11/21/11

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COMING WEDNESDAY iN75 • Barclay’s in downtown Piqua now offers an expanded selection of Brighton handbags and accessories. Also, see what Harris Jeweler is giving away this Christmas. Inside

Vol. 121 No. 232

Sidney, Ohio

November 21, 2011

Holiday Kick Off

TH & 26TH TH NOVEMBER 25TH A Diamond Lasts Forever...

75 cents

www.sidneydailynews.com

Debt panel’s failure likely

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TODAY’S

NEWS

TODAY’S WEATHER

52° 45° For a full weather report, turn to Page 12.

DEATHS Obituaries and/or death notices for the following people appear on Page 3A today: • Wilma M. “Peanut” Schaffner • Jane Ann Wolf • Dolores J. Dunaway • Phyllis E. Bennett • James I. Reedy • Rose Ann Larger • John Gies • Eva C. Compton

INDEX Agriculture .............................8 City, County records..............2 Classified .......................13-15 Comics................................11 Hints from Heloise.................6 Horoscope ............................9 Localife ..............................6-7 Nation/World.........................5 Obituaries..............................3 Sports............................18-20 State news ............................4 ’Tween 12 and 20 .................6 Weather/Sudoku/Abby/Out of the Past/Dr. Donohue ....12

BY ANDREW TAYLOR Associated Press WASHINGTON (AP) — A special deficit-reduction supercommittee appears likely to admit failure on Monday, unable or unwilling to compromise on a mix of spending cuts and tax increases required to meet its assignment of saving taxpayers at least $1.2 trillion over the coming decade. The panel is sputtering to a close after two months of talks in which the members were never able to get close to bridging a fundamental divide over how much to raise taxes to address a budget deficit that forced the government to borrow 36 cents of every dollar it spent last year. Members of the bipartisan panel, formed during the summer crisis over raising the government’s borrowing limit, spent their time on Sunday in testy performances on television talk shows, blaming each other for the impasse. In a series of television interviews, not a single panelist seemed optimistic about any last-minute breakthrough. And it was clear that the two sides had never gotten particularly close, at

For photo reprints, visit www.sidneydailynews.com

SDN Photo/Luke Gronneberg

LEE ADAMS (left), of Piqua, and Jason Truesdale, of Sidney, cut into a piece of metal similar to the kind of metal used in grain silos at the Sidney TruPointe grain elevator Saturday. Area firefighters participated in grain rescue training exercises at the elevator, which included the use of a new grain rescue tube.

Firefighters’ training deals with rescue from grain bins BY JENNIFER BUMGARNER jbumgarner@sdnccg.com

Several fire departments in Shelby County participated in a grain rescue training exercise on Saturday to learn how to use a new tool to rescue people from a life-threatening situation. Firefighters from Sidney Fire and Emergency Services, Fort Loramie, Houston, Lockington, Maplewood, Port Jefferson, Russia, New Knoxville, Osgood and Shelby County were on hand for the training exercise. The reason for the training was because of the recent purchase of a new grain rescue tube. The tube, from Liberty Rescue Tube, will See DEBT/Page 2 be used in situations where a person becomes

trapped in flowing grain such as inside a storage bin, silo or truck. The tube is placed around the victim and the grain left inside the tube is vacuumed out, which then frees the victim. The tool will be kept at Sidney Fire and will be available to anyone in or around Shelby County. Purchase of the equipment cost about $4,000 and the training cost was $3,000. The money was collected through donations from farmers and businesses, including Wappoo Wood Products, Unity Bank, Farmers Elevator, Farm Credit, Race Cars and Future Stars, Crop Production Service, C and H Trucking, Cargill, Red Cross, Trupointe, Home Depot, Eric Smith, Bill Patterson and Rob Joslin.

TODAY’S THOUGHT “Anyone can do any amount of work, provided it isn’t the work he is supposed be doing at that moment.” — Robert Benchley, American humorist (born 1889, died this date in 1945) For more on today in history, turn to Page 11.

NEWS NUMBERS News tips, call 498-5962. Home delivery, call 4985939. Classified advertising, call 498-5925. Retail advertising, call 4985980 Visit the Sidney Daily News on the Web at www.sidneydailynews.com

Annual Community Christmas Dinner planned Dec. 10 The 30th annual Community Christmas Dinner will be held Dec. 10 from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the Civil Defense Building located on the south side of the Shelby County Fairgrounds. In continuing with a long tradition of festivities and fellowship, the Community Christmas Dinner Committee invites all of the people of Shelby County to this year’s dinner. Parking for the event will be on the inside of the fairgrounds. Those who are handicap or cannot walk long distances should

let the volunteers know; and organizers ask that all would allow the volunteers to instruct people on where would be the best place to park. Parking is only available inside the fairgrounds. There is no charge for the dinner. This are no criteria to meet. All are encouraged to come. Adults who are shut-ins can arrange to have meals delivered to their home by calling 4928074, ext. 6, and making reservations with Adult Day Services at Fair Haven Shelby County Home. Reservations for home-

delivered meals must be made no later than 4 p.m. on Dec. 7. Santa Claus will be standing by to pass out candy and treats and listen to wish lists from the many children who attend the event. Anna Local Schools Instrumental Music Department Jazz Band has again agreed to play Christmas music for those who are in attendance. Last year, more than 1,500 people attended the Community Christmas Dinner. The dinner began in 1981, See DINNER/Page 2 2204744

Gift of the Magi Saturday, December 10, 2011 3:00 PM Cameo Theatre

Tickets - Adults $ 6.00

Child (12 and under) $4.00

Tickets available at Ron, Nita's and Gateway Arts Council and at the door

216 N. Miami Ave., Sidney, Ohio 45365

937-498-2787

www.gatewayartscouncil.org

To purchase photographs appearing in the Sidney Daily News, go to www.sidneydailynews.com


Sidney Daily News, Monday, November 21, 2011

Page 2

DINNER

For photo reprints, visit www.sidneydailynews.com

SDN Photo/Jennifer Bumgarner

Jaws training Dallas Davis (front) uses the jaws of life in a car extrication training exercise at Sidney Fire and Emergency Services Thursday while Assistant Chief Cameron Haller watches. The three vans used for the training were donated by Buckeye Ford.

CITY

RECORD

Fire, rescue SUNDAY -6:58 a.m.: medical. Sidney paramedics responded to the 2300 block of Broadway Avenue on a medical call. -2:53 a.m.: medical. Medics responded to the 200 block of South Miami Avenue on a medical call. -1:01 a.m.: medical. Medics responded to a medical call in the 700 block of Fulton Street. SATURDAY -8:50 p.m.: medical. Medics responded to a medical call in the 700

COUNTY Fire, rescue SUNDAY -11:38 a.m.: accident. Fort Loramie Rescue and Fire responded to High Street and Ohio 66 on a report of a sinaccident gle-vehicle with possible injuries. -10:28 a.m.: medical. Fort Loramie Rescue responded to the 6400 block of Ohio 705

block of Fulton Street. -8:02 p.m.: medical. Medics responded to the 1500 Beck Drive on a medical call. -5:44 p.m.: medical. Medics responded to a medical call in the 500 block of North Main Avenue. -2:34 p.m.: medical. Medics responded to a medical call in the 3000 block of Cisco Road. -2:08 p.m.: medical. Medics responded to a medical call in the 200 block of East Water Street. -2:02 p.m.: medical. Medics were called to the 2500 block of Kuther

Road on a medical call. -5:40 a.m.: medical. Medics responded to the intersection of Walnut Avenue and Fair Road on a medical call. -3:32 a.m.: medical. Medics responded to the 1200 block of Hamilton Avenue on a medical call. FRIDAY -9:18 p.m.: CO. Firefighters were dispatched to 1001 Fourth Ave. on a carbon monoxide investigation. None was found. -7:25 p.m.: medical. Medics responded to a medical call in the 900 block of North Miami Avenue.

RECORD on a medical call. SATURDAY -12:05 p.m.: medical. Fort Loramie Rescue responded to a medical call in the 12000 block of Ohio 362. -5:52 a.m.: medical. Perry-Port-Salem Rescue responded to a medical call in the 200 block of East Canal Street. FRIDAY -7:52 p.m.: medical.

Fort Loramie Rescue responded to a medical call in the 6800 block of Canal Street. -4:34 p.m.: medical. Anna Rescue responded to the 100 block of Debra Drive on a medical call. -1:51 p.m.: medical. Houston Rescue responded to a medical call in the 3800 block of Freeman Drive.

DEBT least in the official exchanges of offers that were leaked to the media. Aides said any remaining talks had broken off. “There is one sticking

divide. And that’s the issue of what I call shared sacrifice,” said panel cochair Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash., on CNN’s “State of the Union.”

Copyright © 2011 The Sidney Daily News Ohio Community Media (USPS# 495-720)

1451 N. Vandemark Road, P.O. Box 4099, Sidney, OH 45365-4099 www.sidneydailynews.com Frank Beeson Group Publisher

Ronda Schutte Circulation Manager

Jeffrey J. Billiel Publisher/Executive Editor Regional Group Editor

Mandy Yagle Inside Classifieds Sales Manager

Bobbi Stauffer Assistant Business Manager

Rosemary Saunders Graphics Manager

Becky Smith Advertising Manager

Melanie Speicher News Editor

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politan Housing Authority, Jim and Ginny Thompson, The Ohio University Extension, Mark Adams of Adams Funeral Home and Rush Creek Farms Christmas Trees. All of these businesses and organizations donate supplies and/or financially support the dinner. Many service organi-

zations, companies and businesses assist with the event each year. Phil and Jeff Cummons and staff at Phil’s Cardinal in Jackson Center deserve the greatest thanks, organizers said. They cook the turkey, side items, cookies and pies for the dinner. For more information, call 492-1746 or 4925079.

THANKSGIVING 2011 DISPLAY & CLASSIFIED DEADLINES SIDNEY DAILY NEWS ISSUE Wednesday, 11/23 Thursday, 11/24 Friday, 11/25 Saturday, 11/26 Monday, 11/28

DISPLAY DEADLINE Friday, 11/18, 5pm Friday, 11/18, 5pm Monday, 11/21, 5pm Tuesday, 11/22, Noon Tuesday, 11/22, Noon

LINER Tuesday, 11/22, 3pm Tuesday, 11/22, 3pm Wed., 11/23, Noon Wed., 11/23, 3pm Wed., 11/23, 5pm

COMMUNITY MERCHANT ISSUE Monday, 11/28

DISPLAY DEADLINE Tuesday, 11/22, 5pm

LINER DEADLINE Wed., 11/23, 3pm

TROY DAILY NEWS / PIQUA DAILY CALL ISSUE Wednesday, 11/23 Thursday, 11/24 Friday, 11/25 Saturday, 11/26 Sunday, 11/27 Monday, 11/28

DISPLAY DEADLINE

LINER DEADLINE

Friday, 11/18, 5pm Friday, 11/18, 5pm Monday, 11/21, 5pm Tuesday, 11/22, Noon Tuesday, 11/22, Noon Tuesday, 11/22, Noon

Tuesday, 11/22, 3pm Tuesday, 11/22, 3pm Wed., 11/23, Noon Wed., 11/23, 3pm Wed., 11/23, 4pm Wed., 11/23, 5pm

MIAMI COUNTY ADVOCATE ISSUE DISPLAY DEADLINE LINER DEADLINE Tuesday, 11/22, 5pm Wed., 11/23, 4pm Monday, 11/28 Please be advised our offices will be closed in observance of the Thanksgiving holiday on Thursday, November 24 and Friday, November 25. We will re-open on Monday, November 28 at 8am.

CLOSED THANKSGIVING DAY Will re-open Friday 9am

and Catering 2232385

(937) 492-2194 2551 W. Michigan St., Sidney

(Across from Dan Hemm) Hrs: M.-Fri. 9am-6pm, Sat. 8am-3:30pm, Closed Sun. Call ahead for fast pick-up We accept food cards, credit/debit cards

FRESH AND FROZEN TURKEYS & FRESH SELECT OYSTERS Boneless & Spiral Cut Ham & Other Bone-In Hams Available Beef Value Pack $ 4 lbs. Beef Cube Seaks 4 lbs. Boneless Patio Steaks 5 lbs. Hamburger

5 lbs. Boneless Pollock Fillets 6 lbs. Boneless Chuck Roast 8 lbs. Bone-In Chicken Beast

Thrifty Pack 3 lbs. Bulk Sausage 4 lbs. Boneless Patio Steaks 4 lbs. Loin End Pork Roast

4 lbs. Pork Steak 5 lbs. Hamburger Patties 5 lbs. Boneless Chuck Roast

9400 $8900 44 lbs.

12 lbs. Chicken Legs & Thighs

43 lbs.

5 lbs. Loin End Pork Chops 13 lbs. Chicken Legs & Thighs

MANY OTHER MEAT PACKS ALWAYS AVAILABLE

From Page 1

HOW MAY WE HELP YOU?

I Circulation Customer Service Hours: The Circulation Department is open Monday-Friday 8 a.m. until 7 p.m. and on Saturday from 6 - 11 a.m. Call 498-5939 I All numbers are Area Code (937) Classified Advertising ..........498-5925 Retail Advertising ..................498-5980 Business News ........................498-5967 Comments, Story Ideas ..........498-5962 Circulation ..............................498-5939 City Desk ................................498-5971 Corrections (News) ..................498-5962 Editorial Page ..........................498-5962 Entertainment listings ..............498-5965 Events/Calendar items ............498-5968 Fax (Advertising) ..................498-5990 Fax (News)..............................498-5991 Social News ............................498-5965 Sports ......................................498-5960 Toll Free........................1-800-688-4820 e-mail:sdn@sdnccg.com Published Monday and Wednesday through Saturday Open 8 a.m. until 5 p.m. Monday through Friday

started by Bill McMillen, Stolle Corp. and the United Way as a means to reach out to the community during the holiday season. The dinner could not be such a success every year without the support received from people in the community, organizers said. People interested in volunteering to help should call Rodney at 492-1746 to register. are Volunteers needed to help set up on Dec. 9 and tear down on Dec. 10 after the event, as well as drivers and volunteers of all types on the day of the event. Volunteers are asked to park in the Ohio State University Extension office parking lot located next to the Civil Defense Building. Only volunteers can park there, organizers said. This will not be parking for patrons because there will not be an entrance for dinner patrons on this side of the building. All patrons can enter the building from inside the fairgrounds. Listed are confirmed sponsors, as of Wednesday, for this year’s Community Christmas Dinner: Shelby County Commissioners, AAA of Shelby County, Shelby County Fair Board, Bunny’s Pharmacy, Temperance Lodge 73, Shelby County EmerManagement gency Agency, The Bensman Foundation, Loyal Order of the Moose 586, The Spot Restaurant, Shelby County United Way, Holloway Sportswear Inc., Shelby Public Transit, Kiwanis Club of Sidney, Magnum Music, Ann and Merrill Asher, Adult Day Services, McDonald’s restaurant, Burger King restaurant, Sidney Foodtown, Arby’s restaurant, Genies’s Village Laundry & Cleaners, Anna Jazz Band, FISH of Shelby County, Shelby County Sheriff, Campbell’s Meats & Deli, Schaffer Insurance, American Legion Post 217, Shelby County Fire Department, Stokes Lodge 305, The Medicine Shoppe, Shelby Metro-

From Page 1

I How to arrange home delivery: To subscribe to The Sidney Daily News or to order a subscription for someone else, call us at 498-5939 or 1-800-6884820.The subscription rates are: Motor Routes & Office Pay $41.00/13 wks. (incl. 2% Disc.) $77.00/26 wks. (incl. 5% Disc.) $143.00/52 wks. (incl. 10% Disc.) We accept VISA & MasterCard Mail Delivery $53.00 for 13 wks. $106.00 for 26 wks. $205.00 for 52 wks. Regular subscriptions are transferrable and/or refundable. Refund checks under $10 will not be issued. An administrative fee of $10 for all balances under $50 will be applied. Remaining balances of $50 or more will be charged a 20% administrative fee.

I Delivery Deadlines Monday-Friday 5:30 p.m., Saturday 9 a.m. I Periodicals Postage Paid At Sidney, Ohio I Postmaster, please send changes to: P.O. Box 4099, Sidney, OH 45365-4099 I Member of: Sidney-Shelby County Chamber of Commerce, Ohio Newspaper Association and Associated Press

“The wealthiest Americans who earn over a million a year have to share too. And that line in the sand, we haven’t seen Republicans willing to cross yet,” she said Republicans said Democrats’ demands on taxes were simply too great and weren’t accompanied by large enough proposals to curb the explosive growth of so-called entitlement programs like Medicare and Medicaid. “If you look at the Democrats’ position it was ‘We have to raise taxes. We have to pass this jobs bill, which is another almost half-trillion dollars. And we’re not excited about entitlement reform,’ ” countered Republican Jon Kyl of Arizona on NBC’s “Meet the Press.”

Contact your Sprint Authorized Retailer:

SuperStore

November 21-22

Turkey $ 25 Dinner 6 A Yearly Spot Tradition. Roast Turkey, Dressing, and Gravy, Noodles, Buttered Corn, Dinner roll and Butter. Monday November 21st and Tuesday 22nd only. Try our Shredded Chicken November 20-26 $2.65 Spot will be Closed Thursday, November 24. Corner of Court & Ohio

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PUBLIC RECORD

624 N. Vandemark Rd. Sidney, OH 45365 937-493-0321


PUBLIC RECORD

Sidney Daily News, Monday, November 21, 2011

OBITUARIES

DEATH NOTICES Eva C. Compton PIQUA — Eva C. Compton, 59, of Piqua, passed away on Saturday, Nov. 19, 2011, at 4:50 p.m. are Arrangements pending at MelcherSowers Funeral Home, Piqua.

Jane Ann Wolf

IN MEMORIAM

Daniel Velazco Visitation tonight 4-7pm. Service Tuesday 1pm.

Julia A. Fuller

Phyllis E. Bennett PIQUA — Phyllis E. Bennett, 85, 3768 W. State Route 185, died at 7:34 a.m. on Saturday, Nov. 19, 2011. Private services are being provided to her family through the Jamieson and Yannucci Funeral Home, Piqua.

Visitation Tuesday 5pm until hour of service. Memorial service Tuesday 7pm.

Cromes

Funeral Home & Crematory, Inc. 492-5101 View obituaries at

cromesfh.com 2234577

James I. Reedy

TREE TRIMMING

PIQUA — James I. TREE TRIMMING Reedy, 77, 806 Clark • Beautify & Protect Ave., died at 9:25 p.m. on Saturday, Nov. 19, 2011. • Prevent & Treat A service to honor his Disease life will be held Tuesday • Revive Ailing at the Jamieson and Trees 2231521 Yannucci Funeral Home, Piqua. Area Tree &

Landscaping

After conditioning for a month, fourth- and fifth-grade students at Northwood Elementary School recently participated in a one-mile Turkey Trot on school grounds. The Turkey Trot was held Nov. 9 for all students. As part of the school’s physical education and health program, students worked with teachers Angie Mentges and Darla Kreitzer to prepare for the event. Starting this year, younger students in grades K-3 also participated in a Chickie Trot, allowing these students to run approximately 200 to 400 yards for a similar event. This event was run by Northwood Principal Greg Johnson and Assistant Principal Eric Finke. “It’s important for students to learn the value of physical activity and setting goals for themselves,” explained Mentges. “Instead of competing against one another, students were encouraged to beat their own personal record during the race.” Many students completed the race in less than 10 minutes, meeting their goals and enjoying themselves in the process. Dannon Yogurt helped to sponsor the event, donating yogurt products for each student. “We are extremely proud of all the students who participated in the Trot,” said Mentges. “They all worked very hard. In our physical education classes, students have been learning about heart health. Students have been charting their times for the mile course and recording their resting, active and cool-down heart rates. All students made improvements.” Students also created a personal fitness plan so they can continue their aerobic workouts beyond the Turkey Trot.

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Reverse Mortgages Teresa Rose 937-497-9662 800-736-8485

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ANTICA MURRINA Available at

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Turkey Trot held at school

Page 3

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AFFORDABLE FUNERALS

Salm-McGill Tangeman Funeral Home and Cremation Services 502 S. Ohio Ave., Sidney

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OBITUARY POLICY

The Sidney Daily News publishes abbreviated death notices free of charge. There is a flat $75 charge for obituaries and photographs. Usually death notices and/or obituaries are submitted via the family's funeral home, although in some cases a ANNA — Anna Vil- family may choose to lage Council will meet submit the information Tuesday at 7 p.m. to dis- directly. cuss a council member vacancy. Council will also discuss adopting a tree policy for the village and an For Home Delivery Call ordinance amending previous water ordinances rules and regulations.

Council sets meeting

498-5939 or 1-800-688-4820

Jane Ann Wolf, 63, 237 Hillcrest Court, passed away on and Friday went to join her h u s b a n d , Michael, in heaven, on Nov. 18, 2011, at 7:08 a.m. at Wilson Memorial Hospital. She was born on Dec. 7, 1947, in Sidney, the daughter of the late Eugene and Irene (Henson) Wells. She was married to Michael A. Wolf, who preceded her in death on March 10, 2010. She is survived by one daughter, Josie Smith, of Sidney; one son, Mitch Leckey and wife, Jennifer, of Richmond, Ind.; one stepdaughter, Kathy Kaska, and husband, William, of Dayton; one stepson, Steve Wolf, and wife, Kathy, of Bradford; 13 grandchildren; one brother, Tim Wells and wife, Ruth, of Sidney; one niece, Angie Wells, of

Sidney; and one nephew, Mike Wells, of Sidney. Jane had retired after 30 years as a school bus drive, with the Sidney City Schools. She also was a volunteer with FISH in Shelby County. Memorial services will be held on Tuesday, Nov. 29, at 7 p.m. at Cromes Funeral Home, 302 S. Main Ave. Friends and family may call Tuesday, Nov. 29, from 5 p.m. until the hour of service at Cromes Funeral Home. In keeping with Jane’s wishes, her body was donated to a medical school. Memorials may be made to the charity of donor’s choice in memory of Jane Ann Wolf. Condolences may be expressed to the Wolf family at the funeral home’s w e b s i t e , www.cromesfh.com.

Wilma M. ‘Peanut’ Schaffner Wilma M. “ P e a n u t ” Schaffner, 84, 5261 HardinWa p a k o n e t a died Road, peacefully Sunday, Nov. 20, 2011, at 1:05 a.m. at the Pavilion Nursing Home, Sidney. She was born on March 27, 1927, in Shelby County, the daughter of the late Frank and Martha (Woods) Pellman. On June 24, 1944, she married Forest J. Schaffner and he preceded her in death on June 9, 2001. Wilma is survived by her children, Jerry (Patt) Schaffner, of Sidney, Steve and (Deborah) Schaffner and Cynthia (Robert) Barhorst, of Fort Loramie; three sisters-in-law, Sue Pellman, of Sidney, Janis Pellman, of Quincy, and Wilma Pellman, of Piqua; 12 grandchildren, 27 great-grandchildren and one great-greatgrandchild. She was preceded in death by six brothers and four sisters. Wilma attended Sidney High School. In 1963 she graduated from the Lima Beauty Academy. From 1963 to the present, she was owner and operator of the Scenic View

Beauty Salon, Hardin. For many years she cut hair at the Fair Haven Nursing Home. Wilma was known for her high energy and active lifestyle. Family members often referred to her as the “energizer bunny.” She was a lifetime member of the Compromise Grange and Hardin United the Methodist Church in Hardin. Funeral services will be conducted Wednesday at 10 a.m. at the Adams Funeral Home, 1401 Fair Road, by Pastor Jack Chalk. Burial will follow at Brookside Cemetery, Hardin. Family and friends may call from 4 to 8 p.m. on Tuesday at the funeral home. All arrangements have been entrusted to the staff at the Adams Funeral Home, 1401 Fair Road. In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may be made to the Hardin United Methodist Church, 6073 HardinWapak Road, Hardin, OH 45365. Online memories may be expressed to the family at www.theadamsfuneralhome.com.

Rose Ann Larger PIQUA — Rose Ann Larger, 92, formerly of 511 We s t v i e w Drive, died at 8:03 a.m. on Sunday, Nov. 20, 2011, at the Piqua Manor Nursing Home. She was born Sept. 22, 1919, in Piqua to the late Henry and Florence J. (Lindsay) Besanceney. She married Paul E. Larger Jan. 29, 1944, in Piqua; he preceded her in death Oct. 14, 1996. Survivors include five sons, Lawrence A. (Glenda) Larger, of Columbus; Patrick J. (Linda) Larger, Donald P. (Kathleen) Larger, all of Piqua, Gregory W. (Elizabeth) Larger, of Sidney, Thomas M. (Patricia) Larger, of Springfield; four daughters, Mary Ann (Gordon) Laughman, Virginia (Tom) Rhoades, all of Piqua, Barbara (Bruce) Turner, of Columbus, Catherine (Joe) Bundy, of Piqua; 18 grandchildren and 21 great-grandchildren. She was preceded in death by two brothers and five sisters.

Mrs. Larger was a 1937 graduate of Piqua Catholic High School. She was a wonderful wife, mother, grandmother and friend to many. She was active at St. Mary Catholic Church where she sang in the choir for many years and was a member of its Altar Society. A Mass of Christian Burial will be celebrated at 10 a.m. on Wednesday at St. Mary Catholic Church, with the Rev. Thomas J. Grilliot as the celebrant. Burial will follow at Forest Hill Cemetery. Visitation will be at the Jamieson and Yannucci Funeral Home from 5 to 8 p.m. on Tuesday where a prayer service will be conducted at 5 p.m. Memorial contributions may be made to St. Mary Catholic Church, 528 Broadway, Piqua, OH 45356. Condolences to the family may also be expressed through jamiesonandyannucci.com.

John Gies JACKSON CENTER — John Gies, 91, formerly of Jackson Center, passed away Saturday afternoon, Nov. 19, 2011, at the Dorothy Love Retirement Community. John was born in Akron on April 23, 1920, to the late Christian and Mildred Fox Gies Sr. He married the former Naomi R. Packer, in Kentucky, on Sept. 2, 1939, and she preceded him in death on Aug. 12, 1994. John was also preceded in death by a daughter, Crystal Ann Gies; son, John Michael Gies; three sisters, Barbara Meeker, Mildred Hasselbach and Catherine Gerkey; and four brothers, Henry, Michael, Alexander and Christian Gies Jr. John was a veteran of World War II, having served in the U.S. Army. He retired from Landmark/Countrymark after 40-plus years of employment. He was a member of Grace Lutheran Church, the Jackson Center Veterans of Foreign Wars and American Legion. John enjoyed bowling and was an avid sports fan. He thoroughly enjoyed his grandchildren. John is survived by

daughters, Marcia Lippert, of Wa p a k o n e t a , and M. Beth (Robert) Murphy, of Sidney; six grandchildren, Michelle Lippert, of Wapakoneta, Jodi (Tim) Craddock, of Georgetown, Ind., Rachel (Tim) Rank, of Greenville, Traci (Jim) Koontz, of Jesse Sidney, Murphy, of Sidney, and Robert (Mary) Murphy III, of Sidney; six greatgrandchildren; a brother-in-law, Walter Gerkey, of Sidney; and several nieces and nephews. Pastor Kent Hollis will officiate a funeral service Saturday at 10:30 a.m. at Grace Lutheran Church, Jackson Center. Visitation will be held Friday at the Smith-Eichholtz Funeral Home, Jackson Center, from 4 to 8 p.m. and Saturday at the church one hour prior to the service. Burial will be in Glen Cemetery, Port Jefferson. Memorial contributions may be made to Grace Lutheran Church or Dorothy Love Nursing Home. Online condolences may be expressed at w w w . s m i t h eichholtz.com.

Dolores J. Dunaway Dolores J. Dunaway, 73, of Sidney, went to be with her Lord on Saturday, Nov. 19, 2011, from the Dorothy Love Retirement Community. Born Dec. 30, 1937, in Portsmouth, Scioto County, she was a daughter of the late Frederick and Molly (Adkins) O’Dell. She was also preceded in death by one sister, Margaret Dillow, and one brother, Charles O’Dell. Surviving are her husband, Jacob A. Dunaway Sr., of Sidney; two sons, Jacob A. Dunaway Jr. (Patricia), of High Bridge, N.J., and Bruce E. Dunaway (Roberta), of Piqua; four grandchildren, Kyle Dunaway, of High Bridge, N.J., Luke Dunaway, of Glenwood Springs, Colo., Rebecca Dunaway and Jessica Dunaway, of Piqua. She is also survived by four sisters and two brothers, Bonnie Craft, of Portsmouth, Sandra Piatt, of Otway, Barbara Webb, of Panama City Beach, Fla., Judy Euton, of McDermott, Michael O’Dell, of Waynesville, and Timothy O’Dell, of Portsmouth. Dolores was employed by the Sidney City School system for 30 years. She served as the Sidney High School

cafeteria manager until her retirement in 1998. She was a of member Pleiades Chapter No. 298 Order of Eastern Star, having just recently received a 50-Year Membership Award. Funeral services will be held Wednesday at 10 a.m. at the Trinity Church of the Brethren, with Pastor Brent Driver officiating. Burial will follow at Graceland Cemetery in Sidney. The family will receive friends Tuesday from 6 to 8 p.m. and Wednesday from 9:15 a.m. until the hour of service at the church. A memorial service will be conducted by the Order of Eastern Star Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. Arrangements are in the care of Cromes Funeral Home, 302 S. Main Ave. In lieu of flowers, the family requests that charitable contributions be made to Dorothy Love Retirement Community in memory of Dolores J. Dunaway. Envelopes will be available at the church. Condolences may be expressed to the Dunaway family at the funeral home’s website, www.cromesfh.com.

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STATE NEWS

Sidney Daily News, Monday, November 21, 2011

Page 4

Who will pay for school computers? Needed for online state testing

AP Photo/Madalyn Ruggiero, File

IN THIS Wednesday photo, Pam Bialecki works on a 2012 Jeep Wrangler at the Chrysler Toledo Assembly complex. Chrysler says it will add 1,100 jobs at the assembly complex as part of a $1.7 billion investment to build a new Jeep sport utility vehicle.

City home to Jeep sees auto industry revived BY JOHN SEEWER Associated Press

overnight,” said Ken Lortz, who’s in charge of the United Auto Workers in Ohio. “It was labor, it was management, it was government, it was everybody sitting there saying what do we need. And through that process we got tremendous investment made all over Ohio and particularly in northwest Ohio.” Ohio Congresswoman Marcy Kaptur, a Democrat from Toledo who is wildly popular among auto workers, credited them for sacrificing pay and benefits and accepting lower wages for new hires in recent contracts in order to make sure the automakers didn’t leave town. “Sacrifice and partnership,” she said. “Sacrifice by all the workers. Partnership between the company, the union, the city, state and federal government. They worked together to do something no one of them could have done alone.” Chrysler worker Richard Gartee, who’s been making Jeeps for 28 years, said all sides recognized what was at stake. “It’s been a pretty big turnaround,” said Gartee, 56. “We still make a good wage, but remember we gave up a lot.” Chrysler’s assembly plant, which opened in 2001, now has about 1,800 workers and produces the Jeep Liberty and Wrangler along with the soonto-be-discontinued Dodge Nitro. The plant will begin producing a new Jeep sport utility in 2013 to replace the Liberty. But expectations are that it

TOLEDO (AP) — This town that has been churning out Jeeps since World War II, watching its fortunes rise and fall with the well-being of Detroit’s automakers, is now finding itself in an enviable position within the car industry. Chrysler and General Motors have promised in recent months to spend more than $800 million on retooling and expanding their factories here. These moves will create 1,400 jobs and keep thousands more at the three factories operated by the major automakers and at the smaller parts plants that supply them. The auto revival is raising spirits around Ohio’s fourth-largest city, where high-paying factory jobs have dwindled. Just an hour south of Detroit, the city for generations supplied the auto industry with spark plugs, transmissions and glass. But it has lost a third of its manufacturing jobs over the last decade and unemployment now hovers above 10 percent, just above the state average. That’s why Toledo Mayor Mike Bell called Chrysler Group LLC’s decision announced Wednesday — to add 1,100 jobs and make its assembly plant a key part of its future — “the equivalent of a blood transfusion for our city.” It’s safe to say these deals would have been hard to pull off without cooperation among the major players. “This didn’t happen

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won’t be the only new model coming to Toledo. Chrysler CEO Sergio Marchionne said last week there will be a new vehicle to replace the Nitro and hinted that other vehicles could be built on the same assembly line. He also said there’s a chance of expanding Wrangler production if its sales increase overseas. “This plant has been at the heart of what we’ve done,” he said, adding that the latest expansion “reinforces the special relationship between Chrysler and the city of Toledo.”

DAYTON (AP) — Every school district in Ohio will be using new online state testing to replace pencil-andpaper versions, but some schools are unsure how the new computers and needed software will be funded. The online testing will reflect the Common Core curriculum being adopted by 45 states and the District of Columbia, the Dayton Daily News reported (http://bit.ly/uRtm9S ). The tests are expected to be in place for the 2014-15 school year. The curriculum is designed to replace standards that often varied state-to-state. The computer tests will be a major change from how things have been traditionally done in Ohio. Rather than fill in bubbles on a multiple choice test or write answers in a blue book or on loose leaf, students will sit in front of computer screens several times a year answering questions online. Some questions will include video. It’s unclear how much the transition to computerized testing will cost the state or school districts. The districts must have enough computers to allow a large number of students to take multiple tests. That has some cash-strapped districts worried. “We have lots of concerns but not answers,” Kettering Superintendent Jim Schoenlein told the newspaper. He

said the state could choose to pick up the cost, or pass it on to districts. “I surely hope that if they are going to mandate statewide testing that they pick up the financial responsibility for that, but that’s surely no guarantee.” If the state decides to pass on the cost to local districts, taxpayers would have to foot the bill. While Ohio has federal Race to the Top money to develop standards and testing, it is uncertain how much of that will be used to help districts get the technology they need to administer the new tests, Ohio Department of Education spokesman Dennis Evans said. “How things are implemented and what resources there are, that’s a conversation that is still ongoing,” Evans said. Some schools welcome the new testing. “I think online testing is the way to go,” said Huber Heights Superintendent William Kirby, who added that his district will be ready when testing rolls out. “(Teachers) are able to use those results much more quickly in adjusting their instruction.” ___ Information from: Dayton Daily N e w s , http://www.daytondailynews.com

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NATION/WORLD BRIEFLY

Violence up in Beirut BEIRUT (AP) — Rocket-propelled grenades struck the headquarters of Syria’s ruling party Sunday, bringing the violence that has engulfed much of the country to the heart of its capital for the first time, activists said. The attack on the building in Syria’s capital of Damascus apparently caused no damage or casualties. But if true, it would mark a significant shift in the eight-month uprising against President Bashar Assad. Until now, the capital has remained relatively untouched. The pre-dawn attack awoke many Syrians who reported hearing two loud blasts, but details could not be confirmed. The foreign minister denied an attack had taken place, and Syrian television broadcast footage of the building looking undamaged.

GOP race unsettled ANAMOSA, Iowa (AP) — The race for the Republican presidential nomination is deeply unsettled with an anything-canhappen feel six weeks before Iowans start the state-by-state process of choosing a GOP challenger for President Barack Obama. Hoping to sway the many voters who are still undecided, most of the contenders visited the state in the past week and the pace of campaigning is certain to accelerate after Thanksgiving, when the monthlong sprint to the Jan. 3 caucuses begins. A crush of new TV ads is certain. Expect mailboxes filled with brochures and repeated visits by candidates to diners, town squares and other must-stop venues.

Fewer cops, more crime? CAMDEN, N.J. (AP) — Police in five New Jersey cities where departments have had deep layoffs are making fewer arrests for minor offenses — a trend that experts fear could lead to a rise in the most serious crimes. Newark, Trenton, Paterson, Atlantic City and Camden, all densely populated cities with significant crime problems — all faced with precarious tax revenue and declining aid from a state government that is also cash-strapped — have all made deep cuts in their police departments since the start of 2010.

OUT OF THE BLUE More cats than inmates at prison BELLE GLADE, Fla. (AP) — Authorities say dozens of cats that sneaked into a South Florida prison will be found new homes before the facility closes next month. As many as 80 cats have burrowed under fences and taken up residence at the state-run prison in Belle Glade. Prisoners have been feeding the animals, even though rules prohibit that. The 1,000-inmate prison closes Dec. 1. Officials tell The Palm Beach Post that as of Monday, there are more cats than prisoners at the facility. Just 69 inmates remain awaiting transfers. Palm Beach County animal control officers are removing the cats so they won’t starve when the prison closes. They’re offering to waive adoption fees to find them new homes.

Sidney Daily News, Monday, November 21, 2011

Page 5

Police burn protest tents to clear Cairo’s Tahrir BY SARAH EL DEEB Associated Press CAIRO (AP) — Egyptian soldiers and police set fire to protest tents in Cairo’s Tahrir Square and fired tear gas and rubber bullets in a major assault Sunday to drive out thousands demanding that the military rulers quickly transfer power to a civilian government. At least seven protesters were killed and hundreds were injured. It was the second day of clashes marking a sharp escalation of tensions on Egypt’s streets a week before the first elections since the ouster of longtime authoritarian leader Hosni Mubarak in February. The military took over the country, promising a swift transition to civilian rule. But the prodemocracy protesters who led the uprising have grown increasingly angry with the ruling generals, and suspect they are trying to cling to power even after an elected parliament is seated and a new president is voted in. The military-backed Cabinet said in a statement that elections set to begin on Nov. 28 would take place on time and thanked the police for their “restraint,” language that is likely to enrage the protesters even more. “We’re not going anywhere,” protester Mohammed Radwan said after security forces tried unsuccessfully to push the crowds out of Tahrir, the epicenter of the uprising. “The

AP Photo/Khalil Hamra

A PROTESTER throws a tear gas grenade back at Egyptian riot police near the interior ministry in downtown Cairo, Egypt, Sunday. Firing tear gas and rubber bullets, Egyptian riot police on Sunday clashed for a second day with thousands of rock-throwing protesters demanding that the ruling military quickly announce a date to hand over power to an elected government. The police battled an estimated 5,000 protesters in and around central Cairo's Tahrir Square, birthplace of the 18-day uprising that toppled authoritarian leader Hosni Mubarak in February. mood is good now and people ended on Feb. 11. took charge of security. are chanting again,” he added They were also one of only a The military, which took over after many of the demonstra- few violent confrontations to in- from Mubarak, has repeatedly tors returned. volve the police since the upris- pledged to hand power to an Two protesters were killed ing. The black-clad police were elected civilian government, but on Saturday, putting the toll a hated symbol of Mubarak’s has yet to set a specific date. for two days of violence to regime and after the uprising, The protests over the past two nine. The clashes were some they have largely stayed in the days have demanded a specific of the worst since the uprising background while the military date be set.

Gadhafi son to be tried at home BY RAMI AL-SHAHEIBI Associated Press ZINTAN, Libya (AP) — Libya’s new leaders said Sunday they will try Moammar Gadhafi’s son at home and not hand him over to the International Criminal Court where he’s charged with crimes against humanity. The government also announced the capture of the toppled regime’s intelligence minister, who is also wanted by the court. In one of several emerging complications, however, the former rebel faction that captured Seif al-Islam Gadhafi a day earlier is refusing to deliver him to national authorities in Tripoli, raising concern over whether he will get a proper trial and demonstrating the interim leaders’ weak hold over their fractured nation. In the capital, Information Minister Mahmoud Shammam said ex-Intelligence Minister Abdullah alSenoussi was captured alive on Sunday by revolutionary fighters from a southern region called Fazan, not far from where Gadhafi’s son was seized on Saturday while trying to flee to neighboring Niger. Fighters tracking alSenoussi for two days caught up with him at his sister’s house in Deerat al-Shati, about 40 miles (70 kilometers) south of the desert city of Sebha, said fighter Abdullah al-Sughayer. There were few other immediate details on his capture, and it was not clear whether his captors would also resist turning him over to Tripoli. Though they are wanted by the International Criminal Court in The Hague, Netherlands, Libya will likely seek to try both men at home. Speaking earlier in the day, before al-Senoussi’s capture, the information minister said Seif al-Islam, the ousted Libyan leader’s one-time heir apparent, must be tried in Libya even though the country’s new leaders have yet to establish a court system.

AP Photo/Thomas K. Fowler

IN THIS image made from video, a police officer uses pepper spray as he walks down a line of Occupy demonstrators sitting on the ground at the University of California, Davis on Friday. The video — posted on YouTube — was shot as police moved in on more than a dozen tents erected on campus and arrested 10 people, nine of them students.

Officers in pepper spray incident placed on leave BY JASON DEAREN Associated Press SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — A California university placed two of its police officers on administrative leave Sunday because of their involvement in the pepper spraying of passively sitting protesters, while the school’s chancellor accelerated a task force’s investigation into the incident amid calls for her resignation. The president of the 10-campus University of California system also weighed in on the growing fallout from Friday’s incident at UC Davis, saying that he is “appalled” at images of students being doused with pepper spray and plans a far-reaching, urgent assessment of law enforcement procedures on all campuses. “I implore students who wish to demonstrate to do so in a peaceful and lawful fashion. I expect campus authorities to honor that right,” UC President Mark G. Yudof said. All 10 chancellors would convene soon for a discussion “about how to ensure proportional law enforcement response to non-violent protest,” he said. Officials at UC Davis refused to identify the two officers who were place on administrative leave but one was a veteran of many years on the force and other “fairly new” to the department, the school’s Police Chief Annette Spicuzza told The Associated Press. She would not elaborate further because of the pending probe. Videos posted online of the incident clearly show one riot-gear clad officer dousing the line of protesters with spray as they sit in a line with their arms intertwined. Spicuzza told the

AP that the second officer was identified during an intense review of several videos. “We really wanted to be diligent in our research, and during our viewing of multiple videos we discovered the second officer,” Spicuzza said. “This is the right thing to do.” Both officers were trained in the use of pepper spray as department policy dictates, and both had been sprayed with it themselves during training, the chief noted. Meanwhile, UC Davis Chancellor Linda Katehi said she has been inundated with reaction from alumni, students and faculty. “I spoke with students this weekend and I feel their outrage,” Katehi said in a statement Sunday. Katehi also set a 30-day deadline for her school’s task force investigating the incident to issue its report. The task force, comprised of students, staff and faculty, will be chosen this week. She earlier had set a 90-day timetable. She also plans to meet with demonstrators Monday at their general assembly, said her spokeswoman, Claudia Morain. On Saturday, the UC Davis faculty association called for Katehi’s resignation, saying in a letter there had been a “gross failure of leadership.” Katehi has resisted calls for her to quit. “I am deeply saddened that this happened on our campus, and as chancellor, I take full responsibility for the incident,” Katehi said Sunday. “However, I pledge to take the actions needed to ensure that this does not happen again. I feel very sorry for the harm our students were subjected to and I vow to work tirelessly to make the campus a more welcoming and safe place.”


LOCALIFE Page 6

Monday, November 21,2 011

COMMUNITY

CALENDAR

This Evening • Art Study Group meets at 6 p.m. at CJ’s HighMarks. 295-2323. • The New Knoxville Community Library hosts Storytime for children 3, 4 and 5 and not yet in kindergarten from 6 to 6:30 p.m. • The Narcotics Anonymous group, Vision of Hope, group meets at 7 p.m. at Russell Road Christian Center, 340 W. Russell Road. • Women of the Moose meets at 7 p.m. at the Moose Lodge, on the corner of Broadway Avenue and Russell Road. • Overeaters Anonymous, a 12-step program for anyone desiring to stop eating compulsively, meets at 7 p.m. at Hillcrest Baptist Church, 1505 S. Main St., Bellefontaine. • Sidney Boy Scout Troop 97 meets at 7 p.m. at St. Paul’s United Church of Christ. All new members are welcome. For more information, call Tom Frantz at 492-7075. • TOPS (Taking Off Pounds Sensibly) meets at 7 p.m. at Faith Alliance Church, New Knoxville Road, New Bremen.

Tuesday Morning • Local 735 Copeland retirees meet for breakfast at 9 a.m. at Clancy’s. Retirees and spouses are welcome. • The F.J. Stallo Memorial Library of Minster will host Storytime for children 3, 4 and 5 from 10:30 to 11 a.m.

Tuesday Afternoon • The Narcotics Anonymous group, Addicts at Work, meets at noon at St. John’s Lutheran Church, 120 W. Water St. • Parkinson’s Support Group meet at 2 p.m. at Joint Township District Memorial Hospital, St. Marys. (419) 394-8252.

Tuesday Evening • Head, Neck and Oral Cancer Support Group for patients and care givers meets at St. Rita’s Regional Cancer Center in the Garden Conference Room from 5 to 6:30 p.m. For more information, call (419) 227-3361. • The New Bremen Public Library hosts Storytime for all ages at 6:30 p.m. • An hour-long support group for families who have a child with a life-threatening illness meets from 7 to 8 p.m. at Auglaize County Health Department. • K.I.D.S. (Kids Illness and Disease Support) meets from 7 to 8 p.m. at the Auglaize County Health Department. (419) 738-7386. • The Miami-Shelby Chapter of the Barbershop Harmony Society meets at 7:30 p.m. at the Greene Street UMC, 415 W. Greene St. at Caldwell Street. All men interested in singing are welcome and visitors are always welcome. For more information, call (937) 778-1586 or visit www.melodymenchorus.org. • The Al-Anon Sidney Group, for friends and relatives of alcoholics, meets from 8:30 to 9:30 p.m. at First Presbyterian Church on the corner of North Street and Miami Avenue. All are welcome.

Wednesday Morning • The Amos Memorial Public Library offers Mother Goose Time at 9:15 a.m. for babies, 3 months through 23 months, along with a parent or caregiver. • The Sidney Kiwanis Club meets at 11:30 a.m. at the Moose Lodge. Lunch is held until noon, followed by a club meeting and program.

Wednesday Evening • The Narcotics Anonymous group, Labor of Love, meets at 6:30 p.m. at First Christian Church, 320 E. Russell Road. • Stokes Lodge 305, Free and Accepted Masons, meets at 7:30 p.m. at the Port Jefferson Lodge, Port Jefferson. All Master Masons are welcome.

Thursday Afternoon • The Narcotics Anonymous group, Addicts at Work, meets at noon at St. John’s Lutheran Church, 120 W. Water St.

What color was Mom’s hair? Dear H e l oise: Happy c o m bined 5 0 t h a n n i v e rHints sary of H e l from oise/ Heloise H e l oise! I Heloise Cruse w a s born and raised in Honolulu, but now have been living on the Mainland for many decades (my wife and I got married and bid “Aloha” to the islands in 1964). During the summers of 1960 and 1961, while a student at the University of Hawaii, I worked for The Honolulu Advertiser, first as an office boy and then as a temporary payroll bookkeeper. One day during my second summer, I noticed this seemingly energetic haole woman scurrying along the hallway. An adjacent co-worker told me that she was Heloise, who wrote a column for the newspaper. What I noticed most about Heloise was the color of her hair. But time has faded the exact color from my memory. Was it pink, orange or green? Or all of the above at different times? Aloha! — George Arita, Oak View, Calif. George! Aloha, Thanks so much for sharing your memory of my mother, the original Heloise (1919-1977). She did like to spray her hair to match her outfit. When she first started this column, more than 50 years ago, she colored her hair silver so she would look older and wiser! But as the years went on, green, sapphire blue and orchid were her favorites. So, it doesn’t surprise me, because you could have seen her with any of the above colors. I can remember her with purple hair! Visit www.Heloise.com to see her. Thanks for your letter — you made me smile. — Heloise

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

RECENT

BIRTHS

BARHORST ANNA — Brad and Bridget Barhorst, of Anna, announce the birth of a son and daughter, twins, Oct. 14, 2011, in the Joint Township District Memorial Hospital in St. Marys. Daughter Maddy Lynn was born at 9:24 a.m. Son Max Bradley was born at 9:25 a.m. Maddy weighed 6 pounds, 6 ounces, and was 19 inches long. Max weighed 6 pounds, 4 ounces, and was 19 inches long. The babies were welcomed home by their sister, Liza, 2. The twins’ maternal grandparents are Dennis and Elaine Bruns, of St. Sebastian. Their paternal grandparents are Paul and Ann Barhorst, of Anna. Their greatgrandmother is Alma Schmitmeyer, of Cranberry Prairie. Their mother is the

former Bridget Bruns, of Her mother is the forSt. Sebastian. mer Lisa York, of Russia. HOLTHAUS FORT LORAMIE — Jeff and Lisa Holthaus, of Fort Loramie, announce the birth of a daughter, Cora Elizabeth, Oct. 21, 2011, at 8:41 p.m. in the Copeland-Emerson Family Birthing Center at Wilson Memorial Hospital. She weighed 8 pounds and was 20 1/4 inches long. She was welcomed home by her brothers, Jack, 6, Luke, 5, and Samuel, 1. Her maternal grandparents are Steve and Bonnie York, of Russia. Her paternal grandparents are Bernard and Bobbi Holthaus, of Fort Loramie. Her greatgrandparents are Irma Fleck, of Coldwater, and Bernard Holthaus, of Anna.

HOLTHAUS MINSTER — Brian and Corrie Holthaus, of Minster, announce the birth of a son, Hank Leo Holthaus, Oct. 23, 2011, at 8:26 a.m. in the Copeland-Emerson Family Birthing Center at Wilson Memorial Hospital in Sidney. He weighed 9 pounds, 8 ounces, and was 21 inches long. He was welcomed home by his sister, Carmen, 3. His maternal grandparents are Larry and Bonnie Barga, of Versailles. His paternal grandparents are Harold and Patricia Holthaus, of Sidney. His great-grandparents are Levadia Barga, of Versailles, and Monica Franz, of Laura. His mother is the former Corrie Barga, of Versailles.

Sister’s sex activity upsetting month. She DR. WALsaid they both LACE: I’m 17 feel they are and my older sismature enough ter is 19, and we to have a sexare very, very ual relationclose. She has ship and that been going with they love each her boyfriend for other very over two years. They are consid’Tween much. It answers a lot of ered the “perfect couple” by his 12 & 20 questions that Dr. Robert I had about her mom and dad Wallace moody behavand also by my ior the past few parents. Last I’m really week, my sister told me weeks. that they have been hav- stunned about all this. I ing sex for the past guess you could say that

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LOCALIFE

Sidney Daily News, Monday, November 21, 2011 MARRIAGE

ANNIVERSARY

Page 7

INTENTIONS

Judge William Zimmerman Sr. of the Probate Division of the Shelby County Common Pleas Court has received the following applications for marriage licenses. Benjamin S. Shuster, 20, Shelby County, U.S. Army, and Tara H. Spicer, 20, Shelby County, student. Gregory E. Goettemoeller, 24, Berrien County, Mich., farm marketer, and Dana M. Zumberger, 23, Shelby County. Christopher L. Mr. and Mrs. Oldham Wedding Day 1961 Macke, 26, Shelby County, designer, and to see family and friends Sarah M. Philpot, 24, and enjoys cooking and Shelby County, radiacollecting antique glasstion therapist. ware.

Oldhams mark golden date RAWSON — William “Bill” and Dorothy Oldham, of Rawson, will celebrate their 50th wedding anniversary during their Thanksgiving observance with their family, Nov. 24, 2011. Bill and the former Dorothy Darlene Dillon were married Nov. 25, 1961, in Dorothy’s family church in Van Buren in Hancock County. Bill is the son of the late Roy and Mary Huysman. He has a brother, David Oldham, and a sister, Mary Wingo, both of Findlay. Dorothy is the daughter of the late Donald and

Mabel Dillon. The couple have two children: Jenifer Flaxbart, of Austin, Texas, and Brian Oldham, of Sidney. They have four grandchildren: Jacy, 7, and Addie, 3, both of Austin, Texas, and Dillon, 6, and Olivia, 4, both of Sidney. Dorothy retired as treasurer of the Hancock County Educational Service Center in 2000. Bill is a painter. The couple spend time in Rawson and in Sidney, where they help to take care of their grandchildren. They both enjoy reading and movies. Dorothy travels

Hoying named Teen of Month grade point avThe Sidney erage of 4.0. Noon Kiwanis He has a Club has named brother, Jay, 20. Andrew Hoying, of His academic Anna, its October activities, hon2011 Teen of the ors and awards Month. include NaHoying is the tional Honor son of Doug and Society, AcadeCarol Hoying. Hoying mia Team for He is a senior four years, Disat Jackson Center Student High School and ranks tinguished first in his class with a Award in 2008 and

2010, West Point Leadership Award in 2010, Americanism Test winner, and dual enrollment and advanced placement courses. Hoying has been a member of the baseball and basketball teams for three years, the cross country team for four years, the student council, the Spanish Club for four years and FCCLA.

Into the wild blue yonder

He was a Spanish Club officer, a 4-H Club officer, the 2010 SCAL Basketball Player of the Year, the 2010 baseball MVP and the cross country Tiger Award in 2010. He earned all-county honors in 2008 and 2009 and all-conference honors in 2010. Hoying plans to attend college next fall.

New Life Center topic of meeting Members of the Kiwanis Club of Sidney learned about Elizabeth’s New Life Center during their meeting Nov. 9. David O’Leary, development officer for Elizabeth’s New Life Center, was the guest speaker. Elizabeth’s New Life Center provides positive solutions for the challenges of unexpected pregnancies, according to O’Leary. The New Life Center has five core programs: women’s centers, prenatal care; in school youth development; education marriage programs; and after abortion support. There are six women’s centers, one of which is in Sidney at 2579 Michigan St. Women’s Center Sidney has been in exis-

tence, in one form or another, since 1983, O’Leary told the group. The forerunner was the Problem Pregnancy Center which was started by Henry Cordonnier, Ken Knapke and Mike Gilardi. In 2006, the Women’s Center Sidney merged with Elizabeth’s New Life Center. It has four paid staff and 15 volunteers. The main focus of the center is to serve pregnant women facing unexpected pregnancies. The mission is to empower individuals to make healthy life choices respecting the value of each person created by God. In 2010, O’Leary said, 593 clients were served by the Sidney office. More than 600 pregnancy tests and 194 ultrasounds were

administered. Almost 87 percent of abortionminded women changed their minds, resulting in 163 babies saved. President Heather Pollard presided over the business meeting. The invocation was given by Ken Smith and the group was lead in song by Ralph Bornhorst, accompanied by DiAnne Karas on the piano. Rick Lunsford led the activities which involved answering various trivia questions regarding the military. The club’s annual spaghetti dinner will

SDN Photo/Luke Gronneberg

take place at Sidney High School Dec. 6. Tickets can be purchased from any club member. Kiwanis is a global organization of volunteers dedicated to changing the world one child and one community at a time. The Sidney Kiwanis meets at noon every Wednesday at the Sidney Moose Lodge. This club is always looking for new members who want to serve their community. Contact Secretary Mike Tangeman at jtangeman@hotmail.com.

Elementary school students at Hardin-Houston Local School launched balloons during Red Ribbon Week recently. Attached to each ballon was a student’s pledge to live a drug-free, healthy life. The last time Hardin students did this, balloons were found as far away as Rhode Island, Massachusetts and Canada. For photo reprints, visit www.sidneydailynews.com

CLASSIC MOVIES NOVEMBER 19th 2011 THRU FEBRUARY 12th 2012 November 19 & 20 Singin In The Rain (1952) - 1 hr 43 min November 21 thru November 25 Ferris Bueller’s Day Off (1986)-1 hr 43 min November 26 & 27 The Dirty Dozen (1967) - 2 hr 29 min December 3 & 4 West Side Story (1961) - 2 hr 35 min December 10 & 11 Airplane (1980) - 1 hr 28 min December 17 & 18 - 1 hr 52 min Yours, Mine, and Ours (1968)

Give the Gift that keeps on giving

December 19 thru December 23 Old Yeller (1958) - 1 hr 23 min

One More Time

December 24 & 25 Holiday Inn (1942) - 1 hr 40 min

performs November 25, 2011 1pm to 3pm I-75 Exit 82 Piqua 937-773-1225

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For Gift Subscriptions please call 937-498-5939 or 1-800-688-4820

December 26 thru December 30 National Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation (1989) - 1 hr 37 min December 31 & January 1 Rocky (1976) - 1 hr 59 min January 7 & 8 Grease (1978) - 1 hr 50 min

Oh What Fun It is to

Shop

November 25th & 26th

Holiday Kick Off % 20 OFF STOREWIDE

(already made-up merchandise only)

104 E. Mason Road

January 14 & 15 Top Gun (1986) - 1 hr 50 min January January21 21&&22 22 The Good, The Good,The TheBad, Bad,and andThe TheUgly Ugly (1968) 2 hr 41 min (1968) - 2 hr 41 min January 28 & 29 From HereTo Eternity (1953)-1 hr 58 min February 4 & 5 - 1 hr 45 min It Happened One Night (1934) February 11 & 12 Pretty Woman (1990) - 1 hr 57 min

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Contact News Editor Melanie Speicher with story ideas and news releases by phone at (937) 498-5971; email, mspeicher@sdnccg.com; or by fax, (937) 498-5991.

AGRICULTURE Page 8

Monday, November 21, 2011

Marketing assistance loans available The Comis 1.125 percent. The farmmodity Credit stored quantity (CCC) Corp. for loan may be nine-month certified by the marketing asproducer or sistance loan measured by program is the FSA field for available reporter for a 2011 crop wheat, oats, FSA news nominal fee. All mortsoybeans and Roger Lentz grain gaged by the corn. An acreage report CCC is subject to spotmust be filed with FSA check at any time. Crop loans provide and the producer in compliance with the pro- immediate access to opvisions of sod/swamp erating capital and afand wetland conserva- ford the opportunity for tion. The commodity market price appreciamust have been pro- tion after the harvest duced by an eligible pro- period. Measurement ducer, harvested and FSA offers measurestored in an acceptable structure or delivered to ment services to rean approved warehouse. questing producers to An interest rate is es- determine a quantity for tablished for the month loan, production eviof loan disbursement dence for the ACRE proor other and subject to adjust- gram ment on Jan. 1. The in- documentation of yield. A base rate of $30 terest rate for loans disbursed in November plus $16 for the first

hour on the farm will be charged. A fee of $8 will be assessed for each additional half hour. Reshould be quests submitted to allow sufficient time for field reporter measuring and quantity, quality determinations and county office processing of the requested service. Also, producers are reminded that safe ingress and egress shall be provided for each storage structure. In the event safe access is not provided, the county office will notify the producer(s) of the unsafe situation.

returned to the FSA office by or on Dec. 5. Producers are advised to carefully follow all ballot instructions and return the voted ballot by the deadline.

Grain quality

Producers are reminded to check storage structures on a regular basis and to maintain grain quality. Grain under the CCC loan program must be properly maintained by the borrower. Any loss of quality and/or quantity is considered the producer or CCC loan borrower’s responsibility. Check those storage structures Election Eligible voters in often! Youth loans Dinsmore, Jackson and The Farm Service Van Buren townships are reminded to vote for Agency makes loans to the candidate of their rural youths to establish choice to serve a three- and operate income-proyear term on the County ducing projects in conFSA Committee. Ballots nection with 4-H clubs, must be postmarked or FFA and other agricul-

DeGraff native inducted into broadcasters hall of fame commented that she possessed a remarkable professional maturity. Hill’s photograph and biography will be displayed in Bonner Springs, Kan., home to the National Agricultural Hall of Fame. Ed Johnson of Delaware, founder of ABN Radio, of which Hill became owner, and mentor to Hill, was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 2005 following his death in 2001. At the conclusion of the banquet, Hill’s parents, Lowell and Donna Hill, of DeGraff, were presented with a multipaned window from the barn of her grandparents’ rural DeGraff home where she resided. The window was used to handcraft frames featuring her photographs, artist renderings of scenes of the DeGraff

farmstead, and her favorite Bible verse from Philippians. The NAFB logo and the gavel she had received when named NAFB president accented the frame. Also in attendance were Hill’s brother and sister-in-law, Lance and

Gratitude

tunity to share with others, even in faraway lands. In Shelby County, the 2011 bounty from our toil and perseverance has again been a fruitful venture and with it our agricultural industry continues as a sustainable and economic pillar. We, as producers, are thankful for that opportunity and noble capacity to serve as stewards of the land and livestock enterprises; and to be an integral part as provider of food, feed, clothing and fuel. Indeed, let us truly be grateful for another year of life on the land. From the Shelby County FSA Committee and office staff people, Happy Thanksgiving!

Freedom, faith, family, friends and farming, all gifts from our Creator, are many of the good things and commonality we are privileged to enjoy in our great land. This is a special time of year and season; it is a season of The writer is executive gratitude and thanks as director of the Shelby we appreciate what we County Farm Service have and also the oppor- Agency.

Order Your Thanksgiving Pies Today! Wednesday November 23

Nikki Hill, of DeGraff, and additional immediate family members. Hill will again be honored for her professional accomplishments at the upcoming Ohio Farm Bureau Federation Annual Meeting Dec. 1 in Columbus.

Pie Pick-Up at blue building at Shelby County Fairgrounds Order today at 492-9181

Closed Thanksgiving Day

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A DeGraff native was honored during the National Association of Farm Broadcasters’ (NAFB) 68th annual convention Nov. 9-11 n i Hill Kansas City, Mo. During the President’s Banquet on Nov. 11, DeGraff native Lindsay Hill was inducted into the NAFB Hall of Fame. Hill was killed in a rural Ohio auto accident on May 19. Hill had just recently joined the AgDay and U.S. Farm Report television broadcast team in March as agribusiness director, after serving as a broadcaster and owner of ABN Radio Network in Ohio. Hill, 31, was honored numerous times for her professional achievements, and was serving as the current president of the National Association of Farm Broadcasters. NAFB members came together Nov. 11 to celebrate Hill’s accomplishments, voice their respect for her leadership and relate stories of their professional experiences and personal relationships with Hill. A video of Hill’s life was narrated by Clinton Griffiths, current managing editor at AgDay Farm Journal Television in South Bend, Ind., who was also Hill’s farm news co-anchor at the station. Additionally, the audience viewed taped remarks by Secretary of Agriculture Tom Vilsack, who had met with a delegation from NAFB, and participated in a discussion facilitated by Hill on May 2 in Vilsack’s Washington, D.C., office. Vilsack recalled Hill’s expertise on current agricultural issues and

tural groups. Projects must be planned and operated with the help of the organization adviser, produce sufficient income to repay the loan and provide the youth with practical business and educational experience. The maximum loan amount is $5,000. To inquire about a Rural Youth Loan, contact the FSA office or Farm Loan personnel, Marla Koener or Tina Mellinger (419) 5863149.

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LOCAL NEWS YOUR

Sidney Daily News, Monday, November 21, 2011

HOROSCOPE

BY FRANCIS DRAKE What kind of day will tomorrow be? To find out what the stars say, read the forecast given for your birth sign. For Tuesday, Nov. 22, 2011 ARIES (March 21 to April 19) During the next six weeks, grab every opportunity that comes your way, to travel or go someplace new and different. You want to broaden your horizons and learn more! TAURUS (April 20 to May 20) The month ahead is the time to clean up loose ends about inheritances, insurance matters and shared property. You will get a lot done with surprising ease. GEMINI (May 21 to June 20) Old friends and ex-partners are back in your life again. Also, be aware that in the month ahead, you need to get more sleep than usual. (Oh dear.) CANCER (June 21 to July 22) Your efficiency at work will be hampered by delays, missed paperwork, canceled appointments and mild confusion. Just grin and bear it for the next few weeks! LEO (July 23 to Aug. 22) Old flames might be back on the scene again. The month ahead is a wonderful time for vacations, parties, creative efforts, sports and playful activities with children. VIRGO (Aug. 23 to Sept. 22) For the next six weeks, work to make everything at home flow smoothly. Stock the fridge, because company is coming! LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) Stay on top of potential car repairs because transportation delays are likely in the month ahead. In fact, allow extra time for everything you do. BY FRANCIS DRAKE What kind of day will tomorrow be? To find out what the stars say, read the forecast given for your birth sign. For Wednesday, Nov. 23, 2011 ARIES (March 21 to April 19) This is an amazingly productive day at work. You can practically move mountains. Do whatever you can to introduce reforms and improvements to both your job and your health. TAURUS (April 20 to May 20) This is a powerful day for those of you in the performing arts and for those who work with children. You see new ways of accomplishing your goals. GEMINI (May 21 to June 20) Tackle repair problems related to laundry areas, plumbing and bathrooms. Improve your garbage situation and how you recycle. (It’s a perfect day for this.) CANCER (June 21 to July 22) You are unusually persuasive today! Now is the time to make your case and influence people to agree with you — if this is what you want to achieve. LEO (July 23 to Aug. 22) You might see new ways of earning money today. You also might see new applications or uses for something you already own. Clever you! VIRGO (Aug. 23 to Sept. 22) Give some serious thought to what you can do to improve your appearance, your image and even your health. Take a realistic look in the mirror. Any ideas? LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) Your ability to research and find answers to old problems is fabulous today. You will be relentless in going after what you need to discover. SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21)

SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) The next several weeks are a poor time to initiate new business deals. However, they are an excellent time to wrap up old business and finish whatever is already on your plate. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) Today the Sun moves into your sign, where it stays for the next month, bringing you lots of energy. This means it’s your turn to recharge your batteries for the rest of the year! CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 19) Work alone or behind the scenes in the next month, as you ponder what you want your new year to be all about. If you define your goals, they will more than likely materialize. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18) Old friends are back. Many of you will be involved with clubs, groups and organizations more than usual. Whatever happens causes you to rethink your goals. PISCES (Feb. 19 to March 20) Whether dealing with old bosses or seeing parents again (after a period of absence), you are dealing with authority figures from your past. This might cause you to rethink your life direction in general. YOU BORN TODAY You’re individualistic! You march to the beat of your own drum. Personal freedom is a survival issue for you, which is why you care little what others think about you. This gives you a fresh, carefree quality that is intriguing. You’re a nurturing parent if given the opportunity. In the year ahead, your partnerships and close friendships will be of primary importance. Birthdate of: Billie Jean King, tennis champ; Scarlett Johansson, actress; Mark Ruffalo, actor. You might meet someone unusually powerful today. Quite likely, this person will lead you to change your goals for the future. Possibly, you are the strong person in a group in the eyes of others. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) Because you are so ambitious today, people will listen to you. In particular, you seem to be keen to introduce reforms and improvements. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 19) Go after opportunities in publishing, the media, medicine, the law and higher education today. Your enthusiasm will ensure your success. (It’s a good day to make travel plans as well.) AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18) You will come up a winner in discussions about shared property, inheritances and insurance matters. Don’t be afraid to stand your ground, especially about old issues. This is a good time to wrap up old business. PISCES (Feb. 19 to March 20) Difficulties with partners and close friends might arise today; however, cooperation is possible. Look for win-win solution with someone. Both parties are keen to improve what now seems to be a stalemate. YOU BORN TODAY Because you’re free-spirited and freedom-loving, your motto is live and let live. You never run from a fight, but you can avoid one with your clever wit. Despite your early lifestyle, you hunger for a solid family base. In your later years, you enjoy exploring spirituality and human-consciousness movements. In the year ahead, an important choice awaits you. Choose wisely. Birthdate of: Bruce Hornsby, singer/musician; Jennifer Michael Hecht, poet/historian; Miley Cyrus, singer/actress.

Twas the Week Before

Thanksgiving Sale! Items in this ad Good From Thursday, November 17th thru Wednesday, November 23rd

IGA French Style

GREEN BEANS or Creamed Style CORN Limit 10 Please

DAYTON (AP) — A new study shows that more than one in four Ohioans smoke cigarettes — one of the highest rates in the nation. The Dayton Daily News reports (http://bit.ly/sd02DP ) that about 26 percent of Ohioans smoked cigarettes in 2011, matching the rates of Missouri, Oklahoma, Louisiana, Mississippi and Arkansas. The information comes from a recent study by the GallupHealthways Well-Being Index. Kentucky was the only state with a higher smoking rate, with 29 percent of residents lighting up. Ohio is the only state with a comprehensive smoking ban and a rate above 25 percent. Officials with the Ohio Health Department say

their own survey found that 22.5 percent of Ohioans smoked in 2010. They say smoking is a

huge health concern and the percent of smokers in the state is not decreasing.

Happy Thanksgiving From the Staff at Howell’s

OPEN THANKSGIVING DAY FROM 8 A.M. TO 2 P.M.

$.29

IGA or Prairie Farms

MILK 2%, 1%, or Fat Free Limit 4 Please

$1.89

Boneless, Skinless

Six Pack 1/2 Liter Bottles

CHICKEN BREAST SEVEN UP

$1.33

$1.59 lb.

Final Price When You Get One FREE

Tray Pack

COKE

12 Pack Cans

4/$11.00

Super Deli and Bakery Sale! Let us help with all of your holiday week needs. Deli and Bakery Items are Good Monday November 21 thru Sunday November 27th

8 Piece

Baked in Store

PUMPKIN CHICKEN PIES Fried or Rotisserie

$4.99 2/$5.00 While They Last

Store Made

SHREDDED CHICKEN

$2.99 lb.

Store Made

Troyer Big Horn

Store Made

Troyer Deluxe Club

Store Made

Store Baked

SHREDDED BEEF .................$3.99 lb. COLBY CHEESE ....................$3.99 lb. SHREDDED BBQ PORK ......$3.99 lb. BOLOGNA...............................$1.99 lb. SLOW ROASTED ITALIAN OR PULLED BBQ PORK ............$4.99 lb. FRENCH BREAD .......................$1.19 Troyer Yellow or White

Store Baked 6 ct.

AMERICAN CHEESE ............$3.99 lb. CINNAMON ROLLS .................$2.99

Traditional Holiday Favorites

Zesta

SALTINE CRACKERS

$1.89 Keebler

Stove Top

TOWN HOUSE CRACKERS

Kraft, 8 oz.

2/$3.00

STUFFING ................Final Price $.99 COOL WHIP ..............................$.99 Green Giant Boil in Bag, 7/10 oz. VEGETABLES ............................$.99 Bird’s Eye or Freshlike 10-16 oz.

FROZEN VEGETABLES ...............10/$10.00 Hungry Jack

CASSEROLE POTATOES ....................10/$10.00 Inn Maid 8 oz.

EGG NOODLES ......................$1.19

Ohioans more likely than most to smoke tobacco

Page 9

Campbell’s

CREAM OF MUSHROOM OR CREAM OF CHICKEN SOUP ......10/$10.00

Snack Items Snack Items are Good Monday November 21 thru Sunday November 27th only.

12 Pack, 12 Oz. Cans NESTEA ...................................$1.99 2 Liter NESTEA ......................................$.59 Final Price with Electronic Coupon

Mellow Yellow, Fresca, Seagram’s Ginger Ale 2 Liter SPRITE ...................................... $.79 Final Price with Electronic Coupon, Limit 8

Uncle Rays

Miracle Whip

POTATO CHIPS ............10/$10.00

SALAD DRESSING ............Final Price $2.99

Pajadas

Kraft Jet Puffed

Benxyl

MARSHMALLOWS .....10/$10.00

SALTY SNACKS ...........10/$10.00 PRETZELS ....................10/$10.00

3 DAY SUPER DOUBLE TUESDAY NIGHT November 22nd

1/2 Tenderloin Dinner

695

$

Dine-in or Carry Out. Not valid with Prestige Card or any other discounts.

WED. & FRI. NIGHT

COUPON BONANZA We will double all coupons with a face value of $1.00 or less FRIDAY, SATURDAY AND SUNDAY ONLY!

November 23rd & 24th

Chicken Dinner 4 pc Regular

600

$

Dine-in or Carry Out. Not valid with Prestige Card or any other discounts.

Hours: Tues. - Sat. 4-9 p.m.; Sun. 3:30-8 p.m.

St. Rt. 47 • Port Jefferson, Ohio 937-492-8952 • 937-492-0038 2237455

2236337


Page 10

2236588

Sidney Daily News, Monday, November 21, 2011


COMICS

Sidney Daily News, Monday, November 21, 2011

MUTTS

BIG NATE

DILBERT

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE BLONDIE

ZITS HI AND LOIS

DENNIS THE MENACE

FAMILY CIRCUS BEETLE BAILEY

ARLO AND JANIS

TODAY IN HISTORY CROSSWORD HOROSCOPE Monday, Nov. 21, 2011 During the next year, an opportunity Today is Monday, Nov. 21, might develop for you to takeThere advan325th day of 2011. the tage of a little-known program that are 40 days left in the year. could increase your financial whereToday’s Highlight in itHiswithal. If it checks out, go for in a tory: quiet manner. SCORPIO (Oct.21, 24-Nov. 22) Presi— Find On Nov. 1973, yourself an environment thatattoris free dent Richard Nixon’s from outside interference, and you’ll ney, J. Fred Buzhardt have one of your more productive (buh-ZAHRDT’), days. Shut the door and revealed check your the of an 18emailsexistence later. SAGITTARIUS 23-Dec. — minute gap (Nov. in one of21) the Your farsightedness is remarkable, White House tape recordand itrelated could help visualize exings to you Watergate. actly the right game plan to follow. Ononthis date: Work some future hopes that ■ like In to1789, North you’d bring into being. CarCAPRICORN (Dec.the 22-Jan. 19)state — It’s olina became 12th not ratify always the possible, your perto U.S.but Constituspicuity could help you visualize tion. what’s coming down the line, which Judah the Benwill■aidInyou1861, in marshaling apjamin, who had been acting propriate forces. AQUARIUS (Jan.Secretary 20-Feb. 19) of — Confederate Have confidence in yournamed own convicWar, was formally to tions.post. If you believe you have a good the idea for something, don’t let others ■ In 1920, Rediscourage you the fromIrish following publican through on it.Army killed 12 PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)officers — Watch British intelligence out for someone who tries to get you and two auxiliary policemen to change something that British is of perin the Dublin area; sonal benefit in order to make it into forces responded raiding a windfall for them. Ofby course, they awon’t soccer killing 14 phrasematch, it that way. ARIES (March 21-April 19) — If civilians. you’re reluctant make a necessary ■ In 1922,toRebecca L. Feldecision in a timely manner, someone ton of Georgia was sworn in whom you’d disapprove of is likely to as first woman to for serve stepthe up and make that call you. in theletU.S. Senate. Don’t that happen. TAURUS 20) — Dedi■ In (April 1931,20-May the Universal cate your film time and effort to the tasks horror “Frankenstein,” that you dislike doing the most. The starring Boris Karloff as the relief it would give you will be a huge monster andshoulders. Colin Clive as weight off your his creator, was 20) first reGEMINI (May 21-June — Even if you have a full schedule planned, leased. try ■ to find bit of time to enjoy a moIn a 1942, the Alaska mentarily pleasurable The Highway was pursuit. formally relief would give you the energy to opened. happily continue onward. ■ In (June 1969, the 22) Senate CANCER 21-July — Try not to getdown yourself the involved in a projvoted Supreme ect that oncenomination started demands to of be Court finished. If F. youHaynsworth, do, make sure your Clement 55entire day is cleared to do nothing 45, else. the first such rejection since 1930. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) — If you learn that you haveexat ■some In information 1974, bombs your disposal tremenploded at awould pair be of ofpubs in dous help to another, do England, your best to Birmingham, get it to that person. Chances are killing 21a friend people. (Six susyou’d make for life. pects convicted ofBeing the VIRGO were (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) — prudent isbut likely to convictions ensure that you’ll attack, the of be able to enjoy success and the finer the so-called “Birmingham things down When that time Six” werethe line. overturned in comes, you’ll be glad of your sensible 1991.) behavior. ■ In 1980, 87 23) people died LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. — Once you in a fire at the MGM make an important, carefullyGrand considered decision, the Nev. courage of Hotel in Lashave Vegas, your stand by your res■convictions In 1991,tothe U.N. Secuolution. Being wishy-washy won’t rity Council chose Boutros help anyone. Boutros-Ghali EgyptFeature to be COPYRIGHT 2011ofUnited Secretary-General. Syndicate, Inc.

SNUFFY SMITH

GARFIELD

BABY BLUES

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

CRYPTOQUIP

CRANKSHAFT

Page 11


WEATHER

Sidney Daily News, Monday, November 21, 2011

OUT

OF THE

Page 12

PAST

100 years

Today

Tonight

Mostly cloudy; slight chance of rain High: 52°

Mostly cloudy Low: 45°

Tuesday

Wednesday

Rain, chance of t’storms High: 58° Low: 38°

Thursday

Partly cloudy High: 48° Low: 48°

Mostly sunny High: 55° Low: 38°

Friday

Saturday

Mostly sunny High: 55° Low: 38°

LOCAL OUTLOOK

Rain expected Tuesday

Partly cloudy; 40% chance of rain High: 55° Low: 40°

An unsettled weather pattern will take shape across the Miami Va l l e y for the next seve r a l d ay s. Keep the umbrella and rain jacket handy Sunrise/sunset until Wednesday. Today, Tuesday sunset .........................5:15 p.m. Tonight’s sunset........................5:16 p.m. the showers become a litWednesday sunrise...................7:31 a.m. Tuesday sunrise ........................7:30 a.m. tle more scattered but become much more Temperatures and precipitation for Friday, Saturday, Sunday and Monday will appear widespread as a storm in Wednesday’s edition of The Sidney Daily News. For regularly updated weather infor- system heads this way on mation, see The Sidney Daily News Web site on the Internet, www.sidneydailynews.com. Tuesday.

REGIONAL

ALMANAC

Today's Forecast

National forecast Forecast highs for Monday, Nov. 21

Sunny

Pt. Cloudy

Cloudy

City/Region High | Low temps

Forecast for Monday, Nov. 21

MICH.

Cleveland 47° | 40°

Toledo 45° | 36°

Youngstown 49° | 40°

Mansfield 49° | 40°

Columbus 52° | 43°

Dayton 52° | 43° Fronts Cold

-10s

-0s

Showers

0s

10s

Rain

20s 30s 40s

T-storms

50s 60s

Flurries

Warm Stationary

70s

80s

Snow

Pressure Low

Cincinnati 58° | 49°

High

Portsmouth 59° | 49°

90s 100s 110s

© 2011 Wunderground.com Thunderstorms

Cloudy

Storms In The South, Rain And Snow In The Northwest

Weather Underground • AP

W.VA.

KY.

Ice

A front extends from the Mid-Atlantic to the Southern Plains, triggering more showers and thunderstorms, some of which may turn severe. Meanwhile, another disturbance brings rain and mountain snow to the Pacific Northwest.

PA.

Partly Cloudy

Showers

Ice

Flurries Rain

Snow Weather Underground • AP

AccuWeather.com forecast for daytime conditions, low/high temperatures

Cushing’s disease explained DR. DEAR other glands, like DONOHUE: the thyroid, adrePlease give me nal, ovary and information on testes, into acCushing’s distion. In Cushease. What are ing’s disease, the its symptoms? pituitary proHow is it diagduces too much nosed? How is it ACTH, adrenoTo your corticotropic hortreated? — T.D. ANSWER: A mone, a hormone good round face rethat prods the sembling a full health adrenal glands to moon, weight Dr. Paul G. produce too gain — especially much cortisone. Donohue in the trunk area, Excessive cortithin skin that’s easily sone is responsible for traumatized, facial hair all the signs and sympgrowth in women, loss of toms I listed. periods, erectile dysfuncThe appearance of the tion, an outbreak of acne, patient is one big clue to purple stretch marks, os- the diagnosis. High valteoporosis, a rise in blood ues for blood and urine sugar and elevated blood levels of adrenal gland pressure are some of the hormones are another signs and symptoms of clue. An MRI scan of the Cushing’s disease. brain shows the pituHarvey Cushing was itary tumor. a famous American surRemoval of the tumor geon who died in 1939. almost always cures this He discovered that a pi- disease. Today’s surgery tuitary tumor caused the is much different from above signs and symp- the surgery of Cushing’s toms that now bear his days. Special instruname. The pituitary ments can be directed to gland is a small gland lo- the tumor through the cated on the underside of nose or the roof of the the brain. It releases mouth to grab it and hormones that stimulate eliminate it. The surgeon

doesn’t have to cut through the skull. Adrenal gland tumors, not caused by excess ACTH, are another cause of Cushing’s disease. This situation is not as common as is the pituitary tumor. Surgeons remove adrenal gland tumors through an abdominal incision. DEAR DR. DONOHUE: How do I stop seborrheic keratoses from spreading? They are on all parts of my body. Help! Currently I use salicylic acid cream and have used it for more than a year with no results. — J.L. ANSWER: Tan, brown and, less often, black, raised, circular spots of skin, about an inch in diameter (3 cm) with a warty surface are seborrheic keratoses. They look like they’ve been glued to the skin. They pop up on the back, chest, arms, legs, neck, face and scalp. Their numbers range from a few to hundreds. Their cause is unknown. Seborrheic keratoses

are not skin cancers. They most often don’t hurt or itch. They are unsightly. Even though you have many, a doctor can scrape them off with a special instrument or freeze them with liquid nitrogen. The treatment can be done in stages. A bountiful crop will take time to remove. How to stop their spread? I’m sorry to say that no one has come up with a good way of doing so. As an aside, the sudden appearance of many keratoses might be an indication of a hidden cancer. If it comforts you, I have them too. Dr. Donohue regrets that he is unable to answer individual letters, but he will incorporate them in his column whenever possible. Readers may write him or request an order form of available health newsletters at P.O. Box 536475, Orlando, FL 32853-6475. Readers may also order health newsletters from www.rbmamall.com.

Nov. 21, 1911 The report of the examination of the Children’s Home shows that there are 17 boys and 12 girls being kept at the home. The examiner was shown quite an assortment of fancy work and sewing done by the girls and pains taken. The results show that they are being instructed in needle work as well as the housekeeping department. Mr. and Mrs. J.H. Kemp are the superintendent and matron. The trustees are George Hagelberger, J.E. Way, J.W.A. Fridley and S.J. Hatfield, deceased, now B.T. Bulle. ––––– A C.H.&D. freight engineer was arrested in Dayton yesterday at the request of Chief of Police O’Leary in connection with a robbery at the Metropole Hotel here last Saturday night. It is alleged that the railroad man stole $55.50 from the trouser pockets of Frank Johnston, of Port Jefferson, who was quartered in the same room with him.

score of 40 to 27.

50 years

Nov. 21, 1961 How those misspent copies of The Sidney Daily News destined for subscribers at Russia, Ohio, ended up in the USSR continues to baffle post office officials. Postmaster Sidney W.B. Swonger said this morning that a check of office records here showed the newspapers were placed in a separate sack for the Shelby County village post office and dispatched at 6 p.m. on October 6 by star route from Sidney to the sectional center at Dayton for Distribution. The October 6 papers turned up six weeks late at the Russia post office Tuesday morning, neatly 75 years wrapped in brown paper, Nov. 21, 1936 tied well and marked At the regular meeting “MISSENT USSR RUSof the city council last SIA.” evening, ordinances were 25 years passed authorizing DiNov. 21, 1986 rector of Public Service The City of Sidney will and Safety Al Guerry to be getting a new fire sell the two old American chief. Chief Lyle Baker LaFrance fire trucks and will be retiring after 34 to advertise for the pur- years of service. He is 59 chase of a new fire truck. years old. He has been The old trucks, which will the fire chief since April be offered for sale, have 1973. Chief Baker combeen in service at the fire mented that when he department for over 20 began his career, there years. Council also au- were only 13 men in the thorized the paving of department. There are West Poplar over the old more than twice that canal and the widening many now. “We also of West Avenue between worked 72 hours a week Poplar Street and Court when we were on duty,” Street. The work will be he recalled. His last offidone in the near future. cial day will be sometime ––––– in April 1987. Lowell Watkins, who ––––– completed his third year “Well, it is back to as a member of the Sid- square one,” prosecutor ney High School Yellow James Stevenson comJackets varsity football mented. The trial of team, was elected hon- Michael Grilliot of Ft. Loorary captain for the ramie has been contin1936 season by his team- ued. It was scheduled to mates at a meeting held start when Grilliot fired prior to the Sidney- his attorney, Shelby Springfield Catholic County Public Defender game Saturday. In the William R. Zimmerman. final game of the season Grilliot is charged with Sidney defeated the selling 4.5 pounds of coSpringfield eleven by the caine.

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

Wife wants to wash her man right out of holiday kitchen DEAR ABBY: What is a wife to do? My husband occasionally pitches in to help me prepare holiday meals. He prides himself on his dishwashing Dear skills, but when Abby he’s done I have Abigail to rewash most of Van Buren the pots and pans because he doesn’t check his work. If I ask him to redo them, he reacts as though it’s a criticism and has an over-the-top fit. At times like Thanksgiving I’m stressed out cooking for the family

and would love his help, but it’s more trouble than it’s worth. Discussing it with him hasn’t been successful, and friends have told me they have the same problem. Can you provide a strategy that can keep us humming along happily with our husbands in the kitchen? — DREADING THANKSGIVING IN L.A. DEAR DREADING: Perhaps you should soak the pots and pans immediately after you’re done cooking, so when the meal is done your husband will have an easier job of washing them. If any food is still hard to remove, offer to help him by filling the utensils with water and placing them on the stove; let them boil a while, and then wash them again with detergent and a brush. That should

solve your problem. DEAR ABBY: I have wanted a baby for a long time. Now that I’m 31, my desire is growing stronger. My boyfriend of 11 years, “Chad,” is 35. His daughter lives with us and I have raised her like she was mine. Chad and I discussed having a baby and even went to a fertility clinic to make sure we’re healthy and would have no complications trying to conceive. Now, almost a year later and still no baby, he says he has a successful business, loves his life and doesn’t want any more kids! “Maybe down the road” he “might” change his mind. I hate him for this. I had two abortions for him five years into our relationship because he felt

we weren’t ready. He was starting his business and I was still in my last year of college. Abby, please help me. I am furious with him, and I’m starting to pull away from him and his daughter. — CHEATED IN NEW YORK DEAR CHEATED: I’m sorry, but your signature indicates you have a firm grasp of your situation. It appears you will never have what you want if you stay with Chad, so pack your bags and get on with your life. 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 www.DearAbby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.


Classifieds That Work • 877-844-8385

Sidney Daily News, Monday, November 21, 2011

Page 13

that work .com JobSourceOhio.com

PLACE YOUR CLASSIFIED AD ONLINE-24/7 www.sidneydailynews.com

GENERAL INFORMATION

All Display Ads: 2 Days Prior Liners For:

)44g`# pnuBS@ fn]q>Z1NBgq>Z }1J

Mon - Fri @ 5pm Weds - Tues @ 5pm Fri - Thurs @ 5pm

POLICY: Please Check Your Ad The 1st Day. It Is The Advertiser’s Responsibility To Report Errors Immediately. Publisher Will Not Be Responsible for More Than One Incorrect Insertion. We Reserve The Right To Correctly Classify, Edit, Cancel Or Decline Any Advertisement Without Notice.

Thurs - Weds @ 5pm Sat - Thurs @ 5pm

LOST, German shepherd male, Black face & body with dark tan paws, 11 years old, has birthmark on tongue, cloudy eyes, answers to Jeremiah. Missing since 6/11, from 2000 Tawawa-Maplewood Road area. Greying around muzzle. REWARD for safe return. If you have him please bring him home. k9crew@bright.net (937)869-4705

Charlie (Bus) Fridley 1924-2006 (5 years)

DISPLAY DEADLINE Friday, 11/18, 5pm Friday, 11/18, 5pm Monday, 11/21, 5pm Tuesday, 11/22, Noon Tuesday, 11/22, Noon

LINER Tuesday, 11/22, 3pm Tuesday, 11/22, 3pm Wed., 11/23, Noon Wed., 11/23, 3pm Wed., 11/23, 5pm

COMMUNITY MERCHANT ISSUE Monday, 11/28

DISPLAY DEADLINE Tuesday, 11/22, 5pm

LINER DEADLINE Wed., 11/23, 3pm

TROY DAILY NEWS / PIQUA DAILY CALL ISSUE Wednesday, 11/23 Thursday, 11/24 Friday, 11/25 Saturday, 11/26 Sunday, 11/27 Monday, 11/28

DISPLAY DEADLINE

LINER DEADLINE

Friday, 11/18, 5pm Friday, 11/18, 5pm Monday, 11/21, 5pm Tuesday, 11/22, Noon Tuesday, 11/22, Noon Tuesday, 11/22, Noon

Tuesday, 11/22, 3pm Tuesday, 11/22, 3pm Wed., 11/23, Noon Wed., 11/23, 3pm Wed., 11/23, 4pm Wed., 11/23, 5pm

LINER DEADLINE MIAMI COUNTY ADVOCATE ISSUE DISPLAY DEADLINE Tuesday, 11/22, 5pm Wed., 11/23, 4pm Monday, 11/28 Please be advised our offices will be closed in observance of the Thanksgiving holiday on Thursday, November 24 and Friday, November 25. We will re-open on Monday, November 28 at 8am.

Those we love don’t go away, They walk beside us everyday, Unseen, unheard, but always near. Still loved, still missed and very dear. Wife: Frances, Son: Chuck & Cathy, Son-In-Law: Bob Romanowski, Grandchildren: Jamie & Lynette Fridley, Matt & Karin Romanowski, Holly & Scott Barr, Mitch & Tammi Romanowski and nine great-grandchildren

2235186

SIDNEY DAILY NEWS ISSUE Wednesday, 11/23 Thursday, 11/24 Friday, 11/25 Saturday, 11/26 Monday, 11/28

Holiday Cash

OFFICE WILL BE CLOSED In observance of the

Thanksgiving Holiday 2237194

HELP WANTED! Immediate Opening for an experienced Semi-Trailer mechanic. This is a full-time position with excellent pay and benefits.

Now h throug0 Nov 3

*

y Item n A e s i 5 Advert ** - Only $1s LE ney Daily New A S R O F Sid ews s in ily N 10 Day s in Troy Da ly Call y ai 10 Da iqua D Herald P n i s 10 Day eekly Reecrtisoermdent les, kW er adv 1 Wee *1 iteemxclilumditesp: ,GPaicratugree SItaSold

2235715

HAROLD POHL, INC 9394 McGreevy Road, Versailles, Ohio Phone: 526-5046

the Classifieds Dept. of the Sidney Daily News Troy Daily News and Piqua Daily Call will be closed on Thursday, November 24 and Friday, November 25 We will be available on Monday, November 28 at 8am to assist you with classified advertising needs.

Apply in person at:

2231151

REQUIRES: Reliable transportation, working phone and state minimum insurance is required. You must also be at least 18 years of age.

Available ONLY by calling

877-844-8385

Only 21

SDNM125R – 150 papers – Sidney, Anna Bowman Dr, Co Rd 25A, Ft Loramie Swanders Rd, Hardin-Wapak Rd, Meranda Rd, West Mason Rd, Scott Rd, Sharp Rd, St Rt 119 West, Wenger Rd SDNM210R – 173 papers – Houston, Russia, Sidney Dawson Rd, Hardin-Wapak Rd, Houston Rd, Johns Rd, Patterson Halpin Rd, Pangeline Rd, Redmond Rd, Smith Rd, St Rt 274, St Rt 48, St Rt 66, Stoker Rd, Wright Puthoff Rd

If no one is available to take your call, please leave a message with your name, address, phone number and SDNM number that you are interested in. Your phone call will be returned in the order in which it is received.

2236549

Locally owned family business with career opportunities. Email resume to: LVS@embarqmail.com Mail resume to : Low Voltage Solutions, Inc. 1455 N Main Ave / PO Box 945 Sidney, OH 45365

◆●◆●◆●◆●◆●◆●◆●◆

Bailey Louise Hamblin Love, Daddy, Mommy, Grandpa and Grandma

PLEASE PRINT!

*

Name of Baby: ________________________________________________________ Birth Date: ____________________________________________________________ From:________________________________________________________________ Your Name: __________________________________________________________ Address: ____________________________________________________________ City:_____________________ State:_____ Zip:________ Phone:_________________ J Please mail my photo back to me in the SASE provided. We cannot be responsible for photos lost in the mail. J I will pick up my photo after December 20, 2010. We only hold pictures for 6 months after publication. J Payment Enclosed J Check J Visa/MC J Discover J Cash J Am Express

Now hiring full time technicians with benefits. Experience in audio/ video systems, security systems, network cabling, and basic electronics required.

If interested, please contact: Jason at 937-498-5934

2221942

Sidney Daily News Attn: Baby’s First Christmas PO Box 4099, Sidney, Ohio 45365

ELECTRONIC SYSTEMS TECHNICIAN

SDNM290R – 66 papers Sidney / Quincy Area – Champaign Shelby Rd, Miami Shelby Rd, St Rt 29 East, St Rt 589, Tawawa Maplewood Rd, Tawawa St

November 11, 2010

Twins are handled as two (2) separate photos

NOW HIRING! Substitute teachers, some long-term. Experience desired, not necessary. Warm, caring attitude a MUST! 380 Marker Road, Versailles. Brilliant Beginnings Learning Center. brilliantbeginningslc@ y a h o o . c o m . (937)526-3311.

SDNM150R – 129 papers – Anna, Botkins, Jackson Center Amsterdam Rd, Botkins Rd, Highland Kies Rd, Lochard Rd, Meranda Rd, Pasco Montra Rd, Sidney Freyburg Rd, St Rt 119 East, Wells Rd

ll t Christm ua Daily ca iq P Baby’s Firs d n a s Daily New News, Troy r 19, 2011 Merry Christmas e b m e c e D 011 Monday, ember 9, 2 c e D , y a d ri F Deadline is

00

EXPERIENCED TUTORING: • Math • Algebra I • Algebra II (937)492-5992

From our family to yours, Happy Thanksgiving!

Motor routes are delivered Saturdays, Holidays and on an as needed basis by independent contractors.

Capture th irst Christmas! F Little One’sas will be published in the oSnidney Daily

$

LOST: male Papillon, about 8 lbs., white & brown, last seen Fairview Road headed towards Sidney, neutered, (937)214-1808.

MOTOR ROUTES

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

Full Color 1col. x 3” block

877-844-8385

R# X``# d

In Loving Memory Of

THANKSGIVING 2011 DISPLAY & CLASSIFIED DEADLINES

** state Real E

Sidney Daily News

105 Announcements

105 Announcements

105 Announcements

DEADLINES/CORRECTIONS:

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

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

LEGAL ASSISTANT

Hartzell Fan, a leading manufacturer of industrial air moving equipment is seeking qualified candidates for the following positions at our Piqua, OH and Portland, IN locations: • Software Engineer • Fiberglass Engineer • Black Belt Engineer • Manufacturing Engineering Tech. • Drafters • Cost Accountant • Marketing Coordinator • Customer Experience Manager Hartzell offers an excellent compensation and benefits package including Health/Dental/Prescription Drug Plan, Flexible Benefits Plan, 401K Retirement Savings Plan, Paid Holidays, Paid Vacation, Tuition Reimbursement and much more! For detailed information regarding these openings and to apply please visit www.hartzellindustries.com Equal Opportunity Employer

To Advertise In the Classifieds that Work

Call 877-844-8385

Domestic Relations Legal Assistant needed for prominent Troy law firm. Domestic Relations experience required. Excellent benefit package. Send Resume to Office Manager 18 East Water Street Troy, Ohio 45373 ◆●◆●◆●◆●◆●◆●◆●◆

NOTICE Investigate in full before sending money as an advance fee. For further information, call or write:

Better Business Bureau 15 West Fourth St. Suite 300 Dayton, OH 45402 www.dayton.bbb.org 937.222.5825 This notice is provided as a public service by 2231144


Sidney Daily News, Monday, November 21, 2011

Classifieds That Work • 877-844-8385

Page 14

Service&Business DIRECTORY

To advertise in the Classifieds That Work Service & Business Directory please call: 877-844-8385 COOPER’S GRAVEL

Pole BarnsErected Prices:

MINIMUM CHARGES APPLY

(937) 339-7222 Complete Projects or Helper

937-498-0123 loriaandrea@aol.com

Call

4th Ave. Store & Lock

Any type of Construction:

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Roofing, remodeling, siding, add-ons, interior remodeling and cabintets, re-do old barns, new home construction, etc.

Ask about our monthly specials2234165

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everybody’s talking about what’s in our

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“All Our Patients Die”

ELSNER PAINTING & Pressure Washing, Inc.

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The Professional Choice

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DO YOU HAVE MISSING SHINGLES OR STORM DAMAGE? We will work with your insurance.

OFFICE 937-773-3669 Urb Naseman Construction

To Advertise In the Classifieds that Work

Call 877-844-8385

Home Remodeling And Repairs ~Vinyl Siding ~ Soffit & Facia ~ Home Repairs 937-498-4473 937-726-4579 FREE Estimates Over 20 Yrs Experience Licensed & Insured

COOPER’S BLACKTOP

• Pruning • Cabling & • Stump Bracing Removal • Lot Cleaning • Trimming • Storm Damage • Dead Wooding FREE Estimates • Fully Insured

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Call Walt for a FREE Estimate Today

in Shelby County by Sidney Daily News Readers

Commercial - Industrial - Residential Interior - Exterior - Pressure Washing

937-492-6228

Call for a free damage inspection.

Gutters • Doors • Remodel

937-492-5150

Don’t delay... call TODAY!

Hours: Fri. 9-8 Sat. & Sun. 9-5

Since 1977

Roofing • Siding • Windows FREE ES AT ESTIM

that work .com

VENDORS WELCOME

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Licensed & Insured

937-489-9749 In Memory Of Morgan Ashley Piatt

in the Sidney Plaza next to Save-A-Lot

Get Your Snowblower Ready

2229833

classifieds

Continental Contractors

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FREE pickup within 10 mile radius of Sidney

00

by using

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Free Inspections

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starting at $

Flea Market

937-658-0196 937-497-8817

(See Us For Do-It-Yourself Products) Since 1936

A&E Construction

Holiday Special Buy 4 lessons & GET 1 FREE • No experience required. • Adults & Children ages 5 & up • Gift Certificates Available • Major Credit Cards Accepted Flexible Schedule Nights & Weekends 937-778-1660 www.sullenbergerstables.com

2231198

Sidney

• All Small Engines •

2234505

2235395

CERAMIC TILE AND HOME REPAIRS RON PIATT Owner/Installer

MOWER REPAIR

2232063

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(937)454-6970

Horseback Riding Lessons

• Baths • Awnings • Concrete • Additions

Rutherford

KNOCKDOWN SERVICES

937-335-6080

scchallrental@midohio.twcbc.com

260-740-7639 260-410-6454 260-623-3263

• Spouting • Metal Roofing • Siding • Doors

CALL TODAY FOR FREE ESTIMATE

WE KILL BED BUGS!

2236563

HALL(S) FOR RENT!

We do... Pole Barns • New Homes Roofs • Garages • Add Ons Cement Work • Remodeling Etc.

• Roofing • Windows • Kitchens • Sunrooms

1250 4th Ave.

937-497-7763

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Booking now for 2011 and 2012

937-419-0676 www.buckeyehomeservices.com

Loria Coburn

•30x40x12 with 2 doors, $9,900 •40x64x14 with 2 doors, $16,000 ANY SIZE AVAILABLE!

(419) 203-9409

Residential Insured

Commercial Bonded

Decks, Drywall, Cement, Paint, Fences, Repairs, Cleanup, Hauling, Roofing, Siding, Etc. Insured/References

2233792

875-0153 698-6135

Handyman Services

2232212

Amish Crew

CHORE BUSTER 2232192

Gravel Hauled, Laid & Leveled Driveways & Parking Lots

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

937-875-0153 937-698-6135

GET THE WORD OUT! Place an ad in the Service Directory


Classifieds That Work • 877-844-8385

Sidney Daily News, Monday, November 21, 2011

PRODUCTION ASSEMBLERS MACHINE OPR. FORKLIFT OPR. Troy ● Piqua ● Sidney Greenville 12 Hour Swing shifts

• • • • • • •

MFG. ENGINEER CNC MACHINIST WELDERS PROGRAMMER CNC PROGRAMMER MAINTENANCE TECH CDL CLASS A DRIVERS

A local janitorial company is seeking entry level accountant to assist the controller. Candidates must have an associate's degree in business administrations, accounting or finance. A bachelor's degree is a plus. Must have knowledge of general accounting concepts and Microsoft office applications. Excellent verbal and written communications skills, excellent analytical, organizational and computer skills required. Send resume to: Clean All Services, Attn: James Sharp, PO Box 4127 Sidney, Ohio 45365

(937)778-8563 TRUCK DRIVER (Material Handler) Class A CDL (required) Career opportunity with 40 year old wholesale lumber company in Piqua. WE OFFER: • Excellent Work Environment • Home Every Night • Major Medical/ Cafeteria Plan • Long & Short Term Disability • Life Insurance • Profit Sharing • 401(k) Plan • Competitive Wages Apply in person at our office 9850 Looney Road, PIQUA Excepting applications starting November 21st 9:00 am to 4:00pm

RN SupervisorCasual Time RN Restorative Nurse1st Shift- Full Time We are looking for skilled people who have had 2-4 years experience. Come in and fill out an application and speak with Beth Bayman, Staff Development. Koester Pavilion 3232 North County Road 25A Troy OH 45373 (I-75 at exit 78) 937.440.7663 Phone 937.335.0095 Fax Located on the Upper Valley Medical Center Campus EOE

CNC MAINTENANCE

TECHNICIAN Hartzell Propeller Inc, in Piqua, Ohio is seeking a skilled CNC Maintenance Technician. Candidate should have experience in CNC Maintenance, machine controls and electrical and hydraulic schematics. Electrician experience a plus. Wages up to $25/ hour Day shift but must be willing to work nights as required. Submit resume to: hr@hartzellprop.com EEO/AA

Your is over... find in in the classifieds

3 BEDROOM, 2 bath, spacious duplex, Sidney, appliances, air, laundry hookup, new carpet, no pets, $530, (937)394-7265 3 BEDROOM half double, stove, refrigerator, dishwasher, washer/ dryer hookup, AC, no pets, deposit, $525 month, (937)726-0273.

STNA looking for private care work: Troy, Sidney and surrounding areas. 25 years+ experience in geriatrics, disabled and terminally ill. References available upon request, (419)563-5523. Ask for Carol Marker.

Drivers $1000 Sign on Bonus, Safety incentives, Benefits Package, Vacation Package After six months. OTR CDL-A 1 yr 888-560-9644

SEMI DRIVERS NEEDED Class A CDL license, 2 years experience with dump trailer, and good driving record required. Home weekends. No insurance offered. 937-492-8309 Monday-Friday 8am-3pm

3 BEDROOM newly remodeled near downtown, washer & dryer hook-up. NO PETS. Call about "Move-In" Special. $445 deposit, (937)492-3517.

$275 DEPOSIT!! 2 bedroom appliances, most utilities paid Laundry room on site NO PETS! $500 month (937)489-9921 ANNA, 3 bedroom, 2 bath upstairs apartment. $490 monthly plus deposit. 2 bedroom downstairs, $400 monthly plus deposit. Appliances, clean, utilities separate, close to park. NO PETS! ( 9 3 7 ) 2 9 5 - 3 6 0 7 (937)295-3720 CANAL PLACE Apartments. Reasonable rates. Utilities Included. Metro Accepted. Toll free: (888)738-4776. COUNTRY SETTING 2 bedroom townhouse. No one above or below! Appliances, washer & dryer, fireplace, garage, water & trash included.

(937)498-4747 Carriage Hill Apts. www.1troy.com

FIRST MONTH FREE! 2 bedroom, upstairs, 210.5 Lane. Washer/ dryer hook-up. No pets! $395, deposit. (937)492-7625 NOVEMBER RENT FREE

10 MILES west of Sidney, Newport. Large 1 bedroom, appliances. $325 plus utilities. (937)526-3264.

Village West Apts.

St. Marys Avenue Apartments $275 Deposit Special! Most utilities paid, off street parking, appliances, NO PETS! 1 bedroom, $410 month (937)489-9921

524 OAK St., Sidney, 3 bedroom, completely remodeled, basement. $575 plus deposit. (937)394-7117

2 BEDROOM, 1537 Spruce. Appliances, air, partial utilities, off street parking. No pets, $460. (419)628-3465.

607 NORTH Miami, 4 bedroom house, no pets, $575 month, deposit, (937)498-8000. PIQUA, 2935 Delaware Circle, 3 Bedroom, 2 bath, 2 car garage, all appliances, No pets, $880 monthly, 1 year lease, (937)778-0524

ONLY ONLY $9 $9

Please call 877-844-8385 with questions

KITTENS: 5 males, 4 months old with vaccinations and litter trained. Indoor and outdoor. Playful. Responsible pet parents only. (937)492-2563 KITTENS, free to good homes, raised indoors, litter box trained, healthy, lovable. Call (419)629-3719, (419)236-7501, New Bremen

ADULT MOVIES, still in factory seal, great selection, $4 each. Call (567)356-0272.

HOT TUB, Viking, twin power motors with lights, waterfall, cd player, gazebo. $3500, Tires/wheels 215x40x18 , $200 Both like new (937)418-1575 MOTORIZED WHEELCHAIR Safari motorized scooter. Used less than 5 years. $200. Very good condition. (937)394-2923 NASCAR DIECAST collection. Over 225 1/24 diecast. Some autograph cars, Autograph picture cards. NASCAR card collection and lots more. 3 curio cabinets. (419)629-2041 TRAILER, 4x7G utility landscape carry-on trailer, never been used. Please call for more details. $400 (937)295-3124.

2010 CHEVROLET Silverado LT. 8 Cylinder, 4 x 4, extended cab, short bed. 5200 miles, $24,500. (937)698-5351

WANTED: junk cars and trucks. Cash paid and free removal. (937)732-5424 www.wantedjunkers.com

1999 CHEVY Tahoe, 2 tone grey, great condition, 4 wheel drive, leather seats, running boards, tow package, power windows/locks, rebuilt tranny, new parts. (402)340-0509 2004 BUICK Le Sabre Ltd. 20,200 miles, white, navy blue cloth top. Leather interior, Florida car! Immaculate. $13,000 OBO. (937)492-1308

1990 GMC TRUCK, only 83,000 miles, power brakes & steering, electric lock & windows, $2300, (937)526-4963.

925 Legal Notices LEGAL NOTICE LORAMIE TOWNSHIP Trustees will meet on Thursday, December 8, 2011, at 7:30 p.m. for regular December meeting. Close out meeting will be Wednesday, December 28, 2011, 7:30 p.m. and trustees will reorganize on Wednesday, January 4, 2012, 7:30 p.m. All meetings will be held at Fiscal Officers Office, 6111 Smith Road, Houston, Ohio. Barbara Cook, Fiscal Officer, 492-6640 Nov. 21 2237359

1982 FOURWINNS BOAT

18 ft., 165 OMC Inboard Outboard, runs great. $3000 OBO. (937)524-2724 (513)509-3861

MINIATURE PINSCHER puppies, vet checked, first shots, tails docked, dew claws removed, ready for Christmas. $200 each. (937)418-6575 PUG/POM mix puppy, 8 weeks old, first shots & wormed, $75, (937)539-1372. RABBIT, white long hair female Lionhead. 5.5 Months old. Includes cage and accessories. $50. (937)397-9806

1982 FOURWINNS BOAT

18 ft., 165 OMC Inboard Outboard, runs great. $3000 OBO. (937)524-2724 (513)509-3861

1999 BUICK CENTURY

AWESOME DEAL!!! Only 110,500 miles. 3100 motor. All electric. A/C. Runs great! Very clean inside and out. Good gas mileage. NICE CAR!! $4500. (937)726-5605

WEIMARANER PUPPY AKC, Vet checked, 19 weeks old. 1st and 2nd shots, wormed, tails and claws done. $350. (937)658-0045

2001 HARLEY DAVIDSON ULTRA CLASSIC

Full dresser, Vance & Hines pipes, new battery, new tires, very good condition. 64,000 miles Price reduced! $10,000 OBO Call anytime (937)726-4175

CASH, top dollar paid for junk cars/trucks, running or non-running. I will pick up. Thanks for calling (937)719-3088 or (937)451-1019

2002 CHEVY SILVERADO Extended Cab

112K miles, tow package, power windows, power locks, air, CD player, bed liner. $9600. (937)498-4237

COOKWARE, Original Wagner cast iron. Excellent condition! Price negotiable. (937)492-9434

1/2 DOUBLE, 418 Parkwood, 2 bedroom, air, all appliances, $525 month, n o n - s m o k i n g , (937)492-2276.

Remember your 4-legged or fine-feathered friend in full color this Holiday Season in all three I-75 Newspapers (Sidney Daily News, Troy Daily News and Piqua Daily Call)!

CHAIR, glider, swivel, reclining, with gliding footstool, green in color, excellent condition, $30, (937)492-5702 after 4pm.

GOLDEN RETRIEVER Pups, AKC, vet checked and first shots at 6 weeks. 5 females, 5 males. Parents on premises. $250 stephkoble76@winds t r e a m . n e t . (937)473-5698.

CHRISTMAS TREE, 9.5', slim. $75. (937)473-9833 Call after 2pm.

1&2 BEDROOM, large, North end, ca, appliances, garage, lawn care. $395-$495 deposit. (937)492-5271

a t n a S Paws

FIREWOOD, All hardwood, $150 per cord delivered or $120 you pick up. (937)596-6622 or (937)726-2780

BATHTUB BENCH, Guardian. Guardian commode, InMotion II Treadmill, Rollator, ped bike. All previously used items. (937)492-0606

* Studio * 1 & 2 Bedroom Apts.

3 BEDROOM, 1.5 bath, garage, central air, appliances, 12X20 building. No pets. 1527 Cedarbrook, Sidney. $725 monthly plus deposit. (937)658-1329

2 BEDROOM apartment, Sidney, appliances, air, washer/ dryer hookup, trash paid, no pets, $430, (937)394-7265

COTTONWOOD TREE, down. FREE! You remove. Southern Shelby County, ekvoress@embarqmail.com.

BAR STOOLS, medium colored oak, (2), swivel back, Amish custom made, (937)778-0986.

(937)492-3450

1 BEDROOM, northend Sidney, appliances, air, some utilities, laundry facility, NO PETS. $ 3 5 0 - $ 3 6 5 , (937)394-7265

BICHON FRISE, male, CKC, $100, Shi-Chon, male, $100, Ready soon, Yorkie-Poos & Malti-Poos, (419)925-4339

SPRINKLER SYSTEMS, In ground for flower beds or lawns. Great Christmas Gifts for parents and children. Convenient, affordable. Gift cards available. (937)492-7582

(937)498-4747 www.1troy.com

1, 2 & 3 bedroom, appliances, fireplace, secure entry. Water & trash included, garages.

PLAYSTATION3, new, still in Box. W/T Sony Remote. Comes with KillZone3 and SackBoy1 games. Call any time. CASH ONLY!! $245, jmagoto293@gmail.com. (937)621-5434.

HOLIDAY TURKEYS, Home grown, free range, and fresh. Call (937)526-4934 ask for Beth. If no answer leave message.

ORGAN, Theater Lowry console, in excellent condition, mahogany finish. With two Leslie cabinets. Make offer. (937)773-2217

BLACK LAB mix puppy, 8 month old male, great with other animals and kids, loves attention, very smart! Free to good home, (937)710-0993.

DINETTE TABLE with 3 chairs. Maple wood, pedestal type. BISTRO TABLE with 2 chairs. Inlaid tiles on table and chairs. (937)492-0357

DISCOVER PEBBLEBROOK Village of Anna. 2 & 3 Bedroom townhomes & ranches. Garages, appliances, washer & dryer. Close to I-75, Honda, 20 miles from Lima.

1 & 2 BEDROOMS, Botkins, appliances, air, laundry, patio, 1 level, no pets, $ 3 5 0 - $ 4 1 5 , (937)394-7265.

For sale: 3 Bedroom, 2 bath homes available on lease option OR financing available, 0% interest. As little as $4999 down. Call and ask how! (937)497-7763

CORN HEAD, 6 rows, No 63 for John Deere combine, $1500, (937)526-4861.

(937)498-4747 www.1troy.com

J.R. EDWARDS TRUCKING 3100 Schenk Rd. Sidney, OH 45365

COUNTRY MEADOWS

3 BEDROOM in Sidney, upstairs, washer and dryer hook-up, $450. Call (937)658-3824

AMHERST COUNTRY VILLAS

HR Associates, PIQUA What are you waiting for? Call TODAY!

2 BEDROOM, on Collins, New updates, appliances, garage, A/C, washer/ dryer hook-up. $550 month. (419)629-3427

TV, Magnavox 46 inch projection TV. Works good. $75. (937)498-9935

All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the federal fair housing act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention to make any such preference limitation or discrimination. This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. Our readers are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.

2231145

2004 DODGE INTREPID 95,000 miles, power seats, power windows. White with black interior. Great car for school or work. $5200 OBO. Call (937)638-6228 & leave message

2008 FORD ESCAPE XLT

GREAT condition. 80,000 miles- mostly highway, recently detailed inside and out. Non-smoker and no accidents. All scheduled maintenance performed. Call (937)773-2694 ask for Jennie

Published: December 15 • Deadline: December 6

“Sami Sue”

Your Name:______________________________________ Address: ________________________________________ _______________________________________________ Phone: _________________________________________ Payment: K Cash K Check K CC CC#___________________ Exp:____/____

Brad & Emily

Your Pet’s Name: _________________________________ Message: _______________________________________ From: __________________________________________

Ad size 1col x 3”

Mail form, photo and payment to: Sidney Daily News, Attn: Santa Paws, PO Box 4099, Sidney, OH 45365

We love our Sami Sue!

(1.556”x3”)

2221948

• • • •

2 BEDROOM near downtown. $325. Freshly painted, (1) first floor, (1) second floor, (937)489-6502.

* Limit of one pet per advertisement

RECEPTIONIST/ ASSISTANT needed for veterinary office. 20-30 hours per week, Great clients. Please bring resume to: Community Veterinary Clinic 1200 W Russell Rd Sidney

Page 15


Sidney Daily News, Monday, November 21, 2011

Page 16

Visit NIE online at www.sidneydailynews.com, www.troydailynews.com or www.dailycall.com NIE Coordinator: Dana Wolfe

HeALthy Is Cool!

Graphic Designer: Scarlett Smith

Fitness Pledge As a family, create a weekly exercise plan by brainstorming and making a list of physical activities that everyone will enjoy. Coordinate your schedules to block out an hour each day and track your progress throughout the week.

Part 2 - Continued Hey Kids! We want you to take part in our “Healthy Is Cool” program this year. Fill out the pledge and mail to: Dana Wolfe (NIE Coordinator), 224 S. Market St., Troy, OH 45373. You’ll be entered to win great prizes in our fitness pledge program! Deadline for entry forms is May 2, 2012.

Family discussion: Once you’ve completed the first week of your new fitness plan, have a family meeting. How did things go? What worked? What didn’t? What changes need to be made, and what should stay the same for the next week? What new activities should be added?

Yoga for the younger generation Yoga Is For Everybody Yoga is a Hindu discipline of exercises practiced to promote control of the body and aimed at training the consciousness for a state of perfect spiritual insight and tranquility. Yoga is not a religion. Yoga is a philosophy of life. Yoga is for everybody. Everyone can do yoga, but most think of it as twisting the body into knots. Yoga is a safe, effective way to achieve overall fitness for everyone. Benefits of Yoga The more you practice yoga, the more benefits you will notice. Breathing techniques improve oxygen intake, making the lungs more efficient. Stretching lengthens the muscles increasing flexibility. The poses use body weight to strengthen and tone the muscles. The breathing and flow of the poses brings about a calmer and clearer mind, which reduces stress. While in the poses, concentration on body positioning, helps with improved posture on and off the yoga mat. The contemplative mind-body connection lessens the chance of injury, whether that can be in athletics or everyday activities. Overall Fitness A metabolic exchange occurs during physical activity when the breathing pattern comes into play. Yoga’s rhythm of inhaling and exhaling during physical activity brings oxygen to the muscles for better performance. Some exercise programs concentrate on muscle bulk in specific areas of the body, while yoga offsets the unevenness by offering a complete and balanced mind-body workout for all muscle groups. Yoga also helps with the mental game through mindfulness and meditation.

As a family, we promise to take care of our bodies by working together to: • Get 60 minutes of daily exercise • Limit our sugar intake and avoid products that include high-fructose corn syrup (drinks, candy, snacks) • Drink more water (8-10 glasses each day) • Eat more fresh vegetables and fruits • Limit screen time by turning off the TV, computer and gaming systems • Praise one another for a job well done • Track our progress Being active is good for the entire family! To help you and your family commit to being healthy and fit, complete and sign the health pledge below. Once it’s complete, send to: Dana Wolfe (NIE Coordinator), 224 S. Market St., Troy, OH 45373.

Exercise To Win You’ll be entered to win our fitness pledge grand prize! My family and I pledge to spend ____ minutes ____ times per week exercising together. We will do this through the following activities:

X __________________________ X __________________________ child signature

parent or guardian signature

Child’s name:___________________________________________ Parent or guardian name:_______________________________ Address:________________________________________________ State:______ Zip:_______________ Phone:__________________ Answers from the color NIE page Publisher Scramble: nervous system Ronald Wants To Know: indians, turkey, pilgrims, pumpkins, corn

Ohio Community Media Newspapers

The Newspapers In Education Mission – Our mission is to provide Miami, Shelby and neighboring county school districts with a weekly newspaper learning project that promotes reading and community journalism as a foundation for communication skills, utilizing the Piqua Daily Call, the Sidney Daily News, the Record Herald and the Troy Daily News as quality educational resource tools.

Thank you to our sponsors! The generous contributions of our sponsors and I-75 Group Newspapers vacation donors help us provide free newspapers to community classrooms as well as support NIE activities. To sponsor NIE or donate your newspaper while on vacation, contact NIE Coordinator Dana Wolfe at dwolfe@tdnpublishing.com or (937) 440-5211

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Sidney Daily News, Monday, November 21, 2011

Page 17

Visit NIE online at www.sidneydailynews.com, www.troydailynews.com or www.dailycall.com NIE Coordinator: Dana Wolfe

Graphic Designer: Scarlett E. Smith

HeALthy Is Cool! The Brain & Nervous System The brain manages your body and controls almost everything you do, even when you are asleep. It runs the nervous system (along with spinal cord and nerves) and connects the inside of your body to the outside world. How many jobs does your brain have? • It controls your breathing, heart rate, body temperature and blood pressure. • It handles your body’s movement (telling your muscles when and how to move) and controls balance and coordination (how your muscles work together). • It receives information from your senses and stores it in your memory bank (seeing, hearing, smelling, tasting, touching). • It lets you feel emotions, talk, think, remember and dream. Your brain gives your body the power to be a super kid. Without it, you couldn’t walk, run, ride a bike, skateboard, dribble a basketball, swim or learn. You need your brain to be active and strong, so make sure you and your family: • Eat healthy and nutritions

Part 2 Sponsored by Tammy Shellhaas A.C.E. Personal Trainer & Yoga Instructor / LaBella Viagio

Using the letters in the words BRAIN TEASER, make a list with as many words as you can. Set a timer for two minutes and go! How many words can you create?

foods. Look for foods that contain calcium and potassium, two important minerals for your nervous system. • Exercise and play, move your body and have fun! • Wear a helmet when you ride your bike or play sports that require one. • Keep your body clean by not drinking alcohol, taking drugs or using tobacco. • Do challenging activities such as reading, solving puzzles, playing math games, learning an instrument, creating artwork or playing educational board games that make you think!

BRAIN TEASER ACTIVIT Y: A brain teaser is a puzzle that takes concentration to solve.

protect your super brain

Did You Know? • The spinal cord is a long bundle of nerve tissue about 18 inches long and 3/4 inch thick. • The human brain, considering everything it does, is incredibly compact weighing just 3 pounds. • At birth, the nervous system contains all the neurons you will ever have. • Olfactory cells in the mucous membranes lining each nostril react to chemicals we breathe in and send messages along specific nerves to the brain — which, according to experts, can distinguish between more than 10,000 different smells. • When you are doing a math problem, you’re using the left side of your brain; when you are listening to music, you’re using the right side.

If you ride a bike or play sports, your are at the top of the risk list for head injuries. Falls are the most common cause of playground head injuries, more than bikes and auto accidents combined. To protect your head, make sure you click your seat belt in the car, wear your helmet when riding your bike, and be safe when playing sports and climbing on the jungle gym at school or the park.

Ian Stutz nutrition — the act or process of nourishing or being nourished

SNVOUER EYMSST

16 year old Sophomore Troy High School • Reserve soccer team • Freshman tennis • Soccer referee Q: What types of food fuel your body? A: I fuel my body by starting at breakfast. Oatmeal and a banana or whatever fruit is in season. I find this as a helpful way to start my day. Q: How did sports shape the person you are today? A: Sports helped me with communication with my team and it has given me the skills to overcome whatever life throws my way. Q: How did your family instill health and fitness into daily life? A: My mother has always made me and my brothers eat healthy foods. Parents and grandparents have shown an example that fitness can be obtained at any age. Q: How often do you work out each week? A: Daily, I try not to miss a day of working out, no matter if it’s off season, I try to always stay active. Q: What is your practice philosophy? A: Never stop working hard no matter what the circumstances are, always work hard. Quote: Life is a climb, but the view is always great at the top.

2011 Green Gals Holiday Recycled Ornament Contest Rules and Regulations: 1. The ornament must be made of recyclable or reusable materials. Glue, paint, glitter, floral wire, etc. can be used, but the main emphasis of the contest is to see what can be created with recyclable or reused items. 2. Ornaments should be no more than 6”x 6”x6” in size. 3. The ornament should be light in weight so it can hang on a tree. 4. The ornament must have an appropriate method to be attached to a tree (hanger.) 5. The materials cannot pose a safety hazard to the creator or those observing the ornament. Avoid the use of sharp, toxic or easily breakable materials. 6. Perishable items can’t be used. 7. A 3 x 5 card should be SECURELY attached to each ornament listing the following: • School name & teacher name • Student’s name and grade • Parent’s address & phone number

• Deadline: Friday, December 2nd at 4 p.m. • Turn in entries at the Miami County Sanitary Eng. at 2200 N .County Rd. 25-A, Troy. • Call Cindy at 440-3488 for questions or email cbach@miamicountysed.com • Ornaments can be viewed or picked up after December 14th • McDonalds food wrappers can also be used to create an ornament Entries will be judged depending on number of entries received by grade levels and PRIZES for 1st, 2nd and 3rd will be awarded accordingly

Proud Sponsors of Newspapers In Education

Nourishing Ideas. Nourishing People. The Scott Family McDonald’s would like to wish you and yours a Happy Thanksgiving! Unscramble these words for a FREE McDonald’s® Pumpkin Pie. diinsan___________ ktueyr___________ imslgrip___________ kinmppus___________ ronc___________ One form per visit. Not valid with any other offer. No cash value.Valid at all Scott Family McDonald’s®: Tipp City, Troy, Piqua, Sidney, Greenville, Beavercreek and Fairborn. Expires December 31, 2011.


SPORTS Monday, November 21, 2011

Page 18

Contact Sports Editor Ken Barhorst with story ideas, sports scores and game stats by phone at (937) 498-5960; e-mail, kbarhorst@sdnccg.com; or by fax, (937) 498-5991.

Flyers blank Minster 28-0 BY CHRIS BALLARD

AP Photo/Chuck Burton

TONY STEWART celebrates after winning the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series auto race and clinching the series championship, at Homestead-Miami Speedway in Homestead, Fla., Sunday.

Stewart wins Cup crown HOMESTEAD, Fla. (AP) — Tony Stewart insisted he wasn't a title contender when NASCAR's championship race began. When it became clear he actually was a viable threat, he kicked it into another gear and vowed to go for broke in his pursuit of Carl Edwards. Did he ever. Stewart used a powerful and relentless drive — some might suggest the best in NASCAR history — on Sunday in the season finale to seize his third NASCAR championship. He overcame a hole in the grill of his Chevrolet, a rain delay, used debatable fuel strategy and made 116 passes on the track to win at Homestead-Miami Speedway. Edwards led the most laps — 119 of the 267 — but finished a helpless second. The two ended up tied in the final Sprint Cup points standings, but Stewart's five victories — all in the chase — to Edwards' one gave him the championship. Stewart became the first owner/driver to win the championship since the late Alan Kulwicki in 1992, and the driver to end Jimmie Johnson's record five-year title run. “Are you kidding me?” Stewart asked in Victory Lane. “We said all week we'd just go out and win the race and didn't have to worry about what he did. If this doesn't go down as one of the greatest championship battles in history, I don't know what will.” If this doesn't go down as one of the greatest championship battles in history, I don't know what is.” Edwards was disappointed but held his head high after the race. “This night is about Tony Stewart. Those guys rose to the occasion and they beat us fair and square,” Edwards said. “That is all I had. We came here and sat on the pole, led the most laps and Tony still managed. That's it. That's all I got at the end. That's as hard as I can drive. “I told my wife, 'If I can't win this thing, I'm going to be the best loser NASCAR has ever had.' So, I'm going to try really hard to keep my head up and know that we'll just go next year and we'll be just as hard to beat.”

WAPAKONETA — The Marion Local Flyers and Minster Wildcats entered Saturday night looking forward to their Midwest Athletic Conference rematch against each other. For the Wildcats, it was an opportunity to avenge their 26-17 regular-season loss to the Flyers. As for the Flyers, it was an opportunity to knock the Wildcats out of the playoffs, just as Minster had done to them last season. Marion stifled the Wildcats the entire game on their way to a 28-0 win. With the victory, the Flyers are set to play MAC foe Delphos St. John’s in the Division VI state semifinal game. The rematch of the conference foes will take place Saturday at Wapakoneta at 7 p.m. The first play of the game gave a woeful feeling to the Flyers as sophomore quarter Adam Bertke was intercepted by Minster’s Korey Schultz. This put the Wildcats deep in Flyer territory. But after a stalled drive, the Cats gave the ball away on downs. The teams continued to swap possessions for the remainder of the first quarter which ended 0-0. With its offense being able to find a rhythm, Marion charged its way downfield early in the second quarter. Soon enough, Marion senior running back Jake Heitkamp found his way to the endzone as he hurried around the left side for a 4-yard touchdown run for a 7-0 lead with 10:46

SDN Photo/Luke Gronneberg

MINSTER’S JAY Eilerman breaks up a pass intended for Marion Local’s Lee Pierron (9) in regional final football action at Wapakoneta Saturday night. left until halftime. The two teams would swap possessions again. Soon, Marion found itself with the ball for another opportunity to extend its lead. On a drive set up by big passes from Bertke, the Flyers were on the 4-yard line again. Just like the last time, Heitkamp’s number was called. Going around the left side again, Heitkamp was able to grind his way to the endzone while bouncing off Minster defenders unable to bring him down. With the extra point, the Flyers were up 14-0 with

3:43 left in the second quarter. Marion got the ball back with under twominyutes to go in the half, and mounted backbreaking scoring a drive. Bertke was able to find receiver Lee Pierron downfield several times. With this, the Flyer offense was rolling on all cylinders. The last drive of the first half seemed like it was going to end with Marion having the ball on the 35-yard line of Minster. Instead, Flyer receiver Kellen Goettemoeller had another idea as he hauled

in a touchdown pass from Bertke on the final play of the half. Pierron booted the extra point through the uprights and helped extend his team’s lead to 21-0. From the first snap of the third quarter, Minster’s offense looked new and refreshed. To begin the drive, junior quarterback Adam Niemeyer found Poeppelman near the left sideline. After that, Niemeyer continued finding open receivers downfield. See FLYERS/Page 19

Mistakes cost Bucks 20-14 BY JIM NAVEAU jnaveau@limanews.com COLUMBUS — There is no textbook that tells how to survive a season like Ohio State’s football team has gone through this fall. There are just individual chapters, written on the fly, the latest of which was the Buckeyes’ 20-14 loss to Penn State on Saturday at Ohio Stadium. Penn State (9-2, 6-1 Big Ten) jumped out to a 10-point lead in the game’s first 10 minutes and OSU never caught up. It was the fourth straight game Ohio State has fallen behind early and the seventh time overall this season that it had to try to play catch-up from an early deficit. This latest chapter looked a lot like some of the earlier ones. Ohio State (6-5, 3-4 Big Ten) faced adversity, battled hard, but in the end was done in by the other team being just a little better and by its own mistakes. Stephfon Green rushed for 93 yards and scored two touchdowns to lead Penn State to its first victory in the post-Joe Paterno Era. With a win at Wisconsin this Saturday, Penn State would win the Big Ten’s Leaders Division and advance to the Big Ten’s first conference championship game. But if the Badgers win, they’ll go to the championship game. Freshman quarterback Braxton Miller rushed for 105 yards on 18 carries and had a hand in both Ohio State touchdowns. He rushed 24 yards for a TD in the second quarter, then hit tight end Jake Stoneburner with a 7yard pass for the Buckeyes’ other score. Ohio State got the last available piece of the puzzle back on Saturday when senior wide receiver DeVier Posey (4 catches, 66 yards) played for

AP Photo/Al Behrman

OHIO STATE receiver DeVier Posey, left, is pursued by Penn State defensive back D'Anton Lynn after a making a pass reception in the first half of an NCAA college football game on Saturday in Columbus. the first time this season after serving a 10-game suspension. But even that wasn’t enough to push OSU over the top against a Penn State team dealing with even more adversity than the Buckeyes have faced this season. Defenses were expected to dominate and they did in the second half. All the scoring came in the first two quarters. Two weeks ago, Ohio State still had hopes of winning the Leaders Division and playing for the Big Ten title and a trip

to the Rose Bowl. Now after back-to-back losses to Purdue and Penn State, it must focus on its trip to Michigan this Saturday and trying to play its way into a bowl that is not too far from the bright lights of the bowls it has become accustomed to in the last decade. Center Mike Brewster says it is possible the constant battles against adversity have taken a toll on the Buckeyes in recent games. “You want to say, ‘No,’ but I’m sure at some point (it does). At the end of the day,

we’re college kids and we’ve been through so much,” Brewster said. “That’s not an excuse but it is a fact. “It’s amazing how this team has stuck together through everything and that’s what I’ll remember most abougt this team – staying together like we have.” Probably the Buckeyes’ finest hour was a goal line stand in the third quarter when Penn State had a firstdown at OSU’s two-yard line. See BUCKS/Page 20


SPORTS

Sidney Daily News, Monday, November 21, 2011

Page 19

Bengals fall short 31-24

AP Photo/Mark Duncan

CLEVELAND BROWNS defensive tackle Phillip Taylor (98) celebrates as time runs out in the Browns’ 14-10 win over the Jacksonville Jaguars in an NFL football game Sunday in Cleveland.

Browns edge Jaguars 14-10 didn’t disappoint. “I did trust that we would get them stopped,” Shurmur said. “I trust our defense.” The Browns appeared in control when Dawson booted his 38-yarder toward the goal post. However, the officials standing directly under the uprights ruled the high kick went wide right. Dawson argued that his kick should have counted, but referee Terry McAulay announced the attempt could not be reviewed because it sailed above the post. “The way we saw it was part of the ball was outside of the outside edge of the upright,” said McAulay, whose crew had a few other tough calls to make. Gabbert then drove the Jaguars down the field and Jacksonville caught a break when Browns cornerback Joe Haden was called for interference in the final minute on third down. Maurice Jones-Drew was stopped twice inside the 5, and the Browns were fortunate when Gabbert’s pass on second-and-goal went off wide receiver Jason Hill’s chest in the back corner of the end zone with 3 seconds left. Haden believed he got a hand on Gabbert’s throw. That set up a dramatic finale, and this one went Cleveland’s way, giving the Browns a muchneeded win before their schedule gets rougher. Jackson said he was ready for the pass. “I anticipated the play and that’s a tough route to cover because he’s kind of going away,” Jackson said. “He came into my zone and I went with him. His arms went up, I saw that. I put my arms up. He didn’t catch it, that’s all I know and all that matters.” Del Rio was asked why he didn’t hand the ball to Jones-Drew on the last play. “You can make a case for doing that,” Del Rio said. “You can guess any number of plays when you don’t connect. We had two guys with the ball in the air in the vicinity — missed opportunities.” McCoy completed 17 of 24 passes for 199 yards. And while his numbers were efficient, the second-year QB again showed he’s a gamer by staying in despite hurting his right shoulder.

AP Photo/Gail Burton

CINCINNATI BENGALS defensive back Adam Jones (24) pulls on Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Torrey Smith’s hair as Smith rushes the ball in the first half of an NFL football game in Baltimore Sunday. who was called for intentional grounding. On fourth-and-goal, Dalton was sacked by Pernell McPhee. The Bengals (6-4) needed seven points because on the previous series, an apparent 9-yard touchdown pass from Dalton to Jermaine Gresham was overturned by a replay that determined the receiver didn’t hold onto the ball at the end of a juggling catch. The Bengals settled for a field goal with 5:32 remaining. “When the receiver went to the ground, he had the ball in his right hand,” referee Ron Winter said. “The ball touched the ground and his hand came off the ball.” Baltimore is locked in a first-place tie with

Pittsburgh in the AFC North, but the Ravens own the tiebreaker by virtue of their two wins over the Steelers. “No. 1 in the division, that’s huge,” Suggs said. “Now we’re the master of our destiny.” Even though it wasn’t a banner day for the defense, the three interceptions set up two touchdowns. “Whenever we can get turnovers, it definitely makes everybody’s job easier,” cornerback Cary Williams said. “It’s just being able to capitalize on opportunities, and we did that today.” Dalton went 24 for 45 a touchdown. with Cincinnati was without standout rookie wide receiver A.J. Green, who hurt his right knee a week earlier in a loss to

Pittsburgh. But the Bengals gave Baltimore all it could handle. “We’ve won six games to this point and we’ll win some more,” coach Marvin Lewis said. “We’ve just got to circle the wagons, lick our wounds and go.” One week earlier, the Bengals came up short in rallying from a 14-0 deficit against Pittsburgh. It was more of the same against the Ravens. “It comes down to the fourth quarter. That’s how every game’s been for us,” Dalton said. “We’ve got to start faster. We can’t wait around until the end of the game to pick it up, come out and get back in it. It’s definitely going to be a focus for us.”

FLYERS From Page 18 But as the Wildcats approached the red zone, the tide began to turn as Flyer penalties slowed down Minster’s momentum and the Cats turned the ball over on downs. For the remainder of the third quarter, Marion had possession of the ball as they drove downfield and eventually ran out the clock to hold their 21-0 lead going into the fourth quarter. Shortly into the fourth quarter, Marion’s Bertke scrambled through the Minster defense while shedding numerous tackles, thus finding his way to the endzone. After another Pierron kick, the Flyers held a 28-0 lead with 11:13 left in the game, which would be the final score. “You have to give them all the credit in the world,” said Moore. “That’s a great football team, and they just outplayed us today.” Score by quarter: Marion...........0 21 0 7— 28 Minster..........0 0 0 0— 0 Scoring summary: ML – Heitkamp, 4yard run (Pierron Kick) ML – Heitkamp, 4yard run (Pierron Kick) ML – Goettemoeller, K., 35-yard pass from Bertke (Pierron Kick) ML – Bertke, 10-yard run (Pierron Kick)

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CLEVELAND (AP) — Colt McCoy took a knee on Cleveland’s sideline, closed his eyes and the young quarterback asked for some help from above. This week, the Browns got it. “There’s nothing wrong with praying,” McCoy said. Jacksonville rookie quarterback Blaine Gabbert’s pass into the end zone on the game’s last play was incomplete, allowing the Browns to escape with a 14-10 win over the Jaguars on Sunday. As McCoy watched helplessly, Gabbert rifled a 3-yard pass high over the middle that was off the mark and caromed off wide receiver Mike Thomas’ outstretched hands, and the Browns (4-6) celebrated a win they nearly gave away. “We deserved this one,” McCoy said. “Our team deserved this.” week, the Last Browns lost 13-12 to the St. Louis Rams when Cleveland botched a snap and reliable kicker Phil Dawson missed a 22-yard field goal try. This one nearly ended under similar circumstances as Jacksonville’s final drive was set up by Dawson missing a 38yarder that sailed over the top of the right post. “Everybody played their hearts out and it’s about time it went our way,” said Browns linebacker D’Qwell Jackson, who covered Thomas tightly on the final play. “We knew it was up to us. Right there. We had to make the play and we did.” McCoy shook off an apparent shoulder injury and threw a 3-yard TD pass to Josh Cribbs in the fourth to give Cleveland a 14-10 lead. But Dawson’s stunning miss with 2:49 left gave the Jaguars (3-7) a final chance and Gabbert, who had some good and bad moments, nearly pulled off the comeback. “It’s not the ending we were looking for,” said Jaguars coach Jack Del Rio, who defended his use of the clock in the final minute. “It’s not the first time this year we’ve had the opportunity. We’re really looking for that breakout, gamewinning drive. We had a chance for our quarterback to take us down. He took us down. We were knocking on the door. We just couldn’t close it out.” Chris Ogbonnaya rushed for 115 yards and scored on a 1-yard run for Cleveland, ending a TD drought at home that lasted more than 158 minutes. The Browns had scoring drives of 87 and 85 yards, rarities in the offense’s first season under coach Pat Shurmur. But Shurmur knows he can count on his defense, and the Browns’

BALTIMORE (AP) — An uncharacteristic performance by the Baltimore Ravens defense was offset by an uncommonly effective outing by Joe Flacco and the team’s oft-criticized offense. Flacco threw for 270 yards and two touchdowns, rookie Torrey Smith had six catches for 165 yards, and Baltimore moved into first place in the AFC North with a nerve-racking 3124 victory over the Cincinnati Bengals on Sunday. Playing without middle linebacker Ray Lewis for the first time in 58 games, the Ravens (7-3) nearly blew a 17-point lead in the final 14 minutes, yielded 483 yards and let rookie quarterback Andy Dalton throw for 373. But Baltimore got 104 yards rushing and two touchdowns from Ray Rice, and the defense made big plays when it counted most. After Rice was stuffed on a thirdand-1 with just over two minutes left, he remained confident. “I just looked at the clock and I said, ‘Our defense will get it done,’” he recalled. “That’s the faith I have in our guys.” Even without Lewis, who watched from the sideline after being placed on the inactive list with a toe injury. The Ravens’ spiritual leader and leading tackler saw his unit pick off three passes and turn in a game-saving goal-line stand in the final minute. Down 31-24, Cincinnati reached the Baltimore 7 before Terrell Suggs collared Dalton,

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SCOREBOARD 8:33. Third Quarter Bal_FG Cundiff 22, 10:50. Cin_Benson 3 run (Nugent kick), 6:51. Bal_Rice 2 run (Cundiff kick), :36. Fourth Quarter Bal_T.Smith 38 pass from Flacco (Cundiff kick), 14:02. Cin_Caldwell 49 pass from Dalton (Nugent kick), 10:59. Cin_FG Nugent 27, 5:32. A_71,320. —— Cin Bal 13 First downs . . . . . . . . . . 23 373 Total Net Yards. . . . . . 483 Rushes-yards. . . . . 30-119 28-105 Passing . . . . . . . . . . . . 364 268 3-6 Punt Returns. . . . . . . 4-24 1-26 Kickoff Returns . . . . . . 0-0 Interceptions Ret. . . . . 1-7 3-20 Comp-Att-Int . . . . 24-46-3 17-27-1 1-2 Sacked-Yards Lost. . . . 2-9 Punts. . . . . . . . . . . . 7-38.6 8-48.9 Fumbles-Lost. . . . . . . . 1-0 3-0 6-69 Penalties-Yards . . . . . 6-43 Time of Possession . 32:53 27:07 —— INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING_Cincinnati, Benson 15-41, Scott 9-40, Dalton 4-32, Leonard 2-6. Baltimore, Rice 20104, R.Williams 5-3, Flacco 3(minus 2). PASSING_Cincinnati, Dalton 24-45-3-373, Scott 0-1-0-0. Baltimore, Flacco 17-27-1-270. RECEIVING_Cincinnati, Simpson 8-152, Leonard 5-57, Hawkins 4-47, Caldwell 3-63, Gresham 3-48, Cochart 1-6. Baltimore, T.Smith 6165, Rice 5-43, Dickson 2-21, Leach 2-1, Boldin 1-35, R.Williams 1-5. MISSED FIELD GOALS_None.

FOOTBALL

Seattle. . . . . . 4 6 0 .400 168 209 Arizona . . . . . 3 7 0 .300 190 236 St. Louis . . . . 2 8 0 .200 120 247 Thursday's Game Denver 17, N.Y. Jets 13 Sunday's Games Green Bay 35, Tampa Bay 26 Oakland 27, Minnesota 21 Detroit 49, Carolina 35 Dallas 27, Washington 24, OT Cleveland 14, Jacksonville 10 Baltimore 31, Cincinnati 24 Miami 35, Buffalo 8 San Francisco 23, Arizona 7 Seattle 24, St. Louis 7 Chicago 31, San Diego 20 Atlanta 23, Tennessee 17 Philadelphia at N.Y. Giants, 8:20 p.m. Open: Houston, Indianapolis, New Orleans, Pittsburgh Monday's Game Kansas City at New England, 8:30 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 24 Green Bay at Detroit, 12:30 p.m. Miami at Dallas, 4:15 p.m. San Francisco at Baltimore, 8:20 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 27 Arizona at St. Louis, 1 p.m. Tampa Bay at Tennessee, 1 p.m. Cleveland at Cincinnati, 1 p.m. Buffalo at N.Y. Jets, 1 p.m. Houston at Jacksonville, 1 p.m. Carolina at Indianapolis, 1 p.m. Minnesota at Atlanta, 1 p.m. Chicago at Oakland, 4:05 p.m. Washington at Seattle, 4:05 p.m. Denver at San Diego, 4:15 p.m. New England at Philadelphia, 4:15 p.m. Pittsburgh at Kansas City, 8:20 p.m. Monday, Nov. 28 N.Y. Giants at New Orleans, 8:30 p.m.

14. Wisconsin . . . . . 9-2 1,506 13 15. Kansas State . . 9-2 1,362 17 16. Michigan . . . . . 9-2 1,164 18 17. Clemson . . . . . . 9-2 1,128 8 18. Penn State . . . . 9-2 943 19 872 21 19. TCU . . . . . . . . . 9-2 616 25 20. Baylor. . . . . . . . 7-3 21. Nebraska . . . . . 8-3 442 16 357 24 22. Georgia Tech . . 8-3 281 NR 23. Notre Dame . . . 8-3 24. West Virginia . . 7-3 278 22 25. Virginia . . . . . . 8-3 222 NR teams receiving Other votes: Southern Miss 116; Auburn 94; Tulsa 64; Rutgers 52; Florida State 20; BYU 12; Cincinnati 12; Arkansas State 9; Texas 9; Iowa 6; Iowa State 3; Missouri 3; Northern Illinois 3; Ohio 2.

10. (31) Jeff Burton, Chevrolet, 267, 83.6, 35, $90,400. 11. (11) Dale Earnhardt Jr., Chevrolet, 267, 102.2, 33, $81,150. 12. (14) Ryan Newman, Chevrolet, 267, 93.9, 32, $110,625. 13. (16) Regan Smith, Chevrolet, 267, 71.1, 31, $98,795. 14. (26) Jamie McMurray, Chevrolet, 267, 78.2, 30, $107,664. 15. (12) A J Allmendinger, Ford, 267, 83.2, 29, $110,086. 16. (23) Paul Menard, Chevrolet, 267, 71.2, 28, $79,475. 17. (24) Brian Vickers, Toyota, 267, 73.3, 27, $98,389. 18. (28) David Reutimann, Toyota, 267, 61.4, 26, $98,783. 19. (32) Joey Logano, Toyota, 267, 65.1, 25, $78,575. 20. (5) Brad Keselowski, Dodge, 266, 96.3, 25, $95,158. 21. (43) Mike Bliss, Ford, 266, 46.1, 0, $84,100. 22. (40) Travis Kvapil, Ford, 266, 47.7, 0, $84,283. 23. (19) Kyle Busch, Toyota, 266, 82.2, 22, $114,966. 24. (25) Mark Martin, Chevrolet, 266, 68.3, 20, $77,075. 25. (20) Trevor Bayne, Ford, 266, 62.5, 0, $69,275. 26. (39) Casey Mears, Toyota, 266, 53.9, 18, $68,525. 27. (35) Bobby Labonte, Toyota, 266, 50.6, 17, $95,170. 28. (34) Dave Blaney, Chevrolet, 265, 45.4, 16, $65,125. 29. (41) T.J. Bell, Ford, 265, 37.1, 15, $76,933. 30. (42) Geoffrey Bodine, Chevrolet, 263, 33.9, 14, $75,747. 31. (27) Juan Pablo Montoya, Chevrolet, 261, 57.8, 14, $105,533. 32. (9) Jimmie Johnson, Chevrolet, 261, 82.2, 13, $118,211. 33. (38) David Gilliland, Ford, 245, 36.9, 12, $65,375. 34. (4) Kurt Busch, Dodge, 220, 38.6, 10, $108,450. 35. (8) Greg Biffle, Ford, engine, 190, 61.2, 10, $81,675. 36. (22) Landon Cassill, Chevrolet, accident, 153, 50, 0, $63,450. 37. (29) Cole Whitt, Toyota, accident, 153, 40.3, 0, $63,250. 38. (13) David Ragan, Ford, engine, 81, 60.9, 6, $71,050. 39. (18) Marcos Ambrose, Ford, engine, 72, 44.7, 5, $92,841. 40. (37) Joe Nemechek, Toyota, vibration, 29, 33.5, 0, $62,620. 41. (30) J.J. Yeley, Ford, vibration, 25, 31.9, 3, $62,405. 42. (36) David Stremme, Chevrolet, ignition, 14, 27.8, 2, $62,110. 43. (33) Michael McDowell, Toyota, drive shaft, 13, 29.5, 1, $62,429. Race Statistics Average Speed of Race Winner: 114.976 mph. Time of Race: 3 hours, 29 minutes, 0 seconds. Margin of Victory: 1.306 seconds. Caution Flags: 8 for 54 laps. Lead Changes: 26 among 15 drivers. Top 12 in Points: 1. T.Stewart, 2,403; 2. C.Edwards, 2,403; 3. K.Harvick, 2,345; 4. M.Kenseth, 2,330; 5. Bra.Keselowski, 2,319; 6. J.Johnson, 2,304; 7. D.Earnhardt Jr., 2,290; 8. J.Gordon, 2,287; 9. D.Hamlin, 2,284; 10. R.Newman, 2,284; 11. Ku.Busch, 2,262; 12. Ky.Busch, 2,246.

On first and second High school playoffs down, running back Saturday's Scores Michael Zordich carried The Associated Press PREP FOOTBALL the ball but was stopped Division I short of the goal line. Regionals Quarterback Matt McCin. St. Xavier 35, Cin. Moeller Gloin carried on third 21 Cle. St. Ignatius 23, Mentor 17 down and was stopped, Pickerington Cent. 17, Hilliard then running back Silas Davidson 0 Tol. Whitmer 37, Wadsworth 0 Redd was stuffed on Division IV fourth down when he atRegionals Clarksville Clinton-Massie 21, tempted to dive over the Day. Chaminade 20 line. Creston Norwayne 26, Girard A touchdown would 24 CALENDAR Johnstown-Monroe 27, Coshochave put Penn State up ton 24 High school and probably sealed Kenton 30, Cols. Hartley 28 High school sports Division VI OSU’s fate early. This week Regionals “We just dug deep FRIDAY Berlin Center Western Reserve down in ourselves and 49, Shadyside 7 Girls basketball Russia at Sidney Delphos St. John's 28, Leipsic stopped them,” defensive Lehman at Riverside tackle Johnathan Hank- 20 Marion Local 28, Minster 0 Versailles at Celina Tip-Off ins said. “We just knew Covington at Houston New Washington Buckeye Cent. Marion Local at Fort Loramie we had to stop them. It 40, Beallsville 0 New Bremen Tip-Off —— was going to be the turn6:30 — Anna vs. New Knoxville State semifinal pairings 2nd game — New Bremen vs. DIVISION I ing point of the game if Van Buren Saturday, 7 p.m. they got it.” —— Toledo Whitmer (13-0) vs. The goal line heroics Cleveland St. Ignatius (11-2) at SATURDAY Girls basketball were preceded and fol- Mansfield Arlin Field Sidney at Lehman Pickerington Central (10-2) vs. lowed by costly Ohio Cincinnati Russia at Mississinawa St. Xavier (10-3) at DayState mistakes. Northwestern at Riverside ton Welcome Stadium Jackson Center at Minster State Championship Game: Penn State began that Versailles at Celina Tip-Off Saturday, Dec. 3 at Canton Fawcett series at Ohio State’s 11- Stadium, 7 p.m. Fairlawn at Covinton New Bremen Tip-Off DIVISION II yard line when Dan HerBrowns-Jags 6:30 — Consolation Friday, 7:30 p.m. ron fumbled as he 2nd game — Championship Aurora (12-1) vs. Avon (12-1) at Jaguars-Browns Stats attempted to hand off to Parma Byers Field —— Jacksonville ...............0 7 0 3—10 College Top 25 TUESDAY (Nov. 29) Marion-Franklin Columbus Jordan Hall in the wildCleveland ...................0 7 0 7—14 Girls basketball (13-0) vs. Trotwood-Madison (13-0) AP Top 25, FBC cat formation, where the at Second Quarter Russia at Houston Clayton Northmont Good The Associated Press Jac_Jones-Drew 6 run (Scobee ball is snapped directly Samaritan Stadium Botkins at Fairlawn The Top 25 teams in The Assokick), 10:50. Jackson Center at Fort Loramie State Championship Game: to a running back, not Cle_Ogbonnaya 1 run (Dawson ciated Press college football poll, Friday, Dec. 2 at Massillon Paul with first-place votes in parenthekick), 3:21. the quarterback. Brown Tiger Stadium, 7 p.m. AUTO RACING ses, records through Nov. 19, total Fourth Quarter DIVISION III Then four plays after Cle_Cribbs 3 pass from McCoy points based on 25 points for a firstFriday, 7:30 p.m. place vote through one point for a NASCAR the big stop, Carlos Hyde (Dawson kick), 12:15. Chagrin Falls (13-0) vs. 25th-place vote, and previous rankJac_FG Scobee 42, 5:39. fumbled the ball away to Youngstown Cardinal Mooney (9-3) NASCAR Sprint Cup-Ford 400 ing: A_63,498. Results Penn State at OSU’s 46- at Uniontown Lake Alumni Field Record Pts Pv —— Elida (10-3) vs. Springfield The Associated Press 1 yard line. Cle 1. LSU (60) . . . . . . 11-0 1,500 Jac Shawnee (13-0) at Piqua Alexander Sunday 3 First downs . . . . . . . . . 23 20 2. Alabama . . . . . . 10-1 1,440 The idea this was des- Stadium At Homestead-Miami 6 Total Net Yards . . . . . 303 334 3. Arkansas . . . . . . 10-1 1,376 State Championship Game: Speedway tined to be a low-scoring 8 Rushes-yards . . . . 29-108 28-148 4. Stanford . . . . . . 10-1 1,224 Friday, Dec. 2 at Canton Fawcett Homestead, Fla. 2 186 5. Oklahoma St. . . 10-1 1,206 Passing . . . . . . . . . . . . 195 game looked like it was Stadium, 3 p.m. Lap length: 1.5 miles 9 Punt Returns . . . . . . 1-11 1-0 6. Virginia Tech. . . 10-1 1,133 DIVISION IV going to be dispelled Kickoff Returns . . . . 1-17 2-63 7. Boise St. . . . . . . . 9-1 1,025 10 (Start position in parentheses) Saturday, 7 p.m. 1. (15) Tony Stewart, Chevrolet, when Penn State took a 0-0 8. Houston. . . . . . . 11-0 1,018 11 Interceptions Ret.. . . 1-28 Creston Norwayne (12-1) vs. 4 267 laps, 126.3 rating, 47 points, Comp-Att-Int . . . . 22-41-0 17-24-1 9. Oregon . . . . . . . . 9-2 1,008 20-14 lead. Johnstown-Monroe (13-0) at New 964 18 $341,258. Lost . . 1-15 2-13 10. Southern Cal . . 9-2 The Nittany Lions Philadelphia Woody Hayes Quaker Sacked-Yards 876 12 Punts . . . . . . . . . . . 5-40.6 3-36.0 11. Michigan St. . . 9-2 2. (1) Carl Edwards, Ford, 267, Stadium 819 5 141.3, 44, $296,416. came into Saturday with 0-0 12. Oklahoma . . . . 8-2 Fumbles-Lost . . . . . . . 1-0 Kenton (13-0) vs. Clarksville 815 13 13. Georgia. . . . . . . 9-2 3. (2) Martin Truex Jr., Toyota, the 10th-ranked offense Clinton-Massie (11-2) at Piqua Penalties-Yards. . . . . 9-81 9-70 14. South Carolina 9-2 762 14 Time of Possession . 30:53 29:07 267, 121.1, 42, $189,450. Stadium Alexander in the Big Ten and Ohio 15. Wisconsin . . . . . 9-2 714 15 —— 4. (6) Matt Kenseth, Ford, 267, State Championship Game: 682 16 16. Kansas St. . . . . 9-2 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS State was No. 11. Saturday, Dec. 3 at Massillon Paul 527 20 114.7, 41, $173,736. RUSHING_Jacksonville, Jones- 17. Michigan . . . . . 9-2 5. (7) Jeff Gordon, Chevrolet, But Penn State scored Brown Tiger Stadium, 3 p.m. 515 7 Drew 21-87, Gabbert 2-10, Owens 18. Clemson . . . . . . 9-2 DIVISION V 456 19 267, 118.1, 40, $159,386. the first three times it 2-10, Karim 4-1. Cleveland, Ogbon- 19. TCU . . . . . . . . . 9-2 Friday, 7:30 p.m. 6. (17) Clint Bowyer, Chevrolet, 398 21 naya 21-115, McCoy 5-27, Clayton 20. Penn St. . . . . . . 9-2 had the football and had Kirtland (13-0) vs. Bucyrus 383 25 267, 91.7, 38, $145,633. 21. Baylor. . . . . . . . 7-3 1-4, Cribbs 1-2. three plays of 38 yards Wynford (13-0) at Canton Central 7. (3) Kasey Kahne, Toyota, 267, 155 17 PASSING_Jacksonville, Gab- 22. Nebraska . . . . . 8-3 Klinefelter Field 155 24 93.2, 37, $118,458. or more in the first two Catholic bert 22-41-0-210. Cleveland, McCoy 22. Notre Dame . . . 8-3 Coldwater (10-3) vs. Hicksville 24. Virginia . . . . . . 8-3 147 NR 8. (21) Kevin Harvick, Chevro17-24-1-199. quarters. (11-2) at Lima Stadium 77 NR let, 267, 100.5, 37, $130,811. RECEIVING_Jacksonville, 25. Georgia Tech . . 8-3 State Championship Game: After taking the openOthers receiving votes: West 9. (10) Denny Hamlin, Toyota, Lewis 7-64, Jones-Drew 4-31, Hill Friday, Dec. 2 at Massillon Paul 3-49, Dillard 3-29, Thomas 3-23, Virginia 37, Tulsa 34, Auburn 28, 267, 92.5, 35, $123,875. ing kickoff, Penn State Brown Tiger Stadium, 11 a.m. West 2-14. Cleveland, Little 5-59, Southern Miss. 12, Rutgers 6, DIVISION VI went up six plays later Cribbs 3-20, Massaquoi 2-19, Og- Arkansas St. 4, Iowa St. 3, Cincin7 p.m. Saturday, on a 39-yard run by bonnaya 2-19, Watson 2-18, Mare- nati 1. Berlin Center Western Reserve —— cic 2-13, Norwood 1-51. Green. (13-0) vs. New Washington Buckeye USA Today Top 25 Poll MISSED FIELD Want Better Gas Mileage? Record Pts Pvs The next time the Nit- Central (11-2) at Massillon Paul GOALS_Cleveland, Dawson 38 Give These Guys A Call, Brown Tiger Stadium 1 1. LSU (59) . . . . . . 11-0 1475 tany Lions got the ball, (WR). Delphos St. John’s (10-3) vs. They Can Help! 3 2. Alabama . . . . . . 10-1 1413 Anthony Fera’s 43-yard Maria Stein Marion Local (11-2) at NFL standings 3. Arkansas . . . . . . 10-1 1349 6 7 4. Virginia Tech. . . 10-1 1242 field goal made it 10-0. Wapakoneta Harmon Field State Championship Game: 5. Stanford . . . . . . 10-1 1222 9 YOUR National Football League Ohio State responded Saturday, Dec. 3 at Canton Fawcett 2 6. Oklahoma State 10-1 1156 The Associated Press with a 10-play, 77-yard Stadium, 11 a.m. TOTAL AUTO 7. Houston. . . . . . . 11-0 1075 10 All Times EST 982 11 8. Boise State . . . . . 9-1 drive that ended with a OSU-Penn State AMERICAN CONFERENCE SERVICE CENTER 933 4 9. Oregon . . . . . . . . 9-2 East 24-yard scoring run by 10. Michigan State 9-2 928 12 PENN ST. 20, OHIO ST. 14 W L T Pct PF PA 826 5 11. Oklahoma . . . . 8-2 Miller to cut the lead to Penn St. 10 10 0 0—20 N.Y. Jets . . . . 6 2 0 .750 182 130 12. Wisconsin . . . . . 9-2 808 13 Ohio St. 0 14 0 0—14 10-7. New England 6 3 0 .667 259 200 806 14 13. South Carolina 9-2 First Quarter N.Y. Jets . . . . 5 5 0 .500 228 217 Penn State pushed 14. Georgia. . . . . . . 9-2 803 15 PSU_Green 39 run (Fera kick), Buffalo. . . . . . 5 5 0 .500 237 253 671 17 15. Kansas State . . 9-2 the lead back to 10 12:27. Miami . . . . . . 3 7 0 .300 193 186 618 18 16. Michigan . . . . . 9-2 PSU_FG Fera 43, 1:59. South points at 17-7 when 17. Clemson . . . . . . 9-2 587 8 Second Quarter Houston. . . . . 7 3 0 .700 273 166 Green’s 4-yard run was 494 19 18. TCU . . . . . . . . . 9-2 OSU_B.Miller 24 run (Basil Tennessee . . . 5 5 0 .500 203 195 19. Penn State . . . . 9-2 455 21 the final play in an 81- kick), 12:32. Jacksonville . 3 7 0 .300 125 180 with coupon 20. Baylor. . . . . . . . 7-3 302 NR PSU_Green 4 run (Fera kick), Indianapolis . 0 10 0 .000 131 300 yard drive. 203 t23 21. Georgia Tech . . 8-3 Up to 5 quarts of Kendall 5W-20, 5W-30 or 10:05. North 22. Nebraska . . . . . 8-3 165 16 A pass interception by 10W-30 Motor Oil. Oil & filter disposal included OSU_Stoneburner 7 pass from Baltimore . . . 7 3 0 .700 256 176 158 t23 23. West Virginia . . 7-3 Orian Johnson set OSU B.Miller (Basil kick), 5:22. Pittsburgh. . . 7 3 0 .700 220 179 Coupon Expires 12/15/11 24. Notre Dame . . . 8-3 156 25 PSU_FG Fera 46, :00. Cincinnati. . 6 4 0 .600 236 195 Coupon must be presented at time of purchase. up at Penn State’s 37154 NR 25. Virginia . . . . . . 8-3 A_105,493. Cleveland . . 4 6 0 .400 145 193 Others receiving votes: Rutyard line and it took only —— West STOP IN FOR BRAKES OSU Oakland . . . . 6 4 0 .600 235 254 gers 54; Auburn 33; Southern Misfour plays until Miller First downs. . . . . . . . .PSU 16 15 Denver. . . . . . 5 5 0 .500 205 247 sissippi 25; Tulsa 23; Brigham DISC BRAKE SERVICE hit tight end Stoneb- Rushes-yards . . . 39-239 43-206 Kansas City . 4 5 0 .444 141 218 Young 21; Arkansas State 10; Illinois 10; Missouri 8; Northern 83 San Diego . . . 4 6 0 .400 236 259 urner with a 7-yard Passing . . . . . . . . . . . . 88 Texas A&M 4; Utah 3; Florida State Comp-Att-Int . . . 10-18-1 7-17-0 NATIONAL CONFERENCE with coupon Reg. $109.95 scoring pass. 1; Iowa State 1; Texas 1. 15 Return Yards . . . . . . . 10 East Install pads. Repack wheel bearings. Resurface —— But Penn State’s Punts-Avg. . . . . . . 4-36.0 4-38.3 N.Y. Giants . . 6 3 0 .667 218 211 rotors. Inspect calipers and hydraulic system. Add Harris Top 25 2-2 Dallas . . . . . . 6 4 0 .600 250 206 fluid. Most U.S. cars. Includes labor. Includes Fera’s kicked a 46-yard Fumbles-Lost . . . . . . 0-0 Record Pts Pv semi-metallic pads. Ceramic pads extra. Penalties-Yards . . . . 5-40 6-32 field goal (the longest of Time of Possession 30:08 29:52 Philadelphia . 3 6 0 .333 220 203 1. LSU (115) . . . . . 11-0 2,875 1 Coupon Expires 12/15/11 Washington. . 3 7 0 .300 160 205 2. Alabama . . . . . . 10-1 2,758 3 —— Coupon must be presented at time of purchase. his career) as time ran South 3. Arkansas . . . . . . 10-1 2,619 6 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS New Orleans . 7 3 0 .700 313 228 4. Stanford . . . . . . 10-1 2,371 out in the first half to 7 RUSHING_Penn St., Green 16WE DO COMPLETE/CUSTOM EXHAUST SYSTEMS . . . . . 6 4 0 .600 235 213 5. Virginia Tech. . . 10-1 2,302 9 give Penn State a 20-14 93, Redd 8-63, Drake 3-50, Atlanta Tampa Bay . . 4 6 0 .400 182 268 6. Oklahoma State 10-1 2,267 2 Beachum 4-16, Belton 4-15, Suhey lead. Carolina . . . . 2 8 0 .200 225 286 7. Houston. . . . . . . 11-0 2,060 10 WINTER CAR CARE PACKAGE 1-1, Zordich 2-1, McGloin 1-0. Ohio North “This win isn’t about St., B.Miller 18-105, Herron 18-76, 8. Boise State . . . . . 9-1 2,037 11 $ 00 MOST Green Bay . . 10 0 0 1.000355 212 9. Oregon . . . . . . . . 9-2 2,036 4 CARS me, it’s about the players Hyde 4-24, J.Hall 2-8, Team 1- Detroit. . . . . . 7 3 0 .700 301 219 10. Oklahoma . . . . 8-2 1,719 5 7). Service Includes • Adjust air pressure and this team,” interim (minus Chicago . . . . . 7 3 0 .700 268 207 11. Michigan State 9-2 1,685 12 • Lube, oil change and • Evaluate brake PASSING_Penn St., McGloin new filter (up to 5 condition Penn State coach Tom 10-18-1-88. Ohio St., B.Miller 7-17- Minnesota . . . 2 8 0 .200 200 271 12. Georgia. . . . . . . 9-2 1,559 14 quarts Kendall) West • Analyze battery 13. South Carolina 9-2 1,511 15 Bradley said. “I don’t 0-83. • Top off fluids condition San Francisco 9 1 0 .900 256 145 RECEIVING_Penn St., Moye 3• Replace wiper blades • Examine all belts think any team in the 40, Green 2-8, Beachum 1-13, • Complete tire rotation and hoses history of college football Sazczerba 1-12, Brown 1-11, Suhey Coupon Expires 12/15/11 Zordich 1-1. Ohio St., Posey 4has been through so 1-3, 66, C.Brown 1-10, Stoneburner 1-7, $ 95 • Coolant Flush much in such a short Herron 1-0. (Dexcool Extra) 95 time period. And to Bengals-Ravens • Transmission Flush $ hang in there and fight • Power Steering $ 95 Bengals-Ravens Stats Flush their way through is Cincinnati Eckrich Bologna ...........................$ lb. 7 0 7 10—24 $ 95 • Brake System Flush great.” Baltimore 0 14 10 7—31 $ Coupon Expires 12/15/11 Eckrich Virginia Baked Ham lb. First Quarter Bradley replaced PaCoupon must be presented at time of purchase. Cin_Benson 7 run (Nugent $ terno, who was fired kick), Old Fashion Bulk Bacon ....... lb. 8:17. after 46 seasons as Penn Second Quarter 4 WHEEL THRUST ALIGNMENT Bal_Boldin 35 pass from Flacco Deli Munster Cheese.................$ lb. State’s coach for failing (Cundiff kick), 11:17. Reg. to aggressively pursue Bal_Rice 1 run (Cundiff kick), $69.95

LUBE, OIL, AND FILTER

$

18 $

95

9995

49

69 99 59 49

Woody’s Market 2.69 3.89 2.99 3.49

CLOSED THANKSGIVING DAY

Time to order Fresh Locally Raised Turkeys, Fresh Oysters, and Hams

Remote Vehicle Starts, Make A Great Gift! 204 Commerce Drive • Anna

937-394-7338

5995

Most U.S. cars. We precision align caster, camber and toe-in.

Coupon Expires 12/15/11 Coupon must be presented at time of purchase.

2237453

492-9379

2232817

ELECTRONICS

MON-FRI 8AM-6PM SAT 9AM-5PM CLOSED SUN

Store Hours: Mon.-Thurs. 8 to 6 Fri. 8 to 8 delivery Sat. 8 to 5:30

$

Monday is Golden Buckeye Day Call

for home

Corner of Fair & Spruce • Sidney

937-492-9117

937-492-9118

1231 Wapakoneta Ave. Sidney

120 S. Stolle Ave. Sidney

2236193


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