The Star - August 27, 2013

Page 1

TUESDAY August 27, 2013

Can’t Live Without It Page A6 Mill kept open due to public demand

Colts Need Luck Page B1 Indianapolis QB must stay healthy

Weather Cloudy with a chance of rain today. Hot, high of 91. Low tonight 73. Cloudy again Wednesday. Page A6

GOOD MORNING Contestants can enter to win pianos AUBURN —The Auburn Arts Commission is sponsoring a contest to win pianos that remain in playable condition after this summer’s Pianos on the Square interactive exhibit. Contest rules are: 1. The entrant will write an essay explaining in 25 to 50 words why he or she wants the piano. 2. Entries must have contact information of name, address and phone number. 3. An entrant who wins a piano must move the piano. 4. The entrant may specify a choice or preference for a particular piano, but that choice is not guaranteed. 5. The piano steering committee makes the decision on the recipients, and the committee’s decision is final. 6. Preference for awarding a piano will be music students of any age, nonprofit organizations and the public, in that order. 7. Entries must be postmarked by Sept. 2 and sent to the Auburn Arts Commission, P.O. Box 172, Auburn IN 46706.

Private group to help Indy police with alcohol issues INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Rising concern over recent alcohol-related arrests of Indianapolis-area police officers is sparking a push to create a private foundation to help them address their issues outside the chain of command. Indianapolis Public Safety Director Troy Riggs is working with city leaders to establish the foundation, which would offer training and counseling services for public safety employees. More than a dozen local officers have been arrested on alcohol charges in the past three years, including an Indiana State Police trooper whose blood-alcohol content was three times the legal limit when police say he waved a weapon inside a restaurant earlier this month.

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Index

Classifieds....................................B6-8 Life..................................................... A5 Obituaries......................................... A4 Opinion .............................................B4 Sports.........................................B1-B3 Weather............................................ A6 TV/Comics .......................................B5 Vol. 101 No. 236

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Four jailed in Waterloo meth raid WATERLOO — The Waterloo Marshal’s Department arrested four people Sunday night while investigating a report of someone manufacturing methamphetamine at a residence, said town Marshal Jay Oberholtzer. Officers went to the 300 block of South Oak Street at 10:30 p.m. Sunday. After an initial interview of the occupants, officers obtained a search warrant from the DeKalb Circuit Court to search the residence. Inside the residence, officers reported finding an active “pot” cooking methamphetamine and 12 inactive one-pot reaction vessels, nine hydrochloric acid generators, numerous items of paraphernalia, marijuana and synthetic marijuana.

AUBURN POLICE make drug arrests after traffic stop. SEE PAGE A2.

The Indiana State Police Clandestine Lab Team came to the scene, and the Waterloo Fire Barrington Department was present while an active methamphetamine vessel was disabled. Three children ages 3, 5 and 8, who were sleeping in the residence, were removed from the residence, Oberholtzer said. People arrested at the home are:

Dietrich

Haywood

Strohminger

• Brandon D. Barrington, 37, of the 100 block of Railroad Street, Waterloo, on a charge of dealing in methamphetamine within 1,000 feet of a park, a Class A felony. SEE METH, PAGE A6

Battle to find proof U.N. experts collect samples, testimony of chemical attack OCTAVIA LEHMAN

Sid and Belva Meyer of Auburn depart from the Auburn Cord Duesenberg Automobile Museum today with the 38th annual ACD Hoosier Tour. The 2 1/2-day road trip promotes the Auburn

Cord Duesenberg Festival to surrounding communities. Its 50 drivers are heading to Kalamazoo, Mich.

Couple embark on Hoosier Tour BY OCTAVIA LEHMAN olehman@kpcnews.net

AUBURN — Sid and Belva Meyer’s Auburn Cord Duesenberg Festival week will be busy. Today, the two set out with the festival’s 38th annual Hoosier Tour, a 2 1/2-day road trip of 50 classic cars heading to Kalamazoo, Mich. Once the tour arrives back in Auburn Thursday, it’s the official start of the ACD Festival. Friday, Belva will head to the ACD Ladies Tea, while Sid plans to attend the ACD Swap Meet. Then there’s Saturday — when the two will ride in their 1932 Auburn automobile in the Parade of Classics in the afternoon, then head to a collector car auction in the evening. Recounting all the events, the Meyers will eventually breathe. “At the end of the week, we’ll collapse,” Sid said. “We are very fortunate to be able to go home and sleep in our own beds.” Belva has been coming to the

Tour takes international guests AUBURN — The Hoosier Tour has an international flavor this week with two passengers from Down Under. Daniel Nathan of New Zealand and Terry Mansbridge of Australia are making the trip with their fellow Auburn Cord Duesenberg Club members. Nathan owns a pair of Auburn automobiles from the 1931 and 1936 model years. Mansbridge has 1933 and 1936 versions of the Auburn make. Mansbridge said his 12-cylinder 1933 Auburn belonged to the Auburn dealer in Melbourne, Australia.

Nathan is making his third visit to the Auburn Cord Duesenberg Festival. Mansbridge has arrived for the second time. “It’s wonderful — amazing cars, and the people are very nice and friendly. It’s well worth coming for,” Nathan said. “It’s just a great event, isn’t it?” Mansbridge added. “If you’ve got an Auburn, Cord or Duesenberg, you’ve got to come here.” The men said they are expecting four more Australians to arrive in time for the festival’s main events this weekend.

ACD Festival since high school. Her husband started coming in high school, too, but only “as long as there wasn’t work to do on the farm,” he said.

The two were raised in Butler and moved to Auburn in 1969. While Sid’s first affinity for cars was more for muscle, he said, SEE TOUR, PAGE A6

DAMASCUS, Syria (AP) — U.N. experts collected samples and testimony from Syrian doctors and victims of an alleged chemical weapons attack Monday following a treacherous journey through government and rebel-held territory, where their convoy was hit by snipers. As U.S. officials said there was very little doubt that Syria used chemical weapons and Western powers stepped up calls for swift military action, President Bashar Assad’s government vowed to defend itself against any international attack, warning that such an intervention would ignite turmoil across the region. It also would bring the U.S. closer to a conflict that has killed more than 100,000 people since Assad cracked down on Arab Spring-inspired protesters in March 2011. Syria’s civil war has been increasingly defined by sectarian killings between the Sunni-led rebellion and Assad’s regime, dominated by Alawites, an offshoot of Shiite Islam. It would essentially pit the U.S. and regional allies Saudi Arabia, Turkey and Qatar in a proxy war against Iran, which is providing weapons to the Syrian government’s counterinsurgency, along with Hezbollah, the militant Lebanese group that also has aided Assad’s forces militarily. Deputy Foreign Minister Faysal Mikdad told The Associated Press in an interview in Damascus that SEE SYRIA, PAGE A6

Man gets 8 years for Auburn armed robbery BY KATHRYN BASSETT kbassett@kpcmedia.com

AUBURN — A South Carolina man was sentenced Monday to eight years behind bars for the armed robbery of an Auburn convenience store in December. Taylor D.E. McBee, 23, of Greenville, S.C., pleaded guilty to robbery while armed with a deadly weapon, a Class B felony, as part of a plea agreement filed in DeKalb Superior Court I. The plea agreement capped any executed portion of McBee’s sentence at eight years and dismissed a probation violation allegation in another case. In sentencing McBee, Judge

Kevin Wallace said eight years of incarceration is appropriate in the case. At an earlier hearing, McBee admitted he went into the Auburn Pride convenience store, 1902 S. Wayne St., on Dec. 22, 2012, armed with a nickel-plated revolver and demanded cigarettes and money. McBee admitted he put the attendant in fear by showing him the gun when he demanded the items. “It was the worst mistake I’ve made,” McBee said Monday. “I wasn’t thinking.” McBee said he had been staying at the Fort Wayne Rescue Mission around the time of the

offense and that South Carolina was his home. McBee said he is not a violent person and his behavior at the time of the incident was out of character. McBee acknowledged he has prior criminal convictions involving bad checks. He said he was living on and off of the streets during those times and was bouncing checks to get by. “In the time I’ve worked with Taylor, he has been genuinely remorseful, not that he got caught, but that he did this,” said McBee’s attorney, Thompson Smith. Smith said it is a “mystery” why McBee jumped from petty

crimes to an offense of armed robbery. DeKalb County Prosecutor ClaraMary Winebrenner acknowledged McBee is remorseful but said an eight-year sentence is reasonable. “He has certainly earned all eight,” she added. Earlier this month, Wallace sentenced a second suspect in the incident, Derek W. Rowe of rural Auburn, to eight years in prison for his role in the robbery. Rowe pleaded guilty to aiding in robbery, a Class B felony, as part of a plea agreement. He was accused of acting as a lookout while McBee robbed the store.


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TUESDAY, AUGUST 27, 2013

Auburn man sentenced for child solicitation BY KATHRYN BASSETT kbassett@kpcmedia.com

AUBURN — An Auburn man received a six-year sentence for child solicitation from Judge Monte Brown during a hearing Monday in DeKalb Superior Court II. Cody Pontzius, 19, of South Division Street, pleaded guilty to the Class C felony crime as part of a plea agreement. Pontzius originally was

charged with the more serious crime of child molesting, a Class B felony. The charge was amended as part of the plea agreement. Under terms of the agreement, Pontzius was sentenced to six years of incarceration, with four years suspended and served as four years of probation. Brown said he will allow Pontzius to be screened for eligibility to serve his sentence

on community corrections. However, Brown noted, he will not recommend that Pontzius serve the sentence on community corrections. Pontzius’ attorney, Hugh Taylor, said Pontzius and the victim both were teenagers. “I’m not suggesting it was appropriate, but it started out with communication between the two of them. It was back and forth. It was not one-sided,”

Taylor said. “Cody should have known better. There’s no question about it.” Brown said the incident has had a “profound negative and adverse” effect on the victim and described the plea agreement as “minimally acceptable.” “I believe it’s fair to say that the victim and the victim’s mother support this plea agreement very grudgingly,” Brown said, adding that it allows

Briefly •

Correction • Chassis Pearl admission prices lower

Firefighters will ‘fill boot’ for MDA

A story in Sunday’s edition listed an incorrect admission price for Thursday’s grand opening session of the ACD Chassis Pearl Art, Artisanal, Up-cycled and American Lifestyle Marketplace Advance tickets for Thursday’s session cost $10 and are available at locations throughout the community. Admission will cost $15 at the gate on Thursday only. Admission for Friday and Saturday sessions will cost $5 per day. The marketplace will be on the former school site at South Main and Fifteenth streets, featuring art, artisanal goods, locally produced food, wines and home-brewed beers. It is a new event during the Auburn Cord Duesenberg Festival.

AUBURN — The Auburn Fire Department will collect money for the Muscular Dystrophy Association in its annual “Fill the Boot” campaign this week. Firefighters will be at the intersection of West Seventh Street and Touring Drive: • Wednesday from 9 a.m. to noon; • Thursday from 5-8 p.m.; and • Friday from 1-4 p.m.

Police Blotter •

Chamber invites public to meet, greet new director AUBURN — The DeKalb Chamber Partnership will have a “meet-andgreet” event today from 4:30-6:30 p.m. at the chamber office, 208 S. Carpenter Jackson St. The public is invited to meet Shannon Carpenter, the new executive director of the chamber. The Bowen Center is serving as host for the event.

LaOtto to get Village Post Office today LAOTTO — LaOtto will be the location of the 51st Village Post Office in the Greater Indiana District starting today. The Village Post Office will open at the LaOtto Marathon, 6467 Merchants Drive, with a ribbon-cutting ceremony at 11 a.m. An open house will follow from 11 a.m. to noon. While most of LaOtto’s residences are in Noble County, the Village Post Office will be in the town’s commercial park in DeKalb County. LaOtto Marathon owner Adam Dager feels he’s ideally placed for a Village Post Office, he said in a news release. “We’re the only gas station and convenience store in town, and our customers will now be able to pick up a book of stamps and postal products when they stop in for milk and bread. They will also be able to drop off their mail here,” Dager said. “I’m also hoping it will bring an increase in traffic to the store.” The store is open from 5 a.m. to 11 p.m. Monday through Saturday and 6 a.m. to 10 p.m. Sunday. The new postal center will be opened by New Haven Postmaster Lisa Curlin. Several U.S. Postal Service and local officials will be present at the event.

Thank You for your thoughts and prayers on the recent loss of our newborn granddaughter,

Ashlyn Nicole Moore Cameron & Mary Moore Chris & Melissa Moore

the victim to put the matter behind her and move forward. “But for that fact, I don’t think they would support this plea,” Brown said. “Because of their position, I’m grudgingly going to accept this plea agreement.” As part of the plea agreement, an unrelated charge against Pontzius of sexual misconduct with a minor, a Class C felony, was dismissed.

Rollover crash on I-69 injures driver

DAVE KURTZ

Police inspect the trunk of a car stopped by officers Monday on Indiana Avenue in Auburn, near McKenney-Harrison

Elementary School. Officers arrested three men on drug-related charges, with a charge pending against a fourth man.

Traffic stop finds drugs AUBURN — Police arrested three men, with charges pending against a fourth, after a traffic stop Monday at 11:45 a.m. on Indiana Avenue, just north of Fifteenth Street. Officers found numerous illegal substances and drug-related paraphernalia during an investigation, said Auburn Police Chief Martin D. McCoy. Auburn Police Department officers stopped a blue 1991 Pontiac Bonneville carrying the four men for an alleged traffic violation of operating with an obstructed view. Police arrested: • Zachary R. Lunsford, 21, of Swanton, Ohio, the car’s driver, on charges of maintaining a common nuisance a Class D felony; possession of a synthetic drug and possession of paraphernalia, Class A misdemeanors; • Trey A. Pool, 20, of Angola on charges of possession of paraphernalia and possession of a synthetic drug, Class A misdemeanors, and visiting a common nuisance, a Class B misdemeanor; and • Michael J. Howard, 25, of Sanford, Fla., on charges of dealing methamphetamine, a Class B felony; dealing in a look-a-like substance, a Class C felony; possession of methamphetamine, a Class D felony;

Briefs • Football player upgraded to fair condition COLUMBIA CITY — A Columbia City High School football player’s condition has been upgraded to fair. He had been listed in critical condition throughout the weekend after suffering a head injury Friday, according to news reports. The Post and Mail reports senior football captain Sam Dailey was hurt while trying to make a tackle against Warsaw in the season-opening game.

Israeli methods boost corn success

AUBURN POLICE DEPARTMENT PHOTO

Auburn Police released this photo of allegedly drug-related items seized by officers during a traffic stop Monday in southwest Auburn.

possession of a synthetic drug and possession of paraphernalia, Class A misdemeanors; and visiting a common nuisance, a Class B misdemeanor. Police released Lane Russel Slone, 20, of Angola but said a charge is pending for allegedly visiting a common nuisance, a Class B, misdemeanor. McCoy credited his officers for the arrests. “These first-shift officers are extremely active at pursuing

illegal drugs within our community,” McCoy said. “They have made illegal drug crimes their mission and are using any and all resources available to them to investigate drug-related crime, while building quality investigations and arresting those responsible. If you are using, selling or manufacturing illegal drugs in our community, it is only a matter of time until these officers track you down and you end up behind bars.”

LaOtto rezoning petition pulled ALBION — A request to rezone a property from A1 Agricultural to VM Village Mix was withdrawn Monday before it could be considered by the Noble County commissioners. Michael Yoder, the attorney representing Raccoon Ridge, Key Largo Realty and property owners Doug and Kimberly

Spaces Still Available

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35

“Popular” Outdoor Flea Market 6th Year!

AUBURN — An Illinois woman sustained injuries when she rolled her vehicle Sunday at 2:53 p.m. on Interstate 69, south of S.R. 8, the DeKalb County Sheriff’s Department said. Lola A. Horsfall of Greenville, Ill., had pain in her head, neck and chest pain as well as minor bleeding. DeKalb EMS took her to Parkview Regional Medical Center in Fort Wayne for treatment. Police said Horsfall was driving a 2002 Mercury

Mountaineer southbound on I-69 in the driving lane. When she attempted to enter the passing lane, she saw another vehicle already there. Horsfall told police she overcorrected to the right to avoid a collision and lost control of her vehicle. It slid across the passing lane, off the east side of the road, and rolled several times on a cable-strand barrier fence. The vehicle landed on its wheels. The Auburn fire and police departments assisted county police and EMS at the scene.

Jennings, informed the commissioners the petition was being withdrawn just before the meeting opened. The petition asked commissioners to rezone property at 11330 E. C.R. 500S to allow a village with people re-enacting 1800s life and crafts, along with related shops. They would have been associated with a bed-and-breakfast and small lake on the property. Following a hearing last

week with more than 90 people attending, the Noble County Plan Commission made a neutral recommendation to the commissioners for the requested zoning change. Also Monday, the commissioners gave unanimous permission for Black Pine Animal Sanctuary to build a building with a value of more than $50,000 on the site the sanctuary leases from the county.

Pancake & Sausage Breakfast Friday, August 30 7 AM-10 AM Free Will Donation

Sun., Sept. 1 8 AM-4 PM

National Auto & Truck Museum

Call 925-3311

1000 Gordon Boehrig Place (adjacent to ACD Museum)

MILLERSBURG (AP) — An Elkhart County couple who applied growing tips learned in Israel to produce early crops of sweet corn will be recognized as the county’s “Farm Family of the Year.” Chuck Mohler’s Sweet Corn Charlie has become a household name in the area over the last 25 years. Mohler and his wife, Tami, operate roadside farm markets across northern Indiana. Chuck Mohler told The Elkhart Truth he learned about using ground plastic, trickle irrigation and high tunnels and low tunnels while in Israel during the 1980s. The couple also learned watermelon grafting and how to transplant sweet corn on subsequent trips.

Misconduct counts filed against judge INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — The Indiana Commission on Judicial Qualifications has filed 45 counts of misconduct against an Indianapolis judge accused of delaying the release from jail of at least nine defendants and creating a hostile environment for attorneys, court staff, clerks and others.

The

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The Star (USPS 181-300) 118 W. Ninth St., Auburn, IN 46706 Established 1871, daily since 1913 ©KPC Media Group Inc. 2013 Recipient of several awards from the Hoosier State Press Association for excellence in reporting in 2012.

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Legal Notices •

TUESDAY, AUGUST 27, 2013

Legal Copy Deadlines Copy due Publish Wed. 4 p.m. .............................Mon. Thurs. 4 p.m. ............................Tues. Fri. 4 p.m............................. Wed. Mon. 4 p.m. .......................... Thurs. Tues. 4 p.m. .............................. Fri. Annual Reports & Budgets due 5 working days before the publish date.

Email your legal! legals @ kpcmedia.com Call Kelly at 877-791-7877x182 for details LEGAL NOTICE DANIEL HURSEY SOUTH LATERAL 1 DRAIN NUMBER 48-81-0 JACKSON TOWNSHIP, DEKALB COUNTY, IN. FOR: PERIODIC MAINTENANCE On August 22nd, 2013 public hearing on the above-referenced drain was held in the Derald D. Kruse Commissioner's Court, 2nd Floor of the DeKalb County Courthouse, Auburn, Indiana by the DeKalb County Drainage Board. The Board found and ordered that said drain be placed on periodic maintenance. The Findings and Order of the Board have been filed and are available for inspection in the office of the DeKalb County Surveyor. Brenda Myers Administrative Assistant DeKalb County Drainage Board TS,00351233,8/27,hspaxlp LEGAL NOTICE ORDINANCE NO. 2013-09 AN ORDINANCE VACATING A PORTION OF AN UNIMPROVED ALLEYWAY IN THE W. O. KUHLMAN'S ADDITION LOCATED IN THE CITY OF AUBURN, INDIANA WHEREAS, a petition was filed with the City of Auburn, Indiana to vacate that portion of an unimproved alleyway that lies east of Hazel Street and lots 19, 20, and 21, and west of Dallas Street and lots 12, 13 and 14 and south of Twentieth Street in the W. O. Kuhlman's Addition to the City of Auburn, Indiana, that section of right of way being approximately 16 feet wide and 198 feet long and, WHEREAS, a public hearing of the City of Auburn Common Council was held on the 20th day of August, 2013 at 6:00 P.M. at the Auburn Common Council Chambers regarding the petition for vacation, and WHEREAS, a second reading of the Ordinance was held on August 20, 2013, and WHEREAS, after due consideration and opportunity for public notice and comment; and IT IS NOW THEREFORE ORDAINED BY THE COMMON COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF AUBURN, INDIANA THAT: Section 1. That portion of an unimproved alleyway that lies east of Hazel Street and lots 19, 20, and 21, and west of Dallas Street and lots 12, 13 and 14 and south of Twentieth Street in the W. O. Kuhlman's Addition to the City of Auburn, Indiana, that section of right of way being approximately 16 feet wide and 198 feet long, recorded at the office of the DeKalb County Recorder. See Exhibit “A”, consisting of two (2) pages, which is attached hereto and made a part hereof further setting forth the area being vacated. Section 2. The Municipal City of Auburn shall retain an easement across the vacated right of way of that portion of an unimproved alleyway that lies east of Hazel Street and lots 19, 20, and 21, and west of Dallas Street and lots 12, 13 and 14 and south of Twentieth Street in the W. O. Kuhlman's Addition to the City of Auburn, Indiana, that section of right of way being approximately 16 feet wide and 198 feet long for the purpose of providing, maintaining, and expanding utilities in the future. The Municipal City of Auburn shall have the right to maintain, expand, and repair utilities within said right-of-way. Section 3. BE IT FURTHER ORDAINED that this Ordinance be in full force and effect from and after publication in a newspaper of general circulation in DeKalb County, Indiana. PASSED AND ADOPTED by the Common Council of the City of Auburn, Indiana, this 20 day of, August, 2013. TS,00351026,8/27,hspaxlp PUBLIC NOTICE Shiloh Die Cast Midwest, LLC located at 1200 Power Drive, Auburn, IN, 46706 (with corporate offices at 880 Steel Drive Valley City, OH 44280) is submitting an NOI letter for our facility to notify the Indiana Department of Environmental Management of our intent to comply with the requirements under 327 IAC 15-6. This will allow us to discharge runoff storm water that is exposed to industrial activity at the facility into the wetlands known as Grandstaff Ditch. Questions or comments should be directed to Derek Jaeger at the above mentioned Shiloh-Auburn facility address. TS,00351234,8/27,hspaxlp LEGAL NOTICE ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDDERS Sealed Bids for the 2013 Street Improvements Project for the City of Butler, Indiana (herein called the "OWNER") will be received by the Owner at 215 South Broadway, Butler, Indiana 46721 until September 10, 2013 at 3:00 pm (local time). Any Bids received later than the above time will be returned unopened. All Bids will be publicly opened and read aloud at that time. Nine different areas within the City of Butler will be improved. The work for this project will include: asphalt milling, asphalt patching, asphalt resurfacing, new asphalt pavement, storm sewer inlet, 30 LFT of 12” PVC pipe, pavement markings, and all necessary demolition, removal, disposal, erosion control, construction engineering, traffic control, site restoration, cleanup and incidental work to complete the work. See technical specification section 01990 in the project manual for detailed payment description. Work shall be constructed under a Unit Price Contract. Bids shall be properly and completely executed on a State Board of Accounts Form 96 (Revised 2013). Each Bid shall be accompanied by the Contractor's Bid Attachment (included with the Contract Specifications) to Form 96, a Financial Statement (completely filled out and signed) and a bid security in the form of an acceptable certified check payable to the Owner or an acceptable

Bidder's bond, in an amount of not less than 5% of the total bid price, in accordance with the Contract Specifications. In accordance with Indiana Code 22-5-1.7-11, Contractors entering into a contract with the Owner will be required to enroll in and verify the work eligibility status of all newly hired employees through the E-Verify program. In accordance with Indiana Code 5-22-16.5, Contractors entering into a contract with the Owner will be required to provide an Indiana Iran Investment Certification. The Owner reserves the right to waive any informalities or minor defects in bids or bidding procedure, or to reject any and all bids, or to accept the bid from the lowest most responsible and responsive bidder as exclusively determined by the Owner. Any bid may be withdrawn prior to the above scheduled time for the opening of bids or authorized postponement thereof. No Bidder may withdraw a bid within 60 days after the actual date of the opening thereof. Should there be reasons why the contract cannot be awarded within the specified period, the time may be extended by mutual agreement between the Owner and the Bidder determined by the Owner to be the lowest most responsible and responsive. Submission of a signed Bid by the Bidder constitutes acknowledgment of and acceptance of all the documents and terms and conditions of the Contractual Legal Requirements and Technical Sections of the specifications in the Project Manual. The Contractor to whom the work is awarded will be required to furnish an acceptable Performance and Payment Bond each in the amount of 100% of the contract price and must be in full force and effect throughout the term of the Construction Contract plus a period of twelve (12) months from the date of substantial completion. The Contractor to whom the work is awarded will be required to purchase and maintain insurance coverage as described in the Contract Documents on an "occurrence basis". Copies of the Drawings and Specifications for the work are on file at the City of Butler, 215 South Broadway, Butler, Indiana 46721; and the Engineer, Wessler Engineering, 6334 Constitution Drive, Fort Wayne, Indiana 46804, Telephone (317) 788-4551. Drawings, Specifications and electronic documents (in PDF format) may be obtained at http://wesslerengineering.reprographix.com for a cost of One Hundred Twenty-Five Dollars ($125.00) plus actual shipping costs per set purchased. An up-to-date Planholders List may be viewed at http://wesslerengineering.reprographix.com A Pre-Bid Conference will not be held. CITY OF BUTLER, INDIANA /S/ Ron Walter, Mayor Attest: /S/ Angela Eck Clerk Treasurer TS,00351222,8/27,9/3,hslpaxlp LEGAL NOTICE ORDINANCE NO. 2013-08 AN ORDINANCE TO AMEND THE ZONING MAP OF THE CITY OF AUBURN WHEREAS, the Plan Commission of the City of Auburn has recommended rezoning certain real estate located in the City of Auburn, Auburn, Indiana and WHEREAS, the Plan Commission of the City of Auburn has certified the action recommending rezoning of certain real estate in the City of Auburn, Indiana, WHEREAS, Indiana Code Section 36-7-4-607 provides for changing R-1 district to R-1 district by way of Amending the zoning map, and NOW THEREFORE, BE IT ORDAINED BY THE COMMON COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF AUBURN, INDIANA: Section I. The Zoning Map of the City of Auburn shall be amended to change the zoning from R-1 Single-Family Rural/Low-Density Residential District to R-2 Single-Family Residential District the following described real estate located in DeKalb County, Indiana, to-wit: GENERAL DESCRIPTIONS FOR R-1 Single-Family Rural/Low-Density Residential District to R-2 Single-Family District DISTRICT ZONING. AREA 1 All of that real estate contained within the record boundary for the Plat of Norland Park, a subdivision to the City of Auburn, DeKalb County, Indiana, as recorded in Plat Book 4 at page 95 in the Office of the Recorder of DeKalb County, Indiana. TOGETHER WITH the following described real estate, to-wit: Part of the Northwest Quarter (1/4) of Section 20, Township 34 North, Range 13 East, Union Township, DeKalb County, Indiana and more particularly described as follows: Commencing at the Southeast corner of the Northwest Quarter (1/4) of said Section 20; thence South 89 degrees 25 minutes 10 seconds West, a distance of 260.00 feet along the South line of said Northwest Quarter (1/4) to the Point of Beginning; thence North 01 degrees 30 minutes 00 seconds East, a distance of 170.00 feet; thence South 89 degrees 25 minutes 10 seconds West, a distance of 218.00 feet to the

Southeast corner of Common Area For Detention to the Plat of Auburn Hills Section I, a subdivision to the City of Auburn, DeKalb County, Indiana, as recorded in Plat Book 8 at page 120 in the Office of the Recorder of DeKalb County, Indiana; thence South 89 degrees 25 minutes 10 seconds West, a distance of 218.00 feet along the South line of said Common Area For Detention; thence South 01 degrees 30 minutes 00 seconds West along the East line of said Common Area For Detention to the North right-of-way line of Betz Road; thence South 89 degrees 25 minutes 10 seconds West, a distance of 218.00 feet along said North right-of-way line to the West line of said Common Area For Detention; thence North 01 degrees 30 minutes 00 seconds East along the West line of said Common Area For Detention to the South line of Lot Numbered 3 in said Plat of Auburn Hills Section I; thence South 89 degrees 25 minutes 10 seconds West, a distance of 271.24 feet along the South line of Lots Numbered 3, 2 and 1 in said Plat of Auburn Hills Section I to the East right-of-way line of Southgate Boulevard; thence South 01 degrees 30 minutes 00 seconds West along said East right-of-way line of Southgate Boulevard to the North right-of-way line of Betz Road; thence South 89 degrees 25 minutes 10 seconds West along said North right-of-way line to the West right-of-way line of aforesaid Southgate Boulevard; thence South along said West right-of-way line of Southgate Boulevard to aforesaid South line of the Northwest Quarter (1/4); thence East along said South line of the Northwest Quarter (1/4) to the Point of Beginning. AND AREA 2 All of that real estate contained within the record boundary for the Amended Plat of Greenhurst Glens, a subdivision to the City of Auburn, DeKalb County, Indiana, as recorded in Plat Book 6 at page 170 in the Office of the Recorder of DeKalb County, Indiana. AND AREA 3 All of that real estate contained within the record boundary for the following subdivisions to the City of Auburn, DeKalb County, Indiana, as recorded in the Office of the Re-

corder of DeKalb County, Indiana: Plat of The Village of Duesenberg Section I per Plat Book 5 at page 278; Plat of The Village of Duesenberg Section II per Plat Book 6 at page 6; Plat of The Village of Duesenberg Section IV per Plat Book 6 at page 141; Plat of Country Manor Addition per Plat Book 5 at page 162; Plat of Hawthorne Addition per Plat Book 5 at page 130; Plat of Foxcroft Addition per Plat Book 5 at page 75; Plat of Greenbriar Addition per Plat Book 4 at page 179; Plat of Greenbriar Addition Second Plat per Plat Book 4 at page 174; Plat of Town and Country-Southwood Addition per Plat Book 4 at page 174; Plat of Southwood Extended Addition per Plat Book 4 at page 178; Plat of Cedar Valley Addition per Plat Book 5 at page 94. AND AREA 4 All of that real estate contained within the record boundary for the following subdivisions to the City of Auburn, DeKalb County, Indiana, as recorded in the Office of the Recorder of DeKalb County, Indiana: Plat of Indian Village Second Addition per Plat Book 5 at page 69; Plat of Indian Village Third Addition per Plat Book 5 at page 108; Plat of Indian Village Fourth Addition per Plat Book 5 at page 221. AND AREA 5 All of that real estate contained within the record boundary for the following subdivisions to the City of Auburn, DeKalb County, Indiana, as recorded in the Office of the Recorder of DeKalb County, Indiana: J.W. Walter Addition Plat 1 per Plat Book 4 at page 132; J.W. Walter Addition Plat 2 per Plat Book 4 at page 144; J.W. Walter Second Addition Plat 1 per Plat Book 4 at page 159; J.W. Walter Second Addition Plat 2 per Plat Book 4 at page 170; Valley Park Addition Section E per Plat Book 5 at page 112; Valley Park Addition Section F per Plat Book 5 at page 60; Valley Park Addition Section G per Plat Book 5 at page 62; Valley Park Addition Section H per Plat Book 5 at page 114; Valley Park Addition Section N per

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Plat Book 5 at page 248. AND AREA 6 All of that real estate contained within the record boundary for the following subdivisions to the City of Auburn, DeKalb County, Indiana, as recorded in the Office of the Recorder of DeKalb County, Indiana: Hunter's Glen Section I per Plat Book 8 at page 96; Hunter's Glen Section II per Plat Book 9 at page 98; Hunter's Glen Section IV per Document No. 20301974; Hunter's Glen Section V per Document No. 20509923. AND AREA 7 All of that real estate contained within the record boundary for the Plat of Ditmar's Addition, a subdivision to the City of Auburn, DeKalb

THE STAR

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County, Indiana, as recorded in Plat Book 3 at page 97 in the Office of the Recorder of DeKalb County, Indiana. EXCEPTING THEREFROM that real estate contained within said Plat of Ditmar's Addition, described as follows: Lot Number Thirty-six (36), Lot Number Eight (8) and all of that portion of the right-of-way for Auburn Drive lying north of and adjacent to the North line of said Lot 8. BE IT FURTHER ORDAINED that this Ordinance be in full force and effect from and after publication in a newspaper of general circulation in DeKalb County, Indiana. PASSED AND ADOPTED by the Common Council of the City of Auburn, Indiana, this 20 day of August, 2013. TS,00351025,8/27,hspaxlp

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NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS Complete details of budget estimates by fund and/or department may be seen by visiting the office of this unit of government at 104 E. Oak St., Butler. The political subdivision or appropriate fiscal body shall publish this notice twice in accordance with IC 5-3-1 with the first publication at least ten days before the date fixed for the public hearing and the second publication at least three days before the date fixed for the public hearing. Notice is hereby given to taxpayers of Wilmington Township, DeKalb County, Indiana, that the proper officers of Wilmington Township will conduct a public hearing on the year 2014 budget. Following this meeting, any ten or more taxpayers may object to a budget, tax rate, or tax levy by filing an objection petition with the proper officers of Wilmington Township not more than seven days after the hearing. The objection petition must identify the provisions of the budget, tax rate, or tax levy to which taxpayers object. If a petition is filed, Wilmington Township shall adopt with the budget a finding concerning the objections in the petition and testimony presented. Following the aforementioned hearing, the proper officers of Wilmington Township will meet to adopt the following budget: Date of Public Hearing: 9/3/2013 Time of Public Hearing: 7:00 p.m. Public Hearing Place: 104 E. Oak St., Butler Date of Adoption Meeting: 10/1/2013 Time of Adoption Meeting: 7:00 p.m. Adoption Meeting Place: 104 E. Oak St., Butler Estimated Civil Max Levy: 46,580 1 2 3 4 5 Maximum Estimated funds to be raised Excessive (including appeals Levy and levies exempt Appeals Budget from maximum (included in Current Fund Name Estimate levy limitations) Column 3) Tax Levy General 47,300 28,762 28,762 Township Assistance 15,500 Library (Non-Library Unit) 3,500 Total 66,300 28,762 28,762 TS,00350352,8/20,27,hsapxlp

NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS Complete details of budget estimates by fund and/or department may be seen by visiting the office of this unit of government at 8013 CR 72, Harlan. The political subdivision or appropriate fiscal body shall publish this notice twice in accordance with IC 5-3-1 with the first publication at least ten days before the date fixed for the public hearing and the second publication at least three days before the date fixed for the public hearing. Notice is hereby given to taxpayers of Newville Township, DeKalb County, Indiana, that the proper officers of Newville Township will conduct a public hearing on the year 2014 budget. Following this meeting, any ten or more taxpayers may object to a budget, tax rate, or tax levy by filing an objection petition with the proper officers of Newville Township not more than seven days after the hearing. The objection petition must identify the provisions of the budget, tax rate, or tax levy to which taxpayers object. If a petition is filed, Newville Township shall adopt with the budget a finding concerning the objections in the petition and testimony presented. Following the aforementioned hearing, the proper officers of Newville Township will meet to adopt the following budget: Date of Public Hearing: 9/10/2013 Time of Public Hearing: 4:30 p.m. Public Hearing Place: 8013 CR 72, Harlan Date of Adoption Meeting: 9/24/2013 Time of Adoption Meeting: 4:30 p.m. Adoption Meeting Place: 8013 CR 72, Harlan Estimated Civil Max Levy: 11,184 1 2 3 4 5 Maximum Estimated funds to be raised Excessive (including appeals Levy and levies exempt Appeals Budget from maximum (included in Current Fund Name Estimate levy limitations) Column 3) Tax Levy Rainy Day 4,000 General 18,165 9,997 9,329 Township Assistance 7,000 1,187 1,157 Fire 18,000 5,300 5,086 Total 47,165 16,484 15,572 TS,00350236,8/20,27,hspaxlp

NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS Complete details of budget estimates by fund and/or department may be seen by visiting the office of this unit of government at 2010 CR 61, Butler. The political subdivision or appropriate fiscal body shall publish this notice twice in accordance with IC 5-3-1 with the first publication at least ten days before the date fixed for the public hearing and the second publication at least three days before the date fixed for the public hearing. Notice is hereby given to taxpayers of Franklin Township, DeKalb County, Indiana, that the proper officers of Franklin Township will conduct a public hearing on the year 2014 budget. Following this meeting, any ten or more taxpayers may object to a budget, tax rate, or tax levy by filing an objection petition with the proper officers of Franklin Township not more than seven days after the hearing. The objection petition must identify the provisions of the budget, tax rate, or tax levy to which taxpayers object. If a petition is filed, Franklin Township shall adopt with the budget a finding concerning the objections in the petition and testimony presented. Following the aforementioned hearing, the proper officers of Franklin Township will meet to adopt the following budget: Date of Public Hearing: 9/10/2013 Time of Public Hearing: 6:00 p.m. Public Hearing Place: 2010 CR 61, Butler Date of Adoption Meeting: 10/1/2013 Time of Adoption Meeting: 6:00 p.m. Adoption Meeting Place: 2010 CR 61, Butler Estimated Civil Max Levy: 17,470 1 2 3 4 5 Maximum Estimated funds to be raised Excessive (including appeals Levy and levies exempt Appeals Budget from maximum (included in Current Fund Name Estimate levy limitations) Column 3) Tax Levy Rainy Day 1,210 General 40,125 16,400 15,020 Township Assistance 9,800 1,165 1,165 Fire 38,500 21,100 20,456 Cumulative Fire (Township) 38,000 8,005 8,064 Total 127,635 46,670 44,705 TS,00350097,8/20,27,hspaxlp

NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS Complete details of budget estimates by fund and/or department may be seen by visiting the office of this unit of government at 7341 CR 40, Butler. The political subdivision or appropriate fiscal body shall publish this notice twice in accordance with IC 5-3-1 with the first publication at least ten days before the date fixed for the public hearing and the second publication at least three days before the date fixed for the public hearing. Notice is hereby given to taxpayers of Stafford Township, DeKalb County, Indiana, that the proper officers of Stafford Township will conduct a public hearing on the year 2014 budget. Following this meeting, any ten or more taxpayers may object to a budget, tax rate, or tax levy by filing an objection petition with the proper officers of Stafford Township not more than seven days after the hearing. The objection petition must identify the provisions of the budget, tax rate, or tax levy to which taxpayers object. If a petition is filed, Stafford Township shall adopt with the budget a finding concerning the objections in the petition and testimony presented. Following the aforementioned hearing, the proper officers of Stafford Township will meet to adopt the following budget: Date of Public Hearing: 9/9/2013 Time of Public Hearing: 7:00 p.m. Public Hearing Place: 7341 CR 40, Butler Date of Adoption Meeting: 9/30/2013 Time of Adoption Meeting: 7:00 p.m. Adoption Meeting Place: 7341 CR 40, Butler Estimated Civil Max Levy: 4,582 1 2 3 4 5 Maximum Estimated funds to be raised Excessive (including appeals Levy and levies exempt Appeals Budget from maximum (included in Current Fund Name Estimate levy limitations) Column 3) Tax Levy General 10,100 3,800 3,410 Township Assistance 3,000 790 770 Fire 7,400 7,500 7,216 Cumulative Fire (Township) 5,000 3,168 3,058 Total 25,500 15,258 14,454 TS,00350245,8/20,27,hspaxlp

NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS Complete details of budget estimates by fund and/or department may be seen by visiting the office of this unit of government at 4928 SR 1, Butler. The political subdivision or appropriate fiscal body shall publish this notice twice in accordance with IC 5-3-1 with the first publication at least ten days before the date fixed for the public hearing and the second publication at least three days before the date fixed for the public hearing. Notice is hereby given to taxpayers of Concord Township, DeKalb County, Indiana, that the proper officers of Concord Township will conduct a public hearing on the year 2014 budget. Following this meeting, any ten or more taxpayers may object to a budget, tax rate, or tax levy by filing an objection petition with the proper officers of Concord Township not more than seven days after the hearing. The objection petition must identify the provisions of the budget, tax rate, or tax levy to which taxpayers object. If a petition is filed, Concord Township shall adopt with the budget a finding concerning the objections in the petition and testimony presented. Following the aforementioned hearing, the proper officers of Concord Township will meet to adopt the following budget: Date of Public Hearing: 9/9/2013 Time of Public Hearing: 7:00 p.m. Public Hearing Place: 4928 SR 1, Butler Date of Adoption Meeting: 9/30/2013 Time of Adoption Meeting: 7:00 p.m. Adoption Meeting Place: 4928 SR 1, Butler Estimated Civil Max Levy: 16,194 1 2 3 4 5 Maximum Estimated funds to be raised Excessive (including appeals Levy and levies exempt Appeals Budget from maximum (included in Current Fund Name Estimate levy limitations) Column 3) Tax Levy Rainy Day General 22,630 13,700 11,582 Township Assistance 5,000 2,900 3,585 Fire 43,500 51,500 40,000 11,128 Emergency Fire Loan 43,200 43,651 Total 114,330 111,751 40,000 26,295 TS,00350101,8/20,27,hsapxlp

NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS Complete details of budget estimates by fund and/or department may be seen by visiting the office of this unit of government at Town of Ashley. The political subdivision or appropriate fiscal body shall publish this notice twice in accordance with IC 5-3-1 with the first publication at least ten days before the date fixed for the public hearing and the second publication at least three days before the date fixed for the public hearing. Notice is hereby given to taxpayers of ASHLEY CIVIL TOWN, DeKalb & Steuben County, Indiana that the proper officers of Ashley Civil Town will conduct a public hearing on the year 2014 budget. Following this meeting, any ten or more taxpayers may object to a budget, tax rate, or tax levy by filing an objection petition with the proper officers of Ashley Civil Town not more than seven days after the hearing. The objection petition must identify the provisions of the budget, tax rate, or tax levy to which taxpayers object. If a petition is filed, Ashley Civil Town shall adopt with the budget a finding concerning the objections in the petition and testimony presented. Following the aforementioned hearing, the proper officers of Ashley Civil Town will meet to adopt the following budget: Public Hearing Date: Monday, September 09, 2013 Adoption Meeting Date: Thursday, September 19, 2013 Public Hearing Time: 7:00 PM Adoption Meeting Time: 4:00 PM Public Hearing Location: Ashley Community Center Adoption Meeting Location: Ashley Community Center Estimated Civil Max Levy: $548,000 1 2 3 4 5 Maximum Estimated Funds to be Raised (including appeals and levies exempt from Excessive Current Budget maximum levy Levy Tax Fund Name Estimate limitations) Appeals Levy 0005-CASINO/RIVERBOAT $13,700 $0 $0 $0 0061-RAINY DAY $8,600 $0 $0 $0 0101-GENERAL $860,000 $980,053 $0 $393,836 0706-LOCAL ROAD & STREET $10,250 $0 $0 $0 0708-MOTOR VEHICLE HIGHWAY $150,000 $108,321 $0 $108,467 0720-MAJOR MOVES - TOLLROAD COUNTIES $200,000 $0 $0 $0 1111-FIRE $2,000 $0 $0 $0 1301-PARK & RECREATION $4,500 $0 $0 $0 2379-CUMULATIVE CAPITAL IMP (CIG TAX) $3,100 $0 $0 $0 2391-CUMULATIVE CAPITAL DEVELOPMENT $30,000 $25,355 $0 $14,858 2411-ECONOMIC DEV INCOME TAX CEDIT $89,500 $0 $0 $0 9500-Local Option Income Tax $44,000 $0 $0 $0 9501-Law Enforcement Continued Education $1,250 $0 $0 $0 9502-Tax Increment Finance $1,270,000 $0 $0 $0 9503-Operation Pull Over $3,500 $0 $0 $0 9504-Grants Fire & Police $10,000 $0 $0 $0 Totals $2,700,400 $1,113,729 $0 $517,161 TS,00350841,8/27,9/5,hspaxlp


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AREA • NATION •

kpcnews.com

TUESDAY, AUGUST 27, 2013

Deaths & Funerals • Harry Steers ANGOLA — Harry Eugene Steers, 66, died Monday, Aug. 26, 2013, at his home in Metz. Mr. Steers owned his own truck and was an over-the-road driver with his wife for many years with Allied Mr. Steers Van Lines and then with Reliable Carriers, Canton, Mich., retiring a few years ago. He was born Jan 21, 1947, in Beaver Dam, Wis., to Harry M. and Arvilla (Stellmacher) Steers. He married Virginia Domire on Oct 9, 1982. She survives in Angola. Also surviving are a son and his wife, Leonard and Gwen Hutchison of Edon, Ohio; a daughter and her husband, Brenda and Dale Baldwin of Waterloo; a brother and sister-in-law, Wayne and Barbara Steers of Van Dyne, Wis.; a sister and brother-in-law, Kathie and Robert Birschbach of Orange, Calif.; seven grandchildren; and five great-grandchildren. Services will be at 11 a.m. Thursday at the Weicht Funeral Home in Angola, with Pastor Mike Hesterman officiating. Burial will be in the Metz Cemetery at Metz. Visitation will be from 4-8 p.m. Wednesday and from 10 to 11 a.m. Thursday at the funeral home. Memorials are to the Metz Fire Department or the Metz Christian Church. You may sign the guestbook at www.weichtfh. com.

Virginia Licht FREMONT — Virginia E. Licht, age 99, of Fremont, Indiana, passed away Saturday, August 24, 2013, at Lakeland Nursing Center, Angola, Indiana. Virginia was born Mrs. Licht on October 1, 1913, in Fairmont, West Virginia, to Lloyd and Hattie Blanche (Layman) Shaver. They preceded her in death. Virginia graduated from high school in Shinnston, West Virginia. She retired as a nurse at Wayne County General Hospital in Wayne County, Michigan, and formerly worked for Goodyear Tire and Rubber and BF Goodrich in Akron, Ohio. She was a member of the Fremont Community Church, and formerly attended the Fremont Assembly of God.

She was born and raised in West Virginia, and later moved to Akron, Ohio, and Dearborn, Michigan, and retired in Fremont, Indiana. She loved to travel, loved animals, and always had a pet dog. She married Matthew Licht, and he preceded her in death on June 15, 1975. Surviving are two daughters, Betty Fultz of Fremont, Ind., and Shirley Duerr of Harrison, Mich.; seven grandchildren; and several great-grandchildren. She was also preceded in death by her parents and two sons-in-law, Donald Fultz and Herman Duerr. Visitation will be from 5-7 p.m. Wednesday, August 28, 2013, at Beams Funeral Home in Fremont, Ind. Funeral services will be at 11 a.m. Thursday at the Beams Funeral Home with the Rev. Darin Hendrey officiating. Burial will be in Lakeside Cemetery at Fremont, Ind. Memorials are to the Steuben County Humane Society. Condolences may be sent online to www.beamsfuner alhome.com.

Betty Olinger PLEASANT LAKE — Betty Ruth Olinger, 87, of Pleasant Lake, Indiana, died Sunday, August 25, 2013, in Northern Lakes Nursing & Rehabilitation Center in Angola, Indiana. She was born November 8, 1925, in Butler, Indiana, to Franklin and Ollie (Morehead) Hamman. She married Robert S. Olinger on December 31, 1947. She was a member of the Pleasant Lake United Methodist Church and the Order of Eastern Star, Ashley Chapter. She was a seamstress for a sewing company and later she and her husband helped with the Circle Hill Cemetery in Angola, Indiana. Betty is survived by her husband, Robert S. Olinger of Pleasant Lake, Indiana; one niece, Maxine Poynter of Kendallville, Ind.; two nephews, David Hamman of Melbourne, Florida, and Mike Hamman of Satellite Beach, Florida; two sisters-in-law, Helen Cooper of New Port News, Va., and Ruth Osborn of Pendleton, Ind. She was also survived by her friends William D. and Virginia Ralston of Pleasant Lake, Ind., William E. and Susan Ralston of Angola, Indiana, and Barbara Hoolihan of Pleasant Lake, Indiana. She was preceded in death by her parents; one sister, Anna May Aucker; and one brother, Fred Hamman Services will be at 11 a.m. Wednesday, August 28, 2013, at the Weicht Funeral

Home, Angola, Indiana, with one hour of visitation prior to the service. Pastor John Boyanowski will be officiating. Burial will be in Butler Cemetery, Butler, Indiana. Memorials may be given in Betty’s name to the Pleasant Lake Methodist Church’s Food Bank. You may sign the guestbook at www.weichtfh. com.

Dennis Walker HAMILTON — Dennis L. Walker, 65, of Hamilton, Indiana, and formerly of Montpelier, Ohio, passed away Thursday morning, August 22, 2013, with his family by his side at the Community Hospitals and Wellness Center in Bryan, Ohio. He was Mr. Walker born on June 8, 1948, in Wauseon, Ohio, to Charles Earl and Illega M. (King) Walker. Dennis graduated from Montpelier High School in 1966, and then earned his systems engineering degree from Florida State University in Tallahassee, Florida. On May 19, 1973, he married Jeannine Bowen in Montpelier, and she survives. Dennis worked for Southern Bell Telephone Company in Miami and Ft. Lauderdale from 1970 to 1976 when he moved back to Montpelier to accept an engineering position with Hause Machines. In 1988, Dennis joined Powers and Sons as chief engineer until his retirement in 2008. Dennis’s many hobbies included any kind of boating, especially sailing, as well as model railroading, and recreational flying. As a member of the Coast Guard Auxiliary since 1981, Dennis served as vice flotilla commander and was very active with boating education. He belonged to the Experimental Aircraft Association. He was also a member of the Trackside Modelers in Montpelier and G Track in Fremont, Indiana, and a driver for the Hamilton Lake Ski Club from 1990 to 2001. Recently Dennis remodeled a small sail boat for the Hamilton Garden Club. Dennis is a member of St. John’s Lutheran Church. He is survived by his parents, Earl and Illega of Montpelier; his wife, Jeannine of Hamilton, Indiana; a son, Christopher (Kathy) Walker of Bryan, Ohio; a daughter, Sabrina (Bradford) Fox of Chesapeake City, Maryland; and a sister, Denise L. Brown of Montpelier, Ohio. Dennis was preceded in

death by his brother-in-law, Tom Brown. Funeral services were held Monday at St. John’s Lutheran Church in Montpelier with Pastor Paul Gruetter officiating. Donations in memory of Dennis can be made to Trackside Modelers or to the donor’s choice. Thompson Funeral Home in Montpelier is in charge of arrangements. Online condolences can be left for the family at www.thethompsonfuneral home.com.

Donald Lynch BREMEN — Donald Lynch, 72, of Bremen passed away Saturday, August 24, 2013, at Community Hospital of Bremen. Don was born to Bill and Viola (Vollmer) Lynch in Bremen on September 14, 1940. Don graduated from Bremen High School with the class of 1958. He went on to honorably serve his country in the Navy Mr. Lynch Seabees. On January 2, 1960, he married Alice Virginia Pershing at St. Paul’s Lutheran Church. Don was employed with Dodge Manufacturing as a draftsman for 17 years; he later worked for the Indiana State Highway and remained with them for over 17 years. He was a former member of the Gold Wing Club and a member of St. Paul’s Lutheran Church and the Bremen Conservation Club. He enjoyed hunting, fishing, tree cutting, and NASCAR racing. Don is remembered as a family man, enjoying the time spent with those he loved. Don is survived by his wife, Virginia, of Bremen; three sons, Bryan (Kathy) Lynch of Angola, Ricky (Molly) Lynch of Bremen and Cortland Lynch of Bremen; a son-in-law, Irvin “Bo” Weldy of Bremen; eight grandchildren, Justenn, James, Reighanna, Trevor, Allyson, Kathleen, Carol, and Khendra; one great-grandchild, Cortland; and a brother, Walter (Doris) Lynch. He was preceded in death by his parents; a daughter, Cristi Weldy; and a sister, Carol Bope. A funeral service will be held at 10 a.m. on Thursday, August 29, 2013, at St. Paul’s Lutheran Church. Pastor Neil Wonnacott will officiate with burial following in the Bremen Cemetery. Friends may call from 2-4 and 6-8 p.m. on Wednesday, August 28, 2013, at Mishler

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Funeral Home, Bremen. Memorial contributions may be given to the American Cancer Society or the American Diabetes Association. Condolences may be sent to the family at www. mishlerfuneralhomes.com.

Larry Templeton WARSAW— Larry Ray Templeton, 55, of Warsaw died Sunday, Aug. 25, 2013, from injuries sustained in a motorcycle accident in Warsaw. Visitation will be from 2-4 and 5-7 p.m. Wednesday at Owen Family Funeral Home, S.R. 13 and CR 500N, North Webster, Funeral service will follow at 7 p.m. Wednesday. Private family burial will take place at the Mock Addition to the North Webster Cemetery. Memorials are to the Warsaw Bowling Association, 1702 E. Market St., Warsaw, IN 46580.

Willis Peachy KENDALLVILLE — Willis E. ‘‘Bill’’ Peachy, 92, of Danville, Ky., and formerly of Kendallville died Friday, Aug. 23, 2013, at the home of his daughter in Danville. Visitation will be from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. Friday at Hite Funeral Home in Kendallville, with a graveside service at 1:15 p.m. at Lake View Cemetery in Kendallville. Memorials are to the American Cancer Society, Danville Hospice, or to the church of the donor’s choice.

Nettie Mast SHIPSHEWANA — Nettie Mast, 83, of Shipshewana died Monday, Aug. 26, 2013, at her residence. Visitation will be after 1 p.m. today and all day Wednesday at the Christy Miller residence, 7620 W. C.R. 050N, LaGrange. Funeral services will be at 9:30 a.m. Thursday, also at the Christy Miller residence. Burial will be in East Barren Cemetery, Shipshewana. Miller-Stewart Funeral Home, Middlebury, is in charge of arrangements.

Alexis Coburn KENDALLVILLE — Infant Alexis Marie Coburn of Kendallville died Friday, Aug. 23, 2013, at DeKalb Health in Auburn. She is survived by her parents, Adam R. Coburn and Jennifer M. Stokes of Kendallville. Pinnington-McComb Funeral & Cremation Services, Auburn, is in charge of arrangements.

Marie Foulk WOLCOTTVILLE — Marie L. Foulk, 80, of Wolcottville died Saturday, Aug. 24, 2013,in Lutheran Life Villages in Kendallville. Funeral services will be at 1 p.m. Thursday in Young Family Funeral Home, Wolcottville Chapel, Wolcottville. Burial will be in Woodland Cemetery. Visitation will be from 4-8 p.m. Wednesday in the funeral home, as well as an hour prior to the service on Thursday from noon to 1 p.m.

Deal to dismiss Deen suit gets OK SAVANNAH, Ga. (AP) — A federal judge signed off Monday on a deal to dismiss a discrimination lawsuit against celebrity cook Paula Deen. A civil lawsuit accusing the former Food Network star and her brother of race discrimination and sexual harassment was officially dismissed when U.S. District Court Judge William T. Moore Jr. in Savannah approved a deal reached by attorneys in the case last week. The order closed the case “with prejudice,” meaning former Deen employee Lisa Jackson can’t sue again over the same issues. Both sides agreed to pay their own court costs and legal fees. No other terms of the deal were disclosed. Jackson sued last year, saying she worked in an environment rife with racial slurs and sexual innuendo during her five years as manager of Uncle Bubba’s Seafood and Oyster House in Savannah. Deen co-owns the restaurant with her brother, Bubba Hiers, who oversees its daily operations. The case got little attention outside Savannah until Deen herself was questioned under oath in a May legal deposition. A transcript filed with the court in June showed Deen acknowledged using racial slurs in the past. When an attorney asked if she had ever used the N-word, Deen replied: “Yes, of course.” She also added, “It’s been a very long time.” Within a few days, the Food Network said it would not renew Deen’s contract.

Wall Street • BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Monday’s Close: Dow Jones Industrials High: 15,049.98 Low: 14,945.24 Close: 14,946.46 Change: —64.05 Other Indexes Standard&Poors 500 Index: 1656.78 —6.72 NYSE Index: 9432.51 —42.31 Nasdaq Composite Index: 3657.57 —0.22

Lotteries • INDIANAPOLIS — These are the winning numbers drawn Monday: Indiana: Midday: 6-3-1 and 5-0-2-2. Evening: 0—0-3 and 1-5-6-8. Cash 5: 5-12-1324-37. Quick Draw: 1-2-3-910-18-21-23-29-32-43-46-4748-52-57-59-61-63-69. Ohio: Midday: 0-6-2, 0-9-3-4 and 2-5-5-8-5. Evening: 1-2-9, 5-0-4-0 and 4-0-3-6-4. Classic Lotto: 05-11-13-22-28-41. Kicker: 7-6-0-1-6. Rolling Cash 5: 01-11-22-30-35. Michigan: Midday: 7-8-1 and 1-2-8-8. Daily: 0-6-4 and 9-0-4-0. Fantasy 5: 02-21-2735-37. Keno: 06-07-08-11-1217-19-25-28-33-38-44-49-5455-62-69-73-74-75-77-80.


LIFE •

TUESDAY, AUGUST 27, 2013

kpcnews.com

59TH ANNIVERSARY SALE!! SUPER SALE!!

ALBRIGHT’S SUPERMARKET CORUNNA, INDIANA • PHONE 260-281-2691

WIC APPROVED

www.albrightsonestop.com LOTTO • HOOSIER WORK CARDS AD GOOD FROM AUG. 26, 2013 THRU SEPT. 1, 2013

HOURS: MON. THRU SAT. 8 a.m. TO 7:30 p.m., SUNDAY 9 a.m. TO 3:30 p.m.

ALBRIGHT’S QUALITY MEATS LB. - ALBRIGHT’S

LB. - 10 LB. BAGS

¢ 199 CHICKEN LEG QUARTERS 59 YORK $ 59 GROUND BEEF $259 NEW 3 STRIPS $ 69 SIRLOIN $ 59 PORK 1 3 STEAK PATTIES PORK $ $ 99 1959 PATIO BURGERS 2 STEAKS $ 99 HAM $ 59 2 BACON 13 QUARTERS HOT ¢ BOLOGNA $ 59 SMOKY $ 59 DOGS 99 1 LINKS 1 BRATS

$

REGULAR ONLY!

LB. - 10 LB. BAGS ONLY ALBRIGHT’S - FRESH

LB. - U.S.D.A. - WHOLE - NO ROLL

SUPER BUYS PRODUCE SPECIALS! 50 LB. - UNCLASSIFED

WHITE POTATOES

$

1059

LB. - LOCAL

GREEN CABBAGE

29¢

LESSER AMOUNTS $2.99/LB.

LB. - ALBRIGHT’S - FRESH - CHOPPED

PHOTOS CONTRIBUTED

Trinity Lutheran Church Preschool records solid year Trinity Lutheran Church Preschool in Auburn celebrated a big year, according to Mandy Young, one of the school’s board of directors. The school incorporated the McMillian Center for Health Education’s Brush! program in all grade levels. Above, children in the 3-year-old class learn about brushing and flossing. Brush! was a new program at the school. Children had the opportunity to learn about nature in the school’s butterfly garden, outdoor lab and the nature trail. The center of the nature lab features the school’s JaBraun Knox memorial tree. The children completed observational drawings of the memorial tree throughout the school year. In the spring, children planted crops in the school’s community garden. Below, children in the four-day, prekindergarten class prepare the garden. Other highlights of the 2012-2013 school year included parents and congregation members visiting the classrooms to share their hobbies and interests. The school hosted firefighters and police officers, as well as DeWayne Lockwood and the mastodon bones he found on his DeKalb County farm. The school still has a few spaces open for the 2013-2014 school year. For more information, contact the preschool at 925-2440.

LB. - CHOICE - U.S.D.A.

GREAT TO GRILL!

6 LB. BOX - MISHLER’S

LB. - CHOICE - BONELESS BEEF

5 LB. BOX HOOSIER PRIDE

LB. - KENTUCKY LEGEND

LIMITED SUPPLY!

LB. - ECKRICH - REG. OR BUN SIZE

1 LB. PKG. - ECKRICH

PKG. - ECKRICH

BONELESS BEEF BUNDLE

$

179

5 LB. BONELESS BEEF ROAST 5 LB. CHICKEN BREAST 5 LB. GROUND CHUCK 5 LB. WESTERN RIBS 5 LB. PORK CHOPS

FILL THE FREEZER PACK! 5 LB. 5 LB. 5 LB. 5 LB. 5 LB. 5 LB. 5 LB.

BEEF ROAST GROUND BEEF GROUND CHUCK PORK STEAK BRATS BACON SIRLOIN CHOPS

$

SPLIT SIDE

CHICKEN BREAST 5 LB. MILD SAUSAGE 5 LB. WESTERN RIBS 5 LB. CHIX LEG QTRS. 80 LB. 5 LB. HOT DOGS

$

....................

37999

LB. -

......................

$

18999

LB. -

NO HORMONES, NO STEROIDS

CUT WRAP FROZEN

WHOLE BLACK CANYON ANGUS LB. - CHOICE

LB. - WHOLE

WHOLE SIRLOIN TIPS

3

2

MINI HORNS

$

SLICING IS $2.00 EXTRA

Jerusalem Church to observe 130 years BUTLER — The Jerusalem Community Church, at S.R. 1 and C.R. 12, north of Butler, will celebrate 130 years at 2 p.m. Sunday. Special music will be provided by Nod Arvefel (Don Lefevra) and others. A carry-in dinner will follow in the church basement. The church will provide drinks and table service. The church was

established when a Butler United Brethren Church pastor and a handful of parishioners met in the Jerusalem schoolhouse, once located at the southeast corner of S.R. 1 and C.R. 12. Throughout its history, the church has hosted weddings, funeral services, dedications, community meetings and fellowship. Visitors are invited to share stories and photos. For more information, contact Pastor Stanley Hammond at 495-9006.

Today Food Pantry: 9:30-11:30 a.m. Community Center of Caring, 113 W. Fifth St., Auburn. Film Series: 2-4 p.m. Free film showing of “Great Balls of Fire” as a part of the Auburn Arts Commission’s ‘Sit Down and Play’ interactive piano series. Willennar Genealogy Center, 700 S. Jackson St., Auburn. Bingo: 6:30 p.m. Open to the public; food and drinks available. American Legion Post 97, 1729 Sprott St., Auburn. Homemakers Chorus Rehearsal: 7 p.m. Rehearsal. Call 925-4448 for more information. Garrett First Church of Christ, 213 E. King St., Garrett.

Wednesday, Aug. 28 Auctions America’s Auburn Fall Auction: noon. The Auburn Auction Park plays host to a 1,500-car and memorabilia auction, car corral and swap meet produced by Carlisle Events, dozens of food vendors and celebrity appearances. Admission charged. Auburn Auction Park, 5536 C.R. 11-A, Auburn.

Eighth Annual Cemetery Walk: 6 p.m. Genealogy service coordinator Lynn Kaiser will lead cemetery “residents,” portrayed by actors, as they share stories about their lives and those of their families. The cemetery is at the intersection of S.R. 8 and C.R. 79-A. The cemetery is just to the south on C.R. 79-A in back of the church. Cross the bridge at Newville and travel east one-fourth mile. Evergreen Cemetery, Newville. Auburn Farmers Market: 6 a.m. Local vendors sell produce, flowers, herbs, spices, honey, baked goods, and other products. 100 S. Main St., Auburn.

Food Pantry: 10 a.m. Individuals must bring an ID and proof of address to the food pantry. Shelter Ministries, 315 E. Seventh St., Auburn.

269

REALLY TRULY LOCAL...

KPC Phone Books

Steuben, DeKalb, Noble/LaGrange

8

$ 59

$

LB. - 15 LB. AVG. WT. DEUTSCH KASE HAUS BIG HORNS

OR $ 59 COLBY COLBY-JACK

10

“DAIRY”

PRAIRIE FARMS

24 OZ. TUB

1/2 GALLON

COTTAGE CHEESE

159

$

2

59

RASPBERRY LEMONADE OR LEMONADE $ 59

259

1 $ 49 2

LB. - PRAIRIE FARMS

BUTTER

FROZEN 5 LB. BAGS - GOLD FRY

FRENCH FRIES

9

3/$

12”

$

4 CUTS

JACK’S PIZZAS

359

59

1/2 GALLON - BLUE BELL

4

$

ICE CREAM

OR $3.99 EACH

59

2 LB. BAG - 31-40 CT. PEELED & DEVEINED

RAW SHRIMP

KETCHUP $

1999

CATFISH NUGGETS

199

2159

COCKTAIL $ SHRIMP

$

GROCERY

279

79¢

TOMATO SOUP

69¢ SPORTS $

5

99 DRINKS HAMBURGER 1/2 GAL. - CHICKEN ‘N RIBS 10-1/2 OZ. - SHURFINE DILL QTS. $ 59 CREAM OF 4/$ $ 49 BBQ SLICES MUSHROOM SAUCE OR CREAM OF QT. - SHURFINE CHICKEN ¢ KOSHER BABY DILLS 64 OZ. - 6 KINDS 24 OZ. - HUNT’S 15 OZ. CANS $ 79 SPAGHETTI CHEF BOYARDEE OCEAN SPRAY PASTA SAUCE $ 59 4/$ $ 18 QT. - SHURFINE

5

1

5

QT. - SHURFINE

KOSHER DILL PICKLES

$

5

89

2 2

29 PASTAS $

16 OZ. - JIF

LB. - PREMIUM BULK

6 VARIETIES

EA. - LOCAL - INDIANA

WATERMELONS SEEDLESS OR CANNONBALLS

359

$

PEANUT BUTTER

1

25

DOZ. - LOCAL

SWEET CORN

399

$

ALBRIGHT’S DELI HOT BUYS FOR HOT DAYS! 10 LB. CARTONS 6 VARIETIES

SANDRIDGE SALADS

859

$

OR $1.19 IN 2 LB. TUBS ONLY

2 LB. CONTAINER ALBRIGHT’S

SANDWICH SPREAD

259

$

3

1 $ 99 2

10 OZ.

79

BUG JUICE

459

$

LB. - LEGACY OVEN ROASTED

TURKEY BREAST

8 PK. - 20 OZ. GATORADE

10.75 OZ. - SHURFINE

10 OZ. - CASTLEBERRY

CONEY SAUCE

3 LB. - YELLOW

LB. - ALBRIGHT’S

2 LB. BAG 31-40 CT. - COOKED

LB. - 5 LB. BAGS - UNBREADED

$

99¢

BEEF-STEAK BBQ

SEAFOOD

¢

399

$

LB. - QUINCY STREET

VIRGINIA OR HONEY HAM

399

$

LB. - ECKRICH OVEN ROASTED

TURKEY BREAST

399

$

18 OZ. - SWEET BABY RAYS

BBQ SAUCE

4

2/$

LB. - 13 LB. AVG. WT. WHOLE - ECKRICH

6-1/2 - 8-1/2 OZ. - NABISCO

SNACK $ CRACKERS

3

14 OZ. - NABISCO

49

$

OREOS

ALL VARIETIES

ASSORTED VARIETIES

399

HOUSEHOLD ITEMS 6 PK. - MEGA ROLLS

12 PK. - DOUBLE ROLL PACKS

ANGEL SOFT $ BATH TISSUE

7

59

SCOTT $ TOWELS 150 OZ.

TREND 160 CT.

KLEENEX $ TISSUES

6 PK.

1

99

499

$ COKE PRODUCTS DASANI WATER

$

3

99

50 OZ. SIZE

TIDE

6 $ 99 4 59

699

$

50 LB. BAGS

SOFTENER SALT

$

499

16.6 LBS. - SHURFINE

BRAWNY $ TOWELS

859

SOFT DRINKS 20 PK.

24-16.9 OZ.

Bingo: Early games start at 6 p.m. Call 927-9144 for more information. National Military History Center, 5634 County Road 11-A, Auburn.

2

SOUR CREAM OR CHIP DIPS

2% MILK

4 PACK..............$2.99

Food Pantry: 1:30-3:30 p.m. Community Center of Caring, 113 W. Fifth St., Auburn.

BONELESS RIBEYES

1299

CHEDDAR, SWISS OR $ HOT PEPPER

99

1 LB.

GALLON

$

$

2 LB. LOAF - WILLIAMS SMOKED CHEESES

PRAIRIE FARMS

38 OZ. - HEINZ

Area Activities •

$ 99

4 FLAVORS ONLY!

CELERY

LB. - CHOICE - WHOLE

BEEF TENDERLOIN

ANNIVERSARY CHEESE

LB. - 6 LB. AVG. WT. DEUTSCH KASE HAUS

Briefly •

LB. - SLICED FREE!

BEEF BRISKET

$ 49

STALK - MICHIGAN

LB. -

HALF 99 HOG

129

$

10999

LOCALLY RAISED INDIANA BEEF FREEZER BEEF HALVES - $299 FRONTS - $299 HIND QUARTERS - $339

100 LB. BONELESS BEEF

5 LB.

$

40 LBS.

359

$

159

10 LBS. BONELESS CHICKEN BREAST 10 LBS. GROUND BEEF 10 LBS. BONELESS BEEF ROAST 10 LBS. BONELESS PORK CHOPS

5999

PAULA RED OR GINGER GOLD APPLES

$

STIMULUS PACK

BUDGET PACK

99

3 LB. - NEW CROP MICHIGAN

COOKING ONIONS

ALBRIGHT’S MEAT PACKS 5 LB. ROUND STEAK 5 LB. ROLLED ROAST 5 LB. STEW BEEF 5 LB. PATIO STEAK 10 LB. GROUND CHUCK 10 LB. BEEF ROAST 10 LB. FAMILY STEAK

A5

THE STAR

CHARCOAL

$

699

BEER

QTS.

POWERADE

VIRGINA OR HONEY HAMS SLICED FREE

359

$

BAKERY 8 PK. - HOLSUM

HOT DOG OR HAMBURGER BUNS 2/$

3

HOLSUM

SOFT-TWIST

59

¢

MILLER’S LITE OR COOR’S LIGHT

$

ANNIVERSARY SALE HOT DEAL!

16

99

PK.

ALMOND WINDMILL COOKIES

16 OZ.

CHOCOLA DRINKS

159

2/$

TO BE GIVEN AWAY: 20 - $5000 GIFT CERTIFICATES ANGUS CHOICE SHORT LOIN TROYER’S PITT HAM

3

2/$

24-12 OZ. - CANS OR BOTTLES

MUST BE 18 YRS. OR OLDER TO SIGN UP.

NEED NOT BE PRESENT!

DRAWING WILL BE HELD - SEPT. 2 WE WILL NOTIFY BY PHONE!

199

$

EA. - BIG BAGS

FRITO-LAY POTATO CHIPS

215

$


A6

AREA • NATION •

kpcnews.com

THE STAR

Cloudy with a possibility of rain today. Highs will reach 91 degrees. Low of 73 is expected tonight. Cloudy conditions with a chance of showers continues Wednesday. Daytime high of 90 and the overnight low will be in the upper 60s. Some sunshine will return Thursday. High of 88, low of 66.

Sunrise Wednesday 7:03 a.m. Sunset Wednesday 8:22 p.m.

National forecast

Monday’s Statistics Local HI 88 LO 70 PRC. 0 Fort Wayne HI 88 LO 70 PRC. 0

Forecast highs for Tuesday, Aug. 27

Sunny

South Bend HI 91 LO 72 PRC. 0 Indianapolis HI 89 LO 71 PRC. 0

Today's Forecast

Pt. Cloudy

Cloudy

City/Region High | Low temps

Forecast for Tuesday, Aug. 27

MICH.

Chicago 90° | 75°

South Bend 95° | 70°

Fort Wayne 91° | 70° Fronts

ILL.

TUESDAY, AUGUST 27, 2013

Warm Stationary

Pressure Low

High

PATRICK REDMOND Indianapolis 95° | 73°

David Rinkle, fourth-generation owner of Greenfield Mills in LaGrange County, stands next to a pallet of New Rinkle

Today’s drawing by:

Terre Haute 90° | 68°

Evansville 93° | 72°

Cold

OHIO

Lafayette 90° | 72°

Jayden Davidson Louisville 91° | 73°

KY.

© 2013 Wunderground.com

Submit your weather drawings to: Weather Drawings, Editorial Dept. P.O. Box 39, Kendallville, IN 46755

METH: Several police agencies assisted in raid FROM PAGE A1

• Robert M. Strohminger, 32, of the 300 block of South Oak Street, Waterloo, on a charge of dealing in methamphetamine within 1,000 feet of a park, a Class A felony. • Brent A. Dietrich, 37, of the 300 block of South Oak Street, Waterloo, on a charge of maintaining a common nuisance, a Class D felony; and • Faye Lynn Haywood, 27, of the 400

block of Oak Street, Waterloo, on a charge of visiting a common nuisance, a Class B misdemeanor. All four suspects were incarcerated in the DeKalb County Jail at Auburn. Assisting Waterloo officers at the scene were the Indiana State Police Clandestine Laboratory Team, the DeKalb County Sheriff’s Department, Waterloo Fire Department and Indiana Department of Child Protective Services.

TOUR: Communities invite car owners to visit FROM PAGE A1

“You can’t live in Auburn and not appreciate Auburns.” The couple test-drove the first Auburn they bought during a Hoosier Tour. Their 12-cylinder, 1932 Auburn has no radio, no heater and no air conditioning. “These cars are simple compared to today’s cars,” Sid said.

The couple’s second Auburn is on loan at the Auburn Cord Duesenberg Automobile Museum. Both cars are 1932 models with a heavy bodies, which lend to a smoother drive, Sid said. The ACD Hoosier Tour provides a way for classic car enthusiasts to spend more time doing what they love — driving — while promoting the festival to

surrounding communities. “The communities open themselves up to us,” Belva said. “They call us and ask us to come.” The Meyers like their classic cars, but they enjoy the people of the festival even more. “People are what keep this going,” Belva said. “You meet the greatest people.”

SYRIA: Kerry refers to attack as ‘moral obscenity’ FROM PAGE A1

such an attack would trigger “chaos in the entire world.” “If individual countries want to pursue aggressive and adventurous policies, the natural answer … would be that Syria, which has been fighting against terrorism for almost three years, will also defend itself against any international attack,” he added. Assad told a Russian newspaper that any military campaign against his country was destined to fail. It’s also unclear what U.S. action would mean for relations with Russia, which warned Monday against the use of force not sanctioned by the U.N. Security Council, calling it “a crude violation of international law.” Support for some sort of international military response was likely to grow if it is confirmed that Assad’s regime was responsible for the Aug. 21 attack in the Damascus suburbs that activists say

killed hundreds of people. The group Doctors Without Borders put the death toll at 355. U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry said chemical weapons were used in Syria and he accused Assad’s regime of destroying evidence. He said the U.S. has additional information about the attack and will make it public in the days ahead. “The indiscriminate slaughter of civilians, the killing of women and children and innocent bystanders by chemical weapons is a moral obscenity. By any standard, it is inexcusable and — despite the excuses and equivocations that some have manufactured — it is undeniable,” said Kerry, the highest-ranking U.S. official to confirm the attack. “This international norm cannot be violated without consequences,” he said. Assad has denied launching a chemical attack,

blaming the rebels instead, and has authorized a U.N. team of experts currently in Syria to investigate, although the U.S. said it was a step that came “too late to be credible.” Snipers opened fire on the U.N. convoy, hitting one of the vehicles carrying a team on its way to investigate the Aug. 21 incident. Martin Nesirky, a spokesman for U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, said one of the U.N. vehicles was “deliberately shot at multiple times” in the buffer zone between rebel- and government-controlled territory, adding that the team was safe. Nesirky said the car was “no longer serviceable” after the shooting, forcing the team to return to a government checkpoint to replace the vehicle. U.N. spokesman Farhan Haq said the tires and windshield were hit, but the window was not shattered, and the team plans to go out again Tuesday to do more sampling.

Battle over health care law set to rage in Indianapolis INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Supporters and opponents of the federal health care law brought their national battle to Indianapolis on Monday. Heritage Foundation President Jim DeMint was scheduled to rally conservatives against it Monday night, while the liberal Americans for United Change organized a Statehouse news conference to seek support for the law earlier in the day. The debate began when President Barack Obama’s health care law was first

crafted in 2009 and has continued through its implementation. As the key Oct. 1 deadline for opening state-based health insurance exchanges approaches, the rhetoric has escalated. Congress must pass another “continuing resolution” by the end of next month to keep the government operating, although any measure approved by the Republican-led U.S. House would face little chance of success in the Democrat-led U.S. Senate. DeMint, a former South Carolina Republican

senator, has spent the past week touring nine cities, arguing that “defunding” the health care law is the best option. U.S. Rep. Marlin Stutzman, a Republican who represents northeast Indiana, said since returning to his district during August recess, he said residents have told him they will accept any vehicle for blocking the upheaval in coverage caused by the law. “I hear a lot of people saying ‘We don’t care how you stop it, just stop it,’” said Stutzman.

flour ready for delivery. The mill has been producing flour for more than 100 years.

Old mill staying open due to popular demand BY PATRICK REDMOND predmond@kpcmedia.comy

GREENFIELD MILLS — Greenfield Mills, a historic LaGrange County business, will stay open and already has resumed production, just two weeks after its owner announced he intended to shut down the 160-year-old business. David Rinkle, owner of Greenfield Mills and its line of New Rinkle flours and pancake mix, apparently never really knew just how much his customers appreciated his products. He said he was overwhelmed by people begging him to stay in operation. “I was really, really surprised,” Rinkle said with a smile Monday. Customers flooded his mill’s store after he announced the planned shutdown. They bought practically everything that was on the store’s shelves, all the while pleading with Rinkle to not close Greenfield Mills. “I guess flour is one of those products people kind of take for granted until you start making pies and they don’t turn out,” Rinkle said. “That’s basically what’s happened. So people kind of twisted my arm and said, we want you to continue. And so my wife and I talked about it and decided we can give it another shot, and we’ll see if we can make ends meet.” Greenfield Mills sits in the northeast corner of LaGrange County, next to a mill pond created when the Fawn River first was dammed. It is the oldest commercial, water-powered mill in the state. Rinkle, 58, is the fourth generation of his family to own and operate the mill. His great-grandfather, Henry Rinkle, bought the then-60-year-old mill in 1904 and spent the next two years rebuilding it and repairing the dam that provided the mill’s power. In 1906, Rinkle produced his first batch of “New Wrinkle Flour.” The “W” was later dropped from the product name. In 1924, Henry Rinkle modernized the old mill, installing a 125-watt hydroelectric generator to power the mill’s equipment. He also created what would become the state’s smallest power utility. In addition to powering the mill, the utility provides the electricity to power 11 local homes and a couple of barns. Dave Rinkle said he learned the miller’s art from his grandfather, George Rinkle, Henry’s son. Like everyone one else in his family, Rinkle worked in the mill after school next to his grandfather and father. His son and daughter now work with him in the mill. The mill produces both pastry and bread flour, as well as certified organic

PATRICK REDMOND

Greenfield Mills, the oldest water-powered mill in Indiana, is getting a second chance after customers flooded the mill with pleas to raise prices if that’s what it takes to keep the mill open. Greenfield Mills produces New Rinkle flours and pancake mixes.

whole wheat and white pastry flour. Rinkle also mills pure buckwheat flour, graham flour, yellow and white corn meal, wheat bran and buckwheat hulls, as well as a variety of different pancake mixes. Shutting down an icon is apparently easier said than done. Demand for the mill’s products has been high. “The pastry flour, there’s a huge demand right now, the bread flour is running a close second, pancake mix third,” he said. Rinkle said he spent most of the last two weeks talking to people who were trying to convince him to keep the business open. One man associated with local Scouting said that Scout fundraising pancake breakfasts, many of which seem to use New Rinkle pancake mix, might not be able to continue without the mill. Even commercial bakeries put people on the phone to beg Rinkle to reconsider his decision. “We had such an overwhelming response to the news that the mill would be closing, that we started thinking about it a little bit more,” Rinkle said. “Basically everybody told me in the last two weeks that they’d rather we go up a little in price and continue in business than to quit.” One LaGrange County bakery told Rinkle it could not find a suitable replacement for New Rinkle pastry flour. “They told us they’d tried five different kinds of flour and couldn’t come close to the results they got with our flour,” he said. Demand for other Greenfield Mills products, such as its Hearts of Wheat cereal, also was high. The LaGrange County business is one of the few remaining mills to produce the iconic breakfast food. Rinkle said customers as far away as New York and California contacted him after he announced he was shutting down, wanting to buy any remaining stock. “I had a guy call me from California who just went ballistic when he read we were closing down the mill and was worried he was never going to have Hearts of Wheat cereal

again,” Rinkle explained. “He said he would take as much as I could produce, a couple hundred pounds, just to store it so he’ll have it.” Many of the mill’s visitors have arrived not only looking to buy flour, but willing to discuss with Rinkle plans to stay open and offer a little advice. One popular suggestion is to create a list of people, both professional bakers as well as home cooks, willing to attest to how much they like New Rinkle products, and that Rinkle promote pictures of those people alongside a bag of New Rinkle flour. “Yeah, instead of Betty Crocker, you could have have Betty Yoder,” one suggested with a laugh. Rinkle said he had to raise his prices to continue operating. “We have to, to make sure we cover the costs, and so prices are up a little bit, but not extensively,” he said. The mill’s future still isn’t secure, but Rinkle said he will keep the business open as long as he can. “I talked to so many people in the last two weeks, that’s what surprised me. This isn’t the same as a big mill. I deliver the stuff myself. And they’re not just customers, but friends,” he explained. “They knew I was producing the best I could — it’s a tough world to compete with all these major brands — but try calling one of them with a complaint sometime. If there’s a problem with one of my mixes, it’sgoing to be replaced right on the spot or you’re going to get your money back. If there’s a problem in the store, it gets taken care the minute I walk in the store, no questions asked.” So far, no one has complained about the new prices for Greenfield Mills products. “I just figured if I overpriced it (New Rinkle flour), I wasn’t going to have the sale, so I was always super cautious about raising the price,” Rinkle said. “I just got to point didn’t feel I could raise the prices and still be be competitive. It’s always nice to be proven wrong.”


TUESDAY, AUGUST 27, 2013

Scores •

NATIONAL LEAGUE ST. LOUIS ....................................8 CINCINNATI ...............................6 PHILADELPHIA .......................2 N.Y. METS ....................................1 AMERICAN LEAGUE OAKLAND....................................8 DETROIT.......................................6 KANSAS CITY........................11 TAMPA BAY.................................1 TORONTO....................................5 N.Y. YANKEES ..........................2

Area Events •

VOLLEYBALL Angola at New Haven, 6 p.m. DeKalb at F W Northrop, 6 p.m. Lakewood Park at F W Falcons, 6 p.m. Woodlan at Eastside, 6 p.m. Prairie Heights at Westview, 6 p.m. Columbia City at Garrett, 6 p.m. Wawasee at Cent ral Noble, 6 p.m. Hamilton at Edon, Ohio, 6 p.m. Fremon t at West Noble, 6 p.m. BOYS SO C CE R Central Noble at Prairie Heights, 5 p.m. Eastsid e at Hamilt on, 5 p.m. Westview at Goshen, 5 p.m. Angola at West Noble, 5 p.m. Lakeland at DeKalb, 5 p.m. Garrett at Herit age, 5 p.m. G I R LS SO C CE R Herit ag e at Garrett, 6 p.m. Elkhart Memorial at Westview, 5 p.m. Blackhawk Christ ian at East Noble, 5 p.m. West Noble at Angola 5 p.m. CROS S C OU NTRY Central Noble at Eastside, 5 p.m. Northridge, Westview, Bethany Christ ian, Lakeland Christ ian at Lakeland, 5:3 0 p.m. Concord, Elkhart Christian at Prairie Heights, 5:3 0 p.m. BOYS TE N N I S West Noble at The Howe School, 4:3 0 p.m. Fremon t at F W Northrop, 4:4 5 p.m. Westview at Northridg e, 4:3 0 p.m. Lakeland at Churubusco, 4:3 0 p.m. Wawasee at Cent ral Noble, 4:3 0 p.m. Angola at DeKalb, 5 p.m. Fairfield at Prairie Heights, 4:3 0 p.m. G I R LS GOLF DeKalb at Columbia City, 4 p.m. West Noble at Fremont, 4:4 5 p.m. Angola at Leo, 5 p.m.

On The Air • BAS E BALL Chic ago Cubs vs. L.A. Dodgers, WG N, 1 0 p.m. TE N N I S U.S. Open, E S P N2, 1 and 7 p.m.

On This Day • Aug. 27, 1 977 — Toby Harrah and Bump Wills of the Texas Rangers hit back-to-back insidet he-park home runs on consecutive pitches i n the seventh inning as the Rangers beat the Yankees 8-2 at Yankee St adium.

THE NEWS SUN

The

Star

THE HERALD REPUBLICAN

kpcnews.com

B

Staying healthy a key INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Indianapolis already has two wins, has kept its last two opponents out of the end zone and has seen Andrew Luck make steady progress. The Colts’ biggest feat this preseason may be simply getting healthy. In a preseason rife with injuries, the Colts have so far avoided taking the big blows and could open the season Sept. 8 against Oakland at or near full strength. “Football is a dangerous game and people get hurt, and fortunately, I’ve been able to skirt those kinds of injuries,” tight end Coby Fleener said Monday after

Knights move to 3-1 mark BY CHRIS SMURR

KENDALLVILLE — East Noble started out slow, but didn’t give up as they won in four sets Monday night in Kendallville, 3-1 against the North Side Redskins. Kourtney Edwards led the Knights with 12 kills while Kavan Edwards added another nine. Starting out though, it wasn’t easy for the Knights as the Redskins jumped out to an early 4-1 lead. The Knights answered back to regain the lead shortly, but North Side’s Brandi Armstrong sent a message with a vicious kill to put them back on top, however briefly as the Knights began to gain confidence. “We did talk about momentum because it’s a Monday match,” said East Noble head coach Nicki Ramey. “I did feel like we were a little flat so it was mainly about talking to each other to where we’re communicating each play. We talked about speeding up our offense because that’s when we started to gain a lot of points.” After a wild exchange between the two teams, the set was tied at 20. Sydney Rodenbeck had an ace while Edwards added another kill as the Knights took the first set narrowly 25-23. The second set would not be quite as forgiving—North Side’s Armstrong had two big blocks as the Knights quickly found

returning to practice following a right knee injury. He’s still waiting to hear whether he’ll play in Thursday night’s preseason finale at Cincinnati. Regardless whether Fleener is on the field or not, things certainly look better in Indy (2-1) than with some of the other AFC contenders. Denver, the trendy favorite, has already lost its starting center for the season, and Wes Welker and Champ Bailey are trying to get back on the field. Defending Super Bowl champion Baltimore already lost tight end Dennis Pitta for the season. New England is still waiting for tight end Rob

Gronkowski to get healthy after having offseason back surgery, Miami tight end Dustin Keller is out for the season with a right knee injury and Pittsburgh is trying to sort out its injury-plagued backfield. It’s not that the Colts (2-1) have avoided taking hits. Linebacker Pat Angerer, running back Ahmad Bradshaw and defensive lineman Fili Moala all started training camp on the physically unable to perform list after offseason surgeries. Pro Bowl safety LaRon Landry missed more than two weeks with a left knee injury. SEE COLTS, PAGE B2

AP

Indianapolis Colts quarterback Andrew Luck calls a play against the Cleveland Browns during Saturday’s preseason game in Indianapolis.

Craig powers Cardinals past Reds ST. LOUIS (AP) — Allen Craig hit his first career grand slam with two out in the seventh inning, helping the St. Louis Cardinals rally for an 8-6 win over the Cincinnati Reds on Monday night. Matt Holliday also had a long three-run homer as St. Louis moved into sole possession of first place in the NL Central for the first time since July 29. The Cardinals lead idle Pittsburgh by a half-game and Cincinnati by 3½ games in the top-heavy division. Rookie Carlos Martinez (1-1) pitched two innings for his first major league win and Edward Mujica worked a perfect ninth for his 35th save. Zack Cozart had two hits and three RBIs for the Reds, who dropped to 4-9 against St. Louis JAMES FISHER this season. Jay Bruce hit his 25th East Noble’s Paige DeCamp goes to the net for a block during homer in the eighth. Monday’s victory over Fort Wayne North Side. Cozart and Todd Frazier each However, her efforts in this set themselves down 10-3. hit a two-run triple off Tyler Lyons were for naught as The Redskins After an East Noble time out, in the second, helping Cincinnati the Knights did their best to repeat took the second set, 25-23. to a 4-0 lead. But Holliday belted The third set was found with a their success they found in the first a three-run drive deep to left in the stronger beginning by the Knights third. set. as they took a quick 5-2 lead. Multiple North Side errors led Holliday’s 18th homer came They continued to build on their to the score to begin leveling out against Mike Leake and traveled lead and jumped ahead 10-3. at 17 a piece. After a North Side an estimated 443 feet for the After North Side’s Alli Sorg made longest shot by a St. Louis player time out, the Redskins regained a block the Knight’s lead was the lead. Edwards did her best to at Busch Stadium this season. slashed by five. give her team a shot of adrenaline The Cardinals went ahead to A long exchange between with an eviscerating kill, cutting stay in the seventh. Jon Jay drove the two teams ended after East the lead to one. in a run with a bases-loaded Noble’s Maddie Cook ended the “I feel that Kourtney has had a grounder off Manny Parra (1-3). barrage with a kill pushing the big night every night. It shouldn’t J.J. Hoover then came in and lead back towards the Knight’s be a shock to anybody. She’s walked Holliday on a full-count favor. pretty unstoppable and doesn’t pitch and Craig drove the next SEE EAST NOBLE, PAGE B2 pitch over the wall in right. make a lot of errors,” said Ramey.

Angola girls take NECC golf lead BY KEN FILLMORE kfillmore@kpcmedia.com

ANGOLA — Although the season is short, high school girls golf in Indiana has its own dog days of summer. School starting as matches pile up and the typical steamy August weather can make golf a grind. Angola and Fremont felt those effects Monday in a key Northeast Corner Conference match on the front nine at Zollner Golf Course as their scores were higher than they have been. But the Hornets were a little better on their home course to defeat the Eagles 210-220 and take the lead in the conference. This was Angola’s first weekday match since school began on Wednesday. “They were tired. Monday was a full day,” Hornets coach Joan Sanborn said. They had classes, then had to rush to get here and rush to play. “Being at home helps a lot,” she added. “The short game has been something we’ve been concentrating on and that saved us.” Alison Brimmer medaled with a 49 to lead Angola (6-0, 3-0 NECC). Monday’s match was the first for the senior since she had to withdraw from the 18-hole Fremont Fall Classic on Aug. 15 at Lake James because of a strained right shoulder.

Brimmer was backed up by Kandi Bach’s 51 and Mackenna Kelly’s 52. Bach has been playing consistently well the past couple of weeks. Kelly came off a solid 87 in the New Haven Bulldog Invitational Saturday at McMillen Park in Fort Wayne. On Monday, Bach only had one bad hole, scoring a 10 on the par 5 seventh hole. But with that hole lingering, she had a seven on the eighth hole. But good scores overcame those blemishes for the sophomore Fremont coach Eric Wirick felt his girls were worn down some after the 18-hole tournament Saturday. The Eagles have three freshmen in the varsity lineup and began a stretch of playing three matches in as many days on Monday. “Both teams were 10 to 15 strokes higher than what they usually shoot,” Wirick said. “Angola is a good team and we knew we had to play our best round of the year to beat them. Some of our girls had our lowest rounds ever at New Haven, so that was encouraging.” On Monday, senior Alivia Behnfeldt led FHS (2-1, 1-1) with 50. Freshman Raigan Porath added a 52. Wirick said his team will have four or five days off after this busy stretch. SEE PREP GOLF, PAGE B2

KEN FILLMORE

Angola sophomore Kandi Bach watches this putt on the ninth green at Zollner Golf Course during the Hornets’ Northeast Corner Conference girls golf match with Fremont Monday afternoon.


B2

SPORTS •

kpcnews.com

Football

LOCAL SPORTS BRIEFS •

50 years of Laker football to be celebrated Friday LAGRANGE — Lakeland High School will be celebrating 50 years of football on Friday during its varsity game with Fremont. Kickoff is set for 7 p.m. Many members of the first Laker football team will be on hand to celebrate with current Lakeland players. To ask questions and get more information, call Lakeland High athletic director Tim Gonderman at 499-2474.

Fremont loses to Churubusco FREMONT — Fremont lost its season-opening game to Churubusco 56-0 in a Northeast Corner Conference game. The game was delayed over 30 minutes because of a medical emergency prior to kickoff. Then Class 2A No. 10 Churubusco led 35-0 at halftime. Cody Conwell ran for 223 yards and three touchdowns for ‘Busco. Kane Johnson and Logan Harris added two touchdowns each. Nate Beatty rushed for 72 yards on nine carries and caught four passes for 20 yards for FHS. Kaleb Hayes was 10-of-29 passing for 79 yards and two interceptions.

Girls Soccer DeKalb splits festival matches FORT WAYNE — DeKalb defeated Warsaw 2-0 and lost to Canterbury 4-0 in its two games in the Shindigz National Soccer Festival at IPFW Saturday. Maddie VanWye scored both Baron goals in their victory, with Kacey Wells assisting on both. Keeper Allie Gaff made 12 saves in posting the shutout. Gaff had 13 saves and Alyssa Clark had one in the match against Canterbury.

Girls Soccer LPC falls to Patriots MONROEVILLE — Lakewood Park Christian opened its season with a 2-0 loss to Heritage on Monday. Anna Franke and Erin Walter scored for the Patriots (2-0-1). Maddie Gonzales made 15 saves in goal for the Panthers.

Boys Tennis WN defeats Fremont FREMONT — West Noble won 4-1 over Fremont in a Northeast Corner Conference dual on Monday. The Chargers (1-2, 1-2 NECC) won both doubles matches with Quinn Groff and Ryan Kendall at No. 1 and Beck Groff and Grant Moser at No. 2. West Noble also had straight-set Singles wins by Tyler Rothaar at No. 1 and by Josh Gaff at No. 3. Brandan Arnos won in three sets at No. 2 singles

for Fremont in its first dual of the season.

West Noble 4, Fremont 1 Singles: 1. Tyler Rothhaar (WN) def. Logan Miller 6-4, 7-5; 2. Brandan Arnos (F) def. Jared Swank 6-4, 4-6, 6-4; 3. Josh Gaff (WN) def. Connor McHann 6-1, 6-1. Doubles: 1. Quinn Groff-Ryan Kendall (WN) def. Wade Regadanz-Alberto Figueroa 6-3, 6-4; 2. Beck Groff-Grant Moser (WN) def. Jeremy Seiler-Jordan Sanderson 6-4, 2-6, 6-3.

Warriors top Howe HOWE — Westview swept Howe 5-0 in a varsity tennis match on Monday. Singles players Stephen Gierek and Alex Stutzman each won their matches 6-0, 6-0. Andrew Yoder also won in singles play. In doubles matches, Hunter Christner and Asher Gingerich won at the No. 1 position and Zach Schrock and Taylor Eash teamed for a victory at the No. 2 spot.

Makeups, additions announced A couple high school boys tennis duals have makeup dates and two events have been added to Fremont’s schedule. In boys tennis, Fremont will play Northrop today at 4:45 p.m. in Fort Wayne and Prairie Heights will host Central Noble on Sept. 4. Also at FHS, the Eagle cross country teams will take part in the Concord (Mich.) Invitational Wednesday at 5:30 p.m. The junior varsity and varsity volleyball teams will host North Central (Ohio) Thursday, starting at 6 p.m.

Cross Country Hornets fare well in grand prix VEEDERSBURG — Angola’s boys were second and the Hornets girls were fifth in the 19-team Fountain Central Grand Prix Saturday. The AHS boys had 92 points, finishing five points ahead of third-place McCutcheon. Western won with 47. Isaiah Mortorff was ninth in 18 minutes, 15 seconds to lead Angola. Teammate Nate Roe was next in 18:19. Nathan Clary was 12th in 18:19, and Zach Orn was 24th in 19:13. The Hornet girls were fifth with 146, and a point ahead of sixth-place McCutcheon. Seeger won with 30, followed by Perry Meridian (55), Western (74), Greencatle (125) and Angola. Josie Korte was 14th at 22:57 to lead the Hornets. Alexis Buck was 22nd in 23:28, Maria Clemens was 25th in 23:49, and Jana Olson was 37th in 25:01.

Marine team in hokum karem ELKHART — Hamilton had a boys’ team in the Elkhart Christian Hokum Karem Saturday. The team of Craig Grime and Jerico Harden was 23rd in a time of 37 minutes, 46 seconds.

Volleyball Lakers 2-2 in invite DENVER — Lakeland was 2-2 in the North Miami Invitational Saturday. The Lakers beat Western

25-17, 25-19, and North Miami 25-23, 25-22. Lakeland lost to Wabash 25-14, 25-16, and to Northfield 23-25, 25-18, 15-6. Ashtin Kaminer had 19 kills, Madison Campbell had 29 digs and Nicole McKibben dished off 69 assists in the tournament for the Lakers. Rebecca Wooster added 19 kills.

School Sports Soccer canceled at Hamilton Junior High HAMILTON — Hamilton Community Schools athletic director Jesse Webb announced Monday afternoon that the 2013 season has been canceled for the Hamilton Junior High School soccer team due to lack of numbers. With no junior high game on Friday, Hamilton High School will now host Westview in a Northeast Corner Conference soccer match at an earlier start time of 6 p.m. Hamilton Junior High still needs a cross country coach. Interested person need to contact Webb by phone at 488-2161 or by email at jesse.webb@hcs. k12.in.us.

Sailing Lake George Lasers end season LAKE GEORGE — The Laser fleet enjoyed highly competitive racing for its final racing session of the summer season with eight skippers participating. Two races were held to make up for the past two Sundays when the wind was too light for racing. The first race was a two-lap triangular course set up by race chair Jack Stiefel. Nancy Stiefel took the early lead in 5 to 8 mph southwest wind. During the second lap, she lost control of the boat at the second windward mark and nearly capsized. Four boats passed her and she never caught up. Steve Kindler had a rudder problem but was able to fix it on the course and finish sixth. Jack Stiefel won the race and ended up winning the season championship. Jeff Smith narrowly edged out Kirsten Meyer for second place. The second race was one triangle plus two up-and-back legs. Nancy Stiefel again took the early lead and maintained it to the end. This win helped her move up one position in the season’s final standings. Smith and Meyer again had a very close finish, with Smith pulling ahead at the finish line by inches. The third annual Lake George Laser Regatta will cap the season on Sept. 7. Sailors will gather at The Retreat in the evening after racing in the afternoon for the awarding of trophies for both the summer season and the regatta. Jack Stiefel is coordinating the regatta and plans to run up to six short races starting at 1 p.m. The entry fee is $15. For more information, call Stiefel at 833-9896.

TUESDAY, AUGUST 27, 2013

COLTS: Indy may play it safe against Bengals FROM PAGE B1

Offensive lineman Hugh Thornton sprained his right ankle in rookie mini-camp and fourth-round pick Khaled Holmes sustained the same injury four days into training camp. Tight end Dwayne Allen (right foot) missed the last two games and Fleener has already had to contend with a concussion and a right knee injury. Right guard Mike McGlynn also missed the Cleveland game after bruising his knee in practice last week, and left tackle Anthony Castonzo departed Saturday’s game on the opening series with a sprained medial collateral ligament in his right knee. Five players, including free-agent signee Lawrence Sidbury (shoulder), have already been put on injured reserve and are gone for the season. But somehow, the Colts have minimized their losses. “They’re working their butts off to get back,” Luck said of Allen and Fleener. “I’m sure we’ll see them soon.”

The Colts, coming off an 11-5 season and a nine-game improvement over 2011, have looked good at full strength. Angerer, Landry and linebacker Jerrell Freeman all played against Cleveland, marking the first time Indy’s starting defense was on the field all preseason. The starting defense allowed only four first downs, 104 total yards and pitched a shutout against the Browns for nearly 2½ quarters. “I’ve been good for a while, it’s just a matter of being smart,” Angerer said. “We definitely have the right guys. Our defensive line is playing tremendous and the guys behind us (the secondary) are great, but we’re definitely not all there yet.” Neither is the offense, which has been piecing things together for the last month. Luck played most of Saturday’s game without two of his starting linemen, and with Justice Cunningham and Dominique Jones as the only tight ends on a roster that was expected to use

more double-tight end formations. But it looks as if all the missing players could be back for the opener. Allen returned to practice last week. McGlynn was walking around the locker room just fine Monday, a good sign for a player trying to fend off a challenge for his starting job. Bradshaw is expected to be full go when the season starts, and Fleener and Holmes are practicing again. Even Castonzo sounds optimistic. “It was very good news to hear, that it was kind of a minor thing and it should not cut into the season,” he said Monday. “We’re kind of taking day by day, but the goal is to be ready for Oakland.” The only real question this week is whether the Colts will play it safe against Cincinnati. Coach Chuck Pagano was to meet with his coaching staff later Monday to make that decision. One thing is clear, though. “We’ll be smart,” he said. “I’ll let you know at a later date.”

EAST NOBLE: Tournament at PH up next FROM PAGE B1

Kavan Edwards added a block to putting them ahead 22-15 and from there, they didn’t look back as they took the third set 25-15. As the fourth set began, North Side came out swinging with an early 6-2 lead. Once again, the Knights would not go away as they tied it up 9-9 after a Kourtney Edwards block. The Redskins answered back tying it up at 13 and retook the lead, however briefly. After a change of possession, East Noble’s Sydney Rodenbeck gave the Knights a slim 20-19 lead. Following a time out, Kourtney Edwards put the dagger in the Redskins heart, ending the game with a kill as the final set ended with a

JAMES FISHER

East Noble’s Kourtney Edwards returns a North Side serve on Monday.

score of 25-20. Ramey was pleased overall with her team’s

outing, in particular, freshman Payton Hart. “She’s going to do well as long as we can keep her injury free. Tonight was the first time we saw her a little bit on the flustered side,” said Ramey, “she doesn’t look like she’s lacking experience at all.” The Knights are now riding a three game winning streak and look to ride this wave of momentum into the Prairie Heights Tournament this weekend. “We’re concentrating on one match at a time,” she said, “Garrett has been playing strong so hopefully we can keep focused and win Thursday going into Saturday because that will be a big momentum (boost) going into the weekend.”

GOLF: East Noble falls to Carroll by 2 strokes FROM PAGE B1

Carroll 167, East Noble 169 At Cobblestone, Sarah Bannister and Kierstin Murphy shared medalist honors with 37s to lead the Chargers to a Northeast Hoosier Conference victory. Alyn Clark had a 2-over par 38 to pace the Knights. EN also had a 42 from Logan Handshoe and 43 from Cooper Handshoe. East Noble won the junior varsity match 208-232. The Knights were led by Maddy Sherbondy with a 50. Mariah Hernandez and Brandi Schermerhorn had 51s. Carroll’s Ali Boyle was medalist with 46.

New Haven Invitational At McMillen Park Saturday, East Noble was tied for fifth out of 16 teams with 354. Angola shot 377 to place ninth and finish three shots ahead of 10th-place Fremont. Clark was tied for second individually with a 77 in leading the Knights. EN also had an 88 from Logan Handshoe, a 93 from Kacey VanWagner, a 96 from Becca Alwine and a 97 from Cooper Handshoe. Morgan Dornte led the Hornets with 86. Bach shot 99, Rachael Shively had 105 and Lauren Stanley had 106. “Having two girls shoot

under bogey golf for 18 holes (Dornte and Kelly) is a huge confidence booster,” Sanborn said. “I see the team setting their sights on the home stretch. They are having fun and playing some good golf.” Monday’s results Carroll 167, East Noble 159 Carroll: Sarah Bannister 37, Kierstin Murphy 37, Ali Richard 45, Emily McDermit 48, Kyra Salter 53. EN: Alyn Clark 38, Logan Handshoe 42, Cooper Handshoe 43, Becca Alwine 46, Kacey VanWagner 48. Angola 210, Fremont 220 AHS: Alison Brimmer 49, Kandi Bach 51, Mackenna Kelly 52, Morgan Dornte 58, Rachael Shively 62. FHS: Alivia Behnfeldt 50, Raigan Porath 52, Karli Forte 58, Katie Sidwell 60, Tonya Cessna 60. AHS junior varsity: Stanley 47, Trick 51, E. Stoy 62, Bonifer 67, Sweeney 70.

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Tournament champions The Auburn 9U All-Stars finished their season by winning the Barnaby’s Tournament in South Bend recently. The local team went 4-0 in the tournament with wins over East Side Yohe (11-8), East Side (LaSane) 11-7, the East Side Peppers (13-1) and Yohe again in the championship (11-9). Front, from left, Elijah Ehmke, Brantley Hickman, Parker Smith, Hugh

Henderson and Jason Rose. Middle, from left, Alex Leslie, Carter Miller, Gabe Trevino, Aric Ehmke and Josh Nichols. Back, from left, head coach Jim Leslie, and coaches Andy Smith and Brett Henderson. Team members Alex Graber, Bo Potter and Logan Brooks, and coaches Ron Hickman and Zach Potter are not shown.


SCOREBOARD •

TUESDAY, AUGUST 27, 2013

National League Standings East Division Atlanta Washington Philadelphia New York Miami Central Division St. Louis Pittsburgh Cincinnati Milwaukee Chicago West Division

W 78 65 60 58 49

L 52 65 71 71 80

Pct GB .600 — .500 13 .458 18½ .450 19½ .380 28½

W 77 76 74 57 55

L 54 54 58 73 75

Pct GB .588 — .585 ½ .561 3½ .438 19½ .423 21½

W L Pct GB Los Angeles 76 54 .585 — Arizona 66 63 .512 9½ Colorado 61 71 .462 16 San Diego 59 71 .454 17 San Francisco 58 72 .446 18 Sunday’s Games Colorado 4, Miami 3 Detroit 11, N.Y. Mets 3 Milwaukee 3, Cincinnati 1 Philadelphia 9, Arizona 5 Kansas City 6, Washington 4 Atlanta 5, St. Louis 2 San Francisco 4, Pittsburgh 0 San Diego 3, Chicago Cubs 2, 15 innings Boston 8, L.A. Dodgers 1 Monday’s Games St. Louis 8, Cincinnati 6 Philadelphia 2, N.Y. Mets 1 San Francisco at Colorado, late San Diego at Arizona, late Chicago Cubs at L.A. Dodgers, late Tuesday’s Games Miami (Eovaldi 2-4) at Washington (Ohlendorf 2-0), 7:05 p.m. Milwaukee (Lohse 9-8) at Pittsburgh (Locke 9-4), 7:05 p.m. Cleveland (Salazar 1-1) at Atlanta (A.Wood 2-2), 7:10 p.m. Philadelphia (K.Kendrick 10-10) at N.Y. Mets (Niese 5-6), 7:10 p.m. Cincinnati (Latos 13-4) at St. Louis (J.Kelly 5-3), 8:15 p.m. San Francisco (Petit 0-0) at Colorado (Bettis 0-2), 8:40 p.m. San Diego (Kennedy 5-9) at Arizona (Undecided), 9:40 p.m. Chicago Cubs (T.Wood 7-10) at L.A. Dodgers (Kershaw 13-7), 10:10 p.m. Wednesday’s Games Chicago Cubs at L.A. Dodgers, 3:10 p.m. Miami at Washington, 7:05 p.m. Milwaukee at Pittsburgh, 7:05 p.m. Cleveland at Atlanta, 7:10 p.m. Philadelphia at N.Y. Mets, 7:10 p.m. Cincinnati at St. Louis, 8:15 p.m. San Francisco at Colorado, 8:40 p.m. San Diego at Arizona, 9:40 p.m.

American League Standings East Division W L Pct GB Boston 77 55 .583 — Tampa Bay 74 55 .574 1½ Baltimore 70 59 .543 5½ New York 69 62 .527 7½ Toronto 59 73 .447 18 Central Division W L Pct GB Detroit 77 54 .588 — Cleveland 71 59 .546 5½ Kansas City 66 64 .508 10½ Minnesota 57 72 .442 19 Chicago 54 75 .419 22 West Division W L Pct GB Texas 75 55 .577 — Oakland 73 57 .562 2 Seattle 59 70 .457 15½ Los Angeles 58 71 .450 16½ Houston 43 86 .333 31½ Sunday’s Games Cleveland 3, Minnesota 1 Detroit 11, N.Y. Mets 3 Baltimore 10, Oakland 3 N.Y. Yankees 3, Tampa Bay 2, 11 innings Chicago White Sox 5, Texas 2 Toronto 2, Houston 1 Kansas City 6, Washington 4 L.A. Angels 7, Seattle 1 Boston 8, L.A. Dodgers 1 Monday’s Games Kansas City 11, Tampa Bay 1 Toronto 5, N.Y. Yankees 2 Oakland 8, Detroit 6 Houston at Chicago White Sox, late Texas at Seattle, late Tuesday’s Games N.Y. Yankees (Pettitte 9-9) at Toronto (Happ 3-3), 7:07 p.m. Oakland (Milone 9-9) at Detroit (Verlander 12-9), 7:08 p.m. Baltimore (W.Chen 7-6) at Boston (Doubront 9-6), 7:10 p.m. Cleveland (Salazar 1-1) at Atlanta (A.Wood 2-2), 7:10 p.m. L.A. Angels (C.Wilson 13-6) at Tampa Bay (Ro.Hernandez 6-13), 7:10 p.m. Houston (Clemens 4-4) at Chicago White Sox (Quintana 7-4), 8:10 p.m. Kansas City (Shields 8-8) at Minnesota (Correia 8-10), 8:10 p.m. Texas (D.Holland 9-6) at Seattle (Iwakuma 12-6), 10:10 p.m. Wednesday’s Games Texas at Seattle, 3:40 p.m. N.Y. Yankees at Toronto, 7:07 p.m. Oakland at Detroit, 7:08 p.m. Baltimore at Boston, 7:10 p.m. Cleveland at Atlanta, 7:10 p.m. L.A. Angels at Tampa Bay, 7:10 p.m. Houston at Chicago White Sox, 8:10 p.m. Kansas City at Minnesota, 8:10 p.m.

AP Indiana High School Football Top 10 Teams The Associated Press Top 10 Indiana high school football poll, with first-place votes in parentheses, records through games of Monday, August 26, 2013, rating points and previous rankings: 6A Rank-School FPV Rcd TP Pvs 1. Lawrence Central(13)1-0 332 2. Center Grove (1) 1-0 290 4 3. Ben Davis (3) 1-0 280 3 4. Carmel - 1-0 262 1 5. Indpls Pike (1) 1-0 208 6 6. Penn - 1-0 186 7 7. Hamilton SE - 1-0 120 9 8. Warren Central - 0-1 90 5 9. Merrillville - 1-0 78 10 10. Carroll (Allen) - 1-0 62 NR Others receiving votes: 11, Brownsburg 18. 12, Noblesville 16. 13, Fishers 12. 14, Homestead 10. 15, Crown Point 8. 16, Lafayette Jeff 4. 17, Portage 2. 18, Indpls Tech 2. 5A Rank-School FPV Rcd TP Pvs 1. Ft. Wayne Snider(14)1-0 344 2 2. Indpls Cathedral (3) 0-1 274 1 3. Zionsville - 1-0 258 4 4. Concord - 1-0 244 5 5. TH North (1) 1-0 222 8 6. Martinsville - 1-0 160 9 7. Ft. Wayne North - 1-0 152 7 8. Whiteland - 1-0 136 10 9. Elkhart Central - 1-0 44 NR 10. Castle - 0-1 34 3 Others receiving votes: 11, Munster 24. 12, Westfield 18. 13, Mishawaka 16. 14, Richmond 14. 14, Bloomington South 14. 16, Decatur Central 10. 17, Ev. North 8. 18, Ft. Wayne Wayne 6. 19, Michigan City 2. 4A Rank-School FPV Rcd TP Pvs 1. Columbus East(17) 1-0 358 2 2. Jasper - 1-0 304 4 3. Indpls Chatard (1) 0-1 196 1 4. FW Dwenger - 1-0 190 7 5. Mt. Vernon - 1-0 186 6 6. Indpls Roncalli - 0-1 158 3 7. E. Noble - 1-0 148 8 8. SB St. Joseph’s - 1-0 134 10 9. Ev. Reitz - 0-1 64 5 10. New Prairie - 1-0 50 NR Others receiving votes: 11, Pendleton Hts. 42. 12, New Haven 40. 13, Hobart 34. 14, Leo 20. 15, Northridge 16. 16, Hammond Morton 8. 17, Greenwood 6. 17, Ev. Central 6. 17, E. Central 6. 17, E. Chicago 6. 17, Plainfield 6. 22, New Palestine 2. 3A Rank-School FPV Rcd TP Pvs 1. Indpls Brebeuf (9) 1-0 334 5 2. Andrean (7) 1-0 322 4 3. Western Boone - 1-0 192 9 4. Mish. Marian (1) 1-0 190 10 5. FW Luers (1) 0-1 160 2 6. Delta - 1-0 124 NR 7. Gibson Southern - 1-0 114 NR 8. Hamilton Hts. - 0-1 112 1 9. W. Lafayette - 1-0 92 NR 10. Jimtown - 0-1 82 3 Others receiving votes: 11, Greencastle 58. 12, Indian Creek 54. 13, Rochester 42. 14, Brownstown 36. 15, N. Montgomery 18. 16, Northwestern 8.

16, Tri-West 8. 16, Eastbrook 8. 16, Corydon 8. 20, Guerin Catholic 6. 20, Lawrenceburg 6. 22, Charlestown 4. 23, Western 2. 2A Rank-School FPV Rcd TP Pvs 1. Indpls Ritter (14) 1-0 332 1 2. Laf. Catholic (2) 1-0 294 2 3. Ev. Mater Dei - 1-0 262 3 4. Tipton (1) 1-0 240 4 5. Indpls Scecina - 1-0 166 5 6. Speedway - 1-0 136 6 7. Cass - 1-0 126 7 8. Churubusco - 1-0 96 10 9. Paoli - 1-0 56 NR 10. Rensselaer - 1-0 42 NR Others receiving votes: 11, Shenandoah 28. 12, N. Judson 20. 13, Southridge 18. 14, Heritage Christian 16. 15, S. Spencer 12. 16, N. Posey 8. 17, Oak Hill 4. 17, Hammond Noll 4. 17, Madison-Grant 4. 17, Triton Central 4. 21, Woodlan 2. 1A Rank-School FPV Rcd TP Pvs 1. Linton (13) 1-0 308 2 2. N. Vermillion (2) 1-0 272 4 3. Winamac (1) 1-0 214 6 4. Whiting - 1-0 210 5 5. Sheridan - 0-1 176 1 6. W. Central (1) 1-0 144 7 7. S. Putnam - 1-0 122 8 8. Pioneer - 0-1 102 2 9. N. Central - 1-0 80 10 10. Fountain Central - 1-0 76 Others receiving votes: 11, Eastern (Hancock) 50. 12, Adams Central 40. 13, W. Washington 26. 14, Carroll (Flora) 24. 15, Attica 14. 16, Hagerstown 4. 16, S. Central (LaPorte) 4. 18, N. Knox 2. 18, Tri-Central 2.

NFL Preseason Thursday’s Games Detroit 40, New England 9 Carolina 34, Baltimore 27 Friday’s Games Seattle 17, Green Bay 10 Chicago 34, Oakland 26 Saturday’s Games Washington 30, Buffalo 7 Indianapolis 27, Cleveland 6 N.Y. Jets 24, N.Y. Giants 21, OT Kansas City 26, Pittsburgh 20, OT Philadelphia 31, Jacksonville 24 Tampa Bay 17, Miami 16 Denver 27, St. Louis 26 Dallas 24, Cincinnati 18 Tennessee 27, Atlanta 16 San Diego 24, Arizona 7 Sunday’s Games New Orleans 31, Houston 23 San Francisco 34, Minnesota 14 Thursday, Aug. 29 Indianapolis at Cincinnati, 7 p.m. Detroit at Buffalo, 7 p.m. Philadelphia at N.Y. Jets, 7 p.m. New Orleans at Miami, 7:30 p.m. Washington at Tampa Bay, 7:30 p.m. Jacksonville at Atlanta, 7:30 p.m. N.Y. Giants at New England, 7:30 p.m. Pittsburgh at Carolina, 7:30 p.m. Tennessee at Minnesota, 8 p.m. Cleveland at Chicago, 8 p.m. Green Bay at Kansas City, 8 p.m. Houston at Dallas, 8 p.m. Baltimore at St. Louis, 8 p.m. Arizona at Denver, 9 p.m. Oakland at Seattle, 10 p.m. San Francisco at San Diego, 10 p.m.

Canadian Football League

1,136 1,123 1,118 1,084 1,073 1,069 1,063 1,049 1,036 1,026 1,025 1,019 1,019 1,007 984 971 964 962 941 935 908 905 903 898 884

LPGA Player of the Year Standings 1. Inbee Park, 2. Stacy Lewis, 3. Suzann Pettersen, 4. Beatriz Recari, 5. Hee Young Park, 6. So Yeon Ryu, 7. I.K. Kim, 8. Na Yeon Choi, 9. Jiyai Shin, 10. Karrie Webb, 11. Paula Creamer, 11. Angela Stanford, 13. Cristie Kerr, 14. Catriona Matthew, 15. Jessica Korda, 15. Ilhee Lee, 17. Lizette Salas, 18. Jennifer Johnson, 19. Morgan Pressel, 20. Jodi Ewart Shadoff, 21. Caroline Hedwall, 22. Shanshan Feng, 22. Karine Icher, 24. Anna Nordqvist, 25. Chella Choi, 25. Pornanong Phatlum, 27. Yani Tseng, 28. Haeji Kang, 28. Gerina Piller, 28. Giulia Sergas, 31. Carlota Ciganda, 31. Ai Miyazato, 31. Amy Yang, 34. Mika Miyazato, 35. Chie Arimura, 36. Brittany Lincicome, 36. Lexi Thompson, 38. Irene Cho, 38. Sun Young Yoo, 40. Meena Lee, 41. Candie Kung, 41. Mo Martin, 43. Brittany Lang, 44. Nicole Castrale, 44. Moriya Jutanugarn, 44. Mindy Kim, 44. Jee Young Lee, 44. Jenny Shin, 49. Jacqui Concolino, 49. Jeong Jang, 49. Danielle Kang, 49. Stacy Prammanasudh, 49. Michelle Wie,

281 161 114 80 78 73 68 58 57 54 47 47 46 45 39 39 37 34 33 32 31 29 29 26 22 22 21 19 19 19 17 17 17 16 14 13 13 12 12 11 9 9 8 7 7 7 7 7 6 6 6 6 6

ATP World Tour Rankings

EAST DIVISION Toronto Hamilton Montreal Winnipeg WEST DIVISION

26. Harris English 27. Bubba Watson 28. Steve Stricker 29. Charl Schwartzel 30. Jimmy Walker 31. Lee Westwood 32. Patrick Reed 33. Russell Henley 34. Roberto Castro 35. Nick Watney 36. Rory McIlroy 37. Matt Jones 38. Brendon de Jonge 39. John Merrick 40. Chris Stroud 41. Jonas Blixt 42. David Lynn 43. Kevin Chappell 44. Graeme McDowell 45. John Huh 46. Matt Every 47. Chris Kirk 48. Ken Duke 49. Scott Piercy 50. Jason Kokrak

W 5 4 3 1

L 3 4 5 7

PF 244 203 195 167

PA 206 219 239 247

W L PF PA Saskatchewan 7 1 264 177 Calgary 6 2 258 200 B.C. 5 3 207 203 Edmonton 1 7 188 235 Thursday’s Game Montreal 39, BC Lions 38 Friday’s Game Calgary 32, Toronto 14 Saturday’s Games Hamilton 37, Winnipeg 14 Saskatchewan 30, Edmonton 27 Friday, Aug. 30 Hamilton at B.C., 10 p.m. Sunday, Sept. 1 Winnipeg at Saskatchewan, 4 p.m. Monday, Sept. 2 Edmonton at Calgary, 5 p.m. Tuesday, Sept. 3 Montreal at Toronto, 7:30 p.m.

Top 25 Football Schedule Thursday, Aug. 29 No. 6 South Carolina vs. North Carolina, 6 p.m. No. 24 Southern Cal at Hawaii, 11 p.m. Friday, Aug. 30 No games scheduled Saturday, Aug. 31 No. 1 Alabama vs. Virginia Tech at Atlanta, 5:30 p.m. No. 2 Ohio St. vs. Buffalo, Noon No. 3 Oregon vs. Nicholls St., 4 p.m. No. 5 Georgia at No. 8 Clemson, 8 p.m. No. 7 Texas A&M vs. Rice, 1 p.m. No. 10 Florida vs. Toledo, 12:21 p.m. No. 12 LSU vs. No. 20 TCU at Arlington, Texas, 9 p.m. No. 13 Oklahoma St. vs. Mississippi St. at Houston, 3:30 p.m. No. 14 Notre Dame vs. Temple, 3:30 p.m. No. 15 Texas vs. New Mexico St., 8 p.m. No. 16 Oklahoma vs. Louisiana-Monroe, 7 p.m. No. 17 Michigan vs. Cent. Michigan, 3:30 p.m. No. 18 Nebraska vs. Wyoming, 8 p.m. No. 19 Boise St. at Washington, 10 p.m. No. 21 UCLA vs. Nevada, 10 p.m. No. 22 Northwestern at California, 10:30 p.m. No. 23 Wisconsin vs. UMass, Noon No. 25 Oregon St. vs. E. Washington, 6 p.m. Sunday, Sept. 1 No. 9 Louisville vs. Ohio, 3:30 p.m. Monday, Sept. 2 No. 11 Florida St. at Pittsburgh, 8 p.m.

WNBA Standings EASTERN CONFERENCE W L Pct GB x-Chicago 20 8 .714 1/2 Atlanta 14 11 .560 4 1/2 Washington 13 15 .464 7 Indiana 12 15 .444 7 1/2 New York 11 16 .407 8 1/2 Connecticut 7 19 .269 12 WESTERN CONFERENCE W L Pct GB x-Minnesota 20 7 .741 1/2 x-Los Angeles 19 8 .704 1 Phoenix 14 13 .519 6 Seattle 13 14 .481 7 San Antonio 10 17 .370 10 Tulsa 9 19 .321 11 1/2 x-clinched playoff spot Sunday’s Games San Antonio 70, Seattle 64 New York 74, Connecticut 66 Los Angeles 90, Tulsa 88, OT Monday’s Games No games scheduled Tuesday’s Games Minnesota at New York, 7 p.m. Seattle at San Antonio, 8 p.m. Connecticut at Los Angeles, 10:30 p.m. Wednesday’s Games Washington at Atlanta, 7 p.m.

PGA Tour FedExCup Leaders Rank Player 1. Tiger Woods 2. Adam Scott 3. Phil Mickelson 4. Matt Kuchar 5. Justin Rose 6. Brandt Snedeker 7. Graham DeLaet 8. Bill Haas 9. Jordan Spieth 10. Gary Woodland 11. Keegan Bradley 12. Kevin Streelman 13. Henrik Stenson 14. Jim Furyk 15. D.A. Points 16. Jason Day 17. Billy Horschel 18. Webb Simpson 19. Jason Dufner 20. Boo Weekley 21. Hunter Mahan 22. Dustin Johnson 23. Rickie Fowler 24. Charles Howell III 25. Zach Johnson

Points 4,009 3,846 2,625 2,541 2,397 2,219 1,806 1,719 1,684 1,633 1,599 1,581 1,552 1,516 1,497 1,497 1,488 1,461 1,419 1,394 1,313 1,226 1,185 1,179 1,142

q-qualified for Barclays ATP World Tour Finals, Nov. 4-11; x-clinched year-end No. 1 1. q-Novak Djokovic, 10980 2. q-Rafael Nadal, 8860 3. Andy Murray, 8700 4. David Ferrer, 7210 5. Tomas Berdych, 5075 6. Juan M del Potro, 4740 7. Roger Federer, 4695 8. Jo-Wilfried Tsonga, 3470 9. Richard Gasquet, 2625 10. Stanislas Wawrinka, 2610 11. Milos Raonic, 2555 12. Kei Nishikori, 2405 13. Tommy Haas, 2185 14. Jerzy Janowicz, 2110 15. Nicolas Almagro, 2110 16. Gilles Simon, 2040 17. John Isner, 2025 18. Fabio Fognini, 2025 19. Marin Cilic, 1805 20. Kevin Anderson, 1740 21. Janko Tipsarevic, 1685 22. Tommy Robredo, 1620 23. Andreas Seppi, 1550 24. Mikhail Youzhny, 1475 25. Philipp Kohlschreiber, 1445 Doubles 1. Bob Bryan, 14280 1. Mike Bryan, 14280 3. Alexander Peya, 5970 4. Bruno Soares, 5970 5. Marc Lopez, 5280 6. Marcel Granollers, 5280 7. Rohan Bopanna, 5140 8. Radek Stepanek, 4970 9. Leander Paes, 4745 10. Mahesh Bhupathi, 4580 Teams 1. qx-Bob and Mike Bryan, 11985 2. Alexander Peya and Bruno Soares, 4985 3. Marcel Granollers and Marc Lopez, 3170 4. Mariusz Fyrstenberg and Marcin Matkowski, 2540 5. Aisam-ul-Haq Qureshi and Jean-Julien Rojer, 2335 6. David Marrero and Fernando Verdasco, 2250 7. Julien Benneteau and Nenad Zimonjic, 2130 8. Santiago Gonzalez and Scott Lipsky, 2030 9. Max Mirnyi and Horia Tecau, 1970 10. Ivan Dodig and Marcelo Melo, 1965 x-clinched year-end No. 1

WTA Race Standings q-qualified for TEB BNP Paribas WTA Championships, Oct. 22-27 1. q-Serena Williams, 9040 2. q-Victoria Azarenka, 6270 3. Maria Sharapova, 5891 4. Agnieszka Radwanska, 4897 5. Sara Errani, 4130 6. Li Na, 4090 7. Petra Kvitova, 3220 8. Marion Bartoli, 3174 9. Jelena Jankovic, 2876 10. Sloane Stephens, 2767 11. Roberta Vinci, 2720 12. Sabine Lisicki, 2532 13. Caroline Wozniacki, 2498 14. Angelique Kerber, 2417 15. Kirsten Flipkens, 2378 16. Simona Halep, 2365 17. Maria Kirilenko, 2311 18. Carla Suarez Navarro, 2097 19. Sam Stosur, 2087 20. Sorana Cirstea, 2060 21. Ana Ivanovic, 1994 22. Dominika Cibulkova, 1875 23. Elena Vesnina, 1765 24. Svetlana Kuznetsova, 1679 25. Alize Cornet, 1675 Doubles 1. Sara Errani and Roberta Vinci, 7,090 2. Nadia Petrova and Katarina Srebotnik, 5,660 3. Ekaterina Makarova and Elena Vesnina, 5,471 4. Hsieh Su-wei and Peng Shuai, 4,836 5. Anna-Lena Groenefeld and Kveta Peschke, 4,130 6. Ashleigh Barty and Casey Dellacqua, 3,215 7. Raquel Kops-Jones and Abigail Spears, 2,690 8. Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova and Lucie Safarova, 2,636 9. Andrea Hlavackova and Lucie Hradecka, 2,209 10. Bethanie Mattek-Sands and Sania Mirza, 2,166

NASCAR Sprint Cup Schedule-Winners Feb. 16 — x-The Sprint Unlimited (Kevin Harvick) Feb. 21 — x-Budweiser Duel 2 (Kyle Busch) Feb. 21 — x-Budweiser Duel 1 (Kevin Harvick) Feb. 24 — Daytona 500 (Jimmie Johnson) March 3 — Subway Fresh Fit 500 (Carl Edwards) March 10 — Kobalt Tools 400 (Matt Kenseth) March 17 — Food City 500 (Kasey Kahne) March 24 — Auto Club 400 (Kyle Busch)

kpcnews.com

April 7 — STP Gas Booster 500 (Jimmie Johnson) April 13 — NRA 500 (Kyle Busch) April 21 — STP 400 (Matt Kenseth) April 27 — Toyota Owners 400 (Kevin Harvick) May 5 — Aaron’s 499 (David Ragan) May 11 — Bojangles’ Southern 500 (Matt Kenseth) May 18 — x-Sprint Showdown (Jamie McMurray) May 18 — x-NASCAR Sprint All-Star Race (Jimmie Johnson) May 26 — Coca-Cola 600 (Kevin Harvick) June 2 — FedEx 400 benefiting Autism Speaks (Tony Stewart) June 9 — Party in the Poconos 400 presented by Walmart (Jimmie Johnson) June 16 — Quicken Loans 400 (Greg Biffle) June 23 — Toyota/Save Mart 350 (Martin Truex Jr.) June 30 — Quaker State 400 (Matt Kenseth) July 6 — Coke Zero 400 powered by Coca-Cola (Jimmie Johnson) July 14 — Camping World RV Sales 301 (Brian Vickers) July 28 — Crown Royal Presents The Samuel Deeds 400 at The Brickyard (Ryan Newman) Aug. 4 — GoBowling.com 400 (Kasey Kahne) Aug. 11 — Cheez-It 355 at The Glen (Kyle Busch) Aug. 18 — Pure Michigan 400 (Joey Logano) Aug. 24 — Irwin Tools Night Race (Matt Kenseth) Sep. 1 — AdvoCare 500, Hampton, Ga. Sep. 7 — Federated Auto Parts 400, Richmond, Va. Sep. 15 — GEICO 400, Joliet, Ill. Sep. 22 — Sylvania 300, Loudon, N.H. Sep. 29 — AAA 400, Dover, Del. Oct. 6 — Hollywood Casino 400, Kansas City, Kan. Oct. 12 — Bank of America 500, Concord, N.C. Oct. 20 — Camping World RV Sales 500, Talladega, Ala. Oct. 27 — Goody’s Headache Relief Shot 500, Ridgeway, Va. Nov. 3 — AAA Texas 500, Fort Worth, Texas Nov. 10 — AdvoCare 500 at Phoenix, Avondale, Ariz. Nov. 17 — Ford EcoBoost 400, Homestead, Fla. x-non-points race Points Leaders 1. Jimmie Johnson, 821. 2. Clint Bowyer, 803. 3. Carl Edwards, 768. 4. Kevin Harvick, 760. 5. Kyle Busch, 739. 6. Matt Kenseth, 736. 7. Dale Earnhardt Jr., 714. 8. Kasey Kahne, 701. 9. Greg Biffle, 698. 10. Joey Logano, 685. 11. Brad Keselowski, 681. 12. Kurt Busch, 679. 13. Jeff Gordon, 674. 14. Martin Truex Jr., 663. 15. Ryan Newman, 659. 16. Jamie McMurray, 647. 17. Paul Menard, 638. 18. Aric Almirola, 616. 19. Tony Stewart, 594. 20. Jeff Burton, 592. 21. Juan Pablo Montoya, 590. 22. Marcos Ambrose, 590. 23. Ricky Stenhouse Jr., 582. 24. Casey Mears, 503. 25. Denny Hamlin, 456. 26. David Ragan, 452. 27. Danica Patrick, 436. 28. David Gilliland, 414. 29. Mark Martin, 403. 30. Dave Blaney, 365. 31. Bobby Labonte, 343. 32. David Stremme, 341. 33. David Reutimann, 329. 34. Travis Kvapil, 319. 35. J.J. Yeley, 317. 36. A J Allmendinger, 278. 37. Michael McDowell, 118. 38. Timmy Hill, 114. 39. Michael Waltrip, 102. 40. Scott Speed, 98. 41. Ken Schrader, 85. 42. Terry Labonte, 77. 43. Boris Said, 48. 44. Ron Fellows, 31. 45. Alex Kennedy, 21. 46. Justin Marks, 14. 47. Victor Gonzalez Jr., 10. 48. Scott Riggs, 10. 49. Brian Keselowski, 9. 50. Tomy Drissi, 8.

NASCAR Nationwide Schedule-Winners Feb. 23 — DRIVE4COPD 300 (Tony Stewart) March 2 — Dollar General 200 (Kyle Busch) March 9 — Sam’s Town 300 (Sam Hornish Jr.) March 16 — Jeff Foxworthy’s Grit Chips 300 (Kyle Busch) March 23 — Royal Purple 300 (Kyle Busch) April 12 — O’Reilly Auto Parts 300 (Kyle Busch) April 26 — ToyotaCare 250 (Brad Keselowski) May 4 — Aaron’s 312 (Regan Smith) May 10 — VFW Sport Clips Help a Hero 200 (Kyle Busch) May 25 — History 300 (Kyle Busch) June 1 — 5-hour ENERGY 200 (Joey Logano) June 9 — DuPont Pioneer 250 (Trevor Bayne) June 15 — Alliance Truck Parts 250 (Regan Smith) June 22 — Johnsonville Sausage 200 (A J Allmendinger) June 28 — Feed The Children 300 (Brad Keselowski) July 5 — Subway Firecracker 250 powered by Coca-Cola (Matt Kenseth) July 13 — CNBC Prime’s The Profit 200 (Kyle Busch) July 21 — STP 300 (Joey Logano) July 27 — Indiana 250 (Kyle Busch) Aug. 3 — U.S. Cellular 250 (Brad Keselowski) Aug. 10 — Zippo 200 (Brad Keselowski) Aug. 17 — Nationwide Children’s Hospital 200 (A J Allmendinger) Aug. 23 — Food City 250 (Kyle Busch) Aug. 31 — Great Clips/Grit Chips 300, Hampton, Ga. Sep. 6 — Virginia 529 College Savings 250, Richmond, Va. Sep. 14 — Dollar General 300 powered by Coca-Cola, Joliet, Ill. Sep. 21 — Kentucky 300, Sparta, Ky. Sep. 28 — Dover 200, Dover, Del. Oct. 5 — Kansas Lottery 300, Kansas City, Kan. Oct. 11 — Dollar General 300, Concord, N.C. Nov. 2 — O’Reilly Auto Parts Challenge, Fort Worth, Texas Nov. 9 — ServiceMaster 200, Avondale, Ariz. Nov. 16 — Ford EcoBoost 300, Homestead, Fla. Points Leaders 1. Sam Hornish Jr., 801. 2. Austin Dillon, 795. 3. Elliott Sadler, 790. 4. Regan Smith, 777. 5. Justin Allgaier, 762. 6. Brian Vickers, 761. 7. Brian Scott, 741. 8. Kyle Larson, 735. 9. Trevor Bayne, 734. 10. Parker Kligerman, 696. 11. Alex Bowman, 628. 12. Nelson Piquet Jr., 609. 13. Mike Bliss, 577. 14. Travis Pastrana, 539. 15. Reed Sorenson, 443. 16. Jeremy Clements, 442. 17. Mike Wallace, 421. 18. Michael Annett, 391. 19. Eric McClure, 380. 20. Joe Nemechek, 339. 21. Cole Whitt, 279. 22. Johanna Long, 266. 23. Jeffrey Earnhardt, 266. 24. Blake Koch, 260. 25. Dexter Stacey, 240. 26. Kevin Swindell, 238. 27. Brad Sweet, 234. 28. Landon Cassill, 201. 29. Jamie Dick, 180. 30. Josh Wise, 179. 31. Jeff Green, 167. 32. Hal Martin, 163. 33. Robert Richardson Jr., 160. 34. Joey Gase, 151. 35. Chris Buescher, 139. 36. Jason White, 138.

37. Juan Carlos Blum, 38. Kevin Lepage, 39. Kenny Wallace, 40. Kyle Fowler, 41. Mike Harmon, 42. Max Papis, 43. Drew Herring, 44. Daryl Harr, 45. Carl Long, 46. Harrison Rhodes, 47. Ken Butler, 48. Danny Efland, 49. Owen Kelly, 50. Tony Raines,

125. 105. 101. 101. 99. 81. 80. 78. 75. 66. 66. 64. 62. 62.

NASCAR Camping World Trucks Points Leaders 1. Matt Crafton, 2. James Buescher, 3. Jeb Burton, 4. Ty Dillon, 5. Timothy Peters, 6. Miguel Paludo, 7. Ryan Blaney, 8. Brendan Gaughan, 9. Johnny Sauter, 10. Joey Coulter, 11. Darrell Wallace Jr., 12. Ron Hornaday Jr., 13. Dakoda Armstrong, 14. German Quiroga, 15. John Wes Townley, 16. Max Gresham, 17. Ryan Sieg, 18. Brennan Newberry, 19. Tim George Jr., 20. Ross Chastain, 21. Todd Bodine, 22. Jeff Agnew, 23. Norm Benning, 24. Bryan Silas, 25. David Starr, 26. Chase Elliott, 27. Jennifer Jo Cobb, 28. Erik Jones, 29. Justin Lofton, 30. Caleb Holman, 31. Chris Jones, 32. Justin Jennings, 33. Tyler Young, 34. Chris Lafferty, 35. Chris Cockrum, 36. Brett Moffitt, 37. Clay Greenfield, 38. Jake Crum, 39. Chad Hackenbracht, 40. Kyle Martel, 41. C.J. Faison, 42. Jared Landers, 43. Todd Peck, 44. Cale Gale, 45. Tracy Hines, 46. John King, 47. Dusty Davis, 48. Ben Kennedy, 49. Frank Kimmel, 50. Spencer Gallagher,

498. 449. 445. 440. 426. 422. 421. 418. 409. 399. 386. 383. 382. 355. 343. 323. 297. 280. 252. 219. 215. 203. 203. 201. 200. 197. 152. 112. 105. 100. 100. 97. 97. 69. 67. 57. 56. 54. 47. 40. 39. 32. 32. 31. 31. 26. 24. 24. 23. 22.

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SPORTS BRIEFS • Dean, VanWye Hannah’s best of week for The Star AUBURN — P.J. Dean of Eastside and Maddie VanWye of DeKalb are Hannah Holstein’s first picks for Preps of the Week for the fall sports season for The Star. Dean had a huge night for the Blazer football squad as it captured the Train Trophy with a 46-22 win against county rival Garrett. Dean scored five TDs, scoring on runs of 10, 9, 1 and 60 yards, and also catching a 29-yard scoring Dean pass. He gained 267 yards rushing on only 18 attempts. VanWye had a pair of two-goal games for DeKalb’s girls soccer team. She scored twice as the Barons shellacked Northrop 8-3 in their opener, and also had both goals as DeKalb won over VanWye Warsaw in the Shindigz National Soccer Festival in Fort Wayne In the MJS Apparel football contest, Ned Donaldson of Auburn was the winner by selecting 17 of the 20 winning teams. He missed only Eastside’s win, the Jets over the Giants and the Cowboys over the Bengals. Cathy Armstrong and Skip Zellers of Auburn both missed only four games. Wade Hantz of Auburn missed just five. Hannah Holstein is tied with Mark Murdock for the lead in the competition after one week after both went 16-4. Ken Fillmore was 14-6 and Jim Fisher 13-7.

IndyCars Schedule-Winners March 24 — Grand Prix of St. Petersburg (James Hinchcliffe) April 7 — Grand Prix of Alabama (Ryan Hunter-Reay) April 21 — Grand Prix of Long Beach (Takuma Sato) May 5 — Sao Paulo Indy 300 (James Hinchcliffe) May 26 — Indianapolis 500 (Tony Kanaan) June 1 — Dual in Detroit Race 1 (Mike Conway) June 2 — Dual in Detroit Race 2 (Simon Pagenaud) June 8 — Firestone 550 (Helio Castroneves) June 15 — Milwaukee IndyFest (Ryan Hunter-Reay) June 23 — Iowa Corn Indy 250 (James Hinchcliffe) July 7 — Pocono IndyCar 400 (Scott Dixon) July 13 — Indy Toronto Race 1 (Scott Dixon) July 14 — Indy Toronto Race 2 (Scott Dixon) Aug. 4 — Indy 200 at Mid-Ohio (Charlie Kimball) Aug. 25 — Grand Prix of Sonoma (Will Power) Sep. 1 — Grand Prix of Baltimore, Baltimore Oct. 5 — Grand Prix of Houston 1, Houston Oct. 6 — Grand Prix of Houston 2, Houston Oct. 19 — MAVTV 500, Fontana, Calif. Points Leaders 1. Helio Castroneves, 479. 2. Scott Dixon, 440. 3. Ryan Hunter-Reay, 417. 4. Marco Andretti, 409. 5. Simon Pagenaud, 380. 6. Dario Franchitti, 379. 7. Justin Wilson, 361. 8. Will Power, 356. 9. James Hinchcliffe, 350. 10. Charlie Kimball, 335. 11. Tony Kanaan, 331. 12. E.J. Viso, 287. 13. Takuma Sato, 272. 14. Sebastien Bourdais, 261. 15. Ed Carpenter, 261. 16. Graham Rahal, 252. 17. Josef Newgarden, 251. 18. Simona de Silvestro, 248. 19. James Jakes, 237. 20. Tristan Vautier, 210. 21. Sebastian Saavedra, 172. 22. Oriol Servia, 167. 23. Alex Tagliani, 163. 24. Mike Conway, 149. 25. Ryan Briscoe, 100. 26. J.R. Hildebrand, 93. 27. Ana Beatriz, 72. 28. Carlos Munoz, 67. 29. A J Allmendinger, 65. 30. Pippa Mann, 29. 31. James Davison, 27. 32. Luca Filippi, 14. 33. Conor Daly, 11. 34. Townsend Bell, 10. 35. Lucas Luhr, 8. 36. Katherine Legge, 8. 37. Buddy Lazier, 8.

NHRA Standings Top Fuel 1, Shawn Langdon, 1,370. 2, Spencer Massey, 1,249. 3, Tony Schumacher, 1,199. 4, Doug Kalitta, 1,009. 5, Khalid alBalooshi, 1,002. 6, Antron Brown, 994. 7, Clay Millican, 928. 8, Morgan Lucas, 917. 9, Steve Torrence, 794. 10, Bob Vandergriff, 789, Funny Car 1, Matt Hagan, 1,253. 2, Ron Capps, 1,129. 3, (tie) Johnny Gray, 1,066. Cruz Pedregon, 1,066. 5,John Force, 1,054. 6, Courtney Force, 1,039. 7, Jack Beckman, 1,015. 8, Tim Wilkerson, 952. 9, Bob Tasca III, 906. 10, Robert Hight, 902, Pro Stock 1, Mike Edwards, 1,540. 2, Allen Johnson, 1,390. 3, Jeg Coughlin, 1,275. 4, Vincent Nobile, 1,113. 5, Shane Gray, 1,031. 6, Jason Line, 1,008. 7, Greg Anderson, 977. 8, V, Gaines, 879. 9, Erica Enders-Stevens, 779. 10, Rodger Brogdon, 724, Pro Stock Motorcycle 1, Hector Arana Jr, 795, 2, Matt Smith, 646, 3, Michael Ray, 599, 4, Hector Arana, 553, 5, John Hall, 534, 6, Scotty Pollacheck, 523, 7, Eddie Krawiec, 465, 8, Adam Arana, 462, 9, Shawn Gann, 428, 10, Steve Johnson, 424,

Transactions BASEBALL American League NEW YORK YANKEES — Reinstated SS Derek Jeter from the 15-day DL. Optioned RHP Preston Claiborne to Scranton/Wilkes-Barre (IL). TORONTO BLUE JAYS — Reinstated LHP Aaron Loup from the paternity list. Designated RHP Chien-Ming Wang for assignment. National League ATLANTA BRAVES — Sent 2B Dan Uggla to Gwinnett (IL) for a rehab assignment. MIAMI MARLINS — Optioned INF Gil Velazquez to New Orleans (PCL). PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES — Placed OF Casper Wells on the 15-day DL. Selected the contract of INF/OF Pete Orr from Lehigh Valley (IL). Transferred 1B Ryan Howard to the 60-day DL. Can-Am League TROIS-RIVIERES AIGLES — Exercised the 2014 options on RHP Dan BrittonFoster, LHP Garrett Bullock, LHP Alex Burkard, LHP Rob Cooper, RHP Sean Keeler, RHP David LeBlanc, RHP Matt McDonald, RHP Luis Munoz, RHP Nick Purdy, RHP Nick Sarianides, RHP Jeff Shields, RHP Tyler Wilson.

Tracy McGrady announces retirement from NBA NEW YORK (AP) — Tracy McGrady announced his retirement from the NBA on Monday, ending a 16-year career that included two scoring titles, seven All-Star appearances, injuries to his knee and back and zero playoff series wins while he was leading the way. The straight-from-high school project who blossomed into a dominant, two-way superstar will always be remembered, too, as a player who struggled with injuries. McGrady didn’t rule out continuing his career overseas, perhaps in China where he played last season. “Officially retired from the NBA,” he said on ESPN. “Door’s still open.” He averaged 19.6 points, 5.6 rebounds and 4.4 assists per game in his career and at one point was considered one of the best perimeter players of his generation, a talent that rivaled Kobe Bryant and any other player in the league. He delivered his finest individual season in 2002-03, winning his first scoring title with 32.1 points while averaging 6.5 rebounds, 5.5 assists and 1.7 steals in a tour-de-force season that ended, once again, with a first-round exit at the hands of the Pistons. After a stint with the Hawks, McGrady spent most of last season playing in China until the Spurs jettisoned Stephen Jackson and asked McGrady if he was interested in being an insurance policy for them in the playoffs. He played just 31 minutes in six games during San Antonio’s run to the NBA Finals.

Jets release Braylon Edwards FLORHAM PARK, N.J. (AP) — The New York Jets have released wide receiver Braylon Edwards, trimming their roster to the mandatory 75 players. Edwards was dealing with a leg injury that kept him out of the team’s preseason game against the Giants on Saturday night. Edwards was signed just before training camp began, marking his third tenure with the Jets. He had been given rest days throughout camp as a precaution, but the Jets appear to have moved on. The team signed Mohamed Massaquoi last week to add depth to the receiving corps. The 30-year-old Edwards played his first four seasons in Cleveland, and was acquired by the Jets in 2009. He signed with San Francisco as a free agent in 2011, and was claimed late last season off waivers by the Jets from Seattle.

Injuries sideline two captains at Michigan ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) — Michigan surprised many observers when they announced they would have four captains this year. As it turns out, they are going to open the season with just two. Linebacker Jake Ryan is out until at least October as he recovers from a torn ACL, and Brady Hoke said Monday that safety Courtney Avery is expected to miss two weeks after having arthroscopic knee surgery over the weekend. Avery found out that he had been named captain the day after his operation. The injuries to Avery and Ryan leave linebacker Cam Gordon and offensive tackle Taylor Lewan as the only healthy captains while the No. 17 Wolverines prepare for Saturday’s opener against Central Michigan. Hoke didn’t explain why the Wolverines picked four captains instead of the usual three, just saying that was how the votes turned out.


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THE NEWS SUN

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The

Star

THE HERALD REPUBLICAN

TUESDAY, AUGUST 27, 2013

What Others Say •

Letter Policy •

Going nowhere on U.S. nuclear waste A federal court delivered a much-deserved rebuke of the Obama administration recently for its handling of the proposed Yucca Mountain nuclear waste dump in Nevada. It turns out the administration can’t simply ignore a law it doesn’t like — or at least couldn’t in this case. If the law says the Nuclear Regulatory Commission must review Yucca’s license application, then that’s what the NRC must do. But make no mistake: The court decision has not in any meaningful way revived the site as a potential depository for the nation’s spent nuclear fuel. Indeed, we think it mainly highlights the dysfunctional state of civilian nuclear policy. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid got it right in his reaction. “The place is locked up, it’s padlocked,” he said. “Nothing is happening with Yucca Mountain.” As you might guess, the Nevada senator is delighted with this paralysis. But most Americans should be disturbed. Ideally, the U.S. should not be storing radioactive waste at nuclear plants scattered about the country. Spent fuel should be reprocessed, as it is in other countries, which would recycle more than 90 percent of it. And the remainder should be stored in a secure location, such as — you guessed it — Yucca Mountain. But even with this court ruling, the U.S. is no closer today to a rational disposal policy. The obstacles to opening any depository, beginning with a state’s effective veto and various congressional approvals, remain too high. Although we have supported the Yucca Mountain site, it may be time for officials to rethink what to do about nuclear waste and adopt a less-than-ideal but workable fallback plan. Anyone serious about transitioning this nation off fossil fuels needs to recognize that nuclear energy will have a role — and that it is critical to solve the problem of nuclear waste.

We welcome letters to the editor. All letters must be submitted with the author’s signature, address and daytime telephone number. We reserve the right to reject or edit letters on the basis of libel, poor taste or repetition. Mail letters to: The News Sun 102 N. Main St. P.O. Box 39 Kendallville, IN 46755 Email: dkurtz@kpcmedia. com The Star 118 W. Ninth St. Auburn, IN 46706 Email: dkurtz@kpcmedia. com The Herald Republican 45 S. Public Square Angola, IN 46703 Email: mmarturello@ kpcmedia.com

Letters to The Editor • National minimum-wage boycotts are misguided To the editor: I worked several minimum-wage jobs during high school, through college (working as a journalist), and barely made much more than minimum wage in my first corporate job in the PR department of a Fortune 500 company. McDonald’s was a client that I served during my time at Golin/Harris, the legendary PR firm that launched McDonald’s with a partnership with Ray Kroc that endures today. Unless you

have worked in the restaurant business, or any QSR (quick service restaurant), or a small mom and pop diner, you don’t know the economies of survival in this industry. Go ahead. Do what you can to win the fight to raise the minimum wage to $15 for entry-level jobs at Wal-Mart or McDonald’s. The answer is in incremental increases in the minimum wage. Mark my word … you will see dozens of people lose their jobs in establishments of all types. And with that, get ready to pay! $10 for your Big Mac, fries and drink!

If you are not aware, the restaurant industry has one of the highest failure rates already. Don’t blame businesses that are accountable to shareholders. And don’t blame small businesses who are accountable to their employees, and their own family balance sheet. Instead, look to Washington where all stripes of congressional leaders should do their job and solve the myriad of underlying issues that fuel this misguided hatred for capitalism. Sorry folks, but blaming PR is not going to solve the problem. Todd Appleman Auburn

The Denver Post

Anger forces a doctors’ group to leave Somalia The reluctant pull-out of the medical aid group, Doctors Without Borders, from Somalia after many hard, dangerous years there is a sign of the circumstances that prevail in that East African region. Doctors Without Borders — “Medecins Sans Frontieres” in French — is probably the hardiest and most non-political of the humanitarian groups. It is usually the first in and the last out of world disaster areas, providing care in the most difficult of circumstances to the most miserable victims of sometimes savage conflicts. Thus it has been in Somalia, where MSF has operated since 1991, when the government there collapsed. That area on the map — divided, without coherent government, torn by inter-clan and religion-inspired fighting since 1991 — has been the site of deadly fighting that has claimed up to 1.5 million lives and displaced (either internally or as refugees) mostly into Kenya or Ethiopia, another 2.3 million. Some international organizations, including the United Nations and the African Union, after having spent some $60 billion there, like to pretend that the current body seated — sometimes — in Mogadishu, the capital, is gaining strength and support among Somalis. In fact, the area has at least three different governments — in Mogadishu, in Puntland, and in Somaliland, with other, more local bodies ruling in other towns and areas of what used to be Somalia, making the claim that it is coming back together after 22 years a wish or a joke. The body in Mogadishu, which includes a president, prime minister, cabinet and other trappings of sovereignty, depends for its existence on the presence of 18,000 foreign troops from Burundi, Djibouti, Kenya, Uganda and Sierra Leone, all financed from abroad. A Somali national army is in the process of being trained by foreign troops, but the general view is that the Mogadishu government would be forced to flee the country in haste if the foreign troops were withdrawn. … Medecins Sans Frontieres is pulling out, not because it is no longer needed — for example, a polio outbreak has just occurred in Somalia, with more than a hundred cases — but because it does not feel it can continue to work there in safety. The decision to leave was made after violent attacks on the organization’s staff members, who treated some 665,300 Somalis last year. Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

March of history is a monument in memory speech, Lincoln’s memorial, its Doric Few half-century commemorations columns symbolizing ancient and raise as many complex and uncomforteternal values, was the backdrop of able questions as does the 50th Marian Anderson’s contralto anniversary of the March on in a celebrated 1939 episode Washington: of defiance and determination With a black man in the to the strains of “My Country, White House, has Martin ‘Tis of Thee.” Luther King’s dream been In the pitch-perfect realized? With American social symmetry afforded by the mobility seeming to be stalled, decimal system, we mark the is the American Dream a dream 50th anniversary of King’s deferred? With nearly a million dream in the same year as the black men in prison, is the King dream a dream denied? DAVID M. 150th anniversary of those other hinges of history, the Plus: Why did the events of August 1963 sear us all so SHRIBMAN Emancipation Proclamation and Battle of Gettysburg, and of indelibly? What was the power the only other speech in all of in that speech, and in that American history that changed march? the American character, the These questions haunt Gettysburg Address, whose a nation that yearns to be anniversary is but a dozen weeks away. post-racial. But in asking them — and Lest anyone believe that every heart they are top-of-mind for so many was turned by the summer march of of us this season — we sometimes 1963, we must recall that we mark overlook the remarkable development behind it all, and behind this summer’s another 50th anniversary this year, in three weeks: the bombing of the 16th commemorations. Street Baptist Church in Birmingham, The civil rights movement, lasting Ala., that left four girls dead. Three roughly from 1955 to 1968 but with of them would have been 64 in this antecedents reaching far earlier and anniversary year; one would have been with effects cascading far later, 61: grandmothers, perhaps, maybe produced a profound transformation nearing retirement in a world they — and has itself experienced just as might not have recognized. profound a transformation. And lest anyone think that an event It has been transformed in American memory from a much-reviled outsiders’ marked for decades by presidents was embraced by the president at the time, movement making what seemed to be extremist demands into a much-beloved remember how the prospect of this popular uprising that almost seamlessly march unsettled John F. Kennedy, who watched nervously on a black-andextended the logic of American values white television in the White House. In to a broader base of the nation. Many the next march that rocked Washington of its roots were in the effort to open and the nation’s conscience, the the schoolhouse doors, and today its May 1970 demonstration against the goals (and incomplete achievements) invasion of Cambodia and the student are so widely embraced that schools deaths at Kent State, Richard M. Nixon are closed in the middle of each at least met with the protesters. It January to celebrate its aspirations. was a furtive meeting, to be sure. It It began as a terrifying assault on occurred at the Lincoln Memorial. broad, commonplace practices, led by The transformation that King began the bold and the brave, steeped in civil — the twin of the transformation disobedience, prosecuted on buses and prompted by Lincoln’s speech at a at lunch counters and at the violent battlefield cemetery — is one of the end of the fire hoses of the powerful. most significant in human history, and It evolved in memory into a proud, it is, along with the victory over four broad-based surge of honor whose tyrannies that required one hot war and principal genius is celebrated with a another cold one, a signature American holiday and a Washington monument. achievement of what once was called Abraham Lincoln today has only the the American Century. monument, no longer the holiday. But before the self-congratuIn history’s long view, Lincoln lation becomes too hearty, let’s and King — one white and one black, remember that this is not a “mission one a 19th-century martyr and the accomplished” moment and that all this other a 20th-century one — might be was prompted by one of the greatest remembered as relay runners in the injustices in all of human history, a same long-distance race. Indeed, long stain on the American story that begs before it was the backdrop for King’s

In history’s long view, Lincoln and King — one white and one black, one a 19th-century martyr and the other a 20th-century one — might be remembered as relay runners in the same long-distance race.

• a different question, still without an answer: Why did it take so long? From our perspective here in the second term of the Barack Obama administration, the turning point almost surely was the August agonistes of 1963. For it is almost certain that the spark that bridged the gap between the unimaginable and the inevitable was that March on Washington. “That march was the ultimate mobilization of what had been going on in all of the cities of the South, the ultimate gathering that expressed what was on the mind of black America,” Vernon Jordan, the former president of the National Urban League, said in a telephone conversation this summer. “What happened 50 years ago is that it all came together and the world could see it and appreciate its meaning.” It is difficult to remember today, when that march is a monument in memory — cast in stone, you might say, like the Lincoln and King memorials — that the genius of it all wasn’t only in the careful planning of A. Philip Randolph and Bayard Rustin. It also grew out of the improvisation prompted by Mahalia Jackson, once so well known that it wasn’t necessary to identify her as the Queen of Gospel. King was deep into his oration when Jackson, who had sung at a rally to raise money for the Montgomery bus boycott of 1956, worried that he was losing his forward momentum. She urged him: Tell them about the dream, Martin. King had given his “dream” riff many times — it wasn’t a new element of his repertoire when he stood on the Lincoln Memorial steps. Then again, Lincoln’s speech at Gettysburg, with its biblical allusions and rhythms, wasn’t a complete original either. The result wasn’t only history. It changed history. DAVID M. SHRIBMAN is the executive editor of the Pittsburgh Post Gazette. His email is dshribman@post-gazette.com.


COMICS • TV LISTINGS •

TUESDAY, AUGUST 27, 2013

DUSTIN BY STEVE KELLEY & JEFF PARKER

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Woman battling her past must honestly face future DEAR ABBY: I am a 65-year-old active woman who still works. I play tennis several times a week and have a loving relationship with my kids. I know with certainty that I have many good things in my life. However, since my sister died last year, I have been having second thoughts about a lot of the decisions I have made over the years — especially regarding relationships and my choice of jobs. I realize now that more than a few of my decisions were based on low self-esteem, although I don’t come across that way. I’m feeling depressed and lonely, and it’s hard to be positive. I feel like my world is shrinking, and I don’t know how to get back on track and be a positive and happy person again. As it is, I’m faking it with my children, and my friends have no idea how I really

FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE BY LYNN JOHNSTON

GARFIELD BY JIM DAVIS

BLONDIE BY YOUNG AND MARSHALL

feel. How do I improve my life at this late stage? — DEPRESSED IN SAN DIEGO DEAR DEPRESSED: One way would be to be more honest with your friends and fake it less. If they are good friends, they’ll be willing to listen and give you honest DEAR an perspecABBY tive or the benefit of their life Jeanne Phillips experience. That’s what friends do for each other. You are lucky to be vital and active, because it means your world doesn’t have to shrink any more than you want it to.

Because you say you’re lonely, perhaps it’s time to consider enlarging your circle of acquaintances. The loss of your sister is probably what started your re-evaluation of your life and choices, and that’s normal. But please remember that regret is the cancer of life. You can’t change the past, and you mustn’t allow it to cloud your future. While you may be having second thoughts about choices you made when you were younger, the lessons you learned from them have made you the person you are today. DEAR ABBY is written by Abigail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was founded by her mother, Pauline Phillips. Write Dear Abby at DearAbby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.

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On this date: • In 1979, British war hero Lord Louis Mountbatten and three other people, including his 14-year-old grandson Nicholas, were killed off the coast of Ireland in a boat explosion claimed by the Irish Republican Army. storm over the separation employees before being shot • In 2008, Barack Obama was nominated for president by the Democratic National Convention in Denver.

THE BORN LOSER BY ART & CHIP SANSOM

Follow these tips for guarding against tick bites them. They are brown and about the size of a poppy seed. If they have two days to feed on our skin, they will transmit the Lyme disease bacteria to us. (Occasionally, adult female deer ticks feed on us, but they are much bigger and ASK harder to DOCTOR K. miss.) Deer ticks are to Dr. Anthony designed feed successon us. Komaroff fully They have a two-pronged mouthpart that sticks to our skin because each part has tiny backward-pointing barbs. Just to be sure that their mouthparts stick to our skin,

their saliva forms a sticky glue. It’s a fiendishly clever anatomy. We also have been clever, however: We invented tweezers. To remove a tick, use a pair of fine-tipped tweezers to grasp the tick as close to your skin as possible. Then pull it upward, slowly and steadily. If the mouthpart remains in the skin, try to remove it. If you can’t, check with your doctor. Try not to crush or squeeze an attached tick. Once the tick has been removed, clean your skin and wash your hands with soap and warm water. Dispose of the tick by placing it in alcohol or flushing it down the toilet. The first sign of Lyme disease is often a rash that looks like a red bull’s-eye. Keep an eye out for this rash at the site of your tick bite for about one month after you’ve been bitten. If you

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DEAR DOCTOR K: I live in a heavily wooded area, so I’d like to know the best way to remove a tick if you spot one on your skin. DEAR READER: Knowing how to remove a tick is a useful skill for anyone who spends time outdoors, or who cares for someone who does. The sooner a tick is removed — correctly — the less likely the critter can deliver bacteria that cause Lyme disease or other tick-borne diseases. Very young deer ticks feed on mice and other small mammals. Those animals have the bacteria that cause Lyme disease in their blood. Once the tick feeds, the bacteria enter the ticks. The next late spring or summer these ticks are “older children.” This is typically the time that they will get on our skin and start to feed. Because they’re so small, it’s easy not to notice

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notice a rash, contact your doctor right away. Antibiotics can usually cure the illness. Follow these tips to prevent tick bites: • Avoid woods, high brush and grasses, where ticks hide. • Wear light-colored clothing, which makes ticks easier to spot. • Tuck your pants inside your socks to create a physical barrier. • Use insect repellent, especially those containing DEET or permethrin. • Stay in the sun. Ticks don’t like dry, open areas. • Thoroughly inspect yourself, your children and your pets, especially the legs and groin, after you’ve been out in the woods. DR. KOMAROFF is a physician and professor at Harvard Medical School. His website is AskDoctorK.com.

Crossword Puzzle •


B6

kpcnews.com

TUESDAY, AUGUST 27, 2013

Accused Chinese official attacks witnesses JINAN, China (AP) — China’s most sensational trial in decades ended Monday with disgraced politician Bo Xilai hinting at a love triangle involving his wife and former right hand man — both key witnesses against him — as he made last-ditch efforts to redeem his reputation. The prosecution countered by saying Bo should be severely punished because he showed no remorse in the five-day corruption trial in the eastern city of Jinan, aimed at capping a scandal set off by his wife’s murder of a British businessman and resulting in Bo’s purge from top posts and the Communist Party. In testimony, Bo denounced both his wife, Gu Kailai, as crazy and his former police chief, Wang Lijun, as dishonest, as he has sought to portray himself as an official who worked too hard to scrutinize his family’s affairs and who was surrounded by conniving, duplicitous people.

“He (Wang) was secretly in love with Gu Kailai, his emotions were tangled and he could not extricate himself,” Bo told the court. Prosecutors said Monday that the trial proceedings have shown adequate proof of Bo’s guilt on charges of netting $4.3 million through bribes and embezzlement and abuse of power in interfering with the murder investigation. A date for the verdict has not been given. Bo faces a possible life sentence. “The defendant’s crimes are extremely grave, and he also refuses to admit guilt. As such, the circumstances do not call for a lenient punishment but a severe one, in accordance with the law,” the prosecutor said, according to a transcript of the court proceedings. Though Bo’s downfall has widely been perceived as the result of his defeat in party infighting ahead of last fall’s once-a-decade leadership transition, officials have taken unusual steps to portray his trial as a legitimate prosecution

of his misdeeds, including the release of detailed, though presumably vetted, transcripts of the proceedings. Bo mounted an unexpectedly vigorous defense against the criminal charges, recanting earlier confessions and rarely expressing contrition as he sought to lay the blame for most of the misdeeds on his wife and others. However, he refrained from using the trial as a stage to denounce the administration and his political opponents, according to the transcripts. Most importantly, he acknowledged the party’s legitimacy while holding firm to his denial of the charges — a move that at once seeks to retain his honor and appeal to party loyalists. “I know I am not a perfect person and I had a bad temper and acted subjectively and I made serious faults and mistakes,” Bo said. “I deeply feel that I failed to govern my family

and it had a negative effect on the state. I sincerely accept the investigation from the party and the judicial departments, but the charge of corruption is not true.” Bo added a folksy touch to his arguments, hitting on themes of filial piety, simplicity and tradition that appeal to his support base, made up mostly of farmers and workers at the lowest rung of society who have been disillusioned by the perceived immorality of party cadres. He said the jacket he was wearing was made by a local township company in Dalian, and the pants were bought by his mother in the 1960s. In his efforts to distance himself from Gu, he admitted an affair and said the couple had been estranged at one point. Bo was accused, among other things, of providing political favors to a businessman, Xu Ming, in return for having him at his family’s beck and call. According to Bo’s wife, Xu

gave the family expensive gifts that included a villa in France, international airfare to three continents, abalone dinners and a Segway scooter — and Gu said Bo knew about the gifts because she told him. Bo is also accused of funneling $800,000 in government funds from a secret project. The court also heard allegations over the weekend that Bo abused his power as the Communist Party secretary of Chongqing to block an investigation into the Briton’s murder, as well as to hide his aide’s embarrassing flight to a U.S. consulate — an event that help set the scandal into motion. On Monday, Bo repeated his doubts about the evidence presented by prosecutors while introducing a bizarre twist to the narrative. Bo said that Wang tried to defect to the consulate early last year, not in a dispute over the investigation into the Briton’s murder — as was

commonly understood — but because he had confessed his feelings to Gu and feared Bo’s rage over that trespass. “He knew my personality, he’d trespassed on my family and violated my basic emotions, this is the real reason he decided to defect. Wang Lijun in reality is trying to muddy the waters,” Bo testified. He also said that Gu and Wang were as close as “glue and lacquer” and that they had a “very special relationship; I was frustrated by that.” Wang had earlier said in court he went to the Americans because he feared for his safety after he told Bo that the politician’s wife had murdered the Briton. Striking a note of resignation, Bo thanked the court for letting him fully defend himself. “I know there is no escape from my fate and sometimes I was weak at heart. Faced by imprisonment, I have mixed feelings and the only thing I have is the rest of my life.”

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ADOPTIONS

NEEDED The

S Star

is looking for a full-time sports editor/ reporter to fill an immediate opening in Auburn. The successful applicant will have strong writing, editing and layout skills. A journalism degree is preferred, but not required. Send resumé to: Nancy Sible, Human Resources KPC Media Group Inc. 102 N. Main St., P.O. Box 39 Kendallville, IN 46755 nsible@kpcmedia.com EOE

CARRIER

OPPORTUNITIES INDEPENDENT

CONTRACTORS

Circulation Department Route available in Ligonier, Contact: Misty Easterday earn over $1,100 a month, about 2 hours a day. • VALID DRIVER’S LICENSE • Responsible Adult • Reliable Transportation • Available 7 days a week.

102 N. Main St., Kendallville Phone: 800-717-4679 ext. 105 E-mail: newssundm@kpcnews.net Carriers are independent contractors and not employees.

CARRIER

OPPORTUNITIES

NTRACTORS DEPENDENT CO

IN

Circulation Department

Albion/Brimfield motor route. Contact: Misty Easterday Earn over $1,000 per month in 2+ hr/day. • VALID DRIVER’S LICENSE • Responsible Adult • Reliable Transportation • Available 7 days a week.

102 N. Main St., Kendallville Phone: 800-717-4679 ext. 105 E-mail: newssundm@kpcmedia.com Carriers are independent contractors and not employees.

CARRIER

OPPORTUNITIES

IMMEDIATE OPENINGS!!!

IN

Adult Motor Routes in Auburn, Garrett & Waterloo

Too many positions to list individually!

Production Openings $8 - $14 per hour Technical Positions $13-$17 per hour Management - D.O.E.

EMPLOYMENT

Applications accepted M - F or online www.peoplelinkstaffing.com and select the Angola Branch. E.O.E.

■ ◆ ■ ◆ ■

ADVERTISING SALES DEPARTMENT sharing the many benefits of newspaper, online and niche product advertising with new accounts and current clients. This is a fast-paced, challenging position that requires a selfstarter, someone ready to hit the ground running, with no limits on success. Our sales staff is equipped with the latest, most upto-date research and is fortunate to sell the leading media in Northeast Indiana, whether that be print or online. Applicants must be forward thinking and able to apply the many benefits of KPC Media Group advertising to a variety of businesses. What’s in it for you? In addition to a competitive compensation package and great benefits, we have paid vacation and holidays, 401(k), and a great group of people to work with. Interested candidates should e-mail their resume and cover letter in confidence to KPC’s HR Department at nsible@kpcmedia.com or mail a hardcopy to Nancy Sible, HR Department, KPC Media Group Inc., PO Box 39, Kendallville, IN 46755 Equal Opportunity Employer/ Drug Free Workplace

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Sudoku Puzzle Complete the grid so that every row, column and 3x3 box contains every digit from 1 to 9 inclusively.

is now accepting applications for

4

NEW OPPORTUNITIES

8

All Shifts - $9.40/hour

1

Attend our Job Fair! WHEN: Wednesday, August 28th and September 4th • 9 a.m. – 3 p.m. WHERE:

9 6

IN ASHLEY, IN FOR

SMALL SWITCH ASSEMBLY WORKERS & WAREHOUSE WORKERS!

7

5 7

3

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1

803 HL Thompson Jr., Dr. Ashley, Indiana (Enter the main entrance by the flagpoles)

9 2

7

Hospital Environmental Services Technicians are responsible for maintaining the highest standards of cleanliness, sanitation, and safety for our patients by cleaning and disinfecting all areas of the facility, distributing linens, maintaining floors, and project cleaning. Successful candidates must be motivated, organized, and dependable. They will have a keen eye for detail, exemplify good customer service and have a high school diploma or equivalent. We have full-time and part-time positions available on 2nd shift. If interested please apply on-line: www.cameronmch .com Cameron Memorial Community Hospital Attn: Human Resources Dept. 416 E. Maumee Street Angola, IN 46703 260-667-5214

■ ◆ ■ ◆ ■

6

2

TRIN, Inc.

Kelly Services is an equal opportunity employer.

9

6

6

Call 260-927-9034 if you are unable to apply during these times.

8 7

Environmental Services Technician

Just your cup of tea!

2 3

Lennard Ag Company in Howe, IN is NOW HIRING: CDL-A and POTATO TRUCK DRIVERS Seasonal semi-truck and straight-truck drivers needed to drive along-side our harvesters in the fields and deliver to our Howe, IN location. All local fields – no overnights. Looking for safe, reliable, and professional drivers.

Health

KPC MEDIA GROUP is interviewing for a position in the

• Valid Driver’s License • Responsible Adult • Reliable Transportation • Available 7 days a week

Carriers are independent contractors and not employees.

CDL-A & Potato Truck Drivers

NOTICES

Supervisors/CNC/Auto Cad/Quality Welders/Forklift/Production/Assembly

Circulation Department Contact: Christy Day

118 W 9th St., Auburn, IN Phone: 260-925-2611 ext. 17 E-mail: cday@kpcmedia.com

General

Steuben - DeKalb - LaGrange Counties

NTRACTORS DEPENDENT CO

ADVERTISING SALES KPC Media Group has a full-time opening for an advertising sales representative in its Kendallville office. This is primarily an inside sales position, handling business and private party customers. Working with the Advertising Director, other sales representatives and support personnel, the sales representative will strive to attain personal and team goals. The ideal candidate will be a customer-focused, goal-oriented individual with excellent grammar, spelling, telephone and computer skills. KPC is a family-owned company that has been serving northeastern Indiana for more than 100 years. We offer a competitive salary and benefits. Send a resume to KPC Media Group Inc., PO Box 39, Kendallville, IN 46755 or e-mail nsible@kpcmedia.com

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JOBS

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EMPLOYMENT

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Sunday

LIFE

THE NEWS SU SUN

5

Difficult rating: EASY 8-27

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Installers Here We “GROW” again Select Flooring is looking for Installers & Helpers. Please apply in person 964 Harlash St. Kendallville 260 347-5565 Janitorial

Full and Part Time Cleaners Needed in the Butler area. Must have clean background. Send Resume via e-mail to: pharrison@emsinc .com Or Call Job Line 1-888-395-2020 ext 3336 State your name, number & city with your message. Janitorial $9/HR in Hudson 2nd Shift PT janitorial position. 5 hr/day, Mon.-Fri. Apply online at: www.thecleaning co.com Questions? 1-888-832-8060 M-F 8am - 4pm

Bored?

4 2

Call Lennard Ag @ (260) 562-3900 for more information or apply at:

The THE

S Star

HERALD

REPUBLICAN 1-800-717-4679 to subscribe

Check out Happenings in Friday’s newspaper!


kpcnews.com

TUESDAY, AUGUST 27, 2013

RENTALS

REAL ESTATE ASSISTANT Requires good organizational and communication skills, computer skills, creativity and ability to multi-task. Prior real estate experience and a real estate license is a plus! 20-30 hrs/wk. Angola office. Email resume to:

APARTMENT RENTAL

realestate46703 @gmail.com

Sunny Summer Savings

■ ❍ ■ ❍ ■ Kitchen manager $30,000+ year Send resume to PO BOX 153 LaGrange, IN 46761

■ ❐ ■ ❐ ■ Toolmaker IMMEDIATE OPENING FOR TOOLMAKER Job shop environment. Must be able to interpret blueprints, run lathes, mills and grinders. Wage dependent upon experience. 1st shift position. Health insurance and retirement benefits available. Mail resume to: MTR Machining Concept, Inc., P.O. Box 383 Ashley, Indiana 46705-0383 or email to: richardbowers@ mtrmachine.com

■ ❐ ■ ❐ ■ Drivers DRIVER TRAINEES NEEDED NOW at Stevens Transport! New drivers earn $750 per week. No CDL? No Problem! CDL & Job Ready in 15 days. 1-877-649-9611 Drivers GORDON TRUCKING CDL-A Drivers Needed! Up to $4,000 Sign On Bonus! Starting Pay Up to .46 cpm. Full Benefits, Excellent Hometime, No East Coast. Call 7 days/wk! TeamGTI.com 888-757-2003 General Heavy Equipment Operator Career! 3 Week Hands On Training School. Bulldozers, Backhoes, Excavators. National Certifications. Lifetime Job Placement Assistance. VA Benefits Eligible! 1-866-362-6497 AC1213

• FREE Heat & Hot Softened Water • Low Security Deposits* • Pet-Friendly Community* • On-site Management & Maintenance Staff *Restrictions apply

CALL TARA TODAY! NELSON ESTATES 260-349-0996 1815 Raleigh Ave., Kendallville 46755 nelsonestates@mrdapartments.com mrdapartments.com

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WANTED: Someone to care for an individual with epilepsy. Free room & board on the lake in exchange for help. Must be CPR certified, background check a must, as well as references. Do not need to be home at all times & may work another job with this opportunity. Serious inquiries only260 585-9560

SEARCHING FOR THE LATEST NEWS?

CLICK ON

USDA 100% Government Loans!--Not just for 1st time buyers! All credit considered! Low rates! Buy any home anywhere for sale by owner or realtor. Academy Mortgage Corporation, 11119 Lima Road, Fort Wayne, IN 46818. Call Nick at 260-494-1111. NLMS146802. Some restrictions may apply. Equal Housing Lender. Se Habla Espanol. (A)

MOBILE HOMES FOR SALE Mobile Homes for Sale in Waterloo, Rome City & Butler. Small parks. No big dogs. Ref req’d. (260) 925-1716

*Restrictions Apply

Angola ONE BR APTS. $425/mo., Free Heat. 260-316-5659 Auburn SPECIAL $99, First Month - 2 BR SENIORS 50+ $475. No Smokers/Pets (260) 925-9525 Avilla 1 & 2 BR APTS $450-$550/ per month. Call 260-897-3188 Kendallville

DEERFIELD APARTMENTS

GARAGE SALES

1998 Deerfield Lane 260 347-5600

Auburn 4564 County Road 35 Across from new fire station Aug 31 * 8-2 Huge Downsizing Sale/One Day Only Decorating items, wall art, birdhouses, bookshelves, small appliances, glassware, dishes, pots & pans, knives, baskets, crocks, jars, antiques, golf clubs, Woodland ducks, lawn items, lams, bedding, books galore, DVDs, purses, old trunk desk, padded rocker, high chairs, cane chairs, card table & chairs, TV, stand, flower pots, rugs, bakeware, old coffee pots & tea kettles, shelving units, Christmas. Far too many items to list. Cash only.

1, 2 & 3 BEDROOM APARTMENT HOMES NOW AVAILABLE NO APPLICATION FEE Now until Sept. 9, 2013

CONDOS/DUPLEXES Kendallville Lg. 2 BR, 1 BA, oversized gar. w/opener. New central air & heat, low utilities, clean, new appl. with W/D, non smoking, patio. $625 mo. + dep. Avail. Sept. 260-582-1345

HOMES FOR RENT Crooked Lake House rental, $900/mo. Occupancy Sept. 15 June 15. 4 BR, 3.5 BA, (260) 573-9512 Kendallville Newly remodeled house, 3 BR 2 BA w/C/A$1,150/mo + dep. 260 347-0435

Auburn 5709 County Road 35 Mon. - Fri. • 9-4 Antiques, exercise equip, household, girls clothing from Kohls, boys clothing, & a little bit of everything. Auburn 909 S. Van Buren Wed. Evening 4pm - 8pm No Early Sales Antiques, jewelry, collectibles, glassware, art, name brand clothes, old clocks, garden items, linens, eclectic misc.

AT YOUR SERVICE BUSINESS & PROFESSIONAL

HOME IMPROVEMENT

BANKRUPTCY FREE CONSULTATION

$25.00 TO START Payment Plans, Chapter 13 No Money down. Filing fee not included. Sat. & Eve. Appts. Avail. Call

Collect: 260-424-0954 act as a debt relief agency under the BK code

DO YOU MOW LAWNS? Be “At Their

WANTED TO BUY

Auburn Corner of 5th & Main in the Auburn Classic Florist Parking Lot Aug. 26 - Sept. 1 8:30 am - 5:30 pm Multi-Family Garage Sale Antiques, furniture, gift items, clothing XS-M, lots of books, next to new 14” Radial tires, & much more.

TIMBER WANTED

Avilla 0034 CR 48 Baseline Rd. East WED. - FRI. •8 - 5 Cast irons stoves & skillets, tools, 12 ft. boat, fishing equip., hunters items, furniture, drapes & bedding, canning & freezing jars, sewing, Craftmatic bed, snowblower, kitchen stools.

MERCHANDISE Cannon downriggers, Unitroll, with full accessories. 80 feet, 26 k 28 pound cannonballs. $250 260-833-3181

Clear Lake 6340 N 700 E Next to Clear Lake Marina Thurs. & Fri. * 9-4 Sat. * 9-12 Yard Sale Antiques, automotive, 40+ years of treasures, golf clubs, porch swing.

FURNITURE Brand NEW in plastic!

Fremont 4835 N 100 E Aug. 30 - Sept. 1 7:00 - 3:00 Last chance for the Best Deals.

PIONEER POLE BUILDINGS Free Estimates Licensed and Insured 2x6 Trusses 45 year Warranted Galvalume Steel 19 Colors Since 1976 #1 in Michigan Call Today 1-800-292-0679

LaGrange 1375 S SR 3 1 1/2 mi. S of US 20 on SR 3 Aug. 28 - 31 • 8 - 5 Boy’s 18 mos. - 5T, Misses, women’s plus, toys, lots of misc.

Power washer 2700 PSI new, used once, 5 tips for spray wand. $240. 260 833-1471

6430 E 784 N Aug. 29 - Sept. 2 • 9 -5 Indoor Huge 2 Family Dishes, toys, handmade dolls, tack, children’s Carharts & clothing, adult jackets & clothing, books, home school stuff, crafts stuff & yarn.

AUTOMOTIVE/ SERVICES $ WANTED $ Junk Cars! Highest prices pd. Free pickup. 260-705-7610 705-7630

USED TIRES Cash for Junk Cars! 701 Krueger St., K’ville. 260-318-5555

TOOLS

ATTENTION: Paying up to $530 for scrap cars. Call me 318-2571

Wolf Lake 1345 Main St. HUGE ESTATE SALE Aug. 29 - Sept. 2 • 9-? Furniture, collectibles, linens & much misc.

GUN SHOW!! Marion, IN - August 31st & September 1st, Five Points Mall, 1129 N. Baldwin Ave. Sat. 9-5, Sun. 9-3 For information call 765-993-8942 Buy! Sell! Trade!

CARS

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Sell your merchandise priced $50 or less for FREE in KPC Classified. Kiss it Goodbye, Make some FAST CASH with the nifty fifty program. Up to 12 words plus phone number.

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HERALD REPUBLICAN THE NEWS SUN

The

S Star

SmartShopper

2007 Toyota Rav 4, 2 WD, 60,000 miles, great condition, one owner. $11,900 260-281-2718 1988 Camaro Iroc-Z Red, interior black & gray, T-top, 96,000 miles. $8,977 260-316-0379 or 260-927-8485

2002 red Caravan runs good, looks really bad 1485 North Shore, Rome City. $850 o/b/o. 260-349-3566

BOATS/MOTORS 1992 - 20 ft. Sweetwater pontoon, 40 hp Yamaha w/ tilt & trim. Seat and deck done 5 yrs. ago. Excel. cond. Has top. $4,000/obo 260 350-0820 1988 Maxum boat, 19.5’ long, 130 hp, mercruiser I/O with trailer $2,500 Like new covered boat lift. 3,500 lb capability $1,200 260-854-3011

City/State/Zip:

MAIL TO: KPC Nifty 50 PO Box 39 • Kendallville, IN 46755 Limit six per family or household per month, not to exceed 24 in a 12 month period. NO multiple phone numbers. Used merchandise only. Must be mailed or dropped off. No phone calls please. Will begin within one week of receipt. One item per ad. Same item 2 times only. When space available.

MERCHANDISE UNDER $50

1964 Chrysler 413 motor long block. $450. 1974 Ford 460 long block and ribbed-case C6 trans. $450 Prices firm. Call Matt. 260-925-6054

Freshly painted white 4 drawers with 4 smaller drawers. $45.00. (260) 927-0658

MOTORCYCLES 04 Honda Shadow Aero Vance&Hines Memphis Shades Ultimate Seat Leather Bags 4100 mls $4250 260-587-3169

2007 Road King Classic Harley Davidson FLHRC, 96 cu. in. 1584 cc, 6 speed trans, extra chrome, custom exhaust, custom seat, loaded. Only 15,109 miles. Over $26,000 invested. For Sale $16,500/obo

1979 Rinkerbuilt Boat, 115 HP Mercury Motor, Deep V 18 foot including trailer. $1,800.00 OBO 260-341-5590 20 ft. aluminum roll in dock. Great shape. $800/obo 260 350-0820

Large Rat /Ferret Cage, Wire. 40L x 17 W x 18H. Has second story. Fremont $40. (260) 316-7636 Large wood dresser or buffett. 4.5’ from side to side. $35.00. (260) 927-0658 NASCAR nextel national guard racing jacket. (size L) $50.00 260 351-4244 Pink & purple Princess TV w/ VCR & CD all combined. 2 remotes. Good cond. Works. Exc. $50.00. (260) 761-5132 Solid oak office desk. 6 drawer and 1 file drawer. Good condition. 34x60x30. $40.00. (260) 347-1380 T183 Plus graphing calculator. Nearly new. $50. 260 665-2584

260 449-9277

MERCHANDISE UNDER $50 3 drawer wood bedside small cabinet. $20.00. (260) 927-0658 5 gallon Army Jeep style gas can. $10.00 260 837-4775 80 model railroad magazines $15.00 260 837-4775 Battery powered Little Tikes Hummer. $50 Fremont. Call evenings 260-479-9272 Brown wood with 2 shelves coffee table-Nice. $20.00. (260) 927-0658 Cat Carrier, metal door $20.00 260 351-4244 Complete set of Apple Festival mugs from 1986 - 20th anniversary - all for $50.00 260 349-1833

Wood cabinet on legs for above toilet-also has two shelves. $20.00 (260) 927-0658

KPC LIMITATIONS LIMITATIONS OF LIABILITY: KPC assumes no liability or financial responsibility for typographical errors or for omission of copy, failure to publish or failure to deliver ad vertising. Our liability for copy errors is limited to your actual charge for the first day & one incorrect day after the ad runs. You must promptly notify KPC of any error on first publication. Claims for adjustment must be made within 30 days of publication and, in the case of multiple runs, claims are allowed for first publication only. KPC is not responsible for and you agree to make no claim for specific or consequential damages resulting from or related in any manner to any error, omission, or failure to publish or deliver.

Craftsman circular saw. $10.00 260 357-8197

ADOPTION

HELP WANTED - DRIVERS

Thank you for the gift of life. We will delight in loving your newborn in our happy, secure home. Expenses paid. Kelly and Michael 888-930-5815

Home Daily Truck Driving Positions - Must have: Class A and 1 yr Tractor/ Trailer Exp. Drive to IL, MI, WI 1st and 2nd shift openings available. Call Veriha Trucking 800-3339291 or apply at Veriha.com

ADOPT: A loving married couple wishes to adopt newborn to support wholeheartedly, educate fully, discipline fairly, engage completely and love unconditionally! Natalie/ David: 1-855-759-2229. www.davidandnatalie.info CAREER TRAINING

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AIRLINE CAREERS begin here - Get FAA approved Aviation Tech training. Financial aid if qualified. Job placement assistance. CALL Aviation Institute of Maintenance 877-523-5807 www.FixJets.com AC0901

Drivers - CDL-A SOLO & TEAM DRIVERS NEEDED! Top Pay & Full Benefits. Even MORE Pay for Hazmat! New Trucks Arriving Daily! CDL Grads Welcome! 800-942-2104 www.TotalMS.com

FOR SALE MERCHANDISE, SERVICES & MISCELLANEOUS

Get more home time on Transport America’s regional runs. Great miles, equipment + extras. Enjoy Transport America’s great driver experience! Tadrivers.com or 866-2040648.

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! 1-800-283-0560

Name: Address:

AUTO PARTS & ACCESSORIES

Indiana Classified Advertising Network

SAVE on Cable TV-InternetDigital Phone-Satellite. You`ve Got A Choice! Options from ALL major service providers. Call us to learn more! CALL Today. 888-541-7967 HELP WANTED

Established in 1963

2008 Dodge Caravan. 71K, Loaded, 3 tvs, swivel n go, many extras $11,900 260-668-9685

Guaranteed Top Dollar For Junk Cars, Trucks & Vans. Call Jack 260-466-8689

DirecTV - Over 140 channels only $29.99 a month. Call Now! Triple savings! $636.00 in Savings, Free upgrade to Genie & 2013 NFL Sunday ticket free!! Start saving today! 1-800-246-2073

Tear offs, wind damage & reroofs. Call (260)627-0017

BRYAN DRERUP 260-897-2375

1989 Jeep Wrangler 72,016 miles automatic $1,900 (574) 387-3279

Junk Auto Buyer (260) 238-4787

Telephone #:

BILL DRERUP 260-897-2121

SUV’S

IVAN’S TOWING

SPORTING GOODS

FREE ESTIMATES

1772 N. 750 E Avilla, Indiana 46710

1978 Ford Fairmont Station Wagon Drag Race Car. Needs freshened. Call Matt for details. $3,000 firm. 260-925-6054

up to $1000.00

Call Jeff 260-854-9071 Qualified & Insured Serving You Since 1990

William Drerup & Son

CLASSIC CARS

VANS

Tomatoes $20 for 1st 50 lbs $12 for 2nd 50 lbs 260-281-2210

All Phase Remodeling and Handyman Service - No Job too Big or Small !!! Free Estimates

SAND • GRAVEL • SEPTIC TANKS BACKHOE • BULLDOZING ASPHALT AND SEAL COATING DRIVEWAYS AND PARKING LOTS

English Bull Dog Puppy white male, 10 weeks old, parent on site. $1,800. Stud Service avail. 517-283-2124

SETSER TRANSPORT AND TOWING

County Line Roofing

877.791.7877

PETS/ANIMALS

FRUIT & PRODUCE

ROOFING/SIDING

Service”

Wanted: 3 & 4 wheeler ATVs, jetskis, boats, street bikes, dirt bikes, campers, trailers, cars, trucks, snowmobiles, lawn/garden equip., golf carts, related equip. for big auction held Sept. 7. LOW sell fee. All info at www.snowmo bileauction.com or call 517-369-1153. Buyers from 7 states and Canada. White Star, Bronson, Michigan.

4’ oak vanity w/ 4 drawers, marble top w/ Moen faucet, $800 value. Selling for $200. 260-637-5401

Kendallville 414 N. Lewis St. Close to Fairgrounds 1 Day Only Saturday, Aug. 31 8 am - 3 pm MOVING SALE Boy’s clothes, toys, household items.

THE

260 349-2685

BUILDING MATERIALS

Kendallville 1494 Buena Vista Hall Lake 5 FAMILY SALE Saturday Only 8 am - 3 pm Rain or Shine No early sales Clothes; kids to adult, knick knacks, housewares, antiques, full sz. bed w/spindles, porcelain topped cabinet.

Kiss it...

All species of hard wood. Pay before starting. Walnut needed.

QUEEN PILLOWTOP MATTRESS SET Can deliver, $125. (260) 493-0805

Ray

ELDERY CARE NEEDED Live in care giver needed for elderly man Fremont area. Free room & board plus salary. References & background check. 260 579-7118

HOMES FOR SALE

GARAGE SALES

Restaurant

Wolcottville 2 & 3 BR from $100/wk also LaOtto location. 574-202-2181

HOMES

■ ❍ ■ ❍ ■ Office

GARAGE SALES

WHEELS

MOBILE HOMES FOR RENT

STUFF

EMPLOYMENT

B7

Can You Dig It? Heavy Equipment Operator Training! 3 Weeks Hands On Program. Bulldozers, Backhoes, Excavators. Lifetime Job Placement Assistance. National Certifications. VA Benefits Eligible. 1-866-362-6497 AC1213

Part Time Local CDL-A Drivers RG TRANSPORT Tomatoes will not deliver themselves. RG Transport is seeking part time drivers. *Home Daily *Great Hourly Pay *Seasonal 10 to 12 weeks *60 - 70 Hours per week *Two Shifts available *Fast paced environment. Call us now! 866-275-1454 Or apply online www. rgtransport.com “Partners in Excellence” OTR Drivers APU Equipped Pre-Pass EZ-pass passenger policy. 2012 & Newer equipment. 100% NO touch. Butler Transport 1-800-528-7825 Flatbed Drivers New Pay Scale - Start @ .37cpm. Up to .04cpm Mileage Bonus. Home Weekends. Insurance and 401K. Apply @ Boydandsons.com 800648-9915

ATTENTION REGIONAL & DEDICATED DRIVERS! Averitt Offers Excellent Benefits and Hometime. CDL-A req. 888-3628608. Recent Grads w/a CDL-A 1-5/wks Paid Training. Apply online at AverittCareers.com Equal Opportunity Employer NEED CLASS A CDL TRAINING? Start a CAREER in trucking today! Swift Academies offers PTDI certified courses and offer “Best-In-Class” training. *New Academy Classes Weekly *No Money Down or Credit Check *Certified Mentors Ready and Available *Paid (While Training With Mentor) *Regional and Dedicated Opportunities *Great Career Path *Excellent Benefits Package. Please Call: (866) 950-5815 CDL-A Drivers: Looking for higher pay? New Century Trans is hiring exp. Company drivers and owner operators. Solos and teams. Competitive pay package. Sign-on incentives. Call 888-705-3217 or apply online at www.drivenctrans.com Take your career to the next level with Roehl CDL School - earn your CDL-A and start a rewarding driving career! Call Kim 800-535-8420 GoRoehl.com AA/EOE RECENTLY LAID OFF? IN A RUT? WERNER NEEDS DRIVERS! Train to be a professional truck driver in ONLY 16 DAYS! The avg. truck driver earns $700+/ wk*! Get CDL Training w/ Roadmaster! Approved for Veterans Training. Don’t Delay, Call Today! 1-866205-1569 *DOL/BLS 2012 AC-0205 Drivers - CDL-A Train and work for us! Professional, focused CDL training available. Choose Company Driver, Owner Operator, Lease Operator or Lease Trainer. (877) 369-7203 www. CentralTruckDrivingJobs. com

$1000 Sign On Bonus! Class A CDL Drivers, Run Regionally, Be home weekly. Exceptional Pay ($60-$70K annually) and Benefit Package. Call 888409-6033 or visit us online www.drivejtc.com 25 DRIVER TRAINEES NEEDED NOW! Learn to drive for TMC Transportation. Earn $800 per week! Local 15 day CDL training. TMC can cover costs. 1-877-649-3156 Driver Trainees Needed Now! Become a driver for Werner Enterprises. Earn $800 per week! Local CDL Training 1-800-882-7364 LAND FOR SALE HUNTER’S PARADISE WITH POND $3375 PER ACRE! 45 minutes from Nashville. Tracts from 41 to 560 acres with timber, food plots and views. Call 931629-0595. MEDICAL Bad Teeth? Extractions and Dentures using oral sedation. Free Consultations. Dr. McCall info and before/ after photos at www. drmccalldentures.com 317596-9700 ATTENTION SLEEP APNEA SUFFERERS with Medicare. Get CPAP Replacement Supplies at little or NO COST, plus FREE home delivery! Best of all, prevent red skin sores and bacterial infection! Call 888-696-5125 SPORTING GOODS / GUNS & HUNTING / MISCELLANEOUS GUN SHOW!! Marion, IN - August 31st & September 1st, Five Points Mall, 1129 North Baldwin Ave. Sat. 9-5, Sun. 9-3 For information call 765-9938942 Buy! Sell! Trade!


B8

TUESDAY, AUGUST 27, 2013

EXTENDED SATURDAY HOURS: 10:00 AM - 4:00 PM WE DO A

EXTREMELY

LOWEST MILES, LOWEST PRICE, OR BOTH! SHOP HERE AND COMPARE!

ON EACH VEHICLE BEFORE WE BUY.

SPECIAL RATES!

2.79% LOW MILEAGE VEHICLES! WE LOVE TRADE-INS! FINANCE MANAGER

AS LOW AS

PATRICK SPARKMAN

See our entire inventory online at www.DruleyInvestmentsInc.com FEATURED CAR OF THE WEEK

FEATURED CAR OF THE WEEK 1997 Ford F-250 Lariat Ext. Cab 4x4

1995 Ford Explorer Eddie Bauer 4x4

“Mechanic’ s Special”, 5.4L V8, Automatic, Ice Cold Air, All Power Features

One-Owner, Local Trade, Sunroof, Leather, Power Seats, Chrome Wheels

$

2,500

3,500

$

2012 CHEVROLET MAILBU LS

2013 CHRYSLER 200 TOURING Power Seat, Auto, Air, All Power, Alloy Wheels, Warranty, 9,000 Miles

16,995

$

1999 Chrysler Concorde LXi 3.2L V6, Leather, Dual Power Seats, All Power, Alloy Wheels, 50,000 Miles

6,995

$

1997 Jeep Grand Cherokee Laredo 4x4 Local Trade, Superb Condition Inside & Out, Auto, Air, All Power

16,995

$

6,995

$

3,995

2005 Dodge Caravan SE

2002 Honda Odyssey EX-L

2006 Dodge Grand Caravan SE

2007 Chevrolet HHR LT

2010 Chevrolet Impala LS

One-Owner, V6, Auto, Air, All Power Options, Dual Sliders, 46,000 Miles

DVD Player, Leather, Heated Seats, Dual Power Sliders, Quad Buckets

One-Owner, Stow ‘N Go Rear Seat, Rear Air, All Power, 53,000 Miles

One-Owner, Power Seat, Automatic, Air, All Power, 58,000 Miles

One-Owner, Power Seat,, All Power, Factory Warranty, 39,000 Miles

8,995

9,995

$

8,995

$

$

2010 Dodge Avenger SXT

2009 Ford Fusion SE

One-Owner, Automatic, Air, All Power, Factory Warranty, 45,000 Miles

One-Owner, Automatic, Air, All Power, Factory Warranty, 39,000 Miles

Sunroof, Power Seat, Spoiler, Alloy Wheels, All Power, 47,000 Miles

12,995

Automatic, Air, All Power, Side Airbags, Factory Warranty, 11,000 Miles

Local Trade, Hemi, V8, Power Seat, Auto, Air, All Power, Tow Package

$

2010 Chevrolet Malibu LS $

2004 Dodge Ram 1500 SLT Crew Cab 4x4

12,995

$

12,995

$

11,995

$

12,995

$

2009 Pontiac G6 Sedan

2007 Chrysler Town & Country Touring

2007 Honda Accord LX Coupe

One-Owner, V6, Auto, Air, All Power, Spoiler, Alloys, 34,000 Miles

Power Sliders & Liftgate, Full Stow ‘N Go, Power Seat, Alloy Wheels

4 Cylinder, Automatic, Air, All Power, Alloy Wheels, 65,000 Miles

12,995

$

$

12,995

12,995

$

FEATURED CAR OF THE WEEK 2006 Ford F-150 XLT Ext. Cab 4x4

2006 Hyundai Azera Limited

Local Trade, 5.4L V8, Matching Cap, Power Seat, Tow Package

One-Owner, 3.8L V6, Sunroof, Leather, Heated Seats, 58,000 Miles

12,995

$

2006 Mercury Grand Marquis LS One-Owner, Leather, Dual Power Seats, Alloy Wheels, 59,000 Miles

12,995

$

12,995

$

2005 Chevrolet Silverado 1500 Reg. Cab One-Owner, 5.3L V8, Long Bed, Auto, Air, All Power, 26,000 Miles

12,995

$

2012 LINCOLN MKZ 2006 Cadillac CTS

2006 Chevrolet Uplander LT Ext. AWD

Leather Seats, Power Seat, Automatic, Air, All Power, 61,000 Miles

One-Owner, DVD Player, Power Sliders, Power Seat, Alloys, 34,000 Miles

13,995

$

Sunroof, Heated & Cooled Leather, Chrome Pkg., Warranty, 14,000 Miles

25,995

$

13,995

$

2004 Ford Expedition XLT 4x4

2012 Ford Fusion SE

One-Owner, 9-Passenger, Power Seat, Running Boards, 41,000 Miles

One-Owner, Power Seat, Alloy Wheels, Factory Warranty, 40,000 Miles

13,995

$

14,995

$

2008 Buick LaCrosse CXL

2008 Ford Taurus Limited

2012 Ford Fusion SE

2011 Chevrolet Impala LT

2008 Dodge Ram 2500 ST Reg. Cab 4x4

2012 Ford Fusion SE

“3800” V6, Sunroof, Heated Leather, Chrome Wheels, 60,000 Miles

One-Owner, Leather, Heated Power Seats, Alloy Wheels, 62,000 Miles

One-Owner, Power Seat, Alloy Wheels, Factory Warranty, 33,000 Miles

Power Seat, Remote Start, Alloy Wheels, Factory Warranty, 15,000 Miles

One-Owner, Heavy Duty, Matching Cap, Hemi V8, Auto, Air, Tilt, Cruise

One-Owner, Power Seat, Alloy Wheels, Factory Warranty, 27,000 Miles

14,995

$

14,995

$

2012 Volkswagen Jetta SE

2011 Ford Flex SE

One-Owner/Off-Lease, Leather, Automatic, Air, All Power, 14,000 Miles

3rd Seat, Power Seat, Rear Air Conditioning, Reverse Sensing, Alloys

16,995

$

16,995

$

$

15,995

2011 Ford Fusion SEL Monochrome Pkg., Sunroof, Heated Leather, Sony Audio, 22,000 Miles

16,995

$

15,995

$

2008 Ford F-250 XL Ext. Cab

2007 Jeep Grand Cherokee Laredo 4x4

One-Owner, Super Duty, 5.4L V8, Long Bed, Tow Package, Auto, Air

Sunroof, Power Seat, Stability Control, Side Airbags, 54,000 Miles

16,995

$

FEATURED CAR OF THE WEEK 2012 Chevrolet Malibu 2LT

2009 Mercury Mariner Premier 4x4

Sunroof, Heated Leather, Remote Start, Chrome Wheels, Waranty

Navigation, Sunroof, Heated Leather, Reverse Sensing, 59,000 Miles

17,995

24,995

2012 Chevrolet Impala LT Sunroof, Power Seat, Rear Spoiler, Remote Start, Warranty, 17,000 Miles

17,995

$

17,995

$

2013 MAZDA 6s GRAND TOURING

$

16,995

$

16,995

$

FEATURED CAR OF THE WEEK

$

V6, Navigation, Rear Camera, Sunroof, Leather, Bose Audio, 10,000 Miles

15,995

$

2012 CHRYSLER 300 LIMITED 2011 Ford Escape Hybrid 4x4

2008 Ford Edge Limited AWD

30 MPG, Power Seat, All Power Options, Alloy Wheels, Warranty

Panoramic Roof, Power Liftgate, Leather, 20” Chromes, 43,000 Miles

18,995

$

22,995

$

LOWEST MILES, LOWEST PRICE, OR BOTH!

DRULEY INVESTMENTS, INC. 100 S. Main Street, LaOtto • (260) 897-3858

www.DruleyInvestmentsInc.com

Rear Camera, Heated Leather, Chrome Wheels, Warranty, 20,000 Miles

24,995

$


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