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BIRTHDAYS • ANNIVERSARIES • RETIREMENTS • GRADUATIONS • NEW ARRIVALS
The Courier • TUESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2016
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CELEBR ATIONS !
THE COURIER
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2016
Today in History
Recently born at Blanchard
Valley Hospital, Findlay, as reported
by their parents:
• Owen Charles Beagle, boy, Levi
and Alishia Beagle, Jenera, Oct. 11.
• Merah Isley Johnson, girl, Kohl
Johnson and Alexandria McCartney,
Upper Sandusky, Oct. 12.
• Grace Elise McConnell, girl,
Michael and Holly McConnell, Findlay, Oct. 13.
• Ilah Faith Zimmerman, girl,
Jason and Sara Zimmerman, Findlay,
Oct. 13.
• Isabella Faith Cross, girl, Alan
Mikhael Cross and Charity Marie
Emahiser, Arcadia, Oct. 13.
• Chandler Everett Stiles, boy,
Justin and Anne Stiles, Findlay, Oct.
14.
• Margaret Mary Lucia Finsel, girl,
Tim and Nella Finsel, Findlay, Oct. 14.
• Izabella Astraea Gonzales, girl,
Jesse Gonzales and Melanie McMaster, Findlay, Oct. 15.
• Jaina Marie Jones, girl, Mark
Allen Jones and Marie Andricks, Findlay, Oct. 17.
• Adalyn Grace Muniz, girl, Carl
and Heather Muniz, McComb, Oct. 18.
• Eden Brielle Pritchett, girl,
Dylan and Tara Pritchett, Findlay,
Oct. 18.
• Blaize Alan Morrison, boy, Derek
and Maci Morrison, Arlington, Oct.
19.
• Terry Lee Wright, boy, Chad
Wright and Anna Seaburn, Fostoria,
Oct. 19.
The Bestsellers List
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
FICTION
1. “Two by Two” by Nicholas
Sparks (Grand Central Publishing)
2. “Small Great Things” by Jodi
Picoult (Ballantine)
3. “Harry Potter and the Cursed
Child” by Jack Thorne (Arthur A.
Levine Books)
4. “Order to Kill” by Vince Flynn
& Kyle Mills (Atria Books)
5. “Magnus Chase & the Gods of
Asgard” by Rick Riordan (DisneyHyperion)
6. “Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets: The Illustrated Edition” by J.K. Rowling, art by Jim Kay
(Arthur A. Levine Books)
7. “I Need My Monster” by
Amanda Noll (Flashlight Press)
8. “Woman of God” by James
Patterson & Maxine Paetro (Little
Brown and Company)
9. “Star Wars: Ahsoka” by E.K.
Johnston (Disney Lucasfilm Press)
10. “Home” by Harlan Coben
(Dutton Books)
NONFICTION
1. “Killing the Rising Sun” by Bill
O’Reilly & Martin Dugard (Henry
Holt and Co.)
2. “Skinnytaste Fast and Slow”
by Gina Homolka (Clarkson Potter
Publishers)
3. “Born to Run” by Bruce Springsteen (Simon & Schuster)
4. “Jesus Always” by Sarah Young
(Thomas Nelson)
5. “Is This the End” by David Jeremiah (Thomas Nelson)
6. “Filthy Rich” by James Patterson & James Connolly (Little Brown
and Company)
7. “Thug Kitchen 101” by Thug
Kitchen LLC (Rodale Books)
8. “Strengths Finder 2.0” by Tom
Rath (Gallup Press)
9. “Witness to a Trial” by John
Grisham (Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group)
10. “Going Down Fast” by Carly
Phillips (Carly Phillips)
FICTION E-BOOKS
1. “Order to Kill” by Vince Flynn
& Kyle Mills (Atria/Emily Bestler
Books)
2. “Small Great Things” by Jodi
Picoult (Random House Publishing
Group)
3. “The Girl on the Train” by
Paula Hawkins (Penguin Publishing Group)
4. “Crimson Death” by Laurell
K. Hamilton (Penguin Publishing
Group)
5. “Two by Two” by Nicholas
Sparks (Grand Central Publishing)
6. “Home” by Harlan Coben (Penguin Publishing Group)
7. “The Girl Who Lied” by Sue
Fortin (HarperCollins Publishers)
8. “The Fix Up” by Kendall Ryan
(Kendall Ryan)
9. “Poisonfeather” by Matthew
FitzSimmons (Thomas & Mercer)
10. “Twelve Days of Christmas”
by Debbie Macomber (Ballantine
Books)
NONFICTION E-BOOKS
1. “Filthy Rich” by James Patterson & James Connolly (Little Brown
and Company)
2. “Killing the Rising Sun” by Bill
O’Reilly & Martin Dugard (Henry
Holt and Co.)
3. “Behind the Beautiful Forevers” by Katherine Boo (Random
House Publishing Group)
4. “Oregon Trail” by Rinker Buck
See BOOKS, Page T4
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Today is Tuesday, Oct. 25, the
299th day of 2016. There are 67 days
left in the year.
Today’s Highlight in History:
On Oct. 25, 1962, during a meeting of the U.N. Security Council, U.S.
Ambassador Adlai E. Stevenson II
demanded that Soviet Ambassador
Valerian Zorin confirm or deny the
existence of Soviet-built missile bases
in Cuba, saying he was prepared to
wait “until hell freezes over” for an
answer; Stevenson then presented
photographic evidence of the bases
to the Council.
On this date:
In 1415, during the Hundred Years’
War, outnumbered English soldiers
led by Henry V defeated French troops
in the Battle of Agincourt in northern
France.
In 1760, Britain’s King George
III succeeded his late grandfather,
George II.
In 1854, the “Charge of the Light
Brigade” took place during the
Crimean War as an English brigade
of more than 600 men charged the
Russian army, suffering heavy losses.
In 1929, former Interior Secretary
Albert B. Fall was convicted in Washington, D.C. of accepting a $100,000
bribe from oil tycoon Edward L.
Doheny. (Fall was sentenced to a
year in prison and fined $100,000; he
ended up serving nine months.)
In 1939, the play “The Time of
Your Life,” by William Saroyan,
opened in New York.
In 1944, New York socialite and
amateur soprano Florence Foster
Jenkins, 76, performed a recital to
a capacity crowd at Carnegie Hall.
(The next day, a scathing review by
Earl Wilson in the New York Post
remarked, “She can sing anything
but notes.”)
In 1945, Taiwan became independent of Japanese colonial rule.
In 1954, a meeting of President
Dwight D. Eisenhower’s Cabinet was
carried live on radio and television; to
date, it’s the only presidential Cabinet
meeting to be broadcast.
In 1971, the U.N. General Assembly voted to admit mainland China
and expel Taiwan.
In 1983, a U.S.-led force invaded
Grenada at the order of President
Ronald Reagan, who said the action
was needed to protect U.S. citizens
there.
In 1986, in Game 6 of the World
Series, the New York Mets rallied for
three runs with two outs in the 10th
inning, defeating the Boston Red Sox
6-5 and forcing a seventh game; the
tie-breaking run scored on Boston
first baseman Bill Buckner’s error on
Mookie Wilson’s slow grounder. (The
Mets went on to win the Series.)
In 1994, Susan Smith of Union,
South Carolina, claimed that a black
carjacker had driven off with her two
young sons (Smith later confessed to
drowning the children in John D. Long
Lake, and was convicted of murder).
Three defendants were convicted in
South Africa of murdering American
exchange student Amy Biehl.
Ten years ago:
Acknowledging painful losses in
Iraq, President George W. Bush told
a news conference he was not satisfied with the progress of the long and
unpopular war, but insisted the United
States was winning and should not
think about withdrawing. Serial killer
Danny Harold Rolling was executed
by injection for butchering five University of Florida students in Gainesville
in 1990.
See HISTORY, Page T4
Guidelines For Your ‘Celebrations!’
Welcome to Celebrations!, the place for your non-commercial announcements of nearly every kind. We encourage you to write your own announcement, but we can help
you with a traditional one.
When? Celebrations! is published Tuesdays. Your announcement will appear in one Celebrations! printed edition, and online at www. thecourier.com for one week.
Your deadline is 3 p.m. Wednesdays, at The Courier, for
the following Tuesday’s edition. Earlier is always better.
A form is helpful, but not necessary. You can pick one up
at The Courier, 701 West Sandusky St., Findlay, from 8 a.m.
to 5 p.m. weekdays; download a PDF from www.thecourier.com/celebrations, or call Celebrations! at 419-422-5151
and we’ll work with you. For engagements, weddings and
anniversaries, you can submit forms online, with payment
following. See www.thecourier.com/celebrations.
How big and how much? Use a ruler to help.
• 1 column (2 in) x 5.5 inches: $30.
• 2 columns (4.1 in) x 2.75 inches: $30.
• 1 column x 11 inches: $50.
• 2 columns x 5.5 inches: $50.
• 2 columns x 11 inches: $90.
• 4 columns (8.4 in) x 5.5 inches: $90.
• Half page, 5 col. (10.5 in) x 5.5 inches: $105.
• Front page, full color, 1/4 Page ad: $85.
• Center pages available in full color, call for information
• Additional art (special borders, symbols): $5 per announcement.
Good photos wanted. Photos should be at least walletsized. Glossies help. Prints can be emailed, mailed, dropped
off, or put in the mailbox near our front door. Photos for
weddings, engagements and anniversaries can be submitted online. Photos will be returned by mail with your selfaddressed, stamped envelope; or pick them up within two
weeks or they may be discarded. The Courier assumes no
liability for your photos. A limited number of color photo
opportunities are available in Celebrations!
Want a lot more impact? Put your photo on the cover of
the print and online editions, and we’ll publish your information inside for free.
Legal stuff. Poems and copyrighted photos must include
the creator’s name and permission to reprint. We can reject
any announcement for any reason. This edition is copyrighted by Findlay Publishing Co., which reserves all rights.
Special pricing for ANY active Duty Military Celebrations! ads. Front page of Celebrations! - ½ off, plus free
inside ad up to 11”.
Scholarships and academic honors, including dean’s list
honors announced by students, relatives or friends, should
be placed in Celebrations! Scholarships announced by civic and other organizations are treated as news stories.
We will print free, very-short announcements of engagements, weddings, anniversaries (50, 55, 60 years,
etc.), birthdays (90 years or older), and dean’s list honors
and graduations. They should be mailed or e-mailed to
[email protected]. Examples:
Engagement: Jane Smith, of Findlay, and John Doe, of
Philadelphia, plan to marry Sept. 14 at St. Peter’s by-theSea Episcopal Church, Cape May Point, N.J.
Wedding: Jane Smith and John Doe, of Philadelphia, were
married Sept. 14 in Cape May Point, N.J. She is formerly of
Findlay.
Anniversary: John and Jane Doe of Findlay will celebrate
their 60th wedding anniversary on Sept. 14.
Birthday: Jane Doe of Findlay will celebrate her 90th
birthday on Sunday.
Dean’s list: John Doe Jr., Findlay, son of John and Jane
Doe, University of Findlay.
Businesses should contact their Courier advertising consultant.
Questions? Please call Celebrations! at 419-4225151 between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. weekdays, or e-mail
[email protected].
THE COURIER
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2016
CELEBR ATIONS !
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CELEBR ATIONS !
Findlay’s National Guard
called into federal service
Half-dozen or so of
Findlay’s Company
A joined newly
formed regiment,
Rainbow division
EDITOR’S NOTE: This is from a
series written from 1959 to 1974 by
the late R.L. Heminger, publisher
and editor of The Courier.
By R.L. HEMINGER
Findlay’s National Guard company
went into World War I right after it
had just completed another military
assignment.
The unit, Company A of the 2nd
History
Continued from page T2
Five years ago:
Deposed Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi, his son Muatassim and
former Defense Minister Abu Bakr
Younis were buried at dawn in a secret
location, five days after Gadhafi was
killed when revolutionary fighters
overwhelmed his hometown of Sirte.
One year ago:
Declaring that “today is a time of
mercy,” Pope Francis closed a historic
meeting of bishops that approved an
important new direction in welcoming divorced and civilly remarried
Catholics into the church. Six people
Ohio Infantry, had been called into
federal service June 28, 1916, almost
a full year before the country had
became a belligerent in World War
I, in 1917.
During 1916, a Mexican outlaw,
Pancho Villa, had been causing trouble along the international border
and had entered Columbus, N.M., in
a bloody raid that cost American citizens’ lives. President Wilson ordered
Villa pursued and named J.J. Pershing, then a colonel in the U.S. Army,
to head a force to hunt him down in
Mexico.
National Guard units of some of
the states were called upon to join
the Pershing force, among them the
Ohio Guard. The Ohio Guardsmen
returned home March 24, 1917. Villa
eluded the American troops and the
chase was given up.
were killed when a Canadian whalewatching boat capsized off Vancouver
Island. Flip Saunders, 60, who rose
from the backwaters of basketball’s
minor leagues to become one of the
most powerful men in the NBA as
coach, team president and part owner
of the Minnesota Timberwolves, died
in Minneapolis.
Today’s Non-Show Business
Birthdays: Former American League
president Dr. Bobby Brown is 92. Basketball Hall of Famer Bob Knight is
76. Political strategist James Carville
is 72.
Thought for Today:
“You can tell the size of a man by
the size of the thing that makes him
mad.” — Adlai E. Stevenson II, American statesman (1900-1965).
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The United States entered World
War I in April. The Findlay Guard, as
were the units across the state, was
kept at its barracks, upon its return
from Mexico, in anticipation of a call
for duty in World War I. A recruiting
campaign was conducted to bring the
company to its full strength and the
members of the unit were daily drilled
on Broadway. Frank J. Moyer was the
captain of the company, which had its
own headquarters on the second floor
of what (was) the Findlay Publishing
Co. building on Broadway.
While the company was still here,
a call came for some members of
Company A to go to Columbus to
join a regiment which was being put
together from over the entire state,
with soldiers from each National
Guard company. The new infantry
was to be named the Rainbow division and was to be the first to go
overseas from the Ohio Guard. A halfdozen or so of the Findlay members
of Company A left to join the newly
formed regiment.
The local company left in July 1917
for Camp Sheridan, Montgomery,
Ala., to train for its service overseas.
Other units of the 2nd Ohio regiment
came from Ada, Lima, Paulding,
Van Wert, Hicksville, Spencerville,
Bowling Green, Kenton, St. Mary’s,
Sycamore and Ottawa. Col. J. Guy
Deming, of Ada, was the commander.
At Sheridan, the 2nd Regiment was
“taken apart” and the troops assigned
to various units. Part of Company A,
of Findlay, went to the 145th Infantry,
part to the 146th Infantry and part to
the 147th Infantry. Other regiments
also were divided. The Ohio guardsmen remained in training at the
southern camp through the ensuing
winter, preparing for service abroad.
It was not until the spring of 1918 that
orders came to leave for Europe.
The division from the Buckeye
State, hearing the title of “37th,”
went into action in France and then
in Belgium. It participated in many
engagements and won many honors
for its brave and courageous battle
performance. A substantial number
of officers and enlisted men received
decorations, in recognition of their
records.
The report of the American Battle
Monuments Commission, in reporting on the 37th division casualties,
said battle deaths totaled 1,066 and
the wounded 4,321. There were 655
who were killed in action. The remainder of the battle deaths consisted of
men who died of their wounds later.
A total of 1,041 were gassed. Eighteen officers were killed in action.
Some of the battle casualties and the
wounded were from Findlay and Hancock County.
The history of the 37th division
in World War I was written by Col.
Ralph D. Cole, of Findlay, who was
with the division train and military
police. Assisting him was W.C. Howells, of Cleveland, a Cleveland Plain
Dealer staff member. The history is
in two volumes, which are in the Findlay public library. They contain more
than 1,100 pages of historical matter,
including a list of those who lost their
lives overseas.
Col. Cole represented the 37th
division at Paris in the spring of
1919 when the leaders met to form
the American Legion.
Most units of the 37th division
were discharged in April 1919.
THE COURIER
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2016
Books
Continued from page T2
(Simon & Schuster)
5. “Hungry Heart” by Jennifer
Weiner (Atria Books)
6. “The Power of Your Subconscious” by Dr. Joseph Murphy (General Press)
7. “Short and Tragic Life of
Robert Peace” by Jeff Hobbs (Scribner)
8. “Ready for Dessert” by David
Lebovitz (Potter/Ten Speed/Harmony)
9. “Born to Run” by Bruce Springsteen (Simon & Schuster)
10. “Hillbilly Eleg y” by J.D.
Vance (Harper)
Nielsen BookScan gathers sales
data from about 16,000 locations,
representing about 85 percent of
the nation’s book sales. Print-book
data providers include all major
booksellers and Web retailers, and
food stores. E-book data providers
include all major e-book retailers.
Free e-books and those for less than
99 cents are excluded. The fiction
and nonfiction lists in all formats
include adult and juvenile titles.
Audio books are excluded. Refer
questions to Michael.Boone (at)
wsj.com.
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CELEBR ATIONS !
THE COURIER
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2016
Happy Birthday to All
This week’s celebrity birthdays
include:
Sunday:
Director Ang Lee is 62. Jazz
singer Dianne Reeves is 60. Country singer Dwight Yoakam is 60.
Singer “Weird Al” Yankovic is 57.
Bassist Robert Trujillo of Metallica is 52. Singer David Thomas of
Take 6 is 50. Drummer Brian Nevin
of Big Head Todd and The Monsters is 50. Singer Junior Bryant
of Ricochet is 48. Actor John Huertas (“Castle”) is 47. Country singer
Jimmy Wayne is 44. Bassist Eric
Bass of Shinedown is 42. “So You
Think You Can Dance” host Cat
Deeley is 40. Actor Ryan Reynolds is 40. Singer Matthew Shultz
of Cage The Elephant is 33. Singer
Miguel is 31. Actress Emilia Clarke
(“Game of Thrones”) is 30. Actress
Jessica Stroup (“90210”) is 30.
Actress Amandla Stenberg (“The
Hunger Games”) is 18.
Yesterday:
Former Rolling Stones bassist
Bill Wyman is 80. Actor F. Murray
Abraham is 77. Actor Kevin Kline
is 69. Actor B.D. Wong is 56.
Drummer Ben Gillies of Silverchair is 37. Singer Monica is 36.
Singer-actress Adrienne Bailon of
3LW (“The Cheetah Girls”) is 33.
Rapper Drake is 30. Actor Hudson
Yang (“Fresh Off The Boat”) is 13.
Today:
Singer-actress Barbra Cook is
89. Actress Marion Ross is 88.
Singer Helen Reddy is 75. Singer
Jon Anderson (Yes) is 72. Singer
Taffy Danoff of Starland Vocal
Band is 72. Guitarist Glenn Tipton
of Judas Priest is 69. Actor Brian
Kerwin is 67. Guitarist Matthias
Jabs of Scorpions is 60. Actress
Nancy Cartwright (“The Simp sons”) is 59. Country singer Mark
Miller of Saw yer Brown is 58.
Drummer Chad Smith of Red Hot
Chili Peppers and of Chickenfoot is
55. Actor Michael Boatman (“The
Good Wife,” “Spin City”) is 52.
Comedian Samantha Bee is 47. Guitarist Ed Robertson of Barenaked
Ladies is 46. Actress Persia White
(“Girlfriends”) is 46. Countr y
singer Chely Wright is 46. Actor
Craig Robinson (“The Office”) is
45. Singer Jerome Jones (Romeo)
of Immature is 35. Singer Katy
Perry is 32. Singer Austin Winkler
(Hinder) is 32. Singer Ciara is 31.
Tomorrow:
Actress Jaclyn Smith is 71.
“W heel of Fortune” host Pat
Sajak is 70. Musician Bootsy Collins is 65. Singer Maggie Roche
of The Roches is 65. Actor James
Pickens Jr. (“Grey’s Anatomy”)
is 64. Actress Rita Wilson is 60.
Actor Dylan McDermott is 55.
Actor Cary Elwes is 54. Singer
Natalie Merchant is 53. Country
singer Keith Urban is 49. Writeractor Seth McFarlane (“Family
Guy”) is 43. “The View” co-host
Paula Faris is 41. Actor Jon Heder
is 39. Singer Mark Barry of BBMak
is 38. Rapper Schoolboy Q is 30.
Thursday:
Actor-comedian John Cleese
i s 7 7. C o u nt r y s i n ge r L e e
Greenwood is 74. Director Ivan
Reitman is 70. Country singerguitarist Jack Daniels (Highway
101) is 67. Bassist Garry Tallent
of Bruce Springsteen and the E
Street Band is 67. Guitarist K.K.
Downing (Judas Priest) is 65.
Actor-director Roberto Benigni is
64. Singer Simon LeBon of Duran
Duran is 58. TV personality Kelly
Osbourne is 32. Actor Troy Gentile
(“The Goldbergs”) is 23.
Friday:
Jazz singer Cleo La ine is
89. Actress Joan Plowright is 87.
Country musician Charlie Daniels is 80. Actress Jane Alexander is 77. Actor Dennis Franz
(“N Y PD Blue”) is 72 . Singer
Wayne Fontana of Wayne Fontana and the Mindbenders is 71.
Actress Annie Potts is 64. Actress
Daphne Zuniga (“Melrose Place”)
is 54. Actress Lauren Holly is 53.
Actor Chris Bauer (“True Blood”)
is 50. Actor-comedian Andy Richter is 50. Actress Julia Roberts
is 49. Singer Ben Harper is 47.
Country singer Brad Paisley is
44. Actor Joaquin Phoenix is 42.
Singer Justin Guarini (“American
Idol”) is 38. Actress Troian Bellisario (“Pretty Little Liars”) is
31. Singer-rapper Frank Ocean is
29. Actor Nolan Gould (“Modern
Family”) is 18.
Saturday:
Guitarist Denny Laine (Wings,
Moody Blues) is 72. Singer-actress
Melba Moore is 71. Actor Richard Dreyfuss is 69. Actress Kate
Jackson is 68. Actor Dan Castellaneta (“The Simpsons”) is 59. Singer
Randy Jackson of The Jacksons
is 55. Drummer Peter Timmins
of Cowboy Junkies is 51. Rapper
Paris is 49. Singer S.A. Martinez of
311 is 47. Actress Winona Ryder
is 45. Actress Tracee Ellis Ross is
44. Actress Gabrielle Union is 44.
Actor Brendan Fehr (“CSI: Miami,”
“Roswell”) is 39. Bassist Chris Baio
of Vampire Weekend is 32.
ANNIVERSARY
T5
ANNIVERSARY
Wade & Jeanne Rider
Wade H. and M. Jeanne Rider, of
McComb, will celebrate 65 years of
marriage with a family dinner hosted
by their children.
Wade and the former Jeanne
Fisher were married Oct. 27, 1951
at Portage Chapel Methodist Church
in McComb, by the late Rev. Douglas
MacNaughton.
The farming couple has three
children: Debra (Terry) Lovell,
Dennis (Dianne) all of McComb, and
Donna Kane, Rossford. They have
six grandchildren and five greatgrandchildren.
Happy Anniversary, Mom & Dad,
Grandma & Grandpa... and keep on
dancing!
ANNIVERSARY
Marilyn & Rex Miller
Mr. and Mrs. Rex M. Miller
of Findlay celebrated their 65th
wedding anniversary on October 23,
2016, with a family dinner.
Rex and the former Marilyn
Messmer were married October 20,
1951, at the Christ Evangelical and
Reformed Church in Ft. Thomas,
Kentucky.
Rex served in the US Army
during the Korean War and is retired
from farming. Marilyn worked as a
registered nurse before becoming a
homemaker.
The couple are members of East
Mt. Zion United Methodist Church,
Findlay, Ohio.
They have three children, Rex
(Nancy), Findlay; Perry (Janice),
Findlay; and Sara (James) Frisk,
Wooster, Ohio. They have six
grandchildren and ten great
grandchildren.
Howard & Mary Powell
Howard and Mary (Declercq)
Powell of Deshler, OH will celebrate
75 years of marriage with a family
dinner.
The couple was married October
30, 1941 at St. Paul United Methodist
Church Parsonage in Deshler, OH by
Rev. Charles Rex.
Howard retired from CSX
Railroad and Mary is retired from
Sherwin Williams.
They have four children: Judy
(Ron) Maas, Deshler; Howard
(Sandra) Powell Jr., Deshler; Robert
and David Powell are deceased. The
couple also has six grandchildren,
ten great-grandchildren and two
great-great-granddaughters.
T6
CELEBR ATIONS !
Cash is piling up faster than
Warren Buffet can invest it
OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — Warren
Buffett has the kind of money problem
most people would envy: a growing
mountain of cash.
Nearly $73 billion piled up at Berkshire Hathaway by mid-summer, more
than Buffett’s conglomerate has ever
held before.
And the total continues growing
every day Buffett doesn’t make a
major investment because Berkshire’s
90-odd businesses generate roughly
$1.5 billion in cash every month.
Buffett’s options include buying
entire businesses, picking up a few
million shares of stock or investing
more in companies Berkshire already
owns, such as BNSF railroad and
the utilities of Berkshire Hathaway
energy.
So far, Buffett appears to be mostly
sitting on the cash since January,
when Berkshire completed its biggest acquisition in its history, a $32.36
billion deal for aviation parts maker
Precision Castparts.
“I think he’s looking for the right
price on something outstanding,” said
investor Andy Kilpatrick, who wrote
“Of Permanent Value: The Story of
Warren Buffett.”
Of course, not all of Berkshire’s
cash is available because Buffett
wants to keep at least $20 billion on
hand at all times just in case Berkshire’s insurance companies have to
pay a big claim or some other need
arises.
But Buffett says he’s always on
the hunt for sizeable acquisitions that
would fit well inside Berkshire, but
he won’t pay more than he thinks a
company is worth.
Buffett will only go after companies that fit his criteria for large,
proven businesses he can understand
and that have an enduring competitive
advantage.
“It’s hard to tell what he might be
looking for,” said George Morgan,
who teaches finance at the University
of Nebraska at Omaha. “All we can do
is wait and see.”
Buffett never discusses what he
might buy beforehand, and he doesn’t
talk much about all the deals he says
no to.
But that doesn’t stop investors
from guessing what Buffett might buy
next. Morgan’s favorite idea is that
Berkshire might buy Mars Candy if
the family that controls that privatelyheld firm ever wants to sell. Buffett
has long used Snickers candy bars
as the example when he explains
the concept of a durable competitive
advantage.
The fact that Mars now plans to
buy out Berkshire’s $2.1 billion in preferred stock in its Wrigley gum unit
may sour speculation about Buffett
adding another candy maker alongside Berkshire’s See’s Candy, but the
repurchase will add even more cash
to Buffett’s pile for other investments.
Other investors speculate that
Berkshire might continue expanding its utility unit. Over the past few
years, Berkshire has spent $5.6 billion to buy Nevada utility NV Energy
in 2013 and another $2.7 billion to
buy Canadian power transmission
provider AltaLink in 2014.
Buffett has said that Berkshire
will likely team up again with the
3G Capital investment firm at some
point. They already worked together
to buy Kraft Foods and Heinz, but it’s
not clear when the next deal involving
3G might come.
In the current interest rate environment, Berkshire is earning very
little on its mountain of cash, but Buffett isn’t likely to feel much pressure
from shareholders to make a quick
acquisition or start paying a dividend
for the first time since he took over
Berkshire in 1965.
After all, Buffett still controls
nearly one-third of the voting power of
Berkshire’s stock, and two years ago
Berkshire shareholders overwhelmingly rejected the idea of a dividend.
And Berkshire shareholders don’t
have to look back very far to see how
valuable a pile of cash can be.
In the wake of the financial crisis
of 2008, Buffett offered billions in
financing to Goldman Sachs, General
Electric, Harley-Davidson and others
in return for steep interest payments
and, in some cases, preferred stock.
But until Buffett finds his next
deal he’ll keep doing what he has for
decades: read more business reports,
take the occasional phone call and
wait for the right pitch.
Buffett compares investing to baseball, except that investing is a game
where the hitter can stand at the plate
indefinitely waiting for the right pitch.
“The stock market is a no-calledstrike game. You don’t have to swing
at everything,” Buffett said in “The
Warren Buffett Way.” ‘’The problem
when you’re a money manager is that
your fans keep yelling, ‘Swing, you
bum!’
THE COURIER
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2016
Guinness declares massive
Michigan ice cream sundae a record
LUDDINGTON, Mich. (AP)
— Guinness World Records says
a roughly half-mile-long ice cream
sundae that was gobbled up in Michigan this June was the longest ever.
The Ludington Daily News reports
that the sundae measuring a little over
2,970 feet in length and fed thousands
of people lining eight blocks in the
Lake Michigan town.
House of Flavors organized the ice
cream event in Ludington, 100 miles
northwest of Grand Rapids.
According to Guinness, the previous longest ice-cream dessert was
created in 2015 in Manurewa, New
Zealand, and it was 1,957 feet and 1
inch.
Ludington’s record may be shortlived, however. MLive.com reports
Moo-ville Creamery and others in
Nashville, Michigan, tried to break
the record Sept. 17, making a dessert
that spanned 3,656 feet.
Texas skydiver loses, retrieves
borrowed shoe during jump
SALADO, Texas (AP) — A skydiving instructor in Central Texas who
lost a shoe during a stunt retrieved
the flying footwear after it bounced
off his chest and before either reached
the ground.
Shelby Palmer told KXXV-TV that
he was glad to catch the left shoe that
was part of a pair he borrowed from
another skydiver. Nobody was hurt in
the September jump.
Palmer works for Skydive Temple
in Salado. He and Christopher Elder
decided to do a stunt in which one
person holds on to another for a time,
then lets go.
Elder let go of Palmer sooner than
planned, knocking off the instructor’s
shoe.
Palmer worked his turn and
descent rate to reach the shoe, which
he grabbed and put on before reaching
the ground.
Both skydivers safely landed.
CHRISTMAS
OPEN
HOUSES
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EŽƟĐĞĞĂĐŚƐƚŽƌĞ͛ƐŚŽƵƌƐ
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40th Anniversary
of Ridge & Associates Inc.
You are invited to celebrate with us at an
23(1+286(
November 1, 2016 • 2-6 PM
9747 US Route 224 W • Findlay, OH 45840
We look forward to seeing you
Larry J. Hoover, P.E. - President
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CELEBR ATIONS !
THE COURIER
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2016
Poetry Corner
Fairness
Be fair to someone who needs an extra
hand
Try to understand what you can’t feel
Fairness is knowing and responding
that
we have different feelings, different
thoughts
Giving someone a chance if it’s not
life-threatening
Be fair if we don’t approve of someone’s
idea
If it’s not the same as ours
God is fair to all,
Even when we’re in the wrong
Fairness is an equal opportunity
Vicki Walter
Findlay
My Prayer
I sit here thinking about my day.
To start it off right, I need to pray.
I pray for family and friends in need.
Can I help someone, do a good deed?
Prayer for the U.S., and all those that
lead.
It is, “your will be done,” I have to
concede.
I will end my prayer, in Jesus’ name,
My Savior, my Lord, they are one and
the same.
Dianna Starr
Findlay
A Political Limerick
Campaigning is not very nice,
With attitudes colder than ice.
I wish they’d play fair,
And help clear the air.
I wish that we all could unite,
And stop all the fuss and the fight.
Behave like adults,
Despite all our faults,
And do for our country what’s right.
We all live under one flag;
A country on which we should brag.
The red, white and blue,
For me and for you.
Our loyalty should never lag.
Sally Guilford
Findlay
Cheers! 1st drink
in 81 years sold in
formerly dry town
Worship and praise to the Creator
above
and affirmation of my love.
You’d think that we could just find,
A candidate honest and kind;
Who doesn’t call names,
And never defames;
I really can’t make up my mind.
Should we choose or just roll the dice?
I really don’t like either one.
Discussing it isn’t much fun.
(Peyton Manning’s my man —
I’m such a big fan!)
I wish it was over and done.
BRIDGEWATER, Conn. (AP) —
A simple plastic cup of beer has made
history by being the first alcoholic
drink sold in a small Connecticut
town in 81 years.
The affluent bedroom community of Bridgewater had been the last
dry town in the state until residents
approved alcohol sales in 2014.
The News-Times reported that the
first booze sold in town since 1935
was a cup of beer purchased at the
Bridgewater Country Fair.
Bridgewater native and volunteer
firefighter Jim Lillis took the first
sip before passing the cup to other
firefighters and fair volunteers who
gathered for the ceremonial sale.
Voters legalized alcohol sales two
years ago as developers proposed restaurants in the western Connecticut
town of 1,700 residents on the condition that they could sell booze. No
restaurants have opened yet.
T7
Pumpkins go ballistic at
New Hampshire racetrack
LOUDON, N.H. (AP) — Pumpkins were going ballistic at the
New Hampshire Motor Speedway.
Teams from as far away as Virginia came to the race track to
use trebuchets, catapults and air
guns to launch the fall fruit, some
of which made a gourd-geous arc
across the New Hampshire sky.
W hi le the pu mpk ins, some
weighing in at 1,000 pounds or
more, were the featured item, they
were not only things which were
being fired. Some smaller pumpkins flew up to two-thirds of a mile
across the speedway.
Other acts of wanton destruct io n fo r ge n e r a l a m u s e m e nt
included large, crane-like launchers to throw cars, motorcycles, a
boat and pianos.
Not all of the shots were successful. When a pumpkin misfired,
participants referred to the result
as a “pie.”
Some of the teams clearly took
seriously the task of getting their
medieval or earlier weapons systems in place and ready to launch.
“A lot of work to travel and set
up,” said Dave Shepard, a member
of the Mista Ballista team from
Fr a m i n g h a m , M a s s ac hu s e t t s .
“ Ta kes si x g uys m aybe 10 -12
hours.”
Some of the launchers demon-
strated significant shade-tree ingenuity. One team’s rig used garage
door opener springs, while another
put a half mile of surgical tubing
into service.
Category winners got a trophy
and a story to tell.
Elephant seal sets record by
swimming farthest west
SANTA CRUZ, Calif. (AP) —
Researchers with the University of
California Santa Cruz say an elephant
seal has set a record by swimming
farther west than any other tracked
elephant seal.
UC Santa Cruz officials said that
by the time Phyllis arrives back in
California in January, she will have
completed a 7,400-mile foraging
adventure. The 853-pound mother
of two covered about 3,700 miles of
ocean before turning around and heading home.
The average distance northern elephant seals usually swim during their
eight-month migration is 2,000 miles.
Año Nuevo Reserve director Patrick Robinson says UC Santa Cruz
researchers have been tracking the
marine mammals for 22 years at the
reserve in Pescadero, California.
He says they have compiled one of
the planet’s largest marine mammal
diving and tracking record.
The adventurous animal was
named after Phyllis Sooy, a late newspaper reporter and philanthropist.
Mysterious fire at 206 East Lima St. in October 1889 -- Flying Saucer Attack?
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In 1984, late Repubican-Courier Publisher and Editor R. L. Heminger wrote a story about a mysterious fire
at 206 East Lima St. in October 1889. The fire was attributed to a flying saucer attack. The upper portion of
the house was occupied by Dr. John Guise, his mother, and his wife. The fire began in the early morning,
and it was sheer luck that the Guise family was able to escape it safely. The fire began in the kitchen after Dr.
Guise had returned from a house call at 3 a.m. There was no fire in the stove, and Guise had taken the lamp
with him to the bedroom. At 4 a.m., Guise was awakened to discover the house on fire.
Heminger was advised that a book in 1966 listed the fire as having been started by magnetic rays from a
flying saucer. The book was called “Flying Saucers on the Attack” by Harold Wilkins. The fire was one of a
series of mysterious fires across the world that Wilkins attributed to flying saucers.
This photo is of 206 East Lima St. in 1992.
Courtesy: Hancock Historical Museum
T8
CELEBR ATIONS !
THE COURIER
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2016