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No more trans fat in American diets MARY CLARE JALONICK WASHINGTON (AP) — Heart-clogging trans fats were once a staple of the American diet, plentiful in baked goods, microwave popcorn and fried foods. Now, mindful of the health risks, the Food and Drug Administration is getting rid of what’s left of them for good.

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day — could prevent 20,000 heart attacks and 7,000 deaths each year. It won’t happen right away. The agency will collect comments for two months before determining a phase-out timetable. Different foods may have different schedules, depending how easy it is to find substitutes. “We want to do it in a way that doesn’t unduly disrupt

Condemning artificial trans fats as a threat to public health, the FDA announced Thursday it will require the food industry to phase them out. Manufacturers already have eliminated many trans fats, responding to criticism from the medical community and to local laws, Even so, the FDA said getting rid of the rest — the average American still eats around a gram of trans fat a

markets,� said Michael Taylor, FDA’s deputy commissioner for foods. Still, he says, the food “industry has demonstrated that it is, by and large, feasible to do.� Indeed, so much already has changed that most people won’t notice much difference, if any, in food they get at groceries or restaurants.

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Assessment shows needs human service agencies, churches, healthcare organizations and general public gathered Oct. 23 to learn about the key findings from a Community Wide Needs Assessment conducted over the past year for Shelby County. More than 100 people were in attendance to learn about the results. Wilson Memorial Hospital, Shelby County Family

and Children First Council, Shelby County United Way, Tri-County Board of Recovery and Mental Health Services and the Shelby County Health Department made up the task force that collaborated over the past year to conduct the assessment. Wright State University’s See NEEDS | 3

The case of a man accused of robbing a bank in downtown Sidney — the second robbery of the same bank in the same month — has been bound over to Shelby County Common P l e a s Court. I n Sidney Municipal C o u r t Tu e s d a y, Cromes J u d g e D u a n e Goettemoeller ordered the robbery case of Neil R. Cromes, 31, bound over after Cromes waived a preliminary hearing. Cromes remains in the Shelby County Jail. Oct. 26 about 11:34 a.m., the Sidney Police Department received a report of a robbery at US Bank, 115 E. Court St. Police were told the suspect had fled on a bicycle. Officers arrived at the bank and began an immediate search of the area. A short time later, Cromes was located in the 300 block of East Court Street and was taken in to custody without incident. It was at the same bank on Oct. 15 that a different man allegedly committed a robbery and also fled on a bike, only to be arrested a short time later. Trevor M. Newbauer, 39, 1527 E. Court St., has been indicted by a grand jury on a third-degree felony charge of robbery for that earlier crime.

Math, reading scores up, not enough Walmart honors vets KIMBERLY HEFLING AP Education Writer

WASHINGTON (AP) — Sometimes the best isn’t good enough: Most American fourth and eighth graders still lack basic skills in math and science despite record high scores on a national exam. Yes, today’s students are doing better than those who came before them. But the improvements have come at a snail’s pace. The 2013 Nation’s Report Card released Thursday finds that the vast majority of the students still are not demonstrating solid academic performance in either math or reading. Stubborn gaps persist between the performances of

white children and their Hispanic and AfricanAmericavn counterparts, who scored much lower. Overall, just 42 percent of fourth graders and 35 percent of eighth graders scored at or above the proficient level in math. In reading, 35 percent of fourth graders and 36 percent of eighth graders hit that mark. Still, as state and federal policies evolve in the postNo Child Left Behind era, the nation’s school kids are doing better today on the test than they did in the early 1990s, when such tracking started, with more improvement in math than in reading. Students of all races have shown improvement over the years. The results come from the National Assessment

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Executive Director of the United Way Scott Barr, right, of Anna, goes over 2013 United Way Campaign numbers with Campaign Chair Mike Lochard, of Sidney, at the 2013 Campaign Finale Luncheon Thursday. The lunch was held at the Sidney American Legion Hall. The projected total for money raised in this year’s campaign is $1,278,484. The goal was $1,300,00. Donations are still be accepted for the campaign.

Family instability, substance abuse, mental health and wellness and physical health challenges are what most needs to be addressed in Shelby County, according to a year-long assessment conducted by a coalition of area agencies. Members of the local business and government community, education systems, social and

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United Way campaign finale

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of Educational Progress, or NAEP, which is given every two years to a sample of fourth and eighth graders. This year’s results, compared to results in 2011, show average incremental gains of about one or two points on a 500-point scale in math and reading in both grades, although the one-point gain in fourth grade reading was not considered statistically significant. “Every two years, the gains tend to be small, but over the long run, they stack up,� said Jack Buckley, commissioner of the Education Department’s National Center for Education Statistics. Buckley said he was

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The Sidney Walmart, 2400 W. Michigan St., has announced a program to honor veterans Monday at 1 p.m. at the store. “We’re inviting all veterans,� said Di Parker, assistant manager over operations. Special recognition will be given to the 14 veterans who are local Walmart employees. Sidney Mayor Mike Barhorst and Shelby County Commissioners Bob Guilliozet and Tony Barhorst will attend. Salvation Army Major David Payne will give the

invocation. Lehman Catholic High School senior McKenna Cabe will sing the national anthem. A color guard will troop the colors to begin the ceremony. Walmart will serve cake to all attendees, who should use the store entrance near the grocery department. According to Parker, leaders of all local veterans organizations have been notified of the event and have been asked to share the information with their members. “We don’t have any idea how many people will be there,� she said. “But it’s free and open to all veterans.�

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Page

Records

Sidney Daily News, Friday, November 8, 2013

Municipal court In Sidney Municipal Court Tuesday, Judge Duane Goettemoeller fined Kathleen R. Adams, 38, 326 Mount Vernon Place, $150 and $138 costs, sentenced her to 45 days in jail (30 days suspended), and ordered her to make restitution for theft. • Joseph D. Lucas, 26, 506 S. West Ave., disorderly conduct (amended from theft), $250 and $138 costs, 30 days jail (15 days suspended), 80 hours community service, restitution. • Jerilyn I. Koontz, 39, 314 1/2 N. Ohio Ave., Apt. 6, menacing (amended from aggravated menacing), $200 and $138 costs, 30 days jail (10 days suspended, two days credit). • Shane D. Skeens, 45, 5880 State Route 29, furnishing false information, $250 and $128 costs, 60 days jail (20 days suspended), 80 hours community service; failure to reinstate license, dismissed. • Heather N. Matthieu, 21, 823 E. Court St., stopping after an accident, $150 and $128 costs, six-month license suspension, 30 days jail (15 days suspended); no operator’s license, dismissed. • Nigel A. Allen, 26, 319 1/2 S. Wilkinson Ave., stopping after an accident, $250 and $201 costs, sixmonth license suspension, 180 days jail (90 days sus-

Common pleas - civil casses

pended, one day credit); failure to reinstate license, dismissed. • Donnie King, 36, 5647 Knoop-Johnston Road, theft, $250 and $143 costs; driving under suspension, $150 and $105 costs. • Timothy L. Nixon, 43, 3 Settlers Lane, Minster, speeding, $30 and $105 costs. • Bryson R. Long, 27, 1289 E. Hoewisher Road, speeding, $30 and $105 costs. • Mary J. Adams, 59, 2597 Alpine Court, assured clear distance, $25 and $111 costs. • Ezekiel Q. Fugate, 24, 601 Chestnut Ave., speeding, $30 and $111 costs. • The robbery case of Cody Hurst, 24, 307 N. Walnut Ave., was bound over to Shelby County Common Pleas Court after Hurst waived a preliminary hearing. • Lathan Ragland, 24, 736 Countryside St., domestic violence, dismissed; cruelty to animals, dismissed.

Civil cases

Civil cases filed recently were: Wilson Memorial Hospital v. Laura S. Burden and Kenneth Burden, 305 W. South St., Anna, $600. Wilson Memorial Hospital v. Timothy

Cook, 849 Fielding Road, $195.80. Wilson Memorial Hospital v. Lisa M. Hall, of Piqua, $1,170.25. Cach Inc., Denver, Colo. v. Richard W. Meyers, 1300 Maple Leaf Court, $5,320.20. Wilson Memorial Hospital v. Chris L. Regula and Amber L. Martin, Jackson Center, $3,478.53. Wilson Memorial Hospital v. Lisa A. Young, 9536 Houston Road, $1,268.73.

Cases dismissed Civil cases dismissed recently were: Wilson Memorial Hospital v. Melissa S. Wheeldon, 1152 W. Mason Road, $637.25; judgment satisfied. Anesthesia Associates, Lima v. John Forsythe, Jackson Center, $482.40; judgment satisfied. Midland Funding, San Diego, Calif. v. Michael L. Warnecke, 435 W. Main St., Port Jefferson, $606.64; judgment satisfied. GE Capital Retail Bank, Draper, Utah v. Loretta Stotler, 424 Wilson Ave., $1,090.06; judgment satisfied. Wilson Memorial Hospital v. Joey L. Moses and Phyllis Moses, 524 Wilson Ave., $1,474.84; judgment satisfied.

The following civil cases were filed recently in Shelby County Common Pleas Court: • Jennifer Hoewischer, 13951 State Route 65, Maplewood, v. Steve White, Murray City, intentional infliction of emotional distress, invasion of privacy. Complaint states White uploaded indecent photos of Hoewischer to a public website. • Cavalry SPV I LLC, Columbus, v. Brittany Steinke, 206 Emerald Circle, Anna, unpaid Walmart credit account of $1,831.01. • Tom and Dorothy Jane Dotson, 2122 State Route 66, Houston, v. William and Sherry Skeens, 7741 Hughes Road, Houston, breach of contract and title. Disputed land contract. • Anthony Grimes, 16500 Wones Road, v. Jerry Korn, Box 483, Jackson Center, and Ohio Department of Job and Family Services, personal injuries. Suit claims injury due to improperly maintained property. ODJFS has filed crossclaim seeking compensation for medical bills paid. • Linda and James Rose, 413 S. Wagner Ave., v. The Pavilion Care Center LLC, Cleveland, and Adcare Health Systems, Cleveland, and

Everett, Mass, complaint for declaratory judgment. Schafer is owner of horses and has contract with Bayley to train for two-thirds of purses won. Bayley is to pay all expenses for horses. Bayley contracted with Welsch to train horses. Welsch sought payment from Schafer for services despite no business relationship with Schafer. Suit also claims Welsch was overpaid. • Thomas Voress, 1900 Bulle Road, v. Gray Chrystall, 16411 Kirkwood Road, injunction and money damages. Encroachments on property. • David C. and Judy L. Weaver, Celina, v. Randall L. Welsh, 3244 Tawny Leaf Court, and ORL Inc., 915 W. Michigan St., money damages. Suit claims medical negligence. • Shelie Bensman, Troy, v. Distribution Transportation Services Inc., 401 S. Main St., Fort Loramie, wrongful discharge. • Shyla Goffena, 732 W. Parkwood St., v. U.S. Bancorp Investments Inc., Cleveland, and David Levorchick, 115 E. Court St., complaint. Suit claims financial adviser sold stocks without permission, causing Goffena to incur tax burden.

City records

County records Sheriff’s log

Police log

WEDNESDAY -4:41 p.m.: crash with injuries. Deputies responded with Anna Rescue and Botkins Fire Department to a crash with injuries at County Road 25A and Ohio 274. -3:37 p.m.: property damage accident. Deputies responded to a two-vehicle collision in the 12000 block of Meranda Road. -1:55 p.m.: crash with injuries. Deputies were called to a two-vehicle crash with unknown injuries at Ohio 29 and Deam Road. Perry Port Salem Rescue and Rosewood Fire also responded. -12:29 p.m.: property damage accident. Deputies responded to a two-vehicle crash in the 8000 block of Botkins Road.

THURSDAY -2:08 p.m.: breaking and entering. Police arrested Justin Dwyer, 30, 401 N. Walnut Ave., Apt. 1, on charges of breaking and entering, possession of criminal tools, and drug abuse. He allegedly entered Soul Hunters Ministry Christian Church, 326 N. West Ave. Three door frames were damaged, causing $200 damage. WEDNESDAY -7:45 p.m.: warrant. Police served a summons to Brian D. Wolfe, 30, for alleged code violations of the city zoning code.​​​ -1:55 p.m.: theft. Walmart personnel reported someone cut a security web off a 42-inch TV, valued at $478, and

Luke Gronneberg | Sidney Daily News

Botkins firefighters respond to a two vehicle crash at the intersection of Ohio 274 and County Road 25A that occurred around 4:41 p.m. Wednesday. Two people in the crash sustained non-lifethreatening injuries. Further details were not available.

Fire, rescue THURSDAY -6:59 a.m.: medical. Anna Rescue and Van Buren Township Fire responded to a medical call in the 8400 block of Lock Two.

WEDNESDAY -8:18 p.m.: medical. Anna Rescue and Botkins Police responded to a medical call in the 500 block of East State Street.

Council learns about tornado warning system from council about the alert system. Police Capt. William Shoemaker explained that the Police Department is notified of tornado warnings through its Law Enforcement Agencies Data System (LEADS) when the National Weather Service

The Solid Rock Pentecostal Church of God, 2745 State Route 29 North, will have its second annual Holiday Bazaar and Craft Show on Saturday from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. This will be held in the church’s fellowship hall. There will be 25 vendors of a variety of items, such as wood carvings, handmade crafts, baked goods, Pink Zebra, Pampered Chef, Avon,

ST. MARYS — Joint Township District Memorial Hospital and Auglaize County Council on Aging will be hosting its year-end celebration for the Parkinson’s and Stroke/Brain Injury Support Group. This event will be held on Nov. 18 at 11 a.m. in conference rooms No. 1 at JTDMH. RSVP to 419394-3335, ext. 1749 by Nov. 11.

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The topic for this meeting will be Telestroke Implementation: Collaborating to Improve Stroke Outcomes with speaker Lana Hinders, RN, director of Emergency Center and Ambulatory Services. Please note that there will not be a December meeting. The Auglaize County Council on Aging is able to provide transportation to the class for those who live in Auglaize County. For any information regarding the stroke support meeting, please call Anne Larger, Community Outreach coordinator, at 419-394-3335.

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THURSDAY -2:36 a.m.: medical. Medics were called to the 200 block of South West Avenue. WEDNESDAY -10:59 p.m.: auto accident. Medics were called to an auto accident at 55 S. Vandemark Road and transported one person. -5:22 p.m.: medical. Medics were called to the 100 block of North Clay Street. -3:41 p.m.: call canceled. Medics were called to the area of Interstate 75 and Michigan Street. The call was canceled en route. -3:32 p.m.: medical. Medics were called to the 2800 block of Wapakoneta Avenue.

Tupperware, and Susie’s Front Porch. This will be an opportunity for people to pick up unique items for Christmas gifts or to decorate their homes, event organizers said. There is no admission fee. Homemade soup and sandwiches will be available for lunch. The public is invited.

Support group to meet

Varicose Veins More Than Just A Cosmetic Issue

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issues warnings. A police supervisor then sets off the alarm. In other business, Mayor Michael Barhorst commented about how impressive Wapakoneta Avenue looks now that improvements are completed. “That entrance to Sidney really looks good,” he said. On another matter, Barhorst said a resident of another community who had served on a grand jury told him how impressed he was with the professionalism of Sidney Police officers who testified. At the end of the meeting, council went into an executive session to discuss appointment of public officials to boards and commissions and appointment of public employees. No action was taken after the session.

Pain Heaviness/Tiredness Burning/Tingling Swelling/Throbbing Tender Veins

stole it from the store. -11:57 a.m.: theft. Personnel at Universal Credit Union, 2310 Industrial Drive, reported someone fraudulently removed $875.62 from an account. -10:47 a.m.: contempt. Police arrested Adam Rust, 29, 823 E. Court St., on a warrant for contempt. TUESDAY -10:02 p.m.: burglary. The residence of Lindsey Market, 339 S. Highland Ave., was entered and a 51-inch TV, cable box and Xbox, valued at $1,450, were stolen. A window was broken also, causing $100 damage. -8:29 p.m.: assault. Christy Wilkins, of Sidney, reported someone assaulted her. She had apparent minor injuries.

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Sidney City Council got an explanation of how the tornado alert system works and discussed other items at the end of its work session Monday night. Sounding of local tornado sirens last week prompted a question

The Pavilion, 705 Fulton St., medical malpractice. Failure to provide proper medical and nursing care which resulted in serious medical problems, pain and suffering. • Mantor Auto and Truck LLC, 825 W. Russell Road, v. Alex J. Westgerdes, 11888 Fair Road, and LTD Trucking, Rockford, and Alan Simons, Rockford, and James A. Behr, Maria Stein, compensation of $15,209.92. Suit seeks compensation for cleanup following an auto collision. • C&J Electric Inc., 9195 State Route 119, Anna, v. Lance Dobbins, dba Dobbins Medical & Construction Service, Bryan, Texas, breach of contract, unjust enrichment and claim on account. Suit claims defendant failed to pay for services provided for Grand Lake Regional Cancer Center in Celina in the amount of $123,140. • Jeremy Rentz, 403 Court, Anna, v. Ford Motor Co., Cleveland, breach of warranty. Failure to provide adequate service for mechanical and electrical problems with vehicle purchased. • Thomas E. Schafer, 57 Elm St., Fort Loramie, v. Randy Bayley, Metairie, La., and Lisa Welsch,

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Church plans revival services Northtowne a Church of God, 2008 Wapakoneta Ave., will have revival services Sunday through Tuesday, with a different speaker each evening. Evangelist Robbie Grubbs, from Somerset, Ky., will speak Sunday at 6 p.m. Pastor Tim McGlone, from Goshen, will speak Monday at 7 p.m. Pastor Scott Landes, from Jellico, Tenn., will speak Tuesday at 7 p.m. For more information, call 498-1476.

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Public record

Sidney Daily News, Friday, November 8, 2013

Obituary

Death notices JAMES

MCCLURE

HEITBRINK MARIA STEIN — Velma A. Heitbrink, age 87 of Maria Stein, died Wednesday, Nov. 6, 2013, at 7:37 p.m. at Mercer County Community Hospital, Coldwater. Mass of Christian Burial will be held at 10:30 Monday, Nov. 11, 2013, at St. John the Baptist Catholic Church. Friends may call at the Hogenkamp Funeral Home, Minster, from 1 to 5 p.m. on Sunday, Nov. 10, 2013, and from 9:30 to 10 a.m. on Monday, Nov. 11, 2013.

Roger Christler

VORDEMARK are not just words,

WA PA KO N ETA — Roger “Bud” W. Christler, 86, of Wapakoneta, passed away at 8:58 a.m. on Wednesday, Nov. 6, 2013, at Lima Memorial Health System. He was born in Shelby County, Ohio on Feb. 21, 1927, to the late Henry C. and Margaret “ M a g g i e ” ( R i c ke r t ) Christler. On Dec. 26, 1954, he married the former Rosemary Hawkins, and she survives. He is also survived by two sons, Steve (Peggy) Christler, of Miamisburg, and Brent (Janet) Christler, of Wapakoneta; six grandchildren, Thomas (Charidy) Murphy, of Springfield, Eileen (Cody) Downing, of West Carrollton, Colin Christler, of Dayton, Joshua (Jamie) Christler, of St. Marys, Mandy Christler, of Findlay and Brandon Christler, of Columbus; four great-grandchildren, Brant Smith, Payge Vey, Hayleigh Renee Downing and Madilyn Rose Downing; a sister, Doris Lunz, of New Bremen; a brother-inlaw, James Knoch, of Wapakoneta; and several nieces and nephews. He was preceded in death by four sisters, Ruth Gross, Evelyn Waterman, Shirley

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PIQUA — Mark D. “Marko” McClure, 35, of Piqua, died at 5 a.m. Tuesday, Nov. 5, 2013, at his residence. A service to honor his life will begin at 10:30 a.m. Saturday, Nov. 9, 2013, at the Victory Baptist Church. Arrangements are being handled through the Jamieson & Yannucci Funeral Home, Piqua.

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Markets Local Grain Markets Trupointe 701. S. Vandemark Road, Sidney 937-492-5254 November corn.................$3.88 December corn.................$4.03 November beans.............$12.65 December beans.............$12.66 Storage wheat...................$6.20 July 2014 wheat.................$6.23 Cargill Inc. 800-448-1285 Dayton November corn............$3.97 1/2 December corn............$4.16 1/2 Sidney November soybeans...$12.71 1/2 December soybeans...$12.76 1/2 Posted County Price Shelby county FSA 820 Fair Road, Sidney 492-6520 Closing prices for Thursday:

Wheat....................................$6.89 Wheat LDP rate........................zero Corn......................................$4.74 Corn LDP rate..........................zero Soybeans.............................$13.33 Soybeans LDP rate...................zero

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CVB ads win two tourism awards ST. MARYS — The Auglaize & Mercer Counties Convention & Visitors Bureau (CVB) was recognized when a radio ad and a full page promotional ad each receive two industry awards this fall. In September, the radio spot “Need a Break—Come to the Lake” and the full page print ad “Best Road Trip Ever” won Middy Awards at the Ohio Association of Convention & Visitors Bureau’s Annual Awards Luncheon in Springfield. That competition is open to all CVBs in Ohio. In October, both were named best in the state in their categories and each won a RUBY Award at the Ohio Conference on Tourism in West Chester. The

RUBY Awards competition is open to all hospitality and tourism entities in Ohio; CVBs, attractions, hotels, restaurants, events and transportation entities. Both programs give awards in tiered budget categories. Executive Director Donna Grube said it was very gratifying to have the bureau’s hard work and creativity recognized. CVB President Brian Miller said winning the awards is great as it reflects the professionalism of the CVB staff and board. He added that the bureau works diligently to try to find the best, most effective ways to promote the two-county area and wining the awards is great recognition for that effort.

Needs From page 1 Center of Urban and Public Affairs facilitated the forums and presented key information from the Shelby County report: The four priority needs areas include the following: Family instability (poverty, unemployment, education); substance abuse (leading causes of hospitalization, alcohol use, tobacco and marijuana use); mental health and wellness (depression in adults and youth, youth bullying); and physical health

challenges (women’s health, preventative screenings, access to providers). With the assessment complete and the community forums over, the task force will now begin to develop strategies and implementation plans to leverage strengths and resources within the county to best address the priority needs that have been identified. To view the complete assessment results, go to http://www. wright.edu/cupa/pdf/

company sells by 2016. Recent school lunch guidelines prevent them from being served in cafeterias. In a statement, New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg said it was his city’s 2008 ban that led to much of the progress. “Our prohibition on trans fats was one of many bold public health measures that faced fierce initial criticism, only to gain widespread acceptance and support,” he said. Indeed, consumers are eating less of the fat. According to the FDA, trans fat intake among Americans declined from 4.6 grams per day in 2003 to around one gram in 2012. A handful of other countries have banned them, including Switzerland and Denmark. Other countries have enacted strict labeling laws. Dr. Leon Bruner, chief scientist at the Grocery Manufacturers Association, said in a statement that his group estimates that food manufacturers have voluntarily lowered the amount of trans fats in food products by 73 percent. The group, which rep-

resents the country’s largest food companies, did not speculate on a reasonable timeline or speak to how difficult a ban might be for some manufacturers. Bruner said in a statement that “consumers can be confident that their food is safe, and we look forward to working with the FDA to better understand their concerns and how our industry can better serve consumers.” Said FDA Commissioner Margaret Hamburg: “While consumption of potentially harmful artificial trans fat has declined over the last two decades in the United States, current intake remains a significant public health concern.” Agency officials say they have been working on trans fat issues for around 15 years and have been collecting data to justify a possible phase-out since just after President Barack Obama came into office in 2009. The advocacy group Center for Science in the Public Interest first petitioned FDA to ban trans fats nine years ago.

FDA

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Rhodes State College LIMA — Rhodes State College has released its dean’s list for the 2013 summer term. Jessica M. Wilson, of Kettlersville, was named to the full-time students dean’s list. Rachael Marthan Ahrns, of Fort Loramie, Nathan D. Dienhart, of Houston, Adam M. Bushman, of Minster, Rebecca A. Meyer, of Russia, and Austine D. Hageman and Douglas Ray Roller, both of Sidney, were named to the part-time students dean’s list.

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ST. HENRY — Anthony M. “Tony” Feltz, age 77, of St. Henry, died at 10:20 a.m. on Thursday, Nov. 7, 2013, at Mercer County Community Hospital, Coldwater. Mass of Christian Burial will be held at 10:30 a.m. on Monday, Nov. 11, 2013, at St. Henry Catholic Church, St. Henry. Friends may call on Sunday from 1 7 p.m. and on Monday from 9 to 10 a.m. at the Hogenkamp Funeral Home, St. Henry.

or 937.726.3732

Schnell and Carol Knoch. A U.S. Army Korean War Veteran, Roger was Past Commander of the American Legion Scherer Post 493 in Jackson Center. He was a dairy farmer for several years before he began working as a machinist at the former Excello in Lima, where he remained employed for 25 years. Roger enjoyed gardening and working outdoors. P a s t o r Sylvia Hull will conduct a funeral service on Sunday, Nov. 10, 2013, at 1 p.m. at the Jackson Center United Methodist Church, 202 E. Pike St., Jackson Center. Burial will be in Pearl Cemetery. Visitation will be Saturday, Nov. 9, 2013, from 2 to 4 and 6 to 8 p.m. at the Eichholtz Daring & Sanford Funeral Home, 214 W. Pike St., Jackson Center. Memorial contributions may be made to the Honor Flight Network at www.honorflight.org. Funeral arrangements are in the care of the Eichholtz Daring & Sanford Funeral Home in Jackson Center. Condolences may be expressed at www. edsfh.com.

Page 3

From page 1 Scientists say there are no health benefits to trans fats. And they can raise levels of “bad” cholesterol, increasing the risk of heart disease, the leading cause of death in the United States. Trans fats are widely considered the worst kind for your heart, even worse than saturated fats, which also can contribute to heart disease. Trans fats are used both in processed food and in restaurants, often to improve the texture, shelf life or flavor of foods. Though they have been removed from many items, the fats are still found in some baked goods such as pie crusts and biscuits and in ready-to-eat frostings that use the more-solid fats to keep consistency. They also are sometimes used by restaurants for frying. Many larger chains have phased them out, but smaller restaurants may still get food containing trans fats from suppliers. How can the government get rid of them? The FDA said it has made a preliminary determination that trans fats no longer fall

in the agency’s “generally recognized as safe” category, which covers thousands of additives that manufacturers can add to foods without FDA review. Once trans fats are off the list, anyone who wants to use them would have to petition the agency for a regulation allowing it, and that would likely not be approved. The fats are created when hydrogen is added to vegetable oil to make it more solid, which is why they are often called partially hydrogenated oils. The FDA is not targeting small amounts of trans fats that occur naturally in some meat and dairy products, because they would be too difficult to remove and aren’t considered a major public health threat on their own. Many companies have already phased out trans fats, prompted by new nutrition labels introduced by FDA in 2006 that list trans fats and by an increasing number of local laws, like one in New York City, that have banned them. In 2011, WalMart pledged to remove all artificial trans fats from the foods the

Scores From page 1 “heartened” by some of the results, “but there are also some areas where I’d hoped to see improvement where we didn’t.” Today, President W. Bush’s landmark education law No Child Left Behind, which sought to close achievement gaps among racial groups and have every student doing math and reading at grade level by 2014, has essentially been dismantled. After Congress failed to

update the law before it was due for renewal in 2007, President Barack Obama allowed states to get waivers from it if they showed they have their own plans to prepare students. Most states took him up on the offer. Meanwhile, a majority of states are rolling out Common Core State Standards with the goal of better preparing the nation’s students for college or a job. The states-led standards establish benchmarks for reading and math and replace goals

Obituary policy The Sidney Daily News publishes abbreviated death notices free of charge. There is a flat $85 charge for obituaries and photographs. Usually death notices

and/or obituaries are submitted via the family’s funeral home, although in some cases a family may choose to submit the information directly.

that varied widely from state. Academic scholars have long debated what effects the law and other state-led reforms have had on test scores. This year, Tennessee and the District of Columbia, which have both launched high-profile efforts to strengthen education by improving teacher evaluations and by other measures, showed across-the-board growth on the test compared to 2011, likely stoking more debate. Only the Defense Department schools also saw gains in both grade levels and subjects. In Hawaii, which has also seen a concentrated effort to improve teaching quality, scores also increased with the exception of fourth grade reading. In Iowa and Washington state, scores increased except

in 8th grade math. Specifically pointing to Tennessee, Hawaii and D.C., Education Secretary Arne Duncan said on a conference call with reporters that many of the changes seen in these states were “very, very difficult and courageous” and appear to have had an impact. Chris Minnich, executive director of the Council of Chief State School Officers, said the biggest problem revealed in the results is the large gap that exists between the performances of students of different races. There was a 26-point gap, for example, between how white and African American 4th graders performed on the math section. In eighth grade reading, white students outperformed Hispanic students by 21 points.


Page 4

State

Sidney Daily News, Friday, November 8, 2013

School, NASA will partner space research DAN SEWELL Associated Press

CINCINNATI (AP) — The University of Cincinnati and NASA agreed Wednesday to partner on space science research in a program honoring the first man to walk on the moon. UC President Santa Ono signed the accord with the National Aeronautics and Space Administration as the school announced plans for the Neil Armstrong Space Science Institute. Following his July 20, 1969, moonwalk, Armstrong was an aerospace engineering professor at UC through the 1970s. The Ohio native died last year at age 82. “Although he was reluctant hero who preferred not to be in the spotlight,

the University of Cincinnati community wanted to do something to honor his memory and his achievements,” Ono said. Armstrong’s widow Carol and sons Rick and Mark Armstrong joined in unveiling a life-sized bas relief of Armstrong that will be installed at the entrance to Rhodes Hall, where his teaching office was. The school says the institute will focus on research, education in space science and engineering, and manage space-related data. Its initial work will be around unmanned aerial vehicles, or drones. The agreement will connect UC researchers with experts at the NASA Ames Research Center in Mountain View, Calif. Tom Davis, chief of aviation systems there, said the NASA partnership grew

out of a visit by Ono to the center in May while he was promoting UC in California. Davis is a UC alumnus who met Armstrong through his father, who also taught at UC. “He inspired my generation,” said Davis, who called Armstrong a childhood hero. UC also previewed an exhibition about Armstrong’s life and space exploration, including personal artifacts donated to the school. It opens on campus to the public on Thursday. The school will offer scholarships in Armstrong’s name funded by alumni including some of his former students. UC has also created a commemorative online site about Armstrong.

Al Behrman | AP

Members of astronaut Neil Armstrong’s family, from left, son Rick Armstrong, wife Carol Armstrong, grandson Andrew Armstrong, and son Mark Armstrong, pose in front of a bas relief sculpture of Armstrong while he was a professor at the University of Cincinnati, Wednesday at the university in Cincinnati.

Museum plans events for WWII heroes DAN SEWELL Associated Press

CINCINNATI (AP) — Military and history buffs will be able to watch online as surviving Doolittle Raiders make a final toast Saturday to comrades who died in or since their World War II bombing attack on Japan. The Air Force plans to livestream the annual ceremony at the National Museum of the U.S. Air Force near Dayton. There will also be news media coverage of what traditionally has been a private gathering. Public events ahead of the invitation-only ceremony include a gathering to greet the Raiders as they arrive, a memorial service, a B-25 bomber flyover and movies such as the “Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo” depiction of the 1942 mission.

Only four of the 80 Raiders are still alive, and one isn’t able to travel. For decades, the Raiders have offered a toast “to those who have gone” with specially engraved silver goblets at their annual reunions. After Maj. Thomas Griffin of Cincinnati died in February at age 96, the survivors decided that this year’s annual April reunion would be the last and that they would gather for one last toast the weekend before Veterans Day. “I’m looking forward to it,” said David Thatcher, 92, of Missoula, Mont. His wife, children and other relatives will accompany him, he said by telephone this week. He said he can’t predict the emotions he’ll feel at the toast ceremony.

“I don’t have any idea what it will be like until we’re there,” said Thatcher, an engineer-gunner on the mission. The toast grew from reunions led by Lt. Col. James “Jimmy” Doolittle, who commanded the daring mission credited with boosting American morale and shaking the Japanese after a string of military successes. Lt. Col. Richard Cole, Doolittle’s co-pilot, plans to come to the ceremony from Comfort, Texas, while Lt. Col. Edward Saylor is expected from Puyallup, Wash. Lt. Col. Robert Hite of Nashville, Tenn., 93, who was captured by the Japanese after the attack, won’t be able to attend because of health problems but hopes to watch at home, a museum spokesman said. The goblets, presented to the Raiders in 1959 by the city of

Mark Duncan, File | AP

In these April 18, 2012 file photos, surviving Doolittle Raiders Richard Cole, left, David Thatcher, center, and Edward Saylor take part in a commemoration for the 70th anniversary of the raid on Tokyo at the Museum of the United States Air Force in Dayton, Ohio. Cole, Thatcher and Saylor will return to the museum Saturday, Nov. 9, 2013, to make a final toast to comrades who died in or since their World War II bombing attack on Japan. Only four of the 80 Raiders are still alive, and one isn’t able to travel.

Tucson, Ariz., have the Raiders’ names engraved twice, the second upside-down. During the ceremony, white-gloved cadets

Muslims say workers fired for prayers CINCINNATI (AP) — A Muslim civil rights group said Thursday it has filed federal complaints over the firing of 24 workers in a dispute over prayer breaks at a DHL Global Mail facility in northern Kentucky. The Cincinnati chapter of the Council on AmericanIslamic Relations said the employees were terminated last month. The group said the employees had been using their break times for regular evening prayer. It said an apparent change by managers on the flexible break policy led to the conflict.

The group said it has complained to the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission that thve workers were exercising legally protected religious rights. DHL Global Mail didn’t comment immediately Thursday. The Cincinnati Enquirer reports (http://cin. ci/1bZZPsE) that Somali refugee Mohamed Maow, 27, was among those fired. He said he was terminated Oct. 9 after three years without problems at DHL Global Mail in Hebron, Ky., where he sorted mail for $11.57 an hour.

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The workers said they had stopped, walked to a corner of the mailroom, and began silent prayer in separate huddles of men and women. “First, it’s religion,” Maow said of the requirement for evening prayer. “Second, it is that you are to support your father and mother, and children until they are able to care for themselves. We take work very seriously.” CAIR attorney Booker Washington said the company claims that employees were insubordinate, disrespectful and hostile. He said there’s been no

evidence of disorderly conduct, and that CAIR is seeking possible damages, reinstatement where appropriate and policy changes to protect workers’ rights. CAIR said it has already filed 11 complaints and expects to file 24. The EEOC says it would first offer to mediate and if that is declined, would investigate whether to file suit against the employer. The agency says Muslims across the country filed 785 complaints of religious discrimination in 2012, The Enquirer reported.

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Boy to give WWII dog tags to family MEDINA (AP) — A 9-year-old Ohio boy who came by some World War II military dog tags plans to present them to the soldier’s family on Veterans Day. Lenny Aydemir of the Cleveland suburb of Medina was given the dog tags by an uncle visiting from France last summer. He wondered about the owner — Jack B. Robbins from Wichita Falls, Texas — and set

out trying to find him. It turned out that Robbins was shot down over France in 1944 and spent 10 months in a German prison camp. He died in 1969. WEWS -TV reports that the third-grader will give a presentation on Robbins’ life at his school on Monday. Then he’ll hand over the dog tags to Robbins’ relatives who are flying in for an afternoon ceremony.

Judge won’t stop convict’s execution ANDREW WELSH-HUGGINS

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pour cognac into the participants’ goblets. Those of the deceased are turned upsidedown.

Associated Press

COLUMBUS (AP) — A federal judge on Thursday declined to stop the upcoming execution of a condemned child killer over concerns raised by defense attorneys over the state’s new, never-tried lethal injection processes. Ronald Phillips’ lawyers sued Oct. 31 to stop his execution on the grounds that Ohio had delayed the announcement of its policy so long it didn’t leave enough time to fully investigate the method. They also question the Department of Rehabilitation and Correction’s decision to allow the prisons director to delegate execution responsibilities to other individuals. Judge Gregory Frost said he understands why Phillips does not trust the state to follow its own execution policies based on problems in the past.

But he said Phillips did not prove the state’s new policy is unconstitutional. “Some of the changes target the drug issue, while other changes tweak the protocol in various ways,” Frost wrote. “The changes do not invariably result in the new protocol being unconstitutional.” Phillips, 40, is scheduled to die Nov. 14 for raping and killing Sheila Marie Evans, the 3-year-old daughter of his girlfriend, after a long period of abusing the girl. Phillips’ lawyers argue that allowing the director to delegate some execution-day duties broke a previous agreement with the judge that put all the decision-making in the hands of the director or the death row warden. Ohio has walked away from that promise with the new policies, Allen Bohnert, an attorney for Phillips, told

Frost at a Nov. 1 hearing. “Close enough for government work is not acceptable in applying this death penalty protocol,” Bohnert said. An attorney for Ohio said the state is committed to carrying out the execution in a humane, dignified and constitutional manner and understands that commitment. “The state will do what the state says it will do,” Christopher Conomy, an assistant Ohio attorney general, said at the hearing. The agency switched to two new drugs because it couldn’t obtain a supply of its former execution drug, pentobarbital, from a specialty pharmacy that mixes individual doses for patients. The agency had considered using a compounding pharmacy after its supply of federally regulated pentobarbital expired in September.

Southeast Ohio will get new area code COLUMBUS (AP) — Parts of southeastern Ohio will be getting a new area code in 2015, state regulators said. There aren’t enough numbers in the current 740 area code to accommodate the demand, so the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio said it will have to introduce a new one, according to The Columbus Dispatch. The public utilities commission has begun

to ask people for input on how the new code — the actual numbers haven’t been introduced — should be added. The state is looking at two options. The overlay option would allow those in the 740 area code to retain their number, but they’d have to use all 10 digits when calling within the area code. New numbers would be assigned the new area code. The split plan would

divide the geographic area in half, with half of them assigned the new area code. The public will have until Nov. 27 to vote or comment on which option it prefers. The public utilities commission will then make a ruling and implement it. The need for another area code is an indication of economic and population growth, said Bill LaFayette of the

Columbus-based economics consulting firm Regionomics. A federal agency called the North American Numbering Program Administration says the 740 area code will run out of telephone numbers by early 2015. The 740 area code split off from 614 in 1998. It’s now used in most of southeastern Ohio and some areas around Columbus.


Nation/World Today in History The Associated Press

Today is Friday, Nov. 8, the 312th day of 2013. There are 53 days left in the year. Today’s Highlight in History: On Nov. 8, 1988, Vice President George H.W. Bush won the presidential election, defeating Massachusetts Gov. Michael Dukakis. On this date: In 1889, Montana became the 41st state. In 1909, the original Boston Opera House first opened with a performance of “La Gioconda” by Amilcare Ponchielli. In 1913, the play “Woyzeck,” by Georg Buchner, had its premiere in Munich, Germany, more than six decades after the playwright’s death. In 1923, Adolf Hitler launched his first attempt at seizing power in Germany with a failed coup in Munich that came to be known as the “Beer-Hall Putsch.” In 1932, New York Democratic Gov. Franklin D. Roosevelt defeated incumbent Republican Herbert Hoover for the presidency. In 1942, Operation Torch, resulting in an Allied victory, began during World War II as U.S. and British forces landed in French North Africa. In 1950, during the Korean War, the first jet plane battle took place as U.S. Air Force Lt. Russell J. Brown shot down a North Korean MiG-15. In 1960, Massachusetts Sen. John F. Kennedy defeated Vice President Richard M. Nixon for the presidency. In 1972, the premium cable TV network HBO (Home Box Office) made its debut with a showing of the movie “Sometimes a Great Notion.” In 1980, scientists at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., announced that the U.S. space probe Voyager 1 had discovered a 15th moon orbiting the planet Saturn. In 1987, 11 people were killed when an Irish Republican Army bomb exploded as crowds gathered in Enniskillen, Northern Ireland, for a ceremony honoring Britain’s war dead. In 1994, midterm elections resulted in Republicans winning a majority in the Senate while at the same time gaining control of the House for the first time in 40 years. Ten years ago: A suicide car bombing of a housing complex in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, killed 17 people. Front-runner Howard Dean became the first Democratic presidential candidate ever to reject taxpayer money and avoid the accompanying spending limits, saying he had to act to compete against President Bush’s cash-rich campaign.

Out of the Blue

Man busted for selling rustled cow costumes REDLANDS, Calif. (AP) — Police in Southern California have busted a cattle costume rustler after he tried to sell the stolen suits online. Redlands police say the two 7-foot cow costumes created for the Chick-fil-A chain were nabbed in separate restaurant burglaries. The costumes turned up for sale for $350 apiece on Craigslist on Oct. 30. An undercover officer arranged to buy the bovine attire in time for Halloween. When the seller produced the black-and-white outfits, he was arrested. Forty-three-year-old Robert Michael Trytten, of Riverside, is being held for suspicion of possession of stolen property on $275,000 bail. The costumes were valued by the restaurant at $2,800 apiece. Police also recovered a popup canopy stolen from the restaurant. All the property was returned to Chick-fil-A.

Sidney Daily News, Friday, November 8, 2013

Page 5

Twitter soars in market debut BARBARA ORTUTAY AP Technology Writer

NEW YORK (AP) — Shares of Twitter went on sale to the public for the first time Thursday, instantly leaping more than 70 percent above their offering price in a dazzling debut that exceeded even Wall Street’s lofty hopes. By the closing bell, the social network that reinvented global communication in 140-character bursts was valued at $31 billion — nearly as much as Yahoo Inc., an Internet icon from another era, and just below Kraft Foods, the grocery conglomerate founded more than a century ago. Twitter, which has never turned a profit in the seven years since it was founded, worked hard to temper expectations ahead of the IPO, but all that was swiftly forgotten with the stock’s opening surge. The most anticipated initial public offering of the year was carefully orchestrated to avoid the glitches and

eventual letdown that surrounded Facebook’s first appearance on the Nasdaq 18 months ago. Trading on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol “ TWTR,” shares opened at $45.10, 73 percent above their initial offering price. In the first few hours, the stock jumped as high as $50.09. Most of those gains held throughout the day, with Twitter closing at 44.90, despite a broader market decline. The narrow price range indicated that people felt it was “pretty fairly priced,” said JJ Kinahan, chief strategist at TD Ameritrade. The immediate price spike “clearly shows that demand exceeds the supply of shares,” said Wedbush analyst Michael Pachter. Earlier in the day, Twitter gave a few users rather than executives the opportunity to ring the NYSE’s opening bell. The users included actor Patrick Stewart, who played Captain Jean-Luc Picard in

“Star Trek: The Next Generation”; Vivienne Harr, a 9-year-old girl who ran a lemonade stand for a year to raise money to end child slavery; and Cheryl Fiandaca of the Boston Police Department. Twitter raised $1.8 billion Wednesday night when it sold 70 million shares to select investors for $26 each. Had it priced the stock at $30, for instance, the company would have taken away $2.1 billion. At $35, it would have reaped nearly $2.5 billion. “In hindsight, when you look at this, you almost think they left a little too much money on the table,” Entner said. Named after the sound of a chirping bird, Twitter’s origins date back to 2005, when creators Noah Glass and Evan Williams were trying to get people to sign up for Odeo, a podcasting service they created. Odeo didn’t make it. By early 2006, Glass and fellow Odeo programmer Jack Dorsey began work on a new project: teaming with

Richard Drew | AP

Twitter CEO Dick Costolo uses his mobile phone on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange, Thursday. If Twitter’s bankers and executives were hoping for a surge on the day of the stock’s public debut, they got it. The stock opened at $45.10 a share on its first day of trading, 73 percent above its initial offering price.

co-worker Christopher “Biz” Stone on a way to corral text messages typically sent over a phone. It was Glass who came up with the orig-

inal name Twttr. The two vowels were added later. The first tweets were sent on March 21, 2006.

Malala plotter new Taliban chief ISHTIAQ MAHSUD and SEBASTIAN ABBOT Associated Press

DERA ISMAIL KHAN, Pakistan (AP) — The ruthless commander behind the attack on teenage activist Malala Yousafzai as well as a series of bombings and beheadings was chosen Thursday as the leader of the Pakistani Taliban, nearly a week after a U.S. drone strike killed the previous chief. The militant group ruled out peace talks with the government, accusing Pakistan of working with the U.S. in the Nov. 1 drone strike. Islamabad denied the allegation and accused Washington of sabotaging its attempt to strike a deal with the Taliban to end years of violence. Mullah Fazlullah was unanimously appointed the new leader by the Taliban’s

leadership council, or shura, after several days of deliberation, said the council’s head, Asmatullah Shaheen Bhitani. Militants fired AK-47 assault rifles and anti-aircraft guns into the air to celebrate. The previous chief, Hakimullah Mehsud, was killed by the drone in the North Waziristan tribal area near the Afghan border. He was known for a bloody campaign that killed thousands of Pakistani civilians and security personnel, a deadly attack on a CIA base in Afghanistan and was believed to be behind the failed bombing in New York’s Times square in 2010. The U.S. had put a $5 million bounty on his head, Mehsud’s killing had outraged Pakistani officials. The government said the drone strike came a day before it planned to send a delegation of

clerics to invite the Pakistani Taliban to hold peace talks, although many analysts doubted a deal was likely. Bhitani, the Taliban shura leader, said the group would not join peace talks with the government, accusing Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif of selling out the group when he met with President Barack Obama in Washington on Oct. 23. “We will take revenge on Pakistan for the martyrdom of Hakimullah,” Bhitani told The Associated Press by telephone from an undisclosed location in North Waziristan, where the shura met. The Pakistani government did not immediately respond to request for comment on the Taliban comments or the appointment of Fazlullah. Pakistani Interior Minister Chaudhry Nisar Ali Khan has said he asked the U.S. ambas-

sador in Islamabad, Richard Olson, not to carry out any drone attacks while Islamabad was pursuing peace talks with domestic Taliban militants. The Pakistani Taliban withdrew an offer to hold talks in May after their deputy leader was killed in a U.S. drone strike but warmed to negotiations again after Sharif took office in June. It’s unclear if the government will be able to coax the militants back to the table again, especially since Fazlullah is known to be such a hard-liner. Pakistani officials have criticized the drone strikes in public, saying they violate the country’s sovereignty and kill too many civilians. But the government is known to have secretly supported at least some of the attacks, especially when they targeted enemies of the state.

Senate OKs gay rights bill

Arafat’s death mysterious

DONNA CASSATA

JOHN HEILPRIN and MOHAMMED DARAGHMEH

Associated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Senate approved legislation outlawing workplace discrimination against gay, bisexual and transgender Americans, demonstrating the nation’s quickly evolving attitude toward gay rights nearly two decades after Congress rejected same-sex marriage. Fifty-four members of the Democratic majority and 10 Republicans voted Thursday for the first major gay rights bill since Congress repealed the ban on gays in the military three years ago. The vote in favor of the Employment NonDiscrimination Act was 64-32. Two opponents of a similar measure 17 years ago, Arizona Republican Sen. John McCain, the presidential nominee in 2008, and Republican Sen. Orrin Hatch of Utah, backed the measure this time. “We are about to make history in this chamber,” Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine and a chief sponsor of the bill, said shortly before the vote. The enthusiasm of the bill’s supporters was tempered by the reality that the Republican-led House, where conservatives have a firm grip on the agenda, is unlikely to even vote on the legislation. Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, maintains his longstanding opposition to the measure, arguing that it is unnecessary and certain to create costly, frivolous lawsuits for businesses. Outside conservative groups have cast the bill as anti-family. President Barack Obama welcomed the vote and urged the House to act. “One party in one house of Congress should not stand in the way of millions of Americans who want to go

to work each day and simply be judged by the job they do,” Obama said in a statement. “Now is the time to end this kind of discrimination in the workplace, not enable it.” Gay rights advocates hailed Senate passage as a major victory in a momentous year for the issue. The Supreme Court in June granted federal benefits to legally married same-sex couples, though it avoided a sweeping ruling that would have paved the way for same-sex unions nationwide. Illinois is on the verge of becoming the 15th state to legalize gay marriage along with the District of Columbia. Supporters called the bill the final step in a long congressional tradition of trying to stop discrimination, coming nearly 50 years after enactment of the Civil Rights Act and 23 years after the Americans with Disabilities Act. “Now we’ve finished the trilogy,” Sen. Tom Harkin, D-Iowa, a chief sponsor of the disabilities law, said at a Capitol Hill news conference. The first openly gay senator, Democrat Tammy Baldwin of Wisconsin, called the vote a “tremendous milestone” that she will always remember throughout her time in the Senate. Democrats echoed Obama in pushing for the House to act, with Sen. Dick Durbin of Illinois reminding the GOP leader of the history of his party. “The Republican Party in the United States of America came into being in the 1980s over the issue of slavery, and the man who embodied the ideals of that Republican Party was none other than Abraham Lincoln, who gave his life for his country to end discrimination,” Durbin said. “Keep that proud Republican tradition alive.”

Associated Press

RAMALLAH, West Bank (AP) — Yasser Arafat’s mysterious 2004 death turned into a whodunit Thursday after Swiss scientists who examined his remains said the Palestinian leader was probably poisoned with radioactive polonium. Yet hard proof remains elusive, and nine years on, tracking down anyone who might have slipped minuscule amounts of the lethal substance into Arafat’s food or drink could be difficult. A new investigation could also prove embarrassing — and not just for Israel, which the Palestinians have long accused of poisoning their leader and which has denied any role. The Palestinians themselves could come under renewed scrutiny, since Arafat was holed up in his Israeli-besieged West Bank compound in the months before his death, surrounded by advisers, staff and bodyguards. Arafat died at a French military hospital on Nov. 11, 2004, at age 75, a month after suddenly falling violently ill at his compound. At the time, French doctors said he died of a stroke and had a bloodclotting problem, but records were inconclusive about what caused that condition. The Swiss scientists said that they found elevated traces of polonium-210 and lead in Arafat’s remains that could not have occurred naturally, and that the timeframe of Arafat’s illness and death was consistent with poisoning from ingesting polonium. “Our results reasonably support the poisoning theory,” Francois Bochud, director of Switzerland’s Institute of Radiation Physics, which car-

ried out the investigation, said at a news conference. Bochud and Patrice Mangin, director of the Lausanne University Hospital’s forensics center, said they tested and ruled out innocent explanations, such as accidental poisoning. “I think we can eliminate this possibility because, as you can imagine, you cannot find polonium everywhere. It’s a very rare toxic substance,” Mangin told The Associated Press. Palestinian officials, including Arafat’s successor, Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, had no comment on the substance of the report but promised a continued investigation. The findings are certain to revive Palestinian allegations against Israel, a nuclear power. Polonium can be a byproduct of the chemical processing of uranium, but usually is made artificially in a nuclear reactor or a particle accelerator. Arafat’s widow, Suha, called on the Palestinian leadership to seek justice for her husband, saying, “It’s clear this is a crime.” Speaking by phone from the Qatari capital Doha, she did not mention Israel but argued that only countries with nuclear capabilities have access to polonium. Israel has repeatedly denied a role in Arafat’s death and did so again Thursday. Paul Hirschson, a Foreign Ministry official, dismissed the claim as “hogwash.” “We couldn’t be bothered to” kill him, Hirschson said. “If anyone remembers the political reality at the time, Arafat was completely isolated. His own people were barely speaking to him. There’s no logical reason for Israel to have wanted to do something like this.”


Localife Friday, November 8, 2013

Page 6

Contact Localife Editor Patricia Ann Speelman with story ideas, club news, wedding, anniversary, engagements and birth announcements by phone at 937-498-5965; email pspeelman@civitasmedia.com; or by fax 937-498-5991.

Susan names favorite authors

It’s Wednesday evening and it has really warmed up. Temperature is in the 60s. I am finally having my garage sale on Friday and Saturday. Every time I wanted to have it all summer, something else more important came up. Daughter Susan wrote the column for me today while I went to a quilting. I was surprised and relieved that I didn’t have to squeeze that in yet. I would also like to mention that I had a visit from cousin Fern and her daughter, Tricia, recently. Was nice visiting with them. Dear Readers: Hi, how are you all doing? This is Susan. Mom is pretty busy this week so I decided to surprise her and write the

column for her. She is a books written by nongreat mother! Amish authors just don’t This week has pretty get all the facts of Amish much been spent life right. getting ready for a Sunday my garage sale. I was boyfriend, sorting through Mose’s, parents our books to see had church serwhich ones we vices at their want to sell. I house. They kept all the books live 21 miles that had facts from here so about horses. I went to their I love reading house Saturday those and learnnight. Brother The Amish Benjamin and ing new things about horses. My sister Loretta Cook dream is to one went with me. day write a book. Lovina Eicher Benjamin is I have all kinds of friends with short stories I have writ- Mose’s brother, Freeman, ten. My favorite authors and Loretta, with his are Karen Kingsbury and sister, Linda. Mose and Linda Byler. I just start- I went over to his sised reading Linda Byler’s ter, Hannah’s, house on books and I can tell she is Saturday night. They an Amish author. Other have two little boys and

Mose has been spending a lot of time hunting. He wants me to go deer hunting with him one day. I told him I’ll go if I can take a book along to read. He said if I do, I have to turn the pages really quietly. I like giving him a hard time. Last year when I went hunting with him, my feet were so cold so he gave me some heat packs to put in my boots. Those helped a lot. We plan to bake some bread, rolls, etc., to sell at the garage sale. Tomorrow will be a busy day doing that and organizing everything. We also need to do laundry. Sunday, Mose and I plan to go to another church district, as his friend, Chris, will start following instructions for baptism.

Homemade Dinner Rolls 1 1/2 cups milk 4 teaspoons yeast 1/4 cup butter 1/2 cup warm water 2 eggs, beaten 7 cups flour 1/2 cup sugar 1 teaspoon salt 1. Scald milk with butter in it. 2. Beat eggs, add sugar and salt. 3. Pour hot milk over egg mixture and cool to lukewarm 4. Dissolve yeast in warm water, add to milk. 5. Stir in flour to make a soft dough. 6. Let rise 1 hour. 7. Punch down, let rise 1 hour and shape into buns. 8. Let rise until light. 9. Bake in 350-degree oven for 15 to 20 minutes or until brown.

Holy Angels sale nets $7,000

Cookbook winner

Mary Lou Veit, of Sidney, has won a cookbook in a Sidney Daily News drawing. She submitted recipes for inclusion in the 2013 Harvest Holiday Cookbook, which will be available Nov. 23.

During its recent International Artisan Sale and Dessert Cafe, Holy Angels Parish raised more than $6,000 for artisans and farmers in 32 developing countries and $800 to support parish outreach programs. The event was a project for the national Make a Difference Day. Fair trade products were sold. The producers received 75 percent of the proceeds. Fifteen percent will be used by the Fair Trade Fund to build schools, medical facilities and sanitation projects and for artisan training. The remaining 10 percent is Fair Trade Fund overhead. Proceeds from a raffle and the dessert cafe will be used to benefit Most

No license to fly? Dear Heloise: I will be traveling soon, but my driver’s license is expired. Can I still use it at the airport? — A Reader in Tennessee According to the Transportation Security Hints Administration (www. from Heloise tsa. gov), passengers must present a valid Heloise Cruse photo ID. If a driver’s

an eight-month old girl. She is such a sweetie! Dad and Joseph went hunting tonight. One of the calves decided to slip out of the calf pen. We had quite a chase to get it back in. Elizabeth, Verena, Benjamin, Kevin, mom and I were all trying to round it back into the pen. I imagine we looked kind of funny as that calf seemed to slip between two of us every time. We made sure Benjamin wired the cattle panel shut where it squeezed out. Little Prancer is growing fast. He is a cutie. He is getting fat though, so I try to exercise him. I love that little pony! I have taught him some tricks but it takes a lot of patience. We are glad to have Prancer’s mother, Minnie, back here for keeps.

license has expired, it is no longer valid. If passengers do not have this primary form of ID, they need at least two forms of alternative identification. Here are forms that may be accepted: • Social Security card • Birth certificate

• Marriage license • Credit card Each form of ID must contain the passenger’s name, and one of them also must include one of the following: birth date, address, photo, gender. If you have questions, contact the airport you will be traveling through to find out if your form of identification will be accepted. — Heloise

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Holy Trinity Parish in Honduras and other Holy Angels outreach programs, including Project Linus. Participants in this project make security blankets to comfort children in the Dayton area who are in hospitals or shelters. Another project is the creation of pillowcase dresses by many seamstresses in the parish. Six hundred dresses have already been sent to Haiti , Honduras, Tanzania and Ghana. Funds will also be used to provide a second annual Service Day for Women and Girls in February. Anyone interested in participating in these outreach projects either individually or as a group can call 492-4364 for more information.

SDN Photo/Steve Egbert

Kathy Kinsella, left, and Ginny Mertz, both of Sidney, admire jewelry at the Fair Trade Sale at Holy Angels School recently.

Preventing infant deaths We hear about infant deaths occur when babies are: mortality in underdeveloped • Born too small and too countries. Now we have early (preterm births are learned it is a real problem those before 37 weeks of in Ohio. The Sidney-Shelby pregnancy). County Health Department • Born with a serious birth partners with Wilson defect. Memorial Hospital • Victims of sudCopeland-Emerson den infant death Family Birth Center syndrome (SIDS) or and the Help Me other injuries (unsafe Grow program to idensleeping environment, tify first born infants, suffocation). nursing mothers, non • Affected by English speaking famiunhealthy mothers. lies, teen moms, uninThese top four leadGuest sured, or those with Column ing causes of infant no prenatal care or mortality together Margie prematurity. accounted for 61 Eilerman The Health percent of all infant Department offers deaths in Ohio from these individuals and 2006 to 2009. their newborns a home visit Our focus at the Health by a Public Health Nurse. The Department has several parts Public Health Nurse offers an — each one with a unique educational home visit with aspect for lowering infant weight and assessment of mortality rates in Ohio. the newborn. Maternal conSafe Sleep cerns are also addressed. A Sidney-Shelby County folder of appropriate mater- Health Department needs to nal/child information is pro- make sure that each and every vided and any concerns are baby in Shelby County goes referred back to the mothers to sleep in a safe environment or infant’s primary care pro- – and help parents create that vider. environment. To do this, the Reducing Infant Ohio Department Health creMortality in Ohio and ated a campaign to educate Shelby County parents and caregivers with More than 1,000 Ohio a uniform message regardbabies die before their first ing safe sleep practices based birthday every year; and our on the American Academy of infant mortality rate puts Pediatrics’ recommendations: Ohio as the fourth worst in alone, on their backs, in a the country. crib. The majority of infant A few tips that can be use-

ful to both new and veteran parents are as follows: • Place infants for sleep flat on the back for every sleep, nap time and night time. • Use a firm sleep surface. A firm crib mattress is the recommended surface. • Room sharing without bed sharing is recommended. The infant’s crib should be in the parents’ bedroom, close to the parents’ bed. • Keep soft objects, loose bedding and bumper pads out of the crib. • Do not smoke during pregnancy. Avoid exposure of your infant to secondhand smoke. These are just a few easy ways to ensure that your baby is safe when they lie down at night. Resources Raising awareness about infant mortality is something we can all take a part in. If you would like to learn more about what you can do to help, please visit the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Office on Minority Health at http://minorityhealth.hhs. gov / t e m p l at e s / b row s e . aspx?lvl=2&lvlID=195 or visit ODH’s page on the Ohio Collaborative to Prevent Infant Mortality at www.odh. ohio.gov/odhprograms/cfhs/ octpim/infantmortality.aspx. The writer is the director of nursing at the Shelby County Health Department.

Engagements Couple set date COLDWATER — Tiffany Uhlenhake, of Coldwater, and Jaren Hoying, of Fort Loramie, have announced their engagement and plans to marry Dec. 28, 2013, in the Holy Trinity Catholic Church in Coldwater. The bride-to-be is the daughter of Rick and Beverly Uhlenhake, of Coldwater. She graduated from Coldwater High School in 2007 and from the

University of Toledo in 2010 with a Bachelor of Science in nursing. She is employed by Upper Valley Medical Center in Troy as a registered nurse. Her fiance is the son of Bill and Sue Hoying, of Fort Loramie. He is a 2007 graduate of Fort Loramie High School and attended the University of Toledo. He is employed by the Texas Rangers professional baseball organization.

Uhlenhake/Hoying


Localife

Sidney Daily News, Friday, November 8, 2013

Page 7

Minster veteran’s story released

COLUMBUS — The story by a Minster man is among the next collection of World War II stories released by the Ohio Departments of Aging and Veterans Services. Clifford Wise Sr., 86, of Minster describes the effort it took the Americans to cross the Siegried Line, which had been a German asset for years. The two departments have released the seventh installment of the War Era Story Project (www.aging.ohio.gov/news/storyprojects/). The latest collection of 38 stories shows how Ohioans of all walks of life found themselves in far-reaching corners of the globe, with experiences that would be unmatched in the rest of their lives. Other stories include the following: Frank D. Bergstein, of Cincinnati, in this excerpt from a book published after his death, recounts his experience landing on Omaha Beach on D-Day. Carl Creamer, of Xenia befriended the Delvaux family in Bassenge, Belgium, who took care of him. Later, he would return to Belgium and visit them. Emmett Davis, of Nelsonville, recalls meeting other Ohioans in his travels in southern England. He also witnessed pilot heroics and met his wife-to-be in the nearby town. William Diggs, 89, of Canal Winchester, was drafted into the Navy as a mess attendant, a post he says was typical for black men at the time. Robert H. Doolan, of Cincinnati, wrote that on Aug. 12, 1943, his bomber crew was shot down inside Holland. He eluded capture for 21 days before being arrested by German Gestapo. Maury Feren, of Cleveland Heights, had rotten luck during the war. He was assigned to an

anti-tank team, a machine gun crew, and then to medic, all in a short time and without training. Barry Friedman, of San Diego, Calif., on the plane ride back to the states, caught a birds-eye view of the re-lighting of the Statue of Liberty’s torch after Germany surrendered. Paul Fuchsman, 93, of Chillicothe, tells the story of the sinking of the U.S.S. President Coolidge, which struck mines in the harbor of Espirito Santo, New Hebrides, in October 1942. Howard Gorrell, 68, of Yakima, Wash. shares a passage written by his late father, Paul, who was quickly promoted from reserve officer to acting company commander near Naples. Robert Hermann, 56, of Chula Vista, Calif. shares the story of his father, Robert, who was shot down over Germany. He recalls with humor how an interrogator realized he was “just a dumb first lieutenant.” Harry J. Hinkle, 87, of Barnesville, was captured in Holland and sent to a prison camp on the Polish border. He was later liberated by Russians. He recalls meeting Max Schmelling, a German boxer. Arthur Hunsicker, of Cincinnati, served in the 3rd Army under Patton and was preparing for the invasion of Japan when the atomic bomb ended the war. William R. Kimmel, of LaFayette, at age 21, was considered by many of his comrades on the U.S.S. Starlight in the South Pacific as the “old man.” Robert E. Kinney, 89, of Ashland, was a member of the 736th Tank Battalion and trained for special missions on an experimental tank dubbed “Jumpin’ Jive.” Donna Kitta, of Vandalia, writes that her father, Francis U.

Anna lists costume winners ANNA — The Anna Civic Association has announced the results of its Halloween party costume contest: Scariest: First place, Miranda Rains, daughter of William and Ashley Rains; second place, Candace Smith, daughter of Amanda and Alex Smith; third place, Ryan Noll, son of Mark and Michele Noll. Cutest: First place, Abigail Staudter, daughter of Joel and Kelly Staudter; second place, Molly Rioch, daughter of Bryan and Julie Rioch; third

place: Rylee Tewalt, daughter of Kerry Dulaney. Funniest: First place, Abagail Sheipline, daughter of Krista Sheipline; second place, Kelsey Line, daughter of Stacey Gates; third place, Logan Schlater, daughter of Susan Bergman. Most original: First place, Lucas Fogt, second place, Travis Fogt, both sons of Eric and Gina Fogt; third place: Trey Edwards, son of Heather Glass.

Quick reads

Center starts food drive VERSAILLES — Versailles Health Care Center will collect nonperishable food items from Nov. 15 through Dec. 15. Donations will be given

to the Council of Churches for community distribution. Items can be dropped off at the center, 200 Marker Road, Versailles.

Puthoff, was visited on a moonlit night in August 1944, by a fellow soldier who had had a premonition of his own death that would prove accurate. Tim Lyons, of Columbus, shares the story of Tony Nicolosi, who served on the LST 43 when the cargo it carried exploded. He was saved by a Marine whom he never met before or again. John E. McIntire, 93, of Poland, shares the history of his long military career that began when he enlisted in the Army in February 1940. Earl Miller, 93, of Cedarville, piloted a B-17 Flying Fortress on 25 missions in Europe. His crew was one of only three (out of 46) who made it through that many missions. Dan D. Milosevich, of Columbus, got a first-hand view of racial segregation in 1943 in Augusta, Ga., and recounts how black troops were treated differently by the Army and the city. Eileen Muccino, of Mason, shares excerpts from letters her father, Robert Murphy, wrote to his new wife back home in Cincinnati. Jennifer Kimmel Palmer, of LaFayette, shares journal entries written by her uncle, John Kimmel, while he served in the Navy in 194546. Norma Haignere Prehm, of Hilliard, shares the story of her uncle, John Haignere, who was a communications operator at the top of the Eiffel Tower. Ted Ringwald, 88, of Milford, piloted a B-24 and describes one mission where enemy fire took out the plane’s hydraulics and they had to use creative solutions to land safely. Lawrence H. Rogers, 91, of Cincinnati, was the commander of an efficient field artillery battery that was chosen by General Patton to be part of the Advance

Guard of the 3rd Army. Edward Roth, 91, of Cincinnati, and the 4,500-plus troops aboard the U.S.A.T. Uruguay set a record for the length of time required to reach their destination. Dave Rothenberg, 91, of Beachwood, depressed and lonely at Passover, the only Jew in his training group, traveled across New York City to attend a Passover Seder at the U.S.O. club. Shirley Rough, 59, of Beavercreek, shares a 1945 newspaper article about the downing of the Band Wagon II, a B-17 Flying Fortress, and how the courageous crew (minus one) survived. Jack Schultz, 87, of Cincinnati, because he raised homing pigeons as a hobby, was assigned to the 9th Army Signal Corps in 1943. William L. Sherry, of Columbus, writes that his father, Lester, served with the 148th Infantry of the 37th Division in Fiji and New Georgia. He later volunteered for Merrill’s Marauders. Sanford Silverman, 95, of Beachwood, relates his adventures on Guadalcanal, hiking through swamp-like beaches, digging fox holes and tolerating itchy Army hammocks. Ingrid Silvian, 82, of Groveport, shares an interesting photo of her late husband and relates how this quick-thinking young evaded capture by German troops in 1945. Lony Smith, 80, of Dayton, a German teenager and refugee from Berlin, recalls how German propaganda painted Americans as monsters, and all the children feared them. Richard Thome, of Columbus, relates his nearly three years of service overseas. He served in Asia as a radio engineer, and learned to drive a truck in a convoy. Bernard Utz, of Waterville,

Program brings Sidney native home Patricia Ann Speelman pspeelman@civitasmedia.com

Bernadine Edgington, of Urbana, was treated to a limousine ride through Sidney and lunch at the Spot recently by Senior Independent Hospice of Dayton. The organization has a program, Make It Happen, that grants wishes of its clients. Edgington, a former Sidney resident and longtime owner of the Vogue beauty shop on Poplar Street and later on Ohio Avenue downtown, wanted to see the site of her salon and have lunch with her high school friend, Freda Roesser, of Rosewood. “We were best friends and later neighbors,” Roesser said. The Shelby County Historical

Society provided a volunteer guide to ride in the limousine, which was rented from a company in Delaware. Tom Dunnavant showed Edgington where her salon had been and talked about other businesses that were open at the same time she operated the shop in the 1960s. He showed her historic postcard pictures of downtown Sidney. Edgington graduated from Green Township School and attended beauty school in Piqua. She operated the Vogue until she married Frank Edgington. She said she enjoyed living in Sidney and would shop at Ron & Nita’s and eat at the Spot. Edgington is now a resident of the Mercy McCauley Center in Urbana.

ARC Friday Night Out

City Community Christmas Concert at the Lutheran Church on Dec. 6. Stories must have a holiday theme. They will be judged in four categories: Grades 4-6, grades 7-8, grades 9-12, and adults. For rules and information, visit www.tippcityartscouncil. com

Ag Boosters to tour labs NEW BREMEN — The New Bremen Ag Boosters have partnered with the New Bremen FFA for the 20132014 year. Anyone interested in becoming a member of the New Bremen Ag Boosters is still welcome to join. The

group will meet Monday to tour Brookside Laboratories in New Bremen at 7:45 p.m. A business meeting will follow at New Bremen High School. For information, email nbagboostesr@yahoo.com or write to P.O. Box 248, New Bremen, OH 45869.

YMCA talks personnel changes During their meeting Oct. 24, the YMCA of Sidney-Shelby County Board of Trustees learned that Elizabeth Grace will be director of the Child Development Center, effective this month. Executive Director Ed Thomas also reported the resignation of Sam Casalano, effective Jan.

14, presented information from a recent community needs assessment conducted by several local agencies, and discussed a shared services update including potential expansion opportunities. President presented a report on the status of the strategic plan.

SDN Photo| Patricia Ann Speelman

Bernardine Edgington, left, of Urbana, formerly of Sidney, and Freda Roesser, of Rosewood, enjoy lunch recently at the Spot during a Make It Happen project of Senior Independence Hospice, of Dayton.

Weddings Raasch, Bruce unite in marriage

Story contest opens TIPP CITY — The Tipp City Area Arts Council has announced a holiday short story contest open to children in grades 4 through 12 and adults in Tipp City and the surrounding area. Stories of not more than 5,000 words must be submitted by Nov. 18. Prizes will be awarded to the winning writers at the Tipp

describes his basic training, then his services as infantry on Leyte and Okinawa. While on training in Honolulu, his unit was visited by President Roosevelt. R. William Vogel, 95, of Milford, after Pearl Harbor, quit his job as a machinist and joined the Navy, serving in a unit that would be the precursor to modern-day Navy SEALS. Ed Volkerding, 89, of Cincinnati, while serving as an instrument tech in China, worked on P-61 aircraft that routinely flew over the Himalaya Mountains, also known as “The Hump.” Marilyn Walton, of New Albany, shares the story of her father, Thomas Jeffers, who was shot down on his third mission over Germany and held in the legendary Stalag Luft III. These stories join 134 others that were posted previously at www.aging.ohio.gov/news/storyprojects/. The agencies received nearly 300 submissions and will continue to release stories in installments until all have been shared. The War Era Story Project was a follow-up to the Department of Aging’s award-winning 2009 Great Depression Story Project. Since this project was intended to explore Ohio’s war-time experience, the Department teamed with the Ohio Department of Veterans Services to collect stories from veterans of World War II, as well as the men, women and children who held steady on the home front. The project garnered submissions from 284 individuals, including 21 who currently reside out of state or who did not provide location information. Ohio residents submitting stories represent 50 counties. Of the authors who provided an age, the oldest was 100 and the youngest was 25. The average age of the authors was 83.

Photo provided

Andy Holthaus, back left, and Cory Huelskamp, back right, members of the Sidney Knights of Columbus Council 659 visit with, from left, Lee Kinder, and Cheryl Wiley, Shelby County ARC participants, and provider Sharon Coots, during ARC’s Friday Night Out in September. The council presented ARC a check for more than $2,500. The funds were raised earlier this year when the Knights collected donations during their annual “Measure Up” campaign.

MURRAY, Utah — Sara Elizabeth Raasch and Kelson James Bruce, both of Murray, Utah, were united in marriage Oct. 5, 2013, at 3:30 p.m. in the Crystal Room in Troy. The bride is the daughter of Doug and Mary Jo Raasch, of Sidney. The bridegroom is the son of Dan and Annette Bruce, of Lyons, Colo. Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Trenton Bruce, the bridegroom’s brother, performed University in 2010, where she the ceremony. a Bachelor of Science. The bride was given in mar- earned She is riage by her father. Melinda author. self-employed as an Raasch served as her sister’s The bridegroom is a 2005 maid of honor. graduate Berthoud High Mike Bruce was the best School inofColorado and a man. 2010 graduate of Fort Lewis The couple honeymooned College in Durango, Colo., in Virginia and reside in where he earned a degree in Murray, Utah. They met engineering management. through Match.com. is employed by WesTech The bride graduated from He Engineering in Salt Lake City, Fairlawn High School in Utah, as an engineer. 2007 and from Wright State

Recent births Kemper FORT LORAMIE — Bethany Hoelscher and Bradley Meyer, of Fort Loramie, have announced the birth of a daughter, Alivia Rose Meyer, born Oct. 24, 2013, at 8:45 a.m. in the Copeland-Emerson Family Birth Center at Wilson Memorial Hospital in Sidney. She weighed 7 pounds, 11 ounces, and was 20 inches long. Her maternal grandparents

are Jeff and Lori Hoelscher, of St. Marys. Her paternal grandparents are Tammy Meyer, of Fort Loramie, and the late Don Meyer. Her great-grandparents are Eugene “Gene” Liess, of Anna, Janice and Elmer Larger, of Fort Loramie, and Adolph “Sonny” and Joan Meyer, of Fort Loramie. Her mother is originally from Fort Loramie.

Meyer MINSTER — Tony and Trisha Kemper, of Minster, have announced the birth of a daughter, Reggie Lynne Kemper, born Nov. 2, 2013, at 12:29 p.m. in the CopelandEmerson Family Birth Center at Wilson Memorial Hospital in Sidney. She weighed 6 pounds, 11 ounces, and was 19 1/2 inches long. She was welcomed home by her brother,

Rowen Kemper, 2. Her maternal grandparents are Jim and Elaine Barlage, of Russia. Her paternal grandparents are Jim and Mary Kemper, of Minster. Her great-grandparents are Allen and Odyne Barlage, of Fort Loramie, Al and Mildred Borchers, of Minster, and Marilyn Kemper, of Minster. Her mother is the former Trisha Barlage, of Russia.


Page 8

Weather

Sidney Daily News, Friday, November 8, 2013

Out of the Past

Today

Tonight

Saturday

Sunday

Monday

Tuesday

Wednesday

Partly cloudy; west winds 5 to 10 mph

Partly cloudy; south winds 10 to 15 mph

Partly cloudy; SW winds 15 to 20 mph

Mostly sunny

Partly cloudy

Mostly cloudy; 40% chance of rain and snow

Mostly cloudy; 30% chance of snow showers

High: 49

Low: 35

High: 55 Low: 39

High: 50 Low: 35

High: 52 Low: 35

High: 42 Low: 32

High: 35 Low: 25

Local Outlook

Cold today, mild ahead

Regional Almanac Temperature Wednesday high.............................60 Wednesday low...............................39

Precipitation Wednesday..................................0.26 Month to date..............................0.27 Year to date...............................24.84

Sunrise/Sunset Friday sunset......................5:26 p.m. Saturday sunrise.................7:16 a.m. Saturday sunset.................5:25 p.m.

Source: The Sidney Wastewater Treatment Plant, official weather reporting station for Shelby County, and the U.S. Naval Observatory. For current daytime conditions, low/high temperatures, go to AccuWeather.com.

National forecast

Forecast highs for Friday, Nov. 8

Sunny

Pt. Cloudy

Cloudy

Cooler air has moved in behind a cold front. Highs will be running about seven degrees below normal today. The forecast stays dry into the upcoming week- Brian Davis end. Winds will pick up on Saturday, but those winds will bring in some slightly milder air.

Today's Forecast

City/Region High | Low temps

Forecast for Friday, Nov. 8

MICH.

Cleveland 43° | 36°

Toledo 46° | 30°

Youngstown 48° | 30°

Mansfield 43° | 30°

Fronts Cold

-10s -0s

Showers

0s

10s

Rain

20s 30s 40s

T-storms

Warm Stationary

Pressure Low

Snow

Columbus 46° | 34°

Dayton 48° | 32°

High

Cincinnati 55° | 36°

50s 60s 70s 80s 90s 100s 110s

Flurries

PA.

Portsmouth 50° | 34°

Ice

Wintry Mixed Precipitation In The North A low pressure system will bring rain and snow to the northern Plains. Rain and high-elevation snow showers can also be expected in the Pacific Northwest. The northern Rockies will see precipitation fall primarily as snow.

W.VA.

KY.

© 2013 Wunderground.com Thunderstorms

Cloudy Partly Cloudy

Showers

Flurries Rain

Ice Snow

Weather Underground • AP

Weather Underground • AP

The case for pain medicine DEAR DR. ROACH: that has worked for my pain I have gone to the veter- for many years. They tell ans hospital for my medi- me that pain meds do not cure pain, so how do cal needs for the people with constant past 25 years. I have pain survive without had four major back some type of pain operations and a total medicine? — L.P. knee replacement; I ANSWER: I have also have peripheral written before about neuropathy. They put the concerns of using me on hydrocodone/ narcotics (opiates acetaminophen and gabapentin for the To your is a better word for medications related pain and neuropathy. good These two combined health to opium — such as morphine, oxycodohave helped me treDr. Keith ne or hydrocodone) mendously for the Roach for chronic noncanpain that I have had cer pain. However, constantly for the your situation past 20 years. Now they are going to take away explains clearly how inflexthe pain medication because ible rules don’t make sense. they say they will prescribe Some people with chronic it only to people who have pain from arthritis, spine chronic pain from cancer. problems or other causes They are going to give me do not do well on opiates. something called Baclofen, Their pain isn’t well-treata muscle relaxer. Is it a ed, and they require higher and higher doses, with side narcotic? If that doesn’t work, they effects ranging from conwill give me something stipation to confusion. It’s else. I told them I do not because of this that many want to be a guinea pig. guidelines now recommend Why change something against treating noncancer

pain with opiates. However, guidelines are to help show what is good for most people. They aren’t meant to force your doctor into a certain course of action. In your case, it sounds like the opiates have been working well. Changing to Baclofen, a powerful muscle relaxant and not an opiate, may not control the pain and may cause excess sedation. There are many times when it’s appropriate to make a change for someone using chronic opiates, but this isn’t one of them. Just surviving isn’t the issue. It’s surviving with a reasonable quality of life. DEAR DR. ROACH: I have noticed that many people return from air travel with a cold or some type of respiratory problem, and it seems to me that it may be caused by the recirculated air in the airplane. Is that true? If so, would it improve one’s chance of staying healthy to wear a mask on the plane? — C.G. ANSWER: Yes, there is

pretty good evidence that being in a plane with recirculated air does increase risk of infection, if there is an infectious person on the plane. One study from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention showed that wearing a face mask is protective. I would recommend it only during an outbreak of an airborne contagious disease, such as flu, or for people at high risk, such as people with COPD. DR. ROACH WRITES: In the summer, I wrote about an itchy condition on the back, and warned my reader to see a dermatologist to make sure it wasn’t a skin cancer. Several readers and a dermatologist have written to suggest a condition called notalgia paresthetica, which is a benign and common skin condition causing itchy back that can last for years. Moisturizer and avoiding scratching are good treatments. An ice pack or anesthetic spray may be helpful for more-severe cases.

What food allergy sufferers don’t know DEAR ABBY: I am a every year there is at least 25-year-old woman with a one story in the media about food allergy. Last year I was a some poor individual windguest at a Thanksgiving din- ing up in an emergency ner where the host insisted I room or dying because of an could eat the food “since there allergic reaction. Exposure was just a little in there.” to even a TRACE of a subI understand that stance that an indimaking separate food vidual is allergic to is difficult, but all I is dangerous because ask is that people let “just a little” CAN me know if a dish hurt you. The symptoms of a potentially contains an ingredifatal allergic reacent that will make tion — which have me sick. At best, an appeared in this colallergic reaction is Dear umn before — are a uncomfortable. At Abby tingling sensation, worst, it can be lifeAbigail itching or metallic threatening. Would you please Van Buren taste in the mouth followed by hives, a print a message about sensation of warmth, allergy awareness before the holidays? If you asthma symptoms, swelldo, perhaps someone will be ing of the mouth and throat spared what I went through. area, difficulty breathing, — NOT PICKY, REALLY vomiting, diarrhea, cramping, a drop in blood pressure ALLERGIC IN ILLINOIS DEAR REALLY and loss of consciousness. ALLERGIC: I’m glad to The symptoms can occur raise awareness because in as few as five to 15 min-

utes after exposure, but lifethreatening reactions may progress over several hours. Someone experiencing these symptoms should be treated at the nearest emergency room or hospital. This information was provided by Food Allergy Research and Education, an organization whose mission is to raise public awareness about food allergies, provide education and advance research. Its website is loaded with valuable information on this important subject. Check it out at www.foodallergy.org. DEAR ABBY: Last week I attended two events for my grandchildren. One was a school concert, the other a dance recital. Both times, during the performance I saw electronic devices turned on throughout the audience. It seemed that parents were encouraging children to play video games, watch movies or surf

the Internet instead of pay attention to the show. It drove me crazy. What are these parents teaching their children? Not only are they missing out on the experience, but they are also being taught terrible manners. I held my tongue, but it was a struggle because I wanted to slap the parents in the back of the head. (I’m old school.) Am I wrong? — HOLDING MY TONGUE DEAR HOLDING: No, you’re 100 percent right. Before many performances, the director or principal will request that electronic devices be turned off. That’s what should have been done at the concert and recital you attended. Parents who allow or encourage their children to behave this way aren’t doing their job, which is to teach them to be respectful of the performers and the effort that was put into the show.

100 years Nov. 8, 1913 The Ladies Aid of the First Baptist Church met yesterday afternoon in the church parlors with a large attendance. During the business session, the annual election of officers was held with Mrs. William Linn, elected president; Mrs. Elmer Kiser, vice president; Mrs. Harry Frey, secretary; Mrs. Ed Evans, treasurer, and Mrs. John Seeley, organist. ––––– C.O. Stiles is repairing the improving the appearance of his music store room on East Poplar Street by having the walls of the room frescoed and repainting the woodwork. ––––– L .C . Pe tt y, employed as engineer at the Wagner Manufacturing Co. plant, had his hands and wrists badly scalded while at his work this morning. 75 years Nov. 8, 1938 The trios of Sidney youth, wanted here in the holdup-hijacking robbery of Elmer Schweitzer in this city earlier this week, were captured at Fort Madison, Iowa, last evening, according to word received from that city by Chief of Police O’Leary and Sheriff Pitts. They had left a trail of crime on their trip through Indiana and Illinois before their capture. They were taken as they sought to drive away from a service station without paying for some gasoline they had obtained. Several shots were fired but there were no injuries. The trio is understood to have confessed and will waive extradition for return to Sidney. ––––– A brakeman on a Baltimore and Ohio local freight was seriously injured shortly after noon today, when he slipped and fell beneath the wheels of a car that was being switched near the B & O freight house. He was immediately removed to Wilson Memorial

Hospital where his condition was reported as fair late this afternoon. 50 years Nov. 8, 1963 Betty Fisher, owner of the Bee Zee Beauty Shop, won the trip to Hawaii Thursday night at the tenth annual Sidney Jaycee Hawaiian Banquet with its climax – a trip for two to Hawaii – has become a traditional fund raising project for the Jaycees. It helps finance a series of community and youth projects. ––––– Harry J. Dickman of Hillcrest Court was elected worshipful master of Temperance Lodge 73, F and A.M. at the annual election of officers Thursday evening at the Masonic Temple. Elected to serve under Dickman during the coming year are Emerson Setsor, senior warden; Donald W. Starrett, junior warden; John F. Foster, treasurer, Fred A. Blust, secretary; Ronald L. Laughlin, senior deacon; Forest Friend, junior deacon; and Hugh Turley; tyler. Dan Helman was elected a trustee of the lodge, serving with the present trustees, Ralph Scanlin and A. Lester Ellis. 25 years Nov. 8, 1988 Judge Lewis has ruled on the motions in the Oldham case. The confession of Jimmie Oldham will be given to the jury. He admitted to starting the Goodwin furniture and three other arson fires. ––––– Copeland has announced a $40 million expansion in its facilities. The new manufacturing space will be needed to increase the production of its scroll compressors. Earl Muir of Copeland made the announcement.

Sudoku puzzles also appear on the Sidney Daily News website at www.sidneydailynews.com.

Odds and ends LOS ANGELES (AP) — Penny Marshall and Cindy Williams play feuding ex-TV partners on an episode of Nickelodeon’s “Sam & Cat,” but they brush aside any comparison to their past. The former “Laverne & Shirley” stars, who back in the day of their 1976-83 sitcom were reported to have crossed swords, said they were never enemies and remain friends despite lingering suggestions to the contrary. “That was rumors. Any show you work on for eight years, you’re gonna argue at some point,” said Marshall.

“Way overblown.” Williams agreed, but added a bit of detail. “Yes, it was a bit overblown,” she said. The actress added that she and Marshall have “very different personalities” with contradictory styles of working, which sometimes led to on-set clashes. That said, Williams regularly visits Marshall’s house to watch and discuss TV. There’s a chill in the air, Williams said, but only because Marshall keeps her thermostat turned down and, to compensate, provides down coats and blankets for guests.


Comics

Sidney Daily News, Friday, November 8, 2013

MUTTS

BIG NATE

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

DILBERT

BLONDIE

FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE

HI AND LOIS ZITS

BEETLE BAILEY FAMILY CIRCUS

DENNIS the MENACE

ARLO & JANIS

HOROSCOPE BY FRANCES DRAKE

For Saturday, Nov. 9, 2013 ARIES (March 21 to April 19) You can accomplish a lot today because you have the energy, focus and endurance to get the job done. Make a list, and make it so. TAURUS (April 20 to May 20) This is a great day for dancers, performing artists, professional athletes and anyone who uses vigorous energy to express him- or herself. You have discipline, control and focus today. GEMINI (May 21 to June 20) You can get an amazing amount done at home today. You can renovate, rebuild clean or shove furniture around. You're determined to make some changes for the better. CANCER (June 21 to July 22) In discussion with others, you will be forthright, direct and convincing today. In a way, you are like a stuck record -- relentless. This intense focus will bring results. LEO (July 23 to Aug. 22) You will work hard to earn money today. You also will work equally hard to organize your finances and possessions, because you want to feel you are on top of your game. (You will be.) VIRGO (Aug. 23 to Sept. 22) This is a good day for careful planning and executing projects with care and finesse. You're disciplined, careful and detail-oriented. LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) Work alone or behind the scenes today, because you will be diligent and successful in any research project you undertake. This is because you are feeling persistent, patient and focused. SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) Work together with others to accomplish a great deal today. Cooperation, especially well-coordinated cooperation, can make a huge difference. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) Bosses, parents, teachers and VIPs will be impressed with your steady effort and output today. You're not going to stop until the job is done. (Impressive.) CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 19) You'll find it easy to study today, in large measure because you're prepared to work hard. Your powers of concentration are excellent, in addition to which you will not overlook details. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18) Differences about shared property, inheritances and insurance matters might be settled today, because you are relentless and patient at the same time. Ultimately, you will steamroll over others. PISCES (Feb. 19 to March 20) You can get a lot done working with others today, but you will have to be patient. With Mars opposite your sign now, you're inclined to be irritated by others. Easy does it. YOU BORN TODAY You enjoy earthly pleasures and creature comforts, which is why you often think about temptation. This is because you live for the moment, and you approach life with physical intensity and passion. You are playful and love to discover new places, things and ideas. Good news! This year might be the most powerful year of your life. Dream big! Birthdate of: Eric Dane, actor; Susan Tedeschi, blues musician; Gaetan Hart, boxer.

SNUFFY SMITH

GARFIELD

BABY BLUES

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

CRANKSHAFT

Page 9


Page 10

Classifieds

Sidney Daily News, Friday, November 8, 2013

that work .com JobSourceOhio.com

Lost & Found FOUND, WALMART Bag on Schenk Road, Describe contents to claim, call (937)5380162 Yard Sale SIDNEY, 2019 Fair Oaks Drive, Friday 8-5pm, Saturday 8-2pm, 5 FAMILY GARAGE SALE, cooking stove, refrigerator, wood-burner heater, 2 deer mounts, (one is a 14 point) kicking bag, boxing combo, cedar rabbit cage, name brand clothes many miscellaneous.

Yard Sale

Yard Sale

SIDNEY, 18991 State Route 47E, Friday 9-5pm, Saturday 9-2pm, HUGE MOVING SALE, 2 sectionals, 4 bedroom suites, 2 dining room sets, hutch, washer/dryer, 1938 Frigidaire refrigerator, car dolly, antiques, treadmill, 2 desks, lots of household items. SIDNEY, 225 E Court Street, Saturday 9-5pm, CLOSING BUSINESS SALE, desk, tables, chairs, filing cabinets, office supplies, artificial plants.

SIDNEY, 101 Bon Air Drive, Saturday 8-2pm, Large sale held inside 2 garages, TV's, stereo system, Xbox wireless racing wheel and drum set, various electronics, king size bed, sheets and comforter sets, dresser, lamps, chairs and stools, landscape lights, outdoor fountain, firewood rack with cover, cordless weed trimmer, air compressor, retractable air hose reel, bench grinder, table saw, miter saw, misc tools, shop vac, portable cement mixer, propane heater, natural gas heaters, large selection of garage storage cabinets, ceiling storage racks, automotive items, car amplifier, numerous camping items, trolling motor with battery, 32 sheets drywall, 8 sheets osb, 2x4's, R-13 insulation, vinyl wall base, light fixtures, medicine cabinet, numerous gallons of paint, electrical items, plumbing items, other misc. construction materials, M&M dispensers, Precious Moments figurines, Dayton Dragon items, toys, Christmas decorations, lots of housewares, MUCH MORE! Everything priced to sell!!

SIDNEY, 200 Ironwood Dr. Saturday 8-2pm, Chest Freezer, Craftsman Table Saw, 55 Gallon Aquarium with Accessories, & Stand, Christmas Tree, DVDs and MORE!

Help Wanted General

All signs lead to you finding or selling what you want...

by using that work

Don’t delay... call TODAY! Memory / Thank You

Yard Sale

Drivers & Delivery

OTR DRIVERS

CDL Grads may qualify Class A CDL required Great Pay & Benefits! Call Jon Basye at: Piqua Transfer & Storage Co. (937)778-4535 or (800)278-0619

SIDNEY, 1319 4th Ave.(Amvets) QUARTER AUCTION, Sunday, November 10th, Auction starts at 1 pm, Doors open at noon. Vendors that will be participating are Mary Kay, Tupperware, 31, Tastefully Simple, Nelly Cuddles, Pampered Chef, Lock 2 Embroidery, Old Hen House, Gold Canyon Candles, and very nice donated items from local businesses and individuals, Admission $3.00, Tickets will be used at the auction, Food and drinks will be available to purchase, Team Nuke Luke is sponsoring this auction to benefit The Light The Night Walk for the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society. COME JOIN THE FUN!!!!

TANKER DRIVERS NEEDED * Dedicated Company Driver * Get Home 2-3 Nights + Weekends * Class A-CDL + Tank * 43 CPM + $14.25/ Stop * Medical/ Dental/ RX/ 401K & More!!! * $2000 Sign On Bonus!!! Apply Online @ www.thekag.com Call (800)871-4581 Option #2 Dawn Help Wanted General

Child / Elderly Care LIVE-IN NURSES AIDE to comfort clients in their own homes. Stay to the end. 20 years experience. References. Dee at (937)751-5014.

The family of the late Thomas R. Goings would like to express our sincere appreciation for every act of kindness, sympathy, support and passion shown during our recent loss. God bless r continued each and every one of you for you ent. prayers and words of encouragem e Health A special thank you to Wilson Hom to our ided prov care for the compassionate e for Hom eral Fun ms loved one and to Ada men gy cler the to and their service provided er Pray of se Hou God of and women of Church er dinn , food with ed help and to everyone that ey. mon and rs preparations, flowe ily Sincerely, Elizabeth Goings and Fam

40521620

STORAGE TRAILERS FOR RENT (800)278-0617

40522167

Notices

Drivers & Delivery CLASS A CDL DRIVERS Dancer Logistics is looking for Class A CDL drivers with at least two years experience for part-time, Dedicated regional runs, team runs and OTR. Great home time. OTR and Regional drivers can make up to $0.44 the first year. Benefits include vision, dental, major medical, paid vacation and safety bonuses. Please apply at 900 Gressel Drive Delphos, Ohio or call 419-692-1435

Are You Looking For Meaningful Work and Employer That Values You? MPA Services may be right for you! MPA provides living support services to adults with developmental disabilities within their homes and communities. We are hiring honest, engaging, compassionate people to serve clients in Sidney FT 2nd Shift. Accrued sick and vacation time. All MPA staff must have a HS diploma/ GED, experience, good driving record, pass a drug screening and background check. Call Ken at (419)339-9765 Check out our webpage at www.mpaservices.org

LEGALS NOTICE OF SERVICE OF PROCESS BY PUBLICATION STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF BRUNSWICK IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE DISTRICT COURT DIVISION 13-SP-595 FOR THE ADOPTION OF: Ethyn Santana Olmos Parra BY: Juan-Carlos Olmos Parra and Karen Harriet Olmos Parra

s a m t s i r h C t s r i F s ’ y b r Ba u o Y f o y r o

TO: Aaron Michael Foster and Unknown Birth Fathers or Possible Parents, Respondents TAKE NOTICE that a Petition for Adoption was filed by the Petitioners Juan-Carlos Olmos Parra and Karen Harriet Olmos Parra on the 25th day of June 2013, with the Clerk of Superior Court for Brunswick County, Bolivia, North Carolina, in the above-entitled case. The Petition relates to a male child born June 18, 2013 at Brunswick Navant Medical Center in Bolivia, Brunswick County, North Carolina named Orion Ramir Luedeke born to Ashley Elaine Luedeke. Ashley is a caucasian female with hazel eyes and short, wavy brown hair. Ashley is approximately five feet six inches tall and weighs approximately one hundred twenty pounds. The minor child was conceived approximately September 2012 in Shelby County, Sidney, Ohio.

m e M e h t e r s! aily a Captu m t s i r h C t s ir e published in the Sidney D F s ’ e n O e l t Lit will b aily Call on t Christmas

TAKE NOTICE that you are required to make defense to such pleasing no later than forty (40) days after the date of the first publication of this notice, exclusive of such date. Upon your failure to do so, the Petitioners will apply to the Court for the relief sought in the Petition. Any Parental rights that you may have will be terminated upon the entry of the order of adoption.

Baby’s Firs nd Piqua D a s w e N y il Da News, Troy 16, 2013 r e b m e c e D 013 Monday, ember 6, 2 c e D , y a d ri F Deadline is

This the 7th day of October, 2013. /s/ Amy S. Davis Davis Nardone, P.C. Amy S. Davis, Attorney for Petitioners NC Bar #22809 235 Cabarrus Avenue E. Concord, NC 28025

Full Color 1col. x 3” block

Only 21 $

00

LEGALS IN THE COMMON PLEAS COURT OF SHELBY COUNTY, OHIO JUDGE JAMES F. STEVENSON LEGAL NOTICE (Service by Publication)

Twins are handled as two (2) separate photos

Sidney Daily News Attn: Baby’s First Christmas 1451 North Vandemark Rd. Sidney, Ohio 45365

MINSTER BANK, Plaintiff, -vsDAVID L. VORNHOLT, Defendants CASE NO. 13CV000038

PLEASE PRINT!* 2334647

David L. Vornholt, formerly of Shelby County and last known address as 8667 Bellefontaine Road, Harrod, Ohio, will take notice that on the 19th day of February, 2013, Minster Bank filed a Complaint on Account against him in the Common Pleas Court of Shelby County, Ohio, as Case Number 13CV000038. The Complaint alleges non-payment of a promissory note, demands judgment in the sum of $134,353.74, plus interest, together with all additional costs of collection and attorney fees incurred by Plaintiff, including cost costs, and for such further relief as is just and equitable.

Name of Baby: _______________________________________________________ Birth Date: __________________________________________________________

David L. Vornholt is required to Answer the Complaint within twenty-eight (28) days following the sixth weekly publication of this Notice by serving upon Plaintiffʼs attorney a copy of his Answer to the Complaint. The Answer must be filed with the Clerk of the Common Pleas Court of Shelby County, Ohio, PO Box 809, Sidney, Ohio 45365, within three (3) days after service on Plaintiffʼs attorney. If you fail to appear and defend, judgment by default may be taken against you for the relief demanded in the Complaint.

From: ______________________________________________________________ Your Name: __________________________________________________________ Address: ____________________________________________________________ City:_____________________ State:_____ Zip:________ Phone:_________________ ❏ Please mail my photo back to me in the SASE provided. We cannot be responsible for photos lost in the mail. ❏ I will pick up my photo after December 20, 2013. We only hold pictures for 6 months after publication. ❏ Payment Enclosed ❏ Check ❏ Visa/MC ❏ Cash ❏ Discover ❏ Am Express

November 8, 15, 22

Credit Card #:__________________________________ Exp. Date:_____________________________________ Your Signature:_________________________________

* There is limited space available for wording in these ads, please choose wording carefully, we reserve the right to cut wording if necessary, ad shown actual size (1x3) above.

40521349

Michael A. Staudt (0078164) FAULKNER, GARMHAUSEN, KEISTER & SHENK A Legal Professional Association Courtview Center – Suite 300 100 South Main Avenue Sidney, OH 45365 (937) 492-1271 (telephone) (937) 498-1306 (facsimile) mstaudt@fgks-law.com Attorney for Plaintiff, Minster Bank October 25 November 1, 8, 15, 22, 29


Direct Care Position Sidney We are a local agency that is passionate about serving individuals with disabilities. If you are interested in a rewarding career of caring for people in their homes and working for an agency that values their approach and philosophy then please check us out and apply online at: www.wynn-reeth.com *Flexible Schedules *Full and Part Time *Employee Benefits *Serving the DD Community *Retirement Plans *Healthcare Insurance Any questions please contact Janie Mendoza, Case Manager 419-639-2094 ext 102 Class A CDL Truck Driver Wanted Hauling flatbed 50¢ a mile. Home weekends. 937-210-6615 or 937-210-6554 Fort Loramie Local Schools has an open position for a Coordinator of Building & Grounds. Please see the s c h o o l w e b s i t e : www.loramie.k12.oh.us under Employment for a job description. Resumes and cover letter can be mailed to: Daniel B. Holland, Superintendent, PO Box 26, Ft. Loramie, OH 45845.

Help Wanted General ***Now Hiring*** 311 DRAFT HOUSE Bartending, Serving, and Line Cook positions available Day/Night shifts available Apply at Piqua Chamber of Commerce 326 N Main St, Piqua

NOW HIRING: Estee Lauder

Counter Manager (Full-time)

Visit our store to apply: Rebecca Broerman, SM 2290 Michigan St. Sidney OH 45365 www.stagestores.com COMMUNITY MANAGER Part-time position available for apartment community manager in Sidney. Forward resumes to amandas@1bcr.com. NO PHONE CALLS. POSITION AVAILABLE with floor care company, Part/ Full Time, evenings, must have an eye for detail, must be reliable with transportation, Drivers license a plus, Please call (937)498-7070 for application

REFRIGERATION TECHNICIAN

MACHINE MAINTENANCE Repairing Industrial Equipment, Mechanical, Electrical trouble shooting, Hydraulic/ Pneumatic repair, (PCLs) trouble shooting, 2 years experience, Benefits after 90 days. Submit resume to: AMS 330 Canal Street Sidney, Ohio 45365 Email: amsohio1@earthlink.net

Person will be responsible for maintenance and repairs to semi trailer refrigeration units. Must have ability to diagnose and repair units, perform preventative maintenance and install new units. Prior experience on Thermo King and/or Carrier units preferred. Day shift position. Very clean work environment and newer model equipment. Compensation based on experience with reviews 3, 6, 9, 12 months the 1st year. Full benefit package. Uniforms included. Apply in person at: Continental Express Inc. 10450 St Rt 47 Sidney, OH 45365 Or call Mark at 800-497-2100

Help Wanted General SMALL VENDING Route, about 5 hours once weekly, good driving record, valid drivers license, Champaign County area, leave message (937)336-3396

MANUFACTURING SPHERION will be taking applications at the NK Parts plant in Sidney, OH. Pay is $9.25/hr. Requirements: stable work history w/positive, verifiable references; prior manufacturing background; HS diploma/GED, excellent attendance record. Background check required. Please bring 2 forms of ID. Apply on-line at www.spherion.appone.com, select Industrial, Sidney. WANTED

SERVICE TECHNICIANS For Agricultural Equipment Dealership. Will consider all Levels of experience with and without CDL. Health Insurance, 401K, Vacation Mail Resume to: APPLE FARM SERVICE, Inc. 19161 Kentner Rd Botkins, OH 45306 Or email: mattbot@ applefarmservice.com AREA MANAGER We are looking for a dedicated area manager for a nonprofit in the 2 county areas of Auglaize and Mercer Counties. It is the job of the area manger to recruit, inspire, train and support the volunteers, while also working with community leaders and rallying public support for agency activities. Please send resumes to Attn. Andy Tata, BSA 2100 Broad Ave. Findlay, OH 45840. Bachelors degree required, include salary requirements with your letter of interest. Mechanics Local company is seeking a mechanic to work 40 hours per week during daytime hours Monday through Friday. Formal training and ASE certifications preferred but not required. Must have reliable transportation and be bondable. We offer competitive pay, bonuses, paid vacation and more. Visit www.cleanall.com to complete an application or call James Sharp at 937-4984146 for more information.

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FENIX, LLC PRODUCTION TEAM MEMBERS Seeking team members who want to build a career with our growing company. The ideal candidate should be highly motivated, excel in team environments and, have 3-5 years of manufacturing experience. The plant operates on a 12-hour shift basis with current openings on the 7pm to 7am shift. We offer a highly competitive wage and full benefits. Please send resumes to: HUMAN RESOURCES 319 S. Vine St. Fostoria, OH 44830 Sales / Business Development

SALES We provide equipment financing for businesses. Looking for sales background, good relationship building, ambition WE OFFER: *Generous commission--43% *Monday - Friday work week *Medical insurance *Retirement plan Send resume or call: ACCORD FINANCIAL GROUP Covington, OH (937)473-5991 Fax: (937)473-5990 darryl@accordlease.com

Commercial OFFICE & GARAGE DOWNTOWN SIDNEY, Rent all or part of office and garage. OFFICE 8 rooms. 1,700 square ft, GARAGE 1,700 square ft, 9ft door. Call (937)726-6232 Houses For Sale ANNA Schools, 3 bedroom ranch, in country, on almost an acre, garage, newly remodeled, move-in ready, $119,000, (937)394-7265

ATTN INVESTORS! $11,900. 3 BR. Needs remodeled. 826 N Main, (419)738-4663.

Country Meadows NOW OFFERING HOMES FOR SALE

Financing assistance AVAILABLE Move into your new home before the Holidays! Call for an appointment today! (937)497-7763 FAIRLAWN SCHOOL District, 4 Bedrooms, family room, wood burning fireplace, 4+ acres, barn, selling to settle estate, (937)478-9416

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Trucks / SUVs / Vans 1998 GMC, Model W5R, Delivery truck, 18000 GVW, (419)302-1038 2001 JEEP GRAND Cherokee, V8, 4WD, 106,000 miles, very good condition, all leather, 10 cd disc player, well maintained, $6500 obo, (937)641-9284 2004 NISSAN QUEST, 3.5 SL, spotless inside and out, loaded including power moon roof and sky roof option, all service records, tow package, asking $7200, (937)418-8797 2006 FORD E-Series, cargo van, 6000, GVW, (419)3021038

DOWNTOWN APARTMENT, 2 bedroom, no pets, $425 monthly. Call (937)726-6232 * 1 & 2 Bedroom * Studios

Village West Apts. "Simply the Best" (937)492-3450 Houses For Rent 2 BEDROOM homes, $525, 3 Bedroom home $575, Plus deposit, (937)492-0966 3 BEDROOM, ranch style house, 2.5 car garage. 701 Dingman St. $650/month +deposit. (937)726-4019

617 Jackson Street, Jackson Center, 3 bedroom, 1 bath, large yard, nice, $650 Monthly, (937)492-4038 ANNA, 403 Millette, 3 BEDROOM 1 bath, 1 car garage, no pets, $750 monthly plus security deposit. Newly remodeled. (937)726-5188 VERY NICE! Single story duplex, new flooring, $445. 610 N Wagner, (419)738-4663 Lease RV SPACE, under cover. (937)597-0321 Pets 2 Kittens, 7 weeks old , litter trained, weened, free to good homes, (937)492-9290 CAT beautiful, long-haired, spayed, calico. 4 years, needs indoor, forever home. Great companion for older person. (937)492-7478 leave message.

GET YOUR CHRISTMAS KITTENS NOW! Adorable, fluffy, playful boys. 10 weeks. Indoor homes only. (937)492-7478 Leave message. PUPPIES Half Australian Shepherd/Border Collie. 11 weeks old. FREE Call after 6pm or leave message (937)693-3303.

REGISTERED BORDER COLLIER puppies, beautiful black & white all males, 1st shots, farm raised, $250 (937)5648954 REWARD!! $1000.00 reward for the safe return of 3 adult dogs STOLEN 10/30/13. 2 Shih Tzus, 1 Yorkie. Garwick's the Pet People (419)953-3003 AUTOMOTIVE Autos For Sale 1996 GMC Sonoma SLS, 2 door, sport V6, 71K miles, extra clean, fully loaded, Fiberglass bed cover and liner. $4950 (937)492-4743

Apartments /Townhouses 2 BEDROOM duplex, NE Sidney, garage, New windows/patio door, central air, w/d hook-up. (937)726-3499 1 BEDROOM, upstairs apt in excellent neighborhood, 768 Foraker. Includes appliances, water/trash. No pets. $335/mo. (937)638-5707

2001 MITSUBISHI Eclipse Spyder auto V6, convertible top, all in good condition, runs great, 154K, $4375 (937)335-2812

1, 2 & 3 Bedroom, Sidney & Anna, different floor plans, garages, fireplaces, appliances, washer/ dryers, www.firsttroy.com, (937)498-4747, (937)3355223 2 BEDROOM, appliances, garage, lawn care. $480 monthly plus deposit. No pets. (937)492-5271 2 BEDROOM, Russia, attached garage, nice location! Call for move-in special! (937)417-4910

Truck / SUV / Van Accessories 1993 JEEP Wrangler, dependable, $2900, (937)394-7265 Firewood FIREWOOD $150 split, delivered. Round wood $110/cord, delivered. (937)844-3756 or (937)8443879 FIREWOOD, All hard wood, $150 per cord delivered or $120 you pick up, (937)7262780 Furniture & Accessories CONTEMPORARY bar, 2 stools $800. DINING TABLE, 6 chairs, matching mirror $2000. 65" TV $250. (937)497-7349 Leave message. Miscellaneous 4 STEEL BELTED RADIAL TIRES, (175/65/14") on car for 3 months. Asking $200 (419)628-2280 ANNUITY.COM Guaranteed Income For Your Retirement Avoid market risk & get guaranteed income for retirement! Call for FREE copy of our SAFE MONEY GUIDE Plus Annuity Quotes from A-Rated companies! 800-423-0676 BASEBALL CARDS 80's and 90's sets. Insert cards. Cincinnati Reds. (419)302-6610 BED, King size, Less than 1 year old, new mattress, includes set of sheets & pillowcases, $2000, (937)778-0361 CANADA DRUG: Canada Drug Center is your choice for safe and affordable medications. Our licensed Canadian mail order pharmacy will provide you with savings of up to 75 percent on all your medications needs. Call today 1-800-341-2398 for $10.00 off your first prescription and free shipping. Star Wars, Star Trek, Babylon 5, x-files, misc., books- Tom Swift Jr. Tom Quest, Dave Dawson, Dana Girls, Connie Blair, Vicki Barr, Blue Masque (British mysteries), Vinyl Records (78's, 33-1/3), wide variety, file & storage boxes, Guardian bench for bathtub, Commode raised seat (937)492-0606 after 8pm DISH: DISH TV Retailer. Starting at $19.99/month (for 12 mos.) & High Speed Internet starting at $14.95/month (where available.) SAVE! Ask About SAME DAY Installation! CALL NOW! 1-800-734-5524 FREE HAULING! Refrigerators, freezers, water heaters, stoves, washers, dyers, mowers, farm equipment, car parts, aluminum, metal, steel. Building clean outs, JUNK"B"GONE, (937)5386202

HORSEBACK RIDING LESSONS! Opening December 1st, 2013 Nationally known Instructor referrals available FUN & SAFE HORSES FOR ALL AGES. Call now for information and to reserve your spot!

2003 CADILLAC CTS

(805) 432-5332 • Houston, OH

98k miles, silver, automatic, v6, Bose Sound system, leather heated seats, looks and runs like new, $7495 (937)295-2626

Just Brushes Painting Service )NTERIOR s %XTERIOR s 0OWERWASHING s $ECKS

Holiday Special

2 BEDROOM, Botkins, townhouse apartment, small patio, washer/dryer hookup, no pets, $400 monthly, deposit, (937)693-3752.

Get 2 rooms painted Get 1 room FREE call for details $300 value for only $200 offer ends December 31, 2013 419-753-2662

2 BEDROOM, Sidney, 1.5 bath, appliances, laundry hookup, air, no pets, Trash paid, $460, (937)394-7265

MEDICAL GUARDIAN: Medical Alert for Seniors - 24/7 monitoring. FREE Equipment. Free Shipping. Nationwide Service. $29.95/Month CALL Medical Guardian Today 855-850-9105 MY COMPUTER WORKS: My Computer Works Computer problems? Viruses, spyware, email, printer issues, bad internet connections - FIX IT NOW! Professional, U.S.based technicians. $25 off service. Call for immediate help. 1-888-781-3386 OMAHA STEAKS: ENJOY 100% guaranteed, delivered-to-the-door Omaha Steaks! SAVE 74% PLUS 4 FREE Burgers - The Family Value Combo - Only $39.99. ORDER Today 1-888-721-9573, use code 48643XMD - or www.OmahaSteaks.com/mbff6 9

210.5 LANE, Upstairs, 2 bedroom, appliances, washer/ dryer hookup, no pets, $440 plus deposit, (937)538-6818

$

Apartments /Townhouses ANNA, Condo, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, appliances, laundry hook ups, garage. No pets. $795/month. (937)394-7144

Open House Directory

2 BEDROOM, 844 1/2 S. Walnut St. upstairs apartment, no pets, washer/dryer hookup, deposit & references. (937)4920829

The Favorite Feast

4 FREE

Other

Page 11

2011 Chevy HHR Silver with Black interior 40,000 miles, New tires, like new, Rebuilt title $9890.00 (937)295-2833 ask for Dennis.

3 BEDROOM Duplex, Sidney, 703 N. Main, appliances, laundry, no pets, $475, (937)3947265

3 BEDROOM, 1.5 bath, Large Duplex with 2 car garage, kitchen appliances, washer/dryer hook-up, very clean, no pets, 2487 Alpine Ct. $695 (937)492-5219 715.5 S. Main, upstairs, 1 bedroom, utilities not included, $350, (937)498-4400

Harley Davidson XLH 883 With only 5100 miles. Looks and runs like new. 2005 model. Priced at 1/2 of new cost $4500. (937)489-1725

Open House Directory

18255 PENCE What a view!!! Check out this unique RUSTIC LOG HOME situated on over 9 acres. Property features a mature wooded area with a creek. Looking for peace? Sit and relax on the front lower or upper porch. Like entertaining? Host a party on the back deck and enjoy the wildlife. Open living room area with cathedral ceiling and windows for natural light. Dining area features a pellet stove for additional heat that opens into spacious kitchen area. Oversized master bedroom suite features shower with dual shower heads, dual vanity, and walk-in closets. Custom-built staircase leads up to the open landing area. Second bedroom also features a bath suite and walk in closet. Third bedroom/study is spacious to allow many functions, and has built in shelves. The possibilities are endless in the unfinished walk out basement.

Kristi Bayhan 937-638-9577

lkbayhan@yahoo.com 40518800

Help Wanted General

Sidney Daily News, Friday, November 8, 2013

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Page 12

Cleaning & Maintenance

Miscellaneous

SHED 30x40 with metal roof, siding, wood timber goes with building $50 (937)622-2844

4th Ave. Store & Lock 1250 4th Ave.

SOFA & LOVESEAT like new, brown & green leaf pattern, $225, Oriental Rug, brown & green 5x9ft $65. (419)6293334

Ask about our monthly specials 2385762 40510514

40516526

Mower Maintenance

MOWER REPAIR & MAINTENANCE

Get your snow-blowers ready!

INERRANT CONTRACTORS

Musical Instruments

Stop overpaying your general contractors!

PIANO console. Not real large. $400 or best offer. (937)4980669

Self performing our own work allows for the best prices on skilled labor. • Kitchens • Roofs • Windows • Baths • Doors • Siding • Decks • Floors • Drywall • Paint 25 years combined experience FREE estimates

Televisions /Accessories REAR PROJECTION HITACHI, very nice 53" big screen TV, excellent picture, $100 (937)552-7786

Rutherford

Construction & Building

937-658-0196

40509820

UNITED BREAST CANCER FOUNDATION: DONATE YOUR CAR - FAST FREE TOWING 24 Hr. Response - Tax Deduction UNITED BREAST CANCER FOUNDATION Providing Free Mammograms & Breast Cancer Info 888-928-2362

937-497-7763

All Small Engines • Mowers • Weed Eaters • Edgers • Snowblowers • Chain Saws Blades Sharpened • Tillers

40511270 40110438

Miscellaneous

FREE pickup

within 10 mile radius of Sidney

Painting & Wallpaper

(937)573-7357 InerrantContractors@gmail.com

J.T.’s Painting & Drywall

Landscaping

20 YEARS IN BUSINESS

Want To Buy

40517455

2380832

PAYING CASH for Vintage Toys, GI Joes, Star Wars, HeMan, Transformers, Pre-1980s Comics, Magic The Gathering, much more (937)267-4162.

• Interior/Exterior • Drywall • Texturing • Kitchens • Baths • Decks • Doors • Windows • Doors • Room Additions

LICENSED • INSURED

TOTAL HOME REMODELING Call Jim at 937-694-2454

Cleaning & Maintenance

40511716

Land Care

Residential Insured

Loria Coburn

937-498-0123 loriaandrea@aol.com

Please visit us online at www.sidneydailynews.com

finds in

that work

Miscellaneous

Remodeling & Repairs

Roofing • Drywall • Painting Plumbing • Remodels • Flooring Eric Jones, Owner Insurance jobs welcome: FREE Estimates

aandehomeservicesllc.com 40517708

Roofing & Siding

937-419-0676

• • • •

www.buckeyehomeservices.com

Roofing Windows Kitchens Sunrooms

• • • •

Spouting Metal Roofing Siding Doors

• • • •

Baths Awnings Concrete Additions

CALL TODAY FOR FREE ESTIMATE

40511491

*Professional Window Cleaning *Residential and Commercial Cleaning *Interior Painting *Carpet Cleaning & Protection www.saveutimeservices.com *Licensed & Insured

aMAZEing

40509259

Save U Time Services 937-638-4141

40509666

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AUTOMOTIVE

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Pre-Owned 2011 GMC Terrain SLE2 4 Cyl Fwd Carbon Metallic w/Ebony Cloth Heated seats

2005 Chevy Silverado ½ ton Reg Cab Short Bed Black w/Gray Cloth 118K miles

2011 Chevrolet Silverado 1500 Extended Cab 4x4 Z71 Mocha w/ 38000 miles

2002 Chevy Trailblazer LT 4x4 4 Dr Victory Red Gray Cloth 136K miles

2011 Chevrolet Malibu LT 4 Dr Mocha w/Cocoa Cloth 4 Cyl Auto Overdrive 23K miles

2001 Pontiac Montana 1sc Red /Gray Cloth Inter 3400 V-6 Eng 172000 miles

2006 Chevy ½ Ton Crew Cab 4x4 Graystone w/Ebony Cloth 5.3 V-8 100900 miles

2000 Chevy Silverado ¾ ton Reg Cab 4x4 Two Tone Dk Red & Gray Gas155K miles

2006 Pontiac G6 GT Black w/Ebony Leather Sun Roof V-6 Eng 138K miles

1995 Pontiac Grand Prix Se Sedan Green w/Gray Cloth v-6 engine auto trans 113k miles

2006 Buick Rendezvous CXL All Wheel Drive Cardinal Red w/Gray Leather 145K miles

1992 Chevrolet K2500 ¾ Ton Silverado Reg Cab 4x4 350 V-8 Auto Trans A/c 92K miles

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Check Out Our Inventory At www.kattchevy.net 202 S. Main Street • New Knoxville, OH • 419-753-2278 Hours: Mon. & Wed. 8 a.m. - 7:30 p.m. Tues., Thur. & Fri 8 a.m. - 5 p.m.; Sat. 8:00 a.m. - 12 Noon

40521980


Sidney Daily News, Friday, November 8, 2013

Page 13

DELINQUENT TAX PUBLISHING LIST FOR THE YEAR 2013

The manufactured homes returned delinquent by the County Treasurer of Shelby County with the taxes, interest and penalties charged thereupon agreeable to law are contained and described in the following list, viz: CLINTON TOWNSHIP 1-0231 AHRENS MICHAEL J .................................................................343.24 1-1063 ARMSTRONG PAUL W.............................................................133.22 1-1009 BOYD PHILIP ...............................................................................425.39 1-0277 BURNS JAMES M .........................................................................70.50 1-1280 BYNUM KATHY..............................................................................23.49 1-1520 CAREY MATTHEW ..........................................................................8.15 1-1012 COMPTON CHAD G ...................................................................16.75 1-1037 COMPTON CHAD G ...................................................................18.23 1-1421 CREEKSIDE SALES LLC ..........................................................430.58 1-0981 DORSEY SCOTT ..........................................................................45.80 1-0252 EARICK JOSEPH O & SANDRA K .........................................150.33 1-0517 EARLS JOSEPH ............................................................................20.98 1-0477 FREW SEAN...................................................................................25.82 1-1115 GANGER JAMES L .......................................................................71.13 1-0049 GEIER GWEN & SCHABEL ROBERT ..................................675.46 1-0126 GEIER SUSAN RENEE ..............................................................667.25 1-1499 GIBSON JOHN ............................................................................667.83 1-1362 GILLUM DEBORAH K................................................................171.99 1-1419 *GLICK KERRY R & REBECCA...............................................207.55 1-1333 GREGORY KASEY L .................................................................303.19 1-1514 GROSS PAUL L...........................................................................369.77 1-0134 HAZELTINE TERRI ......................................................................623.44 1-1024 HESS SHIRLEY A .......................................................................250.17 1-1034 HICKERSON TIMOTHY P.........................................................267.41 1-0060 LARGE MICHAEL & FERN........................................................109.31 1-0907 LECKEY RALPH D ........................................................................50.24 1-0169 LOVELESS GLORIA D....................................................................3.54 1-1375 NICODEMUS SUSAN M ...........................................................409.14 1-0652 POTTER MARK C..........................................................................18.71 1-0647 SAUL VICKEY S ............................................................................29.88 1-0434 SMITH EVELYN M & BRUCE D ...............................................475.90 1-0051 SMITH KAREN K ................................................................................ .99 1-1179 SNAVLEY JAMES ..........................................................................16.77 1-0032 SPILLERS JEREMY R...................................................................23.66 1-0577 SUPINGER EDWARD ..................................................................15.75 1-0872 WEST NORMAN ...........................................................................41.58 1-1385 WRIGHT ADAM L .......................................................................124.94 CYNTHIAN TWP LFD 3-0855 BINGHAM DARREL D .................................................................... 9.93 3-0937 BULCHER SCOTT ........................................................................... 5.68 3-0457 POEPPELMAN JEFFREY ............................................................14.09 3-0810 SHANNON BARBARA ................................................................48.38 3-0186 ULLRICH D KRISTINE.....................................................................8.87 CYNTHIAN TWP LFD 6-0691 HAYES MABEL ROSE .................................................................12.56 DINSMORE TWP

10-0818 DULANEY RICHARD N ...............................................................42.84 10-1313 SMITH MARY A..............................................................................46.28 10-1216 SMITH MARY C .............................................................................19.80 10-1176 SMITH ROBERT L.........................................................................97.19 DINSMORE TWP 11-0656 MCELFRESH TIM ..........................................................................20.09 11-1021 SLAYBAUGH ALVIN DEC'D 1/12/04 ......................................12.66 FRANKLIN TWP 13-0598 BEASECKER DAVID ..................................................................144.89 FRANKLIN TWP 15-1211 SLIFE DANNY ..............................................................................177.08 FRANKLIN TWP 16-1195 BRUN STEVEN M ..........................................................................97.52 16-0752 DAVIS JOHN....................................................................................74.31 16-0077 ELLIS SUZANNE D .......................................................................19.76 16-0460 ELSON PHILIP S & LAURA ........................................................40.07 16-0212 GOLD SHEILA ...............................................................................25.00 16-0819 GREER MICHAEL .......................................................................108.34 16-1310 HALTERMAN MICHELE E .........................................................192.49 16-1353 KINKLE ANDREW E & YVONNE ............................................279.74 16-0487 LINE JASON R .............................................................................106.70 16-1129 KRAFT MICHAEL.........................................................................111.30 16-1452 LOFTY REBECCA P .....................................................................39.62 16-0023 MARKIN PAUL D ...........................................................................93.07 16-1154 MASSIE DARLA A.......................................................................169.60 16-0888 REDINBO STEVEN L .................................................................329.02 16-0908 SHADOAN SHIRLEY ...................................................................67.96 16-0096 STRUNK MAGGIE ......................................................................134.15 16-1194 WOLAVER LOVINA ......................................................................91.93 GREEN TWP 17-1495 DRISKELL SHAWN N & CHRISTY D ....................................641.09 JACKSON TWP 19-0184 DOSECK GREG.............................................................................44.14 19-1324 HARLOW FRANCES ....................................................................14.82 19-0217 LAMBERT JASON M ..................................................................271.91 JACKSON TWP 20-1023 GOLD DONNA ............................................................................167.89 20-1161 HARTZLER JOHN T....................................................................231.96 20-0065 JONES CHARLES R & TINA L .................................................240.61 20-1102 MARTIN KAREN...........................................................................115.04 20-1306 MARTIN KAREN.............................................................................14.58 20-1303 NEFF FREDERICK ........................................................................28.89 20-1406 ROMANOWSKI MITCHELL R .................................................183.09 20-0316 LITTLE ERIC J .................................................................................20.35 20-1316 ZWIEBEL WILLIS R ....................................................................210.10 LORAMIE TWP

22-0764 BURGER MICHAEL E ...................................................................47.63 22-1278 RISMILLER GALEN.....................................................................345.97 22-0792 SHOUP GREGORY A .................................................................14.81 MCLEAN TWP LFD 30-0765 BRENNAN DAVID R .....................................................................17.58 30-0655 BRUSSELL VIKKI ..........................................................................15.09 30-0478 BURKE CHRIS ..................................................................................2.21 30-0419 CANTRELL BRENDA ...................................................................80.10 30-0820 HICKERSON DANIEL E ..............................................................16.19 30-0143 MARTIN DENNIS D JR ....................................................................1.45 30-0132 SEGER DOUGLAS T ...................................................................44.14 30-1315 SMITH CHRISTINE A ...................................................................14.81 MCLEAN TWP LFD 35-0811 BLAIR THOMAS N ......................................................................236.90 35-1260 BOYER LISA .................................................................................127.94 35-1201 DANIELS TONY R .........................................................................48.38 35-0165 DANKWORTH DAVID A ............................................................198.80 35-0215 HEUKER RACHEL & JEREMY ...................................................16.89 35-0857 HOFFMAN FRED S ....................................................................280.21 35-0216 JUSTICE MONICA B .......................................................................1.81 35-1147 MILLIGAN KURTIS L...................................................................258.47 35-0323 OLIVER CASEY ................................................................................1.35 35-1068 ROBINSON R SCOTT & ANITA M..........................................316.51 35-0213 SIMMONS JODI...........................................................................163.57 35-0702 SMITH JASON E............................................................................73.14 35-0297 WAKEFIELD MICHAEL P ..........................................................216.19 ORANGE TWP 36-0836 HINKLE ROGER D & ARLENE ................................................136.47 36-0875 TABORN LAURA ............................................................................21.37 36-0560 WILEY RICHARD JR-MARCUS-LUCINDA ............................41.58 PERRY TWP 38-0059 A & R RECK HIDDEN VALLEY MHP ........................................43.57 38-0276 A & R RECK HIDDEN VALLEY MHP ......................................129.00 38-0963 A & R RECK HIDDEN VALLEY MHP ...........................................7.03 38-0938 ALEXANDER DENNIS S............................................................251.77 38-1342 BAKER LOWELL K .....................................................................411.98 38-0589 BLACKFORD JOSEPH E SR & MURDLE ..............................86.81 38-0351 BRIGGS TAMMY ELAINE .........................................................247.28 38-0747 BURNS JON .................................................................................202.12 38-1498 CAMPBELL SOPHIA J .................................................................16.45 38-0085 PARTINGTON SUSAN K ...........................................................183.46 38-1103 CEYLER TRAVIS..........................................................................160.03 38-1373 CIT GROUP/SALES FINANCING INC ..................................110.57 38-0159 CONATSER LAVERNA ................................................................49.80 38-0751 CORDRAY MARISSA & BURNS RICHARD ........................266.69 38-0251 CORVIN CHRISTOPHER T & JULIE ........................................60.76 38-1085 COX GARY .....................................................................................62.03

38-0592 38-0224 38-0223 38-0222 38-0675 38-1481 38-0648 38-1099 38-1289 38-0961 38-0965 38-1475 38-0254 38-0389 38-0204 38-0553 38-1111 38-1192 38-0228 38-0076 38-0046 38-1293 38-0881 38-1228 38-1476 40-0969 40-1170 40-0162 42-0406 42-0901 44-1169 44-0712 44-1426 44-1366 44-0329 58-0667 58-0826 58-1379 58-0730 58-0664 58-0932 58-0354

EISCHEN CORY W......................................................................22.06 HAMBLIN HEATHER M ...............................................................19.71 HAMBLIN JEFF...............................................................................16.73 HEATH TIMBERLEA .....................................................................18.76 HUTCHINSON JOHN E & BRENDA J ...................................293.69 JORDAN LEWIS A ......................................................................426.57 LUDWIG PAUL E...........................................................................26.41 MAIN TIFFANY A .........................................................................134.01 BERNING CHERYL J ......................................................................1.97 MURPHY ARNOLD E ...................................................................25.91 MURPHY ARNOLD E .................................................................208.52 PERRY STEVEN W.....................................................................360.10 RATLIFF JACKIE L .........................................................................51.27 RECK ALEX ....................................................................................80.26 RECK ALEXANDER ....................................................................123.20 RECK ALEXANDER ....................................................................100.24 ROSS LINDA M .............................................................................19.64 SCHERER CHARLES K ............................................................168.27 SHEPHERD JEFFERY A ..............................................................27.76 SKEENS OSA B ..........................................................................117.77 MILLER PAULETTE F..................................................................256.57 STRUNK JERRY...........................................................................198.32 THOMAS SARAH E....................................................................121.47 WICK DENEEN ..............................................................................12.62 WICK TIMOTHY L .......................................................................247.68 SALEM TWP NICHOLS DAVID.........................................................................146.83 REGULA RANDALL L....................................................................50.56 THOMPSON MICHAEL L & JOE R ........................................500.49 SALEM TWP SSD FITCHPATRICK THERESA A......................................................19.01 WATSON ROBERTA S ..............................................................175.29 SALEM TWP BROWN LOLA.............................................................................266.97 KELLY MIKE C ................................................................................... 4.26 LOWERY MICHAEL I & BONNIE J .........................................548.01 REGULA RANDALL L...................................................................62.68 STEPHENS JAMIE S ..................................................................163.00 WASHINGTON TWP BRANSCUM CECIL ......................................................................22.15 BRANSCUM CECIL E...................................................................16.95 DAY DARRIN D ............................................................................472.18 DIDIER TERRY L ............................................................................41.58 FRIES ERIC T & JILL M ................................................................21.33 MICHAEL DAVID M.......................................................................87.81 RICHARDS GRAHAM A..............................................................15.09

Notice is hereby given that the manufactured homes will be certified for foreclosure by the county auditor pursuant to law, unless the whole of the delinquent taxes, interest and penalties are paid within one year. The names of persons who have entered into a written undertaking with the county treasurer to discharge the delinquency are designated by an asterisk. Dennis J.York, County Auditor, Shelby County, Ohio

DELINQUENT TAX PUBLISHING LIST FOR THE YEAR 2013

The Lands, Lots and Parts of Lots returned delinquent by the County Treasurer of Shelby County with the taxes, assessments, interest and penalties charged thereupon agreeable to law are contained and described in the following list, viz: 1-1836426.004 1-1824478.011 1-1825278.005 1-1825455.008 1-1825433.018 1-1825433.019 1-1826458.004 1-1836107.002 1-2210480.007 1-2210480.013 1-1836159.018* 1-2210482.021 1-1836207.013 1-1836207.020 1-1836207.021 1-1825430.039 1-1825430.048 1-1826431.009 1-1930307.006 1-1825204.026 1-2204352.008 1-2204352.009 1-2204352.010 1-2204352.011 1-1836256.021 1-1826408.025 1-1836280.039 1-1836280.041 1-2204307.004 1-2204307.005 1-1836201.006 1-1836201.007 1-1825430.053 1-1826454.021 1-1826326.004 1-1826326.008 1-1825353.022 1-1825353.023 1-1825276.005 1-1836477.004 1-2204351.012 1-1826177.010 1-1825404.028 1-1836404.025 1-1836103.012 1-1835280.001 1-1825280.009 1-1836128.002 1-1930307.003 1-2210435.005 1-2210435.013 1-1836140.010 1-1826433.002 1-1825180.011 1-1825180.012 1-1825429.005 1-1836156.007 1-1836156.008 1-1825380.004 1-2210431.007 1-1836208.011 1-1825433.027 1-1836180.006 1-1825430.052 1-1825430.055 1-1826455.019 1-1824279.026 1-1825252.005 1-1825252.006 1-1835106.021 1-1824179.011 1-1824179.012 1-2210483.011 1-1825377.017 1-1825454.030 1-1836132.012 1-1836132.016 1-1836355.017 1-1835227.003 1-1834202.026 1-1836158.006 1-1825431.018 1-1825431.019 1-1826426.017 1-1836331.025 1-1825183.007 1-1826427.019 1-1825377.023 1-1825431.017 1-1836176.011 1-1836454.017 1-1930152.016 1-1825404.022 1-1825404.023 1-1836180.015 1-1825277.008

CLINTON TOWNSHIP LAVINS RACHEL & MICHAEL ........................................1242.72 ALLISON TIMOTHY H .......................................................669.85 DANIELS GARY L & REBECCA S .........................................19.15 HARRIS DARRYL .................................................................826.40 BERRY LARRY O ..................................................................423.08 BERRY LARRY O ....................................................................30.63 BERRY LARRY O ..................................................................837.86 BERRY LARRY O ....................................................................87.41 BLOSSER WILLIAM JR & BLOSSER STEPHANIE ............867.47 BLOSSER WILLIAM JR & BLOSSER STEPHANIE ................4.19 FERREIRA JAMES LEE ........................................................539.76 BOYD TRISHA .....................................................................914.87 BRAY KENNETH WAYNE ...................................................210.66 BRAY KENNETH WAYNE ...................................................551.13 BRAY KENNETH WAYNE ...................................................523.96 BURTON HERBERT...............................................................32.15 BURTON HERBERT.............................................................143.39 CARNES INVESTMENTS II LLC ........................................791.09 SHELBY COUNTY HABITAT FOR HUMANITY............1245.32 COOKE MARY L ..................................................................918.15 COTTERMAN EUGENE M ...................................................79.16 COTTERMAN EUGENE M ...................................................79.16 COTTERMAN EUGENE M .................................................436.25 COTTERMAN EUGENE M ...................................................79.13 CRIST WILLIAM M & BAY KARYN M ............................1127.48 CURL JAMES D JR & FREISTUHLER CRIST ....................708.79 DAVIS REGINA.......................................................................83.07 DAVIS REGINA.......................................................................72.15 DAVIS LARKIN E..................................................................311.07 DAVIS LARKIN E....................................................................71.05 KNIGHTS TOWING AND RECOVERY LLC ...................1340.37 KNIGHTS TOWING AND RECOVERY LLC .....................151.04 DEMARCUS BILLY J & LINA F .............................................33.57 DESCH MARIAN NELLE ....................................................499.44 DUZICK FRANK E JR ............................................................15.26 DUZICK FRANK E JR ..........................................................390.85 ELLIOTT STEVEN W ...........................................................237.74 ELLIOTT STEVEN W ...........................................................860.96 FERREE BARBARA ANN .....................................................631.88 FINK GREGORY S................................................................259.80 FLEMING RYAN K & CINDY M ...........................................51.67 FLORY DEAN C ......................................................................53.85 FOY KEVIN ...........................................................................896.56 FRAZIER JONES KEVIN & MARK ...................................1193.64 GANGER DAVID L .............................................................1105.23 GEHLE MARSHA L ............................................................1189.00 GIBSON ROGER & MARTENS SHERRI ............................977.73 GIBSON ROGER & MARTENS SHERRI L.........................857.03 GIBSON ROGER & MARTENS SHERRI ............................852.77 GIBSON ROGER & MARTENS SHERRI ............................921.14 GIBSON ROGER & MARTENS SHERRI ..............................60.44 GREEN SANDRA K TRUSTEE ............................................329.92 GRIFFIS PAUL E & DORA J...............................................1078.67 GRUEBMEYER EDWARD A & MILDRED E MINTON CYNTHIA M ...536.40 GRUEBMEYER EDWARD A & MILDRED E MINTON CYNTHIA M .....36.02 HABITAT FOR HUMANITY SHELBY CO.........................119.30 HAMAKER ROBERT G & AMY ..............................................2.95 HAMAKER ROBERT G & AMY ............................................49.46 HAMBLIN HERMAN H III ...................................................44.71 HARRIS TIMOTHY W.......................................................1579.70 HAVILL RYAN J ....................................................................168.25 HAVILLE RYAN ....................................................................304.98 HEATH JAMES M & PATRICIA A.......................................783.29 HESS HAROLD L .....................................................................2.69 HESS HAROLD L .....................................................................5.71 HOLTHAUS STEPHEN L & JACOBS JESSICA N ..............271.52 HOOVER BONNITA S .......................................................1913.10 HOYING JOHN A ................................................................102.55 HOYING JOHN A ..............................................................1227.24 HUBER DANIEL L................................................................501.84 J & M ENTERPRISES INC ...................................................409.51 J & M ENTERPRISES INC .................................................3869.05 JESS DAVID L........................................................................674.04 KARN RONALD & ROBIN ..................................................471.25 KELLER JEROME & ANDREA ................................................3.70 NEWHOUSE JAMES ............................................................597.87 NEWHOUSE JAMES ..............................................................24.95 KERNS KENNETH R ...........................................................500.98 KIES DANIEL PAUL TRUSTEE .........................................1661.61 KNIGHT AUSTIN R & DANIELLE ...................................3616.50 KRUEGER CHRISTOPHER J ..............................................745.17 LEACH JOSEPH L ..............................................................1175.60 LEACH JOSEPH L ................................................................145.01 LIGHTLE RICHARD & CHERYL..........................................51.50 LINK STACY M.....................................................................971.98 LUELLEN THOMAS J & DEBORAH E...............................626.87 MCCOY JESSIE G & TERESA J .............................................19.39 MEKELBURG CLAY R & JESSICA L ...................................880.92 MEKELBURG CLAY R & JESSICA L ...................................451.68 MILLS CHARLES..................................................................427.03 SECRETARY OF HOUSING & URBAN DEVELOPMENT580.35 MOHR ELAINE LOUISE STALEY & KLECKER CAROL ANN .1131.96 MOON TERRY L ..................................................................841.22 MOON TERRY L ..................................................................163.30 MORRISON ALICE D ..........................................................434.49 MURPHY BETTY JEAN.......................................................292.31

1-1825180.004 MCNEELY ROBERT L ..........................................................117.35 1-1825180.005 MCNEELY ROBERT L ..........................................................557.29 1-1825180.006 MCNEELY ROBERT L ............................................................31.78 1-1930154.010 OLLINGER JONATHAN M .................................................429.50 1-1825378.001 ORANGE BLOSSOM RENTALS LLC..................................366.21 1-1836176.010 ORANGE BLOSSOM RENTALS LLC..................................407.98 1-1930307.032 ORANGE BLOSSOM RENTALS LLC....................................43.04 1-1826429.001 POOLE MARJORIE ..............................................................228.14 1-1826429.003 POOLE MARJORIE ..............................................................263.56 1-1826429.004 POOLE MARJORIE ..............................................................188.49 1-1836353.005 PRATER JODY L & RAYMOND E SR .................................367.19 1-1836127.021 HARBOUR PORTFOLIO VII LP .........................................249.06 1-1824478.006 RATERMAN BETH...............................................................300.00 1-1836377.030 RIVERA ELIZABETH A ...........................................................5.90 1-2204353.010 ROBERTS BERNICE Y .............................................................4.19 1-1824251.010 RUECKHAUS STEPHEN & STACY ......................................41.71 1-2601106.030 SALE PATRICIA A ................................................................790.15 1-1836376.016 SCHMIDT DOUGLAS E & PATRICIA A ..........................1810.21 1-1836376.017 SCHMIDT DOUGLAS E & PATRICIA A ............................186.79 1-1825354.015 SHIPP JOSEPHINE E ...........................................................284.66 1-1825429.008 SHOEMAKER CAROL J.....................................................1649.50 1-1825302.045 SHROPSHIRE LON M III ....................................................106.41 1-1825354.003 SHROPSHIRE LON M III ......................................................30.23 1-1836357.015* SHULTZ GEORGE DALE .......................................................116.00 1-2205403.015 SMITH LISA RENEE ............................................................568.02 1-1824305.003 SPIRIT MASTER FUNDING II LLC ...................................132.42 1-1824330.001 SPIRIT MASTER FUNDING II LLC .................................2935.58 1-1824377.001 SPIRIT MASTER FUNDING II LLC .................................1710.67 1-1824377.002 SPIRIT MASTER FUNDING II LLC ...................................189.93 1-1826427.013 STEPHENS GLENNICE & WILMA ....................................483.18 1-1826427.018 STEPHENS GLENNICE & WILMA ......................................14.33 1-1836132.013 STIVER DOYLE F & BRENDA K.........................................510.41 1-1836106.011 TAYLOR ETHEL L ..................................................................15.48 1-1836106.013 TAYLOR ETHEL L ..................................................................62.52 1-1836151.011* TAYLOR HOLLY J ...................................................................795.00 1-1836281.003* BRANSCUM JAMES .................................................................53.72 1-1825282.003 SHAHAN JONATHAN C .....................................................161.52 1-1825403.008 TONER TODD J & TIA R ..................................................1504.58 1-1836126.008 TONER TODD J & TIA R ....................................................812.16 1-1826432.008 TREEN ALBERT E ................................................................541.92 1-1836259.026* LANE EDWARD RAY I & PENNY .........................................240.00 1-1919351.001 WEIGANDT DOROTHY A .................................................951.34 1-1919351.002 WEIGANDT DOROTHY A .................................................123.45 1-1836405.011 EDWARDS TIMOTHY H .....................................................396.50 1-1825476.003 RV HOLDINGS ELEVEN LLC ...........................................1110.35 1-1836257.006 WORDEN LARRY A ...............................................................67.88 1-1835276.007 WYER DENNIS G.................................................................790.66 1-2205404.003 YOUNG EDITH ....................................................................377.84 1-1826351.003 2120 W MICHIGAN INC...................................................9572.07 CLINTON TOWNSHIP 2-2603101.016 KNIGHT AUSTIN R ...........................................................2668.73 2-2603151.005* RASOR SHIRLEY ..................................................................2409.00 CYNTHIAN TWP LFD 3-1622400.003* BENDER GERALD & SUSAN ..............................................1188.00 3-1624400.012 SIEGEL JOHN D & AMY M...................................................42.23 CYNTHIAN TWP LFD 4-1636400.017* COBURN SAMUEL & GLORIA L..........................................151.00 4-1731200.010 HOLBROOKS SEAN ............................................................676.68 4-1728300.012 MARLOW QUENTIN (LI ES) ETAL ...................................645.28 CYNTHIAN TWP LFD 6-1728426.002 WALDROOP JAMIE A .........................................................408.37 6-1728300.006 WIRRIG RONALD L & ANITA M .......................................745.46 DINSMORE TWP 8-0526300.004 FREISTHLER CRAIG M & NICOLE D .................................51.37 8-0522300.002 MURPHY MARK S & LAURIE K ........................................288.24 8-0514300.004 PLATFOOT DAVID L & RITA F ........................................1212.99 DINSMORE TWP 9-0528456.014 BENAVENTE JUAN P & VERA J .........................................925.26 9-0528478.005 DULANEY DONALD A & DIANNA K .............................1306.06 9-0529476.013 MARTINEZ MARCELA FLORES ........................................277.21 9-0529476.014 REYNA OSCAR VILLARREAL ............................................253.02 DINSMORE TWP 10-0233200.017 AMBOS STEVEN V & ANGELA M ...................................1600.95 10-0502226.003 FASSEL JOSEPH T & KELLI A.............................................745.33 10-0502226.004 FASSEL JOSEPH T & KELLI A...............................................64.31 10-0502226.010 FASSEL JOSEPH T & KELLI A...............................................44.50 DINSMORE TWP 11-0504127.004 ALTSTAETTER RUTH B ......................................................100.58 11-0232428.007 DEGEN JO ANNE...................................................................29.78 11-0233379.011 VAUBEL PETER J & HEITKAMP CRYSTAL ......................607.79 11-0233379.012 VAUBEL PETER J & HEITKAMP CRYSTAL ........................48.32 11-0232484.003 STEINKE SHERRI ................................................................482.02 FRANKLIN TWP 14-0533131.018 ACE & TOOLMAN MANAGEMENT CO LLC ....................50.97 14-0533131.020 ACE & TOOLMAN MANAGEMENT CO LLC ..................997.68 14-0533133.003 MINNICH TIM.......................................................................15.15 14-0533131.013 WHITT CRAIG E..................................................................351.90 FRANKLIN TWP 16-1918401.007 BUCIO AMBER M ................................................................280.41 16-1918353.001 FOSTER AMY M F..................................................................42.78 16-1813378.002* FERREIRA JAMES L & KAREN S ........................................380.00 GREEN TWP 17-2319477.018 YANEY POLLY ........................................................................13.08 17-2308101.012 CARNES BETH .......................................................................84.80 17-2823400.002 DEVAULT PAUL R ................................................................507.19 17-2301257.002 DRISKELL SHAWN N & CHRISTY D ................................311.14

17-2319428.002 17-2319477.002 17-2816200.009 17-2828401.006 17-2320400.009 17-2320252.005

ELLIOTT STEPHEN D .........................................................298.84 ELLIOTT STEPHEN D .........................................................252.41 HINES ROBERT G..............................................................1802.69 ORANGE BLOSSOM RENTALS LLC..................................550.35 ORDEAN JAMES L & LEE E ..............................................2130.69 ZIMMERMAN CRAIG A ...................................................3267.52 JACKSON TWP 19-0333300.001 GROSS DENNIS H & ROBIN L...............................................4.81 19-0333300.003 GROSS DENNIS H & ROBIN ................................................63.41. 19-0333300.004 GROSS DENNIS H & ROBIN L.............................................41.55 19-0618402.001 KOENIG MARK L & MARY S TRUSTEES .........................471.26 19-0618402.002 KOENIG MARK L & MARY S TRUSTEES ...........................45.72 19-0618402.010 KOENIG MARK L & MARY S TRUSTEES ...........................11.25 19-0630400.004 UMBAUGH KATHLEEN E ..................................................598.00 JACKSON TWP JCSD 20-0610477.003 BLAIR TERRY L & PAMELA A ..........................................1493.13 20-0610479.023 COOPER WILLIAM E II ........................................................69.67 20-0610478.007 CATTERSON ANNAMAE B ..............................................1259.45 20-0615126.003 ELLIOTT ALAN J................................................................1113.49 20-0615103.039 GILFILLAN DWANE M TRUSTEE .......................................65.04 20-0610327.018 JONES NORMA JEAN .........................................................572.86 20-0615203.002 ORANGE BLOSSOM RENTALS LLC......................................6.05 20-0615203.003 ORANGE BLOSSOM RENTALS LLC..................................306.59 20-0610377.012 SHAFFER KIMBERLY S .......................................................214.80 20-0610476.013 SHELBY COUNTY OHIO HABITAT FOR HUMANITY ..138.35 LORAMIE TWP 22-2509376.014 CALLAHAN WAYNE..........................................................1025.69 22-2509376.015 CALLAHAN WAYNE............................................................721.14 22-2509376.034 CALLAHAN WAYNE..............................................................48.26 22-2509376.035 CALLAHAN WAYNE..............................................................48.26 22-2503200.001 GLISKY RICHARD .............................................................6923.56 22-2503400.003 HOWARD RODNEY ............................................................694.37 22-2516226.007 SECRETARY OF HOUSING & URBAN DEVELOPMENT ..1007.46 22-2517400.009 MIDDENDORF MAX J ............................................................8.02 22-2509152.043 SHERMAN MATTHEW.......................................................492.11 22-2516201.001 SHOUP GREGORY ALLEN .................................................436.15 22-2516300.001 STEPHENSON RODNEY D ..................................................13.51 LORAMIE TWP RFD 24-2414401.013 DERSHEM BRIAN L & LEAH L ........................................1079.08 24-2414402.008 MJM FAMILY LIMITED PARTNERSHIP .........................3280.32 24-2414403.001 MJM FAMILY LIMITED PARTNERSHIP ...........................267.11 LORAMIE TWP RFD 27-2506300.009 PAULUS WILLIAM E & ELIZABETH A..................................5.53 MCLEAN TWP LFD 30-0710477.001 ALBERS JOHN R ....................................................................26.56 30-0701403.009 CANTWIL MARK D SR & SHIRLEY A ..............................415.91 30-1710100.003 ERNST KENNETH J & DEBRA A .......................................409.71 30-1710100.004 ERNST KENNETH J & DEBRA A .....................................5137.82 30-1710200.001 ERNST KENNETH J & DEBRA A .....................................1550.10 30-1710300.002 ERNST KENNETH J & DEBRA A .....................................1400.14 30-1709200.002 ERNST RICHARD L & JENNIFER L...................................948.59 30-1709200.003 ERNST RICHARD L & JENNIFER L.................................1343.71 30-1706426.005 GEISE DANIEL K................................................................2038.70 30-0701476.017 HESS CHARLENE A (LI ES) & ROBBINS ROBERT SCOTT ..30.95 30-0702451.016 LEUGERS DANIEL ROBERT & SARAH J ..........................493.04 30-1612400.006 PLEIMAN ROBERT ALLEN ..............................................1044.04 30-1612200.003 SIEGEL JOHN D & AMY M.................................................550.41 30-1612200.012 SIEGEL JOHN D & AMY M.................................................291.08 30-1707152.001 SIEGEL JOHN D & AMY M.....................................................9.35 30-0712300.002 WATERCUTTER STEVEN D & MARY A .........................1289.93 MCLEAN TWP LFD 31-0710477.002 ALBERS JOHN R ......................................................................3.69 31-1601200.002 ALBERS JOHN R .........................................................................20 31-1708100.019 BOERGER KEITH A & BRANDI L....................................2309.92 31-1706457.002 MJM FAMILY LIMITED PARTNERSHIP .........................1854.52 31-0711357.010 TURNER JOHN R & AMYE S ...............................................45.13 31-0711357.013 TURNER JOHN R & AMYE S .............................................522.71 MCLEAN TWP 32-0430200.001 U&M MEYER FAMILY LLC...............................................1524.82 32-0430200.011 U&M MEYER FAMILY LLC...............................................2077.92 MCLEAN TWP LFD 35-0701181.009 DAWSON BRENT A & SUSAN A ..........................................54.08 35-0701181.011 DAWSON BRENT A & SUSAN A ..........................................56.39 35-0701179.012 HOYING JOHN ....................................................................418.01 35-0701179.013 HOYING JOHN ......................................................................92.34 ORANGE TWP 36-2710100.003 ARTHUR DANIEL A ............................................................708.84 36-2723251.011 BRANDON HAROLD L .........................................................10.61 36-2723251.012 BRANDON HAROLD L .........................................................86.63 36-2723251.013 BRANDON HAROLD L .......................................................949.05 36-2723401.006 BRANDON HAROLD L .......................................................180.74 36-2332426.013 HINKLE ROGER D & ARLENE F .........................................99.06 36-2331400.005 KOLSKY ALAN W ..................................................................18.85 36-2722400.002 MURPHY CLAY & DAWN L................................................569.43 36-2332476.004* MYERS HOWARD E .............................................................108.00 36-2724427.004 WHEELER EUGENE ............................................................415.74 PERRY TWP 38-2321326.007* BRAUTIGAM DONALD W & LINDA J ..............................345.95 38-2321326.009* BRAUTIGAM DONALD W & LINDA J ..............................221.62 38-2321377.003 BRAUTIGAM JAMES P & AMY J ........................................949.39 38-2306353.001 COOPER KYLE E..................................................................522.16 38-2311432.008 SCHWEITZER STEPHEN W ...............................................241.79 38-2114400.006 HAMBLIN KATHY ...............................................................757.74 38-2311276.004 SCHWEITZER STEPHEN W .................................................65.66 38-2311276.005 SCHWEITZER STEPHEN W ...............................................383.26 38-2311282.004 SCHWEITZER STEPHEN W ...............................................221.05

SALEM TWP 40-1912400.008 NICHOLS DAVID E..................................................................1.16 40-1912400.009 NICHOLS DAVID E................................................................56.44 SALEM TWP 41-1427300.004 LATTIMER SUSAN L .............................................................71.30 SALEM TWP 42-1910354.002 DORSEY TIMOTHY J ..........................................................544.89 42-1915108.009 HAVILL RYAN J ....................................................................288.62 42-1910353.004 KENNEDY JIMMIE ............................................................1295.62 42-1910353.005 KENNEDY JIMMIE ................................................................36.40 42-1916226.010 WALTER JOHN R ...................................................................99.94 42-1915112.005 WHITEHEAD JERRY GORDON & SHARON ...................173.57 SALEM TWP 44-1425376.002 BARHORST JACK L ...............................................................94.06 44-1425400.006 BARHORST JACK L .............................................................500.45 44-1426400.003 BARHORST JACK L .............................................................980.86 44-1425376.001 BARHORST JACK LEE.........................................................890.71 44-1902402.013 BOWMAN TIMOTHY S & MARGARET A ........................832.85 44-1916101.005 CLACK LANCE L & STEPHANIE L ..................................1292.91 44-1905201.011 COLE RICHARD L & RHONDA R ...................................2322.48 44-1531229.001 COWAN LINDA V ..............................................................1222.44 44-1905201.005 HARRIS TIMOTHY W.......................................................2237.72 44-2007400.009 KINNINGER PHILIP & GENEVA & KINNINGER D EUGENE ...196.07 44-2005400.005 KLINGELHOFER JOSHUA J .............................................1148.31 44-1434100.006 LATTIMER SUSAN L .........................................................1452.61 44-1531201.005 POORE ALVIN L ..................................................................877.52 44-2007100.010* SPICER TERRY L & LOCHTEFELD BETH A .....................303.00 TURTLE CRK TWP LFD 47-1832400.007 GOCKLEY CHRISTOPHER E .............................................792.75 TURTLE CRK TWP LFD 48-1808300.009 DEMOTTE JOHN & JO ANNA .........................................1487.83 48-1807300.016 TONER TODD & TIA ........................................................2711.21 VAN BUREN TWP 50-0415400.005 WREEDE JONATHAN L & WREEDE CHRISTINA ..........699.22 VAN BUREN TWP 53-0415227.003 K VILLE ENTERPRISES PLL ...............................................101.16 53-0415227.004 K VILLE ENTERPRISES PLL ...............................................803.81 53-0415227.021 K VILLE ENTERPRISES PLL .................................................10.19 VAN BUREN TWP /NEW KNOXVILLE SD / NK FIRE 00440 56-0133400.010 FRANCIS ROBERT E & CLISTA N......................................618.57 WASHINGTON TWP 58-2608158.001 BRANSCUM CECIL .................................................................6.36 58-2608158.004 BRANSCUM CECIL ...............................................................51.61 58-2608158.006 BRANSCUM CECIL ...............................................................13.89 58-2608154.001 BRANSCUM CECIL & VICKI .................................................6.83 58-2608154.002 BRANSCUM CECIL & VICKI .................................................6.83 58-2608154.003 BRANSCUM CECIL & VICKI .................................................2.57 58-2608155.002 BRANSCUM CECIL & VICKI ...............................................22.85 58-2608155.005 BRANSCUM CECIL & VICKI ...............................................16.24 58-2608156.003 BRANSCUM CECIL & VICKI .................................................8.72 58-2608156.004 BRANSCUM CECIL & VICKI .................................................8.72 58-2608156.005 BRANSCUM CECIL & VICKI ...............................................33.23 58-2608156.009 BRANSCUM CECIL & VICKI ...............................................50.66 58-2608156.010 BRANSCUM CECIL & VICKI .................................................4.94 58-2608157.002 BRANSCUM CECIL & VICKI .................................................8.72 58-2608156.008 BRANSCUM CECIL E & VICKI J ............................................5.87 58-2608156.011 BRANSCUM CECIL E & VICKI J ..........................................26.15 58-2608157.003 BRANSCUM CECIL E & VICKI J ..........................................33.23 58-2608157.004 BRANSCUM CECIL E & VICKI J ..........................................19.55 58-2608157.005 BRANSCUM CECIL E & VICKI J ..........................................51.61 58-2511100.003 CLARK WILLIAM P & MELISSA S .......................................71.04 58-2606476.008* COBURN SAMUEL G & LORIA L.....................................1359.00 58-2524201.009 DIDIER TERRY LEE .............................................................349.11 58-2619300.003 FITZPATRICK DAVID W .....................................................400.54 58-2502200.006 FRIES ERIC F & JILL M......................................................1277.27 58-2502200.012 FRIES ERIC F & JILL M..........................................................55.34 58-2608276.002 HUGHES GARY L ..................................................................88.39 58-2608276.003 HUGHES GARY L ....................................................................1.16 58-2608276.004 HUGHES GARY L ................................................................197.30 58-2608276.005 HUGHES GARY L ..................................................................36.04 58-2608276.006 HUGHES GARY L ..................................................................36.04 58-2608428.022 KNOTTS CAROL J & SMITH TAMMY K ..........................852.44 58-2629334.002 MEYER SHIRLEY A ..............................................................219.48 58-2618300.003 MOON LAUNA J & MICHAEL A .......................................965.08 58-2608276.013 OVERBEY JASON C & INMAN MONICA...........................88.11 58-2608276.014 OVERBEY JASON C & INMAN MONICA.........................415.10 58-2617100.007 PARSONS ROBERT H & JACKIE S .......................................80.78 58-2617100.010 PARSONS ROBERT H & JACKIE S .....................................447.37 58-2608428.049 SANFORD SARAH S ............................................................660.24 58-2609100.001 TINGLEY LEE A & KAREN A ............................................2146.58 58-2608403.008 TINGLEY LEE A & KOLSKY KAREN A ............................1142.23 WASHINGTON TWP HHSD 59-2629329.001 ELLIOTT POLLY N...............................................................480.09 59-2629333.004 MEYER SHIRLEY A ..............................................................261.75 59-2629333.009 MEYER SHIRLEY A ..............................................................842.84

Notice is hereby given that the whole of such several tracts, lots or parts of lots, will be certified for foreclosure by the county auditor pursuant to law, unless the whole of the delinquent taxes, assessments, interest and penalties are paid within one year. The names of persons who have entered into a written undertaking with the county treasurer to discharge the delinquency are designated by an asterisk. Dennis J. York, County Auditor,Shelby County, Ohio 40521822


Sports Friday, November 8, 2013

Contact Sports Editor Ken Barhorst with story ideas, sports scores and game stats by phone at 937498-5960; email kbarhorst@civitasmedia.com; or by fax 937-498-5991. Page 14

Cavs clash with run-minded Bearcats Ken Barhorst

kbarhorst@civitasmedia.com

For Lehman football coach Dick Roll, Saturday night’s playoff game will be a stroll down memory lane. The Cavaliers put their 9-1 record up against 8-2 Bainbridge Paint Valley in the first round of the Division VII playoffs Saturday night at 7 p.m. at Sidney Memorial Stadium. And the Bearcats will feature, in Roll’s words, a “grind-it-out” offense, much like his teams used to run before going to the wide open offense that has been so successful this season. “They remind me a lot of our 2010 team,” said Roll, who is preparing his team for postseason play for the first time in the past three years. “They want to run the ball and control the clock. And defending against the run is probably our weakest part. So we have our work cut out.” Paint Valley faces a lengthy bus ride just to get to Sidney. Bainbridge is 114 miles from Sidney

down in the southern part of the state. The team was one of three to share the Scioto Valley Conference championship. The Bearcats have two potent runners in the backfield, led by Teagan McFadden. The 5-foot-8, 175-pounder is just a sophomore, and rushed for 1,028 yards on 115 carries, an average of 8.1 per carry. He scored eight touchdowns. Paint Valley lost back-toback games to Westfall, 20-12, and Adena, 25-24, and it’s interesting to note that McFadden was ejected from the Westfall game. Because of that, he also had to sit out the following week against Adena. Mark Clifford, a six-foot, 210-pound senior, just missed giving the team two 1,000-yard runners, finishing with 975 on 122 carries, 7.9 yards per carry. He scored 14 touchdowns. Quarterback Anthony McFadden, a 5-10 sophomore, added 468 yards rushing along with 893 yards passing on 56-for-

107, 52 percent. He threw for 11 touchdowns and had six interceptions, and his favorite target is Dylan Estep, a 6-2, 165-pound senior. Clifford is next with 13 catches this season. Defensively, the Bearcats are led by Dakota Morgan, a 6-1, 205-pound linebacker who had 85.5 tackles this season. He’s also blocked two punts and has 9.5 quarterback sacks. Teagan McFadden is next with 77.5, and third is Corey Freeman, a 5-8, 155-pound junior defensive back who also has three interceptions this season. Clifford, also a linebacker, had 54 tackles and nine QB sacks. “I think they’ll try to jam it down our throats,” Roll said of the Bearcats. “Control the clock. And we can’t let them do that. That’s what’s scary. They can milk the clock on us if we let them. They can put points on the board and they have some big guys up front. This is the strongest team we’ve faced since Fort Loramie.”

COMPARING

SCORES

Lehman’s 2013 scores

(With opponent’s division and record) L--O Anna (D-6, 4-6) .................................14-40 Minster (D-6, 6-4) .............................33-18 London (D-4, 2-8)..............................48-26 Lima Perry (D-7, 5-5) .........................33-0 Riverside (d-7, 5-5) .............................57-0 Dayton Jefferson (D-7, 4-6) ..............42-14 Fort Loramie (D-7, 8-2) ....................21-14 Ridgemont (D-7, 2-8) ..........................61-6 Waynesfield (D-7, 2-8) ........................60-0 Upper Scioto Valley (D-7, 4-6)..........62-26

The Cavaliers, meanwhile, are coming off a 62-26 demolishing of Upper Scioto Valley that gave them the outright Northwest Central Conference championship last week. After lamenting his team’s slow starts all season, Roll was pleased to see the Cavs come out of the blocks strong a week ago. “We actually got off to a good start,” he said. “Something we’ve been trying to do all season. We

Paint Valley’s 2013 scores

(With opponent’s division and record) PV-O Lockland (D-7, 2-8) .............................44-0 Williamsburg (D-6, 7-3)....................28-14 Col. Africentric (D-7, 0-10) .................46-0 Unioto (D-4, 4-6) ...............................51-19 Zane Trace (D-5, 5-5)........................38-24 Southeastern (D-5, 4-6) ....................34-24 Col.Westfall (D-5, 5-5) ......................12-20 Adena (D-5, 5-5)................................24-25 Piketon (D-5, 4-6) ...............................22-9 Huntington (D-6, 0-10).....................49-16

didn’t have the mistakes last week. In the past, we’d have poor passes, blown blocking assignments, blocking the wrong guy… But it all just clicked from the beginning.” The Cavaliers have been ultra-explosive on offense, with quarterback Nick Rourke throwing for 2,356 yards this season and 27 touchdowns. His favorite target has been Drew Westerheide, who had 43 receptions during the regular season, 13 of which

went for touchdowns. Max Schutt caught 31 passes, Greg Spearman 25 and Clay Selsor 23. Rourke also leads the team in rushing yards with 418. On defense, Spearman leads the way with 72 tackles and four interceptions. Linebacker Skylar Brown leads in sacks with four and has 58 tackles.He was named the Northwest Central Conference Defensive Player of the Year this week.

Redskins ready for unbeaten Flyers FORT LORAMIE — Fort Loramie isn’t going into Saturday’s opening playoff game intimidated, says head coach Matt Burgbacher. And that’s a start because in the eyes of most, the Redskins face an impossible task — beating the powerful Marion Local Flyers, the top-ranked team in Ohio and the defending state champions. The two Division VII rivals will collide Friday night at Marion Local in a first-round game, with the winner advancing to the regional semifinals against either Covington or Portsmouth Notre Dame next Saturday. Fort Loramie comes into the contest with an 8-2 mark, the losses coming to two playoff teams in Defiance Tinora and Lehman. Marion Local rolled impressively through its regular-season schedule with a 10-0 mark, beating 9-1 West Jefferson in week two. Jefferson is the No. 1 seed in the Division V, Region 18 playoffs. The Flyers also went to Coldwater late in the season and put a beating on the Cavaliers, 47-14. In all, both teams faced three opponents during the regular season that

have gone on to qualify for postseason play. “We talked to the kids and we told them our motto this week was Shock the State,” said Burgbacher, who said he was planning on watching his dad’s Tipp City team in playoff action tonight. “I watched that show on that Ohio sports channel and when they got to Division VII, who did they talk about? Marion Local. Nobody is giving us a chance, but our kids aren’t intimidated. They know the challenge they’re up against. But they’ve faced adversity all year and they’ve beaten it. We’re going to face it again Saturday night and I like our chances. “People look at it and think we drew the short stick,” he continued. “But we look at it as an opportunity. We’ve been preparing for them since December of last year really, because we know that to be the best, you have to beat the best. And we have that opportunity.” The Flyers have also faced a lot of adversity, namely losing All-Ohio quarterback Adam Bertke early in the year to a broken throwing hand. Bertke has signed to play at Pitt next year. Before

he went out, he hit 62.2 percent of his passes for 746 yards. His backup, Dustin Rethman, filled in admirably until he, too was injured. The Flyers had to move their No. 1 receiver, Troy Homan, to quarterback in the second half of a 14-3 win over Anna and he rallied the team from a 3-0 deficit late. Bertke is reportedly close to returning, but it likely won’t happen this week. However, the report is that Rethman will be able to go Saturday. Aaron Nietfeld leads the Flyers in rushing with 757 yards and Jacy Goettemoeller is close behind with 544, along with a team-high 13 touchdowns. Homan, meanwhile, has caught 37 passes and Hunter Wilker 28. Fort Loramie can counter with Delaunte Thornton in the backfield. He’s rushed for 1,817 yards and scored 30 touchdowns this season. Burgbacher said he expects Marion Local’s blitzing defense to key on Thornton. “I think they’ll key on him so we have to mix in the pass with the run,” Burgbacher said. “And we feel very confident in

COMPARING Loramie’s 2013 scores

(With opponent’s division and record) L--O Minster (D-6, 6-4) .............................21-18 New Bremen (D-6, 0-10) ..................62-20 Defiance Tinora (D-6, 9-1)................21-35 Ada (D-6, 7-3)......................................14-8 Waynesfield (D-7, 2-8) ........................63-7 Ridgemont (D-7, 2-8) ..........................56-6 Lehman (D-7, 9-1) ............................14-21 Upper Scioto Valley (D-7, 4-6)............54-0 Lima Perry (D-7, 4-6) .........................54-0 Riverside (D-7, 5-5) ............................50-0

our passing game. We set the school record by far for passing yards and we will have to utilize the pass. But obviously, we’re going to have to utilize Delaunte, too. “Marion Local will blitz a lot,” he added. “They look like they have people blitzing from the stands. We have to do our assignments, and if we do, we have a chance, and that’s what we want. We’ve made mistakes this season and gotten away with them, but we won’t if we make them Saturday against this team. But we’re as healthy as we’ve been in a long time and the kids have a great attitude. We’ve had our three best practices of the season this week, and maybe the best three

Bengals adapt to life without Gino CINCINNATI (AP) — Geno Atkins was in the Bengals’ locker room briefly Wednesday, moving slowly on crutches. He declined to answer questions about his torn knee ligament as he headed for a side door and home. It’s still too painful to discuss. Still a bit painful for the teammates who will miss him, too. The Bengals (6-3) will try to maintain their lead in the AFC North without their best defensive lineman. Atkins, an AllPro tackle last season, leads the team with six sacks and is a disruptive force up the middle that Cincinnati already misses badly. “A friend,” defensive end Wallace Gilberry said. “A hell of a teammate. Hell of an athlete. I could go on for days.” They don’t have that much time. The Bengals have a chance to all but clinch their division in the next two weeks when they play at Baltimore (3-5)

and host Cleveland (4-5). Back-to-back wins would leave them with a daunting lead heading down the stretch. The Bengals reached the playoffs as a wild card each of the last two seasons. They haven’t won the division title since 2009. “Honestly we feel like these next two weeks are the biggest of the season because of where we are in the division,” left tackle Andrew Whitworth said. “We get an opportunity. These games can tilt things one way or the other.” Their biggest challenge is filling holes on a defense that has lost some of its best players in the last three weeks. Top cornerback Leon Hall is out for the season with a torn Achilles tendon. Middle linebacker Rey Maualuga missed a 22-20 overtime loss in Miami last Thursday with a concussion and an injured left knee. Atkins tore the anterior

Wilfredo Lee|AP Photo

Miami Dolphins quarterback Ryan Tannehill (17) is sacked by Cincinnati Bengals defensive tackle Geno Atkins.

cruciate ligament in his right knee in the first half of the loss at Miami, a sig-

SCORES

nificant setback to a line already missing end Robert Geathers for the season.

Marion Local’s 2013 scores

(With opponent’s division and record) ML-O Lima Shawnee (D-3, 2-8) . . . . . . . . . 42-7 West Jefferson (D-5, 9-1). . . . . . . . . . 29-0 Parkway (D-6, 3-7). . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42-13 Fort Recovery (D-7, 3-7) . . . . . . . . . . 33-0 Versailles (D-6, 3-7) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28-0 Delphos St. John’s (D-7, 6-4). . . . . . 28-14 St. Henry D-6, 4-6) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35-7 Coldwater (D-5, 8-2) . . . . . . . . . . . . 47-14 Anna (D-6, 4-6) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14-3 New Bremen (D-6, 0-10. . . . . . . . . . . 42-6

we’ve had since I’ve been here. They’ve come out this week focused, ready to learn, and done everything we’ve wanted. They are mentally and physically getting themselves ready for Saturday.” The Redskins also played much of the season without their starting quarterback, Tyler Kazmaier, and also had a capable backup in Andy Grewe, who earned allleague status for his performance. The two have totaled 1,619 yards and 17 touchdowns this season, and Kazmaier ended the regular season with a strong game against Riverside, showing he’s ready to go in the postseason. Burgbacher said Marion Local’s success

starts at the top with head coach Tim Goodwin. He’s what makes them so good,” Burgbacher said. “He is hands down one of the best coaches in the state of Ohio. Between the Xs and Os and the way he gets them to play so hard, it makes them awfully tough to beat. They have some kids that are injured and the kids that come in to replace them really play hard. So coach Goodwin is obviously the No. 1 factor. “And there’s the tradition,” he continued. “You win big games and it takes off. That’s what you have to do and that’s the opportunity we have. They are somewhere we want to be.”

Jackson Center coach chosen for Lifetime Achievement award The Ohio High School Volleyball Coaches Association announced recently that longtime Jackson Center volleyball coach Kim Metz has been chosen to receive its 2013 Lifetime Achievement Award. Metz has coached at Metz Jackson Center for 25 years and has compiled a record of 414 wins and 219 losses. In addition, she has served as Club VB coach for 21 years and has been secretary/treasurer of District 9 Volleyball Coaches for the past 12 years.

She has won numerous County, sectional and district championships and has taken one team to the state tournament. And for the past three seasons, she has been the assistant clinic coordinator at the state clinic during the summer. She will receive her award at the All-State Volleyball festivities the weekend of Nov. 16 and 17 at Wooster High School. A banquet will be held on Saturday that weekend, and on Sunday will be the state allstar matches.


Sports

Sidney Daily News, Friday, November 8, 2013

Page 15

50 years ago: Sidney shocks Fairmont points in those In the fall of four most recent 1963 the new renewals. Sidney High Sidney enSchool was in tered the game its fourth year. Eight passenat 5-4 overall and 3-3 in the ger trains and Miami Valley the same number of buses League, had served Sidney Dave Ross solid talent, and was competitive on a daily basis. Guest Hamburger in every game. columninst was three The Dragons pounds for a dollar at were 8-1 and 6-0 and an Singer's White Villa excellent team that was near the fairgrounds. in good position to win John Kennedy was Pres- its final MVL outright ident but would be as- title before becoming a sassinated on November charter member of the 22 in Dallas. Western Ohio League. November 8, 1963 Could the young men of was a crisp traditional coach Dave Haines defootball Friday night liver an unexpected that brought the 1963 going away present? season to a close almost This would be a very a decade before high tough assignment for school playoffs began. I the visitors to Fairmont was nine years old and Stadium. made the trip to KetterIt took the home team ing with my parents to a grand total of three see our Sidney Yellow plays to visit the end Jackets visit the mighty zone but by halftime the Fairmont West Dragons. Yellow Jackets trailed A year earlier I had gone only 20-14 and knew with my dad to see our they had a chance. Fairguys lose to Fairmont in mont was having its Sidney in a steady two usual success through day rain. Though Fair- the air while Sidney was mont had been split into doing well on the East and West, the 1963 ground. The running atWest version was really tack was serving the Yelthe former combined low Jackets well in both team as Fairmont East yardage and time of poswas forced to start foot- session. Quarterback ball from scratch. Joe Stump was a good It was my second year decision maker and ball of following SHS football handler who could also in 1963. I'd heard all the throw. New fullback legendary stuff about Butch Ward, a converted our annual difficulties QB, could both block and with this Montgomery gain ground. A variety County powerhouse. of runners accompanied The documentation was Ward behind Stump indownright imposing. We cluding Darrell Spanhadn't beaten Fairmont gler, just cleared from an since 1948, and had injury. The styles of ofdropped a dozen straight fense were a major consince a scoreless tie in trast especially a half 1950. We hadn't scored century ago when passagainst them since 1958 ing wasn't as popular as as they tallied 190 it is today.

The second half would belong to Sidney and the mighty Dragons would not score again. Sidney received the opening kickoff of the third stanza and marched down the field. Stump gained 25 to the Fairmont ten, ran it in on the next play, and tallied the two pointer on a sneak for a 22-20 Yellow Jacket lead with 4:53 left. After that Sidney hoped to play "keep away" and "field position" to run the clock toward game's conclusion. However, early in the fourth quarter the lead was in major jeopardy as the Dragons were close to scoring but Sidney defensive end Marvin Gray made a big stop on fourth down near the goal line. A year earlier he was playing bass drum in the marching band. Gray wasn't even listed in the program and was misidentified in a Dayton Journal Herald photo the next morning. The 22-20 score continued as the Jackets got the ball back with about eight minutes to play and a goal of moving the ball and running out the clock. On a third down and nine in their own territory, Spangler returned for the biggest carry of his career, and it took a measurement to reveal the result. "I ran hard behind good blocking to gain nine yards and one foot," he told me just a few weeks ago. Sidney kept the ball and the yardage got easier to the point that another issue arose. What if Sidney scored and failed on the two point conversion for a 2820 lead? Fairmont could have time to score and

tie the game. "I wasn't going to let that happen," coach Haines remembers. "Our guys had worked too hard to end with a tie." Haines called time and told Stump to get a couple of first downs and then not score, which is precisely what happened. The strategy was even obvious to the large Sidney throng in the stands when an untouched ball carrier would fall down. Still, the ball advanced to the Fairmont eight where "first and goal" saw Stump take the final snaps and down the ball to finish the seemingly impossible feat. The visiting crowd was delirious as the SHS fight song pierced the frosty air. Several Sidney helmets were tossed skyward as the frustration had ended. As the Sidney Daily News headline would declare the next afternoon, "Sidney Socks Fairmont With 22-20 Parting Punch!" Over the last 50 years we've heard many 1963 team members talk about this special victory. Tackle Dick Faulkner likened it to "David beating Goliath." QB Stump said "we played the game of our lives." When coach Dave Haines retired after the 1974 season he called this his favorite single win "and the favorite of many of our fans." This is the same guy who coached three straight perfect teams from 196870. After all of the celebrating and an hour's drive back to Sidney, the night would be a short one for the Yellow Jackets who were already

scheduled to make their annual trek to Ohio State the next day to see a Buckeye game. As they entered their seating area in Ohio Stadium dressed in their team blazers, they received a standing ovation from MVL co-champion Xenia, which got a share of the league crown when Sidney beat Fairmont. My memories of that

Dave Ross authored a book on the first century of SHS football that is available at the Shelby County Historical Society. He's a regular contributor to the Sidney Daily News.

thington Kilbourne (9-1) 6 Cols. St. Charles (7-2) at 3 Zanesville (10-0) 5 Pataskala Licking Heights (91) at 4 Mansfield Senior (10-0) Region 6 8 Vandalia Butler (6-4) at 1 Loveland (10-0) 7 Cin. Withrow (8-2) at 2 Cin. Mount Healthy (9-1) 6 Kings Mills Kings (7-3) at 3 Cin. Winton Woods (8-2) 5 Harrison (7-3) at 4 Cin. Northwest (8-2) Division III Games at 7:30 p.m. Friday Region 7 8 Chagrin Falls Kenston (7-3) at 1 Akron St. Vincent-St. Mary (10-0) 7 Alliance Marlington (8-2) at 2 Hubbard (10-0) 6 Aurora (9-1) at 3 Louisville (10-0) 5 Poland Seminary (9-1) vs. 4 Chesterland West Geauga (7-3) Region 8 8 Defiance (6-4) at 1 Toledo Central Catholic (10-0) 7 Medina Buckeye (6-4) at 2 Clyde (9-1) 6 Napoleon (6-4) at 3 Sandusky Perkins (10-0) 5 Norwalk (9-1) at 4 Tiffin Columbian (9-1) Region 9 8 Circleville Logan Elm (7-3) at 1 The Plains Athens (10-0) 7 Dover (7-3) at 2 Cols. MarionFranklin (9-1) 6 Chillicothe (9-1) at 3 Cols. Brookhaven (8-2) 5 New Philadelphia (9-1) at 4 Dresden Tri-Valley (8-2) Region 10 8 Springfield Kenton Ridge (73) at 1 Tipp City Tippecanoe (10-0) 7 Trotwood-Madison (7-2) at 2 Franklin (9-1) 6 Springfield Shawnee (9-1) at 3 Wapakoneta (9-1) 5 Dayton Thurgood Marshall (6-3) at 4 Mount Orab Western Brown (10-0)

Division IV Games at 7:30 p.m. Friday Region 11 8 Cle. Central Catholic (8-2) at 1 Chagrin Falls (8-2) 7 Cortland Lakeview (7-3) at 2 Struthers (8-2) 6 Cle. John Hay (8-2) at 3 Youngstown Cardinal Mooney (6-4) 5 Cle. Benedictine (7-3) at 4 Peninsula Woodridge (8-2) Region 12 8 Millbury Lake (8-2) at 1 Caledonia River Valley (10-0) 7 Galion (9-1) at 2 Kenton (100) 6 Wauseon (9-1) at 3 Wooster Triway (8-2) 5 Bryan (10-0) at 4 Genoa Area (10-0) Region 13 8 Steubenville (6-4) at 1 Newark Licking Valley (8-2) 7 Carroll Bloom-Carroll (6-4) at 2 Gnadenhutten Indian Valley (8-2) 6 New Concord John Glenn (73) at 3 Duncan Falls Philo (8-2) 5 Bexley (7-3) at 4 Zanesville Maysville (7-3) Region 14 8 Cin. Wyoming (8-2) at 1 Kettering Archbishop Alter (9-1) 7 Washington Court House Miami Trace (7-3) at 2 Clarksville Clinton-Massie (9-1) 6 Urbana (10-0) at 3 Cin. Archbishop McNicholas (8-2) 5 Circleville (8-2) at 4 Germantown Valley View (9-1) Division V Games at 7 p.m. Saturday Region 15 8 Youngstown Ursuline (4-5) at 1 Akron Manchester (8-2) 7 Youngstown Liberty (7-3) at 2 Columbiana Crestview (9-1) 6 Beachwood (6-4) at 3 Gates Mills Gilmour Academy (8-2) 5 Navarre Fairless (7-3) at 4 Sullivan Black River (7-3) Region 16 8 Doylestown Chippewa (8-2) at 1 Columbia Station Columbia (100)

7 Huron (7-3) at 2 Findlay Liberty-Benton (9-0) 6 Loudonville (9-1) at 3 West Salem Northwestern (9-1) 5 Coldwater (8-2) at 4 Pemberville Eastwood (8-2) Region 17 8 Chillicothe Zane Trace (5-5) at 1 Cols. Bishop Hartley (9-1) 7 Williamsport Westfall (5-5) at 2 Martins Ferry (9-1) 6 Proctorville Fairland (7-3) at 3 Wheelersburg (9-1) 5 Baltimore Liberty Union (8-2) at 4 St. Clairsville (9-1) Region 18 8 Waynesville (8-2) at 1 West Jefferson (9-1) 7 Cin. Madeira (8-2) at 2 Cincinnati Hills Christian Academy (10-0) 6 Cin. Mariemont (7-3) at 3 Hamilton Badin (8-2) 5 Dayton Chaminade Julienne (6-4) at 4 Richwood North Union (91) Division VI Games at 7:30 p.m. Friday Region 19 8 McDonald (7-3) at 1 Kirtland (10-0) 7 Cuyahoga Heights (6-4) at 2 Canfield South Range (10-0) 6 Cle. Villa Angela-St. Joseph (9-1) at 3 Mogadore (9-1) 5 Louisville St. Thomas Aquinas (8-2) at 4 Brookfield (8-2) Region 20 8 Northwood (8-2) at 1 Defiance Tinora (9-1) 7 Ada (7-3) at 2 Delphos Jefferson (9-1) 6 Convoy Crestview (8-2) at 3 Lima Central Catholic (8-2) 5 Haviland Wayne Trace (9-1) at 4 North Robinson Colonel Crawford (9-1) Region 21 8 Beverly Fort Frye (8-2) at 1 Lucasville Valley (10-0) 7 Oak Hill (8-2) at 2 Cols. Bishop Ready (9-1) 6 Woodsfield Monroe Central (7-3) at 3 Centerburg (10-0)

5 Bellaire (7-3) at 4 Newark Catholic (9-1) Region 22 8 Lewisburg Tri-County North (7-3) at 1 Casstown Miami East (91) 7 Cin. Summit Country Day (82) at 2 Cin. Country Day (10-0) 6 West Liberty-Salem (8-2) at 3 Williamsburg (7-3) 5 New Paris National Trail (82) at 4 Mechanicsburg (8-2) Division VII Games at 7 p.m. Saturday Region 23 8 Garfield Heights Trinity (4-6) at 1 Berlin Center Western Reserve (10-0) 7 Southington Chalker (5-5) at 2 Norwalk St. Paul (9-1) 6 Ashland Mapleton (6-4) at 3 Wellsville (8-2) 5 Lowellville (6-4) at 4 Danville (8-2) Region 24 8 Delphos St. John’s (6-4) at 1 Leipsic (8-2) 7 Hicksville (6-4) at 2 McComb (8-2) 6 Arlington (7-3) at 3 Fremont St. Joseph Central Catholic (7-3) 5 Edon (8-2) at 4 Tiffin Calvert (6-4) Region 25 8 Beallsville (6-4) at 1 Glouster Trimble (10-0) 7 Lancaster Fairfield Christian Academy (7-3) at 2 Shadyside (100) 6 Caldwell (8-2) at 3 Malvern (8-2) 5 Racine Southern (8-2) at 4 Steubenville Catholic Central (8-2) Region 26 8 Cedarville (7-3) at 1 North Lewisburg Triad (10-0) 7 Portsmouth Notre Dame (8-2) at 2 Covington (10-0) 6 Fort Loramie (8-2) at 3 Marion Local (10-0) 5 Bainbridge Paint Valley (8-2) at 4 Lehman (9-1)

This is the boxscore that appeared in the Sidney Daily News the day after Sidney shocked Fairmont in the season finale. night remain vivid. They now have context and perspective that have elevated the experience even further. Oh what a night! ——

SCOREBOARD CALENDAR High school SATURDAY Football Division II playoffs Bainbridge Paint Valley vs. Lehman at Sidney Memorial Stadiu, 7 p.m. Fort Loramie at Marion Local, 7 p.m.

VOLLEYBALL State tournament State High School Volleyball Tournament At The Nutter Center TODAY Division III Versailes (25-3) vs. Upper Sandusky (25-2), noon West Lafayette Ridgewood (271) vs. Gates Mills Gilmour Academy (21-5), 2 p.m. Division II Cleveland Heights Beaumont (16-6) vs. Parma Padua Franciscan (27-1) 4 p.m. Alter (24-3) vs. Dover (27-0), 6 p.m. SATURDAY 11 a.m. — Division I finals 1 p.m. — Division IV finals 3 p.m. — Division III finals 5 p.m. — Division II finals

FOOTBALL Playoffs OHSAA Football Playoffs First Round Pairings Pairings are shows with seeds and regular-season records Division I Games at 7 p.m. Saturday Region 1 16 Shaker Heights (6-4) at 1 Lakewood St. Edward (8-1) 15 Brunswick (6-4) at 2 Mentor (9-1)

14 Toledo Whitmer (6-4) at 3 Hudson (9-1) 13 Marysville (7-3) at 4 Austintown Fitch (10-0) 12 Solon (6-4) at 5 Westerville Central (9-1) 11 Cle. St. Ignatius (6-4) at 6 Canton McKinley (9-1) 10 Elyria (7-3) at 7 StowMunroe Falls (9-1) 9 Cleveland Heights (9-1) at 8 Wadsworth (9-1) Region 2 16 Miamisburg (7-3) at 1 Hilliard Davidson (10-0) 15 Cin. St. Xavier (5-5) at 2 Cin. Archbishop Moeller (9-1) 14 Pickerington Central (7-2) at 3 West Chester Lakota West (9-1) 13 Dublin Coffman (7-3) at 4 Centerville (8-2) 12 Hilliard Darby (8-2) at 5 Huber Heights Wayne (9-1) 11 Springboro (9-1) at 6 Cin. Colerain (10-0) 10 Clayton Northmont (8-2) at 7 Cin. Elder (8-2) 9 Fairfield (9-1) at 8 Pickerington North (9-1) Division II Games at 7:30 p.m. Friday Region 3 8 Lyndhurst Brush (7-3) at 1 Cle. Glenville (9-1) 7 Painesville Riverside (7-3) at 2 Brecksville-Broadview Heights (9-1) 6 Madison (8-2) at 3 Willoughby South (8-2) 5 Bedford (9-1) at 4 Kent Roosevelt (9-1) Region 4 8 Avon Lake (8-2) at 1 Medina Highland (10-0) 7 Toledo St. Francis de Sales (82) at 2 Avon (10-0) 6 Perrysburg (8-2) at 3 Akron Ellet (10-0) 5 Macedonia Nordonia (8-2) at 4 Massillon Washington (8-2) Region 5 8 Cols. Northland (7-2) at 1 New Albany (9-1) 7 Dublin Scioto (6-4) at 2 Wor-


Page 16

Local

Sidney Daily News, Friday, November 8, 2013

Jealousy is a big deal

DR. WALLACE: I care a invested in each other and lot for a guy. He has have discussed the many desirable qualipossibility of getting ties, but he also has married some day. Is one very undesirable jealousy that big of a trait. He is an insedeal, or is it somecure individual and is thing that, if not made very jealous. If I even a big deal, will vanish look at another guy, in time? — Nameless, he gets upset. He goes Sidney, Ohio. berserk if I should ‘Tween 12 NAMELESS: talk to another guy. Jealousy is, indeed, & 20 Whenever we meet, he a big deal. It would wants to know every- Dr. Robert be very difficult for a Wallace thing I’ve done when marriage to succeed he wasn’t with me. when one of the partWe have a lot of time ners is uncontrollably jealous

— to the point where he needs professional counseling to overcome it. His jealousy could be put in that category. Don’t even think about marrying him unless you are 100 percent positive that the professional counseling he has received has allowed him to get his emotions under control. If he doesn’t think that he has an emotional problem — or even if he admits to a problem, but dismisses it as minor and not requiring the aid of a counselor — dump

him immediately. Believe me, the sort of jealousy this guy has exhibited won’t go away on its own. Indeed, it will only get worse. And if you’re married, you’re stuck with it. Your leverage to insist that he change will be lost. DR. WALLACE: I’ve been eating properly and working out every day and I’m in great physical shape. I’m 5-feet-6 and weigh 117 pounds. I plan on maintaining this weight for my entire senior year. I want to weigh 117 when I enter college in September

2014. I count calories and consume 2,100 calories daily. Every night, before going to bed, I eat an apple, which is included in my calorie count. My brother keeps telling me it’s a big mistake to eat just before going to bed because I’ll gain the weight of the item I eat. He says that the body can’t work off the calories while sleeping. Is this true? — Nameless, Little Rock, Ark. N A M E L E S S : Congratulations for being in perfect physical condition!

It takes a lot of hard work and dedication to reach that goal. Your brother is pulling your leg! It is better to eat earlier because the body can work it off, but in the case of an 80-calorie apple — eat it whenever you choose.

Dr. Robert Wallace welcomes questions from readers. Although he is unable to reply to all of them individually, he will answer as many as possible in this column. E-mail him at rwallace@galesburg. net. To find out more about Dr. Robert Wallace and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate website at www.creators.com.

‘Buckeye Strong’ blood drives to be held The Community Blood Center will celebrate state pride, home-team heroics, and helping save lives with “Buckeye Strong” blood drives. Everyone who registers to donate will receive a customdesigned “Buckeye Strong – Blood Donor” T-shirt. Donors are encouraged to schedule an appointment online at www.DonorTime. com. The “Buckeye Strong Blood Donor” T-shirt is gray with scarlet lettering and incorporates the CBC blooddrop logo. The shirt is free to everyone who registers to donate now through Dec. 14 at any CBC donor center and most CBC mobile blood drives. November blood drives include: • Saturday — Sidney Masonic Temple, 9 a.m.noon, public blood drive. • Monday — NK Parts, Sidney, 1-4 p.m., employee blood drive. • Thursday — Fairlawn High School, 8:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m., student and public blood drive. • Thursday — Cargill, Sidney, noon-4 p.m., employee blood drive. • Thursday — Sidney Apostolic Temple, 3-7 p.m., public blood drive. • Nov. 15 — Sidney High School, 8:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m., student blood drive.

• Nov. 18 — Only Believe Ministries Christian Center, Botkins, 3-7 p.m., public blood drive. • Nov. 20 — Sidney Senior Center, Sidney, 10 a.m.-2 p.m, public blood drive. • Nov. 26 — Lehman High School, Sidney, 8:30 a.m.12:30 p.m., student, staff parents, alumni blood drive. • Nov. 26 — YMCA, Sidney, 3-7 p.m., public blood drive. Information about how to make a first donation, organize a blood drive, or bring an education program to schools is available at www.GivingBlood.org. Get all the updates in the CBC/ CTS newsroom, find quick links to social media pages, or schedule an appointment to donate by connecting to www.DonorTime.com. CBC said reported on the following recent bloodmobiles: • Oct. 15 — St. Michael’s Hall, Fort Loramie, was a site for a blood drive that saw 278 donors register, 21 were deferred, 218 gave whole blood, 20 gave double red cells, eight gave plasma and 11 gave platelets; eight gave for the first time. The blood drive was sponsored by the Fort Loramie American Legion Auxiliary, Fort Loramie Community Service Club and Knights of St John. Jane Poeppelman served as chairwoman.

• Oct. 17 — Russia High School hosted a student blood drive that saw 39 students register to give; four were deferred, resulting in 35 units of blood collected. Fourteen students gave for the first time. Ola Schaffer served as chairwoman. • Oct. 22 — Moose Lodge, Sidney, hosted a public blood drive that saw 112 people register; 14 were deferred; 90 gave whole blood, four gave double red cells, 11 gave platelets, and one gave plasma. Jeff Westover served as chairman. • Oct. 24-25 — Plastipak, Jackson Center, hosted an employee blood drive where 48 employees registered to donate; two were deferred; 46 units of blood were donated. The blood drive was canceled early on Oct 25. due to mechanical difficulties on the mobile coach. • Oct. 26 — Jackson Center High School hosted a student and public blood drive that saw 51 donors register; 10 were deferred; 41 units of blood were donated. Jackson Center National Honor Society served as sponsors with Susie Harris serving as chairwoman. • Oct. 29 — Advanced Composites, Sidney, hosted an employee blood drive that saw 22 donors register; six were deferred; two gave for the first time. Violet Stokes served as chairwoman.

The Community Blood Center recognized the following “Donors for Life”: • 230 donations — Mic Johns, Piqua. • 210 — Loren Watkins, Sidney. • 130 — Rod Foster, Sidney. • 110 — James Zwiebel, Sidney. • 90 — John Minniear, Sidney; Dan Magato, Russia. • 80 — Teresa Stackonis, Sidney; Victor Schulze, Anna; Leo Borchers, Fort Loramie. • 75 — Kathy Schafer,

Fort Loramie; Bill Johns, Houston. • 70 — Larry Yinger, Sidney; Jim Slonkosky, Ed Sanders, Fort Loramie. • 60 — Dave Chaney, Richard Romie, Chuck Ernst,Fort Loramie • 50 — Jerry Barhorst, Russia; Chad Haworth, Pat Ruehenkamp, Fort Loramie • 40 — Eric Kaminsky, Kettlersville; Stephanie York, Scott Monnin, Russia; Denny Meyer, Frank Schafer, Fort Loramie.

• 30 — Robert Kohler, Jackson Center; Marsha Davidson, McCartyville. • 25 — Kathy Brockman, Sidney; Tracy Dapore, Russia; Gary Maurer, Brad Meyer, Fort Loramie. • 20 — Kay Zumberger, Fort Loramie. • 10 — Dan Jacob, Matt Kitzmiller, Fort Loramie. • Five — Health Edwards, Kristina Dean, Wendy Wolf, Sidney; Suzanne Lentz, Andrew Prenger, Anna; Morgan Stiffler, Houston; Alexandria Ford, Johnathan Heuing, Russia.

Harvest time - bird’s eye view

Earl Duty of Sidney with pilot services provided by Andy Bolinger

Soybeans are harvested on the Mike Bensman farm, located at Ohio 29 and Sharp Road.

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