held at 2 p.m. Memorial
contributions may be made to
St. John the Evangelist Catholic
Church. Online condolences
may be shared at www.strayerfuneralhome.com.
WeitZeL, Elizabeth L.
Betty, 78, of Coldwater,
Mass of Christian Burial will
begin at 10:30 a.m. today
at Holy Trinity Church,
Coldwater, with Fr. Richard
Walling officiating. Burial
will follow in St. Elizabeth
Cemetery, Coldwater. Friends
may call from 9-10 a.m. today
at Hogenkamp Funeral Home,
Coldwater. Memorial contributions may be made to
State of the Heart Hospice.
Condolences may be left at
hogenkampfh.com.
sCHWieterMAn,
Edgar D., 79, of Delphos, Mass
of Christian Burial will begin
at 10:30 a.m. Wednesday at St.
John the Evangelist Catholic
Church, the Rev. Ron Schock
officiating. Burial will follow
in Resurrection Cemetery.
Visitation will be from 2-8
p.m. Tuesday at Strayer
Funeral Home, 1840 E. Fifth
St., Delphos, where a Parish
Wake Service will be held at 2
p.m. Any memorial contributions made to the family will
be used for the beautification of
the Delphos City Parks. Online
condolences may be shared at
www.strayerfuneralhome.com.
KrieteMeYer, Arnold
M., 80, of Fort Jennings, Mass
of Christian Burial will begin
at 10:30 a.m. today at St.
Joseph Catholic Church, the
Rev. Charles Obinwa officiating. Burial will follow in the
church cemetery. Visitation
will be for one hour prior
to the service at the church.
Memorial
contributions
may be made to St. Josephs
Cemetery or St. Josephs
Parish. Online condolences may be shared at www.
strayerfuneralhome.com.

EMERGENCY
RUN TOTALS
Emergency run numbers
for March were:
8 fire calls
- 6 of them false alarms
102 EMS calls
1 gas leak
8 service calls
119 first responder calls
119 total runs

Monday, April 13, 2015

www.delphosherald.com

Rural Fire Protection


Association holds
annual meeting
INFORMATION
SUBMITTED
MARION TOWNSHIP
The annual meeting of the
Delphos Community Rural
Fire Protection Association
was held April 6 at the Marion
Township House.
In
attendance
were
President Dan Kramer,
Treasurer
Bruce
Kraft,
Director Charlie Buettner,
Director Dave Swick, Director
Harry Heidelbaugh, Secretary
Terry Knebel, Delphos Fire
Department Platoon chief Roy
Hoehn and general member
Doug Geise.
President Kramer called
the meeting to order.
The 2014 meeting minutes
were read. Harry Heidelbaugh
motioned to accept the minutes as read, Dave Swick second. Motion passed.
Treasurer Bruce Kraft gave
the following report:
Expenses for the annual
mailing of $664.49 will be
paid from association funds.
Through the year, various
repairs on the truck previously
purchased by the association
for the fire department were
paid for by the association.
These totaled $2,890.57
Platoon Chief Roy Hoehn
outlined the following current
projects for the fire department:
A blitz nozzle which can
be used with a high-pressure
hose and does not need to be
manned. Cost of the nozzle is
$3,300;
Tablet computers for
EMS will enhance communication with emergency rooms
and streamline paperwork.
Cost is unknown at this time;
Work continues on
obtaining grants for fire
equipment and buildings; and
Upgrade of radios will
allow communication with
other departments.
See FIRE, page 10

The Herald 3

STATE/LOCAL

April is 9-1-1 education month


SUBMITTED BY KIM BRANDT
Van Wert County
9-1-1 Coordinator
Just three numbers to dial seems simple enough
but with todays technology, do you know how
to make 9-1-1 work for you? Here are 10 things
everyone needs to know about 9-1-1:
1. Knowing WHEN to call and what to expect
when you call 9-1-1.
9-1-1 is the phone number you can call from
any phone any place in the USA when you need
help or see someone that needs help right away.
Knowing what to expect when you call 9-1-1 can
help reduce fear and feelings of helplessness in an
emergency.
In an emergency, seconds matter, so being
knowledgeable and prepared can make all the
difference.
It is appropriate to call 9-1-1 when you need
help to save a life, stop a crime or report a fire.
You should be dialing 9-1-1 if someone is hurt and
in need of immediate medical assistance, or if you
are in immediate need of law enforcement or a
firetruck. 9-1-1 is for emergency use only.
2. If you dial 9-1-1 for a non-emergency matter,
you are tying up resources that could be needed
for a real emergency. If you accidentally call 9-11, stay on the line and tell the dispatcher that you
do not have an emergency. Harassing and making
prank calls to 9-1-1 is a crime.
3. Know WHERE you are.
This is the most important place to start.
Van Wert County 9-1-1 has current technology
and up-to-date mapping that helps us find you.
However it depends on cell phone signals, cell
towers and your device as to how accurate the
information we get is.
If you are on the road when an emergency
strikes, tell 9-1-1 what road you are on, look
around for road signs, house numbers or mile
markers to help us locate you. Whats your location will be the first question 9-1-1 will ask you.
Be prepared to answer. Make a real effort to be as
detailed as possible. Landmarks can be helpful if
you dont know where you are. If you are in a large
building with multiple levels, you can help emergency services by letting them know which floor
you are on, which apartment you are in, etc If
you are in a school or a factory, telling 9-1-1 which
door to enter is very helpful.
4. If you have an immediate choice between
calling 9-1-1 from a landline or a cellphone, use
the landline to call 9-1-1. Cellphones are not
always routed to the closest 9-1-1 call center,
causing a slight delay in getting your call to the
proper PSAP.
5. One thing to make 9-1-1 work for you is-

Knowing how to use your phone, be it a cellphone,


VoIP phone, landline phone, etc. It is your job to
be knowledgeable about the devices your family
could use to call 9-1-1 as well as the potential limitations associated with them (such as VoIP phone
likely wont work during a power outage).
Contact your service provider for
more information on device limitations. Something else to consider:
if you are traveling, do others with
you know how to access your phone
if it is locked? Could your children
or grandchildren call 9-1-1 for you
on your cellphone if needed? I go
to preschools and teach kids about
using 9-1-1. When, what numbers to
dial and why to dial 9-1-1. What we
cant teach them is how to access 9-1-1 on your
device/cellphone.
Our current 9-1-1 set-up accepts voice calls
only. Texting 9-1-1 is not an option today in Van
Wert County. Lock your keypad when you are
not using your phone so 9-1-1 is not accidentally
dialed by mistake. For the same reason dont put
9-1-1 on speed dial. Dont give old phones to children as toys. A wireless phone with no service can
still call 9-1-1.
6. Never hang up.
You may have called 9-1-1 by accident, or your
situation may have resolved itself, but it is important to let 9-1-1 dispatch know this. If you end the
9-1-1 call abruptly, dispatch is going to assume
that something has gone very wrong on your end
and will either call you back or send help anyway.
Make sure the dispatcher tells you it is OK to
disconnect before you hang up. Keep in mind that
dispatch can send help to you while they have you
on the phone; they do not need to disconnect to
get help coming to you. Make sure you hold the
line as long as it is safe to do so, so that you can
provide any necessary information or assistance to
the 9-1-1 Operator.
7. When you have 9-1-1 on the line stay calm
and ready to give information and listen for
instructions; you are the eyes and ears for 9-1-1
while you are on the line. If you are crying or
yelling, it can be difficult for 9-1-1 to understand
you. The calmer you can be the faster services can
be sent. 9-1-1 is here to help you until emergency
responders arrive. Be ready to listen and follow
directions. The 9-1-1 dispatcher can talk you
through providing first aid until help arrives. Lives
have been saved thanks to 9-1-1 callers and 9-1-1
dispatchers.
8. Post your address clearly in prominent places in multiple locations outdoors and indoors.
Having your address clearly visible at the end of
your driveway and on your home itself will ensure

that the first responders arent left wondering if


they are in the right location. Make sure you use
numbering and lettering that can been seen clearly
during the day and at night. Make sure it is visible
no matter which direction help is coming from.
Posting your address in a prominent place
inside your home is important as it
is easy to forget your own address
during an emergency. It could be
helpful for a babysitter or other visitors in your home during an emergency if they need to call 9-1-1.
9. Report missing street signs in
your neighborhood immediately.
Making sure that your neighborhood
has all the proper signage not only
helps family and friends find your
home but it can be crucial during an emergency
situation when time is of the essence.
10. For parents, teach your kids what 9-1-1 is.
Help your kids memorize information that will be
useful to 9-1-1 call takers, such as their name, their
parents names, their address and phone number.
The more comfortable they are the more quickly
they can provide vital information to the 9-1-1 call
taker who can then provide vital information to the
appropriate responders.
Engage in ongoing, age-appropriate training
with your children. Once is never enough; your job
isnt done after your kids understand the basics. As
the years pass, technology will change and so will
your childs capacity for providing crucial details
to the 9-1-1 call taker.
I hope this information is helpful to you. Please
contact me if you ever have 9-1-1 questions. Im
available to talk to your class or club about 9-1-1.
My office number is 419-238-3866 and my email
address is vwc911@bright.net
You can find Van Wert County 9-1-1 Operations
on Facebook.
During April, I always like to recognize our
9-1-1 dispatchers for National Telecommunicators
week. They are the calm voice on the other end of
the line. They are on duty night and day 24/7 to
send help your way. I send my heartfelt thank you
to each and every 9-1-1 dispatcher today for the
work they do.
The following organizations can provide you
with more information on 9-1-1 and public safety
issues:
The National Emergency Number Association
(NENA) www.nena.org
The Association
of
Public
Safety
Communications Officials (APCO) International
www.apcointl.org
9-1-1 for Kids www.911forkids.com
VoIP and 9-1-1 Services www.voip911.gov.
www.edwardjones.com

Hunters prepare for wild turkey season

Delphos
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www.edwardjones.co

Youth-only hunt set for this weekend


INFORMATION SUBMITTED
COLUMBUS For many hunters, spring in Ohio
brings the unmistakable sound of gobbling wild turkeys
as Ohios annual hunt of this popular game bird begins.
The 2015 Ohio spring hunting season opens April 20,
with the youth wild turkey season on Saturday
and Sunday, according to the Ohio Department
of Natural Resources (ODNR).
Hunters harvested 16,556 wild turkeys
during the 2014 youth and spring turkey seasons. The total checked in 2013 was 18,391
wild turkeys.
The ODNR Division of Wildlife anticipates
approximately 70,000 licensed hunters, not
counting exempt landowners hunting on their
own property, will enjoy Ohios popular spring
wild turkey season before it ends May 17.
The spring and youth turkey seasons are open
statewide with the exception of Lake La Su
An Wildlife Area in Williams County, which requires a
special hunting permit.
Hunters are required to make their own game tag to
attach to a turkey. Game tags can be made of any material
(cardboard, plastic, paper, etc.) as long as it contains the
hunters name, date, time and county of the kill. Go to the
Turkey Hunting Resources page at wildohio.gov for more
information about the game check process.
All hunters must report their turkey harvest using the
automated game-check system. Game-check transactions
are available online and by phone seven days a week,
including holidays. Hunters with a turkey permit have
three options to complete the game check:
Online at ohiogamecheck.com;
Call 877-TAG-ITOH (824-4864); or
Visit a license agent. A list of agents can be found at
wildohio.gov or by calling 800-WILDLIFE (945-3543).
Landowners exempt from purchasing a turkey permit,
and others not required to purchase a turkey permit, cannot use the 877-TAG-ITOH option.
Landowners and others not required to obtain a permit
have the following game-check options:
Online at ohiogamecheck.com;
Visit a license agent; or
Call 866-703-1928 for operator assisted landowner
game-check (a convenience fee of $5.50 applies).
Hunters are required to have a hunting license and a
spring turkey hunting permit (exceptions are listed in the
current Hunting Digest). The spring season bag limit is
two bearded turkeys. Hunters can harvest one bearded
turkey per day and a second spring turkey permit can be
purchased at any time throughout the spring turkey season. Turkeys must be checked no later than 11:30 p.m.
the day of harvest.
The youth-only turkey hunt is Saturday and Sunday
for youth possessing a valid youth hunting license and
youth turkey permit (exceptions are listed in the current
Hunting Digest). Youth hunters must be accompanied by
a non-hunting adult, 18 years of age or older. Only two
wild turkeys may be checked by a youth hunter during the
two-day season. Additionally, if two turkeys are harvested in the youth season, no additional birds may be taken
by the youth hunter for the duration of the season.

Are your stock, bond or other certificates


in a
www.edwardjones.com
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safety deposit box, desk drawer or closet
... or
are you not sure at the moment?

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Hunting hours are 30 minutes before sunrise until


noon from April 20-May 3. Hunting hours from May
4-17 will be 30 minutes before sunrise to sunset. Hunting
hours are 30 minutes before sunrise to sunset during the
two-day youth season.
Hunters may use shotguns or archery equipment to
hunt wild turkeys. It is unlawful to hunt turkeys using
bait, live decoys or electronic calling devices or to shoot
a wild turkey while it is in a tree. The ODNR Division of
Wildlife advises turkey hunters wear hunter
orange clothing when entering, leaving or
moving through hunting areas in order to
remain visible to others.
Wild turkey breeding activity is primarily
controlled by the increasing amount of daylight. Hens typically start incubating eggs
around May 1 in Ohio. Ohios current wild
turkey population is approximately 165,000.
Wild turkeys were extirpated in Ohio by
1904 and were reintroduced in the 1950s
by the ODNR Division of Wildlife. Ohios
first modern day wild turkey season opened
in 1966 in nine counties, and hunters checked 12 birds.
The wild turkey harvest topped 1,000 for the first time in
1984. Spring turkey hunting opened statewide in 2000,
and Ohio hunters checked more than 20,000 wild turkeys
for the first time that year.
ODNR ensures a balance between wise use and protection of our natural resources for the benefit of all. Visit
the ODNR website at ohiodnr.gov.

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heralD

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4 The Herald

Monday, April 13, 2015

Furious 7 keeps speed, tops


box office with $60.6 million

Engagement

McElroy/Van Horn
Randy and Joyce McElroy of Delphos announce
the engagement of their daughter, Megan, to Luke
Van Horn, son of Matt and Sara Van Horn of Tiffin.
The couple will exchange vows on June 6 at the
Pioneer Mill in Tiffin.
The bride-elect is a 2007 graduate of Jefferson
High School and earned her bachelor of arts degree
in psychology from Tiffin University in 2011. She
earned her MBA in human resources from Tiffin in
2013. She is a human resource representative at the
steel facility at Worthington Industries.
Her fiance is a 2007 graduate of Tiffin Columbian
and earned his bachelor of business in international business management and finance at Tiffin
University. He earned his MBA from Tiffin in 2013.

Caffeine High: Space station


getting Italian espresso maker
CAPE CANAVERAL,
Fla. (AP) The next space
station grocery run will carry
caffeine to a whole new level:
Aboard the SpaceX supply
ship is an authentic espresso
machine straight from Italy.
SpaceX is scheduled to
launch its unmanned rocket
with the espresso maker
and 4,000 pounds of food,
science research and other
equipment this afternoon.
The experimental espresso machine is intended
for International Space
Station astronaut Samantha
Cristoforetti of Italy. It was
supposed to arrive in January,
shortly after her arrival, so
she could get some relief
from the stations instant coffee. But it ended up on the
back burner after a station
shipment from Virginia was
lost in a launch explosion.
The espresso maker is
dubbed ISSpresso ISS
standing for International
Space Station. Italian coffee
giant Lavazza joined forces
with the Turin-based engineering company Argotec and
the Italian Space Agency to
provide a specially designed
machine for use off the planet. NASA certified its safety.
NASAs space station program deputy manager, Dan

Hartman, said its all part


of making astronauts feel at
home as they spend months
and even up to a year
in orbit. Already, Mission
Control gives astronauts full
access to email, phone calls,
private video hookups, and
live news and sports broadcasts.
The psychological support is very, very important, Hartman told reporters Sunday. If an espresso
machine comes back and we
get a lot of great comments
from the crew Its kind
of like the ice cream thing,
right, when we fly ice cream
every now and then. Its just
to boost spirits. Maybe some
rough day, a scoop of ice
cream gets them over that
hump kind of thing.
The SpaceX Dragon supply ship also holds experiments for NASAs one-year
space station resident Scott
Kelly, who moved in a couple
weeks ago. Russian cosmonaut Mikhail Kornienko also
will remain on board until
March 2016.
This will be the Californiabased SpaceX companys
seventh station supply run
since 2012, all from Cape
Canaveral.
For the third time, SpaceX

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DELPHOS, OH 45833
Bus. (419) 695-0660
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NEW YORK (AP) The high-octane thriller Furious 7 maintained


speed in its second week, racing away
with $60.6 million at North American
theaters and bringing its box-office total
to a robust $252.5 million, according to
studio estimates Sunday.
Universals Furious 7 more than
lapped the competition. The only new
wide release of the weekend, the rodeo
romance The Longest Ride, opened
with $13.5 million.
That was good enough for third
place for the Fox release, which stars
Clint Eastwoods son, Scott Eastwood.
In second was the DreamWorks animated alien adventure Home, which
pulled in $19 million in its third week
of release.
But Furious 7 continued to dominate the marketplace, dropping only
59 percent from its remarkable $147.2
million debut last weekend. Globally, it
has already crossed $800 million in its
first two weeks of release, according to
Universal.
The weekend international total
an eye-popping $195 million was
boosted by the film premiering in China
on Sunday, where it earned an estimated
$68.6 million in just one day.

Over 10 days, Furious 7, which


prominently features a tribute to the
late actor Paul Walker, has already outgrossed all previous installments of the
14-year-old franchise.
At its current pace, Furious 7 will
likely become the highest grossing
film in Universals history. The studios Jurassic Park, from 1993, holds
Universals mark with $1.02 billion
worldwide.
Its a summer blockbuster-sized
result for Furious 7, but by opening in
April, it has little competition in its way.
On a much smaller scale, the critically
acclaimed sci-fi film Ex Machina
drew the years largest theater average
of $62,489 in four theaters.
Estimated ticket sales for Friday
through Sunday at U.S. and Canadian
theaters, according to Rentrak. Where
available, the latest international numbers for Friday through Sunday are also
included. Final domestic figures will be
released today.
1. Furious 7, $60.6 million ($195
million international).
2. Home, $19 million ($15.2 million international).
3. The Longest Ride, $13.5 million
($3 million international).

4. Get Hard, $8.6 million ($1.4


million international).
5. Cinderella, $7.2 million ($12.6
million international).
6. The Divergent Series: Insurgent,
$6.9 million ($7.9 million international).
7. Woman in Gold, $5.9 million.
8. It Follows, $2 million.
9. Danny Collins, $1.6 million.
10. While Were Young, $1.4 million.

Estimated ticket sales for Friday


through Sunday at international theaters (excluding the U.S. and Canada),
according to Rentrak:
1. Furious 7, $195 million.
2. Wolf Warriors, $18 million.
3. Home, $15.2 million
4. Cinderella, $12.6 million.
5. Kingsman: The Secret Service,
$9 million.
6. Lets Get Married, $8.5 million.
7. The Divergent Series: Insurgent,
$7.9 million.
8. Pourquoi jai (pas) mange mon
pere, $3.5 million.
9. The SpongeBob Movie: Sponge
Out of Water, $3.2 million.
10. The Longest Ride, $3 million.

Toddler disc jockey fascinates South African fans


JOHANNESBURG (AP) At first it seems like a fluke
a 2-year-old playing with the knobs and buttons of a
sophisticated music system. Yet, the tiny boy is in control
of the big beat of the bass-heavy house music. He is South
Africas youngest disc jockey, DJ AJ.
At a shopping mall appearance, a crowd gathers around
the young boy as he bops his head to the beat, his large
headphones slipping off. Adults whip out their cellphones to
capture the moment while children just stare.
Oratilwe Hlongwane is still learning to put together words
but the toddler is already able to select and play music from a
laptop and has become a viral phenomenon on South Africas
social media.
His mother, Refiloe Marumo, credits his fathers decision
to buy an iPad for his then unborn son. Glen Hlongwane
planned to download educational apps to speed up his childs
education. Hlongwane, a gymnastics coach and aspiring DJ,
also downloaded a disc jockeying app for himself.
At about a year old, DJ AJ learned how to manipulate

the gadget. Not satisfied with number recognition games, he


began to fiddle with his fathers DJ app.
The parents were blown away when their son, still in diapers, repeated what he had learned on the app on actual DJ
equipment, playing with sound effects and bouncing between
songs. A cellphone video of him playing went viral and now
DJ AJ has nearly 25,000 Facebook fans.
His newfound fame has brought special appearances and
sponsorship deals many older DJs dream of.
But celebrity has also brought some criticism as some
accused his parents of abuse and profiting from their childs
precocious ability.
Im not going to exploit my kid, said his father. DJ AJs
parents will not allow him to play in clubs or at parties.
Hlongwane and Marumo are adamant that they will not
force their son to be a DJ when he grows up, but say they
believe his affinity for electronic equipment will probably
decide his future.
Hlongwane said: I can see a future Bill Gates here.

Rocky Mountain National Park faces crowd challenges


ROCKY
M O U N TA I N
NATIONAL PARK, Colo. (AP)
Officials at Rocky Mountain
National Park are considering closing certain areas of the park on the
busiest days if those areas get overcrowded, saying too many people
and vehicles are putting a burden on
trails, roads and wildlife.
The park had a record 3.4 million
visitors last year, and officials have
begun talking about ways to protect
park resources.
Too many people in the park can
affect the trails, roads and wildlife,
but they also can hinder the natural
experience park users are seeking
with crowds and noise, said Rick
Fedorchak, chief of interpretation and
education.
If youre at Bear Lake on a summer

day, youre not going to hear those natural sounds until youre a quarter mile up
the road, he said.
Weekends in the summer have long
been busy in the park, but visitation
has spread out through all seasons with
snowshoeing and sledding in the winter,
fall colors and elk rutting, spring flowers and, of course, beautiful summer
days.
On Sept. 27, officials counted a
record 13,295 vehicles, the Loveland
Reporter-Herald reported (http://tinyurl.
com/ln3zw2b).
The weather was beautiful, said
Kyle Patterson, park spokeswoman.
The colors were amazing. The elk
were rutting, with their bugle calls that
attract wildlife lovers from all over the
country.
Park officials have already taken

some steps to reduce crowding.


Shuttles run from locations in the
nearby town of Estes Park to prime
stops in Rocky Mountain National Park
to cut down on vehicles and emissions
in the park.
The buses also create challenges
with large groups of people dropped off
in a single location at the same time,
Fedorchak said.
Park rangers are urging people to
visit on weekdays if they can, and to
hike and climb in the early morning or
late afternoon to avoid the prime time
from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. There are also
signs that warn people when areas are
full.
Patterson said officials do not anticipate implementing a one-in, one-out
rule, and closures are not expected
anytime soon.

Angela Lansbury, Kinks Davies


win at UKs Olivier Awards
.LONDON (AP) An
American classic directed
by a Belgian and a musical
about a very English rock
band were the big winners
at Britains Olivier theater
awards Sunday but it
was an 89-year old theatrical Dame who brought the

house down.
The Arthur Miller drama
A View From the Bridge
and The Kinks musical
Sunny Afternoon, won
the most prizes, and there
were roars of approval when
Angela Lansbury took the
best supporting actress
trophy for playing scatterbrained psychic Madame
Arcati in Noel Cowards
comedy Blithe Spirit.
I am so infinitely grateful to have this baby in my
hands. You have no idea,
said London-born Lansbury,
who already has an honorary Oscar, five Tonys and a
damehood, the female equivalent of a knighthood.
Here I am creeping up to
90 and feeling like a million
dollars, said the Murder,
She Wrote star, who first
appeared onstage in the
1940s.
She said theater is life
and thank God Im still in it.
Sunny
Afternoon,
the story of 1960s rockers
The Kinks, took four prizes including best new musical and acting trophies for
John Dagleish and George
Maguire, who play battling
brothers Ray and Dave
Davies. The real-life Ray

Davies won the outstanding


achievement in music prize
for the plays score.
He said the unruly North
London lads in The Kinks
were four of the unlikeliest
pop stars youll ever see.
People are the source of
my material, said Davies,
whose songs include Sunny
Afternoon,
Waterloo
Sunset and Lola.
So the next time youre
sitting in a park somewhere
and you see someone like
me looking at you dont
phone the police.
A bold, pared-down
revival of A View From
the Bridge won three prizes
including best revival and
best director, for Ivo van
Hove.
Mark Strong was named
best actor in a play for his
slow-burning performance in
Millers tragedy of blood and
honor in Brooklyn.
Strong said the response
to the play from audience
members had been incredible.
They dont just want
autographs anymore, he
said. They want to talk
about what theyre seeing
and they want to kind of
compare their own experi-

ences to what theyre seeing


onstage.
Mike Bartletts King
Charles III, which imagines
Prince Charles taking the
throne with disastrous results,
was named best new play.
Thank you to the royal
family for not closing us
down for treason, Bartlett
said.
Another king, Henry VIII,
was also crowned with an
Olivier. Nathaniel Parker was
named best supporting actor
for playing the monarch in
Hilary Mantels Wolf Hall
saga, which has just transferred to Broadway.
Downton Abbey star
Penelope Wilton was named
best actress in a play for
the Nazi-era drama Taken at
Midnight.
Rising star Katie Brayben
won the prize for best actress
in a musical for playing
songwriter Carole King in
Beautiful. Her co-star
Lorna Want was named best
supporting actress.
Founded in 1976, the
awards honor achievements
in London plays, musicals,
dance and opera. Winners in
most categories are chosen
by a panel of stage professionals and theatergoers.

Monday, April 13, 2015

www.delphosherald.com

LANDMARK

Musical review

COMMUNITY

The Herald 5

Putnam libraries offer


spring programming
INFORMATION SUBMITTED
The Putnam County District Library has announced the
following April program for various locations:

Presbyterian Church

CALENDAR OF
EVENTS

TODAY
11:30 a.m. Mealsite
at Delphos Senior Citizen
Center, 301 Suthoff St.
6:30 p.m. Shelter from
the Storm support group
meets in the Delphos Public
Library basement.
7 p.m. Marion Township
trustees at township house.
Middle Point council
meets at town hall.
7:30 p.m. Delphos
Knights of Columbus meet at
the K of C hall.
Delphos Eagles Aerie 471
meets at the Eagles Lodge.
American Legion Post 268
Auxiliary meets at the post.
Alcoholics Anonymous,
First Presbyterian Church,
310 W. Second St.
8 p.m. Delphos City
Schools Board of Education
meets at the administration
office.
TUESDAY
10 a.m. to 3 p.m. The
Delphos Museum of Postal
History, 339 N. Main St., is
open.
11:30 a.m. Mealsite
at Delphos Senior Citizen
Center, 301 Suthoff St.
7:30 p.m. Ottoville
Emergency Medical Service
members meet at the municipal building.
Ottoville VFW Auxiliary
members meet at the hall.
Fort Jennings Local
School District board members meet at the high school
library.
Alcoholics Anonymous,
First Presbyterian Church,
310 W. Second St.
Elida village council meets
at the town hall.
WEDNESDAY
9 a.m. - noon Putnam
County Museum is open, 202
E. Main St. Kalida.
10 a.m. to 3 p.m. The
Delphos Museum of Postal
History, 339 N. Main St., is
open.
11:30 a.m. Mealsite
at Delphos Senior Citizen
Center, 301 Suthoff St.
Noon Rotary Club
meets at The Grind.
6 p.m. Shepherds of
Christ Associates meet in the
St. Johns Chapel.
6:30 p.m. Delphos
Kiwanis Club, Eagles Lodge,
1600 E. Fifth St.
7 p.m. Bingo at St.
Johns Little Theatre.
7:30 p.m. Hope Lodge
214 Free and Accepted
Masons, Masonic Temple,
North Main Street.
Sons of the American
Legion meet at the Delphos
Legion hall.
The Ottoville Board of
Education meets in the elementary building.
The Fort Jennings Board
of Education meets in the
library.

Jane (Miki Dull) and Tarzan (Skyler Whitaker) sing sweetly together as they begin a
friendship. (Submitted photo)

Tarzan: Two worlds collide


BY KATHRYN COOPER
What a lesson for our world today!
Lincolnviews production of Tarzan is a
drama of two worlds that blend and clash but
learn from the heartaches that result. Tarzan
is a musical that tells the story of a human
baby adopted by a gorilla family/tribe deep in
the jungle. The original story was written by
Edgar Rice Burroughs in 1914 and then was
made into a Disney movie released in 1999.
The Broadway musical version came on the
scene in 2006. The musical score and lyrics
were written by Phil Collins.
As you walk into the Civic Theater for this
production, expect to be overwhelmed by the
exotic set. With the intimate seating, you feel
like you could be dancing along with the tribe.
The music is energetic and full of life and its
really difficult not to want to join in.
The jungle father, Kerchak (Braxton
Matthews), stands strong defending his family
against predators and outsiders, wanting only
the best for them.
His sweet wife, Kala (Olivia Snyder), adds
great dimension to the story with natural talent and a lovely voice, desperately pleading
to let the baby outsider in after grieving over
a tragic incident.
The Ensemble lends strong voices and
intensity to the decisions each character has

to make. Terk (Taite McKinney), Tarzans


best friend in the jungle, is a joy to watch and
listen to as he involves Tarzan in silly antics
and serious thoughts.
Tarzan (Skyler Whitaker) is well cast as
an innocent but powerful example of the
Noble Savage. He and Jane (Miki Dull) sing
sweetly together as they begin a friendship
and Tarzans world is turned upside down.
The other supporting characters, Father (Nick
Motycka), Mother (Claire Clay), Porter-Janes
father (Chandler Adams), Clayton (Jacob
Pollock) and Snipes (Max Rice), as well as
the young Tarzans (Connor Johnson, Kaden
Hohman) all give their special touches to
round out the action in the drama. The music
and Ensemble give power to the story.
Kudos to Stacie Korte for the musical
direction, to Kinsey Dobbelaere for helping
with the lovely set, Kim Pollock for the choreography, Eric Miglin for running the sound
and especially to Chad Kraner, director of the
play, for his vision and time to bring this production to fruition.
Tickets are selling and there is only one
weekend left to see this show. The only
chance to see it may be Thursday as the final
Saturday and Sunday shows are nearly out of
tickets. Email lincolnviewdrama@gmail.com
to reserve tickets.

COLUMN

Family Fun Night


The Putnam County District Library in Ottawa will have
Book Time with Ronald McDonald on Tuesday at 6:30 p.m.
All are welcome to attend the free program during National
Library Week.
Movie Night at the Library
The Putnam County District Library in Ottawa will have
a movie at 6 p.m. on Wednesday. Due to licensing we can
not post the movie title outside the library. HINTA 1989
movie release of a teacher that urges his students to seize the
day and live their lives boldly. All are welcome to attend this
free movie, all under the age of 13 must be accompanied by a
parent or have a consent form on file.
Author Visit at the Library
The Putnam County District Library in Ottawa will have
author Martha Conway on April 20 at 6 p.m. Martha Conways
first novel, 12 Bliss Street (St. Martins Minotaur), was nominated for an Edgar Award and her short fiction has appeared
in various publications. Martha grew up in northern Ohio and
now lives in San Francisco. Join Martha for a book discussion
of her second novel Thieving Forest, a drama of sisterhood,
survival, and self-creation in the landscape of Northwest
Ohios Great Black Swamp in 1806. Q&A and book signing
will follow her presentation with books available for purchase.
Family Fun Movie Night
The Putnam County District Library in Ottawa will have a
movie at 6:30 p.m. April 28. Due to licensing we can not post
the movie title outside the library. HINTA musical with a
baker and his wife who find their fates linked with perhaps 3-4
different fairy tales. All are welcome to attend this free movie.
These programs are sponsored by the Friends of the Putnam
County District Library.
For more programs visit our website at www.mypcdl.org.

April 14
Owen Baldauf
Dave Buettner
Chris Koverman
Brayden Conley
Hannah Wiltsie
Zachary Friemoth
April 15
Aaron Rose
April Klima
Angela Kleman
Cheryl Hershey
Nick Fitch
Nick Gallemeier
Sandi Lee
Bill Teman
Aidan Martz

Happy
Birthday

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6 The Herald

Monday, April 13, 2015

Carpenters 2-run homer in


11th lifts Cards over Reds
By MARK SCHMETZER
Associated Press
CINCINNATI The St. Louis Cardinals want leadoff batter Matt Carpenter to drive the ball. He sure did Sunday.
Carpenter hit a 2-run homer off Kevin Gregg in the 11th
inning, lifting St. Louis over Cincinnati 7-5 in a game that
featured the major-league debut of Cuban right-hander Raisel
Iglesias for the Reds.
Carpenters 392-foot drive to center on a full-count pitch
from Gregg (0-1) followed Kolten Wongs single and delighted
Cardinals manager Mike Matheny.
Weve talked to him about utilizing
his power, Matheny said. Youre going
to see that from him from time to time.
Carpenters go-ahead drive followed
Jhonny Peraltas 2-run, tying homer in the
eighth off of Jumbo Diaz, which quieted
the crowd of 41,446, Cincinnatis third
sellout of the 6-game homestand.
That was huge, Carpenter said. Hes been swinging the
bat well all season.
Carlos Villanueva (1-0) pitched two innings, working out
of a bases-loaded jam in the 10th by striking out Todd Frazier.
St. Louis took two out of three in the series and has won 13
consecutive 3-game series against Cincinnati, putting a damper
on a homestand that opened with four consecutive wins and
frustrating second-year manager Bryan Price.
See REDS, page 7

Cats defuse Rockets


in softball twin-bill
By JIM METCALFE
DHI Media Sports Editor
jmetcalfe@delphosherald.com
PANDORA Sometimes
the game of fast-pitch softball is simple: catch, field,
throw and hit.
Jeffersons crew did that
well as well as show
extreme patience at the plate
and was rewarded with a
23-2, 16-4 twin-bill sweep
(both in five innings) on a
brilliant yet windy Saturday
morning/afternoon
at
Pandora-Gilboa High School.
In game 1, the Wildcats
had 15 hits, worked their way
for 10 free passes and took
advantage of 11 wild pitches
and eight miscues.
The Lady Wildcats (2-3
after the 2 contests) got started right away in game 1
sending 15 batters to the dish
and scoring 10 times against
Lady Rocket starter Brittany
Riegle; they used nine wild
pitches, four walks, three
crucial errors (leading to 9
unearned runs) and four hits
with Danielle Harmans
single scoring two and Claire
Thompson and Shayla Rice
each doubling for one run
batted in to their benefit.
In the process, leadoff hitter
Sarah Thitoff (4 runs, 2 RBIs)
and No. 2 hitter Thompson
(2-for-5, 3 runs, 2 RBIs) each
scored twice at the top of the
order; eight of the regulars
in the lineup scored at least
once in the first frame.
The top of the second
frame was almost a carbon
copy, save the Red and White
only plating nine and sending 14 to the dish. This time,
they used eight hits two
each by Kaylin Hartsock (5
runs scored) and Harman
(4-for-4, 3 runs, 3 runs batted
in) and especially a 2-run
double down the right-field
line by Rice (3-for-5, 4 RBIs)
two free passes and an
error to go up 19-0 after two
innings. This despite the
fact that Wildcat head coach
Josiah Stober began to play
station-to-station ball in an
effort to not run the score up
even more.
The Lady Rockets (0-6)
finally got to Jefferson
starter Thompson in the
third with two hits: Alysee
Augsburger led off with a
single. Eventually, she would
be throw out at home by
third baseman Kylee Haehn.
Kristen Mullins knocked in
Madi Dulaney (walk, wild
pitch, fielders choice) for
P-Gs first run.
The visitors made it 22-1
in the visitor fourth with
the benefit of no hits: three
bases-on-balls and two miscues were the culprit. Jessica
Pimpas got an RBI on a 1-out
bases-loaded walk ending
Riegles pitching in the opener and bringing in Mullins
and Rice bounced out for the
third run.
P-G made it 22-2 in the
home fourth: a Reigle single,
two wild pitches and a Paiten
Dulaney groundout.
Delphos added the final
run of the contest in the fifth
on a 1-out walk to Hartsock,
a double to left center by

Harman and a 2-out error on


a grounder by Thitoff.
In the nightcap, the Lady
Cats only had seven hits
but managed nine walks and
made the most of eight wild
pitches and five errors.
It began with a 3-run
first against Rocket starter
Mullins, keyed by two errors,
a walk and two hits: one
a 2-run single to center by
Maddy Jettinghoff (2-for-4,
3 RBIs) that plated Thitoff (3
runs, 2 walks) and Thompson
(2 runs, 2 walks). The third
run scored on a groundout by
Kiersten Teman (Hartsock; 2
walks, 2 runs).
Delphos went up 7-0 with
a 4-run second. They had
one hit a 1-out single by
ninth hitter Sophie Wilson
(2-for-3, 3 runs) and
four straight walks: Thitoff,
Thompson, Pimpas and
Hartsock; to plated Wilson
and Thitoff. Two wild pitches
plated Thompson and Pimpas
and finished off Mullins (for
Reigle).
P-G got two back in the
home half against Teman on
three hits, including run-scoring knocks by Katlin Fortman
(Heidi Cherry) and Jordan
Guthrie (Madi Dulaney).
The Red and White batted around in a 5-run third,
using three hits including
a run-scoring triple to the
right-field corner by Pimpas
(Thitoff) and a single by
Jettinghoff (Hartsock) a
walk, a sacrifice, a wild pitch
and two errors to also eventually get Mackenzie Harvey,
Wilson and Thitoff in for a
12-2 advantage.
The Lady Rockets added
one more to their side in
the home half: an error on
Reigles grounder, a stolen
base and two more errors.
Jefferson pushed three
more across in the fourth
for a 15-3 edge: a single
by Harman, a hit batter
(Harvey), two wild pitches
to score Harman, back-toback free passes (Wilson
and Thitoff) and run-scoring
groundouts by Thompson
and Pimpas.
The hosts got their final
run of the day in the home
fourth: a 2-out hustling double by Shaha Hovest and a
run-scoring single to left by
Mullins.
Teman led off the
Jefferson fifth by being hit
by a pitch and scored on two
wild pitches and a groundout
by Harman.
We had a great overall
day. Weve been working on
our approach to the game,
especially at the plate,
Stober observed. We put the
ball in play and yet showed
great patience. We fielded the
ball pretty well except for one
inning and were in good position. We pitched well both
games; its all about throwing strikes and letting our
defense make plays behind
us.
Jefferson
visits
Lincolnview 5 p.m. today,
while P-G is at HopewellLoudon.
See CATS, page 7

www.delphosherald.com

SPORTS

Jordan Spieth, 21, captures


Masters victory for the ages
By DOUG FERGUSON
Associated Press
AUGUSTA, Ga.
Jordan Spieth got more than
redemption and a green jacket Sunday. He took his place
among the best in the game
with a Masters victory for
the ages.
One year after Spieth lost
a bid to become the youngest Masters champion, the
21-year-old Texan turned
in one of the most dominant wins ever at Augusta
National. He never let anyone get closer to him than
three shots after his record
start. He never gave anyone
much hope on Sunday.
Spieth closed with a
2-under 70, missing a 5-foot
par putt on the final hole that
would have set yet another
record. Instead, he tied the
score set by Tiger Woods in
1997 at 18-under 270.
This was the ultimate
goal in my golf life, Spieth
said.
For all the talk about the
Grand Slam bid by Rory
McIlroy and the return of
Woods, this week was about
the arrival of another star.
Its awfully impressive,
McIlroy said after finishing

fourth. Its nice to get your hole. He recovered and


major tally up and running at closed with a 73, 13 shots
an early stage in your career. behind.
Its great to see, great for the
Spieth won for the third
game, and Im sure there will time on the PGA Tour and
be many more.
fifth time worldwide. He will
Spieth became the first rise to No. 2 in the world
wire-to-wire winner at the rankings, still a ways to go
Masters since Raymond to catch McIlroy at the top.
Floyd in 1976, and this might When McIlroy won back-tohave been even
back majors last
more
special.
year to establish
Craig Woods in
himself as the
1941 is the only
games best playother
Masters
er, the quest was
champion who
to find a rival.
led by at least
Spieth prothree shots from
vided the answer
the opening round
on perhaps the
to the trophy prebiggest stage in
sentation.
the sport with
Phil Mickelson
his record-setting
tried to make a
week at Augusta.
run. So did Justin
I
thought
Spieth
Rose. Neither got
today might be
closer than three
easier
having
shots at any point,
played with the
and it wasnt long before lead on Saturday. It wasnt,
Spieth was making another Spieth said. Its the most
birdie putt to take the drama incredible week of my life.
out of the back nine.
This is as great as it gets in
Mickelson (69) and Rose our sport. Im still kind of
(70) tied for second. It was shock a little bit.
the 10th time Mickelson has
And he will keep the edibeen runner-up in a major. tors of the Masters record
Woods jarred his right wrist book busy. Among the marks
then he struck wood under he established this week:
the pine straw on the ninth
The 36-hole record at

14-under 130.
The 54-hole record at
16-under 200.
The most birdies for
the tournament at 28.
The lowest opening
round by a champion at 64.
The youngest player
to lead after the opening
round.
He has no weaknesses,
Mickelson said. He doesnt
overpower the golf course,
but he plays the course strategically well. He plays all
the shots properly. And he
has that ability to focus and
see things clear when the
pressure is on and perform
at his best when the pressure
is on.
Thats something that
you really cant teach, he
said. Some players are able
to do it, some players arent.
And he is.
Spieth showed early he
was up to challenge. Rose,
starting the final round four
shots behind, rolled in a
10-foot birdie putt on the
first hole, and Spieth calmly
made his birdie putt from
just inside him. Spieth went
out in 35 to build his lead to
five shots, and one putt later,
the Masters effectively was
over.

Cabrera rocks Cleveland, hits 2 homers in Tigers win


By TOM WITHERS
Associated Press
CLEVELAND Nobody rocks
Cleveland like Miguel Cabrera.
Detroits menacing slugger homered
twice and drove in four runs as the
Tigers moved to 6-0 for the first time
in 30 years with an 8-5 win over the
Cleveland Indians on Sunday.
Cabrera, who entered the series batting just .182, hit a 2-run homer in the
first inning off T.J. House (0-1) and J.D.
Martinez added an insurance solo shot
in the ninth as the Tigers finished off
a series sweep, improving to 18-5 in
Cleveland since 2013.
Cabrera went 4 for 4 with his first
two homers of the season, a double and
single. With Cabrera needing a triple
for the cycle, Indians manager Terry
Francona intentionally walked him in
the eighth even though there was a runner on first.
During the 3-game series, he went 11
of 14 (.786) with six RBIs and raised his
average to .520.
Hes special, man. Hes special,
Tigers second baseman Ian Kinsler said.
Hes fun to watch and a game should
be sold out just because of him. People
should just want to come watch him hit.
Its incredible.
Not to the Indians.
Cabrera pounds Cleveland pitching
like no one else. For his career, hes batting .357 with 37 homers and 118 RBIs
in 133 games against the Indians, who
havent figured out a way to even slow
him down. Cabrera has 23 homers
the most by any player at Progressive
Field, which had its right-field section
remodeled during the winter. Cabrera

threatened to renovate left field with his


two homers.
The Tigers are 6-0 for the first time
since 1985 and theyve served early
notice that theyre going to give up their
spot atop the AL Central without fight.
Ill put it in perspective, manager
Brad Ausmus said. Its the first week
of the season and Im not ready to throw
any parties.
The Tigers jumped to a 6-0
lead after two innings, giving Kyle
Lobstein (1-0) a comfortable cushion. Joakim Soria worked the ninth
for his second save.
The Indians had a rough opening
weekend at home in their spectacularly remodeled ballpark. In
addition to being swept by the
divisions 4-time reigning champions,
All-Star outfielder Michael Brantley
missed two games with a back issue and
Cleveland lost catcher Yan Gomes for
at least six weeks with a sprained knee.
After the Indians pulled within 6-3 in
the third, Cabrera led off the fourth with
his second homer.
Francona said the Indians would
have walked Cabrera when they could
but there werent opportunities.
Hes that good a hitter and when he
feels that good at the plate, thats a bad
feeling, Francona explained.
The top of Detroits lineup did the
majority of the early damage, as the
Tigers top five hitters went 6 for 6 with
six runs, a homer and three walks in the
first two innings.
Detroit didnt let House get out of the
second, rocking the left-hander for six
runs and six hits in 1 1/3 innings the
shortest outing of his career.
Cabrera put the Tigers up 3-0 in

the first with a 410-foot shot onto the


pedestrian plaza in left. No injuries
were reported.
ACE MENDING
Detroits Justin Verlander (strained
right triceps) threw a bullpen session
with no discomfort Sunday and is
expected to pitch in a simulated game
Wednesday in Pittsburgh. Verlander
threw about 45 pitches including curveballs.
TRAINERS ROOM
Tigers: DH Victor Martinez
was in the lineup despite leaving Saturdays game in the seventh inning with a left leg injury.
Martinez appeared to hurt himself
on an overswing. He hit an RBI
single and gingerly jogged to first
before he was replaced by a pinch-runner. Martinez has had multiple surgeries on his left knee, most recently in
February.
Indians: Brantley missed his fourth
game with a back issue. Francona added
Brantley felt slightly better after resting Saturday and believes two more
days the Indians are off today of
rest will help. Francona remains hopeful
Brantley wont go on the disabled list
but hasnt ruled it out.
UP NEXT
Tigers: RHP Anibal Sanchez starts
as Detroit opens a 3-game interleague
series in Pittsburgh. He blanked
Minnesota on three hits over 6 2/3
innings in his season debut.
Indians: After an off-day, RHP
Carlos Carrasco starts the opener of
a 2-game home series with the White
Sox. Carrasco struck out 10 in his first
start last week, one day after signing a
4-year, $22 million contract.

Only shove by Harvick this time


at Texas comes on the track
Associated Press

race. A very good night for our sport, a lot of great racing.
And the only fireworks afterward were the ones lighting up
FORT WORTH, Texas The only shove by Kevin the Texas sky following the first Cup night race of the season.
Harvick in Texas this time came on the track.
Harvick, Logano and Martin Truex Jr., who finished ninth,
With 20 laps left in the Duck Commander 500 won by are the only drivers to finish in the top 10 in all seven races
Jimmie Johnson, Harvick tapped the rear of Joey Loganos this season, and they remained 1-2-3 in points. Keselowski
car to push past the defending race winner.
got his sixth top 10 by finishing fifth behind fellow Team
You knock them out of the way, and thats the
Penske driver Logano.
chance you take when you block, said Harvick,
Jamie McMurray, who had taken only two tires
whose runner-up finish late Saturday night marked
for the final restart on lap 314 of 334, was still leadthe ninth time in 10 races he was in the top two.
ing Harvick when they slid high through Turns 3
Its the end of the race. I blocked him and he
and 4. That left the bottom wide open for Johnson,
got into me. I get it, said Logano, who kept his
who figured he would at least get past Harvick.
car off the wall but quickly slipped several spots
I thought, Man, were going to get them both
before recovering to finish fourth. Early in the
here, said Johnson, who did for the 29th and last
race thats not acceptable. End of the race, were
lead change of the night.
racing for the win. Id do the same thing.
He led nine times for 128 laps.
But remember, its still early in the NASCAR
Before crossing the line eighth in Martinsville
Sprint Cup season not the eighth of 10 races
two weeks ago in the previous Cup race, Harvick
in the Chase for the Sprint Cup Championship as
had finished first or second in eight in a row. That
Texas is in the fall.
was the longest such stretch since seven-time series
Five months ago, when Johnson also celebrated
champion Richard Petty did it 11 consecutive times
Harvick
in Victory Lane, Harvick helped escalate a post-race
in 1975. The streak for Harvick started with a runmelee in Texas when he pushed Brad Keselowski
ner-up finish to Johnson at Texas in November.
toward Jeff Gordon on pit road after those two drivers made
Maybe well just save the first-place finish for the Chase
contact late while racing for the lead.
race, Harvick said.
Johnson joined season points leader Harvick as the only
Earnhardt finished third for the third time this season,
two-time winners in 2015. He took the lead for good in his bouncing back from a 36th-place showing at Martinsville, and
72nd career win on a third-to-first pass with 14 laps remain- is seventh in points.
ing on the 1 1/2-mile, high-banked track.
With a season-opening Daytona 500 win last year,
It was Johnsons fifth Cup victory at Texas, extending his Earnhardt immediately secured a spot for the 16-driver Chase.
track record with his first in a spring race there. He held off There is no early victory this time, but 20 races remain before
Harvick and Hendrick Motorsports teammate Dale Earnhardt the Chase drivers are locked into place. That is plenty of time
Jr. for his fourth win in the last six races at the place where he to get a win, if that is indeed a necessity.
has led 1,017 laps in his career.
The end of the race was nutty, Johnson said. Just a fun
See HARVICK, page 7

www.delphosherald.com

Monday, April 13, 2015

The Herald 7

Youngpeter fans 15 in 1-hitter


By LARRY HEIING
DHI Media Correspondent
news@delphosherald.com

Baths Jared Davis dives safely back to the first-base bag


ahead of the tag by Jeffersons Jacob Pulford in doubleheader baseball action Saturday afternoon at Wildcat Field
in Delphos. (DHI Media/Larry Heiing)

Local Roundup
INFORMATION SUBMITTED
Bath takes 2 versus Jefferson
DELPHOS Saturday afternoon was pretty good to the
Bath baseball team.
They headed to Wildcat Field at Jefferson High School and
left town with a 14-0 (5 innings) and 7-3 twin-bill sweep.
In the first game, the host Wildcats were limited to a pair of
hits Jace Stockwell and Brandan Herron by starter Logan
Magrum in three innings. Andrew Renner mopped up.
The big bat in the Bath lineup was No. 9 hitter Drew Brown,
going 2-for-3 with three runs batted in. They only had seven
hits but got penty of help from nine free passes issued by three
Jefferson hurlers, as well as four errors.
In the second contest, Cam Clark went 3-for-4 with three
runs and Chase Clark was 2-for-3 including a home run and
a triple with three RBIs for the victors.

GAME 1
BATH (14)
ab r h rbi
Andrew Renner 3 1 1 1, Chase Clark 1 1 1 0, Cam Jenkins 2 1 0 1, Cam
Clark 3 2 1 1, Troy Korkate 1 0 0 0, Dylan Burkholder 1 2 0 0, Logan Magrum
1 1 0 1, Jared Davis 2 2 0 0, Ryan Gossard 1 0 0 0, Tyler Stahr 1 2 1 2, Bo
Gross 3 0 0 2, Luke Niebel 3 1 1 1, Drew Brown 3 1 2 3. Totals 25 14 7 12.
JEFFERSON (0)
ab r h rbi
Jace Stockwell 3 0 1 0, Gaige Rassman 2 0 0 0, Gage Mercer 3 0 0
0, Jacob Pulford 2 0 0 0, Nick Fitch 2 0 0 0, Brandan Herron 2 0 1 0, Kurt
Wollenhaupt 1 0 0 0, Damien Dudgeon 1 0 0 0, Jacob Boop 0 0 0 0, Brett
Mahlie 1 0 0 0, Eli Kimmett 1 0 0 0. Totals 18 0 2 0.
Score by Innings:
Bath 540 50 14
Jefferson 000 00 0
EDudgeon 2, Renner, Pulford, Mercer, Stockwell, Brett Mahlie. LOB
Bath 12, Jefferson 6. SFJenkins. SBBurkholder, Clark, Stahr, Davis.
IP H R ER BB SO HR
BATH
Magrum (W) 3.00 2 0 0 1 3 0
Andrew Renner 2.00 0 0 0 1 3 0
JEFFERSON
Pulford (L) 1.67 2 9 0 7 2 0
Dudgeon 1.67 4 5 5 1 0 0
Mahlie 1.67 1 0 0 1 1 0
WPPulford 3, Magrum, Renner, Mahlie. HBPJenkins 2, Magrum,
Clark, Renner, Stahr, Boop. SOFitch 2, Jenkins, Gross, Niebel, Mercer,
Wollenhaupt, Mahlie, Kimmett. BBStahr 2, Burkholder, Magrum, Gossard,
Brown, Gross, Niebel, Davis, Rassman, Wollenhaupt.
GAME 2
BATH (7)
ab r h rbi
Andrew Renner 4 0 0 0, Jared Davis 4 1 1 0, Cam Clark 4 3 3 0, Dylan
Burkholder 4 1 1 0, Chase Clark 3 1 2 3, Andrew Jordan 3 1 0 0, Ryan
Gossard 3 0 1 0, Tyler Stahr 3 0 1 0, Bo Gross 1 0 0 0, Ben Cowan 3 0 1 0.
Totals 32-7-10-3.
JEFFERSON
ab r h rbi
Jace Stockwell 4 0 1 0, Gaige Rassman 4 0 0 0, Gage Mercer 4 0 1
0, Jacob Pulford 3 0 1 1, Nick Fitch 3 0 0 0, Brandan Herron 2 0 1 0, Kurt
Wollenhaupt 3 1 1 0, Jacob Boop 2 1 0 0, Ryan Bullinger 3 1 3 1. Totals 28
3 8 2.
Score by Innings:
Bath 202 030 0 7
Jefferson 000 030 0 3
EDudgeon, Rassman, Wollenhaupt. LOBBath 7, Jefferson 6. 2B
Bullinger, Mercer, Wollenhaupt. 3BClark. HRClark. SBClark.
IP H R ER BB SO HR
BATH
Gossard (W) 4.67 7 3 3 1 2 0
Gross 0.33 0 0 0 0 0 0
Clark 2.00 1 0 0 1 2 0
JEFFERSON
Stockwell (L) 5.00 10 7 4 1 3 1
Bullinger 2.00 0 0 0 2 1 0
PBFitch 2. WP- Stockwell. BALKGossard. SOStahr (2),
Wollenhaupt 2, Cowan, Davis, Rassman, Fitch. BBJordan, Gossard, Clark,
Boop, Herron.

Lady Vikes slam Big Green


OTTOVILLE Leipsic scored early and kept right
on going as the Lady Vikings slammed Ottoville 15-1 in a
5-inning Putnam County League softball clash Saturday afternoon at Ottoville.
Leipsic hosts Liberty-Benton tonight, while the Lady Big
Green are at Ada 5 p.m. Tuesday.
Score by Innings:
Leipsic 2 2 8 3 0 - 15
Ottoville 0 1 0 0 0 - 1
WP: J. Lopez (1 BB); LP: B. Bowersox (3 BBs, 4 Ks).
Kalida, Crestview split doubleheader
KALIDA Kalida and Crestview played two starting at
high noon Saturday at Holy Name Field.
In the opener, the host Wildcats needed eight innings and
scored in the bottom half of the extra frame to seize a 5-4
triumph.
Austin Klausing got the win for the hosts, while Jordan
Roop took the loss.
The second game also needed an eighth inning but this time,
the Knights turned the tables, scoring two in the top of that
frame and grabbing an 11-9 victory.
Roop got the pitching win this time, with Trent Siebeneck
absorbing the loss.
Kalida (5-2) is at St. Johns this afternoon, while Crestview
(1-4) heads to Paulding for an NWC encounter with the
Panthers.

GAME 1
Final/ 8 innings: Kalida 5, Crestview 4
Score by Innings:
Crestview: 000 110 20 = 4 9 2
Kalida: 022 000 01 = 5 9 1
WP: Austin Klausing (1-0); LP: Roop
Top Hitters Crestview: Owens 2-4 (2B), Overmyer 2-4 (2B), Rolsten
1-4 (2B). Kalida: Jeffrey Knueve 2-2, Drew Hovest 2-4 (2 RBI and walk off
single)
GAME 2
Final/ 8 innings: Crestview 11, Kalida 9
Crestview: 102 100 52 = (11) (11) 2
Kalida: 120 015 00 = 9 (11) 5
WP: Roop; LP: Trent Siebeneck (1-1). Top Hitters: -Crestview: Owens
3-5 (2B, 2 RBI), Roop 3-5 (2B, 5 RBI). Kalida: Austin Klausing 3-5 (2 RBI),
Jeffrey Knueve 2-3 (2B, 1 RBI)

LIMA The Lima Central Catholic


Thunderbirds faced a Delphos baseball
team for the second time in less than 24
hours over the weekend.
On Friday night at Delphos Jefferson,
the T-Birds pounded out 12 hits resulting in 17 runs.
On Saturday at Players Field, Jacob
Youngpeter limited LCC to one hit as
the Blue Jays won 6-1.
The game started as a pitchers
duel between Youngpeter and Anthony
Venturella for the T-Birds as both dominated the opposition the first time
through the batting order.
The first hit of the game didnt occur
until the top of the fourth inning as
St. Johns Eric Vogt rocketed a deep
drive to the center-field fence and
advanced to third on a wild pitch; the
Jays had runners on the corners when
Youngpeter drew a 1-out walk. Josh
Warnecke drove home the first run of
the holy war with a single to plate
Vogt. St. Johns coach Jerry Jackson
knew that runs would be hard to come
by in this duel and gave the steal sign to
his base-runners. First, Youngpeter stole
third and Warnecke moved into scoring
position swiping second. Senior Jorden
Boone beat out an infield hit deep in
the hole at short as the Jays loaded the
bases. Aaron Reindel got the job done
with a grounder to second, scoring
Youngpeter. St. Johns scored again as
Warnecke came home on a Venturella
wild pitch and led 3-0.
On the mound, Youngpeter struck
out five Thunderbirds in a row, putting
his game total for Ks in double digits at
10 in only five innings.
St. Johns tacked on another run in
the fifth off of T-Bird reliever Bitler
Rumer as Vogt got aboard with his
second hit of the afternoon and Boone
added his second base knock for a run
batted in giving the Jays a 4-0 lead.
LCCs only run of the game came in
the fifth inning as Jacob Judy reached
with a 2-out walk and scored on a single
by Joseph Eisele. Youngpeters batterymate, Jaret Jackson, gunned down Brad
Stolly attempting to steal to erase a rare
Thunderbird base-runner.
Youngpeter appeared to get stronger as the game wore on into the sixth
inning, recording a pair of strikeouts.
Catcher Jackson also displayed his great
throwing arm, nailing Venturella on a
steal attempt for his second punch out.
The Blue Jays took advantage of
wildness from the T-Birds third pitcher of the game, Ethan OConnor, in

Harvick

(Continued from page 6)

St. Johns Jacob Youngpeter fired a complete-game 1-hitter at Lima Central


Catholic on Saturday as the Blue Jays improved to 4-2 with a 6-1 victory. (DHI
Media/Larry Heiing)
the seventh inning. Austin Heiing led
off with a walk and came all away
around on three straight wild pitches by
OConnor. Seth Linder also walked and
quickly stole second, followed by the
third walk of the inning as Jackson went
to first. The Jays scored their second run
of the inning without even laying the
bat on the ball as Linder stole third and
came home on the overthrow.
Lima Central Catholics batters simply
couldnt catch up to Youngpeters fastball
in the seventh inning, going down in
order on three straight strikeouts.
Youngpeter was overpowering this
afternoon, said Coach Jackson. It
was an outstanding pitching performance backed up by great defense
by his teammates. Our team also had
some timely hits today against some
tough Thunderbird pitching. We have
a stretch of five games next week and
Youngpeter saved a lot of arms with his
performance today.
Youngpeter
faced
only
26
Thunderbird batters in the game. His
mastery on the hill resulted in 15 strikeouts and scattered four walks for his

the back. So Im probably


worrying for nothing.
James Hinchcliffe wins
wet Indy GP of Louisiana
AVONDALE, La.
James Hinchcliffe cruised to
what may go down as the
easiest victory of his IndyCar
career Sunday at the inaugural Indy Grand Prix of
Louisiana.
The Canadian had a
wet track and a fortunate
pit strategy to thank for his
fourth career victory.
Hinchcliffe,
racing
for
Schmidt
Peterson
Motorsports, pitted only
once on Lap 13 and then

Its not a real serious situation thats kind of bugging


you but its in the back of
your mind. Earnhardt said.
One thing I dont know
about this new system is:
Will we have 16 winners
this year? I dont know. It
dont look like it the way
Harvicks running.
If he wins enough races,
the odds are not really good
to have 16 winners. And if
we dont win a race, I think
were a good enough team to
put enough points together
to get one of them spots in

Reds

(Continued from page 6)

It was a nice homestand but today


was a game we should have won, said
Price, who joined the team in 2010 as
pitching coach. Since Ive been here,
the Cardinals has been a team that
has beaten us. At the end of the World
Series, no one cares how many times
you beat a certain team, but to reverse
that, yes, its important to me.
Iglesias allowed three runs and five
hits in five innings with two walks and
four strikeouts. Signed last July to a $27
million, 7-year contract, he became the
first Reds player since Mike Leake in
2010 to reach the majors without playing a minor-league game.
Iglesias gave up two hits and a walk
through the first four innings, then fell
behind 3-1 in the fifth. Yadier Molina
doubled leading off and Carpenter hit
a 2-run single and scored from first on
Jason Heywards double into the rightfield corner. Heyward was thrown out
trying to stretch his hit into a triple, with

second win of the young season.


St. Johns improves to 4-2 on the
season and entertains Putnam County
League foe Kalida tonight at 5 p.m.
St. Johns (6)
ab-r-h-rbi
Austin Heiing cf 3-1-0-0, Seth Linder 3b 1-1-0-0,
Jaret Jackson c 2-0-0-0, Eric Vogt ss 4-2-1-0, Jesse
Ditto 1b 3-0-1-0, Jacob Youngpeter p 2-1-0-0, Josh
Warnecke 2b 3-1-1-1, Jorden Boone lf 3-0-2-1, Aaron
Reindel rf 3-0-0-1, Chad Etgen ph 1-0-0-0. Totals:
25-6-5-3.
Lima Central Catholic (1)
Jacob Judy lf 1-1-0-0, Joseph Eisele 2b 2-0-1-1,
Brad Stolly 1b 3-0-0-0, Anthony Venturella p 2-0-0-0,
Alex Krumel dh 2-0-0-0, Joey Watkins c 0-0-0-0, Ethan
OConnor ss 3-0-0-0, Thomas Williams 3b 2-0-0-0,
Evan Szeremeta rf 3-0-0-0, Bitler Rumer cf 2-0-0-0.
Totals: 20-2-1-1.
Score By Innings
St. Johns 0-0-0-3-0-1-2-(6)
Lima CC 0-0-0-0-1-0-0-(1)
Errors-St. Johns 1; LOB-St. Johns 6, LCC 4;
Sac-Eisele; SB-Youngpeter 2, Linder 2, Warnecke;
CS-Eisele(by Jackson), Ventrella(by Jackson).
ip-h-r-er-bb-so
St. Johns
Youngpeter (W, 2-0) 7 1 1 1 4 15
Lima Central Catholic
Ventrella (L) 4 3 3 3 3 6
Rumer 2 2 1 1 3 1
E. OConnor 1 0 2 2 3 3
WP-Ventrella 2, E. OConnor; PB-Watkins.

spent much of his day leading


the field around the NOLA
Motorsports Park under a
full-course yellow flag.
Because of several wrecks
in the traffic behind him,
25 of the 47 laps were run
under caution. The race was
supposed to run 75 laps but
ended fittingly under caution as a timed race.
The last chance the drivers had to race under green
was cut short by a spectacular 3-car wreck involving Simon Pagenaud, Ryan
Hunter-Reay and Sebastien
Bourdais early in the first lap
of a restart with less than 10

second baseman Brandon Phillips making the relay after Jay Bruces throw.
St. Louis starter Carlos Martinez
struck out a career-high eight in six
innings, giving up two runs and four hits.
Bruce led off the second with his
second homer of the season and Billy
Hamilton cut the Cardinals lead to 3-2
in the sixth with his first homer.
Frazier had a 2-run single and
Phillips followed with an RBI hit to
give Cincinnati a 5-3 lead in the seventh.
BREAK TIME
The Reds varied their starting eight
for the first time this season, with
Brennan Boesch replacing Marlon Byrd
in left field and Brayan Pena taking
over for Devin Mesoraco at catcher.
Pena was the last position player to play
for the first time this season. Byrd and
Mesoraco both were 2-for-20 (.100) in
the first five games.
TIMEOUT
Reds manager Bryan Price was ejected by crew chief Joe West in the top
of the eighth after Jon Jay was hit by

minutes remaining.
The wreck began when
Hunter-Reay
squeezed
Pagenaud onto a wet spot,
which caused the Frenchmen
to slide onto grass and then
back on track at the next
turn, where he essentially broadsided Hunter-Reay
and drove him into Bourdais
before all three cars slid back
off track and into a tire wall.
Pagenaud was out of
his car quickly and first
informed Bourdais what had
happened, then appeared to
chastise Hunter-Reay.

a pitch. The ejection was the third for


Price, who is in his second season as
manager.
TRAINERS ROOM
Cardinals: Catcher Tony Cruz was
expected to rejoin the team in St. Louis
on Sunday night. Cruz started paternity
leave Friday.
Reds: Catcher Brayan Pena left the
game in the seventh after injuring his
left shoulder in a fall at first base while
beating out a leadoff bunt.
ON DECK
Cardinals: Adam Wainwright will
pitch for the first time in eight days
when he starts St. Louiss home opener
today against Milwaukee. The righthanders second start of the season was
pushed back by last Tuesdays rainout
in Chicago.
Reds: The Reds get their first look at
under-renovation Wrigley Field when
they open their first trip of the season
today in Chicago. Leake is 4-0 with a
1.71 ERA in his last four starts against
the Cubs.

Cats
(Continued from page 6)
Game 1
JEFFERSON (23)
Sarah Thitoff cf 4-4-0-2, Claire
Thompson p 5-3-2-2, Jessica Pimpas
lf 3-0-0-2, Shayla Rice 2b 5-2-3-4,
Samantha Branham c 3-2-2-1, Kylee
Haehn 3b 5-2-1-0, Kaylin Hartsock rf
3-5-2-1, Danielle Hartman 1b 4-3-4-3,
Sophie Wilson ss 4-2-1-1. Totals 36-2315-16.
PANDORA-GILBOA (2)
Korri Basinger cf/2b 3-0-0-0, Kristen
Mullins 2b/p 2-0-1-1, Shana Hovest
ss 2-0-0-0, Brittany Riegle p/cf 2-1-10, Paiten Dulaney 1b 2-0-0-1, Heidi
Cherry 3b 2-0-0-0, Alysee Augsburger
rf 2-0-1-0, Carina Oekermann rf 0-0-0-0,
Madi Dulaney c 1-1-0-0, Katlind Fortman

dp 1-0-0-0, Jordan Guthrie dp 1-0-00. Emma Nielsen flex/lf 0-0-0-0. Totals


18-2-3-2.
Score by Innings:
Jefferson (10) 9 0 3 1 - 23
Pand.-Gilb. 0 0 1 1 0 - 2
E: Mullins 3, Cherry 2, Hovest, M.
Dulaney, Nielsen; DP: Pandora-Gilboa 1;
LOB: Jefferson 9, Pandora-Gilboa 2; 2B:
Rice 2, Thompson, Harman; SB: Thitoff,
Basinger, Mullins; Sac: Thompson.
IP H R ER BB SO
JEFFERSON
Thompson (W, 1-2) 5 3 2 2 1 4
PANDORA-GILBOA
Riegle (L) 3.1 14 22 9 9 3
Mullins 1.2 1 1 0 1 0
WP: Riegle 11, Thompson 3; PB: M.
Dulaney 2.

Game 2
JEFFERSON (16)
Sarah Thitoff cf 3-3-0-0, Kylee
Haehn cf 0-0-0-0, Claire Thompson
2b 1-2-0-1, Jessica Pimpas lf 3-2-13, Kaylin Hartsock 3b 2-2-1-1, Maddy
Jettinghoff c 4-0-2-3, Kiersten Teman
p 3-1-0-1, Danielle Hartman 1b 4-1-11, Mackenzie Harvey rf 2-2-0-0, Kiya
Wollenhaupt rf 0-0-0-0, Sophie Wilson
ss 3-3-2-0. Totals 25-16-7-10.
PANDORA-GILBOA (4)
Korri Basinger 2b 3-0-1-0, Shana
Hovest ss 2-1-1-0, Kristen Mullins p/3b
3-0-2-1, Brittany Riegle 3b/p 3-1-0-0,
Paiten Dulaney 1b 3-0-1-0, Heidi Cherry
cf 1-1-0-0, Madi Dulaney c 2-1-0-0,
Katlind Fortman rf 2-0-1-1, Emmi Oras rf
1-0-0-0, Jordan Guthrie lf 2-0-1-1. Totals
22-4-7-3.

Score by Innings:
Jefferson 3 4 5 3 1 - 16
Pand.-Gilb. 0 2 1 0 - 4
E: Hartsock 2, Thompson, Hovest,
Reigle, M. Dulaney, Fortman, Guthrie;
LOB: Jefferson 6, Pandora-Gilboa 7; 2B:
Hovest; 3B: Pimpas; SB: Thitoff, Wilson,
Reigle; Left Base Early: Fortman; Sac:
Thompson, Cherry.
IP H R ER BB SO
JEFFERSON
Teman (W, 1-1) 5 7 4 3 3 4
PANDORA-GILBOA
Mullins (L) 1.1 4 7 5 5 1
Riegle 3.2 3 9 4 4 2
WP: Riegel 6, Teman 2, Mullins 2
; HBP: Teman (by Riegle), Harvey (by
Riegle).

8 The Herald

Monday, April 13, 2015

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& Commercial
Agricultural Needs
All Concrete Work

TRUCKS, TRAILERS
FARM MACHINERY
RAILINGS & METAL GATES

CONCRETE WALLS

Mark Pohlman

419-339-9084
cell 419-233-9460

Hohlbeins

Home
Improvement
Windows,
Doors, Siding,
Roofing,
Sunrooms,
Decks, Awnings,
Carport & Patio
Covers

Ph. 419-339-4938
or 419-230-8128
665

LAWN, GARDEN,
LANDSCAPING

Mueller Tree
Service

Tree Trimming,
Topping & Removal,
Brush Removal

L.L.C.

Trimming & Removal


Stump Grinding
24 Hour Service Fully Insured

KEVIN M. MOORE

(419) 235-8051

419-339-0110

GENERAL REPAIR
SPECIAL BUILT PRODUCTS

CARBON STEEL
STAINLESS STEEL
ALUMINUM

Larry McClure

5745 Redd Rd., Delphos

953

FREE AND LOW


PRICED MERCHANDISE

FREE BATHTUB and


sliding doors for bath
tub. Ph. 419 695-0405.

The right candidate will possess strong grammar


and writing skills, be able to meet deadlines and
have a working knowledge of still photography. A
sense of urgency and accuracy are requirements.
Assignments can range from hard economic news
to feature stories.

Send resumes to:The Delphos Herald


Attn. Nancy Spencer
405 N. Main St., Delphos, Ohio 45833
or email to: nspencer@delphosherald.com

Insurgent

Whats in the box?


Thats the question that drives the plot of
the second movie based on author Veronica
Roths young-adult Divergent trilogy about
love, loyalty, politics and identity in a
futuristic, post-apocalyptic Chicago.
Shalene Woodley returns as Tris, a
Divergent who doesnt fit into any
of the dystopian societys other rigidly
prescribed factions based on personality and
aptitude: Abnegation (selflessness), Amity
(peacefulness), Candor (honesty), Dauntless
(bravery) and Erudite (intelligence). As the
movie opens, the subdivided system has
fallen apart, insurrection has swept across the
land, and the ruthless Erudite overlord (Kate
Winslet) blames it all on rebel Divergents.
Peace, were told, can only be obtained
by opening a rune-covered, boxed-up do-dad
containing a secret message from the
ng Ilong-ago,
brication & Wel
nc.
Fa
founders
of di
the
walled-in society
that that has ultimately disintegrated into
chaos and ruin. And the only person who can
open the boxthrough a series of grueling,
simulated tests, or sims, that are like wiring
into a life-or-death computer gameis a
Divergent.
Winslets icy CEO/empress orders her
minions to round up Divergents until she finds
one who can passsurviveall five sims,
each based on one of the factions. Whats
in the box, that drives her to coldly sacrifice
others to obtain it? The search is futileuntil
they find Tris, the purest, most divergent of
all the Divergents.

Dear Abby

Some viewers have faulted the Divergent


series as being too derivative of The Hunger
Games, whichfair enoughalso featured
great-looking, well-coiffed, repressed young
people in a grim future world, fighting each
other, held against their will and railing
against an unjust, repressive, totalitarian
regime. But every franchise of anything has
its fans, and Roths trio of novelslike The
Hunger Gameswill also be stretched into
four films before it finally wraps up in 2017.
Insurgent, in addition to Woodley, finds
several other young actors returning to their
roles, including hunks Theo James, Ansel
Elgort and the series true secret weapon,
Miles Teller, who provides much-needed
levityand what little real surprise there is to
be found in the thin storyline. Octavia Spencer
and Naomi Watts are newly aboard, and
their relatively seasoned maturity frequently
gives them the air of grownups navigating a
bustling high school hallway.
The plot is convoluted and confusing,
moving at a gloopy glacial pace punctuated
by spasms and spurts of running, chasing,
shooting and scuffling. The special effects,
when Tris is hooked up to the sims contraption,
are bombastic, jarring blowouts that pummel,
rather than dazzle, the senses. Some of the
large interior scenes seem designed, propped,
costumed and photographed less like pieces of
a dystopian drama and more like a Broadway
musicalI halfway expected someone to
break into a song called Beyond the Wall
or United We Diverge.
Whats in the box? Oh, that: The setup for
two more movies!
Neil Pond, Parade Magazine

Do just Friendly divorce may be best for unhappy marriage


DEAR ABBY: Im 38, own before I walk away.
Because you feel so
one thing married
Will they understand that strongly about raising them
for 16 years and the
by Danny Seo

The most-used appliance that has the


shortest lifecycle is
the coffeemaker. The
reason why is simple:
They get used often,
and they are usually
left on for hours at a
time. To maximize
the lifespan, clean it
by mixing equal parts
water and white vinegar in the coffeepot,
and run it through
the whole process, as
if you were brewing
a pot of joe. This removes trace minerals
and buildup inside.
Then run a whole pot
of regular water to remove the faint taste
of vinegar. If you can,
dont allow a freshly
made pot of coffee
to sit on a burner all
day long; this wastes
energy and wears out
the machine.

Planning a
garage sale?
Advertise it
here!
419-695-0015

I sacrificed my happiness for


them to live with both parents? I want to be in love and
happy, but would rather raise
my babies with their father
than someone else. Your advice is greatly appreciated. -WILLING IN CALIFORNIA
DEAR WILLING: OK.
First, lets talk about your diagnosis and the treatment you
had. Being diagnosed with
a life-threatening illness can
cause anyone to rethink how
one has been living ones
life. It can cause all sorts of
repressed emotions to boil to
the surface, causing anger,
bitterness and hurt. Before
making any life-changing decisions, please talk with your
doctor, a marriage counselor
and your husband about those
feelings.
If you think that staying in
an unhappy marriage with a
man who goes out and stays
out constantly while pretending to be in love would be
healthy for your children, Id
be less than honest if I didnt
warn you that you would be
doing them a disservice. Even
if you could pull it off and the
kids didnt sense the tension
between you and your husband, how do you think theyll
feel when they are older and
realize what
they
were
led to believe
was a happy
marriage was
BRAUN JOB FAIR
a lie?

mother of two small children.


I was recently diagnosed with
ovarian cancer and had a hysterectomy to remove it.
My husband has cheated
more than once in the past,
and since my recovery I have
realized I never forgave him
for it. I kept quiet and pretended I didnt know. Now I
am bitter, angry and hurt. He
goes out and stays out constantly. He does help with the
kids, but I know I dont belong here. I know what I want,
and its not this life with him
anymore.
I know I can leave at any
time, but I feel my children
deserve to be raised with both
parents in the home since neither of us had that when we
were growing up. (My father
died. His parents divorced
when he was a toddler.) His
family has been my family
since the beginning of our relationship.
I want my children to grow
up thinking marriage is forever and growing old with
your partner is great. I want
them to have what I did not. If
we are civilized and pretend
to be in love, would my children be OK? Im willing to
stay in this marriage until they
are old enough and on their

ATTENTION JOB SEEKERS

REPORTER
to join its staff.

Hot youth reunite in grim dystopia for part two of Divergent trilogy. Starring Shailene
Woodley, Ansel Elgort, Kate Winslet and Theo James.

Directed by Robert Schwentke


PG-13

POHLMAN
BUILDERS
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800 TRANSPORTATION
805 Auto
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815 Automobile Loans
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825 Aviations

830 Boats/Motors/Equipment
835 Campers/Motor Homes
840 Classic Cars
845 Commercial
850 Motorcycles/Mopeds
855 Off-Road Vehicles
860 Recreational Vehicles
865 Rental and Leasing
870 Snowmobiles
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890 Trucks
895 Vans/Minivans
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NEWER FACILITY

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615 Business Services
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635 Farm Services
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645 Hauling
650 Health/Beauty
655 Home Repair/Remodeling
660 Home Service
665 Lawn, Garden, Landscaping

670 Miscellaneous
675 Pet Care
680 Snow Removal
685 Travel
690 Computer/Electric/Office
695 Electrical
700 Painting
705 Plumbing
710 Roofing/Gutters/Siding
715 Blacktop/Cement
720 Handyman
725 Elder Care

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automatic transmission
standard transmission
differentials
transfer case
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592 Want To Buy


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595 Hay
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MISCELLANEOUS

Transmission, Inc.

419-203-8202

Do you have a desire


to know more about the
people and news in
the community?

Movie Review

TEMANS

bjpmueller@gmail.com
Fully insured

Do you need to know


what is going on
before anyone else?

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

rts

GENERAL LABOR
Progressive NW Ohio
manufacturing facility is
seeking individuals to fill
general labor positions.
Must be able to lift up to
50# and have mechanical and metal working
skills. Full benefits package, competitive wages,
and retirement plan
available. New hire drug
screen. High school education or equivalent.
Send resumes to:
Krendl Machine Co.
Attn: Human Resources
1201 Spencerville Ave.
Delphos, OH 45833
DFWP/EOE

Telling The Tri-Countys Story Since 1869

345 Vacations
520 Building
Materials
LAWN,
GARDEN,
PETS
AND
350
Wanted
To Rent
525 Computer/Electric/Office
665
LANDSCAPING
355
Farmhouses For Rent
SUPPLIES
530 Events
360 Roommates Wanted
535 Farm Supplies and Equipment
FREE400
MALE
Chihua- SALE 540 Feed/Grain
REAL ESTATE/FOR
545 Firewood/Fuel
hua mix.
7 yrs.
405 Acreage
and old
Lots,
550 Flea Markets/Bazaars
410 Commercial
neutered.
Short white
555 Garage Sales
415
Condos
560 Home Furnishings
hair with brown spots.
420
Farms
565 Horses, Tack and Equipment
Seeking a good home
425 Houses
570 Lawn and Garden
and owner
who
has
time

Trimming
Topping
Thinning
430 Mobile Homes/
575
Livestock
to offer companionship

Deadwooding
Manufactured Homes
577 Miscellaneous
Stump, Shrub
Tree Removal
580&Musical
Instruments
435 Vacation
Property
to a loving
dog. Current
Since
1973in Memoriam
582 Pet
Want To and
Buy too
owner440
traveling
583 Pets and Supplies
b u s y 500
. I fMERCHANDISE
interested,
585 Produce
505call
Antiques
and Collectibles
please
419-695Bill Teman
586419-302-2981
Sports and Recreation
510
Appliances
588 419-230-4890
Tickets
Ernie
Teman
8559.
515 Auctions
590 Tool and Machinery

583

Ca

100 ANNOUNCEMENTS
105
235Announcements
HELP WANTED
110 Card Of Thanks
115 Entertainment
120 In
Memoriam
FLOOR
CARE
125 Lost And Found
Delphos
130 Prayers
$10-$11/HR.
PT, 3rd
135
School/Instructions
Shift,
3 nights
140 Happy
Ads per week,
145
Ride
Share
Tues,
Fri,
Sun, approx

www.delphosherald.com

HERALD

DELPHOS
THE

Restaurant Management
Team Members
Open Interviews
201 Elida Rd., Delphos
Wed. April 15 10am-1pm
Mon. April 20 2-5pm

or to schedule an appointment call


Kim at 419-236-6626

Come and take a tour of our plant.


See, first-hand the operations that you are most interested in.
Talk with our area managers about working for Braun.
WHAT: Braun Job Fair
WHEN: Saturday (05/02/15) at 9AM or 11AM
WHERE: Braun 1170 Production Drive, Van Wert

Bring your cover letter and resume, and be prepared


to take our required testing for applicable positions
(i.e. math, measurements, electrical, etc).
Pre-Register by calling 419-232-7020 before April 30th.

Call earlySpace is limited!


Most position descriptions are available to
view on the website at
www.braunambulances.com

with your husband, my advice is to make every effort


to clear the air and work out
your marital problems with
him. That said: It takes two
to tango. If he is unwilling to
cooperate, all of you might be
happier if you separated and
agreed to an amicable divorce
and shared custody. Im not
saying it would be easy, but it
can be done if both parties are
willing.
DEAR ABBY: I recently received an invitation to a
small wedding that specified
the attire to be dressy casual. Im thinking of wearing
a pair of nice black slacks,
a white sweater and a black
leather jacket.
Is it appropriate to wear
black at a wedding ceremony? And who is the dress code
guru who decides these matters? -- DAN ON THE WEST
COAST
DEAR DAN: MY dress
code guru for weddings is
Emily Post. According to Emily, dressy casual attire for
men is a seasonal sport coat or
blazer and slacks; a dress shirt,
casual button-down shirt,
open-collar or polo shirt; optional tie and loafers or loafer-style shoes with socks. The
rule about not wearing black
to a wedding was discarded
years ago, and it applied to
women -- not men.
COPYRIGHT 2015 UNIVERSAL UCLICK

Seasonal Help Needed


Applicant must have a CDL or
be able to obtain a temporary CDL

Apply in person

11713#A Spencerville-Delphos Rd.


Delphos, OH 45833
419-695-1931

Monday, April 13, 2015

www.delphosherald.com

Comics & Puzzles


Zits

Blondie

For Better or Worse

Beetle Bailey

Pickles

Garfield

Born Loser

Hagar the Horrible

Barney Google & Snuffy Smith

Todays
Horoscope
By Eugenia Last

Monday, April 13, 2015


Youll tend to be ahead of
your time this year. Give others a chance to catch up, and
be prepared to express your
ideas explicitly if you want
others to participate in your
plans. Your vision must be
crystal clear if you want assistance. Believe in yourself.
ARIES (March 21-April
19) -- The most important relationships are often the ones
that get taken for granted.
If you have been neglecting
someone, make amends and
vow to be more attentive.
TAURUS (April 20-May
20) -- You can avoid tension
in the workplace if you stick
to your own duties. Dont get
drawn into debates with colleagues or superiors if you
want to get ahead.
GEMINI (May 21-June
20) -- Someone will have a
profound impact on your life
and future. Learn more about a
hobby or service that intrigues
you by surfing the Internet or
visiting the library.
CANCER (June 21-July
22) -- Pay attention to what
your friends, family and colleagues want and need. Patience will be required when
dealing with elders. Turn a
negative into a positive by
learning from someones valuable experience.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) -Certain people will be extra
sensitive today. Diplomacy
and tact will ensure that everything goes smoothly. Keep
personal matters under your
hat.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept.
22) -- Your commitment and
determination will ensure
recognition and reward. With
your skills and drive, you will
achieve success and the position you have been working
toward.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23)
-- Children will have a positive effect on your day. Love
is on the rise. Turn your focus
to romance if you want to improve your personal life. Pampering yourself will ease your
stress.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) -- Make positive changes
that will make you feel good
about your future. A new location or vocation should be
considered. Avoid sharing
your personal problems with
friends or family members.
SAGITTARIUS
(Nov.
23-Dec. 21) -- You are getting restless and are in need
of a change. Get involved in
a group or gathering that will
provide you with a creative
outlet that stimulates your
senses.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22Jan. 19) -- Opportunities for
advancement are imminent.
Show your versatility and
commitment if you want to
impress people who have the
power to make a difference in
your future.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19) -- Dont compromise your
standards by telling people
what you think they want to
hear. You will earn more respect by being truthful, even
if others disagree with your
opinions.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March
20) -- Business, financial or
governmental dealings will
be troublesome. Keep all your
records up to date and close at
hand in case of a dispute. Minor health issues will escalate
if not dealt with promptly.
COPYRIGHT 2015
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

United

DISTRIBUTED BY UNIVERSAL UCLICK FOR UFS

Answer to Sudoku
Hi and Lois

The Herald 9

Crossword Puzzle

ACROSS
1 Quickie
exam
5 Water-power org.
8 Interest
amt.
11 Pakistani
language
12 Dress
bottoms
14 Place
15 Full of pep
17 Sixth sense
18 Leaves
port
19 Campaign
event
21 Fed a line
23 Bump or
knot
24 Nouveau - 27 Peepers
29 Tennis
instructor
30 Oater
heroes
34 Snoops
37 Drenched
38 Countesss
husband
39 Soothe
41 Primitive
weapon
43 Himalayan
humanoid
45 Woke up
47 Actress
Witherspoon
50 Many
millennia
51 Consumer
protection (2
wds.)
54 PBS funder
55 Start a
garden
56 Chocolate
cookie
57 Foul up
58 Road map
info
59 Stiff

4 Swiss financial hub


5 Not those
6 Zoo staffer
7 Among
8 Implore
9 Social class
10 Hunt and
peck
13 Play parts
16 Stamp backing
20 Nonsense
22 With all
ones heart
24 Engine stat
25 Pique
26 -- liver oil
28 Soph. and jr.
30 Sea, to
Cousteau
31 Belt makers
tool
32 Grassy field
33 Shoats
home
35 -- ex machina
36 Price tags
39 -- -- -foot
pole

Saturdays answers
40 Keep out
of sight (2
wds.)
41 Dove or
pigeon
42 Some
eclipses
44 Crumble
away
45
Philosopher
-- Descartes

DOWN
1 Vt. neighbor
2 Coffee
brewers
3 Notion

Marmaduke

The Family Circus By Bil Keane

46 Doe or
stag
48 Mumbai
attire
49 Widemouthed
pitcher
52 Encountered
53 Tofu
base

10 The Herald

www.delphosherald.com

Monday, April 13, 2015

Hillary

(Continued from page 1)

It would do her well


electorally to be firmly on
the side of average working people who are working
harder than ever and still not
getting ahead, said economist Robert Reich, a former
labor secretary during the

Recall

Clinton administration who


has known Hillary Clinton
for nearly five decades.
The GOP did not wait for
her announcement to begin
their campaign against her.
The partys chairman, Reince
Priebus, has outlined plans for
a broad effort to try to undermine her record as secretary

(Continued from page 1)

Memory loss could be a sign that an individuals medication needs to be adjusted. Several
types of drugs can affect memory, according to
the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA),
including: sleeping pills; antihistamines; antianxiety, cholesterol-lowering and diabetes medications; antidepressants; and certain painkillers.
Nutritional deficiencies can also cause memory
issues. A lack of sufficient B12, a B vitamin essential for normal nerve function, can lead to confusion and dementia. On a daily basis, people need
2.4 micrograms of the vitamin in their diets from
natural sources like dairy products, meat and fish.
Significant stress or anxiety can lead to
problems with attention and memory which is
common for people juggling home and work
responsibilities and are not sleeping well.
Usually, easing stress can improve memory.
Untreated chronic stress can lead to depression, which also affects brain function.
Stress, anxiety and depression are psychological aspects of memory loss. Someone
who is socially isolated and does not engage
their brain may have issues with memory,
Pollitz said. Alcoholism and substance abuse
can also affect memory.
Other conditions that can lead to problems
with memory include infections.
There can be memory issues with urinary
tract, kidney and other outward infections,
Pollitz detailed. I was working in a facility;
a lady who knew me said hello to me one

Fire

(Continued from page 3)


The association members
present agreed that as specific
expenses are incurred on these
projects, the association will
contribute funds to complete
them.
Next meeting was set for
7:30 p.m. April 4, 2016.
The association was
formed in 1955 to aid in the
purchase of equipment for the
fire department. Equipment
has been purchased for all
fire department needs, but
especially for use in the rural
areas.

Learn
About
Better
Hearing

of state while arguing that her


election would be like giving
Obama a third term.
Republicans have jumped
on Clintons use of a personal email account and server
while she was secretary of
state, as well as her handling
of the 2012 terrorist attack in
Benghazi, Libya.

day and the next, she had no idea who I was.


The build-up of toxins from the infections
increases memory loss and confusion.
Pollitz said head injuries, specifically concussions, may include confusion and trouble
with memory and concentration. I talk with
kids who play soccer and football about prevention, she said. I talk with seniors (elderly) about preventing falls and educate them on
exercising to maintain good balance.
She said anesthesia from surgeries and
chemotherapy drugs can also have long-term
effects on memory.
Medication is a big factor in memory loss.
Everyone is different and any drug an individual takes whether it is a new prescription or a combination can cause memory
problems and side effects, Pollitz explained.
According to Alzheimers.org, memory
screenings make sense for people concerned
about memory loss; those who feel they are
experiencing warning signs of dementia; whose
family and friends have noticed changes in them
or who believe they are at risk due to a family
history of Alzheimers disease or a related illness. Screenings are a useful tool for people who
do not have concerns now but want to gauge
their memory now verses future comparisons.
A memory screening is not used to diagnose any particular illness and does not
replace consultation with a qualified physician or other healthcare professional.
For more information, visit nationalmemoryscreening.org or alz.org.

Trivia

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Tuesday

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DELPHOS

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Hearing consultation and screening.


Examination of your ears to check for wax buildup.
Hearing aid cleaning.
Product demonstration of the latest technology.

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the purchase of ANY pair of
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Answers to Fridays questions:


Milwaukee, where the sitcom was set, has a life-size
bronze statue of 1970s sitcom actor Henry Winkler who
played Arthur The Fonz Fonzarelli of TVs Happy
Days prominently displayed along its RiverWalk.
The average house cat can run about 30 miles
per hour.
Todays questions:
What title role was played by Warner Baxter,
Alan Ladd, Robert Redford and Leonardo DeCaprio
in movie adaptations of a great American novel?
How was the Rothschild family able to transmit
messages to its banks across Europe faster than any
other investment house in the early 1800s?
Answers in Wednesdays Herald.

Thursday

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248 N. MAIN ST. DELPHOS, OH 45833

419-516-0661
OTTAWAHEARINGAIDCENTER.COM
*With approved credit. Ask for details. Limited offer expires 04/16/15.

Chik-N-House grilling
for your dining pleasure

DELPHOS The Chik-N-House at the corner of


Fifth and Jefferson streets in Delphos offers a full range
of chicken items with specials every day.
We have several flavors of chicken on the bone,
chicken tenders, wings, fish, sandwiches, sides, salads
and desserts.
The Chik-N-House offers sides such as mashed potatoes and gravy, cole slaw, green beans, potato wedges,
corn, macaroni and cheese, potato salad, baked beans and
applesauce.
The Chik-N-House also offers sandwiches that included the House Crunch, roasted chicken breast, the Tender
Stack, shredded chicken, fish and BBQ pork (seasonal).
Chik-N-House offers breaded wings everyday and
grilled wings on the Wing Wednesday Special. Sauces
available with all wings including honey BBQ, sweet and
spicy BBQ, hot sauce, ranch, honey mustard, southwest
garlic and our new kickin ranch.
We also have chicken chunks and gizzards.
One of the more popular items on our menu is the
chicken bowl which is chicken chunks layered with
mashed potatoes, corn, cheese and gravy. Also in a bowl
is chicken and noodles over mashed potatoes.
We offer a family-friendly atmosphere and great service with excellent quality food.
However, thats not all. We also welcome call-ahead
orders. Call us to have your meal ready at a special time
and it will be ready for you whether it is for one person or
an office party, we will accommodate your needs.
Chik-N-House has added a new healthy side to our
menu featuring our roasted chicken breast which can be
ordered in a meal of one or two filets, a wrap, sandwich
or added to one of our large salads.

Look for bucket specials this summer when you are


getting together with family and friends.
Chik-N-House offers quality food and quick service.
We are a dine-in or carry-out restaurant.
A variety of specialty meals for catering events are
available: of course, chicken, 1/2 barbecued or fried;
wings, BBQ pulled pork, pastas and more. Stop in or call.
We do party-planning for large menu events like
graduations, rehearsal dinners, benefits, office lunches or
just family and friend get-togethers.
For a delicious meal of chicken cooked with care and
served fast and friendly, visit the Chik-N-House today.

Topp Chalet
Restaurant and Lounge

Proprietors of Fine Food & Drink in a Family Atmosphere!

Friday and Saturday


PRIME RIB.......................$19.95

1/2 STYLE GREEK CHICKEN


GYROS & GREEK SALADS

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Try our delicious BBQ chicken!


Announcing....

HAPPY HOURS

Wed.-Thur.-Fri.

2-4 pm

1/2 PRICE

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$2.00 off 15 or 18 Pizza


Open T-W-Th-Sat. at 4 p.m.
Fri. & Sun. at 11 a.m.

Carry Out Only


229 W. Fifth St.
Delphos, Ohio

CALL FOR WEEKEND SPECIALS!

419-692-8888 or 419-692-8751

226 N. Main St.


Delphos, OH
567-765-0213

Lattes,
Smoothies,
Frappes

239 W. Fifth Next to Topp Chalet


419-692-3333

1/2 BBQ
Chicken
PICK YOUR
Favorite sides!
SPECIALS EVERYDAY

DINE IN - CARRY OUT DRIVE THRU


NEW WINTER HOURS:
Sun.-Thurs. 11:00am-8:00 pm
Fri.-Sat. 11:00am-9:00pm

Custom Catering!

Graduation Parties
First Communion
Confirmation
Showers
Prom
Stop in & pickup a
catering menu.

Is There Anybody
Out There?
. Carryout Only .

BIG Texas
Tenderloin
Served on a 5-inch bun
Only

$ 99

after 4 pm

Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday

Buy a
bag full
at this
price!!!

Call in and we will have your order waiting for you!


Offer good till 9 PM each day. Runs thru 4/30/15

We Are Never CLOSED! 419-968-2209

133 E. Fifth St., Delphos


Ph. 419-695-8085

$999

STUFFED
CRUST
PIZZA

1 TOPPING

4 Bakery Breadsticks
with cheese or marinara
$ 00
For only

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