Congress to vote on budget-cutting plan

Transcription

Congress to vote on budget-cutting plan
Hardin
County’s
KENTON TIMES
Kenton, Ohio — Thursday, April 14, 2011
www.kentontimes.com
R’mont posts
softball win
Birds and their nests
Gophers tally pair
of 10-run innings
in victory over
Waynesfield.
Little time between call to
police and fatal van plunge
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Reds fall to Padres
USPS 584-440
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Chance of
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Lows in the upper 30s.
Friday, chance of showers
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Hardin County News
by
Hardin County People
C
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Congress to vote on
budget-cutting plan
WASHINGTON (AP) — The
House and Senate are ready to
vote on legislation cutting
almost $40 billion from the
budget for the current year,
but President Barack Obama
and his GOP rivals are both
eager to move on to multiyear
fiscal plans that cut trillions
instead of billions.
Lawmakers were to vote
Thursday on a long-overdue
spending measure funding the
day-to-day budgets of federal
agencies through September.
Later in the day, Republicans
dominating the House will
launch debate on a 2012-andbeyond plan that promises to
cut the long-term budget blueprint Obama laid out in
February by more than $6 trillion.
Obama
countered
Wednesday with a new call to
increase taxes on wealthier
people and impose quicker
cuts to Medicare, launching a
roiling debate in Congress and
the 2012 presidential campaign to come.
Obama fired a broadside at
the long-term GOP plan, which
calls for transforming the
Medicare health program for
the aged into a voucher-like
system for people under the
age of 55 and imposing stringent cuts on Medicaid, which
provides health care to the
poor and disabled, including
people in nursing homes.
More immediate, however, is
the 2011 spending measure. It
combines more than $38 billion in cuts to domestic
accounts with changes to benefit programs, like children’s
health care, that Congress’
own economists say are illusory.
Thursday’s measure is a
compromise between Obama,
GOP House Speaker John
Boehner
of
Ohio
and
Democratic Senate Majority
Leader Harry Reid of Nevada.
As such, it’s a split-the-differences compromise that considerably smooths a much more
stringent version that passed
the House in February.
The bill cuts $600 million
from community health pro-
grams, $414 million from
grants for state and local police
departments, and $1.6 billion
from
the
Environmental
Protection Agency’s budget.
Community development block
grants, a favorite with mayors
of both political parties, take a
$950 million cut. And construction and repair projects
for federal buildings would
absorb an almost $1 billion
cut.
Obama, however, was able
to ease cuts to favored programs like medical research,
family planning programs and
education, while largely ridding
the bill of conservative policy
initiatives to block last year’s
health care law and new environmental regulations.
But the measure would
have little direct impact on the
deficit through the Sept. 30
end of the fiscal year, according
to the Congressional Budget
Office, since about $8 billion in
immediate domestic program
cuts are more than outweighed
by increases for the Pentagon
and ongoing war costs.
Moving earth
Construction began this week on the Rail
Logistics Center on the south edge of Kenton
on U.S. 68. The center is being built to transfer
Clinton: NATO nations agree
that Libya’s Gadhafi must go
BERLIN (AP) — NATO
nations stressed Thursday
that their common aim in
Libya is to bring an end to
Moammar Gadhafi’s regime,
and U.S. Secretary of State
Hillary Rodham Clinton said
the world must increase its
support for the Libyan opposition.
The effort to enforce a nofly zone over Libya topped the
agenda at a two-day meeting
of foreign ministers from
NATO’s 28 member countries.
Three
weeks
of
airstrikes haven’t routed
Gadhafi’s forces, causing tensions in the alliance.
Although NATO countries
agree that Gadhafi must be
ousted, his departure is not
one of its military goals and
the alliance has been at odds
on how to proceed. One proposal from Italy — Libya’s
former colonial ruler — calls
for the western powers to
provide defensive weapons to
rebels.
France has said NATO
isn’t doing enough, and was
pushing other countries at
the meeting to work “on more
Footloose
in Ada
Drew Crabtree (left) tries to
stop Ronnie Roberts from violating a small town’s law prohibiting dancing in the Ada
High
School
Music
Department’s production of
Footloose. The musical is
based on the 1980’s film of the
same name and follows the
efforts of Ren McCormack to
have a real school prom in
the town where dancing and
rock music has been banned.
It will be staged at 7:30 p.m.
Friday and Saturday and 2
p.m. Sunday in the school
auditorium. Tickets, available
at the door, are $7 for adults
and $5 for students and senior
citizens. The production is
under the direction of David
Wilson, Director of Vocal
Music at Ada High School.
Times photo/Tim Thomas
Times photo/Dan Robinson
freight between truck and rail services, including the parts needed for the wind turbines
expected to be built in the county later this
year.
robust, more efficient, more
rapid actions,” according to
French Foreign Ministry
spokesman Bernard Valero in
Paris.
The rebels — along with
France and Britain — have
been urging the U.S. military
to reassert a stronger role in
the NATO-led air campaign.
The Obama administration,
however, has been insisting
the U.S. will stick to its plan
to remain in a supporting
role, and the Pentagon noted
that Americans have flown 35
percent of all Libyan air missions over the last 10 days.
Clinton appealed to the
other NATO foreign ministers
to show unity.
“As our mission continues,
maintaining our resolve and
unity only grows more important,” Clinton said Thursday.
“Gadhafi is testing our determination.”
NATO members are “sharing the same goal, which is to
see the end of the Gadhafi
regime in Libya,” Clinton
said. “We must also intensify
our political, diplomatic and
economic mission to pressure
and isolate Gadhafi and bring
about his departure.”
NATO Secretary-General
Anders Fogh Rasmussen said
the alliance and its partners
“are fully engaged in operations to safeguard the people
of Libya, taking every measure possible to prevent
Gadhafi’s brutal and systematic attacks.”
The alliance is keeping up
“a high operational tempo,”
he added.
France’s foreign minister,
Alain Juppe, struck a diplomatic tone as he met with his
counterpart from Germany,
which isn’t taking part in the
military
operation
and
abstained in the U.N. vote
authorizing it.
“In reality, we have the
same objective — this objective is to allow the Libyan
people to enjoy democratic
freedom,” Juppe said, adding
“there will not be a military
solution to the problem, there
can only be a political solution.”
“There is no future in
Libya with Gadhafi,” Juppe
added.
Kenton man receives another three years in prison
By DAN ROBINSON
Times staff writer
A Kenton man was given an additional three years in prison after
being found guilty of a felony in
Hardin County Common Pleas
Court.
According to court records from
Prosecutor Brad Bailey’s office,
Richard Allen Flowers Jr., 424 S.
Henry St., is currently serving a
term in Orient prison out of a previ-
ous case. He was given an additional three years in prison for failure to
comply with an order or signal of a
police officer. Flowers was also fined
$100. A charge of operating a motor
vehicle while under the influence
resulted in a 31-day jail term and
another $370 fine. Flowers was
given 31 days credit for jail time
served.
In other recent cases, Gregory
Lee Hogue, 16564 Ohio 309,
Kenton, was sentenced to 28
months in prison for two counts of
aggravated trafficking in drugs.
Each count represented 14 months
in prison and a $50 fine. Hogue is
also to pay restitution of $70 to the
Hardin County Sheriff’s Office.
Terri Lynn Bridenstine, 106 Place
St., Alger, was fined $5,000 and
placed on community control for
four years after being convicted of
trafficking in heroin in the vicinity of
a school and/or juvenile. She must
also pay restitution of $500 to the
Hardin County Sheriff’s Office.
Bridenstine was also found guilty of
possession of heroin.
Aaron Daniel Stuckey, 5148 CR
115, Dola, was placed on three
years community control and fined
$50 for one count of trafficking in
heroin in the vicinity of a school
and/or a juvenile. Stuckey is also to
perform 50 hours of community
Riding to
raisie money
Cameron
Jesionowski
leads the students of the First
Methodist Church Preschool
who spent their class time
Wednesday riding tricycles
and bicycles in a huge loop
around
the
Community
Building at the Hardin County
Fairgrounds. A total of 47 students in three groups took
part in the fundraiser which
brought in money for St.
Jude’s Children’s Hospital.
Times photo/Dan Robinson
Home damaged
A Kenton firefighter prepares to enter the
burning home at 548 N. Glendale Street in
Kenton Wednesday morning. The department
sent six firemen to battle the blaze at the house
owned by Rosie Sons Zuchetto and rented by
Chris Amweg. No one was home when the
alarm was reported, but firefighters believe a
cigarette left on a couch may have been the
source of the fire. The damage was estimated
at $50,000 and there were no injuries.
Times photo/Dan Robinson
service and pay restitution of $100
to the Hardin County Sheriff’s
Office.
Michael Ford Taylor, 344 N. High
St., Kenton, was placed on three
years of community control for tampering with evidence. He was also
fined $50 and ordered to perform 75
hours of community service. Taylor
is to pay restitution to WalMart in
the amount of $35 and was ordered
to not go into the Kenton WalMart.
Page 2 – KENTON TIMES
Thursday, April 14, 2011
Bird nests
By NANCY MABREY
Director, Wildheart
Rehabilitators
Generally, in temperate
areas, nest-building coincides
with the arrival of spring.
That's when birds' internal
clocks tell them it's time to
mate and raise a brood. Which
bird actually does the building
– the male or female – varies by
species. In some cases, both
collect material to build the
nest and join in its construction.
We usually think of nests in
tree branches. Some birds
build nests on the ground,
some in bushes, or attach their
nests to the sides of cliffs. Barn
Swallows have an affinity for
barns. Chimney Swifts, as the
name implies, favor chimneys
and other man-made enclosures. Carolina Wrens will nest
in almost any cavity, from an
empty can to a coat pocket.
To keep nests together and
secured in place, birds need
good adhesives. They use a
variety of natural substances
to do the job, including mud,
saliva, spiderwebs, caterpillar
silk, leaf mold, and certain
plant fibers. Materials that
make up the nest are intertwined, and with the weaver
bird, are actually woven or
thatched together using grass,
strips of leaves, and twigs.
Birds can make hundreds of
trips to collect materials. While
they seem to prefer natural
objects (helpful as camouflage),
some use almost anything that
works and that they can carry.
Candy wrappers, cellophane,
shredded money – even barbed
wire – have shown up in nests.
But however coarse the outside
of the nest is, the inside is
usually lined with soft materials.
Although some large birds
(eagles, hawks, and sea birds)
return to nests they've made,
most birds rarely do. Eagles
may return annually to the
huge platform nests they build
in the treetops. Some measure
as much as 6 feet in diameter.
On the flip side are hummingbirds, which fashion tiny cuplike nests not much bigger
than a thimble.
Cupped nests are the most
common type built by most
songbirds. Such nests may be
constructed of various materials and in a variety of locations. Cup nests may be located in the crotches and branches of trees and shrubs and
supported mainly from below.
Many passerines and hummingbirds build such nests.
Adherent nests, typically of
mud, are plastered to a building wall or stone ledge, made
by Barn Swallows. Pensile
nests, a cup nest suspended
from the forks of a tree branch,
are made by vireos. Pendulous
nests are bag-like nests suspended from the tips of
branches, as built by orioles.
Ground nests – cupped
nests on the ground – have
sides extended upward and
arched over the top making a
domed structure. Several
passerines, particularly those
that occupy open habitats like
grasslands and tundra, build
ground nests.
Platform nests are relatively
flat nests that may be located
on the ground, in a tree, or on
the tops of rooted vegetation or
on debris in shallow water.
This may include hawks,
eagles, geese, and Western
Grebes.
Cavity nests (in trees or
cacti) are used by numerous
passerines, woodpeckers, owls,
parrots, and some waterfowl.
Some birds, such as woodpeckers, construct their own
cavity nests and are referred to
as primary cavity nesters.
Species that use natural cavities or cavities constructed by
primary cavity nesters are
called
secondary
cavity
nesters.
Burrow nests are very effective at protecting eggs and
young from predators & maintaining an appropriate microclimate for eggs & young. Some
birds, like Bank Swallows and
Belted Kingfishers, usually
construct their own burrows,
while
others,
such
as
Burrowing Owls, may use burrows constructed by other
species.
Scrape nests are simple
depressions in the ground
(sometimes with a few stones
added) or in the leaf litter. Such
nests are used by some penguins, shorebirds, gulls, terns,
nighthawks, vultures and
peregrines.
The Migratory Bird Treaty
Act made it illegal for people to
"take" migratory birds, their
eggs, feathers or nests. This
includes any means or in any
manner, any attempt at hunting, pursuing, wounding,
killing, possessing or transporting any migratory bird,
nest, egg, or part thereof. The
law exists to protect birds in
the wild from disturbance.
Newspaper: Kasich
pays staff slightly less
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) —
The state’s new Republican
administration is paying its
employees slightly less than
the former Democratic one,
with the governor achieving
the savings while paying
more money to top-earning
staffers, a newspaper reported Wednesday.
Gov. John Kasich had
promised to spend less
money on employees than did
his Democratic predecessor,
Ted Strickland, and Kasich’s
total payroll is lower by about
$38,500, or 0.5 percent, The
Columbus Dispatch reported.
The newspaper’s analysis
found that Kasich pays less
to his lowest-level employees
than Strickland did.
Data supplied by Kasich’s
administration
and
the
Department of Administrative
Services show that Kasich
projects hiring four fewer
staff members — saving more
than $171,000 on salaries
from the previous administration — but also pays his
23-member cabinet about
$133,000
more
than
Strickland paid for those
posts, the newspaper reported.
Kasich’s office says cabinet
salaries were not included in
his spending promise.
“The bottom line is, we are
doing more work with fewer
people at a lower cost, which
Ada is still
a village
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) —
Results of the 2010 U.S.
Census mean Ohio now has
247 cities — three more than it
had 10 years ago.
Ohio Secretary of State Jon
Husted says a community is
classified as a city when it has
a population of 5,000 or more.
Smaller municipalities are proclaimed villages.
A review of census data by
Husted’s office finds that while
Ohio has had a net gain in
cities, the number of villages
has held steady at 691.
In a news release, the secretary notes that three villages
keep that designation even
though census tallies put them
over 5,000.
Ada, Granville and Grafton
have been disqualified from
city status because their
0totals include college students and prison inmates who
don’t count in the official population.
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is what the governor said we
would do,” Kasich spokesman
Rob Nichols said.
The top 25 percent of
Kasich’s employees make an
average of $109,950 annually, more than $15,000 higher
than Strickland’s highestpaid employees, the newspaper reported. The lowest-paid
25 percent on Kasich’s staff
make an average of $29,758
— including the salaries of
two part-time staff members
—
compared
with
the
$33,999 average paid to the
same
grouping
under
Strickland,
the
analysis
found.
Kasich has been criticized
for paying top staffers more
than Strickland did, and
opponents
have
called
Kasich’s support for a law
that will limit collective bargaining for public employees
an attack on the middle class.
The governor has said that
his support for the new law
limiting collective bargaining
was based on his desire to
help local governments control costs and that higher
salaries were necessary for
his advisers.
“We had to pay competitive
salaries to get the right people with the skills to get Ohio
back on track,” Nichols told
the newspaper.
Kasich’s
base
salary,
$148,866 a year, is determined
by
state
law.
Strickland’s base pay was
$138,757, partly because he
refused to accept a salary
increase scheduled for the
first two years of his term,
former Strickland officials
said.
Decorating session set
Finders Keepers, 101 1/2 N. Detroit St., Kenton, a
high end furniture and clothing consignment store, will
host “Renew Your Room” at 7 p.m. Friday, featuring
Interior Decorator Brad Ellis.
Ellis and Jacqueline Fitzgerald, owner of Finders
Keepers, will be available to answer decorating questions. They are encouraging people to bring pictures of
their problem areas so that they can offer possible solutions.
Fitzgerald said she is excited about the opportunity to
host the event. "Brad Ellis has delighted countless customers over the years with his creative ability to redesign
a space to reflect the persons or businesses style," she
said. "He has a real knack for turning what you think is
junk into a treasure."
During the event, anyone spending $50 or more will
be entered into a drawing to win a chance for Ellis to
come to their home to provide free advice on how to redo
a room. Complete details are available at Finders
Keepers.
For more information, e-mail Fitzgerald at
jjfitz12@yahoo.com or call 419-673-0477.
civic agenda
THURSDAY, APRIL 14
Mount Victory council – 7 p.m., chambers
Forest council – 7:30 p.m., chambers
Hardin County Educational Service Center Governing
Board – 3 p.m., offices at Hardin Hills Health Center
MONDAY, APRIL 18
Kenton Board of Education – 7 p.m., administration
building, 222 W. Carrol St.
Ridgemont Board of Education – 5 p.m., high school
library
Riverdale Board of Education – 6 p.m., board meeting
room in Central Office, monthly work session
BKP Ambulance District Board of Trustees – 7 p.m.,
board office
Alger Board of Public Affairs and Village Council – 6 p.m.,
village offices
Dunkirk council – 7 p.m., chambers
Liberty Township trustees – 8 p.m., township hall
Hardin Southeast Ambulance Board – 7 p.m., Hale
Township hall
Hardin County Board of Developmental Disabilities – 7
p.m., Simon Kenton School
Sometimes we get so caught up in the day-to-day
stresses, work, relationships, chores, that it’s easy to
get discouraged and lose sight of the bigger picture.
This Easter come renew the spiritual side of your
life, at New Hope Fellowship.
We think that faith can infuse you with hope and
bring all the other aspects of life into focus.
at
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Join us this Easter and let a renewed faith
change your life!
SUNDAY, APRIL 24th AT 12:30 P.M.
LOCATED AT 815 E. Columbus St.,
Kenton, OH 43326
• Children’s classes during service
• Safe loving nursery for babies
• Coffee, punch and cookies after service!
www.kentonnewhope.com
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www.kentontimes.com
Family Living
Thursday, April 14, 2011
Send family news to the Kenton Times,
PO Box 230, Kenton 43326; phone 419-674-4066;
or e-mail ktnews@kentontimes.com
Live life
to the fullest
R’mont team
third in state
Members of Ridgemont's
Ag Issues Team, which
placed third in the state competition on April 9 at
Wilmington College, are (from
left) an unidentified representative of the college, followed
by Andrew Scharf, Bailey
Wagner, Blaize Billenstein,
Zane Connolly, Koty McKee
and Chy Hedges. Their topic
was on the positives and negatives of marketing specialty
crops at Farmers Markets.
Stephanie Jolliff is their advisor.
By Jodi Miller
Eggs Benedict Day
Every year on April 16, it is National Eggs Benedict Day.
You might be one of many who have never tried this brunch
food or even know what the consistency entails. It is basically
made up of toasted English muffins, ham, poached eggs, and
a hollandaise sauce.
Like many other inventions, people aren't completely sure
about the origins of Eggs Benedict. One legend has Lemuel
Benedict ordering two poached eggs, bacon, buttered toast
and a pitcher of hollandaise sauce in the Waldorf Hotel on
Fifth Avenue in 1894. The maitre d'hôtel added it to the menu
but substituted ham for bacon and English muffins for toast.
The other story has Mr. and Mrs. LeGrand Benedict requesting the combination at a restaurant called Delmonico's.
It may be quite a challenge to make this dish if you're not
very handy in the kitchen. You might want to start with a
recipe from Kraft Foods called "Beginner Eggs Benedict."
4 large eggs
1/4 cup plain nonfat yogurt
1/4 cup mayonnaise
1 teaspoon yellow mustard
2 English muffins, split, toasted
12 slices thinly sliced smoked harm warmed
1. Fill a large skillet with 1 inch of water; bring to boil.
Reduce heat to keep water gently simmering.
2. Break eggs, one at a time, into a cup. Holding cup close
to water's surface, gently slip eggs into water. Cover and cook
5 minutes or until whites are completely set and yolks begin
to thicken but are not hard. Remove eggs from skillet with
slotted spoon. Drain in spoon or on paper towels. Trim any
rough edges, if desired.
3. Meanwhile, make the sauce. Mix the yogurt, mayo, and
mustard in small saucepan.
4. Cook on low heat 5 minutes or until heated through, stirring constantly.
5. Top each muffin with 3 ham slices, one egg, and one
heaping tablespoon of sauce.
If you don't feel up for the challenge of making it yourself,
just go to a restaurant and let them do all of the work for you.
There are also many variations of Eggs Benedict that you
could order. Some of them include: Eggs Chesapeake, Eggs
Royale, Eggs Benedict Poor Boy, Irish Benedict, Eggs Benedict
Arnold, Goose Benedict, Eggs Frederick, Eggs Florentine,
California Benedict, Eggs Stanley, and Pennsylvania-Dutch
Benedict. Or you could just order your favorite combination of
eggs: scrambled, sunny-side up, hard-boiled, shirred (which
are oven baked eggs), or as an omelet. With Easter just around
the corner, it's the perfect time to consume more eggs!
–––––
Jodi Miller, a Riverdale High School graduate, is an elementary school teacher.
social calendar
THURSDAY, APRIL 14
Hardin County Players – 7 p.m., Trinity Presbyterian
Church, Kenton.
AA and Al-Anon ACOA Hope – 7 p.m. at St. Mark
Lutheran Church, Ada.
Joyful Journeys – 7 p.m. at home of Cynthia Morrison.
AA Fellowship – 7:30 p.m., Big Book/12 and 12, First
United Methodist Church, 234 N. Main St., Kenton.
FRIDAY, APRIL 15
Hardin County Council on Aging – 8:30 a.m., coffee,
cards and chat; 9 a.m., puzzles, word finds and hidden pictures; 10 a.m., quilting; 11 a.m., Mel’s sit down
exercises; noon, Bingo with Community Health
Professionals.
Hardin County Retired Teachers Association – noon at
The Wishing Well, McIntosh Center on the campus of
Ohio Northern University. Guest speaker Jane Kraft,
RN on Truthful Information About Food.
AA – 6:30 p.m. open discussion at St. John’s United
Church of Christ.
SATURDAY, APRIL 16
Weight Watchers – 9:15 a.m., Bellefontaine Center,
Bellefontaine. Weigh-in starts 1/2 hour earlier. No
appointment necessary. Call 800-651-6000 for more
details.
AA Fellowship – 11 a.m., closed discussion, First United
Methodist Church, 234 N. Main St., Kenton.
Policy on announcements
The Kenton Times offers a free, abbreviated version for
engagements, weddings and anniversaries – all without photos. All others need to be paid for. The cost is $20 for engagements, $35 for weddings and $20/$30 for anniversaries
depending if there is one or two pictures.
KENTON TIMES – Page 3
Book disappoints Fortnightly club
The Fortnightly Literary
Club met at Blanchard House
on April 8. President Rita
Radway opened the meeting
with quotes by former first
ladies. She thanked Mary Dowd
for having the meeting at
Blanchard House and Doris
Tackett and Kay Doll for
refreshments. The business
meeting progressed with the
secretary's report from Michele
Oates and the treasurer's
report from Kay Doll.
Marie Sprang of the Literary
Committee presented the list of
books for the 2011-2012 season.
Rosemary
Fitzgerald
announced that the Spring
Luncheon would be held at the
Kenton Elks on May 13 at
12:30 p.m. There was no report
from the Civic committee and
no old or new business to discuss. Radway closed that portion of the meeting and gave the
floor to Diane Smith for the
introduction of this month's
book.
American Wife by Curtis
Sittenfield is the back story of
an American first lady, loosely
based on Laura Bush. It is fiction, not biography and must
be realized as such. Much fictional conjecture went into this
story. The author reportedly
was trying to show a depth of
character not shown by Mrs.
Bush during her years in the
White House. Whatever the
author's purpose, Diane did not
enjoy the book and that opinion
was shared by many members.
The author, a woman, born in
Ohio, holds an M.F.A. and
studied and worked at the prestigious Iowa Writers group. She
had written two previous books
that were well received and this
book spent time on the New
York Times bestseller list. That
said, this particular book had
little appeal for the Fortnightly
members. Some events in the
book resembled those well
known to the American public
and better documented in other
work including Mrs. Bush's
own Spoken From the Heart
currently in print.
This author took a real
tragedy from Mrs. Bush's past
and gave it shadings and consequences that were imagined.
Some of those were dark and
sordid and indicative of the
author's need to spice up her
story at the expense of her protagonist's character. Mindful
that this is fiction, some of the
members found it difficult to
accept behaviors from the heroine that might reflect on the former first lady.
The book had some interesting characters, some recognizable from what we know or think
we know of the Bush family
and presidency, but even they
did not elevate this story to any
kind of enlightenment. The
club was disappointed in both
the content and format of the
book finding it disjointed.
Rather than just dismissing the
book as lightweight and unappealing, members were active
and vocal in their dislike. An
explanation might be the cultural fatigue this community
and other communities are
experiencing
when
faced
repeatedly with incivility and
salaciousness under the banner of fiction or journalism.
In counterpoint to this disappointment, the club had
some shining moments at the
April meeting. Two of our members, Mary Dowd and Mary
Lou Knapp, were able to join us
at the Blanchard House venue.
At the close of the meeting,
Mary Dowd spoke to us about
her long-time membership and
what the club has meant to
her. She told us that the club
had opened her eyes and
altered the way she felt about
literature and reading. We all
hope to approach 90, as is
Mary, with our lives as well
traveled and well read. We may
not have liked this month's
book, but we read it, discussed
it, and tried to understand it.
The next book could open our
eyes, give us new insight,
change an opinion, or keep us
awake because we can't bear to
put it down. You never know
until you turn that first page –
and begin.
Hardin County PERI chapter has guest speaker
Chapter No. 34 Hardin
County PERI met on Friday,
April 1 at the Hardin Memorial
Hospital
meeting
room.
President Gerald Potter opened
the meeting by apologizing for
canceling the February meeting
due to weather. Members and
guests repeated the Pledge of
Allegiance followed by everyone
introducing themselves. There
were over forty members and
guests present.
Secretary Evelyn Osborn
read the minutes of the
December 2010 meeting and
Treasurer Deb Roberts gave the
treasurer's report. Both were
approved. PERI presently has
107 paid members and 57
associate members. Edison
Klingler stated the Silver
Slippers program is available at
the YMCA in Kenton and at
Curves in Ada.
Potter reported on the
Officers Meeting held in
January in St. Marys.
Klingler introduced Gordon
SEE
RICHARD
At
Richard’s Greenhouse
Open for the season
April 15th. It’s time to
plant your cabbage and
onions!
11803 S.R. 67 W, Kenton
Gatien of OPERS as the guest
speaker. Gatien reported the
proposed changes to our retirement program. He suggested
the members follow the OPERS
website to follow this legislation. Klingler said he constantly
visit's the OPERS and PERI
websites and will forward infor-
mation to everyone. Anyone
desiring direct communication
with OPERS can submit their email address to them and they
will forward updates directly.
The next chapter meeting
will be held June 3 at the
Sheriff's Department with
Sheriff Keith Everhart as the
speaker.
Door prizes were awarded to
Thelma
Jacobs,
Florence
Striker, James Modd, Berkley
Hill and Kay Potter.
Gerald Potter closed the
meeting with a humorous reading concerning bathroom closets at a campground.
Page 4 – KENTON TIMES
Thursday, April 14, 2011
www.kentontimes.com
Opinions
Send reader editorials to the
Kenton Times, PO Box 230, Kenton 43326;
e-mail kteditor@kentontimes.com
donald lambro
Boehner wins vital
budget concessions
WASHINGTON -- Speaker
John Boehner extracted more
budget
concessions
from
President Obama and the
Democrats than was at first
evident when the deal was
announced last week.
Not only did he squeeze
nearly $40 billion out of this
fiscal year's remaining budget,
but also another $40 billion in
increases Obama had proposed
for agency budgets that
Congress never agreed to
accept.
The deal Boehner negotiated
for fiscal 2011 means that
spending this year will be
$78.5 billion less than what
Obama requested last year
from
the
Democratic-run
Congress, which failed to enact
any budget. In one key respect,
Boehner and the Republicans
did what the Democrats irresponsibly refused to do -- cut
spending.
While these sums pale in the
face of a $3.7 trillion annual
budget, that is running a
record $1.6 trillion deficit and
$14 trillion in debt, the GOP's
interim victory has thrown
Obama and the Democrats on
the defensive as they enter a
critical two-year presidential
election cycle, with Obama's
job approval scores falling dangerously into the mid-40s, and
23 Senate Democrats -- a number of whom are vulnerable -up for re-election next year.
Obama, who proudly called
Boehner's budget deal "the
largest spending cut in our history," is turning himself into
what Washington Post political
reporter Dan Balz called "a
born-again budget cutter."
In the aftermath of the deal,
the White House was scrambling to reposition the president on spending and soaring
debt that their own polls show
is fast turning into a Mount
Everest-size political issue that
endangers his re-election
prospects.
Suddenly, Obama was more
tightly embracing the proposals
of his presidential budget
reform commission that he had
kept at arm's length -- speaking warmly about its provisions
to scuttle a raft of tax breaks
and
other
loopholes
in
exchange for lowering the corporate and individual tax rates.
Donald
Lambro
Syndicated
columnist
He was practically sending
love letters to the bipartisan
"Gang of Six" senators who
were working behind the
scenes to come up with a compromise 2012 budget based on
the
commission's
report.Trouble is, though, they
have not been able to reach an
agreement.
"It's pretty hard for (Obama)
to hitch himself to something
that doesn't exist yet," said
Oklahoma Sen. Tom Coburn, a
waste-fighting
Republican
member of the gang. "There's
nothing I've agreed to that
could be announced this
week," Coburn told the
Washington Post.
Obama was expected to lay
out his latest budget plans in a
major speech here Wednesday,
but, as is his style, he wasn't
going to get his hands dirty on
any specifics. Instead, he will
speak only in broad themes,
his advisers said. Such is "leadership" in the age of Obama.
On Sunday, the White
House sent out Obama's senior
political adviser, David Plouffe,
to the morning talk shows, saying Obama would cut the
budget with "a scalpel, not a
machete." It was both a message of reassurance to Obama's
liberal base that he would not
touch the social welfare and
entitlements that are the holy
grails of the Democrats, but
also a campaign promise that
his boss offered the country a
barely noticeable, cosmetic
approach to the budget that
could best be described as
"Obama-lite."
Predictably, though, Obama
will put away the scalpel and
bring out his Hawaiian-style
machete to slash the tax cuts
he agreed to last year. Good
luck on raising taxes on a fragile economy with $4 a gallon
gasoline, rising food prices,
declining wages and nearly 9
percent unemployment.
Obama built this mountain
of spending and debt, and it's
going to take a great deal more
than a tummy tuck or a nose
job.
Since 2007, the year before
the Great Recession struck,
spending rose by $1.1 trillion,
while the budget deficit went
from a modest $161 billion to
$1.6 trillion under Obama's
leadership, leaving a long line
of trillion dollar-plus deficits for
the rest of this decade and
beyond.
Obama's 2012 budget proposals, which escaped serious
scrutiny, predicted the deficits
would drop to $772 billion by
2022.
But the University of
Maryland's ace economist,
Peter Morici, who has crunched
the numbers, says, "That forecast is dubious, because it
assumes 4 percent (economic)
growth ... which few economists would endorse, and cuts
in Medicare payments to physicians and hospitals, few political observers believe will materialize."
Now comes the heavy lifting
and the far bigger spending
battles -- raising the debt ceiling and passing next year's
budget -- with the Republicans
holding the stronger hand.
It is generally conceded that
Congress will pass a rise in the
debt ceiling, because the
world's largest economy is not
going to default on its debts.
But not before further spending restrictions are added to
the bill that Obama will have to
sign.
The next major heavyweight
fight will be over the 2012
budget. It's already begun with
the House Budget Committee's
blueprint, which cuts or freezes
virtually every government program.
The Democratic-run Senate,
fearful of losing yet another
budget fight, has yet to produce
its own version, though the
betting in this corner is that
Congress will pass a budget
that gets tough on spending
and that those who would vote
against it do so at their own
political peril.
Copyright 2011, United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.
tom purcell
Tough time for accountants
Boy, are accountants
going through a rough patch
now -- even rougher than we
taxpayers are.
Despite software that has
greatly simplified tax preparation, American accountants suffer a host of daily
aggravations.
They're responsible for filing on behalf of some 82 million U.S. taxpayers and for
understanding the U.S. tax
code's 5,600 incomprehensible pages, according to
AccountingToday.com.
No wonder, then, that the
American accountant suffers
"a poor work/life balance,
botched sleep schedules,
poor eating habits, and problems in personal relationships."
One survey found 64 percent complain that their
clients, far more confused by
the tax code than they, are
KENTON TIMES
Phone 419-674-4066
201 E. Columbus, Kenton,
Ohio 43326.
Published daily except
Sundays and the following
holidays: New Year’s Day,
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Subscription rates: Single
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$144.76 per year (monthly
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according to current postal
requirements.
Ray F. Barnes............founder
Jeff Barnes.............publisher
Tim Thomas.................editor
Tom
Purcell
Syndicated
columnist
careless or unprepared.
I hope our accountants
can forgive us.
The same survey says our
emotions get in the way of
organizing our tax information in a timely manner:
"Procrastination (45 percent) is one of the biggest
challenges for those who
haven't filed in a suitable
timeline by this time of year.
"Others blame nervousness about filing taxes correctly (28 percent), confusion
and the process (26 percent),
laziness (23 percent), and
lack of organization (20 percent)."
I could toss in extended
happy hours, but I don't
believe that was on the list.
The survey describes other
things agitating accountants.
Thirty-six percent complain about the need to
resolve complex tax situations, twenty-three percent
about "aggressive clients" -who probably want to know
why they owe so much after
spending hours organizing
business
expenses
and
deductions.
And client deductions are
a sizable source of grief.
AccountingToday.com
cites one client who tried to
depreciate his cows.
Another tried to deduct
the costs of raising a cat. A
third tried to deduct his hot
tub for medical purposes.
A fourth "tried to claim
water bottle costs towards
health care since his doctor
told him he needed to drink
more water."
If such deductions sound
reasonable -- they do to me - you are among a rapidly
shrinking group: Americans
who actually have jobs,
incomes and high taxes.
Again, I hope our accountant pals can forgive us. The
survey says 60 percent of us
feel mighty uneasy about
being audited.
"That's more than those
who are worried about other
nerve-wracking situations,
such as receiving a performance review at work (39 percent) or visiting the doctor for
an annual check-up (35 percent)."
The article doesn't say
what kind of doctor, but it's
surely a proctologist -- whose
procedure's surely far less
intrusive than an audit!
In any event, at this cruddy time of year, many are
miserable and uneasy.
About to write massive
checks, we're sickened to see
our bank balances depleted.
We're more sick that our
combined annual contributions are $1.7 trillion less
than our government will
spend this year.
We're sicker yet that we
have to hand over fat checks
to our accountants to make
sure we comply with that
incomprehensible tax code.
Of course, our accountants get the worst of it all.
Taxpayers themselves, they
must work ungodly hours to
put our taxes in order.
I hope they can deduct
their poor work/life balance
and eating habits.
–––––
Tom Purcell, a freelance
writer, is also a humor columnist
for
the
Pittsburgh
Tribune-Review. E-mail Tom
at Purcell@caglecartoons.com.
Copyright
2011
Tom
Purcell
dear abby
Couple more quarrelsome
DEAR ABBY: We have been
friends with "The Bickersons"
for quite some time. They
never have a kind word to say
to each other. Mr. B. now has
a terminal illness, and you
would think they'd be kinder
to each other at a time like
this. On the contrary, their
fights are more groundless
and vicious than ever. It is
becoming increasingly difficult to be around them. This
is when they need friends
more than ever, but they're
driving everyone away! What
can we do? -- LOVE IS ALL
WE NEED
DEAR LOVE: While you
might imagine that when a
spouse has a terminal illness
it would bring the couple closer together, that is not always
the case. Mr. B. may be frightened, angry, in pain and taking it out on his wife. Mrs. B.
may be furious at her husband for being sick and
dependent, and requiring her
to have gone from being a wife
to a caregiver. Also, they both
may be settling old scores.
Because it's painful to
watch what's going on but
you want to be supportive,
consider socializing with
them separately. They may
appreciate the time they get
to spend away from each
other.
–––––
DEAR ABBY: When does
dieting become rude? I have
always
enjoyed
inviting
friends and family over for
dinner. But lately it seems
everyone is on some kind of
diet and "can't eat that."
I fix healthy meals -- free of
fats, sugars and salt. If someone has a dietary restriction
or wants to pass on dessert, I
Jeanne
Phillips
Syndicated
columnist
am fine with that, of course. I
don't like it, though, when my
carefully prepared meals turn
into leftovers or get thrown
away off someone's plate.
Why would anyone accept
a dinner invitation and then
turn into a picky guest?
Would eating an average serving of a good meal once a
week blow someone's diet? -LOST THE JOY OF COOKING
DEAR LOST THE JOY: I'll
answer your questions in
reverse order. Eating an
"average serving of a good
meal" once a week COULD
blow someone's diet, depending on the kind of diet the person is on. And the reason
someone who is on a severely
restricted diet would accept a
dinner invitation on a weekly
basis might be because he or
she wants to see you, wants
to see some of the other
guests or doesn't want to be
left out. But for a conclusive
answer, you need to query the
dieter.
–––––
DEAR ABBY: My mother
and I are very close, and I love
her very much, but I have a
problem. Mom goes on every
single field trip with my class.
There have even been times
when she was the only parent
in attendance. The teachers
are grateful for her, but it's
becoming embarrassing. I'm a
freshman in a private high
school, and I want to start
doing things more independently. What's the best way to
tell Mom before my next trip
that I prefer she not go without hurting her feelings? -I'M A BIG GIRL NOW
DEAR BIG GIRL: Talk to
your mother at a time when
you are both calm. She needs
to understand that her hovering is making you self-conscious when you need some
independence. However, keep
in mind that she may be the
only parent who is volunteering and has the time to assist
in the field trips -- which is
why the teachers are grateful.
What I'm trying to convey is
how important it is for you
and your mother to communicate honestly with each other.
–––––
Dear Abby is written by
Abigail Van Buren, also
known as Jeanne Phillips,
and was founded by her
mother, Pauline Phillips.
Write
Dear
Abby
at
www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA
90069.
–––––
For an excellent guide to
becoming a better conversationalist and a more sociable
person, order "How to Be
Popular." Send a businesssized, self-addressed envelope, plus check or money
order for $6 (U.S. funds) to:
Dear Abby -- Popularity
Booklet, P.O. Box 447, Mount
Morris,
IL
61054-0447.
(Postage is included in the
price.)
Copyright 2011 Universal
Uclick
reader editorial
Inmate offers apology
To the editor:
Dear community/victims:
My name is Justin Lee
Frazier and I am a 24-yearold inmate here at the
Southeastern Correctional
Institution in Lancaster, Ohio
who is serving a four-year
and four-month prison sentence for the Hardin County
Adult Common Pleas Courts
due to two felony 3 burglaries, one felony 3 grand theft,
one felony 5 drug trafficking,
one felony 5 possession of
drugs and one felony 5 recieving stolen property convictions, in which, I am not one
bit proud of. Anyways, the
purpose of this letter is to
make a sincere apology for
my actions, inactions, addictions and crimes.
Please know that all of my
convictions were, in fact,
drug and alcohol related and
that I wouldn't have ever
committed or even thought
about committing such if it
had not been for my active
addiction to drugs and alcohol, although that is no justification or excuse for my
actions, inactions, addictions
and crimes. I made that ultimate choice to pick up that
first drug and drink knowing
what the possible consequences of such a choice
would be without anyone
forcing me to do so, although
I may not have realized it
could or would get as bad as
it did. As we all can see it did
get bad and I regret that so
badly!
Please know that my
actions, inactions, addictions
and crimes were not intentional, although they may
have seemed that way at the
time. I just simply allowed
drugs and alcohol to take
over my life as already mentioned. Furthermore, I would
like to make a special and
more personal apology to Kyle
and Jessica Blair because
they were, in fact, direct victims in my crimes and did not
deserve what I done to them
one bit.
Please also know that I am
a really good person with a
really good background and
heart who just simply made
some really bad choices in
life. Therefore, please do not
allow my past actions, inactions, addictions and crimes
to convince you that I'm a bad
person because I am not. Nor
am I a waste or a lost cause. I
have much hope and potential.
Please know that I am now
doing exactly what it is that
the community as a whole,
my direct victims, my family,
my friends and myself would
want me to do and that is
staying clean and sober and
active in a solid program of
recovery. As soon as I'm able
I look forward to making further amends to my victims,
community,
family
and
friends but in the meantime
I'm just doing what I can with
what I have here in prison so
that I do not ever repeat my
past in the future.
It is my hopes and prayers
that "all" of you will forgive
me and be of encouragement
or support to me instead of
against me, but if you do not
I'll understand and respect
your decision because in no
way is your forgiveness owed
to me.
In closing, I thank you all
for your time in reading over
this letter, and I thank you all
for any and all consideration
that you may have for me at
this time in this matter. May
God bless and be with each
and everyone of you.
Justin Frazier
Lancaster
Consumer aid
Consumers who have complaints that they feel should
be investigated or who wish to
have questions answered may
call the Ohio attorney general’s consumer public action
hotline, toll-free, at 1-800282-0515.
Consumer
complaints
about utilities may be called
to 1-800-282-0198.
On the national level, consumers
may
call
the
Consumer Product Safety
Commission toll-free hotline
at 1-800-638-2666.
area deaths
Gunnett
Smith
Wilma A., 81
Kenton
Arrangements for Wilma A.
Gunnett are incomplete at
the Schindewolf Stevens
Stout Funeral Home in
Kenton.
She died at 12:55 a.m.
today, April 14, 2011 at the
Kenton
Nursing
and
Rehabilitation Center.
Marjorie Colleen, 88
Dunkirk
Services
for
Marjorie
Colleen Smith will be 1 p.m.
Friday at the Price Funeral
Home in Kenton by Pastor
Bob Wood. Burial will be in
Dunkirk Cemetery.
Friends may call from 11
a.m. until the time of services
Friday.
She died at 2:50 a.m.
Wednesday, April 13, 2011 at
the
Arlington
Good
Samaritan Center.
She was born Feb. 18,
1923 in Hardin County to
Ross and Ethel Maude
(Garling) Price. On July 31,
1939, she married Clair E.
“Smitty” Smith, who preceded her in death on July 26,
1989.
Surviving are a son, Joe
(Elaine) Smith of Davidson,
Mich.; two daughters, Nancy
Baltz of Findlay and Jean
Vermillion of Florida; eight
grandchildren, Gregory (Lori)
Anania of Jenera – whom she
raised, Shad, Johna, Nelson,
Lee Ann, John, Amy and
Amanda and 10 great-grandchildren.
She was preceded in death
by a grandchild, Tracy; two
brothers, Robert and Dick
Price and a sister, Joyce
Essinger.
She worked at North
Electric, RCA and Oldaker
Manufacturing.
Memorials may be made to
the
Arlington
Good
Samaritan Center Activity
Fund.
(Pd. 041411)
DORABELLE RUPERT
Rupert
Dorabelle Marie, 92
Bullhead City, Ariz.
formerly of Ada
Services for Dorabelle
Marie Rupert will be 1 p.m.
Friday at Hanson-Neely
Funeral Home in Ada by the
Rev. Gregg King. Burial will
be in Woodlawn Cemetery in
Ada.
Friends may call 6-8 p.m.
today and until time of the
services Friday.
She died at 5 a.m.
Thursday, April 7, 2011 at
Silver Creek Leisure Living
in Bullhead City, Ariz.
She was born Jan. 30,
1919 in LaFayette to Lowell
and Wilma McQuown Sr.,
who preceded her in death.
She first married Justin
Shadley and he preceded her
in death. She later married
Norbert Rupert who also preceded her in death.
Surviving are a son, E.
Wesley (Deb) Shadley of
Bullhead City, Ariz.; a
daughter, Pamela Thomson
of Forest; six grandchildren,
Dan (Wendy) Thomson and
Doreen (Eric) Flowers, both
of Forest, Jennifer (Trever)
Wagner of Amarillo, Texas,
Megan (Keith) Norgrove,
Albuquerque, N.M., and
Rachel (Chris) Shadley and
Ethan Shadley, both of
Bullhead City, Ariz.; eight
great-grandchildren, Corey
Thomson, Brayden Flowers,
Brenna
Flowers,
Alex
Wagner, Hannah Wagner,
Roland Wagner, Aja Norgrove
and Kail Norgrove; a brother,
Paul McQuown of Gary,
Minn.; and 11 nieces and
nephews.
She was preceded in
death by a brother, Lowell
McQuown Jr.; a sister, Betty
Ludwig and a son-in-law,
Duane Thomson.
She was employed during
her life as a seamstress and
waitress.
Dorabelle lived in Ada
until 1967 when she married
and moved to St. Marys. She
lived in St. Marys until her
husband died in 1994 and
then she moved to Bullhead
City in 1995, where she has
since resided.
She was a member of
many organizations and
women’s clubs: Mother’s
Club, Eight & Forty, Clef
Club,
Liberty
Grange,
Eagles,
Farm
Bureau
Council,
Crochet
Club,
Farmers
Community
Institute, PTA president,
American Legion Ladies
Auxiliary
and
the
Professional
Business
Women’s Association.
She was a member of
Sugar
Grove
United
Methodist Church in Ada
and the Sugar Grovettes
Quartet, also in Ada, and the
Hope
United
Methodist
Church in Bullhead City,
Ariz.
Condolences may be sent
to hansonneely@wcoil.com.
Memorials may be made
to
the
Alzheimer’s
Association.
–––––
Editor’s note: This obituary is being republished to
correct the name of a survivor.
Stewart
Richard, 83
Lakeland, Fla.
formerly of Kenton
Arrangements for Richard
Stewart are incomplete at the
Price Funeral Home in
Kenton.
He died Tuesday, April 12,
2011 at the HIghland Lake
Center in Lakeland, Fla.
Kasich to get
teaching bill
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — A
bill headed to Ohio Gov. John
Kasich’s desk would open the
state’s door to a service-oriented teaching program that targets low-income areas.
The non-profit Teach for
America program recruits
recent college graduates and
professionals to teach for two
or more years in low-income
urban and rural communities
across the country. The Ohio
Senate says 300 people who
attended Ohio colleges participate.
Ohio Lottery
CLEVELAND (AP) — These
Ohio lotteries were drawn
Wednesday:
Classic Lotto: 09-27-3438-40-42
Estimated jackpot: $27.8
million
Pick 3 Evening: 5-3-3
Pick 3 Midday: 3-1-4
Pick 4 Evening: 2-3-4-9
PIck 4 Midday: 6-1-6-1
Powerball: 04-23-39-4950, Powerball: 39, Power
Play: 3
Rolling Cash 5: 09-22-2731-32
Estimated
jackpot:
$100,000
Ten OH Evening: 01-0406-07-09-10-11-17-25-2734-41-45-52-55-63-64-6567-79
Ten OH Midday: 01-04-0810-16-18-19-27-28-39-4049-56-59-64-65-67-68-73-76
births
Jon Good and Rebecca
Strain of Sarasota, Fla., are
parents of an 8-pound, 3ounce, 21-inch boy, Jon
Michael Good, born at 8:24
p.m. Jan. 26, 2011 at
Lakewood Ranch Medical
Center,
Bradenton,
Fla.
Grandparents are Leonard
and Sally Strain of Alger and
Mike and Rhonda Good of
Mountain Home, Ark. Greatgrandfather is Joseph R
Morrison of Emlenton, Pa.
–––––
Editor’s
note:
This
announcement
is
being
reprinted with a correction.
REV. ROD VINCENT
of Texas, Guest Speaker
Fri., & Sat. at 7 p.m. and Sun. at 11 a.m.
FAITH LIGHTHOUSE
On 67 East, Kenton. Everyone Welcome.
Bill Turner - Pastor
Thursday, April 14, 2011
Tonight/Friday
City/Region
Low | High temps
Forecast for Friday, April 15
MICH.
Cleveland
40° | 54°
Toledo
38° | 50°
Associated Press
PA.
Mansfield
43° | 61°
Columbus
40° | 65°
Cincinnati
45° | 67°
Portsmouth
45° | 72°
W.VA.
KY.
© 2011 Wunderground.com
Thunderstorms
Cloudy
Partly
Cloudy
Ice
Flurries
Rain
Showers
Snow
Weather Underground • AP
area forecast
The high was 64 Wednesday at the Kenton U.S. weather
station. The low was 39 and it was 48 at 8 a.m. today.
–––––
Tonight, partly cloudy. Lows in the upper 30s. Northeast
winds 10 to 15 mph. Friday, mostly cloudy with a chance of
showers and thunderstorms. Highs in the lower 60s. East
winds 15 to 20 mph. Chance of rain 30 percent. Friday night,
showers with a chance of thunderstorms. Breezy with lows in
the lower 50s. Southeast winds 15 to 25 mph with gusts up to
35 mph. Chance of rain 100 percent. Saturday, showers.
Highs in the lower 50s. Chance of rain 80 percent. Saturday
night, mostly cloudy with a 30 percent chance of showers.
Lows in the upper 30s. Sunday and Sunday night, partly
cloudy. Highs in the mid 50s. Lows in the lower 40s. Monday
and Monday night, mostly cloudy with a chance of showers
and thunderstorms. Highs in the lower 60s. Lows in the lower
40s. Chance of rain 30 percent. Tuesday, mostly cloudy with
a chance of showers and thunderstorms. Highs in the mid
60s. Chance of rain 40 percent. Tuesday night, cloudy with a
chance of showers and thunderstorms. Lows in the lower 40s.
Chance of rain 40 percent. Wednesday, mostly cloudy with a
chance of showers and thunderstorms. Highs in the lower 60s.
Chance of rain 40 percent.
police reports
Kenton police
Josh Spencer, 607 Cooper
St., was taken into custody
on an outstanding bench
warrant from Hardin County
Municipal Court. Spencer
was arrested after allegedly
attempting to hide from officers in the restroom of a
restaurant. J.R. Davis, 221
Harrison St., Kenton, was
cited in the incident for
obstructing official business.
Kyle Smith, 118 Harrison
St., reported the theft of an iPod from his home.
Randall Fink, 214 N.
Cherry St., reported someone
had thrown eggs at his car.
A car belonging to Rebecca
Mermann, 123 E. Lynn St.,
was struck while parked at
502 N. Detroit Street on the
driver’s side by a car which
did not stop after the accident.
Cory D. Hays, 5988 TR
115, Ridgeway, was cited for
fictitious plate.
A vehicle reportedly struck
the Dairy Queen. No report
was available.
A crash was reported in
the Kroger parking lot.
Leo Farrell, 702 Robinson
Ave., told officers he purchased some power tools
from a named suspect which
he believes could have been
stolen.
Czech president to be
sent thousands of pens
PRAGUE (AP) — Some say
the pen is mightier than the
sword.
If
true,
Czech
President Vaclav Klaus will
soon be a very mighty man.
More than 5,000 Czechs
have signed up to a Facebook
campaign to mail pens to the
president after a video of him
sheepishly pocketing a pen
he took an obvious liking to
during an official signing ceremony last week in Chile
became widely popular on
the Internet.
Klaus says it’s customary
for leaders to keep pens after
signing accords. But the
manner in which he sized up
the pen — encrusted with
semiprecious Chilean stones
— and then sneakily slipped
it into his pocket while he sat
at a desk alongside Chilean
President Sebastian Pinera
has seen him ridiculed by
some of his countrymen.
“It seemed to me absolutely inappropriate to do anything like that during an official ceremony,” said Vojtech
Palous, a 23-year-old student of medicine from
Prague.
Block Watch
meet canceled
DUNKIRK
—
The
Blanchard Township Block
Watch meeting scheduled for
Sunday has been canceled
due to Palm Sunday and lack
of activity to report.
Free HIV/AIDS Testing
Mondays 8 - 9 a.m., Thursdays 3 - 4 p.m.
without appointment.
No blood draw, mouth swab collected.
Anonymous or confidential.
Must be 13 years of age or older.
Results immediately.
Union County Health Dept.
940 London Ave., Suite 1100,
Marysville, OH
Ph: 1-937-642-0801 or 1-888-333-9461
Incentive Gift Cards Available.
Sponsored by the UC Aids Task Force
and the Gamma Mu Foundation
Little time between
call/fatal plunge
By CHRIS CAROLA
Youngstown
40° | 61°
Dayton
41° | 63°
KENTON TIMES – Page 5
“To do that in front of television cameras was just
insane.”
Campaign participants are
being asked to send to the
presidential office pens, pencils or other writing means
on May 2 because “Mr. president obviously has nothing to
write with.”
Palous said it is likely his
family will send the president
a parcel with a collection of
pens.
“The campaign is great
because so many people were
able to say they disapprove
with Klaus, and they can do
it in a relatively funny way,”
Palous said.
The
Czech
Foreign
Ministry declined comment
Wednesday when asked if
they thought Klaus’ huge
YouTube exposure could
harm the country’s image.
Palous said the country’s
image will survive, but the
video makes the president
seem a little weird.
“It doesn’t harm the Czech
Republic, but it says something about the way he represents us... His way of representing is weird and this
video proves that well.”
The conservative Klaus
relishes being at odds with
the mainstream and his
views often dramatically differ from those of his archrival
Vaclav Havel, whom he
replaced as president in
2003.
Circulars in
Today’s Times
Sears
NEWBURGH, N.Y. (AP) — Angela Gilliam called the police at
7:43 p.m. Tuesday. She was worried about her niece’s well-being
and said there was a domestic tussle going on at the younger
woman’s apartment in this hardscrabble city on New York’s
Hudson River.
Police headed to the apartment but by the time they got there,
it was empty.
Seventeen minutes later, Gilliam’s grand-nephew La’Shaun
Armstrong stood shivering and soaking wet in a firehouse down
the street, struggling to get the words out: His mother, 25-yearold Lashanda Armstrong, had driven their minivan off a boat
ramp and into the river, taking her three other children with her.
All of them died.
Only 10-year-old La’Shaun survived, managing to open the
driver’s window and escape the van just before it slipped beneath
the surface.
Police were still working Wednesday night to piece together
the events that led to Tuesday’s tragic plunge that killed
Armstrong and three children: Landen Pierre, 5, Lance Pierre, 2,
and 11-month-old Laianna Pierre.
Earlier Tuesday, Armstrong appeared stressed when she
picked up the children at the Young and Unique Christian
Development Child Care, said Shaniesha Strange, supervisor in
the infant room.
“The only thing she’d say was that she was so alone,” Strange
said Wednesday. “She’s a single parent. She takes great care of
her kids, goes to school and works. She really needed a helping
hand.”
Police question the man they identified as the father of the
three dead children, Jean Pierre, but did not give details. He
apparently didn’t live with the mother and children and could
not immediately be located for comment.
Hetty Minatee, another teacher at the day care center, said
Armstrong had enrolled the four children there in September. At
first Jean Pierre would come in with Armstrong and sometimes
would pick up the kids.
“A couple weeks ago, she came in a little upset,” Minatee said.
“She said, ’Miss Minatee, I don’t want the father to pick the kids
up or have any contact with them.’ She said she was trying to
get a court order so he could never see the kids again.”
From Armstrong’s apartment, she would have taken a right
turn onto Washington Street, site of George Washington’s headquarters during the American Revolution, and driven straight
toward the river, downhill all the way. She’d be familiar with the
boat launch, neighbors said. She watched fireworks over the
river from the corner near her house. A half-mile drive would
have gotten her there. A hard left then a quick right turn would
take the van into the water.
Fire Chief Michael Vatter said the vehicle went under in the
45-degree water within two minutes.
A passer-by found a soaked and cold La’Shaun Armstrong
along the shore and took him to a firehouse for help.
“He got out of the car, got up onto the boat ramp, turned
around and it was gone,” Vatter said.
Divers searched for about an hour before finding the minivan
submerged in 10 feet of water about 25 yards from the shore.
They used a tow truck to pull it up the ramp.
La’Shaun is staying with Gilliam and “doing fine,” she said.
“She was a good mother. She was going through some stuff,”
Gilliam said of her niece. “Nobody knows what my niece went
through.” She would not elaborate.
Police said there was no history of domestic violence at the
address.
Are your taxes fair?
Most people say yes
WASHINGTON (AP) — For all the complaining this time of year,
most Americans actually think the taxes they pay are fair.
Not that they’re cheering. Fewer people expect refunds this year
than in previous years, a new Associated Press-GfK poll shows.
But as Monday’s filing deadline approaches, the poll shows that 54
percent believe their tax bills are either somewhat fair or very fair,
compared with 46 percent who say they are unfair.
Should taxes be raised to eat into huge federal deficits? Among
the public, 62 percent say they favor cutting government services
to sop up the red ink. Just 29 percent say raise taxes.
That’s sure to be a major issue as Congress takes up budget legislation for next year and the 2012 presidential campaign gets
under way in earnest. On Wednesday, President Barack Obama
revived his proposal to raise taxes on the wealthiest Americans to
help reduce government borrowing.
In the poll, Democrats were more likely than Republicans to
think their tax bills were fair. Liberals and moderates were more
likely to think so than conservatives. Women more likely than men.
Most whites thought their tax bills were fair; most non-whites didn’t.
The young and the old — adults under 30 and seniors 65 and
above — were much more likely to say their taxes were fair than
those in their prime earning years. Surprisingly, there was little
difference in the perception of fairness across income levels.
But just because people say they pay a fair amount doesn’t
mean that they think others do.
Sandra Jennings, a retired teacher in South Bend, Ind., said
her federal taxes are fair, but she thinks rich people get off too easily.
Rich people, she said in an interview, “get all these loopholes.
The middle class does not have loopholes.”
Mari Lemelson of Edison, N.J., said, “I have a big problem with
the millionaires, at least what I understand to be the millionaires’
tax breaks.”
Jim Martel, an electrician from Weymouth, Mass., said his tax
bill is already unfair, but he would be willing to pay more if he
thought the money would be spent wisely. He’s not optimistic.
“If I thought people in office had the right thing in mind and
they were doing the right thing with the money instead of blowing
it and wasting it and funding these stupid projects that are totally
ridiculous, I wouldn’t have a problem with it,” Martel said. “But
they don’t, so that’s what bothers me.”
In Loving Memory Of
ANNE MARIE MORRISON
June 23, 1983 – April 14, 2010
Sadly missed and greatly loved by
Mom, Dad, Scott & Grace, Joe & Mandi,
Deanne & John, Matt and son Logan
IN LOVING MEMORY OF
DAISY BAUGHMAN
WHO PASSED AWAY 4-14-95.
There’s not a day goes by that you
aren’t on our minds or in our hearts.
– Sadly missed by your family
Page 6 – KENTON TIMES
Thursday, April 14, 2011
www.kentontimes.com
Entertainment
Summer
musicals
slated at
Palace
MARION — Marion Palace
will see two musicals produced on the Palace stage
this summer. The theater will
present the '60s dance-rich
hit Hairspray in July and the
world premiere of The Singin'
Cowboy in August.
Based on the 1988 John
Waters film Hairspray, the
songs include 1960s-style
dance music and "downtown"
rhythm and blues. In 1962
Baltimore, Maryland, plump
teenager Tracy Turnblad's
dream is to dance on The
Corny Collins Show, a local
TV dance program based on
the real-life Buddy Deane
Show. When Tracy wins a
role on the show, she
becomes
a
celebrity
overnight. She then launches
a campaign to integrate the
show. Hairspray is a social
commentary on the injustices
of parts of American society
in the 1960s. Later made into
a film starring John Travolta,
Hairspray won 8 Tony
Awards during its original
Broadway run, including
Best Musical. Performances
will be July 9, 10, 15, 16 17.
Area residents will be the
first to see and hear The
Singin' Cowboy when the
world premiere opens on Aug.
12. Other performance dates
are Aug. 13, 14, 19, 20 and
21. The romantic comedy is
an homage to the great characters of movie Westerns,
particularly those with a penchant for strumming and
humming. It tells the tale of
our hero named Singin' who
sets out to capture and bring
to justice the fiercest outlaws
in the land, Tumbleweed
Tammy and her bumbling
gang.
Roles are available in all
age ranges and ethnicities for
both shows.
Those interested in auditioning for Hairspray should
come to the May Pavilion at
the Marion Palace Theatre on
either Saturday, May 21 or
Sunday, May 22 from 1 to 4
p.m. Those desiring a lead
role should come with a solo
prepared; an accompanist
will be provided. Those wanting to participate in the chorus only will audition in
groups. Children ages 6 and
up will also audition in
groups. Learning choreography will be part of the audition process as well so come
dressed to participate in
dance numbers. Those desiring speaking parts will also
read from the script.
Auditions for The Singin'
Cowboy will be 1-4 p.m. June
4 and 5 in the May Pavilion at
the Marion Palace Theatre.
Those interested in principal
roles should have an up
tempo song prepared, and
bring sheet music in the
appropriate key; an accompanist will be provided. Those
seeking lead roles will also
sing from the show and read
from the script. Participants
interested in ensemble only
will audition in groups. Come
dressed to move as everyone
will learn a dance combination. Bring jazz shoes if available; socks or footies if they
are not.
For more information, call
740-383-2101.
American Idol
finalist plans
hometown
show in Ohio
PORT CLINTON, Ohio (AP)
— Last season’s “American
Idol” runner-up is coming
home for a concert near her
tiny hometown in northwest
Ohio.
Crystal Bowersox will perform July 9 at the Ottawa
County Fairgrounds near
Port Clinton.
It was just under a year
ago that Bowersox finished
second on the Fox singing
competition. She made a
quick trip home during the
final week and sang a few
songs at the fairgrounds.
She now has an album out
and is planning a tour.
The News-Messenger in
Fremont says tickets for the
July show go on sale at May
16 and will cost $25.
Send entertainment news to Kenton Times, PO
Box 230, Kenton 43326; phone 419-674-4066, ext. 232;
fax 419-673-1125 or e-mail ktnews@kentontimes.com
Kentonite to perform
at UF spring concert
AMERICAN ENGLISH
Authentic Beatles tribute
show to be staged in Marion
winners as voted by fans at
Beatlefest, and headlining
International Beatle week
before a crowd of 50,000.
Every member of the group
has spent years perfecting
their respective character;
Frank Canino (John Lennon),
Eric
Michaels
(Paul
McCartney), Doug Couture
(George Harrison) and Tom
Gable (Ringo Starr).
From intensive study of
Beatles music to tribute performances in Las Vegas, the
backgrounds of all four combine to create a well-rounded
quartet ready to take their
audience on a musical journey.
The show begins with the
early years and includes classic Beatle favorites such as
"She Loves You," "Twist and
MARION
—
American
English brings an authentic
Beatles tribute show to the
Palace Theatre in downtown
Marion Saturday, April 16 at 8
p.m.
American English in concert perform songs covering
the entire career of The Beatles
from 1963-1970. With precise
attention to every musical
detail, along with costume
changes, vintage instruments,
and special effects, American
English magically creates what
many consider to be the complete Beatles tribute.
While many tribute bands
exist for the Fab Four, none
have the awards and experience of American English,
which include three-time winners of "Best Tribute Band"
voting in Chicago, three-time
Shout," "I Want To Hold Your
Hand" and many others.
Next, the audience will witness incredible versions of
selections from Sgt. Pepper
and Magical Mystery Tour performed completely live without
any tapes or backing tracks.
And in the end, everyone
can relive the final years of the
boys from Liverpool with moving renditions of songs such as
"Hey Jude," "Something" and
"Let It Be."
Tickets are $22/$18. They
may be purchased at the
Palace box office, 276 W.
Center St., Marion or by phone
at 740-383-2101. Box office
hours are 9 a.m.-5 p.m.
Monday
through
Friday.
Information for all shows and
tickets is also online at
www.marionpalace.org.
‘Idol’ finalists attack movie tunes
By DERRIK J. LANG
AP Entertainment Writer
LOS ANGELES (AP) —
Jennifer Lopez isn’t sure
“American Idol” viewers will be
calling in for finalist Haley
Reinhart.
Lopez said the bluesy 20year-old college student from
Wheeling, Ill., didn’t dial up
her best performance with
Blondie’s “Call Me” from
“American Gigolo” on the Fox
talent competition’s evening of
film tunes Wednesday. The
show’s lone female judge was
reluctant to criticize Reinhart
because every eliminated finalist has been a woman this season.
“I don’t want any of the girls
to go home,” lamented People
magazine’s most beautiful
woman.
The show’s other remaining
female crooner, 16-year-old
high school student Lauren
Alaina of Rossville, Ga., fared
better with Miley Cyrus’ “The
Climb”
from
“Hannah
Montana: The Movie.” Before
taking the stage, “Idol” mentor
and Interscope chief Jimmy
Ivovine told Alania that he
thought she was “a much,
much stronger singer than
Miley Cyrus.”
“I love what you bring to a
song, and I love more what a
song brings to you,” said
Steven Tyler.
Paul McDonald and Scotty
McCreery stayed in their comfort zones. McDonald, the 26year-old
performer
from
Nashville, Tenn., kicked off the
show with Bob Seger’s “Old
Time Rock and Roll” from
“Risky Buisness.” McCreery,
the 17-year-old high school
student from Garner, N.C.,
kept it mellow with George
Strait’s “I Cross My Heart”
from “Pure Country.”
Stefano Langone’s take on
Boyz II Men’s “End of the
Road” from “Boomerang” incited Lopez to shout an expletive
after the 21-year-old crooner
from Kent, Wash., performed.
Tyler was also silenced after
Jacob Lusk, the 23-year-old
spa concierge of Compton,
Calif., sang Simon and
Garfunkel’s “Bridge Over
Troubled Water” from “The
Pursuit of Happyness.”
“God bless you and your
voice,” boasted Tyler.
The judges provided a
standing ovation to Casey
Abrams, the 20-year-old film
camp counselor of Idyllwild,
Calif., after his jazzy rendition
of Nat King Cole’s “Nature Boy”
from “The Boy with Green
Hair.” Ivovine originally pushed
Abrams to perform Phil
Collins’ “In the Air Tonight”
from “Risky Business,” but
Abrams took a stand with
“Nature Boy.”
James Durbin, the 22-yearold rocker from Santa Cruz,
Calif., also faced off against
Ivovine over his song choice of
Sammy Hagar’s “Heavy Metal”
from the film of the same
name. The rebellion also paid
off for Durbin, who was accompanied by guitarist Zakk Wylde
of Black Label Society. His performance prompted Randy
Jackson to repeatedly chant,
“Durbin rocks!”
One of the eight finalists will
be dismissed tonight.
FINDLAY
—
Megan
Halsey, a freshman physical therapy major, will perform in the University of
Findlay’s symphonic band
and wind ensemble spring
concert at 3 p.m. Sunday,
April 17 at the Heminger
Auditorium of Findlay High
School.
Halsey, a 2010 graduate
of Kenton High School, is
the daughter of Amy and
Bob Halsey of Kenton.
The theme for the program is “The ABCs of 20thCentury American Music.”
Featuring the music of
Leroy Anderson, Leonard
Bernstein
and
Aaron
Copland,
the
Wind
Ensemble will perform the
Overture to “Candide,”
“Belle of the Ball” and
“Scenes from Billy the
Kid.”
The Symphonic
Band
will
perform
“Buckaroo
Holiday,”
“Wearing of the Green” and
MEGAN HALSEY
music from “West Side
Story.”
The bands will combine
to perform music from
Leonard
Bernstein’s
“Mass.”
Tickets may be reserved
in advance at the UF Box
Office by calling 419-4345335 or may be purchased
at the door.
Lima Area Youth
Orchestra to perform
LIMA — The Lima Area Youth Orchestra will present
its annual Spring Concert Saturday at 7:30 p.m. in the
Lima Senior High School Auditorium.
The orchestra is comprised of 65 talented students,
ranging from the 7th through the 12th grades and representing 26 schools from an eight-county area.
Students will take the audience around the world with
an exciting program to showcase their talent.
Tickets are $10 and available at the door.
‘Hop’ remains at the top
LOS ANGELES (AP) — The good news for Russell Brand is that
his animated comedy “Hop” remains the top movie for the secondstraight weekend with $21.3 million.
The bad news is that his new live-action comedy “Arthur” could
not jump as high as “Hop.”
The Warner Bros. remake of Dudley Moore’s 1981 romance
about a rich, drunken man-child finally learning to grow up,
“Arthur” was a distant third with a modest debut of $12.2 million,
according to studio estimates Sunday.
Opening at No. 2 with $12.4 million was Focus Features’
“Hanna,” the tale of a teenager trained as a killing machine that
stars Cate Blanchett, Eric Bana and Saoirse Ronan.
Sony’s “Soul Surfer” debuted at No. 4 with $10.6 million. The
movie features AnnaSophia Robb in the real-life story of a surfer
struggling toward a comeback after losing an arm in a shark
attack.
The weekend’s other new wide release, Universal’s medieval
action comedy “Your Highness,” opened at No. 6 with $9.3 million,
weak results given a cast that includes James Franco and Natalie
Portman.
With a solid second weekend, Brand’s Easter bunny tale “Hop”
raised its 10-day total to $68 million.
“I’m so thrilled that we’re so far ahead of the pack,” said Nikki
Rocco, head of distribution at Universal.
The poor results for “Your Highness” dimmed the mood at the
studio, which had hoped more young males would turn out for
the tale starring Franco, Portman and Danny McBride in a blend
of supernatural action and frat-boy raunchiness.
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THE INN AT OHIO NORTHERN UNIVERSITY
On SUNDAY, APRIL 24th, The Inn will feature a special Easter Brunch. Enjoy an
outstanding brunch with family and friends. Along with traditional brunch favorites,
the Easter Brunch will feature a carving station with
Prime Rib, Spiral Ham, Shrimp and Turkey.
Brunch will be held from 11:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m.
Make your reservation early as Easter Brunch will sell out quickly!
$16.95 - Adults, $7.95 for children up to 13 years old,
Children under 3 years old are free.
To plan perfectly for you, The Inn requires reservations for Sunday Brunch.
Please call 419.772.2500 or toll-free at 866.713.4513.
401 WEST COLLEGE AVE., ADA • www.innatonu.com
The COMPLETE BEATLES TRIBUTE
AMERICAN
ENGLISH
SĂtƵrĚĂLJ͕ AƉrŝů ϭ6 ϴ͗ϬϬ Ɖŵ
SPORTS
Hardin
County’s
Kenton Times
Thursday, April 14, 2011
KENTON TIMES – Page 7
More sports on P-12
Wynford outslugs Riverdale LOOKING
FOR
RESULTS?
By BRANDON DRAKE
Times news bureau
Times photo/Kendrick Jesionowski
Off the bat
Ridgemont’s Luke Heilman hits the ball during the Gophers
loss to Waynesfield-Goshen on Wednesday afternoon.
W-G downs Gophers
RIDGEWAY
—
Waynesfield-Goshen tallied
runs in six of the seven
innings it batted on the way
to
an
11-1
win
over
Ridgemont in North West
Central Conference baseball
action on Wednesday.
The Gophers, who scored
their run in the sixth inning,
received a double from Tyler
Tillman.
Luke Heilman took the
pitching loss.
Ridgemont
travels
to
Fairbanks tonight.
———
WG 121 501
1
R
000 001
0
WP - Miller. LP - Heilman.
2B - Tillman.
-11 11 2
- 165
Kenton rips Mustangs
HARROD — Kenton got its bats going on Wednesday,
pounding out 13 hits on the way to 10-4 baseball win over
Allen East.
The Wildcats scored three runs in the top of the second
to take the lead and added runs in each of the next four
innings to earn their second victory of the season.
Alex Kissling had four hits and a pair of RBIs to lead the
Wildcats at the plate.
Also for Kenton, Zach Wolowicz had a double and two
RBIs, Brice Fackler had three hits, Caleb Halsey had two
hits with a RBI, Brennan Rolander had a hit and an RBI and
Tyler Dennis had a pair of hits with a double.
Noah Furbush earned the pitching win, allowing two
earned runs on three hits and six walks, while striking out
five batters in four innings on the hill.
Kissling threw the final three innings in relief, allowing an
unearned run on two hits while recording three strikeouts.
“We were really pleased with our pitching but our bats
woke up a bit tonight,” Kenton coach Brent Fackler said.
“We also played much better defensively and that’s a key for
us,”
Kenton, 2-8, host Marion Hardin tonight.
MOUNT BLANCHARD — It
took a while for Wynford’s
bats to string runs together
Wednesday.
But better late than never
for coach Gabe Helbert, as the
Royals broke open a 4-4 tie
against Riverdale with six
runs in the top of the fifth
inning after taking advantage
of a pair of fielding errors and
some lively hitting en route to
a 10-8 win.
“We got a lot of runs across
there in the fifth, but really
looking at it, we felt we
could’ve had a bigger inning,”
Helbert said. “We had a couple baserunning errors that
hurt us. But our kids have
come out and swung the bat
well to this point and hopefully we can continue to do that.”
Wynford (6-3, 2-1 North
Central Conference) batted
around the order in the fifth
with five hits and three walks.
Todd DeLong ripped a single into the outfield off reliever Caleb Shultis to start the
inning and moved to third
thanks to a blooper by right
fielder Brett Parish while
attempting to field the ball.
Shultis then walked Aaron
Bishop, paving the way for
Chase Lantz, who ripped a
ball down the third base line
into the corner of the outfield
to score a DeLong. Bishop
was thrown out at third.
Adam Hartz walked and
scored after Gage Roe’s bomb
to deep left-center field was
dropped. A pair of singles by
Caleb Miller and Teran
Stuckman reloaded the bases
for the Royals and Shultis
walked Scott, scoring Hartz,
before Jerad Butler stepped to
the plate and stroked a threerun double to make it 10-4.
“It helps out a lot having
good defense behind you, but
in the fifth inning we kind of
slipped there,” said Devin
Dilley, who started for the
Falcons and pitched four
innings before being replaced
by Shultis.
Shultis (0-2) was pulled
after two-thirds of an inning
of work, and Seth Knoll was
able to get the Falcons (2-6, 04 NCC) out of a circus of an
inning after walking DeLong
and sending Bishop back to
Look To The
Classifieds!
Just Call
419-674-4066
KENTON TIMES
Times photo/Brandon Drake
Play in the outfield
Riverdale’s Steven Rahn scoops up the ball in the outfield
during the Falcons game against Wynford on Wednesday afternoon.
the dugout on a swinging forced Jon Grant to ground
out to third base, but Shultis
strikeout.
“I guess our struggle all followed with a double to leftyear has been defense, errors center field, scoring Weber to
make it 10-7.
and stuff,” Dilley said.
Dilley grounded out to
The game, though, was not
completely in the books for shortstop, advancing Shultis
and he scored on the next atthe Royals.
Knoll pitched two scoreless bat on a wild pitch. But that
innings in relief as the was it for Riverdale, as Rickle
Falcons’ bats came to life in popped out for the game’s
final out to center field.
the sixth inning.
“We’ve got to get our bats
Logan Rickle reached on a
single and moved to second going a little bit sooner in the
on Knoll’s sacrifice bunt. He game,” Dilley said.
Dilley allowed eight hits,
then stole third and scored on
Miller’s wild pitch to make it a four runs, all of which were
five-run game. Steven Rahn earned, and two runs, but got
reached on a walk and was his team out of two big jams
knocked home on Evan with two outs early.
Riverdale took a 2-0 lead
Wolfe’s triple that rolled all
the way to the right field fence in the first inning after a pair
of errors resulted in both
to put them within four.
In the seventh, Brady scores.
———
Weber opened the inning with
W
010
360
0 — 10 15 3
a double, forcing Wynford to
R
210
102
2— 8 8 5
turn to reliever Hartz after
WP - Miller (1-0); LP - Shultis (0-2)
Miller threw a strong six and
2B - Scott, Butler, Weber, Shultis.
3B - Wolfe.
one-third innings. Hartz
Lady
Wildcats
blast
Allen East
———
K
031
132
AE
101
110
WP - Furbush. LP - Lloyd.
2B - Wolowicz. Dennis.
0
0
-
10 13 2
454
Raiders pick up CBC
victory over Urbana
URBANA — Ben Logan scored five runs in the second
and cruised to a 9-2 win over Urbana in a Central Buckeye
League baseball matchup on Wednesday.
The Raiders, who rebounded from a 2-1 loss to the
Hillclimbers a night earlier, improve to 7-3 overall and 3-2
in the CBC’s Mad River Division.
Collin Puckett, Dustin Bowers and Tanner Johnson had
two hits each and Colt Stover added a double to lead the
Raiders.
Brandon Wilson improved to 4-0 on the season on the
mound, allowing five hits and striking out three batters
before being relieved by Stover in the fifth.
"We came out more aggressive at the plate today," Ben
Logan coach Doug Rutan said. "We were able to jump out to
an early lead which allowed us to play our game and had
Urbana trying to play catch up all day long."
"We lost our catcher and captain Jonathon Mobley for a
few games due to an ankle injury and the team rallied
together to pick up the slack," the Raider coach added.
Urbana falls to 4-7 and 2-3.
In junior varsity action at Ben Logan, the Raiders topped
Urbana 11-8.
Tristin Harshfield and Chase Anspach had three hits
each and Ethan Walborn had a double.
Harshfield and Keelyn Zell combined for the pitching win.
The Raiders travel to Kenton Ridge today.
———
BL
050
100
U
001
010
WP - Wilson (4-0). LP - Bader.
2B - Stover, Bader.
3
0
-
8 10 2
150
BL softball suffers loss
URBANA — Urbana scored five runs in the first inning
and never looked back on the way to a 9-0 win over Ben
Logan in a Central Buckeye Conference softball matchup
on Wednesday.
The Raiders, who drop to 4-6 overall and 2-3 in the
CBC’s Mad River Division, were led by Sierra Cronkleton,
who had three hits and Lauren Bycynski, who added two
hits. Haley Goodrich took the pitching loss, allowing 10
hits and three walks in the game.
Ben Logan coach Ran Smith said he felt his team hit
the ball well, but Urbana was solid in the field.
“That was the difference in the game,” he said. “They
made some great plays and we couldn’t catch anything.”
The Raiders finished with five errors.
Ben Logan travels to Kenton Ridge tonight.
———
BL
000
000
0
U
501
201
x
WP - Pittsenbarger. LP - Goodrich.
-
075
9 10 0
Times photo/Kendrick Jesionowski
Plays at first
Ridgemont shortstop Whitney Arseneau sends a throw to first
base during the Gophers 22-3 win over Waynesfield-Goshen on
Wednesday.
Gophers have pair of
10-run innings in win
RIDGEWAY — Ridgemont
had a pair of 10-run innings
on the way to a 22-3 victory
over Waynesfield-Goshen on
Wednesday.
Cierra James, Haley Miller,
Amber
Pemberton
and
Whitney Arseneau all hit
doubles for the Gophers, who
scored 10 times in both the
third and fourth innings on
the way to the win.
Morgann Mercer was the
winning pitcher.
Ridgemont is at Fairbanks
tonight.
———
WG 200
01
- 37R20(10)(10)x
- 22 13 WP - Mercer. LP - Dyer.
HR - Ojeda. 2B - Crawford 2, James, Miller,
Pemberton, Arseneau.
KHS looking for coaches
Kenton High School is
accepting applications for the
position of head wrestling
coach, head girls soccer coach
and head girls tennis coach.
Interested
candidates
should send a letter of application and resumé with references to:
Mike Mauk, athletic director. Kenton High School, 200
Harding Ave., Kenton, Ohio,
43324 or e-mail maukm@kentoncityschools.org
All calls can be referenced
to Mike Mauk at 419-6731286. The deadline for applications in Friday, April 30.
HARROD
—
Kenton
pounded out 19 hits on the
way to a 22-3 rout of Allen
East in a non-league softball
game on Wednesday afternoon.
The Wildcats scored two
runs in the first inning, five
in the second and three in
the third before putting the
game away with a 12-run
sixth.
Jackie Stalder had two
doubles and a singles and
Morgan Goecke had a double
and two singles to lead the
Wildcats at the plate.
Gwen Downing and Alexis
Altvater had three singles
each, Sara Price chipped in
with a double and a single,
Brook Ellis had a triple and a
single and Hannah Sherman,
Bailey Price and Kasey Shark
all added singles.
Goecke went the distance
in the circle, striking out four
batters and walking two.
“Our defense is getting
better and tonight it was a
total team effort,” Kenton
coach Bill Lawrence said. “It
was a good win for us and
hopefully we can take it into
our game against Marion
Harding.”
The Wildcats (3-6 overall)
host Harding today at 5 p.m.
———
K
253 00(12)
- 22 19 0
AE 000
120
3-WP - Goecke.
3B - Ellis. 2B - Stalder 2, Price, Goecke.
Correction
In the article about the
Kenton tennis match that
appeared in the Tuesday’s
Times, it should have stated
that Brady Collins defeated
Van Wert’s Nathan Knodel at
second singles by a score of
6-1, 6-2.
The wrong information
was submitted and Brady
Hood was credited with the
victory in the article.
201 E. Columbus St.
Kenton, Ohio 43326
419-674-4066
Classified Advertising Rates
4 insertions . . . . . 65¢ per word
(12 word minimum — $7.80)
7 insertions . . . . . 80¢ per word
(12 word minimum — $9.60)
Box # Service Charge . . . . . $2
Card of Thanks . . 15¢ per word
($6 minimum)
In Memoriam. . . . 15¢ per word
($6 minimum)
Classified advertising placed
after noon weekdays or after 9
a.m. Saturday cannot be inserted until the second publishing
day following placement.
1 - Legals
LEGAL NOTICE
Sheriff’s Sale of Real Estate
General Code, Sec. 11681
Revised Code, Sec. 2329.26
The State of Ohio, Hardin County
Deutsche Bank National Trust
Company,
as Trustee for the Registered Holders
of the Soundview Home Loan Trust
2006-NLC1, Asset-Backed Certificates,
Series 2006-NLC1Plaintiff
vs.
Timothy R. Scott, et al., Defendant
Case No. 20101018 CVE
In pursuance of an Order of Sale in the
above entitled Action, I will offer for sale at
public auction, at the Main floor of
courthouse in Kenton, in the above named
County, on Tuesday, the 26th day of April,
2011, at 10 o’clock A.M., the following
described real estate, situate in the County
of Hardin and State of Ohio and in the
Township of Cessna to wit.
LEGAL DESCRIPTION
Situated in the County of Hardin, in the
State of Ohio and in the Township of
Cessna and bounded and described as
follows:
Being a part of the Southeast Quarter of
the Southeast Quarter of Section Number
Eight (8) in Township Number Four (4)
South, Range Number Ten (10) East and
being all that part of the said Southeast
Quarter that lies South of the Lima Pike
(now State Route 309), containing Five (5)
acres of land more or less.
Excepting therefrom the following
described real estate, to-wit:
Situated in the County of Hardin, in the
State of Ohio and in the Township of
Cessna and hounded and described as
follows:
A part of the Southeast Quarter (1/4) of
the Southeast Quarter (1/4) of Section
Eight (8). T. 4S, R. 9E, Cessna Township,
Hardin County. State of Ohio and further
described as follows:
Beginning at a point marked by a hinge
nail set in pavement on the South line of
said Southeast Quarter (1/4) a distance of
1,042.02 feet West of the stone at the
Southeast Quarter (1/4) of said Southeast
Quarter (1/4);
1. Thence continuing on the South line a
distance of 277.00 feet to a point marked
by a hinge nail set in pavement;
2. Thence North 00 26’ East a distance
of 456.61 feet to the centerline of State
Route 309 (Harding Highway);
3. Thence South 66° 01’ East on the
centerline of State Route 309 a distance of
374.66 feet to a point;
4. Thence South 12° 44’ West to the
place of beginning, containing 2.767 acres
of land, more or less, but subject to all
legal highways.
Containing in the parcel conveyed by
this instrument and being that which
remains after the foregoing exception, said
parcel containing 2.233 acres, more or
less.
Parcel No. 08-080020.0000 and 08080021.0000
Prior Deed Reference: OR Volume 462,
Page 2134
More commonly known as: 7719 County
Road 90, Alger, OH 45812
Said Premises Located at 7719 County
Road 90, Alger, OH 45812
Said Premises Appraised at $45,000.00
and cannot be sold for less than two-thirds
of that amount.
TERMS OF SALE 10% cash, day of
sale. Full purchase price shall be paid
within 30 days from the date of sale. The
balance shall bear interest at the legal rate
until paid.
Note: Appraisal does not include an
interior inspection or viewing by appraisers
when sale is confirmed by the Hardin
County Common Pleas Court.
Keith A. Everhart, Sheriff
Hardin County, Ohio
Laurito & Laurito, Attorney
March 24, 31, April 7, 14, 21
Page 8 – KENTON TIMES
Thursday, April 14, 2011
1 - Legals
1 - Legals
LEGAL NOTICE
Sheriff’s Sale of Real Estate
General Code, Sec. 11681
Revised Code, Sec. 2329.26
The State of Ohio, Hardin County
CitiMortgage, Inc. successor by merger
to ABN AMRO Mortgage Group, Inc.,
Plaintiff
vs.
Philipp Clark, et al., Defendant
Case No 20101070 CVE
In pursuance of an Order of Sale in the
above entitled Action, I will offer for sale at
public auction, at the Main floor of
courthouse in Kenton, in the above named
County, on Tuesday, the 19th day of April,
2011, at 10 o’clock A.M., the following
described real estate, situate in the County
of Hardin and State of Ohio and in the
Township of Pleasant to wit.
LEGAL DESCRIPTION
Situated in the County of Hardin in the
State of Ohio and in the City of Kenton.
And being Inlot Number Eleven (11) in
James Ewing’s Addition to the said City as
the same is known and designated on the
recorded Plat of said Addition. Said
premises known as number 625 West
Lima Sheet, save and excepting forty feet
(40’) off the entire South end of Inlot
Number Eleven (11), Property Address:
625 West Lima Street, Kenton, OH 43326
Parcel No: 36-190022.0000
Prior Deed Reference: OR Vol. 456,
Page 2120
Said Premises Located at 625 West
Lima Street, Kenton
Said Premises Appraised at $45,000.00
and cannot be sold for less than two-thirds
of that amount.
TERMS OF SALE 10% cash, day of
sale. Full purchase price shall be paid
within 30 days from the date of sale. The
balance shall bear interest at the legal rate
until paid.
Note: Appraisal does not include an
interior inspection or viewing by appraisers
when sale is confirmed by the Hardin
County Common Pleas Court.
Keith A. Everhart, Sheriff
Hardin County, Ohio
Lerner, Sampson & Rothfuss, Attorney
March 17, 24, 31, April 7, 14
LEGAL NOTICE
Sheriff’s Sale of Real Estate
General Code, Sec. 11681
Revised Code, Sec. 2329.26
The State of Ohio, Hardin County
U.S. Bank, N.A., Plaintiff
vs.
Christopher L. Blue, et al., Defendant
Case No. 20101278 CVE
In pursuance of an Order of Sale in the
above entitled Action, I will offer for sale
at public auction, at the Main floor of
courthouse in Kenton, in the above
named County, on Tuesday, the 19th day
of April, 2011, at 10 o’clock A.M., the
following described real estate, situate in
the County of Hardin and State of Ohio
and in the Township of Pleasant to wit.
LEGAL DESCRIPTION
Situated in the County of Hardin, State
of Ohio and in the City of Kenton, and
bounded and described as follows:
Tract No. 1: And being parts of Lot
Number Two (2) in Henry Heisel’s
Addition to the City of Kenton, Ohio,
described as follows: beginning at the
Southeast corner of said Lot Number Two
(2), and running North along the East line
thereof Ninety feet (90’); thence West
parallel with the South line of said Lot
Forty-three and one-half feet (43.5’);
thence South parallel with the East line of
said Lot Number Two (2) Ninety feet (90’)
to the South line of said Lot Number Two
(2); thence East on the South line of said
Lot Forty three and one half feet (43.5) to
the beginning; with the right to use as a
driveway a strip of said Lot, Ten feet (10’)
wide and extending East and West from
High Street to Heisel Street, immediately
off and adjacent to the above described
premises, and off the lot West of the
same, said driveway to be an open way
for the use of all owners of lots and parts
of said Lots Number One (1) and Number
Two (2) in said addition.
Tract No. 2: Being a part of Inlot
Number Two (2) in Henry Heisel’s
Addition to Kenton, Ohio, commencing at
a point in the West line of Heisel Street,
thirty feet (30’) South from the South line
of an East and West alley; thence South
in the West line of Heisel Street, Forty
two and six inches (42.6); thence West
and parallel with the South line of said
alley Forty-three feet (43’); thence North
parallel with the West line of Heisel Street
Forty two feet and six inches (42.6’);
thence East and parallel with the South
line of said alley Forty three feet (43’) to
the place of beginning.
Property Address: 411 East Columbus
Street Kenton, Ohio 43326
Prior Deed Reference: OR Volume 483
Page 1563
Parcel Number: 36-580014.0000 and
36.580018.0000
Said Premises Located at 411 E
Columbus St, Kenton
Said Premises Appraised at $55,000.00
and cannot be sold for less than twothirds of that amount.
TERMS OF SALE 10% cash, day of
sale. Full purchase price shall be paid
within 30 days from the date of sale. The
balance shall bear interest at the legal
rate until paid.
Note: Appraisal does not include an
interior inspection or viewing by
appraisers when sale is confirmed by the
Hardin County Common Pleas Court.
Keith A. Everhart, Sheriff
Hardin County, Ohio
Laurito & Laurito, Attorney
March 17, 24, 31, April 7, 14
LEGAL NOTICE
Sheriff’s Sale of Real Estate
General Code, Sec. 11681
Revised Code, Sec. 2329.26
The State of Ohio, Hardin County
The Huntington National Bank, Plaintiff
vs.
Jeffery P. Connolly, et al., Defendant
Case No 20101222 CVE
In pursuance of an Order of Sale in the
above entitled Action, I will offer for sale at
public auction, at the Main floor of
courthouse in Kenton, in the above named
County, on Tuesday, the 17th day of May,
2011, at 10 o’clock A.M., the following
described real estate, situate in the County
of Hardin and State of Ohio and in the
Township of Hale to wit.
LEGAL DESCRIPTION
The following described real estate
situated in the State of Ohio, County of
Hardin, Township of Hale, Being part of
Virginia Military Survey 9860-10042 and
more particularly described as follows:
BEGINNING AT A CAP AND NAIL SET
IN THE CENTERLINE OF COUNTY
HIGHWAY 240 AT THE NORTHEAST
CORNER OF HENRY DICK’S 33.25 ACRE
TRACT AS DESCRIBED IN D.B. VOL. 103
PAGE 140.
THENCE WITH SAID CENTERLINE N.
82º 30’ 00” E. 330.87 FEET TO A CAP
AND NAIL SET.
THENCE S. 9° 09’ 54” E. 1164.69 FEET
TO A 5/8 INCH IRON BAR SET.
THENCE S. 55° 06’ 16” W. 56.37 FEET
TO A 5/8 INCH IRON BAR SET.
THENCE N. 89° 10’ 17” W. 430.89 FEET
TO A 5/8 INCH IRON BAR SET.
THENCE N. 74° 45’ 58” W. 388.39 FEET
TO A 5/8 INCH IRON BAR SET.
THENCE S. 79° 57’ 29” W. 280.39 FEET
TO A 5/8 INCH IRON BAR SET.
THENCE N. 83° 39’ 30” W. 160.33 FEET
TO A 5/8 INCH IRON BAR SET.
THENCE 5. 77° 04’ 29” W. 508.97 FEET
TO A 5/8 INCH IRON BAR SET.
THENCE 5. 47° 44’ 26” W. 270.92 FEET
TO A 5/8 INCH IRON BAR SET IN THE
EAST LINE OF HAROLD HICKMAN’S
46.64 ACRE TRACT AS DESCRIBED IN
D.B. VOL. 167 PAGE 466.
THENCE WITH SAID HICKMAN’S EAST
LINE N. 6° 35’ 07” W, 418.30 FEET TO A
POINT
IN
THE
CENTER
OF
RUSHCREEK, PASSING A 5/8 INCH
IRON BAR SET AT 368.30 FEET.
THENCE WITH THE CENTER OF
RUSHCREEK AND THE SOUTH LINE OF
SAID DICK’S 33.25 ACRE TRACT, THE
FOLLOWING 10 COURSES:
1. N 83° 07’ 29” E. 64.20 FEET TO A
POINT,
2. N. 31° 42’ 17” E. 164.68 FEET TO A
POINT,
3. N. 76° 57’ 44” E. 241.38 FEET TO A
POINT,
4. S 81° 43’ 48” E. 260.71 FEET TO A
POINT,
5. N. 73° 50’ 26” E. 202.65 FEET TO A
POINT,
6. S. 53° 51’ 51” E. 225.96 FEET TO A
POINT,
7. N 88° 48’ 38” E. 173.54 FEET TO A
POINT,
8. S. 43° 36’ 15” E. 241.35 FEET TO A
POINT,
9. S. 76° 07’ 58” E. 39.86 FEET TO A
POINT,
1 0. N. 440 05’ 02” E. 311.22 FEET TO A
POINT,
THENCE WITH SAID DICK’S EAST LINE
N. 6° 50’ 54” W. 817.40 FEET TO THE
PLACE OF BEGINNING.
CONTAINING 20.116 ACRES MORE OR
LESS.
THE ABOVE DESCRIBED 20.116 ACRE
TRACT BEING N THE NORTHWEST
CORNER OF WAYNE DETLING’S 122
ACRE AS DESCRIBED N D.S. VOL. 143
PAGE 370.
BEARINGS ARE BASED ON AN
ASSUMING BEARING (N. 82° 30’ 00” E.)
FOR THE CENTERLINE OF CR 240 IN
THIS FIELD SURVEY BY LESLIE H.
GEESLIN, REG. SURVEYOR 5248 ON
NOVEMBER 7, 1994.
PARCEL NUMBER: 16-100024.0000
PRIOR DEED REFERENCE: VOLUME
164, PAGE 109-111
PROPERTY ADDRESS: 20680 COUNTY
ROAD 240, MOUNT VICTORY, OH 43340
Said Premises Located at 20680 County
Road 240, Mt Victory
Said Premises Appraised at $180,000.00
and cannot be sold for less than two-thirds
of that amount.
TERMS OF SALE 10% cash, day of
sale. Full purchase price shall be paid
within 30 days from the date of sale. The
balance shall bear interest at the legal rate
until paid.
Note: Appraisal does not include an
interior inspection or viewing by appraisers
when sale is confirmed by the Hardin
County Common Pleas Court.
Keith A. Everhart, Sheriff
Felty & Lembright, Attorney
April 14, 21, 28, May 5, 12
LEGAL NOTICE
Sheriff’s Sale of Real Estate
General Code, Sec. 11681
Revised Code, Sec. 2329.26
The State of Ohio, Hardin County
Citifinancial, Inc., Plaintiff
vs.
Janet S. Joseph, et al., Defendant
Case No 20101230 CVE
In pursuance of an Order of Sale in the
above entitled Action, I will offer for sale
at public auction, at the Main floor of
courthouse in Kenton, in the above
named County, on Tuesday, the 19th day
of April, 2011, at 10 o’clock A.M., the
following described real estate, situate in
the County of Hardin and State of Ohio
and in the Township of McDonald to wit.
LEGAL DESCRIPTION
Situated in the County of Hardin in the
State of Ohio and in the Township of
McDonald:
Being a part of Virginia Military Survey
Nos. 10221. 10310. 10360 and being
more particularly described as follows:
Commencing for reference at the
intersection of the centerline of the State
Route 67 with the centerline of the Scioto
River, this point being on the centerline of
an existing bridge across said river;
thence South 81 degrees 15’ East along
the centerline of State Route 67, for a
distance of Four Hundred Fifty Seven and
Fifty Eight Hundredths feet (457.58’) to a
P.K. nail (set), this point being the Place
of Beginning for the parcel to be
conveyed by this instrument: thence
North 9 degrees 45’ East for a distance of
Five Hundred Sixty Three and Sixty Four
Hundredths feet (563.64’) to a 5/8’ iron
rod set, passing 5/8’ iron rods set at
Seventy-Four and Six Tenths feet
(74.60”) and at Two Hundred Sixty Three
and Six Tenths feet (26360’): thence
South 81 degrees 15” East for a distance
of Two Hundred Thirty One and Eighty
Five hundredths feet (231.85’) to a 5/8”
iron rod set; thence South 9 degrees 45’
West for a distance of Five Hundred Sixty
Three and Sixty Four Hundredths feet
(563.64’) to a P.K. nail set on the
centerline of State Route 67, passing 5/8”
iron rods at One Hundred feet (100.00)
and Five Hundred Nine and Twenty Nine
hundredths feet (509.29’); thence North
81 degrees 1 5’ West along the centerline
of State Route 67, for a distance of Two
Hundred Thirty One and Eighty Five
Hundredths feet (23 1 .85’) to the Place of
Beginning containing in all Three (3.00)
acres of land more or less, but subject to
all easements and right-of-way of record.
Parcel Number(s): 45-280042
Property Address: 2855 State Route 67,
Belle Center, OH 43310
Deed Reference Number: dated August
6, 1997. filed August 15, 1997, recorded
in Official Records Volume 29, Page 20,
Recorder’s Office, Hardin County. Ohio
Said Premises Located at 2855 State
Route 67, Belle Center
Said Premises Appraised at $75,000.00
and cannot be sold for less than twothirds of that amount.
TERMS OF SALE 10% cash, day of
sale. Full purchase price shall be paid
within 30 days from the date of sale. The
balance shall bear interest at the legal
rate until paid.
Note: Appraisal does not include an
interior inspection or viewing by
appraisers when sale is confirmed by the
Hardin County Common Pleas Court.
Keith A. Everhart, Sheriff
Hardin County, Ohio
Manley Deas Kochalski, LLC, Attorney
March 17, 24, 31, April 7, 14
1 - Legals
1 - Legals
1 - Legals
1 - Legals
LEGAL NOTICE
Sheriff’s Sale of Real Estate
General Code, Sec. 11681
Revised Code, Sec. 2329.26
The State of Ohio, Hardin County
The Huntington National Bank, Plaintiff
vs.
Robert L. Bays, et al., Defendant
Case No 20101206 CVE
In pursuance of an Order of Sale in the
above entitled Action, I will offer for sale at
public auction, at the Main floor of
courthouse in Kenton, in the above named
County, on Tuesday, the 19th day of April,
2011, at 10 o’clock A.M., the following
described real estate, situate in the County
of Hardin and State of Ohio and in the
Township of Pleasant to wit.
LEGAL DESCRIPTION
Situated in the State of Ohio, County of
Hardin and City of Kenton:
Being known as Inlot Number Six (6) in
Conrad Shows Addition to the City of
Kenton, Ohio.
EXCEPTING THEREFROM five feet (5’)
off the North end of the above described
as described in Deed from Mary W. Burger
and Frank Burger to Richard V. Clucker
and Allen M. Clucker, as recorded in
Volume 174, Page 148, Hardin County
Deed Records.
Property Address: 546 North Market
Street, Kenton, OH 43326
Parcel Number 36-380049.0000
Prior Deed Reference: Deed from
Lawrence D. Cole and Michelle Cole,
husband and wife, to Robert L. Bays, filed
May 1,2007, in OR Book 469, Page 163 of
Hardin County Records
Said Premises Located at 546 N Market
St, Kenton
Said Premises Appraised at $42,000.00
and cannot be sold for less than two-thirds
of that amount.
TERMS OF SALE 10% cash, day of
sale. Full purchase price shall be paid
within 30 days from the date of sale. The
balance shall bear interest at the legal rate
until paid.
Note: Appraisal does not include an
interior inspection or viewing by appraisers
when sale is confirmed by the Hardin
County Common Pleas Court.
Keith A. Everhart, Sheriff
Hardin County, Ohio
Weltman, Weinberg & Reis, Attorney
March 17, 24, 31, April 7, 14
LEGAL NOTICE
Sheriff’s Sale of Real Estate
General Code, Sec. 11681
Revised Code, Sec. 2329.26
The State of Ohio, Hardin County
PHH Mortgage Corporation fka Cendent
Mortgage Corporation, Plaintiff
vs.
Ronald D. Tarr, et al., Defendant
Case No 20101225 CVE
In pursuance of an Order of Sale in the
above entitled Action, I will offer for sale at
public auction, at the Main floor of
courthouse in Kenton, in the above named
County, on Tuesday, the 26th day of April,
2011, at 10 o’clock A.M., the following
described real estate, situate in the County
of Hardin and State of Ohio and in the
Township of Liberty to wit.
LEGAL DESCRIPTION
Situated in the Village of Ada, Hardin
County, Ohio:
Inlots Twenty-one (21) and Twenty-two
(22) in W.A. Edwards Addition to the
Village of Ada, Hardin County, Ohio.
Property Address: 316 East Montford
Avenue, Ada, OH 45810
Parcel No: 25-160095.0000, 25160096.0000, 25-160118.0000 and
25-160119.0000
Prior Deed Reference: OR Volume 247
Page 354
Said Premises Located at 316 East
Montford Ave, Ada
Said Premises Appraised at $75,000.00
and cannot be sold for less than two-thirds
of that amount.
TERMS OF SALE 10% cash, day of
sale. Full purchase price shall be paid
within 30 days from the date of sale. The
balance shall bear interest at the legal rate
until paid.
Note: Appraisal does not include an
interior inspection or viewing by appraisers
when sale is confirmed by the Hardin
County Common Pleas Court.
Keith A. Everhart, Sheriff
Hardin County, Ohio
Lerner, Sampson & Rothfuss, Attorney
March 24, 31, April 7, 14, 21
LEGAL NOTICE
Sheriff’s Sale of Real Estate
General Code, Sec. 11681
Revised Code, Sec. 2329.26
The State of Ohio, Hardin County
Deutsche Bank National Trust
Company,
as Trustee for the Certificate holders of
Soundview Home Loan Trust 2006OPT2, Asset Backed Certificates,
Series 2006-OPT2, Plaintiff
vs.
Brian Nichols et al., Defendant
Case No 20071101 CVE
In pursuance of an Order of Sale in the
above entitled Action, I will offer for sale at
public auction, at the Main floor of
courthouse in Kenton, in the above named
County, on Tuesday, the 17th day of May,
2011, at 10 o'clock A.M., the following
described real estate, situate in the County
of Hardin and State of Ohio and in the
Township of Cessna to wit.
LEGAL DESCRIPTION
Situated in the Township of Cessna,
County of Hardin and State of Ohio,
bounded and described as follows:
Being a parcel of land situated in the
northwest 1/4 of Section 15, Township 4
South, Range 10 East, Cessna Township,
Hardin County, Ohio and being part of the
Francis Am land described in V. 148, P.
233 of the Hardin County Deed Records
more particularly described as follows:
Commencing for reference at a nail and
shiner found at the northwest corner of
Section 15, this point being on the
centerline of Township Road 105; thence
S 00° 00’ 00 W, along the centerline of
Twp. Rd. 105 and the west line of Section
15 for 1316.28 feet to a railroad spike
found; thence N 89° 35’ 10” E. for 300.00
feet to an iron pin found marking the point
of beginning for the parcel to be described;
1. Thence from this point of beginning, N
89° 35’ 10” E, for 300.0 feet to a 1/2 iron
pin set
2. Thence S 00° 00’ 00”, W, for 435.60
feet to a 1/2 iron pin set
3. Thence S 89° 35’ 00” W, for 300.00
feet to an iron pin found
4. Thence N 00° 00’ 00” E, for 435.60
feet to the point of beginning.
Containing in all 3.00 acres at land,
subject however to all legal easements
and rights of way.
NOTE: This plat and description
prepared from an actual field survey all
bearings refer to the centerline of Twp. Rd.
105 and the west line of Section 15 as
being S 00° 00’ 00” W.
PARCEL TWO
Situated in the Township of Cessna,
County of Hardin, State of Ohio, bounded
and described as follows:
Being a parcel of land situated in,
Cessna Township, Hardin County, Ohio in
the Northwest Quarter of Section 15,
Township 4 South, Range 10 East and
being more particularly described as
follows:
Commencing for reference at the
Northwest corner of Section 15, this point
being the intersection of the centerline of
Township Road 90 with Township Road
105
Thence South 00° 00’ 00” East, along
the centerline of Township Road 105 and
the West line of Section 15 for a distance
of 1316.26 feet to a R.R. spike set marking
the point of beginning for the parcel to be
described
1. Thence North 89° 35’ 00” East for
300.00 feet to an iron pin set, passing on
iron pin set at 20.00 feet;
2. Thence South 00° 00’ 00” East for
435.60 feet to an iron pin set;
3. Thence South 89° 35’ 10” West for
300.00 feet to a R.R. spike set on the
centerline of Township Road 105 and the
west line of Section 15, passing an iron pin
set at 280.00 feet;
4. Thence North 0° 00’ 00” West along
said centerline and West line for 435.60
feet to the point of beginning.
Containing in all 3.00 acres of land.
Parcel Number: 07-150028 & 07-150038
Parcel No.: 7-150028.0000 and 7150038.0000 Address known as 8256 TR
105, Kenton
Said Premises Located at 8256 TR 105,
Kenton
Said Premises Appraised at
$86,000.00 and cannot be sold for less
than two-thirds of that amount.
TERMS OF SALE 10% cash, day of
sale. Full purchase price shall be paid
within 30 days from the date of sale. The
balance shall bear interest at the legal rate
until paid.
Note: Appraisal does not include an
interior inspection or viewing by appraisers
when sale is confirmed by the Hardin
County Common Pleas Court.
Keith A. Everhart, Sheriff
Hardin County, Ohio
Lerner, Sampson & Rothfuss, Attorney
April 14, 21, 28, May 5, 12
LEGAL NOTICE
Sheriff’s Sale of Real Estate
General Code, Sec. 11681
Revised Code, Sec. 2329.26
The State of Ohio, Hardin County
The Home Savings and Loan Company
of Kenton, Ohio, Plaintiff
vs.
John T Ramsey et al, Defendant
Case No 20111004 CVE
In pursuance of an Order of Sale in the
above entitled Action, I will offer for sale at
public auction, at the Main floor of
courthouse in Kenton, in the above named
County, on Tuesday, the 17th day of May,
2011, at 10 o’clock A.M., the following
described real estate, situate in the County
of Hardin and State of Ohio and in the
Township of Blanchard to wit.
LEGAL DESCRIPTION
Situated in the Village of Dunkirk, County
of Hardin and State of Ohio:
Lot Numbered Ninety-six (96) in Smith
and Alexander’s Addition to the Village of
Dunkirk, Ohio.
Permanent Parcel No. 03-020009.0000
Said Premises Located at 261 E
Patterson St, Dunkirk
Said Premises Appraised at $15,000.00
and cannot be sold for less than two-thirds
of that amount.
TERMS OF SALE 10% cash, day of
sale. Full purchase price shall be paid
within 30 days from the date of sale. The
balance shall bear interest at the legal rate
until paid.
Note: Appraisal does not include an
interior inspection or viewing by appraisers
when sale is confirmed by the Hardin
County Common Pleas Court.
Keith A. Everhart, Sheriff
Hardin County, Ohio
Paul N. McKinley, Attorney
April 14, 21, 28, May 5, 12
LEGAL NOTICE
Sheriff’s Sale of Real Estate
General Code, Sec. 11681
Revised Code, Sec. 2329.26
The State of Ohio, Hardin County
The Bank of New York Mellon FKA The
Bank of New York, as Trustee for the
Certificate holders CWABS, Inc,.AssetBacked Certificates, Series 2006-13,
Plaintiff
vs.
Marcia R Richards, Defendant
Case No 20111005 CVE
In pursuance of an Order of Sale in the
above entitled Action, I will offer for sale at
public auction, at the Main floor of
courthouse in Kenton, in the above named
County, on Tuesday, the 17th day of May,
2011, at 10 o’clock A.M., the following
described real estate, situate in the County
of Hardin and State of Ohio and in the
Township of Hale to wit.
LEGAL DESCRIPTION
Situated in the Village of Mt. Victory,
County of Hardin, State of Ohio, is
described as follows:
Situated in the Village of Mt. Victory,
County of Hardin and State of Ohio, and
being in inlot Number thirty three (33) in
the original plat of said village.
Titleholders: Marcia R Richards and
Timothy A Richards
Properly Address: 130 North Main
Street, Mount Victory, OH 43340
Parcel number: 18240038000
Prior Deed Reference: OR Volume 467,
Page 1288 Recorded: 03/05/2007
Said Premises Located at 130 N Main
St, Mt Victory
Said Premises Appraised at $32,000.00
and cannot be sold for less than two-thirds
of that amount.
TERMS OF SALE 10% cash, day of
sale. Full purchase price shall be paid
within 30 days from the date of sale. The
balance shall bear interest at the legal rate
until paid.
Note: Appraisal does not include an
interior inspection or viewing by appraisers
when sale is confirmed by the Hardin
County Common Pleas Court.
Keith A. Everhart, Sheriff
Hardin County, Ohio
Reisenfeld & Associates, Attorney
April 14, 21, 28, May 5, 12
LEGAL NOTICE
Sheriff’s Sale of Real Estate
General Code, Sec. 11681
Revised Code, Sec. 2329.26
The State of Ohio, Hardin County
The Huntington National Bank,
Successor by merger to Sky Bank,
Plaintiff
vs.
Dennis W Titus II et al., Defendant
Case No 20101269 CVE
In pursuance of an Order of Sale in the
above entitled Action, I will offer for sale at
public auction, at the Main floor of
courthouse in Kenton, in the above named
County, on Tuesday, the 26th day of April,
2011, at 10 o’clock A.M., the following
described real estate, situate in the County
of Hardin and State of Ohio and in the
Township of Pleasant to wit.
LEGAL DESCRIPTION
Situated in the City of Kenton, County of
Hardin and State of Ohio:
Known as part of Outlet No. One (1) in John
Goodin’s Addition to the town, now City of
Kenton, Ohio: beginning in the East line of
said Outlot and Southeast corner of a part
of said Outlot heretofore conveyed by
Harvey Buchminster and wife to Luther M.
Strong by deed dated November 6, 1880;
thence with the East line of said Outlot
South 53 feet; thence West and parallel
with the South line of said Outlet 98 feet to
Market Street thence with the line of Market
Street North 55 feet to the Southwest
corner of a part of said Outlet conveyed to
Luther M. Strong; thence East on his South
line 98 feet to the place of beginning.
Premises commonly known as: 412 N.
Market Street, Kenton, Ohio 43326
Permanent Parcel No: 36-37022.0000
Title Holder: Dennis W. Titus, II and
Karen Titus
Prior Deed Reference; OR Volume 462,
Page 1290
Said Premises Located at 412 North
Market Street, Kenton
Said Premises Appraised at
$40,000.00 and cannot be sold for less than
two-thirds of that amount.
TERMS OF SALE 10% cash, day of sale.
Full purchase price shall be paid within 30
days from the date of sale. The balance
shall bear interest at the legal rate until
paid.
Note: Appraisal does not include an
interior inspection or viewing by appraisers
when sale is confirmed by the Hardin
County Common Pleas Court.
Keith A. Everhart, Sheriff
Hardin County, Ohio
Carlisle, McNellie, Rini, Kramer & Ulrich,
Attorney
March 24, 31, April 7, 14, 21
KENTON TIMES • (419) 674-4066
LEGAL NOTICE
Sheriff’s Sale of Real Estate
General Code, Sec. 11681
Revised Code, Sec. 2329.26
The State of Ohio, Hardin County
U.S. Bank National Association, as
Trustee, on behalf of the Holders of the
Home Equity Asset Trust 2005-2 Home
Equity
Pass-Through Certificates, Plaintiff
vs.
Jessica A. Johnson et al. ,Defendant
Case No 20111010 CVE
In pursuance of an Order of Sale in the
above entitled Action, I will offer for sale at
public auction, at the Main floor of
courthouse in Kenton, in the above named
County, on Tuesday, the 26th day of April,
2011, at 10 o’clock A.M., the following
described real estate, situate in the County
of Hardin and State of Ohio and in the
Township of Jackson to wit.
LEGAL DESCRIPTION
Situated in the Village of Forest, County
of Hardin and State of Ohio:
Being a parcel of land situated in part of
Block 34 of the Original Plat, in the Village
of Forest, Hardin County, Ohio and further
described as follows:
Commencing at a set iron rod marking the
southwest corner of Lot I of said Block 34
and being the Point of Beginning;
Thence on an assumed bearing of N 01
degrees, 01’ 29” East along the west line of
said Lot 1 easterly right-of-way line of
Louisa Street a distance of 107.51 feet to a
set iron rod;
Thence South 89 degrees 58’ 32” East a
distance of 150.00 feet to a set iron rod on
the east line of Lot 2 of said Block 34;
Thence South 01 degrees 01” 29” West
along the east line of said Lot 2 a distance
of 107.51 feet to a set iron rod marking the
southeast corner of said Lot 2;
Thence North 89 degrees 58’ 32” West
along the south line of said Lots I and 2 and
northerly line of a 20 foot alley a distance of
150.00 feet to the Point of Beginning.
Containing in all 0.370 acres/16,124 sq
feet of land, more or less, being subject to
all legal highways and easement of record.
Bearings are assumed and are for
angular measurements only. All set iron
rods are 5/8” diameter with personalized
plastic caps.
This legal description is based upon a
survey performed by Victor B. Koehler, P.S.
#7457, in November 1999.
Parcel Number(s): 231100940000 and
231100950000
Property Address: 108 Louisa Street,
Forest, OH 45843
Deed Reference Number: Dated
December 31, 2004, filed January 13, 2005,
recorded in Official Records Volume 445,
Page 2230, Recorder’s Office, Hardin
County, Ohio
Case Number: CV 20111010
Ref # 11-000253/DAW
Said Premises Located at 108 Louisa St,
Forest
Said Premises Appraised at $30,000.00
and cannot be sold for less than two-thirds
of that amount.
TERMS OF SALE 10% cash, day of sale.
Full purchase price shall be paid within 30
days from the date of sale. The balance
shall bear interest at the legal rate until
paid.
Note: Appraisal does not include an
interior inspection or viewing by appraisers
when sale is confirmed by the Hardin
County Common Pleas Court.
Keith A. Everhart, Sheriff
Hardin County, Ohio
Manley, Deas, Kochalski, LLC, Attorney
March 24, 31, April 7, 14, 21
LEGAL NOTICE
Sheriff’s Sale of Real Estate
General Code, Sec. 11681
Revised Code, Sec. 2329.26
The State of Ohio, Hardin County
U.S. Bank, National Association, N.D.,
Plaintiff
vs.
Mark A. Albert, et al., Defendant
Case No 20101180 CVE
In pursuance of an Order of Sale in the
above entitled Action, I will offer for sale at
public auction, at the Main floor of
courthouse in Kenton, in the above named
County, on Tuesday, the 19th day of April,
2011, at 10 o’clock A.M., the following
described real estate, situate in the County
of Hardin and State of Ohio and in the
Township of Buck to wit.
LEGAL DESCRIPTION
Situated in the County of Hardin, State of
Ohio and the City of Kenton and bounded
and described as follows:
Being Inlot Number Sixty One (61) in
Thomas Espy’s Second Addition to said
City of Kenton, Ohio. Save and except
thirty five feet (35’) in width off of the east
end of said lot.
Property Address: 621 Fontaine Street
Kenton, Ohio 43326
Prior Deed Reference: OR Volume 167
Page 368 and OR Volume Page 36
Parcel Number: 06-060036.000
Said Premises Located at 621 Fontaine
St, Kenton
Said Premises Appraised at $25,000.00
and cannot be sold for less than two-thirds
of that amount.
TERMS OF SALE 10% cash, day of
sale. Full purchase price shall be paid
within 30 days from the date of sale. The
balance shall bear interest at the legal rate
until paid.
Note: Appraisal does not include an
interior inspection or viewing by appraisers
when sale is confirmed by the Hardin
County Common Pleas Court.
Keith A. Everhart, Sheriff
Hardin County, Ohio
Laurito & Laurito, Attorney
March 17, 24, 31, April 7, 14
LEGAL NOTICE
Sheriff’s Sale of Real Estate
General Code, Sec. 11681
Revised Code, Sec. 2329.26
The State of Ohio, Hardin County
The Huntington National Bank, Plaintiff
vs.
Mike A. Sealscott, et al., Defendant
Case No 20101157 CVE
In pursuance of an Order of Sale in the
above entitled Action, I will offer for sale at
public auction, at the Main floor of
courthouse in Kenton, in the above named
County, on Tuesday, the 19th day of April,
2011, at 10 o’clock A.M., the following
described real estate, situate in the County
of Hardin and State of Ohio and in the
Township of Pleasant to wit.
LEGAL DESCRIPTION
Situated in the City of Kenton, County of
Hardin. and State of Ohio:
TRACT I: Inlot 17 in J. C. Williams
Addition to the City of Kenton.
TRACT II: Two and one half feet (2 1/2)
of the extreme North side and the entire
length of Inlot 16 in J. C. Williams Addition
to the City of Kenton.
Tract II more particularly described as
follows:
Beginning at the Northwest corner of Lot
16 as it is known and designated in Plat
Book E, Page 40 of Hardin County, Ohio:
thence East along the North line of said
Lot 16, 128.0 feet to the Northeast corner
of said lot: thence South along the East
line of said lot, 2.50 feet to a point:
thence West and parallel to the North lot
line, 128.0 feet to a point on the West lot
line; thence North along the West lot line,
2.50 feet to the place of beginning. This
description prepared by Richard A.
Hemphill, Attorney at Law, 230 Madriver,
Bellefontaine, Ohio 433 11, on January 1
5, 1993 from existing records.
Property Address: 308 Clinton Street,
Kenton, OH 43326
PPN: 36-47-0017-0000
Prior Deed Reference: Deed from Phillip
Weaver, married (to Deborah Weaver who
signs to release all dower interest), to Mike
A. Sealscott, filed May 22. 2007. in Official
Record Book 469, Page 1424 of Hardin
County Records.
Said Premises Located at 308 Clinton
St, Kenton
Said Premises Appraised at $20,000.00
and cannot be sold for less than two-thirds
of that amount.
TERMS OF SALE 10% cash, day of
sale. Full purchase price shall be paid
within 30 days from the date of sale. The
balance shall bear interest at the legal rate
until paid.
Note: Appraisal does not include an
interior inspection or viewing by appraisers
when sale is confirmed by the Hardin
County Common Pleas Court.
Keith A. Everhart, Sheriff
Hardin County, Ohio
Weltman, Weinberg & Reis, Attorney
March 17, 24, 31, April 7, 14
LEGAL NOTICE
Sheriff’s Sale of Real Estate
General Code, Sec. 11681
Revised Code, Sec. 2329.26
The State of Ohio, Hardin County
JP Morgan Chase Bank, National
Association, Plaintiff
vs.
Anthony L. Marvin et al, Defendant
Case No 20111039 CVE
In pursuance of an Order of Sale in the
above entitled Action, I will offer for sale at
public auction, at the Main floor of
courthouse in Kenton, in the above named
County, on Tuesday, the 17th day of May,
2011, at 10 o’clock A.M., the following
described real estate, situate in the County
of Hardin and State of Ohio and in the
Township of Pleasant to wit.
LEGAL DESCRIPTION
Situated in the County of Hardin in the
State of Ohio and in the City of Kenton:
Being Inlot #17 in W.C. Ewings Addition
to said City of Kenton, Ohio, as the same
is shown and designated on the recorded
plat of said Addition.
Parcel Number(s): 361500560000
Property Address: 225 Harrison Street,
Kenton, OH 43326
Deed Reference Number: dated October
29, 1993, filed October 29, 1993, recorded
in Volume 139, Page 285, Recorder’s
Office, Hardin County, Ohio
Said Premises Located at 225 Harrison
St, Kenton
Said Premises Appraised at $28,000.00
and cannot be sold for less than two-thirds
of that amount.
TERMS OF SALE 10% cash, day of
sale. Full purchase price shall be paid
within 30 days from the date of sale. The
balance shall bear interest at the legal rate
until paid.
Note: Appraisal does not include an
interior inspection or viewing by appraisers
when sale is confirmed by the Hardin
County Common Pleas Court.
Keith A. Everhart, Sheriff
Hardin County, Ohio
Manley, Deas, Kochalski, Attorney
April 14, 21, 28, May 5, 12
LEGAL NOTICE
Sheriff’s Sale of Real Estate
General Code, Sec. 11681
Revised Code, Sec. 2329.26
The State of Ohio, Hardin County
HSBC Mortgage Services, Inc., Plaintiff
vs.
Patrick Blanchard and Letha Risner,
Defendant
Case No 20101155CVE
In pursuance of an Order of Sale in the
above entitled Action, I will offer for sale at
public auction, at the Main floor of
courthouse in Kenton, in the above named
County, on Tuesday, the 17th day of May,
2011, at 10 o’clock A.M., the following
described real estate, situate in the County
of Hardin and State of Ohio and in the
Township of Roundhead to wit.
LEGAL DESCRIPTION
Situated in the Township of Roundhead,
County of Hardin and State of Ohio:
Being a parcel of land in the Southeast
Quarter (1/4) of Section Eighteen (18),
Township Five (5) South, Range Nine (9)
East, being more particularly described as
follows:
Commencing for reference at the
intersection of the centerline of Township
Road No. 21 with the centerline of
Township Road No. 152 and the North line
of the South half (1/2) of Section Eighteen
(18), this point being marked by a railroad
spike set and being the place of beginning
for the parcel to be conveyed by this
instrument; thence from this place of
beginning East along the centerline of
Township Road No. 152 and the North line
of the South half (1/2) of Section Eighteen
(18), a distance of four hundred forty-four
and four tenths feet (444.40’) to a railroad
spike set; thence South 1° 55’ 30” West a
distance of two hundred twenty-three and
ninety-three hundredths feel (223.93’) to a
five-eights inch (5/8”) iron pin set in an
existing line fence; thence south 89° 28’
31” West along said existing line fence a
distance of three hundred forty-three and
fifty-four hundredths feet (343.54’) to a
railroad spike set on the centerline of
Township Road No. 21; thence North 22°
21’ 30” West along Township Road No. 21
a distance of two hundred forty-five and
four tenths feet (245.40’) to the place of
beginning.
Containing in all two and four hundredths
Acres (2.04 Acres) of land, more or less.
Subject to all easements and right-of-way
of record.
Note: All bearings refer to the centerline
of Township Road No. 152 and the North
line of the South half (1/2) of Section
Eighteen (18) as being East.
A survey of this property was made by
Thomas C. Hubbell, Registered Surveyor
No. 5044 on February 19, 1976.
Prior Deed Reference: General Warranty
Deed, in OR Volume: 442, Page: 2133,
Dated
October
11,2004,
Recorded
October 11, 2004.
Parcel No.(s): 37-130023.0000
Property: 744 Township Road 152,
Harrod, Ohio 45850
Said Premises Located at 744 Township
Road 152, Harrod
Said Premises Appraised at
$80,000.00 and cannot be sold for less
than two-thirds of that amount.
TERMS OF SALE 10% cash, day of
sale. Full purchase price shall be paid
within 30 days from the date of sale. The
balance shall bear interest at the legal rate
until paid.
Note: Appraisal does not include an
interior inspection or viewing by appraisers
when sale is confirmed by the Hardin
County Common Pleas Court.
Keith A. Everhart, Sheriff
Hardin County, Ohio
Stephen D. Miles, Attorney
April 14, 21, 28, May 5, 12
1 - Legals
LEGAL NOTICE
Sheriff’s Sale of Real Estate
General Code, Sec. 11681
Revised Code, Sec. 2329.26
The State of Ohio, Hardin County
Nationstar Mortgage, LLC., Plaintiff
vs.
Brian Crumrine, et al., Defendant
Case No 20101233 CVE
In pursuance of an Order of Sale in the
above entitled Action, I will offer for sale
at public auction, at the Main floor of
courthouse in Kenton, in the above
named County, on Tuesday, the 19th day
of April, 2011, at 10 o’clock A.M., the
following described real estate, situate in
the County of Hardin and State of Ohio
and in the Township of Marion to wit.
LEGAL DESCRIPTION
Situated in Township of Marion, County
of Hardin and State of Ohio:
Being a tract of land out of the
Southwest corner of the Northwest
Quarter of Section 19, Township 4 South,
Range 9 East, more particularly
described as follows:
Beginning at the Southwest corner of
said Northwest Quarter of Section 19, in
the center of the intersection of the
County Line road and a county road;
thence Northerly with the centerline of the
County Line Road 180 feet to a metal
marker; thence Easterly and parallel with
the centerline of an East West County
Road 145 feet to a fence post, thence
Southerly and parallel with centerline of
said County Line Road 180 feet to a
metal marker centerline of said East West
County Road; thence with the centerline
of said East West County Road in a
Westerly direction 145 feet to the SW
corner of said NW Quarter of Section 19,
the place of beginning, containing 0.598
acres of land, be the same more or less,
and being part of a tract of land conveyed
by Arthur Horn et alto Ronald M. and
Carol L. Campbell by deed recorded Vol.
187, page 175 Hardin County Deed
Records.
As part of the consideration for this
deed, Grantees agree to maintain the
right half of the line fence around said
property and keep same in good
condition.
Parcel Number(s): 28-190011.0000
Property Address: 9488 County Road
15, Alger, OH 45812
Deed Reference Number: Dated April
23, 2007, filed April 30, 2007, recorded in
Official Records Volume 469, Page 62,
Recorder’s Office, Hardin County, Ohio
Said Premises Located at 9488 County
Road 15, Alger.
Said Premises Appraised at $75,000.00
and cannot be sold for less than twothirds of that amount.
TERMS OF SALE 10% cash, day of
sale. Full purchase price shall be paid
within 30 days from the date of sale. The
balance shall bear interest at the legal
rate until paid.
Note: Appraisal does not include an
interior inspection or viewing by
appraisers when sale is confirmed by the
Hardin County Common Pleas Court.
Keith A. Everhart, Sheriff
Hardin County, Ohio
Manley Deas Kochalski, LLC, Attorney
March 17, 24, 31, April 7, 14
NOTICE OF SALE UNDER
JUDGMENT OF FORECLOSURE
OF LIENS FOR DELINQUENT LAND
TAXES
In the Court of Common Pleas,
Hardin County, Ohio, Case Number
CVE 20101268, in the matter of
foreclosure of liens for delinquent land
taxes:
Denise Althouser,
Hardin County Treasurer,
Plaintiff,
Vs.
Gerald E. Baughman, et al., Defendants
Whereas, judgment has been rendered
against a certain parcel of real property for
court costs, accrued taxes, assessments,
penalties, and interest, as follows:
Permanent
Parcel
Number:
06100013.0000
Address: 444 S. Wayne Street, Kenton,
Ohio 43326
Legal Description:
Situated in the County of Hardin, State
of Ohio, and in the City of Kenton:
Situated in the County of Hardin. in the
State of Ohio in the City of Kenton:
Known as the east half(1/2) of Inlot
Number Five (5) in Letson, Teters, and
Gibson’s South Kenton addition to the
town (now City) of Kenton, Ohio, as the
same is shown and designated on the
recorded plat of said addition.
To meet the requirements of the Hardin
County Engineer, in order to complete
transfer of within deed, said property is
more particularly described as follows by
Frederick E. Markley, Attorney. This
description is made from information and
plat records on file at the office of the
Hardin County Engineer or Hardin County
Recorder plat Book E. page 148 but is not
based upon any survey or inspection of
the premises. and accordingly said
attorney does not represent same to
accurately contain measurements or
location or premises that would be
provided by survey and accordingly
expressly disclaims responsibility for
accuracy hereto wit:
Beginning at the Northeast corner of
said inlot 4 and in the West line of Wayne
Street;
Thence southerly and parallel with
Wayne Street a distance of 60’ to the
southwest corner of said inlot, thence
westerly along the south line of said Inlot
and parallel with Espy Street a distance of
66’ to a point, thence northerly and
parallel to Wayne Street a distance of 60’
to the North line of said Inlot 5
Thence easterly and parallel with Espy
Street 66’ to the place of beginning said
plat recorded in Vol. E., Page 148, Hardin
County Recorder’s Office.
Official Records Volume 230 Page 138
Hardin County Recorders Office
Property Address 444 South Wayne
Street Kenton, Ohio 43326
Computer Number 06 100013.0000
Name and Address of Last Known
Owners: Gerald E. Baughman Becky
Baughman
Amount of Judgment: Taxes and costs
of $5,349.05
(Subject to change)
Whereas, such judgment orders such
real property to be sold by the
undersigned to satisfy the total amount of
such judgment;
Now, therefore, public notice is hereby
given that I, Keith A. Everhart, Sheriff of
Hardin County, Ohio, will sell such real
property at public auction, for cash, to the
highest bidder of an amount that equals at
least the total amount of the judgment,
including all court costs, accrued taxes,
assessments, penalties and interest
payable subsequent to the delivery to the
prosecuting attorney of the delinquent
land tax certificate, on the 3rd day May of
2011 at the hour of 10 A.M. at the East
door of the Hardin County Courthouse in
Kenton, Ohio. If said parcel does not
receive a sufficient bid, it shall be offered
for sale, under the same terms and
conditions of the first sale and at the same
time of day and at the same place, on the
17th day of May, 2011, for an amount that
equals at least the total amount of the
judgment, including all court costs,
accrued taxes, assessments, penalties,
and interest payable subsequent to the
delivery to the prosecuting attorney of the
delinquent land tax certificate.
Keith A. Everhart
Hardin County Sheriff
April 14, 21, 28
1 - Legals
Thursday, April 14, 2011
1 - Legals
LEGAL NOTICE
Sheriff’s Sale of Real Estate
General Code, Sec. 11681
Revised Code, Sec. 2329.26
The State of Ohio, Hardin County
The Huntington National Bank, Plaintiff
vs
Elizabeth A. Seagrave, Defendant
Case No. 20101210CVE
In pursuance of an Order of Sale in the
above entitled Action, I will offer for sale at
public auction, at the Main floor of
courthouse in Kenton, in the above named
County, on Tuesday, the 19th day of April,
2011, at 10 o’clock A.M., the following
described real estate, situate in the County
of Hardin and State of Ohio and in the
Township of Blanchard to wit.
LEGAL DESCRIPTION
Situated in the Village of Dunkirk, County
of Hardin and State of Ohio:
Parcel 1:
Being a part of the NE 1/4 NW 1/4
Section 18, Dunkirk Lands, Blanchard
Township, County of Hardin, State of Ohio
and further described as follows:
Beginning at an iron pin on the South
right-of-way line of Patterson Street, said
pin being Easterly 128.56 feet from the
intersection of the South right-of-way line
of Patterson Street and the centerline of
the New York Central Railroad Tracks,
thence, with the interior angle of 85° 30’ in
a Southerly direction, a distance of 247.80
feet to a point; thence, with an interior
angle of 89° 00’ in an Easterly direction, a
distance of 59.50 feet to an iron pin;
thence, with an interior angle of 270° 30’ in
a Southerly direction a distance of 46.65
feet to an iron pin; thence with an interior
angle 86° 25’ in an Easterly direction,
along the North line of an alley, a distance
of 42.96 feet to a point; thence, with an
exterior angle of 89° 35’ in a Northerly
direction, a distance of 282.40 feet to a
point in the South right-of-way line of
Patterson Street; thence, at an interior
angle of 99° 00’ in a Westerly direction
along the South line of Patterson Street, a
distance of 81 .25 feet to the place of
beginning and containing 0.63 acres of
land, more or less.
Parcel 2:
Situated in the Village of Dunkirk, County
of Hardin and State of Ohio:
Beginning at a point on the East right of
way line of Shuee Street, said point being
247.8 feet South of the intersection of the
East line of Shuee Street and the South
right-of-way line of Patterson Street;
thence with an interior angle 89° 00’ in a
Easterly direction, a distance of 59.5 feet
to an iron pin; thence with an interior angle
of 89° 30’ a distance of 46.65 feet to an
iron pin; thence with an interior angle of
83° 35’ in a Westerly direction, a distance
of 60.2 feet to a point; thence with an
angle of 85° 55’ in a Northerly direction, a
distance of 50 feet to the place of
beginning, containing 0.07 acres, more or
less.
Property Address: 259 West Patterson
Street, Dunkirk, OH 45836
Parcel Number 03-060006.0000 and 03060043.0000
Prior Deed Reference: Deed from Chad
D. Rider and Julie M. Taft-Rider, f/k/a Julie
M. Taft, husband and wife, to Elizabeth A.
Seagrave, dated October 7. 2005, filed
October 14, 2005, in Official Record
Volume 454, Page 550 of Hardin County
Records.
Said Premises Located at 259 W
Patterson St, Dunkirk
Said Premises Appraised at
$65,000.00 and cannot be sold for less
than two-thirds of that amount.
TERMS OF SALE 10% cash, day of
sale. Full purchase price shall be paid
within 30 days from the date of sale. The
balance shall bear interest at the legal rate
until paid.
Note: Appraisal does not include an
interior inspection or viewing by appraisers
when sale is confirmed by the Hardin
County Common Pleas Court.
Keith A. Everhart, Sheriff
Hardin County, Ohio
Weltman, Weinberg & Reis, Attorney
March 17, 24, 31, April 7, 14
LEGAL NOTICE
Sheriff’s Sale of Real Estate
General Code, Sec. 11681
Revised Code, Sec. 2329.26
The State of Ohio, Hardin County
Fifth Third Mortgage Company, Plaintiff
vs.
Steve M. Prater, et al., Defendant
Case No 20101257 CVE
In pursuance of an Order of Sale in the
above entitled Action, I will offer for sale at
public auction, at the Main floor of
courthouse in Kenton, in the above named
County, on Tuesday, the 19th day of April,
2011, at 10 o’clock A.M., the following
described real estate, situate in the County
of Hardin and State of Ohio and in the
Township of Pleasant to wit.
LEGAL DESCRIPTION
Situated in the City of Kenton, County of
Hardin, and State of Ohio:
Being a part of Inlot No. 1., B. R.
Brunsons Addition in the City of Kenton, as
the same is shown and designated on the
recorded plat thereof and being the west
50 feet off the said lot.
Subject to covenants, easements and
restrictions, if any, appearing in the public
records.
Parcel Number: 36-20025.OO00
Property Address: 350 West Columbus
Street, Kenton, Ohio 43326
Prior Deed Reference: OR Vol. 473,
Page 766-767
Property Owners: Steve M. Prater
Case Number: CV 20101257
Said Premises Located at 350 W.
Columbus St, Kenton
Said Premises Appraised at $15,000.00
and cannot be sold for less than two-thirds
of that amount.
TERMS OF SALE 10% cash, day of
sale. Full purchase price shall be paid
within 30 days from the date of sale. The
balance shall bear interest at the legal rate
until paid.
Note: Appraisal does not include an
interior inspection or viewing by appraisers
when sale is confirmed by the Hardin
County Common Pleas Court.
Keith A. Everhart, Sheriff
Hardin County, Ohio
Felty & Lembright, Attorney
March 17, 24, 31, April 7, 14
5 - Garage Sales
0903 CR 92, ALGER— Friday,
Saturday 9-4. 32” TV, mens hunting
clothes, boys clothes 4-6, baby girls
18-24 months, toys. All name brand
clothing, juniors xsmall to medium,
womens clothes medium to large.
Excersaucer, misc.
FREE CLOTHING DAY— OBMCC
Church, 809 S. Detroit, Kenton.
Friday, Saturday 8-4.
INSIDE
OLD
OSBORN
FURNITURE— Check “Bec’s”, 309
W., West Lima Street, beside Rick’s
Auto. Friday 9-5, Saturday 9-4. Craft
supplies of all kinds. Material,
sewing, buttons, thread, etc. Old
glassware,
handmade
jewelry,
nothing over $5.00. Amish preserves,
brown eggs, Easter candy, furniture,
prom dresses, many more items.
6 - Special Notices
CANADIAN FISHING CABINS FOR
RENT— Walleyes, jumbo perch,
northerns. Call Hugh or Doris toll
free, for free brochure. Or look at our
website. www.bestfishing.com800426-2550
CRAFT OPEN HOUSE
SALE NOW THRU APRIL 17
Tues. thru Sun. 10-5
3 Buildings full of Crafts, 10% off!
Door prizes, refreshments
Take 67 to SR 103 W. continue 6.4
miles, turn left on to Miller Rd. go 1
mile. At stop sign turn right on to
New Washington Rd. On corner
Primitive Crossroads Craft Barn
1201 New Washington Rd.
Bloomville (Lykens Twp.)
419-284-3106
LARGE AMISH
AUCTION
MATHEWS HONDA
SUPER SALE!
2008 Acura MDX 4WD
2008 Honda Odyssey EX-L
Auto., PW, PL, air, cruise, tilt, entertainment pkg., V6, sunroof, #A384
Auto., PW, PL, air, cruise, tilt, V6, sunroof, heated mirrors, satellite radio, #P1105
Sale Price $29,975
SATURDAY, APRIL 16, 2011 AT 9:30 AM
Directions: From Mt. Victory take St. Rt. 31 north to Co.
Rd. 200. Turn right, go 1/2 mi to sale on left. From
Kenton, take St. Rt. 31 south to Co. Rd. 200, turn left, go
1/2 mi to sale on left. Watch for signs.
MACHINERY: Popec Model L ensilage cutter; IH 2 row corn
planter w/dolly wheel; JD 999 corn planter w/dolly wheel; IH 9
arm light-duty hay loader; Oliver 6 arm hay loader; JD hay
loader; IH No. 9 high gear 6’ hay mower; IH No. 7 6’ mowing
machine; New Idea hay rake; IH discs, 7’ & 8’; Oliver 9’ wheel
disc; 9’ wheel disc; JD 8’ disc; Oliver 2 bottom plow; 2 bottom
plows (2); JD 12 hole grain drill; IH 3 section spring-tooth
harrow; New Idea No 12 manure spreader; IH hay rake (for
parts). Most of the listed machinery is in good condition & field
ready.
MISC. ITEMS: Mortar mixer on wheels; Ottawa drag saw w/5’
blade; 8hp Honda motor w/reduction gear; 9hp Honda, motor,
both overhauled; Leather buggy harness; 5 galv farrowing
crates/ feeders & waterers; Approx. 50 4x4 cedar posts; Ash
wagon & mower tongs; Fiberglass feeders; Sm. chicken coop; 25
new dog leashes; Calf dehorner w/head-lock; Several 100 plastic
plates for JD & IH corn planters; New tarps (6’x8’ up to 40’x60’);
4 tanks; Wooden hog feeder; Plastic pallets.
LUMBER & BUILDING MATERIAL: 750 sq ft of oak & maple
hardwood prefinished flooring; 2 hard wood flooring nailers; 1
new prehung 36” interior door; 2 new prehung 24” doors; One
36” metal door; 4 interior prehung solid wood doors; 3 interior 4lite used doors; 2 new log cabin windows; 3 new double hung
vinyl 36”x60” windows w/screens; 100 bd ft of poplar; 100 bd ft
of oak (all upper grade); Cherry lumber; Kiln dried walnut,
cherry, maple & hickory lumber; 50 bales 3rd cutting alfalfa
hay.
HOUSEHOLD: 1 queen size bed; 1 full size log bed; New oak
dresser; Maytag wringer washer; Display shelves on casters;
Butter churn; 2 Victoria strainers; Singer sewing machine; 4
burner oil stove; 5 burner oil stove w/oven on top; 1 burner
portable burner; Wooden high chair; 1 new Lone Star full size
quilt; 1 6yr crib size comfort; 2 copper boilers; Cast iron kettle
w/jacket.
GUNS: Winchester Model 1300 12 ga shot gun; Remington
Model 700 50 cal black powder; Barrel only for Remington 870
12 ga shotgun.
This is only a partial listing. Consignments will be taken on
April 14 and April 15, from 9:00 am to 5:00 pm.
No tires, junk or livestock will be accepted.
Lunch will be served by Amish Ladies. Bake sale proceeds to
benefit bills at Nationwide Children’s Hospital
OWNERS: SCIOTO VALLEY PRODUCE AUCTION
AUCTIONEERS: Harley Jackson & Phil Thompson
Produce Auction Dates: April 29; May 3, May 6, May 13,
May 20, May 27; June 3, June 7, June 10, June 14, June 17,
June 21, June 24, June 28.
April 7, 14
Sale Price $22,975
2005 Chevrolet Colorado Z85
2008 Hyundai Accent Hatchback GS
Auto., AM/FM stereo, ext. cab, #6560A
4-cyl., auto., air, tilt, FWD, spoiler, #8456A
Sale Price
12,475
$
Sale Price $8,975
2007 Buick Lucerne CXL
2008 Honda Ridgeline RT 4WD
Auto., PW, PL, CD, air, cruise, V6, heated mirrors, leather, MP3, #E527A
Auto., PW, PL, CD, air, cruise, tilt, crew cab, V6, #8082C
Sale Price
18,975
$
Sale Price $18,975
2010 Dodge Challenger R/T
2008 Jeep Patriot
V8, PW, PL, CD, air, 2-dr., cruise, tilt, black, MP3, 6 spd. manual, #8706A
4-cyl., auto., PW, PL, AM/FM stereo, CD, air, cruise, tilt, MP3, #8668A
Sale Price $29,475
Sale Price $17,975
2008 Dodge Caliber SXT
2007 Pontiac G6 GTP
Auto., PW, PL, CD, air, 4-dr., cruise, satellite radio, black, #8637A
Auto., PW, PL, CD, air, cruise, tilt, V6, fog lamps, equalizer satellite radio, #8597A
Sale Price $10,475
Sale Price $13,975
2002 Ford Explorer Sport 4WD
2008 Pontiac G6
Auto., PW, PL, stereo, cassette, CD, air, V6, silver, #1101A
4-cyl., auto., PW, PL, AM/FM stereo, CD, cruise, tilt, MP3, #8701A
Sale Price $7,975
Sale Price $14,975
2010 Honda Accord EX-L
2008 Saturn VUE XE
Auto., AM/FM stereo, CD, air, tilt, V6, FWD, heated mirrors, MP3, #7395A
4-cyl., auto., PW, PL, AM/FM stereo, CD, air, cruise, FWD, MP3, satellite radio, #8511A
Sale Price $23,975
Sale Price $16,975
2004 Honda Accord EX
2002 Pontiac Sunfire SE
Auto., PW, PL, CD, air, cruise, tilt, V6, leather, sunroof, heated seats, #8710A
4-cyl., auto., AM/FM stereo, cassette, air, FWD, #P1099A
Sale Price $10,975
Sale Price $7,475
2006 Honda Accord EX-L
1988 Toyota Camry LE
Auto., PW, PL, CD, air, tilt, heated leather seats, FWD, #8375A
4-cyl., auto., AM/FM stereo, tilt, FWD, #8602B
Sale Price
12,975
$
Sale Price $3,975
2008 Honda Odyssey LX
2009 Toyota Corolla LE
Auto., PW, PL, CD, air, tilt, V6, MP3, #8430A
4-cyl., auto., AM/FM stereo, CD, air, tilt, MP3, #8499A
Sale Price $21,975
Sale Price $14,975
2002 Honda CR-V 4WD
2005 Acura TSX
Auto., PW, PL, CD, air, cruise, tilt, sunroof, #8609A
Auto., PW, PL, CD, air, sunroof, heated mirrors, leather seats, #8088A
Sale Price $6,975
Sale Price $15,975
2003 Honda Pilot 4WD
2008 Acura TSX
Auto., PW, PL, CD, air, cruise, tilt, Navi, leather, V6, #8446B
Auto., PW, PL, CD, air, cruise, tilt, satellite radio, #A8242A
Sale Price $13,975
Sale Price $19,975
2008 Honda Pilot 4WD
1995 Chevrolet Lumina
Auto., PW, PL, CD, air, cruise, tilt, V6, satellite radio, #P1096
Auto., PL, AM/FM stereo, air, tilt, 4-dr., tilt, blue, FWD, #8484B
Sale Price $22,975
Sale Price $2,475
2000 Jeep Grand Cherokee Laredo 4WD 2003 Ford Explorer Eddie Bauer 4WD
V8, auto., AM/FM stereo, cassette, air, tilt, #8679A
Sale Price
7,475
$
V8, Auto., PW, PL, CD, air, 4-dr., cruise, tilt, Aspen Green, leather seats, running boards, #8425B
Sale Price $11,975
2004 Nissan Quest SE Van
1998 Ford Expedition 4WD XLT
Auto., PW, PL, AM/FM stereo, CD, air, cruise, tilt, #A7305B
V8, Auto., PW, PL, stereo, cassette, 4-dr., keyless entry, red, #8401B
Sale Price
11,475
$
Sale Price $4,475
2008 Mitsubishi Lancer GTS
2001 Ford Focus ZX3
4-cyl., auto., PW, PL, CD, air, cruise, tilt, FWD, MP3, #8498A
Auto., AM/FM stereo, CD, aluminum wheels, fog lamps, #8521A
Sale Price $17,475
Sale Price $6,575
2004 Pontiac Grand Prix GT2
1999 Ford F-150 XLT Supercab
Auto., PW, PL, CD, air, tilt, V6, #8260B
V8, auto., AM/FM stereo, ABS, RWD, #8719A
Sale Price
8,475
$
Sale Price $9,975
2008 Toyota Camry LE
2006 Honda Accord EX-L
4-cyl., auto., PW, PL, AM/FM stereo, CD, air, cruise, tilt, #8704A
Auto., PW, PL, CD, air, cruise, Navi, V6, leather, #7053A
Sale Price
18715 County Road 200, Mt. Victory, OH 43340
KENTON TIMES – Page 9
17,975
$
Sale Price $16,975
2009 Toyota Camry LE
2007 Honda Civic EX
4-cyl., auto., PW, PL, CD, air, cruise, tilt, MP3, #P1106
4-cyl., auto., PW, PL, CD, air, cruise, tilt, MP3, #8687A
Sale Price $16,975
Sale Price $14,475
2009 Toyota Rav4 4WD
1998 Honda Civic LX
4-cyl., auto., PW, PL, CD, air, cruise, tilt, MP3, #8539A
Auto., PW, PL, AM/FM stereo, CD, air, cruise, tilt, #8469B
Sale Price $18,975
Sale Price $3,475
2009 Acura TL AWD
2008 Honda Pilot 4WD EX-L
Auto., PW, PL, CD, air, power sunroof, MP3, satellite radio, #8442A
Auto., PW, PL, CD, air, cruise, tilt, V6, heated seats, #8502A
Sale Price
33,975
$
Sale Price $24,975
2004 Acura MDX Touring
2003 Hyundai Sante Fe
Auto., PW, PL, air, sunroof, power heated mirrors, #8467A
Auto., PW, PL, AM/FM stereo, cruise, tilt, CD, air, V6, #6361A
Sale Price $14,475
Sale Price $6,975
2006 Chevrolet Impala LS
2008 Hyundai Sante Fe AWD
Auto., CD, AM/FM stereo, PW, PL, air, cruise, power mirrors, #8020A
Auto., PW, PL, CD, air, cruise, tilt, V6, fog lamps, satellite radio, #8600B
Sale Price $6,975
Sale Price $21,475
2004 Dodge Interpid SE
1998 Mercedes-Benz E-Class Wagon AWD
Auto., PW, PL, stereo, cassette, air, 4-dr., tilt, blue, #8719A1
Auto., PW, PL, cruise, tilt, V6, #8549A
Sale Price
6,975
$
Sale Price $7,975
2005 Dodge Dakota 4WD SLT
2004 Kia Sedona EX Van
Auto., PW, PL, CD, air, 4-dr., tilt, quad cab, #8634A
Auto., PW, PL, AM/FM stereo, CD, air, cruise, tilt, V6, FWD, #8540A
Sale Price $15,975
Sale Price $17,975
2010 Ford F-150 XL
2006 Pontiac Grand Prix
V8, auto., AM/FM stereo, air, tilt, tire pressure monitor, #8481A
Auto., PW, PL, AM/FM stereo, CD, air, cruise, V6, #8556B
Sale Price
16,975
$
Sale Price $11,475
2008 Honda Accord EX-L
2009 Subaru Legacy
Auto., PW, PL, CD, air, sunroof, MP3, satellite radio, #P1090
4-cyl., auto., PW, PL, CD, air, cruise, tilt, MP3, leather seats, #8301A
Sale Price $18,975
Sale Price $18,975
2008 Honda Accord
2007 Saturn Outlook XR
Auto., PW, PL, CD, air, V6, MP3, satellite radio, #8715A
Auto., PW, PL, CD, air, cruise, tilt, FWD, V6, MP3, #8635A
Sale Price
20,975
$
Sale Price $19,975
2000 Honda Accord EX
2009 Toyota Rav4 4WD
Auto., PW, PL, CD, air, cruise, tilt, V6, leather, keyless, #8707A
4-cyl., auto., PL, AM/FM stereo, CD, air, cruise, tilt, satellite radio, MP3, #8218A
Sale Price $8,475
Sale Price $19,975
2004 Honda Accord EX
2010 Toyota Tacoma 4WD
Auto., PW, PL, CD, air, cruise, tilt, FWD, #8365A
Auto., PW, PL, AM/FM stereo, CD, air, tilt, V6, MP3, #8315A
Sale Price
9,975
$
Sale Price $27,975
www.mathewsautogroup.com
740-387-1400 1127 Delaware Ave., Marion
Page 10 – KENTON TIMES
Thursday, April 14, 2011
6 - Special Notices
16 - Misc. Services
REWARD $1,000— Leading to the
arrest and conviction of stolen Indian
relics on 4-2-11. One case was my
field findings, I found them. John,
567-674-2777.
JOHN’S HANDYMAN SERVICES—
Senior citizen work. Electrical, painting, plumbing, mowing, landscaping,
drywall, and more. Affordable cost &
free estimates. 419-675-1017, Kenton.
Spring Clean-Up
has been scheduled from Monday, April 25th thru Friday, April
29th, 2011. The spring clean-up
will be on your regular residential
sanitation collection day. Bundles of brush will not be picked
up but can be taken by residents
to the compost pile located behind the Wastewater Treatment
Plant, 155 Indian Mill Drive. During this period residents will not
be charged for more than three
(3) garbage bags. RESIDENTS
PLACING MATERIALS ABOVE
AND BEYOND A REASONABLE AMOUNT CAN BE ASSESSED
AN
ADDITIONAL
CHARGE AT THE DISCRETION
OF THE CITY.
This year the Lion's Club will
pick up appliances, TV sets,
bare bed springs and all other
metal items. The Lion's Club will
not pick up overstuffed furniture, bed mattresses or box
springs and tires. Appliances
should be placed in the front,
rear or side yard. Lion's pick up
will be April 25th thru April
29th, 2011. Arrangements to
collect these items can be made
by calling the following number:
419-294–3862.
7 - Lost and Found
LOST ENGLISH BULL DOG– male,
white & tan, has no collar, black circle around eye, numbered tattoo in
ear. Reward, 419-294-3984.
11 - Monuments
DELPHOS
GRANITE WORKS
903 E. Columbus Street
(Next to Sherwin Williams) Kenton
Business Phone: 419-679-1041
Cell Phone: 567-674-5144
Monuments Markers-Memorials
A variety of cemetery arrangements
by Blossom Gallery Florist
Hours: Tuesday - Friday 10-5
Saturday & evenings
by appointment
KENTON MARBLE
& GRANITE
LOCALLY FAMILY
OWNED & OPERATED
123 S. Leighton, Kenton
419-673-3138
kentonmarbleandgranite.com
Serving Hardin County
since 1893
LEO ELWOOD TREE SERVICE–
Tree trimming and removal, 419273-2114.
17 - TV, Radio Services
LOOKING FOR ANTENNA TOWERS— To take down or paint. Free
estimates, 567-674-7215.
18 - Building/Contracting
AMISH CREW— Framing, additions,
garages, pole barns, roofing and siding. Call 419-979-9161.
BURRIS
GENERAL CONTRACTING, L.L.C.
New homes, additions, remodeling,
siding, windows, plumbing, wind, fire,
water restoration. OH. Lic. #33757.
www.burrisconstruction.com.
419757-6675.
GRINDELL MASONRY— Concrete
sidewalks, patios, tuck pointing,
standing seam and roofing, painting.
You know the name, you’ve seen our
work. 419-673-1761.
HOLBROOK
CONSTRUCTION—
Formerly Ken Holbrook Carpentry.
Roofing, siding, windows, room additions and new homes. Questioning
who to call, we do it all. 419-6731766, 419-674-3531.
MIKE COULSON— Roofing, painting, siding, windows, spouting, garages, drywall, ceilings. All types of
remodeling. References, free estimates. 673–1511.
RISH MASONRY— Patios, sidewalks, all types of concrete floors.
Custom imprint concrete at competitive prices. 567-674-0509, 567-6744245.
34 - Help Wanted
36 - Business Oppt.
42 - Apartments for Rent
DRIVER
TRAINING
INSTRUSTOR— Part time flexible hours that
you choose. Training provided. Must
have 5 years driving experience with
good record. Call 1-800-580-9555
ext. 23 for more information.
DRIVERS— Tanker owner operator.
Average $1.23 mile, + fuel surcharge. Paid CDL training available
& benefits! Call Prime Inc. today! 1800-277-0212. www.primeinc.com
FOR RENT– 625 sq. feet of newly
remodeled, all electric office space
with central air and additional storage area in attic. Suitable for low
traffic type of business. $400/monthly. Call 419-294-3424 for details or to
view.
ONE BEDROOM DOWNSTAIRS
APARTMENT— In Kenton. Water included. $275. 567-674-4022.
GARY’S ROOFING— Specialized in
3 tab dimensional shingles, rubber
and roof coating. Free estimates,
567-674-7215.
KENTON SEAMLESS GUTTER—
Variety of colors, free estimates.
419-675–3184.
ROGERS ROOFING— Flat and mobile homes. EPDM rubber roofing
system. Free estimates. Ed Rogers,
419-673-8955.
24 - Hauling/Removal
WILL HAUL METAL/SCRAP/BATTERIES & APPLIANCES– for free!
TV’s for small fee. Ask for Lonnie,
740-244-9409.
26 - Auctioneers
CHARLES "CLIFF" WYNEGAR
COMPLETE AUCTION SERVICE
675–2405
DAVE
WEDERTZ,
AUCTIONEER
419-674-4206
www.auctioneerdave.com
JAN LAYMAN,
AUCTIONEER
Complete auction service
419-673-0964
419-835-5185 cell
www.laymanauction.com
UNITED COUNTY
Walton Realty & Auction Co., LLC
& Appraisers
97 Houpt Dr., Upper Sandusky
(419) 294-0007 or 927-2562
27 - Storage Space
19 - Electricians
JAKOB’S ELECTRIC— Commercial,
industrial, agricultural, residential.
419-673-1388. OH Lic. 44838
RICHARD VANBUSKIRK—
dential wiring. 419-675-1223.
23 - Roofing & Siding
Resi-
20 - Heating & Plumbing
RICK’S
CLIMATE
CONTROL—
Heating, Cooling, Plumbing, Electrical. Free Estimates 419-673-4152.
22 - Painting, Wallpaper
BEITLER PAINTING— Interior, exterior. Free estimates. 419-273-2192.
BILL WARD
PAINTING
419-674-8210
RAY ROGERS PAINTING— Interior,
exterior.
937-464-2532, 419-6750687.
"MOVE IN WITH YO' MAMA and
store your stuff with us." Grannie's
Attic Mini Storage, 419-673-1293.
ATTN
LB MINI-STORAGE CUSTOMERS
If you are behind 3 months or more
your contents will be sold. Please
make payment arrangements prior to
April 22. Questions? Call 419-7670916
Your ad
could be here.
Call Times Classified
419-674-4066
MT. VICTORY LOCK UP— For all
your storage needs. Call 937-3545246.
34 - Help Wanted
DRIVER — Recession proof, refrigerated freight. Plenty of miles. Need
refresher? Free tuition at FFE.
$1,000 sign on. Pet and rider policy.
Company & owner operators. recruit@ffex.net. 855-378-9329.
16 - Misc. Services
23 - Roofing & Siding
ADAM HAUDENSCHIELD’S TREE
SERVICE— Trimming, removal, free
estimates.. 419-675-1093.
COULSON’S
FINANCE MANAGER
CONSTRUCTION Must have 2 years experience in
ELWOOD’S TREE SERVICE— And
Stump Removal. Owner Jim Elwood,
Free estimates, fully insured. 419273-2771, 419-273-3197.
EXPERT TREE SERVICE– Tree and
stump removal, 419-273-2013.
Roofing, siding,
room additions
Garages, pole barns, concrete
Free estimates, fully insured
References. 419-303-0787
auto sales. Excellent pay plan,
salary plus commission. Send
resume to Anderson Ford, Box
129, Bellefontaine, Ohio 43311,
or email: andersonford@embarqmail.com
Full time opportunity for driver / ware
house position at local wholesale
company. CDL required. Send your
to resume Box N c/o Daily Chief-Union 111 W.Wyandot Ave. Upper
Sandusky, Ohio 43351
OTR DRIVER WANTED— Home
weekends. Excellent pay. Pulling
hopper or belt trailer. 3 years experience. 419-757-8285.
PART-TIME OUTDOOR WORK–
must have good drivers license,
good attitude. Reply Box Y c/o DCU
111 W. Wyandot, Upper Sandusky.
PROVIDER AGENCY
is seeking a dependable person to care for individuals
with developmental disabilities in Wyandot County. Afternoon/evenings. Apply at:
E.C.I. Inc.
382 S. Huron St.
(TR 1092).Tiffin
or submit application on-line
at www.eciinc.net
SEASONAL POSITION— Applications currently being accepted
for seasonal positions with the
Hardin County Engineers Office
for one (1) laborer on the road
crew and one (1) engineer/surveyor intern. Applications may
be obtained at the Hardin County Engineers Office at 1040 W.
Franklin Street, Kenton, Ohio, or
by calling 419-674-2222. Applications may be submitted Monday thru Thursday, 6:30 a.m. to
3:30 p.m. Deadline for applications will be April 21, 2011. Must
be eighteen years of age to apply. EOE employer.
SECRETARY NEEDED— Small
Kenton office, need computer skills,
bookkeeping, meets with public, no
medical benefits. Send resumes to
Box 75, %Kenton Times, P.O. Box
230, Kenton, Ohio 43326.
SITE LABORER
Wanted laborer with own
transportation for a housing
development site in the local
Upper Sandusky area. Misc.
cleaning and moderate lifting
may be required. This is a
temporary part time position.
$10 per hour. Please contact
Loren Payne at (614) 9892772 if interested.
WANTED— Experienced, solo, team
drivers for dedicated runs with good
home time. Need CDL-A, live within
100 mile radius of Wauseon, Ohio.
For information: 1-800-621-4878.
OFFICE SPACE FOR RENT— In
downtown Kenton. 225 sq. ft. in a office complex with receptionist space
during business hours with utilities
included. Rent is only $300. Call
937-935-4512.
OFFICE SPACE– Upper Sandusky.
1,000 sq. ft. $300 month, utilities included, 419-310-0992.
42 - Apartments for Rent
!SPRING CLEAN the easy way,
MOVE to Eagles Point! EOH.
www.YourNextPlaceToLive.com1866-286-7010.
1, 2 & 3 BEDROOM APARTMENTS— In Upper with rent starting
at $389 per month. We pay water &
trash. On site laundry. Riverglenn
Estates, 440 Indian Mill, 419-2944679.
2 BR, GROUND LEVEL– All Utilities
and appliances included. Back yard
to enjoy, 325 N. Warpole St. Apt. B
Upper Sandusky. Total cost per
month $525, 419-294-8067.
2-3 BEDROOM APARTMENTS &
HOUSES— For rent in Kenton. $600
- $800. All utilities included, no pets
and deposit required. Call 419-6753187 for more details.
3 BEDROOM & 1 BEDROOM– Apts.
in Wharton. Electric and heat included. No pets, 419-722-4180.
Baker Apartments, Carey
now has apartments available. Refrigerator, stove, a/c furnished. All
utilities, laundry, cable and trash. For
appointment call 419-396-6677.
ELDERLY OR EXECUTIVE– 2 Bedroom 2. bath Condo, garage. 1 Floor.
No pets. $750 rent, $750 deposit,
419-294-7117.
HUNTERS RIDGE– Deluxe 2-Bedroom, vaulted ceilings, all appliances
including washer/dryer. Garage optional. Pets allowed, $595, 419-2943999.
ONE
BEDROOM
UPSTAIRS
APARTMENT— 430 N. Main, Kenton. No pets. Washer, dryer hookup.
Free garbage. $300 month, appliances furnished. References. 419-6743665, 419-673-1856.
ONE MONTH FREE— 1 bedroom, 1
bath, upper units, no pets. Non
smoker. Water, trash paid. Appliances included. $350 month plus deposit. 215 N. Main, Kenton. 419-4250079.
ONE MONTH FREE— 2 bedrooms,
1 bath, upper units, no pets. Non
smoker. Water, trash paid. Appliances included. $375 month plus deposit. 215 N. Main, Kenton. 419-4250079.
SETON KENTON— 1 bedroom
apartments designed for ages 62
and older, or mobility impaired. HUD
subsidized. 419-673-7202 or TTY#
1-800-750-0750. EHO.
UPSTAIRS, ONE-BEDROOM– close
to downtown, Upper Sandusky. No
pets. References and deposit required, 419-294-3311.
VILLAGER APARTMENTS– A quiet
1 bedroom in Upper. Appliances furnished. No pets, 419-294-1513 or
419-294-7078.
43 - Houses for Rent
2-3 BEDROOM, KENTON— 608 S.
Detroit St. Washer, dryer hookup,
trash included, no pets. $475 month,
$475 deposit. References. 419-6748206 or 419-759-2069.
3 BEDROOM RANCH HOME— 2
car attached garage. Just south of
Ada. Call 419-302-4045.
302 KENTON ST., MCGUFFEY— 3
bedrooms, 1 bath, $350 month, $350
deposit. 419-647-4525.
IN COUNTRY– 5 miles north of Upper. 3 Bedroom, 1 bath. No pets.
$500/month plus $500/deposit, 419835-4628.
KENTON— 2 bedroom duplex, built
in stove, dishwasher and refrigerator.
Washer, dryer hookup. 1 year lease.
$425 month, $425 deposit. 419-6730528, 419-674-6164.
IN UPPER– Clean 1 bedroom, upstairs apt. Includes all appliances,
and utilities. Electric, heat, A/C, water and trash, $600. No outside upkeep. Off street private parking. No
smoking, no PETS, references required. Call 419-294-7720.
KENTON— 1 bedroom apartment.
Washer and dryer. Off street parking.
$350 month, $350 deposit. No pets.
419-674-7609.
ONE BEDROOM APARTMENT—
Kenton. Water furnished. No pets.
Stove, refrigerator. 419-673-0847.
CARETAKERS:
Retired couple wanted to live in beautiful Country Lodge
on 500 acre hunting estate. Duties include keeping
trespassers off property, cleaning lodge after owners use,
cutting some grass on riding mower, and general
maintenance. Separate living quarters with utilities,
internet and TV provided for free, in exchange for
services above. Prefer people who enjoy country living
and outdoors. Must pass background check.
Send resume to P.O. Box 869, Lima, Ohio 45802.
WOW! This home is stellar
and above the rest.
Enjoy a tremendous view over
the pool and through the woods.
4/5 bedrooms plus 3.5 baths.
30 x40 pole building situated on
5 acres. You name it, it’s here.
Seller is motivated and trade is an
option. KCC-146.
Call Becky 419-679-6091
SUNWAY REALTY LLC
930 E. Columbus
Kenton 419-675-2333
EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY
REALTOR
LAST OF THE NEW 2010’s
‘10 DODGE CHARGER RALLYE
Spoiler, 20” Wheels, Vanilla
LIST: $30,590
REDUCED $24,500
FIVE STAR ★★★★★
CARS
HARDIN MOTORS–MT. VICTORY, OHIO ★★★★★ FIVE STAR
NOW
‘09 Chrysler PT Cruiser Touring Edition – cast wheels ..............................................white..............$10,995
‘08 Chevrolet Cobalt 2 Dr. Coupe LT – spoiler, cast wheels ..............................bright silver........$11,950
‘07 Chrysler Sebring Touring – V6, cast wheels,............................................................inferno red........ $10,495
‘07 Chrysler Sebring Touring Sedan – 4 cyl., cast wheels,..........................................blue...............$10,495
‘06 Chrysler PT Crusier Limited Sedan – turbo, sunroof, leather, chrome wheels,..blue..................$7,995
‘06 Dodge Stratus SXT – cast wheels, 4 cyl., low miles.......................................................light cypress..........$9,995
‘05 Dodge Magnum RT – Hemi,.........................................................................................magnesium....... $12,995
‘04 Chrysler Concorde LXI – 4 door sedan, leather,......................................................bright silver...........$5,995
VANS
‘10 Chrysler Town & Country Touring – sto & go, nav., rear DVD, leather ...silver....................$23,995
‘07 Chrysler Town & Country Touring – sto & go, rear AC, power sliders .....silver....................$11,995
‘05 Pontiac Montana SV6 – 7 pass., rear DVD player .............................................silver.......................$9,995
‘05 Chrysler Town & Country Touring – sto & go, rear heat/AC, 3.8 .............magnesium ........... $8,995
SPORT UTILITY
‘10 Jeep Grand Cherokee Laredo – V6, cast wheels, all power......................bright silver.....$19,995
‘08 Jeep Liberty Limited – leather, chrome wheels, sky slider roof...............................bright silver.....$17,995
‘06 Jeep Liberty 4x4 Renegade – light bar, wheel pkg., low miles..............................bright silver.....$15,495
‘05 Dodge Durango 4x4 SUV – 7 pass., hemi, tow pkg....................................................dark blue.......$12,995
‘99 Jeep Grand Cherokee 4x4 Laredo – 6 cyl., new brakes, tow pkg., new tires...dark red........$4,995
TRUCKS
‘10 Dodge Ram 1500 4x4 Quad Cab SLT – 12,000 miles, tow pkg.......................black .................. $25,995
‘08 Dodge Dakota 4x4 Quad Cab – leather, wheel pkg., low miles.............................red...................... $22,495
‘07 Dodge Ram 1500 4x2 Regular Cab ST – 4.7, auto, tow pkg., dual exhaust....black .................. $12,995
‘01 Dodge Ram 2500 H.D. Quad Cab SLT 4x4 – Cummins, tow pkg.............almond...............$13,995
‘01 Dodge Ram 1500 4x2 Quad Cab – 318 V/8, tow pkg., dual exhaust.................dark blue.............. $6,795
‘93 Chevrolet 2500 H.D. Regular Cab 4x2 – Diesel, auto......................................white ..................... $2,995
‘90 Dodge Ram 1500 Regular Cab – low miles, 318......................................................blue....................... $2,995
‘80 Chevrolet El Camino – low miles................................................................................................dark green............$4,295
See And Test Drive The All New 2011 Chrysler 200! – IN STOCK!
All Prices Include Hardin Motors Discount Plus Factory Rebates: Tax And Title Extra
All Certified Used Cars Have A 6 Yr. - 80,000 Mile Power Train Warranty And A 3 Mo. - 3,000
Mile All Mechanical Warranty. All Vehicles Must Pass A 125 Point Inspection And Repair List.
Over 50 Years In Business! We may not be the
largest, but WE ARE THE BEST!
Hardin Motors Inc.
MT. VICTORY
800-473-2681 or 937-354-4061
“The Little Profit Dealer, They’re Cheaper In The Country!”
All Sale Prices Include Incentives by Chrysler / Hardin Motors / GMAC
See All Pictures Of new
& Used Vehicles On
Our Website!
www.hardinmotors.com
®
44 - Mobile Homes, Rent
604 ELM ST., MCGUFFEY— 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, very nice mobile
home with deck. $475 month plus
deposit. 419-647-4525.
CAMPER HOOK-UP– Available,
possible year round. Private and
Scenic, 419-310-7137.
46 - Real Estate for Sale
1,000’S OF AREA
LISTINGS
www.
charterrealtyonline
.com
CHARTER REALTY
1420 S. MAIN
KENTON, OHIO
419-674-4114
3 BEDROOM– Country Home. 2
plus acres, 419-310-3140.
745 N. MAIN, KENTON— Perfect
family home. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths,
central air, appliances. $85,000. 419673-8506.
CHARTER REALTY
419-674-4114
NEW LISTING— Here’s a great
option for the budget minded
buyer. Priced in the $40’s, this 3
bedroom home has newer wiring
and plumbing, a wraparound
covered porch, and a nice lot.
Code 1969
PRICE REDUCED— Enjoy the
spring weather to come from the
covered deck of this nice 4 bedroom, 1-1/2 bath Kenton home.
Great features include a lovely
fireplace, first floor laundry, 2 car
garage with work area, and a
nearly 1/4 acre lot. Code 1950
RECOVER
FROM
RENTING— Invest in your own future
with this 3 bedroom, 1-1/2 bath
traditional home in north Kenton.
Located on a quiet tree lined
street, this home is move in
ready and features a dining
room, a space saving kitchen
with pantry, and a first floor laundry. Code 1947
For more information or to
view these homes,
CALL VANESSA BRIM
419-792-1650
vsbrim@windstream.net
TIMES CLASSIFIED ADS GET RESULTS. Phone 674-4066 and talk
with an ADvisor.
46 - Real Estate for Sale
CENTURY 21
SUNWAY REALTY,
LLC
419-675-2333
View our listings
on the Internet
www.realtor.com
www.century21.com
CLOSE TO SCHOOLS— And shopping area. Ready to move in. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. 739 N. Barron, Kenton. Call 419-674-3785.
FOR RENT OR SALE— House with
pond, 80x100 pole barn, two plus
acres of pasture, pole shed, on 5
acres. North of Big Springs. 937363-3033.
LAND CONTRACT OR RENT—
With option to buy. 3 bedrooms, high
efficiency natural gas furnace, central A/C, fenced in back yard, large
garage. Agent owned. Kenton. Wingfield Realty, 937-363-3814.
LOCATION LOCATION! Move in
Ready! 3 Bedroom, 2 bath. 422
Front St., Upper Sandusky. 419-6180170.
47 - Mobile Homes, Sale
ALL NEW 2011– Singlewides have
arrived, mobile home park ready.
Call today, move in fast, 740-3894424.
CLAYTON HOMES– of Marion. New
homes starting at $19,995. No one
sells for less, 740-389-4424.
FOR SALE— Trailer on rented lot in
Dunkirk. $1,200 or best offer. Call
and leave message. No calls after 8
p.m. 567-674-4129.
KENTON
ENTERPRISES, INC’S
New mobile & modular
home sales
Custom order your new
Home today!
Call: 419-674-4172
Single wide lots
available at
Rush Mobile Home Park
in Kenton!
MOVE IN READY– 3BR-2BA w/furniture, very nice private community &
6 months free lot rent, 740-3894424.
NEW 3BR - 2BA– on 2 acres w/2 car
attached garage possible owner Finance w/good down payment, minutes from Rt 23, just reduced, 740389-4424.
OWN YOUR LAND??– Pick a
home!! Singlewides or Modulars,
turn key projects, 740-389-4424.
47 - Mobile Homes, Sale
64 - Pets & Supplies
SINGLEWIDE SALE!– used starting
at $7995 and up. 1, 2 & 3BR models
all under $14,995, 740-389-4424.
FREE— SMALL DOG HOUSE.
Good condition. 567-295-8044.
48 - Wanted to Buy
ATTN:
Paying top dollar for all
vehicles. Buying ferrous and
non-ferrous metals. Will
beat any competitors prices
Danner’s Towing & Recycling
Sycamore, OH
419-927-6154
Mon - Fri 8-5
CASH FOR YOUR GOLD— Goldrush Jewelers, Kenton. 419-6751117.
WANTED TO BUY— Up to $1000
cash for junk cars, truck, motorcycles. Free pickup. Savage Brothers
Auto Wrecking. 937-935-7534, 937935-6767.
WANTED TO BUY— Wheat straw.
In truck load lots of 650 bale loads.
Call 937-367-3602, 937-596-5143.
53 - Antiques
ANTIQUES ~ BOUGHT ~ SOLD
Buying coins, glassware, collectibles,
furniture, entire estates. We offer
stripping/refinishing. Bill & Terri Baker, 419-294-4558.
55 - Misc. for Sale
65 - Lawn & Garden
20 HORSE HYDRO CUB CADET—
Tractor mower. Runs and mows
great. 567-674-6068.
AFFORDABLE
LAWN
CARE—
Lawn rolling. Licensed and insured.
Mike Osborn. 30 year experience.
419-674-3611 or 419-675-2879.
AHW
ENTERPRISES— Property
services, lawn mowing, clean ups,
small and large, residential and commercial. 567-674-3131. Information
at: ahwservices.com
Thursday, April 14, 2011
69 - Livestock for Sale
78 - Autos for Sale
HOGWILD SHOWPIG SALE— Many
consigners. Saturday, May 7th, at
the Hardin County Fairgrounds, in
Kenton. Sale preview at 6 pm, sale
starts at 7 pm. For more information
call 419-234-5794.
BUYING JUNK, WRECKED and repairable cars and trucks. $50 $5,000. Kenny, 419-673-1283.
PIG SALE— Sparks Farm. 15987
Twp. Rd. 195, Kenton. Sale: Sunday,
May 1st at 2:00 pm. Barn opens at
12:30 pm. Selling January 20th
through March 3rd fair pigs. Preview
on Saturday, April 30th from 9 am - 3
pm. Questions call 567-674-1205 or
567-674-4084.
77 - Campers & RVs
Hardin County Small Engine Services 1482 S. Main Street Kenton or
1st drive off St.Rt. 292.419-6738525. See us for Lawn mower, tiller,
generator, 4 wheeler & ALL other
small engine repair needs! FREE
pick up in Kenton until April 1.
1976 HOLIDAY RAMBLER 32’—
With awning. No title, lots extras,
asking $1,500. 567-674-7394.
HEART LANDSCAPING— Spring is
here! Call now to get on our spring
schedule! FREE ESTIMATES. 419673-0809
2000 WILDERNESS– 34 ft. Travel
Trailer, double slides, many extras
with hitch, 419-294-3667.
LAWN MOWING— Lawn rolling,
spring clean up. Trim bushes, etc. 35
years in business. Free estimates.
Paul Miller Mowing, 419-673-0053,
419-230-6303.
1996 STARCRAFT– 25’ 5th wheel
camper, awning, $5,000, 419-9279453.
78 - Autos for Sale
!CASH! FOR NON RUNNING— Unwanted cars or trucks, 419-6743164, 419-674-4556.
3 SETS OF HAVILAND CHINA–
Reasonable, 740-341-5126.
NOW OPEN— Richard’s Greenhouse, 11803 SR 67 W. It’s time to
plant your cabbage and onions.
BEAR
CAT
SCANNERS—
BC340CRS desk top scanner.
BC72XLT hand held scanner, your
choice $125. Born’s Tire Center,
419-673-1060.
OLLIE’S LAWN SERVICE— Spring
clean up. Lawn rolling, mowing,
hedge trimming, landscaping, mulching. Licensed and insured. Free estimates. 419-674-7100.
POOL AND GAME TABLES— New,
used, coin, buy, sell, move. Edison,
OH, 419-946–8682.
TONY’S LAWN SERVICE— Mowing, commercial & residential. Free
estimates. Kenton area. 419-7670310.
****
*Car Credit Made Easy*
Tired of Hearing No?
We Say Yes!
Bad Credit? Repos?
Bankruptcy?
Call Matt Today for
Easy Approval
*419-294-2386*
*800-589-8079*
****
WANTED YARDS TO MOW— Big or
small, low rates. 567-674-5223, 419675-3004.
2008 PONTIAC SOLESTICE— Low
mileage, red, convertible. $17,500.
419-202-1896.
67 - Farmers Column
BIG WILK’S
MOTOR SALES, LLC
Buy here, Pay here
0% interest for everyone on
qualified vehicles
18352 SR 309 E
4 miles east of Kenton
www.bigwilks.com
VERY NICE BABY– infant furniture.
Bought from Babies-R-Us. Armoire
w/drawers, changing table w/drawers, crib, and rocker/glider $425 for
set or can separate pieces, 740-4992736 evenings.
63 - Firewood & Supplies
DON HULL TREE CARE— Cutting,
trimming, tree transplanting. Firewood $50. 567-674-4103, 419-6752936.
64 - Pets & Supplies
HARDIN COUNTY
HUMANE SOCIETY
Pet Food Pantry
Every 1st and 3rd Saturday
of the month
9 am - noon
Proof of income
based assistance
13510 SR 68 S., Kenton
today in history
By The Associated Press
Today is Thursday, April 14, the 104th day of
2011. There are 261 days left in the year.
Today’s Highlight in History:
On April 14, 1865, President Abraham Lincoln
was shot and mortally wounded by John Wilkes
Booth during a performance of “Our American
Cousin” at Ford’s Theater in Washington; the
president died nine hours later.
On this date:
In 1775, the first American society for the abolition of slavery was formed in Philadelphia.
In 1828, the first edition of Noah Webster’s
“American Dictionary of the English Language”
was published.
In 1910, President William Howard Taft
became the first U.S. chief executive to throw the
ceremonial first pitch at a baseball game as the
Washington Senators beat the Philadelphia
Athletics 3-0.
In 1912, the British liner RMS Titanic collided
with an iceberg in the North Atlantic and began
sinking.
In 1949, at the conclusion of the so-called
“Wilhelmstrasse Trial,” 19 former Nazi Foreign
Office officials were sentenced by an American
tribunal in Nuremberg to prison terms ranging
from four to 25 years.
In 1956, Ampex Corp. demonstrated the first
successful videotape recorder at the National
Association of Radio and Television Broadcasters
Convention in Chicago.
In 1960, the musical “Bye Bye Birdie” opened
on Broadway.
In 1981, the first test flight of America’s first
operational space shuttle, the Columbia, ended
successfully with a landing at Edwards Air Force
Base in California.
In 1986, Americans got word of a U.S. air raid
on Libya.
Ten years ago: The 24 crew members of the
U.S. spy plane who’d been held in China for 11
days landed at their home base, where they were
greeted by thousands of friends, family members
and other well-wishers.
Five years ago: President George W. Bush
rebuffed recommendations from a growing number of retired generals that he replace Defense
Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld, saying, “He has
my full support.”
One year ago: The Eyjafjallajokul volcano in
Iceland erupted, sending out an ash plume that
led most northern European countries to close
their airspace between April 15 and 20, grounding about 10 million travelers worldwide.
Today’s Birthdays: Actor Bradford Dillman is
81. Actor Jay Robinson is 81. Country singer
Loretta Lynn is 76. Actress Julie Christie is 71.
Retired MLB All-Star Pete Rose is 70. Rock musician Ritchie Blackmore is 66. Actor John Shea is
62. Actor-race car driver Brian Forster is 51.
Actor Brad Garrett is 51. Actor Robert Clendenin
is 47. Actress Catherine Dent is 46. Actor Lloyd
Owen is 45. Rock musician Barrett Martin is 44.
Actor Anthony Michael Hall is 43. Actor Adrien
Brody is 38. Actor Antwon Tanner is 36. Actress
Sarah Michelle Gellar is 34. Actor-producer Rob
McElhenney is 34. Actress Abigail Breslin is 15.
Thought for Today: “Change your life today.
Don’t gamble on the future, act now, without
delay.” — Simone de Beauvoir (1908-1986).
CREEK SIDE BARN RECYCLING.
Wanted– Lumber from your old barn.
We will remove your unwanted
barns. Call for more info 567-2300843.
WANTED TO BUY— Standing timber. Hardwood and Cottonwood. No
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KENTON TIMES – Page 11
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Page 12 – KENTON TIMES
Thursday, April 14, 2011
L-B outscores HN 20-3
DOLA — Liberty-Benton plated runs in all five innings
it batted included seven runs in the fifth inning on the
way to a 20-3 win over Hardin Northern in Blanchard
Valley Conference baseball action on Wednesday afternoon.
Jacob Gossard had two hits with a double and an RBI
to lead the Polar Bears at the plate.
Austin Roby added a double and an RBI and Reed
Poling, Patrick Stevenson and Ethon Flowers all added
singles for the Polar Bears.
Flowers also had an RBI.
Gossard took the pitching loss, allowing 10 runs (five
earned) on seven hits and two walks, while striking out
three batters in 2 2/3 innings on the mound.
Colin Geiger, Patrick Stevenson and Jacob Lozano all
got relief work.
The Polar Bears committed 13 errors in the game.
Austin Ingleston struck out six and walked one batter
in four innings to earn the win.
The Polar Bears are off until Tuesday when they travel to Arcadia.
———
LB
154
37
20 15 2
HN
001
20
3 6 13
WP - Ingleston. LP - Gossard.
2B - Gossard, Harpst, Stanton, Ingleston.
Riverside outhits Rams
DEGRAFF — Upper Scioto Valley was defeated by
Riverside 9-1 in a North West Central Conference baseball game on Wednesday.
The visiting Rams were limited to 4 hits and committed 8 errors in the game.
Blake Watkins and Cain Haney had doubles for USV,
which falls to 3-7 on the season. Riverside is now 6-5.
Sean Hale took the pitching loss.
USV hosts Perry this afternoon.
———
USV
100
000
R
210
150
WP - Proffitt. LP - Hale.
2B - B. Watkins, Haney, Hurley.
0
x
-
148
981
Eagles top Polar Bears
DOLA — Liberty-Benton broke open a close game with
six runs in the top of the seventh inning on the way to a
9-1 win over Hardin Northern in softball action
Wednesday evening.
The Polar Bears, who trailed 3-1 going into the seventh, received two hits including a double from Kaylee
Hooker and a double from Carlie Doll.
Becky McElree took the pitching loss as the Polar
Bears fell to 1-8 on the season.
Hardin Northern travels to Arcadia on Tuesday.
———
LB
000
300
HN
000
100
WP - Dean. LP - McElree.
2B - Doll, Hooker, Dager.
6
0
-
970
155
Spring League teams set
Teams have been drawn
for the Spring League at
Memorial Park Golf Club.
Play will begin Friday,
April 15 between 4 and 5
p.m.
Teams are as follows:
Team 1: Bill Brown, Clint
Stuck, Jerry Waddle, Judy
Brim.
Team 2: Tracy Shepherd,
David
Bettinger,
Scott
Willoby, Jane Baker.
Team 3: Dean Brim, Mike
Wood, Ron Reese, Dick
Cannode;
Team 4: Darrel Reese,
Tyler Boston, Todd Hayter,
Anne Stuck;
Team 5: Dave Geiger, Jim
Davis, Don Dodds, Joni
Rensing.
Early runs help Wynford get past Falcons
By LONNIE McMILLAN
Times news bureau
MOUNT BLANCHARD —
Wynford was patient at the
plate early and took advantage of some Riverdale pitching control problems in taking a 9-4 North Central
Conference softball victory
on Wednesday.
The Royals drew five
walks and were hit by three
pitches in the first inning,
scoring six runs off of freshman pitcher Jordyn Wright.
“We were really patient
with her, and I told the girls
to be patient,” Wynford
coach Dave Ujveri said. “We
were up and ready when the
balls were there to cash in
when we could. Most of the
time, she was struggling,
and the worse she got, the
more patient we got.”
Wright (0-2) walked her
first batter, and after getting
an out, she hit two in a row.
She got KarLee Schiefer to
ground out for the second
out with only two runs in,
but she simply could not get
the third out.
After walking another batter, Kayli Stuckman had a
two-run single. Four straight
hitters after that reached on
a walk or by being hit by a
pitch.
“Jordyn, it’s only her second start, so she’s naturally
nervous as a freshman,”
Riverdale coach Luke Swavel
said. “She’s having a hard
time finding the strike zone,
hitting some batters and
walking. They really didn’t
hit her. She just dug herself
Times photo/Brandon Drake
Making a throw
Riverdale shortstop Breann Parish prepares to throw the ball
to first base during the Falcons game against Wynford on
Wednesday.
a hole. That’s to be expected
Bridget Fox got the
from a freshman sometimes, Falcons (0-9, 0-4 NCC) out
and she’ll just have to take of the jam, and after giving
that as a learning experience up three runs — only one
and keep moving forward.”
earned — the next two
Padres beat Reds 3-2
SAN
DIEGO
(AP)
—
Orlando Hudson hit a basesloaded, opposite-field single
with two outs in the ninth
inning and the San Diego
Padres beat the Cincinnati
Reds 3-2 on Wednesday night
to avoid a three-game sweep.
Hudson hit the first pitch
he saw from Nick Masset (0-3)
over third baseman Juan
Francisco’s head and into left
field.
With the score tied at 2,
pinch-hitter Brad Hawpe
started the winning rally with
a one-out walk before advancing to third on Nick Hundley’s
hit-and-run single to right.
Will Venable was intentionally
walked to get to Jason
Bartlett, who was hitting just
.133. Bartlett grounded to
innings, she was nearly
flawless
the
last
four
innings. She gave up a twoout single in the fourth
inning and sent Wynford (74, 2-2 NCC) down in order
the final three innings.
Teneil Krebs had an RBIgroundout and another run
scored on a wild pitch in the
second inning. Two singles
and an error led to a run in
the third inning to make it
9-0.
Riverdale fought back
with a four-run sixth inning,
taking advantage of three
Wynford errors and control
problems by Stuckman,
another freshman pitcher.
“I’m happy because the
last two games we kind of
rolled over, and we finally
fought back,” Swavel said. “I
saw a little bit of fight from
this young team, and it’s
getting me excited for what’s
coming up.”
Stuckman (2-1) threw 5
2/3 innings, giving up just
three hits but with seven
walks. She struck out three,
before being relieved by
Shannon Miller.
Fox had two of the
Falcons’ four hits in the
game. Tiffany Wright scored
a run and had an RBI.
Andi Perdue had two hits
and scored twice to lead the
Royals at the plate.
Both teams are off until
4:30 p.m. Friday when they
meet again at Wynford.
———
Wynford
621
000
0— 9 6 3
Riverdale
000
004
0— 4 4 3
WP: Stuckman (2-1); LP: J. Wright (0-2).
Ram track teams finish
2nd in four-team meet
third
baseman
Juan
Francisco, who threw to home
for the force.
The Padres scored an
unearned run without getting
a hit in the eighth to tie it at 2.
Hudson reached on a bunt
that forced Bartlett at third,
stole second and took third on
catcher Ryan Hanigan’s throw
into center for Cincinnati’s
second error of the inning. He
scored on Jorge Cantu’s chopper to third.
The victory came less than
24 hours after the Padres had
numerous chances Tuesday
night before losing 8-2 in 11
innings. They had runners on
second and third with none
out in the eighth, then had the
bases loaded in both the ninth
and 10th.
RICHWOOD — The Upper Scioto Valley boys and girls
track teams were second in a quad meet at North Union
on Tuesday. North Union won the boys meet with 122
points, followed by the Rams with 65 1/2, Ridgemont with
58 1/2 and Village Academy with 1.
USV winners were Mason Howard in the 110 hurdles
(16.6 seconds), Colby Salyer in the long jump (18-0 1/4),
Cody Henderson in the pole vault (10-0), Jason Holbrook
in the shot put (40-8) and the 1,600 relay team of Chris
Netzer, Jerod Cotterman, Salyer and Zak Beltz (3:49.2).
North Union scored 115 points to win the girls meet.
USV finished with 53 points, Ridgemont had 53 and
Village Academy scored 5.
USV winners were Aspen Rose in the 100 hurdles (17.1
seconds), the 300 hurdles (53.8 seconds) and the 200
dash (29.2 seconds), Kelly Canfield in the shot put (27-5),
Stephanie Harpster in the 1,600 run (7:23) and the 3,200
relay of Harpster, Mackenzie Downing, Kiley Beale and
Kayla Skidmore (12:59).
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2007 GMC SIERRA 3500 SLT DURAMAX 4WD
2007 HONDA CRV EX-L 4WD
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STEVES PRICE $12,500
2010 CADILLAC DTS LUXURY
STEVES PRICE $38,995
2008 PONTIAC G8 GT
STEVES PRICE $19,588
2008 CHEVROLET MALIBU LT
STEVES PRICE $12,275
2007 PONTIAC G6 GT CONVERTIBLE
P9797
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11,800 MILES, KELLEY BLUE BOOK $36,585 34,600 MILES, KELLEY BLUE BOOK $26,210 42,500 MILES, KELLEY BLUE BOOK $16,998 40,000 MILES, KELLEY BLUE BOOK $18,750
STEVES PRICE $32,995
2008 HONDA PILOT 4WD
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2008 CHEVROLET COLORADO LT1 4WD
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2009 TOYOTA CAMRY LE
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2010 CHEVROLET HHR LT
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2010 CHEVROLET TAHOE
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2003 CHEVROLET SILVERADO 1500 HD 4WD 2006 CHEVROLET SILVERADO 2500
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2007 HONDA ACCORD SE
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2008 KIA OPTIMA LX
P9853
P9848
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STEVES PRICE $14,995
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2010 CHEVROLET MALIBU LT1
P9844
P9847
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2007 SATURN OUTLOOK XR
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2007 CHRYSLER 300C
10T206A
P9850
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