Download as pdf or txt
Download as pdf or txt
You are on page 1of 16

DELPHOS

The
50 daily www.delphosherald.com

Info emerges about 2nd woman in Patraeus case, p4A

NFL look, p6A

Veterans Day ceremonies honor all who served

Monday, November 12, 2012

Telling The Tri-Countys Story Since 1869

HERALD
Delphos, Ohio

Delphos Veterans Council Honor Guard fired a 3-volley salute to honor Veterans Day Sunday at the Veterans Memorial. BY STACY TAFF When they died, they gave up are as follows: Richard L. eran holder, May 16, 2012; staff@delphosherald.com their chance to be husbands Weisgerber, Army Peacetime, W. Tim Mericle, Navy, vetand fathers and grandfathers. Nov. 3, 2011; Paul D. Purdy, eran holder, May 18, 2012; DELPHOS Those They gave up their chance Marine Corp. Vietnam, Nov. Kenneth W. Fetzer, Army, who attended the Veterans to be revered old men. They 4, 2011; Dale Frederick Korea, May 18, 2012; Hubert Day ceremonies Sunday gave up everything for us and Miller, Army World War II; A. Youngpeter, Army, World were blessed with beautiful our country. Leonard W. Smith, Army War II, June 11, 2012; Glen weather and unseasonably Please remember those World War II, Nov. 14, 2011; J. Allemeier, Army, Korea, warm temperatures as they who are serving in the Armed Charles A. Rohrbacher, Navy June 20, 2012; John Joseph gathered around the Veterans Forces today. Keep them in Peacetime, Dec. 17, 2011; Lubrano, Air Force, veterMemorial to honor all who your thoughts and prayers, William H. Strayer, Marine an holder, June 21, 2012; have served and those who for a safe return home to fam- Corp. Korea, Dec. 27, 2011; Raymond Ward, Army, have fallen. ily and friends. Richard Grothouse, Korea; Korea; William F. Lane, Post commanders and presAmerican Legion Post Robert M. Bendele, Air Force Nat. Guard, July 16, 2012; idents of the Delphos VFW Commander Larry Grothouse World War II, Jan. 16, 2012; Donald V. Grothouse, Army, and American Legion and their read a poem titled The Noble Charles R. Kissel, Air Force, Korea, July 20, 2012; Ronald respective auxiliaries were and the Brave: A Veterans Day World War II, Jan. 28, 2012; E. Ditto, Navy, peacetime, present to say a few words in Tribute by Joanna Fuchs and William J. German, Navy July 23, 2012; John Keith honor of the occasion. American Legion Auxiliary Seebee, peacetime, Jan. 27, Bemis, Navy, Aug. 8, 2012; We are gathered here President Sharon Miller read 2012; Julius F. Wurst, Army, Orville W. Carder, Army vettoday to honor those who Freedom is not Free by Ashley peacetime, Jan. 28, 2012; eran holder, Aug. 18, 2012; have served at home and in Persyn. Mary Grothause, presi- Alfred Emanuel Baldauf, Charles A. Fletcher, Army, war far away and have died dent of the VFW Auxiliary, Army, Korea, Feb. 16, 2012; World War II, Aug. 22, in defense of our country, read an excerpt from the speech Deborah Sue Best, U.S. Air 2012; Jack E. Werner, Army, VFW Commander Mike The Torch is Passed by John Force, March 4, 2012; Leo World War II, Aug. 27, 2012; Hughes said. We see these F. Kennedy. N. Drerup, Army, Korea, Lasaro R. Vasquez, Korea Members of the VFW and American Legion salute the brave soldiers in our minds At the conclusion of the April 9, 2012; Louis Rode, and Vietnam, Sept. 17, 2012; as old and wise. We see them ceremony, which included a Army, World War II, May F. George Berres, Navy, flag as the Star Spangled Banner is played. as something like the found- 3-volley salute and the play- 1, 2012; Paul H. Feathers World War II, Sept. 25, 2012; Army, veteran holder, Oct. Watkins, Army, World War ing fathers, grave and gray- ing of Taps, veterans who Sr., Nat. Guard, peacetime, Thomas E. Deffenbaugh, 15, 2012; Joseph L. Knippen, II, Oct. 25, 2012; and James haired, but most of them passed away within the last May 6, 2012; Richard A. Navy, veteran holder, Oct. Army, World War II, Oct. Lee Jim Wilcox, Navy, were boys when they died. two years were honored. They Gengler, Navy & Army vet- 6, 2012; Louis W. Etzkorn, 23, 2012; Willard Willy Vietnam, Nov. 8, 2012.

Stacy Taff photos

K of C offers Thanksgiving meals

Upfront

Gawkers head to New Yorks storm-ravaged neighborhoods


The Associated Press NEW YORK Garbage trucks, hulking military vehicles and mud-caked cars move slowly through a Staten Island waterfront neighborhood still reeling from Superstorm Sandys storm surge. Then comes an outlier: a spotless SUV with three passengers peering out windows at a mangled home choked with sea grass. Residents recognize the occupants right away. Theyre disaster tourists, people drawn to the scene of a tragedy to glimpse the pictures theyve seen on television come to life. Two weeks after the superstorm socked the region, cleanup continues in New York and New Jersey, which bore the brunt of the destruction. At its peak, the storm knocked out power to 8.5 million in 10 states, and some during a later noreaster. About 73,000 utility customers in New York and New Jersey remained without power late Sunday, most of them on Long Island. But the storm didnt just bring darkness and despair; it also brought the gawkers. Its a little annoying, said Chris Nasella, who paused as he finished cleaning up a home reduced to a shell on the first floor. By the same token, I would do it, too. I dont think anyone wouldnt want to look at boats that are picked up and left on the streets. As long as you dont get a kick out of it, its an amazing thing. There werent many tourists in Nasellas neighborhood on Saturday. Cleanup crews had done some extensive work. The neighborhood is only accessible through streets clogged with idled cars in gas lines and traffic made deliberate by still-powerless traffic signals. But they left an impression. The gawking was amazing last week, said Joanne McClenin, whose home was filled with water five feet high on the night Sandy came ashore. It was kind of offensive as a homeowner, because I felt violated. As the power outages on Long Island drag on, New Yorkers railed Sunday against the utility that has lagged

The Delphos Knights of Columbus will offer its free Thanksgiving meals from 10:30-11:30 a.m. on Thanksgiving Day for pickup or delivery. Meals are prepared and served by Knights. Call Dave Burnett at 419-695-2895 by Thursday to order meals. Mostly sunny Tuesday with highs around 40. Lows in the mid 20s. See page 2A.

Forecast

Index

Obituaries State/Local Politics Community Sports Announcements World News Classifieds TV

2A 3A 4A 5A 6-7A 8A 12A 2B 3B

Jennings students tour museum in Memorial

Photo submitted

In honor of Veterans Day, Fort Jennings students toured the Veterans Museum in the Memorial Hall. Retired Chief Petty Officer Randy Gasser takes questions from students in Audrey Mancinottis class, including, from left, Jacqueline Kaskel, Simon Smith, Aaron Kloeppel and Nick Fields.

behind others in restoring power, criticizing its slow pace as well as a dearth of information. Separately, U.S. Secretary of Homeland Security Janet Napolitano visited with disaster-relief workers Sunday in Staten Islands Midland Beach neighborhood, which is still devastated two weeks after Sandy hit. The lack of power restoration for a relative few in the densely populated region at the heart of the storm reinforced Sandys fractured effect on the area: tragic and vicious to some, merely a nuisance to others. Perhaps none of the utilities have drawn criticism as widespread, or as harsh, as the Long Island Power Authority. Nearly 67,000 of the homes and businesses it serves were still without power late Sunday. That was almost all of the remaining outages in New York state. We certainly understand the frustration thats out there, LIPAs chief operating officer, Michael Hervey, said in a conference call late Sunday. But, he said, the storm had been worse than expected, no utility had as many workers in place beforehand as it would have liked, and the power was coming back rapidly compared to the damage thats been incurred.

The Mortgage Center


Re-nance now to take advantage of historically-low rates Its fast, easy, and could save you thousands!
Call Alisha Reaman at (419) 879-3518 to nd out more!
NMLS #747448

SuperiorFCU.com

1303 E. 5th Street, Delphos

2A The Herald

Monday, November 12, 2012

www.delphosherald.com

More details released in Rockford murder case


BY ED GEBERT Times Bulletin Editor CELINA - A Rockford man remains at large - the subject of a manhunt in the aftermath of the shooting death of Melinda S. Shinn at the couples home early Thursday morning. Shinn, 26, was discovered shot to death Thursday morning at the mobile home she had shared for a couple of years with Daniel C. Martin on North St. in Rockford. Martin, 40, is now the subject of a manhunt. On Friday morning, Mercer County Sheriff Jeff Grey was joined by Rockford Police Chief Paul May and Rockford Mayor Amy Joseph for an update on the investigation and search for the suspect. Grey did disclose that the victims nine-year-old child was present in the mobile home when the shooting occurred. That child was unharmed and is now staying with relatives. Right now we have in our possession a warrant for the arrest of Daniel C. Martin, Grey stated. Daniel Martin lived in that residence, was the boyfriend of the victim. He is 40 years old. The description of him - hes a black male, 5-foot-11-inches tall, 230 pounds, black hair, brown eyes. We have not located him at this point. We have other law enforcement agencies trying to help us located him. After interviews and an initial investigation, authorities were able to present enough evidence to get a warrant for Martins arrest just after 5 p.m. Thursday. Greys office released the description of a vehicle which Martin was thought to have been driving. That red 1998 Ford Explorer has been located and impounded by police in Fort Wayne, but Martin remains at large. Grey said that the couple had been arguing throughout Wednesday night and early Thursday morning. Thats verified by people

For The Record


Jennifer A. Hill

OBITUARIES

Resident reports Police arrest Power meter broken window man on warrant explodes at At 1:20 p.m. on Sunday, business Delphos Police were called to
the 500 block of East Suthoff Street in reference to a criminal damaging complaint at a residence in that area. Upon officers arrival, the victim stated someone had broken a picture window in the front of the residence.

Wiring cut inside home

At 12:41 p.m. on Saturday, Delphos Police were called to the 700 block of East Second Street in reference to a breaking and entering complaint at a residence in that area. Upon officers arrival, the victim stated someone had forcibly gained entry in the residence and had cut electrical wiring from inside the residence. The case was forwarded to the Detective Bureau for further investigation.

even outside of the home, as enforcement agencies, espethere were text messages and cially the Fort Wayne Police things that were sent from the Department. Besides Martins victim to people outside of the vehicle being found in that home. We believe it was in city, Martin also is known to the early morning hours that have family in that area. a firearm was used to cause Martin also has a lengthy her death, he said. criminal record Grey remained tightwhich includes lipped on further at least one firedetails such as the arms charge. number of gunshots Hes known to and the location in have some viothe trailer where lent tendencies. Shinns body was He is entered found when police into the comarrived around 10:45 puter as armed a.m. Thursday. and dangerous, Rockford Police said Grey. We Chief Paul May was do believe that Martin the officer to find he is currently Shinn inside the still armed, so we trailer. He stated that he had would suggest that the public, known Shinn and had coached if you see him, call your local her sons football team. law enforcement agency... Do Weve never had an inci- not approach him. We dont dent like this in the Village know what he is capable of. At of Rockford, May declared. this point Im sure hes scared, Ive been there 20 years, and and Im sure he knows were grew up there. Nothing like looking for him. this. In the area maybe, but not Law enforcement had been in the village. called to the North St. resiRockford Mayor Amy dence previously, according to Joseph agreed, I think the records, and several EMS runs people in Rockford are shak- were made for an elderly peren a little bit, still in shock. son who formerly also lived Like Chief [May] said, this is with the couple at that address. something that does not hapOne emphasis of the manpen in our village. Ive been hunt is Fort Wayne where assured though by the Sheriffs Martin is believed to have at Department and Chief May least one child and other famthat this wasnt just a random ily, although Grey promised thing. It was between two peo- that if the suspect is located, ple and the village is still safe his department will make and doesnt have anything to sure to go bring him back to worry about. Mercer County. Grey confirmed this is He also warned anyone the first homicide in Mercer who might consider harCounty since the deaths of boring Martin. If anybody Robert and Colleen Grube last knows where he is, you cant November. He added that it is let him stay at your house, just the fourth murder handled you cant help him, you cant by the Mercer County Sheriffs assist him. If anybody does Office in the past 12 years. that, that would be a criminal The investigation and the violation under Ohio law. If manhunt are ongoing at this we found out that happened, time. Grey stated that an autop- we would arrest them too. It By The Associated Press sy was to be scheduled Friday is important that we get him Today is Monday, Nov. 12, afternoon in Lucas County. picked up, bring him into jail, As for the search for Martin, and we get the court process the 317th day of 2012. There Grey indicated that he is work- started, and hell have his day are 49 days left in the year. Todays Highlight in ing with many other law in court. History: On Nov. 12, 1942, the OLICE EPORT World War II naval Battle of Guadalcanal began. (The Allies ended up winning a major victory over Japanese forces.) At 9:55 a.m. on Sunday, On this date: while on routine patrol In 1787, severe flooding At 3:30 a.m. on Sunday, in the 300 block of South Delphos Police were flagged struck Dublin, Ireland, as the Bredeick over in the 100 block of West River Liffey rose. Street, In 1815, American suffragSecond Street in reference to Delphos ist Elizabeth Cady Stanton a small explosion and fire at Police a business in that area. Upon was born in Johnstown, N.Y. came In 1918, the short-lived checking the business, it was into conRepublic of German-Austria found the power meter on tact with the side of the business had was declared. Lyle In 1927, Josef Stalin exploded and caught fire. Diltz, became the undisputed ruler A witness to the incident 47, of advised that two subjects were of the Soviet Union as Leon Delphos, seen running from the area Trotsky was expelled from the at which Diltz shortly after the explosion had Communist Party. time In 1936, the San Franciscooccurred. offiOakland Bay Bridge opened Delphos Fire and Rescue cers arrested Diltz on as President Franklin D. and AEP were contacted. an active arrest warrant Roosevelt pressed a telegraph issued out of Van Wert key in Washington, D.C., givMunicipal Court on a coning the green light to traffic. tempt of court violation. In 1948, former Japanese Diltz was transported to premier Hideki Tojo and At 5:44 p.m. on Saturday, the Van Wert County Jail several other World War II and will appear in Van Wert Delphos Police were called to Japanese leaders were senMunicipal Court on the war- the 800 block of Skinner Street tenced to death by a war in reference to an assault in rant. crimes tribunal. that area. In 1969, news of the My Lai Upon officers arrival, the Massacre in South Vietnam victim stated a subject known to them had been at the resi- in March 1968 was broken dence and struck the victim in by investigative reporter Seymour Hersh. the face.

Nov. 12, 1973-Nov. 5, 2012 Jennifer A. Hill, 38, of Odessa, Texas, and formerly of Oakwood, died at 2:30 p.m. Nov. 5 at Medical Center Hospital, Odessa. She was born Nov. 12, 1973, in Defiance to Robert and Jacquelyn (Geddings) Baldwin, who survive in Oakwood. On April 9, 2005, she married Kenneth Hill, who survives. Also surviving are three brothers, Steven (Karen) Baldwin of Louisville, Ky,; Bradley (Sherry) Baldwin of Defiance and Anthony (Lisa) Baldwin of Ottawa Lake, Mich.; grandparents Tom and Helen Geddings of Delphos; and 19 nieces and nephews. She was preceded in death by her grandparents Delaine and Arlene Baldwin. Mrs. Hill was a homemaker. She was a graduate of Paulding High School and Defiance College. She loved all animals and enjoyed spending time with her family. Jennifer shared the gift of life through organ and tissue donation. Mass of Christian Burial will be held at 10 a.m. Saturday at St. John The Baptist Catholic Church, Continental, the Rev. Herman Scherger officiating. Burial will follow in St. Barbaras Cemetery, Cloverdale. Visitation will be from 4-8 p.m. Friday at Heitmeyer Funeral Home, Oakwood, and one hour prior to service Saturday at the church. Memorials may be made to the family. Condolences may be expressed at: www.heitmeyerfuneralhome.com

The Delphos Herald


Nancy Spencer, editor Ray Geary, general manager, Delphos Herald Inc. Don Hemple, advertising manager Tiffany Brantley, circulation manager
Vol. 142 No. 109

Frank Butch Sanders


Sept. 28, 1946 Nov. 9, 2012 Frank Butch Sanders, 66, of Bluffton, died at 4:20 p.m. Friday in his wifes arms surrounded by family after a year-long battle with esophageal cancer. He was born Sept. 28, 1946, in Lima to Levi and Loretta (Prine) Sanders, who preceded him in death. On Oct. 8, 1993, he married Deborah D. Webb, who survives in Bluffton. Other survivors include three sons, Chad (Cindy) Sanders of Lima, Ryan (Staci) Wingfield of Harrod and Thad Wingfield of Bluffton; two daughters, DeEtte Dee (Darren) Helms of Delphos and Nicole Nikki (Joel) Dunifon of Bluffton; four brothers and six sisters; a sister-in-law, Bert Sanders of Delphos; 28 grandchildren and one great-granddaughter; and special friend, Jim Reams of Bluffton. He was also preceded in death by the parents who raised him in Delphos, Stanton Bus and Margaret (Trempert) Sanders; and four brothers and two sisters. Mr. Sanders was a U.S. Air Force veteran during Vietnam. He worked in maintenance at Fruehauf for more than 25 years, at PSI in Ottoville and the Lima City Schools. He was a member of High Street Free Will Baptist Church, American Legion Post 96, VFW Post 1275 and the Delphos Bass Club; an honorary lifetime member of Forest L. Wood Outdoor; and a lifetime member of the NRA. He was an avid fisherman and hunter. Funeral service will begin at 1 p.m. Tuesday at Shawnee Chapel Chiles-Laman Funeral and Cremation, the Rev. James Webb officiating. Military rites will be conducted by the VFW Post 1275 and the U.S. Air Force. Burial will be in Dayton National Cemetery. Friends may call from 6-8 p.m. today and 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. Tuesday at the funeral home. Preferred memorials are to the family for medical expenses.

IN HISTORY

TODAY

Heavy fire and smoke damage was reported to the home of James Schaffner at 740 W. Skinner St. on Saturday. Delphos Fire and Rescue responded to the fire call at 11:02 a.m. with 3 pieces of equipment and 20 fire firefighters. Fire Chief Dave McNeal reported the fire began in or near an attached carport. No one was injured. Fire and Rescue personnel were back on station at 1:32 p.m.

Home heavily damaged by fire and smoke

The Daily Herald (USPS 1525 8000) is published daily except Sundays, Tuesdays and Holidays. By carrier in Delphos and area towns, or by rural motor route where available $1.48 per week. By mail in Allen, Van Wert, or Putnam County, $97 per year. Outside these counties $110 per year. Entered in the post office in Delphos, Ohio 45833 as Periodicals, postage paid at Delphos, Ohio. No mail subscriptions will be accepted in towns or villages where The Daily Herald paper carriers or motor routes provide daily home delivery for $1.48 per week. 405 North Main St. TELEPHONE 695-0015 Office Hours 8 a.m.-5 p.m. Mon.-Fri. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to THE DAILY HERALD, 405 N. Main St. Delphos, Ohio 45833

WEATHER
Delphos weather
High temperature Sunday in Delphos was 68 degrees, low was 53. Weekend rainfall was recorded at .06 inch. High a year ago today was 60, low was 39. Record high for today is 72, set in 1964. Record low is 11, set in 1911. WEATHER FORECAST Tri-county The Associated Press

Police probe assault claim

Web Directory
ANDY NORTH
Financial Advisor

TONIGHT: Mostly clear. Lows in the mid 20s. West winds 5 to 15 mph. TUESDAY: Mostly sunny. Highs around 40. Northwest winds around 10 mph. TUESDAY NIGHT: Mostly clear. Lows in the mid 20s. North winds around 5 mph shifting to the east after midnight. EXTENDED FORECAST WEDNESDAY: Mostly sunny in the morning then becoming partly cloudy. Highs in the lower 40s. Southeast ST. RITAS A girl was born Nov. 9 to winds around 10 mph. WEDNESDAY NIGHT: Veronica Curry and Antione Mostly clear. Lows in the Fields of Delphos. upper 20s. THURSDAY AND THURSDAY NIGHT: Partly cloudy. Highs in the mid 40s. Corn $7.54 Lows around 30. Wheat $8.62 FRIDAY THROUGH Soybeans $14.34 SUNDAY: Mostly clear. Highs around 50. Lows in the lower 30s.

BIRTH

LOCAL PRICES

TARA
Real BioLife donor since August 2011.
UP T RECEIVE

www.edwardjones.com

1122 Elida Ave. DELPHOS, OHIO 45833 Bus. (419) 695-0660 1-800-335-7799
Member SIPC

Call or stop by today.

0 $24MBER! IN NOVE

O .C O M T L A SM A IO L IF EP T IO N V ISIT B E YOUR D O N A UL SCHED

ANYONE CAN BE A LIFESAVER AT BIOLIFE.

It doesnt matter who you are or what you do, your plasma donation has the potential to save countless lives. Learn more at BIOLIFEPLASMA.COM.

4299 Elida Road Lima, OH 45807 419.224.0117 1789 E. Melrose Ave Findlay, OH 45840 419.425.8680
All BioLife donor eligibility criteria must be met to protect the donors health and product safety.

www.raabeford.com
11260 Elida Rd., Delphos

419-692-0055

NEW DONORS OR DONORS WH MONTHS OR MORE, PRESEN O HAVENT DONATED IN SIX $75 IN JUST TWO DONATI T THIS COUPON AND RECEIVE ONS. Must present this coupon prio $25 on your first and a tota r to the initial donation to receive a total of Initial donation must be l of $50 on your second successful donation. second donation within completed by 11.30.12 and 30 only upon completing suc days. Coupon redeemable combined with any other cessful donations. May not be offer. Only at participatin locations. g

$75

CLEVELAND (AP) These Ohio lotteries were drawn Sunday: Mega Millions Estimated jackpot: $19 M Pick 3 Evening 2-2-9 Pick 3 Midday 0-8-4 Pick 4 Evening 9-1-6-7 Pick 4 Midday 9-6-1-0 Pick 5 Evening 7-6-0-2-4 Pick 5 Midday 6-0-3-3-2 Powerball Estimated jackpot: $185 M Rolling Cash 5 03-04-08-28-38 Estimated jackpot: $556,000

LOTTERY

www.delphosherald.com

Monday, November 12, 2012

The Herald 3A

Ohioans food stamp benefits to decrease next year

BRIEFS

Ohio legislator wants tax refunds on debit cards

TOLEDO (AP) Ohioans who get food stamp benefits could see that aid shrink by about $50 a month next year, partly because of a change in how the government calculates utility expenses for recipients. The Blade in Toledo reports 869,000 households are enrolled in the program for the states poorest residents. A spokesman for the Ohio Department of Job and Family Services says it will send letters this month to notify those affected by the change. Ohio tried to appeal the change, but the request was denied by the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Organizations that provide food assistance to those in need say the loss of $50 in aid could have a big effect on some families, and theyre bracing for higher demand for help as a result of the change.

Columbia Gas customers Midwest Electric paid more after choice members donate $13,469 to charities, projects
storage cabinet and an iPad for instructional use. Mercer County Emergency Response Volunteers, $550 to buy new emergency traffic cones. Maria Stein Shrine, $500 towards upgrading the temperature controls on the heating and cooling units. Delphos Community Christmas Project, $500 to buy presents for needy children. Lima Symphony Orchestra, $500 to help support the Youngs People Concert. Van Wert Youth Baseball, $500 to put in a new ball diamond in Jubilee Park. Lock One Community Arts, New Bremen, $500 to help support childrens programming. The Midwest Electric Community Connection Fund is a voluntary charitable program. Participating members monthly electric bills are rounded up to the next dollar, with the additional pennies deposited in the Fund. A board of trustees, composed of cooperative members and separate from the Midwest Electric Board of Trustees, oversees the application and allocation process. Individuals or organizations can obtain an application by contacting Midwest Electric, at 419-394-4110 or 1-800-962-3830. COLUMBUS (AP) Consumers in Columbia Gas of Ohio territory have paid more, not less, since being offered a choice of natural-gas carriers under utility deregulation, a newspaper reported Sunday. The Columbus Dispatch reported newly disclosed data showed that those who selected their own gas provider paid a combined $885 million more since 1997 by shopping than they would have by sticking with regulated prices. Ohios gas choice program was launched in 1997. The data was released last week in a regulatory case before the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio that could lead to regulated prices being abolished. The comparison data covers the period from April 1997 to September 2012. Customers fared best in the late 1990s, when the concept of choosing a provider was new, the report said. Many people chose fixed-rate gas contracts as an alternative to Columbias variable rate. But over time, as the market developed, customers did worse. Consumer advocates said the figures showed consumers havent had enough information to make smart decisions. You have to wonder whether the whole setup is ever going to be able to deliver the kinds of benefits for customers that were promised, said Dayton-area attorney Ellis Jacobs, who represents utility consumers. Deregulation supporters said the figures dont reflect how competition drove down even regulated prices and dont take into account the special products, such as

STATE/LOCAL

Gas prices in Ohio start higher to begin the week

DAYTON (AP) An Ohio legislator thinks the state should offer taxpayers the option of getting their Ohio refunds on prepaid debit cards. State Sen. Eric Kearney says his proposal could save the state money and benefit low-income residents who dont have bank accounts. The Cincinnati Democrat says the option would give them a safe and easy way to get their refunds, avoiding checkcashing fees. A federal survey found that about 414,000 Ohio households didnt have a checking or savings account last year. The Dayton Daily News reports some officials are concerned that the programs costs would outweigh its benefits. A U.S. Treasury pilot program was halted after only a small number of taxpayers chose to participate.

COLUMBUS (AP) For the first time in nearly a month, Ohio drivers are seeing an increase in gas prices as the week begins. The average price for a gallon of regular gas was $3.40 in Mondays survey from auto club AAA, the Oil Price Information Service and Wright Express. Thats 8 cents higher than a week ago but level with the average at this time last year. Nationally, the average cost has dropped to its lowest level since midsummer. It was about $3.44 per gallon today.

Teresa Bambauer, center, Midwest Electric Community Connection Fund trustee, presents a $1,000 check to Dorothy Hoffman and Marilyn Wagner of the Delphos Canal Commission to help install heating and cooling in the museums second floor. Ft. Recovery Public Midwest Electric members recently donated $13,469 to Library, $1,000 to insulate 16 west-central Ohio chari- and repair damaged siding. Catholic Social Services ties and community projects through the cooperatives of the Miami Valley, $1,000 Community Connection to help support the early childhood program for area Fund. Since the program began pre-schools. Childrens in 1998, the Midwest Electric Community Connection Fund Developmental Center of has provided $727,963 to 551 Lima, $819 to purchase a area projects. The recent fund recipients include the following: New Bremen German Township Fire Department, $1,500 to purchase iPads and related equipment for mapping and training. Apollo Career Center, Lima, $1,100 to purchase iPads for instructional use in the ABLE/ESOL programs. Delphos Canal Commission, $1,000 to help install heating and cooling in the museums second floor. Darke County EMS, $1,000 to help fund the annual EMS seminar for area counties. Bath Elementary Multiple Disabilities, $1,000 to purchase iPads for instructional aides. Family Promise of LimaAllen County, $1,000 to buy Teresa Bambauer, left, Midwest Electric Community beds for the homeless. West Ohio Food Bank, Connection Fund trustee, presents a $500 donation to Edna $1,000 to help with OSHA- Fischer and Karen Edelbrock of the Delphos Community required maintenance repairs. Christmas Project to help buy presents for area children.

Photos submitted

Eastwood, Leno are writein presidential picks

fixed-rate gas contracts, that arent available at regulated prices. Aggregating the number does not give the whole picture, said Bethany Ruhe, a spokeswoman for Houstonbased Direct Energy. Customers have literally saved hundreds of millions of dollars ... because of the existence of the competitive market, said Vince Parisi, general counsel for IGS Energy in Dublin. Both Direct Energy and IGS market unregulated gas contracts in Columbia territory. Columbia spokesman Ken Stammen said customers are still responsible for making good decisions in a competitive marketplace. ?Choice offers the opportunity of savings but not the guarantee of savings, he said. Ohio State University energy economist Matthew Lewis said consumers might choose options that arent in their financial interest out of fear of price increases or complacency. According to the PUCO, about 40 percent of Columbias 1.3 million residential and business customers are on choice contracts. The rest either pay the regulated price or receive low-income assistance. All Columbia customers paid regulated prices before 1997. Clarence Rogers Jr. of Cleveland, a PUCO board member from 2001 to 2006, said the new figures should be of concern to Ohio regulators. The general belief was that customers would save money, he said.

CANTON (AP) Actor Clint Eastwood, New York Jets quarterback Tim Tebow and comedian Jon Stewart all received write-in votes for president in the battleground state of Ohio. A review by The Canton Repository of ballots cast Tuesday found submissions silly, stupid and sublime among 242 writeins cast in Stark County. There were votes for God and Jesus; for Tebow, car racing icon Richard Petty and other sports stars; for fictional characters including Tigger, Cookie Monster and Eric Cartman, the foul-mouthed schoolboy from TVs South Park; and votes for Eastwood, Stewart and Jay Leno. One voter wrote in Democratic U.S. Sen. John Kerry, eight years too late. The countys deputy elections director said votes for unregistered candidates dont count, but theyre a good source of entertainment.

Check us out online: www.delphosherald.com

Cant Seem to put us Down?

Neither can the subscribers who read our newspaper for local news, information and so much more! Get a heads-up on whats happening locally and beyond; call 419-695-0015 to subscribe.

Although you may not be a customer of All American Energy we have pipeline facilities that may be on or near your property. These facilities serve our current customers in the Ottoville and Ft. Jennings area. These pipeline facilities are operated and maintained to ensure safe and reliable service for these areas.

All American Energy Natural Gas Facility Information


We Want To Provide You With Information To Help Keep You Safe

Leakage Recognition and Response

How to recognize a gas leak: 1. A distinctive (gas) odor rotten egg smell. 2. A shrill blowing or hissing sound. 3. Dirt being blown or thrown into the air. 4. Water being blown into the air at a pond, creek or river. 5. Fire apparently coming from the ground or burning above the ground. 6. Patches or brown vegetation in a green grassy area on or near the pipeline right-of-way. 7. Dry spot on moist field. 8. Bubbles appearing on the surface of water.

Ohio Utility Protection Service (OUPS) Call Before You Dig

If you suspect a natural gas leak please call 1-877-2465100. This is our 24 hour a day emergency number. If you smell gas in your home leave immediately and go to a neighbors house to call.

Keep Your Retirement on Solid Ground


Even If Things at Work Are Up in the Air.
Additional Information

If you are planning to do any digging on your property (planting trees, installing a fence, etc.) you are required by law to call the Ohio Utility Protection Service (OUPS). Their number is 1-800-362-2764. You can also reach them by dialing 811. This call must be made 48 working hours (2 working days) in advance of the planned work. This call initiates contact with your local utility companies so they can mark the location of their underground facilities on your property. Those facilities can then be avoided when you dig. If you have questions, would like additional information or are interested in natural gas service please call All American Energys office at 1-888-527-2494.

CONGRATULATIONS VIRGINIA WANNEMACHER


WEEK 10 WINNER

WINNER

Living in the Now, Preparing for the Future

Few things are as stressful as worrying about work. Because its easy to feel like things are out of control, its essential to consider any financial decision carefully. This is especially true when it comes to your retirement savings.

Edward remain constant: financial indepenFor many of us, our goals in lifeJones can help. Well start by getting to know your goals. Then well balance between saving dence and providing for family. Striking a sort through your current situation and work with you face to face to allocating for goals, such as education and retirement, and develop a strategy that can help you keep your challenging. But you can money for daily expenses can beretirement on track. do it.

Learn how you can redefine your savings approach To make sense of your retirement savings alternatives, toward education andor visit today. or visit today. call retirement. Call

Andy North North Andy


.

Jill Miller, DDS Steven M. Jones, DDS


Welcome the association of

STEAK FEED
FIREMENS CLUBHOUSE
911 Lima Ave., Delphos

Delphos Fire Association


with all the trimmings

Tuesday, Nov. 13

Financial Advisor Advisor Financial .

General Dentistry

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

419-695-0660

NEW PATIENTS WELCOME


Located on S.R. 309 in Elida
Member SIPC

Joe Patton, DDS


myddsoffice.com

www.edwardjones.com

419-331-0031

www.edwardjones.com

Member SIPC

PUBLIC INVITED

8 $ 00 10
$ 00
Carry Out No Presale

Dine In

daytime, evening and weekend hours available.

Serving 6 PM to 8 PM

4A The Herald

POLITICS

Monday, November 12, 2012

www.delphosherald.com

This is the lesson that history teaches: repetition.

Gertrude Stein, American author (1874-1946).

info emerges about 2nd woman in Petraeus case


The AssOciATed Press WASHINGTON As questions swirl about the extramarital affair that led to the resignation of CIA Director David Petraeus, the retired general and his biographer, Paula Broadwell, have been quiet about details of their relationship. However, information has emerged about the woman who received the emails from Broadwell that led to the FBIs discovery of Petraeus indiscretion. A senior U.S. military official identified the second woman as Jill Kelley, 37, who lives in Tampa, Fla., and serves as an unpaid social liaison to MacDill Air Force Base in Tampa, where the militarys Central Command and Special Operations Command are located. In a statement Sunday, Kelley and her husband, Scott, said: We and our family have been friends with Gen. Petraeus and his family for over five years. We respect his and his familys privacy and want the same for us and our three children. The military official who identified Kelley spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to publicly discuss the investigation. He said Kelley had received harassing emails from Broadwell, which led the FBI to examine her email account and eventually discover her relationship with Petraeus. The FBI contacted Petraeus and other intelligence officials, and Director of National Intelligence James Clapper asked Petraeus to resign. A former associate of Petraeus confirmed the target of the emails was Kelley, but said there was no affair between the two, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss the retired generals private life. The associate, who has been in touch with Petraeus since his resignation, said Kelley and her husband were longtime friends of Petraeus and his wife, Holly. Petraeus, 60, quit Friday after acknowledging an extramarital relationship. He has been married 38 years to Holly Petraeus, with whom he has two adult children, including a son who led an infantry

One Year Ago St. Johns Elementary School fifth-graders listened to veterans Paul Baumgarte, Bob Metcalfe and Larry Luersman as they shared their experiences in military service as part of Veterans Day activities at the school on Thursday. 25 Years Ago 1987 American Legion and Veterans of Foreign Wars and auxiliaries paid tribute to American veterans at 11 a.m. Wednesday with an 18-gun salute. Among those participating were Richard Hugel, Neil Leininger, Mickey Vondran, Harold Vonderembse, Barney Will and Bud Kaverman. Students from the studio of Marleen Wehri will present a piano recital Nov. 15 at St. Peter Lutheran Church, North Pierce Street. On Nov. 7 several students participated in the Ohio Music Teacher Associations Blue Ribbon Festival. Those students who performed included Leah Morris, Jimmie Mox, Kendra and Marshall Thompson, Katie Wehri and Margot Downey. Ottoville Ohio Child Conservation League Growing Together recently held husbands night out. Dottie Oberg was hostess and Rosie Heitmeyer was co-hostess. A hayride was held and chili was served to 14 members and husbands. Next meeting will be Dec. 10 in the home of Carol Giesken. 50 Years Ago 1962 Delphos Country Club, Inc., will hold its fourth annual Thanksgiving party and dinner Nov. 17 at the clubhouse. Turkey and all the trimmings are on the dinner menu. Games will be provided as entertainment with prizes being awarded. Mr. and Mrs. Steve Dickman are serving as chairmen for the party. They will be assisted by Mr. and Mrs. Ray Pohlman, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Grone, Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Kill and Mr. and Mrs. Paul Kill. Delphos cage fans are in for a treat Nov. 17 when the Harlem Satellites come to town. A team of Delphos AllStars, being organized by Gilbert (Gip) Pohlman will take on these merry-mad men of basketball. Tickets for this cage event are on sale at the House of Vogts, at the Chew Chew Restaurant, at the Cozy Confectionery and at St. Johns High School office. Tam Chapter of Alpha Delta Omega Sorority held its regular meeting Thursday evening in the home of Mrs. Calvin Fox, North Jefferson Street. An interesting program on leather work and tooling was presented by Mrs. Fox. In card games played first prize was awarded to Mrs. Bill Prine and second to Mrs. Vernon Clevenger. 75 Years Ago 1937 Armistice Day was observed in a most quiet manner in Delphos Thursday. The only public observance was that of Commemorative Post, American Legion. The members of that organization marched from their hall to the Memorial Park at the rear of the post office and conducted memorial services for departed comrades. A party of Delphos deer hunters returned from Canada late Wednesday night and brought back with them four deer. Their camp was established 10 miles north of Thassolen, Ontario, Canada. The deer ranged in weight from 275 to 166 pounds. The members of the party reported that the weather was ideal for hunting with little snow. Members of the party were R. N. Upperman, Ed. Auer, Roman Williams and Frank Baldauf. Mrs. Ed. Dickman and Mrs. Stephen Dickman entertained the members of the Laff-a-Lott Club and three guests Wednesday evening. Guests were Mrs. John Kundert, Mrs. Fred Kundert and Mrs. Otis Benson. The party was arranged in the form of a hard-times affair. For the cleverest costume, Mrs. Benson received the honors.

IT WAS NEWS THEN

Senators propose comprehensive immigration changes

Moderately confused

WASHINGTON (AP) Two senators on opposite sides of the aisle are proposing comprehensive changes to the immigration laws that would include a pathway to citizenship for the estimated 11 million illegal immigrants now in the United States. Democrat Chuck Schumer of New York and Republican Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, who promoted similar proposals on separate Sunday news shows said that no path to citizenship would be available until the countrys borders were secure. Only then could those in the U.S. without authorization come out of the shadows, get biometrically identified, start paying taxes, pay a fine for the law they broke, Graham told CBS Face the Nation. They cant stay unless they learn our language, and they have to get in the back of line before they become citizens. They cant cut in front of the line regarding people who are doing it right and it can take over a decade to get their green card. A green card grants permanent residency status a step toward citizenship. Schumer told NBCs Meet the Press that he and Graham have resumed talks on immigration policy that broke off two years ago and have put together a comprehensive detailed blueprint on immigration reform that has the real potential for bipartisan support based on the theory that most Americans are for legal immigration, but very much against illegal immigration. Graham, however, made no mention of working with the chairman of the Senate Judiciary subcommittee on immigration, refugees and border security. Immigration policy, largely ignored during President Barack Obamas first four years in office, has re-emerged as a major issue as Republicans seek ways to rebound from their election performance. More than 70 percent of Hispanic voters supported Obama, who has been more open than Republicans to comprehensive overhaul of immigration laws. Three days after Tuesdays election, House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, said it was time to address immigration policy. He urged Obama to take the lead in coming up with a plan that would look at both improved enforcement of immigration law and the future of the estimated 11 million people living in the country illegally. Boehner, however, did not commit to the citizenship issue. Graham said that the tone and rhetoric Republicans used in the immigration debate of 2006 and 2007 has built a wall between the Republican Party and Hispanic community, causing Hispanic support to dwindle from 44 percent in 2004 to 27 percent in 2012. This is an odd formula for a party to adopt, the fastest growing demographic in the country, and were losing votes every election. Its one thing to shoot yourself in the foot, just dont reload the gun. I intend not to reload this gun when it comes to Hispanics. I intend to tear this wall down and pass an immigration reform bill thats an American solution to an American problem, he said. Both senators said the overhaul would include developing a secure document to assure employers theyre hiring people authorized to work in the country, and allowing legal immigration for needed workers at all skill levels. The path to citizenship would require immigrants to learn English, go to the back of the citizenship line, have a job and not commit crimes.

Deficit cutters look to Pentagon budget


By dONNA cAssATA The Associated Press WASHINGTON One war is done, another is winding down and the calls to cut the deficit are deafening. The military, a beneficiary of robust budgets for more than a decade, is coming to grips with a new reality fewer dollars. The election accelerated an already shifting political dynamic that next year will pair a second-term Democratic president searching for spending cuts with tea partyers and conservatives intent on preserving lower tax rates above all else, even if it means once unheard of reductions in defense. President Barack Obama and Congress have just a few weeks to figure out how to avert the automatic cuts to defense and domestic programs totaling $110 billion next year. Those reductions are part of the so-called fiscal cliff of expiring Bush-era tax cuts and the across-the-board cuts that Defense Secretary Leon Panetta has warned would be devastating to the military. All sides are trying to come up with a deficit-cutting plan of $1.2 trillion over 10 years. Any solution that might emerge from the high-stakes negotiations before the Jan. 2 deadline likely would include some reductions in the military budget, which has nearly doubled in the last decade to half a trillion dollars. That amount doesnt include the hundreds of billions of dollars spent on the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Projected defense spending over the next 10 years was expected to grow to $640 billion. In the parlance of Willie Sutton, who supposedly said he robbed banks because thats where the money was, the military budget is where the dollars are for Washington negotiators. It is a big piggybank, said former Wyoming Sen. Alan Simpson, a Republican who along with Democrat Erskine Bowles had recommended $4 trillion in budget cuts over a decade, including deep reductions in defense, as part of a special presiden-

platoon in Afghanistan as an Army lieutenant. The Petraeus news caught much of Washington by surprise and members of Congress said Sunday they want to know more details about the FBI investigation that revealed the extramarital affair between Petraeus and his biographer. They questioned when the retired general popped up in the FBI inquiry, whether national security was compromised and why they werent told sooner. Petraeus affair with Broadwell will be the subject of meetings Wednesday involving congressional intelligence committee leaders, FBI deputy director Sean Joyce and CIA deputy director Michael Morell. Petraeus had been scheduled to appear before congressional committees on Thursday to testify about the Sept. 11 attack on the U.S. Consulate in Benghazi, Libya, that killed four Americans, including U.S. Ambassador Chris Stevens. Morell was expected to testify in place of Petraeus, and lawmakers said he should have the answers to their questions.

WASHINGTON The headline was inevitable: What went wrong? Seriously? Republicans plan to commence focus groups and voterbased polls to discover the mystery behind their loss. Having sat staring into space the past couple of days, they now want to get to the bottom of it. The bubble in which most politicians and their staffs live is not just a metaphor, apparently. The answer has been so obvious for so long and in so many ways, one has to wonder what these people read in their spare time? Old issues of Boys Life? If nothing else, one only had to look at the two political conventions. One was colorful, vibrant, excited and happy. The other was pale, moribund, staid and restrained. If the latter sounds like something in the final stages of life, youre not far off. A couple of weeks before the election, I spoke to an audience of about 450 in Florida, the demographics of which were about 80 percent male, 90 percent Republican and, oh, about 99.9 percent white. What could be more fun than that! Alas, the bulk of my talk was criticism of the Republican Party. If Mitt Romney loses, I told them, it will be largely the fault of the party. As I spelled out the details, nary a creature was stirring. It was painfully quiet. Even my best jokes fell flat. Hey, guys, that was funny! It was hard to tell whether they resented the messenger or whether they were trying to digest the unpalatable truth. Truth is often painful and the days following President Obamas re-election have been a salted slugfest. Amid the

What they learned


KATHLEEN PARKER

tial commission in December 2010. If you cant get in there and start getting stuff out of there when you have a defense budget of $740 billion bucks and the defense budget of every major country on earth, 17 of them, including Russia and China, is $540 billion combined. Who is joshing who? asked Simpson. Thats madness, madness. One possible starting point is the recommendation of Senate Armed Services Committee Chairman Carl Levin, D-Mich., who indicated earlier this year that he would be willing to accept additional defense cuts of $10 billion a year as part of any solution to avoid the acrossthe-board cuts. I think its got to be all one package, and defense has to participate. Everything has to be on the table, said former Sen. Sam Nunn, D-Ga., a predecessor of Levin at the helm of Armed Services who also insisted that the rising cost of Social Security and Medicare needs to be addressed.

Point of View
writhing, I rest my case. Some Republicans stubbornly insist, of course, that the problem was that Romney wasnt conservative enough. Really? In his heart, this may be true. I never believed Romney was passionate about social issues. He embraced them because he had to, but had no intention of pursuing a socially conservative agenda. But the real problem is the Republican Party, which would not be recognizable to its patron saint, Ronald Reagan. The party doesnt need a poll or a focus group. It needs a mirror. The truth is, Romney was better than the GOP deserved. Party nitwits undermined him and the self-righteous tried to bring him down. The nitwits are well-enough known at this point those farthest-right social conservatives who couldnt find it in their hearts to keep their traps shut. No abortion for rape or incest? Sit down. Legitimate rape? Put on your clown suit and go play in the street. Equally damaging were the primary leeches who embarrassed the party and wouldnt leave the stage. Nine-ninenine, were talking about you, Herman Cain. And Gov. Oops? You, too. And then there were Rick Santorum and Michele Bachmann, who never had a real shot at the nomination and certainly could never win a national election, yet they refused to surrender to the certain nominee.

Did they have a right to persist in their own fantasies? Sure. But not if they were serious about getting a Republican in the White House. Thus, for months and months, Romney had to spend his energy and, importantly, his money to prevail in the primaries against opponents who had no chance and who ultimately hurt him. During that same precious time, Obamas campaign was busy pinpointing specific voters, practically learning the names of their dogs, and buying ads in niche markets. More to the point, the GOP seems willfully clueless. Theres a reason there are so few minorities in the party. Theres a reason women scrambled to the other side. Theres a reason Hispanics, including even Cuban-Americans this time, went for Obama. The way forward is about love, not war, baby. Womens reproductive rights need to come off the table. As Haley Barbour suggested long ago, agree to disagree. Compassionate immigration reform, including a path to citizenship, should be the centerpiece of a conservative partys agenda. Marginalize or banish those who in any way make AfricanAmericans, gays, single women or any other human being feel unwelcome in a party that cherishes the values of limited government, low taxes and freedom. A large swath of conservative-minded Americans are Democrats and independents by default. Mitt Romney would have been a fine president and might have won the day but for the party he had to please. Kathleen Parkers email address is kathleenparker@ washpost.com.

www.delphosherald.com

Monday, November 12, 2012

The Herald 5A

COMMUNITY
LANDMARK
YOUR NEWSPAPER ... STILL THE BEST BUY IN THE NEIGHBORHOOD.

Putnam County Courthouse

CALENDAR OF
EVENTS
TODAY 6 p.m. Middle Point Village Council meets 7-9 p.m. The Delphos Canal Commission Annex Museum, 241 N. Main St., will be open. 7 p.m. Marion Township trustees at township house. Middle Point council meets at town hall. 8 p.m. Delphos City Schools Board of Education meets at the administration office. Delphos Knights of Columbus meet at the K of C hall. TUESDAY 11:30 a.m. Mealsite at Delphos Senior Citizen Center, 301 Suthoff Street. 6:30 p.m. Delphos Lions Club, Eagles Lodge, 1600 E. Fifth 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. 8:30 p.m. Elida village council meets at the town hall.
Photo submitted

Happy Birthday
NOV. 13 Alyssa Berelsman Zachary Saum Corey Koverman Anne Watkins Dick Miller Mindy Merricle Tom Bilimek Kyle Williams Paige Bradley Evan Martz NOV. 14 Jim Weeden Leonard Warnecke Patrick Kleman Marcus Krendl Jared Honigford Madilyn Conley Garrett Trentman

In todays world, fifty cents doesnt buy a heck of a lot except of course, when it comes to your newspaper. For less than the cost of a soda, you can get word from across town or across the nation. For less than the price of a cup of coffee, you can get your fill of local news, politics, or whatever else is your cup of tea. With something new to greet you each day, from cover to cover, your newspaper is still the most streetwise buy in town! The Delphos Herald 419-695-0015 ext. 122

Landeck students raise $1,916 for St. Judes

TAYLORS AUTO SALES, INC.


SELECTED INSPECTED GUARANTEED
AWD, Maple Met., Graphite leather, 43K tan, 92K, clean, 3 seats, leather, FWD

Summer Savings
The

SIZZLING
FIRST RULE
Of advertising is to get their attention
The

Landeck recently finished the St. Jude Childrens Research Hospital Math-AThon. The 48 students who participated raised a total of $1,915.98 this year. Since 1988, Landeck students have raised approximately $34,439 for St. Jude. They are very grateful to our students and families who have participated in this for many years. St. Jude Childrens Research Hospital uses these funds to continue its lifesaving programs of research, patient care, and education. Holding some of the prizes they earned are Math-A-Thon students Lauren French, front left, and Levi Rode; and back, Leila Jefferson, Kaylee Buzard and Braxton Scalf.

231 S. Walnut St. Van Wert, Ohio 45891 Phone: 419-238-6440 Fax: 419-238-9715

4-dr., lt gold mist, two tone cocoa, cashmere leather interior, sunroof, loaded, 12K Mini van, gray, hot leather, DVD, loaded, two sun roof, 6K 3.6,V6, chromes, hot leather, sunroof, 3K

2012 BUICK REGAL CXL

2008 HYUNDAI SANTA FE LTD

2012 NISSAN QUEST SLE 2012 CHRYSLER 300 Black,

2006 BUICK RENDEVOUS 4 dr., 2007 BUICK LUCERNE 2006 JEEP GRAND CHEROKEE LTD Hemi, 4x4, Nav,

BUCKEYE CHARTER

4-Dr., V-8, lt. gold mist, 6-pass, 38K, Florida estate car, like new

WEDNESDAY 9 a.m. - noon Putnam SECOND*On select models w/approved credit. Limited time offer. RULE County Museum is open, 202 Is sustained E. Main St. Kalida. repeated 11:30 a.m. Mealsite at Delphos Senior Citizen advertising Center, 301 Suthoff Street. Noon Rotary Club Phone Apply online at www.superior-auto.com meets at The Grind. The Delphos Van Wert 4 p.m. orDelphos Public S. Shannon St., at 1053 Herald Library board members meet 419-238-7314 at the library conference 419-695-0015 room.

214 DELIVERS*
Thanksgiving Food Drive going on now!
Reduce the price of your new vehicle purchase by making a donation
* See dealer for details, limited time offer. Some restrictions apply.

Casino Trips
$

AWD, Diamond white, graphite, hot & cold leather, Dbl. sunroof, 2 DVDs, tow pack, chromes

2012 BUICK ENCLAVE CXL 2012 CHEVY CAPTIVA

DVD, Sunroof, chromes, black graphite leather, 105K 4x4, 1/2 ton, NAV - DVD-Sunroof, tow pack., silver, lt gray, leather, 116K

2005 CHEVY SUBURBAN LT

30

2012 DODGE GRAND CARAVAN CREW

4-Dr., V6, white, Two Tone, FWD, cloth, loaded, 1K

Stow & Go, Black Met., Black Cloth, V6, Loaded, 8K

engine, 62K, excellent condition

2005 CADILLAC CTS LUXURY SPORT Med. charcoal, black leather, 3.6 2005 TOYOTA SEQUOIA SR5 WAGON white/gray trim, only 57K mi., 2004 ACURA TL 4 Dr, ruby red, gray
leather, sunroof, loaded, 113K

AWD, 4 door, red met/lt grey leather, quades chromes, 15K Met., Custom trim, chromes, moon, 24K

2012 GMC ACADIA SLT

2011 LINCOLN MKZ 4-Dr., Dark Gray

one lady owner

both loaded.

2 - 2011 BUICK LUCERNE CXL Both silver, one 6 pass., one 2K, one 33K, 2010 MERCURY MARINER PREMIERE V6, AWD, Nav-Sunroof,

rust, 125K

2004 PONTIAC MONTANA EXT 7 pass., bronze, full power, clean, no 2002 GMC SONOMA

Loaded, 8K

1/2 ton, ext. cab, sport side, 4.3 V6, auto, A/c, full power, white, 88K

AWD, 7-pass Van, 29K, pine mist met., gray cloth, full power, extra clean

2010 TOYOTA COROLLA SPORT Silver, 25K 2010 TOYOTA SIENNA LE 2010 DODGE CHARGER 2010 MAZDA 6
V-6, 4 Door, black, roof, 24K, loaded

2001 LINCOLN CONTINENTAL

Wednesdays, Nov. 14 & Dec. 12


Delphos & Van Wert $10 casino play & $10 dining FREE slot tournament Call for reservations

4 Door, SXT, orange leather, roof, 22K, V-6

4 DR, Lt tan leather, quater top, fullpower, 92K

2000 LINCOLN TOWNCAR EXECUTIVE 2000 CHEVY CAMARO


3800 V6, auto, A/C, burgundy, only 85K

Blue, met-gray leahter, only 64K

FWD, 3.6 V6, silver, hot lt gray leather, full power, only 29K

2009 SATURN VUE XR

1991 MERCURY CAPRI CONVERTIBLE


4 cyl, auto, A/C, red, 81K, clean

EXTENDED HOURS:
00049084

Now Open Until 6 p.m. Saturdays!

Online at www.superior-auto.com Online at www.superior-auto.com or at 2094 Allentown Rd., 1053 1053 S. St., or atS. Shannon Shannon St., Van Wert Lima Van Wert

See us on the web ...TaylorAutoSalesInc.com


Over 60 Years in Business
See Gary Taylor or Gary Miller or Roy Salisbury

419-238-7314 419-238-7314 419-229-3487

877-864-9608

OPEN: Mon., Tues., Thurs., Fri. 8:00-6:00; Wednesday 8:00-5:30; Saturday 9:00-12:00

HKB&G

HUFFMAN, KELLEY, BROCK & GOTTSCHALK, LLC


ATTORNEYS AT LAW 540 W. Market St. Lima, OH 45801 (419) 227-3423 Fax (419) 221-3592 info@540westmarket.com www.540westmarket.com

Let us host your party.


Reception Hall Banquet Center Openings available for this holiday season

LOOKING FOR FAST FLAT TV REPAIR? Call Us! We Looking For Great Buys Repair Lamps Too! on Used TVs? 419-695-1229
50 YEARS OF SERVICE
www.hohenbrinktv.com

The law firm of Huffman, Kelley, Brock & Gottschalk, LLC is pleased to announce that has joined the firm as an associate attorney. Andrew received his Bachelors Degree from Bowling Green State University and his law degree from Ohio Northern University. Andrew, a graduate of Kalida High School, and his wife Amanda, reside in Delphos, Ohio.

Andrew D. Knueve

Springbrook Gardens
4240 N. West St. Lima, OH 419-233-1530 or 419-235-1261

54 YEARS OF SERVICE
11230 Elida Rd., Delphos

Come See Us!! HOHENBRINK TV HOHENBRINK TV


419-695-1229

ACTIVE DUTY MILITARY & VETERANS


THANK YOU FOR YOUR SERVICE FOR OUR COUNTRY.

419-695-1229 11230 Elida Rd., Delphos www.hohenbrinktv.com

NOW AVAILABLE...

Veterans, Active Duty Personnel, Spouses & Minor Dependents


DO YOU KNOW WHAT YOUR BENEFITS ARE?

PIZZA BY THE SLICE


Also serving every morning breakfast pizza by the slice Try a slice of our morning sunrise with egg, bacon & hash browns, green peppers. Wild Western with egg, ham, green peppers.
Buy one slice get one

662 Elida Ave., Delphos

NEW

419-223-8522
Allen County Veterans Service Commission

ys Alwa ious & elic Hot, D y to Go! Read

FREE!
(for limited time)

419-692-0007
Open 5 a.m.-9 p.m.

6A The Herald

Monday, November 12, 2012

COLUMBUS The Ohio High School Athletic Association announced the pairings and neutral-site selections for the regional finals of the football playoffs Sunday afternoon. The pairings are listed below and can also be found in the football weekly release and notes packet, which is posted at: www.ohsaa.org/news/ sports/2012OHSAAFootballRele ase4.pdf In addition, the OHSAA has announced how the regional champions will be paired in the state semifinals Nov. 23-24. That information is found in the pairings below. Notes and playoff histories of all remaining teams can be found in the football weekly release linked above. The football Tournament Central website, which contains the brackets, weekly press releases, ticket information and televised games schedule is posted at: www. ohsaa.org/sports/ft/boys/2012/ TournamentCentral.htm Radio stations are invited to carry the OHSAA Radio Networks broadcasts of the state championship games. Stations that opt into an affiliate plan can have reduced or waived broadcast rights fees for playoff games they broadcast themselves. Contact Tim Stried, Director of Information Services at tstried@ ohsaa.org, for more information or visit www.OHSAA.org/news/ Radio/radiohome.asp. OHSAA Football Regional Final Pairings Home Team Listed First Division I Games scheduled for 7 p.m. (unless noted) on Saturday Region 1: 4 Mentor (11-1) vs. 2 Cleveland St. Ignatius (11-1) at Parma Byers Field Region 2: 1 Massillon Washington (11-1) vs. 2 Toledo Whitmer (12-0) at Mansfield Arlin Field Region 3: 4 Pickerington North (11-1) vs. 7 Hilliard Davidson (102) at Ohio Wesleyan University Selby Stadium Region 4: 1 Cincinnati Colerain (12-0) vs. 3 Cincinnati Archbishop Moeller (9-3) at University of Cincinnati Nippert Stadium, 7:30 p.m. Division I State Semifinals, Sat., Nov. 24: Region 1 vs. Region 2 Region 3 vs. Region 4 Division I State Championship: Saturday, Dec. 1, 7 p.m., Canton Fawcett Stadium Division II Games scheduled for 7:30 p.m. Friday Region 5: 4 Chardon (10-2) vs. 3 Aurora (11-1) at Twinsburg Tiger Stadium Region 6: 4 Avon (11-1) vs. 2 Toledo Central Catholic (11-1) at Clyde Robert Bishop Jr. Stadium Region 7: 4 New Albany (10-2) vs. 3 Columbus MarionFranklin (11-1) at Gahanna Lincoln Stadium Region 8: 1 Cincinnati Turpin (12-0) vs. 6 Trotwood-Madison (10-2) at Kings Stadium Division II State Semifinals, Fri., Nov. 23: Region 5 vs. Region 6 Region 7 vs. Region 8 Division II State Championship: Friday, Nov. 30, 7 p.m., Massillon Paul Brown Tiger Stadium Division III Games sched-

OHSAA Regional Final pairings announced

Bengals revive season, beat reeling Giants 31-13


By JOE KAY The Associated Press CINCINNATI The best game of Andy Daltons career saved the Cincinnati Bengals season, ended their 4-game losing streak and provided a chance to get back into playoff contention with a strong closing run. Things arent so upbeat for the defending Super Bowl champions. Sure, the New York Giants are still in first place but their trend is definitely down. Dalton threw a career-high four touchdown passes each to a different receiver for a 31-13 victory Sunday that left the Bengals revived and the Giants reeling. The Bengals (4-5) knew they had to win the game to have any realistic chance of making it to the playoffs. Now, they get to play Kansas City and Oakland the next two weeks with an opportunity to get back over .500. The odds are still against them but the win over New York (6-3) kept them in it for at least a little while longer. To beat the defending Super Bowl champs is a big deal, said Andrew Hawkins, who had the second of the Bengals four touchdown catches. The NFL has great parity. This was a great example of it. Today, we played extremely well. Spirits were high. The Bengals were spirited leading up to the game. Pro Bowl receiver A.J. Green told a New York sports radio station that the Giants have a lot of holes on their defense, which has given up a lot of big plays. Some of the Giants were miffed. Safety Antrel Rolle replied hed let his pads do the talking during the game. Rolle gave up one of the four TD passes and the Giants were pretty much out of words to describe their all-around worst showing of the season. Its starting to feel familiar. Last season, the Giants also opened 6-2, then dropped four in a row. The Giants won three of their last four to reach the playoffs, where they got hot at the right time. Obviously, we know that last year we went through a tough stretch and we were able to come out and win some games when we needed to, get back in the mix and make the playoffs, Eli Manning said. We still have the lead in the division now. The Giants remain ahead of Dallas (4-5) in the NFC East but head into their bye week with a lot of problems. The most puzzling ones involve the offense, which was one of the leagues best the first six weeks but has fallen apart. Manning threw for only 125 yards his lowest total in four years during a sloppy 24-20 loss to Pittsburgh a week ago. That showing could be excused after the Giants spent their preparation week dealing with the fallout of Superstorm Sandy. There was no explanation for this one. Manning threw two interceptions in the third quarter that set up Cincinnati touchdowns and the Giants had four turnovers in the second half. Plus, Cruz dropped a potential touchdown pass while the Bengals pulled away. Thats what won the game for us; getting the ball with great field position and scoring when we got down there, said Dalton, who was 21-of-30 for 199 yards without a sack or interception. Manning was 29-of-46 for 215 yards with no touchdowns, a season-high four sacks, the two interceptions and a fumble. I still believe Eli will bounce back and will play the way that he has played, at a championship level, Giants coach Tom Coughlin said. I certainly dont quite understand where we are and why. Manning couldnt uphold the family legacy of beating the Bengals. A week earlier, older brother Peyton led the Denver Broncos to a 31-23 win in Cincinnati, improving to 8-0 career against the Bengals. Even though he got a scouting report from his brother during the week, Eli couldnt pull it off before a less-than-capacity crowd of 56,614. He fell to 1-2 career against Cincinnati. The Giants defense also has big issues. Cornerback Corey Webster let Green run past him along the sideline on the games fifth play, thinking a safety was behind him to help. Wrong. Green was wide open for a 56-yard touchdown that proved Greens point. Right away, hed found a huge hole in New Yorks defense. The Giants have given up 39 passes of 20 yards or more, 10 for touchdowns. Green had seven catches for a game-high 85 yards. NOTES: The home team has won every game in the series, which the Bengals lead 6-3. ... Giants WR Domenik Hixon left in the first quarter with an ankle injury and didnt return. ... It was the first time this season that Dalton didnt throw an interception. ... Green has a TD catch in eight straight games, tying T.J. Houshmandzadeh for secondlongest streak in Bengals history. ... There were nearly 9,000 unused seats at Paul Brown. SAINTS 31, FALCONS 27 NEW ORLEANS Jimmy Graham caught seven passes for a career-best 146 yards and two touchdowns, cornerback Jabari Greer made a diving, touchdownsaving pass breakup on a late fourth-down play and the New Orleans Saints held on to hand the Atlanta Falcons their first loss, 31-27, Graham and his Atlanta counterpart, veteran tight end Tony Gonzalez, both were superb in a game that showcased all the intensity and drama of one of the NFLs most passionate and longstanding rivalries. Gonzalez finished with 11 catches for 122 yards and two scores for Atlanta (8-1) and in the process became the first tight end to catch 100 touchdown passes. Brees threw for 298 yards and three TDs as the Saints (4-5) won for the fourth time in five games, keeping alive hope of getting back into the wild card race after an 0-4 start. TEXANS 13, BEARS 6 CHICAGO Arian Foster finished with 102 yards rushing and a touchdown catch and Houston intercepted Jay Cutler twice before knocking him out of the game with a concussion on their way to a soggy win. In a showdown between two of the NFLs best teams, the Texans (8-1) beat the Bears (7-2) at their own game. They came away with four takeaways and Tim Dobbins delivered the biggest blow when he drove his helmet into Cutler late in the second quarter. Foster was the only reliable offensive weapon on either side, particularly in the first half when he ran for 85 yards and made a sprawling catch for a 2-yard touchdown to put Houston ahead 10-3. 49ERS 24, RAMS 24 (OT, tie) SAN FRANCISCO San Francisco and St. Louis played the NFLs first tie game in four years as kickers from both teams missed overtime field goals in Sundays 24-24 outcome. Greg Zuerlein kicked a 53-yarder but the Rams were penalized 5 yards for delay of game. He tried again from 58 as coach Jeff Fisher played for the win and missed wide right with 2:42 left in OT. San Franciscos David Akers missed wide left on a 41-yard attempt that could have sealed it for the 49ers (6-2-1), who lost quarterback Alex Smith to a firsthalf concussion. And just when it seemed the 49ers and Akers typically reliable left leg would have one more chance to win it, San Francisco linebacker Patrick Willis was flagged for holding Lance Kendricks on third down. That extended St. Louis last drive, a costly mistake in a long list of them on an uncharacteristically sloppy day by coach Jim Harbaughs team. Akers booted a tying 33-yarder with 3 seconds left in regulation after Sam Bradford threw a 2-yard touchdown pass to Austin Pettis with 1:09 remaining. The Rams are 3-5-1. SEAHAWKS 28, JETS 7 SEATTLE Russell Wilson threw touchdowns of 38 yards to Golden Tate and 31 yards to Sidney Rice and Seattle sent the Jets to their worst start since 2007. Wilson was harried for much of the day by the multiple looks from the Jets defense. But the Seattle rookie responded with key throws, hitting Tate on the opening drive, then connecting with Rice early in the fourth quarter to give Seattle (6-4) a 2-score advantage. Tate added a TD pass on a reverse to Rice later in the fourth quarter. Mark Sanchez struggled in his reunion with Seattle coach Pete Carroll, his former coach at USC. Sanchez threw a costly interception at the goal line in the first half, then fumbled at the Seattle 32. Muhammad Wilkersons fumble return for a TD was the only score for New York (3-6). COWBOYS 38, EAGLES 23 PHILADELPHIA Tony Romo threw a pair of touchdowns, Dwayne Harris had a 78-yard punt return for a score and Brandon Carr returned an interception 47 yards for a TD. The Cowboys improved to 4-5. The Eagles (3-6) lost Michael Vick to a concussion after consecutive bruising hits in the second quarter and have lost five straight games under coach Andy Reid for the first time in his 14 seasons. Nick Foles filled in for Vick and briefly rallied the Eagles until the Cowboys started showing some touchdown versatility. Romo hit Dez Bryant on a 30-yard pass on the final play of the third quarter and Harris and Carr scored their TDs in the fourth quarter. BRONCOS 36, PANTHERS 14 CHARLOTTE, N.C. Peyton Manning made sure John Foxs return to Carolina was a successful one, throwing for 301 yards and a touchdown. Manning threw his 420th touchdown pass to move into a tie for second place on the NFLs all-time list with Dan Marino. He trails only Brett Favre (508). Manning had plenty of help from his teammates. Von Miller harassed Cam Newton all day and Trindon Holliday returned a punt 76 yards for a touchdown as the Broncos (6-3) won for the fifth time in six weeks. The Broncos sacked Newton seven times, including once for a safety, and Miller pressured him into an interception Tony Carter returned 40 yards for a score. Fox, who coached the Panthers for nine seasons, downplayed his return all week but celebrated with a few fist pumps Sunday. PATRIOTS 37, BILLS 31 FOXBOROUGH, Mass. Tom Brady threw for two touchdowns, Devin McCourty ended Buffalos hopes with an interception in the end zone and New England kept Buffalo winless at Gillette Stadium. The Patriots (6-3) let a 17-3 lead slip to 34-31 with 7:47 left on Ryan Fitzpatricks 2-yard touchdown pass to Donald Jones. Then the Bills (3-6) held the Patriots to a 27-yard field goal by Stephen Gostkowski with 2:06 remaining. Buffalo then moved to a second-and-10 at the New England 15 before Fitzpatrick threw the ball right into the hands of McCourty while trying to hit T.J. Graham. New England is 11-0 against the Bills at Gillette since it opened in 2002 and 20-2 overall in its last 22 games against Buffalo. VIKINGS 34, LIONS 24 MINNEAPOLIS Adrian Peterson raced 61 yards for the game-sealing touchdown midway through the fourth quarter, padding his NFL rushing lead with 171 yards on 27 carries for Minnesota. Peterson had 120 yards in the final 15 minutes, 10 1/2 months after reconstructive surgery on his left knee. Ponder bounced back from a rough game with 221 yards and two touchdowns on 24-for-32 passing for the Vikings (6-4). Calvin Johnson had 207 yards on 12 catches, including a touchdown that brought the Lions (4-5) a little closer with 1:53 left. But Johnsons lost fumble near midfield on the previous possession put Vikings rookie Blair Walsh in position for his fourth field goal. BUCCANEERS 34, CHARGERS 24 TAMPA, Fla. Josh Freeman threw two touchdown passes and the surging Buccaneers scored on a blocked punt and Leonard Johnsons 83-yard interception. Freeman has thrown for 13 TDs with one interception in his past five games, helping the Bucs (5-4) win four times to climb back over .500 following a 1-3 start. Rivers threw for 337 yards and three touchdowns for San Diego. He was intercepted twice in the fourth quarter to ruin any chance of the Chargers (4-5) coming from behind. RAVENS 55, RAIDERS 20 BALTIMORE Joe Flacco threw for 341 yards and three touchdowns and Baltimore set a club record for points. The Ravens (7-2) scored on six of their first seven possessions against the struggling Raiders (3-6), who have yielded at least 40 points in two straight games for the first time since 1962. The 55 points tied an Oakland record for points allowed, a mark set in 1961 and matched in 1981. Baltimore led 27-10 at halftime. In the third quarter, Flacco threw touchdown passes of 47 and 20 yards to Torrey Smith and holder Sam Koch scored on a fake field goal in the third quarter to make it 48-17. In the fourth quarter, Jacoby Jones took a kickoff 105 yards for 55-20 lead. Baltimores previous record for points in a game was 48, against Detroit in December 2009. TITANS 37, DOLPHINS 3 MIAMI Colin McCarthy returned an interception 49 yards for a touchdown and four takeaways helped Tennessee rout Miami. The Titans came into the game on pace to set an NFL record for points allowed in a season but they stymied Miami by intercepting Ryan Tannehill three times and recovering a Reggie Bush fumble to set up a touchdown. Tennessee (4-6) rebounded from a 51-20 loss a week ago against the Bears that prompted owner Bud Adams to put the organization on notice. Last week, the Titans trailed 28-2 after one quarter; this week, they led 21-0 after 16 minutes. For Miami (4-5), the home loss was the most lopsided since 1968.

SPORTS

www.delphosherald.com

Harris USA Today Computer BCS Rk Pts Pct Rk Pts Pct Rk Pct Avg Pv 1. Kansas St. 2 2774 .9649 2 1427 .9675 2 .9700 .9674 2 2. Oregon 1 2844 .9892 1 1460 .9898 4 .9700 .9497 3 3. Notre Dame 3 2634 .9162 3 1346 .9125 1 .9900 .9396 4 4. Alabama 4 2494 .8675 5 1243 .8427 5 .8500 .8534 1 5. Georgia 5 2398 .8341 4 1260 .8542 6 .8100 .8328 5 6. Florida 7 2113 .7350 7 1079 .7315 3 .9200 .7955 6 7. LSU 8 2082 .7242 8 1040 .7051 7 .7700 .7331 7 8. Texas A&M 10 1842 .6407 10 967 .6556 8 .6900 .6621 15 9. South Carolina 11 1732 .6024 11 903 .6122 8 .6900 .6349 8 10. Florida St. 6 2175 .7565 6 1143 .7749 17 .2900 .6071 10 11. Clemson 9 1972 .6859 9 1033 .7003 15 .3900 .5921 13 12. Oklahoma 12 1631 .5673 12 799 .5417 10 .6300 .5797 12 13. Stanford 13 1621 .5638 13 793 .5376 11 .6100 .5705 14 14. Nebraska 14 1239 .4310 14 653 .4427 13 .5300 .4679 16 15. Texas 15 1095 .3809 15 615 .4169 14 .4800 .4259 17 16. Oregon St. 16 1081 .3760 17 490 .3322 12 .5400 .4161 11 17. UCLA 19 870 .3026 16 494 .3349 20 .2400 .2925 18 18. Southern Cal 18 886 .3082 21 343 .2325 17 .2900 .2769 19 19. Louisville 17 943 .3280 18 442 .2997 27 .0200 .2159 9 20. Louisiana Tech 20 728 .2532 19 413 .2800 25 .0400 .1911 20 21. Michigan 24 264 .0918 23 144 .0976 16 .3100 .1665 NR 22. Rutgers 21 571 .1986 20 354 .2400 27 .0200 .1529 23 23. Texas Tech 22 325 .1130 25 106 .0719 20 .2400 .1416 22 24. Oklahoma St. 26 118 .0410 24 111 .0753 22 .2100 .1088 NR 25. Washington 40 1 .0003 36 7 .0047 19 .2500 .0850 NR AH RB CM KM JS PW 1. Kansas St. 1 1 3 2 2 2 2. Oregon 4 3 5 4 5 4 3. Notre Dame 2 2 1 1 1 1 4. Alabama 5 4 4 5 9 5 5. Georgia 6 5 6 7 4 6 6. Florida 3 6 2 3 3 3 7. LSU 7 7 9 6 6 7 8. Texas A&M 9 10 8 8 10 8 9. South Carolina 8 9 10 9 8 9 10. Florida St. 16 17 14 16 11. Clemson 15 14 13 22 14 12. Oklahoma 13 8 15 10 7 10 11. Stanford 10 11 7 11 11 11 14. Nebraska 12 15 11 12 18 12 15. Texas 14 12 16 14 13 15 16. Oregon St. 11 13 12 13 12 13 17. UCLA 18 24 17 20 21 21 17 16 18 18. Southern Cal 21 19 22 19. Louisville 24 20 20. Louisiana Tech 22 24 24 21. Michigan 17 21 18 18 20 17 22. Rutgers 25 19 25 23. Texas Tech 20 16 21 15 23 24. Oklahoma St. 19 18 19 19 25. Washington 22 23 25 15 14 19 Explanation Key The BCS Average is calculated by averaging the percent totals of the Harris Interactive, USA Today Coaches and Computer polls. Team percentages are derived by dividing a teams actual voting points by a maximum 2,875 possible points in the Harris Interactive Poll and 1,475 possible points in the USA Today Coaches Poll. Six computer rankings are used to determine the overall computer component. The highest and lowest ranking for each team is dropped and the remaining four are added and divided to produce a Computer Rankings Percentage. The six computer ranking providers are Anderson & Hester, Richard Billingsley, Colley Matrix, Kenneth Massey, Jeff Sagarin and Peter Wolfe. Each computer ranking accounts for schedule strength in its formula.

Nov. 11, 2012

BCS standings

uled for 7 p.m. Saturday Region 9: 1 Chagrin Falls (11-1) vs. 6 Akron St. VincentSt. Mary (10-2) at Solon Stewart Field Region 10: 1 Napoleon (11-01) vs. 2 Bellevue (11-1) at Findlay Donnell Stadium Region 11: 4 Dover (10-2) vs. 2 Millersburg West Holmes (111) at Canton Fawcett Stadium Region 12: 1 Dayton Thurgood Marshall (11-1) vs. 3 The Plains Athens (11-1) at Reynoldsburg Raider Stadium Division III State Semifinals, Sat., Nov. 24: Region 9 vs. Region 11 Region 10 vs. Region 12 Division III State Championship: Saturday, Dec. 1, 11 a.m., Canton Fawcett Stadium Division IV Games scheduled for 7:30 p.m. Friday Region 13: 1 Brookfield (120) vs. 2 Creston Norwayne (120) at Stow Ron Marhofer Auto Family Field Region 14: 1 Columbus Bishop Hartley (12-0) vs. 2 Ottawa-Glandorf (12-0) at Piqua Alexander Stadium-Purk Field Region 15: 1 St. Clairsville (12-0) vs. 3 Johnstown-Monroe (10-2) at Zanesville Sulsberger Stadium Region 16: 1 Clarksville Clinton-Massie (12-0) vs. 7 West Milton Milton-Union (10-2) at Centerville Stadium Division IV State Semifinals, Fri., Nov. 23: Region 13 vs. Region 15 Region 14 vs. Region 16 Division IV State Championship: Friday, Nov. 30, 3 p.m., Canton Fawcett Stadium Division V - Games scheduled for 7 p.m. Saturday Region 17: 1 Kirtland (12-0) vs. 7 Youngstown Ursuline (8-4) at Aurora Veterans Stadium Region 18: 4 Findlay LibertyBenton (11-1) vs. 7 Hamler Patrick Henry (10-2) at Lima Stadium Region 19: 1 Lucasville Valley (12-0) vs. 6 Baltimore Liberty Union (10-2) at Nelsonville Boston Field Region 20: 1 Coldwater (12-0) vs. 3 Covington (12-0) at Dayton Welcome Stadium Division V State Semifinals, Sat., Nov. 24: Region 17 vs. Region 19 Region 18 vs. Region 20 Division V State Championship: Saturday, Dec. 1, 3 p.m., Massillon Paul Brown Tiger Stadium Division VI - Games scheduled for 7:30 p.m. Friday Region 21: 1 Mogadore (12-0) vs. 6 Youngstown Christian (9-2) at Ravenna Gilcrest Field Region 22: 1 McComb (12-0) vs. 6 Delphos St. Johns (8-4) at Findlay Donnell Stadium Region 23: 1 Danville (111) vs. 2 Newark Catholic (10-2) at Westerville Central Warhawk Field Region 24: 4 St. Henry (9-3) vs. 3 Maria Stein Marion Local (10-2) at Wapakoneta Harmon Field Division VI State Semifinals, Fri., Nov. 23: Region 21 vs. Region 23 Region 22 vs. Region 24 Division VI State Championship: Friday, Nov. 30, 11 a.m., Massillon Paul Brown Tiger Stadium

College roundup

McCloskey and Janzen lead Beavers at NCAA Regionals ANDERSON, Ind. - The Bluffton University mens and womens cross country teams competed in the last meet of the season at the NCAA Great Lakes Regional cross country championships held on the campus of Anderson University. A total of 37 teams from across the region and over 250 athletes per gender were competing for the opportunity to advance to the NCAA Cross Country Championships next Saturday in Terre Haute, Indiana. The men started off the day with a standout performance from Colin McCloskey (Sylvania/Northview). McCloskey ran a phenomenal race, finishing in 67th place overall and 10th among freshman in the region. It was the highest finish at a regional meet in Bluffton mens history. McCloskey averaged a 5:20 per-mile pace over 8k to finish in 26:35.11. Fellow freshman Kevin Stewart (Springfield/Emmanuel Christian Academy) also ran an exceptional race, finishing in 27:37.73. Rounding out the top three for the Beavers was freshman Zach Bradley (Sheffield/Brookside), running a personal-best 27:58.43. The women were led once again by their senior captain Alison Janzen (Whitewater, Kan./Remington), who was

competing in her final collegiate cross country meet. Janzen ran a near personal best to finish in 23:40.60; her 65th place showing was also the highest finish at the NCAA regional meet in the history of Blufftons women. The freshman duo of Tara Murphy (Westerville/ Thomas Worthington) and Demi Snider (Kenton) finished second and third for the Beavers. Murphy finished in 25:12.89 with Snider close behind at 26:01.76. Head coach Karen Brandt was pleased with the overall performance from the men this day and the season as a whole: I am amazed with how well Colin ran as a freshman against a very large and talented field. I was very pleased with the fact that the men defeated Defiance but was a little frustrated with the overall team performance compared to the conference meet. There were a few runners that did not run to their potential. Overall, it was a quality season for a primarily freshmen team that had four first-year runners lead our team today. We hope to add to this nucleus next year. Coach Brandt was also extremely proud of Janzen in her final cross country meet: I am absolutely thrilled with the way Alison ran today considering the windy conditions at the regional meet and delighted with how she finished

among this field. Im happy to see Alison end with a strong performance at the conclusion of her cross county career. It was a very good performance overall for the womens team considering the lingering injuries we had throughout our top seven but delighted with the way the women finished out the season. The cross country season came to a close on Saturday but the Beavers will return to action Dec. 1 when the indoor track and field team opens up its 201213 campaign at Defiance. Men 8k Run CC Top 10 Individuals: 1. Jones (Franciscan, Ohio) 24:26.16; 2. Kerr (Calvin) 24:27.35; 3. Muller (Marietta) 24:45.25; 4. Kramer (Calvin) 24:49.24; 5. Droddy (DePauw) 24:58.29; 6. Christiansen (Calvin) 25:13.14; 7. Deng (Spalding) 25:21.64; 8. Nordman (Manchester) 25:22.58; 9. Kelly (Case Western) 25:23.66; 10. Hoerbert (Wabash) 25:24.45. Local College Finishers (147 Runners): 21. Mark Berton (Ohio Northern) 25:49.08; ... 37. Hayden Krick (Defiance) 26:12.05; ... 67. Colin McCloskey (Bluffton) 26:35.11; ... 72. Nathan Rosenbaum (Ohio Northern) 26:38.66; 73. Evan McKee (Ohio Northern) 26:39.69; ... 76. Tyler Feitshans (Ohio Northern) 26:40.55;

77. Joe Davis (Defiance) 26:42.92; ... 79. Mathew Johnson (Ohio Northern) 26:44.73; ... 121. Eric Wymer (Ohio Northern) 27:19.99; ... 138. Madison Murphy (Defiance) 27:35.27; 139. Kevin Stewart (Bluffton) 27:37.73. Women 6k Run CC Top 10 Individuals: 1. Alis Steinbrunner (Ohio Northern) 21:00.31; 2. Lyons (Oberlin) 21:37.17; 3. Willett (Kenyon) 21:42.00; 4. McCormack (Hope) 21:46.14; 5. Michmerhuizen (Calvin) 21:49.41; 6. McCarron (Capital) 21:53.93; 7. Neal (Oberlin) 21:57.34; 8. Lydia Weaver (Ohio Northern) 21:58.38; 9. Penning (Calvin) 21:59.21; 10. Clark (Denison) 21:59.46. Other Local College Finishers (147 Runners): 65. Aya Tomozawa (Ohio Northern) 23:40.31; 66. Alison Janzen (Bluffton) 23:40.60; ... 90. Sarah Turley (Ohio Northern) 24:12.53; 91. Brooke Larsen (Ohio Northern) 24:12.97; ... 132. Casey Adamcik (Ohio Northern) 25:03.81; ... 140. Tara Murphy (Bluffton) 25:12.89. -----Beavers pull out double-overtime thriller over rival Defiance 27-24 By Evan Skilliter Sports information assistant BLUFFTON The Beavers held off (See COLLEGE, page 7A)

www.delphosherald.com

Monday, November 12, 2012

The Herald 7A

NFL at a glance
The Associated Press AMERICAN CONFERENCE East W L T Pct New England 6 3 0 .667 Miami 4 5 0 .444 N.Y. Jets 3 6 0 .333 Buffalo 3 6 0 .333 South W L T Pct Houston 8 1 0 .889 Indianapolis 6 3 0 .667 Tennessee 4 6 0 .400 Jacksonville 1 8 0 .111 North W L T Pct Baltimore 7 2 0 .778 Pittsburgh 5 3 0 .625 Cincinnati 4 5 0 .444 Cleveland 2 7 0 .222 West W L T Pct Denver 6 3 0 .667 San Diego 4 5 0 .444 Oakland 3 6 0 .333 Kansas City 1 7 0 .125 NATIONAL CONFERENCE East W L T Pct N.Y. Giants 6 4 0 .600 Dallas 4 5 0 .444 Philadelphia 3 6 0 .333 Washington 3 6 0 .333 South PF 299 173 175 211 PF 250 186 219 127 PF 254 191 220 169 PF 271 209 191 133 PF 267 188 156 226 PA 201 186 228 285 PA 143 201 311 246 PA 196 164 231 211 PA 189 191 284 240 PA 216 204 221 248 Atlanta Tampa Bay New Orleans Carolina North W 8 5 4 2 L 1 4 5 7 T 0 0 0 0

Wild race blows championship open for Keselowski


PF 247 260 249 163 PA 174 209 256 216

The Associated Press EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division W L Pct New York 4 0 1.000 Philadelphia 4 2 .667 Brooklyn 3 2 .600 Boston 3 3 .500 Toronto 1 5 .167 Southeast Division W L Pct Miami 5 2 .714 Charlotte 2 3 .400 Atlanta 2 3 .400 Orlando 2 4 .333 Washington 0 5 .000 Central Division W L Pct Chicago 4 2 .667 Milwaukee 3 2 .600 Indiana 3 4 .429 Cleveland 2 5 .286 Detroit 0 7 .000 WESTERN CONFERENCE Southwest Division W L Pct San Antonio 6 1 .857 Memphis 5 1 .833 New Orleans 3 2 .600 Dallas 4 3 .571 Houston 3 3 .500 Northwest Division W L Pct Oklahoma City 5 2 .714 Minnesota 4 2 .667 Denver 4 3 .571 Utah 3 4 .429 Portland 2 4 .333

NBA at a glance
GB 1 1 1/2 2 4 GB 2 2 2 1/2 4 GB 1/2 1 1/2 2 1/2 4 1/2 GB 1/2 2 2 2 1/2 GB 1/2 1 2 2 1/2

AVONDALE, Ariz. When the fighting stopped, the oil had dried and the last of the W L T Pct PF PA Chicago 7 2 0 .778 242 133 wrecked cars had been towed Green Bay 6 3 0 .667 239 187 away, Brad Keselowski found Minnesota 6 4 0 .600 238 221 himself on the brink of a first Detroit 4 5 0 .444 216 222 Sprint Cup title for himself and West team owner Roger Penske. W L T Pct PF PA Only he wasnt in a celebraSan Francisco 6 2 1 .722 213 127 Seattle 6 4 0 .600 198 161 tory mood. He entered Sundays race Arizona 4 5 0 .444 144 173 St. Louis 3 5 1 .389 161 210 at Phoenix International Raceway trailing 5-time chamSundays Results pion Jimmie Johnson by seven New Orleans 31, Atlanta 27 points and had the better car Minnesota 34, Detroit 24 all day. And moments after Denver 36, Carolina 14 Tampa Bay 34, San Diego 24 Keselowski raced his way into Tennessee 37, Miami 3 the lead, a blown tire caused New England 37, Buffalo 31 Johnson to crash and take his Baltimore 55, Oakland 20 battered car to the garage for Cincinnati 31, N.Y. Giants 13 repairs. Seattle 28, N.Y. Jets 7 St. Louis 24, San Francisco 24, OT It helped Keselowski, who Dallas 38, Philadelphia 23 finished sixth, to a 20-point lead Houston 13, Chicago 6 in the Chase for the Sprint Cup Open: Arizona, Cleveland, Green Bay, Championship heading into the Washington season finale at HomesteadTodays Game Kansas City at Pittsburgh, 8:30 p.m. Miami Speedway, where hell clinch the title with a finish of 15th or better. I wanted to take the points lead by winning a race and Pacific Division not relying on a failure, W L Pct GB Keselowski said. L.A. Clippers 5 2 .714 Johnsons sudden misforL.A. Lakers 3 4 .429 2 Golden State 3 4 .429 2 tune was a dramatic and stunPhoenix 3 4 .429 2 ning turn in the most chaotic Sacramento 2 5 .286 3 race of the year. It proved to be just the warm-up act in a race Saturdays Results that could go down as the one Philadelphia 93, Toronto 83 many fans will call the best of Indiana 89, Washington 85 Charlotte 101, Dallas 97, OT the season. Chicago 87, Minnesota 80 Probably for all the wrong Houston 96, Detroit 82 reasons. Boston 96, Milwaukee 92 And thats what had Utah 94, Phoenix 81 Keselowski so upset. San Antonio 112, Portland 109 Denver 107, Golden State 101,2OT Im more just disappointed Sundays Results in the quality of racing that we Brooklyn 82, Orlando 74 saw, he continued. I thought L.A. Clippers 89, Atlanta 76 it was absolutely ridiculous and Memphis 104, Miami 86 I was ashamed to be a part of Oklahoma City 106, Cleveland 91 it. L.A. Lakers 103, Sacramento 90 Todays Games Kevin Harvick snapped a
Milwaukee at Philadelphia, 7 p.m. Utah at Toronto, 7 p.m. Oklahoma City at Detroit, 7:30 p.m. Boston at Chicago, 8 p.m. Miami at Houston, 8 p.m. Minnesota at Dallas, 8:30 p.m. Denver at Phoenix, 9 p.m. Atlanta at Portland, 10 p.m. Tuesdays Games Washington at Charlotte, 7 p.m. Toronto at Indiana, 7 p.m. New York at Orlando, 7 p.m. Cleveland at Brooklyn, 7:30 p.m. Portland at Sacramento, 10 p.m. San Antonio at L.A. Lakers, 10:30 p.m.

Pct .889 .556 .444 .222

By JENNA FRYER The Associated Press

44-race losing streak by beating Kyle Busch on a pair of late restarts, the ironic winner on the same weekend news leaked hes reportedly signed a deal to leave Richard Childress Racing to drive for StewartHaas Racing in 2014. We have 2012, we have 2013, and regardless of what happens on a business side of things, Richard Childress and myself will always be friends, good or bad, and may agree to disagree, Harvick said, but we still have a lot of racing left to do and we owe it to our sponsors and our company to go out and do exactly what we did today and be men and do the best we can for everybody. Harvick and Busch crossed the finish line ahead of a melee of crashing cars, a chain reaction caused in part because NASCAR failed to throw a caution when Danica Patrick was spun on the restart. Then others slid in oil, into Patricks wrecked car, bounced all over the track, and even Keselowski was hit. There was a lot of stuff on the race track, there was oil all over it. Ray Charles could see that, second-place finisher Denny Hamlin said. Busch, who finished third, also saw the oil all over the track. But the carnage was simply the final exclamation point in a sequence triggered by 4-time champion Jeff Gordon. He intentionally wrecked Clint Bowyer and that led to a full brawl in the garage and a redflag of nearly 15 minutes for cleanup on the track. Keselowski was tweeting during the delay from inside his car a practice he first did during a jet fuel fire in the

season-opening Daytona 500 and NASCAR had officially reached 3-ring circus status. The sport was made on fights. We should have more fights; I like fights, Harvick said after the race. Theyre not always fun to be in, sometimes youre on the wrong end, but fights are what made NASCAR what it is. This one began as the field closed in on what should have been the final lap and Gordon slowed his car to wait for Bowyer so he could intentionally wreck him as retaliation for several weeks of on-track contact between the two. After Gordon climbed from his car in the garage, he appeared to be jumped from behind by one of Bowyers crew members. It led to a full brawl between the crews, with Bowyer sprinting from his car to join the fracas. Bowyer was held back by NASCAR officials from entering Gordons hauler. Its pretty embarrassing, Bowyer said. For a 4-time champion and what I consider one of the best this sports ever seen to act like this is pretty ridiculous. Both drivers and their crew chiefs were called to the NASCAR hauler for a meeting with series officials and police officers stood outside on guard. Gordon said hes had problems with Bowyer all season and had reached his limit. Things just got escalated over the year and Id just had it, he explained. Clint has run into me numerous times, wrecked me, and he got into me on the back straightaway and pretty much ruined our day. Ive had it, fed up with it and I

got him back. He added he didnt know what penalties might be coming from NASCAR but theyve got to do what theyve got to do and I guess I had to do what. NASCAR vice president of competition Robin Pemberton said the situation would be looked at further this week. Keselowski was livid, questioning the double-standard a week after he was criticized for racing hard on the final restarts against Johnson last week at Texas. He could have wrecked Johnson for the victory; three years ago he might have done just that. But Keselowski was only aggressive and even after losing the race was condemned by some of his fellow competitors. Hell move on now to Homestead, where a conservative day should be enough to wrap up the title. But he saw what happened to Johnson, at one of Johnsons best tracks, and wont take anything for granted. Johnson, who has been thinking lately about a NASCAR-record eight championships, sounded resigned after his 32nd-place finish to going for broke at Homestead. Its way, way out of our control. Thats racing and well go to Homestead and do all we can down there and see how things pan out, he added. Anything can happen in racing. Im very proud of the year, Im very proud of the effort. I hate to see it potentially end this way but again, thats racing. Ive been doing this a long time. Ive won a few championships and Ive lost a lot. Losing isnt any fun but well be back next weekend and next year hungrier than ever and do the best we can.

The Associated Press The Top 25 teams in The Associated Press college football poll, with first-place votes in parentheses, records through Nov. 10, total points based on 25 points for a first-place vote through one point for a 25th-place vote, and previous ranking: Record Pts Pv 1. Oregon (45) 10-0 1,485 2 2. Kansas St. (14) 10-0 1,451 3 3. Notre Dame (1) 10-0 1,382 4 4. Alabama 9-1 1,259 1 5. Georgia 9-1 1,223 5 6. Ohio St. 10-0 1,212 5 7. Florida 9-1 1,089 7 8. LSU 8-2 1,046 9 9. Texas A&M 8-2 1,031 15 10. Florida St. 9-1 1,024 8 11. Clemson 9-1 907 10 12. South Carolina 8-2 848 12 13. Oklahoma 7-2 798 14 14. Stanford 8-2 766 16 15. Oregon St. 7-2 556 13 16. Nebraska 8-2 549 18 17. UCLA 8-2 541 17 18. Texas 8-2 496 19 19. Louisiana Tech 9-1 374 19 20. Louisville 9-1 322 11 21. Southern Cal 7-3 297 21 22. Rutgers 8-1 179 24 23. Michigan 7-3 135 NR 23. Texas Tech 7-3 135 25 25. Kent St. 9-1 93 NR Others receiving votes: Oklahoma St. 79, N. Illinois 77, Mississippi St. 48, Wisconsin 26, UCF 16, Boise St. 14, Arizona 6, Cincinnati 6, Fresno St. 6, TCU 5, San Jose St. 4, Tulsa 4, Utah St. 4, San Diego St. 3, Northwestern 2, Toledo 1, Washington 1.

AP top 25

The Associated Press LOS ANGELES The Los Angeles Lakers hired Mike DAntoni late Sunday night, signing the former coach of the Suns and Knicks to replace Mike Brown. The Lakers and DAntonis agent, Warren LeGarie, confirmed the deal two days after the Lakers fired Brown five games into the season. DAntoni agreed to a 3-year deal worth $12 million, with a team option for a fourth season. DAntoni got the high-profile job running the 16-time NBA champions only after the clubs top brass extensively discussed the job with former Lakers coach Phil Jackson. The 61-year-old DAntoni underwent knee replacement surgery earlier this month and could be physically limited early his tenure. Lakers spokesman John Black said the Lakers arent certain when DAntoni will travel to Los Angeles to begin work. Interim coach Bernie Bickerstaff will continue running the Lakers until DAntoni arrives. Los Angeles beat Sacramento 103-90 on Sunday night, improving to 2-0 under Bickerstaff after a 1-4 start under Brown. The Lakers next game is Tuesday night against San Antonio at Staples Center.

Dwight Howard had 23 points and 18 rebounds and Kobe Bryant scored 20 Sunday night. Jimmer Fredette scored 18 and Jason Thompson had 15 points and 10 assists for the Kings. GRIZZLIES 104, HEAT 86 MEMPHIS, Tenn. Reserve Wayne Ellington had career bests with seven 3-pointers and 25 points, leading the Memphis Grizzlies over the Miami Heat 104-86 on Sunday for their fifth straight win and the best start in franchise history. The Grizzlies (5-1) snapped Miamis 4-game winning streak while topping their 4-1 start in 2000-01 the franchises last season in Vancouver. They also extended their own team-record home winning streak to 14 dating to last season. Rudy Gay added 21 points and Zach Randolph had his sixth double-double with 18 points and 12 rebounds for Memphis. Mike Conley had 18 points and nine assists, while Marc Gasol added 10 rebounds and six assists. Chris Bosh scored 22 points and LeBron James had 20 for Miami. Dwyane Wade came in averaging 20.4 points but was held to eight in his first game back after missing Friday nights win at Atlanta

NBA capsules

with a cold. Memphis never trailed and the Heat managed to tie it only twice, the last at 14-all. THUNDER 106, CAVALIERS 91 OKLAHOMA CITY Russell Westbrook banked in a half-court shot during a rough-and-tumble 27-point outing and Kevin Durant added 26 points to lead Oklahoma City over Cleveland. Kyrie Irving led the Cavs with 20 points, Alonzo Gee had 18 points and Daniel Gibson. Irving hit back-to-back 3-pointers after Oklahoma City had taken a 63-50 lead midway through the third quarter and his driving layups on consecutive possessions got Cleveland within 67-65 with 3:42 to go in the period. The Thunder never relinquished the lead, though, with Kendrick Perkins scoring inside on a basket interference call before Durants two-handed slam. Then Westbrook took over. NETS 82, MAGIC 74 NEW YORK Brook Lopez scored 20 points, Kris Humphries added 14 points and 21 rebounds and Brooklyn beat Orlando to complete a home-andhome sweep. Deron Williams finished with 17 points, seven rebounds, seven assists

and a couple key plays down the stretch after what appeared to be another blowout turned into a close game. The Nets beat the Magic 107-68 at Orlando on Friday and jumped out to an early 20-point lead in this one. But after losing a 22-point lead at home against Minnesota on Monday, Brooklyn almost coughed up another huge cushion, letting Orlando get within five in the final 2 minutes. Glen Davis had 19 points and 10 rebounds for the Magic, who have dropped four in a row. CLIPPERS 89, HAWKS 76 LOS ANGELES Blake Griffin scored 16 points and Chris Paul had 15 points and eight assists to lead Los Angeles to a win over Atlanta. Jamal Crawford had 11 points after coming in with a team-high 21.8 average tops among the leagues reserves. Fifth-year center DeAndre Jordan, coming off the first back-to-back 20-point games of his NBA career, finished with eight points. Josh Smith had a team-high 13 points for the Hawks, who shot 41.7 percent from the field in the opener of a 4-game road trip. Atlanta also committed 22 turnovers that led to 24 points for the Clippers.

College

(Continued from page 6A) a late Defiance rally to beat the Yellow Jackets after a field goal from the visitors with two seconds remaining pushed the game into overtime. After the teams traded touchdowns in the first extra session, a Bluffton field goal in the second and an interception by senior Tyler Hensley (Batavia) sealed a 27-24 victory by the home team, marking the third straight year Bluffton has taken down rival Defiance. Ben Schamp (St. Marys/Memorial) recovered an early fumble, setting up kicker Austin Sweeney (Adrian Mich./ Whitmer) for a 40-yard field goal, his longest of the season, which put the Beavers on top 3-0. Defiance took the lead on the ensuing possession when Garrett Teague found Brian Mircovich for a 6-yard touchdown with 5:18 to play in the first period. The extra point was good to make the score 7-3. The score remained 7-3 until Nick Smith (Troy) picked off the Yellow

Jackets at midfield with 47 seconds left in the first half. Bluffton made the Jackets pay on the next play when Tyler Wright (Troy) connected with Ryan Sabin (Canal Winchester) for a 48-yard flea-flicker that gave Bluffton a 10-7 lead at the break. The Beavers extended the lead late in the third quarter when Calib Alexander (Ocala, Fla./St. John Lutheran) fought off a defender to haul in a 26-yard touchdown pass from Wright. Sweeney connected again to put the Beavers up 17-7 with 4:30 remaining in the third. The Yellow Jackets pulled within three when Leroy Cheatham picked up a Beaver fumble and returned it 50 yards to paydirt which made the score 17-14 after a successful PAT. Bluffton held off the visitors until Teague found Mircovich late in the game on a 43-yard tipped pass that put the Jackets on the 15-yard line. That completion set up a Spencer Saunders 32-yard field goal with just two seconds remaining. His attempt was good and

sent the contest into overtime. Defiance scored on the first overtime possession as Teague found Jon Carribino for a 14-yard touchdown pass but Bluffton answered when Wright jumped over the pile and into the end zone on Blufftons possession to knot the score at 24. Bluffton started the second overtime with the ball and went up three on a 22-yard field goal by Sweeney. After two Defiance runs, a Teague pass on third down was intercepted by Hensley, sealing the Bluffton Senior Day victory. Wright led the Bluffton offense with 212 passing yards and two touchdowns on 11 completions. Sabin finished the final game of his career with an impressive 100 receiving yards and a touchdown on five catches. Junior Airic Steagall (Hillsboro) led the Beavers rushing attack with 56 yards on 16 carries. Sweeney finished the day with eight points after hitting both of his field goal attempts (40 and 22) and going 2-of-2 on extra points.

Seniors Ben Kaufman (OttawaGlandorf) and Preston Huddleston (Benton Harbor, Mich./Eau Claire) rocked the Jackets with 12 tackles each. Huddleston finished with 1.5 tackles-forloss. Mike Johnson (Browns Mills, NJ/ Pemberton Township) finished with 11 stops while fellow senior Derek Woods (Springfield/South) and junior Josh Runda (Lima/Bath) each tallied eight tackles. Defiance finished with 357 total yards, compared to 297 for the Beavers. The Jackets went for 146 on the ground, while Bluffton completed 11 passes for 212 yards. Both teams fumbled it away three time and Defiance also tossed three interceptions, including the gameclincher. The home team was a perfect 3-of-3 in the red zone, while Defiance converted just three of its six opportunities inside the 20-yard line. The win pushed Blufftons record to 6-4 (5-3 HCAC) and marked the first time the Beavers have finished with a winning record since 2000.

Financial stability, low-closing costs and a variety of options make

the logical choice when looking for a fixed rate mortgage loan.
LOWEST PRICES BEST SERVICE
Corn Gas Wood Pellet Electric
LARGEST DISPLAY IN THE USA WITH OVER 200 UNITS INCLUDING OVER 50 LIVE BURN MODELS

The Ottoville Bank Co.

The Ottoville Bank Co.


MAIN OFFICE 161 W. Third St. Ottoville, OH 45876 419-453-3313

Nothing burns like a Quad


Fireplaces Stoves Heaters Logs Outdoor Fireplaces Gas Grills Saunas & Spas

CELINA

LIMA
4147 Elida Road

LENDING OFFICE 940 E. Fifth St. Delphos, OH 45833 419-695-3313

5217 Tama Road


SR 127, 5 Miles North of Celina, 1 Mile West of Tama

419-224-4656

1089968

419-363-2230 www.kernsfireplaceandspa.com

Large enough to serve you, small enough to know you. www.ottovillebank.com

8A The Herald

Monday, November 12, 2012

www.delphosherald.com

Wedding
Courtney Lynn Wells and Joseph John Knopick were united in marriage at noon on June 30, 2012, at St. Johns Catholic Church, by the Rev. Jacob Gordon. The brides parents are Chris and Traci Wells of Delphos. The grooms parents are Mark and Corinne Knopick of Rootstown. Nuptial music was provided by vocalists Ryan and Kara Eickholt, pianist Linda Schmit and trumpeter Bill Massa. Maid of honor was Morgan Wells of Delphos, sister of the bride. Bridesmaids were Steffany Swick of Plain City, friend of the couple; Logan Haines of Delphos, friend of the couple; Cassie Schaffer of Findlay, friend of the couple; Emily Knopick of Ravenna, sisterin-law of the groom; and Megan Fritz of Delphos, friend of the couple. Flower girls were Libby Sapp of Findlay, friend of the couple; and Bronwynne Rodenhauser of Cincinnati, cousin of the groom. Miniature groomsmen were Kobe and Kane Epperly of Versailles, cousins of the bride. Best man was Chris Knopick of Ravenna, brother of the groom. Groomsmen were Craig Brown of Rootstown, friend of the couple; Joseph Brown

Wedding
Melissa Marie Odenweller and Todd Michael Myers were united in marriage at 2 p.m. on April 28, 2012, at St. John the Evangelist Catholic Church in Delphos, the Rev. Melvin Verhoff officiating. The brides parents are Don and Deb Odenweller of Delphos. The grooms parents are Mike and Annette Myers of Van Wert. Nuptial music was provided by vocalist Jamie Grothaus and organist Linda Schmit. Matron of Honor was Julie Horstman of Columbus, cousin of the bride. Bridesmaids were: Stacey Vaske, Julie Moenter and Audra Miller of Delphos, friends of the couple; Nikki Bockrath of Kalida, friend of the couple; and Jenn Hassinger and Nicole Osborne of Cleveland, friends of the couple. Best men were Matt and Ryan Myers of Columbus, brothers of the groom. Groomsmen were: Alex Stechschulte, Adam Schaffner, Travis Zigler and Tyler Hamrick of Columbus, friends of the couple; and Bill and David Odenweller of Delphos, brothers of the bride.

of Rootstown, friend of the couple; Chris Condeni of Findlay, friend of the couple; Kurt Obockzy of Paris, friend of the couple; and Justin Lyons of Jenison, Mich., friend of the couple. The brides grandparents are Cliff Wells and Jeanne Dunlap. A reception was held at the Fort Jennings American Legion after the ceremony.

Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Knopick

Following a wedding trip to Punta Cana, Dominican Republic, the couple reside in Canal Fulton. The bride is a graduate of St. Johns High School and the University of Findlay. She is employed by Plain Local Schools. The groom is a graduate of Southeast High School and the University of Findlay. He is employed by Jackson Local Schools.

Grandparents of the couple are: Margaret Suever and the late Ralph Suever, the late Marie OdenwellerWannemacher, the late Sylvester Odenweller, the late Thomas Wannemacher, John and Delores Myers, Rita Beining and the late Julius Beining. Following the ceremony, a reception was held at the Ottoville Parish

Mr. and Mrs. Todd Myers

Center. After a wedding trip to Jamaica, the couple reside in Hurricane, W.Va. The bride is a graduate of the University of Toledo and is a teacher at Kanawha County Schools. The groom is a graduate of The Ohio State University and is employed as an area manager at Dupont.

3 Days of Deals
EXCLUSIVE CHIEF & RAYS COUPON
PLU 283

EXCLUSIVE CHIEF & RAYS COUPON

PLU 282

Superiors Easy Carve Whole Boneless

Smoked Ham
Arps or Deans

$ 99
lb.

Sliced Free

Fresh or Frozen

Hen Turkeys

Less than 16 lbs. Excludes turkey breast


Limit 1 with additional $20 purchase. Expires 11-22-12

9
lb.

off

Fresh or Frozen

Tom Turkeys
Pepsi

16 lbs. and up. Excludes turkey breast


Limit 1 with additional $20 purchase. Expires 11-22-12

16

off

Marie Callenders

Milk

PiesVarieties, excludes Cherry Selected

Scarlotta Seedless Premium

Whole, 1%, 2%, Skim

2/$
gal.
85% Lean

$ 99
Kraft

Limit 2 w/ Addtl $15 Purchase Addtls $4.99

Red Grapes

Soft Drinks
selected varieties,

$ 99

28-45 oz.

12 pk cans

4/$

12

Must purchase 4. More or Less 4/$13

Certied Ground Daily

Ground Chuck

Cool Whip

$ 99
lb.

3 lb. Package or More

selected varieties Limit 2 - Addtls $1.19

Del Monte

99
Stove Top

8-12 oz.

49
Flavorite

Sweet Potatoes

Homemade Classic

In the Deli

Potato Salad

$ 99
lb.

lb.

Canned Vegetables

Chief

Stufng Mix

4/$
11-16 oz.

selected varieties

3 3

99
Rice or

selected varieties

Butter

6 oz.

2/$
1 lb.

salted or unsalted

Nestle Coffee-mate

Creamer

Birdseye Freshlike or Steamfresh

In the Bakery
Special Recipe

5
doz.

Spiral Sliced Smoked Half Ham

$ 99
lb.

Selected Varieties Limit 2 - Addtls $2.28

Vegetables
selected varieties

Cookies

USDA Choice Beef Easy Carve Bone-In

selected varieties

2/$
16 oz.

10/$
10-18 oz.

Lays

10
24 ct.

$ 99
Appetizer

Rib Roast

$ 99
lb.

Potato Chips

In the Bakery
Special Recipe

Selected Varieties, 10-10.5 oz.

FREE

Buy One Get One

Cookie Tray

Trays

In the Deli

6 4

Hye Roller

In the Deli

$ 99

Prices good 8am Monday, November 12 thru midnight Wednesday, November 14, 2012 at all Chief & Rays Supermarket locations.

selected varieties

Wraps & Trays


Turkey & Ham varieties

$ 99
ea.

11

$ 99
lb..

www.ChiefSupermarkets.com www.facebook.com/ChiefSupermarket www.ChiefSupermarkets.com | | www.facebook.com/ChiefSupermarket

www.delphosherald.com

Wednesday, November 12, 2008 Monday, November 12, 2012

Anniversary 77 Anniversary
th

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

The Herald 3 The Herald 9A


The Herald 3

OPEN HOUSE
Affordable Value & Service Since 1935

BEST PRICES OF THE YEAR!

4 FLOORS OF INCREDIBLE SAVINGS!

Thursday9-5 9-5 Friday9-8 Saturday 9-5 Thursday Friday TUES., Saturday 9-5 SUN. 9-5 9-8 Saturday 12-4 MON., 9-5 Friday 9-8 ThursdayWED., 9-59-8FridayTHURS.,SAT. 9-5Sunday 12-4 Thursday FRI. 9-8 Saturday9-5 Sunday12-4 Register Win Over $1500.00 FREE Door Prizes $1000.00 Register ToWin Over $4500.00 InFREE Door Prizes Register To Win Over$1000.00 In FREE Door Prizes Register ToToWinOver $1500.00 InInFREE Door Prizes
1st: La-Z-Boy Recliner Mattress Set 2nd: La-Z-Boy 2nd: Restonic Full Recliner 2nd: Restonic Full Size 2nd: Restonic RockerSize Full 2nd: Best Swivel Full Size Restonic Rocker Size 3rd: Mattress Set *Tribute Plush* Mattress Set *Tribute Plush* Mattress Set 4th:MattressFull Mattress Set Restonic Set 5th: Pulaski 3rd: AshleyCurioCabinet 3rd: AshleyGiftCurio Console 3rd: Ashley Curio Console 3rd: Ashley Curio Curio 6th: $300 Certificate 7th: $200 4th: $100 GiftCertificate 4th: $100Gift Certificate 4th: $100Gift Certificate Gift Certificate 4th: $100Gift Certificate Gift Certificate 8th: $200 5th: $100 GiftCertificate 9th: $100 Gift Certificate 5th: $100Gift Certificate 5th: $100 Gift Certificate 5th: $100Gift Certificate
1st: Lazy Boy Recliner Ashley Queen Memory 1st: Lazy Boy Recliner Foam 1st:La-Z-BoyRecliner 1st:

OPEN HOUSE OPEN HOUSE OPEN HOUSE PRIZES PRIZES PRIZES

By: Ashley - Holland House By: Ashley - Holland House By: Ashley - Holland House By: Ashley - Holland House Vaughn - Bassett -Trade Master Lea Vaughn Bassett Millennium Lea Vaughn - Bassett --Trade Master - Lea Vaughn Bassett -Millennium - -- Lea

$$

$ 399 399 299

9595 95

DINETTE SETS
Designed for looks. Constructed for durability.

10th: $100 Gift Certificate We Offer the Entire Ashley Line of Sofas, Recliners, Bring in the Kids to See Our Decorated Room Settings We Offer the Entire Ashley Line of Sofas, Recliners, Dinettes, Bedrooms, Occasional Tables, Lamps & Accents at Bring in the Kids to See Our Decorated Room Settings Dinettes, Bedrooms, Prices.Nobody sellsLamps & Accents at of the Latest from LEA - Kids Pub Heights in Stock. Occasional Tables, Ashley for LESS! Great Selection of Dining and Generation! LOW Fatory Director of the Latest from LEA - Kids Generation! LOW Fatory Director Prices.Nobody sells Ashley for LESS!

$$ $

239 239 249

95 95 95

WOW WOW
$ $

Comfort. Its what we do.


Save 30% to 50%

$ $$

79 79 79

95 95 95
SOLD IN SETS

Comfort. Its what we do.


TM TM

299 299

95 95

f h d
TM

LATEX or VISCO STOP IN AND TRY THE NEWEST Memory Foam Mattress Sets LATEX or VISCO 8 MODELS TO TRY LOW SALE PRICES

STOP IN ANDOVER 40SETS ON DISPLAY! TRY THE NEWEST OVER 30 SETS ON DISPLAY!

OVER 30 SETS ON DISPLAY!

$
f h d
TM

Memory Foam Mattress Sets


8 15 MODELS TO TRYLOW SALE PRICES MODELS TO TRY - LOW SALE PRICES

599 95 599 $ 95 799 $ 95 799


95

$ 95 $ 95 Over 200 Recliners In Stock Over 300 Recliners In In Stock Over 200 Recliners Stock
List $579.95 List $539.95

279 299 279 299

List $539.95

VISIT US at www.francisfurniture.net

12 MONTHS

00049556

MON.-WED.-FRI. 9:00 - 8:00 SHOWROOM HOURS: TUES.-THURS.-SAT. 9:00 - 5:00 MON.-WED.-FRI. SHOWROOM HOURS: SUNDAY 12:00-4:00 9:00 - 8:00 4863 MON.-WED.-FRI. TUES.-THURS.-SAT. 9:00 - 8:00 9:00 - 5:00 TUE.-THU.-SAT. 9:00 - 5:00 SUNDAY 12:00-4:00 804863 SUNDAY 12:00 - 4:00

SHOWROOM HOURS:

12 MONTHS

10A The Herald

WINATURKEY
SWEEPSTAKES
RULES
Name Address Phone

Monday, November 12, 2012

www.delphosherald.com

You need not be present to win. Each winner will be notified. Anyone OVER 18 years of age is eligible to participate. Only one turkey may be won by a family. Decisions of judges will be Saturday! Sale starts final.
Clip the turkey coupons on this page. Fill in your name, address and phone number on each one. Deposit each turkey coupon in the Turkey Contest Box in the Save up to store of the sponsoring merchant where a drawing $5.00 lb. will USDA Choice Save up to $1.81 Boneless Beef Arps or Deans be held to determine the winner of the free turkey for Ribeye Steak EACH Cottage Cheese Regular or Thick Cut store. Drawing Thursday, Nov.varieties Delphos Herald/Eagle Print selected 15. employees and their families not eligible. Odds of winning are based on the number of entries. Please deposit entries by lb. November 14 at 5pm. No oz. 24 facsimiles accepted. Product of the United States
In the Deli

ENTRIES BROUGHT IN BY CHILDREN WILL NOT BE ACCEPTED.

Name Address Phone

Name

95% Fat Free, No MSG, Filler or Gluten Address

Phone

Deposit This At

201 E. Kiracofe (St. Rt. 309) Elida www.thatplaceforpets.com thatplaceforpets@hotmail.com

Tri-County Do-It Center


In the Deli

419-339-3208

1 $ 99 3 $ 99 1
$ 68
Save up to $3.00 lb.

$ 99

6
12 pk.

Deposit This At

1150 Elida Rd. Eat-in/ Delphos Drive-thru or Carryout 419-695-1BBQ (1227)

HICKORY PIT The Point BBQ at


DELIVERY

Kretschmar

Virginia Brand

Save $7.96 on 4

Honey Ham

All Varieties

Super Chill Soda

2/$
Limit 4 - Additionals 2/$5
Save $1.80 on 3

lb.

Save up to $2.00 lb.

FreshMarket

Sandwich Spread

Deposit This At

833 N. Main St. Delphos Ph. 419-692-6936


lb.
Save up to $1.00

Limit 3 - Additionals $1.29

3 79
Flavorite

Name Address Phone

White Bread

Deposit This At

229 N. Main St. Delphos 419-695-1BBQ (1227) 419-695-0425

Delphos Sporting Goods

16 oz.

delphossportinggoods.com

Name Address Phone

Save $3.42 on 2

Seyferts
Deposit This At

Potato Chips

$ 28

Name Address
In the Bakery
Iced or Lemon

8.5-9 oz. Phone Angelfood Cake

$ 29

$ 99
ea.

Angelfood Cake

Shannon Station Van Wert (419) 238-5304


Open 6 a.m. To midnight everyday

Pick 'N Save

Deposit This At

Name
S $2 11 l t i ti Save $2.11; select varieties

Super Dip

Address

Ice Cream

4 qt.

Phone

Great food. Good neighbor.

1102 Elida Ave., Delphos

GREVECHRYSLER JEEP DODGE


877-343-1613 756 E. Ervin Rd., Van Wert

Deposit This At

Prices good 8am Saturday, September 12 to midnight Sunday, September 13, 2009 at all Chief & Rays Supermarket locations.

Double Coupons Every Day www.ChiefSupermarkets.com


Name Address Phone

Name Address Phone

Name Address Phone

Deposit This At
161 W. Third St. Ottoville, Ohio 45876

MAIN OFFICE LENDING CENTER


419-453-3313
940 E. Fifth St. Delphos, OH 45833

Deposit This At

hbors Insuring Neighbors Neig


Since 1863

The Ottoville Bank Co.

www.ottovillebank.com

419-695-3313

419-692-3413

112 E. Third St., Delphos, OH

107 East Main St., Van Wert 419-238-2722


Marvin S. Vetter, Sr., owner

Main Street Ice Cream

Deposit This At

Name Address Phone

Name Address

This Turkey fits our diet perfectly!


Name Address

1022 S. Shannon St., Van Wert, Ohio 419-238-0944

Save-A-Lot Grocery

Deposit This At

Phone

Deposit This At

Phone

230 E. Second St., Delphos (419) 695-1055


Visit us online at www.first-fed.com

Deposit This At

PEAK 24 HOUR FITNESS


333 North Street Delphos

419-695-3488

Name Address Phone

Name Address

Name Address

Deposit This At
660 Elida Ave., Delphos Phone

Phone

Pitsenbarger Supply Inc.


234 N. Canal St., Delphos Ph. 419-692-1010

Deposit This At

Phone

419-692-3784

Deposit This At

(DRUG)

BIG
BIG BIG BIG BIG
Name Address Phone

Sales and Service Van Wert 1-866-LEEKINSTLE LEEKINSTLE.COM

LEE KINSTLE GM

Name Address Phone

Name Address Phone

RELIABLE
PLUMBING & HEATING
205 W. Second St. Delphos, OH 45833

Deposit This At
24 Hour Emergency Service
OH LIC 24196

Deposit This At

419-695-2921

Deposit This At

www.reliablepandh.com

10098 Lincoln Hwy., Van Wert, Ohio

Kitchens Baths Appliances

419-238-5650

906 W. Main Street, Van Wert, Ohio (419) 238-5255

EASY AUTO CREDIT

www.delphosherald.com

Monday, November 12, 2012 T:5.75

The Herald 11A

Steel Aluminum Iron cans: 65 /lb Copper30 Nov. 1 Brass y 3 Steel ying Aluminum 3 Iron tals. 3 Copper Stainless 3 Brass 3 Aluminum Lead 3 Stainless Zinc 3 Lead
3 Zinc

d trash ).

Buying all grades of ferrous and non-ferrous metals over 80 years!


Also offering container service for metals and trash (roll-off boxes, van, dump & low-boy trailers). Kohart Recycling is your full service scrap recycling facility.

11.15. 2012
4-7 PM
1 Enter for a chance to win an all-new 2013 Ford Fusion.

Kohart Recycling has 3 convenient locations to serve you!

State Route 613 E. 634 Spruce St. 905 S. Main St. Paulding, OH 45879 Fostoria, OH 44830 Delphos, OH 45833 419-399-4144 419-435-7792 419-692-4792

Participate, and Ford will make a donation to charity.2


1 Preregister online for a chance to win American Idol tickets.

T:10.5

Test Your Judging Skills with American Idol and you could win a VIP experience to the show.1

Register at randomactsoffusion.com/nalact

comfort. love. respect


national hospice and palliative care month. november 2012
Hospice brings you and your family compassionate care when a cure isnt possible. Palliative care provides comfort and support earlier in the course of a serious illness. Together, its solutions beyond traditional medical care.

2013 FUSION/ FUSION HYBRID


All-new interior and exterior design The 2013 Fusion Hybrid has best-in-class fuel economy3 Two available EcoBoost turbo engine choices

Our charity of choice is Equestrian Therapy Program. Raabe & Ford Motor Co. will together donate $20 for each person registered up to $1000 for the Charity.

Living life as fully as possible is what hospice is all about.


1

2013 FUSION | Starting at $20,714.52* A/Z-Plan Starting at $XX,XXX 4


No purchase necessary. Must be legal resident of the 50 U.S. States/DC, 18 years of age or older with valid drivers license. Void where prohibited. Promotion ends 11/15/12. For complete entry, eligibility, prize details and odds disclosure, see Official Rules at www.randomactsoffusion.com/nalact. American Idol: / 19 TV Ltd. and FremantleMedia North America. 2013 All Rights Reserved. www.americanidol.com. 2Ford will contribute $10 per registered guest, up to a maximum of $500, to a Ford-approved charity. Charitable donations are the sole responsibility of Ford, not American Idol or related parties. 3EPA-estimated 47 city/47 hwy/47 combined mpg. Actual mileage will vary. Class is Midsize Hybrid Sedans vs. 2012/2013 competitors. 4 Dealer to insert disclaimer.

Learn more at ComHealthPro.org or call a local CHP location: Celina 419-586-1999 Delphos 419-695-1999 Lima 419-991-1822 Van Wert 419-238-9223

*Plus $1,000 Customer Cash or Finance by Ford Motor Credit Rebate.

Wapak 419-738-7430Act of Fusion POP Final


Qtr Page News Ad Client: Ad #: Agency #: Park #: Live: Trim: Bleed: None 28061-12 None FUND-02070 None 5.75 x 10.5 None

Service Parts Body Shop Hours:


Monday 7:30 a.m.-8:00 P.m. Tuesday-Friday 7:30 a.m.-6:00 p.m. Engraver: None Saturday 9:00 a.m.-2:00 p.m.

Check us out online: www.delphosherald.com

Date: 9-27-2012 12:29 PM File Name: FUND02070_2806112_FAF_QtrPg_R01.indd Sales Hours: 11260 Elida Road - just east of Delphos Mon. 8:00Inks: Cyan, Magenta, Yellow, Black a.m.-8:00 p.m.;
Tues.-Fri. 8:00 a.m.-6:00 p.m.;

Come in as a Customer, Leave as a Friend


Ph. 419-692-0055
www.raabeford.com

FORD - LINCOLN

RAABE

5 Time Winner

Rev: 1

Gall

Fonts: Ford Antenna (Light, Regular, Bold, Black, Saturday 9:00 a.m.-2:30 p.m. Doc Scale: 100% Semibold, Medium, Medium Italic), Ford Antenna Output Size: None Cond (Regular, Light) Media/Type: Ad-Newspaper

Images: Gradient_Coolwht2_18x12_PK.psd (CMYK; 568 ppi, ppi; 52.76%, 49.16%), 0157FLW AI logo Reg CMYK flat Nov 0 (CMYK; 4188 ppi; 7.16%), GoFurtherwithFord8.31.ai (37.76% FGBR_12GF_URL_DealerName.eps (24.31%), 2013_RAOF_Her D06_002_PK.psd (CMYK; 2054 ppi; 14.6%)

Toll Free 800-589-7876

1st Annual Betty Honigford Spirit of Christmas House Decorating Contest

Park ADD: Park Designer: Park PM: Park Retoucher: Park Prod Artist:

None None Nicholl None L. Mansfield

GCD/CCO/GDD: Associate CD: Art Director: Writer: Print Producer:

None None Maglinger None Covington

Copy Editor: None EAST-BELLEFONTAINE AT KIBBY Traffic: None 419-229-1385 Glick DOWNTOWN-ELIZABETH AT MARKET 419-228-1778 WEST-ALLENTOWN AT CABLE 419-227-9791 Hamburg Pickle On Top! Makes Your Go Flippity Flop!

Direct Mail Ops: Data: Art Producer: Account Super: Account Exec:

None None

Legal: Product Info:

None None None Lacey

All homes within the Delphos City School District are eligible to participate. All homes must be registered or nominated by an admirer in order to be judged. Prizes will be awarded! All entries must be received by November 30th, 2012, in order to be considered. Judging will take place on (St. Nicks Day) December 6th, 2012. Winners will be announced in the Delphos Herald. * The Winner of each category will receive $50! * The Grand Prize Winner will receive $100! Peoples Choice Voting will take place from December 8th-14th , 2012. The winner will be published in the Delphos Herald and will receive a banner to be displayed on their property. A list of all participating houses may be found at the Delphos City Building (608 N Canal St.) after December 8th, 2012. Contact Bev Jettinghoff (419-695-8470) or Meghan Ryba (567-376-9719 or meg2011@live.com) for more information.

PUMPKIN OR MINCE PIE


TODAY FOR THE HOLIDAYS!

ORDER YOUR

Since 1928

Eligible homes must be within the Delphos City School District. Please return this form to The Delphos City Building to enter your home in the contest!

RULES AND ENTRY FORM CHRISTMAS HOUSE DECORATING CONTEST

Name: _________________________________________________ Address: _______________________________________________ Phone #: _______________________________________________

City: _________________________ Zip: _____________________


IMPORTANT: Judging will take place the evening of December 6th, 2012. Please keep your decorations illuminated from 6p.m. -11p.m. that evening. A diverse committee of judges will judge your home based on curbside appeal only. Judges will not enter the property. Each home will be judged in the following categories. Please check the box next to the one category description you think best matches your home display. The category you select will be used as a guide only. Please note that the judges will ultimately decide which category best fits the home display being considered. In addition, the judges reserve the right to eliminate or add categories based on the entries received. Check the box of the category you would like your home to be judged on: RELIGIOUS (Best display with a religious theme) NOSTALGIC (most old-fashioned, best reminds-me display) CLARK GRISWOLD (excessive use of outdoor lighting and decoration) INSIDE-OUT (indoor displays that are visible from the street) One home judged the best overall (regardless of category) will be selected to win THE GRAND PRIZE AWARD. Please sign here if you agree to allow photographs of your home display to be displayed in the Delphos Herald and your address to be published on the Participating Homes page in order to be eligible for the Peoples Choice Award. Homeowners signature: _____________________________________________________

12A The Herald

Monday, November 12, 2012

www.delphosherald.com

Israel reports direct hits on targets in Syria


BY JOSEF FEDERMAN The Associated Press

Answers to Saturdays questions: Famous clown Ronald McDonald had his own comic book from 1970-71. The pen name of Charles Lutwidge Dodgson is Lewis Carroll. Todays questions: What author and statesman, later beheaded, wrote Utopia? Who derived his famous nickname from his first hit song, The Fat Man? Answers in Wednesdays Herald. Todays words: Nid-nod: to nod when sleepy Zubguq: an Arabic infidel

JERUSALEM An Israeli tank scored a direct hit today on a Syrian armored vehicle after a mortar shell landed on Israeli-held territory, the military said, in the first direct confrontation between the countries since the Syrian uprising broke out, sharpening fears that Israel could be drawn into the civil war next door. Israel has steadfastly tried to avoid getting involved in the Syrian conflict, but it has grown increasingly worried after a series of stray mortar shells have struck territory in the Israeli-controlled Golan Heights. Israeli military officials

say they believe the mortar fire is spillover from intense fighting near the frontier between Syrian President Bashar Assads army and rebel forces trying to oust him, and not an overt attempt to hit the Jewish state. Israeli military officials question their assessment. We thought it was spillover, but today were not sure, said the military official. Syrias civil war also shook the countrys northern neighbor, Turkey, on today, after a Syrian fighter jet bombed a rebel-held area near the frontier, killing at least six people, a Turkish official said on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to brief the media. In a statement, the mili-

tary said Israeli tanks targeted the source of fire in Syria after the mortar shell landed in an open area of the Golan Heights. It confirmed direct hits on the targets. Israeli military officials said an armored vehicle carrying Syrian mobile artillery was hit. There was no immediate word on casualties on the Syrian side, but Israeli officials said the vehicle was believed to belong to the Syrian government. A number of mortar shells have landed in the Golan over the past week, and early this month, Syrian tanks accidentally crossed into a buffer zone along the frontier of the Golan for the first time in nearly 40 years. Israel cap-

tured the Golan, a strategic plateau, from Syria in the 1967 Mideast war and subsequently annexed it. After weeks of standing still, Israel responded for the first time on Sunday, firing what it called a warning shot into Syria after another mortar shell strayed across the frontier and landed near an Israeli military post. Israel also warned of a tougher response if the attacks persisted. While Israel appeared eager to calm the situation, its response was a potent reminder of how easily the Syrian civil war already spilling across borders with Turkey, Lebanon and Jordan could explode into a wider regional conflagration.

These businesses are proud of their community and ask you to visit them in

DELPHOS.

Special $ 99

They invite you to check them out for the best in personal service, value and price!

79

203 N. MAIN ST. DELPHOS LARGER SELECTION OF TVs and COMPUTERS


NEW COMPUTER TOWERS $299 & UP NEW LAPTOPS $349 & UP NEW FLAT PANEL MONITORS & PRINTERS USED COMPUTER TOWERS &LAPTOPS COMPUTER ACCESSORIES

STOP IN AN SEE US AT OUR NEW LOCATION:

Save $40 NOW $ 99

Reg. $179.99

Save $40 NOW ONLY $ 99

Reg. $289.99

249

139

NEW
Hoover Tempo
Twin Tank Steam Cleaner
$
GREAT FOR CERAMIC TILE SALE

LG FLAT PANEL TVs Computer repair since 1993 BLU-RAY PLAYERS for home & small business. SOUND BARS HOME THEATER SURROUND SOUND CHECK OUR PRICES

Hoover U 547 2900 Wind Tunnel

Hoover U648 5900 SP Wind Tunnel

Check our NEW website www.gt vcomputer.com for SPECIALS OF THE WEEK!

13499

Delphos

Hardware

GERDEMANS TV & COMPUTER


203 N. Main St. (old Westrich location) Delphos 419-692-5831 email dangerd@wcoil.com

Buy with service after the sale since 1952

242 North Main St. Ph. 419-692-0921 Open evenings til 6:30; Sat. til 5

Now featuring

NOW OFFERING

We carry the complete Vera Bradley collection!


* Ornaments - unique gifts for everyone on your list * Collectibles * Books * Recordable storybooks * jewelry * and much more
H.G. Violet Equipment 2103 North Main St Delphos , OH 45833 Ph. 419-695-2000 www.hgviolet.com

SAME AS CASH
With Approved Credit

SIX MONTHS

Front: Andrew Lobach, Frank Reynolds, Marshall Poling. Back: Matt East, Andy Spangler.

Your Christmas Store...

READMORES
222 N. Canal St., Delphos, Ohio

419-692-2034
Open: 8-6 M-F, 8-1 Sat.

Over 50 years combined experience to fill all your tire needs.

TIRE
226 S. Pierce St. Delphos

419-692-0961

Open Mon.-Fri. 8-6; Sat. 8-1. CALL FOR EVENING APPOINTMENTS

24 HOUR ON-SITE SERVICE

Hours: Mon.-Thurs. 9am-6pm; Friday 9am-5pm; Saturday 10am-4pm Personal appointment can be arranged.

GOLD & SILVER BULLION

We Sell

WE BUY/ SELL/APPRAISE

419-692-1888 email us at ccc@coinscurrencyandcollectibles.com


Visit us at: www.coinscurrencyandcollectibles.com

238 N. MAIN ST., DELPHOS, OH 45833

111 W. Third St. Delphos, Ohio Handcrafted Jewelry, purses, candles, wine bottle art and more! Beaded jewelry made from most flower petals and hair bows by Maggie May Designs Tues., Wed. and Friday 4 pm-7 pm Saturday 11 am - 3 pm 419-695-5105
Call for Appraisal Service Always Buying Single Items to Estates

with this ad

20% off

BLACK SWAMP ANTIQUES & ANTIQUE MALL


238 North Main Street, Pottery - Old Delphos, Ohio

877-260-0348

Mon-Thurs 9am-6pm; Friday 9am-5pm; Saturday 10am-4pm

Miami-Erie Mall
Antiques & Collectibles

We Buy & Sell Old Stuff!


132 S. Main St., St. Rt. 66 Delphos, Ohio 45833 419-692-4624

Kathy Anns Boutique


Bring in this ad for free gift with purchase
Tuesday thru Friday 10-5 and Saturday 10-2

Youll Find A Treasure Around Every Corner

Cookie Jars & Fenton Glass - BooksArtifacts - Plates & much more

Open Thursday, Friday, & Saturday 11- 4:30

Saturday, Dec. 1 - 10-4 Sunday, Dec. 2 - noon-4


Phone: 419-692-0000

Holiday Open House

249 N. Main Street Delphos, Ohio 45833

www.delphosherald.com

Monday, November 12, 2012

The Herald B1

Classifieds

2B The Herald

Monday, November 12, 2012

www.delphosherald.com

ing a pink collar. Call 419-692-7261

Telling The Tri-Countys Story Since 1869 ACROSS 1 Carpenters jaws To place an ad phone 419-695-0015 ext. 122 5 Beat pounder www.delphosherald.com 8 Elev. FREE ADS: 5 days free if item is free THANKS TO ST. JUDE: Runs 1 day at the 11 Submarine Minimum Charge: 15 words, Deadlines: 13 times - $9.00 001 Card Of Thanks 2 080 Help Wanted 120 Financial the next days issue. or less month. RNs group per ad, 1 price of $3.00. 600 Apts. for Rent ad per than $50. Only 1 item 11:30 a.m. for GARAGE SALES: Each day is $.20 per 14 Grande or Bravo Each word is $.30 2-5 days Saturdays paper is 11:00 a.m. Friday BOX REPLIES: $8.00 if you come word. $8.00 minimum charge. 15 Soft candy THE FAMILY of $.25 6-9 days FIRE and Alice DELPHOS IS IT A SCAM? The DelFORT JENNINGS and pick them up. $14.00 if we have to I WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR Mondays urges is p.m. Friday Maag hereby express our 10+ days openings for phos Herald paper our1:00Quiet, secure 1 & 2 send them to you. 16 Most popular $.20 RESCUE has DEBTS: Ad must be placed in person by thanks to Fr. Joe Weig - volunteer paid per call fire- readers to contact 11 a.m.bedroom in an upscaleCARD OF THANKS: life Herald Extra is The Thursday 18 Zest for $2.00 base the person whose name will appear in the ad. Each word is $.10 for 3 months fighters and emergency man, Fr. Charles Obinwa, Better Business Bureau, apartment complex. charge + 20 for each word. Must show ID & pay when placing ad. Regu$.10 Oodles more prepaid Deacon Larry, the mass or medical technicians; ( 4 1 9 ) We accept1 0 223-70 o r Massage therapist on-site. lar rates apply 21 Punch server basics, advanced, and servers, organist Joyce 1-800-462-0468, before Laundry facilities, socializ23 Belief paramedics. Applicants Gasser, the choir, Shirley entering into any agreeing area, garden plots. 24 Util. bill must reside in the Hammond (for programs), ment involving financing, Appliances and utilities response district. Amee and Elaina (for the business opportunities, or included. $675-$775/mo. 25 Bullpen stats Applications available at singing), the readers, the work at home opportuni419-233-3430 27 Hey, you! eucharistic ministers, the Delphos Fire Department, ties. The BBB will assist 31 Bali -- 125 E. Fifth St. Friends of Hope, and Sue in the investigation of House For Sale 32 Sour pickle Knippen and her gang these businesses. (This 800 33 Canyon reply (luncheon) for helping us FULL AND Part-time em- notice provided as a cuswith our dear mothers fu- ployees needed in local tomer service by The Del- 7 VAN Wert area homes 34 Planets, to poets available! Owner financing neral. Thanks Norma retail business. Send re- phos Herald.) 36 Woe is me! plies to Box 179 c/o Delto clean rent to own or Maag and Mary Maag for 38 Smoke-detector output land contract candidates. your special help in plan- phos Herald, 405 N. Main 39 Textbook division All 3+ bedroom, garages, ning the funeral. Thank St., Delphos, OH 45833 290 Wanted to Buy 40 Vanessas sister remodeled with items such you Tim Maag for keeping as new roofs, flooring, 41 Rival a huge family organized lighting, mechanical upand for your wonderful 42 Winnebagos, for short Raines dates and much more! Ineulogy. We could not have 44 Boat crane dividual address, pics, dedone it without you. We Jewelry tails at chbsinc.com or 46 Citrus fruit gratefully appreciate the 5 High Hopes lyri- (hyph.) 49 -- Spumante thoughtful care given to Cash for Gold 419-586-8220 cist 29 Make a film 50 Drives forward our mother by Vancrest Scrap Gold, Gold Jewelry, Auto Repairs/ 6 Mrs. Lennon 30 Get in shape Silver coins, Silverware, Nursing Home, Hospice, 52 Hunger for 810 Parts/Acc. 7 Storm tracks 35 Leather for honing Marketing Admission Repand by the staff at Love Pocket Watches, Diamonds. 56 Obtained resentative Immediate 8 Fringe -37 Grab Funeral Home. We also 2330 Shawnee Rd. 57 Third letter opening for a successful, wish to thank family and 9 Sibilate 43 Sweater style Lima 58 Mood Midwest Ohio friends for the floral ar - goal-oriented Community 10 Booster seat users (hyph.) (419) 229-2899 59 Bonfire remains Services/Marketing Reprerangements, monetary do12 Shouted 45 Flu bug Auto Parts sentative. The successful nations, food donations, 60 Campground initials 17 Fiesta Bowl site 46 Links org. candidate must have a four and cards. Thank you all 61 Serenade Specialist 19 TV receptors 47 God of love year degree and either 5 very much. Garage Sales 340 Windshields Installed, New years of Long Term Care exThe Family of Alice Maag 21 Be informed of 48 Wool eater DOWN perience or Healthcare MarLights, Grills, Fenders,Mirrors, 22 Suspects need 49 On a cruise MOM-TO-MOM SALE 1 Channels 2-13 keting/Sales experience. Hoods, Radiators 23 Boulevard dividers 51 Mr. Tolstoy 005 Lost & Found Sat, Nov. 17, 2012 2 Promise to pay 4893 Dixie Hwy, Lima 24 You, once 53 How -- -- doing? 8am-noon at the Ottoville Director of Dining Ser3 Dejected Parish Center. Gently 26 Pact member 54 Wernher -- Braun vices Immediate opening FOUND: SANDY colored 1-800-589-6830 4 -- on (incited) used childrens clothes for a culinary chef with minidog 11/6 on SR 309 wear28 Heinleins genre 55 Joule fraction

Todays DELPHOS Crossword Puzzle HERALD


THE

mum of 2 years Head Chef experience.

and items.

010 Announcements
ADVERTISERS: YOU can place a 25 word classified ad in more than 100 newspapers with over one and a half million total circulation across Ohio for $295. It's easy...you place one order and pay with one check through Ohio Scan-Ohio Statewide Classified Advertising Network. The Delphos Herald advertising dept. can set this up for you. No other classified ad buy is simpler or more cost effective. Call 419-695-0015, ext 138.

Meadows of Kalida Health Campus 755 Ottawa Street, 45853 Send Resume to Stephanie.Clark @MeadowsofKalida.com EOE
HIRING DRIVERS with 5+ years OTR experience! Our drivers average 42cents per mile & higher! Home every weekend! $55,000-$60,000 annually. Benefits available. 99% no touch freight! We will treat you with respect! PLEASE CALL 419-222-1630 PART-TIME SEC R E TARY needed for established Delphos business. Please, only those with prior secretarial experi ence or secretarial education apply. Job requires good people skills, excellent phone and computer skills along with the willingness to work toward better knowledge of office software and operations. Job opening is for 20 hours a week Monday through Friday along with the flexibility to occasionally cover vacation and possible situations for other staff members. Application deadline is November 16th with an anticipated orientation/start date of December 10th. Send cover letter along with resume to Box 178 c/o Delphos Herald, 405 N. Main St., Delphos, OH 45833 PATS DONUTS & KREME Hiring 1st shift Customer Service 5am-1pm. Weekends mandatory. Fast-paced and strong multi-tasking skills required. Drug screen contingent upon hiring. Apply at Pats Delphos bakery or Lima bakery. No phone calls.

501 Misc. for Sale


100 FEET good used, heavy duty, outdoors extension cord. $80 new cost now, sell for $30. Phone 419-695-2887 CUSTOM BUILT solid oak Entertainment Center. 2x7x9. Must see! Call 419-453-3523 FIREWOOD FOR sale $30 a truckload. Call 567-712-7789 FOR SALE: JD 4020D with Front Loader. 1997 Buick Skylark 4-door. 16ft. 2-axle flatbed trailer. Call 419-667-3161 JACK LALANNES Power Juicer with books. Excellent condition. $49.50. Ph: 419-230-9738

840 Mobile Homes

1 BEDROOM mobile home for rent. Ph. 419-692-3951. MOVE IN ready, remodeled 14x70. 3 bedroom, 2 bath, new carpet, washer/dryer/stove. Located in Delphos Ulms II. $8000. Call Donna at 419-605-8136 RENT OR Rent to Own. 2 bedroom, 1 bath mobile home. 419-692-3951.

890 Autos for Sale


01 SILVER Chevy Silverado. 2 wheel drive, automatic, power steering. $2500/OBO. Call 419-692-0136

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

080 Help Wanted


AREA C O M P A N Y is growing and has an immediate first shift opening in our hardwood moulding department for a tooling grinder and tooling set up person. Applicants must be self motivated and detail oriented individuals who take pride in their work. Applicants must also be able to work independently, read and comprehend shop drawings and measure with a micrometer and calipers to hold strict tolerances. Marching training and or experience is a plus but not required. Competitive wages, health insurance, 401K plan, paid holidays and vacations are all available. Apply in person or send resumes to Teem Wholesale, 200 W. Skinner St., P.O. Box 278, Ohio City, Ohio 45874. No phone calls please.

550 Pets & Supplies


AMERICAN BULLDOG/BOXER mix. FREE to a good home. Had some shots and wormed at Kessens. Answers to Bella. 567-712-1729, ask for April. FREE TO a good home, 4mo old female mixed breed. Will be a small dog. Call 567-259-5084 SHIH TZU Puppies, 8 wks old. Females, $300, vet checked and first shots. Call 419-532-2040

Is It Broken?
Find A Repairman To Fix It

Check The Service Answer to Puzzle Directory In

Dear Annie: When my older sister was dying a year ago, our entire family supported her with calls and visits with the exception of our father and half-brother (my mothers son from a previous marriage). They also didnt attend the funeral and offered no explanation for their absence. Five months later, another sister died. Dee never married, and our father was her legal next-of-kin and responsible for the funeral arrangements. Dad refused our help and then denied us any information with the exception of our half-brother. My father had Dee cremated and then mailed her ashes to our halfbrother, who then dumped them in his backyard. We learned of this after the fact. We dont know why this happened, but we suspect it was a collaborative effort between our fathers third wife, 20 years his junior, and our half-brothers wife, 11 years his senior. The two of them are close in age and good friends. They are also

Guests should heed no gifts on invitations

590 House For Rent


2 BEDROOM, 1Bath house available soon. No pets. Call 419-692-3951

The Delphos Herald


Office: 419-692-2249 Fax: 419-692-2205

SCHRADER REALTY LLC


Put your dreams in our hands
Office: 419-692-2249 Fax: 419-692-2205 202 N. Washington Street Delphos, OH 45833

SCHRADER REALTY LLC


Put your dreams in our hands
202 N. Washington Street Delphos, OH 45833

Schrader Realty is pleased to announce Del Kemper as the newest realtor to our staff. Del can be reached at 419-204-3500 He may also be contacted via email at: dskemper@msn.com or thru our website at www.schraderrealty.net.

Schrader Realty is pleased to announce Lynn Claypool as the newest Broker/Realtor to our staff. Lynn can be reached at 419-234-2314 She may also be contacted via email at: claypool@woh.rr.com or thru our website at www.schraderrealty.net.

S
950 Car Care

controlling, manipulative and replied, Because I wanted to. spiteful. As more gifts piled on, I began Is there any way to find out to feel humiliated, embarrassed why our father turned his back and angry. In order not to spoil on his own flesh and blood to the occasion, I left. allow his stepson to What is the perform such a vile proper etiquette in and hateful act? How situations like this? do we find closure? An Avid Annie Grieving Brother Fan Dear Grieving: Our Dear Avid: deepest condolences on People routinely the loss of your sisters. ignore No Gifts Your grief is undoubtrequests, which not edly compounded by only upsets obedithe astonishing lack of ent non-givers, but compassion shown by can also embarrass your father and halfand upset the recipibrother. There is no ents. This is another explanation for such Annies Mailbox reason why gifts contemptuous behavshould not be menior, and it serves no purpose to tioned on any invitations other waste time and energy trying to than those for showers, where figure these people out. In fact, gifts are, in fact, expected. You upsetting you may be one of did nothing wrong. If it happens their goals. Consider grief coun- again, please pay no attention to seling through any local hospital, those who cannot follow direcand please know that your sisters tions. are at peace regardless of the Dear Annie: I was surprised circumstances. to read the letter from Pastors Dear Annie: I received two Wife in the Northwest, whose different invitations: one for a husband wasnt paid for his wedbirthday party and the other for ding services. an engagement party. Both stated The churches I have been no gifts, please. Yet on arrival, affiliated with have a set of pricthere were tons of gifts. es for weddings and specifically I was astounded by this and list the cost for the use of the asked, Whats with the gifts? sanctuary, the organist, rehearswondering whether I missed als, cleanup and the pastor. The something in their message. I fees must be paid a week before was assured by those who set the ceremony. up the invites that they asked for Members of the congregano gifts and that if I wanted, I tion may have fees waived, and could get one the next day. Does needy persons may receive a that mean gifts were expected discount. The pastor may waive after all? his fees entirely, but that is up to At the engagement party, I him. She might want to call other asked a family member why she pastors in their community to see brought a gift, and she boldly what they do. P.

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

AT YOUR

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

Fitzgerald Power Washing & Painting


Interior, Exterior, Residential, Commercial, Decks, Fences, Houses, Cleaning, Sealing, Staining, Barn Painting FREE ESTIMATES Insured References

950 Tree Service

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

Mark Pohlman

419-339-9084 cell 419-233-9460

419-303-3020

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

2012 Malibu
Stock #I2C24. WAS $18,750 now $

2012 Impala LTZ


Stock #I2F69. WAS $19,900 now $

2011 Impala 1LT


Stock #I2D33. 4 available. WAS $16,900 now $

419-453-3620

15,900

18,900

13,900

950 Construction

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

950 Miscellaneous

$244.00 per mo.*

$289.00 per mo.*

$213.00 per mo.*

Amish Crew
Needing work
Roofing Remodeling Bathrooms Kitchens Hog Barns Drywall Additions Sidewalks Concrete etc. FREE ESTIMATES

COMMUNITY SELF-STORAGE
GREAT RATES NEWER FACILITY

Mueller Tree Service


Tree Trimming, Topping & Removal

Mark Pohlman

419-339-9084 cell 419-233-9460

419-692-0032
Across from Arbys

419-203-8202
bjpmueller@gmail.com Fully insured

2010 Equinox LT
Stock #I2F71. WAS $19,900 now $

2007 Rendezvous
#IIL163. WAS $14,700 now $

2011 Regal CXL


Stock #I2G20. WAS $22,500 now $

18,900

12,900

19,900

419-733-9601 950 Home Improvement

$289.00 per mo.*

$218.00 per mo.*

$305.00 per mo.*

* 2012 - 2011 - 2010 MODEL YEARS. 72 MO. 3.25% APR. 2007 MODEL YEAR 66 MO. 3.9% APR. Plus tax & title fees down. Second National Bank with approved credit. Sales Department Service - Body Shop - Parts Mon. & Wed. 8:30 to 8:00 Mon., Tues., Thurs. Tues., Thurs. & Fri. 8:30 & Fri. 7:30 to 5:00 to 5:30; Wed. 7:30 to 7:00 Sat. 8:30 to 1:00 Closed on Sat.

Joe Miller Construction


Experienced Amish Carpentry Roofing, remodeling, concrete, pole barns, garages or any construction needs. Cell

SAFE & SOUND


SELF-STORAGE
Security Fence Pass Code Lighted Lot Affordable 2 Locations
Why settle for less?

L.L.C.

DELPHOS

Trimming & Removal Stump Grinding 24 Hour Service Fully Insured

CHEVROLET BUICK
1725 East Fifth Street, Delphos VISIT US ON THE WEB @ www.delphachevy.com

IN DELPHOS 419-692-3015 TOLL FREE 1-888-692-3015

KEVIN M. MOORE

567-644-6030

419-692-6336

(419) 235-8051

www.delphosherald.com

Monday, November 12, 2012

The Herald 3B

Tomorrows Horoscope
By Bernice Bede Osol
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2012 Friends and associates are likely to play critical roles in your affairs in the year ahead. You will have an easier row to hoe if you stand by them when they need you, so they can return the favor when necessary. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) -- Some changes might be in store for you where your finances are concerned. Depending upon how you handle them, results could be either adverse or beneficial. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21) -- In your anxiousness to conclude matters that have been causing you a lot of frustration lately, you might deprive yourself of what is rightfully due you. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) -- Measures that are predicated upon sober evaluations will produce desirable results. Conversely, the opposite will be true with situations that you fail to properly study. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) -- Before getting even more deeply involved with someone who is already indebted to you, make an attempt to get this person to settle his or her old accounts. Dont compound things further. PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) -Take time to review your objectives, because you could be chasing something unattainable. Realism is the only thing that can bring you success. ARIES (March 21-April 19) -- You will be doing yourself a great disservice if you let a wild hunch take precedence over your common sense. Deal from a factual basis at all times. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) -If at all possible, engage in projects that you have the knowledge, experience and expertise to handle properly. Getting in over your head could be risky. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) -- When negotiating a matter of importance, dont make any unnecessary concessions. Itll serve you better if you deal from your strengths, not from your weaknesses. CANCER (June 21-July 22) -- Try to face career or work issues head-on, instead of attempting to circumvent them. Problems will most assuredly get worse over time if you simply sweep them under the rug. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) -Distractions will reduce all your productive efforts and turn your day into a waste. If you hope to succeed in your efforts, you must have focus. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) -- If youre not careful, you could easily get so involved in outside matters that you fail to take care of the things you should be handling. Keep your priorities in sound working order. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) -- In order to get others to do your bidding, you could be tempted to bribe them with some big promises that youll not be able to keep. This is not a good way to get along with your cohorts. WED. NOVEMBER 14, 2012 Finally, conditions that have a pronounced effect on your material circumstances are likely to show a marked improvement in the year ahead. However, if and when you begin to make more money, itll be up to you to handle it carefully. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) -- Financial trends continue to run in your favor. Theres a strong possibility that you could derive material benefits from something that comes totally out of left field. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) -- Some new social contacts could have greater significance than usual, even though a few of them will be extremely brief in duration. All of them will be worth cultivating. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) -- Chances are there will be two unrelated rainbows in your life, with each having a pot of gold at its base. In all probability, they will yield something that you havent earned. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) -- A close friend of yours may also be a good chum of someone who could be of real assistance to you at the present time. Ask your friend to act as an intermediary. PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) -Lucky you, because situations that have pronounced elements of chance could work out to your advantage, especially those that pertain to your career or finances. ARIES (March 21-April 19) -Its one of those unexplainable days when, for whatever reason, you are likely to be unusually charismatic. Youll enjoy members of the opposite gender finding you more appealing than usual. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) -Lady Luck is likely to be smiling at you, especially in involvements with your friends. Pals with whom you spend your day will do nice things for you purely on impulse. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) -- Dont leave important decisions up to others, especially if they will affect your friends. Any judgment call you make will be constructive for everybody. CANCER (June 21-July 22) -- Something exceptionally unusual is likely to develop that will be instrumental in helping you fulfill an ambitious objective. Jump on it, because it wont stick around too long. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) -- Dan Cupid is likely to take a new interest in your love life, especially for those of you who havent been enjoying much activity lately in the romance department. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) -- Those changes youve been contemplating that you believe will enhance your material security could be right on target. Believe in your thinking and implement things as quickly as possible. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) -Trust in your judgment, even if you have to make some snap decisions under pressure. Your first thoughts are likely to be as sound as those you make after lengthy deliberation.
COPYRIGHT 2012 United Feature Syndicate, Inc.

HI AND LOIS

BLONDIE

BEETLE BAILEY

SNUFFY SMITH

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

Monday Evening
8:00
WLIO/NBC The Voice WOHL/FOX Bones

WPTA/ABC Dancing/Stars WHIO/CBS How I Met Partners

8:30

9:00

9:30

2 Broke G Mike The Mob Doctor Criminal Minds

Cable Channels
A&E AMC

ION

Criminal Minds

Castle Hawaii Five-0 Revolution Local Criminal Minds

10:00

10:30

Local Local Local

11:00

November 12, 2012


Nightline Jimmy Kimmel Live Late Show Letterman Ferguson Tonight Show w/Leno J. Fallon Criminal Minds

11:30

12:00

12:30

Criminal Minds

Gangsters: Most Evil Gangsters: Most Evil Gangsters: Most Evil Gangsters: Most Evil Gangsters: Most Evil Apocalypse Now Redux Enemy ANIM Finding Bigfoot Finding Bigfoot Finding Bigfoot Finding Bigfoot Finding Bigfoot BET Barbershop 2: Back Keyshia & Sleep! Soul Man Wendy Williams Show BRAVO Real Housewives Real Housewives Start-Ups Happens Real Housewives Start-Ups CMT Reba Reba Ron White: They Call Me Tater Ron White's Comedy S CNN Anderson Cooper 360 Piers Morgan Tonight Anderson Cooper 360 E. B. OutFront Piers Morgan Tonight COMEDY Jeff Dunham: Arguing South Pk South Pk Brickle. South Pk Daily Colbert South Pk South Pk DISC Fast N' Loud American Chopper Jesse James American Chopper Jesse James DISN A Bug's Life Gravity Phineas Jessie ANT Farm Wizards Wizards E! Studio E! E Special Nicki Min Nicki Min Ice-Coco Ice-Coco Chelsea E! News Chelsea ESPN Countdown NFL Football SportCtr College Basketball ESPN2 World/Poker World/Poker Basketball SportsCenter FAM Harry Potter-Chamber The 700 Club Prince Prince FOOD Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners Mystery D Health Diners Diners FX Shrek Forever After Shrek Forever After Dear John HGTV Love It or List It Love It or List It Hunters Hunt Intl Love It or List It Love It or List It

BORN LOSER

FRANK & ERNEST


Pawn Pawn American Pickers Nanny-Christ MTV Teen Mom Teen Mom 2 NICK Full H'se Full H'se Full H'se Full H'se SCI G.I. Joe: Cobra Jeepers Creepers 2 SPIKE Kick-Ass Kick-Ass TBS Family Guy Fam. Guy Fam. Guy TCM Man-Gold Arm TLC Long Isla Long Isla Long Island Medium: TNT The Mentalist The Mentalist TOON Regular Annoying King/Hill King/Hill TRAV No Reservation No Reservation TV LAND Cosby Cosby Raymond Raymond USA WWE Monday Night RAW VH1 Basketball Wives LA T.I.-Tiny Chrissy WGN Funniest Home Videos Funniest Home Videos
HIST LIFE HBO MAX

Premium Channels
SHOW

Pawn Pawn 1880's 1880's A Dad for Christmas Teen Mom 2 Catfish: The TV Show The Nanny The Nanny Friends Friends Daybreakers Repo Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Conan From Here Long Isla Long Isla Long Isla Long Isla The Mentalist CSI: NY Amer. Dad Amer. Dad Fam. Guy Fam. Guy No Reservation The Layover Raymond Raymond King King CSI: Crime Scene Basketball Wives LA Storytellers WGN News at Nine Funniest Home Videos Little Fockers What's Your Number? Dexter

Pawn Pawn Nanny-Christ Teen Mom 2 Friends Friends C.O.D. Office Repo Office Lolita Long Island Medium: CSI: NY Chicken Aqua Unit No Reservation The King of Queens CSI: Crime Scene T.I.-Tiny Chrissy Rules Rules

Tuesday Evening
WPTA/ABC Dancing/Stars WHIO/CBS NCIS WLIO/NBC The Voice

Real Time/Bill Maher Witness Contagion Rise of the Planet of the Apes Untold History Homeland

BIG NATE

Homeland

2009 Hometown Content, listings by Zap2it

8:00

8:30

Cable Channels
A&E AMC

WOHL/FOX Raising Ben-Kate ION Criminal Minds

Happy Apt. 23 NCIS: Los Angeles Go On Normal New Girl Mindy Criminal Minds Storage

9:00

9:30

Private Practice Vegas Parenthood Local Criminal Minds

10:00

10:30

Local Local Local

11:00

November 13, 2012


11:30 12:00 12:30

Dexter

Nightline Jimmy Kimmel Live Late Show Letterman Ferguson Tonight Show w/Leno J. Fallon Flashpoint Storage

Flashpoint Storage

Storage Storage Poseidon ANIM Frontier Earth BET Soul Man Keyshia & BRAVO Real Housewives CMT Reba Reba CNN Anderson Cooper 360 COMEDY Work. Tosh.0 DISC Last Frontier DISN WALL-E E! Fashion Police ESPN College Basketball ESPN2 College Basketball FAM Harry Potter FOOD Chopped FX Twilight HGTV Love It or List It

Storage Storage Poseidon Wild Hawaii Blue Planet: Seas Keyshia & Keyshia & Keyshia & Soul Man Flipping Out Decorators Redneck Island Chainsaw Big Texas Piers Morgan Tonight Anderson Cooper 360 Tosh.0 Tosh.0 Tosh.0 Brickle. Last Frontier Alaska Marshals Gravity Phineas Young-Vanish College B College Basketball College Basketball Chopped Property Property Chopped Sons of Anarchy Hunters Hunt Intl

Storage

Storage Storage The Reaping Frontier Earth Wild Hawaii Sleep! Soul Man Wendy Williams Show Happens Flipping Out Million D Redneck Island Chainsaw Big Texas E. B. OutFront Piers Morgan Tonight Daily Colbert Tosh.0 Mash Up Last Frontier Alaska Marshals Austin Good Luck Wizards Wizards Chelsea E! News Chelsea SportsCenter NFL Live The 700 Club Prince Prince Chopped Chopped Sons of Anarchy Million Dollar Rooms Property Property

GRIZZWELLS

Premium Channels
HBO MAX SHOW

Pawn Pawn Abby's Dance Jersey Shore NICK Full H'se Full H'se SCI Total Total SPIKE Ink Master TBS Big Bang Big Bang TCM What Price TLC Little People TNT Rizzoli & Isles TOON Looney Adventure TRAV Dangerous Grounds TV LAND Cosby Cosby USA Law & Order: SVU VH1 40 Funniest Fails 2 WGN How I Met How I Met
HIST LIFE MTV

Mankind The Story Abby's Dance Teen Mom 2 Full H'se Full H'se Total Total Ink Master Big Bang Big Bang

Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Prank Mom Prank Mom Prom Prom Abby's Dance Underemployed Underemployed Jersey Shore The Nanny The Nanny Friends Friends Friends Friends Total Video Total Video Roadkill Ink Master Tattoo Beverly Hills Cop Big Bang Big Bang Conan Office Office Our Betters Two Against Law-Trop. Little People Big Wo Extreme C Extreme C Little People Big Wo Extreme C Extreme C Rizzoli & Isles Rizzoli & Isles Leverage The Closer King/Hill King/Hill Amer. Dad Amer. Dad Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Chicken Aqua Unit Dangerous Grounds Bizarre Foods Bizarre Foods Dangerous Grounds Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond King King The King of Queens Law & Order: SVU Covert Affairs Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU 40 Funniest Fails 2 Behind the Music Storytellers Couples Therapy How I Met How I Met WGN News at Nine Funniest Home Videos Rules Rules Treme Fast Five Homeland Boardwalk Empire Dexter REAL Sports Gumbel Hunted 4:44 Last Day

PICKLES

Stuck Unknown Apollo 18

Alvin-Chipwrecked Goon

2009 Hometown Content, listings by Zap2it

4B The Herald

Monday, November 12, 2012

www.delphosherald.com

BELLACINOS PIZZA & GRINDERS


Bellacinos Pizza & Grinders in Lima and Findlay continue to serve up tasty grinders, pizzas, pastas, salads and calzones. Owners Kory and Lameice Kenny and Nadya Shihadeh are celebrating their fourth year in Lima and 15 in Findlay. Situated at the corner of Elida and Cable roads, we have a great location in Lima right out in front of the Lima Mall and other shopping hot spots. The Findlay location is also very convenient to local shopping in the KohlsWalmart Plaza on the east side of town. With over 25 varieties of grinders, its hard to pick a favorite but our Italian Grinder is our House Specialty; our Steak & Chicken Bacon Ranch Grinders are also favorites; our Bellacinos Pride is our top selling specialty pizza; and everyone loves our Garlic Cheese Bread. Pizza specials change daily and join a grinder meal deal, which includes a half grinder, chips and a drink for a discounted price. One of the most popular recent additions to the menus is the Grab 2, which allows guests to pick two of their favorite menu items for one low price - $6.99. Cant get away for lunch? No problem. Bellacinos delivers over the lunch hour, in the evenings and on weekends. So any time is Bellacinos time. Dining in? The comfortable, casual atmosphere that is very family friendly. Being a familyowned business, our staff is like our extended family. Our team works hard but we also try to have fun and not take ourselves too seriously. Bellacinos is also a great place to unwind. After a long day of shopping or work, enjoy a cold beer with your delicious food. Bellacinos can be a part of any celebration. Our catering is extremely popular and offers a lot of variety grinders, pizza, pasta, salads and desserts. We also offer delivery and set up with our catering. Hours: 11 a.m to 9 .m. Monday-Thursday; 11 a.m. to 10 .m. Friday & Saturday; 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. Sunday. Grinder options include: Italian Grinder House Specialty Ham, sausage, salami, mushrooms, onions, green peppers, cheese, lettuce, tomatoes and mayo Bellacinos Zesty DeliTM

th

4 GREAT years at our Lima location

Come celebrate with us!


LIMA | 2330 ELIDA RD
In front of the Lima Mall

(419) 999-0023

*1/2 grinder. Add $.50 for chicken or steak.


Expires: 11/30/12. Limit 1 per customer per visit. Not valid with other offers. Good at Lima location only.

$4 Grinder*

Capicolla (Italian ham), salami, pepperoni, onions, green peppers, mushrooms, cheese and pasta sauce Pizza Pepperoni, pizza sauce, mozzarella cheese Bellacinos Club Turkey, ham, bacon, cheese, lettuce, tomatoes and mayo Steak Thinly sliced ribeye steak covered with mushrooms, onions, green peppers, cheese lettuce, tomatoes and mayo Chicken Marinated broiled chicken breast topped with onions, green peppers, cheese, lettuce, tomatoes and mayo Bellacinos BayouTM Marinated broiled chicken breast rubbed with Bellacinos own Cajun seasoning, covered with onions, cheese and mayo Chicken Bacon Ranch Chicken, bacon, ranch, cheese, lettuce and toma-

toes Triple Decker Roast beef, ham, turkey, cheese, lettuce, tomatoes and mayo Crab & Seafood Crab and seafood flaky chunks topped with onions, lettuce, tomatoes, cheese and mayo Ham & Cheese Ham, cheese, lettuce, tomatoes and mayo Reuben Tender corned beef piled high, lots of sauerkraut, Thousand Island dressing and cheese Ham & Turkey Ham, turkey, cheese, lettuce, tomatoes and mayo Ham, Cheese & Salami Ham, cheese, salami, lettuce, tomatoes and mayo Turkey Grinder Turkey, cheese, lettuce, tomatoes and mayo Roast Beef Roast beef, cheese, lettuce, tomatoes and mayo

Veggie Green peppers, onions, mushrooms, cheddar and mozzarella cheese, lettuce, tomatoes and mayo Barbeque Pork Pork, barbeque sauce and cheese B.L.T. Bacon, cheese, lettuce, tomatoes and mayo Stromboli Grinder Italian sausage, cheese, pasta sauce, onions, green peppers and banana pepper rings Tuna Tuna, onions, cheese, lettuce, tomatoes and mayo Meatball Bellacinos wonderful meatballs, pasta sauce, cheese, onions and green peppers Taco Taco meat, onions, cheddar and mozzarella cheese, taco salsa, black olives, lettuce and tomatoes Specialty pizzas in-

clude: Bellacinos Pride Pepperoni, ham, sausage, mushrooms, green peppers, onions, black olives and mozzarella cheese Bellacinos Super Pepperoni, mushrooms, green peppers, onions and mozzarella cheese Chicken Alfredo White creamy Alfredo sauce, marinated broiled chicken breast, onions and cheese Veggie Mushrooms, onions, green peppers, black olives and mozzarella cheese Taco Taco meat, onions, green peppers, black olives, fresh lettuce and tomatoes Bellacinos Meat Eater Pepperoni, sausage, ham, beef, bacon and mozzarella cheese Sicilian Square Pizza Garlic basted thick crust

Ramblers Roost Restaurant * Fuel * Convenience Store OPEN 24 HOURS


18191A LINCOLN HWY. MIDDLE POINT, OH 45863 Ph. 419-968-2118 for carryout or 419-968-2209

if you do, we have a deal for YOU AND THE WHOLE FAMILY. Come out and join us for our

DO YOU LOVE FRIED CHICKEN?

and Truck Stop

*Restaurant OPEN 24 HOURS

CALL US TODAY TO BOOK YOUR PARTY


beginning at
$

of Ottoville

ALL YOU CAN EAT FRIED CHICKEN BUFFET 1-7PM EVERY SUNDAY
Featuring: our delicious fried chicken, real mashed potatoes, baked potato, 2 hot vegetables, dinner rolls only $8.49 Tossed salad, macaroni salad, potato salad, cole slaw, pickled beets and eggs, broccolli salad, kidney bean salad Desserts: Cake, Jell-o, pudding, fresh fruit or

Party Platters 25

Its Pumpkin Doughnut Time!


Come on in for a delicious cup of coffee & this favorite fall treat!

662 ELIDA AVE., DELPHOS

Add the Salad Bar for only $2.00

190 W. Third St., Ottoville, Ohio 45876

ENJOY OUR ALL YOU CAN EAT BREAKFAST BAR 9A-1P


CHINESE RESTAURANT DINE IN & CARRY OUT
BUFFET

419-453-7827

419-692-0007
Next to Topp Chalet

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

BIG BOX DINNER


includes 2 medium 1-topping pizzas, choice of 8 wings, or large pasta, or 4 pizza rolls, and 5 breadsticks

239 W. Fifth

419-692-3333
WE CUSTOM CATER ALL EVENTS

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


BUFFET BUFFET

$1.00 off of 2 Reg. Lunch Buffet


Expires 11-14-12

$2.00 off of 2 Reg. Dinner Buffet


Expires 11-14-12

$1999 FREE 2 LITER


133 E. Fifth St. Delphos Ph. 419-695-8085 with the purchase of a BIG BOX at $19.99
with this coupon

ALL FOR

All You Can Eat Super Buffet MORE THAN


Best Chinese Restaurant in Town 100 ITEMS

Monday: $1.00 off ANY SANDWICH Tuesday: $1.00 off ANY 3 pc. meal Wednesday: JUMBO WINGS 60 each Thursday: COUNTRY FRIED STEAK $4.95 Friday: FISH DINNER 3 pc. $6.25
NOW BOOKING HOLIDAY PARTIES.
DINE IN - CARRY OUT - DRIVE THRU OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 11 AM - 9 PM

You might also like