County - Minster Historical Society

Transcription

County - Minster Historical Society
Saturday, Sept. 14, 2013
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County commissioner gives club update
By MICHELLE STEIN
Staff Writer
MINSTER — The
Minster Service Club
received an update by
Auglaize County Commissioner Doug Spencer
concerning recent and
upcoming projects, as
well as the current state
of the county.
Renovations to the
county courthouse were
a major project recently,
Spencer noted, which is
nearly complete.
“It was an extremely
worthwhile project,” he
said. “If you have not had
the chance to tour the
courthouse, please give
me a contact and I’ll try
to make arrangements, or
if your group wants to go
through.”
Spencer said courthouse operations were
shut down in the court
house for a two-year period for these renovations.
At this point, it is nearly
the one-year anniversary
of re-opening the court
house.
“Now that it’s open,
we’ve been getting some
very prestigious awards,”
he said. “In May, we received the best public
project in Ohio from
Heritage Ohio. And just
his last week, we received
notification that Sept.
28 — and I want to also
say Garmann & Miller is
also a recipient, as well as
Auglaize County, of that
— of the Preservation
Merit Award. This one
is by the Ohio Historic
Preservation Office.”
The
120-year-old
building underwent al–––––––––––––––
See COUNTY Page 2A
Seasonal program comes to end
Staff photo/Michelle Stein
Auglaize County Commissioner Doug Spencer speaks
at the Minster Service Club meeting Aug. 15.
Minster BOE talks
evaluations, fobs
By DEAN EVERSOLE
Staff Writer
MINSTER — Minster
Superintendent Brenda
Boeke discussed the
change in teacher evaluations Monday night during the Minster School
Board meeting.
“The process has
changed this year,” said
Boeke “With that has
come much pre-planning.
Our teachers and principals will be developing
with their evaluators a
professional growth plan,
which will be used in the
evaluation.”
Boeke noted that the
evaluations will be documented in the Electronic
Teacher Principal Evaluation System, which she is
currently setting up.
The village council
and education board disPhoto provided cussed the use of Seventh
During the summer months, children would bicycle from St. Augustine Catholic Church to McDonald’s after
Street Park. Some of the
Wednesday morning Mass. The Rev. Rick Nieberding started this program four years ago.
items discussed in the
meeting included the next
By MICHELLE STEIN
Donald’s after Mass, led by the Rev. Rick Nieberding.
Staff Writer
This tradition began about four years ago, Nieberding phase of the playground,
tennis court restoration,
explained.
MINSTER — A special program at St. Augustine
“Kids always come to Mass on Wednesday mornings the need for more trash
Catholic Church recently ended, as children are easing during the school year, so in late spring, when they were cans along the practice
field sidewalk and the reback into the school year routine.
moval of dangerous limbs
–––––––––––––––
Every Wednesday during the summer months chilSee
BICYCLE
Page
2A
and the health of trees.
dren had the opportunity to bike from the church to Mc-
Boeke
Laura
Koening addressed
t h e
board,
represent ing
the ath-
letic boosters.
The issue at hand was
the use and regulations
of the weight room located behind the football
field. At a recent boosters meeting attended by
Boeke, a plan was created
to monitor the use of the
facility.
It was noted that a key
fob system should be put
in place. Also, the use of
the facility would be limited to current Minster
athletes and graduates of
Minster in college.
“We felt this was a
good compromise,” said
Koening. “When the
room was built, we told
people it would be open,
but things have changed
since then.”
Boeke added there
weren’t free weights when
it first opened, but now
–––––––––––––––
See BOE Page 2A
Kids learn to make bracelets at Minster’s library
By MICHELLE STEIN
Staff Writer
MINSTER — Minster sixth-grader
Sierra Lentz shared her crafty skills
with local kids Aug. 13 at Francis J.
Stallo Memorial Library.
Participants in “Craft time with Sierra” had the opportunity to make either a pop tab bracelet and a button
bracelet at two sessions upstairs at the
library.
“She’s good — she has a lot of
craft skills from Girl Scouts,” said
Becky Prenger, branch manager at the
library.
Lentz said she gets a lot of her craft
ideas from Pinterest, an online pin
board full of inspiration.
“I found little turtles made out of egg
cartons,” she said.
A couple of participants in Sierra’s
craft session shared why they decided
to sign up for the class.
“I’m making a necklace for my sister,
Rachel, because she’s moving to college,” said Sami Cull, a second-grade
student at Minster Elementary School.
“She’s hanging it up in her dorm
room.”
“I came because then I can make
something for my backpack — like
this, I’m going to put on my backpack,” said Natalie Hoying, who is a
fourth-grader at Minster Elementary
School.
Getting crafty seems to run in her
family, Natalie said.
“My aunt, she lives in Columbus,
and she’s a scapbooker,” she said.
“And my mom sews, so I like
both of them. And I’m in Girl
Scouts.”
For a complete schedule of upcoming events at the library, visit http://
auglaize.oplin.org/.
Staff photo/Michelle Stein
Kids make pop tab bracelets Aug. 13 at Francis J. Stallo Memorial Library in Minster.
www.minstercommunitypost.com
The Community Post
Page 2A
County
From Page 1A
most $9 million of updates and changes with
the help of Garmann &
Miller, Spencer said —
all of which accrued no
debt.
“It’s just the Auglaize
County philosophy of our
capital projects — you
make sure you plan, you
have the vision and that
you save the money, and
then you do the project,”
he said. “So that’s pretty
exciting for us as well.”
Garmann & Miller will
also be assisting Auglaize
County with its upcoming dog warden project,
Spencer said.
“When I came into office in 2007, we were still
working with the humane
society, and they were
contracted to be our dog
warden,” he said. “Well,
some things happened in
2008, and they stopped
serving as our dog warden. It kind of left us in
a bad position because
we had no employee and
we had no facility, but
we’re mandated by ORC
to provide those services
and to have that facility.”
Russ Bailey has served
at the county’s dog warden since July 2008,
working from a tempo-
Bicycle
From Page 1A
soon to get out for the
summer, I offered them
a special deal,” he said. “I
said if you come in the
summer — four years ago,
what I said is if you come
this next Wednesday after school’s out, I’ll take
you over to McDonald’s.
(It was) to kind of foster
a little bit of a summer
spiritual renewal after the
school year.”
At first, about 20 kids,
Thursday, August 22, 2013
rary location — what
was supposed to be six
months turned into six
years, Spencer noted.
A new facility is in the
works, which will be located next to the sheriff ’s
law enforcement center
in Wapakoneta.
“The long story short
on that is, it’s going to
be a total package of
$467,000,” he said. “It’s
under construction right
now — Jack Heyne got
the award on that. We
hope by the end of the
year, the beginning of
next year that, that facility will be up and running.”
Another recent project
included the power house
at the court house, which
had, and still has the original boilers in there, which
weigh 22,000 pounds.
“We had Wellman
Brothers take a look at
our smoke stack, and the
capstone is going to have
some issues,” he said.
“It’s going to basically
need one of two options
— take the top 10 feet
of the capstone down, or
the second option is see if
they can get up there and
do some re-touching on
that and make it safe and
secure. And so we’ve kind
of postponed that; they
feel we can postpone that
until next year.”
The law enforcement
center is also in need
of some weather proofing and expansion joint
work, Spencer said.
“So, you’ll see that
as you’re traveling on
33, probably in the next
couple of months, that
Wellman Brothers will
be doing some work on
the exterior of the law enforcement building.”
Work at the airport is
also currently underway,
Spencer noted, with the
aid of a 90-10 grant — 90
percent from FAA and 10
percent from the county.
“We’re looking at the
development of a new terminal and snow removal
equipment building,” he
said. “Garmann & Miller
has been sub-contracted
through Delta Airport,
which is the main architect that the airport authority uses when managing all of the grants
from the FAA, etc. They
have a really awesome design ... But before we get
to that point, we have to
do utility upgrades, and
so we’re in that phase one
right now.”
The approximate costs
for these projects are
$750,000 for the utility design and upgrades
and for the snow removal
equipment building, and
$800,000 for the new terminal building, Spencer
said.
Auglaize Acres was
another topic of discussion, with Spencer noting
significant work needs to
be done on the building
itself.
“It’s a wonderful, wonderful facility, a wonderful institution,” he said.
“It’s an old building,
which creates big headaches, especially when
competing against some
more modern-designed
buildings that makes it a
little easier to staff than
what we have with the
acres.”
Licenses for 40 beds
at Auglaize Acres are currently in the process of
being sold to a home in
Ashtabula County for
$720,000. Right now,
$550,000 worth of critical infrastructure needs
to be taken care of at
Auglaize Acres, Spencer
noted.
“We are the exception — there aren’t too
many county homes in
the business anymore,’ he
said. “We were the first,
but it’s really becoming
something more of the
private world. We are a
dual-certification home
there — Medicaid, Medicare — and trying to everything that we possibly can to keep Auglaize
Acres in business.”
The solid waste department received no-
tification from the EPA
that it is time to update
its 15-year plan, Spencer
said. The EPA also recently installed four new
investigative wells at the
county landfill, which
cost $21,000 for installation and another $27,000
for the EPA to sample and
document six times.
Spencer commented
on the recent canal project, noting that although
there were setbacks, the
end result looks great.
“The ditch petition
that we were involved
with in Minster and the
canal project looks awesome,” he said.
“Though, there’s been
a few slippages that the
county engineer, with another contractor, has taken care of ... Hopefully,
everybody’s pleased with
how that went. It’s really,
in my estimation, done a
nice job with beautifying
the canal area.”
Spencer ended with
the financial state of Auglaize County, hitting upon
some notable statistics
for this year compared to
past years.
• “Sales taxes are our
bread and butter,” he said.
“We’ve got one-and-ahalf percent of the sales
tax — and things will be
changing because of the
new budget bill that was
passed with state sales
tax and county sales tax
... This year, we projected $6.5 million; our total budget is a little over
$14 million. Year to date,
we’re at 70 percent collected.”
• “Year to date, we’ve
collected a half a million dollars more than
we did in 2011, year to
date and 2012 year to
date,” he said. “So thank
you for spending money
in Auglaize County and
thanks for inviting all
of your friends outside
of Auglaize County to
spend money in Auglaize
County.”
• The property tax projection was $1.9 million,
and Auglaize County exceeded that projection.
“We’ve collected 103 percent,” Spencer said. “We
collected $20,000 more
this year than what we did
in 2012. We’re $240,000
more than where we were
in 2008.”
• In 2008, interest
income generated revenue of $1.1 million. This
year, it is projected to be
$120,000.
• Overall, the budget
is $14.3 million in the
general revenue fund,
with another $36 million
in other special revenue
funds, bringing it to a total of slightly more than
$50 million for Auglaize
County.
typically in second through
fourth-grade, showed up
for Mass and McDonald’s
afterward,
Nieberding
said.
“It’s developed each
year — we’ve had a lot of
benefactors,” he said, noting the McDonald’s group
averaged about 45 this
summer, although there
were as many as 55 at one
time.
Kids who participated
rode their bicycles to Mass,
and then gathered outside
after Mass is over. About
10 volunteers helped Nie-
berding for each trip to
help ensure safety, which
included: Jim Saluke, Jeff
Ahrens, Dianne Voskuhl,
Nancy Niekamp and Nick
Grieshop.
The troupe crossed
State Route 66 at Seventh
Street, with the help of
Randy Houseworth, Minster’s police chief.
“Randy Houseworth
escorts us over and blocks
that intersection by Hausfeld Motors,” he said.
“We’re responsible for getting back, but he escorts
on the way over to keep it
safe.”
Giving
McDonald’s
employees warning before
bombarding the restaurant
with 50 people, the kids
and helpers have a routine
they follow, Nieberding
said.
“We usually say the
Pledge of Allegiance, sing
‘The Star Spangled Banner,’ have lunch — we
always eat outside,” he
said.
The group eats in a
grassy area near McDonald’s. After eating, they
move over to a grassy area
behind Marathon to play
games and do fun activities. Junior high volunteers
help with these games and
activities.
“We use that grassy area
behind there for another
half-hour to 40 minutes
of games, water balloons,
cooperative, kind of camaraderie play,” Nieberding
said. “We play, we pray, we
eat.”
Although the last trip
to McDonald’s after Mass
has come and gone this
season, kids will have one
more fun activity to look
forward to when school
let’s out next summer.
“The kids enjoy it, it’s a
good community witness,
it extends our religious
outreach,”
Nieberding
said.
“It’s not heavy on theology — these are kids —
but they attend Mass, and
that Mass is more geared
toward them. They do
readings, they act as servers, some of them sing in
the choir, so it’s a little bit
different than our regular, routine 8 a.m. Mass
through the summer.”
Local kids show off talent at F.J. Stallo library
By JANICE BARNIAK
Staff Writer
MINSTER — Ten
acts performed to a
packed community room
Aug. 5 in the first-ever FJ
Stallo Talent Show, with
audience members voting for the acts they liked
best.
The performers sang,
danced and performed
gymnastics
for-thestanding-room-only
event. Organizers Alexis
Kyburz and Dezy Miller,
both paid summer interns
at the library, said they
were surprised by how
many people showed up
for the concert.
While they had sign
ups, they’d believed only
the children and their
parents would show
up.
“We had plastic chairs
out, and we didn’t expect
to need more,” Kyburz
said.
Miller said the program fit the fun and vivacious spirit of the library
BOE
From Page 1A
free weights are there and
those are a safety concern.
The board agreed that
changes should be made.
Koening also informed
the board that finances
were becoming an issue,
and they are working
with Athletic Director
programs and was a nice
wrap up to summer. Miller and Kyburz are sisters,
and the all-female show
brought out sisters competing against each other
and sister acts.
A dance routine featured Lydia and Ella Mescher and Lydia Bornhorst, dancing their way
into first place as the audience’s favorite.
“The best part was winning,” Bornhorst said.
Ella said the girls are
neighbors and were able
to practice together at
least three times every
time they met.
“We were kind of nervous at first,” she said.
“But once we were done,
I was like why were we
nervous?”
Lydia Mescher agreed
that she’d been nervous
but had enjoyed winning.
The tumbling dance
group of Isyra and Bryann Oldiges along with
Lauren and Allison
Dwenger performed to
All for One.
In competing sisters,
Savanna Webb sang
“Pricetag” by Jessie J.
While she paused a
few times in the a cappella act to focus and block
out her nervousness,
Webb said she enjoyed
the performing.
“It was scary, but I feel
better,” she said. “I got it
over with. I wanted people to hear my voice.”
Skyla Webb, younger
sister to Savanna, followed her with the Black
Eyed Peas’ “Where Is the
Love.”
“I really like singing but I’m very shy,”
Skyla Webb said. “It was
scary.”
She added she had
performed in the school
talent show before. Her
favorite part is when it’s
all over and people clap,
she said.
Music was mostly
popular radio tunes.
The first act, Kaycie
Wissman, sang “Count
on Me” by Bruno Mars.
Grace Schmiesing and
Janae Hoying had a tumbling and singing act to
Bruno Mars’s “Grenade.”
They said they had
performed together before in a school play, and
Hoying has performed
from a young age.
“The best part was
when people congratulated us,” Schmiesing
said. “That made me feel
proud.”
Hannah James sang
with Alice Schmiesing
on guitar a song by Miley
Cyrus called “Butterfly
Fly Away.” The girls said
they’re in a band named
Chatterbox
together
through Red Bird Guitar
Studio with three other
girls. Schmiesing said
she comes to the library
a lot, and was inspired to
sign up thinking it would
be fun.
Alayna Albers sang the
Taylor Swift song “22”
and said she picked the
Josh Clune to ease the
burden.
Boeke informed the
board there have been
no changes in the status
of the Hanover Street
building and it’s still for
sale.
The superintendent
discussed the staff touring
both Minster Machine
and Machine Concepts.
Boeke noted the tours
were amazing and helped
the teachers and companies understand how to
best help each other.
The board approved
the contracts of the following:
• Lisa Schemmel —
instructional aid
• Jessica Baker — cafe
server
• Jaqueline Clark —
cafe server
• Kirby Cummins —
groundskeeper
• Rachel Couse —
substitute cafe server
• Marcie Huizenga —
substitute cafe server
• Bonnie Trzaska —
substitute cafe server
• Carly Wagner — substitute cafe server
The board scheduled its next meeting
for 8 a.m. Sept. 16 in
large group meeting
room at the elementary
building.
song by turning on the
radio at the time she was
thinking about entering
the contest.
“It was the first thing I
heard,” she said.
It wasn’t her first performance. Albers said
that she performed with
the percussive players and in a production of School House
Rock.
Alayna Hogenkamp
performed to “I Knew
You Were Trouble,”
which she said she had
practiced a lot in advance. It was her first performance ever, she said.
Her mother encouraged
her to sign up.
“I really want to sing,”
Hogenkamp said.
The Community Post
Your hometown newspaper since 1896
326 North Main St., #200 * P.O. Box 155
Minster, OH 45865
Open Monday - Friday 9 a.m.-4:30 p.m.
419.628.2369 * FAX 419.628.4712
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Thursday, August 22, 2013
Page 3A
The Community Post
Rotary club learns about national bird
Op-Ed
Jill Bowers visited weight between 12and 15 on the lake. Bowers notBowers
described
ed
that
there
is
now
also
a
pounds.
The
typical
bald
the
New
Bremen-New
how
young
eagles
begin
Dear Editor,
It will take time for
nest
on
66A,
north
of
St.
eagle
nest
will
measure
Knoxville
Rotary
Club
building their strength by
Ohio is changing the schools and communiMarys.
Bowers
spotted
from
three
to
five
feet
to
discuss
her
work
with
“limb hopping” or standway it measures and rates ties alike to readjust to the
four
eagles
(two
juvenile
across,
and
they
use
the
the
American
Bald
Eaing
in place on a branch
the performance of its state's change in expectaand
two
adults
with
full
same
nest
year
after
year.
gles
at
Grand
Lake
St.
and
repeatedly flapping
schools and districts. The tions.
white
heads
and
tails.)
“In
Vermillion,
Ohio
Marys.
their wings.
As educators, we look
changes to our report
The
eagles
at
Grand
there
was
a
nest
that
had
Bowers
is
a
bald
eagle
Bowers visits local
cards signal a significant forward to meeting these
Lake
St
Marys
continubeen
used
for
over
35
nest
monitor
for
the
Ohio
school
to educate stuoverhaul to our account- new challenges together
ally
add
to
their
nests
years
by
twelve
different
Division
of
Wildlife.
She
dents
on
the American
ability system and the en- and improving educationwith
various
small
tree
pairs
of
eagles,”
said
Bowhas
served
in
that
role
Bald Eagle and their nattire state must now adapt al practices in our combranches
and
sticks.
As
ers.
since
1996.
ural habitat.
to a new way of talking munities and across the
a
result,
the
nests
grow
“The
nest
had
been
“When
I
started
this,
I
She demonstrates the
state.
about accountability.
quite
large
over
time.
blown
down
in
a
wind
didn’t
know
that
we
had
size
of the eagles with reSincerely,
In previous years, reBowers
showed
a
plaster
storm
and
a
few
local
any
bald
eagles
in
Mercer
productions of the birds’
— Brenda Boeke
port cards used six ratings
representation
of
an
eagle
men
weighed
the
nest
and
Auglaize
County,”
talons, skull and other
Superintendent, Minto describe school perforegg,
the
size
of
the
palm
and
it
weighed
in
at
over
said
Bowers.
objects. It is illegal for
mance — Excellent with ster Local
of
her
hand.
She
noted
4,000
pounds.”
“She
learned
of
a
new
anyone to have anything
— Shawn Brown
Distinction,
Excellent,
that
eagles
typically
lay
The
eagles
arrived
in
nest
in
Mercer
County
real from an American
Superintendent, St.
Effective,
Continuous
1-3
eggs.
1996,
but
their
first
nest
during
her
training.
I
was
Bald Eagle so the items
Improvement, Academic Mary's Local
The
hatchlings
grow
failed.
In
1997,
they
reso
thrilled
to
learn
that
she has are all reproduc— Howard Overman
Watch and Academic
quickly
to
the
point
turned
and
built
another
I’d
have
access
to
a
bald
tions.
Superintendent, New
Emergency – and were
where
they
can
stand
and
nest
that
has
had
on
and
eagle’s
nest.”
“The kids love seeing
mostly based on how well Bremen Local
move
around
the
nest,
off
again
success.
By
An
American
Bald
the
samples and learn— Kim Waterman
students performed on
preparing
for
flight
by
the
2005
there
were
two
nests
Eagle
is
30-36
inches
tall
ing
about
our bald eagle
Superintendent, New
state assessments.
time
they
are
five
to
six
on
Grand
Lake
St
Marys.
with
a
wingspan
of
over
friends
at
Grand
Lake St.
Beginning with the Knoxville Local
weeks
old.
Now,
there
are
three
nests
6
feet.
The
adult
birds
Marys,” said Bowers.
— Suzanne Darmer
2013-14 school year and
Superintendent, Ada
district report cards, assessments will still be a Exempted Village
— Emmy Davis
major part of school and
Two Bowling Green State Uni- to honor Wrey’s service to the UniSuperintendent, Riddistrict grades but the reversity
(BGSU) scholarships were versity as Dean of Women and Prosults will be shown in a dif- gemont Local
recently
awarded to Fort Loramie fessor of Physical Education. This
— Keith Horner
ferent way. Letter grades
graduate,
Lindsey Hilgefort.
scholarship is given to incoming
Superintendent, Waof A-F will be given in six
She
will
be
an
incoming
freshfreshman or current students who
broad categories: Achieve- pakoneta City Schools
man
at
BGSU
this
fall
majoring
in
demonstrate leadership on campus
— Jennifer Pencment, Gap Closing, Gradintegrated mathematics.
or community activities.
uation Rate, Progress, K-3 zarski
Hilgefort was named the recipiHilgefort’s high school activiSuperintendent, Ken- ent of the Kerm and Mary Lu Stroh ties included: Class officer, Student
Literacy and Prepared for
Success. Schools that have ton City Schools
Scholarship, which was established Council, National Honor Society,
— Chris Pfister
traditionally been rated
at BGSU in 2002 to be awarded to Spanish Club, History Club, MatheSuperintendent,
Excellent and Excellent
one student annually, who has dem- letes and Student Aide.
with Distinction may not Waynesfield-Goshen
onstrated outstanding scholarship,
She participated in Fort Loramie
receive As under the new Local
leadership, and citizenship.
Cheerleading with OASSA State
— Doug Roberts
system because the comIn April, Hilgefort also attended Championship titles in 2010 and
Superintendent, Har- the Honors and Awards convocation 2013; Co-Captain 2013. Volleyball
ponents are far more comwhere she was awarded the Robert team with OHSAA districts titles
din Northern Local
plicated and stringent.
and Wrey Barber Scholarship. This and trip to Regional finals in 2013; ministry, Ft. Loramie Cancer Cruscholarship was established in rec- Co-Captain 2013, Track team.
saders, blood donor, and Liberty
ognition of the Barber’s longstandCommunity services include be- Days volunteer.
ing commitment to education and ing a member of St. Michael’s youth
Prudential Financial, bership each year.
Inc. announced recently
Beckman, a resident of
that Theodore Beckman, a Minster, can be reached at
financial professional with theodore.beckman@pruBy ALLISON BRADY
young. Butterfly larva eat go, jitterbug at the Joe-pye conditions increased in seThe Prudential Insurance dential.com or at 419628Heritage Trails Park District
weed, or the ever popular verity as these regal butteronly the leaves of plants.
Company of America’s 4076
Sulphers, the most abun- feces foxtrot for those but- flies headed south. Many
Ohio Valley Agency, loMDRT is The Premier
My yard is aflutter with a dant native butterfly, chore- terflies that are attracted to perished en route because
cated at 96 W. Fourth St. Association of Financial variety of butterflies. Flow- ography their dance to lay animal scat.
of lack of food and host
Suite B, Minster, has quali- Professionals. Founded ers are the butterflies’ great eggs on clover. Cabbage
Hold on, something plants. Habitat conditions
fied for membership in the in 1927, MDRT is an in- attraction, and mine were whites, Ohio’s most com- is amiss. I am growing a worsened with wildfires in
Million Dollar Round Ta- ternational, independent planted on their behalf. mon non-native butterfly, hearty crop of milkweed Texas. Adult monarchs died
ble (MDRT) — one of the association of more than Floppy-winged black swal- twirl and weave around for the monarch mombo, and they or their hatchlings
life insurance industry’s 35,000, or less than one lowtails suck away on the plants in the mustard fam- so where are they? We did not succeed in migramost prestigious organiza- percent, of the world’s best butterfly bush, while giant ily such as cabbage, broc- typically see them in great tion. Phil reports that it will
life insurance and finan- swallowtails, avid flower coli, and radish. Ohio’s 35 numbers at this late sum- take a while for the populations.
“Theodore exemplifies cial services professionals. visitors, take their turn. varieties of aster fulfill the mer dance of butterflies. tion to recover.
everything that MDRT MDRT membership is These beautifully adorned dance-of- life for pearl cres- I have only counted four
Mark your calendar for
stands for — the highest recognized internation- creatures are performing cent butterflies.
specimens to date.
the dedication of the newstandards of professional- ally as the standard of sales the ballet of the butterflies.
Phil Valentine of Wa- est Heritage Trails Park.
Several of the fast movism, competence, integrity, excellence in the life insurSmaller skippers and sul- ing skippers boogie over to pakoneta is an Ohio Certi- We will dedicate the Dr.
and putting the needs of ance and financial services phurs dip and dive around pea and grass family plants fied Volunteer Naturalist Elizabeth Yahl Kuffner Naour customers first," said business.
the big-winged swallow- to lay eggs. Great spangled specializing in butterflies. ture Preserve on SeptemPrudential Financial, tails. They unfurl their pro- fritillary, a golden beauty, Phil and 10 volunteers (in- ber 7 at 10 am. . This new
Caroline Feeney, president
of Agency Distribution at Inc., a financial services boscis, a straw like pipe, to deposits eggs near any one cluding Jan Heinrich of St. park is located on 66A one
Prudential. “We are very leader, has operations in suck up the nectar-- prob- of 26 varieties of violets. Marys) monitor butterflies mile north of US 33. It is a
proud of Theodore and the United States, Asia, ing and moving, probing The chance of seeing these weekly, from April to Oc- beautiful example of woodcongratulate him on an Europe, and Latin Ameri- and moving—repeating butterflies increase when tober, in five parks located land habitat worthy of presca. Prudential’s diverse and this dance hundreds of host plants are present in Allen/Auglaize County, us- ervation. Call if you would
outstanding year.”
MDRT membership is talented employees are times a day.
ing the guidelines provided like more information-the landscape.
based on excellence in cus- committed to helping inButterflies consume necIt seems as if the entire by the Ohio Lepidopterists 419-202-6053. Please join
tomer sales and service, dividual and institutional tar, sap, juice from fruit, car- county is populated with monitoring program.
in the celebration of parks.
and only a small percent- customers grow and pro- rion, and feces. In addition butterflies feeding to gain
Phil, aware of the
Want a sneak peek of
age of life insurance and tect their wealth through to food, each species of but- strength, mate, and multi- monarch void, reports the new park? The Park
financial services profes- a variety of products and terfly requires a host plant ply. Hoe-down on the hol- that events from last year District Board of Commissionals qualify for mem- services.
for laying eggs and feeding lyhock, trumpet vine tan- brought about the precipi- sioners invite you to attend
tous fall of monarch num- our annual outdoor meetbers this year. Last summer ing on Aug. 20, 5pm at the
WOW! RENT TO OWN
we were very dry in Aug- Kuffner Nature Preserve.
1/2 the cost of others at FOWLER’S TV St. Marys
laize County at the time Bring a chair and join us for
VOTED BEST
32” SONY TV
monarchs began their fall this open air meeting and a
26 Payments of
PLACE TO BUY
migration to Mexico. Dry tour. All are welcome.
$17.24/Week
Loramie grad awarded scholarships
Beckman honored
Ballet of the Butterflies: Auglaize Outdoors
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Page 4A
The Community Post
Thursday, August 22, 2013
From Out of Our Past
By GARY OLDIGES
Minster Historical Society
Photo provided
Above, is a rare photograph of the Tama Baseball Team, which will be on exhibit
Sept. 8 at the Mercer County Historical Museum. (One man is wearing his Chatt uniform.) Joe Hinton is seated in the back row, as the first person on the left.
Our Old Book Case
By JOYCE ALIG
President, Mercer County
Historical Society
In honor of Grandparents’ Day, Sept. 8, from 1
p.m. to 4 p.m., the Mercer
County Historical Society is hosting an exhibit of
the early history of Mercer County’s local men
and women’s baseball
and softball teams, at the
Mercer County Historical
Museum, 130 E. Market,
a block east of the Courthouse in Celina.
Between 2007 and
2009, I invited Mercer
County former baseball
and/or softball players
from women and men’s
teams to come to the
Mercer County Historical Museum and share
the history of their former
ball teams.
These past few years,
the photographs, newspaper articles, play books,
scrapbooks, uniforms, and
related team equipment
have been shared with the
Mercer County Historical
Society. The photographs
and documents have been
placed in photograph albums, for each team, for
this exhibit
“Mercer County Ohio’s
Adult Baseball Teams’
Early History,” is the title
of this series of collections,
which are being prepared
for the next book by the
Mercer County Historical
Society Members.
This is the tentative
list of teams in Mercer
County: Montezuma Bay
View Ducks; Montezuma
Ducklings; Burkettsville
Anchors; Burkettsville
Merchants; Burkettsville
D & M Triangles; Cassella Owls; Chattanooga
Team; Chickasaw Baseball Club; Chickasaw Indians; Chickasaw Chicks;
Cranberry Team; Fort Recovery American Legion;
Fort Recovery Girls Team;
Guadeloupe Ducks; Maria
Stein Baseball Team; Maria Stein Jinx; Maria Stein
Pals; Montezuma Indians;
Mendon Team; Neptune
All Stars; Goose Haven
Ball Team; Padua Baseball
Team; Philothea Sluggers;
Rockford American Legion; Rockford Baseball
Club; Rockford Eagles;
Saint Anthony Padua;
Saint Henry American
Legion; Saint Henry New
Corner Baseball Team;
Saint Henry Vets; Saint
Peter Sluggers; Sharpsburg, The Mohawks;
Sharpsburg Speeds; Tama
Baseball Team; Wabash
Chiefs, and Wendelin
Sailors.
Celina teams include:
Celina Carps; Celina
Forrest Ball Club; Celina
Girls Softball Team; Celina Insurance Companies;
Celina
Independents;
Celina Merchants; Celina
Reservoir Club; Celina
Sluggers; Celina Suns;
Grand Lake Mariners;
Mercelina Park Baseball
Club; Reynolds & Reynolds Women’s Softball
Team, and Wehrkamp’s
Team.
Coldwater teams include: Coldwater Acme
Baseball Team; Coldwater
Betties Restaurant; Coldwater Bettinger Team;
Coldwater City Baseball
Team; Coldwater Eagles;
Coldwater Hardballers;
Coldwater
Merchants.
and Coldwater New Idea
Team.
If we do not record
the history of these adult
baseball and softball teams
now, this history will be
lost with this generation
of readers. Thank you to all
of the people who thank
me for the great efforts of
the Members of the Mercer County Historical Society in preserving Mercer
County’s history, not only
through publishing local
history books, but also for
placing excellent exhibits at the Mercer County
Historical Museum.
If you have photographs
or scrapbooks, uniforms
and related equipment
which relates to the early
history of adult baseball
or softball teams in Mercer County which you
want to exhibit on Sept. 8,
email or telephone Joyce
Alig, at the address below.
Have we missed any teams
in this list?
The Mercer County
Historical Society President Joyce Alig , may be
contacted at 3054 BurkSt. Henry Road, Saint
Henry, OH 45883, or
[email protected]
or
419-678-2614.
Minster Bank makes
donation to WOEF
Minster Bank recently donated a
$1,000 to the Academic Excellence
Scholarship which recognizes top students from area school districts when
they select the Lake Campus to further
their education.
These students are awarded $3,000
and 22 area high schools in Auglaize,
Darke, Mercer and Van Wert counties
are eligible. Due to the generous support
of our donors, over $150,000 is endowed
in this scholarship fund. Applications for
next year’s award will be available online
this fall.
For nearly a century, Minster Bank
has been helping individuals, families
and businesses achieve their dreams by
offering a variety of personal, business,
and private wealth management services. As long-time friends of the university,
Minster Bank has contributed and supported the WOEF scholarship program
and the Lake Campus Facilities Capital
Campaign.
These donations allow a greater number of students in our region to have
access to higher education and earn advanced degrees at the Lake Campus.
Photo: (left to right) Rob Albers, Senior Commercial Loan Officer, is shown
presenting Minster Bank’s donation to
Julie Miller, WOEF Development Officer. To find out more about the work of
the WOEF Board as well as their scholarship program, log onto http://www.
wright.edu/lake/about/woef.html.
Visit The Community Post
online at:
www.minstercommunitypost.com
TNT Craft Creations
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Call Tammy Wehrman 937-538-8625 or 419-582-2805
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University of Dayton Apparel and Products Plus Embroidery also Available
Note: This column is
created from the archives
of the Minster Community
Post by Minster Historical
Society volunteers for your
enjoyment. Larry Prenger
edits and translates the
100 Years Ago.
100 years ago
In the past week the
equipment of the contractor T.J. Mulligan who had
accepted the contract for
paving Fourth Street, was
sold at public auction by
Sheriff Shockey.
The German American
Bank of Lima had taken
possession of Mr. Mulligan’s equipment because
he was unable to make
scheduled
payments
causing red ink.
The existing equipment was sold to Mr. P.R.
Beck of Lima for the sum
of $1,050. Mr. Mathew
Mulligan, son of T.J. Mulligan, also has tools and
equipment and will work
on paving Fourth Street.
Chas. Kitzmiller and
Ben Hunstead went to
Celina on Thursday and
attended the great banner fair.
Mr. Wm. J. Sherman
and family from Ft. Loramie passed through our
town on Wednesday on a
trip to St. Marys. The trip
was made in the beautiful
7 passenger automobile
of Mr. Sherman.
Miss Millie Bornhorst
of Sag Harbor, N.Y., arrived here the middle of
last week in order to visit
relatives and friends.
On Monday she will
travel to Cleveland where
she will spend several
days with her mother and
sisters before she returns
to Sag. Harbor.
Miss Bornhorst has
operated a millinery shop
for the past year and has
had good success in her
business.
Last week the F. Thieman Lumber Co. bought
a 1900 pound black horse
from Henry Meyer of east
of town.
The Lumber Co. now
has a beautiful team of
black horses. They will be
able to transport without
much effort the heaviest
logs of this area to the
Lumber Co. mill.
75 years ago
Organization by a
group of sportsmen representing Minster and Ft.
Loramie and the communities of the two towns,
of the “Lake Loramie Improvement Association”,
was effected at a meeting
held at Rulmann’s Recreation here last Friday.
The new organization,
the purpose of which is
to further the interest of
the lake and of the community surrounding was
formed with the election
of Cy Sherman of Minster
as president, and Granville Filburn of Filburn’s
landing as vice president.
Ad----Hey, Kids! 25
cent Circus Tickets for
Only 15 cents. Lewis
Bros, Big 3-Ring Circus.
Miss Beata Knapke,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
A.H. Knapke of Minster,
and Vincent Muhlenkamp, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Theodore Muhlenkamp of St. Anthony,
were united in marriage
during a ceremony performed in St. Augustine’s
church here Tuesday
morning.
Announcement of the
marriage at Indianapolis, Ind., several months
ago of Miss Jane Busse,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Ed Busse, and Frank
Schmuecker, son of Mrs
Louisa Schmuecker, was
made here this week.
Mr. Schmuecker is employed as assistant postmaster at the Minster post
office. Mrs. Schmuecker
owns and operates Jane’s
Beauty Shop here.
Henry (Hank) Leugers,
pitcher of the Cassella
Owls, entered the hall of
fame when he pitched a
no-hitter against the Russia Merchants.
50 years ago
In addition to winning
the league championship, Minster’s entry in
the Western Ohio Pony
League (baseball) has
won the league tourna-
ment. The team’s record
is 17-1, the only loss having been to Newport.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Hoying entertained Sunday in honor of the baptism of their daughter,
Julie Ann Marie, born
Aug. 14 at the St. Marys
Hospital. Sponsors were
Louis A. Hoying and Joan
Eilerman.
Baptized Sunday in St.
Augustine’s Church were
Sharon Meyer, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Urban
Meyer (Eileen Albers,
born Aug. 8, with Ralph
and Ester Frey as sponsors. Also, Randall Lee
Brunswick, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Richard Brunswick (Rita Eilerman),
born Aug. 6, with Anthony Eilerman Katherine as
sponsors.
Carol Anderson was
surprised with a bridal
shower Sunday at the
Town House in Minster.
Miss Anderson will become the bride of August
Gaier Jr. on Sept. 21, in
St. Augustine’s church.
.Mr. and Mrs. Urban
Nerderman and family visited with Mr. and
Mrs. August Wenning
and Margie of Coldwater
Monday evening.
Current news
Program:
Stepping
Among the Stones on
St. Augustine Cemetery:
Sept., 29 at 3:15 p.m. We
will explore and share
history once again with
the Rev. David Hoying
on another section of our
cemetery.
Fundraiser: Annual
Wedding Chicken Dinner Carry-Out, Sept.
29 from 4:30 p.m. to 6
p.m. Pre-sale tickets are
$9 and includes: Four
piece chicken, dressing,
noodles, applesauce and
a roll. Call Sue Prenger
at 419-628-3058 or Tom
Meyer at 419-628-3389
or stop at the museum for
tickets.
Research: Currently,
the historical society
is searching for history and photos of Lake
Loramie for a future
program to be held next
spring.
Thursday, August 22, 2013
Page 5A
The Community Post
Seniors
Harvest Fest to help raise
funds for Council on Aging
BY DEAN EVERSOLE
Staff Writer
WAPAKONETA —
The Auglaize County
Council on Aging is taking the bull by the horns,
so to speak.
Because of cuts in
funding the council has
been forced to become
creative in raising funds
— so what better way
than a craft show?
Last year, the council
created and hosted the
first annual Harvest Fest
as a part of their fundraising events
This year, the fest will
be held on Sept. 14 from
9 a.m. to 5 p.m. at the
Auglaize County Fair
Grounds.
The event will have
something for everyone
from crafts, to food, to
music according the event
planner Trena Childs.
"We have over 66 tables reserved for crafts already and that is as many
as last year. We are planning on having music,
food and a pumpkin patch
for kids," said Childs.
The admission to the
event is $1 or a canned
good item. All the proceeds will go to funding
the council and helping
them preserve their many
services.
“Any food donations
will be given to local pantries and all funds raised
during the event are used
by the council. We help
senior citizens continue
living independently with
aid from us," said Childs.
The concept of a craft
show came Childs' experiences as a craft show
enthusiast
"I enjoy going to craft
shows and thought it
would be a good idea to
host one. It takes a lot of
work and many volunteers to put this together,"
said Childs.
In fact, Childs said the
planning for next year's
event will start right after
this one is over.
One addition to the
fest this year will be an antique auction. It will take
place on Thursday, Sept.
14 in the Miller Building
on the fair grounds. The
doors will open at 3 p.m.
and the auction will begin at 4 p.m.
"We have a lot of items
for this auction. I know
there are a number of
paintings, dishes and
there is some furniture,"
said Childs.
Like the craft show, all
the proceeds will go to
the council.
"It is just so important for us to help keep
the senior citizens of the
county at home and living independently," said
Childs.
That task has grown
with the continued budget cuts, but the folks at
the council have proven where there's a will,
there's a way.
Photo provided
Pictured above and below are folks enjoying a meal the Auglaize County Council
on Aging.
Recording history
There are so many different and creative ways
for families to showcase
their heritage and honor a
grandparent or other special senior. Scrapbooks
are one such way to share
the life of a special person
and indirectly tell the tale
of your family history.
Very often personal
history projects are a part
of elementary school curricula, so you may already
have the makings of a family tree or a family diary in
your home. All it takes is
a little more research and
some planning to design
a scrapbook that can be
gifted or kept for generations to enjoy.
Begin by making an
outline of what you would
like to cover in the scrapbook. Perhaps there is a
specific event in a grandparent's life that is worth
highlighting, like a military tour of duty or a brief
stint in show business.
Maybe you would like to
present different snapshots in time during his or
her life. Either way, planning out the content of
the scrapbook will make it
easier to gather the necessary elements.
Once you've settled on
a theme, begin your re-
Are
you searching
for ayou
Financial
Leaving
a job? Should
leave Advisor?
your retirement plan assets behind?
Are you unhappy with your current advisor? Are your accounts receiving the service they deserve?
Are you struggling to manage your portfolio on your own? Has your portfolio not lived up to your expectations?
search by interviewing the
eventual recipient (he or
she doesn't have to know
the reason behind the inquiry).
During the interview,
take note of key dates and
try to establish the mood
of the era with supporting
materials. For example,
you may be able to find
samples of advertisements
from a correlating period
in history or newspaper
clippings that can be used
to fluff up the content of
the book.
In the meantime,
gather photos that can be
used in the scrapbook,
which may take some
hunting. Prints can be
scanned and copied via a
desktop scanner at home,
or loaded onto a CD or
thumb drive and brought
to a pharmacy photo kiosk. Some specialty shops
can even scan slides or
convert stills from film
into images. Make sure to
make copies of all original prints and be careful
not to lose or damage the
originals.
Scrapbooks can be
made manually with materials purchased anywhere from craft and
hobby stores to stationery
shops. There are a variety
of paper-cutting tools,
adhesives, stickers, labels,
and stencils that can be
used to enhance the look
of the scrapbook. There
also are computer software programs or online
tools through photo-sharing sites that enable you
to upload images and text
and design photo books
entirely online. Then the
finished product can be
printed out in a variety of
finishes. This method may
actually be preferable for
those who plan to save the
scrapbook or anticipate it
being such a big hit that
others will want their own
copies.
Create a digital file of
all of your information
and copies of images. This
way if you ever want to
add to the scrapbook or
reproduce information in
the future you will have all
of the information at your
fingertips. The scrapbook
also will serve as a good
source material down the
line should future generations want to learn about
their ancestors.
Scrapbooking is more
than just detailing baby's
first birthday or a vacation.
This popular pastime can
help document the life of
a special senior.
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Page 6A
Thursday, August 22, 2013
The Community Post
Seniors
Advice: Preparing for hospice care
Sometimes patients
succumb to a disease, in
spite of the best treatments and support.
When the time comes
for a family to confront
a loved one's declining
health, hospice care can
be a dignified way to
make that person's final
days as comforting as
possible.
Hospice is a type of
care designed to make
the final moments of a
person's life as pain-free
and manageable as possible.
It can take place in a
medical facility, but very
often hospice care occurs at home or wherever
the ill person feels most
comfortable.
Hospice care is usually the last step when
all other options have
been exhausted. Making
the decision to move a
loved one to hospice care
can be an emotionally
wrenching time.
Decisions such as
these may be better made
at a time in a person's life
when he or she is not
sick.
That is why living wills
that spell out details for
end-of-life care can be
quite valuable.
Decisions are made
with a level head and not
wrought with emotions.
Such living wills also
can take the pressure off
of family members who
may not feel comfortable
making such decisions
on their own or in concert with relatives.
Hospice is a type of
care and a philosophy
that focuses on the palliative care of terminally
ill patients.
Rather than providing
medication to try to treat
the illness, medicine is
offered to make a person
more comfortable and
remove any pain.
Psychological therapy
may also be offered to
help the person come
to terms with the end of
life.
Although hospice is a
concept that has gradually evolved since the
11th century, the principles of modern hospice care can trace their
roots to the 1950s and
Dame Cicely Saunders,
a nurse and social work-
er who is known as the
creator of the hospice
movement.
If hospice care is outlined in a dying person's
living will or expressed
wishes, there are some
guidelines that can be
followed by the sick individual.
• Visit various medical care centers to see if
away-from-home options
provide the care and environment you desire. If
Be sure to establish what
type of hospice care you
prefer. This may include
care within a nursing
home or hospital, or in
the comfort of your own
home.
• Sign a medical durable power of attorney.
This signed document
gives authority to an
adult age 18 or older,
who then has the right to
make necessary medical
and healthcare decisions
for you in the event you
become incapacitated.
• Clearly indicate your
wishes regarding resuscitation. A signed document may alert emergency healthcare personnel
or others of your wishes
Hospice care offers palliative, not curative, care, aiming to keep the terminally ill
comfortable in their final days.
not to be resuscitated.
This document must be
signed by you and a doctor and witnessed by others.
• Decide on the duration of care. Hospice
care generally lasts six
months. This enables a
long stretch of palliative
care.
Should you live beyond the time period,
hospice care can continue. Studies have shown
ACCA notes upcoming programs
The Auglaize County
Council on Aging has announced the following
reminders to area residents in a recent newsletter:
Keep this date
Our 2nd Annual Auglaize Harvestfest fund
raiser will be held at the
Auglaize County Fair
Grounds on Saturday,
Sept. 14, 2013, from 9
a.m. to 5 p.m.
An antique auction will
also be held on Thursday,
Sept. 12 at 4 p.m. We are
asking for donations of
antiques/quilts and good
quality items.
Chicken and rib
dinners prepared by
“Sweet Carolines” are
available from any staff
member.
If you want more
information, or want
to reserve a booth for
$50, call 419-394-8252
and ask for Bob or
Trena.
Kroger rewards
program
As a fundraiser for
the ACCA, we encourage you to register
your Kroger Plus card
on line at www.krogercommunityrewards.
com.
This is a reward program through Kroger’s for non-profit organizations and will
not affect your fuel
points.
To register you will
need your Kroger Plus
card.
The ACCA number is
83524. When the card
is swiped at Kroger’s the
points will automatically
be redeemed as long as
you have registered your
card online.
Ohio Home Energy
Assistance Program
(HEAP)
The Home Energy
Assistance
Program
(HEAP) is a Fede1rally funded program
administered by the
Ohio Department of
Development,
Office
of Community Service
(OCS).
It is designed to help
eligible
low-income
Ohioans meet the high
costs of home heating.
HEAP provides a onetime payment for Public
Utilities
Commission
of Ohio (PUCO) regulated utility customers
for the winter heating
season.
Vouchers are issued
to non-regulated util-
Congratulations to
Golden LivingCenter – Valley!
ity customers, mastermetered and other applicants who do not
have a utility bill in their
name.
In order to qualify for
this benefit program, you
must be a resident of the
state of Ohio and you
must need financial assistance for home energy
costs.
To qualify you must
also have an annual
household
income
(before taxes) below
$22,692.00 for one person; $29,675 for two
people and $36,657.00
for three people living in
your household.
For more information, or help with filling
out the application call
419-394-8252 and ask
for Trena to schedule an
appointment.
that patients who receive
hospice care for at least
30 to 60 days gain greater
benefit than those who
are placed in hospice
only in their final days.
• Investigate financial options for hospice.
Medicare and Medicaid
provide hospice coverage in 44 states. Many
private insurance plans
have a hospice benefit
as well. Understand how
payment is made to fig-
ure out if private funding
will be necessary.
Not all hospice programs are the same.
Certain core models
of care are followed by
many hospice facilities,
but options vary.
Hospice can provide
comfort in a person's
final days and help sufferers better enjoy life
and time spent with
loved ones in these last
days.
St. Rochus Auxiliary
holds regular meeting
The regular meeting of St. Rochus Auxiliary Knights of St.
John was held on July
22 with 16 members
present.
The meeting opened
with the recitation of the
rosary for all the living
and deceased members of
the our auxiliary especially those in hospitals and
nursing homes.
It was decided that
group three will work at
the July chicken fry with
group one working the
August fry.
It was noted the merger
with Fort Loramie is now
complete and we welcome
them into our group.
Carol Heinfeld reported that 960 items were
donated to the cake stand
for Countryfest.
Overall, it was a successful year but a few adjustments will be made.
Joan Albers reported the
590 rosaries were made in
July. She sent 400 to the
Franciscan Missions.
Door prizes were won
JoAnn Albers, Carol
Heinfeld, Sue Siegal,
Mary Knapke and Lou
Ann Kremer. Lunch was
served and birthday and
anniversary gifts were
presented.
The next meeting will
be held on Monday, Aug..
26.
Follow us on Twitter:
@TheCommunityPos
Find The Community Post online at:
www.minstercommunitypost.com
Visiting Nurses & Hospice
100 Don Desch Drive, Coldwater, OH 45828
T: 419.678.2311 • F: 419.678.3491
Briarwood-Village.com
Auglaize, Darke, Mercer, Shelby
Local staff available 24 hrs./day
Nonprofit
The Agency
American Health
• Skilled Nursing • Hospice
• Inpatient Hospice • Therapy
Health Aides • Adult
Day Care
Care• Association
(AHCA)
and
“Come have a Ball” at
National Center for
Assisted Living (NCAL) have awarded Golden LivingCenter – Valley
419-586-1999
the prestigious StepCelina:
I National
Quality Award for 2009.
Briarwood Village
Wapak: 419-738-7430
for Briarfest 2013
Saturday, September 14th
12:00 to 3:00 p.m.
Community Health Professionals
This award recognizes facilities that have demonstrated a strong
commitment to the principles of continuous improvement by:
www.ComHealthPro.org
Delivering ever-improving
value to residents and other customers
Offices in: Ada, Archbold, Celina, Defiance, Delphos, Lima, Paulding, Van Wert, Wapakoneta
Improving overall organizational effectiveness and capabilities
complimentary lunch from 12:30 to 2:00 p.m.
Serving as a champion for organizational and personal learning
All attendees are encouraged to bring a school supply item or
monetary donation to be contributed to the local schools!
for been
all of
your
Rehab
needs.
We are See
proudus
to have
named
a Step
I National
Quality Award
recipient, and we remain dedicated to providing the greatest
Your
to Independence.
qualitypathway
care and services
to our residents.
To find out more about us, give us a call today!
And, don’t forget to wear your favorite sports attire!
Entertainment
Talent Show from 12:30 to 1:30
Contact Leslie Schmiesing at 419.678.2311 to register to perform.
Thien Snipps from 2:00 to 3:00
Michael Rue’s balloon creations
Coldwater Creek Alpacas • Pony Rides
Freedom Train • Inflatables
Carnival Games • Prizes!
Golden LivingCenter – Valley
1140 Knoxville Rd.
St. Mary’s, OH 45885
419-394-3308
Golden LivingCenters welcome all persons in need of their services and do not discriminate on the basis of age, disability, race, color,
national origin, ancestry, religion, gender, sexual orientation or source of payment. GLS-04942-09 OA
www.goldenlivingcenters.com
2013
Briarfest
Thursday, August 22, 2013
Page 7A
The Community Post
Seniors
Silver lining for cancer or Alzheimer's patients?
Cancer or Alzheimer's
disease is seldom something to cheer about.
But there may be one
positive to come from a
cancer or Alzheimer's diagnosis.
New research indicates older people who
have either Alzheimer's
or cancer are less likely to
get the other disease.
Although in essence
it is a no-win-scenario,
researchers at the National Research Council
of Italy in Milan, headed by study author Dr.
Massimo Musicco, have
found that having cancer seems to protect seniors from Alzheimer's
disease.
The reverse also appears to be true.
If you receive a diagnosis of Alzheimer's
disease, you are at a far
lower risk of developing cancer. Dr. Musicco
has said, "understanding
the mechanisms behind
this relationship may
help us better develop
new treatments for both
diseases."
Researchers studied
more than one million
residents of northern Italy, tracking them for six
years.
They found a 50 percent drop in cancer risk
for Alzheimer's patients
among the subjects age
60 and over, and a 35
percent reduction in Alzheimer's risk for those
with cancer.
Additional information suggests a similar
correlation between Parkinson's disease and cancer.
It is unclear what is behind this link, and there
remains the possibility
that both diseases can
occur concurrently.
Researchers believe
Historical society
sets membership
meeting Aug. 22
The Auglaize County
Historical Society will
host its third quarter
membership
meeting
on Thursday, Aug. 22,
at 7 p.m. at the former
Olive Branch Church,
Shinbone, located east of
New Knoxville on State
Route 219.
After business is transacted, members will
enjoy a program about
the establishment of
Auglaize County and its
townships.
Greg Myers will present his highly regarded
"Formation of Auglaize
County and Its Townships" to those in attendance.
Currently,
Myers
serves as the executive
director for the Wapakoneta Area Economic
Development Council.
A longtime trustee of
the Cridersville Historical Society, Myers
is also a past trustee of
ACHS.
Myers served for many
years on the board of the
statewide local history
association,
formerly
known as OAHSM (Ohio
Association of Historical
Societies and Museums)
and now named the Ohio
Local History Alliance
(OLHA).
For more information,
contact the Auglaize
County Historical Society at 419-738-9328, or
email [email protected].
Check out
The Community Post
online at:
www.minstercommunitypost.
the lowered risk results
from opposite biological mechanisms of the
two diseases. Because
Alzheimer's
results
from brain cell death,
it may prevent cancer
because cancer forms
from uncontrolled cell
growth.
The study, which was
published in the July 10,
2013 issue of the journal
Neurology, did not take
into account lifestyle
factors, such as smoking, physical activity
and diet, which may influence the risk of these
diseases.
While receiving a
diagnosis of cancer or
Alzheimer's disease is
never a welcome development, the strange correlation between the diseases could give doctors
new clues into treatment
options for both conditions.
64 youth attend annual camp
BEARable for grieving youth
A total of 64 youth attended State of the Heart
Hospice’s thirteenth annual
Camp BEARable for grieving children held July 1214 at the Spiritual Center
at Maria Stein. Of the total
attending, only ten had any
association with hospice
care, stated Marlene Black,
State of the Heart Hospice
bereavement specialist and
camp director. Sixty seven
youth had signed up for
camp, a record number, but
three were unable to attend.
Those attending camp do
not need to have any association with hospice care.
“This year, we had nine
youth who had lost a parent to suicide,” Black said,
adding that this is the largest number she can recall
attending camp. “This is a
difficult loss,” she said. “The
kids do not understand
how a parent who loved
them could take their own
life. They have so many
unanswered questions.”
Thirty four youth had lost
a parent; 21 a grandparent,
three had lost both par-
ents, two had lost an uncle,
and four had lost a sibling.
Black said that there were
eight six-year-olds attending camp. “We have been
seeing younger children in
recent years,” she explained.
Children are segmented
into groups by age.
State of the Heart
Hospice, with offices in
Greenville, Coldwater and
Portland, provides care
to patients and families in
eastern Indiana and western Ohio who are confronting a life-limiting illness.
Grief support is provided
to both adults and children.
The camp is free and is offered to any child, six to 15
who is experiencing grief.
Over the last 13 years, over
500 young people have attended the camps.
This year, a panel made
of up a physician (Dr. Jim
Schwieterman); a minister
(Rev. Becky Erb-Strang of
the New Bremen United
Church of Christ), and a
funeral director (Phillip
Pierrie, (manager of Zechar
Bailey Funeral Home in
7990 SR 119 • Maria Stein, OH 45860
Phone: 419-925-4511
315 W. Spring St. • St. Marys, OH 45885
Phone: 419-394-4141
Specialist In:
Medicare Supplement Coverages
• Medi-Gap • Medicare Trust
• Nursing Home Coverage
• Charitable Living Trust
Minster, OH 45865
419-628-2396
Serving The Community
For 35 Years!
Dementia/Alzheimer Care
• Complete Nursing Center with 24/7 Nursing coverage
• Individualized and group programs
All pay types • Specialized activities
Routine Medical Director
accepted... • visits
Private Pay
• Full Behavior Adaptive Programs
Insurance
• Continued Clinical Assessments
Medicare
Medicaid
• Access to Dietary, Pharmacy & Neurological
Once admitted to
evaluations
Heritage Manor, you will not
have to relocate if Medicaid
Assistance is needed!
“Family Caring for Family”
Greenville) listened to
questions from the youth,
then responded to them.
“This was a wonderful
addition to camp,” Black
said. “Those on the panel
were so good at answering questions posed by
the young people at their
level. This was so helpful
to the youth as they do not
know who to go to in many
instances when they have a
question about the loss of
someone they loved and
who died. I would say this
was the most successful
part of camp.”
Amy Topp, Admissions
Liaison for State of the
Heart, attended camp as
a buddy this year for the
first time. Her experience,
she said, “was memorable.”
On Friday evening at the
start of camp, Topp spoke
with the youngsters about
the sudden death 15 years
ago of her older sister when
Amy was only eleven years
old. At times, she said, she
was emotional while talking of her loss.
The experience of
watching Amy speak emotionally about her loss at
a young age, “was a good
thing,” Black said. “It sent
an instant message to the
kids that it is okay to feel
sad about the loss of a loved
one and to cry.”
“As I was speaking to
them, I realized what they
were going through,” Topp
said. “Often, someone
grieving feels alone.” She
noted that as the weekend
progressed the children
“became more open with
one another, sharing hugs,
and exchanging phone
numbers to they could
keep in contact.”
Hospices nationwide
conduct camps similar to
Camp BEARable. Hospice
bereavement specialists
believe that early intervention with grieving children
can prevent problems such
as drug and alcohol ad-
diction and suicide, later
in life. Camp provides a
“safe” environment for kids
where they are surrounded
by their peers and with
adults they trust. Camp is
a mixture of fun and games
mixed with serious dialogue. Each child is paired
with a specially trained
buddy who is with them
for the weekend.
Chris Killian, who has
been a camp buddy and
has helped Black direct
the camp for a number
of years, said Topp’s story
about her own loss and
the sharing of information
from the panel were significant additions to the camp
experience. “Amy’s sharing
set the pace as the young
people saw that it was okay
to show your soft side, and
to show your emotions.
Those on the panel shared
personal stories also.” The
comments from the campers at a campfire Saturday
evening reflected that they
had connected with both
Topp and the panel, Killian
added.
This year, students from
a Registered Nursing class
at Edison Community College helped as buddies as
part of a community clinical service requirement
for their degrees. Jennifer
Stewart, a member of that
class and a LPN with State
of the Heart, attended camp
as a buddy. “It certainly
broadened the horizon for
me and my classmates,” she
said.
“Daily I am working
with patient care and do
not see the grieving side of
life, particularly how it impacts kids. Being at camp
helped me both personally
and professionally.”
The dates for next year’s
camp are July 11-13. For
information about any of
the services provided by
State of the Heart, visit the
agency web site at www.
stateoftheheartcare.org.
Page 8A
Thursday, August 22, 2013
The Community Post
Schlater, Mikels
Gusching, Quellhorst
announce engagement
exchange vows
The couple will exchange vows on Oct.
19, 2013, at St. Augustine Catholic Church in
Rensselaer, Ind.
The bride-elect is a
2004 graduate of New
Bremen High School.
She attended St. Joseph’s
College, where she
earned her bachelor’s de-
Anna Marie Schlater,
the daughter of Craig
and Mary Jo Schlater of
New Bremen, and Caleb James Mikels, the
son of Deb Mikels and
the late Mick Mikels of
Brookston, Ind., have
announced their engagement and approaching
marriage.
gree in 2008 and a Master of Education in 2012.
She is currently working
at Rensselaer Central
School Corporation
The
prospective
groom is a 2003 graduate
of Frontier High School.
He is currently working
as an electrician apprentice at ALCOA.
Coloring contest winners named
Photo provided
The United Way of Auglaize County is excited to announce the winners of our 2013
Coloring Contest held in conjunction with the Auglaize County Fair.
Waynesfield Goshen 6th Grader Cecilia Werner won the 10-12 year old division,
Aleah Ruppert who will be a Kindergartener at Wapakoneta Elementary won the 3-5
year old division and New Bremen fourth grader Riley Trentman won the 6-9 year
old division. Each winner was awarded a backpack and school supplies for the upcoming school year.
Final month of
the Summer
Clearance Event
at Bud’s!
2013 Ram 1500 Tradesman
2013 Dodge Journey SXT
Regular Cab,
HEMI,
6 Spd. Auto.
Flexible Seating Group
MSRP $25,040
Bud’s Discount -996
Rebates
-2,750
_____________
Bud’s Price
$
Now Only
Chrysler Capital Conquest
Trade Assistance -1,000*
#32-044-0
MSRP
25,6600
$
Bud’s Discount
-1,666
Rebates
-1,000
Trade Assistance
-1,000
_____________
21,294
Bud’s Price As Low As
#33-164-0
Bud’s Price
As Low As
20,294
$
21,994
$
Business owners qualify
for up to an additional
$1,000 of incentives!
2013 Chrysler 200
V-6, 6 Spd. Auto.
#31-240-0
MSRP $21,590
Bud’s Discount -354
Rebate -2,500
_____________
Bud’s Price Now Only
18,736
$
2013 Jeep Patriot Latitude
4x4, Freedom Edition
MSRP $26,100
#34-134-0
Bud’s Discount -1,465
Rebates
-1,500
_____________
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$
23,135
2013 Dodge Grand Caraven SE
V-6, Stow-n-go Seats
MSRP 24,585 #N3-290-0
Bud’s
Discount -627
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21,958
Kylie
Samples
Randy
Garrison
Saleasha
Krogman
Senior supper hour to be held
Joint Township District Memorial Hospital
has teamed up with Otterbein St. Marys to offer its
Senior Supper Hour program. The program will be
held in the Meyer Room
on the grounds of Otterbein St. Marys, 11230
State Route 364, and will
be held Aug. 22.
Dinner will begin at 5
p.m. and the program will
follow at 5:45 p.m. The
program is called “The Rewards of Aging” with Sondra Marker of Otterbein
speaking. A fee of $7 will
Popular Equipment Group
MSRP $20,875
Bud’s Discount -499
Rebates -1,750
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#31-110-0
Little Flowers Girls Club
18,626
* Must trade a non Chrysler group vehicle and
finance with Chrysler Capital, with approved credit
Ed
Rump
pearl sprays.
The flower girl wore a floor length
white ball gown made of a matte satin
bodice with a five tiered shimmering
organza skirt. A white matte satin bow
was tied at the waist with a large white
flower on the front. She carried a white
pomander ball with white satin ribbon
and a brooch.
The mother of the bride wore a matte
satin floor length A-line gown in azalea
with a sweetheart neckline and a matching short sleeve bolero jacket.
The mother of the groom wore a floor
length A-line gown in night blue taffeta
with a ruched bodice.
The best man was Adam Quellhorst,
brother of the groom. The groomsmen
were Justin Gusching, brother of the
bride, and Daniel Gusching, brother of
the bride. Ushers were Joe Keyes, friend
of the couple, and Martin Travis, friend
of the couple.
The bride is a 2006 graduate of Minster High School, a 2009 graduate of Ball
State University, having earned a bachelor’s degree there, and a 2013 graduate of The Ohio State University, having
earned a DDS. She is currently employed
as a dentist in Lancaster, S.C.
The groom is a 2006 graduate of New
Bremen High School, a 2009 graduate of
Bowling Green State University, having
earned his bachelor’s degree there, and
a 2013 graduate of Wright State University, where he earned his MBA.
The couple honeymooned in sunny
Punta Cana, DR at an all-inclusive resort.
The couple is currently residing in
Charlotte, N.C.
2013 Dodge Dart SXT
$
Matt
Hamilton
Melissa Gusching, the daughter of
Mark and Linda Gusching, of Minster,
and Ryan Quellhorst, the son of Tim
and Vicki Quellhorst, of New Bremen,
exchanged vows June 22 at St. Augustine
Catholic Church in Minster.
The Rev. Hal Belcher officiated the
1:30 p.m. ceremony. Music was provided by pianist Jane Grubmeyer, violinist
Halim Beere, brother-in-law of the bride,
and vocalist Allison Eiting, cousin of the
bride.
The bride wore a white Allure Couture gown, which featured a strapless
sweetheart neckline with a mermaid
silhouette. The gown was adorned with
embroidered lace motifs accented with
Swarovski crystals and sequins. The chapel length train was edged with a scallop
lace finish. The veil had a blusher and
was also chapel length. White peonies,
white feathers, pearl sprays, and brooches made up the bridal bouquet.
The matron of honor was Renee
Beere, sister of the bride. The bridesmaids were Stacey Boswell, friend of
the couple, and Erin Jester, sister of the
groom. The flower girl was Roya Beere,
niece of the bride.
The blue jewel colored bridesmaids
dresses featured a sweetheart neckline
and a princess style bodice overlaid with
matching chiffon creating a twisted effect at the neck with back straps. The
wide pleated band at the empire waist
flowed into the pencil knee length skirt.
The bridesmaid dresses were designed
by the bride and custom made by the
mother of the groom. The bridesmaids
carried a bouquet of white peonies, turquoise ranunculus, white feathers, and
Brian
Holstad
Anthony
John
Lacey Fritzinger
Chris
Zibrida
Lee
Goettemoeller
945 S. Main St., Celina
419-586-7000 • 866-412-BUDS
budschryslerdodgejeep.com
The Little Flowers Girls’ Club is a
program whose goal is to help young
girls gain strong self-esteem in being
young Catholic girls. For Girls
Kindergarten – Fourth Grade.
Meetings are after school until
5:00 pm
in the Parish Center.
If interested, please complete a
registration form and return to the
Parish Center by Sept 9th . Forms can be
found on our web page at
www.staugie.com/forms
be charged for dinner.
A free blood pressure clinic from 4 p.m. to
5 p.m. will be held. For
more information about
our Senior Supper Hour
program, please contact
Anne Larger at (419)
394-3335, ext.1128.
B
The Community Post
Serving Our Communities Since 1896
Thursday, August 22, 2013
Minster
Staff photo/Brian Smith
Pictured above is the 2013 Minster football team: Josh Nixon, Jacob Dues, Peter Falk, John Baumer, Bryce Schmiesing, Chad Stoner, Evan Huelsman, Isaac
Dorsten, Jared Thobe, Scott Sekas, Brett Hoelscher, Kyle Heitkamp, Jonathan Niemeyer, Eli Wolf, A.J, Huelsman, Ethan Wolf, Joe Trzaska, Max Huber, Jack Poeppelman, Alex Oldiges, Conner Tumbusch, Caleb Broering, Carter Hogenkamp, Jacod Stechschulte, Ben Stubbs, Sam Dircksen, Alex Eiting, Zach Eiting, Jason
Schultz, Adam Boehnlien, Pierce McGowan, Paul Dues, Peter Ranly, Wes Hegemann, Clay Brown, Jon Hueker, Josh Otting, Seth Hermeyer, Jesse Burkhead,
Logan Pack, Reid Frick, Cody Schlater, Prater Otting, Nathan Schwieterman, J.R. Nixon, Ryan Brown, Blake Mallory, Derek Grieshop, Hayden Schindler, Chase
Cassel, Aaron Kitzmiller, Noah Poeppelman, Sam Dues.
Staff photo/Brian Smith
Picture above is the 2013 boys varsity golf team: John Burke, Freddie Purdy, Gunner Blanke, Sam Borhorst, Austin Brackman, Xavier Francis, Seth Koening, Cliff
Perryman, Sam Schutte, Matthew Trushaw, Dane Dahlinghaus, Austin Dwenger,
Jordan Brackman.
x2
Staff photo/Brian Smith
Pictured above is the 2013 girls’ varsity golf team: Marissa Conrad, Claire Fischer,
Abby Hausfeld, Laura Meyer, Macey Elder, Sable Hudson, Sarah Huwer, Hailey Oldiges.
10/16 10/14/03 2:26 PM Page 1
Staff photo/Brian Smith
Pictured above is the 2013 Minster boys’ varsity cross country team: Andy Albers, Christian Boehnlein, Dominic
Slonkosky, Alex Winner, Andrew Fausey, Jonathan Fausey, Gabe Goodwin, Nathan Riethman, Ben Butler, Ethan
Monnin, Jacob Enneking, Alex Blanco, Dylan Byers, Kyle Prenger, Coach Larry Topp.
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Pictured above is the 2013 Minster girls’ varsity cross country team: Olivia Enneking, Leah Niekamp, Casey
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Monnin, Sara Hosey, Jordyn Heitbrink, Cassie Jutte, Regan Hahn, Megan Kaiser, Hannah Schmitmeyer, LeAnn
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Page 2B
Thursday, August 22, 2013
The Community Post
Marion local
Staff photo/Fred Kremer
Pictured above is the 2013 Marion Local football team: Evan Fleck, Derek Albers, Alex Ungruhn, Jacob Kleinhenz, Cole Unrast, Cole Griesdorn, Nate Nagel, Ryan Bruns,
Dustin Rethman, Adam Bertke, Cory Heitkamp, Jacy Goettemoeller, Duane Leugers, Luke Berning, Joe Wuebker, Tyler Bertke, Blake Benton, Austin Albers, Hunter Wilker,
Nathan Saintignon, Kyle Homan, Troy Homan, Aaron Nietfeld, Kevin Tangeman, Ryan Thobe, Nate Moeller, Joel Goodwin, Mitch Kuether, Jack Homan, Jon Knapschafer,
Chas Homan, Kyle Hilgeford, Hayden Jackson, Joe Schwieterman, Jacob Kunkler, Ethan Nietfeld, Jared Bergman, Noah Percy, Peyton Kramer, Ryan Kemper, Logan Brunswick, John Freeman, Caleb Schemmel, Justin Bohman, Nathan Heckman, Luke Moorman, Mason Thobe, Nick Heckman, Trevor Cooper, John Schwieterman, Matt Bertke,
Jason Brunswick, Chris Lochtefeld, Lance Brunswick, Bob Osterloh, Sam Poeppelman, Dylan Keller, Nathan Bertke, Alan Wynk, Brandon Prenger, NIck Heitkamp, Kyle
Koening, Matt Kahlig. Head Coach Tim Goodwin, Assistan Coaches: Dan Kremer, Kevin Otte, Greg Bruns, Dan Thobe, Bob Gecewich, BJ Wolters, Bill Goodwin, Jason
Staff photo /Fred Kremer
Pictured above is the 2013 Marion Local Boys’ golf team: Jordan Heitkamp, Derek
Platfoot, Collin Fleck, Josh Keller, Darrin Broering, Adam Kremer, Luke Knapke,
Randy Knapshaefer, Bill Elking.
Staff photo//Fred Kremer
Pictured above is the 2013 Marion Local girls’ golf team: Megan Subler, Mindy
Puthoff, Sarah Rengers, Jessica Hoyt. Russ Puthoff, Carlee Kremer, Molly Kindle,
Hannah Moeller, John Bruns.
Staff photo/Fred Kremer
Pictured above is the 2013 Marion Local volleyball team: Managers Emily Neitfeld, Makenzie Gross, Kelsey Koening, Meg Schwieterman, Allie Wendel, Megan Wendel, Clara Wuebker, Hannah Heitbrink, Gina Kramer, Brooke
Winner, Katie Elking, Holly Lochtefeld, Coach Jenna Barhorst, Coach Marianne Bruns, Allie Thobe, Makenzie
Albers, Emily Mescher, Andrea Wynk, Tyla Bergman, Coach Amy Steiniger, Coach Mary Lou Bruns.
Staff photo/Fred Kremer
Pictured above is the 2013 Marion Local girls’ cross country team: Courtney Albers, Ashlynn Berning, Emily
Bomholt, Vivian Garmann, Katie Heitkamp, Sophie Heitkamp, Monica Hemmelgarn, Olivia Hemmelgarn, Lisa
Lange, Meredith Moeller, Jenna Pierron, Sarah Rengers, Heather Tuente, Carly Ungruhn, Lydia Wendel, Beth
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Thursday, August 22, 2013
Page 3B
The Community Post
New Bremen
Staff photo/Brian Smith
Pictured above is the 2013 New Bremen varsity football team: Garrett Westbrick, Jacob Gilberg, Max Messick, Cody Duncan, Colin Scheib, Eric Bowers, Zane
Ferguson, Trey Naylor, Tristin Hoffmaster, Ben Schwieterman, Garrett Doherty, Greg Parker, Carson Manger, Nick Blaine, Travis Martin, Bennett Staton, Zach Fry,
Brice Boroff, Cory Luedeke, Joe Schemmel, Ryan Selby, James Kronenberger, Mitchell Kramer, Brett Barlage, Ben Strang, Cam Bergman, Adrian Speelman,
August Slife, Ty Overman, Austin Verhoff, Hayden Richter, Seth Williams, Nick Gusching, Braden Elshoff. Head Coach: Jason McGaharan, Assistant Coaches:
Kurt Albers, Doug Kramer, Mark Sharp, Jeff Thobe, Chad Williams.
Staff photo/Brian Smith
Pictured above is the 2013 New Bremen varsity boys golf team: Travis Berteisen,
Zach Hegemier, Chris Albers, Alex Britton, Jacob O’Neill, Markus Sachtler, Max Travis, Jake Davidson, Isaac Kosch, Taite McKinney, Coach Cindy Newman.
Staff photo/Brian Smith
Pictured above is the 2013 New Bremen girls varsity golf team: Heather Bensman,
Mackenzie Howell, Rachel Parker, Payton Doherty, Sydney Holdren, Sara Lefleur,
Molly Borowski, Eimly Flaute, Molly Paul, Amy Schmitmeyer, Caitlyn Topp, Ashlyn
Bertke, Mikayla Feltz, Hannah Lane, Coach Mike Holdren, Tony Holdren
Staff photo/Brian Smith
Pictured above is the 2013 New Bremen varsity boys cross country team: Drew McClurg, Tom Maurer, Andersen
Reed, Nathan Herriot, Brad Rammel, Sam Burtch, Lucas Heitkamp, Kaelen Reed, Cort Speckman, Hunter Suchland, Thomas Zhang, Jason Zircher, Ben Kronenberger, Coaches Molly Watcke and Laurissa Dalrymple
Staff photo/Brian Smith
Pictured above is the 2013 New Bremen varsity girls cross country team: Katie Schulze, Mary Steineman, Danielle
Ahlers, Ashley Berning, Marissa Frazee, Veronica Hirschfeld, Shelby Paul, Kaylie Squires, Aly Elking, Paige Kuck,
Paige Rutschilling, Bailey Bronkema, Erica Niekamp, Kathryn Niekamp, Kendra Paul, coaches Molly Watcke and
Laurissa Dalrymple
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Pictured above is the 2013 New Bremen varsity volleyball team: Julie Brown, Tarynn Clune, Karli Jones, Victoria
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Page 4B
The Community Post
Thursday, August 22, 2013
Fort Loramie
Staff photo/Angela Crabtree
Pictured above is the 2013 Fort Loramie football team: Tony Schulze, Andy Grewe, Cole Cordonnier, Connor Meiring, Trey Rittenhouse, Tyler Kazmaier, Drew Wehrman,
Darren Turner, Clint Ratermann, Connor Rose, Cody Gasson, Patrick Pangilinan, Carter Siegel, Jake Ward, Aaron Plas, Bard Pleiman, Wes Puthoff, Craig Fullenkamp, Tate
Sholtis, Daniel Berning, Duval Thornton, Troy Benanzer, Alex Dickerson, Josh Siegel, Alec Holthaus, Luke Gephart, Frank Meyer, Logan McGee, Delaunte Thornton, David
Holthaus, Jacob Kitzmiller, Kaleb Albers, Dylan Heitkamp, Josh Schulze, Tristan Stripling, Daniel Zimmerman, Craig Poeppelman, Luke Gigandet, Clay Eilerman, Riley
Hausfeld, Andy Meyer, Justin Eilerman, Dylan Eilerman, Hunter Drees, Zach Brandewie, Brent Bruggemen, David Ahrns, Nathan Pleiman, Stephen Marsteller, Corey Mangas, Blake Gaier, Logan Brackman, Grant Olberding, Garret Eilerman, Cody Pleiman, Head Coach: Matt Burbacher Assistant Coaches: Aaron Rose, Chuck Seaver, Kevin
Wrasman, Dan Holland, Justin Firks, Nick Turner, Ryan Humphreys.
Staff photo/Angela Crabtree
Staff photo/Angela Crabtree
Pictured above is the 2013 Fort Loramie boys varsity cross country team: Tom Ballas, Ethan Broerman, Alan Holdheide, Nick Pleiman, Luke Stager, John Chaney, Riley Holland, Ty Frilling, Caleb Hoelscher, Tom Meyer, Doug Gigandet, Evan Riethman, Coach Dennis Prenger.
Pictured above is the 2013 Fort Loramie varsity girls cross country tream: Katelyn
Luebke, Renee Seger, Audrey Bender, Samantha Bensman, Ashley Frilling, Taylor
Gasson, Makenna Geise, Emily Holdheide, Claire Kazmaier, Melanie Kremer, Cortney
Norris, Rachel Schmitmeyer, Andrea Meyer, Rachel Bollheimer, Regann Geise, Tara
Holthaus, Rachael Marchal, Rachel Stager, Hailey Wray, Toni Berning, Taylor Broerman, Tara Luebke, Hannah Meyer, Sara Meyer, Kenzie Middendorf, Meg Westerheide,
Coach Dennis Prenger.
Staff photo/Angela Crabtree
Pictured above is the 2013 boys varsity golf team: Kyle Pleiman, Jordan Meyer, Josh Koppin, Tanner Rosengarten, Nick Ruhenkamp, Aaron Schwartz, Luke Carter, Brad Goettemoeller, Matt Branscum, Alex Wilt,
Coach Brad Turner.
Good Luck
to the
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Staff photo/Angela Crabtree
Pictured above is the 2013 Fort Loramie varsity girls golf team: Ashley Ordean, Hope Ruhenkamp, Ellen Turner,
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Pictured above is the 2013 Fort Loramie varsity volleyball team: Kelly Turner, Claire Witt, Julie Hoying, Darian
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Thursday, August 22, 2013
Page 5B
The Community Post
Area runners compete at the
preseason cross country meet
From Staff Reports
Staff photo/Brian Smith
The Lady Wildcats opened the 2013 cross country season by winning their section
at the OHSAA Preseason Invitational in Hebron.
High school golfers
tee off the ‘13 season
CELINA — St. Henry
picked up the Mercer
County Elks girls golf invite title on Wednesday.
Led by Taylor Koesters' 91
and Haleigh Straughler's
97, the Redskins shot a
403 team score for the
win.
Coldwater's
Kelsey
Koesters was the invite
medalist with a 78 — 13
strokes better than the
second-best score.
Celina finished second
with a 413 score. Johna
Walls shot a 102, Camille
Smith had a 103 while
Kelly Stahl and Kailee
Ross both had 104s.
New Bremen finished
fourth with a 460 team
score. Mackenzie Howell
turned in a team-best 97
for the Cardinals. Sydney
Holdren shot a 118 and
Rachel Parker added a
122.
By BRIAN SMITH
Sports Editor
MINSTER — Xavier
Francis returned to the
form that made him one
of the Midwest Athletic
Conference’s top players
a season ago and the Minster Wildcats pulled away
for the Auglaize County
invitational win at Arrowhead Golf Club on
Wednesday.
Minster’s Francis fired
a medalist two-over par
74, while a trio of Wildcats — John Burke, Austin Brackman and Freddie
Purdy — all shot 77s.
The Wildcats shaved
16 strokes off their score
on the same course the
day before during the Cardinal Invitational. Francis
alone improved his score
by 10 strokes from the day
before.
Francis said the first
few rounds of the year
were frustrating for him,
but his game started to fall
into place on Wednesday.
“I’ve started off the year
really badly,” Francis said.
“I felt like today I found
my game again.”
Francis carried a 38 average per nine holes a season ago, so Minster head
coach Jay Purdy said he
and his team weren’t concerned with the hiccups in
the first couple rounds by
Francis.
“He expects to go out
there and shoot par every
day — and that’s great —
but it’s not always going to
happen,” Purdy said. “He
really puts a lot of pressure on himself, but he’s
so laid back you’d never
know it.”
St. Marys’ Carter Bowman finished second individually with a 76, helping the Roughriders to
a third-place team finish
with a 352 score. His putter kept him from putting
an even better score on
the board. Bowman made
a seven and followed it
with a bogey in the middle
of the front nine, but he
responded with a couple
birdies on the back nine
to card a 76.
“The putter let me
down today,” Bowman
said. “Everything else was
pretty good. I struck the
ball well, but the putter
let me down. I made that
seven, it led to another bogey, but I was able to make
a couple birdies to get my
round back on track.”
Wapakoneta took second as a team with a 335
score, led by Drew Wayman’s round of 77.
New Bremen finished
fourth with a 374 team
score. Alex Britton again
led the way for the Cardi-
nals with an 82.
David Boesche led New
Knoxville with a 97.
New Bremen takes to
the links again on Thursday at Delphos St. John’s
at 10 a.m. The rest of the
area’s teams will be back
in action on Friday for
the Celina Invitational at
Fox’s Den. That invite begins at 8:30 a.m.
TEAM STANDINGS
1. Minster 305 (Francis
74, Burke 77, Brackman
77, Purdy 77, Trushaw
82, Schutte 87); 2. Wapakoneta 335 (Wayman 77,
Crow 82, Miller 86, Gossard 90, Bruns 95, Hunlock 95), 3. St. Marys 352
((Bowman 76), Burke 84,
Hollman 94, T. McMurray
106, Hinds 118), 4. New
Bremen 374 (Britton 82,
Bertelsen 90), Hegemier
99, Travis 103, O’Neil
104, Sachtler 107), 5.
Waynesfield-Goshen 410
(L. Turner 94, Crumrine
95, Lament 109, Wilcox
112, Spencer 112, B. Turner 120); 6. New Knoxville
447 (David Boesche 97,
Shane Topp 114, Brandon
Steinke 115, Nick Thobe
121, Robert Egbert 132,
Logan Leffel 173).
Staff Report
Auglaize County Open
Results August 14.
Minster 305
Wapakoneta 335
St. Marys 352
New Bremen 374
Individual Results:
Xavier Francis – Medalist 74 Minster
Carter Bowman – 76
St. Marys
John Burke 77 Minster
Austin Brackman 77
Minster
Freddie Purdy 77
Minster
Staff photo/Brian Smith
Pictured above is the Minster boys’ golf team, which has opened the 2013 season
strong.
Pictured below is the New Bremen girls’ golf team, which finished fourth at the Elks
Invitational.
HEBRON — Runners
from area cross country
teams began the season
at the OHSAA Preseason
High School Invitational
at National Trail Raceway
in Hebron, where the annual state cross country
championships will be
staged in October.
The sessions were broken down into lettered
sections.
The Minster girls won
their section, while New
Bremen and Minster's
boys teams turned in a
top-three finish.
New Knoxville's Cassie Boyle and Isaac Kuntz
were both individual section winners.
Girls Section C/D
Boyle, a Ranger senior
and former state qualifer, won the C/D section with a 20:16 time,
topping her next-closest
competitor by nearly
nine seconds.
New Knoxville's Hannah Privette finished fifth
with a 21:18.17 time.
Girls Section C
In the girls section C,
Minster's Julia Slonkosky finished fifth with
a 20:44.33 time. Katherine Burke was sixth
(20:59.95), Morgan Pohl
was seventh (21:10.36)
and Kaci Bornhorst was
eighth (21:17.99). Those
finishes gave Minster the
section C with 27 points.
New Bremen was sixth
with 176 points, led by
runner Kendra Paul, a
freshman, who turned
in a 23:49.69 time in the
section C event.
Boys Section A
Both New Bremen
and Minster turned in
strong team showings in
the section A boys event.
New Bremen finished
second with 110 points
while Minster was third
with 112 points.
Minster senior Domi-
nic Slonkosky won the
boys section A with a
16:39.42 time.
New Bremen sophomore Cort Speckman
led the Cardinals with
an 11th-place finish and
17:20.86.
Minster sophomore
Ben Butler finished ninth
with a 17:09.54 time, and
junior Andrew Fausey
took 13th (17:27.97).
New Bremen junior
Nathan Herriott took
17th (17:52.68) and senior Drew McClurg took
19th (17:55.45).
Boys Section A/B
New Knoxville senior
Isaac Kuntz, a former
state qualifer, won the
A/B section title with a
17;48.27 time. He was
followed in second place
by teammate sophomore
Jacob Shaw, who turned
in an 18:49.15 time.
Ranger sophomore Marcus Nitschke took sixth
with a 19:32.76 time.
Ethan Wolf pictured above will look to lead his team in 2013.
Staff photo
Change is the name
of the game in 2013
BY DEAN EVERSOLE
Staff Writer
Change is the word of
the day for MAC football
2013. Two of the MAC’s
top programs the last
three years Minster and St.
Henry will be under new
guidance. Nate Moore
left Minster to take the
reins as the head coach at
Cincinnati LaSalle, while
Jeff Starkey departed St.
Henry to become the principle at the Lagrange High
School.
The new head Cat is
Geron Stokes, who comes
over from Urbana. St.
Henry plucked Brad Luthman off the Marion Local staff. Both coaches are
taking over squads coming
off playoff appearances,
but each was hit by graduation.
Stokes will need to replace a talented and extremely successful group.
He will start with Ethan
Wolf at tight end and defensive end. Luthman ‘s
job is not any easier as the
Skins said goodbye to a
number of two and three
year starters, including
quarterback Nate Stahl.
While those two programs change direction,
the Marion Local Flyers
remain squarely on course
for another state title run
with 17 varsity letterwinners returning. Tim Goodwin’s crew is coming off
their sixth state title and
with the squad nearly intact, a seventh is looking
more than possible.
Led by quarterback and
University of Pittsburgh
commit, Adam Bertke,
the Flyers are clearly the
favorite in MAC play and
in the newly created Division VII.
Right behind the Flyers
are the Coldwater Cavaliers. Although the Cavs
lost more player wise than
any other MAC team, they
have become experts in reloading. There is one thing
different this year however. The Cavs lost long
time assistant coach Tim
Hoyng, who retired and
Jason Hemmelgarn, who
has named the new high
school principle. Replacing those two parts may
prove more difficult than
perceived.
Delphos St. Johns returns one of the league’s
top running backs, Tyler
Jettinghoff , who rolled
to over 1800 yards rushing and 20 touchdowns..
Helping Jettinghoff will be
full back Luke MaLennan,
who rushed for over 600
yards. St. Johns will also
move to the new D-VII,
that means once again it
could come down to the
Flyers and Jays, one more
time.
The Versailles Tigers’
2012 season ended at 5-5,
but could have easily been
8-2. This year the Tigers
could be the surprise of
the MAC with a senior
laden team. Coach Adam
Miller in his second year,
will have a senior in almost every spot, including
quarterback Nick Campbell. Versailles dropped to
D-VI after playing D-V the
previous seasons.
Anna returns a number
of key starters including
1,000 yard rusher Chris-
tian Williams. The Rockets missed the playoffs in
2012,but behind Williams
and a strong rushing game
Anna should be in contention for a playoff birth.
Like Versailles, the Rockets are now in D-VI and
will play in Region 22.
Ft. Recovery will have
to replace Mason Evers at
quarterback. One of those
hoping to pick up the slack
will be Kyle Timmerman.
The Indians are looking to
continue building on some
past successes.
Parkway suffered a season of injuries last year,
leaving head coach Dan
Cairnes with very few options. Quarterback Austin
Dennsion will have to add
to his 1000 yards passing if
the Panthers are going to
improve on last season.
New Bremen is suffering from lack of numbers
as they have less then
40 players on the roster. Quarterback Garrett
Westerbeck and wide out
Carson Manger are keys
for the Cards' success and
will need a strong 2013
season.
Schedule for week one
of football:
Aug. 30
• Ft. Loramie at Minster
• Kenton at Coldwater
• Marion Local at Shawnee
• Allen East at New
Bremen
• Covington at St. Henry
• Celina at Versailles
• Lehman at Anna
• Edgerton at Ft. Recovery
• St. Johns at Elida.
Follow us on Twitter
@TheCommunityPos
for Friday night scores and updates
Page 6B
Thursday, August 22, 2013
The Community Post
Eldora
NASCAR Hall of Fame displaying
artifacts from the Eldora Speedway
Austin Dillon to Unveil Artifacts from Eldora
Speedway Victory at NASCAR Hall of Fame Dillon’s No. 39 American
Ethanol Chevrolet truck
among artifacts to debut
on Tuesday, Aug. 13
Dillon made history
as the first driver to win
a NASCAR Camping
World Truck Series race
on dirt on July 25 at Eldora Speedway in New
Weston, Ohio, also marking the first time in four
decades NASCAR has
run on a dirt track in its
top three series. Dillon
will be on hand for a press
conference that unveils
three artifacts from the
victory at the NASCAR
Hall of Fame.
The jar of dirt that Dillon scooped up near the
finish line with the Eldora golden shovel, his
winner’s trophy and the
No. 39 American Ethanol
Chevrolet truck will be on
display beginning Tuesday, Aug. 13 for a limited
time.
NASCAR Hall of Fame
Great Hall, 400 E. Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd.,
Charlotte, N.C.
Parking is available
in the NASCAR Hall of
Fame garage on Brevard
Street. Media may bring
their parking ticket to media registration for validation. Please show busi-
ness card or media ID at
media registration in the
NASCAR Hall of Fame
lobby.
Tickets to the NASCAR Hall of Fame can
be purchased by calling
(877) 231-2010 or at
nascarhall.com. Admission is $19.95 for adults,
$17.95 for seniors and
military, $12.95 for children 5-12 and free for
children younger than
five. Memberships are
available starting at $25
for children and $50 for
adults. The NASCAR
Hall of Fame is open daily
10 a.m. – 6 p.m. and is
closed on Christmas Day.
For more details, visit nascarhall.com. Up-to-the-
minute updates are available at facebook.com/
nascarhall or @nascarhall
on Twitter.
About NASCAR Hall
of Fame
Conveniently located
in uptown Charlotte,
N.C., the 150,000-squarefoot NASCAR Hall of
Fame is an interactive,
entertainment attraction
honoring the history and
heritage of NASCAR.
The high-tech venue, designed to educate and entertain race fans and nonfans alike, opened May
11, 2010, and includes artifacts, hands-on exhibits,
278-person state-of-theart theater, Hall of Honor,
Buffalo Wild Wings res-
taurant, NASCAR Hall
of Fame Gear Shop and
NASCAR Media Groupoperated broadcast studio. The venue is open
10 a.m. – 6 p.m. seven
days a week and has an
attached parking garage
on Brevard Street. The
five-acre site also includes
a privately developed
19-story office tower
and 102,000-square-foot
expansion to the Charlotte Convention Center,
highlighted by a 40,000
square-foot ballroom. The
NASCAR Hall of Fame
is owned by the City of
Charlotte, licensed by
NASCAR and operated
by the Charlotte Regional
Visitors Authority.
Family Fun Night held at Eldora
Photo provided
Above: A driver meets one of his young fans during the Family Fun Night at Eldora.
Below: A young fan gets an autograph from a driver during the Family Fun Night.
Photos provided
Two young race fans enjoy Family Fun Night at Eldora
on Saturday, Aug. 3.
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421 N. Eastern Ave.
St. Henry, OH 45883
(419) 678-4530
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Visit us for all your building needs...
PVC Pipe & Fittings
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Saturday
August 10th
Family Fun Night #2
UMP DIRTcar
Modifieds, Eldora Stocks plus
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Thursday, August 22, 2013
Page 7B
The Community Post
Classified Advertising
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The Community Post
Page 8B
Thursday, August 22, 2013
Coach Geron Stokes looking to build on success
MINSTER — New
head football coach
Geron Stokes takes over a
Minster football program
that has experienced
some major success the
past few seasons. The
Wildcats are in the midst
of their best run since
the late 1980s and early
1990s, having won at least
one playoff game the last
three seasons.
But Minster underwent wholesale change
since bowing out of the
playoffs to eventual state
champion Marion Local
last November.
Former head coach
Nate Moore left to take
the head coaching position at Cincinnati LaSalle,
and the Wildcats lost
leading passer Adam Niemeyer (2,441 yards, 22
TDs), leading rusher Korey Schultz (1,334 yards,
16 TDs) and leading
receiver Devon Poeppelman (58 receptions, 784
yards, 7 TDs) to graduation.
Stokes, who was a fouryear starting quarterback
at Urbana High School
and a starter for three seasons at Urbana University
and Wittenberg University, led Urbana to the postseason twice in his four
seasons as the Hillclimbers' head coach and won a
trio of conference titles.
Stokes talked about the
early process of working
with a new group and imparting his vision.
"It's about getting to
know each other," Stokes
said. "Every day is a learning process. You have to
communicate your expectations. It's made me
a better football coach because these are phenomenal kids to work with."
"Passion.
We're
preached passion over
and over again," Stokes
said. "No matter what
you're doing in life you
want to be about passionate people in life. That's
the way the game of football is meant to be played.
If you're playing passionate, you're probably playing with toughness, energy, enthusiasm. That's
all we're asking for. If we
have 55 kids playing with
passion, I think we're going to win a lot of football
games."
While many of the key
skill position players from
last year's nine-win team
graduated, Stokes still
has some talent to work
with, including a future
Southeastern Conference
player at tight end.
Senior tight end Ethan
Wolf, who caught 43 passes for 563 yards and eight
touchdowns in 2012, is
committed to play for the
University of Tennessee.
"He's a great kid,"
Stokes said. "He is a great
high school football player. My job is to help him
reach his potential. He
has no clue how high his
potential is. He can get so
much better and he will.
He's a great football player and I'm glad he's on my
team."
Sophomore Josh Nixon
will be the new starting
quarterback, taking over
after the graduation of re-
The Cats will look to continue their strong defensive efforts in 2013 under new Coach Geron Stokes, who took
over for Nate Moore.
cord-setting quarterback
Adam Niemeyer. "He's
leading the way there,"
Stokes said. "Hopefully
he can move into that position. It's a tough void to
fill, to replace a guy like
Adam Niemeyer."
The offensive line will
feature returning senior
standouts Wes Hegemann
at tackle and Clay Brown
at guard, along with senior Jon Huecker at center and junior Hayden
Schindler at left tackle.
Senior Prater Otting and
sophomore Josh Otting
are competing for one of
the guard spots.
A trio of running backs
will compete for the tailback position with sophomore Jacob Stechschulte,
senior Paul Dues and
junior Sam Dues getting
reps in the preseason.
Stokes has a cadre of
wide receivers working
for playing time, including A.J. Huelsman, Eli
Wolf, Jacob Dues, Jared
Thobe and John Baumer.
Most of the offensive
line will also be on the defensive front for the Wildcats. Brown, Hegemann,
Schindler, Prater Otting
and Ethan Wolf will make
up that unit.
Scott Sekas, Paul Dues,
Joe Trzaska, Eli Wolf are
in the mix at linebacker.
Stechschulte, Huelsman, Sam Dues, Paul
Dues Baumer, Thobe are
among the large group
working for time in the
secondary.
Minster moves to the
newly-formed Division
VII this season.
Adman Neimeyer pictured above, is one of the players
Stokes must replace.
Eldora Speedway gearing up for
the 43rd annual World 100 races
The official entry form
for the 43rd annual World
100 has been released
from the Eldora Speedway
office. For the first time
ever, the World 100 format will encompass three
days of racing, September
5-6-7. Interested drivers
and teams can download
and print the form using
the link below.
Misc Notes:
-Posted awards of
$283,910 represents a
$103,010 increase over
2012.
-The World 100 winner’s purse has been raised
the traditional $1,000 to
$46,000.
-The World 100 field
has been expanded to 32
positions and the purse
increased to guarantee a
minimum of $2,000-tostart.
-In 2013, the World 100
adopts the three day “Full
Racing Program” each
night format which proved
extremely popular at the
Dirt Late Model Dream.
Two 25-lap Features pay-
ing $5,000-to-win/$500to-start will run on both
Thursday night and Friday
night giving 48 teams per
night an additional Feature race payoff. All entries
receive tow money.
-All A-Feature events
and the Saturday night
B-Feature
Scrambles
count for UMP DIRTcar
National Championship
points.
-World 100 Contingency Awards (value not
counted in the posted
awards) include: $1,000
Fastest Qualifier by Custom Motorsports Graphics; $1,000 Best Appearing Car by DirtOnDirt.
com; a Bert Transmission
to the winner of the first
B-Feature by Bert Transmission and Mason Racin’; $500 Hard Charger
by Custom Motorsports
Graphics; lap money and
more contingencies TBA.
-Pre-Entries ($100 –
covering all three days)
postmarked by August
24 include discounted
entry fee and a three-day
driver pit pass – a savings
of $112.
-Thursday/Friday/Saturday pit passes save $10
and Friday/Saturday pit
passes save $5 over individual day pricing.
-Ticket holders to all
three days can upgrade to
include a pit pass for all
three-days for just $5 by
bringing all three tickets
to the upgrade window –
saving $10.
-Fewer than 175 reserved campsites remain
in Eldora Village and
Pictured above is some of the action from the 2013 season. One of the few major events left is the World 100, coming Sept. 5,6 and 7.
Northside Camp and Park
– a record pace.
-An all-star announce
crew consisting of Dustin
Jarrett, James Essex, Shane
Andrews and Ben Shelton
has been assembled to
deliver all of the action
to the fans via the newly
upgraded public address
system and on the Eldora
Speedway big screen.
-Tire rule limiting teams
to three UMP DIRTcar
compounds
(Hoosier
LM20, LM30 and LM40)
remains.
Photos provided