INDIANAPOLIS — Improve-ment in the state unemployment rate was magnifi ed in the area in August, as all four northeast Indiana counties saw their unemployment rates improve by a percentage point or more.
“The signifi cant decrease in Indiana’s unemployment rate in August is defi nitely encouraging, but the fact is too many Hoosiers are still unemployed,” said Scott B. Sanders, commissioner of the Indiana Department of Workforce Development. “This underscores
the need to bring unemployed individuals into WorkOne following their fourth week of receiving benefi ts. It is vital we get folks on the path to reemployment as soon as possible.”
Reports released Friday by the DWD said DeKalb, LaGrange and Steuben counties each saw their unemployment rates fall by 1 percentage point from the revised July fi gures.
DeKalb County’s rate improved to 7.4 percent in August, while LaGrange County’s unemploy-
ment rate dropped to 7.2 percent and Steuben County’s dropped to 7.5 percent.
Noble County saw its unemployment rate drop by 1.1 percentage points to 7.3 percent in August.
DeKalb, Noble and Steuben countie each saw a slight drop in their labor force for the month, and Steuben County saw its number of employed workers drop by 29.
However, LaGrange County,
despite seeing its labor force rise, saw its number of unemployed workers drop below 1,000 in August.
Allen County saw an even larger drop in its unemployment rate, falling from 8.7 percent in July to 7.1 percent in August.
“Retooling has wrapped at several major manufacturers, likely contributing to the positive dynamics month-over-month as workers have returned to those production lines. The year-over-year improvement in the region’s
Jobless rate much better at 7.4%
Index•
Classifi eds ................................. B7-B8Life ..................................................... A3Obituaries ......................................... A4Opinion ............................................. A5Sports......................................... B1-B3Weather............................................ A8TV/Comics .......................................B6
The Star118 W. Ninth St. Auburn, IN 46706
Auburn: (260) 925-2611Fax: (260) 925-2625
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Info•
Vol. 101 No. 260
GOOD MORNING
Football ScoreboardCol. City 34DeKalb 12
Bluffton 28Garrett 14
Fairfi eld 56Eastside 28
East Noble 27Carroll 7
Churubusco 14Angola 7
Weather Partly sunny today.Chance of showersHigh 68. Low 45.Sunny and clear Sunday. High 67.
Page A8
SATURDAYSeptember 21, 2013
Auburn, Indiana k p c n e w s . c o m 75 cents
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ComingSunday
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how honey is created and what else honey bees are
used for, on Sunday’s C1 and C2.
Clip and SaveFind $67 in coupon savings in Sunday’s
newspaper.
Unemployment ratesIn percentages
COUNTY AUG. JULY AUG. 2013 2013 2012DeKalb 7.4 8.4 8.9LaGrange 6.2 7.2 7.8Noble 7.3 8.4 9.0Steuben 7.5 8.5 8.7Allen 7.1 8.7 8.4Elkhart 7.7 8.5 9.3Indiana* 8.1 8.4 8.4U.S.* 7.3 7.4 8.1*seasonally adjusted
SOURCE: INDIANA DEPARTMENT OF WORKFORCE DEVELOPMENTSEE JOBLESS, PAGE A8
PHOTO CONTRIBUTED BY VALERIE HACKBUSH
DeKalb show choir wins Bluffton contestDeKalb High School’s Classic Connection show choir members celebrate with their trophy after winning fi rst place in a contest Thursday night at the Bluffton Street Fair. Northrop placed second out of fi ve competing choirs, followed by East
Noble in third place. Classic Connection will perform as part of a choir show Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. on the main stage of the DeKalb County Free Fall Fair in Auburn.
BY PATRICK [email protected]
ALBION — What a difference a year makes.
Last fall, Rachael Bender said, her family-owned orchard, Bender’s Orchard, “barely produced enough apples to make a good pie.”
This year, however, apples at the southern Noble County orchard are in abundance.
“Yes, yes, and we’re very happy about that!” Bender exclaimed. “We have a really good crop of apples this year, and it looks great!”
Apple growers across northern Indiana are reporting bumper crops of apples this year, only one year after suffering through last season and what might have been the worst apple crop harvest on record.
“It’s as good this year as it was bad last year,” said LaGrange County apple grower Martin Franke. “We’ve got a lot of apples.”
Franke’s apple operation produced less than one-quarter its normal yield last year. His farm, like others in the area, was slammed by 2012’s strange twist of weather.
First, spring came early to northern Indiana last year, with the area basking in record warm temperatures by mid-March. That springlike weather caused apple trees to produce blossoms early —blossoms that later were damaged or killed when normal cold and frosty weather returned to Indiana in April. What few Indiana apples managed to survive the frost then had to endure a two-month-long drought.
“I had about 35 percent of my normal crop last year,” said Rick Meyer of Kendallville’s Orchard Hills Farms. Meyer operates one of the largest orchards in the
area, with trees covering more than 70 acres. His farm is a major wholesaler of apples, and like Bender and Franke, Meyer agreed that this is a great year for Indiana apple growers.
“We have a big crop,” Meyer said of the fruit on his farm.
Orchard Hills Farm’s trees are loaded with fruit this year. His farm grows dozens of different
varieties of apples, including honeycrisp, a very popular sweet and tart apple that Meyer said will be a huge crop this season.
“We have a big crop of just about everything,” Meyer said.
But this year’s apple crop isn’t just big, it’s a good crop, too.
“I’d say all in all, quality- and quantity-wise, this is best we’ve
APPLES IN ABUNDANCE
PATRICK REDMOND
Orchard owner Christine Franke reaches to check an apple on a tree on her rural LaGrange County fruit farm. Franke’s 400-plus apple trees are loaded with fruit this season.
What a difference a year makes for local orchards
SEE APPLES, PAGE A8
WASHINGTON (AP) — The GOP-controlled House voted Friday to cripple President Barack Obama’s health care law as part of a risky ploy that threatens a partial shutdown of the government in a week and a half.
The fi ght is coming on a stopgap funding measure required to keep the government fully running after the Oct. 1 start of the new budget year. Typically, such measures advance with sweeping bipartisan support, but tea party activists forced GOP leaders — against their better judgment — to add a provision to cripple the health care law that is the signature accomplishment of Obama’s fi rst term.
Republicans welcomed the vote, saying the new health care law is a disaster that is forcing cutbacks in workers’ hours, raising health insurance premiums and being implemented unfairly. House Republicans have voted more than 40 times to disable all or part of the health care law.
“With just 11 days until millions are forced onto ObamaCare’s exchanges, House Republicans voted to save the American people from this train wreck,” said U.S. Rep. Marlin Stutzman, R-Ind.
“Over the past months, I’ve heard the stories of families struggling to pay soaring premiums, businesses dropping coverage and workers cashing smaller paychecks,” Stutzman added. “Today, we responded by passing practical legislation that defunds ObamaCare. By funding the government, we’ve taken a government shutdown off the table and stopped ObamaCare’s severe impact — it’s time for the Senate to side with the American people, as well.”
The partisan 230-189 vote sets the stage for a confrontation with the Democratic-led Senate, which promises to strip the health care provision from the bill next week and challenge the House to pass it as a simple, straightforward funding bill that President Barack Obama will sign.
“Republicans are simply postponing for a few days the inevitable choice they must face: Pass a clean bill to fund the
BudgetbattlebeginsHouse votes to kill Obamacare
Stutzman
SEE BUDGET, PAGE A8
DeKalb Health, cardiology group form partnership
AUBURN — DeKalb Health and Parkview Physicians Group (PPG)-Cardiology announced a new partnership Friday to provide “unique and specialized services aimed at improving the heart health of DeKalb County.”
“DeKalb Health is proud to announce this relation-ship embracing Parkview Cardiology,” said Fred Price, chief executive offi cer of DeKalb Health. “This is not a new relationship, but one moving toward providing more robust outpatient cardiovascular testing.”
“This alignment gives both organizations the ability to provide great cardiology services to a great community, said Mark O’Shaughnessy, cardiologist, PPG-Cardiology.
PPG-Cardiology already provides many outpatient treatment services inside DeKalb Health, and the new partnership will open the door to new opportunities for additional services that will be announced later.
AUBURN — The source of Auburn’s drinking water is groundwater produced from wells located in the community.
To help protect the underground aquifer and the water supply wells from contamination, the City of Auburn continues to implement the Wellhead Protection Plan, which was originally approved by the Indiana Department of Environmental Management in April 2003.
The city’s Wellhead Protection Local Planning Team meets annually
to update the plan and implement management strategies to protect Auburn’s drinking water source. A complete copy of the Wellhead Protec-tion Plan and educational pamphlets are available to the public at the Auburn Water Department, 800 North St.
The Local Planning Team held its annual meeting Aug. 28 to discuss the Wellhead Protec-tion Program. Auburn’s Wellhead Protection Program focuses on public awareness and education and spill prevention and reporting.
In the upcoming year, the Local Planning Team will continue public education efforts and will focus on identifying septic systems and active, inactive and abandoned wells.
Leachate from an improperly maintained septic system has the potential to directly affect groundwater used for the public water supply.
Water wells that become damaged, or are no longer used, are a potential conduit for surface contamination to reach the groundwater and contaminate the underground drinking water source.
Anyone who has a well on a local property is requested to contact Clint Sites of the Auburn Water Department at 925-5711 so that it can be added to a tracking database.
The city offered these tips to help protect the city’s drinking water source:
• Recycle used oil, automotive fl uids, batteries, and other products. Don’t dispose of hazardous
products in toilets, storm drains, wastewater systems, creeks, alleys or the ground. This pollutes the water supply. Contact the Northeast Indiana Solid Waste Management District at 587-3063 for recycling events in the area.
• Reduce the amount of fertilizers, pesticides, or other hazardous chemicals used. Buy only what is needed so it is not necessary to dispose of leftovers. Read labels and follow all directions on household chemicals and other hazardous products used around the home.
• Check cars, boats, motorcycles and other machinery and equipment for leaks and spills. Place drip pans under leaking vehicles/equipment and make repairs as soon as possible. Clean up spilled fl uids with an absorbent material such as kitty litter or sand and properly dispose of the material. Do not rinse spills with water or into a nearby storm drain and do not allow spills to soak into the ground.
• Properly abandon water wells that are no longer in use. Information is available from the Water Department.
• Properly maintain septic systems. Information is available from the Water Department.
“The City of Auburn feels that drinking water protection is the responsi-bility of all citizens,” the Water Department said in a news release. “By assisting the city with its wellhead protection efforts, residents and business can help ensure the people of Auburn have a safe water supply now and in the future.”
Auburn continues to work on protection of wellheads
A2 THE STAR kpcnews.com AREA • STATE •
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 2013
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PHOTO CONTRIBUTED
Staff members of the new DeKalb Health After Hours Walk-In Clinic, from left, Kristi King, MSN, NP-C; Kelly Brown, RN; and Mandie Grate, CNA, perform a mock walk-through. They are ensuring procedures and processes will be followed to result in high-quality, personalized care for patients of the clinic, which opens Monday.
AUBURN — DeKalb Health will open its Medical Group’s new after-hours walk-in care clinic Monday.
The DeKalb Health After Hours Walk-In Clinic is intended to provide convenient, affordable non-emergency care seven days a week. Through the clinic, experienced providers of the DeKalb Health Medical Group will treat a range of minor, non-emer-gency health concerns, including allergies, respira-tory infections, minor burns and/or injuries and cold/fl u. No appointment is required to be seen.
“We are excited about expanding physician services to open an after-hours clinic with walk-in accessibility,” said Matt Lehn, vice president of physician services for DeKalb Health. “With our new clinic, patients who require non-emergent, primary care in the evening or on a weekend can now receive high-quality, attentive service from
experienced DeKalb Health Medical Group providers in a convenient, affordable way.
“Through this new clinic,” Lehn added, “we can continue to provide appropriate levels of care and service for our patients, which helps keep costs down for them and for us.”
The DeKalb Health After Hours Walk-In Clinic will be open from 4-9 p.m. Monday through Friday and 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. on Saturday and Sunday. It is currently operating out of a temporary location in the Physician Offi ce Entrance 1310 in Suite G until its permanent location is fi nalized and completed.
The clinic will accept most major health insurance plans, and no appointment is needed. A service fee of $25 will be charged per patient at time of service in addition to a co-pay.
More information about the clinic and its services and providers is available at dekalbhealth.com.
DeKalb Health opening new after-hours clinic
BY MATT [email protected]
ROME CITY — A woman who was abducted late Wednesday was found early Friday morning and is safe, police said.
Jennifer Lee Bitzel of Peru was located in Rome City by that town’s police department, a news release from the LaGrange County Sheriff’s Depart-ment said.
“It’s great that it ended this way,” Rome City Town Marshal Steve Heltzel said.
“We’re pleased she’s been located and that at least she wasn’t terribly hurt,” said John Parrish, investigator for the LaGrange County Prosecutor’s Offi ce.
Parrish said Bitzel has bruising to her head, face and throat.
Bitzel’s Facebook page says she was a member of the East Noble High School class of 2003 and previously lived in Rome City.
Police still are searching for Steven Gail Gose, 40, who is believed to be involved in the abduction.
Lagrange County Superior Court Judge Brown has issued an additional warrant for Gose on charges of criminal confi nement, a Class C Felony, and two Class D felony offenses, domestic battery and strangula-tion.
Gose also currently has an active warrant for his arrest on a parole violation.
Anyone who spots Gose is urged to contact the LaGrange County Sheriff’s Department or call 911. Gose should still be considered armed and dangerous and should not be approached by anyone other than law enforcement, police said.
“We have found him to be unpredictable and dangerous when confronted by law enforcement,”
Parrish said.Police said Gose is 5-foot-10 and
175 pounds.The investigation has revealed that
several people have been involved with transporting, hiding and assisting Gose, police said. The LaGrange County Prosecutor’s offi ce said anyone who assists Gose also is committing a crime, and each lead on those who are assisting him will be looked into and considered for prosecution accord-ingly.
Police said Bitzel had last been seen at 10:30 p.m. Wednesday at a residence in the 3000 block of LaGrange C.R. 600E.
It is alleged that at the residence, Bitzel was the victim of an extensive battery. She then was removed forcefully from the residence by a man who allegedly made death threats to Bitzel before forcing her into a silver, 2001 Pontiac Grand Prix, four-door sedan, bearing Indiana registration 543AIB.
Bitzel’s two young children were left behind at the residence.
Abducted woman found safe
Bitzel
Gose
BY AARON [email protected]
AUBURN — The DeKalb County Airport Authority on Friday approved a pair of projects.
To cover their costs, it will search for funds in its budget or seek additional appropriations from the DeKalb County Council.
The board approved a contract with local contractor Pfi ster to clear away four acres of trees on the airport’s west end for $25,000.
When the airport installed its instrument landing system years ago, it had to clear trees in the path. The Indiana Depart-ment of Environmental Management and the Army Corps of Engineers allowed only a portion of the trees to be cleared, though, until wetlands in the area were mitigated.
With that mitigation now complete, the full clearing can be competed. In fact, airport manager Russ Couchman said IDEM has threatened to raise the airport’s ceiling minimum if it does not clear the
obstructing trees.The board then approved
a contract with Hewes Concrete Construction to refi nish a fl oor of the hangar leased by Parkview Hospital for its Samaritan medical helicopter. The job will cost $22,720.
The Samaritan crew has told Couchman that when the fl oor of the hangar is wet, it becomes extremely slippery and hazardous. Hughes will grind down the current epoxy fi nish and apply a polish to the fl oor.
Airport Authority president Brad Stump said the payback to the airport for the project would be 12 1/2 months, fi guring the hangar’s $1,800 per month lease.
The board approved both projects under the stipula-tion that they not exceed the contract cost. The board said it will work within its budget to cover as much of the costs as possible before approaching the County Council for the remaining balance.
Also Friday, the authority board welcomed new member John Harris, who
fi lls a vacancy left by the resignation of Brad Moore earlier this month.
Harris is retired as a plant manager with Dana Corp. and served as a neighborhood liaison for the airport for several years. A local resident since 1980, Harris said he welcomed the appointment to the board by the county commissioners.
“I was interested in it,” said Harris, a political independent. “I’ve been a neighbor of the airport for many years, and I am and always was interested in the airport goings-on, so it was a good opportunity for me.”
Jesse Myers, who also was named to the board by county commissioners to fi ll a vacancy left by the death of former board president Jim Mason, was not in attendance Friday due to a previous commitment.
The board also was peppered with questions by residents concerned over relocation of electric transmission lines away from airport property.
Several residents approached the board, upset
with a plan by American Electric Power to move power lines between C.R. 29 and 31 that would place them directly on and above their properties.
Last month, the board approved an agreement with AEP to move lines for $2.6 million. The reloca-tion is part of the airport’s planned runway extension project, because the lines interfere with fl ight patterns, though the lines need to be moved whether the runway extension goes through or not, the board has been told.
The relocation would place the lines on the properties of several residents. Those residents questioned why AEP would not either fi nd a new path of bury the lines. The board has been told the power company is reluctant to bury lines following a blackout of the Eastern seaboard several years ago.
Airport counsel Jim McCanna suggested the residents hire an attorney and approach AEP with alternate suggestions for the lines.
Airport Authority approves projects
VIDEOVIDEO FEATURES FEATURES onon
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — A man hiding behind an apartment door shot and killed an Indianapolis police offi cer as he kicked his way in early Friday, authorities said, responding to a woman screaming for help after being held at gunpoint for three hours.
Offi cer Rod Bradway had been talking to the man for
several minutes before the woman’s screams prompted him to kick in the door, Detective Thomas Lehn told The Indianapolis Star. The man then ambushed Bradway, he said.
He said the 41-year-old Bradway, who was pronounced dead at an Indianapolis hospital, had little time to react.
Gunman kills police offi cer
Area Activities•
In the Service•
Paw Prints•
TheStar kpcnews.com A3SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 2013
For a detailed listing of churches in your area, log on to kpcnews.com/churches.
The Star will print the area church listings the fi rst weekend of each month.
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Sebert Oil Company
Auburn Moose
Family Center
GARAGE SALEThis Sat., September 21
11 AM-4 PM
402 S.
Main St.
DeKalb County Free Fall Fair
Wednesday,September 25
LUNCH 12:00Served by Smith Farms Manor
60 and older
PROGRAM 1:00Entertainment and Awards
First United Methodist Church 1203 East 7th Street
Auburn
Old Settlers Day
DeKalb County Residents
Gonzalez graduates from basic training
FORT MEADE, Md. — Air Force Airman 1st Class Bernardo G. Gonzalez graduated from basic military training at Joint Base San Antonio-Lack-land, in San Antonio, Texas.
Gonzalez is the son of Enrique Salazar of Kendall-ville, and a 2008 graduate of Eastside High School.
He earned an associate degree in 2009 from Lincoln Technical Institute, Indianapolis.
The airman completed
an intensive, eight-week program that included training in military discipline and studies, Air Force core values, physical
fi tness, and basic warfare principles and skills.
Airmen who complete basic training earn four
credits toward an associate in applied science degree through the Community College of the Air Force.
From left are Teca Slone, Brandy Wimer, Kayla Baker, Clayton Baker and Loren Buse, all volunteers with H.O.P.E., a teen outreach starting in Auburn. Teens
can visit the H.O.P.E. center at 202 S. Jackson St.., Auburn, on Monday, Tuesday and Thursday from 4-6 p.m.
PHOTO CONTRIBUTED
BY OCTAVIA [email protected]
AUBURN — Eight years of foster care for at-risk teen girls made Brandy Wimer empathize with the problems teens are facing.
She said she always has had a passion for teens who are hurting.
Along with other adult volunteers, Wimer is starting H.O.P.E., Heroes of Peers Encouraging. The Auburn woman’s vision is to help hurting teens in her city.
She wants to train youth in peer mentoring and to educate teens about suicide prevention.
While Wimer is still in the process of obtaining a nonprofi t status, the organi-zation has rented a space across from the Auburn Post Offi ce at 202 S. Jackson St. and is welcoming teens to visit.
H.O.P.E. will hold an open house Friday during the DeKalb County Free Fall
Fair from 10 a.m. to noon. Creative Comedy Art will provide face painting, and guests can enjoy free food.
Currently, H.O.P.E. is open Monday, Tuesday and Thursday from 4-6 p.m. The center provides snacks, games and homework help from volunteers.
“I want to provide a place of refuge for them,” Wimer said. “A place where they can feel safe and beautiful.”
Since opening, Wimer has been given donations to supply the center with games and furniture.
Through H.O.P.E., Wimer wants to educate teens to impact their community. She is providing Lifelines, a suicide prevention training course, as one of the main educational tools.
She held her fi rst training session of Lifelines with two teens Sept. 7.
“Every suicide thought needs to be taken seriously,” Wimer said. “(The thoughts) should not be taken as a joke.”
When she was a teen, Wimer said at times she felt like she didn’t have anyone. “Every teen goes
through the stage of feeling worthless,” she said.
With the foster children in her care, Wimer learned to just sit and listen.
“You will be amazed with the difference you can make,” Wimer said.
As the organization grows, Wimer hopes to get involved with local schools to offer Safe Dates, a 10-day anti-dating violence curric-ulum for middle and high school students.
Wimer serves on the DeKalb County Domestic Violence Task Force.
While the space on South Jackson Street is small, Wimer hopes to eventually fi nd a place so teens can meet on Friday evenings.
To learn more about H.O.P.E., visit Facebook.com/herosofpeersencouraging.
Reaching out to teens
Gonzalez
TodayAuburn Farmers
Market: 6 a.m. to 1 p.m. Local vendors sell produce, fl owers, herbs, spices, honey, baked goods, and other products. 100 S. Main St., Auburn.
American Sign Language Class: 10 a.m. Designed for beginners of American Sign Language. Class covers the basics of ASL, including the alphabet, numbers, simple vocabulary and casual conversation. The class meets in room one of the lower level of the church. No registration is necessary. For more informa-tion, contact Pam Helton at 925-4417 or [email protected]. New Hope Christian Center, 900 S. Wayne St., Waterloo.
Bingo: Early games start at 6 p.m. today and Monday. National Military History Center, 5634 County Road 11-A, Auburn.
Sunday, Sept. 22Bingo: 5 p.m. Open to
the public. Food and drinks available. American Legion Post 97, 1729 Sprott St., Auburn.
Monday, Sept. 23Adult Basic Education/
GED Class: 8-11 a.m. and 4-7 p.m. today through Thursday. Call the IMPACT Institute at 888-349-0250. Auburn Presbyterian Church, 111 W. Twelfth St., Auburn.
Adult Basic Education/GED Class: 4-7 p.m. today and Wednesday; 9 a.m. to noon Tuesday and Thursday. Call 888-349-0250 ext. 251 for more information. Ashley Community Center, 500 S. Gonser Ave., Ashley.
Little River Chorus rehearsal: 6-9 p.m. Little River Chorus of Sweet Adelines International is a national barbershop organi-zation for women. The group is open to new members. For more information, call 475-5482. Fairview Missionary Church, 525 E. C.R. 200N, Angola.
American Sign Language Classes: 6-8 p.m. Designed for beginners of American Sign Language. Class covers the basics of ASL, including the alphabet, numbers, simple vocabulary and casual conversation. The class meets in room one of the lower level of the church. No registration is necessary. For more informa-tion, contact Pam Helton at 925-4417 or [email protected]. New Hope Christian Center, 900 S. Wayne St., Waterloo.
Pets of the WeekThe DeKalb Humane
Society features two pets of the week, Myra and Spaghetti-o.
Myra arrived at the shelter on March 15, 2013.
She is a female boxer-terrier mix. Myra was surren-dered by her owner and is 3 years old. She currently weighs 56 pounds. Myra is rather shy at fi rst, but once she gets to know people, she is friendly. Myra is patiently waiting to go to her forever home.
Spaghetti-o is a male, American shorthair cat. He arrived at the shelter on Aug. 29, 2012. He is considered an adult. He is patiently waiting on his forever home.
To see all of the shelter’s adoptable pets, visit to petfi nder.com. Type in zipcode 46721 to fi nd pets.
Red Carpet fundraiserThe annual fall fundraiser
will be Oct. 17 at the
National Military History Center from 6-9 p.m.
The cost is $50 per person and $90 per couple. Guests can enjoy a meal, as well as live and silent auctions. Reservations will be accepted through Oct. 4.
To make a reservation, call 868-2409.
Paws for PhotosKasey Wallace Photog-
raphy LLC of Garrett will donate 100 percent of its proceeds for scheduled mini sessions now through Dec. 31 to the DeKalb Humane Society.
A charity mini session costs $100 and includes 30 minutes at a location of choice. The package includes 10 digital fi les, two 8x10 prints and four 5x7 prints. A 10 percent discount will be given to any additional products ordered. All proceeds will support the DeKalb Humane Society.
A check will be presented to the Humane Society on Dec. 31, with a list of participants from the mini sessions.
For more information, visit kaseywallace.com
Paw Prints is a weekly update from the DeKalb Humane Society, 5221 U.S. 6, Butler. Contact the DeKalb Humane Society at 868-2409.
Myra
Spaghetti-o
540 E. Marion Street, Waterloo260-837-2802
www.hartmanautobody.com
Please drive carefully.
They’re out there.
Auburn group wants to help area youth
Meet H.O.P.EWHO: Volunters with H.O.P.E.
WHAT: Open house, with face painting and free food
WHEN: Friday from 10 a.m. to noon during the Free Fall Fair
WHERE: 202 S. Jackson St., Auburn
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Terry PresleyANGOLA — Terry
Jean Presley, age 66, of Angola, Indiana, passed away at 7:50 p.m. Thursday evening, September 19, 2013, at Cameron Memorial Community Hospital, with her family by her side.
Terry was born on November 7, 1946 in New Castle, Indiana, the daughter of Charles S. “Pete” and Lois M. (Henderson) Colwell. They preceded her in death.
Terry married Samuel E. Presley on March 18, 1967, at the Ashley Hudson Nazarene Church, and he survives.
She graduated from Fremont High School and lived most of her life in Steuben County area, living at Orland, Nevada Mills, and Angola. She was a member of The Olde York Church, Fremont, Indiana.
She worked for 15 years as a cashier for the Petro Truck Stop in Fremont.
She and her husband Sam were very active helping children during their years together, serving as foster parents for many children.
Her hobbies included, fl owers, knitting and doing crochet, and shopping.
Surviving are her husband, Samuel E. Presley of Angola; a son, David Lee Presley of Fort Wayne, Ind.; a sister, Sheila Petry of Angola, Ind.; 13 foster children; a stepbrother, Michael and Wendy Ridenour of Quincy, Mich.; and several nieces and nephews.
She was preceded in death by her parents and a nephew, Chad Craig.
Visitation will be from 5-8 p.m. Monday, September 23, 2013, Beams Funeral Home in Fremont, Ind.
Funeral services will be at 11 a.m. Tuesday, September 24, 2013, at the funeral home, with Pastor Stephen “Sam” Hoffman and Rev. Jerry Strahan offi ciating.
Burial will be in Jamestown Cemetery at Fremont, Ind.
Memorials are to the Charles Craig Scholarship Fund in care of First Federal Bank, Angola, Ind.
Condolences may be sent online to www.beamsfuner alhome.com.
Lorene DePewGARRETT — Lorene
M. DePew, 92, a resident of Chandler House in Kendall-ville and formerly of Garrett, died Friday, Sept. 20, 2013, at Chandler House.
Arrangements are pending at Thomas Funeral Home in Garrett.
A full obituary will appear in Sunday’s edition.
Ilene ReinhardBLUFFTON — Ilene
May Reinhard, 88, of Craigville, died Tuesday, Sept. 17, 2013, at Bluffton Regional Medical Center.
Mrs. Reinhard had lived most of her life in the Adams and Wells counties area and was a 1944 graduate of Kirkland High School.
She was a homemaker and had assisted her father, Floyd, and her husband, Howard, at the Craigville Telephone Co. as a telephone operator and with manually processing monthly bills.
Mrs. Reinhard was a member of the Pleasant Dale Church of the Brethren and its Ladies Aid Society.
She was born Nov. 24, 1924, in Adams County to Floyd and Lola (Barger) Ehrman. She married Howard Franklin Reinhard on Oct.29, 1946, in Adams County. He preceded her in death on March 16, 2008.
Surviving are two sons, Carlton (Julia) Reinhard of Hamilton and Arland (Ruth) Reinhard of Bluffton; two daughters, Arvilla (Stephen) Rodenbeck of Bluffton and Carla (Lee) Von Gunten of Bluffton; 13 grandchildren; and 10 great-grandchildren.
She was also preceded in death by her parents and two brothers, Kenneth Ehrman in November of 1953 and Hugh Ehrman in June of 2012.
Funeral services will be at 3:30 p.m. Sunday at Pleasant Dale Church of the Brethren. Burial will be at Pleasant Dale Cemetery.
Visitation will be from 2-4 and 5-8 p.m. today at Thoma/Rich, Chaney & Lemler Funeral Home and one hour prior to service Sunday at the church.
Preferred memorials are to the Alzheimer’s Association or the donor’s choice.
Online condolences may be made at www.thomarich.com.
Martin Page Jr.ALBION — Martin
Finley Page Jr., 88, died Friday, Sept. 20, 2013, at his home in Albion.
Private graveside services will be held.
Memorials are to the Parkview Noble Home Health and Hospice.
Hite Funeral Home of Kendallville is in charge of arrangements.
Ursula LeyAVILLA — Ursula M.
Ley, 81, of Avilla died Friday, Sept. 20, 2013, at Presence Sacred Heart Home in Avilla.
Arrangements pending at Thomas Funeral Home in Garrett.
Sherman CragerBUTLER — Sherman
Crager, 57 loving and wonderful husband, father, papa, brother, uncle and friend passed away Thursday September 19, 2013 at his home in Butler surrounded by his family.
He was born September 16, 1956 in Garrett, KY to Joe and Goldie (Whitaker) Crager.
Sherman was a NDT Tech Class 2 for 3 years and was in Quality Control at Bohn Aluminum for 23 years retiring in 2001.
He was a member of the Butler Eagles. He loved life, fi shing and camping at Lake Erie with friends and family. Throughout his illness he was an avid fi ghter. He pushed to the end to be with his family and enjoyed every moment, especially those with his 3 grandkids who were the apple of his eyes.
Sherman married Christine S Baughman on February 16, 1974 in the Hopewell Church in Auburn and she survives.
Also surviving are 2 daughters, Sherry R Shaffer and Damion Dickerhoof of Butler and Sheila A. (Shaffer) Whitaker and her husband Jarrod of Butler; 3 grandchildren, Kaylob Shaffer, Shayla Shaffer and Trista Shaffer; 8 brothers and 6 sisters, Robert (Nancy) Crager of Auburn, Mitchell (Roseanna) Crager of Auburn, Richard (Berniece) Crager of Fremont, James (Sharon) Crager of Angola, Joe (Bobbie) Crager of Hamilton, Millard (Mona) Crager of Auburn, Larry (Marsha) Crager of Butler, Donny (Deb) Crager of Waterloo, Goldie Ray Sherman of Auburn, Thelma Collins of Waterloo, Geneva (Dick) Freed of Auburn, Joyce (Bob) Crawford of Angola, Judy (Brian) Wilson of Butler, Cathy Crager of Fort Wayne and a sister in law Lillie Crager of Garrett.
Sherman was preceded in death by his parents, a granddaughter Camry Shaffer, a brother Bill Crager and 2 sisters, Margie Handshoe and Lois Wilson, and a brother in law Ed Sherman.
Services are 11 AM Monday September 23, 2013 at Hopewell United Brethren Church, 6852 CR 35, Auburn, IN with Scott Taylor offi ciating. Burial in Butler Cemetery, Butler. Calling is Sunday from 1 to 3 and 4 to 6 p.m. at Feller and Clark Funeral Home, 1860 Center Street,
Auburn, IN and also 1 hour prior to the service Monday from 10 to 11 AM. Preferred memorials are to the Angola Cancer Associ-ation or DeKalb Health Home Care and Hospice. To send condolences visit www.fellerandclark.com.
Adella WeeksFORT WAYNE —
Adella “Della” Weeks, 85, passed away Thursday, September 19, 2013.
Born in Fort Wayne, Della was a member of Holy Cross Lutheran Church and she enjoyed crocheting, gardening and baking.
Surviving are her daughters, Diana (Al) Arlic of Roanoke, Debbie Weeks and Becky Weeks both of Corunna; a brother, Clarence Stute of Hemet, Calif.; two grandchildren, Al III, and Tammy, and four great-grandchildren.
Della was preceded in death by her husband, Robert; a brother, Albert Stute; a sister, Helen Nord; a grandson, Aaron; and a great-grandson, Weston.
Funeral service is at 11 a.m. Monday at D.O. McComb & Sons Pine Valley Park Funeral Home, 1320 East Dupont Road, with calling one hour prior.
Entombment will be in Covington Memorial Gardens.
Memorials may be made to the Ashley or Corunna Fire departments.
To sign the online guest book, go to www.domccom bandsons.com.
Deaths & Funerals •
Obituary Policy•
KPC Media Group daily newspapers (The News Sun, The Star and The Herald Republican) do not charge for death notices that include notice of calling hours, date and time of funeral and burial, and memorial information. An extended obituary, which includes survivors, biographical information and a photo, is available for a charge.
Deadline for funeral homes placing obituaries is 5 p.m. for next day publication. The email address is [email protected].
Submitted obituaries must contain the name and phone number of the funeral home.
For information, contact Jan Richardson at 347-0400, ext. 131.
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BOULDER, Colo. (AP) — With snow already dusting Colorado’s highest peaks, the state is racing to replace key mountain highways washed away by fl ooding, in some cases laying down crude, one-lane gravel roads just to throw a lifeline to isolated towns before winter descends.
More than 200 miles of state highways and at least 50 bridges were damaged or destroyed across this rugged region, plus many more county roads. Fully rebuilding all of them is sure to take years. But for now, the work has to be fast, even if that means cutting corners.
“Our priority is to reconnect these communi-ties as quickly as we can, recognizing that we’re in a very tight timeframe,” said Amy Ford, a spokeswoman for the state Department of Transportation.
In many other parts of the country, road crews would be able to work through the fall and much of the winter. But in the Rockies, the cold weather comes earlier, stays longer and brings with it countless dangers. The fi rst storms could hit as soon as next month.
That urgency was underlined this week when Trail Ridge Road, the high-elevation path through Rocky Mountain National Park and one of the few supply routes into the town of Estes Park, was temporarily closed because of snow. It normally stays open until October.
Colorado is looking East for advice, specifi cally to Vermont, where Tropical Storm Irene dumped up to 11 inches of rain in August 2011, sweeping away homes, roads, bridges and farm fields and killing
six people.After the mountains
fl ooded, Colorado Gov. John Hickenlooper quickly fl ew in experts from Vermont, which also faced a winter deadline two years ago.
“The big picture is that you’re going to get through this, and you’re going to recover stronger, but it is a long haul,” said Sue Minter, deputy secretary of the Vermont Agency of Transportation, who has been assessing Colorado damage. “Two years later, we’re still recovering from Irene.”
Scott Rogers, Vermont’s director of transporta-tion, said the immediate challenge is putting road material in place that can be maintained through winter.
“We had to put pavement down before it snowed so that roads could be plowed,” Rogers said. “And in many cases, it was just a temporary pavement. We knew we would have to come back and do it better.”
Expediting repairs before winter is crucial, especially in the Front Range’s mountainous corridors, which receive heavy snowfall. Rerouting some washed-out roads may be all but impossible because many of them follow streamside trails used by settlers chasing gold and silver in the mid-1800s. The steep Rocky Mountain foothills offer no other access.
Canyon hamlets such as Jamestown, Lyons and Pinewood Springs lost roads when as much as 20 inches of rain fell last week, transforming ravines into lethal funnels of rushing water powerful enough to fl ing boulders and large trees and generate 20-foot waves.
Colorado races to fi x roads before winter hits
Lotteries•
Wall Street•
Dow Jones IndustrialsFriday’s Close:High: 15,654.77Low: 15,448.09Close: 15,451.09Change: —185.46Other IndexesStandard&Poors 500
Index: 1709.91 —12.43NYSE Index: 9769.73
—85.03Nasdaq Composite
Index: 3774.73 —14.65NYSE MKT Composite:
2377.33 —27.42Russell 2000 Index:
1072.83 —2.44
INDIANAPOLIS — These are the winning numbers drawn Friday:
Indiana: Midday: 2-4-2 and 7-9-7-2. Evening results were not available at press time.
Mega Millions: 01-15-20-21-47. Mega Ball: 34. Megaplier: 2.
Ohio: Midday: 1-2-7, 9-5-7-5 and 3-2-2-5-7. Evening: 9-9-2, 7-5-4-5 and 2-8-1-3-9. Rolling Cash 5: 06-16-20-22-30.
Michigan: Midday: 6-0-4 and 8-0-8-7. Daily: 4-5-9 and 5-1-7-4. Fantasy 5: 15-19-34-36-37. Keno: 09-11-17-20-21-23-30-33-37-40-41-44-45-49-56-62-63-69-70-71-72-75.
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Barack Obama and Iran’s new president may meet briefl y next week for the fi rst time, marking a symbolic but signifi cant step toward easing their countries’ tense relationship. An exchange of letters between the leaders already has raised expecta-tions for a revival of stalled nuclear talks, though Iran is still likely to seek an easing of international sanctions in exchange for signifi cant progress.
In small steps and encour-aging statements, Iran’s leaders appear to be opening a door more widely to detente in their nuclear dispute with
the U.S. Cautiously optimistic yet still skeptical, Washington is weighing whether Iranian President Hasan Rouhani’s recent overtures actually represent new policies or just new packaging.
“Negotiations with the Iranians is always diffi cult,” President Barack Obama said in a recent interview with ABC News. “I think this new president is not going to suddenly make it easy. But, you know, my view is that if you have both a credible threat of force, combined with a rigorous diplomatic effort, that, in fact, you can strike a deal.”
U.S. and Iran eye diplomatic defrosting at United Nations
On a recent Friday afternoon, I came back from lunch and sat down at my desk in The Herald Republican newsroom. I have the best view in the place out my window of the courtyard. My window is framed with ivy that covers our building and I peer out it like looking through a telescope.
In looking out my window, there was what I thought was a giant twig. But then it moved.
I jumped and realized I was nose-to-nose with a praying mantis. It was sunbathing.
Like any reporter would do, I started taking pictures. A close up of its face showed little dots for eyeballs and legs with tiny hairs.
My colleague, Carol Ernsberger, told me praying mantises are good luck. I will accept that, Carol.
The mantis balanced on the dainty ivy vines like a gymnast on a beam and slowly crawled away. Likely it went down to peer in the windows of Amy Oberlin and Mike Marturello.
Seeing that bug made me wonder what other little details are missed while speeding through the day and attempting to do more and more.
I get daily self improvement ideas emailed to me. Today’s said to stop and use the senses more to experience that which is often ignored. I made that my mission.
As an example of not paying attention, I
was getting my mail and did not notice the box had been painted. I set a magazine down on it and it stuck. I laughed. It was
a good thing it was a catalogue I didn’t like, but someone forgot to hang a wet paint sign.
Elsewhere, two black and white dogs were hanging their heads out a truck window as it cruised down the road. The mutts had looks of pure ecstasy on their faces and it looked like they were thinking, “Whee.”
There are sounds that simply can’t be forgotten.
Recently in church, a Trine University student sang “Amazing Grace” in seven different languages including Cherokee and Swahili.
Simply breathtaking.By the Angola City Hall, there is a
large tree as you go in the door. As in the Alfred Hitchcock classic, “The Birds,” there was much loud chirping. Birds were all over the tree’s limbs as if a convention were being held.
Taste and smell-wise, I am catching the domestic bug in looking for easy crock pot recipes. Maybe what’s best about it is the simmering smells. Recently I made lasagna in mine. Tomato sauce and goodies simmering away reminded me of home again. It turned into lasagna soup the first night. The second and third nights it’s gotten better. It’s also gotten tastier.
Odor-wise, one of the best parts of summer is sweet corn. The more yellow, the sweeter in taste and smell. Get it while you can; cold weather takes all summer’s pleasures away.
Touch is down pat. One of the best things I do all day is pet my cat, Poppy. She smiles as I rub the sides of her face.
A moment of calm, like that, is what it’s all about.
JENNIFER DECKER is a reporter at The Herald Republican in Angola. She can be reached at [email protected].
Calm appealings to the senses
TheStar kpcnews.com A5SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 2013
What’s up with so many Democrats wanting missile strikes on Syria, while Republi-cans balk? I’m told Republicans are the war party.
Is this just hypocrisy? Politicians change their position on military intervention when their own party controls the White House?
Historian Thaddeus Russell says it’s not. He says it’s always been “progressive” Democrats
who led America into war: Woodrow Wilson in World War I, FDR in World War II, Truman in the Korean War, Kennedy and Johnson in Vietnam and Bill Clinton in Somalia and Kosovo.
Russell says the progres-sives like “nation-building” because it fi ts their view that government can reform the world “not just in the ghettos, but outside our borders. Anywhere we fi nd the oppressed, we must go out and save them.”
Of course there are the neoconservatives, such as William Kristol, who were pro-war under both Bush and Obama.
“The so-called neocons who drove us to war in Iraq actually all began in the Democratic Party. They all began as progressives,” says Russell. “They supported intervention in Iraq to remake Iraq in our image, and they support intervention in Syria to do the same.”
Both neocons and progressives call those of us who oppose most intervention overseas “isolationist.”
A Wall Street Journal column complained about “the isolationist worm eating its way through the Republican Party apple.” On the left, Secretary of State John Kerry declared, “This is not the time for armchair isolationism.”
I resent the smear.“Isolationist” suggests that anyone who
objects to killing people in foreign countries (mostly people who have never attacked us) wants to “isolate” America, withdraw from the world.
Before World War II, American?isolation-ists did fi ght to prevent refugees who were escaping Hitler from coming to America. Isolationists also opposed trade and immigra-tion. That’s nuts. We libertarians who are skeptical about war today are nothing like that.
I want to be engaged with the world without us being in charge of it. Let us trade with people of every nation. It’s said that when goods cross borders, armies don’t. History backs that up. A report funded by several governments found that the level of armed confl ict in Muslim countries is lower today than two decades ago, and trade is the reason. You’re less likely to bomb the people with whom you engage in commerce.
Preferring trade to government action may not sound “progressive” to progressives, but it’s not a surrender to evil or a withdrawal from global affairs. As we trade goods, we also export our ideas and our culture.
I don’t claim that this will end all confl ict, but it is harder for radicals to make you hate people who sell you things, inspire you to change your hairstyle or make movies that make you laugh.
When the Soviet Union fell, conservatives said it happened because of Ronald Reagan’s military buildup. OK, that played a part. But so did American music.
In 1988, Bruce Springsteen held a concert in East Berlin, and even there, behind the Iron Curtain, 160,000 people came to hear him perform. And they knew the words to “Born in the USA” and sang along. Springsteen stopped his performance and told the crowd he hoped one day all the barriers would be torn down. One year later, the Berlin Wall did come down.
I don’t claim that America’s culture, consumer goods or Bruce Springsteen was entirely responsible for that, but the obvious comparison between Soviet repression and America’s vibrancy did play a part. Eventually, people in the Soviet bloc wanted what we had.
These cultural and economic infl uences work, and they are less likely to create new enemies and bankrupt America than bombing and invading.
So let tourism fl ow. Let our music alarm mullahs. Let neocons donate books to the Middle East fi lled with ideas dictators hate. Let our cell phones expose isolated people to the wonders of the free world.
There are times when we have to go to war, but real progress means making those times as rare as possible.
JOHN STOSSEL is host of “Stossel” on the Fox Business Network. He’s the author of “Give Me a Break” and of “Myth, Lies, and Downright Stupidity.” More information at johnstossel.com.
Make trade, not war
JOHN
STOSSEL
•
Let us trade with people of every nation. It’s said that when goods cross borders, armies don’t. History backs that up.
•
Letters To The Editor•
Donated land is valuable assetTo the editor:Hurrah for Mike Walter! When I fi rst
read about two lots of school property gifted to the Community Foundation, I was appalled. After consideration, I decided there must be something I did
not understand about this transaction. Surely, surely, our school board who has been entrusted to act on the behalf of their electing public would not donate an asset as valuable as two cleared city lots in the middle of town.
Sixty percent of my property tax bill goes to support the public school.
I have been reading about a major rebuild at McKenney-Harrison. Is our school corporation so wealthy that there is no need to be compensated for their proper-ties? If so, perhaps it can be refl ected in next year’s property taxes.
Suzanne CarpenterAuburn
Ever since the Waltzing Poet has danced my way, I have been reading his book, “Twenty Days on Route 20.” I gave a copy of the book to Kathy, and she read it on a road trip last weekend with her sisters. What a great idea, I thought.
It is my turn to make a short road trip this week on Route 20. I am on the clock working for Indiana Landmarks and Storytelling Arts of Indiana as I begin my interviews for my newest research project, the Brookside Mansion in Fort Wayne.
My destination on this day is the Sisters of St. Francis of Perpetual Adoration in Mishawaka. My traveling companions include my black binder, my interview notes, my camera, my GPS and Michael’s book. We take to the road in the morning.
The sky is brilliant blue with a nice breeze; in fact, enough of a breeze that all my papers need to be placed on the fl oor of the backseat. I am on Route 20. I have, of course, traveled this way so often before, but today I am seeing it for what it is or what it was.
Did you know that it is the longest road in the United States? It begins in Boston and ends in Newport, Ore., just a mile from the Pacifi c Ocean.
The road was often given the title as “Mud Pike” as it came through Indiana from Ohio. The name was earned genuinely, I believe, due to the mud holes that would pull down wagons and their horses as they traveled through.
I watch the scenery of cornfi elds. The corn, which was August green just a few weeks ago, has now turned to crispy brown waiting the harvest season just around the
full moon.My drive to Mount Alverno takes me
off the road into a mass of woods and fi elds with small gardens of sunfl owers to brighten the pathway.
Sister Jo Ellyn Scheetz is waiting for me in the sunroom and we begin our interview. Sister Jo Ellyn is a brilliant woman, having taught for more than 35 years and holding the presidency of St. Francis College, now St. Francis University, for 23 years.
We talk about the history of the Sisters in Germany, their travel to the United States and their journey to begin St. Francis College in Fort Wayne. For two hours I listen, I write and I ask questions. In the peripheral vision of my eye, I watch the slanting of the sun move quietly over fi elds and woods. She is tired, and it is
time for me to go. I promise to go back. I think I always promise.
Route 20 waits for me to travel home. This time there are yellow school busses weaving in and out of schools and small towns as children hurry home and run outside to play in these waning days of summer.
I arrive into my hometown to be welcomed by streets blocked off as old cars adorn the circle and the small streets for the “Cruise In” on this night.
We gather, friends and family, on the streets of my town abandoning our cars and bikes to walk and enjoy. Each antique car is shined to perfection and the owner willing to talk or sell, if the price is right. Everyone is joyous. The mood is infectious as we greet friends, take photos and let the kids run about exclaiming over each car.
We order pizza and sit outside. We are sitting on the side of Route 20. I pull away into my own thoughts for a while trying to think it through … the wagons, the horses, the folks going west or stopping because this would be a good place for a town. I listen to folks telling stories about cars or families.
The pizza arrives just as the lights come on around the circle and the monument. In the east the full Harvest Moon makes her appearance. She seems to be a bit early, but the harvest moon is the one closest to the equinox, so there she is giving us the sign of harvest.
Folks begin packing up babies and bags and cars and still we sit in the early darkness, not wanting the evening to end.
Larry and Sherry give Jonah and Matthew a ride home in their restored Jeep, and I take photos as they travel off in time.
I am last to leave. Yes, I think, a good place to stop and call home.
LOU ANN HOMAN-SAYLOR lives in Angola at the White Picket Gardens where you can fi nd her gardening or writing late into the night under the light of her frayed scarlet lamp. She is a storyteller, teacher, writer, actress and a col-lector of front porch stories.
It’s good to call home a place off of Route 20
LOU ANN
HOMAN-
SAYLOR
•
JENNIFER DECKER
This praying mantis recently made an appearance in Jennifer Decker’s Herald Republican offi ce window.
JENNIFER
DECKER
•
We welcome your letters to the editor. All letters must be submitted with the author’s signature, address and daytime telephone number. Send letters to: The Star, 118 W. Ninth St., Auburn, IN 46706. Letters may be emailed to [email protected]. We reserve the right to reject or edit letters on the basis of libel, poor taste or repetition.
Our Letter Policy
•
A6 THE STAR kpcnews.com AREA •
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 2013
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5417 CR 51, ST. JOESecluded country property situated on approx. 5 acres. This farm features a 30x52 pole barn, 30x40 bank barn with hay mow above, 30x19 corn crib, and a 30x48 detached insulated, lined and heated shop/garage that has a 16’ wide garage door. Property is already set up for cows, horses, etc. The house has brand new kitchen with all new cabinets with pullout drawers in pan-try, countertops, wood floor, 2 year old range and microwave, and all kitchen appliances stay. Also new is the bathroom, which has been remodeled. There is built-in shelving, 5’ wood trim, new gas furnace, newer Berber carpet, and all newer windows. Home has a 724 sq. ft. wrap-around double tier deck with 6x8 area already wired for a hot tub. Price reduced to $138,500.
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POSSESSION
IMM
EDIATE
POSSESSION
6874 FRONT ST., SPENCERVILLEGreat location! This property is located on a quiet street, spacious lot with large mature trees with easy access to Auburn or Fort Wayne. Home features 3 bedrooms, spacious family room and plenty of storage. Eat-in kitchen with large walk-in pantry, plenty of oak cabinets for storage, and appliances are remaining with home. Master bedroom is on main level with large attached bath. Home features many updates: one year old water heater, two year old well, newer high efficient gas forced air furnace and central air. 22x12 storage area attached to house as well as an outdoor entrance, 24x24 two car detached garage. Property is priced at $84,900.
427 WESTWARD DRIVE, BUTLERThis 3 bedroom, 2.5 bath, 2 story home has lots of great features. Kitchen has lots of storage and counter space with beautiful cabinets, refrigerator, range, washer and dryer remain with home. Hardwood floors throughout main level of home. Three large bedrooms all with walk-in closets. Large den space on main level could be used as a den or a 4th bedroom. Full finished base-ment with a bar features plenty of space to entertain. Home has triple-pane windows, Manablock system, and back battery sump pump. Reduced to $133,000.
000 CR 8, CORUNNAThis property is perfect for the outdoorsman! 10 acres of property, great for deer and turkey hunting. Mature trees, approved building site. Property has been cleared for camping and 4 wheeler trails. 30’ Jayco camper with slide-out, kitchen, awning, in excellent condition remains with property. Additional outbuildings include 20x12 carport and a 10x12 storage shed. Electricity is on site. Many other items are remaining with property, too numerous to list. Please call for further details. Priced at $84,500.
(260) 925-5400Toll-free 1-888-838-7653
131 Ensley Ave.Auburn, IN 46706
www.castleonerealty.com
Featured Listings
480 S. Oak St. • WaterlooImmediate possession! Charming Victorian style 3 BR home. Den could also be a 4th BR. Spacious living room area with dining room and large kitchen. Your handyman will enjoy the oversized garage with workshop area! Home sits on an oversized lot. MLS#201211195.
$68,9
00
517 Beech St. • ButlerGreat 4 bedroom, 2 bath home, newer carpets, paint, light fi xtures, and roof. Move right in. Large privacy fenced backyard, with pergola over patio, gas heat, central air. Convenient location close to Eastside Jr./Sr. High School. Low property taxes. MLS#201310669.
$89,9
00
108 W. Walnut • Butler3 bedroom, 2 bath spacious home. Beautiful hardwood fl oors throughout!!! Updated bath with ceramic tile & claw foot tub. Newer roof, windows & carpet. 200 amp service, large yard & a shed. What a cheap house payment this would be!! MLS#201202684.
$44,9
00
1524 Dallas St. • AuburnThree bedroom one bath with large utility room. Newer furnace and roof. Schedule your showing today! MLS#201310608.
$55,50
0
409 S. Indiana • AuburnThis 2+ bedroom, 2 story home is close to McKenney-Harrison Elementary school. Features 1.5 baths, replaced windows, GFA and CA are 3 years old. Large detached garage with alley access. MLS#201311873.
$69,9
00
360 W. 9th • AuburnThis 3 bedroom home offers 1-1/2 baths. A large living room, formal dining room. An updated gas forced air furnace and gas water heater, new carpet throughout and fresh paint. A corner lot has a large backyard and off-street parking. MLS#201311688.
$64,9
00
Building Lots
Highland Lots • AuburnThese 2+ acre lots in a well desired Jackson township rural subdivision offer possible walkout basement, pond view, and cul-de-sac lots! Restrictive covenants on fi le to protect your investment! Choose your builder and build your dream home! 5 minutes from Auburn, 7 minutes from Fort Wayne. 13 total lots.
LOTS
Iron Horse Crossing • GarrettBuild the home of your dreams in the Iron Horse Crossing Addition! Located just 15 minutes from Fort Wayne, and not even 10 minutes from Auburn! Choose from 33 total lots available, at approx. 1/4 acre each. Call 925-5400 for more information. $19,900 per lot.
LOTS
1311 S. Lee St. • GarrettBeautiful buildable site, almost 1 acre! Very attractive lot just north of Maple Knoll. Lots 26-29, no restrictions! MLS#201300905.
Doug MarshREALTOR®
Consultant
Michelle Snyder
Principal Broker615-6289
Lynda Carper
Associate Broker413-2018
KristieConradREALTOR ®
414-5660
Tammie Fluke
REALTOR®
438-1087
Kristin Blevins
Associate Broker413-2465
“The Malcolm
Team”Terry & Cherie
REALTORS ®
413-1229413-1121
TrinaWatsonREALTOR ®
573-3978
Gracy DanielsREALTOR ®
553-0132
MicoleaDepewREALTOR ®
570-5472
OPEN SUNDAY 1-4 PM
www.malcolmschlueter.com
Kelly Oswalt, Realtor
573-2510 or
489-0013 ext. 357
6705 E. Maguire Rd. • ChurubuscoLike to fish, swim or ski? This 3 bedroom home has numerous updates including new furnace in 2011, new roof in 2011, new water heater in 2010, new softener in 2011, newer carpet and windows. With 2 sheds and a canvas garage, there’s plenty of storage. Property is 2 lots and has 2 access areas to Blue Lake. Fish in the mornings and evenings, ski in the afternoons, then come home and relax on the patio! $79,900.
Host:Cindy
George
OPEN2-4 PM
NEW PRICE - 906 ONTARIO LANE - AUBURN – Well-maintained, nicely decorated 3 bedroom ranch with large fenced-in yard. Home features Copper River kitchen cabinets with a new vinyl floor and new carpet throughout. Water purifier & window treatment in master bedroom to sellers. This beautifully landscaped property is close to shopping and hospital. $89,700.DIRECTIONS – SR 8 to Duesenberg. North on Duesenberg to Wesley Rd. West on Portage Pass. South on Ontario Lane.
www.wiblerealty.com
OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2-4 P.M.
WIBLEOPENHOUSE
925-4068
508 SOUTH GRANDSTAFF DRIVE - AUBURN
WIB
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www.wiblerealty.com
“Serving DeKalb County Since 1945”
925-4068 • 508 S. Grandstaff Dr., Auburn
ANDY JAGODA . . . . . . . . . . . .908-1412JANE FELLER . . . . . . . . . . . . . .908-2163LINDA MIDDLETON . . . . . . . . .908-7096KYLE BRANSCUM. . . . . . . . . . .553-9000
ALICE L. MacDONALD . . . . . . .925-1652SCOTT KNAPP . . . . . . . . . . . . .927-5537SUE STOOPS . . . . . . . . . . . . . .750-7451CINDY GEORGE . . . . . . . . . . . .908-3714
3533 STATE ROAD 327 - CORUNNANice 5 bedroom, bi-level home on 2.5 acres. Attached 2 car gar. with floored storage in garage attic. 8x10 storage shed. Nice split level deck and a stocked pond. Located in DeKalb Central school district. $129,900.
5504 CR 75A - ST. JOEQuiet country living on almost 4 wooded and rolling acres in Riverdale school district. 3 BD, 1 BA, large eat-in kitchen. Most windows replaced, CA and GFA furnace. Enclosed porch/sunroom. Oversized 2 car garage. The outbuilding w/screened porch has electricity and gas for heat and would make a fabulous office or studio. $85,000.
147 W. OAK - BUTLERWell-maintained home with character. Laundry on main level and many upgrades including GFA & CA, new vinyl windows, newer 1/2 bath on 1st floor. Large landing could be 3rd bedroom. Washer & dryer stay. 10x13 enclosed front porch and large fenced backyard. $63,900.
702 HELEN AVE. - AUBURNThis well-maintained home is situated on 4 city lots w/an ample amount of shade. Manufactured home on 4 ft. crawl space. 3 bed/2 bath. Custom blinds & all appliances stay. The 3 1/2 car garage will provide plenty of storage/parking. This property has country feel in this established neighborhood. Enjoy your mornings in the 3-season room and your evenings on the large front porch. Hosted by Linda Middleton. $114,900.
OPEN SUN. 2-4 PM
1312 LORI LEA - AUBURN3 BD, 2 BA ranch beautifully landscaped. This 10 year old home located in Timber Trace, is in excellent condition. New carpet installed in 2012. Large closet in master bedroom. Enjoy your large newly fenced-in backyard from the 10x12 patio. Property is near Bridgewater golf course and hospital. $115,000.
NEW PRICE
1307 VIRGINIA LANE - AUBURNNice 3 BD, 2 BA ranch in a great neighborhood. 1,465 square feet with large lot. Water softener, refrigerator and range all stay. Very large great room with cathedral ceiling. Separate laundry room. Ready for a quick possession. $112,900.
NEW LISTING
NEW LISTING NEW LISTING NEW LISTING
BOB BRALEY
The Most Rev. Kevin C. Rhoades, foreground, Bishop of the Catholic Diocese of Fort Wayne-South Bend, blesses people taking part in a ceremony for the opening of the new
Presence LaVerna Terrace Assisted Living apartments in Avilla Friday. Assisting him is Presence Sacred Heart Home administrator Craig Procupek, standing in the background.
BY BOB [email protected]
AVILLA — The bishop of the Catholic Diocese of Fort Wayne-South Bend visited Friday to bless a new assisted living facility in Avilla, located in a longtime senior citizen apartment complex.
The Most Rev. Kevin C. Rhoades, bishop of the Diocese of Fort Wayne-South Bend, blessed the new Presence LaVerna Terrace Assisted Living apartments, including all in attendance and all thresholds in the building, during a half-hour ceremony with scripture readings, prayers and singing.
At the same ceremony, Elaine Shank was introduced as the new administrator of Presence LaVerna Terrace.
The event celebrated a double transition for the building, explained Craig Procupek, administrator of Presence Sacred Heart Home, which has been operating LaVerna Terrace. Both are part of Presence Health, a Catholic health provider.
LaVerna Terrace started as senior citizen apartments, Procupek said. It’s now licensed as an assisted
living provider, with an emphasis on affordable care.
Also, the building itself has had a new expansion, with a common area at the front in which most of Friday’s celebration took place, Procupek said.
Presence Health recently underwent a name change. It had been known as Provena Health. Both Sacred Heart Home and LaVerna Terrace used the Provena name until recently.
“This is a beautiful, beautiful mission,” Rhoades said Friday. The importance of caring for people who need that care is a loving act in Christ’s name, he said.
On recent remarks from Pope Francis, Rhoades said one he found most powerful was not one of those on which the media has focused.
When asked to describe himself, including his life before becoming pope, Rhoades quoted Francis as saying, “The fi rst thing you need to know is, I’m a sinner.”
“That’s so true of all of us. We’re all sinners,” Rhoades said. Christ is the one who saves us from our sin, he added. “I pray for this home that this is a place you will grow closer to Christ.”
Bishop blesses Avilla assisted living units
AUBURN — Fifteen people received sentences for criminal offenses during hearings in DeKalb Superior Court I this week.
In hearings Monday, Judge Kevin Wallace imposed these sentences:
• John Ruschak of Mogadore, Ohio, was fi ned $75 and must pay court costs for public intoxication, a Class B misdemeanor.
• Melissa K. Jones of Indianapolis received a 90-day suspended sentence and one year of probation for possession of marijuana, a Class A misdemeanor. She was fi ned $1 and must pay court costs. Her driving license was suspended for 180 days.
• Mary M. Flaherty of Bokchito, Okla., was fi ned $1 and must pay court costs for resisting law enforcement, a Class A misdemeanor.
• Christopher S. Prater of the 100 block of East Sixteenth Street, Auburn, was sentenced to one year in jail, all suspended except 60 days, for operating a vehicle while intoxicated, a Class A misdemeanor. He was placed on probation through Sept. 16, 2014, and was fi ned $500. He must pay court costs, and his driving license was suspended for 180 days.
• Dennis L. Thompson of the 600 block of South Indiana Street, Waterloo, was fi ned $75 and must pay court costs for operating a vehicle never having received a license, a Class C misdemeanor.
• Jennifer Cook of Marshall, Mich., was sentenced to 90 days in jail, all suspended except 20 days, for operating a vehicle while intoxicated, a Class A misdemeanor. She received one year of probation and was fi ned $500. She must pay court costs, and her driving license was suspended for 90 days.
• Adam Abbott of the 600 block of East Union Street, Waterloo, was sentenced to 60 days in jail for domestic battery, a Class A misdemeanor. Costs were found to be uncollectable.
In hearings Wednesday, Judge pro tem James McCanna imposed these sentences:
• Darryl Eicher Jr. of the 5100 block of C.R. 19, Garrett, was sentenced to two days in jail for disorderly conduct, a Class B misdemeanor. He received credit for time already spent in jail. He was fi ned $1 and must pay court costs.
• Jacob Justus of the 3200 block of C.R. 68, Auburn, was sentenced to 60 days in jail, all suspended except 20 days, for operating a vehicle
with an unlawful alcohol concentration, a Class C misdemeanor. He received one year of probation and was fi ned $500. He must pay court costs, and his driving license was suspended for 90 days.
• Shonda Bauman of the 300 block of Maple Knoll, Garrett, was sentenced to 60 days in jail, all suspended except 20 days, for operating a vehicle with an unlawful alcohol concentration, a Class C misdemeanor. She received one year of probation and was fi ned $500. She must pay court costs, and her driving license was suspended for one year.
• Spencer Stafford of the 800 block of Innkeepers Court, Waterloo, was sentenced to 60 days, which may be served at the Serenity House, for public intoxication, a Class B misdemeanor. He must pay court costs.
• Anthony Muniz of the 1000 block of North Randolph Street, Garrett, received a 120-day suspended sentence and one year of probation for conversion, a Class A misdemeanor. He must
pay court costs.• Gary Gansmiller of the
500 block of North Beech Street, Butler, was sentenced to 60 days in jail for being a habitual traffi c violator, a Class A misdemeanor. He must pay court costs, and his driving license was suspended for one year.
In hearings Thursday, Judge pro tem Wm. Joseph Carlin imposed these sentences:
• Steven A. Richmond of the 100 block of East Lincoln Street, Ashley, received a 60-day suspended sentence and one year of probation for operating a vehicle never having a license, a Class C misdemeanor. He was fi ned $25 and must pay court costs.
• Anthony Combs of the 300 block of South Hamsher Street, Garrett, was sentenced to 90 days in jail for battery, a Class B misdemeanor. In a separate case he was sentenced to 180 days in jail for resisting law enforcement, a Class A misdemeanor. The sentences will be served consecu-tively. He was fi ned $25 in each case and must pay court costs.
DeKalb judges sentence 15 for criminal offenses
LOCAL kpcnews.com THE STAR A7•
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 2013
GREAT
NEW PRICE
Lot 100, Sawgrass Circle,Cobblestone, Kendallville
Golf course frontage - hole #3 at Cobblestone! This is a top-notch lot in a top-notch golf community! Nice pie-shaped lot with a gorgeous view of the golf course. Motivated seller willing to negotiate. MLS#9005171. $22,400.
260-349-8557Dawn Hurley
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728 Richmond Street, KendallvilleHassle-free home buying! Well-maintained home with new carpet and paint. Newer water heater, furnace, roof and remodeled kitchen. 3 BR, 1 BA. Cedar-lined closets and hardwood in main floor bedroom and spacious master bedroom upstairs. Drapes and pull-down window coverings stay. Enjoy beautiful views of the McCray mansion garden next door. 2-car detached garage with openers. Nice yard and privacy fence. A must-see! $97,500. MLS#9004913.
260-349-8850The Hess Team
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NEW PRICE
8426 E. Swan Road, AvillaBeautiful, updated and peaceful home situated on 2 acres of gorgeous country land. Hardwood floors throughout the main living area and kitchen, which open into each other, for a very spacious and inviting home life! Bay windows give a great view off of the main living room and allow a lot of natural light in. The eat-in kitchen also has lots of windows and great views. $138,500. MLS#9005944.
260-349-8850The Hess Team
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513 Wayne Drive, KendallvilleRoomy home on a large lot in a great neighborhood! Oversized great room with vaulted ceilings, gas log fireplace, and an open stairway to the 2nd story loft, full bath and 2 upper bedrooms. Kitchen with breakfast bar and break-fast nook, new refrigerator and range. Master suite with full bath and walk-in closet on the main floor. Patio and large deck in back for entertaining. Close to town and schools. $129,900. MLS#9005898.
260-349-8850The Hess Team
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260-312-4882Dep Hornberger
L2240 S 445 E, ROYER LAKE
Unique lakefront, privacy galore w/spacious ranch attach. 2+ car garage, 40x24 pole barn & 3/4 acre total land. Enjoy boating, swimming, fishing & viewing 2 lakes. Home sits back surrounded by woods on 2-sides & fence on other, at end of cul-de-sac. $179,900. MLS#9003210. DIRECTIONS: SR 3 to 100S, W past stop to 400E, S to 200S, E to 445S, S to property.
OPEN SUN.
2-4 PM
NEW PRICE
260-349-8850The Hess Team
N2013 CORTLAND LANE, KENDALLVILLE
Beautifully appointed villa in Orchard Place. Open concept. Large great room with 12’ ceilings, fireplace, built-in bookshelves and large array of windows to the patio & backyard. Kitchen with custom maple cabinets, all appliances, breakfast bar and dining area. Front bedroom with vaulted ceilings, master suite with a full bath and walk-in closet. Great home! Great community! $174,500. MLS#9004571. DIRECTIONS: US 6 west of Kendallville to Orchard Place to Cortland.
OPEN HOUSE
SUN. 1-3 P
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S9000 TERRY LAKE ROAD, HAMILTON
This 3 BR, 2 BA home was built in 1996 but it looks brand new. New furnace in 2012, new shingles in 2010 and new countertops in the kitchen and both bathrooms. $129,900. DIRECTIONS: From 4-way stop in Hamilton, go south on 427 to Terry Lake Rd. Left to home.
Hosted By: Danielle Jackson Team
260-668-8877202 E. Harcourt Rd., Suite D, Angola
S3035 KELLYGREEN DR. ANGOLA
This 4 BR, 3 BA home is in exclusive Glendarin Hills. Open floor plan with spacious kitchen and upgraded appliances. Huge master suite. Family room with wet bar in the daylight basement. Lots of storage. $230,000. DIRECTIONS: N. Wayne to 200W, east to Glendarin Hills, left to 1st home.
Hosted by: Dan Shumaker
260-243-1485202 E. Harcourt Rd., Suite D, Angola
OPEN SUN.
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306 WOODS DR., ALBION
Immaculate custom built 1-owner home. Partially wooded lot. Open floor plan nearly 2,500 SF. Unique solar design, picturesque solarium w/tiled floors. Large open LR, DR. 3 spacious BR and master w/full bath. Partial basement. $149,900 DIRECTIONS: From SR 9, turn east on W. South St., turn right onto Circle Dr., bear right onto Woods Dr. to home.
Hosted By: Jill Brigman
260-410-0174
N1320 N. LIMA RD., KENDALLVILLE
Move-in ready. Beautiful 3 BR ranch right between city & country. New: roof, windows, LR carpet, laminate flooring, ceiling fans, Dura-Pane sliding patio doors, reverse osmosis system, roof, stove, dishwasher, water heat, fence, wall coverings, and more! MLS#9005326. $114,900. DIRECTIONS: US 6 to SR 3, north to home about 1 mile on right.
Hosted By: Bob Muller
260-318-2595
OPEN SAT.
1-3 PM
Beautiful Brick Front Home /
ExcellentCondition
This 1533 sq ft., 3 bedroom home built in 1998 invites you in! The spacious kitchen and living room with vaulted ceilings, gives you plenty of room for family. Cozy up in the warmth of the living room with the gas log fireplace. Entertain on the beautiful patio with plenty of room for friends, family or maybe a garden. Bid your price and move in at closing!
AUCTION
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 23 AT 6:00 PM
LOCATION: 409 VAN SCOYOC ST., AVILLA 46710From the intersection of Main Street and Albion Street (stop light in
Avilla) take Albion Street east 1 block to Van Scoyoc Street thensouth 3 ½ blocks to the property. Auction held on site.5 Miles South of Kendallville • 15 Miles North of Fort Wayne
260-244-76061-800-451-2709
www.schraderauction.com
INSPECTION DATES:Tues., Sept. 24,4:00-6:00 PM
Wed., Sept. 25,4:00-6:00 PMThurs., Oct. 3,4:00-6:00 PM
#AC63001504
Owner: Alberta Zawadzke Estate | Auction Manager: Arden Schrader
Charlie VanHorneOwner/Broker
209 N. Main St.,Auburn, IN
1529 Lakeshore Dr.AUBURN - Great 3 bedroom ranch home with a 3-car garage and 3 city lots. Complete
remodeling throughout with a new hickory kitchen, roof, windows, appliances, floors, paint and decor. Move-in condition.
$84,000
mikethomasrealtor.com
260-925-6900
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MIKE THOMAS ASSOCIATES/F.C. TUCKER 1560 Shook Dr., Auburn (north of The Home Depot)
260-925-6900View all of our listings atmikethomasrealtor.com
NEW LISTINGS
246 S. CENTER, AUBURNGREAT AUBURN LOCATION. 2 bedroom, 1 bath home in east Auburn. Gas heat, C/A and eat-in kitchen. One-car detached garage. Priced to sell. MLS#201313171/9005910. $59,900. Linn Aldrich 927-5878.
909 N. VAN BUREN, AUBURNSUPER NICE! Totally remodeled 3 bedroom home with tons of updates. Newer kitchen complete with appliances, plus washer and dryer. Newer bath, brand new carpeting, freshly painted, oversized 2-car garage, tons of storage and located on 3 lots with mature trees and walking trail. Private fenced-in backyard. Just pack and move right in. MLS#201313098/9005901. $111,900. Teri Davis-Foster 260-927-3168.
415 N. BROADWAY, BUTLERGRANDMA'S HOUSE NEEDS SOME UPDATES! What a large family home. 3 bedrooms, den with a closet could be a 4th bedroom and 1-1/2 baths. 2,062 sq. ft. Great backyard. (2) 1-car garages. Eat-in kitchen has a built-in table. 1st floor master bedroom is connected to a full bath. MLS#201313270/9005932. $49,900. Char Suntken 927-3699.
1310 CULBERTSON CT., AUBURNSTUNNING RANCH. Totally remodeled 3 bedroom, 2 bath home features new Pergot, new appliances, crown moulding and kitchen countertops. Freshly painted and area rugs stay. Immaculate condition. Don't miss this charmer! $109,900. Linn Aldrich 927-5878.
201 E. HIGH ST., GARRETTCHEAPER THAN RENT! Home features 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, living room, dining room, spacious kitchen and sunroom. Hardwood floors and newer roof. Corner lot. With some tender loving care this could be a nice home or a great rental property. Priced to sell. MLS#201313198/9005912. $29,900. Teri Davis-Foster 260-927-3168.
1206 DESOTO CT., AUBURNVERY NICE RANCH ON A CUL-DE-SAC. Trendy decor, open floor plan, eat-in kitchen, pantry, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, new windows and French doors. All appliances and blinds stay. Great neighborhood, close to parks, JR Watson School and the hospital. MLS#201313272/9005922. $109,900. Char Suntken 927-3699.
Open Homes
PHOTO CONTRIBUTED
Children First employee honoredBetsy Rodecap-Kurtz of Auburn and Children First Center receives the Healthy Families Indiana Exceptional Support Staff Award. Eric Vermeulen, Prevention Program director for the Indiana Department of Child Services, presents the statewide award at the Strengthening Families Institute, Monday in Indianapolis. Rodecap-Kurtz was recognized for developing a system and process to assist supervi-sors and direct service staff in delivering programming to families participating in home visits provided by Children First. She was nominated by Maria Manuel Slone,
Meetings•
Monday8:30 a.m. — DeKalb
County Commissioners, courthouse, Auburn.
6 p.m. — St. Joe Town Council, closed, executive session at Town Hall for interviews with prospective employees.
6:30 p.m. — St. Joe Town Council, Town Hall.
6 p.m. — Hamilton Redevelopment Commis-sion, Town Hall, 900 S. Wayne Street.
Tuesday6 p.m. — Auburn Board
of Zoning Appeals, City Hall council chambers, 210 E. Ninth St.
6 p.m. — Auburn Parks and Recreation Board, Rieke Park Lodge, Auburn.
7 p.m. — Corunna Town Council, Town Hall.
Wednesday6:30 p.m. — DeKalb
Central school board, Superintendent’s Offi ce, 3326 C.R. 427, Waterloo, closed session for training.
Thursday8:30 a.m. — DeKalb
County Drainage Board, Commissioners’ Court, second fl oor, courthouse.
9 a.m. — Auburn Board of Public Works and Safety, council chambers, City Hall, 210 E. Ninth St.
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A8 THE STAR kpcnews.com AREA • NATION •
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 2013
1815 S. Wayne, Auburn925-6310
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outer
unemployment rate is strong and notable (7.0 percent vs. 8.3 percent), pointing to longer-term progress in strengthening the northeast Indiana labor market,” said Ellen Cutter, director of the Community Research Institute at Indiana University-Purdue University Fort Wayne. “This is the lowest point the region’s (non-season-ally adjusted) unemploy-ment rate has dropped to since October of 2008.”
The statewide season-ally adjusted unemploy-ment rate dropped by 0.3 percentage points in August to 8.1 percent, the largest
one-month decrease since January 2011, the DWD said.
Indiana also added 3,000 manufacturing jobs last month, halting a recent decline. The state continues to have a higher percentage of manufacturing jobs as a portion of the private sector than any other state, the DWD said.
“Since the low point of employment in July 2009, Indiana has added over 60,000 manufacturing jobs, which is second in the nation, at a 14.1 percent rate of growth, also second in the nation,” said Frank Joseph, DWD communications direstor.
However, Indiana’s private sector shed 2,900 jobs in August, as losses in the trade, transportation and utilities and construc-tion sectors offset gains, the DWD said.
“Indiana’s private sector job growth ranks fi fth in the nation in percentage of growth since the low point of employment in July 2009 (8.4 percent), and 10th in the nation in total private sector growth since July 2009 (195,900),” Joseph said.
Sanders noted initial claims for unemployment insurance this year are still at their lowest levels since 2000.
JOBLESS: Local rates lowest since October 2008FROM PAGE A1
seen in years,” said Garry Stroh, owner of G.W. Stroh Orchard, just outside Angola.
Stroh said his orchard probably did better last year than most other area orchards, but this year, he said, it appears all the fruit crops are exceptional. Stroh’s farm produces apples, peaches and plums.
Stroh has about 15 acres of trees in full production on his farm. Like other growers, he said his trees sprouted so many apples, and were so heavy with fruit, that earlier this summer, Stroh had to knock some of the fruit off the branches in order to protect his trees.
Stroh said he started picking some of his early varieties of apples in July, but his fruit trees are so full of apples, he estimates he’ll still be picking fresh apples all the way through October.
Besides fresh apples, most orchard owners also produce and sell apple cider, and that promises to be a
bumper crop as well this season.
Franke’s fruit farm already is pressing cider, and he estimates that he probably will still be pressing cider in December. Last year, Franke was able to make only four batches of cider, and that quickly sold out. He was left with no cider to ferment into apple vinegar, another orchard crop.
All of this is good
news for apple consumers, who Bender said were disappointed last year.
“People missed apples last year. It was just an unfortunate thing,” said Bender, whose orchard produces more than 30 different varieties of apples. “This year, it’s been a great year, and it’s a beautiful crop. What a difference from one year to the next.”
APPLES: All types of fruit crops look exceptional
PATRICK REDMOND
A red delicious apple tree is loaded with apples waiting to be picked. Apple were in short supply in the area last year, but are plentiful this year.
FROM PAGE A1
government, or force a shutdown,” said Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev. The White House promises Obama will veto the measure in the unlikely event it reaches his desk.
At a post-vote rally by House Republicans, Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, called the measure’s approval “a victory today for the American people” and turned the spotlight on the Democratic Senate.
“Our message to the United State Senate is real simple: The American people don’t want the government shut down, and they don’t want Obamacare,” he said to cheers from his GOP colleagues. “The House has
listened to the American people. Now it’s time for the United States Senate to listen to them as well.”
The temporary funding bill is needed because Washington’s longstanding budget stalemate has derailed the annual appropri-ations bills required to fund federal agency operations.
The fi ght over the must-do funding bill comes as Washington is bracing for an even bigger battle over increasing the government’s borrowing cap to make sure the government can pay its bills. Democrats say they won’t be held hostage and allow Republicans to use the must-pass measures as leverage to win legislative victories that they otherwise couldn’t.
Obama said at a unionized Ford Motor Company plant in Liberty, Mo., Friday: “If you don’t raise the debt ceiling, America can’t pay its bills.”
“If Congress doesn’t pass this debt ceiling in the next few weeks, the United States will default on its obliga-tions. That’s never happened in American history. Basically, America becomes a deadbeat,” Obama said.
The No. 2 House Democrat, Steny Hoyer of Maryland said the GOP ploy is a “blatant act of hostage-taking” fueled by Republicans’ “destructive obsession with the repeal of the Affordable Care Act and its unrestrained hostility towards govern-ment.”
BUDGET: Borrowing cap could be a bigger battleFROM PAGE A1
WASHINGTON (AP) — Linking global warming to public health, disease and extreme weather, the Obama administration pressed ahead Friday with tough requirements to limit carbon pollution from new power plants, despite protests from industry and Republicans that it would dim coal’s future.
The proposal, which would set the fi rst national limits on heat-trapping pollution from future power plants, is intended to help reshape where Americans get electricity, moving from a coal-dependent past into a future fi red by cleaner sources of energy. It’s also a key step in President Barack Obama’s global warming plans, because it would put in motion plans to end what he called “the limitless dumping of carbon pollution” from all power plants.
Under the law once the Environmental Protection Agency controls carbon at new plants, it will also control carbon at existing plants — a regulation the agency said Friday it would
start work on immedi-ately to meet a June 2014 deadline.
Yet the federal govern-ment’s own analysis of the new power plant proposal concludes that it would have a “negligible” impact on carbon dioxide emissions, pose little to no costs for the industry and provide no additional benefi ts to the public by 2022. That’s because it essentially locks in what was widely expected to happen anyway. Even without new federal regula-tions, the agency concluded that no new coal plants would have been built. Instead, the bulk of new power in this country would be supplied by natural gas, which already meets the standard announced Friday.
“The EPA … does not anticipate this rule will have any impacts on the price of electricity, employ-ment or labor markets or the U.S. economy,” the EPA wrote in its analysis.
The industry, and its allies in Congress, quickly dismissed that conclusion.
Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.
Va., said the agency was holding the coal industry to “impossible standards.”
“If these regulations go into effect,” he said, “American jobs will be lost, electricity prices will soar and economic uncertainty will grow.”
EPA administrator Gina McCarthy said in a speech Friday that rather than damage an industry, the proposed regulations would help the industry to adapt, by encouraging energy companies to develop ways to reduce carbon dioxide, the chief greenhouse gas, from burning coal.
“This proposal, rather than killing future coal, actually sets up a certain pathway forward for coal to continue to be part of the diverse mix in this country,” McCarthy said. “We know that coal is going to be part of the energy generation that we rely on substantially over the next few decades. Why wouldn’t we now acknowl-edge and invest in the kind of technologies that will allow coal a future long beyond that?”
Obama moves to limit power-plant carbon
SANAA, Yemen (AP) — Under a heavy fog, al-Qaida militants disguised in military uniforms launched car bomb attacks on three different security and military posts in southern Yemen on Friday, killing 38 soldiers in the group’s biggest attack in the country since last year.
The coordinated attacks point to how al-Qaida is exploiting the continued weakness of Yemen’s military to rally back here at a time when the group’s branches across the region grow more assertive. More than two years after U.S. raid that killed Osama bin Laden, factions of the group he led are taking advantage
of turmoil in multiple Arab nations to expand their presence and infl uence.
In Syria, foreign jihadis linked to or inspired by al-Qaida have become such a powerful force in the rebellion that the Syrian opposition on Friday accused them of being opportunists hijacking the uprising against President Bashar Assad. After the coup in Egypt toppled the Islamist president, al-Qaida leaders have called on sympathizers to join militants’ fi ght there against the military. Iraq’s al-Qaida branch has stepped up attacks in that country and extended operations into neighboring Syria.
Last month, the U.S. temporarily closed 19 diplomatic missions across the Middle East and North Africa after intelligence agencies intercepted a message between al-Qaida leader Ayman al-Zawahri and Nasser al-Wahishi, also a one-time confi dant of bin Laden who leads the Yemen branch.
“I think there’s been a promiscuous rush to write al-Qaida’s obituary, and it’s always been presump-tuous. It’s certainly had setbacks … but its resilience has always been more formidable than we imagine,” said Bruce Hoffman, director of the Center for Security Studies.
Al-Qaida surging in Yemen
ILL.
MICH.
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KY.
© 2013 Wunderground.com
Today's ForecastSaturday, Sept. 21
City/RegionHigh | Low tempsForecast for
Chicago66° | 57° South Bend
70° | 59°Fort Wayne
68° | 57°
Lafayette68° | 54°
Indianapolis72° | 59°
Terre Haute70° | 54°
Evansville73° | 61° Louisville
77° | 66°
Sunrise Sunday 7:28 a.m.
Sunset Sunday 7:40 p.m.
Cooler today with partly sunny skies and a possibility of showers. High of 68 and tonight’s low will be in the mid-40s. Sunny and clear Sunday with a high daytime temperature of 67 and an overnight low of 42 expected. Monday will be mostly sunny. High temperature of 70, low of 47.
Sunny Pt. Cloudy Cloudy
National forecastForecast highs for Saturday, Sept. 21
Fronts PressureCold Warm Stationary Low High
-10s 100s-0s 0s 10s 20s 30s 40s 50s 60s 70s 80s 90s 110s
Today’s drawing by:Zadie HessSubmit your weather drawings to: Weather Drawings, Editorial Dept.P.O. Box 39, Kendallville, IN 46755
Local HI 75 LO 56 PRC. .10Fort Wayne HI 79 LO 57 PRC. .80
South Bend HI 74 LO 57 PRC. tr.Indianapolis HI 79 LO 58 PRC. 1.1
Friday’s Statistics
TheStarSATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 2013 kpcnews.com B
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NATIONAL LEAGUECINCINNATI ...............................6PITTSBURGH ...........................5
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H IG H SCHOOLFOOTBALL Grand Val ley Christ ian (Mich.) at The Howe School , noonVOLLEYBALL Angola at Leo Invi-tat ional , 8 a .m. Goshen Invitat ion-al , 9 a .m.BOYS SOCCE R Wawasee at East Noble, 11 a.m. Lakewood Park at South Adams, noonN ECC TournamentChampionshipAt Westview xxxx vs. xxxx, x p.m.Consolat ion matchesAt Hamilton Lakeland vs. Prai-r ie Heights, 10 a.m. Central Noble vs. Hamilton, noonG I R LS SOCCE R East Noble at F.W. South Side, 10 a.m. Lakewood Park at South Adams, 10 a.m.N ECC Tournament Angola at West-view, x p.m.G I R LS GOLF West Noble, Prair ie Heights at East No-ble Sectional (Cob-blestone) , 9 a .m. DeKalb, Fremont at Angola Sectional (Zol lner) , 1 p.m.CROSS COU NTRY East Noble, Angola, Westview and Fremont at New Prairie Invita-tional, 9:30 a.m. Prairie Heights and Hamilton at West Noble Invitational, 9:30 a.m.BOYS TE N N I S Angola at Canterbury Invitational, 9 a.m. Fremont at Knox Invitat ional , 10 a.m. Westview at Fair-f ield (varsity only) , 10 a.m.COLLEG E TE N N I S Trine women in ITA Regional Champion-ships at DePauw, 9 a .m.COLLEG E GOLF Trine men at Alma M IAA Jamboree, 10 a.m. Trine women at Wisconsin-Whitewater Invitational , 10 a.m.COLLEGE VOLLEYBALL Kalamazoo at Tr ine, 11 a.m.COLLEG E FOOTBALL Concordia (Wis.) at Tr ine, 1 p.m.
Area Events•
CHAD KLINE
Garrett’s Noah Follett carries the ball during Friday’s ACAC contest with Bluffton. The
Railroaders lost, 28-14.
BY AARON [email protected]
COLUMBIA CITY — DeKalb head coach Mike DeVos said his football team is improving after it gave the young coach small glimpses of its underlying talent Friday night.
Just not enough yet.The Barons found the end
zone twice — double their season production — but were undone by a Columbia City team which rushed for 232 yards and three touchdowns, and scored twice through the air in a 34-12 Eagles win. Columbia City’s defense allowed just 12 rushing yards to DeKalb runners and intercepted Barons sophomore quarterback Harrison Price twice.
“We had some glimpses of what we can become,” said DeVos. “We’re trying to build on getting the little things each week. Some little things we improved on — blocking, giving time for the quarterback, making the correct reads, running the ball hard and making plays. This was the fi rst time we had our players make plays for us, and that’s good to see and we have to build on that.”
It took time for DeKalb to get rolling. Price was sacked on his fi rst play from scrimmage before his unit went three and out and was forced to punt. Columbia City responded with a 4-yard rumble from bruising back Braden Myers for an Eagles touchdown.
After a Barons punt, Myers scored again from 3 yards out on Columbia City’s next drive. Another DeKalb punt led to a 17-yard run up the middle by change-of-pace tailback Carson Reed midway through the second quarter.
DeKalb found its leg from there.
After Price was nearly intercepted on third down, the Barons were forced to punt.
DeKalb downed by Eagles
BY CHRIS SMURRGARRETT — When it rains,
it pours. That’s exactly what happened on a rainy Friday night as the Garrett Railroaders fell to the Bluffton Tigers 28-14 in an Allen County Athletic Confer-ence football game.
The Railroaders (3-2, 1-1 ACAC) were plagued all night by Tigers sophomore running back D’Wayne Eskridge as he gashed the defense for one big gain after another in racking up a whopping 222 yards on the ground on 18 carries. He also hauled in three catches for 10 yards.
“We haven’t handled athletic running backs very well,” Garrett head coach Chris DePew said. “Our two losses have come to some athletic guys.”
To say that DePew was disappointed with his team’s loss would be an understatement.
“I wasn’t real happy with our game plan,” he said. “We had to juggle our offensive line a little bit and I think it affected our game plan negatively. I don’t think we paid enough attention to detail this week.
“We didn’t have a great week of practice. I think coaches and players alike didn’t have a great
week.”The Railroaders found the end
zone twice, both scores coming through the air from senior quarterback Noah Follett. He fi nished with 161 yards and had two interceptions on the night while connecting on 12 of his 18 pass attempts.
Entering the fourth quarter, the Railroaders found themselves down 13-7. After freshman defensive lineman Cordell Camp scooped up a fumble by the Tigers, the Railroaders would capitalize on what would be the most electrifying play of the game. That play would come in the form of a 55-yard fl ea-fl icker pass from Follett to senior wide receiver Cole Wilson, which gave Garrett a 14-13 lead with 9 minutes, 23 seconds to play in regulation.
It would be the last time the Railroaders would score.
Bluffton’s Eskridge continued to make big plays, picking up big chunks of yards as his team would fi nd the end zone two more times; once from junior quarterback Jacob Wenger on a 3-yard run and another from senior running back Michael Pearson from 4 yards out for his second score of the game.
The Railroaders did their best
to try and recuperate to close the gap with time winding down, but more turnovers removed any hopes of doing so.
“We didn’t run the ball very well tonight,” DePew said. “That’s our bread and butter. Our offense was pretty anemic tonight. That all comes from me play calling and it comes from game planning. We can’t win games with four turnovers.”
The rainy weather may not have affected Bluffton (3-2, 1-2) in the end, but it was hard to ignore it the entire night.
“The ball may have gotten a little slippery tonight, but Bluffton was playing in the same stuff that we were and they seemed to handle it (well). It didn’t put either team at a disadvantage,” DePew said.
“For the most part, it was just a matter of how we played. Knowing that it might rain I thought it would give us more of an advantage given our style of play. It didn’t work out that way at all.”
The Railroaders will look to rebound with a win next week at Woodlan. “They’re a big physical team and we’re going to have play a lot better up front on offense and defense,” DePew said.
Railroaders corralled
JEFF JONES
Eastside’s Kadis Renier outruns several Fairfi eld Falcons for a big gain in the fi rst half of Friday’s football game at Butler. Renier returned a kickoff 79 yards for a touchdown, but Eastside lost, 55-28.
BY JEFF [email protected]
BUTLER — Fairfi eld dominated the line of scrimmage, rolling up nearly 500 yards of offense, and spoiled Eastside’s homecoming with a 55-28 victory Friday.
Falcon senior Cameron Kitson carried 23 times for 274 yards and fi ve touchdowns on the ground. He also caught two passes, including one for a touchdown.
It was the Blazers (1-4 overall, 0-4 in Northeast Corner Confer-ence play) who struck fi rst, however.
Eastside forced a three-and-out on Fairfi eld’s fi rst possession, and Kadis Renier’s 35-yard run set up P.J. Dean’s 5-yard touchdown run just three minutes into the contest.
The Falcons (4-1 overall and in NECC play) made sure everyone knew what kind of a night was in store, controlling the ball for the next six minutes, with Kitson grabbing a 7-yard pass from Kyle
Mast for the tying score with 2:31 left in the opening quarter.
The Falcons forced a three-and-out on Eastside’s next possession, and returned the ensuing punt to the Blazer 38.
On the fi rst play of the second quarter, Kitson was in the end zone again, this time on a 9-yard run. Reid Kammerdiener’s kick made it 14-7, Fairfi eld.
The teams traded short posses-sions before the visitors embarked on a seven-play, 71-yard scoring drive, capped by Kitson’s 17-yard TD run with 2:02 left in the half.
The Blazers attempted to rally, with Dean completing two passes for fi rst downs and running for another before Fairfi eld’s Lucas Miller intercepted his pass at the Falcon 15 just before the half ended.
Eastside regrouped at halftime, and put together another quick scoring drive, with Dean scoring from 3 yards out with 9:04 left in the third.
Falcons spoil Eastside Homecoming, 55-28
SEE BARONS, PAGE B2
SEE BLAZERS, PAGE B2
B2 THE STAR kpcnews.com SPORTS •
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 2013
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CONTEST RULES
1. To enter, list the teams you think will win. For the tie breakers, select the highest number of points you think will be scored by one of the winning teams. No team need be selected, only the number of points scored.ADDITIONAL TIE BREAKERS If the 3 highest scores for the week do not break the tie, the following procedures will be used: A. Win-loss record in high school games only. B. Win-loss record in high school games in The Star/The Garrett Clipper circulation area only. C. Winner will be drawn out of a hat.2. One entry per person, per family, per mailing address. No fictitious names may be used. Contestants for The Star/The Garrett Clipper Hannah Holstein contest must be DeKalb County residents. If multiple entries are judged to be from the same person - regardless of what name or address is on the entry blank - all of those entries will be disqualified. The decision of the judges is absolutely final.3. All entries must be postmarked by THURSDAY of the contest week.4. Winners will be announced on the Wednesday following the contest.5. Winners limited to once every 30 days. 6. Varsity football players are ineligible during this contest.
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FOOTBALLCONTEST
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1. DeKalb at Homestead, Fri.2. East Noble at Norwell, Fri.3. Garrett at Woodlan, Fri.4. Eastside at Lakeland, Fri.5. Angola at Fairfi eld, Fri.6. Howe School at Central Noble, Fri.7. West Noble at Churubusco, Fri.8. Fremont at Prairie Heights, Fri.9. Leo at Heritage, Fri.10. Trine at St. Joseph's, Sat.
11. Oklahoma at Notre Dame, Sat.12. Northern Illinois at Purdue, Sat.13. Toledo at Ball State, Sat.14. Wisconsin at Ohio State, Sat.15. LSU at Georgia, Sat.16. Ole Miss at Alabama, Sat.17. Steelers vs. Vikings (London, Eng.) Sun.18. Bengals at Browns, Sun.19. Bears at Lions, Sun.20. Colts at Jaguars, Sun.
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SOUTH BEND (AP) — Notre Dame is still missing graduated linebacker Manti Te’o a quarter of the way through this season.
Without the charismatic leader who made those around him better, the once dominating Fighting Irish defense is meandering even with eight returning starters. The defense has given up one fewer point through three games (71) than it did through eight games (72) last season. The Irish defense, which allowed only nine offensive touchdowns all last regular season, already has given up eight this year.
“Our guys were like hunting dogs last year. In other words, when it was time to go, we knew what to expect,” coach Brian Kelly said. “We’re not there yet, but I’m getting a better feel for our football team each and every week. I’d like to be there right now, but the problem is our first four weeks don’t allow us time to grow up.”
While the 22nd-ranked Irish (2-1) opened the season against Temple and then split
games with Michigan and Purdue, the Spartans (3-0) opened the season with wins against Western Michigan, South Florida and Youngstown State. Michigan State coach Mark Dantonio said he expects to learn more about his team Saturday.
“You are going to find out how they handle adversity, how they play away, look for matchups here, how do they play in crunch time in a close game, which we really haven’t had that yet,” he said.
The Spartans this season have looked more like the Irish of last season than Notre Dame has, depending on the nation’s No. 1 defense to win games. Defensive end Shilique Calhoun has led the charge with three touchdowns on a pair of fumble recoveries and an interception return as the defense scored four of the Spartans’ first six touchdowns.
But Irish linebacker Prince Shembo believes the Irish defense is still capable of playing like it did last season.
“It’s just lack of execution.
We’ve just got to work at our assignments and get better at it,” he said.
The Irish defensive line, which has not been as produc-tive as last season, could be further hampered by an ankle sprain defensive end Sheldon Day sustained against Purdue. Day practice Thursday after missing the first two days of practice this week, but Kelly said he will be a game-time decision.
Kelly admits the Irish are still searching for their identity, but believes quarterback Tommy Rees showed leadership against Purdue in the second half that should help with that. With three players sharing the two inside linebacker spots and a first-time starter at safety in Austin Collinsworth, Kelly is looking for people to help fill the leadership void left by the departures of Te’o and Zeke Motta.
“Those are two positions we’re still in flux a little bit with,” Kelly said. “We’ve got leaders; we just haven’t got that position nailed down yet. I
think once we do, we’ll have the leadership we need.”
Here are five things to watch in the Michigan State-Notre Dame game on Saturday:
WHAT’S COOKING: Michigan State quarterback Connor Cook will make his first start against a BCS-level opponent after winning the job by throwing for four touchdowns in the first half in a 55-17 victory against Youngstown State last week. He’ll be going against a Notre Dame defense that is 89th in the country in pass defense, 56th in total defense and has struggled against mobile quarterbacks.
GROUND GAME: The Irish are 24-4 in four seasons under Kelly when outrushing opponents, while the Spartans are 43-10 in seven seasons under Dantonio with the rushing advantage. So far this season, Michigan State, behind the rushing of Jeremy Langford and Nick Hill, has been the better rushing team. The Spartans are averaging 210 yards a game while the Irish, who have three running backs sharing the load,
are averaging just 125 yards.300 CLUB: Tommy Rees is
just the second Irish quarterback to pass for 300 yards in three straight games to open a season and could become the first to do so in the first four. He had accomplished the feat only two times before this season, losing both games. The Michigan State defense has given up just 380 passing yards total in three games this season, including a high of 193 yards against Western Michigan.
THRILLING FINISHES: Nine of the last 13 games in the series have been decided by a touchdown or less and four of the last eight by a field goal. Those exciting finishes include Michigan State beating Notre Dame 34-31 in 2010 on a fake field goal in overtime when Dantonio was hospital-ized afterward because of a mild heart attack and Notre Dame winning 33-30 a year earlier when safety Kyle McCarthy intercepted a pass from Kirk Cousins at the 4-yard line with 57 seconds left.
Irish still seeking identity, face Michigan State
Although their lead was cut to a touchdown, the Falcons were unfazed, and Kitson ripped off three runs of 14 yards or more, including a back-breaking 27-yard TD run barely three minutes later to boost the score to 28-14.
When the Blazers gave up the ball on downs near midfi eld, Kitson and the Falcons scored again, this time on a 20-yard run with 2:43 left in the third. Fairfi eld missed the extra point, but led 34-14.
The teams combined for three touchdowns in just over a minute in the fourth.
Fairfi eld’s Miller broke loose for a 13-yard run with 9:52 left. Eastside’s Renier returned the ensuing kickoff 79 yards to the end zone. Kitson raced 44 yards for his sixth score of the night at 8:39.
The Falcons tacked on one more score before the game ended.
The Blazers fi nished with 333 yards in total offense.
Dean ran for 95 yards on 21 carries, and completed 7-of-14 passes for 91 yards. Conner Dove completed 3-of-4 fourth-quarter passes for 71 yards.
BLAZERS: Eastside scores 3 TDs in second half against FalconsFROM PAGE B1
BY JAMES FISHERjfi [email protected]
EMMA — Different year, but the teams are the same.
West Noble and Westview earned spots in Saturday’s NECC tourna-ment chmpionship games with semifi nal victories on Friday.
Westview beat the Chargers 3-2 in last season’s tournament championship game.
“The rematch — we want this,” said West Noble’s Uriel Macias, who scored three times on Friday as the Chargers defeated Angola 5-0 in the fi rst semifi nal. “I remember the disappointment of not getting last year’s title. This one would mean everything.”
Westview beat Eastside 7-0 in the second semifi nal.
Goalkeepers Jonathan Moreno and Joeuany Reyes combined for the shutout for West Noble. Moreno made six stops in the fi rst half and Reyes stopped fi ve shots in the second half.
The Hornets kept the potent Chargers off the scoreboard for nearly 27 minutes at the outset.
“We held them for the fi rst thirty minutes, then just ran out of gas,” said Angola coach Dusan Friga. “They’re a quality team. What got us was the two games back-to-back. The guys were tired.”
Macias struck with the fi rst Charger goal on a header in front of the goal past Angola keeper Hayden Cowen.
“It was a beautiful cross from Abel (Zamarripa),” Macias said, “I just fi nished.”
West Noble struck again when Cowan came out to retrieve a shot. The ball got past and Chris Najera placed the ball in the corner of an open net with 5:32 to play in the fi rst half. Macias struck again with 52 seconds left in the half on a shot in front of the goal, giving the Chargers a 3-0 margin at the break.
Angola had its best chances early in the second half, but couldn’t connect.
Sixteen minutes into the second half Macias found himself one-on-one in front of the net with Cowan and was able to slip a shot past the Hornet keeper for a 4-0 margin. Less than a minute later Abel Zamarripa made in 5-0 with a score in front with an assist from Macias.
Westview 7, Eastside 0Bucky Carpenter scored
two early goals and fi ve different Westview players added goals as the Warriors upended Eastside.
Lindon McDonald, Lincoln McDonald, Nate Geradot, Micah Hunsberger and Jacob Berkey added goals.
Eastside ousted in NECC tourney
Fairfi eld 55, Eastside 28Fairfi eld 7 14 13 21 — 55Eastside 7 0 7 14 — 28First QuarterES — Dean 5 run (K.Franz kick), 9:00.FF — Kitson 7 pass from Mast (Kammerd-iener kick), 2:31.Second QuarterFF — Kitson 9 run (Kammerdiener kick), 11:53.FF — Kitson 17 run (Kammerdiener kick), 2:02.Third QuarterES — Dean 3 run (K.Franz kick), 9:04.FF — Kitson 27 run (Kammerdiener kick), 6:06.FF — Kitson 20 run (kick failed), 2:43.Fourth QuarterFF — Miller 13 run (Kammerdiener kick), 9:52.ES — Renier 79 kickoff return (Moreno pass from Dean), 9:39.FF — Kitson 44 run (Kammerdiener kick), 8:39.ES — Lockhart 39 pass from Dove (run failed), 6:50.FF — Zook 2 run (Kammerdiener kick), 3:18. FF ES
First downs 20 17
Rushes-yards 52-418 36-171
Passing yards 68 162
Comp-Att-Int. 5-9-1 10-18-1
Total yards 486 333
Penalties-yards 3-29 6-35
Fumbles-lost 0-0 0-0
Punts-Avg. 1-25 4-29
INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS
RUSHING — Fairfi eld: Kitson 23-274, 5
tds; Zook 16-74, 1 td; Miller 8-46, 1 td; Mast
8-24. Eastside: Dean 21-95, 2 tds; Renier
10-50; Nickolson 4-20; Dove 1-6.
PASSING — Fairfi eld: Mast 5-8, 68
yards, 1 td, 1 int.; Glogouski, 0-1. Eastside:
Dean 7-14, 91 yards, 1 int.; Dove 3-4, 71
yards, 1 td.
RECEIVING — Fairfi eld: Glogouski, 1-40;
Zook 2-19; Kitson 2-9, 1 td. Eastside:
Lockhart 4-116, 1 td; Eck 3-17; Renier
2-15; Sprunger 1-14.
Columbia City’s Davin Lawrence fumbled the punt, though, and DeKalb’s Chad Ramus recovered the ball at the Eagles’ 24. Price took two keepers to the 1 before Ramus took a direct snap around the end and in for a touchdown.
Columbia City’s ensuing drive was stuffed by the Barons’ defense, and Price was given a half-fi eld to work with with 38 seconds left in the half. Two players later, he lofted a deep ball to 6-6 sophomore receiver Will Chrisman, who leaped over his defender to snatch the ball before running untouched into the end zone for a 53-yard score with 20 seconds left in the half.
Chrisman then intercepted Eagles quarterback Trevor Bolt’s pass to end the half.
The second half, though, wasn’t as exciting for DeKalb. The Barons’ six second-half series were ended with three punts, two interceptions, and the game clock with Columbia City adding two more insurance touchdowns.
“We’ve got to continue to get better, because if we’re honest, we’ve got a lot of work to do,” said Eagles
coach Randy Hudgins. “We stepped up well defensively with new guys and new schemes, but I was generally pleased with how we got after the quarterback.”
Columbia City sacked Price four times and had nine tackles for loss.
DeVos praised his own defense, which despite allowing 345 yards of total offense to the Eagles still had key stops throughout the game. He was pleased with the playmaking his offense sporadically showcased, as well.
“That’s the fi rst time we’ve seen true glimpses of what we really can become, and it’s exciting to see,” said DeVos. “We still have a large amount of mistakes to correct yet, but we’re getting there. We’ve got to build on tonight, look at the fi lm and get better.”
Price fi nished 7-of-20 for 102 yards with a touchdown and two interceptions.
Columbia City was led by receiver Wayne Smith, who caught three balls for 74 yards and two scores, and intercepted Price once. Bolt threw for 83 yards on 4-of-12 passing and one score.
BARONS: DeKalb will face Homestead in next NHC contestFROM PAGE B1
DETROIT (AP) — Max Scherzer became baseball’s fi rst 20-game winner Friday night, pitching through bad weather for six innings to help the Detroit Tigers to a 12-5 victory over the Chicago White Sox.
Scherzer (20-3) was making his fi fth attempt at win No. 20. He had two losses and two no-decisions in his previous four starts before Friday’s victory on a rainy night. Torii Hunter had four hits for Detroit, and Victor Martinez homered.
Dylan Axelrod (4-10) allowed seven runs in 2 2-3 innings.
The AL Central-leading Tigers lowered their magic number to eliminate second-place Cleveland to three.
Former Tiger Avisail Garcia hit a two-run homer for Chicago.
Scherzer’s previous
career high was 16 wins last year, and he’s been terrifi c this season from the start. He began with a 13-0 stretch and remains among the front-runners for the American League Cy Young Award.
By the middle innings, the biggest obstacle between Scherzer and win No. 20 was probably the weather. It was raining at the start of the game, and although the teams played through it, there was always the possibility of a delay that could have knocked Scherzer out before he could pitch the required fi ve innings for the victory.
Detroit’s offense did its part, scoring two runs in the fi rst, one in the second, four in the third and fi ve in the fi fth. With the rain falling and umbrellas showing up throughout the crowd, Scherzer allowed three runs
and six hits. He walked one and struck out three.
Scherzer was receiving a major league-high 6.66 runs of support on average before Friday’s game — and the Tigers quickly added to that fi gure.
Braves 9, Cubs 5Chris Johnson went 3
for 4 with a home run, and Atlanta beat Chicago 9-5 on Friday to reduce its magic number to clinch the NL East to one.
The Braves broke open a tie game in the top of the ninth with four runs — all with two outs. Brian McCann and Johnson had RBI singles, and Andrelton Simmons followed with a two-run double.
Freddie Freeman earlier hit a three-run homer for Atlanta.
David Carpenter (4-1) pitched a scoreless eighth to get the win.
Scherzer wins 20th, Tigers rout White Sox, 12-5
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SPORTS BRIEFS•
Henrik Stenson builds 4-shot lead at East Lake
ATLANTA (AP) — Henrik Stenson made three birdies on the opening four holes at East Lake to quickly seize control and shot 4-under 66 to build a four-shot lead over Adam Scott in the Tour Championship.
Stenson was at 10-under 130 going into the third round and might be playing a course far less firm. The forecast is for rain most of day, and the starting times have been moved up to Saturday morning with hopes of getting it in.
Tiger Woods was 14 shots behind. It was the first time since the 2011 PGA Championship that Woods began a tournament with back-to-back rounds over par.
Jordan Spieth, the 20-year-old rookie, had a 67 and was five shots behind. U.S. Open champion Justin Rose, Dustin Johnson and Billy Horschel were another shot back.
Stenson (No. 2) and Scott (No. 3) are among the top five seeds in the FedEx Cup who could take home the $10 million bonus simply by winning the Tour Championship. Woods could still win the FedEx Cup if both of them falter, which is looking unlikely halfway through the tournament.
Scott has even more at stake — a win might be enough for him to win PGA Tour player of the year.
Tsonga and Simon reach Open de Moselle semifi nals
METZ, France (AP) — Top-seeded Jo-Wilfried Tsonga stayed on course for his third straight Open de Moselle title by beating Germany’s Tobias Kamke 4-6, 6-3, 6-4 to reach the semifinals on Friday.
Saturday’s other semi is an all-French match between Gilles Simon and Nicolas Mahut.
Simon beat sixth-seeded Sam Querrey 6-4, 7-6 (1). Simon, who did not face a single break point, next plays countryman Nicolas Mahut after he beat Germany’s Benjamin Becker 6-2, 6-4.
Area Football StandingsNORTHEAST HOOSIER CONF.TEAMS NHC ALL PF PANew Haven 3-0 5-0 233 84Homestead 2-1 4-1 98 73East Noble 2-1 4-1 183 59Bellmont 2-1 3-2 150 132Columbia City 2-1 3-2 164 129Carroll 1-2 3-2 208 89Norwell 0-3 0-5 82 221DeKalb 0-3 0-5 26 216Friday, Sept. 20East Noble 27, Carroll 7Columbia City 34, DeKalb 12Bellmont 14, Homestead 13 OTNew Haven 28, Norwell 7Friday, Sept. 27Bellmont at CarrollColumbia City at New HavenDeKalb at HomesteadEast Noble at Norwell
NORTHEAST CORNER CONF.TEAMS NECC ALL PF PAChurubusco 5-0 5-0 177 26Lakeland 5-0 5-0 190 39Fairfi eld 4-1 4-1 189 102Angola 2-2 2-3 51 116Prairie Heights 2-2 2-3 79 107West Noble 1-3 1-4 62 138Fremont 1-3 2-3 82 192Eastside 0-4 1-4 122 161Central Noble 0-5 0-5 61 191Friday, Sept. 20Fremont 35, Central Noble 20Churubusco 14, Angola 7Fairfi eld 56, Eastside 28Lakeland 33, West Noble 0Woodlan 32, Prairie Heights 7 Friday, Sept. 27Angola at Fairfi eldEastside at LakelandFremont at Prairie HeightsThe Howe School at Central NobleWest Noble at Churubusco ALLEN COUNTY ATHLETIC CONF.TEAMS ACAC ALL PF PAHeritage 3-0 4-1 147 164Leo 2-0 5-0 187 25Garrett 1-1 3-2 110 96South Adams 1-2 2-3 99 153Woodlan 1-1 3-2 168 95Adams Central 0-3 2-3 117 109Bluffton 1-2 3-2 141 124Friday, Sept. 20Bluffton 28, Garrett 14Heritage 33, Adams Central 27Leo 35, South Adams 12Woodlan 32, Prairie Heights 7Friday, Sept. 27Garrett at WoodlanLeo at HeritageSouth Adams at Adams CentralSouthern Wells at Bluffton
Prep Football ScoresAnderson Prep Academy 14, Indiana Deaf 6Avon 41, Brownsburg 13Batesville 31, E. Central 10Bellmont 14, Homestead 13, OTBluffton 28, Garrett 14Boone Grove 20, Bowman Academy 8Bremen 45, Culver 14Brownstown 28, N. Harrison 0Carmel 49, Lawrence North 9Carroll (Flora) 20, Caston 6Cass 46, Peru 7Center Grove 42, Lawrence Central 10Charlestown 14, Silver Creek 0Churubusco 14, Angola 7Cin. St. Xavier, Ohio 15, Indpls Cathedral 6Columbia City 34, DeKalb 12Columbus East 48, New Albany 20Columbus North 21, Terre Haute South 20Corydon 35, Eastern (Pekin) 0Decatur Central 55, Mooresville 14Delphi 27, Clinton Prairie 0E. Noble 27, Carroll (Ft. Wayne) 7Eastbrook 42, Elwood 7Eastern Hancock 65, Knightstown 0Edinburgh 59, Tindley 26Fishers 35, Lafayette Harrison 13Floyd Central 28, Jeffersonville 14Fremont 35, Central Noble 20FW Snider 14, FW Concordia 13FW South 47, Ft. Wayne Northrop 21FW Wayne 15, Ft. Wayne Luers 0Glenn 40, Triton 6Hamilton Hts. 54, Eastern 6Huntington North 46, Anderson 13Indian Creek 21, Brown Co. 0Indpls Chatard 41, Indpls Ritter 14Indpls Roncalli 20, Indpls Scecina 7Indpls Tech 26, Guerin Catholic 8Jennings Co. 13, Madison 9Kokomo 32, New Castle 6Laf. Catholic 31, Benton Central 0Lakeland 33, W. Noble 0LaVille 16, Knox 0Lebanon 21, Frankfort 6Linton 48, Springs Valley 7Logansport 39, Marion 13Maconaquah 28, Western 18Manchester 35, N. Miami 0Milan 55, N. Decatur 0Mishawaka 17, Ft. Wayne North 14Mississinewa 46, Blackford 0Mitchell 14, Crawford Co. 6Mt. Vernon 35, Pendleton ts. 7N. Vermillion 79, Riverton Parke 0New Haven 28, Norwell 7New Palestine 35, Whiteland 10New Prairie 25, Jimtown 7Noblesville 28, McCutcheon 20Northridge 24, Warsaw 0Northview 33, Owen Valley 16Northwestern 47, Taylor 14Oak Hill 14, Alexandria 7Penn 57, S. Bend Clay 0Pike Central 22, Forest Park 7Plainfi eld 35, Greenwood 7Providence def. Indpls Manual, forfeit
Rochester 28, Southwood 21Rockville 38, Turkey Run 0Rushville 19, Connersville 0S. Adams 35, Leo 12S. Bend Riley 42, Elkhart Central 24S. Putnam 34, Greencastle 29Salem 26, Clarksville 6Shenandoah 59, Heritage Christian 7Southmont 26, Crawfordsville 13Southridge 33, S. Spencer 0Speedway 34, Monrovia 6Sullivan 15, Edgewood 8Tri-West 48, N. Montgomery 8Union City 20, Centerville 12W. Central 56, S. Newton 14W. Lafayette 34, Tipton 10W. Vigo 14, S. Vermillion 6Warren Central 28, Indpls N. Central 26Wawasee 21, NorthWood 16Western Boone 27, Danville 24Westfi eld 10, Zionsville 7Whitko 51, Wabash 7Woodlan 32, Prairie Hts. 7
NFL StandingsAMERICAN CONFERENCEEast W L T PF PANew England 2 0 0 36 31Miami 2 0 0 47 30N.Y. Jets 1 1 0 28 30Buffalo 1 1 0 45 46SouthHouston 2 0 0 61 52Indianapolis 1 1 0 41 41Tennessee 1 1 0 40 39Jacksonville 0 2 0 11 47NorthCincinnati 1 1 0 41 34Baltimore 1 1 0 41 55Cleveland 0 2 0 16 37Pittsburgh 0 2 0 19 36WestKansas City 3 0 0 71 34Denver 2 0 0 90 50Oakland 1 1 0 36 30San Diego 1 1 0 61 61NATIONAL CONFERENCEEast W L T PF PADallas 1 1 0 52 48Philadelphia 1 2 0 79 86N.Y. Giants 0 2 0 54 77Washington 0 2 0 47 71SouthNew Orleans 2 0 0 39 31Atlanta 1 1 0 48 47Carolina 0 2 0 30 36Tampa Bay 0 2 0 31 34NorthChicago 2 0 0 55 51Detroit 1 1 0 55 49Green Bay 1 1 0 66 54Minnesota 0 2 0 54 65WestSeattle 2 0 0 41 10St. Louis 1 1 0 51 55San Francisco 1 1 0 37 57Arizona 1 1 0 49 48Thursday’s GameKansas City 26, Philadelphia 16Sunday’s GamesSan Diego at Tennessee, 1 p.m.Arizona at New Orleans, 1 p.m.St. Louis at Dallas, 1 p.m.Cleveland at Minnesota, 1 p.m.Houston at Baltimore, 1 p.m.N.Y. Giants at Carolina, 1 p.m.Detroit at Washington, 1 p.m.Tampa Bay at New England, 1 p.m.Green Bay at Cincinnati, 1 p.m.Atlanta at Miami, 4:05 p.m.Indianapolis at San Francisco, 4:25 p.m.Jacksonville at Seattle, 4:25 p.m.Buffalo at N.Y. Jets, 4:25 p.m.Chicago at Pittsburgh, 8:30 p.m.Monday’s GameOakland at Denver, 8:40 p.m.Thursday, Sep. 26San Francisco at St. Louis, 8:25 p.m.Sunday, Sep. 29N.Y. Giants at Kansas City, 1 p.m.Seattle at Houston, 1 p.m.Baltimore at Buffalo, 1 p.m.Arizona at Tampa Bay, 1 p.m.Indianapolis at Jacksonville, 1 p.m.Cincinnati at Cleveland, 1 p.m.Chicago at Detroit, 1 p.m.Pittsburgh vs. Minnesota at London, 1 p.m.N.Y. Jets at Tennessee, 4:05 p.m.Washington at Oakland, 4:25 p.m.Dallas at San Diego, 4:25 p.m.Philadelphia at Denver, 4:25 p.m.New England at Atlanta, 8:30 p.m.Open: Carolina, Green BayMonday, Sep. 30Miami at New Orleans, 8:40 p.m.
National League StandingsEast Division W L Pct GBAtlanta 91 62 .595 —Washington 83 71 .539 8½Philadelphia 71 82 .464 20New York 69 84 .451 22Miami 56 98 .364 35½Central Division W L Pct GBSt. Louis 89 64 .582 —Cincinnati 88 66 .571 1½Pittsburgh 88 66 .571 1½Milwaukee 68 84 .447 20½Chicago 64 90 .416 25½West Division W L Pct GBx-Los Angeles 88 65 .575 —Arizona 77 75 .507 10½San Diego 71 81 .467 16½San Francisco 71 83 .461 17½Colorado 70 84 .455 18½x-clinched divisionThursday’s GamesPittsburgh 10, San Diego 1
San Francisco 2, N.Y. Mets 1Chicago Cubs 5, Milwaukee 1Colorado 7, St. Louis 6, 15 inningsL.A. Dodgers 7, Arizona 6Washington 3, Miami 2Friday’s GamesAtlanta 9, Chicago Cubs 5Cincinnati 6, Pittsburgh 5, 10 inningsWashington 8, Miami 0N.Y. Mets 6, Philadelphia 4N.Y. Yankees 5, San Francisco 1Arizona at Colorado, lateSt. Louis at Milwaukee, lateL.A. Dodgers at San Diego, lateSaturday’s GamesSan Francisco (Vogelsong 3-5) at N.Y. Yankees (Nova 8-5), 1:05 p.m.Atlanta (Medlen 14-12) at Chicago Cubs (T.Wood 9-11), 4:05 p.m.Cincinnati (H.Bailey 11-10) at Pittsburgh (A.J.Burnett 8-11), 7:05 p.m.Miami (Koehler 3-10) at Washington (Strasburg 7-9), 7:05 p.m.N.Y. Mets (Gee 11-10) at Philadelphia (Cloyd 2-5), 7:05 p.m.St. Louis (Lynn 13-10) at Milwaukee (Gallardo 11-9), 7:10 p.m.Arizona (Cahill 7-10) at Colorado (McHugh 0-2), 8:10 p.m.L.A. Dodgers (Kershaw 14-9) at San Diego (B.Smith 1-1), 8:40 p.m.Sunday’s GamesSan Francisco at N.Y. Yankees, 1:05 p.m.Cincinnati at Pittsburgh, 1:35 p.m.Miami at Washington, 1:35 p.m.N.Y. Mets at Philadelphia, 1:35 p.m.Atlanta at Chicago Cubs, 2:20 p.m.Arizona at Colorado, 4:10 p.m.L.A. Dodgers at San Diego, 4:10 p.m.St. Louis at Milwaukee, 8:05 p.m.Monday’s GamesMilwaukee at Atlanta, 7:10 p.m.N.Y. Mets at Cincinnati, 7:10 p.m.Philadelphia at Miami, 7:10 p.m.Pittsburgh at Chicago Cubs, 8:05 p.m.Washington at St. Louis, 8:15 p.m.Arizona at San Diego, 10:10 p.m.
American League StandingsEast Division W L Pct GBx-Boston 94 61 .606 —Tampa Bay 83 69 .546 9½Baltimore 81 71 .533 11½New York 81 73 .526 12½Toronto 70 83 .458 23Central Division W L Pct GBDetroit 90 64 .584 —Cleveland 84 70 .545 6Kansas City 80 72 .526 9Minnesota 65 87 .428 24Chicago 60 93 .392 29½West Division W L Pct GBOakland 90 63 .588 —Texas 83 69 .546 6½Los Angeles 74 78 .487 15½Seattle 67 86 .438 23Houston 51 103 .331 39½x-clinched divisionThursday’s GamesDetroit 5, Seattle 4Cleveland 2, Houston 1, 11 inningsToronto 6, N.Y. Yankees 2Boston 3, Baltimore 1Texas 8, Tampa Bay 2Oakland 8, Minnesota 6Friday’s GamesCleveland 2, Houston 1, 7 inningsN.Y. Yankees 5, San Francisco 1Detroit 12, Chicago White Sox 5Boston 6, Toronto 3Baltimore at Tampa Bay, lateTexas at Kansas City, lateMinnesota at Oakland, lateSeattle at L.A. Angels, lateSaturday’s GamesBaltimore (Mig.Gonzalez 10-7) at Tampa Bay (Cobb 9-3), 1:05 p.m.San Francisco (Vogelsong 3-5) at N.Y. Yankees (Nova 8-5), 1:05 p.m.Minnesota (P.Hernandez 3-1) at Oakland (J.Parker 11-7), 4:05 p.m.Houston (Clemens 4-5) at Cleveland (Kazmir 8-9), 6:05 p.m.Chicago White Sox (Sale 11-13) at Detroit (Porcello 13-8), 7:08 p.m.Texas (Garza 3-5) at Kansas City (Guthrie 14-11), 7:10 p.m.Toronto (Buehrle 11-9) at Boston (Buchholz 11-0), 7:10 p.m.Seattle (J.Saunders 11-15) at L.A. Angels (Williams 8-10), 9:05 p.m.Sunday’s GamesHouston at Cleveland, 1:05 p.m.San Francisco at N.Y. Yankees, 1:05 p.m.Chicago White Sox at Detroit, 1:08 p.m.Toronto at Boston, 1:35 p.m.Baltimore at Tampa Bay, 1:40 p.m.Texas at Kansas City, 2:10 p.m.Seattle at L.A. Angels, 3:35 p.m.Minnesota at Oakland, 4:05 p.m.Monday’s GamesBaltimore at Tampa Bay, 3:10 p.m.Houston at Texas, 8:05 p.m.Detroit at Minnesota, 8:10 p.m.Toronto at Chicago White Sox, 8:10 p.m.Oakland at L.A. Angels, 10:05 p.m.Kansas City at Seattle, 10:10 p.m.
College Football ScheduleFriday, Sept. 20FAR WESTBoise St. (2-1) at Fresno St. (2-0), 9 p.m.Saturday, Sept. 21EASTWake Forest (1-2) at Army (1-2), NoonVanderbilt (1-2) at UMass (0-3), NoonGeorgetown (1-2) at Brown (0-0),
12:30 p.m.Tulane (2-1) at Syracuse (1-2), 12:30 p.m.Yale (0-0) at Colgate (0-3), 1 p.m.Columbia (0-0) at Fordham (3-0), 1 p.m.Chowan (1-1) at Sacred Heart (3-0), 1 p.m.Lincoln (Pa.) (1-1) at St. Francis (Pa.) (0-2), 2 p.m.Bucknell (1-0) at Cornell (0-0), 3 p.m.Stony Brook (1-1) at Villanova (0-2), 3 p.m.Kent St. (1-2) at Penn St. (2-1), 3:30 p.m.Arkansas (3-0) at Rutgers (2-1), 3:30 p.m.Wagner (1-2) at Delaware (2-1), 6 p.m.Monmouth (NJ) (0-3) at Holy Cross (1-2), 6 p.m.Lafayette (0-2) at Penn (0-0), 6 p.m.Lehigh (2-0) at Princeton (0-0), 6 p.m.CCSU (0-3) at Albany (NY) (1-2), 7 p.m.Michigan (3-0) at UConn (0-2), 8 p.m.SOUTHMiddle Tennessee (2-1) at FAU (1-2), NoonNorth Carolina (1-1) at Georgia Tech (2-0), NoonFIU (0-3) at Louisville (3-0), NoonMarshall (2-1) at Virginia Tech (2-1), NoonNorth Texas (2-1) at Georgia (1-1), 12:21 p.m.Pittsburgh (1-1) at Duke (2-1), 12:30 p.m.Warner (0-3) at Jacksonville (1-2), 1 p.m.Jacksonville St. (3-0) at Georgia St. (0-3), 2 p.m.Davidson (0-2) at Johnson C. Smith (2-0), 2 p.m.Southern U. (1-2) at MVSU (0-3), 2 p.m.Towson (3-0) at NC Central (2-1), 2 p.m.SE Louisiana (1-2) at Samford (2-1), 3 p.m.Northwestern St. (2-1) at UAB (0-2), 3 p.m.Tennessee (2-1) at Florida (1-1), 3:30 p.m.West Virginia (2-1) at Maryland (3-0), 3:30 p.m.VMI (1-2) at Virginia (1-1), 3:30 p.m.Mars Hill (1-1) at W. Carolina (0-3), 3:30 p.m.SC State (1-2) vs. Benedict (2-0), at Columbia, S.C., 4 p.m.Charleston Southern (3-0) at Norfolk St. (0-2), 4 p.m.Arkansas St. (2-1) at Memphis (0-2), 4:30 p.m.Grambling St. (0-3) at Alabama St. (1-2), 6 p.m.Hampton (0-3) at Coastal Carolina (3-0), 6 p.m.Appalachian St. (0-2) at Elon (1-2), 6 p.m.Bethune-Cookman (3-0) at Florida St. (2-0), 6 p.m.Charlotte (2-1) at James Madison (2-1), 6 p.m.Berry (0-1) at Mercer (2-0), 6 p.m.The Citadel (1-2) at Old Dominion (1-2), 6 p.m.Liberty (2-1) at Richmond (1-2), 6 p.m.Colorado St. (1-2) at Alabama (2-0), 7 p.m.Savannah St. (1-2) at Miami (2-0), 7 p.m.E. Kentucky (1-2) at Morehead St. (0-3), 7 p.m.Langston (0-2) at Nicholls St. (1-2), 7 p.m.Birmingham-Southern (2-0) at Stetson (1-1), 7 p.m.Morgan St. (0-3) at W. Kentucky (1-2), 7 p.m.Rhode Island (1-2) at William & Mary (2-1), 7 p.m.Gardner-Webb (2-1) at Wofford (2-1), 7 p.m.Troy (2-1) at Mississippi St. (1-2), 7:30 p.m.Auburn (3-0) at LSU (3-0), 7:45 p.m.Weber St. (1-2) at McNeese St. (3-0), 8 p.m.Tennessee St. (2-1) at Tennessee Tech (2-1), 8 p.m.MIDWESTToledo (1-2) at Cent. Michigan (1-2), NoonW. Michigan (0-3) at Iowa (2-1), NoonLouisiana Tech (1-2) at Kansas (1-1), NoonSan Jose St. (1-1) at Minnesota (3-0), NoonFlorida A&M (1-2) at Ohio St. (3-0), NoonBall St. (2-1) at E. Michigan (1-2), 1 p.m.Indianapolis (2-0) at Drake (0-2), 2 p.m.Austin Peay (0-3) at Ohio (2-1), 2 p.m.SE Missouri (0-2) vs. S. Illinois (1-2) at St. Louis, 2 p.m.Murray St. (2-1) at Bowling Green (2-1), 3:30 p.m.Delaware St. (0-2) at N. Dakota St. (2-0), 3:30 p.m.S. Dakota St. (3-0) at Nebraska (2-1), 3:30 p.m.Maine (3-0) at Northwestern (3-0), 3:30 p.m.Michigan St. (3-0) at Notre Dame (2-1), 3:30 p.m.Purdue (1-2) at Wisconsin (2-1), 3:30 p.m.Cincinnati (2-1) at Miami (Ohio) (0-2), 4 p.m.Duquesne (1-1) at Youngstown St. (2-1), 4 p.m.Louisiana-Lafayette (1-2) at Akron (1-2), 6 p.m.Dartmouth (0-0) at Butler (2-1), 6 p.m.Abilene Christian (3-0) at Illinois St.
(0-2), 7 p.m.Cent. Arkansas (1-2) at Missouri St. (0-3), 7 p.m.E. Illinois (3-0) at N. Illinois (2-0), 7 p.m.Missouri (2-0) at Indiana (2-1), 8 p.m.SOUTHWESTHouston (2-0) at Rice (1-1), 3 p.m.Louisiana-Monroe (2-1) at Baylor (2-0), 4 p.m.Alcorn St. (2-1) at Ark.-Pine Bluff (0-3), 7 p.m.Alabama A&M (1-2) at Prairie View (1-2), 7 p.m.Incarnate Word (2-1) at Sam Houston St. (2-1), 7 p.m.Montana St. (2-1) at Stephen F. Austin (1-2), 7 p.m.SMU (1-1) at Texas A&M (2-1), 7 p.m.Texas St. (2-0) at Texas Tech (3-0), 7 p.m.Bacone (2-1) at Lamar (1-2), 8 p.m.Kansas St. (2-1) at Texas (1-2), 8 p.m.UTSA (1-2) at UTEP (1-1), 8 p.m.FAR WESTPanhandle St. (1-2) at Montana (2-0), 3 p.m.Harvard (0-0) at San Diego (1-1), 3 p.m.Idaho St. (2-0) at Washington (2-0), 3 p.m.Utah St. (2-1) at Southern Cal (2-1), 3:30 p.m.N. Iowa (2-0) at N. Colorado (1-2), 3:35 p.m.South Dakota (1-1) at N. Arizona (1-1), 7 p.m.Arizona St. (2-0) at Stanford (2-0), 7 p.m.Oregon St. (2-1) at San Diego St. (0-2), 7:30 p.m.Hawaii (0-2) at Nevada (1-2), 8:05 p.m.Portland St. (2-1) at UC Davis (0-3), 9 p.m.W. Illinois (2-1) at UNLV (1-2), 9 p.m.S. Utah (2-1) at Sacramento St. (1-2), 9:05 p.m.Wyoming (2-1) at Air Force (1-2), 10:15 p.m.Utah (2-1) at BYU (1-1), 10:15 p.m.New Mexico St. (0-3) at UCLA (2-0), 10:30 p.m.Idaho (0-3) at Washington St. (2-1), 10:30 p.m.
MLS StandingsEASTERN CONFERENCE W L T Pts GF GANew York 14 9 6 48 46 36Montreal 13 8 6 45 46 39Sporting KC 13 9 6 45 41 27Houston 11 10 7 40 32 35Chicago 11 11 6 39 36 40Philadelphia 10 10 9 39 37 39New England 10 11 7 37 39 32Columbus 10 14 5 35 33 39Toronto FC 4 14 11 23 24 42D.C. 3 19 6 15 18 46WESTERN CONFERENCE W L T Pts GF GASeattle 15 8 4 49 37 27Real Salt Lake 14 9 6 48 52 37Colorado 12 8 9 45 37 30Los Angeles 13 10 5 44 45 35Portland 10 5 13 43 44 31FC Dallas 10 8 10 40 40 41Vancouver 10 10 8 38 39 38San Jose 10 11 8 38 29 40Chivas USA 6 15 8 26 28 49NOTE: Three points for victory, one point for tie.Friday, Sept. 20Colorado at Portland, lateSaturday, Sept. 21Vancouver at Montreal, 2 p.m.Sporting Kansas City at Toronto FC, 4 p.m.Chicago at Columbus, 7:30 p.m.D.C. United at New England, 7:30 p.m.Chivas USA at Houston, 8:30 p.m.San Jose at Real Salt Lake, 9 p.m.Seattle FC at Los Angeles, 10:30 p.m.Sunday, Sept. 22FC Dallas at New York, 5 p.m.
Tour Championship ScoresFridayAt East Lake Golf ClubAtlantaPurse: $8 millionYardage: 7,307; Par 70Second RoundHenrik Stenson 64-66—130Adam Scott 65-69—134Jordan Spieth 68-67—135Justin Rose 68-68—136Dustin Johnson 68-68—136Billy Horschel 66-70—136Keegan Bradley 72-65—137Nick Watney 72-65—137Gary Woodland 70-67—137Zach Johnson 69-68—137Steve Stricker 66-71—137Phil Mickelson 71-67—138Jim Furyk 70-68—138Roberto Castro 67-71—138D.A. Points 72-67—139Hunter Mahan 70-69—139Bill Haas 70-69—139Graham DeLaet 68-71—139Webb Simpson 68-71—139Sergio Garcia 68-71—139Luke Donald 70-70—140
TransactionsBASEBALLAmerican LeagueNEW YORK YANKEES — Announced the retirement of LHP Andy Pettitte at the end of the season.FOOTBALLNational Football LeagueNFL — Fined N.Y. Jets G Willie Colon $34,125 — $26,250 for contact with an offi cial, and $7,875 for punching an opponent. Fined Tennessee RB Jackie Battle $21,000.
SCOREBOARD•
kpcnews.com B3SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 2013
PITTSBURGH (AP) — The meeting was intimate and brief. Following his team’s fi rst 0-2 start in more than a decade, Pittsburgh Steelers quarter-back Ben Roethlisberger and safety Ryan Clark huddled with remaining players from the club’s last Super Bowl title in 2009 and tried to plot a course forward.
While a pep talk certainly doesn’t hurt, it can’t score a touchdown or force a turnover.
“It’s not like it’s a magic solution,” Roethlisberger said.
Perhaps because there isn’t one.
The Steelers enter Sunday night’s game against the unbeaten — if not exactly unbeatable — Chicago Bears (2-0) ranked near the bottom of the league in every major offensive category. Pittsburgh can’t run it, can’t throw it deep and can’t seem to fi nd its way to the end zone with any regularity.
“It’s as frustrating as it gets right now,” running back Isaac Redman said. “I don’t think anybody expected this.”
And it’s only going to get worse if the Steelers can’t fi nd a way to keep up with the resilient Bears. Chicago’s perfect start is the byproduct of a pair of fourth-quarter rallies, the latest a 10-play, 66-yard drive in the fi nal minutes against Minnesota last Sunday. It ended with a 16-yard touchdown pass from quarterback Jay Cutler to tight end Martellus Bennett that lifted the Bears to a 31-30 victory.
“We’ve had a few things go
our way, a few fourth-quarter plays went our way,” Cutler said. “We’re obviously happy to be 2-0 but we realize there is a lot of work ahead of us.”
Here are fi ve things to look for as Pittsburgh tries to win a game and Chicago tries to establish itself as a threat in the NFC under fi rst-year coach Marc Trestman.
CONTENDERS?: The Steelers’ list of problems is about as long as their roster. A 3-0 start would boost the argument that the Bears are for real, at least in the NFC North. A loss, on the other hand, would raise all sorts of questions. After all, they had to rally to beat Minnesota in the closing seconds, and that came on the heels of a season-opening win over Cincinnati when they trailed by 11 in the third quarter.
YOUR TURN FELIX: The Philadelphia Eagles considered running back Felix Jones so expendable they traded him to Pittsburgh last month for linebacker Adrian Robinson, who didn’t even make the team. Jones impressed Steelers coach Mike Tomlin enough during last week’s loss to Cincinnati to get another turn at the wheel against the Bears. Jones still has the burst that made him a fi rst-round pick by the Dallas Cowboys back in 2008. He’ll need it to fi nd holes behind an offensive line that isn’t exactly dominating at the line of scrimmage. Pittsburgh’s 75 yards rushing this season is less than 34 individual players, including
four quarterbacks.HESTER’S HAVOC: The
most encouraging sign for the Bears last week likely was Devin Hester’s performance.
He returned fi ve kickoffs for a club-record 249 yards against the Vikings and reminded everyone else that he still can be a game-changer. That was one of the big questions coming into this season after he was ineffec-tive a year ago. His longest kickoff return in 2012 was for 40 yards. He exceeded that
three times last week, including a 76-yarder after right after Cordarrelle Patterson returned the opener 105 yards and an 80-yarder in the second quarter.
CREATING CHAOS: Pittsburgh’s defense remains one of the league’s best, but the Steelers are no longer making the kind of splash plays necessary to fl ip the fi eld. Pittsburgh is one of two teams (Oakland is the other) that has yet to create turnovers and it has just one sack through two games. An interception here or a fumble recovery there could go a long way to help boost the offense’s confi dence: “We need to put people in bad situations behind the sticks,” Clark said. “(That) allows us to do what we do best, which is rush the quarterback, create pressure, sack-fumbles and cause bad throws.”
PANIC TIME: The Steelers dropped their fi rst two games in 2003 before catching fi re under journeyman quarterback Tommy Maddox and earning a wild-card berth. They’ve never made it to the postseason starting 0-3. While Roethlisberger and coach Mike Tomlin believe mid-Sep-tember is hardly the time to panic — and in the, so far, anemic AFC North, they might be right — Pittsburgh can’t afford to lose any more ground. “A win would solve or help heal some wounds that we have right now, but for us it’s still early in the season,” Roethlisberger said. “And it’s a home game, so we think all those are must wins.”
Steelers at early crossroads as Bears visit
APChicago Bears wide receiver Devin Hester (23) runs with the ball against the Minnesota Vikings last Sunday.
SOCCE R Premier, Aston Vi l la vs. Nor-wich, N BCS N, 7:40 a.m. Premier, Tottenham vs. Car-dif f , N BCS N, 9:55 a.m. Premier, Fulham vs. Chelsea, N BCS N, 12:25 p.m. M LS, Seatt le vs. Los Angeles, N BCS N, 8:30 p.m.S PORTS TALK Steuben Sports Talk, ESPN-FM 92.7, 9 a.m. DeKalb Footbal l Coaches Cor-ner, WAWK 95.5 FM /1140 AM, 10:30 a.m. East Noble Footbal l Coaches Corner, WAWK 95.5 FM /1140 AM, 11 a.m.COLLEG E FOOTBALL Flor ida A&M vs. Ohio State, BTN, noon North Carol ina vs. Georgia Tech, E S PN, noon San Jose State vs. Minnesota, E S PN2, noon Louisiana Tech vs. Kansas, Fox Sports 1, noon Wake Forest vs. Army, CBS Sports , noon Concordia (Wis.) vs . Tr ine, WEAX-FM 88.3, 12:30 p.m. Houston vs. Rice, FS N, 3 p.m. Michigan State vs. Notre Dame, NBC, WOWO 1190 AM/92.3 FM, 3:30 p.m. Purdue vs. Wisconsin, ABC, 3:30 p.m. Tennessee vs. Flor ida, CBS, 3:30 p.m. Utah State vs. Southern Cal , E S PN2, 3:30 p.m. Kent State vs. Penn State, BTN, 3:30 p.m. Arkansas vs. Rutgers, E S PN, 3:30 p.m. Louisiana-Monroe vs. Baylor, Fox Sports 1, 4 p.m. Lehigh vs. Pr inceton, N BCS N, 6 p.m. Colorado State vs. Alabama, E S PN2, 7 p.m. Arizona State vs. Stanford, Fox, 7 p.m. Texas State vs. Texas Tech, FS N, 7 p.m. Oregon State vs. San Diego State, CBS Sports , 7:30 p.m. Auburn vs. LSU, ESPN, 7:45 p.m. Missouri vs . Indiana, BTN, WAWK-FM 95.5, 8 p.m. Michigan vs. Connecticut , ABC, 8 p.m. Utah vs. BYU, E S PN2, 10:15 p.m.GOLF PGA Tour Championship, Golf Channel , 10 a.m. ; N BC, noon Champions, Hawaii Champi-onship, Golf Channel , 6:30 p.m.BAS E BALL Baltimore vs. Tampa Bay, Fox, 12:30 p.m. At lanta vs. Chicago Cubs, WG N, 4 p.m. Chicago White Sox vs. Detroit , ESPN-FM 92.7, WBET-AM 1230, 6:45 p.m.AUTO RACI NG NASCAR Nationwide Series, Kentucky 300, E S PN EWS, 7:30 p.m.
On The Air•
The DeKalb County Free Fall Fair is fi nally upon us. Growing up in Hillsdale County, Mich., their fair was always the last week of September, so it was a natural fi t for me here in DeKalb with their fair
falling the same week. For me fall, corresponds with fair, and it isn’t fall without one.
Back in July, when most county fairs are, Clayton Rye, a farmer
from Hanlontown, Iowa, wrote the following for The Farmers Exchange:
So while you are eating the wonderful food and playing the fun games on the midway, make sure you check out the animal and nonanimal exhibits down on the fairgrounds that celebrate the hard work and dedication of the youth that participate in our 4-H program.
Fair season is approaching, and it is time for me to give my annual reminder encouraging everyone to go to the fair and not to miss the best part of the fair.
What is the best part of the fair?
Besides the grandstand events, the food, the midway, and just spending a day seeing people who are doing the same thing you are doing, the best part of the fair is in the livestock barns and displays by the 4-H and FFA members.
It is not so much the livestock and displays that are great (well, yes, they are), but those wonderful, amazing kids who have spent hours preparing their projects for the fair are truly great.
The projects can have four or two legs, long or short ears, feathers, be a family pet, made of steel or paper or cloth or wood, or on a plate or in a vase.
I have a soft spot for the livestock barn, because a walk through the barn will show these young people wearing shorts and a T-shirt with a brush in one hand and a garden hose frequently in the other.
An hour later, those same young people will be wearing a clean shirt and as well groomed as the animals they just spent time preparing for the judging event.
In the show ring, the animal is led, herded or pulled along as the judge looks over the entries.
The sorting begins with the better entries being selected until the top entrant receives that coveted ribbon for best of show. It is a joyful moment for that winner. For everyone else, there’s always next year.
It is a good lesson in life. Rewards go to those who make the extra effort in their pursuit of excellence. It is the spirit of competition that makes excellence.
It is another lesson that while those extra efforts were made, the judge may not see them or they are not what the judge is looking for. Yes, it is not fair, but the judge’s decision is fi nal.
It is another important life lesson to learn about disappointment and how to handle it, including those times when you believe the judge is wrong.
It is usually in those
disappointments where we learn our best lessons and how to grow from them.
So, for any 4-H and FFA members reading this, just know if it were up to me, all of you would get a blue ribbon.
But that is not in the spirit of competition, and it cheapens the meaning of what a blue ribbon represents.
This is also a good time to thank those 4-H and FFA leaders who keep projects, kids and the paperwork moving. The motivation has to start somewhere and the leader is just that.
These are the people who are always there standing a few feet away, offering encouragement and making sure that the rules of safety are followed.
I fi nd it really something that a cow, a restored tractor, a photograph and a plate of brownies all have the same thing in common. They were made possible by parents, a leader and, of course, the exhibitor who will be leading a bucket calf today and in coming years, a 1,300-pound steer that is halter broke.
It is defi nitely the best of show.
See you at the fair.
ELYSIA
RODGERS
•
ELYSIA RODGERS is the agriculture and natural resources director for the Purdue University Cooper-ative Extension Service in DeKalb County.
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Many farmers in the Midwest are seeing healthy corn crops with near-record yields expected. Corn
growers really will start to see the full effect of more domestically produced nitrogen in 2015.
WEST LAFAYETTE — Changes in the economics of grain production after drought led to record-high farm incomes in 2012 could mean a shift in the demand for and prices of agricultural inputs for the 2014 crop, a Purdue Extension agricultural economist says.
The 2012 drought-ravaged crop left short supplies and high demand, with farmers receiving high prices for the grain they were able to produce and high insurance indemnities on covered crops that were destroyed. High grain-farm incomes capped a series of years with abnormally high grain prices. But with some drought relief in major corn- and soybean-production states leading to expected higher yields and lower commodity prices, grain farmers can expect to see changes in what they pay for inputs, such as seed, fertilizers, fuels and chemicals, for the 2014 crop.
An apparent shift in market demand for corn and soybeans also could play a major role in what it will cost growers to produce the next crop, Alan Miller said.
“The markets are currently saying they want more soybeans and less corn in 2014, which changes the demand for inputs,” he said. “For example, growers don’t need as much nitrogen fertilizer if they are growing less corn. That ultimately will affect the prices of inputs.”
The big story in 2014 crop produc-tion costs, Miller said, is fertilizer prices. Potash and phosphate prices have been declining since the fall of 2012 and are down 15-17 percent since last spring. Nitrogen prices peaked last spring and have dropped about 22 percent this fall. Farmers’ ability to apply fertilizer this fall will help determine what prices will look like for next spring.
“If weather or a late harvest were to keep farmers from applying fertilizers this fall, it could drive fertilizer prices down for the spring,” he said. “Normally, fertilizer prices hit bottom in the early fall, but we will have to wait and see is if the market is weak enough to sustain the drop into the spring.”
Nitrogen prices also are falling because the U.S. is now a low-cost producer. North American fertilizer producers are expecting historically strong sales this fall.
During the height of the ethanol boom, farmers were growing more corn and using more nitrogen. Plus, natural gas prices were high. Since then, natural gas prices have fallen, which has led to renewed interest in investing in domestic production capacity for nitrogen fertilizers. This leads to greater supplies of U.S.-pro-duced nitrogen in the future if the cost
of producing it here stays well below its market price as it is now.
“Corn growers really will start to see the full effect of more domestically produced nitrogen in 2015,” Miller said. “We have been importing more than 50 percent of our nitrogen fertilizer, meaning supply disruptions could easily impact prices. As we produce more of our own, we will import less. The bigger supply will benefi t corn producers.”
Recent prices for nitrogen in anhydrous ammonia form have hovered around $700 per ton. According to Miller, that could possibly eventually fall to as low as $400 or $500 per ton if U.S. production capacity increases considerably.
One area where farmers won’t see price relief is seed costs. By Miller’s estimates, some seed could be up by 2-3 percent or more for the 2014 planting season.
“Seed is not the place where growers will cut corners to try to save money,” he said. “They will be careful in pricing inputs, but they want the technology to produce the best crop possible.”
The prices of chemicals, such as herbicides, pesticides and fungicides, are likely to be a mixed bag. For the most part, chemical prices will be up slightly — about 1 percent, according to Miller. The exception is herbicide, where prices will remain fl at.
Prices for fuels commonly used on the farm currently are expected to be down in 2014. The costs for both diesel, which powers most farm machinery, and propane, which farmers use to power grain dryers, could be down by about 4 percent.
Fuel prices, however, can be among the most volatile costs farmers encounter each year because much of it is imported. While an increase in domestic energy production has helped thwart major supply disrup-tions, Miller said tensions abroad could affect what farmers pay for fuel in the U.S.
Farmers who have wanted to purchase new tractors, combines, implements or other machinery have encountered increasing prices. Machinery prices increased by an average of 7.4 percent per year from 2002 to 2012 because record-high farm incomes increased demand. The sustained increases in machinery prices could quickly come to a halt, especially for used farm equipment, if commodity prices decline and stay down for an extended period of time, Miller said.
As producers make their decisions about inputs for the 2014 crop year, Miller said the bottom line is that they should keep an eye on the economics of each decision. For fertilizer, that means waiting to see if prices continue to decline.
Ag economist: 2013 to be a transition year for farmers
WASHINGTON (AP) — The House has voted to cut nearly $4 billion a year from food stamps, a 5 percent reduction to the nation’s main feeding program used by more than 1 in 7 Americans.
The 217-210 vote was a win for conservatives after Democrats united in opposition and some GOP moderates said the cut was too high. Fifteen Republicans voted against the measure.
The bill’s savings would be achieved by allowing states to put broad new work requirements in place for many food stamp recipients and to test applicants for drugs. The bill also would end government waivers that have allowed able-bodied adults without dependents to receive food stamps indefi -nitely.
House conservatives, led by Majority Leader Eric Cantor, R-Va., have said the almost $80 billion-a-year program has become bloated. More than 47 million Americans are now on food stamps, and the
program’s cost more than doubled in the last fi ve years as the economy struggled through the Great Recession. Democrats said the rise in the rolls during tough economic times showed the program was doing its job.
Finding a compromise — and the votes — to scale back the feeding program has been diffi cult. The conserva-tives have insisted on larger cuts, Democrats opposed any cuts and some moderate Republicans from areas with high food stamp usage have been wary of efforts to slim the program. The White House has threatened to veto the bill.
House leaders were still shoring up votes on the bill just hours before the vote. To make their case, the Republican leaders emphasized that the bill targets able-bodied adults who don’t have dependents. And they say the broader work requirements in the bill are similar to the 1996 welfare law that led to a decline in people receiving that government assistance.
“This bill is designed to give people a hand when they need it most,” Cantor said on the fl oor just before the bill passed. “And most people don’t choose to be on food stamps. Most people want a job … They want what we want.”
The new work require-ments proposed in the bill would allow states to require 20 hours of work activities per week from any able-bodied adult with a child over age 1 if that person has child care available. The requirements would be applicable to all parents whose children are over age 6 and attending school.
The legislation is the House’s effort to fi nish work on a wide-ranging farm bill, which has historically included both farm programs and food stamps. The House Agriculture Committee approved a combined bill earlier this year, but it was defeated on the fl oor in June after conservatives revolted, saying the cuts to food stamps weren’t high enough.
House votes to cut nearly $4 billion in food stamps
The best part of the fair is …
PHOTO CONTRIBUTED
County fairs provide millions of Americans with fond memories of their youth, as well as a chance for people with shared interests to gather together and celebrate the good things in life.
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WEST LAFAYETTE — Young people on family-op-erated grain farms and beginning workers in the commercial grain industry can learn how to stay safe in their work by attending daylong training offered by Purdue University.
“Safe Grain Storage and Handling for Youth and Beginning Workers” will be offered Sept. 30 at Brock Manufacturing, Milford, Ind.; Oct. 2 at Beck Educational Center, West Lafayette, Ind.; and Oct. 16 at FFA Leader-ship Center, Trafalgar, Ind. Training will begin at 9 a.m. and end at 3 p.m.
Steve Wettschurack, a Purdue farm rescue instructor, said the goal is to provide basic awareness safety and health training needed by young people interested in pursuing employment in the commercial grain industry or who are already employed on family-operated farms with grain storage operations. He said about one in every fi ve
victims of serious accidents at grain storage and handling facilities are people under the age of 21.
“The primary cause of these tragic events has been the lack of awareness of basic hazards associated with storage and handling of grain and failure to comply with safe grain-handling practices,” Wettschurack said.
Participants will learn the importance of the grain industry and career opportu-nities. Topics to be discussed include primary hazards associated with grain storage and handling, common ways workers become entrapped in fl owing grain, basic safety practices, types of personal protective equipment, rights of workers under the provisions of the Occupa-tional Safety and Health Administration, and steps to take in the event of an emergency.
Sponsors of the training are Purdue’s Agricultural Safety and Health Program,
U.S. Department of Labor/OSHA Susan Hardwood Grant, Indiana Rural Safety and Health Council, Brock Manufacturing and Farm Bureau Insurance.
There is no cost to attend, but advance registration is required. Basic personal protective equipment and lunch will be provided.
Participants will receive a certifi cate of attendance and samples of personal protec-tive equipment commonly used in the grain industry.
Farm youth working on family-operated grain farms, high school and community college students interested in a career or summer employ-ment in agriculture or the grain industry, FFA members, and young and beginning workers in the commercial grain industry are encouraged to attend.
To register or for more information, contact Steve Wettschurack at 765-714-4557 or [email protected].
Grain-safety seminar planned
Bono to attendglobal festival
NEW YORK (AP) — U2 frontman Bono and a long list of world leaders will attend next week’s Global Citizen Festival to help fi ght poverty.
United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-moon, leaders from several countries and congressional members will join Stevie Wonder, Kings of Leon, Alicia Keys and John Mayer at the free concert Sept. 28 in New York’s Central Park. The concert coincides with the U.N. General Assembly. Fans earn free tickets for helping spread the word or volunteering to help end world poverty.
Bono will present Liberian President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf with a Global Citizen Movement Award for her work on women’s equality.
Crown Princess Mary of Denmark, Malaysia Prime Minister Najib Razak and U.S. Congress members Earl Blumenauer, Charlie Dent and Kay Granger also are expected to attend.
Man charged withDUI on riding mower
MURRYSVILLE, Pa. (AP) — A western Pennsyl-vania man has been charged with driving drunk while carrying an open can of beer — on a riding lawn mower.
Murrysville police say they found 55-year-old Thomas Marrone driving the mower along a road just before 1:30 a.m. Aug. 30.
Police say Marrone smelled of alcohol and had an open can of Coors Light beer in the mower’s storage compartment. They say he told them he was driving to his Murrysville home — some 6.4 miles away.
Grenades kill threeat Pakistan mosque
PESHAWAR, Pakistan (AP) — Pakistani police say assailants hurled hand grenades into a Sufi mosque in the country’s northwest in a late night attack that left three people dead.
Police offi cial Misri Khan says the attack late Thursday in Achini Bala village near the Khyber tribal region also wounded 20 people.
Khan said on Friday that three of the wounded were in critical condition. Dozens of worshippers were participating in a religious gathering when the attack took place.
No one has claimed responsibility for the attack, but suspicion will likely fall on the Pakistani Taliban and their allies. Hard-line Sunni extremists consider Sufi s to be heretics.
Russians towingGreenpeace ship
MOSCOW (AP) — The Russian Coast Guard is towing a Greenpeace ship toward the nearest port after armed offi cers stormed it following a protest against oil drilling in Arctic waters.
The agency said Friday that the ship’s captain refused to operate the Arctic Sunrise, so a Coast Guard ship has arrived at the scene to tow the ship to the port of Murmansk. The trip is expected to take three to four days.
Russian offi cials said that Greenpeace activists could face terrorism or piracy charges.
One of the activists aboard the vessel, Faiza Oulahsen, told the AP late on Thursday that about 15 armed men had boarded the Arctic Sunrise, aggressively herding 29 activists into one compartment. The vessel’s captain was held separately on the bridge.
“They used violence against some of us, they were hitting people, kicking people,” she said.
Briefs•
People•
NATION • WORLD kpcnews.com B5•
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APChicago Police detectives investigate the scene where a number of people,
including a 3-year-old child, were shot Thursday night in a city park in Chicago.
CHICAGO (AP) — Those behind a late-night attack at a southwest Chicago park in which 13 people were wounded, including a 3-year-old, used an assault-style weapon to spray the crowd with bullets, making it “a miracle” no one was killed, the city’s police superinten-dent said Friday.
Ballistics evidence shows that those behind Thursday night’s attack used a 7.62 mm rifl e fed by a high-capacity magazine, police Superintendent Garry McCarthy told reporters. That type of weapon, he said, belongs on a “battle-fi eld, not on the street or a corner or a park in the Back of the Yards,” the neighbor-hood where the shooting took place.
“It’s a miracle in this instance that there have been no fatalities based upon the lethality of the weapon used at the scene,” McCarthy
said, calling on lawmakers to restrict the sale of such weapons and choke off the fl ow of illegal guns into the city.
The attack happened shortly after 10 p.m. while the Cornell Square Park was still crowded with people watching a basketball game and enjoying a warm late summer night.
Investigators believe several people took part in the attack but weren’t sure yet how many fi red shots. McCarthy said that based on witness interviews, it appears the attack was gang-related and that several victims are gang members.
“Even if it’s gang-re-lated, even if we have the most hardened criminals who becomes the victim of gun violence, that individual is the father, brother, sister sometimes parent of somebody else,” McCarthy said. “So murder is not a one-victim crime.”
Among those shot was a 3-year-old boy, Deonta Howard, and two teenagers, a 15-year-old and a 17-year-old.
Deonta was alert when he arrived at the hospital and was apparently doing well, his family and friends said early Friday. He was in critical condition, as were two other shooting victims. The others were reportedly in serious or fair condition.
Deonta’s uncle, Julian Harris, told the Chicago Sun-Times that dreadlocked men in a gray sedan shot at him Thursday night before turning toward the nearby park and opening fi re. He said his nephew was shot in the cheek.
“They hit the light pole next to me, but I ducked down and ran into the house,” Harris said. “They’ve been coming round here looking for people to shoot every night, just gang-banging stuff. It’s what they do.”
Assault weapon leaves13 wounded in Chicago
THE HAGUE, Nether-lands (AP) — Syria has sent the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons an “initial declara-tion” outlining its weapons program, the organization said Friday.
Spokesman Michael Luhan told The Associ-ated Press the declaration is “being reviewed by our verifi cation division.” The organization will not release details of what is in the declaration.
U.S. State Department spokeswoman Marie Harf said the United States and other nations that have joined the chemical weapons organization “will be making a careful and thorough review of the initial document.”
The Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons, based in The Hague, polices a global treaty known as the Chemical Weapons Convention of 1993, which bars the development, production, stockpiling and use of chemical arms. The organization relies on a global network of more than a dozen top laboratories to analyze fi eld samples.
U.S. offi cials said last week that the United States and Russia agreed that Syria had roughly 1,000 metric tons of chemical weapons agents and precursors, including blister agents, such as sulfur and mustard gas and nerve agents like sarin.
In the aftermath of the U.N. report that concluded sarin had been used in an attack in Damascus last month, the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons, which polices the
treaty outlawing chemical weapons, is looking at ways to fast-track moves to secure and destroy Syria’s arsenal of poison gas and nerve agents as well as its produc-tion facilities.
However, diplomatic efforts to speed up the process are moving slowly. A meeting initially scheduled for Sunday at which the organization’s 41-nation executive council was to have discussed a U.S.-Rus-sian plan to swiftly rid Syria of chemical weapons was postponed Friday, and no new date was immediately set. No reason was given for the postponement.
Harf said she did not know why the meeting was postponed, but said Syria’s initial declaration was a step Washington was seeking “and we’ll go from there.”
Under a U.S.-Russia agreement brokered last weekend in Geneva, inspec-tors are to be on the ground in Syria by November. During that month, they are to complete their initial assess-ment and all mixing and fi lling equipment for chemical weapons is to be destroyed.
All components of the chemical weapons program are to be removed from the country or destroyed by mid-2014.
The Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons plan of action will be backed up by a U.N. Security Council resolution, and negotiations remain underway on the text of such a resolution.
U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry said he talked to his Russian counter-part, Sergey Lavrov, about Syria’s chemical weapons early Friday.
Syria sends fi rstinformation onchemical arsenal
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESSColoradans who ventured
back into the fl ood-ravaged town of Lyons found scenes of stomach-churning destruc-tion, with dozens of homes destroyed, family keepsakes missing, food spoiling and mud everywhere.
“It’s just sickening,” said Gloria Simpson, whose family salvaged some of her grandmother’s handmade quilts Thursday from her 81-year-old father’s home. They found some family photos, but others were nowhere to be found.
The number of dead rose to seven, with three others missing and presumed dead. But the number of unaccounted-for people dropped to about 80, thanks to rescues, restored communications and door-to-door searches.
Rescue operations tapered off and the state began to turn its attention to fi nding homes for the displaced, restoring basic services and fi guring out how to repair hundreds of miles of roads and dozens of bridges.
“Right now we’re just moving from the life-saving mode to the life-sustaining mode,” said Kevin Kline, director of the Colorado Division of Homeland
Security and Emergency Management.
Kline said it was too early to estimate the dollar damage but added, “It’s going to be big.”
The damage spans 17 counties and nearly 2,000 square miles.
Gov. John Hickenlooper said the state’s reconstruction effort would be overseen by Jerre Stead, executive chairman of the global information company IHS Inc.
With dustings of snow already on the highest mountains, a new group within the state Transpor-tation Department will focus on repairing and reconstructing as much of the state highway system as possible by Dec. 1.
Under tight security, hundreds of Lyons evacuees were given two hours to check on their homes Thursday. On Sept. 12, the St. Vrain River destroyed dozens of homes, a trailer park, two bridges and sections of roads in the picturesque town of 1,600.
Darren Horwitz saw boulders, broken glass and dislodged propane tanks strewn around Lyons. His truck and sailboat that he parked at a friend’s mobile home had been swept away.
“When you get there, the shock sets in,” he said.
Bob Ruthrauff, 84, found his home intact, but food was rotting in his refriger-ator because electricity had been cut off. He spent his two hours getting rid of the spoilage but was grateful. “We’re very lucky. We came home to a dry home,” Ruthrauff said.
Utility poles were toppled and power lines were in tangles. Work crews cleared debris and tried to restore power, water and sewer service.
E. coli has been found in the town’s drinking water and it could be two to six months before the town is livable for most, the Longmont Times-Call
reported. However, residents willing to rough it will be allowed to stay.
Millions of gallons of sewage have been released around the state because of septic systems and sewer lines torn out by fl ood waters and fl ooded waste treatment plants, said Steve Gunderson, director of the state’s water quality control division.
Coloradans return home to fi nd heartbreak
AP
Dan Ochsener, left, comforts Karen Little as they stand surrounded by their
fl ood-damaged belongings in LaSalle, Colo., Friday.
NEW YORK (AP) — Sen. Al Franken is asking Apple for more clarity on privacy and security concerns he has with its use of fi ngerprint recogni-tion technology in the new iPhone 5S.
The iPhone 5S, which went on sale Friday, includes a fi ngerprint sensor that lets users tap the phone’s home button to unlock their phone, rather than enter a four-digit passcode.
But Franken said that the fingerprint system could be potentially
disastrous for users if someone does eventually hack it. While a password can be kept a secret and changed if it’s hacked, he said, fingerprints are permanent and are left on everything a person touches, making them far from a secret.
“Let me put it this way: if hackers get a hold of your thumbprint, they could use it to identify and impersonate you for the rest of your life,” the Minnesota Democrat said in a letter to Apple CEO Tim Cook.
Franken raisesiPhone concerns
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE BY LYNN JOHNSTON
DUSTIN BY STEVE KELLEY & JEFF PARKER
ALLEY OOP BY JACK AND CAROLE BENDER
FRANK & ERNEST BY BOB THAVES
THE BORN LOSER BY ART & CHIP SANSOM
GARFIELD BY JIM DAVIS
BLONDIE BY YOUNG AND MARSHALL
BEETLE BAILEY BY MORT WALKER
DEAR DOCTOR K: I’d like to start biking to work. Any advice before I get back on my bike?
DEAR READER: Cycling is great exercise. For one thing, it gets you breathing harder and your heart rate up. Th at pays cardiovascular dividends. Cycling stacks up well against other forms of exercise when it comes to burning calories, too. And it isn’t as hard on the knees as running.
Perhaps the biggest advantage of cycling is that it can perform double duty as a form of transportation. A number of my patients, and my colleagues here at Harvard Medical School, bicycle to and from work every day.
One of my colleagues once said: “I don’t need to go to the gym, and I don’t need to pay the gym or pay for parking. I have bike paths
most of the way, so during rush hours it takes no longer than driving. Except on a rainy day, the advantages are obvious.” During blizzards,
he takes the car. “I’m not a complete nut about cycling,” he assured me.
Now and then, cyclists injure a muscle. But the main risks of cycling are not from the physical activity but from traffi c. Th e vast majority of the fatali-ties from
bicycle-related injuries are caused by accidents involving motor vehicles. Drivers will oft en say aft er an
accident that they never saw the cyclist.
Reckless cycling can be a factor, too. Being on two wheels doesn’t mean that traffi c laws don’t apply to you. Running red lights and weaving in and out of traffi c is courting disaster. And it’s surprisingly common, at least in Boston. I sometimes wonder if part of what makes some cyclists enthusiastic about cycling is the sense that they are courting danger.
And of course, wear a helmet. Th e worst injuries to cyclists are head injuries. A patient of mine couldn’t fi nd his helmet, was in a rush and went cycling without it. He hit a pothole and sustained a severe concussion. He fully recovered, but it took six weeks.
Be especially wary about cars parked along the side of the street: Running into a car door that has opened
suddenly is a common way to get hurt. Sure, drivers should be looking in their side-view mirrors before opening the door, but they oft en don’t.
Bad technique or positioning, or a bike that’s the wrong size, can make cycling uncomfortable to the point of pain and may eventually result in injuries. High-end bike stores off er fi tting services for a fee. It will be money well spent if you’re cycling a lot. If any problems come up — knee, lower back or buttock pain, or numb hands and wrists are among the more common — a bike store should be able to make adjustments to your bike or help you tweak your technique.
DR. KOMAROFF is a physician and professor at Harvard Medical School. His website is AskDoctorK.com.
Cycling requires rider have good traffi c sense
SATURDAY EVENING SEPTEMBER 21, 2013 5:00 5:30 6:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30
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Crossword Puzzle•
On this date: • In 1893, one of America’s fi rst horseless carriages was taken for a short test drive in Spring-fi eld, Mass., by Frank Duryea. • In 1897, the New York Sun ran its famous editorial, written anonymously by Francis P. Church, which declared, “Yes, Virginia, there is a Santa Claus.” • In 1938, a hurricane struck parts of New York and New England killing 700.
Almanac•
B6 kpcnews.com COMICS • TV LISTINGS SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 2013
•
DEAR ABBY: I am fortunate to be a stay-at-home mom. My days are spent doing chores and taking care of the kids. I also volunteer extensively at their schools, but I do fi nd time for other pursuits, such as reading and writing. My problem is my husband. “Bob” is the kind of guy who can’t sit still. When he’s home on weekends or taking a day off , he constantly needs to be doing something. Th is involves projects around the house. Other than spending time online, his hobbies are active ones. Because he’s always on the go, he insists I should be equally “productive.” He constantly wants to know what I’m doing, and if it’s not something he thinks is useful, he becomes passive-aggressive. Bob initiates big projects and then complains that
he gets no help and has no time for himself. He says my volunteerism takes away from time I should be
doing things around the house. In addition, Bob is incredibly neat and oft en insists that our immacu-late house needs to be cleaned. I dread the days he’s home because I have to
constantly justify my activi-ties or feel guilty if I’m not busy the entire time. Don’t misunderstand — Bob is a great guy, a good dad and my best friend. But I’m afraid I will soon resent him to the point of dislike if I
must live my life according to his unrealistic expecta-tions. Any advice other than to seek counseling? — NOT A LOAFER IN CHICAGO DEAR NOT A LOAFER: Nope. It appears that your great guy, good dad and best friend is so controlling he makes you miserable when he’s home. I agree that if this continues, it will have a negative eff ect on your marriage. Th e person who should explain it to him is a licensed mental health professional who can provide the counseling and/or medication he may need, because I suspect he may have OCD. DEAR ABBY is written by Abigail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was founded by her mother, Pauline Phillips. Write Dear Abby at DearAbby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.
DEAR ABBY
Jeanne Phillips
•
Husband wearingon wife’s patience
ASK DOCTOR K.
Dr. Anthony
Komaroff
•
kpcnews.com B7SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 2013
To ensure the best response to your ad, take the time to make sure your ad is correct the first time it runs. Call us promptly to report any errors. We reserve the right to edit, cancel or deny any ad deemed objectionable or against KPC ad policies. Liability for error limited to actual ad charge for day of publication and one additional incorrect day. See complete limitations of liability statement at the end of classifieds.
To place an ad call 260-347-0400 Toll Free 1-877-791-7877 Fax 260-347-7282 E-mail [email protected]
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S e r v i n g D e K a l b , L a G r a n g e , N o b l e a n d S t e u b e n C o u n t i e s
KEYFLOW CREATIVE
DIGITAL MEDIA ACCOUNT EXECUTIVEWe don’t frown at socializing on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram or even making professional connections on Linkedin while working – at Key-fl ow Creative it’s a job requirement! If the ever evolving digital world is a large part of your personal life, you should make it a career.
KeyFlow Creative is looking for tech savvy professionals to share their passion for all the new cool digital technology and how it can accelerate business growth.
Can you help a novice understand why some websites come fi rst on Google, while millions of others are destined to never be found? We need to talk. If you know what the heck a Panda Update is, we seriously need to talk.
As a Digital Media Account Executive you’ll fi nd and coach businesses on how to create an effective web presence through dynamic graphic design, videos, the latest SEO and SEM strategies and how social me-dia can tie it all together.
RESPONSIBILITIES• Identify local businesses whose web-based marketing strategy is well, lacking. (Most all!) • Make in-person calls and presentations utilizing tablets, of course. • Generate interest in the company’s full suite of products and ser-vices using a consultative sales approach• Close sales and achieve sales goals• Build, manage and maintain a growing pipeline of clients
ABOUT YOU• At least 2 – 5 years successful track record in B2B sales• Ability to build relationships and develop trust• Able to work well in a team oriented environment and meet goals together• Use the internet to effectively identify potential clients and explain to them your creative digital marketing solution
ABOUT US• We believe that to achieve excellence, every person on the team has unwavering enthusiasm about the internet, new technologies and loves what they do• We offer a great work environment, competitive salary, unlimited bonus potential, expense reimbursement, health/dental insurance, 401(k) – you know, all the good stuff.
If it sounds like you’re a good fi t, we can’t wait to hear from you. E-mail us your resume, cover letter and salary requirements to:
aaaASudoku PuzzleComplete the grid so that every row, column and 3x3 box contains every digit from 1 to 9 inclusively.
Diffi cult rating: DIFFICULT 9-21
7 8 1
4 2 9 8
1 4 6
8 4 3 7
3 4
6 4 5 3
5 6 9
9 6 5 7
8 7 5
NOW HIRINGTHERMA TRU
Assembly/ProductionWorkers
1155 W. 15th St., Auburn • 260-927-0501Apply at:
ADVERTISING ADVERTISING SALESSALES
KPC Media Group has a full-time opening for an advertising sales representative in its Kendallville offi ce. This is primarily an inside sales position, handling business and private party customers. Working with the Advertising Director, other sales representatives and support personnel, the sales representative will strive to attain personal and team goals. The ideal candidate will be a customer-focused, goal-oriented individual with excellent grammar, spelling, telephone and computer skills.
KPC is a family-owned company that has been serving northeastern Indiana for more than 100 years. We off er a competitive salary and benefi ts. Send a resume to KPC Media Group Inc., PO Box 39, Kendallville, IN 46755 or e-mail [email protected]
RN ON SITE SUPPLEMENTAL
IU Health Workplace Services seeks an Occupational Health Services Nurse for a
manufacturing facility.
• Location: Fremont, Indiana• Hours: Supplemental (8 hour/month,
potential to increase)• Pay rate: $27- 29/hour
Must have Indiana nursing license; prefer 2 years nursing experience; team player with energetic personality, positive attitude. Nurse will work outside traditional practice setting and play vital role in employee health and wellness at a manufacturing facility. Respon-sibilities: work site injury triage, preventative checks, annual health screenings. Contact Joy Fay, Nurse Recruiter, at [email protected] to apply.
FULL TIME TELLER SUPERVISOR
POSITION LOCATED AT THE BUTLER OFFICE OF
FARMERS & MERCHANTS STATE BANK.
For a description of duties and qualifi cations please visit www.fm-bank.com.
Respond only if your background matches our requirements and duties listed. Please email or mail resume, professional reference list and a letter outlining your qualifi cations. Refer to job # D 090413 and email in a Word format to [email protected] or mail Attn: Human Resource Department, Farmers & Merchants State Bank, Box 216 Archbold OH 43502. Resumes must be re-ceived by September 23, 2013. An equal op-portunity employer.
Will be hosting a
JOB FAIR for
(Ligonier Facility)
Join us and see how you can land a great job and be eligible for a $1,000 bonus.
HOLIDAY INN EXPRESS1917 Dowling Street, Kendallville, IN 46755
GENERAL PRODUCTION$10.00/hr • (8-hour and 12-hour shifts available)
THURSDAY, SEPT 26, 20132:00 PM - 6:00 PM
• Diploma/GED required• Must be able to work weekends• Must be able to work overtime
260-894-4764 or 260-347-0339EOE M/F/D/V
• Valid Driver’s License• Responsible Adult• Reliable Transportation• Available 7 days a week
118 W 9th St., Auburn, INPhone: 260-925-2611 ext. 17
E-mail: [email protected] are independent contractors and not employees.
Adult Motor Route for Auburn/Corunna Area
INDEPENDENT CONTRACTORS
Circulation DepartmentContact: Christy Day
CARRIERCARRIEROPPORTUNITIESOPPORTUNITIES
ADOPTIONS
❤❤❤ ADOPTION: ❤❤Affectionate Artistic Mu-sical Financially Secure
Couple awaits baby.❤Expenses paid.❤❤1-800-557-9529❤
❤❤ Lisa & Kenny ❤❤
FOUND
FOUNDDogs
Golden Retriever, Male.600 W. Albion
Pitt bull mix,F,Blk/white.Ligonier
Dalmatian mix,M,.SR 3 Avilla
CatsSeal point Siamese, F.
50 W. AlbionDSH,Black,M.400 S LaOtto
Humane Society ofNoble County, Inc.1305 Sherman St.
Kendallville, IN 46755260-347-2563
FOUND: Canoe,north of Kendallville.
Call w/description.260 599-4539
LOST
11 yr old black lab &chow mix. All black.Short & wirey hair.
Short tail like chow.White muzzle, no tagsor collar. Her name isMolly. Lost Tuesday,July 9 in afternoon.
Lost on CR 54 & 39260-925-1950
LOST: Stihl chainsawColdwater Lake area.Lost 9/17. Reward.
260 665-5930
JOB
SJO
BS
EMPLOYMENT
■ ◆ ■ ◆ ■Auditor
Factory seeking
QUALITYAUDITOR
full time and first shift.Must ensure high
level customer serviceand communication
skills. Must be able tocorrect quality issues
and complaints. Mustbe able to analyze data,product specifications,formulate and docu-
ment quality standards.Must be able to readblueprints and fill out
SPC charts.
Please send resumeand qualifications to:
Quality AuditorPO Box 241
Ashley, IN 46705
■ ◆ ■ ◆ ■
■ ❍ ■ ❍ ■Construction
Canopy Installerneeds full time
help.
Send resume to:KCI
2785 SR 127 NAngola, IN 46703
■ ❍ ■ ❍ ■
EMPLOYMENT
◆ ◆ ◆ ◆ ◆Driver
Lennard Ag Company, Howe, IN
NOW HIRING:CDL-A and
POTATO TRUCKDRIVERS NEEDED
Seasonal semi-truckand straight-truck
drivers needed to drivealong-side our harvest-
ers in the fields anddeliver to our Howe, INlocation. All local fields
– no overnights.Looking for safe,
reliable, and profes-sional drivers.
Call Lennard Ag @(260) 562-3900
for more information orapply at
0450 W. 750 N. Howe, IN
for an immediate inter-view. (Turn West at theValero gas station andHoliday Inn Express on
SR 9.)
◆ ◆ ◆ ◆ ◆
■ ❏ ■ ❏ ■Engineer
Ventra Angola, LLC has an opening for aManufacturing
Engineer.
Degree in Engineeringor 5 years similar field.
Background in industrialengineering, GD&T,PPAP, 8D problem
solving, lean manufac-turing, and electricalexperience is a plus.Responsibilities will
include troubleshootingproduction problems by
working directly withequipment and associ-ated personnel. Also
directly responsible forlaunching of new jobs,installations, start-up,
and set-up parameters.Candidates must have
computer skills inMicrosoft office and
AutoCad.Please send resume or
apply in person -
Monday – Friday, 8:00 a.m. – 4:00 p.m.
at:Ventra Angola LLC3000 Woodhull Dr.Angola, IN 46703
Ventra Angola is anEqual OpportunityEmployer, a drug
Screen and backgroundcheck will be required.
■ ❏ ■ ❏ ■
■ ✦ ■ ✦ ■ General
Garrett-Keyser-ButlerCommunity Head Startand Early Head Start
Program has the follow-ing position available -
TEACHER AIDE -HS Diploma orGED required.
Apply at:Garrett Head Start
504 South Second St.Garrett, IN
■ ✦ ■ ✦ ■
■ ❐ ■ ❐ ■Health
“Residents First..Employees Always..”
We are in need tofill the following
positions:
• Dietary• Housekeeping
• RN
Apply in person at:
Kendallville Manor1802 Dowling St.Kendallville, IN
EOE
■ ❐ ■ ❐ ■
EMPLOYMENT
■ ◆ ■ ◆ ■General
TRINEUNIVERSITY
seeks a full time
HOUSEKEEPER
for our main Angolacampus. Must beable to lift at least
50lbs.
Please see:
www.trine.edu/about_trine
for more details.
No phone calls please.
■ ◆ ■ ◆ ■
✦ ✦ ✦ ✦ ✦Health
CAREGIVERSRequired to look afterclients in the clients
home on a part timebasis leading to
full time eventually.Must be willing towork throughout
Noble &LaGrangecounties.
Please submit aresume to:
Stay HomeSenior Care
119 1/2 W. MaumeeAngola, IN 46703
or call 260-668-8737 for further details
✦ ✦ ✦ ✦ ✦
■ ✦ ■ ✦ ■Janitorial
Part Time Cleanersneeded In the Albion &
Auburn area. Musthave clean background.
Send resumevia e-mail to:
or Call Job Line
1-888-395-2020ext 3336
State your name, number & city
with your message.
■ ✦ ■ ✦ ■
■ ● ■ ● ■Machinist
Part TimeMACHINIST
Starting wage$10.00 an hour.
Send resume to:P.O. Box 462
Auburn, IN 46706
■ ● ■ ● ■
We KnowWhat Makes
YOU
Click!Click your way up thecorporate ladder when
you log on to
kpcnews.com
We KnowWhat Makes
YOU
KPC Media Group Inc.
Classifieds1-877-791-7877
kpcnews.com
THE NEWS SUN THE HERALDREPUBLICAN
StarThe
EMPLOYMENT
■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■Merchandiser
PART TIMEMERCHANDISER
Walmart KendallvilleStocking bread for
Holsum Bakery.Self motivated, depend-
able, own transporta-tion, casual dress
No benefits, insuranceor vacation.
Days needed -Wednesday, morning
6amFriday, 3pm
Saturday, 1pm and 5pmSunday 6am and 2pmAll subject to change.
•Week total hrs approximate 10
•Starting pay $9.00per hour
Will work every week-end and holidays.
Physical job must beable to lift 30 lbs.
Must be 18 yrs old.Must live within a 5 mile
radius of store.Great job for retiree or
housewife.Must take drug screen.
Holsum pays forscreening.
Call Monday - Friday8am - 4 pm
800-552-2312Ext. 252
■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■
✦ ✦ ✦ ✦ ✦Superintendent
SewerSuperintendent
The Town of Waterloohas an opening
for the position ofSewer Department
Superintendent. Thisposition is responsiblefor the management,
operation andmaintenance of theTown’s .369 MGD
Wastewater TreatmentPlant and lift stations.
The applicant must be ahigh school graduate
(college education pre-ferred) and possess a
State of Indiana Class IIcertification in Waste-water Treatment PlantOperation. Experience
and possessionof DSM and WT3
Drinking WaterCertifications is desir-able. Applicant shallalso possess a valid
State of Indiana driver’slicense.
The Town of Waterloois an Equal OpportunityEmployer and offers acompetitive salary and
benefits package.Interested individuals
should mail theirresumes to: Town of
Waterloo, Attn: TownManager, P.O. Box 96,
Waterloo, Indiana46793. Please mark all
correspondenceregarding application
for this position“Confidential-Job
Application.” Includeproof of possession of
current statecertifications anddriver’s license.
✦ ✦ ✦ ✦ ✦
DriversDriver Trainees NeededNow! Learn o drive for
US Xpress! Earn$800+ per week! Noexperience needed!CDL-Trained and
Job Ready in 15 days!1-800-882-7364
EMPLOYMENT
GeneralEquipment Fabricator-Technician wanted forpiping system fabrica-tion position. This is an
assistant/apprentice po-sition. Our goal is to de-velop a lead fabricator.Applicant must be reli-able, detail oriented,with a strong workethic, and high me-
chanical aptitude. Gen-eral fabrication experi-
ence, basic weldingskills, equipment paint-
ing experience andgeneral electrical
knowledge are all theskills we are looking for.Tools will be required.
The starting hourlyscale for this job will
range from $12-$16 de-pending on mechanicalaptitude scores and ex-
perience. Great workhours and benefit pack-
age. Career position.Indoor Work w/Over-time. 260-422-1671,
X106. (A)
RE
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AT YOUR SERVICE
Dale238-3023
Tony494-7857
Will Do: Custom Harvesting $26/acre Disc Ripping $17/acre Drill Wheat $15/acreWanted: Farm land to rent for 2014 & beyond
R & R FARMS, INC.
SPENCERVILLE, IN
BUSINESS &PROFESSIONAL
BANKRUPTCYFREE CONSULTATION$25.00 TO STARTPayment Plans, Chapter
13 No Money down. Fil-ing fee not included. Sat.& Eve. Appts. Avail. CallCollect: 260-424-0954
act as a debt relief agencyunder the BK code
Divorce • DUI •Criminal • BankruptcyGeneral Practice
KRUSE & KRUSE,PC260-925-0200 or800-381-5883
A debt reliefagency under theBankruptcy Code.
HOMEIMPROVEMENT
All PhaseRemodeling
and HandymanService - No Job
too Big or Small !!!Free Estimates
Call Jeff260-854-9071
Qualified & InsuredServing You Since
1990
ROOFING/SIDING
County Line RoofingFREE ESTIMATES
Tear offs, winddamage & reroofs.
Call (260)627-0017
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5 3 4 2 6 1 9 8 7
1 8 9 7 3 4 2 6 5
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2 7 3 8 5 6 4 9 1
9 6 1 4 2 7 8 5 3
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LOW RENTAL RATESLOW RENTAL RATESCall today to schedule Call today to schedule a Tour!a Tour!
260-668-4415260-668-4415199 Northcrest Road199 Northcrest Road
Angola, IN 46703Angola, IN 46703PETS WELCOME!PETS WELCOME!
Restrictions apply.Restrictions apply.www.mrdapartments.comwww.mrdapartments.com
E-mail to: crosswaitestates@E-mail to: [email protected]
A New ApartmentHome Awaits You at
Don’t Fumble Don’t Fumble Your Chance!!Your Chance!!
260-349-0996260-349-09961815 Raleigh Ave., Kendallville 467551815 Raleigh Ave., Kendallville 46755
nelsonestates@mrdapartments.commrdapartments.commrdapartments.com
NELSON ESTATESCALL TARA TODAY!CALL TARA TODAY!
1, 2 & 3 Bedroom Apt. Homes
• Free Heat • Free Hot/ Softened Water
(260) 927-0197900 Griswold Ct., Auburn, IN 46706
GRISWOLD ESTATES
*Restrictions Apply
DEPOSITS START AT $99!
$350 OFF YOUR SECOND MONTH’S RENT
NOW OPEN UNTIL7 PM ON TUESDAYS
AND THURSDAYS
Only four more left!
FREE HEAT!
FIRST MONTH RENT FREE
Until 10/11/13$12 Application Fee.
Income restrictions apply.Washer/Dryer Connection,
Dishwasher, Central Air,Gas Heat, Closet Organizers
Exterior StorageEnjoy Fall without having to rake!
DEERFIELDAPARTMENTS
1998 Deerfi eld Lane, Kendallville
Hours: M-F 8-5
260-347-5600
Fall Fall Special OfferSpecial Offer
Fall Fall Special OfferSpecial Offer
Fall Special Offer
Fall Special Offer
Angola2 BR 1 BA duplexw/W/D & attached
1 car gar. $650/mo. 260 668-5994
AngolaONE BR APTS.
$425/mo., Free Heat.260-316-5659
AuburnSPECIAL $99, First
Month - 2 BRSENIORS 50+ $465.
No Smokers/Pets (260) 925-9525
Avilla1 & 2 BR APTS$450-$550/ per
month. Call260-897-3188
Avilla1 BR APT: $140/wk.
Includes Util., Dep.Req’d. No Pets.260-897-2154 or
260-318-2030
FremontFairmont I Villas
Call (260) 495-1665Handicap Accessible
Equal HousingOpportunity
“This institution is anequal opportunity
and employer.”
Kendallville1 BR APT: $96/wk.All Util. Included
(260) 582-1186
HOMESFOR RENT
WaterlooLand contract, 3 BR
almost country,$400/mo. 260 615-2709
MOBILE HOMESFOR RENT
Wolcottville 2 & 3 BR from $100/wkalso LaOtto location.
574-202-2181
LAKE RENTALS
Sylvan Lake3 BR, appliances. 1 yr.
lease. $800/mo.Call (260)341-5896
OFFICE SPACE
AuburnOffice near hospital.
Well maint. 100 N ClarkSt. Call 925-4660
STORAGE
INDOOR HEATEDBOAT & RV STOR-
AGE. REASONABLERATES. ELKHART
AREA. CALL GREGG330-338-7445
WANT TO RENT
Country, mid aged cou-ple non smoking, want
to rent house in orEast of Kendallville.
574-320-0936
HO
ME
SH
OM
ES
HOMES FOR SALE
All real estateadvertising inthis newspaperis subject to theFair Housing
Act which makes it illegal toadvertise "any preferencelimitation or discriminationbased on race, color, relig-ion, sex, handicap, familialstatus, or national origin, oran intention, to make anysuch preference, limitationor discrimination." Familialstatus includes children un-der the age of 18 living withparents or legal custodians;pregnant women and peo-ple securing custody of chil-dren under 18. This news-paper will not knowingly ac-cept any advertising for realestate which is in violationof the law. Our readers arehereby informed that alldwellings advertised in thisnewspaper are available onan equal opportunity basis.To complain of discrimina-tion call HUD Toll-free at1-800-669-9777. Thetoll-free telephone numberfor the hearing impaired is1-800-927-9275.
Angola2 BR 2 BA, 1 car att.
gar. Michigan basementnew roof & gutters. (’12)fresh paint throughout,
tile floors in bathrooms,near Center Circle.
$83,000. Will considerland contract w/$4,000
down payment.419-345-4698
SEARCHING FOR THE
LATEST NEWS?CLICK ON
Keeping People Connectedin Northeast Indiana
HOMES FOR SALE
USDA 100% GOVERN-MENT--Loans! Not justfor 1st time buyers! Allcredit considered! Lowrates! Buy any homeanywhere for sale by
owner or realtor. Acad-emy Mortgage Corpora-tion, 11119 Lima Road,Fort Wayne, IN 46818.
Call Nick at260-494-1111.
NLMS146802. Somerestrictions may apply.Equal Housing Lender.Se Habla Espanol. (A).
OPEN HOUSES
LigonierOPEN HOUSE
Sunday, Sept. 221:00 - 3:00
404 Grand St.US 33 N into Ligonier,left on Union St. right
on Grand St. House onthe left.
Price: $139.900.Josh Rosenogle
260 385-0013Orizon Real Estate
MOBILE HOMESFOR SALE
Auburn2 BR 1.5 BA, shed,
patio deck, WestedgeMHP. Very clean.
$8,999. 419-733-6754
GarrettBEN MAR
CHATEAU/NORTHPOINTE CROSSING.WE WILL MOVE YOU
FOR FREE!PAY 1ST MONTHS
LOT RENT & DEPOSITWE DO THE REST!
260-357-3331
GarrettWE LEASE AND SELL
NEW/USEDHOMES...CALL
TODAY!10% DOWN ON
USED/20% DOWN ONNEW OR LEASE TO
OWN FOR AS LOW AS$500.00 MO.260-357-3331
Steuben County1988 14x80 Mobile
home. 3 BR, 2 BA on aone acre lot. Small
shed & beautiful pinetree landscaping. NearPrairie Heights School.
$45,000 firm.260-829-6697
LAKE PROPERTYFOR SALE
Auction!September 28@ 2 pm
Lakefront HomeSandy Beach, All
SportsBig Long Lake(260) 740-6429
Auction!October 13@ 11 am
Lakefront HomeSandy Beach, All
SportsLake Lavine
(260) 740-6429
Hundreds of published and
non-published photos
available for purchase!
REPRINTSphotoR photophoto
Go to:kpcnews.
mycapture.com
❊ ❊ ❊
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
OWNER/OPERATORS
Angola, IN
We want YOU!
Live your dream byowning & operatingyour own box vandelivery service.
• Exciting consistentyear round work. •Great Income
potential! • Low startup costs! • Be home EVERY
night with yourfamily!
Work with the #1Home Improvement
Center in theMidwest.
For more informationcall
(260) 665-0610 or e-mail
ANGOGeneralManager
@menards.com
GA
RA
GE
SALE
SG
AR
AG
E SA
LES
GARAGE SALES
Albion4733 N 150 E
SR 6, turn S onto 150go 2 miles on right.
Thurs., Fri. & Sat. • 8-6Boys 9 mo.-4T, child &adult clothing, furniture,grill, TV’s (free), shoes,coats and much more.
Angola1005 South Wayne St.Fri. 7 - 5 • Sat. 8 - 4Indoor Rain or Shine
Body shop tools,housewares, pushmower, men’s &
women’s clothes, muchmore.
Angola2.8 mi. So. of CircleSept. 21 & 22 • 8 - 5
9 Family SaleFurniture, logo hoodies,
tools, misc. & ladderstands.
Angola212 W. Prospect St.Sept. 20 & 21 • 9 - 4
Sept. 22 • 10 - 2Table saw, chain saws,
weedeaters, misc.tools. Antiques,
clothes, lamps, books,featherweight Singer
sewing machine, 2012Chevy Suburban, much
more.
Angola219 Powers St.
Sat. - Mon. • 8 - 5175 hp bass boat,
preteen & teen boy’sclothes & more.
Angola401 N. West St.
Sept. 20 - 21MOVING SALE
Furniture, Tom ClarkGnomes, antiques.
Angola8472 East 100 North
Fri. & Sat. • 9 - 2Jeep, trailer, hunting,
fishing, golf clubs,sporting goods, boat,
heaters, Wii & games,TV, DVD’s, guitar,
household, kids & adultclothes, shoes & more.
Angola903 Harry Kelley Blvd.
Thurs. - Sat. • 8 - 54 Family Sale
Painting books, DVDs,Dewberry, etc. Some-
thing for Everyone.
Auburn5355 County Road 427
Fri & Sat 9-5Estate Sale
Auburn812 Allison Blvd.
Fri. 9 - 4 • Sat. 9 -1Girl’s bikes, girl’s pree-
mie - sz. 12, light &bathroom fixtures, Lon-
gaberger, TV, scrubjackets, holiday decor,antiques, dishes, toys,
much misc.
Bored?Check out
Happenings in Friday’s
newspaper!
GARAGE SALES
Avilla11823 E 300 N
Friday & Sat. • 8 - 5 Antique Sale
No Early Sales!!Antique shop final
inventory closeout.Furniture including tables, cupboards,
chairs and alsowindows, lamps, tools,
primitives, woodenchicken cages & feeder,
architectural salvage,books & bookcases,pictures, frames, mir-
rors, old store counter,beds, mantels, antique
canning jars, woodironing boards & too
much to mention.Also included is a storedisplay filled with hun-dreds of new old stockbuttons. No clothing.
Garrett1139 SR 8
Fri. 9:30 - 5 • Sat. 8 - 3BARN SALE
Antiques, clothing,household goods,
washer & dryer, tools,much more.
Garrett510 S. Johnson St.*Thurs. & Fri. • 8 - 5
Sat. • ???Huge Annual SaleBiggest One Ever
Garrett/Auburn
CONNIE JEANCROSSING
(Garrett)&
JERRY JUNCTION(Auburn)
COMMUNITY GARAGE
SALESept. 20 & 21
8:00 am - 5:00 pm
Kendallville
1508 BrookviewBlvd.
BrooksideEstates
*Saturday Only 8 - noon
3 Sister’s SaleFurniture, washer &
dryer, linens, seasonalitems, 9’ Christmas
Tree, Colemanlanterns, pots/pans,Food Network cook-ware, Longaberger,women’s Huffy bike,kid’s clothes, toys,purses, women’s
clothes X-3X.
Kendallville2112 Canyon Drive
Arvada HillsFri. & Sat. • 9-4
Lawn equip., tools,washer & dryer, snowblower, Avon, tables &chairs, TV stand, an-
tique dresser & buffet,Cuckoo clock, house-
hold, glassware & misc.
Kendallville521 N. Patty Ln.*
Meadow LanesAddition
Sat. ONLY • 9 - ?
Lake James20 Lane 200 FBRed Sand BeachSat. Only •9 - 4MOVING SALE
All garage items, tools,storage cabinets, refrig-
erator, twin beds &misc.
Little Turkey Lake3325 S 1075 E
Fri. & Sat. • 9 - 4Small freezer, lots ofDVD movies, chairs,
smoker, stands, lots ofhousewares, puzzles,clothes, canning jars a
reg. truck toolbox &tiller.
Rome City9094 Overlook Dr.
Sat. only! • 9-4Glasstop stove, dorm
frig., area rug,baby-toddler & adultclothes, new vera &
more.Everything must go!
ST
UF
FS
TU
FF
ANTIQUES
Duncan Phyfedining table, 6 chairs,
3 leaves. $125260-347-1121
FURNITURE
Brand NEW in plastic!QUEEN
PILLOWTOPMATTRESS SETCan deliver, $125.
(260) 493-0805
BUILDINGMATERIALS
PIONEER POLEBUILDINGS
Free EstimatesLicensed and Insured
2x6 Trusses45 year WarrantedGalvalume Steel
19 ColorsSince 1976
#1 in MichiganCall Today
1-800-292-0679
FRUIT & PRODUCE
Apples - $15.00 Bushel$8.00 1/2 Bushel
Call 260 475-5433
MUSIC
Free: Ludwig UprightPiano. Regular 88 keys.
(260) 357-5976
TOOLS
Craftsman Radialtablesaw 2 1/2HP
10 in. $200. AlsoCraftsman air compres-
sor on wheels, 2 hpPSI 40 $100.00260 925-3067
Sears Craftsmen 10”, 2.5 HP, radio arm
saw. $400.00260-665-9046
WANTED TO BUY
TIMBER WANTEDAll species of hardwood. Pay before
starting. Walnut needed.
260 349-2685
FARM/GARDEN
APPLES & CIDER Mon.-Sat. • 9-5:30
Sun. • 11-5GW Stroh Orchards
Angola (260) 665-7607
FARM MACHINERY
1952 ALLIS CHALMER,WD & trailer. $1,600.
Will separate.260 357-8539
PETS/ANIMALS
FREE: Kittens8 weeks old
260 226--5360
WH
EE
LS
WH
EE
LS
AUTOMOTIVE/SERVICES
$ WANTED $Junk Cars! Highest
prices pd. Freepickup. 260-705-7610
705-7630
SETSER TRANSPORTAND TOWINGUSED TIRES
Cash for Junk Cars!701 Krueger St.,
K’ville. 260-318-5555
ATTENTION:Paying up to $530 forscrap cars. Call me
318-2571
IVAN’S TOWINGJunk Auto Buyerup to $1000.00(260) 238-4787
CARS
93 Bonneville Runs good, good body,
new tires.$1800 obo
260-316-2454
YOUR CHOICE: $130092 Caravan/V-6/every-thing works, 98 Taurus
V-6 Both/Good TiresGood work vehiclesCall: 260-460-7729
1 & Only Place ToCall--to get rid of thatjunk car, truck or van!!
Cash on the spot!Free towing. Call
260-745-8888. (A)
Guaranteed Top DollarFor Junk Cars, Trucks& Vans. Call Jack @
260-466-8689
Indiana Auto Auction,Inc.--Huge Repo SaleThursday, Sept. 26th.
Over 100 repossessedunits for sale. Cash
only. $500 deposit perperson required. Regis-ter 8am-9:30am to bid.
No public entry after9:30am. All vehiclessold AS IS! 4425 W.Washington Center
Road, Fort Wayne. (A)
SUV’S
2005 Buick Ranier CXL,AWD, 71,934 mi., ex-cel. cond., 4.2 liter, L6
engine, loaded, oneowner
color red. $10,500.260 343-8772
BOATS/MOTORS
1979 RinkerbuiltBoat, 115 HP
Mercury Motor,Deep V 18 foot
including trailer.$1,500.00 /OBO
260-341-5590
MOTORCYCLES
2007 Road KingClassic
Harley DavidsonFLHRC, 96 cu. in.1584 cc, 6 speed
trans, extra chrome,custom exhaust,
custom seat,loaded. Only 15,109miles. Over $26,000invested. For Sale
$16,500/obo
260 449-9277
2009 KawasakiVulcan 500LTD.Only 4100 miles.With windshield,
luggage rack, anddetachable travel trunk.
$3650 OBO(260)502-1010
MERCHANDISEUNDER $50
(2) Eddie Bauer Men’sVest. 1-blue, 1-beige.Size XL, new. $25.00.
(260) 499-0233
16” Boys Bike withtraining wheels.
Kept inside, great cond.$25.00 obo
(260) 761-2054
19” PC MonitorHanspree flat screenwith built in speakers.
$25.00. (260) 495-9166
1957 M-3 HammondOrgan with bench.
Cherry finish. Excellentcond. Works good,
$50.00. (260) 357-3694
2 - Door Bifold36”x80 5/8”. $15.00.
(260) 242-7582
2 Blow Molded Hallow-een Ghosts. $20.00 set.
(260) 487-1337
2 Steel Wagon Wheels4x4, $50.00.
(260) 627-3134
23 inch Sanyo analogtelevision. $15.(260) 357-4338
29 gal. Aquarium withscreened lid. $35.00.
(260) 487-1337
32” Storm DoorComplete. $25.00.
(260) 927-1286
4 Person Paddle Boat$50.00
(260) 349-0506
5 qt. Electric Bucket foroutside water. $5.00.
(260) 242-7582
6 ft. Lighted Glass Cu-rio
16 by 12”, four glassshelves. $50.00.(260) 927-4931
8 piece Left hand juniorgolf set with bag.
$25.00. (260) 636-2285
8 Screw-in TreeClimbers. $8.00.(260) 897-3426
9 Piece Sheffield ofEngland Stainless SteelCutlery Set. Mint cond.Original box. $50.00.
(260) 316-2089
A.O. Smith Glass LinedPropane Hot WaterHeater. 40 gallons.
Works great, $50.00.(260) 868-5566
Antique 1896 SingerSewing Machine.
No cabinet. $25.00.(260) 897-3416
Antique Stanley Rule &Level Co. No. 36 Wood
Plane. $45.00.(260) 316-2089
Apartment SizeRefrigerator, $25.00.
(260) 925-3067
Attractive OutdoorGarden AccentsFountain. Pumpincluded. $50.00.(260) 316-2089
Bar Stools with backs,padded, 24” height. Setof 4. Moving, must sell.
$40.00 oboAuburn, (260) 927-5148
Bath Lavatory20” longx17” widex5”splashback. $5.00.
(260) 347-4179
MERCHANDISEUNDER $50
Beautiful Oak Entertain-ment Center with TV
“doors” many shelves &nice drawers.$50.00 obo.
(260) 582-1861
Beautiful TurquoiseDress. Knit skirt, long
sleeves, nylon & acrylic(Philippe Marques).
Some pink trim, wornonce. Size 16, med.
$25.00. (260) 570-5832
Bissell Quicksteamercarpet cleaner (cost
new $79.99) used once.$25.00
(260) 925-0268
Christmas Blue RopeLights, multiple strands.$35.00. (260) 487-1337
Contemporary 3 in 1oval, tempered glasscoffee table. Extends
from 54” to 80”. Excel-lent cond. $50.00. Fre-mont, (260) 243-0383
Cookbooks over 30,new & old valued at
$325. Sell all for $25.00(260) 925-0268
Corelle Dish SetImpressions Enduring
Elegance, 16 piece set.Still in box. $20.00.
(260) 347-3537
Corelle Plates20 - 10 1/8”
8 - 6 3/4”, multi designs.Bird house & flowers,
$20.00. (260) 347-3537
Corner Cabinet34” tall, 44” across front
with double doors.$40.00. (260) 925-0386
Dual Reclining Couch/Console. In fair cond.Perfect for man-cave/
college student. $25.00.(260) 927-4931
Exotic African Tree4 ft. $35.00
(260) 927-1286
Fabric Backed VinylWallpaper. 6 rolls - 70sq. ft. per roll. $10.00
for all. (260) 897-3426
Giant Ferret & Chin-chilla Multi Level Cage.$50.00. (260) 487-1337
Giant Melissa & DougStuffed Husky. $30.00.
(260) 487-1337
Girl’s Pink Disney LargePlastic Kitchen Outfit,
many needed accesso-ries included. New.
$50.00. (260) 499-0233
Gmax HelmetSize Med. Black,
$15.00. (260) 242-7582
Gold Comforter Setwith Shams & Bedskirt.
Queen size. $10.00.(260) 925-1622
Halloween DecorationBrand new, $20.00 per
tote. (260) 487-1337
Handicap Stool forBath Tub, $5.00.(260) 242-7582
Home Interior Set of 2wall pictures w/wall
pocket. Pd. $200. Sell$50.00. (260) 927-4931
Jeans. Rural Kingbrand. Blue. 42”x29”
mens 2 regular pairs.1 - 5 pocket - pair. Likenew. All 3 for $20.00.
(260) 347-3537
Krups Expresso, Cap-puccino, Latte Coffee-
maker. Excellent cond.,$15.00. (260) 357-3694
Large Insulated DogHouse with hinged topfor ventilation. $20.00.
(260) 894-1583
Lawn SeederAccu-green 1000
$15.00. (260) 347-3537
MacGregor PutterM6-4K Designed by
Bobby Grace. Originalcover & grip. $50.00.
(260) 316-2089
Matching End Table,Coffee Table & Round
Table. Excellent shape.$25.00. (260) 927-1286
Measuring WheelLufkin MW-38
Contractor. $35.00.(260) 347-3537
Natural Wood 6’x8’wStockade fencing. 3
separate pieces.All pick up. $50.00.
(260) 627-3134
New 14 ft. Canvas BoatCover. $20.00.(260) 897-3426
New 36” long brownNautilus stove hood. 163/4” wide with vent and
light. 6 1/2” slop.$30.00. (260) 347-4179
New F96T12/CW/HORecessed Base Fluo-
rescent Tubes. $15.00.(260) 925-6090
Nordic Track SkiMachine. Great cond.,
$25.00. (260) 246-0831
Oak Quilt Rack$45.00
(260) 665-1732
MERCHANDISEUNDER $50
Pool Table with pingpong top. Moving, must
sell. U Haul. $50.00.Auburn, (260) 927-5148
Queen Size CoverletSet with bedskirt &
shams. Never used.Antique gold. $25.00.
(260) 925-1622
Radio Shack Big ButtonUniversal Remote
Control & User’s Guide.$3.00. (260) 242-7582
Riley School DeskSeat only. $25.00
(260) 925-3067
Rockport Slip On newshoes. Size 8, $10.00.
(260) 897-3426
Schlage All PurposeEntry Lock, $4.00.
(260) 897-3426
Self-Coil Air Hose1/4” I.D., 25 ft., rated
185 psi, $5.00.(260) 897-3416
Small Black Deskwith wood grain. Top 3
drawers. $10.00.(260) 349-2784
Small EntertainmentCenter. Darker wood,great for small room,good shape. $35.00
(260) 925-0386
Squirrel Yard OrnamentHeavy - Big. $10.00.
(260) 347-3537
Stacked Weights andweight bench.
Great shape. $25.00.(260) 246-0831
Student/office desk.Metal w/wood grain top
& 3 drawers. Goodcondition. $25(260) 357-4338
Telescope on Tripod forspotting. Winchester
WT-541. $50.00.(260) 246-1428
Titliest Pro V1 golfballs. $50.00
(239) 565-0847
Trivial Pursuit/YoungPlayers Edition with all
Star Sports & BabyBoomers Editions.
$45.00 oboAuburn, (260) 927-5148
TV stand/VCR cabinetw/one shelf & double
glass doors. 28” across,22” high, 16” deep.
Wood face, wood graincabinet in good condi-
tion. $20.(260) 357-4338
Used Chain Link Fence250 plus ft. fence withpoles and gate. Also
some used landscapelogs. Already taken
down & ready to move.$50.00. (260) 894-1583
V Tech education gameComes with around 11
games. Like new,$20.00. (260) 582-1861
Vent-Free Gas Heater14K to 28K B.T.U. with
thermostat. Worksgood. $35.00.
(260) 925-0386
Victorian Record PlayerHand cranked with
records. $50.00.(260) 349-1191
Wicker 3 drawerdresser, night stand,
full/queen headboard.$50.00. (260) 925-3093
KPCLIMITATIONS
LIMITATIONS OFLIABILITY:
KPC assumes no liabil-ity or financial responsi-bility for typographicalerrors or for omission ofcopy, failure to publishor failure to deliver ad -vertising. Our liability forcopy errors is limited toyour actual charge forthe first day & one incor-rect day after the adruns. You must promptlynotify KPC of any erroron first publication.Claims for adjustmentmust be made within 30days of publication and,in the case of multipleruns, claims are allowedfor first publication only.KPC is not responsiblefor and you agree tomake no claim for spe-cific or consequentialdamages resulting fromor related in any mannerto any error, omission,or failure to publish ordeliver.
1-877-791-7877
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