12
www.thecr.com 50 cents Portland, Indiana 47371 The Commercial Review Wednesday, August 10, 2011 •P Pa ag ge e 4 4 — Finding cousins he didn’t know that he had. Back in the Saddle by Jack Ronald. P Pa ag ge e 5 5 — Results, photos from 2011 4-H goat show at Jay County Fair. P Pa ag ge e 1 12 2 — JCHS volleyball camp in full swing. Photo. Lows tonight will dip into the mid-50s, with partly cloudy skies and winds from the north-north- west at 10 to 15 mph. The high Tuesday at the Portland weather station was 83 degrees. The low was 61, with a reading today at 7 a.m. of 67. Fort Recovery High School students can pick up schedules Aug. 16 through 22 from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. They will be available in the FRHS office. School begins Aug. 23 at 8:15 a.m. T Th hu ur rs sd da ay y , , A Au ug gu us st t 1 11 1 — Coun- ty council expecting report on county’s pay plan. Coverage from CR government reporter Steve Garbacz. S Sa at tu ur rd da ay y , , A Au ug gu us st t 1 13 3 — Pence to headline Jay County GOP banquet. Story, photo. Inside Weather In review Coming up LONDON (AP) — Stocks in Europe and the U.S. tum- bled today, a day after a Federal Reserve pledge to keep extremely low inter- est rates for two more years temporarily calmed investors’ jitters. The Fed’s surprise announcement Tuesday that it would likely keep its Fed funds rate at near zero percent through 2013 to help the ailing U.S. econo- my fueled a late Wall Street surge — the Dow Jones industrial average rallied 6 percent just in the final hour of trading, one of the biggest turnarounds ever seen. That continued into Asian and European trad- ing sessions today, although traders remained nervous after the market turmoil of recent weeks, which has sent many glob- al markets officially into bear market territory — falling 20 percent from recent peaks. That nerv- ousness became more acute as the U.S. open loomed and European mar- kets gave up all their earli- er gains. “So far, panic has eased but fear remains,” said Kit Juckes, an analyst at Soci- ete Generale. In Europe, the FTSE 100 index of leading British shares was down 1.4 per- cent at 5,093 while Ger- many’s DAX fell 2.5 percent to 5,814. The CAC-40 in France was 2.5 percent lower at 3,098. In the U.S., the Dow Jones industrial average was down 2.7 percent at 10,940 while the broader Standard & Poor’s 500 index fell 2.6 percent to 1,141. Over the past few weeks, markets have suffered a severe reverse amid wor- ries over the U.S. economic recovery and the country’s debt situation in light of a protracted debate in Con- gress to get the debt ceiling lifted. That contributed to last weekend’s announce- ment by Standard & Poor’s to downgrade the U.S.’s credit rating for the first time ever. The Commercial Review/Shawn Shinneman From right, U.S. Rep. Marlin Stutzman, State Sen. Carlin Yoder and State Rep. Bill Davis, R-Portland, get a tour of the POET biorefining plant from Technical Manager Matt Clamme and General Manager Steve Pittman. By SHAWN SHINNEMAN The Commercial Review U.S. Rep. Marlin Stutzman trad- ed his tie for a hard hat Tuesday afternoon. Stutzman, who represents Indi- ana’s 3rd district, was in Jay Coun- ty Tuesday for a tour of the POET Biorefining plant. Stutzman, who grew up and lives in Howe, Ind., is a supporter of ethanol advancements and said he wanted to hear from the experts in the field. But he was also in town to get to know Jay County. Redistricting will move Jay County into the area encompassed by Stutzman’s dis- trict. “This is also kind of part of that, to get to know folks down in this area,” Stutsman said. Stutzman says he plans to run for reelection in the newly-shaped district, which will include Jay County, in 2012. The new Congres- sional districts will not take effect until Jan. 1, 2013. Jay County is currently repre- sented in Congress by Mike Pence, who has already announced his intent to run for Indiana governor in 2012. While Jay County was at the northern end of Pence’s J- shaped district, it will be at the southern tip of the 3rd District, which includes most of northeast Indiana. The tour started with POET General Manager Steve Pittman talking with Stutzman and others, including State Rep. Bill Davis, R- Portland, and District 12 State Sen- ator Carlin Yoder, about the process of turning corn into ethanol. Stutzman said opposition to ethanol advancements often makes the argument that we are “burning our food.” Pittman told him their plant produces as much food from corn as they do ethanol. “It’s nice to have the informa- tion to combat those when they do come back at you,” Stutzman said. The group then proceeded through the plant, hearing from Pittman and Technical Manager Matt Clamme about the plant’s efforts to remain environmentally friendly. “I’m impressed,” Stutzman said after the tour. “I’m impressed at how clean it is. The professional- ism is top notch. And you can tell that they’re concerned about, not only our fuel resources but also about the environment and the resources they have with corn and making sure they’re utilizing every bit of it.” Stutzman said he’s also been pleased with the agricultural industry’s willingness to take less federal funding with current budg- et negotiations in Washington. “The agricultural community is stepping up and saying, ‘We can do without direct payments, we can do without ethanol subsidies,’” he said. “We want to do it in a respon- sible way, but don’t just take those dollars that we’re going to be cut- ting and stick it into a different program. We want to see it go to reducing the debt.” By JACK RONALD The Commercial Review Indiana’s new school voucher program couldn’t have come at a better time for the Jay County Christian Academy. Eighteen of last year’s 51 students at the academy weren’t going to be returning this fall. Some were heading to Jay County High School, and some from the pre-school program were going to public elementary schools. But the voucher program is providing a boost to this fall’s enrollment. So far, principal Michael Eads said this week, a dozen students will be making use of vouchers, known as the Indiana Choice Scholarship. “We’re at 60 kids,” said Eads. “That’s 27 new ones.” The other 15 are pre-schoolers, he added. “The voucher system is going to open up some doors,” said Eads. The 12 Jay County students using the vouchers are part of more than 2,230 that will be receiving the scholarships this year, according to the Indiana Department of Education. That number could rise before the pro- gram closes out in mid-September. The Indiana General Assembly had authorized up to 7,500 in the initial year. Jay Schools superintendent Tim Long said the program, which still faces a legal challenge over whether it violates the state constitution, should have no significant impact on local public schools this fall. “Our enrollment is really strong right now,” Long said. “But that’s just prelimi- nary.” Jay Schools receives about $6,200 in state funding per student, an amount cal- culated by dividing the total budget by enrollment. A shift of 15 students to JCCA would mean a loss of approximately $93,000 in funding for Jay Schools. Jay County Christian Academy, one of 250 religious or private schools taking part in the program, has been working toward vouchers since the idea appeared in the last session of the state legislature. “We went to Indianapolis three times this year because we really wanted to be involved,” said Eads. “When we found out it was going to be (launched) this fall, we were really elated.” To be eligible for a scholarship, a stu- dent must have attended public school the previous two semesters. See V V o ou uc ch he er r page 2 JCCA getting boost from voucher offer The Commercial Review/Jack Ronald Mike Eads, principal of Jay County Christian Academy, left, is pictured earlier this week along with staff members Roger Domingo and Jeannine Poole. The school, based at Fellowship Baptist Church, rural Portland, has seen a bump in enrollment thanks to a new state-funded voucher program. Stutzman tours local plant Markets remain nervous Changes will move Jay County into 3rd District

Congressman Stutzman

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Page 1: Congressman Stutzman

www.thecr.com 50 centsPortland, Indiana 47371

The Commercial ReviewWednesday, August 10, 2011

•PPaaggee 44 — Finding cousins hedidn’t know that he had. Back inthe Saddle by Jack Ronald.

•PPaaggee 55 — Results, photosfrom 2011 4-H goat show at JayCounty Fair.

•PPaaggee 1122 — JCHS volleyballcamp in full swing. Photo.

Lows tonight will dip into themid-50s, with partly cloudy skiesand winds from the north-north-west at 10 to 15 mph. The highTuesday at the Portland weatherstation was 83 degrees. The lowwas 61, with a reading today at 7a.m. of 67.

Fort Recovery High Schoolstudents can pick up schedulesAug. 16 through 22 from 8 a.m. to4 p.m. They will be available inthe FRHS office.School begins Aug. 23 at 8:15

a.m.

•TThhuurrssddaayy,, AAuugguusstt 1111 — Coun-ty council expecting report oncounty’s pay plan. Coveragefrom CR government reporterSteve Garbacz.

•SSaattuurrddaayy,, AAuugguusstt 1133 — Penceto headline Jay County GOPbanquet. Story, photo.

Inside Weather In review Coming up

LONDON (AP) — Stocksin Europe and the U.S. tum-bled today, a day after aFederal Reserve pledge tokeep extremely low inter-est rates for two more yearstemporarily calmedinvestors’ jitters.The Fed’s surprise

announcement Tuesdaythat it would likely keep itsFed funds rate at near zeropercent through 2013 tohelp the ailing U.S. econo-my fueled a late Wall Streetsurge — the Dow Jonesindustrial average rallied 6percent just in the finalhour of trading, one of thebiggest turnarounds everseen.That continued into

Asian and European trad-ing sessions today,although traders remainednervous after the marketturmoil of recent weeks,which has sent many glob-al markets officially intobear market territory —falling 20 percent fromrecent peaks. That nerv-ousness became moreacute as the U.S. openloomed and European mar-kets gave up all their earli-er gains.“So far, panic has eased

but fear remains,” said KitJuckes, an analyst at Soci-ete Generale.In Europe, the FTSE 100

index of leading Britishshares was down 1.4 per-cent at 5,093 while Ger-many’s DAX fell 2.5 percentto 5,814. The CAC-40 inFrance was 2.5 percentlower at 3,098.In the U.S., the Dow

Jones industrial averagewas down 2.7 percent at10,940 while the broaderStandard & Poor’s 500index fell 2.6 percent to1,141.Over the past few weeks,

markets have suffered asevere reverse amid wor-ries over the U.S. economicrecovery and the country’sdebt situation in light of aprotracted debate in Con-gress to get the debt ceilinglifted. That contributed tolast weekend’s announce-ment by Standard & Poor’sto downgrade the U.S.’scredit rating for the firsttime ever.

The Commercial Review/Shawn Shinneman

From right, U.S. Rep. Marlin Stutzman, State Sen. Carlin Yoder and State Rep. Bill Davis, R-Portland, get a tour of the POETbiorefining plant from Technical Manager Matt Clamme and General Manager Steve Pittman.

By SHAWN SHINNEMANThe Commercial ReviewU.S. Rep. Marlin Stutzman trad-

ed his tie for a hard hat Tuesdayafternoon.Stutzman, who represents Indi-

ana’s 3rd district, was in Jay Coun-ty Tuesday for a tour of the POETBiorefining plant. Stutzman, who grew up and

lives in Howe, Ind., is a supporterof ethanol advancements and saidhe wanted to hear from the expertsin the field.But he was also in town to get to

know Jay County. Redistrictingwill move Jay County into the areaencompassed by Stutzman’s dis-trict.“This is also kind of part of

that, to get to know folks down inthis area,” Stutsman said.Stutzman says he plans to run

for reelection in the newly-shapeddistrict, which will include JayCounty, in 2012. The new Congres-sional districts will not take effectuntil Jan. 1, 2013.Jay County is currently repre-

sented in Congress by Mike Pence,who has already announced hisintent to run for Indiana governorin 2012. While Jay County was atthe northern end of Pence’s J-shaped district, it will be at thesouthern tip of the 3rd District,which includes most of northeastIndiana.The tour started with POET

General Manager Steve Pittmantalking with Stutzman and others,including State Rep. Bill Davis, R-Portland, and District 12 State Sen-ator Carlin Yoder, about theprocess of turning corn intoethanol.Stutzman said opposition to

ethanol advancements often makesthe argument that we are “burningour food.” Pittman told him their plant

produces as much food from cornas they do ethanol.“It’s nice to have the informa-

tion to combat those when they docome back at you,” Stutzman said.The group then proceeded

through the plant, hearing fromPittman and Technical ManagerMatt Clamme about the plant’sefforts to remain environmentallyfriendly.“I’m impressed,” Stutzman said

after the tour. “I’m impressed athow clean it is. The professional-ism is top notch. And you can tellthat they’re concerned about, notonly our fuel resources but alsoabout the environment and theresources they have with corn andmaking sure they’re utilizingevery bit of it.”Stutzman said he’s also been

pleased with the agriculturalindustry’s willingness to take lessfederal funding with current budg-et negotiations in Washington.“The agricultural community is

stepping up and saying, ‘We can dowithout direct payments, we cando without ethanol subsidies,’” hesaid. “We want to do it in a respon-sible way, but don’t just take thosedollars that we’re going to be cut-ting and stick it into a differentprogram. We want to see it go toreducing the debt.”

By JACK RONALDThe Commercial ReviewIndiana’s new school voucher program

couldn’t have come at a better time for theJay County Christian Academy.Eighteen of last year’s 51 students at

the academy weren’t going to be returningthis fall. Some were heading to Jay CountyHigh School, and some from the pre-schoolprogram were going to public elementaryschools.But the voucher program is providing a

boost to this fall’s enrollment.So far, principal Michael Eads said this

week, a dozen students will be making useof vouchers, known as the Indiana ChoiceScholarship.“We’re at 60 kids,” said Eads. “That’s 27

new ones.” The other 15 are pre-schoolers,he added. “The voucher system is going toopen up some doors,” said Eads.The 12 Jay County students using the

vouchers are part of more than 2,230 thatwill be receiving the scholarships thisyear, according to the Indiana Departmentof Education.That number could rise before the pro-

gram closes out in mid-September. TheIndiana General Assembly had authorized

up to 7,500 in the initial year.Jay Schools superintendent Tim Long

said the program, which still faces a legalchallenge over whether it violates the stateconstitution, should have no significantimpact on local public schools this fall.“Our enrollment is really strong right

now,” Long said. “But that’s just prelimi-nary.”Jay Schools receives about $6,200 in

state funding per student, an amount cal-culated by dividing the total budget byenrollment. A shift of 15 students to JCCAwould mean a loss of approximately$93,000 in funding for Jay Schools.Jay County Christian Academy, one of

250 religious or private schools taking partin the program, has been working towardvouchers since the idea appeared in thelast session of the state legislature.“We went to Indianapolis three times

this year because we really wanted to beinvolved,” said Eads. “When we found outit was going to be (launched) this fall, wewere really elated.”To be eligible for a scholarship, a stu-

dent must have attended public school theprevious two semesters.

See VVoouucchheerr page 2

JCCA getting boostfrom voucher offer

The Commercial Review/Jack Ronald

Mike Eads, principal of Jay County Christian Academy, left, is picturedearlier this week along with staff members Roger Domingo and Jeannine Poole.The school, based at Fellowship Baptist Church, rural Portland, has seen a bumpin enrollment thanks to a new state-funded voucher program.

Stutzman tours local plant

Marketsremainnervous

Changes willmove Jay Countyinto 3rd District

Page 2: Congressman Stutzman

Barn fireA Noble Township hog

barn sustained major dam-age during a fire Tuesdayafternoon.The Salamonia Fire

Department responded to afire call at a hog barn at8346 East Ind. 26, Portland,at 3:03 p.m. The property isowned by Jerry and IleneSchwieterman.The cause of the fire is

under investigation, butSalamonia assistant firechief Roger Theurer saidhe believes the cause waselectrical.Southwest Mercer Fire

District (Fort Recovery)provided mutual aid. Fourtrucks responded and fire-fighters were at the scenefor about six hours.

Tools stolenA Portland man report-

ed items stolen from histruck Tuesday.James Zimmerman, 1017

W. Race St., told policeabout 8:30 p.m. he had somepipe wrenches and othertools stolen from his truck,which was parked in hisdriveway. He also said aflower pot and its holderwere missing.Zimmerman said he sus-

pected the theft occurredsometime during the dayTuesday.

Bike accidentA Portland boy suffered

scrapes to his leg Tuesdayafternoon after he rode hisbike into a moving car.Jorden Shawver, 10, 204

E. High Street, told policehe was riding his bikethrough Rose Alley, behindKoffee Kup Diner, atapproximately 3:50 p.m.when he attempted to crossEast High Street. Shawversaid he did not see an east-bound Ford Escort drivenby Marilyn S. Garinger, 58,920 S. Bridge St., Portland.Shawver’s bicycle struck

Garinger’s vehicle on thedriver’s side.Total damage in the acci-

dent is estimated to bebetween $750 and $1,000.

Gun missingA Bryant man reported

a handgun and automotivescanner missing from hisshop Tuesday evening.John Miller, whose shop

is on 102 E. Elm St., toldpolice he last saw his hand-gun two days ago in a deskdrawer. He discovered it was

missing Tuesday nightafter first noticing hisscanner was gone atapproximately 7 p.m. Hesaid he last saw the scan-ner Monday night at 7 p.m.

Local The Commercial ReviewWednesday, August 10, 2011Page 2

REDKEY UNITED METHODIST CHURCH“The Great August Give Away.”

Saturday, August 13 from 10:00am-2:00 pm We will be meeting the needs of our community by giv-ing away lightly used clothing, shoes, household and kitchen items plus some miscellaneous. From 11:00 - 1:00 we will be serving free hot dogs and drinks. The church is located at 122 W. Main St., Redkey, IN. Ph. 765-730-4979 (Please no dealers or resale buying.) We reserve the right to restrict quantity.

AMERICAN LEGIONPOST 211

Saturday • August 13

ALL YOU CAN EAT

Pancakes

& Sausage

7-11 am $6.00

OPEN TO THE PUBLIC211 W. WALNUT PORTLAND, IN

THANK YOU We would like to express our deep appreciation for all the prayers, cards, fl owers and calls while

Inez was in the hospital and at her passing. Thanks to all who visited her during her stay at the hospital

to help make her day a little brighter, to the staff of the Baird-Freeman funeral home, West Walnut Street

Church of Christ, friends and neighbors. Also, special thanks to Jim Nichols and Bruce Phillips

for their encouraging words during our time of loss. She loved her family and home and will be greatly

missed.

The family of lnez Kunkle

HoosierMiddayDaily Three: 9-3-8Daily Four: 4-8-2-3Lucky 5: 6-14-19-22-24EveningDaily Three: 5-1-5Daily Four: 1-1-6-1Lucky 5: 9-10-16-31-32Mix and Match: 23-28-

34-36-50Quick Draw: 2-3-5-9-11-

18-20-22-35-45-46-50-53-54-56-57-59-70-74-77Mega Millions: 11-19-

39-45-54, Mega Ball: 15Estimated jackpot: $12

million

Megaplier: 4Powerball Estimated

jackpot: $220 millionOhioEveningPick 3: 7-3-5Pick 4: 2-7-9-2Rolling Cash 5: 2-12-15-

24-27Ten OH: 1-2-16-17-19-21-

23-26-30-32-33-34-43-45-56-62-63-70-76-79MiddayPick 3: 7-2-1Pick 4: 7-3-8-0Ten OH: 1-2-7-9-12-14-

31-32-40-46-47-53-57-59-62-65-67-77-78-79

Fort RecoveryEquity Inc.Aug. corn ..................7.18Sept. corn ..................7.28New corn .................. 6.89Jan. corn ..................7.02Feb. corn....................7.06

The AndersonsRichland TownshipAug. corn ..................7.33Oct. corn....................6.90Beans ......................13.16Sept. beans ..............12.76Aug. wheat ................6.85

Central StatesMontpelierCorn ..........................7.18New corn ..................6.80Beans ......................13.02New beans ..............12.68

Wheat ........................6.87Jan. wheat ................7.11

POET BiorefiningPortlandAug. corn ..................7.33Sept. corn ..................7.33New corn ..................6.94Jan. corn ..................7.04

TrupointeFort RecoveryAug. corn ..................7.43Oct. corn....................6.73Aug. beans ..............12.94Sept. beans ..............13.04Aug. wheat ................6.56

Cooper FarmsFort Recovery Corn ..........................7.25New corn ..................6.89

Closing prices as of Tuesday, August 9

Jay County HospitalPortlandAdmissionsThere were five admis-

sions to the hospital onTuesday.DismissalsThere were two dis-

missals.

EmergenciesThere were 15 people

treated in the emergencyrooms of JCH, including:Portland — Lindsey

Jenkins, Courtnee Smithand Amanda Workman.Pennville — Andrew

M. Mallard.

Today7 p.m. — Jay County

Council, commissioners’room, Jay County Court-house, Portland.

Thursday, Aug. 116:30 p.m. — Dunkirk

City Council budgetworkshop meeting, coun-cil chambers, city hall,

131 S. Main St.7 p.m. — Ridgeville

Town Council, specialmeeting, 7 p.m.,library/fire station.

Monday, Aug. 159 a.m. — Jay County

Commissioners, commis-sioners’ room, Jay Coun-ty Courthouse, Portland.

Lotteries

Markets

Hospitals

Citizen’s calendar

CR almanac

Weather courtesy of American Profile Hometown Content Service

The Commercial Review/Steve Garbacz

Barn burnerA Salamonia firefighter sprays the roof of a hog barn in Noble Township that caught fire Tuesday afternoon. For

details, see Capsule Reports, elsewhere on this page.

DECATUR — A Redkeyman accused of robbing aCVS Pharmacy in Bernewas charged with fivefelonies in Adams CountyMonday.Seth T. Curtis, 25, was

charged with attemptedarmed robbery and threecounts of criminal confine-ment, all Class B felonies,and unlawful possession ofa syringe, a Class D felony.Curtis was also chargedwith a misdemeanor countof possession of parapher-nalia.Curtis allegedly entered

the Berne CVS about 2 p.m.Sunday, wielding a pelletgun and demanded thatstore clerks give him thedrug Opana. Curtis alsoallegedly forced customersand store employees toremain in the store. He wasshot by an off-duty AdamsCounty deputy during theincident.Curtis is also facing

charges in Jay County forresisting law enforcementand probation violation.

Robberysuspectcharged

Voucher ...

Capsule Reports

Felony arrestsDrug possessionA woman was arrested

in Portland Tuesday on awarrant from Allen County.Christina A. Baker, 6514

Cornwallis Drive, FortWayne, was arrested at

approximately 2:40 p.m. ona warrant for possession ofcocaine, narcotics andmethamphetamines, a classD felony, and driving whilelicense suspended, a class Amisdemeanor.

LAFAYETTE, Ind. (AP)— After weeks of swelter-ing heat and scant rainfall,some Indiana farmers arecelebrating recent thunder-storms that have dumpedsignificant amounts ofrain on their parchedfields.But the Journal & Couri-

er reports those stormshave been hit and miss,bringing heavy rain tosome farms and little ornone to others nearby.

Purdue Universityagronomist Bob Nielsensaid it’s hard to gauge theimpact those rains willhave on crops, althoughthey will help in areas thatget a good dousing. Mean-while, he said east-centraland northeastern parts ofthe state remain in adrought condition follow-ing the long stretch of tem-peratures in the 90s anddry conditions that beganin July.

Rain hit or miss forHoosier farmers

Continued from page 1If a student meets that criteria

and is on the free or reduced lunchprogram, approval for a voucher isautomatic, said Eads. The applica-tion process is handled by the acade-my and can be completed in as littleas 5 minutes.The scholarship provides up to

$4,500 for grades 1-8 or the school’stuition, whichever is less. In the caseof the Jay County Christian Acade-my, the annual tuition is $3,500, sothat’s what the voucher provides.

Long noted that next year, the pro-gram will expand to provide up to15,000 vouchers. “In the third year,the cap comes off,” he said. He notedthat Indiana currently has almost116,000 students in 742 different pri-vate schools, mostly in grades 1through 8. About 23,000 more who arecurrently being home schooled don’tqualify under the current terms ofthe program.“When the vouchers become

unlimited, we’re going to have toturn people away,” Eads predicted.

“If we could get another 15 to 20voucher kids, that would help us.”Long said his concern is that pub-

lic education be adequately funded.“I’m not opposed to vouchers as longas we fully fund public education,”he said. “For public education, weneed to compete. It should make usall better.”A Marion County judge was

expected to hear arguments Thurs-day about whether to grant aninjunction blocking the voucher pro-gram.

Page 3: Congressman Stutzman

DEAR ABBY: I'm 16 andpregnant. The father of mybaby is my stepbrother. It'smy fault because I seducedhim when we were homealone. Last night my sistersaid I need to go on a dietbecause I'm gainingweight, and she joked that Ilook pregnant. I don't thinkshe has any idea that I real-ly am.I won't be able to hide

this pregnancy muchlonger. My parents will gocrazy, and my stepbrotherwill also be in major trou-ble even though it isn't real-ly his fault. I can tell youmy mom will not be under-standing. Please help. —DESPERATE FOR ADVICEDDEEAARR DDEESSPPEERRAATTEE::

YYoouu''rree rriigghhtt —— tthhiiss iiss mmaajjoorrttrroouubbllee.. BBuutt yyoouurr ppaarreennttss

hhaavvee ttoo bbee ttoolldd,, nnoott oonnllyybbeeccaauussee yyoouurr pprreeggnnaannccyywwiillll ssoooonn bbeeccoommee oobbvviioouuss,,bbuutt aallssoo bbeeccaauussee ffoorr tthheessaakkee ooff tthhee bbaabbyy,, yyoouu mmuusstthhaavvee pprreennaattaall ccaarree.. IIff yyoouuaarree aaffrraaiidd ttoo tteellll tthheemm bbyyyyoouurrsseellff,, tthheenn aapppprrooaacchhtthheemm wwiitthh tthhee hheellpp ooffaannootthheerr aadduulltt,, eeiitthheerr aacclloossee ffrriieenndd oorr aa rreellaattiivveeyyoouu ccaann ccoonnffiiddee iinn.. TThheeoonnllyy tthhiinngg yyoouu sshhoouullddnn''tt ddooiiss wwaaiitt aannyy lloonnggeerr..

DEAR ABBY: I havebeen feeling a great deal ofguilt for a number of yearsafter my parents' deaths.They both died of naturalcauses.When the church servic-

es were over, my sister andbrothers stood together inline and thanked everyonefor coming. I could hardlysit through the service,much less thank anyone forattending. I was the first toleave the service and drovehome to be alone.Was I wrong not to stand

with my siblings? I couldhardly control my own feel-ings. It was impossible forme to deal with those of theothers. What do you think,Abby? — WORKINGTHROUGH GRIEFDDEEAARR WWOORRKKIINNGG:: II

tthhiinnkk yyoouu aarree bbeeaattiinngg yyoouurr--sseellff uupp nneeeeddlleessssllyy.. GGrriieevviinnggiiss aa ppeerrssoonnaall pprroocceessss,, aannddppeeooppllee ddoo iitt iinn tthheeiirr oowwnniinnddiivviidduuaall wwaayy.. BBeeccaauusseeyyoouu nneeeeddeedd ttoo bbee aalloonnee,, yyoouuwweerree rriigghhtt ttoo lleeaavvee..DEAR ABBY: I am dat-

ing a woman who is a pros-titute and have developedfeelings for her. The prob-lem is her “job” gets in theway. I thought I could beOK with this, but I am not.She says she needs me andwants me in her life. Shehas talked about gettinganother job, but nothingever happens. What shouldI do? — MY NAME'S NOTJOHNDDEEAARR NNOOTT JJOOHHNN:: TThhiiss

wwoommaann hhaass aallrreeaaddyy ddeemmoonn--ssttrraatteedd tthhaatt sshhee iiss nnoott ggooiinnggttoo cchhaannggee pprrooffeessssiioonnss..WWhhaatt yyoouu sshhoouulldd ddoo iiss ffiinnddaa wwoommaann wwhhoo iissnn''tt aa pprroossttii--ttuuttee aanndd wwhhoossee pprrooffeessssiioonnddooeessnn''tt ““ggeett iinn tthhee wwaayy..”” IIttwwiillll bbee hheeaalltthhiieerr aanndd lleessssffrruussttrraattiinngg ffoorr yyoouu..DEAR ABBY: The other

day my boyfriend discov-ered my diary and startedreading it even though Iasked him not to. I took itaway from him, and heaccused me of hiding some-thing from him. I'm not hid-ing anything, it's just verypersonal. Is it wrong that Iprefer to keep my diary aprivate matter? — NOTH-

ING TO HIDE IN NEWYORKDDEEAARR NNOOTTHHIINNGG TTOO

HHIIDDEE:: NNoo,, iitt''ss nnoott wwrroonngg..MMaannyy ppeeooppllee wwhhoo kkeeeeppjjoouurrnnaallss aallssoo pprreeffeerr ttoo kkeeeepptthheemm pprriivvaattee.. WWhhaatt IISSwwrroonngg iiss yyoouurr bbooyyffrriieennddssnnooooppiinngg iinn tthhee ddiiaarryy aafftteerryyoouu aasskkeedd hhiimm nnoott ttoo,, aannddtthheenn aaccccuussiinngg yyoouu ooff hhiidd--iinngg ssoommeetthhiinngg ffrroomm hhiimmwwhheenn yyoouu ttoolldd hhiimm iitt mmaaddeeyyoouu uunnccoommffoorrttaabbllee.. IIff yyoouuhhaavvee ggiivveenn hhiimm nnoo rreeaassoonnttoo mmiissttrruusstt yyoouu,, tthhaatt''ss aanniinnddiiccaattiioonn tthhaatt hhee iiss iinnssee--ccuurree aanndd ddooeessnn''tt rreessppeeccttbboouunnddaarriieess.. AAnndd iitt''ss aa rreeddffllaagg..

———Dear Abby is written by

Abigail Van Buren, alsoknown as Jeanne Phillips,and was founded by hermother, Pauline Phillips.Write Dear Abby atwww.DearAbby.com or P.O.

Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA90069.To receive a collection of

Abby's most memorable —and most frequentlyrequested — poems andessays, send a business-

sized, self-addressed enve-lope, plus check or moneyorder for $6 (U.S. funds) to:Dear Abby — KeepersBooklet, P.O. Box 447,Mount Morris, IL 61054-0447.

FamilyThe Commercial ReviewWednesday, August 10, 2011 Page 3

© 2009 Hometown Content

Sudoku Puzzle #2258-M

Medium

1 2 3 4 56 5 3

7 8 45 6 2

9 5 8 63 8 4

2 6 74 3 1

8 5 2 7 9

© 2009 Hometown Content

Sudoku Solution #2257-M

8 7 4 1 3 2 6 9 56 3 9 5 7 8 1 4 21 5 2 6 9 4 3 7 85 2 8 9 6 1 7 3 44 6 7 8 2 3 9 5 13 9 1 4 5 7 8 2 6

7 8 3 2 1 5 4 6 99 4 5 7 8 6 2 1 32 1 6 3 4 9 5 8 7

Tuesday’s Solution

The objective is to fill anine-by nine grid so that eachcolumn, each row, and eachof the nine three-by-threeboxes (also called blocks orregions) contains the digitsfrom 1 to 9 only one timeeach.

Sudoku

Store Hours: Monday-Thursday 8:30 a.m.-7 p.m. Friday & Saturday 8:30 a.m.-8 p.m. Sunday 11 a.m.-5 p.m.State Roads 1 & 67 765-369-2226 Redkey, Indiana

REDKEY

20 pk. Coke Products $599

Weekly

Ads

SALE PRICES WEDNESDAY-SATURDAY AUGUST 10 - 13

Wider

Aisles

Whole in the Chunk $2.49 lb

ECKRICHDeliBologna

SmokyLinks

1 lb. Reg. Bun or Jumbo

Franks 2/$400

Wills Rite Sandwiches$1.49 ea.

Just the meat $3.99 lb.

Ground Chuckin 5# Bags = $12.45

$249 lb.Lesser Quantities $2.69 lb.

Boneless, Skinless

Chicken Breast ....................$199 lb.

Boneless Butterfly (Tenderloin)

Pork Chops .........................$269 lb.Whole in the Bag (Sliced Free)

New York Strips ...................$499 lb.

Freezer Wrap 25¢ lb. • Single Steaks $5.99 lb.

10 lbs. Idaho Potatoes....................$399Eckrich Bologna 1 lb...................2/$400Smoked Sausage 3 lbs. .................$799Eckrich Grillers 1 lb. ......................$299

2/$500$299lb.

Bulk Sausage.................$199lb

Schenkeler 24 oz

Cottage cheese ......$299

1.25 liter

Coke Products ..........99¢

Bananas.....................49¢lb.

Colby or CoJack Cheesein precut chunks ..................

$299lb.

County LineMini Colby Cheese......

$399lb.

Johnsonville Brat Burgers ..$739

Seyferts or Mike Sells Potato Chips.............................2/$500

Charmin 24 pk....................$799

24 Pack Dasani Water .....$399

Coke 2 Litres 3/$333

24 pk cans or bottles Bud or Bud Light..........$1699

1 lb pkg.

Wed in June

Lisa Kaufman and

Bud LabigLisa M. Kaufman and Marion A.

“Bud” Labig II were wed on June 29at the Wedding Bell Chapel in LasVegas.Lisa is the daughter of Bob and

Peaches Kaufman, ruralDunkirk/Hartford City.Bud is the son of the late Marion

“Bud” Labig and Loretta Bailey,Florida.The couple are former Dunkirk

residents and graduates of JayCounty High School.

Bud and Lisa Labig

Delts are recognizedat recent conventionBy VIRGINIA CLINEThe Commercial ReviewTwo local Xi Chapter

members received anaward and a grant at the103rd National Conventionof Delta Theta Tau Sorori-ty held in July in GrandRapids, Mich., with thetheme “Live Well, LaughOften, Love Much.”Jackie Grady was

awarded the Teresa McCal-lister Award for 30 years ofservice to Xi Chapter andPortland. She volunteersan average of 650 hours peryear.Jennifer VanSkyock

received the Delta ThetaTau Educational Grant.She earned her master’sdegree in social work fromIU East in Richmond and isa counselor with the YouthService Bureau of JayCounty and a licensed clin-ical addictions counselor. Other Xi Chapter mem-

bers who attended the con-

vention were Linda Ash-man, Marsi Dow, DebbieFunk, Sue Burk, JanisFritz, Marilyn Laux, LoriFerguson, Denice Bell,Paula Sibery, Cindy Van-Skyock, Chris Weaver,Sharon Beeler, EmilyFunk, Carrie DeVoss, Har-riett Kunce and JudyMedler.

Summer serviceLee Haggenjos, a junior

at the University of NotreDame, spent his summerhelping others as part ofthe University’s SummerService Learning Program

that is a three credit coursein theology. He is majoringin music and preprofes-sional studies.Haggenjos served at the

Senior Friendship Centerin Sarasota, Fla., where heassisted doctors in the clin-ic by taking patient vitalsand histories and shadow-ing doctors.He also served at Resur-

rection House, a faith-based resource center thatserves the homeless ofSarasota County.After completing the

eight-week service learn-ing program, Haggenjoscommented, “I will use mySSLP experience in myfuture career as a physi-cian to remember andserve those patients thatare often underserved orforgotten by the healthcaresystem.” He is the son ofDr. Mark and DonnaHaggenjos, Portland.

TakingNote

Teen can’t keep her secret much longer DearAbby

Community CalendarNotices will appear in

the Community Calendarfor three publication daysprior to the meeting ifreported by 5 p.m. the daybefore or by noon on Friday.Call family editor VirginiaCline at (260) 726-8141.

TodayCAREGIVER SUPPORT

GROUP — For caregiversof persons withAlzheimer’s disease orrelated dementias, thegroup meets the secondWednesday of each monthat 6 p.m. at Blackford Com-munity Hospital confer-ence room, 410 PilgrimBlvd. in Hartford City. Formore information, call JoniSlentz or Lisa Garrett at(765) 348-1072 or (800) 272-

3900.STD CLINIC — Will be

held the second Wednesdayof each month from 6 to 8p.m. at the Jay CountyHealth Department, 504 W.Arch St. in the Jay CountyCourthouse Annex. Walk-ins are welcome. For moreinformation, call (260) 726-8080.PARENT SUPPORT

GROUP — For specialneeds children of any age,the group meets the secondWednesday of each monthat 6 p.m. at General ShanksElementary. For more infor-mation, call SusanWilliams at (260) 726-2004 orHolly Tonak at (260) 726-8868. ALCOHOLICS ANONY-

MOUS — Will meet each

Wednesday from 6:30 to 7:30p.m. upstairs at True ValueHardware, North MeridianStreet, Portland. For moreinformation, call (260) 726-9719.

ThursdayCOFFEE CLUB — Will

meet each Thursday at 9a.m. in Mt. Tabor Hall atMt. Tabor UnitedMethodist Church, 216 W.Pleasant St. in Dunkirk.There will be coffee, cook-ies and conversation.Everyone is welcome. Formore information, call (765)768-7273.PIKE & NEIGHBORS

HOME EXTENSION CLUB— Will meet Thursday at6:30 p.m. at Bluff PointCommunity Building.

Cindy Rudrow is the host-ess. CELEBRATE RECOV-

ERY — a 12-step Christianrecovery program for any-one dealing with chemicaldependency, anger, physicaland emotional abuse, sexu-al addiction, divorce, foodaddiction, gambling addic-tion, same sex attraction,debt, anxiety or stress, thegroup will meet eachThursday at 6:30 p.m. atPortland First Church ofthe Nazarene, 920 S. ShankSt. in Portland. For moreinformation, call JudySmith at (260) 726-9187 orDave Keen at (260) 335-2152.

Friday AL-ANON FAMILY

GROUP — New Begin-

nings, a support group forfriends and families ofalcoholics, will meet eachFriday at 7 p.m. in the ZionLutheran Church, 218 E.High St., Portland. Formore information phone(260) 726-9719.

SaturdayALCOHOLICS ANONY-

MOUS — Will meet eachSaturday at 10 a.m. upstairsat True Value Hardware,North Meridian Street,Portland. For more infor-mation, call (260) 726-9719.BEARCREEK FARMS

WOOD PECKERS — Willmeet the second Saturdayof each month at 1 p.m. inthe guest house atBearcreek Farms. For moreinformation, call Kitty

Coyne at (614) 239-9688 or(260) 279-2915 or [email protected].

ReunionsGOODYEAR FAMILY

REUNION — Saturday atnoon at Haynes Park inPortland. Bring a covereddish. Remind other familymembers.WEAVER REUNION —

Saturday at noon at HaynesPark in Portland. Bring acovered dish, table serviceand a lawn chair.BAILEY, IMEL, JOHN-

SON REUNION — Sundayat noon at Haynes Park inPortland. Bring a covereddish, white elephant giftsfor bingo and updated infor-mation and photos.

Page 4: Congressman Stutzman

Opinion The Commercial ReviewWednesday, August 10, 2011Page 4

“Were it left for me to decide whether we shouldhave government without newspapers or newspaperswithout government I should not hesitate to prefer thelatter.” – Thomas Jefferson

The Commercial ReviewHUGH N. RONALD (1911-1983), Publisher Emeritus

VOLUME 139–NUMBER 85WEDNESDAY EVENING, AUGUST 10, 2011

Subscription rates: City carrier rates $10 permonth. City delivery and Internet-only pay at the officerates: 13 weeks – $28; six months – $54; one year –$99. In Jay County mail or motor route pay at theoffice rates: 13 weeks – $35; six months – $62; oneyear – $114; Mail outside Jay County: 13 weeks – $40;six months – $68; one year – $119.

Home delivery problems: Call (260) 726-8144.

JACK RONALD MIKE SNYDERPresident, Editor, Publisher Managing Editor

RAY COONEY JEANNE LUTZAssistant Managing Editor/Sports Editor Advertising Manager

US PS 125820

The Commercial Review is published daily exceptSundays and six holidays (New Years, Memorial Day,Fourth of July, Labor Day, Thanksgiving, andChristmas) by The Graphic Printing Co. Inc., 309 W.Main St., Portland, Indiana 47371. Periodical postagepaid at Portland, Indiana. Postmaster: Send addresschanges to The Commercial Review, 309 W. Main St.,P.O. Box 1049, Portland, Indiana 47371 or call (260) 726-8141.

We welcome letters to the editor. Letters should be700 words or less, signed and include a phone numberfor verification purposes. We reserve the right to editletters for content and clarity. Newsroom e-mail:[email protected]

www.thecr.com

By JACK RONALDThe Commercial ReviewI have a new set of cousins.Cousins I’ve never met.

Cousins whose names I do notknow.Let me explain, or try to.Genealogy isn’t really my

thing.I’m interested in what I come

across, but I’m not obsessed withit. I’ve always figured that nomatter how interesting yourancestors are, the real value ofyour life depends upon you, notthose who came before.Plus, in my case, there’s the

big asterisk that comes with thefact that my mother wasadopted. That complicates thebloodlines more than a little bit.But still, I’m curious. And

with the Internet’s capabilities,

there’s a temptation to see what’sout there.Again, I run into a

complication.When your family name is

Ronald, any Google search isgoing to bring up hundreds ofthousands of references toRonald Reagan and — of course— Ronald McDonald.Just the same, I’m curious.One of my cousins — Ron

Hine, whose mother was Janet(Ronald) Hine — built upon his

mother’s research and managedto trace our family back to theera when they emigrated fromScotland to Canada beforemoving south into Michigan.I’d had a link to Ron’s

research but somehowmisplaced it.Last week, I found it again.

And new doors started opening.On my cousin’s site I noticed

that our great-grandfather —James Ronald, father of Hugh N.Ronald Sr. who served as pastorof First Presbyterian Church inPortland, and grandfather of myown dad Hugh N. Ronald Jr. —had some brothers.One of them was named

David K. Ronald.Now, if you’re Googling, a

name like “David K. Ronald” isdistinctive enough to constitute

a breakthrough.I gave it a try.And hit the mother lode, a 45-

page plus history of the familyof my great-grandfather’sbrother.It was a serious piece of

genealogy, reaching well backinto 18th century Scotland butalso confirming a number ofdetails about the emigration toNorth America.Thanks to it, I know the exact

location of a stone house mygreat-great grandfather built ina small town in Ontario. It’sapparently still standing.Thanks to it, I’ve read my

great-great grandfather’s will.And, thanks to it, I have a

whole new batch of cousins I’venever met and whose names Idon’t yet know.

They are the Canadianbranch. While my great-grandfather James came downto Michigan, his brother Davidand descendants stayed upnorth, farming in Ontario, thenManitoba, then Saskatchewan.Now, thanks to the Internet,

we’re connected again.We share a great-great

grandfather, which by mycalculations makes us thirdcousins. But as I told two of them in

emails over the weekend, it’salways a pleasure to meet a newcousin.And I’m already planning a

trip one of these days to see thestone house my great-greatgrandfather built in 1853 in alittle town in Ontario. Whatcould be cooler than that?

Cousins he didn’t know he hadBack in

the Saddle

The following editorialappeared in Tuesday’sWashington Post:Mitt Romney doesn’t

understand what all thefuss is about. The secret $1million donor to RestoreOur Future, the super-PACset up to help elect Mr.Romney president, issecret no longer. W SpannLLC turns out to be oneEdward Conard, a formercolleague at Bain Capital, aprivate equity firm thatRomney helped found. SoMr. Romney’s response, ashe told reporters in NewHampshire Monday, is “noharm, no foul.” Sorry, nosale.“He came out and

discussed who he is, sothere’s not much questionanymore — no controversybecause he said, ‘Hey, it’sme, and I’ve given to Mittmany times before,’ “ Mr.Romney said of Mr.Conard, who he describedas “a longtime businessassociate, a friend ofmine.” Later, Mr. Romneyadded, “I think the wholecontroversy with regardsto his contribution kind ofdisappears when he cameforward and said he wasthe contributor.”Just because a press

clamor forces a would-besecret donor into the opendoes not, Mr. Romney’shopes notwithstanding,end the matter. TheRomney campaign hasrefused to say whether thecandidate was aware ofMr. Conard’s generositybefore he came forward orwhether Mr. Romneyplayed any role insoliciting it. What does Mr.Romney think about theuse of a sham corporationto evade disclosure rules?Was he aware that Mr.Conard was using thistactic? Is he concernedabout this development?

For all the Romneycampaign’s protestationsthat it cannot comment onthe donation becauseRestore Our Future is anindependent group, Mr.Romney has spoken at itsevents. As Peter Stone ofthe Center for PublicIntegrity reported, Mr.Romney took time outfrom raising money inNew York last month tospeak at a dinner fordonors and potentialdonors hosted by RestoreOur Future. Was Mr.Conard present? Did heattend earlier Restore OurFuture events with Mr.Romney? When we posedthese questions to theRomney campaign, wereceived this non-responsive response:“Governor Romney’sactivities have been withinboth the spirit and letter ofthe law.”During the 2008

campaign, Mr. Romneyvoluntarily revealed thenames of his majorfundraisers, the so-calledbundlers who can haul inhundreds of thousands ofdollars in campaign cash.This time around, Mr.Romney isn’t releasing thenames of bundlers, and hiscampaign’s “explanation”has been only that he isfully complying with alllaws. During the 2008campaign, Mr. Romneydecried the insidiousexplosion of “politicalspending … driven intosecret corners.” This timearound, he seems entirelyunconcerned about thosecorners.

By ALEXANDRA PETRIThe Washington Post President Obama, a few

notes on Monday’seconomy speech, since Ihave a sinking feeling itmight not be your last:(1) When trying to

inspire confidence that weare not headed intoanother Great Depression,a good tactic is to notdeliver your chat at afireside. It inspires thevague desire to starthoarding bits of tin.(2) You do realize that

no matter how many timesyou say “No matter whatsome agency may say,we’ve always been andalways will be a Triple-Acountry,” that doesn’tmake it true? It’s the same as if you

told Malia and Sasha: “Nomatter what your teachermay say, you always havebeen and always will be astraight-A student. I havehere a signed letter fromWarren Buffett saying thatif it were possible to giveyou a 120 on that test, hewould give it to youunreservedly. And WarrenBuffett knows what’swhat.”

(3) You shouldn’t start aspeech by saying thatAmerica’s problem is “alack of political will inWashington” and end thespeech by saying that thegreat thing about Americais that “we’ve always notjust had the capacity butalso the will to act.”This speech had the

strange whiff ofdesperation that has creptincreasingly into thepresident’s communi-cations. It is the sort ofspeech that comes at 3 a.m.from someone you thoughtyou had succeeded inbreaking up with. “But ouruniversities are still thebest! And we are veryentrepreneurial! AndWarren Buffett believes inus!” followed byinarticulate sobbing andthe sound of someonefalling off a table. Itsounds like a compellingcase — not at all grasping

at straws — until you hearit out loud.What was striking

about the president’sremarks was how close allthis came to sounding likeAmerican Exceptionalism2.0. Obama never uses theword “exceptionalism.”But that’s what hisconclusion boiled down to.Best schools in the

world — well, not exactly.Best entrepreneurs in

the world — well, maybe.Most productive

workers in the world —sure, if you don’t checkour browser histories.But we are still the best

— the best at beingAmerican! What thismeans often comes intoquestion. It’sUnexceptionalExceptionalism, the ideathat we are the best SimplyBecause We Are.The term

“exceptionalism” used tocome freighted withsomething else — the ideathat we were a sort of cityon a hill with a unique, ifnot uniquely efficient,system of government; aset of common ideals; anda population willing to

strive for great things.But as he spoke, Obama

listed a bit towardredefining “best” to mean“whatever Americahappens to be at the time.”This goes only so far, as thespeech indicated. In a fewyears, if such redefinitionscontinue, we’ll be saying:“We are the bestmoderately wealthy, non-landlocked nation in theWestern Hemisphere!” It’sthe sort of tautologicalpraise for Uniqueness andSpecialdom that we lavishon children with failingtest scores.But there was a bit of

hope. Along with praisingour dubiously excellentuniversities and dubiouslymarvelous workers,Obama noted that we aredifferent in ways thatencompass more than aperpetually divided andrecalcitrant government,united by a set of commonbeliefs and even a sharedwill.Just maybe not in

Washington.******

Petri is a member ofThe Washington Post’seditorial page staff.

Advice for Obama’s next speechGuestOpinion

Romney justdoesn’t get it

GuestEditorial

Chronicle-TribuneWe have another crisis of the

week.No sooner did we survive the

politically manufactured debt cri-sis of last week then we find our-selves battling the consequenceof Wall Street’s reaction to thatcrisis and the downgrading of theU.S. credit rating.The Dow Jones Industrial

Average fell by more than 600points in trading Monday.

Market experts blamed thesteep fall on the downgrade byStandard and Poor’s last week, jit-ters over the future of the indebt-ed economies of Europe and

America and the bitter debateover taxes, spending and capital-ism that continues in this countryand won’t be settled until Novem-ber 2012.The frustrating part is that

this economic problem seemsmore about government policyand personalities than aboutfinancial reality. As bad as thingsare regarding debt for the UnitedStates, it is considerably worse inEurope. In rational times, with a

U.S. federal government thatwould signal significant reduc-tions in spending rather thanincreases in taxation, moneywould flow to the United States asa safe haven from anti-capitalistsabroad. The truth is we are as credit-

worthy today as we were beforethe overly dramatic negotiationsthat produced the debt ceilingagreement last week. Standard &Poor’s lowering of the rating

from AAA to AA+ was wrong.Standard & Poor’s basically

said they didn’t like the politicalgames being played in Washing-ton and for that they were down-grading our national credit rat-ing. Well, who does like the politi-cal games being played in Wash-ington? We don’t ask Standard &Poor’s to rate politicians —although that might be a way forthe rating firm to make moremoney yet.

Another contrived crisis from WashingtonHoosierEditorial

Page 5: Congressman Stutzman

4-H Goat ShowDairy junior doe1. Danielle Heitkamp, 2.

Sarah HeitkampDairy senior doe1. Danielle Heitkamp, 2.

Jacob Heitkamp, 3.Danielle Heitkamp, 4.Jacob Heitkamp, 5. JacobWangler, 6. ChristopherCarpenter, 7. JessycaByers, 8. Levi Peterson, 9.Sarah Heitkamp, 10. RobbyByersDairy dry yearlings1. Jacob Heitkamp, 2.

Danielle Heitkamp, 3.Christian Peterson, 4.Danielle Heitkamp, 5.Sarah Heitkamp, 6.Christopher CarpenterGrand Champion:

Danielle HeitkampReserve Champion:

Jacob HeitkampMilking yearlings1. Jacob Heitkamp, 2.

Ashley Walker, 3. AshleyWalker, 4. Brandon Muh-lenkampMilking doe 2-4 years1. Danielle Heitkamp, 2.

Jacob Heitkamp, 3. Christo-pher Carpenter, 4. DanielleHeitkamp, 5. SarahHeitkamp, 6. Robby Byers,7. Christian PetersonMilking doe over 4 years1. Danielle HeitkampGrand Champion Senior

Dairy Doe: DanielleHeitkampReserve Grand Champi-

on Senior Dairy Doe: JacobHeitkampGrand Champion Dairy

Goat Doe: DanielleHeitkampReserve Grand Champi-

on Dairy Doe: JacobHeitkampMother-daughter Grand

Champion: JacobHeitkampMother-daughter

Reserve Grand Champion:Danielle HeitkampMilking Contest:

Danielle HeitkampDairy Wethers light

weight1. Megan Smith, 2. Loren

Jutte, 3. Jared L. Jutte, 4.Ashley Walker, 5. JessycaByers, 6. Christian Peter-son, 7. Robby ByersDairy Wethers medium

weight1. Danielle Heitkamp, 2.

Jacob Heitkamp, 3. Kort-ney Garringer, 4. Jalen T.Ryder, 5. Sarah Heitkamp,6. Ashley Walker, 7. JacobWangler, 8. Audrey May, 9.Jamie Valentine, 10. SarahHeitkamp, 11. Jalen T.RyderDairy Wethers heavy

weight1. Kyndal Miller, 2. Kyle

Cline, 3. Kyle Cline, 4. Wm.Tyler Osborne, 5. ShelbyCarpenterGrand Champion Dairy

Goat Wether: KyndallMillerReserve Champion

Dairy Goat Wether:Danielle HeitkampPygmy junior doe1. Kady Finnerty, 2.

Robby ByersPygmy senior doe1. Marianna R. Seiber, 2.

Megan Smith, 3. AndrewToneyPygmy yearling1. Ashley Walker, 2.

Zavier Garringer, 3. CarlyGrieshop, 4. Robby Byers, 5.Robby Byers, 6. MariannaSeiberPygmy over 4 years1. Carly Grieshop, 2.

Kortney GarringerGrand Champion

Pygmy: Carly GrieshopReserve Champion

Pygmy: Kady FinnertyMeat senior doe1. Brandon Muh-

lenkamp, 2. Thomas Hem-melgarn, 3. Ashley Walker,4. Jacob Schwieterman, 5.Rosemary D. Hemmelgarn,6. Thomas Hemmelgarn, 7.Chandler Chapman, 8. Asi-lyn DavisGrand Champion Senior

Doe: Brandon Muh-lenkampReserve Champion Sen-

ior Doe: Thomas Hemmel-garnGrand Champion Junior

Market Doe: Bryan Schwi-etermanReserve Champion Jun-

ior Market Doe: Skye Wim-merMeat junior doe1. Bryan Schwieterman,

2. Skye Wimmer, 3. SkyeWimmer, 4. LaurannSchoenlein, 5. Alli Camp-bell, 6. Dillon Muh-lenkamp, 7. Kaleb Bell, 8.Brandon Muhlenkamp, 9.Jamie Valentine, 10.Damon Muhlenkamp, 11.Britlyn Dues, 12. BrandonMuhlenkamp, 13. AdamJutte, 14. Ashley Walker, 15.Britlyn DuesGrand Champion Junior

Meat Doe: Bryan Schwi-etermanReserve Champion Jun-

ior Meat Doe: Skye Wim-mer

See GGooaattss page 6

Local/IndianaThe Commercial ReviewWednesday, August 10, 2011 Page 5

Harness Racing!(Featuring Indiana Sired Horses)

Saturday, August 13Post Time 11:00 a.m.

At: Jay County Fairgrounds, PortlandFREE Gate & Grandstand–JAY COUNTY FAIR BOARD–

Costly workEVANSVILLE, Ind.

— Indiana’s 142-mileextension of Interstate69 between Indianapolisand Evansville willsiphon hundreds of mil-lions of dollars awayfrom other road andbridge projects in com-ing years, according toa report from an envi-ronmental group.The report by the

Hoosier EnvironmentalCouncil concludes thatthe highway’s nearly $3billion estimated costwill consume one-fifthof funding available forstate highway construc-tion and maintenanceprojects between 2012and 2014. In 2013 alone,nearly 30 percent ofIndiana’s highwayfunds will go toward I-69, the report said.The result will be

that many projectsacross the rest of thestate will be stuck in“shovel ready” mode, ornever leave the drawingboard, said Tim Mal-oney, the council’s sen-ior policy director.Maloney said in the

report released Mondaythat dedicating a fifthof the state’s highwayfunds to a single projectover the next few years“will imperil the state’sability to fulfill itsresponsibility to pro-vide safe and reliabletransportation solu-tions to other areas ofIndiana.”By the time Gov.

Mitch Daniels leavesoffice in January 2013,Indiana will have spentnearly $1 billion tobuild about 90 miles tothe highway betweenEvansville and theCrane Naval SurfaceWarfare Center in Mar-tin County, the Evans-ville Courier & Pressreports.

PoweringUPLAND, Ind. —

Two wind turbines arebeing built to helppower a new sciencebuilding at a centralIndiana college campus.Taylor University’s

$41 million science com-plex will be powered bya combination of wind,geothermal and solarenergy.Sciences Dean Mark

Biermann tells theChronicle-Tribune ofMarion that plannersput an emphasis onusing sustainable ener-gy sources in designingthe building.The two 50-kilowatt

wind turbines are morethan 100 feet tall. Theelectricity generatedwill be used by con-struction crews work-ing to finish the build-ing that is scheduled toopen next year.

SentencedMUNCIE, Ind. — A

judge has sentenced acentral Indiana womanto 50 years in prison forthe malnutrition deathof her 5-year-old step-daughter.A Delaware County

judge on Tuesday gavethe maximum sentenceto 25-year-old BrittanyMcConniel of Munciefor what he called “thebrutal and horriblenature” of LaurenMcConniel’s death. Shewas convicted in Mayon child neglectcharges.The Star Press

reports Lauren died inMarch 2010 after weigh-ing 28 pounds when shewas hospitalized withlethal salt levels.McConniel cried

while telling the judgethat while she let Lau-ren down, her convic-tion was based on liesand that she wouldappeal her case.Lauren’s father, Ryan

McConniel, testifiedagainst his now-formerwife and is to pleadguilty to child neglectwith a maximum 20-year sentence.

— Associated Press

In review Results from 2011 4-H goat show

The Commercial Review/Steve Garbacz

The Commercial Review/Ray Cooney

Pictured at left is Skye Wimmer, whoshowed the grand champion market doe during the2011 Jay County Fair. Above is Brady Vore, with hisgrand and reserve champion meat goat wethers.

At far right is JacobHeitkamp, whose goatwas named reservechampion dairy doeduring the 2011 fair. Atright is Kyndall Miller withher grand champion dairygoat wether.

The Commercial Review/Shawn ShinnemanThe Commercial Review/Sharon Hernandez

The Commercial Review/Shawn Shinneman

Above is SarahHeitkamp, whose goatwas named reservechampion dairy goatwether.

Page 6: Congressman Stutzman

Nation/World The Commercial ReviewWednesday, August 10, 2011Page 6

KilledWASHINGTON —

The top commander inAfghanistan says inter-national forces killedthe Taliban insurgentsresponsible for downinga U.S. helicopter andkilling 38 U.S. andAfghan forces over theweekend.Marine Corps Gen.

John Allen told a Penta-gon news conferencetoday that forceslearned where theinsurgents had fled toand killed them in anearly Monday morningair strike.A separate statement

to the media fromAfghanistan said thestrike killed Talibanleader Mullah Mohibul-lah and the insurgentwho fired the rocket-propelled grenade thatdowned the Chinookhelicopter.

DeadlinePHOENIX — Ari-

zona Gov. Jan Brewerfaces a deadline todayfor asking the U.S.Supreme Court toaccept her appeal of aruling that put on holdkey parts of the state’simmigration enforce-ment law.The Republican gov-

ernor lost her firstattempt to throw out adistrict court’s decisionthat blocks, amongother portions of thelaw, a provision requir-ing police, while enforc-ing other laws, to ques-tion the immigrationstatus of those they sus-pect are in the countryillegally, when a three-judge panel of the 9thCircuit Court ofAppeals rejected hermotion in April.Brewer vowed three

months ago to take herargument before thenation’s highest court,which has discretion onwhether to hear hercase.The 9th Circuit said

the federal governmentis likely to be able toprove the law is uncon-stitutional and likely tosucceed in its argumentthat Congress has giventhe federal governmentsole authority toenforce immigrationlaws.Brewer’s lawyers

have argued that thefederal governmenthasn’t effectivelyenforced immigrationlaw and that the state’sintent in passing itsown regulations was toassist federal authori-ties, as Congress hasencouraged.

GOP lossesMADISON, Wis. — A

stand by WisconsinRepublicans against amassive effort to oustthem from power couldreverberate across thecountry as the battleover union rights andthe conservative revolu-tion heads toward the2012 presidential race.Democrats succeeded

in taking two Wisconsinstate Senate seats awayfrom Republican incum-bents on Tuesday butfell one short of whatthey needed to seizemajority control of thechamber.Republicans saw it as

a big win for Gov. ScottWalker and a confirma-tion of his conservativeagenda, the hallmark ofwhich was a polarizingproposal taking awaymost collective bargain-ing rights from publicworkers.“Republicans are

going to continue doingwhat we promised thepeople of Wisconsin —improve the economyand get Wisconsin mov-ing back in the rightdirection,” RepublicanSenate Majority LeaderScott Fitzgerald said ina prepared statementafter the victory.Walker attempted to

strike a bipartisan tonein victory, saying thathe reached out to lead-ers in both parties.

— Associated Press

In review

Continued from page 5Meat yearling doe1. Skye Wimmer, 2. Kyn-

dal Miller, 3. Brandon Muh-lenkamp, 4. Conner Benter,5. Brandon Muhlenkamp, 6.Elizabeth Schoenlein, 8.Dillon Muhlenkamp, 9.Jade Hollopeter, 10. AshleyWalkerMeat doe 2 to 4 years1. Kyndal Miller, 2. Kyn-

dal Miller, 3. Kortney Gar-ringer, 4. Brandon Muh-lenkampMeat doe 4 years and

older1. Kortney Garringer, 2.

Kaleb Bell, 3. Anna Muh-lenkampGrand Champion Senior

Market Doe: Skye WimmerReserve Champion Sen-

ior Market Doe: KyndalMillerGrand Champion Mar-

ket Doe: Skye WimmerReserve Champion Mar-

ket Doe: Kyndal MillerMeat goat wethers light

weight1. Betsy Huffman, 2.

Kady Finnerty, 3. GavinBowen, 4. Robby ByersMeat goat wethers medi-

um weight1. Elizabeth Schoenlein,

2. Dillon Muhlenkamp, 3.Damon Muhlenkamp, 4.Reese Bowen, 5. GarrettMann, 6. Kaleb Bell, 7. Dil-

lon Muhlenkamp, 8. AnnaMuhlenkamp, 9. Jalen T.Ryder, 10. Damon Muh-lenkamp, 11. Gavin Bowen,12. Sarah Heitkamp, 13.Jacob Wangler, 14. AlecBurcham, 15. Kortney Gar-ringerChampion: Lizzy

SchoenlinReserve Champion: Dil-

lon MuhlenkampMeat goat wethers medi-

um weight1. Brady Vore, 2. Eliza-

beth Schoenlein, 3. AshleyWalker, 4. Katie Lyons, 5.Taylor Muhlenkamp, 6.McKensie Muhlenkamp, 7.Jacob Heitkamp, 8. AnnaMuhlenkamp, 9. GerardMuhlenkamp, 10. LiliaMuhlenkamp, 11. MariaMuhlenkamp, 12. BraydenDues, 13. Maria Muh-lenkamp, 14. FoustinaMuhlenkamp, 15. Jalen T.Ryder, 16. Britlyn Dues, 17.Kylie OsborneMeat goat wethers heavy

weight1. Brady Vore, 2. Bryan

Schwieterman, 3. KyndalMiller, 4. Kylie Osborne, 5.Kyle Garringer, 6. AshleyWalker, 7. Gabi Paxon, 8.Kyle Cline, 9. KyndalMiller, 10. Wm. TylerOsborne, 11. Kyle Cline, 12.Reese Bowen, 13. BrandonMuhlenkamp, 14. Gerard

Muhlenkamp, 15. AdamDirksen, 16. Brandon Muh-lenkamp, 17. DanielleHeitkampGrand Champion Meat

Goat Wether: Brady VoreReserve Grand Champi-

on Meat Goat Wether:Brady VoreGrand Champion

Records: Christian Peter-sonRate of Gain – Meat:

Adam DirksenRate of Gain – Dairy:

Kyndal MillerMilk Production: Jacob

Heitkamp

ShowmanshipBeginnerChampion: Levi Patter-

sonReserve: Jacob WimmerJuniorChampion: Skye Wim-

merReserve: Taylor Muh-

lenkampIntermediateChampion: Kylie

OsborneReserve: Carly GrieshopSeniorChampion: Kylie

OsborneReserve: Danielle

HeitkampAdvancedChampion: Kylie

Osborne

Goats ...

LONDON (AP) —Britain will not let a “cul-ture of fear” take over itsstreets, Prime MinisterDavid Cameron insistedtoday, saying police havedrawn up contingencyplans to use water cannonif necessary to remove riot-ers from the streets.Thousands of extra

police officers on thestreets kept a nervous Lon-don quiet after three nightsof rioting, but lootingflared in Manchester andBirmingham, where a mur-der probe was opened after

three men were killed in ahit-and-run reportedly asthey took to the streets todeter potential rioters.“We will do whatever is

necessary to restore lawand order onto our streets,”Cameron said in a sombertelevised statement. “Noth-ing is off the table” —including water cannon,commonly used in North-ern Ireland but neverdeployed in mainlandBritain.Cameron has recalled

Parliament from its sum-mer recess for an emer-

gency debate on the riotsThursday.An eerie calm prevailed

in the capital today, wherehundreds of shops wereshuttered early or boardedup Tuesday night as a pre-caution, but unrest spreadacross England on a fourthnight of violence by brazencrowds of young people.Scenes of ransacked

stores, torched cars andblackened buildings havefrightened and outragedBritons just a year beforetheir country is to hostnext summer’s Olympic

Games, bringing demandsfor a tougher responsefrom law enforcement.Police across the countryhave made almost 1,200arrests — including 800 inLondon — since the vio-lence broke out in the capi-tal on Saturday.Armored vehicles and

convoys of police vansbacked up some 16,000 offi-cers on duty — almosttriple the number whowere out Monday night.The show of force seems tohave worked — there wereno reports of major trouble

in London on Tuesdaynight, although there werescores of arrests.The violence has revived

debate about the Conserva-tive-led government’s aus-terity measures, which willslash 80 billion pounds($130 billion) from publicspending by 2015 to reducethe country’s swollen budg-et deficit.Cameron’s government

has slashed police budgetsas part of the cuts. A reportlast month said the cutswill mean 16,000 fewerpolice officers by 2015.

HAMA, Syria (AP) —The streets of Hamawere deserted today andthe city in central Syriathat has come to symbol-ize defiance against theregime appeared to beunder full governmentcontrol after last week’sbrutal crackdown on pro-testers.To the east, troops

seized control of anotherflashpoint city, Deir el-Zour, after four days ofintense shelling and gun-fire.The government took

journalists on a tour tosee a rare glimpse ofHama, a city of 800,000which has seen some ofthe largest anti-govern-ment protests of the 5-month-old uprising.About 50 armored per-

sonnel carriers wereplaced on flatbed trucksheading out of the cityafter a weeklong militaryassault that the govern-ment said was aimed atrooting out “terrorists.”The government blamesthe unrest in Syria onforeign extremists, aclaim dismissed by mostobservers.Turkish Prime Minis-

ter Recep Tayyip Erdo-gan also said his ambas-sador reported that tanksand security forces hadbegun to withdraw fromHama.“Let’s hope that this

development results posi-tively and that within 10or 15 days the process iscompleted so that stepstoward reforms are takenin Syria,” Erdogan said.

ST. LOUIS (AP) — Police and sheriff ’sdepartments in states that produce muchof the nation’s methamphetamine havemade a sudden retreat in the war on meth,at times virtually abandoning pursuit ofthe drug because they can no longer affordto clean up the toxic waste generated bylabs.Despite abundant evidence that the

meth trade is flourishing, many lawenforcement agencies have called off tac-tics that have been used for years to con-front drug makers: sending agents under-cover, conducting door-to-door investiga-tions and setting up stakeouts at pharma-cies to catch people buying large amountsof cold medicine.The steep cutbacks began after the fed-

eral government in February canceled aprogram that provided millions of dollarsto help local agencies dispose of seizedlabs. Since then, an Associated Pressanalysis shows, the number of labs seizedhas plummeted by a third in some keymeth-producing states and two-thirds in atleast one, Alabama.The trend is certain to continue unless

more states find a way to replace federalmoney or conduct cheaper cleanups.In Michigan, authorities still bust meth

labs when they find them, but tougher mis-sions like secretly sending officers into themeth underworld have been scrapped.Authorities say they have no doubt that

meth trafficking remains brisk. Recordbusts are being reported in some statesthat fund their own cleanups.But in places that rely on federal money,

law enforcement agencies feel paralyzed.At least one sheriff became so frustratedthat he considered burning meth wasteillegally in a landfill rather than leaving itin neighborhoods where curious childrencould find it.In Warren County, Tenn., about 70 miles

southeast of Nashville, deputies had“always been very aggressive on meth,”Sheriff Jackie Matheny said. By midsum-mer a year ago, they had busted some 70meth labs. This year, that number tumbledto 24. “When you have to kind of kick itinto neutral, it makes you sick to yourstomach because we know it’s out there,”Matheny said.

Funding shortages affectwar on methamphetamine

Syrian governmentin control of Hama

London officials call for peace

DENVER (AP) — Aweeklong nationwidesearch for three siblingsaccused of crimes in Flori-da and Georgia has shiftedto Colorado, where policeand FBI officials say theybelieve the trio made a pur-chase at an outdoors storeand could be headed to acampground or rural areato try to avoid capture.Authorities have said

they have received “credi-ble information” that peo-ple matching the descrip-tion of the three were spot-ted in Colorado. The twobrothers and sister arebelieved to be armed anddangerous, said Dave Joly,spokesman for the FBI’sDenver office.Joly said today there

was no new information onthe search for 21-year-oldRyan Edward Dougherty,26-year-old Dylan Dougher-ty Stanley and 29-year-old

Lee Grace Dougherty.The three are accused of

opening fire at a Floridaofficer after a high-speedchase, and of robbing aGeorgia bank at gunpoint.The possible sighting

near Interstate 25 north ofdowntown ColoradoSprings was reportedaround 1:30 p.m. Tuesday,Colorado Springs policesaid.Sgt. Steven Noblitt said

it hasn’t been confirmedthat the siblings are in thearea, but the FBI said thepeople spotted Tuesdaywere in a small white Sub-aru Impreza with thestolen Texas license plateLCS 909. The suspects werelast seen in a 2006 whiteImpreza.“We don’t have 100 per-

cent identification, but itsure appears they werehere with the informationwe have at this time,”

Noblitt said.Authorities released few

other details, but Joly saidthe people who were spot-ted made a cash purchaseat an outdoors store, sug-gesting they may be tryingto camp, and that parkrangers have been notifiedof the search.Joly didn’t know what

the three bought.REI spokeswoman Libby

Catalinich said the compa-ny, which has a store nearthe interstate, was contact-ed by law enforcement offi-cials. She declined further

comment, as did storeemployees.A nationwide manhunt

for the siblings began Aug.2. The three are suspectedof firing at least 20 shots ata Florida officer who triedto pull them over for speed-ing in a chase at speeds upto 100 mph.

Search for fugitivesiblings shifts west

Page 7: Congressman Stutzman

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00 CLASSIFIEDS

CLASSIFICATIONS010 Card of Thanks020 In Memory030 Lost, Strayed orFound040 Notices050 Rummage Sales060 Services070 Instruction, Schools080 BusinessOpportunities090 Sale Calendar100 Jobs Wanted110 Help Wanted120 Wearing Apparel/Household130 Misc. for Sale140 Appliances

Dave’sHeating & Cooling

Furnace,Air ConditionerGeothermal

Sales & Service

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and Sewer Cleaning

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T.M. Banta, D.D.S

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The Commercial ReviewWednesday, August 10, 2011 Classifieds Page 7

Visit Us At: www.thecr.com

Page 8: Congressman Stutzman

150 Boats, Sporting Equipment 160 Wanted to Buy 170 Pets 180 Livestock 190 Farmers Column 200 For Rent 210 Wanted to Rent 220 Real Estate 230 Autos, Trucks 240 Mobile Homes

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Pre-Payment requiredfor:

Rummage sales,business opportunities,jobs wanted, boats andsporting equipment,wanted to rent, motor-

izedvehicles, real estateand mobile homes.

ATTENTION! LOST APET OR FOUND ONE?The Jay County HumaneSociety can serve as aninformation center. 260-726-6339.

40 NOTICES

CIRCULATION PROBLEMS?After hours, call: 260-726-8144 The Commercial

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PLEASE NOTE: Be sureto check your ad the firstday it appears. We cannotbe responsible for morethan one day’s incorrectcopy. We try hard not tomake mistakes, but theydo happen, and we maynot know unless you callto tell us. Call before 12:00pm for corrections. The Commercial Review309 W MainPortland, Indiana260-726-8141

CLASSIFIED AD DEADLINESIn order for your advertise-ment to appear in the nextday’s paper, or for a cor-rection or stop order to bemade for an ad alreadyappearing, we must re-ceive the ad, correction orcancellation before 12:00pm Monday-Friday. Dead-line for Monday is 3:00 pmon the previous Friday.Deadline for The Circula-tor and The News and Sunis 11:00 am Monday. The Commercial Review 309 W Main Portland, Indiana 260-726-8141

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ADVERTISERS: You canplace a 25-word classifiedad five days a week (M-F)in more than 50 dailynewspapers across Indi-ana reaching more than 1million readers EACH DAYfor only $590. ContactHoosier State Press Assn.(317) 803-4772.

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GUN SHOW! TerreHaute, IN - August 13th &14th, Vigo County Fair-grounds, 3901 US-41,Sat. 9-5, Sun 9-3 For in-formation call 765-993-8942 Buy! Sell! Trade!

THRIFT SHOP 518 S.Wayne St. Hours: ClosedMonday; Tuesday - Friday 9-4. We are open to the gen-eral public.

BOOTHS FOR JAYCOUNTY’S largest indoorgarage sale to be held inJay County High SchoolAuxiliary Gym August 26thand 27th from 8:00 to 4:00.Booths are $10 for a 10 X12 area. Buy as many asyou want. Come to the highschool or contact JessieMangus at 726-9306 for in-formation and to secure abooth.

1631 W 100 S Thursday,Friday, Saturday 9-5. Multi-family sale. Clothing; 24month-3T girls; mens; wom-ens; lots of miscellaneous.

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YARD SALE; August11th/12th, 9:00-6:00; cloth-ing; washer/dryer; dish-washer; entertainmentcenter; knick-knacks; lots ofmiscellaneous; two mileseast of Highway 27 on Ran-dolph county road 900 N,one mile south of JayCounty line.

60 SERVICES

CARPET INSTALLATIONNew and used. Work guaranteed, 25 years expe-rience. Call Bert Ping, 260-997-6932 for a freeestimate.

J. L. CONSTRUCTIONAmish crew. Custombuilt homes, newgarages, pole barns, in-terior/ exterior remodel-ing, drywall, windows,doors, siding, roofing,foundations. 260-726-5062, leave message.

LITTLE JJ’S TREESERVICE Tree trim-ming and removal;stump grinding. Fire-wood available. 765-509-1956

AMISH CREW NEED-ING WORK Roofing, re-modeling, bathrooms,kitchens, hog barns,drywall, additions, side-walks, concrete, etc.Free estimates. Cell:419-733-9601

KEEN’S ROOFING andConstruction. Standingseam metal, paintedsteel and shingle roof-ing, vinyl siding and re-placement windows.New construction andremodeling. CharlesKeen, 260-335-2236.

WENDEL SEAMLESSGUTTERING For allyour guttering and leafcover needs. Call us fora free quote. Call Jim at 260-997-6774 or Steveat 260-997-1414.

HILTY CONSTRUC-TION Foundations, con-crete, roofing, siding,residential remodelingand new construction,pole barns, garages,homes. Free estimates.Call Keith, 260-726-8283.

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HANDYMAN MIKEARNOLD Remodeling;garages; doors; windows;painting; roofing; siding;much more. 28 years expe-rience. Free estimates.260-726-2030; 260-251-2702.

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POWERWASHING JohnFerguson & Sons; Vinyl sid-ing, decks, fences, walks,drives, masonry, evenroofs. Cleans dirt, algae,mold, bugs under siding,most insect marks. 4500pressure. 260-703-0364.

GOODHEW’S ROOFINGSERVICE 800-310-4128;765-857-2071. We’ve spe-cialized in Standing SeamMetal Roofs and havebeen installing StandingSeam Metal Roofs for over50 years. We are the “Orig-inal” Goodhew’s RoofingService! Free Estimates!

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AFFORDABLE HEALTHINSURANCE I representall the major carriers. Fora free quote, call TravisCarpenter at 765-278-8877

70 INSTRUCTION,SCHOOLS

JAY COUNTY CHRIS-TIAN ACADEMY Attendour Christian school withsmall class sizes - at lit-tle or no cost! For moreinformation call 726-8873 or come in and seeus!

ZION EARLY LEARN-ING CENTER Now en-rolling three and fouryear olds for the 2011-2012 school year. Pleasecall 260-726-8832, be-tween 9 a.m. and 12 p.m.or leave a message.

ENROLL NOW FirstPresbyterian Early Child-hood Education. Five dayclass, two and three dayclasses. Class times9:00 a.m.-11:00 a.m. or12:00 p.m.-2:00 p.m. Call260-726-4455 or 260-726-8462.

000 CLASSIFIEDS30 LOST, FOUND OR

STRAYED40 NOTICES

50 RUMMAGE SALES 60 SERVICES 60 SERVICES 60 SERVICES

Classifieds The Commercial ReviewWednesday, August 10, 2011Page 8

RECEIPTS COMPARISONS – CALENDAR YEAR 2010Receipt Accounts 2010 Approved 2010 Actual

GENERAL FUND Budget Receipts Receipts1000 Local Sources . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 310,905.462000 Intermediate Sources . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1,369.323000 State Sources . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22,415,983.65 22,828,295.415000 Bonds and Advances . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 216,806.10

TOTAL . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22,415,983.65 23,357,376.29DEBT SERVICE 1000 Local Sources . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3,379,325.00 3,590,425.53

TOTAL . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3,379,325.00 3,590,425.53SCHOOL PENSION DEBT1000 Local Sources . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 916,079.00 964,096.35

TOTAL . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 916,079.00 964,096.35CAPITAL PROJECTS FUND1000 Local Sources . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3,024,998.00 3,215,607.763000 State Sources . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5,135.005000 Bonds and Advances . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1,000,000.00 1,074,630.00

TOTAL . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4,024,998.00 4,295,372.76TRANSPORTATION/OPERATING FUND1000 Local Sources . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1,912,071.00 2,087,265.486000 Loans . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3,352.71

TOTAL . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1,912,071.00 2,090,618.19TRANSPORTATION/SCHOOL BUS REPL1000 Local Sources . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 442,535.00 464,973.33

TOTAL . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 442,535.00 464,973.33GRAND TOTAL . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33,090,991.65 34,762,862.45

EXPENDITURE COMPARISONS –CALENDAR YEAR 2010

2010 Approved 2010Budget Actual 2010

Expenditure Accounts Expenditures Expenditures TransfersGENERAL FUND11000 Instruction/Regular Programs 14,152,933.00 13,470,146.46 13,182.20-

12000 Instruction/Special Programs 1,988,050.00 2,116,783.29 230,558.98

13000 Instruction/Adult/Cont. Ed 84,080.00 62,799.46 .00

14000 Instruction/Summer School 163,000.00 4,775.40 .00

16000 Instruction/Remediation 92,000.00 115,459.07 23,909.07

17000 Payments toGovernmental Unit 40,000.00 49,977.55 9,977.55

21000 Support Services/Pupils 1,403,400.00 1,417,889.01 15,430.29

22000 Support Services/Inst. Staff 750,590.00 579,552.75 .00

23000 Support Services/Gen. Admin. 464,650.00 497,508.19 33,274.19

24000 Support Services/Sch. Admin. 1,878,640.00 1,910,855.36 32,215.36

25000 Support Services/Business 389,620.00 374,633.35 14,386.65-

26000 Support Services/Central 2,705,720.00 2,217,164.95 335,851.66-

30000 Community Services 436,900.00 445,558.82 18,053.7550000 Debt Services 17,424.00 17,425.32 1.3260000 Non-ProgrammedCharges .00 75,348.28 .00

TOTAL 24,567,007.00 23,355,877.26 .00 DEBT SERVICE50000 Debt Services 3,451,218.00 3,283,874.55 .0060000 Non-Programmed

Charges .00 100,000.00 .00TOTAL 3,451,218.00 3,383,874.55 .00

SCHOOL PENSION DEBT50000 Debt Services 981,421. 00 981,421. 00 .00

TOTAL 981,421. 00 981,421. 00 .00CAPITAL PROJECTS FUND22000 Support Services/Inst. Staff 388,400.00 457,688.42 119,931.40

26000 Support Services/Central 1,073,132.00 1,368,183.69 295,517.91

40000 Facility AcquisitionAnd Constrct 1,718,033.00 1,113,586.82 415,449.31-

50000 Debt Services .00 1,000,000.00 .0060000 Non-ProgrammedCharges .00 181,315.00 .00

TOTAL 3,179,565.00 4,120,773.93 .00TRANSPORTATION/OPERATING FUND27000 StudentTransportation 1,998,200.00 1,964,021.92 .00

40000 Facility Acquisitionand Construction .00 51,989.00 .00

60000 Non-ProgrammedCharges .00 50,000.00 .00

TOTAL 1,998,200.00 2,066,010.92 .00TRANSPORTATION/SCHOOL BUS REPL27000 StudentTransportation 77,000.00 14,470.17 .00

TOTAL 77,000.00 14,470.17 .00 GRAND TOTAL 34,254,411.00 33,922,427.83 .00

Certified Salary Schedulein effect June 30, 2011

Experience Bachelor’s # of Master’s # ofemployees employees

0 31,686.00 2 32,866.00 11 32,761.00 4 34,032.00 12 33,836.00 8 35,195.00 23 34,912.00 12 36,361.00 14 35,988.00 13 37,526.00 25 37,065.00 4 38,690.00 16 38,141.00 6 39,856.00 47 39,216.00 7 41,020.00 08 40,292.00 6 42,194·00 49 41,372.00 6 43,372.00 1

10 42,458.00 4 44,549·00 4

11 43,544.00 5 45,724·00 112 44,632.00 8 46,901.00 413 45,719·00 4 48,077.00 314 46,806.00 6 49,253.00 515 47,893.00 4 50,431.00 216 48,979·00 1 51,606.00 417 50,066.00 1 52,783.00 218 51,152.00 3 53,958.00 119 52,239·00 0 55,135.00 3

20 and up 55,166.00 8 59,430.00 91Part Time - 1Full Time - 248

2008-2009, 2009-2010 and 2010-2011Extra-Curricular Salary Schedule

2008-09 2009-10 2010-11CATEGORY BASE= $28,846 $29,423 $30,011

INDEXI. 0.117 $ 3,375 $ 3,442 $ 3,511 II. 0.086 $ 2,481 $ 2,530 $ 2,581 III. 0.072 $ 2,077 $ 2,118 $ 2,161 IV. 0.060 $ 1,731 $ 1,765 $ 1,801 V. 0.045 $ 1,298 $ 1,324 $ 1,350 VI. 0.035 $ 1,010 $ 1,030 $ 1,050 VII. 0.030 $ 865 $ 883 $ 900 VIII. 0.029 $ 837 $ 853 $ 870IX. 0.019 $ 548 $ 559 $ 570X. 0.013 $ 375 $ 382 $ 390

CATEGORY I.High School - Head WrestlingHigh School - Head BaseballHigh School - Head Boys’ SwimmingHigh School - Head Girls’ SwimmingHigh School - GymnasticsHigh School - Head Boys’ TrackHigh School - Head Girls’ TrackHigh School - Assistant Football 4High School - Assistant Boys’ Basketball (2 varsity)High School - Assistant Girls’ Basketball (2 varsity)High School - Head Girls’ VolleyballHigh School - Head CheerleaderHigh School - Girls’ SoftballMiddle School - Athletic Director (2; 1 per building; This position hasone period of prep during the day.)High School - Concert Band DirectorCATEGORY II.High School - Freshman Boys’ BasketballHigh School - Freshman Girls’ BasketballHigh School - Head Boys’ Soccer High School - Head Girls’ Soccer High School - Swing Choir DirectorHigh School - Drama DirectorPool CoordinatorCATEGORY III.High School - Freshman Football (2)High School - Assistant Baseball (2)High School - Assistant Volleyball (2)High School - Assistant Softball (2)High School - Assistant Wrestling (2)High School - Assistant Boys’ TrackHigh School - Assistant Girls’ TrackHigh School - Head Girls’ TennisHigh School - Head Boys’ TennisHigh School - Head Boys’ GolfHigh School - Head Girls’ GolfHigh School - Head Boys’ and Girls’ Cross CountryHigh School - Assistant Boys’ SoccerHigh School - Assistant Girls’ SoccerCATEGORY IV.High School - Assistant Boys’ SwimmingHigh School - Assistant Girls’ SwimmingHigh School Department Chairpersons (11)High School Assistant Summer Band DirectorHigh School Assistant Band DirectorHigh School Band GuardHigh School Summer Band GuardHigh School Academic Competition CoordinatorHigh School - Assistant Boys’ and Girls’ Cross CountryHigh School - JV / Freshmen Grade Cheerleaders (2)High School - Student Council (2)High School - Yearbook AdvisorMiddle School - 7th Grade Football (1 per building)Middle School - 8th Grade Football (1 per building)Middle School - 7th Grade Boys’ Basketball (1 per building)Middle School - 8th Grade Boys’ Basketball (1 per building)Middle School - 7th Grade Girls’ Basketball (1 per building)Middle School - 8th Grade Girls’ Basketball (1 per building)Middle School - Head Wrestling Coach (6th & 7th & 8th) (2: 1 perbuilding)CATEGORY V.High School - Assistant Boys’ GolfHigh School - Assistant Girls’ GolfHigh School - Assistant GymnasticsMiddle School - Swimming Coach/Coordinator (1)Middle School - 7th Grade Assistant Football (2: 1 per building)Middle School - 8th Grade Assistant Football (2: 1 per building)Freshman Academy (1)CATEGORY VI.High School - FFAHigh School - IntramuralHigh School Latin ClubMiddle School Team Leader (3 per building) One per team/teams areestablished by principal.High School Choir DirectorMiddle School Track Coaches (10, 5 per building)Middle School - 7th Grade Head Volleyball (2; 1 per building)Middle School - 8th Grade Head Volleyball (2; 1 per building)Middle School - Assistant Wrestling (6, 7&8) (2; 1 per building)CATEGORY VII.High School - Junior Class Sponsor (2)

High School - Auditorium SupervisorHigh School - Baseball Field CoordinatorHigh School Musical DirectorHigh School Music DirectorMiddle School - Cross Country (2; 1 per building)CATEGORY VIII.Middle School Academic Coordinator (2; 1 per building)Middle School - Cheerleaders (2; 1 per building)Middle School - Sixth Grade Girls’ Basketball (1 per building)Middle School - Sixth Grade Boys’ Basketball (1 per building)Middle School - Sixth Grade Volleyball (1 at each building)Middle School - Assistant Cross Country (1 at each building)Middle School - Assistant Swimming (1 per Corporation)Elementary - Intramural (7; 1 per building)Elementary - Fifth Grade Girls’ Basketball (1 at each building)Elementary - Fifth Grade Boys’ Basketball (1 at each building)High School - Academic Competition Assistant (4)CATEGORY IX.High School - Planetarium DirectorHigh School Student Council (1)High School PVE Club (2)High School Spanish ClubHigh School French ClubHigh School German ClubHigh School - Senior Class Sponsor (2)Middle School - Annual (2; 1 per building)Middle School - Newspaper (2; 1 per building)Middle School - Honor Society (4; 2 per building)Middle School - Drama (2; 1 per building)Middle School - Sixth Grade Cheerleader (1 at each building)High School - National Honor Society (2)High School AFS ClubArchery coaches (up to 3)Robotics coaches (up to 3)CATEGORY X.High School - Sophomore Class SponsorHigh School - Freshman Class SponsorHigh School - Earth Watch ClubHigh School - Y-Teens (2)High School - FCAHigh School Thespian ClubMiddle School - Just Say No Club (2; 1 per building)Middle School - Pep Club (2; 1 per building)Middle School - Student Council (4; 2 per building)Elementary - Cheerleader Sponsor (7; 1 per building)Elementary - Yearbook (7; 1 per building)Elementary - Student Council (7; 1 per building)Elementary - Just Say No Club (7; 1 per building)

Noncertified Employee Classificationsand Range of Pay Rates 2010-2011

I. Instructional and Supplementary Pupil ServicesAll Instructional Assistants $7.40 to $11.75

II. Cafeteria and Food Service WorkersManagers and head cooks $10.45 to $15.35School food service director $54,081 annualAll other food service employees $7.50 to $12.25

III. Health Services, Nurses $25,845 to 33,045 yearIV. Office/Clerical/Secretarial $10.00 to $22.10V. Executive/Administrative/Accounting

Business Manager $90,102 annualBuildings and grounds director

VI. Maintenance/Custodial/TransportationBuilding Custodians $9.00 to $15.12Bus Drivers $15.85 to $21.85 or $65 dayMaintenance/Mechanics $12.00 to $22.35

VII. Computer Services $34,500 to $44,500 yearTotal Number of noncertified part-time employees 16Total Number of noncertified full-time employees 225

Certified Administrative Staff in effect June 30, 2010Lowest Highest Average NumberSalary Salary Salary Personnel

Administrative Staff $62,402.00 $118,861.00 $77,112 17Student Enrollment

October 1, 2010Grade Level Enrollment Grade Level EnrollmentPrekindergarten . . . . . . . . . . 00 Grade 7 ..................................319.00Kindergarten . . . . . . . . . 140.00 Grade 8 ..................................260.00Grade 1. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 275.00 Grade 9 ..................................284.00Grade 2. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 259.00 Grade 10 ................................288.00 Grade 3. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 279.00 Grade 11 ................................291.00Grade 4. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 276.00 Grade 12 ................................263.00Grade 5. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 272.00 Secondary Ungraded ................00 Grade 6. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 313.00 Post Graduates .......................... 00Elementary Ungraded. . . . . 00 TOTAL ................................3,519.00

Assessed Valuation And Tax RatesYear 2010 Year 2011

Assessed Valuation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .760,443,055.00 767,824,114.00Tax Rate – Debt Service Fund . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .4254 .4251Tax Rate – Capital Projects Fund . . . . . . . . . . . . .3808 .3805Tax Rate – School Transportation Fund . . . . . . .2407 .2394Tax Rate – School Bus Replacement Fund . . . . . .0557 .0054Tax Rate – Pension Fund . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1203 .1200

Statement of Indebtedness Calendar Year 2010Indebtedness Principle Outstanding

Temporary Loans . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .School Bonds . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1,750,000.00Emergency Loans . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .School Bus Loans . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Holding Company - Public & Private . . . . . . . . . . .37,970,000.00Veterans Memorial Loans . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Common School Loans . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1,208,641.30Indiana Bond Bank/Anticipated NotesRetirement/Severance Bond Debt . . . . . . . . . . . . . .9,645,000.00Other DLGF Approved Debt . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Qualified School Constrution Bonds (ARRA) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Qualified Zone Academy Bonds (ARRA) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Total . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .50,573,641.30Outstanding Encumbrances - All Funds . . . . . . . . . .209,489.82

(Include Purchase Orders, Vendor Contracts, Letters Of Commitment, Leases)

Legal NoticeANNUAL FINANCIAL REPORT

COUNTY NUMBER: 38 SCHOOL CORPORATION NUMBER: 3945THE JAY SCHOOL CORPORATION

Any questions regarding this report should be directed to: Contact Persons Name: Bradley T. DeRome Title: Business Manager/Treasurer Telephone Number: 260-726-9341

250 Legal Notices

Page 9: Congressman Stutzman

10TH ANNUALSHETLER

Blacksmith Consign-ment Auction

Saturday, August 13,2011 at 8:30 a.m. Lo-cated 2-1/2 miles

south of Geneva, Indi-ana. US 27 to CountyRoad 800 N, then east1/4 mile. Bring yourmachinery; tack; har-ness; buggies; shoptools; lawn and gardento sale location any-time Tuesday, August9th through Friday, Au-gust 12th, 7:00 a.m. to6:00 p.m. Horses willbe numbered and soldconsecutively. All out-of-state horses mustbe Coggins tested. Noconsignments after Fri-day night 6:00 p.m.,(except horses). Noshoeing Friday or Sat-urday. Auctioneer an-nouncements takeprecedence over all

advertising.Auctioneers

Samual R. LengacherAU10700061260-241-8870Jacob StoltzfusAU10700049

KELLY DECEASED, OTH-ERS AUCTION

Saturday, August 13, 2011at 10:00 a.m. Location:

Swing Building, Jay CountyFairgrounds, E. VotawStreet, Portland, Indiana.John Kelly, deceased, Oth-ers. 10” Craftsman radialsaw; household furnishings;antiques; glassware; col-

lectibles; Nascar, Coca-Colacollection; (also Coca-Colafurniture); antique furniture;oak secretary/bookcase;childs dry sink; ice chest;Primitives; Grandfather

clock; Kirby sweeper with at-tachments; Hall’s Bluechina; Pfaltzgraff 12 place

setting silverware;Longaberger baskets; cos-tume jewelry; lift chair; lotsmore. Possible double ring

at 11:00 a.m. See AuctionZip.com #11389Mel Smitley’s Real Estateand Auctioneering

260-726-6215 - Office260-726-0541 - Cell

Mel Smitley AU01011555Rob Green AU19500011Laci Smitley AU10600051

Ryan Smitley Clerk

PUBLIC AUCTIONSaturday, August 13, 2011at 10:00 a.m. Location:3430 W SR 67, Portland,Indiana. Area Contractorsand Farmers, Owners. Cat307 Excavator w/stick sideswing; John Deere 730 LPtractor; International 440baler; Peterbuilt 379 semi;Mack tri-axle dump truck;Trailwise gooseneck trailer;Ford F250 extended cab;Craftsman radial arm saw;shop/hand tools; interior/ex-terior doors; vinyl windows;Cub Cadet mower w/44’deck; EZ-GO golf cart;Cushman three-wheel

truckster; Honda motorcy-cle; alfalfa hay; wheat straw;

oak churchpews/chairs/desks; stainedglass windows; renderingkettle; appliances; muchmuch more. www.auc-

tionzip.com www.shawver-auctioneeringandrealty.bizOffice Phone 260-729-5107

Pete Shawver AU01010220

Pete Shawver, Jr. AU19700040260-726-5587 Zane ShawverAU10500168260-729-2229

PUBLIC AUCTIONSaturday, August 12,2011 at 4:30 p.m. Mrs.

Daniel “Beverly”Klepser, Owner. Loca-tion: 7785 E 125 N,Van Buren, Indiana.

Alumcraft 14’ boat withfish finder; Mercury25hp motor; trailer;

Suzuki motorcycle; gasgenerator; snow

blower; rototiller; tworiding lawn mowers;three Razor scooters;two push mowers; sala-mander; leaf blower;chain saws; scroll saw;planer; drill; benchgrinder; sander;

table/jig/saber saw; beltsander; airless paintsprayer; drill press;wrenches; hydraulicjack; hand tools; golfclubs; fishing tackle;kerosene heater; woodworking books; more.For more informationcall Loy Real Estateand Auction 260-726-

2700 Gary Loy AU0103160Ben Lyons AU10700085

www.auctionzip.com

PUBLIC AUCTIONSaturday, August 20, 2011at 10:00 a.m. Location:206 E. Main Street,

Ridgeville, Indiana. HenryH. Smiley Estate, by Si-mone Joseph, PersonalRepresentative. Two-story;five-bedroom home; 2,810square feet; partial base-ment; two-story detachedgarage and shop building.Refrigerator; washer/dryer;gas range; flat screen tele-vision; upright freezer; fourbedroom suits; rockers;love seat; two cedar

chests; large book collec-tion; kerosene lamps; car-penter boxes; milk cans;Chevy S-10 pickup; ridinglawnmowers; disc grinder;scroll saw; two table saws;router and stand; lawn/gar-den tools; much more. www.auctionzip.comwww.shawverauction-

eeringandrealty.biz OfficePhone 260-729-5107

Pete Shawver AU01010220

Pete Shawver, Jr. AU19700040260-726-5587 Zane ShawverAU10500168260-729-2229

SHINABERRY DE-CEASED, NEWLAND,Others. Friday, August 19,2011 at 4:30 p.m. DoubleRing 5:00 p.m. Location:Swine Building, Jay CountyFairgrounds, E. VotawStreet, Portland, Indiana.Dorothy Shinaberry, de-ceased, Betty Newland,Others. Household furnish-ings; antiques; glassware;china; Primitives; 70

plus/minus advertising signs(Sohio, Farmax, CooperTires, Root Beer, etc.); Tex-aco (oil pump, outfit); glassquart oil bottles; antique fur-niture/clocks; Seller’s cabi-net; toys; 16’ box cargo

trailer; neon beer signs; BudLight Colts Super Bowlchamps bottles; Tonka

trucks; comic books; muchmore.

See AuctionZip.com #11389Mel Smitley’s Real Estateand Auctioneering

260-726-6215 - Office260-726-0541 - Cell

Mel Smitley AU01011555Rob Green AU19500011Laci Smitley AU10600051

Ryan Smitley Clerk

JOE WICKEY CON-STRUCTION remodelold houses; additions;basements; newhouses; pole barns;roof replacement; sid-ing; windows; barnrestoration; founda-tions 260-849-1749

WILL STAY AND BE ACAREGIVER in yourhome. Have referencesupon request. Call andleave a message at765-789-6458 or 765-789-6438.

BABYSITTING; Forfirst and second shift;school transpor tationavailable; Call 260-726-2920

90 SALE CALENDAR70 INSTRUCTIO N,,90 SALE CALENDAR

70 INSTRUCTIO N,90 SALE CALENDAR 90 SALE CALENDAR 90 SALE CALENDAR 90 SALE CALENDAR 100 JOBS WANTED

The Commercial ReviewWednesday, August 10, 2011 Classifieds Page 9

Vendor Name General Fund Cap. Projects Transport./ Transport./ TotalAmount Fund Amount Oper Amount Scho Amount Amount

Jay School Corp 2,809,414.34 233,715.00 416,000.00 3,459,129.34Oasdi Cert/Non Cert FICA 1,140,905.92 19,287.96 69,102.31 1,229,296.19 Bank Of New York 1,000,000.00 1,000,000.00Ind State Tchrs Retirement Fd 784,219.01 9,655.56 1,750.82 795,625.39 Jay County REMC 294,188.88 168,447.93 462,636.81Public Emp Retirement Fund 300,012.05 13,586.81 93,952.25 407,551. 11 Delta Dental 345,597.92 345,597.92 Indiana Michigan Power Company 71,828.33 222,486.13 1,296.00 295,610.46Agbest 285,522.98 285,522.98Energy USA - TPC Corp 272,583.28 272,583.28 Aker-Taylor Plumbing 67,619.61 110,150.24 177,769.85First Merchants Ins. Services 32,416.11 86,791.62 27,767.53 146,975.26Office Equipment Financial Ser 4,675.72 141,583.22 146,258.94Met Life / FASCO 118,328.59 118,328.59Wabash Valley Restoration Inc 104,185.00 104,185.00DCS Computer Sales & Service 1,577.58 91,915.53 93,493.11 Hall Aluminum Products Inc 5,086.00 80,460.00 85,546.00 Progressive Office Products 73,484.58 8,135.00 1,364.65 82,984.23 First National Bank Omaha 28,298.67 54,578.90 82,877.57 Ohio Valley Gas Corp 80,386.77 80,386.77 Sun Life Of Canada 72,461. 57 72,461.57 Honeywell 8,327.78 62,486.24 70,814.02City Of Portland 7,383.23 61,850.65 69,233.88 Janitor's Supply Co Inc 60,204.33 6,828.00 67,032.33 Mainsource Bank 18.00 64,533.01 64,551.01 Educational Furniture Ltd 85.00 59,784.22 59,869.22Kerlin Bus Sales & Leasing Inc 51,989.00 2,838.17 54,827.17Hillyard - Indiana 54,090.37 54,090.37Madison National Life 51,873.71 51,873.71 Centurylink 51,657.34 51,657.34Frontline Walls & Ceilings Inc 51,274.00 51,274.00 Xerox Corp 565.00 47,706.26 48,271.26 Plato Learning 45,149.00 45,149.00Fluid Dynamics Inc 43,965.00 43,965.00School Specialty Inc 43,934.95 43,934.95 Georgia Direct Carpet Inc 280.00 42,816.80 43,096.80 Bluffton-Harrison M.S.D. 39,045.65 39,045.65 STI 695.00 37,100.00 37,795.00Harvest Land Co-Op 31,084.71 31,084.71Ind Dept Of Workforce Dvlpmnt 29,136.23 29,136.23 Region 8 Education Serv Center 17,284.62 9,600.66 1,984.00 28,869.28 C&T Design & Eqpt Co., Inc 28,724.00 28,724.00 Validated Custom Solutions 27,864.00 27,864.00 Lehman's Mechanical 2,220.35 24,774.00 26,994.35 Follett Library Resources 26,615.44 26,615.44 Mail Finance 25,408.09 25,408.09Amerlcan Fidelity/Corp 1% Annu 24,843.12 24.843.12 Franklin's Electrical Supply 10,572.17 14,185.43 24,757.60 Best Way Disposal 23,648.58 23,648.58Trane US Inc 23,305.58 23,305.58 Trane US Inc 22,936.99 22,936.99CSO Architects Inc 22,156.56 22,156.56 John Jay Learning Center 22,100.00 22,100.00Delaware Glass & Mirror 20,000.00 20,000.00Four Star Floor Care Inc 19,535.00 19,535.00Perma Bound 18,076.40 18,076.40Visual Edge Inc 17,006.33 17,006.33Selking International 16,920.26 16,920.26Automated Controls & 130.00 16,664.50 16,794.50Follett Software 82.01 16,341.26 16,423.27Tremco Inc 16,228.17 16,228.17Leslie Coatings Inc 15,820.00 15,820.00Scholastic 8,705.40 6,734.56 15,439.96Coldren & Frantz 15,151.14 15,151.14Stein Industries 15,025.69 15,025.69City Water & Wastewater Dept 14,966.38 14,966.38Asia Travel Inc 14,610.00 14,610.00Programmer's Paradise 14,366.67 14,366.67Portland True Value 14,091.14 254.33 14,345.47Allmon, Rebecca J 14,244.80 14,244.80ADI 2,273.88 11,756.90 14,030.78DBI Technology Solutions 14,030.52 14,030.52Houghton Mifflin Grt Source 13,545.64 13,545.64McGraw-Hill 13,244.41 13,244.41Premier Agendas Inc 12,991.49 12,991.49Rehabilitative Services Inc 12,893.63 12,893.63Walmart Community 6,794.03 5,915.23 12,709.26Zurcher Tire Inc 667.61 11,632.00 12.299.61Verizon Wireless 12,286.64 12,286.64Midwest Transit Equip Of IN 12,210.92 12,210.92Office Concepts 3,953.43 8,057.18 12,010.61Turfgrass Inc 11,611.00 11,611.00Komputrol Inc 11,540.00 11,540.00Holmes, Sarah 11,538.00 11,538.00Tim Johnson 2,318.00 9,150.00 11,468.00Portland Motor Parts 9,107.08 2,001.56 11,108.64Shiffler Equipment Sales Inc 725.49 10,235.80 10,961.29Daktronics Inc 10,930.75 10,930.75Timmons Water Systems 10,348.34 10,348.34Airsource Technologies LLC 10,343.93 10,343.93John's Small Engine Inc 178.93 10,058.00 10,236.93 Jay Co High Schl Graphic Arts 9,881.00 9,881.00G & G Oil Co Of Indiana, Inc 9,743.35 9,743.35Fort Recovery Lumber Co 1,542.30 8,016.26 9,558.56Centurylink 9,289.01 9,289.01Centurylink 9,221.26 9,221.26Gabbard Fence Construction 8,560.00 450.00 9,010.00ING 8,824.76 8,824.76Pelion Benefits 8,824.76 8,824.76

Frontier 8,785.48 8,785.48Macgill & Co 8,689.83 8,689.83Renaissance Learning Inc 6,978.60 1,656.00 8,634.60Marsh 8,410.19 8,410.19South Adams School Corporation 8,044.86 8,044.86 Rund Wallman & Robbins LLP 7,887.53 7,887.53Spear Corp 7,823.81 7,823.81Presstek Inc 7,297.48 472.50 7,769.98David A Wendel 1,161.00 6,422.00 7,583.00West Jay Community Center 7,480.00 7,480.00Boyce,A E * 7,437.14 7,437.14Validated Custom Solutions 7,400.00 7,400.00Bollenbacher, Rita 7,377.50 7,377.50Indiana School Boards Assn 7,321.70 7,321.70Glenn, Chuck 7,225.00 7,225.00Taylor Painting 7,211.09 7,211.09Arrow Pest Control 7,201.46 7,201.46Bose Mckinney & Evans LLP 7,101.50 7,101.50Display Craft 802.50 6,264.68 7,067.18Midwest Air Filter Inc 7,004.09 7,004.09Eco Logical Solutions Inc 6,997.50 6,997.50Cintas Corporation #716 3,790.50 2,958.72 6,749.32 Vectren Energy Delivery 6,590.98 6,590.98Mc-Graw-Hill 6,418.02 6,418.02Purdue University 6,200.00 6,200.00Kirby Risk Electrical Supply 5,966.97 5,966.97Bye-Mo'r 5,946.26 5,946.26Long, Dr Tim 5,906.51 5,906.51Jay School Corp Transportation 5,816.89 5,816.89Amazon 5,785.75 5,785.75Curtis & Livers Consulting LLC 5,750.00 5,750.00Vista Landscape & Design LLC 5,494.00 195.00 5,689.00Town Of Redkey 5,492.41 5,492.41Alliance Environmntl Group Inc 900.00 4,500.00 5,400.00Roehm Radio & Sound Inc 535.29 4,556.95 5,092.24Holt Mcdougal 5,019.94 5,019.94Indiana Chamber Of Commerce 5,003.70 5,003.70Ball State University 907.00 4,093.00 5,000.00First 5,000.00 5,000.00Data Futures 5,000.00 5,000.00 Portland Tire & Service 1,737.08 3,191.90 4,928.98Indiana Oxygen Company 4,641. 38 218.40 4,859.78Innovative Concepts Pntng LLC 4,802.00 4,802.00Quill 4,796.26 4,796.26Amco Elevators Inc 1,405.10 3,242.31 4,647.41Flinn Scientific 4,560.50 4,560.50Graphic Printing Co 4,531.92 4,531.92Hm Receivables Co LLC 4,527.35 4,527.35Hm Receivables Co LLC 4,519.23 4,519.23Learning. Com 4,418.00 4,418.00Wabash Electric Supply Inc 3,744.03 669.06 4,413.09Stanley Convergent Security 1,010.61 3,267.58 4,278.19Pearson Education 4,159.32 4,159.32Educationcity.Com 4,095.00 4,095.00Reynolds Farm Equipment 1,277.69 2,800.00 4,077.69East Central Ed Service Center 4,039.88 4,039.88 CIM Technology Solutions 4,015.00 4,015.00 K & M Hirschy Construction 4,000.00 4.000.00Robert Davidson 4,000.00 4,000.00Janitors Supply Co Inc 3,994.00 3,994.00Indiana Dept Of Education 3,964.50 3,964.50BMI Educational Services 3,909.95 3,909.95UK College Of Engineering 3,900.00 3,900.00Portland Insurance Agency 3,891.00 3,891.00Evan-Moor 3,774.43 3,774.43In Assn/School Principals 3,747.00 3,747.00Esco Communications 1,133.90 2,600.00 3,733.90Fire Protection Inc 3,715.74 3,715.74Woodard Sales 3,657.50 3,657.50Neola Inc 3,653.51 3,653.51Reece. David M 3,605.00 3,605.00Jay School Corp/Food Service 3,602.72 3,602.72 Dunkirk Investment Group LLC 3,500.00 3,500.00Phillips, Bruce 3,487.30 3,487.30 Dustin Hatzell 3,480.08 3,480.08Fastenal Company 3,409.61 3,409.61Reliance Communications Inc 3,402.50 3,402.50Highsmith 2,584.18 796.44 3,380.62Carquest Of Portland 886.71 2,492.80 3,379.51Town Of Pennville 3,285.15 3,285.15Amer.Com 3,276.26 3,276.26Stevenson University 3,250.00 3,250.00James D Lucas Jr 1,403.94 1,799.53 3,203.47Jostens Inc 3,201.66 3,201.66Jamar Appliance Inc 3,139.12 3,139.12A Landon Excavating 3,112.50 3,112.50Town Of Bryant 3,098.00 3,098.00Barwick, Wood 3,001.62 3,001.62Hospitality Control Systems 2,960.00 2,960.00Telvent DTN 2,904.00 2,904.00 Lyons 2,870.00 2,870.00Fort Wayne Diesel Service 2,836.50 2,836.50Lincoln National Life Ins 2,831.51 2,831.51Postmaster 2,820.00 2,820.00Nasco 2,808.05 2,808.05Fullenkamp Machine & Mfg 2,798.25 2,798.25EP Graphics 2,796.20 2,796.20Birts Sewing Center 2,782.08 2,782.08United Art & Ed Supply Co 2,725.14 2,725.14Interior Products Supply 2,719.98 2,719.98Library Video Co 2,658.28 2,658.28

PAYMENTS IN EXCESS OF 2,500.00 MADE TO VENDORSCALENDAR YEAR 2010

Legal NoticeANNUAL FINANCIAL REPORT

COUNTY NUMBER: 38 SCHOOL CORPORATION NUMBER: 3945THE JAY SCHOOL CORPORATION

Any questions regarding this report should be directed to: Contact Persons Name: Bradley T. DeRome Title: Business Manager/Treasurer Telephone Number: 260-726-9341

250 Legal Notices

CR August 10, 2011 NS August 10, 2011

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PROPERTY MANAGERNEEDED in Genevaarea for approximately30 hours. Individualmust have excellentcustomer service andcommunication skills,both verbal and written.Needs to possess self-confidence, integrityand present a profes-sional appearance.Should work success-fully with others andpossess a willingness tolearn and be a self-starter, organized andcapable of multi-task-ing. Computer experi-ence preferred. Pleasefax resume to 260-724-6439 by August 15th.EOE

HELP WANTED; Li-censed bartender; applyat Val’s Place, Redkey;or call 765-369-8139

MANUFACTURING TECH-NICIAN Local high-techfirm is seeking a self-moti-vated, dependable individ-ual for part-time leading tofull-time employment. Musthave good math skills; bemechanically inclined; will-ing to work any shift. Re-quirements: Two yearswork experience, highschool diploma; and drugscreen. Above averagecompensation and cleanwork conditions. Send re-sume to: Classified Box434, c/o The CommercialReview, P. O. Box 1049,Portland, IN 47371.

OWNER OPERATORSWANTED Midwest Re-gional Up to 1.10 per Mile.All Miles Paid FSC Paid AllMiles $1500 Sign OnBonus Frontier Transport800-991-6227 www.fron-tiertransport.co

PRODUCTION ASSOCI-ATES Looking for employ-ment! Open interviews onThursday, August 11,2011. Scheduled times:8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. Ex-panding snack manufac-turer seeks Full-time andPart-time production as-sociates. Positions avail-able on all three shiftswith shift differentials. Weoffer flexible hours; a fullbenefit package includinghealth and life insurance;dental 401k and vacation.Permanent positions.Good prospect for ad-vancement in rapidlygrowing company! Confi-dentiality fully assured.EOE Tastemorr Snacks, adivision of Basic GrainProducts, Inc., 300 EastVine Street, Coldwater,Ohio 45828 Tel: 419-678-2304 ext: 101

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ALUMINUM SHEETS23”x30”,.007 thick. Cleanand shiny on one side..35

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2003 CONCESSIONTRAILER Great condi-tion; Deposit and spacealready paid for Tractorand Engine Show. Call419-852-1017 for details.Great money maker!

SUPREME MODELWHIRLPOOL automaticwasher and electricdryer; runs good; $300for both; call 765-789-4802

NEW QUEEN PLUSHMATTRESS $75.00. Candeliver 260-749-6100

160 WANTED TO BUY

BUYER OF RUNNINGAND NON-RUNNINGcars and trucks; 260-417-7345

170 PETS

SAXMAN’S ALL BREEDdog grooming; 50 yearsexperience; pick up anddeliver; Call 765-369-2033.

TWO FREE DAY PASSESto the Mercer County Fairwith any puppy purchasedbefore 8/13/11. Garwick’sthe Pet People. 419-795-5711.

CHIHUAHUA PUPPIES12 weeks old; very cute.Reasonable price. 3088 E800 N, Bryant.

FARM GROUND 74 acrefarm; Section 6, Jeffer-son Township with 66acres tillable. Four-bed-room home containing2,200 square feet of fin-ished living area; barnand pole building. Homeis in move in condition.Call Shawver Auctioneer-ing and Real Estate. PeteShawver 260-726-5587or Zane Shawver 260-729-2229.

FRESH PRODUCE willbe in front of True ValueHardware, Saturdaysfrom 1:00-4:00pm withfresh produce and sugar-free baked goods.

OLD BUCKRAKE,RARE Stenciled ClarkTractor Sweep Atherton,Mo. Been inside 60 plusyears. 260-726-7679leave message.

110 HELP WANTEDS70 INSTRUCTIO N,,110 HELP WANTED 110 HELP WANTED 130 MISC. FOR SALE 130 MISC. FOR SALE 130 MISC. FOR SALE

190 FARMERSCOLUMN

Classifieds The Commercial ReviewWednesday, August 10, 2011Page 10

Jay County Sewage Ordinance No. 2011-04 Ordinance regulating the installation, construction, maintenance, operation, and repair of residential andcommercial on-site sewage disposal systems in Jay County, Indiana and providing penalties for violations

thereof. Jay County Sewage Ordinance No. 2011-04 Hereby repeals

Jay County Ordinance No. 2-1981. Be it ordained and enacted by the Board of Commissioners of Jay County, State of Indiana as follows:

Article I Administration

Section 101: The regulations and requirements of Indiana State Department of Health Rule 410 IAC 6-8.2"Residential On-Site Sewage Systems" are hereby incorporated by reference in this Ordinance and shallinclude any later amendments to these regulations and requirements as the same are published in theIndiana Register of the Indiana Administrative Code with effective dates as fixed therein. Copies of theapplicable IAC regulations and requirements are available and are on file in the office of the Jay CountyHealth Department. Section 102: The regulations and requirements of Indiana State Department of Health Rule 410 IAC 6-10"Commercial On-site Wastewater Disposal" are hereby incorporated by reference in this Ordinance andshall include any later amendments to those regulations and requirements as the same are published inthe Indiana Register of the Indiana Administrative Code with effective dates as fixed therein. Copies of theapplicable IAC regulations and requirements are available and are on file in the office of the Jay CountyHealth Department. Section 103: All other regulations and requirements duly promulgated by the Indiana State Department ofHealth as found in Title 410 IAC and various bulletins relative to the subject matter of this Ordinance arefurther incorporated herein and made a part hereof. Specifically. Bulletin S.E. 11 "The Sanitary VaultPrivy", as updated or amended from time to time, and Bulletin S.E. 13 "On-Site Water Supply andWastewater Disposal for Public and Commercial Establishments", as updated or amended from time-to-time, and any bulletin or publication which may hereafter be published by the Indiana State Department ofHealth as a supplement or successor to said Bulletin S.E. 11 or Bulletin S.E. 13 are hereby incorporatedherein and made a part hereof. Copies of the respective bulletins are available in the office of the JayCounty Health Department.

Article II Definitions

In addition to, or to otherwise supplement those definitions contained in Rule 410 IAC 6-8.2, Rule IAC 6-10,Bulletin S.E 11 and Bulletin S.E. 13, which are herein incorporated by reference, this Ordinance shallinclude the additional definitions.

Section 201: "Aeration Tank" shall mean any tank or device designed to receive and treat sewage by causingor inducing air to circulate or combine with the contents creating an aerobic bacterial condition to exist. Section 202: "Board of Health" shall mean the Board of Health having jurisdiction in Jay County, State ofIndiana. Section 203: "Building" shall mean a structure having a roof supported by columns or walls built or used forthe enclosure, shelter, protection or occupancy of persons, fixtures or personal property, and from whichthere emanates any sewage. Section 204: "Health Officer" shall mean the Health Officer having jurisdiction in Jay County, State ofIndiana, or the Health Officer's designated agent. Section 205: "Installer" shall mean any person engaged in or intending to engage in the installation,construction and repair of on-site systems or equipment in Jay County. Section 206: "On-Site System" shall mean any commercial on-site wastewater disposal or residential on-sitesewage system not constructed, installed, maintained, operated, and/or owned by an incorporated city ortown, conservancy district, regional sewer district, or private utility. Section 207: "Owner" shall mean the owner of a dwelling or building (or the agent of the owner). Section 208: "Privy" shall mean a fly tight and rodent proof structure designed for the disposal of humanwaste erected on or over a properly constructed sanitary vault. Section 209: "Sanitary sewerage system" be defined as such term is defined by 410 IAC 6-8.2-34, as amendedfrom time to time, and which term currently shall mean a sewer or system of sewers that convey sewageaway from the lot on which it originates to a wastewater treatment facility owned and operated by:

(1) An incorporated city or town; (2) A conservancy district; (3) A regional sewer district; or (4) A private utility.

Section 210: "Soil Survey" shall mean the book entitled "Soil Survey of Jay County, Indiana" published bythe United States Department of Agriculture, Soil Conservation Service as updated or appended from time-to-time. Section 211: "Subdivision" shall mean divisions of any parcel of land shown as a unit or as contiguous unitscreated for dwelling or building sites.

Article III Residential and commercial on-site systems requirements

Section 301: Where a sanitary sewerage system or combined sewer is not available in Jay County, allpersons owning or leasing property shall comply with the following provisions of the Ordinance for on-sitesystems. Section 302: It shall be unlawful for any person to throw, run, drain, seep, or otherwise dispose into any ofthe surface waters or ground waters of the County of Jay, State of Indiana, or cause, permit, or suffer to bethrown, run, drained, allowed to seep, or otherwise disposed into such waters, any organic or inorganicmatter from a dwelling, building, or on-site sewage system that would cause or contribute to a healthhazard or water pollution. Section 303: Any public, commercial or business building situated within the County of Jay, State ofIndiana. where on-site systems may be approvable and where a sanitary sewerage system is not available,said on-site systems shall be installed, constructed and maintained with the minimum requirements ofBulletin S.E. 13, Rule 410 IAC 6-10 or such other standards as may be adopted from time-to-time by theIndiana State Department of Health, the Indiana Department of Environmental Management and the JayCounty Board of Health. Section 304: A privy situated within the County of Jay, State of Indiana, shall be of the sanitary vault typeand shall be installed, constructed, maintained and disposed of in compliance with the minimum standardsset forth in Bulletin S.E. 11, as may be amended from time-to-time by the Indiana State Department ofHealth. All privies shall be kept in a clean condition so that insects and rodents cannot enter the vault andshall be located properly to protect water supplies from contamination. Section 305: All on-site systems shall be installed, constructed and maintained in a manner approved by theJay County Health Officer and in compliance with the minimum standards set forth in Rule 410 IAC 6-8.2,Rule 410 IAC 6-10, Bulletin S.E. 11, Bulletin S.E. 13 and such other standards and policies as may beadopted from time-to-time by the Indiana State Department of Health and the Jay County Board of Health. Section 306: The installation of any other on-site systems not described in Rule 410 IAC 6-8.2, Rule 410 IAC6-10, Bulletin S.E. 11 or S.E. 13 and which operate by mechanical, chemical, or other means shall beapproved in advance by the Indiana State Department of Health, the Indiana Department of EnvironmentalManagement (when required) and the Jay County Health Officer. Section 307: If any failure exists or occurs with any on-site system or privy and said system fails to meet thestandards and requirements of Section 302, Section 303, Section 304, Section 305 or Section 306, the failureshall be remedied to the satisfaction of the Jay County Health Officer by the owner or the occupant of thepremises or their agents within the time required by the Jay County Health Officer. Section 308: Wherever a sanitary sewerage system approved by the Indiana State Department of Health orIndiana Department of Environmental Management is available and is within 300 feet of the property lineof the residential or business property and the estimated cost of sewer construction and connection doesnot exceed one hundred fifty percent (150%) of the estimated cost of an on-site system, which property isserved by an on-site system or privy, situated within the County of Jay, State of Indiana, a direct connectionshall be required to said sanitary sewerage system (provided that the sanitary sewerage system will acceptthe connection) with all privies, septic tanks, aeration tanks and on-site systems being filled andabandoned in a safe and sanitary manner as approved by the Jay County Health Officer. Such directconnection shall be completed by the owner and/or the occupant of the premises or their agents withinninety (90) days after receipt of written notice ordering such action. Section 309: Notwithstanding any other provisions of this Ordinance, where a residence or commercialbusiness is constructed within Jay County that will utilize an on-site system, the building site shall consistof an area not less than two (2) acres. The provisions of Section 309 shall not be applicable to anysubdivisions or lots platted before the effective date of Jay County Sewage Ordinance No. 2-1981, only if anon-site system can be installed in compliance with Rule 410 IAC 6-8,2 and Rule 410 IAC 6-10. Section 310: Notwithstanding any other provisions of this Ordinance, the Jay County Health Officer maylimit or prohibit the use of an on-site system for residences or businesses in areas that are seasonably wet,pond water, or which periodically flood during any part of the year, or in areas where the size ortopography of the site, or where information contained in an evaluation by a registered soil scientistindicates a reasonable likelihood that an on-site system will not function properly and will dispose ofsewage in an unsanitary manner in violation of the terms of this Ordinance.

Article IV Permits- permit fees, inspections installers registration

Section 401: Before the start of construction of any public, commercial or business building or privateresidence where an on-site system or privy is to be installed or where any alterations, repairs or additionsof an existing on-site system or privy is planned, the owner shall first obtain a written permit signed by theJay County Health Officer. The application for such permit shall be made on a form provided by the JayCounty Health Officer. Said application shall be supplemented by all plans, specifications and otherinformation required by the Jay County Health Officer. A permit and inspection fee as established by theJay County Commissioners shall be paid to the Jay County Health Department for deposit into the JayCounty Health Fund. Section 402: The Jay County Health Officer shall examine said application, together with all informationaccompanying the same, and if determined, consistent with the provisions of this Ordinance, that suchapplications should be approved, the permit shall be issued. Otherwise, the Jay County Health Officer shalldeny such application and shall notify the applicant in writing of the reason or reasons for such denial. Inany case, an application shall be denied if the information submitted therewith is incomplete orinaccurate. The permit, if issued, shall be posted prior to the start of construction in a conspicuous place ator near the building where the on-site system is under construction. The permit shall be plainly visiblefrom the public thoroughfare serving the building,

Section 403: If the on-site system or privy for which the permit was issued has not been constructed,installed, altered, or repaired within two years from the date of issuance, the permit shall automaticallyexpire and become void. Section 404: A permit for the construction, installation, alteration or repair of an on-site system or privyshall not constitute final approval of such system until the same is completed to the satisfaction of the JayCounty Health Officer. The Jay County Health Officer shall be permitted to inspect the work at any stage ofconstruction; and in any event, the owner shall notify the Jay County Health Officer before the start ofconstruction of any component of the on-site system, before any components of the on-site system arecovered, and when the work is ready for final inspection. The final inspection shall be made within theshortest reasonable time, but not to exceed two (2) working days after receipt of notice by the Jay CountyHealth Officer, excluding weekends, legal holidays, and days when the weather is unfit to make aninspection as reasonably determined by the Jay County Health Officer. Section 405: The Jay County Health Officer shall maintain a register of all approved on site systeminstallers within Jay County, State of Indiana. Section 406: Any installer engaged or intending to engage in the installation, construction or repair of on-site systems or equipment shall make application to the Jay County Health Officer to have their nameplaced on the "Register for those engaged in the installation, construction and repair of on-site systems orequipment." The application form shall contain the name and address of the firm or place of business suchinstaller is associated with, and such other information as the Jay County Health Officer may reasonablyrequire to aid in the administration and enforcement of this Ordinance, or to help determine whether thereis any reason the application should not be approved. Section 407: Any installer applying for registration shall demonstrate knowledge of the applicable laws,rules, technical specifications, and ordinances before becoming registered by passing a written proficiencyexamination conducted by the Jay County Health Department or an entity approved by the Jay CountyBoard of Health. Section 408: Any installer making application to have the installer's name placed on the "Register for thoseengaged in the installation, construction and repair of on-site systems or equipment" shall pay anapplication fee as established by the Jay County Commissioners per calendar year to the Jay County HealthDepartment for deposit into the Jay County Health Fund. Only one application is required to be submittedpursuant to Sections 405 and 406 of this Ordinance, if such installer is a firm, partnership, association,corporation or other entity. Section 409: Upon acceptance of the installer's registration, such installer shall post both a surety bond anda certificate of liability insurance with the Jay County Board of Health with the surety bond in the penalsum of not less than twenty thousand dollars ($20,000) in favor of the Jay County Board of Health andliability insurance with the minimum amount of one hundred thousand dollars ($100,000) per occurrence.The company issuing the surety bond or liability insurance shall be registered with the State of Indianaand be acceptable to the Jay County Board of Health. Acceptance of the installer's registration shall beconditioned upon the installer's faithful compliance with this Ordinance and with rules and regulationswhich may from time-to-time be established by the Jay County Board of Health and the Indiana StateDepartment of Health relating to the installation of on-site systems, Section 410: The Jay County Health Officer may remove the name of any installer from the "Register forthose engaged in the installation, construction and repair of on-site systems or equipment" who hasdemonstrated inability or unwillingness to comply with this Ordinance. Such installer may have his namereinstated on said Register by the Jay County Board of Health after satisfactory demonstration of abilityand willingness to comply with these regulations. Section 411: All fees collected under the terms of this Ordinance shall be deposited into the Jay CountyTreasury and credited to the Jay County Health Fund.

Article VPower to inspect

Section 501: The Jay County Health Officer, bearing proper credentials and identification, shall bepermitted to enter upon all properties subject to the provisions of this Ordinance at reasonable times forpurposes of inspections, observations, measurements, sampling and testing necessary to carry out theprovisions of this Ordinance. Section 502: The Jay County Health Officer may issue an immediate stop work order of work completed, inprocess or planned, which is in violation of any provisions of this Ordinance. Therefore all work at the worksite shall be suspended immediately. Such stop work order shall be posted at the construction site andconfirmed by written notice to the owner or occupant of the premises and any person engaged in theperformance of said work or any person causing said work to be performed.

Article VI Notices

Section 601: Any person in violation of any of the provisions of this Ordinance shall be served a writtennotice by the Jay County Health Officer stating the nature of the violation and providing a time limit forsatisfactory correction thereof.

Article VII Appeals

Section 701: Appeals may be taken from any of the following decisions or action taken by the Jay CountyHealth Officer:

a) Denial of an application for a permit to construct, install, alter or repair an on-site system or privy; b) Failure to approve an application to have name placed on "Register for those engaged in theinstallation, construction, or repair of on-site systems or equipment"; c) Removal of name from "Register for those engaged in the installation, construction and repair of on-site systems or equipment"; d) A determination that work completed, in process or planned is in violation of any of the provisions ofthis Ordinance, or that any other violation of the provisions of this Ordinance exists; e) Order to make direct connection with a sanitary sewerage system and to abandon an on-site system orprivy under Section 308 of this Ordinance; f) Prohibition against use of an on-site system where building site consists of less than two (2) acres as setforth in Section 309 of this Ordinance.

Section 702: An appeal may be filed with the Jay County Board of Health by any person aggrieved oraffected by any decision of the Jay County Health Officer as set forth in Section 70l. Such appeal shall besubmitted in writing at the office of the Jay County Board of Health within ten (10) days after the applicabledecision of the Jay County Health Officer (unless the appellant obtains an extension of time in writing fromthe Jay County Board of Health). Said appeal shall specify the adverse decision being appealed and thegrounds for said appeal. The Jay County Health Officer shall forthwith transmit to the Jay County Board ofHealth all of the papers in the Health Officer's possession constituting the record of the case. The JayCounty Board of Health, upon receipt of such notice and record, shall immediately select a reasonable timeand place for the hearing of the appeal and shall give notice in writing to the appellant of the time andplace thereof. The hearing of the appeal may be continued from time to time. Following the conclusion ofthe hearing, the Board shall render a decision within twenty (20) days thereafter. Any person may appearand testify at such hearing, either in person or by counsel. Section 703: The Jay County Board of Health shall hear and decide the appeal, and may overrule or modifythe decision or determination of the Jay County Health Officer if the Board determines that the Jay CountyHealth Officer decided incorrectly on the matter. The Jay County Board of Health shall overrule or modifythe decision of the Jay County Health Officer only if the appellant shows by clear and convincing evidencethat:

a) strict compliance with the provisions of the Ordinance will impose upon such person unusualdifficulties and/or particular hardship; AND b) that overruling or modifying the decision of the Jay County Health Officer:

i. will constitute substantial justice, ii, is in harmony with the general purpose, intent and spirit of this Ordinance, iii. will not serve merely as a convenience to appellant, iv. will alleviate a demonstrable hardship, and v. surrounding property and the public in general will not be harmed hereby.

Section 704: A quorum (a majority of the total members of Jay County Board of Health) of the Jay CountyBoard of Health shall be required to hear an appeal under this Ordinance and a concurring vote of amajority of the members present at the hearing shall be necessary to reverse or modify any determinationor decision of the Jay County Health Officer.

Article VIIIPenalties

Section 801: Any person, firm or entity that shall violate any provision of this Ordinance shall pay a fine ofnot more than two thousand five hundred dollars ($2,500) per offense, and each day the violation continuesshall constitute a distinct and separate offense. Section 802: The Jay County Board of Health shall also be entitled to seek any other legal remedy available,including injunctive relief, against any person, firm or entity who shall violate any provision of thisOrdinance. Section 803: The Jay County Board of Health shall be entitled to the payment by the violator of all legalfees, court costs and expenses incurred to enforce this Ordinance. Section 804: The remedies provided in this Section shall be cumulative, and not exclusive, and shall be inaddition to any other remedy provided by law.

Article IX Ordinance in force

Section 901: All ordinances or parts of ordinances in conflict herewith are hereby repealed. Section 902: The invalidity of any section, clause, sentence or provision of this Ordinance shall not affectthe validity of any other part of this Ordinance. Section 903: This Ordinance shall be in full force and effect from and after its passage, approval, andpublication as provided by law. Passed and adopted by the Commissioners of Jay County, State of Indiana, on this 1st day of August, 2011.

Jay County Commissioners Milo Miller, President

Faron ParrJames Zimmerman

Attest: Nancy Culy, Jay County AuditorCR August 10, 2011, NS August 10, 2011

250 Public Notices

Public Notice

Page 11: Congressman Stutzman

WANT TO CASH RENT,share crop, or flex leasefarm ground for 2012 andbeyond, yearly or multi-year, contact 260-726-7679 leave message.

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200 FOR RENT

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220 REAL ESTATE

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230 AUTOS, TRUCKS

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190 FARMERSCOLUMN

70 INSTRUCTIO N,,200 FOR RENT

70 INSTRUCTION,200 FOR RENT 200 FOR RENT 230 AUTOS, TRUCKS

The Commercial ReviewWednesday, August 10, 2011 Classifieds Page 11

250 Public NoticesPublic Notice

Notice To Taxpayers Of Tax LeviesThe Jay School Corporation

Notice is hereby given the taxpayers of Jay School Corporation, Jay County, Indiana, that the proper legalofficers of said School Corporation at Administration Office, on August 22, 2011, at 6:00 PM will conduct apublic hearing on the budget. Following the meeting, any ten or more taxpayers may object to a budget, taxrate, or levy by filing an objecting petition with the proper officers of the political subdivision within sevendays after the hearing. The objection petition must identify the provisions of the budget, tax rate, or taxlevy the taxpayers object to. If a petition is filed, the political subdivision shall adopt with its budget awritten finding concerning the objections filed and testimony presented. Following the aforementionedhearing the School Board will meet at the Administration Office, on September 12, 2011 at 6:00 PM to adoptthe following budget:

Budget EstimateComplete details of budget estimates by fund may be seen at the School Administration Offices.

1 2 3 4 52012 Budget 2012 Maximum 2012 Excessive 2011 Current

School Funds Estimate Estimated Funds Levy Appeals Tax Levyto be raised included in

(including appeals) column 3General $25,482,865Referendum- Exempt

Operating $ $ $ $3,669,586Debt Service $3,744,101 $3,803,162 $Retirement/SeveranceBond Debt Service $985,508 $936,620 $922,945

Exempt Retirement/Severance BondDebt Service

Referendum DebtExempt Capital $ $

Capital Projects $3,350,000 $3,034,906 $2,926,504School Transportation $2,486,000 $2,205,033 $72,746 $1,841,305School Bus Replacement $1,581,936 $1,706,658 $41,533Rainy Day $160,000Total $37,790,410 $11,686,379 $9,001,873

Net Assessed Valuation of taxable property for the year 2011 payable 2012. $692,000,000Taxpayers appearing at the hearing shall have an opportunity to be heard. Comparative statement oftaxes collected and to be collected: (Property tax to be collected in current year and actual collections forthe previous three (3) years.)

To BeCollected Collected Collected Collected

Fund Name 2008 2009 2010 2011General 5,595,542 138,296 2,446Referendum ExemptOperating

Debt Service 1,945,296 3,080,917 3,187,220 3,269,586Exempt Retirement/Severance BondDebt Service 474,078 947,855 901,320 922,945

Referendum DebtExempt Capital

Capital Projects 3,014,207 2,896,128 2,853,064 2,926,504School Transportation 1,609,329 1,749,463 1,803,394 1,841,305School Bus Replacement 3,524 260,061 417,321 41,533

Spec. Ed. Preschool 16,956Total 12,658,932 9,072,720 9,164,765 9,001,873

NoticeIn addition to the annual budget, the proper officers of Jay School Corporation will meet at AdministrationOffice, August 22, 2011 at 6:00 PM to consider the establishment of a Capital Projects Fund Plan.The following is a general outline of the plan:Current Expenditures Account

No. 2012 2013 2014(1) Land Acquisition And Development 41000(2) Professional Services 43000 10,000 10,000 10,000(3) Education Specifications Development 44000(4) Building Acquisition, Construction,

And Improvement(includes 45200 and 45300) 45100 979,890 1,033,890 964,890

(5) Rent Of Buildings, Facilities And Equipment 45500 262,000 262,000 262,000(6) Purchase Of Mobile Or Fixed Equipment 47000 328,000 288,000 278,000(7) Emergency Allocation (Other Facilities

Acquisition and Construction) 49000 23,978 10,000 10,000(8) Utilities (Maintenance of Buildings) 26200 636,132 636,100 636,100(9) Maintenance Of Equipment 26400 304,000 310,010 316,010(10) Sports Facility 45400 157,000 189,000 120,000(11) Property Or Casualty Insurance 26700 135,000 135,000 135,000(12) Other Operation And Maintenance of Plant 26800(13) Technology

Instruction - Related Technology 22300 514,000 516,000 518,000Admin Tech Services 25800

Subtotal Current Expenditures 3,350,000 3,390,000 3,250,000(14) Allocation for Future Projects

Cumulative Totals(15) Transfer From One Fund to Another 60100Total Expenditures and Allocations 3,350,000 3,390,000 3,250,000Sources and Estimates of Revenue(1) January 1, Cash Balance 135,492(2) Less Encumberances Carried Forward

from Previous Year(3) Estimated Cash Balance Available for Plan

(Line 1 Minus Line 2) 135,492(4) Property Tax Revenue 3,034,906 3,210,400 3,070,400(5) Auto Excise, CVET and FIT receipts 179,602 179,600 179,600

(6) Other Revenue (Interest Income)Total Funds Available for Plan (Add Lines 3,4,5,6) 3,350,000 3,390,000 3,250,000Estimated Property Tax Rate to Fund Plan 0.4386 0.4164 0.3972Based upon an assessed Valuation of: 692,000,000 771,000,000 773,000,000Taxpayers are invited to attend the meeting for a more detailed explanation of the plan and to be heard onthe proposed plan.This notice includes Future Allocations which have not previously been subject to taxpayer objections

Project-Location Allocation Allocation Allocationyear 2012 year 2013 year 2014

*Future Allocations as specified above will be subject to objections during the period stated in the Noticeof Adoption to be published at a later date.To be published in years after the first yearThis notice includes Future Allocations which have not previously been subject to taxpayer objections

Project-Location Allocation Allocation Allocationyear 2012 year 2013 year 2014

*Future Allocations as specified above will be subject to objections during the Taxpayers are invited to attend the meeting for a detailed explanation of the plan and to exercise theirrights to be heard on the proposal If the proposal is adopted by resolution, such proposal will be submitted to the Department of LocalGovernment Finance for approval.

Dated this 1st day of August, 2011Board President Greg WellmanVice President Mike Masters

Secretary Larry PaxsonMember Jim SandersMember Ron Laux Member Mike ShannonMember Beth Krieg

In addition to the annual budget the proper officers of Jay School Corporation will meet at AdministrationOffice August 22, 2011 at 6:00 PM to consider the School Bus/Vehicle Replacement Plan as summarizedbelow for twelve (12) year period between 2012 and 2023. The levy required to fund this plan will be raisedas indicated in the Notice to Taxpayers of Budgets and Levies to be collected in 2012. Detail of theproposed plan is on file in the office of the Superintendent for inspection from the date of this notice.Taxpayers shall have the right to be heard on the plan summary as listed below at the public hearing.1. Summary of planned replacements and accumulation for future years

A. B. C. D. E.Total of *Amount to be

No. of buses No. of buses to Year Replacement Accumulated in 2012owned be replaced Cost for future purchases54 17 2012 1,581,936 936,62054 2 2013 112,000 54 201454 1 2015 95,00054 17 2016 1,694,00054 201754 2018 54 16 2019 1,568,00054 202054 202154 202254 1 2023 99,000

*The above only reflects allocations to be raised in 2012. Such amount will be added to Accumulationraised from prior years. Total Accumulations are reflected on Line 11 of the Budget Form 4B, available forinspection in the office of the Superintendent.II. Additional bus needs for year 2012 (Including Contractual Costs per IC-20-40-7-7)Number Bus capacity Year Type of To be Owned Year 2012 Cost of

bus/vehicle or leased Additional buses DOE “TN” (including Bus

Contracts beingshifted to the

Bus Replacement fundN/A 2012

Bust Contracts Per IC 20-40-7-7Section II

Additional Bus needs for year 2012(Including portions of bus contracts being shifted to the bus replacement fund per IC 20-40-7-7)

Bus Description Model Year Type of Owned or leased Year 2012bus/vehicle per Additional CostsDOE “TN”

3 N/A16 Attach Additional if necessary Total Additional Bus Costs17 Bus Contracts Total Contracts to be shifted to Bus Replacement in 201218 Total Additional Buses & Bus Contracts for Section II (Line 16+Line 17)Section IIIJustification for replacement and/or additional bus purchases 1. If the School Corporation is seeking to acquire or contract for transportation services that will provide foradditional school buses or buses with a larger seating capacity as compared to the number and type of schoolbuses from the prior school year, explain for each additional bus, the circumstances of the demand forincreased transportation services within the School Corporation. (Add additional sheets if necessary) N/A 2. If the School Corporation is seeking to replace an existing school bus earlier than twelve (12) years after theexisting school bus was originally acquired or requires a contractor to replace a school bus, explain for eachbus the circumstances for that need. (Attach additional sheets if necessary) N/A CR August 10, 17, 2011 NS August 10,17, 2011

250 Public NoticesPublic Notice

2011-03 Ordinance No. 03 Amending ordinance no. 1995-2 asamended in 2008 by the Board of County Commissioners of

Jay County, Indiana An ordinance prohibiting the operation of trucks on certain county highways within Jay County, Indiana

Whereas, I.C. 9-20-1-3(c) and I.C. 9-21-1-2 provide for statutoryauthority for local authorities including county Boards ofCommissioners to regulate roads and highways under its ju-risdiction by ordinance including the prohibition of the op-eration of motor vehicles upon such highways and roadswithin the jurisdiction of the local authority; and Whereas, the Board of Commissioners desires to restricttruck and/or motor vehicle traffic upon sections of certainJay County highways to prevent unreasonable deteriorationof said highways and for purposes of general pubic safety. Now therefore, be it ordained by the Board of County Com-missioners of Jay County, Indiana as follows:

Section one. Jay County Ordinance 1995-2 is amended byOrdinance in 2008 is hereby amended to add to these high-ways upon which the operation of a truck is unlawful to thatsection is hereby added the following County Highways towit:

(a) County Road 750 West between Indiana State Road 18and County Road 550 North. (b) County Road 750 West from County Road 450 North to400 North, (c) County Road 500 North between County Road 750 Westto 650. Section two. This Ordinance shall not apply to pickup

trucks, school buses, delivery vehicles which must stopwithin the above designated sections of County Highways tomake deliveries in their normal course of business, or to ve-hicles owned and operated by property owners located ad-jacent to the designated sections of County Highways uponwhich traffic's prohibited which is owned by the vehicle op-erator.

Section three. A person found guilty of violating this Or-dinance shall be subject to a minimum fine of Fifty Dollars($50.00) and a maximum fine of Two Thousand Five HundredDollars ($2,500.00) for an initial violation of the Ordinanceand shall be subject to a minimum fine of Two Hundred Dol-lars ($200.00) and a maximum fine of Two Thousand FiveHundred Dollars ($2,500.00) for each subsequent violation ofthe Ordinance.

Section four. This Ordinance shall be in full force and ef-fect from and after the date of its adoption by said Board ofCounty Commissioners of Jay County, Indiana.

Section five. The Board of County Commissioners are fur-ther authorized by this Ordinance and pursuant to I.C. 36-2-4-8(b) may from time to time designate additional highwaysor roads under the jurisdiction of the County Commissionersas highways and roads upon which such motor vehicle trafficas above described is prohibited and that such prohibition tomotor vehicle traffic is of urgent necessity for the safety ofother persons using said highways and for upon which trucktraffic is prohibited the County Commissioners shall pur-suant to I.C. 36-2-4-8-(b )(2) cause copies of such amendmentsof this Ordinance to be posted in three public places withinJay County. Passed and adopted by the Jay County Commissioners in reg-ular session on this 25th day of July, 2011.

Board of County Commissioners of Jay County, Indiana Milo Miller

Jim ZimmermanFaron Parr

Attest: Nancy Culy, Jay County Auditor

CR August 3, 10, 2011 NS August 3, 10, 2011

250 Public Notices

Public NoticePetition for Name ChangeNotice is hereby given

that Dreama Rene Walkerhas filed a petition tochange her name to DrewOsroe Walker in the JayCircuit Court No. 38C01-1105-MI-10 on May 2, 2011.Any person has the right toappear at the hearingSeptember 20, 2011 at 9:30am and to file objections.CR July 27, August 3, 10, 2011

Public NoticeNotice to Taxpayers

Notice is hereby given to taxpayers of Jay County Public Library, Jay County, Indiana thatthe proper officers of Jay County Public Library at 4:00 pm on Monday, September 19, 2011,at 315 N. Ship St., Portland, IN will conduct a public hearing on the year 2012 budget.Following this meeting, any ten or more taxpayers may object to a budget, tax rate, or taxlevy by filing an objection petition with the proper officers of the political subdivisionwithin seven days after the hearing. The objection petition must identify the provisions ofthe budget, tax rate, or tax levy that taxpayers object to. If a petition is filed, the politicalsubdivision shall adopt with its budget a finding concerning the objections filed andtestimony presented. Following the aforementioned hearing, the said unit will meet at 4:00pm on October 03, 2011 at 315 N. Ship St., Portland, IN to adopt the following budget. Net Assesed Valuation: $609,821,00Estimated Max Levy $537,048

Maximum Estimated Excessive Levy CurrentFund Name Budget Estimate Funds to raise Appeals Tax levyTotal $986,831 $687,892.00 $0 $647,0870101-General $812,545 $537,100 $0 $500,0530180-Debt Service $154,286 $150,792 $0 $147,0342011-Library Improvement Reserve $20,000 $0 $0 $0CR August 10, 17, 2011, NS August 10, 17, 2011

250 Public Notices

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www.thecr.com The Commercial ReviewPage 12

SportsWednesday, August 10, 2011

Vote in our poll aboutJCHS fall sports teamsby visiting thecr.com

Jay, SAHS spikersscrimmage Thursday,

see Sports on tap

ScoreboardMMaajjoorr LLeeaagguuee BBaasseebbaallll

Colorado 3, Cincinnati 2Washington 3, Chicago Cubs 1Chicago White Sox 4, Baltimore 3Cleveland 3, Detroit 2, 14 innings

Local scheduleTTooddaayy

South Adams — Girls golf vs. Wes-Del – 4 p.m.

TThhuurrssddaayyJay County — Volleyball scrimmage

at South Adams – 6 p.m.Fort Recovery — Boys golf hosts

quad – 9 a.m.South Adams — Volleyball scrim-

mage vs. Jay County – 6 p.m.; Boys ten-nis scrimmage at Madison-Grant – 5p.m.; Girls golf at Blackford Invitational –9 a.m.

TV scheduleTTooddaayy

7 p.m. — Major League Baseball:Los Angeles Angels at New York Yankees(ESPN)

7 p.m. — Little League Baseball:World Series – Southeast Regional semi-final (ESPN2)

8 p.m. — Major League Baseball:Washington Nationals at Chicago Cubs(WGN)

9 p.m. — Soccer: United States vs.Mexico (ESPN2)

TThhuurrssddaayyNoon — ATP Tennis: U.S. Open Series

– Rogers Cup round of 16 (ESPN2)1 p.m. — Golf: PGA Championship –

First round (TNT)2 p.m. — Little League Baseball:

World Series – Midwest Regional semifinal(ESPN)

4 p.m. — Little League Baseball:World Series – Northwest Regional semifi-nal (ESPN2)

Local notesJJaayy ttiicckkeettss aarree oonn ssaallee

Jay County High School super andseason tickets are on sale.

Tickets are available in the JCHS ath-letics office from 7 a.m. to noon and 1p.m. to 3:30 p.m. today through Aug. 18.Beginning Aug. 19 they will be sold duringschool hours — 7:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m.

Super tickets, which provide admis-sion to all home, regular-season athleticevents, are $70 for adults, $45 for seniorcitizens and $30 for students. Family tick-ets, which can be used for two parentsand children in grades one through 12 inthe same family, are $175.

Football season tickets are $20, andbasketball season tickets are $40.

For more information, call the JCHSathletics office at (260) 726-9806.

Sports on tap

Sarahsetting

Sarah Walter putsup a set during a drillTuesday on theopening day of the JayCounty High Schoolvolleyball program’scamp for fifth througheighth graders. Thecamp continuesthrough Friday.

The Commercial Reviewl/Ray Cooney

CINCINNATI (AP) — Troy Tulowitzki hita two-run homer, Esmil Rogers pitched justwell enough for six innings and the Col-orado Rockies sent the Cincinnati Reds totheir fifth loss in six games with a 3-2 win onTuesday night.Dexter Fowler had two of Colorado’s five

hits and drove in the go-ahead run for theRockies.Lack of clutch hitting continued to

plague the Reds, who were 0 for 10 with run-ners in scoring position and left DontrelleWillis still looking for his first win in sixstarts since being called up from Triple-A onJuly 10.Willis (0-2) lowered his ERA from 3.41 to

3.16 and finished with a season-high 10strikeouts.Rogers (6-1) allowed eight hits and two

runs with six strikeouts and two walks.Matt Reynolds, Josh Roenicke and Rex

Brothers combined for two scorelessinnings of relief before Rafael Betancourtpitched the ninth for his first save of the sea-son and 20th of his career.Willis, who went into the game with

Cincinnati’s longest active hitting streak atfive games, followed Ramon Hernandez’ssecond-inning leadoff single with a one-outtriple into the corner in right. The triple wasthe sixth of Willis’s career and first since hehit three for Florida in 2007.

Rockies defeat Willis

HAGERSTOWN — Thetrend of improvementcontinued Tuesday for thePatriots.Jay County High

School’s girls golf teammade its most dramaticjump of the young season,posting their best score ofthe year by34 strokeswith a 417at theHager-stown Invi-tational. Itfinishedfifth in the eight teamfield while the host Tigerswon with a 371 andFranklin County was sec-ond at 396.The Patriots have sliced

nearly 80 strokes sinceopening the season Aug. 2with a 495 in the MonroeCentral Invitational atHickory Hills Golf Club.Alysia Fennig became

the first Jay County play-er this season to break100, leading the team forthe third straight outingwith a 99. She totaled 11bogeys, including fourstraight on holes 11through 14.Whitney Gray turned

in two of the Patriots’ fourpars, playing even on theseventh and 17th holes.She finished just onestroke behind Fennig witha season-best 100.Brittany Stevens had

one par to go along withfive bogeys on the way tocarding a 104. CortneyMyers tallied 57s on eachnine to round out the teamscore with a 114, andKatlin Petro finished at115.

Jay Co.cuts 34strokes

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) —Healthy again, JerraudPowers will likely be one ofthe Indianapolis Colts’starting cornerbacks whenthe regular season begins.A two-year starter at

right cornerback, Powersmissed the final four gamesof last regular season andthe AFC Divisional playoffgame against the New YorkJets with a foot injury.Who will start opposite

Powers remains a big ques-tion heading into Saturdaynight’s preseason openerwith the St. Louis Rams.Jacob Lacey has worked

with the first team sincethe start of training camplast week. He’s penciled into start against St. Louisand is the favorite to winthe job. But he’s gettingcompetition from JustinTryon, Kelvin Hayden,Brandon King, KevinThomas and rookie ChrisRucker.Thomas was a third-

round draft choice last yearwho missed his rookie sea-son with a knee injury.King was an undrafted freeagent in 2010 and is comingoff a season-ending ham-string issue. And thenthere’s Rucker, a formerMichigan State standoutwho has been battling agimpy left ankle duringtraining camp.“(He) hasn’t given us a

real great opportunity toevaluate him thoroughly,”Coach Jim Caldwell said.“He looks the part, obvi-ously he’s big and strongand he’s a guy that loves toplay so we will see, we willhave to evaluate him fur-

ther in the next coupledays.”Tryon isn’t worried about

where he winds up on theColts’ depth chart. If hedoesn’t earn a starting job,he’ll most likely end up asthe nickel cornerback forIndianapolis.“I don’t see it as a battle

(for a starting job) or any-thing like that. I just thinkwe are going in as we arejust competing, all of usactually just from Jerraudall the way down ... ,” hesaid.“The best people are

going to win on the field.”Rucker is still trying to

learn as much as he canabout the Colts’ defensivescheme.“Those guys definitely

know the defense,” he said.“They’ve made plays beforeand they’ve proven that. I’mjust trying to compete.”

DB battleunderway

Cornerbackcompetition

The Indianapolis Colts have agroup of players vying to earn astarting cornerback slot across thefield from Jerraud Powers. Listedbelow are the contenders, and howthey fared last season.

KKeellvviinn HHaayyddeenn61 tackles, two interceptions

BBrraannddoonn KKiinnggOne tackle

JJaaccoobb LLaacceeyy51 tackles, one interception

KKeevviinn TThhoommaassSenior at Southern California

JJuussttiinn TTrryyoonn34 tackles

NNeexxtt mmaattcchhvs. Anderson

IndiansMonday, 4:30 p.m.