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USA<br />

Weekend<br />

The<br />

Inside<br />

Local/Area<br />

Obituaries. . . . . . . . . 3<br />

Police Notebook . . .3<br />

Opinion<br />

Will Durst . . . . . . . .4<br />

Also...<br />

Sports. . . . . . . . . . 6-7<br />

Classifieds . . . . 10-11<br />

Diversions . . . . . . . .9<br />

Five top new TV<br />

shows this fall<br />

Entertainment Guide<br />

Page 6<br />

<strong>News</strong>-<strong>Banner</strong><br />

Good Morning!<br />

Outside<br />

Spotty showers in forecast<br />

for Street Fair week<br />

Today Sunday Monday<br />

High 69 High 73 High 74<br />

Low 44 Low 56 Low 58<br />

Online<br />

Don’t forget to check our<br />

“<strong>Bluffton</strong> Street Fair”<br />

blog in our blog bank at<br />

www.news-banner.com<br />

next week for plenty of<br />

“Timeless memories.”<br />

Vol. 82 No. 270<br />

<strong>SAT</strong>URDAY<br />

September 17, 2011<br />

Sports<br />

Now Showing at the <strong>News</strong>-<strong>Banner</strong>’s “Slide Shows”<br />

“Ossian Days”<br />

Check it out at www.news-banner.com<br />

Raiders are only<br />

local team to win<br />

www.news-banner.com<br />

<strong>SAT</strong>URDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 2011 BLUFFTON, INDIANA • Wells County’s Hometown Connection 50¢<br />

Slowed, but not<br />

stopped: She’s<br />

taking on MS<br />

By CHET BAUMGARTNER<br />

Once Wells County resident Bridget<br />

Schweikhardt, through a set of false teeth<br />

and an imaginary plastic surgeon, told a<br />

story of inner beauty — how God judges<br />

people from the inside despite how much<br />

they change on the outside.<br />

More than five years ago, Schweikhardt<br />

created and played a character, Murtle<br />

Turtle, in a set of skits she helped write for<br />

her church, the Dillman United Brethren<br />

Church.<br />

In her skit “Extreme Makeover,” the<br />

imaginary Murtle endures a gauntlet of<br />

plastic surgery, cosmetics and more to<br />

forge a brand new body, only to conclude<br />

when the skit concludes that God loves her<br />

for the heart she has inside her.<br />

Most people, when watching the<br />

skit, will only notice the fake teeth Sch-<br />

Royal Raiders<br />

Clayton Hamilton was crowned king and Kaitlin Bonewit<br />

was crowned queen at Friday night's Southern Wells homecoming.<br />

The Raiders rolled over Wes-Del 60-0. (Photo by<br />

Glen Werling)<br />

BRMC’s care impresses<br />

national review panel<br />

By DAVE SCHULTZ<br />

<strong>Bluffton</strong> Regional Medical<br />

Center is one of five Indiana hospitals<br />

listed among the nation’s top<br />

performers by the Joint Commission,<br />

an organization that accredits<br />

health care providers.<br />

BRMC is one of four hospitals<br />

affiliated with the Lutheran<br />

Health Network on the list, where<br />

it is joined by Dukes Memorial<br />

Hospital in Peru, Dupont Hospital<br />

of Fort Wayne, and the Orthopedic<br />

Hospital of Lutheran Health<br />

Network of Fort Wayne. The fifth<br />

Indiana hospital honored is Terre<br />

Haute Regional Hospital.<br />

The Joint Commission’s list of<br />

“Top Performers on Key Quality<br />

Measures” for 2010 is based on<br />

data about a hospital’s efforts to<br />

improve care for five conditions<br />

— heart attack, heart failure, pneumonia,<br />

surgical care, and children’s<br />

asthma. <strong>Bluffton</strong> Regional Medical<br />

Center was recognized for its<br />

excellence in treating pneumonia<br />

and providing surgical care.<br />

BRMC is one of 405 U.S. hospitals<br />

on the Joint Commission’s<br />

list. Inclusion on the list is based<br />

on data reported to The Joint Commission<br />

during the previous cal-<br />

endar year. This first recognition<br />

program is based on data reported<br />

for 2010.<br />

“Our associates and our medical<br />

staff know that what matters most<br />

to patients is safe, effective care.<br />

That’s why we have made a commitment<br />

to deliver positive patient<br />

experiences and clinical outcomes<br />

through evidence-based care processes,”<br />

said Brandon Haushalter,<br />

CEO of <strong>Bluffton</strong> Regional Medical<br />

Center. “This recognition is the<br />

latest in a string of national awards<br />

<strong>Bluffton</strong> Regional has received that<br />

give testimony to the high quality<br />

of the care given at our hospital.<br />

We are proud to be named to the<br />

list of The Joint Commission’s Top<br />

Performers on Key Quality Measures.<br />

Everything we do at <strong>Bluffton</strong><br />

Regional is about the patient.”<br />

Other Lutheran Health Network<br />

facilities in Indiana on the Joint<br />

Commission’s list are Dukes, for<br />

pneumonia; Dupont, for pneumonia<br />

and surgical care; and Orthopedic<br />

Hospital, for surgical care.<br />

Terre Haute Regional Hospital<br />

is not in the Lutheran Health Network,<br />

but its former CEO is Brian<br />

Bauer. Bauer is now the CEO of<br />

(Continued on Page 8)<br />

More Weather on Page 2<br />

Children’s Museum:<br />

Bring the family<br />

Bridget Schweikhardt was diagnosed<br />

with multiple sclerosis about 10 years<br />

ago. Her friends and family are organizing<br />

a fundraiser tomorrow to support a<br />

bike-a-thon they did last week. (Photo by<br />

Chet Baumgartner)<br />

weikhardt used. They’ll only notice how<br />

the make-believe plastic surgeon, played<br />

by Larry Palmer, transformed Murtle Turtle<br />

into someone who looks suspiciously<br />

(Continued on Page 2)<br />

Wells’ unemployment<br />

rate shows slight boost<br />

By DAVE SCHULTZ<br />

Wells County’s unemployment<br />

rate took a slight<br />

jump last month, up .04 of a<br />

percent, according to figures<br />

released Friday by the Indiana<br />

Department of Workforce<br />

Development.<br />

The preliminary unemployment<br />

rate in Wells County<br />

was 7.8 percent in August<br />

after sitting at 7.4 percent in<br />

both June and July.<br />

The number put Wells<br />

County at 27th among Indiana’s<br />

92 counties in terms of<br />

lowest unemployment rate.<br />

The only area county with a<br />

lower unemployment rate is<br />

Jay County, at 7.4 percent.<br />

Two counties that border<br />

Wells County, Blackford<br />

and Grant, have two of the<br />

state’s highest unemployment<br />

rates. Blackford is<br />

second in the state, at 11.2<br />

percent, and Grant is tied<br />

for 10th in the state at 10.5<br />

percent.<br />

Fayette County in east<br />

central Indiana has a 12.1<br />

percent unemployment rate,<br />

the state’s highest, while<br />

Dubois and Daviess counties<br />

in southern Indiana have<br />

the lowest, at 6.1 percent.<br />

Indiana’s statewide preliminary<br />

unemployment rate<br />

for August was 8.7 percent,<br />

up from 8.5 percent in July.<br />

The Department of Workforce<br />

Development also<br />

noted, with the U.S. rate at<br />

9.1 percent, that Indiana’s<br />

unemployment rate is<br />

below the national rate and<br />

the rates of its neighboring<br />

states for the seventh month<br />

in a row.<br />

Mark W. Everson, commissioner<br />

of the DWD,<br />

said the National Bureau of<br />

Labor Statistics did some<br />

recalculation concerning<br />

Indiana’s private sector<br />

employment and the state<br />

showed an increase of 4,100<br />

private sector jobs in July.<br />

The numbers also showed<br />

a decline of 4,800 private<br />

sector jobs in Indiana in<br />

August.<br />

(Continued on Page 2)<br />

Saying goodbye<br />

Students from Bethlehem Lutheran School of rural Ossian lined up in front of the school Friday to say their final goodbyes<br />

to kindergarten teacher Adeline Schuller, who died Monday evening following a massive stroke while on a weekend<br />

vacation trip. The procession passed in front of the school en route to Schuller's funeral service. A number of students<br />

held up banners; pictured above are, from left, parent Jeni Harkless, Madison Bearman, Isaac Harkless, Kaden<br />

Laley, Makena Scheumann and Emily Werling. The poster is decorated with students' drawings of horses. Schuller<br />

was an avid horsewoman. (Photo by Barbara Barbieri)<br />

Paving<br />

the way<br />

Mark LaFever from<br />

LICA Construction<br />

uses a small<br />

roller to pack down<br />

a large asphalt<br />

patch on Cherry<br />

Street in front of<br />

the emergency<br />

room at <strong>Bluffton</strong><br />

Regional Medical<br />

Center Friday. The<br />

paving project is<br />

part of a larger<br />

project to improve<br />

patient flow into<br />

the emergency<br />

room. (Photo by<br />

Glen Werling)<br />

How to contact us:<br />

Call us: 824-0224<br />

or 1-800-579-7476<br />

Fax us: 824-0700<br />

email@news-banner.com<br />

On the Web:<br />

www.news-banner.com<br />

Follow us at:<br />

twitter.com/newsbanner


Page 2 • The <strong>News</strong>-<strong>Banner</strong> • <strong>SAT</strong>URDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 2011<br />

MS event<br />

(Continued from Page 1)<br />

like Schweikhardt’s daughter,<br />

Emily Jones.<br />

They probably won’t<br />

notice Schweikhardt’s transformation<br />

— the one that<br />

tells another story.<br />

In the video, Schweikhardt<br />

can move her<br />

fingers to grab the microphone.<br />

In the video, she can<br />

walk. Today, in real life,<br />

because of multiple sclerosis,<br />

Schweikhardt’s fingers<br />

curve constantly inward, and<br />

she mostly uses a motorized<br />

wheelchair to move.<br />

However, Schweikhardt<br />

is telling both stories —<br />

her’s and Murtle’s — Sunday<br />

evening<br />

at the Dillman<br />

church.<br />

The event is a<br />

fundraiser to<br />

raise money<br />

for the National<br />

Multiple<br />

Sclerosis Society<br />

to research<br />

On the Web<br />

the disease — what causes it<br />

and what could cure it.<br />

“I don’t know if they’ll<br />

find a cure for me,” Schweikhardt<br />

said, “but I have a<br />

daughter, and I have a niece,<br />

and I have lots of family and<br />

friends. I don’t want them to<br />

go through what I’m going<br />

through, so I would say<br />

that’s my biggest reason for<br />

wanting to help the MS society.”<br />

During Sunday’s fundraiser,<br />

Schweikhardt’s husband,<br />

Mike, and Palmer,<br />

another member of the<br />

church, will perform a<br />

magic act as “Buddy” and<br />

“Dewey”— characters they<br />

created.<br />

Greta Nusbaumer, who<br />

also has multiple sclerosis,<br />

is baking a pie, and her son,<br />

Jesston, is auctioning it off.<br />

The auction’s proceeds,<br />

along with donations that<br />

evening, will go to the society.<br />

Among the auctioning<br />

and magic, four groups, featuring<br />

Mike’s family as well<br />

as family friends, will sing<br />

gospel music.<br />

“As Christians, we try to<br />

use our gifts, and most of<br />

our families’ gifts (are) in<br />

music,” she said, “and what<br />

better way to use them than<br />

for a good cause.<br />

“We aren’t crafty; we<br />

aren’t athletic ... we wouldn’t<br />

want to have a beauty contest,”<br />

she said, laughing.<br />

Schweikhardt still laughs,<br />

and still maintains she is<br />

blessed.<br />

Multiple sclerosis,<br />

according to the National<br />

Institutes of Health, essentially<br />

disrupts communication<br />

between the brain and<br />

other parts of the body by<br />

causing the body’s immune<br />

system to attack myelin, the<br />

substance which coats and<br />

insulates nerves.<br />

“Your nerves are covered<br />

just like an electrical cord,”<br />

she said. “Your body attacks<br />

that insulation, so your<br />

nerves are exposed.”<br />

Sometimes, the affliction<br />

does relatively little<br />

Unemployment<br />

(Continued from Page 1)<br />

“The July revision of<br />

private sector jobs largely<br />

offsets the August decrease,<br />

making the job numbers<br />

essentially the same as<br />

last month,” Everson said.<br />

“While the number of longterm<br />

unemployed is still too<br />

high, for the first time since<br />

November of 2007, fewer<br />

than 50,000 individuals are<br />

•<br />

damage. Other times, it can<br />

cause paralysis. It differs for<br />

each person, Schweikhardt<br />

said. Her sister went blind<br />

because of the disease.<br />

“They say MS is like a<br />

glacier,” she said. “There is<br />

more under the water than<br />

what is shown.”<br />

Her condition, though,<br />

has eaten away at more than<br />

the protective coating around<br />

her nerves.<br />

As her muscles stopped<br />

cooperating over the decade<br />

she’s been afflicted, she had<br />

to quit her job; she can’t<br />

tolerate the heat. She can’t<br />

clean her house; her niece<br />

does it for her.<br />

She can,<br />

however, use<br />

a modified<br />

computer to<br />

write more<br />

Murtle Turtle<br />

skits if she<br />

wants to, and<br />

she does visit<br />

the Heritage<br />

Pointe retirement center<br />

twice a week for stretching<br />

and swimming exercises.<br />

She does the banking and<br />

she runs the projector at<br />

church. She meets with other<br />

women in her church every<br />

Monday for “Mondays with<br />

Bridget.”<br />

And she can inspire others,<br />

her daughter said.<br />

Since her official diagnosis<br />

in November 10 years<br />

ago, her family and friends<br />

have raised money through<br />

some walk-a-thons and,<br />

for the first time this year,<br />

a bike-a-thon that the MS<br />

Society organizes.<br />

Last weekend, her daughter<br />

and Schweikhardt’s<br />

brother-in-law Troy Drayer<br />

rode 100 miles on a bike to<br />

raise money for the society.<br />

Her nephew, Andrew<br />

Brauchla, rode about 30<br />

miles.<br />

Jones is holding this<br />

weekend’s fundraiser, to<br />

support that bike-a-thon.<br />

“We figured we would be<br />

able to tell stories that would<br />

help people participate in the<br />

society,” Jones said.<br />

Schweikhardt’s family<br />

— both her husband’s side<br />

and her side, the Brauchlas<br />

— organized the event and<br />

prepared the food.<br />

“With family and friends,<br />

all you got to say is, ‘Can<br />

you make this?’ ‘Can you<br />

make that?’<br />

“I don’t think we had<br />

anyone refuse us,” Schweikhardt<br />

said.<br />

“MS is a disease that<br />

affects a lot of people. It’s<br />

changed our lives a lot. It’s<br />

not quite how we thought<br />

we’d be, but we try to make<br />

the most of it the best we<br />

can,” she said.<br />

“(We) still have a good<br />

life, good friends and good<br />

family. You know when it<br />

comes down to it, that’s the<br />

most important thing”<br />

Those who can’t attend<br />

the fundraiser can still send<br />

donations to Jones at her<br />

address 5841W-1100S-90,<br />

Warren, IN, 46792.<br />

chetb@news-banner.com<br />

Donate to the<br />

National Multiple<br />

Sclerosis Society<br />

on its website at<br />

www.nationalmssociety.org<br />

collecting state unemployment<br />

insurance.”<br />

The unemployment<br />

rates for other area counties<br />

are Adams, 8.0 percent;<br />

Whitley, 8.1; Allen, 8.5;<br />

LaGrange, 9.0; Huntington,<br />

9.1; Wabash, 9.2; DeKalb<br />

and Steuben, both 9.6; and<br />

Noble, 10.3.<br />

daves@news-banner.com<br />

Air base lockdown ends<br />

with no details released<br />

TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) — A barricade situation had ended<br />

at an Air Force base in southern Arizona, but authorities<br />

aren’t immediately releasing any details Friday.<br />

A military official said earlier that a man with a gun was<br />

holed up in a building at the Davis-Monthan Air Force Base<br />

on the outskirts of Tucson and that the base was locked<br />

down for several hours.<br />

The base issued a statement saying that its response to the<br />

situation had ended, but provided no details on how it was<br />

resolved. A press conference on the incident was scheduled<br />

for later Friday.<br />

Sgt. Maria Hawke, a Tucson police spokeswoman, said<br />

base officials told the police department that the department’s<br />

SWAT, bomb and hostage negotiation squads no longer<br />

needed at the scene. Hawke didn’t know how the situation<br />

was resolved or whether any arrests were made.<br />

By SCOTT SONNER<br />

and MARTIN GRIFFITH<br />

Associated Press<br />

RENO, Nev. (AP) — A vintage World<br />

War II-era fighter plane plunged into the<br />

edge of the grandstands Friday during a<br />

popular air racing show, killing three people,<br />

injuring more than 50 spectators and creating<br />

a horrific scene strewn with body parts<br />

and smoking debris.<br />

The plane, flown by a renowned 74-yearold<br />

air racer and Hollywood stunt pilot,<br />

spiraled out of control without warning<br />

and appeared to disintegrate upon impact.<br />

Bloodied bodies were spread across the area<br />

as people tended to the victims and ambulances<br />

rushed to the scene.<br />

Authorities were investigating the cause,<br />

but an official with the event said there were<br />

indications that mechanical problems were<br />

to blame.<br />

Maureen Higgins of Alabama, who has<br />

been coming to the show for 16 years, said<br />

the pilot was on his third lap when he lost<br />

control.<br />

She was sitting about 30 yards away from<br />

the crash and watched in horror as the man<br />

in front of her started bleeding after a piece<br />

of debris hit him in the head.<br />

“I saw body parts and gore like you<br />

wouldn’t believe it. I’m talking an arm, a<br />

leg,” Higgins said “The alive people were<br />

missing body parts. I am not kidding you. It<br />

was gore. Unbelievable gore.”<br />

Among the dead was pilot Jimmy Leeward,<br />

74, of Ocala, Fla., a veteran airman<br />

and movie stunt pilot who named his P-<br />

51 Mustang fighter plane the “Galloping<br />

Ghost,” according to Mike Houghton, president<br />

and CEO of Reno Air Races. Officials<br />

earlier said Leeward was 80.<br />

Renown Regional Medical Center<br />

spokeswoman Kathy Carter confirmed that<br />

two others died, but did not provide their<br />

identities.<br />

Stephanie Kruse, a spokeswoman for<br />

the Regional Emergency Medical Service<br />

Authority, told The Associated Press that<br />

emergency crews took a total of 56 injury<br />

victims to three hospitals. She said they also<br />

observed a number of people being transported<br />

by private vehicle, which they are not<br />

including in their count.<br />

Kruse said of the total 56, at the time of<br />

transport, 15 were considered in critical<br />

condition, 13 were serious condition with<br />

potentially life-threatening injuries and 28<br />

Public Auction<br />

Saturday, Oct. 1, 2011<br />

Sale starting at 9:00 a.m.<br />

AUCTION CONDUCTED AT:<br />

4111 East 400 North • <strong>Bluffton</strong>, IN 46714<br />

Antique Oak Furniture – Primitives & Collectibles<br />

Aladdin Oil Lamp – Dolls – Teddy Bear Collection<br />

Longaberger Baskets – Antique & Farm Toy Collection<br />

Toy Steam Engines – 4 Pedal Tractors – Long Guns<br />

100 Lots – Longaberger Baskets; 122 Lots – Toys;<br />

22 Lots – Long Guns (All Sold in Catalog Order)<br />

For complete listing of Longaberger Baskets, Toys and Long Guns,<br />

please go to our website at www.HollowayAuction.com<br />

or call for catalogs.<br />

Cookie Jar and Salt & Pepper Collection – China<br />

Glassware – Modern Furniture & Household<br />

Wayne (LeROI) Industrial Air Compressor – Power<br />

Shop Tools – Hand Tools – Rolling Gantry Crane w/<br />

Hoist Shelving Portable Sign Boards – 1998 Ford<br />

Windstar GL Mini Van – 1997 Ford Thunderbird LX<br />

Simplicity 5212.5 Lawn Tractor w/43” Mower Deck<br />

Call for a detailed brochure, auction terms and rotation or go to<br />

www.HollowayAuction.com<br />

Rolland (Ron) & Judy Myers, Owner<br />

Corporate Lic. #AC30900129<br />

Jody Holloway Lic. # AU1027504 Rudy Frauhiger Lic. # AU01027407<br />

Robert Ellenberger Lic. # AU1000174 Isaac Stoller Lic. # AU10700090<br />

www.HollowayAuction.com<br />

Check out the Community Calendar at the<br />

P-51 Mustang crashes into<br />

crowd at Nevada air show<br />

ELIZABETH, Ind. (AP)<br />

— A southern Indiana casino<br />

says it is bouncing back<br />

from smaller crowds it saw<br />

in the days after the closest<br />

bridge over the Ohio River<br />

was closed last week.<br />

Horseshoe Southern<br />

Indiana Casino saw its business<br />

drop by more than 10<br />

percent last weekend right<br />

after state officials closed<br />

the Sherman Minton Bridge,<br />

which carries Interstate 64<br />

between Indiana and Louisville,<br />

Ky., Jonathan Jones,<br />

the casino’s vice president<br />

of operations, told The Courier-Journal<br />

for a story published<br />

Thursday (http://bit.<br />

ly/ncJ8j8 ).<br />

Attendance began<br />

improving in the middle of<br />

this week with the casino<br />

promoting alternative routes<br />

that add at least 10 minutes<br />

for trips from Louisville to<br />

the casino along the Ohio<br />

River near Elizabeth, Jones<br />

said.<br />

“We are all very optimistic<br />

the business will come<br />

back and it will do so quickly,”<br />

he said.<br />

Drivers have faced<br />

long delays in the Louisville<br />

area since officials<br />

abruptly closed the 50-yearold<br />

bridge on Sept. 9 after<br />

inspectors found cracks in<br />

the span’s steel.<br />

The bridge closure trouble<br />

follows flooding from<br />

the Ohio River this spring<br />

that forced the casino to<br />

be shut down for about 15<br />

days. The casino reported<br />

a 15 percent decline in customers<br />

and an 8.3 percent<br />

decrease in revenues for the<br />

first six months of the year,<br />

compared with the same<br />

period in 2010.<br />

Jones said he doesn’t<br />

expect the bridge closure<br />

will force the casino to lay<br />

off any of its 1,700 employees.<br />

A P-51 Mustang airplane is shown right<br />

before crashing at the Reno Air show on<br />

Friday. The plane plunged into the stands at<br />

the event in what an official described as a<br />

"mass casualty situation." (AP photo/Grass<br />

Valley Union, Tim O'Brien)<br />

were non-serious or non-life threatening.<br />

“This is a very large incident, probably<br />

one of the largest this community has seen<br />

in decades,” Kruse told The Associated<br />

Press. “The community is pulling together<br />

to try to deal with the scope of it. The hospitals<br />

have certainly geared up and staffed up<br />

to deal with it.”<br />

The P-51 Mustang, a class of plane that<br />

can fly at speeds in excess of up to 500 mph,<br />

crashed into a box-seat area in front of the<br />

grandstand at about 4:30 p.m., race spokesman<br />

Mike Draper said. Houghton said Leeward<br />

appeared to have “lost control of the<br />

aircraft,” though details on why that happened<br />

weren’t immediately known.<br />

Houghton said at a news conference<br />

hours after the crash that there appeared to<br />

be a “problem with the aircraft that caused it<br />

to go out of control.” He did not elaborate.<br />

Surfing the<br />

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LOCAL/NATION<br />

Weather<br />

Saturday: Partly<br />

sunny, with a high near<br />

69. East wind between 5<br />

and 10 mph.<br />

Saturday Night: Partly<br />

cloudy, with a low around<br />

44. East wind around 5<br />

mph.<br />

Sunday: Mostly sunny,<br />

with a high near 73. East<br />

wind between 5 and 10<br />

mph.<br />

Sunday Night: A 40<br />

percent chance of showers<br />

and thunderstorms.<br />

Mostly cloudy, with a<br />

low around 56. South<br />

wind around 5 mph. New<br />

rainfall amounts between<br />

a tenth and quarter of<br />

an inch, except higher<br />

amounts possible in thunderstorms.<br />

Monday: A 50 percent<br />

chance of showers and<br />

thunderstorms. Cloudy,<br />

with a high near 74. New<br />

rainfall amounts between<br />

a tenth and quarter of<br />

an inch, except higher<br />

amounts possible in thunderstorms.<br />

Monday Night: A 30<br />

percent chance of showers<br />

and thunderstorms before<br />

2 a.m. Mostly cloudy,<br />

with a low around 58.<br />

Tuesday: Mostly<br />

sunny, with a high near<br />

78.<br />

Tuesday Night: A 30<br />

percent chance of showers.<br />

Partly cloudy, with a<br />

low around 58.<br />

Wednesday: A 30 percent<br />

chance of showers.<br />

Partly sunny, with a high<br />

near 74.<br />

Wednesday Night:<br />

Partly cloudy, with a low<br />

around 52.<br />

Thursday: A 30 percent<br />

chance of showers.<br />

Partly sunny, with a high<br />

near 71.<br />

Thursday Night:<br />

Mostly cloudy, with a low<br />

around 52.<br />

Friday: Mostly sunny,<br />

with a high near 69.<br />

Casino recovering from bridge shutdown<br />

Other bridges holding the load OK<br />

LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) — Kentucky Transportation<br />

Secretary Mike Hancock says the two bridges remaining<br />

open between Louisville and southern Indiana show no<br />

structural problems from the extra traffic they are carrying<br />

since the forced closure of the Sherman Minton<br />

Bridge last weekend.<br />

In a statement, Hancock said two crews of inspectors<br />

from the Kentucky Department of Highways examined<br />

both the John F. Kennedy Memorial Bridge and the Clark<br />

Memorial Bridge and reported “no remarkable findings<br />

or changes” from each bridge’s most recent scheduled<br />

inspection.<br />

36th Annual<br />

Forks Of The Wabash<br />

Pioneer Festival<br />

SEPTEMBER 24 & 25, 2011<br />

Saturday 10 a.m. - 6 p.m.<br />

Sunday 10 a.m. - 5 p.m.<br />

HIER’S PARK • HUNTINGTON<br />

Admission $3 Adults, , $1 Students; ; under 5 free<br />

• Encampments pme me nt nts t • Reenactments Re Reen en enac ac actm tm tmen en ents ts • GGames<br />

Engines • Tractors • Displays • Crafts<br />

Antiques • Entertainment • Food<br />

Follow green arrowheads to<br />

Hier’s Park from any major<br />

highway leading into the city<br />

What’s UP Wells County blog @ www.news-banner.com<br />

Submit your items at


LOCAL/AREA<br />

Obituaries<br />

James D. Reynolds, 77<br />

James D. “Jim” Reynolds, 77,<br />

of <strong>Bluffton</strong> and Big Turkey Lake,<br />

died at 10:47 a.m. Friday, Sept.<br />

16, 2011, at Cameron Hospital in<br />

Lagrange.<br />

Mr. Reynolds was born on Jan.<br />

20, 1934, in <strong>Bluffton</strong>, to Cloyd<br />

and Mildred (Wiley) Reynolds.<br />

He married Donna Brumbaugh<br />

on April 16, 1953, in Linn Grove;<br />

she survives in Lagrange.<br />

A 1952 graduate of Petroleum<br />

High School, Mr. Reynolds<br />

worked at Franklin Electric for<br />

45 years, retiring in 1997, He also worked on the family<br />

farm for many years. He enjoyed IU basketball, the<br />

Pacers, the Colts, and he was a NASCAR fan. He also<br />

enjoyed fishing and hunting.<br />

Other surviving relatives include his mother, of <strong>Bluffton</strong>;<br />

two sons, David (Sue) Reynolds of Apollo Beach,<br />

Fla. and Jeff (Lisa) Reynolds of Warren; one daughter,<br />

Dee (Finley) Conley of Stroh; six grandchildren and two<br />

great-granddaughters.<br />

Mr. Reynolds was preceded in death by his father and<br />

one sister, Sue Moser.<br />

Calling hours will be from 2 to 8 p.m. Monday, Sept.<br />

19, at the Thoma/Rich, Chaney and Lemler Funeral<br />

Home in <strong>Bluffton</strong>. Funeral services will be at 10:30 a.m.<br />

Tuesday, Sept. 20, at the funeral home with Tony Garton<br />

officiating. Burial is at Six Mile Cemetery, in <strong>Bluffton</strong>.<br />

Preferred memorials are to the Southern Wells Athletic<br />

Program and Prairie Heights Athletic Program.<br />

Online condolences: www.thomarich.com<br />

Gary Lee Shultz, 74<br />

Gary Lee Shultz, 74, of Warren, died at 2:50 a.m. Friday,<br />

Sept. 16, 2011, at Heritage Pointe in Warren.<br />

He was born on Jan. 8, 1937, in Warren, to Samuel<br />

and Elizabeth Shultz. He married Shirley Messler Shultz;<br />

she preceded him in death on Nov. 23, 1994.<br />

Surviving relatives include one son, Bobby Shultz of<br />

Warren; and two grandchildren.<br />

Calling hours will be from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. Monday,<br />

Sept. 19, at the Glancy-H. Brown & Son Funeral Home,<br />

203 N. Matilda St., Warren. Funeral services will be at 1<br />

p.m. Monday at the funeral home. Burial will be at the<br />

Gardens of Memory in Marion.<br />

Online condolences: www.glancyfuneralhomes.com<br />

Obituary Policy<br />

The <strong>News</strong>-<strong>Banner</strong> and Ossian Journal publishes “basic” obituaries<br />

free of charge for “local” deaths. “Basic” obituaries will include<br />

the deceased’s name, age, community of record, date and place of<br />

death, basic genealogical information, the date, time and location of<br />

calling hours and services and the name of the funeral home handling<br />

arrangements.<br />

If additional information and/or a photo is desired to be included,<br />

or if the deceased does not meet the definitions of a “local” person,<br />

there is a charge.<br />

Area funeral homes will provide details on the policy and will<br />

coordinate obituary publication. The full policy is also available at<br />

the <strong>News</strong>-<strong>Banner</strong> and Ossian Journal offices or on our website. www.<br />

news-banner.com/index/obituaries<br />

Births<br />

Mr. and Mrs. Cory<br />

(Brooke Newcomb) Miller<br />

of Fort Wayne are the parents<br />

of a daughter, Vivian<br />

Lenore, born at 4:15 p.m.,<br />

Thursday, Sept. 8, 2011. She<br />

weighed 5 pounds, 15 ounces<br />

and measured 19 inches.<br />

She joins a brother, Jonathan,<br />

and sisters, Eleanor and<br />

Melanie, all at home. Grandparents<br />

are Bill and Barb<br />

Newcomb of Crawfordsville<br />

and Mark and Kathy Miller<br />

of <strong>Bluffton</strong>.<br />

Chely Reyes of Vincennes<br />

and Mary McClure of rural<br />

<strong>Bluffton</strong> are the parents of<br />

a son, Lane Ezekiel, born at<br />

4:03 a.m., Saturday, Aug. 20,<br />

2011 at Lutheran Hospital in<br />

Fort Wayne. He weighed 7<br />

pounds, 11 ounces and measured<br />

19 1/2 inches. Grandparents<br />

are Rick and Deena<br />

McClure of rural <strong>Bluffton</strong><br />

and Jose and Leslie Reyes of<br />

Mentone.<br />

Mr. and Mrs. Brent E.<br />

(Rachelle E. Gerber) Tonner<br />

of Berne are the parents of a<br />

daughter, Jordyn Rachelle,<br />

born at 12:26 p.m., Wednesday,<br />

Aug. 31, 2011. She<br />

weighed 7 pounds and measured<br />

20 inches. She joins<br />

siblings Brittney Sloan, age<br />

25, Brendon, age 18, Kaitlin,<br />

age 17, Madison, age<br />

15, Riley, age 8, Brody, age<br />

6, Brayson, age 4 and Ashlyn,<br />

age 3. Grandparents are<br />

Sam and Mary Jo Gerber<br />

of <strong>Bluffton</strong> and Gary and<br />

Diann Tonner of Decatur.<br />

Great-grandmother is Jeanette<br />

Tonner of <strong>Bluffton</strong>.<br />

Jim Reynolds<br />

GRAIN PRICES<br />

At closing Friday,<br />

Sept. 16<br />

Central States,<br />

Montpelier<br />

1-888-935-1107<br />

Cash corn $6.92, new<br />

crop corn $6.87, December<br />

corn $6.91, January corn<br />

$6.95, new crop corn 2012<br />

$5.96.<br />

Cash beans $13.25, new<br />

crop beans $13.13, December<br />

beans $13.33, January<br />

beans 2012 $13.39, new<br />

crop beans 2012 $12.97.<br />

Cash wheat $6.73, January<br />

wheat $7.07, new crop<br />

wheat 2012 $7.10.<br />

Agland Grain,<br />

<strong>Bluffton</strong><br />

September corn (CZ+20)<br />

$7.12, first half October<br />

corn (CZ+15) $7.07, O/N<br />

corn (CZ-0) $6.92.<br />

F/H September beans<br />

(SX-20) $13.36, L/H September<br />

beans (SX-35)<br />

$13.21, S/O/N (SX-45)<br />

$13.11.<br />

30 days wheat (WZ-20)<br />

$6.68.<br />

Friday<br />

HOOSIER LOTTERY<br />

Daily Three-Midday<br />

— 9-9-7<br />

Daily Three-Evening<br />

— 8-8-6<br />

Daily Four-Midday —<br />

4-3-9-9<br />

Daily Four-Evening<br />

— 3-7-2-2<br />

Lucky 5-Midday — 05-<br />

08-15-19-26<br />

Lucky Five-Evening<br />

— 5-20-23-34-35<br />

Visitation and Services<br />

Merlin A. Dunwiddie<br />

Visitation Noon to 5 p.m. Sunday and from 9:30 to<br />

10:30 a.m. on Monday at the funeral home.<br />

Services 10:30 a.m. Monday at the funeral home.<br />

Psi Otes<br />

see results<br />

of their<br />

generosity<br />

By BARBARA BARBIERI<br />

At a recent meeting of<br />

<strong>Bluffton</strong>’s chapter of Psi Iota<br />

Xi the members were able<br />

to see first hand what their<br />

contributions to the research<br />

into cochlear ear implants<br />

has made possible.<br />

On hand for the meeting<br />

was 5-year-old Paige Boots,<br />

who has been the recipient<br />

of a cochlear implant. She is<br />

the daughter of Annemarie<br />

and Bentley Boots and the<br />

granddaughter of Larry and<br />

Theresa Sell.<br />

Among the contributions<br />

made by the local group<br />

has been to the study by<br />

Dr. Richard Miyamoto, formerly<br />

from Los Angeles. In<br />

1978 he joined Riley’s clinical<br />

trials that had begun for<br />

cochlear implants.<br />

Chapters of Psi Iota Xi,<br />

including <strong>Bluffton</strong>’s, had<br />

given seed money to start<br />

Miyamoto’s research in<br />

Preferred memorials are to the Honor Flight of<br />

Northeast Indiana, through the funeral home.<br />

THOMA / RICH, CHANEY & LEMLER<br />

FUNERAL HOME<br />

308 W. Washington St., <strong>Bluffton</strong> 824-3850 www.thomarich.com<br />

Paige Boots, right, and her<br />

grandmother, Theresa Sell.<br />

(Photo contributed)<br />

1979. With that money he<br />

trained many doctors who<br />

are now performing this<br />

procedure.<br />

The Psi Otes learned that<br />

Paige received her implant<br />

in November of 2010 and it<br />

was activated in December<br />

of 2010. Her grandmother<br />

reported to the group that<br />

Paige is making some verbal<br />

progress, although it has<br />

been slow.<br />

Supporting speech and<br />

hearing projects have long<br />

been championed by the<br />

<strong>Bluffton</strong> Psi Otes.<br />

Author will sign books<br />

at WCPL next Saturday<br />

Tod Langley, a former<br />

Petroleum resident and 1985<br />

graduate of Southern Wells<br />

High School, will<br />

be signing copies<br />

of his current<br />

epic fantasy novel<br />

from 10 a.m. to<br />

2 p.m. Saturday,<br />

Sept. 24, in<br />

front of the Wells<br />

County Public<br />

Library’s <strong>Bluffton</strong><br />

branch, 200 W.<br />

Washington St.<br />

Every hour<br />

Langley will read<br />

select passages from his novels<br />

and share his thoughts<br />

on the global war on terror,<br />

and he will also speak about<br />

issues faced by new writers.<br />

Copies of his books will<br />

be available at discounted<br />

prices for purchase.<br />

Langley earned a bachelor<br />

of arts degree from Purdue<br />

University, graduating<br />

in 1992. While in college he<br />

served as an infantryman in<br />

the Army National Guard<br />

in Delphi, Ind. After graduating,<br />

he receive an Army<br />

infantry officer’s commission.<br />

Langley and his wife<br />

moved seven times over<br />

the next 15 years. He also<br />

served as an infantry com-<br />

Police Notebook<br />

INCIDENTS<br />

City:<br />

Friday, 3:58 p.m. Caller<br />

reported kids playing with<br />

the street name sign at the<br />

intersection of West Townley<br />

and South Morgan streets<br />

and it is in danger of falling<br />

down. An officer spoke with<br />

the juveniles and asked them<br />

to leave the signs alone.<br />

County:<br />

Friday, 7:15 a.m. Caller<br />

reported a two-vehicle accident<br />

on Ind. 116 at 150N.<br />

Lottery Numbers<br />

Mix and Match — 19-<br />

30-34-39-41<br />

Quick Draw — 1-2-9-<br />

15-16-18-22-30-32-34-48-<br />

49-57-59-62-69-73-74-77-78<br />

Hoosier Lotto — Estimated<br />

jackpot: $12.5 mil-<br />

FALL FERTILIZER<br />

SALE APPLY<br />

NOW!<br />

8-5 Mon.-Fri.<br />

8-12 Sat.<br />

2275 N. Main St., <strong>Bluffton</strong> • 824-5189<br />

pany executive officer and<br />

patrol leader in Port-au-<br />

Prince, Haiti, in 1995 during<br />

Operation Uphold<br />

Democracy.<br />

After Sept. 11,<br />

2001, he became<br />

a member of elite<br />

Special Operations<br />

Forces and<br />

served on three<br />

combat tours<br />

in Iraq and has<br />

served in Afghan-<br />

istan numerous<br />

Tod Langley<br />

time.<br />

Langley was<br />

awarded two Bronze stars<br />

and left the Army at the<br />

end of 2007. He continues<br />

to provide counter-terrorism<br />

advice to the Army and<br />

divides his time between<br />

living on the East Coast and<br />

back in Indiana.<br />

Langley’s dream is to<br />

spend many more years in<br />

his “home office” writing<br />

novels that help turn what<br />

he has seen and experienced<br />

into entertaining and<br />

thought-provoking stories<br />

for readers of all genres.<br />

“Prince Kristian’s Honor,<br />

Book One: The Erinia Saga,”<br />

was his first novel. The next<br />

book in the series, “Ferral’s<br />

Deathmarch Army,” was<br />

published last December.<br />

Friday, 9:59 a.m. Caller<br />

reported a controlled burn at<br />

4265E Ind. 124.<br />

Friday, 10:53 a.m. Caller<br />

reported a suspicious vehicle<br />

has been sitting at a burnt<br />

down residence on Ind. 218,<br />

between 600E and 700E<br />

throughout the week. Caller<br />

was concerned as they were<br />

unaware that anyone had<br />

permission to be there. An<br />

investigating deputy found<br />

no vehicle there when he<br />

responded to the call.<br />

lion<br />

MEGA MILLIONS<br />

06-23-41-45-56; Mega<br />

Ball: 24; Megaplier 4<br />

POWERBALL<br />

Estimated jackpot: $20<br />

million<br />

$4.75<br />

HUNTINGTON 7<br />

260-359-8463<br />

Hauenstein Rd.<br />

West of Wal-Mart<br />

GQTI.com and on Facebook<br />

BARGAIN TWLIGHT<br />

DAILY 4:00-6:00 PM<br />

DIGITAL PROJECTION<br />

BRIGHTER AMAZING CLARITY<br />

SHOWTIMES 9/16 - 9/22 No passes<br />

FALL MOVIES<br />

Saturday & Sunday 9 & 10 AM<br />

YOGI BEAR (PG)<br />

DRIVE (R) 11:50, 2:15, 4:40, 7:05,<br />

9:30 FRI/<strong>SAT</strong> LS 11:55<br />

3D LION KING (G)<br />

$2.50 PREMIUM PER 3D TICKET<br />

2:20, 4:35, 6:55, 9:05 FRI/<strong>SAT</strong> LS 11:15<br />

LION KING (G) 12:05 PM<br />

STRAW DOGS (R) 11:15, 1:45, 4:15,<br />

6:45, 9:15 FRI/<strong>SAT</strong> LS 11:50<br />

CONTAGION (PG-13) 11:20, 1:50,<br />

4:20, 6:50, 9:20 FRI/<strong>SAT</strong> LS 11:45<br />

APOLLO 18 (PG-13) 4:50, 7:10<br />

DON’T BE AFRAID OF THE DARK (R)<br />

12:00, 2:30, 9:25 FRI/<strong>SAT</strong> LS 11:40<br />

OUR IDIOT BROTHER (R) 12:20, 2:35,<br />

9:40 FRI/<strong>SAT</strong> LS 12:00<br />

THE HELP (PG-13)<br />

12:10, 3:15, 6:30, 9:35<br />

RISE OF THE PLANET OF THE APES<br />

(PG-13) 4:55, 7:15<br />

<strong>SAT</strong>URDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 2011 • The <strong>News</strong>-<strong>Banner</strong> • Page 3<br />

&<br />

<strong>Bluffton</strong><br />

Parks Rec<br />

<strong>News</strong> Notes<br />

Destination Recreation<br />

The countdown to the <strong>Bluffton</strong><br />

Free Street Fair is now three days!<br />

Look for us in the opening night<br />

parade on Tuesday.<br />

With the start of the fair, so ends<br />

the season of the Splash Pad. If Mother<br />

Nature cooperates, tomorrow (Sept.<br />

18) will be the final day. We will host<br />

our annual “Doggie Douse” from 7 to<br />

8 p.m. so bring your leashed dog for an hour of water<br />

play and social time for them.<br />

There is also still a few spots left for vendors in our<br />

Arts and Crafts Bazaar being held in the City Gym<br />

from noon to 7 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 24. Call or e-mail<br />

our office to reserve your space as soon as possible. The<br />

cost for a 10-foot by 10-foot area is just $10.<br />

There is no admission fee for those choosing to<br />

browse and support the vendors.<br />

Registration for the Adult Coed Volleyball League<br />

is also going on right now. Put together your own team<br />

and call to register for this recreational league that<br />

begins Nov. 7 and runs for 10 weeks. Call or e-mail us<br />

for more details.<br />

We’d like to thank all of those who participated in<br />

the National Neighborhood Day and the Pedal and<br />

Picnic events this past Sunday. We had a great time<br />

with the Scatter 8s Square Dancers and Mark’s Ark.<br />

We’d like to give a big “thank you” to Paula and Dennis<br />

Deininger for sharing their miniature goats for petting,<br />

the National Guard for their fun climbing wall and their<br />

assistance on the bike ride, the <strong>Bluffton</strong> Police Department<br />

and <strong>Bluffton</strong> Fire Department, the Wells County<br />

Boys and Girls Club, the Wells County YMCA, <strong>Bluffton</strong><br />

Regional Medical Center, the Inventure Group, the<br />

United Way, and the Wells County Foundation for their<br />

assistance and generous donations that supported this<br />

wonderful community event.<br />

Thanks also to all of you who donated items for our<br />

troops including CVS who also collected several boxes<br />

of goodies to be sent.<br />

Calling out to all you adults who are looking for<br />

something fun to do — join us at the Boys and Girls<br />

Club from 9 to 11 a.m. Tuesday and Thursday mornings<br />

for Social Time. Enjoy pool, air hockey, ping pong,<br />

computer time, gym time, cards, games, and just relaxing!<br />

The cost is only $1 per visit, or purchase a 12-visit<br />

card for just $10. That’s two free visits!<br />

Until next week … Enjoy the fair!<br />

Receive a<br />

FREE<br />

Tri Kappa 2011<br />

BLUFFTON STREET<br />

FAIR T-SHIRT<br />

When you Open a Checking Account Package<br />

at your local<br />

Wells Fargo <strong>Bluffton</strong> Bank Branch.<br />

Stop in our local <strong>Bluffton</strong> Branch<br />

during Street Fair and<br />

“Swipe Your Card For A Sweet!”<br />

– slide your debit card for a<br />

FREE CANDY BAR!<br />

*Offer at local <strong>Bluffton</strong> Store Only from September 19th thru 24th – stop in<br />

at 101 S. Main Street, <strong>Bluffton</strong>, IN or call us at 260-824-0910 for details!<br />

Come enjoy the<br />

101 st <strong>Bluffton</strong> Free Street Fair!<br />

September 20th-24th<br />

Street Fair Idol<br />

Contest<br />

Sat., Sept. 24 • 7 p.m.<br />

Main Stage<br />

Qualifications held at Life Church on<br />

Sept. 18 at 6 p.m. Must attend<br />

qualifications to participate on Saturday.<br />

Rules and Regulations<br />

• 17 years and older<br />

• Must qualify in the preliminary qualifications<br />

at Life Church Auditorium<br />

• Vocally adept to qualify<br />

• Anonymous judges will determine finalists<br />

for the main event on the Street Fair State<br />

Street Fair Office<br />

P.O. Box 2<br />

<strong>Bluffton</strong>, IN 46714<br />

&<br />

By Pam<br />

Vanderkolk<br />

Prizes:<br />

1st Place . . . $700<br />

2nd Place . . $300<br />

3rd Place . . . $200<br />

260-824-4351<br />

www.blufftonstreetfair.com<br />

TELL US WHAT YOU THINK!<br />

forum.news-banner.com


Page 4 • The <strong>News</strong>-<strong>Banner</strong> • <strong>SAT</strong>URDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 2011<br />

Today in History<br />

By The Associated Press<br />

Today is Saturday, Sept.<br />

17, the 260th day of 2011.<br />

There are 105 days left in<br />

the year.<br />

Today’s Highlight in History:<br />

On Sept. 17, 1911, Calbraith<br />

P. Rodgers set off<br />

from Sheepshead Bay, N.Y.,<br />

aboard a Wright biplane in<br />

an attempt to become the<br />

first flier to travel the width<br />

of the United States. (The<br />

49-day journey required<br />

69 stops before Rodgers<br />

Telephone<br />

Number<br />

260-824-0224<br />

Red-Meat Slam Dance<br />

A full complement of Republican<br />

presidential candidates gathered for<br />

the battle royale at the Ronald Reagan<br />

Library in Seamy (Simi) Valley, Calif.<br />

And though he was only there in<br />

spirit, the Great Communicator could<br />

easily have supplied the power for the<br />

entire proceedings had the networks<br />

harnessed him spinning in his grave<br />

like a rotisserie chicken in the middle<br />

of a power surge.<br />

The eight challengers for<br />

his mantle didn’t just<br />

break the Gipper’s 11th<br />

Commandment, “Thou<br />

shall not speak ill of other<br />

Republicans,” they stomped<br />

on it with football cleats and<br />

Submit your Letters to the Editor via:<br />

• Fax: (260) 824-0700<br />

• E-Mail: email@news-banner.com<br />

• Mail: PO Box 436, <strong>Bluffton</strong> IN 46714<br />

• Drop-off: 125 N. Johnson St., <strong>Bluffton</strong><br />

All letters must be signed and must include a phone<br />

number or address in case verification is desired. Letters<br />

are edited for brevity and clarity. Letters must be no more<br />

than 500 words. Please mark your correspondence as a<br />

“Letter to the Editor,” or if you wish to express an opinion<br />

to us but do not want it published, please mark as “Not for<br />

Publication.”<br />

arrived in Pasadena, Calif.,<br />

on Nov. 5.)<br />

On this date:<br />

In 1787, the Constitution<br />

of the United States<br />

was completed and signed<br />

by a majority of delegates<br />

attending the Constitutional<br />

Convention in Philadelphia.<br />

In 1908, Lt. Thomas E.<br />

Selfridge of the U.S. Army<br />

Signal Corps became the<br />

first person to die in the<br />

crash of a powered aircraft,<br />

the Wright Flyer, at Fort<br />

Myer, Va.<br />

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Opinions expressed on this page do not necessarily<br />

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Will<br />

Durst<br />

TheRaging<br />

Moderate<br />

shoved it down a sewer grate with a broken rake handle.<br />

It was a red-meat, power-tie slam dance with operatic<br />

overtones.<br />

Anticipation ran higher than Charlie Sheen on New<br />

Year’s Eve that a hockey match would break out and<br />

the bloodthirsty audience was not going to be satisfied<br />

until lecterns dripped with copious spillage. Before Rick<br />

Perry could answer Brian Williams’ question about the<br />

execution of 234 inmates on his watch, they erupted into<br />

applause like an emeritus alumni crowd at Assassins<br />

State University during homecoming. Creeping the<br />

moderator out more than pinworms in the bottom of his<br />

footie pajamas.<br />

Eyes on the prize, Newt Gingrich cautioned panel<br />

mates to keep the attacks focused on Obama, while<br />

castigating the media for trapping them in this internecine<br />

warfare. The rest of the contingent affectionately<br />

dismissed his admonition the way a group of Oakland<br />

Raider tailgaters would an elderly aunt wandering into a<br />

discussion on blitz protection. Newt Gingrich -- the soul<br />

of reason. Something has gone horribly awry.<br />

We did learn that Michele Bachmann believes in<br />

$2-a-gallon gasoline and “a strong, bold leader... who<br />

will lead,” and that she spent the last three weekends<br />

going to restaurants and thinks drilling for oil in the<br />

Everglades is a good idea. So, apparently she’s planning<br />

an electoral strategy that disincludes Florida’s mighty<br />

27.<br />

Rick Perry hates cancer and called Social Security “a<br />

Ponzi scheme,” not once, but three times, so Florida is<br />

obviously not on his front burner either. Arch-enemy to<br />

all things science, Perry supported his “climate change,<br />

what climate change” philosophy by comparing himself<br />

to Galileo. You can’t make stuff up like this.<br />

Ron Paul has been mauled by the TSA and is not<br />

happy about it or much of anything else. Second time<br />

through, it is virtually impossible for Willard Mitt<br />

Romney to be out-smugged by anybody, even an unctuous<br />

Texan. Herman Cain likes Chile. The country,<br />

not the food. And the major difference between Elvis<br />

Presley and Rick Santorum’s candidacy is... there is<br />

none, they’re both rock-salt, shaved-dust, dead.<br />

Jon Huntsman may be running for the wrong party’s<br />

nomination. Trying to steer the group from the edge of<br />

various abysses, he and Newt shared the big-boy babysitter<br />

role, while Bachmann lost more momentum than a<br />

dark matter anvil hitting a freeway sound wall. Big winner...<br />

Sarah Palin. For being prescient enough to not to<br />

have made up her mind yet.<br />

But there’s plenty of time. This was just the premier<br />

stop for the traveling abattoir. There are dozens of<br />

chances for continued bloodletting until either Perry or<br />

Romney drops from the death of 1000 cuts, or they take<br />

each other out in a murder-suicide pact. While Team<br />

Obama roots for Perry from the sidelines the same way<br />

Jimmy Carter cheered on Bonzo’s sidekick back in ‘80.<br />

Be careful what you wish for.<br />

Emmy-nominated comedian and writer Will Durst recently published<br />

a book, “The All American Sport of Bipartisan Bashing.”<br />

durst@caglecartoons.com.<br />

All in the (federal) family<br />

In societies governed by persuasion, politics is<br />

mostly talk, so liberals’ impoverishment of their<br />

vocabulary matters. Having damaged liberalism’s<br />

reputation, they call themselves progressives. Having<br />

made the federal government’s pretensions absurd,<br />

they have resurrected the supposed synonym “federal<br />

family.” Having made federal spending suspect, they<br />

advocate “investments” -- for “job creation,” a euphemism<br />

for stimulus, another word they have made<br />

toxic.<br />

Barack Obama, a pitilessly rhetorical president,<br />

continues to grab the nation by its lapels, demanding<br />

its attention, and is paying the price: The nation is no<br />

longer listening. This matters because ominous portents<br />

are multiplying.<br />

Bank of America, which reported an $8.8 billion<br />

loss last quarter, plans 30,000 layoffs out of a workforce<br />

of nearly 300,000. The Postal Service hopes to<br />

shed 120,000 of its 653,000 jobs (down from almost<br />

900,000 a decade ago). Such churning of the labor<br />

market would free people for new, more productive<br />

jobs -- except that to reduce unemployment, the economy<br />

needs an approximately 3 percent growth rate,<br />

triple today’s rate.<br />

Consumers of modest means are so strapped that<br />

Wal-Mart is reviving layaway purchases for the<br />

Christmas season. The Wall Street Journal reports<br />

that Procter & Gamble, which claims to have at least<br />

one product in 98 percent of American households,<br />

expects hard times for a long time: It is putting new<br />

emphasis on lower-priced products for low-income<br />

shoppers.<br />

Just as Obama administration policies have<br />

delayed the housing market reaching a salutary bottom,<br />

Europe’s policies designed to delay Greece’s<br />

default on its debt are probably making that inevitability<br />

worse. If the contagion reaches Italy or Spain<br />

(“Too big to fail and too big to bail”), we shall learn<br />

how hollow Europe’s banks are, and how much U.S.<br />

banks are entangled with them.<br />

During the debt-ceiling debate, The New York<br />

Times, liberalism’s bulletin board, was aghast that<br />

Republicans risked causing the nation to default on<br />

its debt. Now two Times columnists endorse slowmotion<br />

default through inflation: The Federal Reserve<br />

should have “the deliberate goal of generating higher<br />

inflation to help alleviate debt problems” (Paul Krugman)<br />

and “sometimes we need inflation, and now is<br />

such a time” (Floyd Norris).<br />

Ken Rogoff, a Harvard economist, suggests “trying<br />

to achieve some modest deleveraging through<br />

moderate inflation of, say, 4 to 6 percent for several<br />

OPINION<br />

years.” This is an antiseptic way of saying<br />

we should reduce the weight of our<br />

indebtedness by reducing the value of the<br />

dollars in which it is denominated. But<br />

does the nation need more uncertainty?<br />

And note Rogoff’s serene confidence in<br />

government’s ability to control such things<br />

-- inflation will be fine-tuned within a narrow<br />

band, switched on for just a few years,<br />

then off, like a government-approved light<br />

bulb.<br />

George<br />

It is a wonder, this faith-based (and often<br />

campus-based) conviction that the govern- Will<br />

ment that brought us the ethanol program<br />

can be trusted to precisely execute wise policies that<br />

will render the world predictable and progressive.<br />

For two years, there has been one constant: As<br />

events have refuted the Obama administration’s certitudes,<br />

it has retained its insufferable knowingness.<br />

It knew that the stimulus would hold unemployment<br />

below 8 percent. Oops. Unemployment has been at<br />

least 9 percent in 26 of the 30 months since the stimulus<br />

was passed. Michael Boskin of Stanford says that<br />

even if one charitably accepts the administration’s<br />

self-serving estimate of jobs “created or saved” by the<br />

stimulus, each job cost $280,000 -- five times America’s<br />

median pay.<br />

And research by Garett Jones and Daniel M. Rothschild<br />

of George Mason University’s Mercatus Center<br />

indicates that just 42.1 percent of workers hired by<br />

entities receiving stimulus funds were unemployed<br />

at the time. More (47.3 percent) were poached from<br />

other organizations, and 10.6 percent came directly<br />

from school or outside the labor force.<br />

Obama’s administration, which is largely innocent<br />

of business experience, knew its experts would be<br />

wizards at investing taxpayers’ dollars. Oops. After<br />

more than half a billion stimulus dollars in loan guarantees,<br />

bankrupt Solyndra has shed nearly all of its<br />

more than 1,100 workers.<br />

The economic policy the “federal family” should<br />

adopt can be expressed in five one-syllable words:<br />

Get. Out. Of. The. Way. Instead, Energy Secretary<br />

Steven Chu, whose department has become a venture<br />

capital firm for crony capitalism and costly flops at<br />

creating “green jobs,” praises the policy of essentially<br />

banishing the incandescent light bulb as “taking away<br />

a choice that continues to let people waste their own<br />

money.” Better to let the experts in his department<br />

and the rest of the federal family waste other people’s<br />

money.<br />

georgewill@washpost.com<br />

Racial preferences in Wisconsin<br />

The campus at the University<br />

of Wisconsin-Madison<br />

erupted this week after<br />

the release of two studies<br />

documenting the heavy<br />

use of race in deciding<br />

which students to admit to<br />

the undergraduate and law<br />

schools. The evidence of<br />

discrimination is undeniable,<br />

and the reaction by critics<br />

was undeniably dishonest<br />

and thuggish.<br />

The Center for Equal<br />

Opportunity (CEO), which I<br />

founded in 1995 to expose and challenge<br />

misguided race-based public<br />

policies, conducted the studies based<br />

on an analysis of the university’s own<br />

admissions data. But the university<br />

was none too keen on releasing the<br />

data, which CEO obtained through<br />

filing Freedom of Information Act<br />

requests only after a successful legal<br />

challenge went all the way to the state<br />

supreme court.<br />

It’s no wonder the university wanted<br />

to keep the information secret. The<br />

studies show that a black or Hispanic<br />

undergraduate applicant was more<br />

than 500 times likelier to be admitted<br />

to Wisconsin-Madison than a similarly<br />

qualified white or Asian applicant.<br />

The odds ratio favoring black law<br />

school applicants over similarly qualified<br />

white applicants was 61 to 1.<br />

The median <strong>SAT</strong> scores of black<br />

undergraduates who were admitted<br />

were 150 points lower than whites or<br />

Asians, while the median Hispanic<br />

scores were roughly 100 points lower.<br />

And median high school rankings<br />

for both blacks and Hispanics were<br />

also lower than for either whites or<br />

Asians.<br />

CEO has published studies of<br />

racial double standards in admissions<br />

at scores of public colleges and<br />

universities across the country with<br />

similar findings, but none<br />

has caused such a violent<br />

reaction.<br />

Instead of addressing the<br />

findings of the study, the<br />

university’s vice provost<br />

for diversity, Damon A.<br />

Williams, dishonestly told<br />

students that “CEO has one<br />

mission and one mission<br />

only: dismantle the gains<br />

that were achieved by the<br />

civil rights movement.” In<br />

fact, CEO’s only mission is<br />

to promote color-blind equal<br />

opportunity so that, in Martin Luther<br />

King’s vision, no one will be judged<br />

by the color of his or her skin.<br />

Egged on by inflammatory comments<br />

by university officials, student<br />

groups organized a flashmob via a<br />

Facebook page that was filled with<br />

propaganda and outright lies about<br />

CEO wanting to dismantle their student<br />

groups. More than a hundred<br />

angry students stormed the press<br />

conference at the Doubletree Hotel<br />

in Madison, where CEO president<br />

Roger Clegg was releasing the study.<br />

The hotel management described<br />

what took place in a press statement<br />

afterward: “Unfortunately, when<br />

escorting meeting attendees out of<br />

the hotel through a private entrance,<br />

staff were then rushed by a mob<br />

of protestors, throwing employees<br />

to the ground. The mob became<br />

increasingly physically violent when<br />

forcing themselves into the meeting<br />

room where the press conference had<br />

already ended, filling it over fire-code<br />

capacity. Madison police arrived on<br />

the scene after the protestors had<br />

stormed the hotel.”<br />

But the outrageous behavior didn’t<br />

end there -- and it wasn’t just students<br />

but also faculty who engaged in disgraceful<br />

conduct. Later the same day<br />

of the press conference, Clegg debat-<br />

Linda<br />

Chavez<br />

ed UW law professor Larry Church<br />

on campus. The crowd booed, hissed,<br />

and shouted insults, continuously<br />

interrupting Clegg during the debate.<br />

Having used Facebook to organize<br />

the flashmob, students and<br />

some faculty extended their use of<br />

social media and tweeted the debate<br />

live. Even with Twitter’s 140-character<br />

limit, you’d think participants<br />

would be able to come up with<br />

something more substantive than the<br />

repeated use of the label “racist” to<br />

describe Clegg and his arguments<br />

against racial double standards, but<br />

hundreds of tweets exhibited little<br />

more than hysterical rants and personal<br />

attacks.<br />

Perhaps the most offensive tweet<br />

was posted by Sara Goldrick-Rab,<br />

an associate professor of educational<br />

policy studies and sociology. After<br />

announcing that she was “Getting<br />

set to live blog this debate between a<br />

racist and a scholar,” she tweeted that<br />

Clegg sounded “like the whitest white<br />

boy I’ve ever heard.” The only racism<br />

in evidence came from the defenders<br />

of the university’s race-based<br />

admissions policies, such as Professor<br />

Goldrick-Rab.<br />

You’d think that a responsible university<br />

would denounce the intimidation<br />

and lack of civility by its students<br />

and faculty. Instead, Vice Provost<br />

Williams told the student newspaper,<br />

“I’m most excited about how well the<br />

students represented themselves, the<br />

passion with which they engaged, the<br />

respectful tone in how they did it and<br />

the thoughtfulness of their questions<br />

and interactions.”<br />

It appears that not only are the<br />

university’s admissions policies<br />

deeply discriminatory, but also that<br />

university officials applaud namecalling,<br />

distortion and outright physical<br />

assault.<br />

© 2011 CREATORS.COM


CITY CHURCH PAGE<br />

ABUNDANT LIFE<br />

CHRISTIAN CENTER<br />

1409 S. Main St.<br />

Scott & Michelle Ochsner,<br />

pastors<br />

Children’s Ministry<br />

(ages newborn-5th grade)<br />

10 a.m. - Worship.<br />

BLUFFTON CHURCH<br />

OF GOD<br />

327 W. Cherry St.<br />

Donald R. Marlowe Sr., pastor<br />

Jeff & Christina Reichard,<br />

youth dir.<br />

10 a.m. - Sunday School.<br />

11 a.m. - Worship. 6 p.m. -<br />

Service.<br />

Monday: 6 p.m. - Youth.<br />

Wednesday: p.m. - Family<br />

Training Hour.<br />

BLUFFTON WESLEYAN<br />

CHAPEL<br />

(Independent Holiness Church)<br />

410 W. Cherry St.<br />

Rev. Chad B. Clark, pastor<br />

Rev. Tim Cole, minister of<br />

music/worship leader<br />

www.blufftonwesleyan.net<br />

pastorchad@blufftonwesleyan.net<br />

Staffed nursery available<br />

Handicap accessible<br />

from south entrance<br />

9:30 a.m. - Sunday School.<br />

10:30 - Worship. 6:30 p.m. -<br />

Worship.<br />

Wednesday: 7 p.m. - Adult<br />

Bible study & Prayer mtg.; Different<br />

Direction children/preteen<br />

ministry; Kid’s Club.<br />

CALVARY LUTHERAN<br />

1532 N. Main St.<br />

Jerry O’Neal, pastor<br />

calvary@adamswells.com<br />

calvarylutheranbluffton.org<br />

Handicap accessible<br />

9 a.m. - Sunday School. 10<br />

a.m. - Worship w/Communion.<br />

12-3 p.m. - Catechism<br />

cookout. 5 p.m. - Nation youth<br />

gathering 2012 mtg. 7 p.m. -<br />

Romans Bible study.<br />

Tuesday: Brats booth at<br />

<strong>Bluffton</strong> Street Fair (through<br />

Saturday).<br />

Wednesday: 10 a.m. - Altar<br />

Guild.<br />

COMMUNITY CHRISTIAN<br />

1309 W. Washington St.<br />

Wayne Ball, pastor<br />

9-9:45 a.m. - Sunday<br />

School. 10 a.m. - Worship.<br />

Wednesday: 6:30 p.m. -<br />

Bible Study.<br />

COVENANT CHAPEL<br />

3550 S. SR 1<br />

(Former Poplar Grove School)<br />

Arley Higginbotham, pastor<br />

www.covenantchapel.us<br />

Nursery available for<br />

all services<br />

Transportation Available<br />

8-9 a.m. - Worship. 9:15<br />

a.m. - Sunday School. 10:15 -<br />

Worship. (Children’s Church<br />

for ages 6-12).<br />

Wednesday: 6:30 p.m.<br />

- Adult Bible Study; For the<br />

Youth: Rush Hour, Traffic Jam<br />

& Kids Jam!<br />

KING’S HIGHWAY<br />

TABERNACLE<br />

1224 W. Central Ave.<br />

10 a.m. - Sunday School.<br />

Wednesday: 7 p.m. - Bible<br />

Study; Children’s Church.<br />

THE BOWLING<br />

CENTER, INC.<br />

1231 S. Scott<br />

<strong>Bluffton</strong>, IN 46714<br />

824-9966<br />

126 W. Townley<br />

<strong>Bluffton</strong> • 824-3330<br />

<strong>Bluffton</strong> • 824-0300<br />

Delivery Available • Fax: 824-1300<br />

127 East Forest Dr., <strong>Bluffton</strong>, IN<br />

824-1588<br />

960 N. Main<br />

<strong>Bluffton</strong> • 824-4404<br />

<strong>Bluffton</strong> • 260-824-3982<br />

Ossian • 260-622-1000<br />

3220 E. State Road 124<br />

<strong>Bluffton</strong>, IN (260)824-3852<br />

Funeral Directors: David L. Goodwin,<br />

Douglas L. Cale, Mitch Harnish<br />

260-565-3131<br />

A Division of Craigville<br />

Telephone Company, Inc.<br />

CHRISTIAN NEW LIGHT<br />

1011 W. Washington St.<br />

Rev. Timothy McKnight Sr,<br />

pastor<br />

www.christiannewlightchurch.com<br />

9:45 a.m. - Sunday School.<br />

10:30 - Worship. 6 p.m. - Service.<br />

Wednesday: 6 p.m. - Adult<br />

Bible Study in fellowship hall;<br />

6-7 p.m. - Youth mtg. in annex.<br />

EPWORTH UNITED<br />

METHODIST<br />

1204 W. Cherry St.<br />

Rev. Dick Frederick, pastor<br />

Handicap accessible<br />

(Lift chair at northeast door on<br />

Walmer St.)<br />

9:30 a.m. - Worship, Children’s<br />

Church, “Words of<br />

Life.” 10:40 - Sunday School.<br />

11:45 - Nominations Committee<br />

mtg.<br />

Wednesday: 7 p.m. - A.A.<br />

mtg.<br />

Saturday: 9 a.m. - A.A. mtg.<br />

FIRST PRESBYTERIAN<br />

215 E. Dustman Rd.<br />

Rev. Robert E. Madsen<br />

9 a.m. - Sunday School.<br />

10:30 - Worship, “So the Last<br />

Will be First & the First Will<br />

be Last.” 11:30 - Third-5th<br />

grade lunch & bike ride.<br />

Monday: 9 a.m. & 12:30 -<br />

Pre-School (through Friday); 7<br />

p.m. - Worship Committee.<br />

The recurrent theme of<br />

Proverbs is that the wise<br />

person is he or she who is<br />

open to receive instruction.<br />

A certain amount of wisdom<br />

is necessary to receive more<br />

wisdom. “In the house of<br />

the righteous there is much<br />

treasure, but trouble befalls<br />

the income of the wicked.<br />

The lips of the wise spread<br />

knowledge; not so the minds<br />

of fools.” So, there are<br />

rewards for wisdom and dire<br />

consequences for foolishness.<br />

While there are usually<br />

rewards for wise decisions,<br />

the New Testament teaches<br />

us that, nevertheless, the<br />

good and wise man may end<br />

up on a cross. So, we seek<br />

wisdom and righteousness,<br />

not for guaranteed rewards,<br />

but to remain faithful to<br />

God and his will. Still, that<br />

doesn’t mean we should be<br />

ignorant of the usual penalties<br />

for willful ignorance and<br />

the usual benefits of being<br />

open to wise instruction.<br />

Humble wisdom generally<br />

makes life better: “Folly is a<br />

joy to him who has no sense,<br />

but a man of understanding<br />

walks aright… The wise<br />

man’s path leads upward to<br />

life, that he may avoid Sheol<br />

beneath” (15:21-24).<br />

THE SOFT ANSWER<br />

For the sages, the key<br />

components of wisdom are<br />

kindliness of speech, courtesy<br />

in reply, the wisdom<br />

of silence, and caution in<br />

speaking. These may appear<br />

rather passive until we realize<br />

how these could enrich<br />

our lives as individuals, families<br />

and communities. Think<br />

how much more effective<br />

our government, local, state<br />

and national, would be if<br />

these guidelines molded our<br />

political discourse! Instead,<br />

we as a people who profess<br />

to be “one nation under<br />

God” have come, not only to<br />

accept, but desire and expect<br />

that our politics will be conducted<br />

without kindliness,<br />

courtesy, caution and truthfulness.<br />

The sage tells us: “A soft<br />

answer turns away wrath,<br />

but a harsh word stirs up<br />

anger. The tongue of the<br />

wise dispenses knowledge,<br />

but the mouths of fools pour<br />

out folly… A gentle tongue<br />

is a tree of life. But perverseness<br />

in it breaks the spirit”<br />

(15:1, 2, 4). Why then do<br />

we accept and expect that<br />

political discourse will be<br />

“down and dirty”?. Is harsh<br />

speech generally more constructive<br />

than that which is<br />

gentle? Does Jesus teach<br />

us to “Love your neighbor,<br />

except in politics!”? The<br />

trouble with harshness and<br />

distortion and sometimes<br />

FIRST CHURCH OF<br />

THE NAZARENE<br />

1515 Clark Ave.<br />

Rev. Tim Miller, sr. pastor<br />

Rev. Tim Sheets,<br />

discipleship & sr. adult pastor<br />

Rev. Martin Hodge,<br />

youth & outreach pastor<br />

www.blufftonnazarene.org<br />

(For transportation, 824-0460)<br />

9 a.m. - Sunday School.<br />

9-10 a.m. - Free ESL classes.<br />

10:15 - Worship. 4:45 - Children’s<br />

quiz practice. 5 p.m.<br />

- Choir practice. 6 p.m. - Service.<br />

Monday: 7 p.m. - Men’s<br />

open basketball in gym.<br />

Wednesday: 6:30 p.m. -<br />

Youth; 7 p.m. - Family Ministries<br />

(Adult Bible study, sanctuary;<br />

Dare to Care, Room #19;<br />

Have a New Kid by Friday,<br />

Room #45; Caravan; Nursery,<br />

Lisa Eubank).<br />

GRACE BAPTIST<br />

1621 S. 350 E.,<br />

Stogdill Rd. Ext.<br />

Douglas McClure, pastor<br />

www.gbcbluffton.com<br />

9 a.m. - Sunday School. 10<br />

a.m. - Worship, Frank Bosler,<br />

missionary to Korea. 6 p.m. -<br />

Worship.<br />

Wednesday: 7 p.m. - The<br />

Wednesday Connection... Adult<br />

Bible study & prayer mtg. &<br />

GRACE Kids Connection!<br />

Do you despise<br />

yourself?<br />

September 18, 2011<br />

Background Scripture:<br />

Proverbs 10:1-15:33<br />

Devotional Reading:<br />

Proverbs 1-7<br />

downright lying is not only<br />

that it is in violation of the<br />

way in which Jesus taught<br />

us to live, including those<br />

with whom we disagree, but<br />

that it is generally the most<br />

ineffective and disappointing<br />

tactic in the long run.<br />

The recent debacle of the<br />

two parties in Congress is<br />

illustrative. Politicians often,<br />

perhaps usually, play to our<br />

basest instincts and prejudices.<br />

The rarely overrate<br />

the integrity and intelligence<br />

of their constituents. Their<br />

appeal is usually, not to our<br />

clear thinking, but to our<br />

most base feelings.<br />

WHAT WE DESERVE?<br />

So, why do they do it?<br />

Apart from their own ethical<br />

deficiencies, they are<br />

very much aware of ours.<br />

They know what we want<br />

to hear. If you are sick and<br />

tired of the politicians, first<br />

ask yourself if we are not<br />

getting pretty much what<br />

we deserve. “The mind of<br />

the righteous ponders how<br />

to answer, but the mouth of<br />

the wicked pours out evil<br />

things” (15:29). (See also<br />

Proverbs 8:12; 11:02; 16:18;<br />

19; 21:04, 21.24; 29:23).<br />

The corrosive effect of<br />

human pride is one of the<br />

most prominent themes<br />

throughout the Bible. C.S.<br />

Lewis says that “it was<br />

through Pride that the devil<br />

became the devil: Pride<br />

leads to every other vice:<br />

it is the complete anti-God<br />

state of mind.” Proverbs do<br />

not teach pride, they teach<br />

humility. St. Augustine said:<br />

“Should you ask me: what<br />

is the first thing in religion?<br />

I should reply: the first, second<br />

and third thing therein is<br />

humility.” It is not that most<br />

of us are against humility,<br />

in fact, it is the first thing<br />

we look for — in others!<br />

We may yearn to be pious<br />

but virtually no one yearns<br />

to be humble. And there<br />

is a significant difference<br />

between being humbled and<br />

being humble. St. Bernard<br />

of Clairvaux said that “It is<br />

no great thing to be humble<br />

when you are brought low;<br />

but to be humble when you<br />

are praised is a great and<br />

rare attainment.” That, too,<br />

is wisdom.<br />

The sage tells us: “He<br />

who ignores instruction<br />

despises himself, but he who<br />

heeds admonition gains<br />

understanding” (15:32),<br />

Why? Because we may not<br />

be all that intelligent and<br />

may lack education, but the<br />

wisdom that exceeds both is<br />

something within our grasp.<br />

To choose ignorance over<br />

wisdom for ourselves is an<br />

act of self-hatred.<br />

126 W. Townley<br />

<strong>Bluffton</strong> • 824-3330<br />

FIRST REFORMED<br />

CHURCH OF BLUFFTON<br />

301 W. Cherry St.<br />

Dr. Bryson Eugene Bell,<br />

sr. pastor<br />

Vicki Bell, director of<br />

Christian education<br />

John-Thomas Roseberry,<br />

youth pastor<br />

firstref@adamswells.com<br />

(Handicapped entrance available)<br />

9:15 a.m. - Sunday School.<br />

10:30 - Worship, “Instructions”<br />

by Mayor Ted Ellis.<br />

Monday: 6:30 p.m. - Christian<br />

Education.<br />

Sunday (Sept. 25): John-<br />

Thomas Roseberry speaks.<br />

FIRST UNITED<br />

METHODIST<br />

325 W. Washington St.<br />

Greg Rittenhouse, sr. pastor<br />

Max Stuckey, music<br />

firstumc@adamswells.com<br />

www.blufftonfirstumc.org<br />

(Transportation & tapes available)<br />

9:30 a.m. - Worship &<br />

Children’s Jr. Church, “Purpose<br />

First! What Posture Shall<br />

We Take?” 10:30 - Sip & Chat.<br />

10:35 - Sunday School. 2 p.m.<br />

- Get-Acquainted gathering at<br />

Thompson’s.<br />

Tuesday: 11 a.m. - Paper<br />

crafters.<br />

Wednesday: 9:30 a.m. - Staff<br />

mtg.<br />

Thursday: 6 p.m. - Choral<br />

groups here.<br />

PARK UNITED<br />

BRETHREN<br />

617 S. Bennett St.<br />

John Cole, lead pastor<br />

A 4G kind of church<br />

parkub.blogspot.com<br />

9:30 a.m. - Worship,<br />

“National Back to Church<br />

Sunday.” 10:40 - Connection<br />

time.<br />

No weeknight activities this<br />

week, street fair.<br />

Just<br />

Thinking ...<br />

PRECIOUS MEMORIES<br />

I slowly, almost solemnly,<br />

walked into the room;<br />

its charcoal-black walls<br />

stood shocked and defeated;<br />

the smell of smoke<br />

oozed and snaked<br />

throughout the room,<br />

and the charred<br />

corpses of plastic<br />

and paper pitifully<br />

covered the floor.<br />

Regardless,<br />

though, I found the<br />

chicken, still joyfully<br />

playing his accordion.<br />

I found the birthday card,<br />

featuring the fowl merrily<br />

performing his polka ditty,<br />

while exploring my parent’s<br />

back porch, where, about 12<br />

hours earlier, a small fire had<br />

ignited.<br />

Despite the gloom sneaking<br />

around me, though,<br />

that card, with its slightly<br />

smudged chicken, reminded<br />

me of a fire-free February<br />

evening when my brother<br />

and my two nieces hunted<br />

for a birthday present for my<br />

mom. They<br />

Back in reality, I opened<br />

and closed the card several<br />

times; in my memories, my<br />

nieces opened and closed the<br />

novelty in untainted, littlegirl<br />

delight, thrilled that they<br />

had found the perfect gift.<br />

I still thank God that I<br />

picked up that card, but I’m<br />

also thankful that I could put<br />

it down — before it dragged<br />

me down.<br />

Memories, when carved<br />

into monuments, let us celebrate<br />

the bigger gifts of God<br />

that defy tragedies. They<br />

give us visual landmarks so<br />

that we don’t forget God’s<br />

truth.<br />

However, when we weld<br />

them into anchors, we risk<br />

shackling our souls to longpast<br />

slivers of stability,<br />

like a boat at a dock, constantly<br />

looking back with a<br />

sigh, wishing that we could<br />

return.<br />

The memories folded into<br />

that card reminded me that<br />

no fire could ever destroy<br />

God’s eternal blessings,<br />

but the memories wouldn’t<br />

replace the melted furnace<br />

or whimpering walls.<br />

A tattered photo album<br />

might remind the widow<br />

that her husband still lives<br />

in Heaven, but the people in<br />

those pictures can’t live for<br />

her in this world<br />

<strong>SAT</strong>URDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 2011 • The <strong>News</strong>-<strong>Banner</strong> • Page 5<br />

by Chet<br />

Baumgartner<br />

HOPE MISSIONARY<br />

429 E. Dustman Rd.<br />

Rev. Gary Aupperle, sr. pastor<br />

Rev. Matt Hartsell, associate<br />

Pastor Rob Witzig, youth<br />

Pastor Tim O’Sullivan,<br />

worship arts<br />

www.hope4thefamily.com<br />

www.hope-youth.org<br />

9 a.m. - Sunday School. 9<br />

a.m., 10:30 & 10:31 - Worship.<br />

Noon - Belize trip interest mtg,<br />

fellowship hall; Cantata interest<br />

mtg. 2:30 - Youth Worship<br />

Team practice, youth area.<br />

6 p.m. - Intercessory prayer<br />

mtg., PowerHouse.<br />

Monday: 7 p.m. - Reducing<br />

the Risk Training, PowerHouse.<br />

Tuesday: FCW Walking Taco<br />

trailer at Street Fair (through<br />

Saturday).<br />

Wednesday: 7 p.m. - Hope<br />

youth scavenger hunt, Street<br />

Fair.<br />

Thursday: 7 p.m. - Worship<br />

Team practice.<br />

Saturday: 9 a.m.-noon -<br />

Upward soccer games.<br />

LIFE COMMUNITY<br />

428 S. Oak St.<br />

(Life Center - Allen auditorium)<br />

Kent Ringger,<br />

pastor/operations<br />

Joy Cash, worship arts director<br />

Chad Ringger,<br />

pastor/speaking<br />

www.missionoflife.com<br />

life@missionoflife.com<br />

9 a.m. & 11 a.m. - Services,<br />

nursery available; Kid Life;<br />

Wild Life. 7 p.m. - High Life.<br />

THE FOUNTAIN<br />

COMMUNITY CHURCH<br />

2330E 250N, <strong>Bluffton</strong><br />

(Timber Ridge Golf Course)<br />

Tim Atkins, pastor<br />

10 a.m. - Worship w/<br />

nursery provided; Z Street<br />

Children’s Ministries. 6 p.m.<br />

- Fountain Youth (FYI).<br />

The Apostle Peter, who I<br />

believe stayed anchored to<br />

Israel’s glory days of kings<br />

and kingdoms, couldn’t<br />

comprehend the cross at<br />

first, so he attacked the<br />

men taking Jesus there.<br />

Later, though, when<br />

he wrote to those struggling<br />

under Roman<br />

persecution, he didn’t<br />

remind them of Israel’s<br />

former sovereignty. He<br />

instead told them to use<br />

the law of love to transform<br />

the new world.<br />

When the Babylonians<br />

first conquered Israel, God<br />

commanded them through<br />

the prophet Jeremiah to<br />

“build houses and settle<br />

down; plant gardens and eat<br />

what they produce. Marry<br />

and have sons and daughters;<br />

find wives for your sons and<br />

give your daughters in marriage.”<br />

God didn’t command<br />

them to forget His laws,<br />

but He didn’t want them to<br />

stop living because of where<br />

or when they lived, even<br />

though they could no longer<br />

visit the temple.<br />

Today, many politically<br />

and fiscally conservative<br />

Christians might feel like<br />

they live in exile in America<br />

when they compare today’s<br />

economy, job climate, social<br />

issues and political missiles<br />

to the undisclosed simpler<br />

times, which, honestly, probably<br />

never existed outside<br />

Andy Griffith’s front porch.<br />

Understandably, they<br />

long to return to Jerusalem<br />

(or, perhaps, Mayberry), but<br />

God’s command to the Israelites<br />

apply to them as well:<br />

Don’t just weather this reality<br />

by clinging to the “good<br />

old days.” Champion the<br />

timeless truths behind those<br />

temporal moments and that<br />

defy time. Conquer this new<br />

reality to show people that<br />

God reigns regardless of the<br />

circumstances of the day.<br />

Those who anchor into<br />

memories — no matter how<br />

pure — risk ultimately idolizing<br />

those circumstances<br />

that molded them, possibly<br />

leading to bitterness, as they<br />

subtly curse the present.<br />

They only see the<br />

scorched walls and the lost<br />

opportunities. They only<br />

see the chicken, and not the<br />

heart that purchased it.<br />

chetb@news-banner.com<br />

CHURCH OF CHRIST<br />

735 S. Marion St.<br />

Jim Dougal, minister<br />

9:30 a.m. - Bible Study.<br />

10:30 - Worship.<br />

FELLOWSHIP BAPTIST<br />

210 W. Townley<br />

Lenny Stringer, pastor<br />

info@fbc-bluffton.com<br />

9:30 a.m. - Sunday School.<br />

10:30 - Worship.<br />

FIRST BAPTIST<br />

202 W. Cherry St.<br />

Bud Abrams, pastor<br />

Brandon Evans, youth pastor<br />

firstbaptist@adamswells.com<br />

(Handicap accessible)<br />

9 a.m. - Sunday School.<br />

10:15 - Kidz Time & L.O.L.<br />

10:15 - Worship, “Great<br />

Faith.”<br />

Monday: 6:30 p.m. -<br />

WWBS.<br />

FIRST CHURCH<br />

OF CHRIST<br />

909 W. Spring St.<br />

Larry Sprinkle, sr. pastor<br />

Dennis Wood,<br />

Worship/Outreach Minister<br />

Kevin Mechling,<br />

student ministry director<br />

Diane Cornett,<br />

Children’s Director<br />

8:30 a.m. - “Blended” Worship.<br />

9:50 - “h2O” family service.<br />

11 a.m. - “Elevate” Worship;<br />

“Energized Hour” for<br />

children.<br />

SONLIGHT WESLEYAN<br />

2350S. SR 1<br />

Rev. Lyle A Breeding,<br />

senior pastor<br />

Jeremiah Wondercheck,<br />

youth pastor<br />

Andrew Bush,<br />

children’s pastor<br />

www.sonlightwesleyan.com<br />

(For transportation, 824-0068)<br />

9 & 10:30 - Sunday School<br />

& Worship.<br />

Wednesday: 6:30-8:30 p.m.<br />

- Jr. & Sr. high Powerhouse; 7<br />

p.m. - Prayer group.<br />

ST. JOSEPH CATHOLIC<br />

1300 N. Main St.<br />

Fr. Francis C. Chukwuma,<br />

pastor<br />

stjosephchurch@adamswells.com<br />

Saturday: 7:45 a.m. -<br />

Prayer. 8 a.m. - Mass. 8:30<br />

- Rosary. 4 p.m. or by appointment<br />

- Confessions. 5 p.m.<br />

- Mass.<br />

Sunday: 7:30 & 10 a.m. -<br />

Mass.<br />

Monday: 7:45 a.m. - Prayer;<br />

8 a.m. - Mass; 8:30 - Rosary.<br />

Tuesday: 7:45 a.m. - Prayer;<br />

8 a.m. - Mass; 8:30 - Rosary;<br />

Confessions (or by appointment).<br />

Wednesday: 5-7 p.m. Adoration<br />

w/Benediction (second of<br />

each month); 6:30 p.m. - Rosary;<br />

6:45 - Prayer; 7 p.m. - Mass.<br />

Thursday-Friday: 7:45 a.m.<br />

- Prayer; 8 a.m. - Mass; 8:30 -<br />

Rosary.<br />

REIMSCHISEL<br />

FORD, INC.<br />

970 N. Main, <strong>Bluffton</strong><br />

824-2300<br />

DECK’S SUPER<br />

SERVICE<br />

126 N. Main St.<br />

<strong>Bluffton</strong> • 824-2324<br />

Since 1934<br />

Specializing in Your Automotive Needs<br />

1150 N. Main, <strong>Bluffton</strong>, IN 46714<br />

824-5344<br />

(260)375-2135<br />

1-800-895-7035<br />

222 N. Wayne Street - Warren, IN<br />

Your Pharmacist, Terry Daniels P.D.<br />

Has Over 30 Years of Pharmaceutical Experience<br />

Mon.-Fri 9-5:30; Sat. 9-12 noon<br />

260-565-3131<br />

A Division of Craigville<br />

Telephone Company, Inc.<br />

632 N. Main<br />

<strong>Bluffton</strong><br />

824-5701<br />

2190-3 Commerce Dr. (Next to Zestos)<br />

824-4451 • (800)842-4496<br />

Dependable Auction and Real Estate<br />

Service Since 1925<br />

<strong>Bluffton</strong>, Indiana Ft. Wayne, Indiana<br />

260-824-2426 260-747-3189<br />

REIMSCHISEL<br />

FORD, INC.<br />

970 N. Main, <strong>Bluffton</strong><br />

824-2300


Page 6 • The <strong>News</strong>-<strong>Banner</strong> • <strong>SAT</strong>URDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 2011<br />

By ADAM TUDOR<br />

GARRETT — A missed<br />

extra point, a late interception,<br />

and Todd Frickey cost<br />

the <strong>Bluffton</strong> Tigers’ football<br />

team a chance to get a winning<br />

record Friday.<br />

The Tigers (2-3) fell short<br />

to Garrett 35-27 in the Allen<br />

County Athletic Conference<br />

showdown.<br />

Garrett improved to 5-0<br />

and 2-0 in the conference.<br />

<strong>Bluffton</strong> slipped to 1-2 in<br />

league play.<br />

Frickey came into the<br />

game for Garrett as one of<br />

the area’s most productive<br />

running backs. He left the<br />

game leaving little doubt<br />

about that. But for the<br />

majority of the first half, the<br />

<strong>Bluffton</strong> defense was able<br />

to contain Frickey and the<br />

By RICK SPRUNGER<br />

NEW HAVEN — A<br />

long season got longer for<br />

the Norwell Knights Friday<br />

night.<br />

The Knights traveled to<br />

New Haven and came away<br />

with a 41-7 whipping at the<br />

hands of the homestanding<br />

Bulldogs.<br />

New Haven improved to<br />

4-1 on the season, including<br />

a 2-1 mark in Northeast Hoosier<br />

Conference play.<br />

Norwell fell to 0-5 in all<br />

games and 0-3 in the conference.<br />

“We’re not executing<br />

offensively,” said Norwell<br />

coach Jeff Miller after the<br />

game. “Our varsity hasn’t<br />

scored in three games. You<br />

can’t win if you don’t score.<br />

You can’t keep making mistakes<br />

and coming up empty<br />

when you have chances.<br />

We’ve struggled that way for<br />

five weeks.”<br />

Norwell put together an<br />

impressive opening drive<br />

after recovering a New<br />

Haven fumble at the Bulldog<br />

46.<br />

The Knights reached the<br />

10, where they faced a second-and-5.<br />

But quarterback Grant<br />

Baker lofted a fade pass into<br />

the left corner of the end zone<br />

and was picked off by Jordan<br />

Hogue to end the drive.<br />

It was one of three interceptions<br />

thrown by Baker in<br />

the first half.<br />

“We cannot have a turnover<br />

in that situation,” sighed<br />

Miller. “We need to get a first<br />

down [at the 5] and push it<br />

in, or at least kick a field goal<br />

if we can’t get the first down.<br />

But we need points when<br />

we’re that close.”<br />

Railroaders.<br />

Garrett’s first three possessions<br />

each consisted of<br />

three plays and a punt. On<br />

its fourth possession, Garrett<br />

quarterback Brayden<br />

Moreau threw an interception<br />

to Jake McKinley of<br />

<strong>Bluffton</strong>.<br />

Meanwhile, the Tigers<br />

got hot in the second quarter<br />

and were able to score the<br />

game’s first touchdown with<br />

4:47 to go in the half. Donald<br />

Mock carried the ball<br />

into the end zone from one<br />

yard out after a nice nineplay,<br />

73-yard drive.<br />

On <strong>Bluffton</strong>’s next possession,<br />

quarterback Ryan<br />

McCarthy scored on a oneyard<br />

keeper to bring the<br />

score to 14-0. The Tigers<br />

were looking like they<br />

New Haven immediately<br />

turned the game around.<br />

The Bulldogs marched<br />

80 yards in 10 plays and<br />

got the go-ahead score on a<br />

nine-yard run by Te’Vaughn<br />

Hurse.<br />

And at that point, the roof<br />

fell in on the Knights.<br />

After another New Haven<br />

interception, Hurse galloped<br />

52 yards for his second score<br />

of the night.<br />

As the state’s sixth-leading<br />

rusher going into the<br />

game, the talented tailback<br />

would finish with 162 yards<br />

in 21 carries.<br />

The Bulldogs immediately<br />

held Norwell to nine<br />

yards in three plays. And in<br />

an effort to get something,<br />

anything, going offensively,<br />

Miller threw caution to<br />

the wind and went for it on<br />

fourth-and-1.<br />

The play lost two yards,<br />

and New Haven was right<br />

back in business at the Norwell<br />

37.<br />

Nine plays later, the Bulldogs<br />

were in on a three-yard<br />

scoring run by Anthony<br />

Moore.<br />

That made it 21-0 with<br />

1:50 left in the first half.<br />

And they weren’t finished.<br />

Domonique Cuffy picked<br />

off another Baker pass and<br />

raced 45 yards into the end<br />

zone to make it 28-0 with<br />

0:44 to play.<br />

“We’re not very good<br />

right now,” said Miller,<br />

choosing his words carefully.<br />

“The kids haven’t given<br />

up. They’re fighting, and I<br />

appreciate that. But at some<br />

point we’ve got to get better.<br />

We haven’t gotten better<br />

since Week 2. I’ve coached a<br />

would put the Railroaders<br />

on upset alert. However,<br />

Frickey cracked the goal<br />

line on the next Garrett possession<br />

before halftime and<br />

cut <strong>Bluffton</strong>’s lead in half.<br />

The score stood 14-7 at halftime<br />

in favor of the Tigers.<br />

In the third quarter, Garrett’s<br />

offense broke lose and<br />

was not stopped for the rest<br />

of the night. As the Tiger<br />

defense paid attention to the<br />

edges of the field to contain<br />

Frickey, Moreau took a<br />

quarterback sneak 44 yards<br />

to the end zone. With the<br />

extra point, the score was<br />

tied at 14-14.<br />

<strong>Bluffton</strong> had a long drive<br />

all the way to the Garrett 25yard<br />

line, but a dropped pass<br />

on fourth down gave the ball<br />

back to the Railroaders.<br />

long time, and I’ve never had<br />

this much trouble getting the<br />

offense to execute.”<br />

New Haven scored another<br />

touchdown on its first<br />

offensive play of the third<br />

quarter, when Hogue gathered<br />

in a Lydell Trainor pass<br />

and sped 78 yards down the<br />

left sideline.<br />

After that, it was pretty<br />

much a matter of just playing<br />

out the string. Even the officials<br />

kept the clock moving<br />

on first downs, even though<br />

Miller never requested that.<br />

“I don’t know what that<br />

was all about,” said the boss.<br />

“We were only down four<br />

touchdowns at halftime. New<br />

Haven got four in one quarter.<br />

That’s not insurmountable.”<br />

New Haven got one more<br />

touchdown midway through<br />

the fourth quarter to up the<br />

count to 41-0 before Norwell<br />

finally punched one in late in<br />

the contest on a 21-yard pass<br />

from Nathan Shelton to Joe<br />

Rasdorf.<br />

Norwell will host East<br />

Noble next Friday night.<br />

sports@news-banner.com<br />

Frickey only needed<br />

two plays to take the lead.<br />

Stopped for no gain on the<br />

first play, he got around the<br />

edge on the second play and<br />

ran 75 yards for the touchdown.<br />

Garrett now led in the<br />

game 21-14.<br />

<strong>Bluffton</strong> responded<br />

by a nice drive of shortrange<br />

passes to move into<br />

an exciting fourth quarter<br />

of play. The drive took 13<br />

plays, 50 yards, and 5:45 off<br />

of the clock, culminating in<br />

a three-yard touchdown pass<br />

from McCarthy to Patrick<br />

Steckbeck that evened the<br />

score at 21.<br />

What seemed ironic<br />

about this game was that<br />

<strong>Bluffton</strong> was controlling<br />

the time of possession with<br />

long drives that were largely<br />

NEW HAVEN 41, NORWELL 7<br />

At New Haven<br />

Score By Quarters<br />

Norwell 0 0 0 7 – 7<br />

New Haven 0 28 6 7 – 41<br />

Scoring Summary<br />

Second Quarter<br />

NH--Te’Vaughn Hurse 9 run (Alec Jaurigue<br />

kick), 11:18.<br />

NH--Hurse 52 run (Jaurigue kick),<br />

8:05.<br />

NH--Anthony Moore 3 run (Jaurigue<br />

kick), 1:50.<br />

NH--Domonique Cuffy 45 interception<br />

return (Jaurigue kick), 0:44.<br />

Third Quarter<br />

NH--Jordan Hogue 78 pass from<br />

Lydell Trainor (kick failed), 9:35.<br />

Fourth Quarter<br />

NH--Moore 3 run (Jaurigue kick),<br />

7:36.<br />

N--Joe Rasdorf 21 pass from Nathan<br />

Shelton (Brian Bolinger kick), 4:51.<br />

Team Statistics<br />

NOR NH<br />

First Downs 10 18<br />

Rushes-Yards 28-128 43-233<br />

Yards Passing 67 151<br />

Passing (Comp-Att-Int) 6-13-3 5-8-0<br />

Penalties-Yards 8-47 2-17<br />

Fumbles-Lost 2-1 1-1<br />

Punts-Average 1-40.0 0-0<br />

Time of Possession 19:41 28:19<br />

Individual Statistics<br />

Rushing: Norwell, Kyler Mills 7-21,<br />

Grant Baker 7-13, Al Albers 3-37,<br />

William Gerber 2-37. New Haven,<br />

Te’Vaughn Hurse 21-162, Anthony<br />

Moore 8-23, Lydell Trainor 4-8, Brandon<br />

Fluker 3-27.<br />

Passing: Norwell, Grant Baker 3-8-<br />

3 40, Nathan Shelton 3-5-0 27. New<br />

Haven, Lydell Trainor 5-8-0 151.<br />

Receiving: Norwell, Austin Dantzer 3-<br />

34, Cale Schumm 2-12, Joe Rasdorf<br />

1-21. New Haven, Jordan 2-92, Caleb<br />

Heckley 2-54, Andrew Hoffer 1-5.<br />

passing plays. Meanwhile,<br />

Garrett was effective with<br />

very short drives of almost<br />

all running plays. The Railroaders<br />

did not complete a<br />

single pass the entire game.<br />

On the next possession<br />

Frickey ran the ball in from<br />

14 yards out.<br />

<strong>Bluffton</strong> counter punched<br />

with a 10-play, 60-yard<br />

drive. Mock ran the ball in<br />

again for the Tigers from<br />

one-yard out. With <strong>Bluffton</strong><br />

down after the touchdown,<br />

coach Casey Kolkman considered<br />

going for a twopoint<br />

conversion to retake<br />

the lead but went for the tie.<br />

However for the first<br />

time in the evening, the kick<br />

was missed and Garrett held<br />

on to a one-point lead.<br />

The Railroaders rolled on<br />

as Frickey scored another<br />

touchdown. This time, he<br />

ran in from 28 yards out.<br />

Each time one team<br />

took the lead the other team<br />

answered all night. But in<br />

the end it was not meant to<br />

be for the Tigers as McCarthy’s<br />

last pass was intercepted.<br />

The Railroaders proceeded<br />

to run out the clock<br />

to ice the victory.<br />

Coach Kolkman was<br />

happy with the performance<br />

despite the loss.<br />

“I thought our kids did a<br />

good job and executed in the<br />

fourth quarter. We converted<br />

several key fourth downs,”<br />

he said.<br />

In regards to Frickey,<br />

Kolkman felt good that the<br />

game remained competitive<br />

despite the caliber of player<br />

SPORTS<br />

Southern Wells shuts down Wes-Del for 60-0 win<br />

By PAUL BEITLER<br />

Sports Editor<br />

Right from the initial<br />

kickoff, the Southern Wells<br />

Raiders dominated the Wes-<br />

Del Warriors Friday night<br />

and ran away with a 60-0<br />

football victory on homecoming<br />

night at Carnes<br />

Field.<br />

The Raiders’ defense<br />

smothered the Warriors (0-<br />

5), while their offense could<br />

not be stopped by Wes-Del’s<br />

defense.<br />

“I really felt like our<br />

defense controlled the<br />

night,” said Southern Wells<br />

head coach Mark Lefebvre.<br />

“They really struggled to<br />

move the ball and I think<br />

that our defense really set<br />

the tone.”<br />

Senior quarterback Trevor<br />

Furnish, who threw for<br />

three touchdowns and ran<br />

for another, also had a second-row<br />

seat at his linebacker<br />

position as he watched the<br />

front line apply pressure to<br />

the Warriors all night.<br />

“Our D-line really<br />

stepped it up and took care<br />

of business so us linebackers<br />

didn’t have to make many<br />

tackles,” said Furnish. “Our<br />

defensive line really did a<br />

great job of putting pressure<br />

on their offense. They<br />

did a great job of going to<br />

the right gaps and pinching<br />

when they needed to and<br />

closing when they needed<br />

to.”<br />

The Raiders (3-2) took it<br />

to the Warriors right from<br />

the beginning and scored on<br />

two big touchdown passes<br />

in the first quarter.<br />

After the second three<br />

and out by the Warriors and<br />

a punt, Furnish found tight<br />

end Seth Biberstine wide<br />

open for a 43-yard scoring<br />

pass with just over two minutes<br />

of time elapsed.<br />

Austin Hampton (64), Seth Biberstine (50) and Trevor Furnish (22) for Southern Wells plow Wes-<br />

Del's Dakota Whittenburg into the end zone for a safety Friday night at Carnes Field. (Photo by<br />

Glen Werling)<br />

Following another Wes-<br />

Del punt, Furnish struck<br />

again with a 50-yard pass to<br />

split end Clayton Hamilton,<br />

who was all alone behind<br />

the Warriors’ defense.<br />

Hamilton also was<br />

crowned king of homecoming<br />

during halftime festivities<br />

and later on caught a<br />

nine-yard touchdown pass<br />

in the second quarter.<br />

“They committed a lot<br />

of guys to the line of scrimmage<br />

and the guys did a<br />

good job of taking advantage<br />

of the numbers we had<br />

in the passing game and got<br />

a couple big plays,” said<br />

Lefebvre.<br />

“I thought we did a nice<br />

job. I really believe that we<br />

can play catch and get those<br />

big plays when they’re there<br />

for us. We just have to get a<br />

little more consistent at it.”<br />

Coming out to play football<br />

his senior year because<br />

of his friends, the runaway<br />

victory was especially gratifying<br />

to Hamilton, who is a<br />

basketball guard and runner<br />

in cross country and track.<br />

“Actually homecoming<br />

really wasn’t on my mind.<br />

The game was even bigger<br />

than the homecoming,” said<br />

Hamilton. “Trevor just put<br />

the ball right on the money<br />

wherever I needed it and<br />

that was exciting.”<br />

Furnish completed 3 of<br />

5 passes for 102 yards and<br />

three TDs and carried the<br />

ball four times for 78 yards.<br />

In addition, to Furnish,<br />

Hamilton and Biberstine, the<br />

other big offensive standout<br />

was sophomore Clay Watson<br />

who scored two touchdowns<br />

and ran for 143 yards<br />

on seven carries.<br />

His two TD runs of 18<br />

and 88 yards in the second<br />

quarter propelled the Raiders<br />

to a 26-0 lead.<br />

After Furnish found<br />

Hamilton on his short TD<br />

pass to close out the firsthalf<br />

scoring, Furnish opened<br />

the second-half scoring with<br />

a 54-yard scamper into the<br />

Warriors’ end zone for a 38-<br />

0 advantage.<br />

Biberstine recorded two<br />

more points for the Raiders<br />

as he tackled the Warriors’<br />

second quarterback in the<br />

end zone in the third quarter.<br />

Senior halfback Jagger<br />

Love added a nine-yard<br />

touchdown run to close out<br />

the third-period tallies.<br />

In the final quarter, the<br />

Raiders’ second string<br />

scored twice. Freshman<br />

Landon Cassiday bolted into<br />

the end zone on a 10-yard<br />

run and classmate Jacob<br />

Roush ended the scoring<br />

with a 61-yard breakaway.<br />

“I thought the young<br />

guys played well in the second<br />

half and we tried to give<br />

them an opportunity to play<br />

and they did a good job for<br />

us,” said Lefebvre.<br />

The Raiders’ next opponent<br />

will be the <strong>Bluffton</strong><br />

Tigers at 7 p.m. on Friday at<br />

<strong>Bluffton</strong>. sports@news-banner.com<br />

SOUTHERN WELLS 60<br />

WES-DEL 0<br />

At Carnes Field<br />

Score By Quarters<br />

Wes-Del 0 0 0 0 – 0<br />

Southern Wells 14 18 14 14 – 60<br />

Scoring Summary<br />

First Quarter<br />

SW--Seth Biberstine 43 pass from<br />

Trevor Furnish (Austin Smith kick),<br />

6:35.<br />

SW--Clayton Hamilton 50 pass from<br />

Furnish (Smith kick), 4:47.<br />

Second Quarter<br />

SW--Clay Watson 18 run (Kick failed),<br />

4:07.<br />

SW--Watson 88 run (Kick failed),<br />

1:47.<br />

SW--Hamilton 9 pass from Furnish<br />

(Kick failed), 0:26.<br />

Third Quarter<br />

SW--Furnish 54 run (Kick failed),<br />

11:42.<br />

SW--Biberstine tackled Drake Helm in<br />

end zone for a safety, 6:31.<br />

SW--Jagger Love 9 run (Run failed),<br />

6:07.<br />

Fourth Quarter<br />

SW--Landon Cassiday 10 run (Smith<br />

kick), 8:37.<br />

SW--Jacob Roush 61 run (Smith kick),<br />

6:02.<br />

Team Statistics<br />

WD SW<br />

First Downs 7 12<br />

Rushes-Yards 50-46 32-367<br />

Yards Passing 29 102<br />

Passing (Comp-Att-Int) 5-12-1 3-5-0<br />

Penalties-Yards 3-15 5-45<br />

Fumbles-Lost 2-2 2-2<br />

Punts-Average 7-32.7 2-38.0<br />

Time of Possession 35:14 12:46<br />

Individual Statistics<br />

Rushing: Wes-Del, Dakota Malchow<br />

11-44, Drake Helm 8-16, Tre Quinn<br />

3-9, Austin Brown 1-8, Michael Hollingsworth<br />

3-8, Dakota Whittenburg<br />

5-0, Austin Prather 8-minus 24, Jacob<br />

Love 5-minus 11, Devin Gill 4-minus 4.<br />

Southern Wells, Watson 7-143, Furnish<br />

4-78, Jacob Roush 4-71, Cole Preston<br />

9-36, Love 5-15, Cassiday 1-10, Daniel<br />

Beeks 1-8, Brad Woodward 1-6.<br />

Passing: Wes-Del, Prather 5-10-1-29,<br />

Helm 0-2-0. Southern Wells, Furnish<br />

3-5-0-102-3.<br />

Receiving: Wes-Del, Desmond Wilson<br />

2-25, Whittenburg 2-8, Gill 1-minus 4.<br />

Southern Wells, Hamilton 2-59, Biberstine<br />

1-43.<br />

Tigers come up short of derailing Railroaders<br />

Knights fall prey to Bulldogs 41-7<br />

Sign up for Squires Basketball League<br />

Any Northern Wells Community Schools’ girl or boy in<br />

grades 3-6 may register for the Norwell Squires Basketball<br />

League by Friday, Sept. 29.<br />

Registration forms have been distributed to all schools.<br />

Teams practice one or two times per week and games will<br />

be held on Saturdays in the Norwell High School auxiliary<br />

gym beginning Oct. 30. Team selection night is Oct. 12.<br />

For further information, call Norwell girls’ basketball<br />

coach Eric Thornton at 543-2213, ext. 7313, or boys’ basketball<br />

coach Randy Hawkins, ext. 7235.<br />

Starting times changed at So. Wells<br />

The starting times for the Southern Wells Junior High<br />

School football game with Woodlan and cross country meet<br />

with Woodlan and Garrett on Tuesday, Sept. 20, have been<br />

moved to 5:30 p.m. instead of 5 p.m.<br />

•<br />

There’s More!<br />

Go to our Blog Bank on<br />

our website and click<br />

on the "Sports & Outdoors"<br />

blog for video<br />

coverage of the homecoming<br />

festivities.<br />

and performance they were<br />

facing. Frickey ran 19 times<br />

for 227 yards and four rushing<br />

touchdowns.<br />

Next Friday <strong>Bluffton</strong><br />

hosts the Southern Wells<br />

Raiders during Street Fair<br />

week. Garrett in turn will<br />

travel to Woodburn to take<br />

on the Woodlan Warriors.<br />

NOTE: Read more from<br />

Adam Tudor at www.sportsandconsequences.net<br />

sports@news-banner.com<br />

GARRETT 35, BLUFFTON 27<br />

At Garrett<br />

Score By Quarters<br />

<strong>Bluffton</strong> 0 14 0 13 – 27<br />

Garrett 0 7 14 14 – 35<br />

Scoring Summary<br />

Second Quarter<br />

B--Donald Mock 1 yard run (Zack Zeis<br />

kick), 7:13.<br />

B--Ryan McCarthy 1 yard run (Zeis<br />

kick), 4:05.<br />

G--Todd Frickey 3 yard run (Chase<br />

Hall kick), 1:29.<br />

Third Quarter<br />

G--Brayden Moreau 44 yard run (Hall<br />

kick), 9:46.<br />

G--Frickey 75 yard run (Hall kick),<br />

4:05.<br />

Fourth Quarter<br />

B--McCarthy 3 yard pass to Patrick<br />

Steckbeck (Zeis kick), 10:20.<br />

G--Frickey 14 yard run (Hall kick),<br />

9:15.<br />

B--Mock 1 yard run (Zeis kick), 5:44.<br />

G--Frickey 28 yard run (Hall kick),<br />

3:39.<br />

Team Statistics<br />

BLU GAR<br />

First Downs 23 10<br />

Rushes-Yards 42-147 32-317<br />

Yards Passing 242 0<br />

Passing (Comp-Att-Int) 22-39-2 0-3-1<br />

Penalties-Yards 3-20 6-57<br />

Fumbles-Lost 0-0 0-1<br />

Punts-Average 2-34 3-35<br />

Time of Possession 31:10 16:50<br />

Individual Statistics<br />

Rushing: <strong>Bluffton</strong>, McCarthy 25-88,<br />

Mock 8-32, Pearson 9-27. Garrett,<br />

Frickey 19-227, Moreau 7-83, Mitchell<br />

2-7, Bobay 1-4, Porter 1-0.<br />

Passing: <strong>Bluffton</strong>, McCarthy 22-39-<br />

242-2. Garrett, Frickey 0-1-0-0, Moreau<br />

0-2-0-1.<br />

Receiving: <strong>Bluffton</strong>, McKinley 12-147,<br />

Pearson 5-62, Clark 2-18, Brigner 1-12,<br />

Steckbeck 1-3, Marshall 1-0. Garrett,<br />

None.<br />

High School Calendar<br />

Saturday, Sept. 17<br />

GIRLS GOLF: Norwell IHSAA Sectional at Timber<br />

Ridge, 9 a.m.<br />

CROSS COUNTRY: Norwell at Yorktown Invitational,<br />

9 a.m.<br />

VOLLEYBALL: <strong>Bluffton</strong>, Southern Wells at FW Canterbury<br />

Invitational, 9 a.m.; Norwell at Tippecanoe Valley<br />

Tourney, 10 a.m.<br />

Monday, Sept. 19<br />

BOYS TENNIS: Adams Central at <strong>Bluffton</strong>, 4:30 p.m.;<br />

Bellmont at Norwell, 4:30 p.m.<br />

GIRLS SOCCER: Norwell at DeKalb, 6 p.m.<br />

BOYS SOCCER: DeKalb at Norwell, 6 p.m.<br />

VOLLEYBALL: Southern Wells at Lakewood Park<br />

Christian, 6 p.m.<br />

JV FOOTBALL: New Haven at Norwell, 6:30 p.m.<br />

C-TEAM FOOTBALL: Eastbrook at Southern Wells,<br />

6:30 p.m.<br />

FRESHMAN FOOTBALL: Jay County at <strong>Bluffton</strong>,<br />

6 p.m.<br />

Tuesday, Sept. 20<br />

BOYS TENNIS: Homestead at Norwell, 4:30 p.m.<br />

CROSS COUNTRY: Garrett, Woodlan at Southern<br />

Wells, 5:30 p.m.; South Adams at <strong>Bluffton</strong>, 5 p.m.<br />

BOYS SOCCER: Heritage at Norwell, 6 p.m.<br />

VOLLEYBALL: Southern Wells at Leo, 6 p.m.; Adams<br />

Central at <strong>Bluffton</strong>, 6 p.m. (Freshman, 5 p.m.); Columbia<br />

City at Norwell, 6:15 p.m.


SPORTS<br />

By RICK GANO<br />

AP Sports Writer<br />

SOUTH BEND, Ind. (AP)<br />

— It’s only the 16th game of Brian<br />

Kelly’s coaching career at Notre<br />

Dame as the Irish face No. 15 face<br />

Michigan State. For the many fans<br />

growing impatient at an 0-2 start,<br />

Saturday’s matchup could be the<br />

most crucial of his short tenure.<br />

Kelly says he’s not listening to<br />

the critics who are wondering why<br />

the Irish can’t stop making mistakes<br />

or losing close games.<br />

“I really don’t put any more<br />

pressure on myself than I do for<br />

the opener, to the last game,” Kelly<br />

said. “I treat them all the same.”<br />

Another loss would give the<br />

Irish an 0-3 record for the first<br />

time since they dropped the first<br />

five in 2007 under Charlie Weis<br />

and would leave Kelly with a .500<br />

BASEBALL<br />

AMERICAN LEAGUE<br />

All Times EDT<br />

East Division<br />

W L Pct GB<br />

New York 90 59 .604 —<br />

Boston 87 63 .580 3 1/2<br />

Tampa Bay 83 67 .553 7 1/2<br />

Toronto 76 74 .507 14 1/2<br />

Baltimore 61 88 .409 29<br />

Central Division<br />

W L Pct GB<br />

Detroit 87 63 .580 —<br />

Cleveland 73 75 .493 13<br />

Chicago 73 77 .487 14<br />

Kansas City 66 86 .434 22<br />

Minnesota 59 90 .396 27 1/2<br />

West Division<br />

W L Pct GB<br />

Texas 86 64 .573 —<br />

Los Angeles 82 68 .547 4<br />

Oakland 68 82 .453 18<br />

Seattle 62 87 .416 23 1/2<br />

Thursday’s Games<br />

Tampa Bay 9, Boston 2<br />

Texas 7, Cleveland 4<br />

Kansas City 7, Chicago White Sox 2<br />

Oakland 6, Detroit 1<br />

Friday’s Games<br />

Baltimore 8, L.A. Angels 3<br />

Toronto 5, N.Y. Yankees 4<br />

Boston 4, Tampa Bay 3<br />

Kansas City 7, Chicago White Sox 6<br />

Cleveland 7, Minnesota 6<br />

Detroit at Oakland, 10:05 p.m.<br />

Texas at Seattle, 10:10 p.m.<br />

Saturday’s Games<br />

N.Y. Yankees (Colon 8-9) at Toronto<br />

(H.Alvarez 1-2), 1:07 p.m.<br />

Cleveland (J.Gomez 3-2) at Minnesota<br />

(Swarzak 3-6), 1:10 p.m.<br />

Detroit (Porcello 14-8) at Oakland<br />

(G.Gonzalez 13-12), 4:10 p.m.<br />

Tampa Bay (Niemann 10-7) at Boston<br />

(Lester 15-7), 4:10 p.m.<br />

L.A. Angels (E.Santana 11-11) at Baltimore<br />

(Britton 9-10), 7:05 p.m.<br />

Chicago White Sox (Z.Stewart 2-4) at<br />

Kansas City (Teaford 1-0), 7:10 p.m.<br />

Texas (C.Lewis 12-10) at Seattle<br />

(A.Vasquez 1-3), 7:10 p.m.<br />

Sunday’s Games<br />

N.Y. Yankees at Toronto, 1:07 p.m.<br />

L.A. Angels at Baltimore, 1:35 p.m.<br />

Tampa Bay at Boston, 1:35 p.m.<br />

Chicago White Sox at Kansas City,<br />

2:10 p.m.<br />

Cleveland at Minnesota, 2:10 p.m.<br />

Detroit at Oakland, 4:05 p.m.<br />

Texas at Seattle, 4:10 p.m.<br />

Monday’s Games<br />

Baltimore at Boston, 1:05 p.m., 1st<br />

game<br />

Minnesota at N.Y. Yankees, 1:05 p.m.<br />

Seattle at Cleveland, 4:05 p.m.<br />

L.A. Angels at Toronto, 7:07 p.m.<br />

Baltimore at Boston, 7:10 p.m., 2nd<br />

game<br />

NATIONAL LEAGUE<br />

All Times EDT<br />

East Division<br />

W L Pct GB<br />

z-Philadelphia 97 52 .651 —<br />

Atlanta 86 65 .570 12<br />

New York 72 79 .477 26<br />

Washington 71 78 .477 26<br />

Florida 68 83 .450 30<br />

Central Division<br />

W L Pct GB<br />

Milwaukee 88 63 .583 —<br />

St. Louis 82 68 .547 5 1/2<br />

Cincinnati 74 77 .490 14<br />

Pittsburgh 68 82 .453 19 1/2<br />

Chicago 66 85 .437 22<br />

Houston 51 99 .340 36 1/2<br />

West Division<br />

W L Pct GB<br />

Arizona 87 63 .580 —<br />

San Francisco 81 70 .536 6 1/2<br />

Los Angeles 73 76 .490 13 1/2<br />

Colorado 70 80 .467 17<br />

San Diego 63 87 .420 24<br />

z-clinched playoff berth<br />

Thursday’s Games<br />

Washington 10, N.Y. Mets 1<br />

Philadelphia 3, Florida 1, 1st game<br />

Cincinnati 8, Chicago Cubs 6, 11 innings<br />

Philadelphia 2, Florida 1, 10 innings, 2nd<br />

game<br />

San Francisco 8, Colorado 5<br />

Pittsburgh 6, L.A. Dodgers 2<br />

Friday’s Games<br />

Chicago Cubs 4, Houston 3, 12 innings<br />

Florida 3, Washington 0<br />

St. Louis 4, Philadelphia 2, 11 innings<br />

Milwaukee 6, Cincinnati 3<br />

N.Y. Mets 12, Atlanta 2<br />

San Francisco 9, Colorado 1<br />

Arizona at San Diego, 10:05 p.m.<br />

Pittsburgh at L.A. Dodgers, 10:10 p.m.<br />

record at South Bend. It would also<br />

pretty much wreck Notre Dame’s<br />

chances of making a BCS bowl.<br />

“Every game we play here is a<br />

big game,” Kelly said.<br />

There have been plenty of difficult<br />

losses — last week’s 35-31<br />

defeat at Michigan saw the Wolverines<br />

score 28 fourth-quarter<br />

points, including the game-winner<br />

with 2 seconds left after driving 80<br />

yards in a half-minute.<br />

But no one can ever forget last<br />

year’s numbing loss at Michigan<br />

State.<br />

The epic finish featured a fake<br />

field goal in overtime that turned<br />

into a game-winning TD pass from<br />

holder Aaron Bates to Charlie<br />

Gantt and a 34-31 Spartans’ victory.<br />

It’s been replayed numerous<br />

times this week.<br />

Michigan State coach Mark<br />

Saturday’s Games<br />

Houston (Sosa 2-4) at Chicago Cubs<br />

(R.Lopez 5-6), 1:05 p.m.<br />

N.Y. Mets (Dickey 8-12) at Atlanta<br />

(T.Hudson 14-10), 4:10 p.m.<br />

Florida (Volstad 5-12) at Washington<br />

(Strasburg 0-0), 7:05 p.m.<br />

St. Louis (Westbrook 12-8) at Philadelphia<br />

(Oswalt 7-9), 7:05 p.m.<br />

Milwaukee (Gallardo 16-10) at Cincinnati<br />

(Volquez 5-5), 7:10 p.m.<br />

San Francisco (Surkamp 2-0) at Colorado<br />

(Pomeranz 1-0), 8:10 p.m.<br />

Arizona (Collmenter 9-9) at San Diego<br />

(LeBlanc 3-5), 8:35 p.m.<br />

Pittsburgh (Ja.McDonald 9-8) at L.A.<br />

Dodgers (Lilly 9-14), 10:10 p.m.<br />

Sunday’s Games<br />

Milwaukee at Cincinnati, 1:10 p.m.<br />

Florida at Washington, 1:35 p.m.<br />

N.Y. Mets at Atlanta, 1:35 p.m.<br />

Houston at Chicago Cubs, 2:20 p.m.<br />

San Francisco at Colorado, 3:10 p.m.<br />

Arizona at San Diego, 4:05 p.m.<br />

Pittsburgh at L.A. Dodgers, 4:10 p.m.<br />

St. Louis at Philadelphia, 8:05 p.m.<br />

Monday’s Games<br />

St. Louis at Philadelphia, 7:05 p.m.<br />

Atlanta at Florida, 7:10 p.m.<br />

Houston at Cincinnati, 7:10 p.m.<br />

Milwaukee at Chicago Cubs, 8:05 p.m.<br />

San Diego at Colorado, 8:40 p.m.<br />

Pittsburgh at Arizona, 9:40 p.m.<br />

SOUTHERN LEAGUE<br />

Double A<br />

All Times EDT<br />

Southern League Playoffs<br />

(x-if necessary)<br />

Championship<br />

(Best-of-5)<br />

Mobile 2, Tennessee 0<br />

Wednesday, Sep. 14: Mobile 6, Tennessee<br />

3<br />

Thursday, Sep. 15: Mobile 1, Tennessee<br />

0, 11 innings<br />

Saturday, Sep. 17: Mobile at Tennessee,<br />

7:15 p.m.<br />

x-Sunday, Sep. 18: Mobile at Tennessee,<br />

5 p.m.<br />

x-Monday, Sep. 19: Mobile at Tennessee,<br />

7:15 p.m.<br />

MIDWEST LEAGUE<br />

Single A<br />

All Times EDT<br />

Midwest League Playoffs<br />

(x-if necessary)<br />

Championship<br />

(Best-of-3)<br />

Quad Cities 2, Lansing 0<br />

Wednesday, Sep. 14: Quad Cities 4,<br />

Lansing 2<br />

Thursday, Sep. 15: Quad Cities 5, Lansing<br />

3<br />

Saturday, Sep. 17: Lansing at Quad<br />

Cities, 8 p.m.<br />

x-Sunday, Sep. 18: Lansing at Quad<br />

Cities, 6 p.m.<br />

x-Monday, Sep. 19: Lansing at Quad<br />

Cities, 7 p.m.<br />

BASKETBALL<br />

WNBA<br />

All Times EDT<br />

CONFERENCE SEMIFINALS<br />

(Best-of-3)<br />

x-if necessary<br />

Eastern Conference<br />

Indiana 1, New York 0<br />

Thursday, Sept. 15: Indiana 74, New<br />

York 72<br />

Saturday, Sept. 17: Indiana at New<br />

York, 4 p.m.<br />

x-Monday, Sept. 19: New York at Indiana,<br />

8 p.m.<br />

Atlanta 1, Connecticut 0<br />

Friday, Sept. 16: Atlanta 89, Connecticut<br />

84<br />

Sunday, Sept. 18: Connecticut at Atlanta,<br />

3 p.m.<br />

x-Tuesday, Sept. 20: Atlanta at Connecticut,<br />

7 or 8 p.m.<br />

Western Conference<br />

Minnesota vs. San Antonio<br />

Friday, Sept. 16: San Antonio at Minnesota,<br />

9 p.m.<br />

Sunday, Sept. 18: Minnesota at San<br />

Antonio, 5 p.m.<br />

x-Tuesday, Sept. 20: San Antonio at<br />

Minnesota, 8 or 9 p.m.<br />

Seattle 1, Phoenix 0<br />

Thursday, Sept. 15: Seattle 80, Phoenix<br />

61<br />

Saturday, Sept. 17: Seattle at Phoenix,<br />

10 p.m.<br />

x-Monday, Sept. 19: Phoenix at Seattle,<br />

10 p.m.<br />

Dantonio, who suffered a heart<br />

attack hours after the emotional<br />

victory, noted that the series has<br />

been full of late heroics and wild<br />

finishes.<br />

“I think whether they come<br />

here, we go there, there’s going<br />

to be a great football game. That’s<br />

what I’ve really seen in my time<br />

here,” said Dantonio.<br />

“There’s not very many games<br />

that have gotten lopsided. They’ve<br />

all been close, had comebacks, had<br />

great action.”<br />

Nine of the last 11 games<br />

between the schools have been<br />

decided by seven points or less.<br />

Notre Dame won 33-30 two<br />

years ago in South Bend, clinching<br />

it with an interception at the 4yard<br />

line with just under a minute<br />

left. But from 1997-2007 the Spartans<br />

fashioned six straight wins at<br />

FOOTBALL<br />

NFL<br />

All Times EDT<br />

AMERICAN CONFERENCE<br />

East<br />

W L T Pct PF PA<br />

New England 1 0 0 1.000 38 24<br />

Buffalo 1 0 0 1.000 41 7<br />

N.Y. Jets 1 0 0 1.000 27 24<br />

Miami 0 1 0 .000 24 38<br />

South<br />

W L T Pct PF PA<br />

Houston 1 0 0 1.000 34 7<br />

Jacksonville 1 0 0 1.000 16 14<br />

Tennessee 0 1 0 .000 14 16<br />

Indianapolis 0 1 0 .000 7 34<br />

North<br />

W L T Pct PF PA<br />

Baltimore 1 0 0 1.000 35 7<br />

Cincinnati 1 0 0 1.000 27 17<br />

Cleveland 0 1 0 .000 17 27<br />

Pittsburgh 0 1 0 .000 7 35<br />

West<br />

W L T Pct PF PA<br />

San Diego 1 0 0 1.000 24 17<br />

Oakland 1 0 0 1.000 23 20<br />

Denver 0 1 0 .000 20 23<br />

Kansas City 0 1 0 .000 7 41<br />

NATIONAL CONFERENCE<br />

East<br />

W L T Pct PF PA<br />

Washington 1 0 0 1.000 28 14<br />

Philadelphia 1 0 0 1.000 31 13<br />

Dallas 0 1 0 .000 24 27<br />

N.Y. Giants 0 1 0 .000 14 28<br />

South<br />

W L T Pct PF PA<br />

New Orleans 0 1 0 .000 34 42<br />

Tampa Bay 0 1 0 .000 20 27<br />

Carolina 0 1 0 .000 21 28<br />

Atlanta 0 1 0 .000 12 30<br />

North<br />

W L T Pct PF PA<br />

Chicago 1 0 0 1.000 30 12<br />

Detroit 1 0 0 1.000 27 20<br />

Green Bay 1 0 0 1.000 42 34<br />

Minnesota 0 1 0 .000 17 24<br />

West<br />

W L T Pct PF PA<br />

San Francisco 1 0 0 1.000 33 17<br />

Arizona 1 0 0 1.000 28 21<br />

St. Louis 0 1 0 .000 13 31<br />

Seattle 0 1 0 .000 17 33<br />

Sunday’s Games<br />

Chicago at New Orleans, 1 p.m.<br />

Baltimore at Tennessee, 1 p.m.<br />

Tampa Bay at Minnesota, 1 p.m.<br />

Kansas City at Detroit, 1 p.m.<br />

Jacksonville at N.Y. Jets, 1 p.m.<br />

Oakland at Buffalo, 1 p.m.<br />

Arizona at Washington, 1 p.m.<br />

Seattle at Pittsburgh, 1 p.m.<br />

Green Bay at Carolina, 1 p.m.<br />

Cleveland at Indianapolis, 1 p.m.<br />

Dallas at San Francisco, 4:05 p.m.<br />

Cincinnati at Denver, 4:15 p.m.<br />

Houston at Miami, 4:15 p.m.<br />

San Diego at New England, 4:15 p.m.<br />

Philadelphia at Atlanta, 8:20 p.m.<br />

Monday, Sep. 19<br />

St. Louis at N.Y. Giants, 8:30 p.m.<br />

HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL<br />

Friday’s Scores<br />

Avon 17, Brownsburg 14<br />

Bedford N. Lawrence 42, Seymour 7<br />

Boonville 51, Hopkins Co. Central, Ky. 0<br />

Boyle Co., Ky. 38, Indpls Tech 10<br />

Bremen 20, Culver 13<br />

Brownstown 71, N. Harrison 12<br />

Cambridge City 41, Winchester 0<br />

Carmel 42, Lawrence North 0<br />

Carroll (Allen) 21, E. Noble 16<br />

Cass 45, Peru 0<br />

Caston 31, Carroll (Flora) 0<br />

Center Grove 21, Terre Haute South 0<br />

Centerville 26, Union City 20<br />

Charlestown 67, Silver Creek 18<br />

Churubusco 37, Angola 21<br />

Cin. La Salle, Ohio 66, Indpls Northwest<br />

0<br />

Clarksville 39, Salem 7<br />

Clinton Prairie 20, Delphi 14<br />

Columbia City 28, DeKalb 14<br />

Columbus East 60, New Albany 20<br />

Concord 26, Goshen 10<br />

Corydon 48, Eastern (Pekin) 14<br />

Crawfordsville 28, Beech Grove 18<br />

Crown Point 42, Portage 0<br />

Decatur Central 36, Mooresville 22<br />

Eastbrook 57, Blackford 3<br />

Eastern (Greene) 51, Wood Memorial 29<br />

Eastside 49, Fairfield 14<br />

Edgewood 35, Sullivan 28<br />

Elkhart Central 28, S. Bend Riley 21<br />

Elkhart Memorial 35, Plymouth 0<br />

Ev. Mater Dei 40, Ev. Bosse 6<br />

Ev. Reitz 42, Ev. Memorial 32<br />

Fishers 38, Lafayette Harrison 6<br />

Floyd Central 52, Jeffersonville 42<br />

Forest Park 41, Pike Central 14<br />

Fountain Central 48, Attica 0<br />

Franklin Co. 48, Lawrenceburg 21<br />

Fremont 58, Central Noble 21<br />

Ft. Wayne Luers 56, Ft. Wayne Wayne<br />

12<br />

Ft. Wayne Northrop 21, Ft. Wayne<br />

South 14<br />

Ft. Wayne Snider 43, Ft. Wayne Concordia<br />

14<br />

Garrett 45, <strong>Bluffton</strong> 27<br />

Gibson Southern 64, Princeton 14<br />

Glenn 63, Triton 7<br />

Greenfield 36, Shelbyville 13<br />

Greenwood 34, Plainfield 21<br />

Griffith 55, Kankakee Valley 7<br />

Guerin Catholic 42, Indpls Arlington 6<br />

Hagerstown 21, Union Co. 20<br />

Hamilton Hts. 34, Eastern (Howard) 21<br />

Hamilton Southeastern 36, Lafayette<br />

Jeff 14<br />

Hammond 40, Gary West 26<br />

Heritage 20, Adams Central 13<br />

Homestead 55, Bellmont 7<br />

Huntington North 42, Anderson 28<br />

Indpls Ben Davis 46, Terre Haute North 7<br />

Indpls Brebeuf 21, Culver Academy 17<br />

Indpls Chatard 42, Indpls Ritter 27<br />

Indpls Lutheran 19, Indpls Park Tudor 7<br />

Indpls Roncalli 40, Indpls Scecina 7<br />

Jay Co. 32, Muncie South 28<br />

Jennings Co. 43, Madison 32<br />

Jimtown 41, New Prairie 0<br />

Knightstown 20, Eastern Hancock 14<br />

Knox 41, LaVille 16<br />

Kokomo 55, New Castle 21<br />

Lafayette Catholic 54, Benton Central 7<br />

Lake Central 24, LaPorte 7<br />

Lakeland 45, W. Noble 20<br />

Linton 50, Springs Valley 19<br />

Logansport 49, Marion 39<br />

Lowell 45, Highland 21<br />

Madison-Grant 57, Elwood 27<br />

Martinsville 21, Franklin 14<br />

McCutcheon 21, Noblesville 14<br />

Milan 41, N. Decatur 28<br />

Mishawaka 45, Ft. Wayne North 28<br />

Mishawaka Marian 28, S. Bend Washington<br />

14<br />

Mississinewa 30, Alexandria 22<br />

Mitchell 7, Crawford Co. 0<br />

Mt. Vernon (Posey) 20, Washington 19<br />

N. Daviess 54, Union (Dugger) 8<br />

N. Miami 49, Manchester 28<br />

N. Montgomery 21, Lebanon 3<br />

N. Posey 20, Heritage Hills 12<br />

N. Putnam 40, Danville 6<br />

N. White 34, Frontier 0<br />

New Haven 41, Norwell 7<br />

New Palestine 53, Rushville 0<br />

Northeastern 53, Tri 6<br />

Northview 27, Owen Valley 0<br />

Northwestern 42, Taylor 3<br />

Oak Hill 35, Frankton 27<br />

Paoli 50, W. Washington 13<br />

Pendleton Hts. 38, Mt. Vernon (Fortville)<br />

6<br />

Penn 42, S. Bend Clay 6<br />

Perry Central 21, Tell City 0<br />

Pioneer 46, N. Judson 22<br />

Rensselaer 28, Twin Lakes 27, 2OT<br />

Richmond 23, Muncie Central 19<br />

Rochester 74, Southwood 28<br />

Rockville 47, Turkey Run 8<br />

S. Adams 30, Leo 6<br />

S. Bend St. Joseph’s 23, S. Bend<br />

Adams 7<br />

S. Newton 32, W. Central 20<br />

Seeger 14, Covington 12<br />

Shenandoah 28, Lapel 6<br />

Sheridan 46, Clinton Central 15<br />

Southern Wells 60, Wes-Del 0<br />

Southmont 42, Tri-West 8<br />

Southridge 31, S. Spencer 7<br />

Speedway 38, Monrovia 35<br />

Tri-Central 40, Monroe Central 6<br />

Triton Central 41, Edinburgh 0<br />

Vincennes 25, Jasper 22<br />

W. Lafayette 17, Tipton 7<br />

W. Vigo 62, S. Vermillion 8<br />

Warren Central 48, Indpls N. Central 16<br />

Warsaw 36, Northridge 14<br />

Wawasee 20, NorthWood 12<br />

Western 64, Maconaquah 0<br />

Western Boone 27, Frankfort 13<br />

Whiteland 69, Connersville 14<br />

Whiting 41, Hammond Noll 3<br />

Whitko 35, Wabash 0<br />

Winamac 42, Tri-County 33<br />

Woodlan 69, Prairie Hts. 33<br />

Yorktown 28, Delta 14<br />

Zionsville 44, Westfield 29<br />

COLLEGE FOOTBALL<br />

All Times EDT<br />

(Subject to change)<br />

Friday’s Game<br />

MIDWEST<br />

Boise St. 40, Toledo 15<br />

———<br />

Saturday’s Games<br />

EAST<br />

Valparaiso (0-2) at Duquesne (1-1),<br />

<strong>SAT</strong>URDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 2011 • The <strong>News</strong>-<strong>Banner</strong> • Page 7<br />

Badgers enjoying time in spotlight: Northern Illinois next in line<br />

By NANCY ARMOUR<br />

AP National Writer<br />

CHICAGO (AP) — Wisconsin is rarely<br />

going to be mistaken for one of college football’s<br />

“glamour” teams.<br />

Its roster isn’t loaded with blue chip<br />

recruits. Its offense isn’t flashy enough to<br />

have its own nickname. Its defense is built on<br />

size and strength, not gimmicks. Its uniforms<br />

are only slightly less boring, er, traditional<br />

than Penn State’s or Alabama’s. Even when<br />

it’s had great teams, they weren’t considered<br />

the equal of an Oklahoma or Texas or USC.<br />

Thanks to new quarterback Russell Wilson<br />

and scandals that have upended the traditional<br />

Big Ten order, however, the Badgers<br />

are hearing what sounds an awful lot like<br />

— dare we say it? — buzz these days.<br />

Up to No. 7 after the first shutout of a<br />

BCS team this season, the Badgers (2-0) are<br />

getting a taste of life in the big leagues this<br />

week when they play Northern Illinois (1-1)<br />

at Soldier Field on Saturday afternoon.<br />

“I think it’s fun,” offensive lineman Peter<br />

Konz said. “You normally don’t get recognized<br />

for what you do, at least here. We<br />

haven’t been a national team, you don’t hear<br />

about Wisconsin every other day on ESPN.<br />

So it’s just fun to be recognized. It’s sort of a<br />

respect thing.”<br />

Wisconsin has finished in the top four of<br />

the Big Ten every year but one since 2004,<br />

and it won a share of the conference title last<br />

year. It’s had 10 or more wins four of the last<br />

six seasons, including a Wisconsin-best 12 in<br />

2006, Bret Bielema’s first season as coach.<br />

It’s gone to bowl games every year since<br />

2002.<br />

Yet ask college football fans to name the<br />

premier programs in the country, and odds<br />

are Wisconsin’s name won’t be near the top<br />

of the list.<br />

Part of the reason is Ohio State and<br />

Michigan are so steeped in tradition, not to<br />

mention talent, they tend to monopolize the<br />

Big Ten spotlight. But Wisconsin’s style of<br />

play hasn’t done much to boost its star status,<br />

either. The Badgers don’t go for fads<br />

or innovation, preferring to stick with a formula<br />

that’s worked since the days of leather<br />

helmets: run the ball behind a big, bruising<br />

offensive line, and stop opponents with a<br />

rugged, physical defense.<br />

They’re college football’s version of<br />

“Groundhog Day,” the names on the backs<br />

of the uniforms the only way to tell one year<br />

from another.<br />

“Wisconsin is what it is,” Bielema said<br />

before the season began. “We’re not real<br />

sexy.”<br />

What they do, however, they do awfully<br />

well.<br />

Montee Ball and James White already<br />

have combined for almost 300 yards rushing<br />

and six touchdowns, and the season is only<br />

two games old. The Badgers are 11th in the<br />

country in scoring defense, and in the top 30<br />

for both rush defense and total yardage. They<br />

haven’t turned the ball over yet this year, and<br />

have had only five turnovers over the last 13<br />

games.<br />

“You can ask any coach in the country.<br />

When you play Wisconsin, they’re not about<br />

tricking you,” said Northern Illinois coach<br />

Dave Doeren, who spent the past five seasons<br />

in Madison as Wisconsin’s defensive<br />

coordinator. “They’re about playing better<br />

technique, and being stronger and tougher<br />

than you are. That’s what’s made them a<br />

good program for a long time.”<br />

The Badgers haven’t lost a non-conference<br />

game during the regular season since<br />

2003 — 30 in a row for those counting<br />

— and they have no interest in seeing that<br />

streak end this week.<br />

Not when people are finally paying attention<br />

to them.<br />

The country took notice of the Badgers<br />

last season after they knocked off then-No.<br />

1 Ohio State, and the addition of Wilson has<br />

only added to their appeal. The transfer from<br />

North Carolina State is a quarterback unlike<br />

any other Wisconsin has had, a multidimensional<br />

threat that gives the Badger offense<br />

some flair.<br />

Wilson has a great arm — he was drafted<br />

by the Colorado Rockies in the fourth round<br />

last year — and is 27 of 34 for 444 yards and<br />

five touchdowns in his first two games with<br />

Notre Dame wants to avoid going 0-3 against Michigan State<br />

Notre Dame Stadium.<br />

Saturday’s game will be the<br />

Spartans first on the road this season<br />

and also MSU’s first real test<br />

after easy wins over Youngstown<br />

State and Florida Atlantic, in<br />

which it gave up a total of six<br />

points. Florida Atlantic had one<br />

first down and 48 yards last week<br />

— the fewest yards allowed by<br />

Michigan State since it held Notre<br />

Dame to 12 yards in 1965.<br />

If the 75th meeting in the series<br />

needed some spice, Michigan<br />

State defensive coordinator Pat<br />

Narduzzi may have provided it.<br />

According to the Lansing State<br />

Journal, Narduzzi hinted that the<br />

Irish may have been stealing the<br />

Spartans’ defensive signals.<br />

“They don’t look to the sidelines<br />

as much (normally), but<br />

against us they did for some rea-<br />

<strong>News</strong>-<strong>Banner</strong> Scoreboard<br />

Noon<br />

Penn St. (1-1) at Temple (2-0), Noon<br />

Northwestern (2-0) at Army (0-2), 3:30<br />

p.m.<br />

SOUTH<br />

Louisville (1-1) at Kentucky (2-0), 7<br />

p.m.<br />

Indiana St. (1-1) at W. Kentucky (0-2),<br />

7 p.m.<br />

Ohio St. (2-0) at Miami (0-1), 7:30 p.m.<br />

MIDWEST<br />

Wyoming (2-0) at Bowling Green (2-<br />

0), Noon<br />

Pittsburgh (2-0) at Iowa (1-1), Noon<br />

E. Michigan (2-0) at Michigan (2-0),<br />

Noon<br />

SE Missouri (0-1) at Purdue (1-1),<br />

Noon<br />

Cent. Michigan (1-1) at W. Michigan<br />

(1-1), Noon<br />

Marist (1-1) at Dayton (1-1), 1 p.m.<br />

Butler (1-1) at Taylor (0-0), 1 p.m.<br />

Akron (0-2) at Cincinnati (1-1), 3:30<br />

p.m.<br />

SC State (1-1) at Indiana (0-2), 3:30<br />

p.m.<br />

Miami (Ohio) (0-1) at Minnesota (0-2),<br />

3:30 p.m.<br />

Wisconsin (2-0) vs. N. Illinois (1-1) at<br />

Chicago, 3:30 p.m.<br />

Washington (2-0) at Nebraska (2-0),<br />

3:30 p.m.<br />

Michigan St. (2-0) at Notre Dame (0-2),<br />

3:30 p.m.<br />

Illinois St. (1-1) at Youngstown St. (1-<br />

1), 4 p.m.<br />

NW Oklahoma (0-2) at South Dakota<br />

(1-1), 5 p.m.<br />

Buffalo (1-1) at Ball St. (1-1), 7 p.m.<br />

Missouri S&T (1-1) at Drake (1-1), 7<br />

p.m.<br />

Arizona St. (2-0) at Illinois (2-0), 7 p.m.<br />

Kent St. (0-2) at Kansas St. (1-0), 7<br />

p.m.<br />

W. Illinois (1-1) at Missouri (1-1), 7<br />

p.m.<br />

Marshall (1-1) at Ohio (2-0), 7 p.m.<br />

Tennessee Tech (1-1) at E. Illinois (1-1),<br />

7:30 p.m.<br />

Major League Soccer<br />

All Times EDT<br />

EASTERN CONFERENCE<br />

W L T Pts GF GA<br />

Columbus 11 9 8 41 35 36<br />

Kansas City 10 8 10 40 43 36<br />

Philadelphia 8 7 12 36 35 30<br />

Houston 8 9 12 36 36 38<br />

D.C. 8 7 10 34 37 35<br />

New York 6 6 15 33 42 38<br />

Chicago 4 8 15 27 30 35<br />

New England 5 11 12 27 32 43<br />

Toronto FC 5 12 12 27 30 51<br />

WESTERN CONFERENCE<br />

W L T Pts GF GA<br />

x-Los Angeles 15 3 10 55 40 22<br />

Seattle 13 6 9 48 43 31<br />

FC Dallas 13 8 7 46 36 31<br />

Real Salt Lake 13 7 6 45 37 22<br />

Colorado 10 8 11 41 39 37<br />

Portland 9 12 6 33 33 41<br />

Chivas USA 7 11 10 31 32 33<br />

San Jose 6 10 11 29 29 35<br />

Vancouver 4 13 10 22 28 43<br />

NOTE: Three points for victory, one<br />

point for tie.<br />

x- clinched playoff berth<br />

Wednesday’s Game<br />

Columbus 2, Houston 2, tie<br />

Friday’s Game<br />

New England at Portland, 11 p.m.<br />

the Badgers. He’s rushed for an additional<br />

73 yards, including a 46-yard scoring run<br />

against UNLV after he rolled out and, seeing<br />

no one coming after him, took off.<br />

“(He) manages the game the same way<br />

that Scott Tolzien did, but he’s a better athlete,”<br />

Doeren said. “So there’s another<br />

dimension there when things break down, or<br />

if things are covered up.”<br />

And if there’s ever a year for the Badgers<br />

to shine, this is it.<br />

Ohio State is reeling from its offseason<br />

woes, Michigan is rebuilding under new<br />

coach Brady Hoke and Michigan State, even<br />

with the progress it’s made, is still a basketball<br />

school. Plenty are curious to see how<br />

Nebraska fares in its rookie Big Ten season<br />

— the Cornhuskers’ trip to Madison on Oct.<br />

1 is one of the hottest tickets in the country<br />

— but things are shaping up nicely for the<br />

Badgers to claim another Big Ten title and<br />

earn a spot in a second straight BCS bowl.<br />

Do that, and Wisconsin will be seeing a<br />

lot more of itself.<br />

“I think we are building a national reputation,”<br />

Wilson said. “That’s a positive thing.<br />

But at the same time, we’re not focused on<br />

that. We’re focused on what we need to do<br />

every single day, and that’s to make sure<br />

every single play, we’re playing the best<br />

we can play. Execute our offense, execute<br />

our defense, special teams — and just keep<br />

working hard.”<br />

son,” Narduzzi said. “Whether<br />

they’re stealing our signals, I don’t<br />

know. But we’ve got something<br />

(changed this year) on the signals,<br />

too. You never know. Guys are<br />

thieves, you know.”<br />

He said Michigan State would<br />

use four different people signaling<br />

in formations Saturday.<br />

Kelly said the Irish have enough<br />

problems without pilfering signals.<br />

“I’m worried whether or not<br />

we’re going to get the play in and<br />

call the right play. That’s just too<br />

much for us to handle. No, I don’t<br />

think it’s appropriate to film anybody’s<br />

sideline and pick up signals,”<br />

he said.<br />

“You don’t need to do that.<br />

We’ll take care of what we can<br />

take care of. Believe me, that’s the<br />

last thing on our minds. We got our<br />

hands full with our own guys.”<br />

LIVE UNITED<br />

AROUND<br />

THE CLOCK<br />

4:00 pm Julia takes her mother to<br />

Panos Free Clinic - she has had a<br />

cough that just won’t go away and she<br />

needs medical attention and medicine<br />

but has no insurance.<br />

Saturday’s Games<br />

Colorado at Toronto FC, 1:30 p.m.<br />

Chivas USA at Chicago, 4 p.m.<br />

Columbus at Philadelphia, 7:30 p.m.<br />

New York at FC Dallas, 8:30 p.m.<br />

San Jose at Houston, 8:30 p.m.<br />

D.C. United at Seattle FC, 9 p.m.<br />

Sporting Kansas City at Real Salt Lake,<br />

9 p.m.<br />

Vancouver at Los Angeles, 10:30 p.m.<br />

SPORTS TRANSACTIONS<br />

FRIDAY<br />

BASEBALL<br />

COMMISSIONER’S OFFICE — Suspended<br />

N.Y. Mets minor league RHP<br />

Brandon Moore 50 games for a second<br />

violation of baseball’s minor league drug<br />

policy.<br />

American League<br />

TORONTO BLUE JAYS — Activated OF<br />

Colby Rasmus from the 15-day DL.<br />

National League<br />

ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS — Recalled<br />

OF Cole Gillespie from Reno (PCL).<br />

COLORADO ROCKIES—Recalled INF<br />

Hector Gomez from Tulsa (TL).<br />

PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES—Recalled<br />

OF Domonic Brown and RHP Justin<br />

DeFratus from Lehigh Valley (IL).<br />

Selected the contracts of C Erik Kratz,<br />

LHP Joe Savery and OF Brandon Moss<br />

from Lehigh Valley.<br />

PITTSBURGH PIRATES — Promoted<br />

director of scouting Greg Smith to assistant<br />

general manager, director of player<br />

development Kyle Stark to assistant general<br />

manager, director of baseball operations<br />

Tyrone Brooks to director of player<br />

personnel, assistant scouting director<br />

Joe DelliCarri to director of amateur<br />

scouting, area scout Larry Broadway to<br />

director of minor league operations, and<br />

assistant director of baseball operations<br />

Kevan Graves to director of baseball<br />

operations.<br />

American Association<br />

ST. PAUL SAINTS — Released RHP<br />

Julio DePaula, LHP Jesse English and<br />

OF Ryan Patterson.<br />

Can-Am League<br />

BROCKTON ROX — Released RHP<br />

John Kelly.<br />

FOOTBALL<br />

National Football League<br />

NFL — Fined Baltimore LB Brendon<br />

Ayanbadejo $15,000, Pittsburgh S Troy<br />

Polamalu $15,000 and Pittsburgh CB Ike<br />

Taylor $15,000, N.Y. Giants S Antrel Rolle<br />

$20,000 and N.Y. Giants S Kenny Phillips<br />

$10,000 for unnecessary roughness penalties<br />

during last week’s games.<br />

KANSAS CITY CHIEFS — Waived TE<br />

Jake O’Connell. Signed TE Anthony<br />

Becht.<br />

Canadian Football League<br />

WINNIPEG BLUE BOMBERS — Placed<br />

WR Kito Poblah on the nine-game injured<br />

list. Re-added S Brady Browne to the<br />

nine-game injured list.<br />

HOCKEY<br />

National Hockey League<br />

NEW YORK ISLANDERS — Agreed to<br />

terms with C Josh Bailey on a two-year<br />

contract.<br />

ECHL<br />

READING ROYALS — Agreed to terms<br />

with D Channing Boe.<br />

SOUTH CAROLINA STINGRAYS<br />

— Agreed to terms with F Pierre-Luc<br />

O’Brien.<br />

•Give<br />

•Advocate<br />

•Volunteer<br />

Do You LIVE UNITED? ®<br />

LIVE UNITED?<br />

(888) 758-3111 •<br />

marklebank.com<br />

Member FDIC


Page 8 • The <strong>News</strong>-<strong>Banner</strong> • <strong>SAT</strong>URDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 2011<br />

BUSINESS/FINANCE<br />

Chamber plans Member Appreciation Lunch<br />

By FRANK SHANLY<br />

The Wells County Chamber<br />

of Commerce wants to<br />

thanks its members.<br />

And it is planning to<br />

throw a “Member Appreciation<br />

Lunch” to do it.<br />

Plans are underway for a<br />

free hot dog, baked beans,<br />

pretzels and cookie lunch<br />

from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. on<br />

Wednesday, Oct. 5, at the<br />

Arts, Commerce and Visitors<br />

Centre.<br />

Chamber ambassadors<br />

and the Board of Directors<br />

will be on hand to greet,<br />

serve and personally show<br />

their appreciation to members<br />

for their membership<br />

and support of the organization.<br />

frank@news-banner.com<br />

Business Roundup<br />

Gray named manager<br />

at Mobile King<br />

Harold Gray III has recently been<br />

promoted to the store manager position<br />

of the Mobile King c=ell phone<br />

business, located 600 N. Main St. in<br />

<strong>Bluffton</strong>.<br />

Gray had previously worked at<br />

the location when it was a Centennial<br />

Wireless store from 2006 to 2010.<br />

BRMC<br />

(Continued from Page 1)<br />

Lutheran Hospital in Fort<br />

Wayne, moving to that position<br />

in July.<br />

To be recognized as a top<br />

performer on key quality<br />

measures, an organization<br />

must meet two 95 percent<br />

performance thresholds.<br />

First, they must achieve a<br />

composite performance of<br />

95 percent or higher after<br />

the results of all the accountability<br />

measures reported to<br />

The Joint Commission are<br />

factored into a single score<br />

that includes measures that<br />

had less than 30 eligible<br />

cases or patients. Second,<br />

they must meet or exceed a<br />

95 percent performance target<br />

for every single accountability<br />

measure for which<br />

they report data, excluding<br />

any measures with less than<br />

30 eligible cases or patients.<br />

In addition to being<br />

included in the release of<br />

The Joint Commission’s<br />

“Improving America’s Hospitals”<br />

annual report, each<br />

hospital will be recognized<br />

on the Joint Commission’s<br />

Qualitycheck.org website.<br />

<strong>Bluffton</strong> Regional Medical<br />

Center is a 79-bed acute<br />

care facility located in Bluff-<br />

Wells County Chamber of Commerce ambassadors plan their upcoming "member Appreciation<br />

Lunch." Seated at the table, from left to right, are Chon Michael of Ossian State<br />

Bank, Cyndee Fiechter of BKM Real Estate, Michael Towne and Mike Lampton of Farm<br />

Bureau Insurance, Ted Brinneman and Paula Johnson of Three Rivers Federal Credit Union<br />

and Megan Morrison, Wells County Chamber of Commerce. (Photo provided)<br />

Harold Gray<br />

Wind turbine firm taking over plant<br />

EVANSVILLE, Ind. (AP) — A Dutch company that<br />

designs and makes wind turbine blades will open its first<br />

U.S. facility at a former refrigerator plant in Evansville that<br />

Whirlpool Corp. closed last year.<br />

Global Blade Technology executives joined Gov. Mitch<br />

Daniels and city officials in the announcing that the company<br />

would lease a portion of the factory for offices and production<br />

lines for making wind blades, molds and tooling.<br />

Jay, Randolph wind project breathes<br />

Portland Commercial Review<br />

A major wind turbine project in southern Jay and northern<br />

Randolph counties that once appeared dead is very much<br />

alive, local officials said this week.<br />

Bill Bradley, executive director of Jay County Development<br />

Corp., told his board that the project is likely to move<br />

forward. The project, in the planning stages for several<br />

years, hit a snag when American Electric Power elected to<br />

purchase power from the developer of a proposed wind farm<br />

in central Indiana. A new company, however, has stepped up<br />

to replace AEP.<br />

ton, Ind. Services offered by<br />

the hospital include a full<br />

range of digital diagnostic<br />

services, pediatrics, medical/<br />

surgical, in- and outpatient<br />

surgery, intensive care, continuing<br />

care, the Women’s<br />

Center, emergency services,<br />

Business Health Services,<br />

rehabilitation services, and<br />

Advanced Primary Stroke<br />

Center. The hospital is a<br />

recipient of the Health-<br />

Grades Outstanding Patient<br />

Experience Award for two<br />

consecutive years. In August<br />

2010, <strong>Bluffton</strong> Regional<br />

was presented with a Gold<br />

Performance Achievement<br />

Award from the American<br />

Heart Association/American<br />

Stroke Association for<br />

adherence with the “Get<br />

With The Guidelines” program.<br />

For more information,<br />

visit the blufftonregional.<br />

com website.<br />

FOLLOW<br />

US ON<br />

TWITTER!<br />

twitter.com/newsbanner<br />

www.edwardjones.com<br />

Member SIPC<br />

New business in Markle<br />

Sweet Swirls Cupcakery in Markle<br />

held its official ribbon cutting Monday,<br />

which was also attended by staff and<br />

ambassadors from the Wells County<br />

Chamber of Commerce, and family of<br />

the owner/manager, Brandy Householder.<br />

Pictured from left are Suzanne<br />

Huffman, Wells County Chamber of<br />

Commerce; Bill Bowman, family member;<br />

Chon Michael, Ossian State Bank;<br />

Diane Wedler, family member; Sid<br />

Schwartz, MarkleBank; Brandy Householder,<br />

owner/manager of Sweet Swirls<br />

Cupcakery; Detta Gass, Goldenrod; Pat<br />

Bowman, family member; Preston Kaehr,<br />

First Bank of Berne; Andy Marshall,<br />

MarkleBank; Greg Smitley, President of<br />

MarkleBank; and Troy Spath, Integrated<br />

Office Solutions. (Photo provided)<br />

Serving those who serve<br />

Hector Minon, chef and co-owner of the Snug Cafe, delivers<br />

three servings of spaghetting with meatballs as well as<br />

salad to the <strong>Bluffton</strong> Police and Fire departments Monday<br />

morning. Minon delivers them the food annually in remembrance<br />

of Sept. 11. (Photo by Chet Baumgartner)<br />

DOUG FEAR<br />

Financial Advisor<br />

2035 Commerce Dr.<br />

(Behind Lowes)<br />

<strong>Bluffton</strong>, IN 46714<br />

260-565-4134<br />

JEREMY TODD<br />

Financial Advisor<br />

1169 N. Main St.<br />

Suite 2<br />

<strong>Bluffton</strong>, IN 46714<br />

260-824-0686<br />

LARRY A. SMITH<br />

Financial Advisor<br />

102 S. Jefferson<br />

Ossian, IN 46777<br />

260-622-7952<br />

JEREMY RUFENER<br />

Financial Advisor<br />

201 E. Market St.<br />

Suite 1<br />

<strong>Bluffton</strong>, IN 46714<br />

260-824-2354<br />

Don’t miss the latest from New York’s<br />

Wall Street and <strong>Bluffton</strong>’s Main Street...<br />

Click on “Business <strong>News</strong>” at www.news-banner.com<br />

THE WEEK IN REVIEW<br />

Close: 11,509.09<br />

1-week change: 516.96 (4.7%)<br />

13,000<br />

12,500<br />

12,000<br />

11,500<br />

11,000<br />

10,500<br />

Dow Jones industrials<br />

WEEKLY DOW JONES<br />

68.99<br />

MON<br />

44.73<br />

TUES<br />

M A M J J A S<br />

STOCK MARKET INDEXES<br />

52-Week Wk Wk YTD 12-mo<br />

High Low Name Last Chg %Chg %Chg %Chg<br />

12,876.00 10,458.60 Dow Jones Industrials 11,509.09 +516.96 +4.70 -.59 +8.50<br />

5,627.85 4,205.13 Dow Jones Transportation 4,664.60 +295.61 +6.77 -8.66 +5.21<br />

442.01 381.99 Dow Jones Utilities 439.29 +19.40 +4.62 +8.47 +12.32<br />

8,718.25 6,839.00 NYSE Composite 7,348.18 +303.17 +4.30 -7.73 +2.70<br />

2,490.51 1,966.64 AMEX Index 2,237.86 +31.41 +1.42 +1.34 +12.51<br />

2,887.75 2,263.69 Nasdaq Composite 2,622.31 +154.32 +6.25 -1.15 +13.24<br />

1,370.58 1,101.54 S&P 500 1,216.01 +61.78 +5.35 -3.31 +8.03<br />

14,562.01 11,570.57 Wilshire 5000 12,802.12 +642.69 +5.29 -4.18 +8.39<br />

868.57 639.85 Russell 2000 714.31 +40.35 +5.99 -8.85 +9.65<br />

4,051.89 3,168.69 Lipper Growth Index 3,596.63 +184.16 +5.40 -2.31 +12.71<br />

Wk Wk YTD<br />

Name Ex Div Last Chg %Chg Chg<br />

AFLAC NY 1.20 36.33 +2.50 +7.4 -35.6<br />

AT&T Inc NY 1.72 28.94 +1.40 +5.1 -1.5<br />

AlcatelLuc NY ... 3.23 +.12 +3.9 +9.1<br />

Alcoa NY .12 11.97 +.39 +3.4 -22.2<br />

AEP NY 1.84 37.52 +.72 +2.0 +4.3<br />

ApldMatl Nasd .32 11.57 +.85 +7.9 -17.7<br />

Atmel Nasd ... 10.53 +1.84 +21.2 -14.5<br />

BP PLC NY 1.68 39.69 +3.69 +10.3 -10.1<br />

BkofAm NY .04 7.23 +.25 +3.6 -45.8<br />

Bar iPVix rs NY ... 41.55 -4.28 -9.3 +10.5<br />

BrMySq NY 1.32 30.53 +1.37 +4.7 +15.3<br />

CampSp NY 1.16 31.36 +.51 +1.7 -9.8<br />

Caterpillar NY 1.84 85.90 +1.94 +2.3 -8.3<br />

Chevron NY 3.12 99.63 +4.44 +4.7 +9.2<br />

Cisco Nasd .24 16.62 +.80 +5.1 -17.8<br />

Citigrp rs NY .04 28.99 +2.25 +8.4 -38.7<br />

CocaCola NY 1.88 71.23 +2.33 +3.4 +8.3<br />

Dell Inc Nasd ... 15.20 +1.23 +8.8 +12.2<br />

DrSCBr rs NY ... 40.64 -8.02 -16.5 -13.2<br />

DrxFnBull NY ... 14.09 +2.00 +16.5 -49.4<br />

DirxSCBull NY ... 45.92 +7.13 +18.4 -36.6<br />

Disney NY .40 32.91 +1.87 +6.0 -12.3<br />

Eaton s NY 1.36 39.74 +1.08 +2.8 -21.7<br />

ExxonMbl NY 1.88 74.55 +3.54 +5.0 +2.0<br />

FordM NY ... 10.62 +.57 +5.7 -36.7<br />

FrankElec Nasd .54 38.66 +.59 +1.5 -.7<br />

FMCG s NY 1.00 41.59 -.40 -1.0 -30.7<br />

GenElec NY .60 16.33 +1.39 +9.3 -10.7<br />

GloblInd Nasd ... 7.85 +2.70 +52.4 +13.3<br />

HewlettP NY .48 23.53 +1.00 +4.4 -44.1<br />

HomeDp NY 1.00 34.61 +2.74 +8.6 -1.3<br />

iShEMkts NY .84 40.53 +.52 +1.3 -14.9<br />

iS Eafe NY 1.68 50.90 +2.15 +4.4 -12.6<br />

iShR2K NY .94 71.52 +4.02 +6.0 -8.6<br />

ITT Corp NY 1.00 44.93 +2.15 +5.0 -13.8<br />

Intel Nasd .84 21.97 +2.27 +11.5 +4.5<br />

IBM NY 3.00 172.99 +11.62 +7.2 +17.9<br />

Inventure Nasd ... 4.00 ... ... -7.4<br />

MUTUAL FUNDS<br />

140.88<br />

WED<br />

NYSE AMEX<br />

u� ��������� ������� u� ��������� ������ u<br />

GAINERS ($2 OR MORE)<br />

Name Last Chg %Chg<br />

Marcus 11.25 +3.02 +36.7<br />

iSoftStn n 10.76 +2.86 +36.2<br />

ExcelM 2.48 +.60 +31.9<br />

DrxSOXBll 33.35 +7.79 +30.5<br />

ChKanghui 24.80 +5.74 +30.1<br />

Comeric wt 5.80 +1.31 +29.2<br />

JournalCm 3.90 +.81 +26.2<br />

NeoPhoto n 7.86 +1.59 +25.4<br />

PNC wt 10.14 +2.04 +25.2<br />

Textron 18.63 +3.37 +22.1<br />

LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)<br />

Name Last Chg %Chg<br />

DSOXBr rs 63.37 -21.13 -25.0<br />

DrxTcBear 19.69 -4.48 -18.5<br />

CSVS2xVxS 55.51 -12.32 -18.2<br />

C-TrCVOL 49.58 -10.77 -17.8<br />

PrUShtSm rs 51.77 -10.83 -17.3<br />

iP SXR1K 42.35 -8.62 -16.9<br />

SilvrcpM g 7.02 -1.41 -16.7<br />

DrSCBr rs 40.64 -8.02 -16.5<br />

PrUPShR2K 20.11 -3.92 -16.3<br />

DirFnBr rs 53.39 -9.96 -15.7<br />

STOCK EXCHANGE HIGHLIGHTS<br />

GAINERS ($2 OR MORE)<br />

Name Last Chg %Chg<br />

ChinNEPet 2.67 +.62 +30.2<br />

NewConcEn 2.48 +.56 +29.2<br />

Procera rs 9.02 +1.71 +23.4<br />

NHltcre 37.87 +6.83 +22.0<br />

NthnO&G 22.93 +3.19 +16.2<br />

VistaGold 4.27 +.57 +15.4<br />

WstCopp g 3.32 +.43 +14.9<br />

Quepasa 4.81 +.61 +14.5<br />

WalterInv 25.70 +3.15 +14.0<br />

Arrhythm 4.10 +.50 +13.9<br />

LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)<br />

Name Last Chg %Chg<br />

Geokinetics 3.21 -.97 -23.2<br />

Aerocntry 8.95 -2.10 -19.0<br />

SED Intl 3.75 -.81 -17.8<br />

LoncorRs g 2.12 -.34 -13.8<br />

GoldStr g 2.26 -.29 -11.4<br />

XPO Log rs 9.97 -1.28 -11.4<br />

OrientPap 2.66 -.34 -11.3<br />

NovaGld g 8.13 -1.03 -11.2<br />

ComstkMn 2.74 -.31 -10.2<br />

SeabGld g 26.73 -2.74 -9.3<br />

STOCKS OF LOCAL INTEREST<br />

186.45<br />

THUR<br />

75.91<br />

Total Assets Total Return/Rank Pct Min Init<br />

Name Obj ($Mlns) NAV 4-wk 12-mo 5-year Load Invt<br />

PIMCO TotRetIs CI 144,330 10.96 -0.7 +3.6/E +8.3/A NL 1,000,000<br />

Vanguard TotStIdx LB 58,721 30.50 +2.0 +10.9/A +1.1/B NL 3,000<br />

American Funds GrthAmA m LG 57,082 29.14 +1.7 +7.8/E +1.0/D 5.75 250<br />

Fidelity Contra LG 57,045 67.65 +2.3 +12.3/C +4.2/A NL 2,500<br />

Vanguard InstIdxI LB 55,901 111.79 +2.2 +10.3/B +0.5/B NL 5,000,000<br />

American Funds CapIncBuA x IH 55,898 48.46 0.0 +5.1/C +2.2/C 5.75 250<br />

American Funds IncAmerA x MA 51,184 16.24 +1.0 +8.0/B +2.5/C 5.75 250<br />

Vanguard 500Adml LB 49,870 112.55 +2.2 +10.3/B +0.5/B NL 10,000<br />

American Funds CpWldGrIA x WS 48,359 32.22 -2.1 -1.0/E +1.0/C 5.75 250<br />

Vanguard TotStIAdm LB 47,454 30.52 +2.1 +11.0/A +1.2/B NL 10,000<br />

American Funds InvCoAmA x LB 43,101 26.33 +0.8 +5.4/E -0.3/D 5.75 250<br />

Dodge & Cox IntlStk FV 40,297 30.48 -5.5 -5.3/D -0.8/A NL 2,500<br />

American Funds WAMutInvA m LV 36,898 27.29 +2.9 +12.1/A +0.5/A 5.75 250<br />

American Funds EurPacGrA m FB 33,112 36.81 -4.4 -3.0/D +1.1/A 5.75 250<br />

American Funds NewPerspA m WS 29,791 26.73 -0.9 +4.4/C +2.8/A 5.75 250<br />

Davis NYVentA m LB 15,822 31.84 +0.3 +4.9/E -1.2/E 4.75 1,000<br />

Putnam GrowIncA m LV 4,153 12.30 -0.7 +2.9 -3.4 5.75 500<br />

Oppenheimer MainStrA m LB 4,007 31.19 +3.1 +8.4/C -0.2/C 5.75 1,000<br />

Putnam VoyagerA m LG 3,230 20.04 -0.6 -3.4/E +3.6/B 5.75 500<br />

Putnam MultiCapGrA m LG 2,861 47.87 -0.1 +9.9 +0.8 5.75 500<br />

Putnam DivrInA m MU 2,287 7.57 -1.0 +1.9/D +3.6/E 4.00 500<br />

Putnam InvestorA m LB 1,166 12.20 -0.2 +7.7 -2.5 5.75 500<br />

Putnam TaxEIncA m ML 1,064 8.56 +0.9 +3.0/B +4.1/B 4.00 500<br />

Putnam GeoPutA m MA 987 11.69 +0.6 +5.6/D -2.2/E 5.75 500<br />

Fidelity Advisor EqGrowA m LG 619 54.00 +2.3 +17.5/A +2.0/C 5.75 2,500<br />

Thornburg IntMuniA m MI 373 13.59 +0.7 +3.5/C +4.5/C 2.00 5,000<br />

Fidelity Advisor GrowOppA m LG 260 35.25 +3.7 +21.9/A +2.7/B 5.75 2,500<br />

Thornburg LtdTmUSA m GS 183 13.93 -0.1 +3.2/A +5.2/A 1.50 5,000<br />

CA -Conservative Allocation, CI -Intermediate-Term Bond, ES -Europe Stock, FB -Foreign Large Blend, FG -Foreign<br />

LargeGrowth, FV -Foreign Large Value, IH -World Allocation, LB -Large Blend, LG -Large Growth, LV -Large Value,<br />

MA -Moderate Allocation, MB -Mid-Cap Blend, MV - Mid-Cap Value, SH -Specialty-heath, WS -World Stock, Total<br />

Return: Chng in NAV with dividends reinvested. Rank: How fund performed vs. others with same objective: A is in<br />

top 20%, E in bottom 20%. Min Init Invt: Minimum $ needed to invest in fund. Source: Morningstar.<br />

Stock Footnotes: g = Dividends and earnings in Canadian dollars. h = Does not meet continued-listing standards. lf = Late filing<br />

with SEC. n = New in past 52 weeks. pf = Preferred. rs = Stock has undergone a reverse stock split of at least 50 percent within<br />

the past year. rt = Right to buy security at a specified price. s = Stock has split by at least 20 percent within the last year. un =<br />

Units. vj = In bankruptcy or receivership. wd = When distributed. wi = When issued. wt = Warrants. Mutual Fund Footnotes: b =<br />

Fee covering market costs is paid from fund assets. d = Deferred sales charge, or redemption fee. f = front load (sales charges).<br />

m = Multiple fees are charged. NA = not available. p = previous day’s net asset value. s = fund split shares during the week.<br />

x = fund paid a distribution during the week. Gainers and Losers must be worth at least $2 to be listed in tables at left. Most<br />

Actives must be worth at least $1. Volume in hundreds of shares. Source: The Associated Press. Sales figures are unofficial.<br />

FRI<br />

NASDAQ<br />

� ��������� �������<br />

GAINERS ($2 OR MORE)<br />

Name Last Chg %Chg<br />

TransceptP 5.65 +2.93 +107.7<br />

GloblInd 7.85 +2.70 +52.4<br />

NetLogicM 48.33 +16.42 +51.5<br />

Fundtch 23.18 +6.99 +43.2<br />

EastVaBk 3.08 +.79 +34.5<br />

Lightbrdge 3.12 +.75 +31.6<br />

Vermillion 3.01 +.69 +29.7<br />

KiOR n 19.24 +4.20 +27.9<br />

Bluefly 2.30 +.50 +27.8<br />

PaciraPh n 10.56 +2.23 +26.8<br />

LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)<br />

Name Last Chg %Chg<br />

AutoChn lf 10.01 -13.87 -58.1<br />

Zogenix n 2.00 -.88 -30.6<br />

PerfectWld 14.18 -4.58 -24.4<br />

Netflix 155.19 -48.78 -23.9<br />

LML Pay 2.25 -.60 -21.1<br />

Zillow n 29.19 -7.74 -21.0<br />

RschMotn 23.93 -5.75 -19.4<br />

57StGen un 4.40 -1.05 -19.3<br />

ChinaNGas 2.07 -.48 -18.8<br />

KipsBMd n 2.50 -.57 -18.6<br />

MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE) MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE) MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE)<br />

Name Vol (00) Last Chg Name Vol (00) Last Chg Name Vol (00) Last Chg<br />

S&P500ETF 13013340 121.52 +6.23 NthgtM g 276334 3.75 -.25 SiriusXM 4145794 1.83 +.12<br />

BkofAm 11565988 7.23 +.25 NwGold g 244909 13.62 -.28 PwShs QQQ 3725357 56.59 +3.52<br />

GenElec 4937187 16.33 +1.39 GoldStr g 200797 2.26 -.29 Cisco 3077134 16.62 +.80<br />

SPDR Fncl 4910263 12.91 +.73 NovaGld g 200453 8.13 -1.03 Intel 2973714 21.97 +2.27<br />

iShR2K 3591532 71.52 +4.02 VantageDrl 174238 1.35 -.04 Microsoft 2959909 27.12 +1.38<br />

iShEMkts 3186602 40.53 +.52 VistaGold 154103 4.27 +.57 MicronT 2786169 7.03 +.68<br />

SprintNex 2793918 3.36 -.09 CFCda g 149695 25.61 +.49 Yahoo 1975508 14.97 +.49<br />

DrxFnBull 2631249 14.09 +2.00 GrtBasG g 139531 2.26 -.02 RschMotn 1888047 23.93 -5.75<br />

FordM 2619884 10.62 +.57 ParaG&S 127332 2.71 +.33 Oracle 1808889 29.23 +3.23<br />

Pfizer 2478853 18.15 -.13 CheniereEn 109639 7.33 +.32 <strong>News</strong>CpA 1615713 16.96 +1.03<br />

DIARY<br />

DIARY<br />

DIARY<br />

Advanced 2,399 Advanced 277 Advanced 2,058<br />

Declined 759 Declined 239 Declined 677<br />

New Highs 77 New Highs 6 New Highs 66<br />

New Lows 315 New Lows 47 New Lows 337<br />

Total issues 3,193 Total issues 533 Total issues 2,787<br />

Unchanged 35 Unchanged 17 Unchanged 52<br />

������� �������������� ������� ����������� ������� ��������������<br />

Wk Wk YTD<br />

Name Ex Div Last Chg %Chg Chg<br />

JPMorgCh NY 1.00 33.43 +1.35 +4.2 -21.2<br />

Kroger NY .46 22.39 +.37 +1.7 +.1<br />

LillyEli NY 1.96 37.81 +1.68 +4.6 +7.9<br />

LincNat NY .20 19.20 +1.17 +6.5 -31.0<br />

Lowes NY .56 20.38 +1.42 +7.5 -18.7<br />

McDnlds NY 2.44 88.29 +3.26 +3.8 +15.0<br />

MicronT Nasd ... 7.03 +.68 +10.7 -12.3<br />

Microsoft Nasd .64 27.12 +1.38 +5.4 -2.8<br />

NL Inds NY .50 12.86 -.10 -0.8 +15.2<br />

<strong>News</strong>CpA Nasd .19 16.96 +1.03 +6.5 +16.5<br />

NiSource NY .92 22.18 +1.16 +5.5 +25.9<br />

NorflkSo NY 1.72 70.42 +5.59 +8.6 +12.1<br />

Nucor NY 1.45 35.04 +1.90 +5.7 -20.0<br />

Nvidia Nasd ... 15.46 +1.58 +11.4 +.4<br />

Oracle Nasd .24 29.23 +3.23 +12.4 -6.6<br />

PepsiCo NY 2.06 62.05 +2.06 +3.4 -5.0<br />

Pfizer NY .80 18.15 -.13 -0.7 +3.7<br />

PwShs QQQ Nasd .41 56.59 +3.52 +6.6 +3.9<br />

PrUShS&P NY ... 22.37 -2.52 -10.1 -5.9<br />

RegionsFn NY .04 4.00 +.04 +1.0 -42.9<br />

RschMotn Nasd ... 23.93 -5.75 -19.4 -58.8<br />

SpdrDJIA NY 3.14 114.86 +5.25 +4.8 -.7<br />

S&P500ETF NY 2.46 121.52 +6.23 +5.4 -3.4<br />

SiriusXM Nasd ... 1.83 +.12 +6.7 +12.3<br />

SprintNex NY ... 3.36 -.09 -2.6 -20.6<br />

SP Engy NY 1.08 67.09 +2.47 +3.8 -1.7<br />

SPDR Fncl NY .20 12.91 +.73 +6.0 -19.1<br />

SP Inds NY .69 31.97 +1.97 +6.6 -8.3<br />

StlDynam Nasd .40 12.21 +.94 +8.3 -33.3<br />

Valspar NY .72 32.36 +1.95 +6.4 -6.1<br />

VangEmg NY .82 41.53 +.38 +0.9 -13.7<br />

VerizonCm NY 2.00 36.72 +1.48 +4.2 +2.6<br />

WalMart NY 1.46 52.65 +1.29 +2.5 -2.4<br />

Walgrn NY .90 36.96 +1.63 +4.6 -5.1<br />

WsteMInc NY 1.36 32.01 +1.53 +5.0 -13.2<br />

WellsFargo NY .48 24.95 +1.43 +6.1 -19.5<br />

YRC rsh Nasd ... .07 -.41 -85.4 -98.1<br />

Yahoo Nasd ... 14.97 +.49 +3.4 -10.0<br />

MONEY RATES<br />

CURRENCIES<br />

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Last Pvs Day<br />

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Australia .9641 .9681<br />

Britain 1.5788 1.5809<br />

Canada .9798 .9840<br />

Euro .7251 .7200<br />

Japan 76.87 76.64<br />

Mexico 12.9950 12.9500<br />

Switzerlnd .8760 .8697<br />

British pound expressed in U.S. dollars. All<br />

others show dollar in foreign currency.


DIVERSIONS<br />

A mom and her two sons<br />

Dear Annie: My husband and his<br />

brother, “Sam,” are both in their 50s.<br />

My mother-in-law thinks Sam is “the<br />

golden child.” He and his wife receive<br />

the best gifts, and we get whatever trash<br />

she can put her hands on. She gives my<br />

sister-in-law all the best jewelry, and I<br />

get cheap junk. She recently told me that<br />

for my birthday, she was sending a blouse<br />

that she bought for herself, wore a few<br />

times and now doesn’t care for.<br />

I don’t know what to say to her when<br />

she does these things. My main concern is<br />

how it makes my husband feel. When he<br />

tries to visit, she tells him not to bother,<br />

that she doesn’t need to see him. But when<br />

Sam visits, she runs out and gets her hair<br />

and nails done and stocks the house with<br />

all of his favorite things.<br />

My husband deals with it by lowering<br />

his expectations, but I find it more<br />

difficult to handle. We will no longer<br />

spend holidays with his family, because<br />

our last Christmas was so painful. My<br />

sister-in-law received enough sapphires<br />

and diamonds for a ring, bracelet and<br />

earrings. I got a used mood ring. She gave<br />

each of her sons a family memento, but<br />

she told my husband he could only look<br />

at his and then needed to give it to his<br />

brother.<br />

I think she has a sick obsession with<br />

my brother-in-law, and of course, he<br />

doesn’t see the problem. My husband<br />

has told her he doesn’t appreciate how<br />

she treats us, but she doesn’t care. She<br />

has also made it clear that she’d like my<br />

husband to get back together with his exwife.<br />

(That will never happen.)<br />

I don’t care if I never see my in-laws<br />

again, but I want my husband to feel<br />

loved by his mother. Is there anything I<br />

can say or do to make her understand how<br />

hurtful her behavior is? — Sad Wife<br />

Dear Wife: Probably not. As much as it<br />

hurts, you need to let your husband handle<br />

this as he chooses. The best you can do is<br />

be supportive. Don’t harp on how unfair<br />

and unloving Mom is. That will only add<br />

to his pain. Instead, show him how much<br />

he is loved in his own home, and treat the<br />

rest with as light a touch as possible.<br />

Dear Annie: My 40-year-old daughter<br />

and her two young children live with me.<br />

Her husband is in and out of prison, and<br />

My<br />

Answer<br />

By Dr. Billy<br />

Graham<br />

SEEK CHRIST’S<br />

GUIDANCE IN ALL<br />

AREAS OF LIFE,<br />

INCLUDING YOUR<br />

FINANCES<br />

Q: We’ve been going<br />

through some hard times<br />

recently because my<br />

husband lost his job. Now,<br />

I’m afraid we didn’t cut<br />

back like we should have,<br />

and we’re up to our necks<br />

in debt. Could you please<br />

warn people about the<br />

danger of too much debt?<br />

I don’t know what we’re<br />

going to do. — Mrs. L.Y.<br />

A: Yes, debt can be<br />

very dangerous, and I hope<br />

others will learn from your<br />

example. And I hope you’ll<br />

learn from your experience<br />

as well, and you won’t keep<br />

Annie’s<br />

Mailbox<br />

living the way you’ve<br />

been living and getting<br />

deeper and deeper<br />

in debt. People often<br />

find that shopping or<br />

spending money gives<br />

them pleasure, even<br />

if they can’t afford<br />

it, simply because it<br />

helps them escape (at<br />

least temporarily) from the<br />

problems they’re facing.<br />

But take steps to keep this<br />

from happening to you.<br />

Not only would it be<br />

unwise to keep on the same<br />

road you’ve been on, but it<br />

would be a sin in the eyes<br />

of God. Instead of being<br />

the master of your money,<br />

you’ve become its slaves<br />

— and that is wrong. As<br />

the Bible says, “A man is<br />

a slave to whatever has<br />

mastered him” (2 Peter<br />

2:19).<br />

Accept the fact that you<br />

can’t do everything you<br />

once did, even if it hurts<br />

your pride or tarnishes your<br />

image with others. Then<br />

draw up a realistic budget<br />

she relies on me to<br />

help. I also have an<br />

18-year-old daughter<br />

with a baby living<br />

under my roof, not<br />

to mention a third<br />

daughter who is<br />

visiting for a month with her five kids.<br />

I’m fed up and want to be left alone.<br />

I plan to sell my home, move to a senior<br />

apartment and maybe travel. I don’t want<br />

them to follow me. I think that is the only<br />

way to get rid of them. I assure you, they<br />

will never leave on their own.<br />

Am I obligated to provide child care<br />

and housing forever? — Debbie<br />

Dear Debbie: Of course not. Let the<br />

kids know you are selling the house and<br />

moving into a much smaller place and<br />

they will have to find their own housing<br />

arrangements. We hope you enjoy your<br />

travels. It sounds like you deserve a<br />

break.<br />

Dear Annie: I read the letter from “Up<br />

a Creek,” whose friend, “Bob,” struggles<br />

with alcoholism. “Creek” suspects<br />

unresolved mental health issues, and you<br />

acknowledged that this could be true.<br />

We have an adult son who went<br />

through years of rehab, AA, arrests,<br />

counseling, you name it. It started when<br />

he was 18, and it got continuously worse<br />

until his mother and I finally got educated<br />

enough on bipolar disorders to help him<br />

get the treatment he should have received<br />

much earlier.<br />

Please tell “Creek” to get in touch with<br />

the National Alliance on Mental Illness<br />

(nami.org) at 1-800-950-NAMI (1-800-<br />

950-6264). — N.<br />

Annie’s Mailbox is written by Kathy<br />

Mitchell and Marcy Sugar, longtime editors<br />

of the Ann Landers column. Please<br />

e-mail your questions to anniesmailbox@<br />

comcast.net, or write to: Annie’s Mailbox,<br />

c/o Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. Century<br />

Blvd., Ste. 700, Los Angeles, CA 90045.<br />

© 2011 CREATORS.COM<br />

— and stick to it. Draw up<br />

a plan also to repay your<br />

debts, even if it seems<br />

impossible.<br />

Most of all, turn to Christ<br />

and ask Him to become the<br />

center and foundation of<br />

your lives -- including your<br />

finances. In addition, don’t<br />

stop trying to find work<br />

— but in the meantime<br />

make the most of the time<br />

God has given you — time<br />

to help others, and time to<br />

grow closer to God.<br />

(Send your queries to<br />

“My Answer,” c/o Billy<br />

Graham, Billy Graham<br />

Evangelistic Association,<br />

1 Billy Graham Parkway,<br />

Charlotte, N.C., 28201;<br />

call 1-(877) 2-GRAHAM,<br />

or visit the Web site for the<br />

Billy Graham Evangelistic<br />

Association: www.<br />

billygraham.org.)<br />

©2011 BILLY<br />

G R A H A M<br />

DISTRIBUTED BY<br />

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(3:30) NCAA Football Tennessee vs. Florida Site: Ben NC15<br />

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Weekend<br />

Rules of<br />

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Criminal Minds "The<br />

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48 Hours Mystery NC15<br />

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(:35) The Unit (:35) The<br />

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ABC<br />

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Weekend<br />

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Sat. Night Football (L) /(:05) NCAA Football Oklahoma vs. Florida State Site:<br />

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INC <strong>News</strong><br />

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Are? "Kim Cattrall"<br />

Up-Night<br />

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"Pilot" Victims Unit "Bombshell" at 11 p.m.<br />

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(33.2) 62<br />

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PBS<br />

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the 50's and 60's for a trip down memory lane. that energized the spirit of a nation for four decades. Symphonies II<br />

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PBS<br />

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Michael Londra Beyond Celtic Austin City Limits "Sonic Nature "Clever Monkeys"<br />

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Cold Squad Da Vinci's Inquest Criminal Minds Numb3rs Kickin' It<br />

WINM ��11 26 63<br />

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C ABLE C HANNELS<br />

WGN 9 7 22 239 307 Law & O: CI "Shibboleth" The Unit Bones Funniest Home Videos Funniest Home Videos WGN <strong>News</strong> at Nine Scrubs Met-Mother South Park South Park<br />

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Scott, Anjelica Huston, Drew Barrymore.<br />

� ��� 50 First Dates (2004, Romance) Drew<br />

Barrymore, Rob Schneider, Adam Sandler.<br />

� ��� Dodgeball: A True Underdog Story (2004,<br />

Comedy) Ben Stiller, Christine Taylor, Vince Vaughn.<br />

ESPN 15 50<br />

(3:30) NCAA Football (L)<br />

26 140 206<br />

Football<br />

Score. (L)<br />

Football<br />

Score. (L)<br />

NCAA Football Ohio State vs. Miami (L) College Football Scoreboard Highlights and analysis from the<br />

world of college football. (L)<br />

ESPN 2 16 54<br />

(3:30) NASCAR Auto Race NCAA Football Navy vs. South Carolina (L)<br />

27 144 209 Dollar General 300 (L)<br />

College Football (L) /(:15) NCAA Football Utah vs. BYU (L) (:15) NHRA Drag<br />

Football (L) Racing<br />

FOXSP 17 53<br />

Action Sports World<br />

Tour Championship<br />

TEVA Mountain Games UEFA Soccer Champions League AC Milan vs. Barcelona Site:<br />

Estadio Nou Camp -- Barcelona, Spain<br />

ProFootball NCAA Football Oklahoma State vs. Tulsa (L)<br />

Week<br />

TBS 22 130 41 230 247 Friends Accord.Jim Seinfeld Seinfeld Queens Queens � ��� Wedding Crashers ('05, Com) Owen Wilson. � �� I Love You, Man ('09, Com) Paul Rudd. Movie<br />

FX 24 132<br />

Two and a<br />

54 137 248 Half Men<br />

� �� X-Men Origins: Wolverine (2009, Action) Liev Schreiber,<br />

Danny Huston, Hugh Jackman.<br />

NCAA Football Syracuse vs. USC (L) The League The League Wilfred<br />

"Happiness"<br />

TVLAND 25 58 106 301 Three's<br />

Company<br />

Three's<br />

Company<br />

Sanford and Sanford<br />

Son and Son<br />

Sanford and All in the<br />

Son Family<br />

All in the<br />

Family<br />

All in the<br />

Family<br />

Everybody<br />

Loves Ray<br />

Everybody<br />

Loves Ray<br />

Everybody<br />

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Loves Ray<br />

Ray "Just a Everybody<br />

Formality" Loves Ray<br />

Ray "Sweet Everybody<br />

Charity" Loves Ray<br />

E! 26 142 49 114 236 Kardashians<br />

The Kardashians<br />

"Getting to Know You"<br />

The Kardashians<br />

"Trouble in Paradise"<br />

Kardashians<br />

� �� I Now Pronounce You Chuck and Larry (2007, Comedy)<br />

Kevin James, Jessica Biel, Adam Sandler.<br />

The Soup Kardashians<br />

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Lately<br />

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SPIKE 30<br />

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57 168 325<br />

UFC Unleashed � �� Kill Bill Vol. 1 (2003, Action) Lucy Liu, David UFC Mixed Martial Arts Fight Night Shields vs.<br />

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DISC 35 72<br />

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28 182 278 With It "Got Revenge"<br />

(Almost) Got Away "Got (Almost) Got Away "Got Ten Commandments of<br />

to Lock and Load" To Run With My Buddy" the Mafia<br />

Track Me If You Can I Faked My Own Death Track Me If You Can<br />

"Alligators and Autopsy"<br />

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TLC 36 73<br />

Real Life "Murder in the<br />

47 183 280 Moonlight" Pt. 2 of 2<br />

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Real Life "The Friday the Dateline: Real Myst. "In Real Life "In Broad<br />

13th Murder" (N) Broad Daylight" 1/2 (N) Daylight" Pt. 2 of 2 (N)<br />

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A&E 39 134 39 118 265 Scared "Chowchilla" Beyond Scared Straight Scared Straight "Lieber" Beyond Scared Straight Beyond Scared Straight Beyond Scared Straight Beyond Scared Straight Beyond Scared Straight<br />

HALL 40 117<br />

� Love's Long Journey (2005, Drama) Logan<br />

67 185 312 Bartholomew, John Savage, Erin Cottrell.<br />

� Love Takes Wing (2009, Drama) � Love Begins (2011, Family) Julie Mond, Nancy<br />

McKeon, Wes Brown.<br />

� Love Begins (2011, Family) Julie Mond, Nancy<br />

McKeon, Wes Brown.<br />

SYFY 41 135<br />

(3:25) � ��� Blade<br />

62 122 244 Runner Harrison Ford.<br />

� ��� Casino Royale (2006, Action) Judi Dench, Eva Green, Daniel Craig. � ��� Quantum of Solace (2008, Action) Olga Kurylenko,<br />

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USA 42 133<br />

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24 105 243<br />

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LIFE 43 113<br />

(4:00) � �� Stranger In � �� Enough (2002, Thriller) Bill Campbell, Juliette Lewis,<br />

29 108 252 My Bed<br />

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� The Perfect Roommate (2011) William R. Moses,<br />

Boti Bliss, Ashley Leggat.<br />

� �� Enough (2002, Thriller) Bill Campbell, Juliette Lewis,<br />

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TNT 44 131<br />

(:15) � ��� The Rock (1996, Action) Nicolas Cage, Ed Harris, Sean Connery.<br />

42 138 245<br />

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� ��� True Lies (1994, Action) Arnold<br />

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AMC 45<br />

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43 130 254<br />

� ��� Defiance (2009, Drama) Liev Scheiber, Jamie Bell, Daniel Craig. � ��� Top Gun (1986, Action) Kelly McGillis, Val<br />

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SPEED 46 64<br />

(3:00) Grand-Am Racing<br />

56 150 607 Emco Gears Classic (L)<br />

Monster Jam<br />

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COM 47 50 107 249 (3:45) � Ferris Bueller... � �� Scary Movie 4 ('06, Com) Anna Faris. � �� Drillbit Taylor ('08, Com) Owen Wilson. � �� Jackass Number Two Johnny Knoxville. � Katt Williams: Ame...<br />

NICK 51 37 170 299 Victorious Victorious iCarly iCarly iCarly iCarly iCarly Victorious Ninjas iCarly Friends Friends Friends Friends '70s Show '70s Show<br />

DISN 52 30 38 172 290 A.N.T. Farm A.N.T. Farm SoRandom Shake It Up Shake It Up � Wizards of Waverly Place: The M... (:15) GoodL (:40) A.N.T. A.N.T. Farm Shake It Up Shake It Up Phineas SoRandom GoodLuck<br />

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FOOD 59 153 46 110 231 Iron Chef America Challenge Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners Iron Chef America Diners Diners<br />

BRAVO 60 140 55 129 273 Next Top Model Top Chef: Just Desserts Millionaire Millionaire � �� The Break Up ('06, Com) Vince Vaughn. � �� The Break Up ('06, Com) Vince Vaughn.<br />

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700 300 501 Saldana.<br />

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Dallas Howard, Matt Damon.<br />

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When I Die"<br />

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Michelle Rodriguez, Danny Trejo.<br />

MAX 325<br />

(:20) � �� Knight and Day (2010, Action) Tom<br />

730 310 512 Cruise, Cameron Diaz,<br />

(:15) � ��� Men in Black (1997, Sci-Fi) Tommy<br />

Lee Jones, Vincent D'Onofrio, Will Smith.<br />

Strike Back � ���� Inception (2010, Action) Leonardo DiCaprio, Ellen<br />

Page, Joseph Gordon-Levitt.<br />

Skin To The<br />

Max<br />

SHOW 351<br />

(:15) � �� My Best Friend's Wedding ('97, Com)<br />

750 318 71 Dermot Mulroney, Cameron Diaz, Julia Roberts.<br />

� ��� Letters To Juliet (2010, Comedy/Drama)<br />

Vanessa Redgrave, Amanda Seyfried.<br />

� The Other Woman (2011, Drama) � � The Penthouse ('10, Com) Corey<br />

Large, April Scott, Rider Strong.<br />

Weeds<br />

TMC 375<br />

� �� Irresistible (2005, Drama) Susan Saradon,<br />

785 327 544<br />

Emily Blunt, Sam Neill.<br />

(:55) � �� Knowing (2009, Sci-Fi) Chandler<br />

Canterbury, Rose Byrne, Nicolas Cage.<br />

� Trauma (1994, Thriller) Christopher Rydell, Brad<br />

Dourif, James Russo.<br />

� Night of the Demons ('09, Hor) (:35) �<br />

Trauma<br />

M – MEDIACOM A – ADAMS W ELLS C – COMCAST D1 – DISH D2 - DIRECTV<br />

<strong>SAT</strong>URDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 2011 • The <strong>News</strong>-<strong>Banner</strong> • Page 9<br />

CROSSWORD By Eugene Sheffer


Page 10 • The <strong>News</strong>-<strong>Banner</strong> • <strong>SAT</strong>URDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 2011<br />

The<br />

Classifieds<br />

Place Your Ad 24/7: GO TO www.news-banner.com AND CLICK ON “Local Classifieds”<br />

OR CALL 824-0224 MON-FRI 8-5 • TOLL FREE 800-579-7476 • FAX 824-0700 WE ACCEPT<br />

ALL of your Classifi ed Ads now placed on<br />

Vehicles<br />

Auto/Trucks<br />

98 FORD WINDSTAR 198K,<br />

Runs Great! New plugs, plug<br />

wires, front and rear brakes,<br />

rotors, drums, front struts<br />

and springs. $2500 OBO<br />

260.273.8493<br />

1993 LINCOLN CONTINEN-<br />

TAL— Executive. 6cyl., overdrive.<br />

Good on gas. New battery,<br />

new tires, heated mirrors,<br />

leather seats. All seats front<br />

power, instrument panel, all<br />

entries work. Cold air. New CD,<br />

AM/FM. Car runs and drives<br />

excellent! Pretty car! Only<br />

95,000K! WOW! $2,495. 260-<br />

450-3769<br />

CHEESEMAN LLC<br />

HOME WEEKLY!<br />

ALL LOADED<br />

STOPS ARE PAID<br />

FULL MAJOR MEDICAL -<br />

401k - PAID VACATIONS<br />

AND HOLIDAYS<br />

SIGN ON BONUS OF<br />

$1,000.00 AT 6 MONTHS<br />

WITH ONE WEEK OFF<br />

R EQUIREMENTS:<br />

CLASS A w/6 mo. OTR exp.<br />

APPLY ONLINE AT<br />

www.cheeseman.com<br />

CLICK ON CAREERS<br />

OR CALL<br />

800.762.5793 EXT. 4547<br />

Auto/Trucks<br />

GUARANTEED TOP DOLLAR<br />

— FOR JUNK CARS, TRUCKS<br />

& VANS. CALL JACK @ 260-<br />

466-8689. (A)<br />

2005 GRAND PRIX— Wellmaintained,<br />

good brakes and<br />

tires. $5,000 or OBO. Call 260-<br />

565-3593.<br />

2006 TOWN & COUNTRY W. P.<br />

Chrysler Limited Edition, Magnesium,<br />

CD/DVD, Navigation,<br />

81,000 miles, excellent condition.<br />

$12,000 260.415.1885<br />

2000 CHEVY SILVERA-<br />

DO 4 WHEEL DRIVE:<br />

AUTOMATIC;EXTENDED<br />

CAB; 150 K; SILVER; RUNS<br />

GOOD; NEEDS BODY WORK;<br />

$3500 OR OBO. 260.824.8723<br />

Autos Wanted<br />

BUYING RUNNING AND<br />

NON-RUNNING cars, trucks,<br />

vans with or without Titles. Free<br />

pickup. Call Bill for best quote:<br />

260-246-0069. (A)<br />

1 & ONLY PLACE TO CALL—<br />

to get rid of that junk car, truck<br />

or van!! Cash on the spot! Free<br />

towing. Call 260-745-8888. (A)<br />

INDIANA AUTO AUCTION,<br />

INC.— Huge Repo Sale! Sept.<br />

22nd. Over 100 repossessed<br />

units for sale. Cash only. $500<br />

deposit per person required.<br />

Register 8am-9:30am to bid.<br />

No public entry after 9:30am.<br />

All vehicles sold AS IS! 4425<br />

W. Washington Center Road,<br />

Fort Wayne. (A)<br />

Financial Services Offi cer<br />

Job #10560<br />

<strong>Bluffton</strong>, Indiana<br />

Farm Credit Services is seeking a Financial Services Offi cer (FSO) to serve <strong>Bluffton</strong>, Indiana.<br />

The FSO’s primary responsibilities center around building relationships with customers in the ag<br />

production market segment. The FSO will use his or her knowledge of agriculture and fi nance to<br />

fully understand the customer’s or prospect’s business and personal plans and then market the FCS<br />

fi nancial services that best meet their needs. After initially screening for soundness, the FSO submits<br />

the information to an analyst, underwriter or scoring system for fi nal decision. The FSO leads the<br />

customer relationship and often coordinates with others to serve the customer’s loan, lease, crop<br />

insurance and servicing needs.<br />

A “typical” day after training might include:<br />

• Building relationships with team members and prospects<br />

• Calling on customers and infl uencers<br />

• Preparing and assessing fi nancial information<br />

• Preparing documents<br />

• Closing deals<br />

• Servicing loans<br />

• PR at community events (county fairs, auctions, advisory meetings)<br />

• Creating and implementing marketing strategies<br />

Minimum Qualifi cations: Bachelor’s degree in agriculture, business or related fi eld and one to three<br />

years’ experience in sales of fi nancial services or credit analysis. Signifi cant knowledge of agricultural<br />

industry (personal, professional or educational) is required. Salary is dependent upon experience.<br />

To be considered an applicant, you must:<br />

• Meet minimum qualifi cations for the position<br />

• Submit your resume by 09/22/2011 to: www.e-farmcredit.com Careers, Job Opportunities,<br />

indicating the specifi c position for which you are applying<br />

Check out our Benefi ts!<br />

• Once on our Web site, click on Careers, Employee Benefi ts, then click on Employee<br />

Benefi ts Presentation.<br />

We are proud to be an EEO/AA employer, M/F/D/V.<br />

Anytime You Click.<br />

When you can’t wait to spread the news<br />

or sell your goods in our classified section,<br />

just call us at 260-824-0224<br />

or visit us online at<br />

www.news-banner.com<br />

www.news-banner.com<br />

The<br />

<strong>News</strong>-<strong>Banner</strong><br />

AND<br />

at No Additional Charge!<br />

Services<br />

Adoptions<br />

ADOPTION:— A devoted, loving<br />

couple will treasure our child.<br />

Financially secure, loving home<br />

filled with warmth. Expenses<br />

paid. Fran & Bruce at 1-855-330-<br />

8487. (A)<br />

Services<br />

BANKRUPTCY: Free consultation,<br />

$25 to start. Payment plans<br />

available. Fort Wayne Office, call<br />

collect: 260-424-0954. Decatur<br />

Office: 260-728-9997. Saturday<br />

and evening appointments available.<br />

Act as a debt relief agency<br />

under the BK code.<br />

D.A.W. CONSTRUCTION—<br />

Amish Crew for hire. 13 years<br />

experience in residential repairs<br />

on homes, barns, new<br />

homes. Mark: 419-305-2845.<br />

PIANO LESSONS— Studio 88<br />

LLC offering private and group<br />

lessons for all ages. Adult recreational<br />

classes. Behind DQ.<br />

Amy: 260-251-3360.<br />

Employment<br />

Help Wanted<br />

PART-TIME NIGHTLY CLEAN-<br />

ING— <strong>Bluffton</strong>. 3rd shift. Must<br />

be dependable and like to<br />

clean. Must have reliable transportation.<br />

Call 260-403-7676.<br />

Ask for Bob.<br />

WANTED— Chairside dental<br />

assistant for established practice<br />

in <strong>Bluffton</strong>. Experience<br />

preferred. Expanded duties<br />

would be very welcome. Would<br />

train right person. Needs to be<br />

self-motivated and enjoy being<br />

a caregiver. Please send resumes<br />

to: File #30, c/ o <strong>News</strong>-<br />

<strong>Banner</strong>, P.O. Box 436, <strong>Bluffton</strong>,<br />

IN 46714.<br />

One, Two & Three<br />

Bedroom Apartments<br />

Available Now!<br />

Northern Wells Community Schools<br />

Seniors Welcome!<br />

•Used items priced up to $49 only<br />

•Price must be included in ad<br />

•One item per ad only<br />

Mail to: Fantastic Freebies<br />

<strong>News</strong>-<strong>Banner</strong><br />

P.O. Box 436<br />

<strong>Bluffton</strong>, IN 46714<br />

Help Wanted<br />

CDL DRIVER NEEDED Flexible<br />

home times, late mod equip,<br />

RGN, SD, Mj Med Ins, Vac/Holiday<br />

Pay, All miles pd, most pay<br />

$.40 or more with drops included<br />

260-414-7003<br />

ROCK LEASING INC.— a family<br />

owned business for over 30<br />

years is in need of professional<br />

drivers to fill 5 trucks. Rock<br />

offers a family atmosphere,<br />

great benefits package including<br />

health insurance, paid vacations,<br />

paid holidays and a<br />

401K with a company match.<br />

NO New York City freight, NO<br />

Jersey ship yards. Call Jeff at<br />

800-543-4650 ext. 212 for all<br />

the details. (A)<br />

FULL-TIME OIL CHANGE—<br />

Technician needed in <strong>Bluffton</strong>.<br />

Call Kristin at 260-824-3334.<br />

HIRING— Powder Coaters,<br />

Forklift Drivers, Toolmakers,<br />

Clerical/Assembly, CNC Operators,<br />

Break Press Operators,<br />

Machine Assemblers, and Wall<br />

Assemblers (must be able to lift<br />

70 lbs). R&R Employment Inc<br />

915 S 11th St Decatur, IN 260-<br />

724-4810. (A)<br />

GROWING COMPANY: Part<br />

Time (mostly Nov-Dec), 10-<br />

30+ hrs/wk. Order Fulfillment,<br />

Entry-level Accounting; Skills<br />

needed: Windows/MS Office,<br />

interpersonal/writing, Organized,<br />

able to multi-task. Supervision,<br />

database, analytical/research<br />

skills helpful. Fax<br />

resumes: 775.269.0747<br />

For Sale<br />

Used Furniture/<br />

Collectibles<br />

CHINA HUTCH FOR SALE—<br />

Tell City Antique. Must see! Very<br />

nice! $350. 765-438-3530.<br />

Home Furnishings<br />

BRAND NEW IN PLASTIC!—<br />

QUEEN PILLOWTOP MAT-<br />

TRESS SET. Can deliver, $125.<br />

(260) 493-0805. (A)<br />

Hot Deals!<br />

SILPADA JEWELRY 30-50%<br />

OFF! SAMPLE SALE! Large<br />

selection of.925 sterling silver display<br />

jewelry for 30-50% off retail!<br />

410 Highland Avenue, Rose Ann<br />

Heights, Ossian. Christie Rans,<br />

Independent Rep.<br />

Pets<br />

NEW PUPPIES!— New deal!<br />

FREE food with every puppy.<br />

Poms, Bichon mixes, Shih-tese,<br />

Morkies, Poodles, Dachshunds,<br />

Shih-Tzus, Chihuahua mixes,<br />

more! Garwick’s the Pet People:<br />

419-795-5711. (A)<br />

FANTASTIC<br />

FREEBIES<br />

EVERY <strong>SAT</strong>URDAY IN THE<br />

NEWS-BANNER AND THE ECHO!<br />

Deadline: Thursday Noon<br />

•Limit 2 ads each week<br />

•Ads must be printed on coupon blanks<br />

•Start ad with name of item<br />

•Private party only<br />

•Include phone number<br />

•NO PHONE ORDERS<br />

Items priced up to $49 only.<br />

Name Phone<br />

Address<br />

City Zip<br />

PLEASE PRINT CLEARLY<br />

Ad No. 1<br />

Ad No. 2<br />

GREAT AMENITIES:<br />

• Full size washer and dryer<br />

• Central heat and air<br />

• Dishwasher & garbage disposal<br />

• All appliances furnished<br />

• Community room<br />

• Playground<br />

• 24 hour maintenance<br />

• Large pets welcome<br />

*with 12 month lease - restrictions apply.<br />

PINE GROVE APARTMENTS<br />

260-565-4241<br />

Located on Monroe St. behind Walgreens<br />

Office Hours: Mon., Wed., Thurs. 9-5; Tues., Fri. 9-6; Sat. Closed<br />

1 Month<br />

FREE<br />

Rent*<br />

428 W. MARKET— Saturday,<br />

Sept. 17th, 8a-5p. Couches,<br />

chairs, recliner, wood chairs,<br />

table, treadmill, appliances,<br />

towels, linens, knick-knacks,<br />

clothes, misc.<br />

MOVING SALE 1014 W Wabash<br />

St, <strong>Bluffton</strong>. end tables,<br />

tv stand, small gun cabinet,<br />

XBOX 360 games, harley davidson<br />

boots, 8 foot pool, boy<br />

crib bedding, boys clothes<br />

NB-9 mon, girls clothes NB-<br />

18 mo, teen clothes&dresses<br />

(sz 2/3, 9/10, M) TOYS; Friday<br />

8-4 & Saturday 8-?<br />

GARAGE & DRIVEWAY<br />

SALE— Saturday, 8a-4p.<br />

411 Lamar Drive (behind<br />

DQ). Clothes: sizes: Boys:<br />

(14-16), Girls (9M-18M & 8-<br />

10), Womens (7-18 jeans,<br />

M-4X tops), Mens: (30-40W,<br />

L-XXL tops). Books: Mystery,<br />

Harlequin romance, kids.<br />

VCR & DVD movie, bedding,<br />

household miscellaneous.<br />

Or drop off at our office at :<br />

125 N. Johnson St.<br />

<strong>Bluffton</strong>, IN<br />

Office Hours: Mon.-Fri. 8-5<br />

Reaching an<br />

ADDITIONAL...<br />

5,000<br />

Facebook Friends<br />

1,725<br />

Facebook Fans<br />

440<br />

Twitter Followers<br />

This Week’s<br />

Garage<br />

Sales<br />

Clip & Save<br />

703 EASTMOOR— Mobile<br />

Manor. Friday/Saturday, 10a-<br />

? A little of everything! Priced<br />

too high? Make offer!<br />

621 W. SOUTH— Tuesday,<br />

Thursday & Friday, 9a-4p.<br />

Winter coats, tools, lamps,<br />

shoes (size 6-11), Shape<br />

Ups (size 11), Ladies clothes<br />

(Petites 8-14, plus L-4X),<br />

kids clothes, flower pots.<br />

Much more!<br />

GARAGE SALE-704 S.<br />

JOHNSON ST Women’s<br />

clothing size 16 & 18. Purses,<br />

Misc. houseware items,<br />

books, TV..<br />

SALE!!! Multi-Family — Saturday<br />

17th 8:00 to 3:00 pm.<br />

National Guard Armory on<br />

Spring St. <strong>Bluffton</strong>. For Sale:<br />

Clothes - Baby, Toddler, Kid,<br />

Teen, Adult. Baby Items.<br />

Misc. Items. Toys. Books - all<br />

ages. House decor & kitchen<br />

items. 260.693.0198<br />

Miscellaneous<br />

PRIDE VICTORY 9 ELECTRIC<br />

3—- Wheel Scooter. Has horn,<br />

headlight and basket. Brand<br />

new condition. $990. Call 260-<br />

622-7072. Leave message.<br />

Fantastic<br />

Freebies!<br />

Fireplace with 220 electric heater,<br />

works, $49. 346-2697.<br />

Polan chain saw, good cond.<br />

Two chains, $49. 346-2697.<br />

50+, 16x16x2, red, paving<br />

blocks, U haul, $49. 824-1985.<br />

Kolcraft stroller, blue, nice, $15.<br />

820-1814.<br />

Twin mattress and box springs,<br />

like new, $49. 260-273-3410.<br />

Mirror, 42x72. $30. 260-273-<br />

3410.<br />

FREE, frame for outdoor canopy,<br />

good shape, 765-438-<br />

3530.<br />

HP deskjet F300 all-in-one<br />

printer, $20. obo, 824-0922.<br />

Complete Harry Potter book set,<br />

$20. 824-0922.<br />

Snow tires, P215/70R15, on<br />

rims, $49. 260-565-3381.<br />

New, hardwood chess set, in<br />

case, $45. 824-0795.<br />

6’, med. action, ugly stik, never<br />

used, $15. 824-0795.<br />

Cream colored love seat, very<br />

nice cond. $25. 824-1389.<br />

Large wall or dresser mirror,<br />

dark wood, FREE. 824-1389.<br />

Dragon figurine candle holder<br />

and candle, $5. 765-606-7834.<br />

Dragon snow globe, $5. 765-<br />

606-7834.<br />

Dragon smoker water fountain<br />

with color changing LED light,<br />

$20. 260-273-2074.<br />

Dragon lava lamp, $20. 260-<br />

273-2074.<br />

Berne furniture arm chairs, two,<br />

$5 ea. 589-2209.<br />

Wood lawn chairs and chaise,<br />

recovered, $30 for set. 589-<br />

2209.<br />

Kerosene, oil stove with blower,<br />

$32. 824-4391.<br />

Heavy duty, 4”, floor, belt sander,<br />

$45. 824-4391.<br />

Student desk, white with drawers,<br />

good cond. $25. 824-<br />

5427.<br />

Pro form air walker, exercise<br />

machine, $30. 824-8149.


Miscellaneous<br />

INVACARE PATRIOT LIGHT-<br />

WEIGHT— folding wheelchair<br />

with swingaway footrests. Used<br />

for 1 month. $400. Call 260-622-<br />

7072. Leave message.<br />

PRIDE MOBILITY JET 3 UL-<br />

TRA— Electric power Chair.<br />

Turns in circular motion. Looks<br />

brand new! $990. Call 260-622-<br />

7072. Leave message.<br />

TRI-LEVEL WOOD PLAY-<br />

SET— Can fit 3 swings, tire<br />

swing, slide, climbing rope and<br />

rock climbing wall. Tent/tarp on<br />

top level. Great for a family with<br />

lots of children or a daycare<br />

facility. $550/OBO. 765-329-<br />

0567.<br />

Rentals<br />

Apartments for Rent<br />

1BR UPPER APARTMENT—<br />

Clean. Includes utilities. 604<br />

W. Cherry. 260-824-4026. References<br />

required.<br />

Apartments for Rent<br />

1 BEDROOM— Upper unit,<br />

water, stove, fridge, A/C, dishwasher<br />

included. $390/month.<br />

Available now. Also 2BR available<br />

Oct. 1st, $415/month. Call<br />

1-800-572-1193.<br />

2BR DUPLEX APARTMENT—<br />

great location, maintenance<br />

free, insulated well. Appliances<br />

included. Security deposit<br />

and reference required. $532/<br />

month. 260-307-6222.<br />

2BR UPSTAIRS APARTMENT<br />

— Off-street parking. Utilities<br />

included. $375/Security Deposit.<br />

$125/week. 317 E. Washington.<br />

260-348-6473.<br />

ALL UTILITIES PAID— 2BR,<br />

$125/week, $300/Deposit, 412<br />

W. Market. Also, 1BR, 117 S.<br />

Main, $95/week, $200/Deposit.<br />

Service pets only. 260-353-<br />

3227.<br />

CRAIGVILLE— 2BR and 3BR,<br />

1BA apartment. Central air, appliances,<br />

washer & dryer. No<br />

smoking. Service animals only.<br />

260-565-4176 or 260-417-<br />

2956.<br />

HAMPSHIRE COURT APTS.—<br />

1st Month Rent Free!! No Application<br />

Fee! All apartments<br />

are single story with W/D<br />

Hookups and Private entry.<br />

Open 9a-5p, Monday-Friday.<br />

Weekends and evenings by<br />

appointment. Call 260-824-<br />

1097.<br />

NEWER VERY CLEAN— 2BR<br />

<strong>Bluffton</strong> apartment. All appliances,<br />

washer & Dryer. AC.<br />

$140/week. Call 260-622-<br />

8666.<br />

ONE, TWO & THREE BED-<br />

ROOM— Apartments for rent<br />

in Ossian starting at $460 per<br />

month plus utilties. $250 Deposit<br />

and References required.<br />

260-433-5263.<br />

Public<br />

Sale Calendar<br />

SEPTEMBER 17 - 9 a.m. - Estate of<br />

S. Eugene Murray. 7327S. 1000W-<br />

90, Warren. US 224 at Markle go<br />

south 14.5 miles on SR 3 to CR<br />

800S, turn west to CR 1000W, go<br />

north. 226+/-A offered in 6 tracts,<br />

Wells County, Jackson Township,<br />

Sections 4 & 9. Tract 1: 7.26A, home,<br />

buildings. Tract II: 38.25A. Tract III:<br />

29.29A. Tract IV: 59.43A. Tract V:<br />

29.61A. Tract VI: 63.01A. Tractors,<br />

bulldozer, hay equipment, shop tools,<br />

antiques & collectibles, furniture,<br />

appliances, more. Real estate sells<br />

at 1 p.m. Wiegmann Auctioneers,<br />

260-447-4311, www.wiegmannauctioneers.com.<br />

SEPTEMBER 17 - 9 a.m. - Robert<br />

R. Weimer Estate. 11 W. Kendall,<br />

LaFontaine, In 46940. Auction<br />

conducted at The LaFontaine<br />

Community Center. Charming 1<br />

1/2 story arts and craft home; 1973<br />

Mustang convertible; 2006 Mazda<br />

6; 1999 Ford Ranger XLT ext. cab;<br />

Outstanding collection of antiques;<br />

Early American antique furniture;<br />

Modern furniture; Antique mantel,<br />

wall & shelf clocks; Oil paintings;<br />

Large selection of musical instruments;<br />

Pocket watches; Glassware<br />

and much more! For private inspection<br />

of this real estate, please contact<br />

Ellenberger Bros., Inc., 1-800-373-<br />

6363, www.EllenbergerBros.com.<br />

SEPTEMBER 17 - 9 a.m. - Evelyn<br />

Brewer, owner. 320 Northwood<br />

Drive, <strong>Bluffton</strong>. 3 bedroom home,<br />

4 car garage, workshop on 2.34<br />

+/- acres. 2003 Buick Rendezvous<br />

CX, John Deere riding lawn mower,<br />

antique Seeburg Select-o-Matic<br />

200 jukebox, 2009 Cyclone Rake<br />

XL lawn vacuum, coin collection,<br />

antiques, furniture, appliances, tools.<br />

Real Estate sells at 11 a.m. Scheerer<br />

McCulloch Auctioneers, 260-441-<br />

8636, www.smauctioneers.com.<br />

SEPTEMBER 21 - 6:30 p.m.<br />

- United Methodist Memorial<br />

Home, owner. Auction conducted<br />

at Dogwood Glen Golf Course.<br />

157+/- acres, 2 tracts, productive<br />

farmland near I-69, Salamonie &<br />

Jefferson Twps., Huntington Co.<br />

Online bidding available. Halderman<br />

Real Estate Services, 800-424-2324,<br />

www.halderman.com. Rick Johnloz,<br />

260-827-8181.<br />

SEPTEMBER 24 - 9 a.m. - Keystone<br />

Schools, owner. 1800 Laverne<br />

Avenue, Fort Wayne. Complete<br />

liquidation. Activity bus, portable<br />

classrooms, storage units, appliances,<br />

stainless cookware, stage<br />

lighting system, computers & computer<br />

accessories, electronics, instruments,<br />

sound equipment, projectors,<br />

PA system, sport & gym class equipment,<br />

educational & classroom supplies,<br />

art supplies, office equipment,<br />

IPFW mastodon sculpture, portable<br />

metal fencing, housekeeping equip-<br />

...and have a great day full of fun .<br />

<strong>Bluffton</strong><br />

Street<br />

Fair<br />

Tues., Sept. 20<br />

through<br />

Sat., Sept. 24<br />

ment, lawn & garden, hand tools.<br />

Inspection Sept. 23 from noon to 5<br />

p.m. Steffen Group, 260-426-0633,<br />

www.steffengrp.com.<br />

SEPTEMBER 24 - 10 a.m. - Jean E.<br />

and James F. Karst, owners. 7502<br />

W 250 S, Huntington. Modern furniture,<br />

appliances, tools, lawn & garden,<br />

household, electronics & much<br />

more! Ellenberger Bros., Inc., 1-800-<br />

373-6363, www.EllenbergerBros.<br />

com.<br />

OCTOBER 1 - 9 a.m. - Plaintiffs of<br />

court order, owner. Former Your<br />

Friends & Neighbors group home,<br />

1515 Magnavox Way, Fort Wayne.<br />

Office supplies & furniture, electronics,<br />

appliances, kitchenware, lawn<br />

& garden, exercise equipment,<br />

Christmas décor, miscellaneous.<br />

Inspection: Sept. 30, 9 a.m.-5 p.m.<br />

Steffen Group, 260-426-0633, www.<br />

steffengrp.com.<br />

OCTOBER 1 - 9 a.m. - Rolland<br />

(Ron) & Judy Myers, owners. 4111<br />

East 400 North, <strong>Bluffton</strong>. Furniture,<br />

primitives & collectibles, Aladdin oil<br />

lamp, dolls, teddy bear, cookie jar,<br />

salt & pepper, and antique & farm<br />

toy collections, Longaberger baskets,<br />

toy steam engines, 4 pedal<br />

tractors, long guns, china, glassware,<br />

household, industrial air compressor,<br />

tools, crane w/hoist, shelving,<br />

portable sign boards, mini van, Ford<br />

Thunderbird LX, lawn tractor w/42"<br />

mower deck. Holloway Auction<br />

Company, Inc., 260-824-5060, www.<br />

HollowayAuction.com.<br />

OCTOBER 8 - 10 a.m. - Ralph<br />

E. Helton Life Estate, Constance<br />

(Connie) & Arlin Mann, owners.<br />

118 N. Washington, Montpelier.<br />

Well maintained, one story home<br />

w/660 sq. ft. detached garage. 1979<br />

Chevrolet Caprice Classic, one<br />

owner, 42,072 miles. Modern furniture,<br />

appliances, household items,<br />

lawn and garden, fishing & much<br />

more! Open houses Sept. 25 from<br />

2-4 p.m. or call for private inspection.<br />

Ellenberger Bros., Inc., 1-800-373-<br />

6363, www.EllenbergerBros.com.<br />

SUDOKU ANSWER<br />

• Rides • Games<br />

• Food Vendors • Parades ... Fun!<br />

plus Great Deals All Over Town<br />

STREET FAIR EDITION<br />

Including Schedules & Industrial Tent Directory<br />

MONDAY, SEPT. 19 • NEWS-BANNER<br />

TUES., SEPT. 20 • ECHO & SUNRISER<br />

Mobile Home Rental<br />

2BR & 3BR— Mobile Homes<br />

for rent in quiet, clean park. Norwell<br />

School District. Weekly, Bi-<br />

Weekly, Monthly Rates available.<br />

$300 Security Deposit/References<br />

Required. 260-824-8611.<br />

House Rentals<br />

2BR HOUSE— 315 W. Townley.<br />

Laundry hookup, appliances.<br />

$116/week, pays water and sewage.<br />

$300/deposit. Service pets<br />

only. Give references. 260-353-<br />

3227.<br />

Real Estate<br />

Homes For Sale<br />

$ZERO DOWN GOV. LOANS—<br />

Good, slow, no credit. Buy any<br />

home anywhere. Fast Free preapprovals.<br />

Land contract payoffs<br />

or refinances. Allied Home Mortgage<br />

Corporation Branch, 3042,<br />

502 Airport North Office Park,<br />

46825. Please call 260-750-<br />

9376. Equal Housing Opportunity.<br />

(A)<br />

YOU WILL LOVE THIS CLAS-<br />

SIC — Riverview 3BR/2BA<br />

ranch home! New french<br />

country kitchen. New flooring<br />

throughout. Open House Every<br />

Thursday, 5p-7p & Saturday,<br />

noon-2p. 905 Ranch Road,<br />

<strong>Bluffton</strong>. $135,000. 260-307-<br />

6040.<br />

Daily<br />

Arlin<br />

Heyerly<br />

Serving the Community<br />

since 1995<br />

Hiday Motors<br />

New & Pre-Owned GM<br />

& Pre-Owned Chrysler<br />

260-824-0900<br />

aheyerly@hidaymotors.com<br />

633 N. Main St., <strong>Bluffton</strong><br />

“Ask<br />

Rich”<br />

Homes For Sale<br />

NINE ACRES— Nice home.<br />

Barns & Outbuildings. 10329S.,<br />

1200W-90, Marion, IN. (So.<br />

Wells Co. So. of SR218). Appraised<br />

at $130,000. GAUNTT<br />

R. E. & AUCTIONEERING<br />

1-800-662-4643 or 260-358-<br />

6940.<br />

OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY,<br />

SEPT. 18TH- 1p-5p. Lovely<br />

2-Story Country home built by<br />

Barkley Buildings in 2001 located<br />

between Markle and I-<br />

469. 2,132sq.ft. and 1,407sq.<br />

ft. daylight basement. Custom<br />

kitchen & cabinets. 4BR. Master<br />

Suite located on the main floor.<br />

2 Full Baths and 2 Half Baths.<br />

geothermal Heating & Cooling.<br />

3-car attached garage. Half<br />

acre swimming pond. Located<br />

on a paved road at 4485W.,<br />

1000N-90. $245,000. Call 260-<br />

417-2252.<br />

KEVIN J. DEAKYNE, D.D.S., P.C.<br />

470 Bennett Dr., Suite A<br />

P.O. Box 307 - Warren, IN 46792<br />

1-800-236-0891<br />

Metlife & Delta Dental Provider<br />

AMISH CONSTRUCTION<br />

& REMODELING<br />

•New Homes •Pole Barns •Roofing<br />

•Siding •Room Additions •Garages<br />

Free Estimates • 765-669-2848<br />

BLUFFTON<br />

ASPHALT<br />

PAVING<br />

CO. INC.<br />

•Professional Paving and<br />

Seal Coating at<br />

Competitive Prices<br />

•Hot Rubber Crack Fill<br />

JOEL LADIG<br />

815 W.<br />

Cherry St.<br />

BLUFFTON<br />

(260)<br />

824-5388<br />

MILLER BODY SHOP<br />

No job too big or small!<br />

Collision repair, Unibody<br />

alignment. Insurance<br />

estimates available.<br />

260-824-4141<br />

TROUBLE WITH YOUR<br />

GARAGE DOOR?<br />

Sales & Service Call<br />

STINSON DOOR<br />

SERVICE<br />

824-1123<br />

Forest Ridge<br />

Tree Service<br />

70 ft. Aerial Service<br />

FULLY INSURED<br />

Cell: 820-0863<br />

Joe Isch, owner<br />

LANDSCAPE DESIGN<br />

& INSTALLATION<br />

FERTILIZING • WEED CONTROL<br />

Minnich’s Lawn Service<br />

Scott Minnich<br />

Cell: 260-760-4404<br />

(260)375-2135<br />

222 N. Wayne St., Warren, IN<br />

1-800-895-7035<br />

www.warrenpharmacy.com<br />

Independent F amily O wned<br />

E&E<br />

Construction<br />

Amish Craftsmen<br />

•New Homes •Roofing<br />

•Decks •Concrete Work<br />

•Siding •Room Additions<br />

•Garages •Remodeling<br />

•Pole Barns<br />

Ervin Schwartz<br />

5386 W. 300 S.-1, <strong>Bluffton</strong>, IN 46714<br />

1-260-334-5786<br />

1-260-443-1823<br />

Richard Borror<br />

Sales & Leasing Professional<br />

HIDAY MOTORS<br />

“Selling the Best Trucks & Cars in the World”<br />

824-0900<br />

(260)824-5060<br />

1103 S. Main St., <strong>Bluffton</strong><br />

www.HollowayAuction.com<br />

Buy it, sell it in<br />

the classifieds<br />

<strong>SAT</strong>URDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 2011 • The <strong>News</strong>-<strong>Banner</strong> • Page 11<br />

SUDOKU<br />

Complete the grid so that every row, column and 3x3 box contains<br />

every digit from 1 to 9 inclusively.<br />

FREE<br />

Estimates<br />

824-4887<br />

S T O RAGE<br />

Sure-Flo<br />

Zap Electric, Inc.<br />

260-824-2927<br />

Commercial-Industrial-Residential<br />

24 Hr. Emergency Service<br />

Charles Miller-Electrican<br />

1233 W. Cherry St., <strong>Bluffton</strong><br />

824-1846<br />

•Safety Lighting •Clean Units<br />

•24 Hr. Access<br />

•Video Cameras<br />

www.a1-ustor.com<br />

After hours & Saturdays<br />

Call 273-0253 or 824-4782<br />

In Monroe at corner of<br />

U.S. 27 and S.R. 124<br />

Office at 1180 N. Main, <strong>Bluffton</strong><br />

Rich Beaver Crop Insurance, Farm, Auto, Home, Life<br />

Toll Free: 877-385-1792 Cell: 260-227-0091<br />

email: rbeaver@harrellfin.com<br />

2826 Theater Ave., Huntington, IN 46750<br />

Seamless<br />

Gutters<br />

5” & 6” Continuous Gutters<br />

Leaf Protection Systems<br />

Large Color Selection - FREE Estimates<br />

Stan Worthman<br />

260-622-4372<br />

www.seamlessgutter.net<br />

Annual Enrollment begins Oct. 15th thru Dec. 7th<br />

In the 1882 Brick Building at MAIN & MARKET ... Downtown <strong>Bluffton</strong>, IN<br />

A Human Being Answers Our Phone at 824-1618<br />

JERRY FLACK - 101 NORTH MAIN - BLUFFTON<br />

SHADE TREES<br />

•Large Shade Trees<br />

•Tree Moving<br />

Gerber Lawn Service<br />

(260) 565-3128<br />

B B& & J Construction<br />

F REE<br />

Estimates<br />

Amish Contractors<br />

Roofing, Concrete, Room Additions, Garages,<br />

Remodeling, Pole Barns, rough in or finish work.<br />

260-703-0046<br />

Drivers: Regional & OTR<br />

Start up to $.41/mi + Excellent Benefits.<br />

401K + Bonuses. Miles & Guaranteed Hometime!<br />

CDL-A 6 mos. exp.<br />

(888)219-8041<br />

HOLLOWAY<br />

824-SOLD (7653)<br />

1103 South Main St., <strong>Bluffton</strong><br />

www.JustThinkSold.com<br />

0339 West<br />

100 North<br />

<strong>Bluffton</strong>, IN<br />

260-820-1909<br />

www.freeze-frame.biz<br />

andree.shearer@gmail.com<br />

APPRAISAL SERVICES<br />

– FARMS<br />

– ESTATES<br />

– PERSONAL<br />

PROPERTY<br />

– REAL ESTATE<br />

Joe Weterick<br />

Certified Appraiser<br />

Licensed Auctioneer<br />

260-414-7780<br />

260-824-5536<br />

FREE<br />

Estimates<br />

Why<br />

Choose<br />

• Established 1944<br />

• Over 1 Million Acres SOLD<br />

• Take advantage of our<br />

“Maxium Marketing Method”<br />

• Local Representation<br />

Call Al Pfister at<br />

760-8922<br />

BASIC WILDLIFE<br />

REMOVAL<br />

Nuisance Animals Removed<br />

•Raccoons •Skunks<br />

•Moles •Bats & More!<br />

Ken Brosman<br />

1-866-257-5903<br />

POLE BUILDINGS<br />

Any Size Available<br />

30’x40’x12’<br />

1 - 16’x11’, Slide Door, 1 - 3/0<br />

Walk-In, Rafters 4’ O.C.<br />

$ 9,800 Erected<br />

40’x64’x14’<br />

1 - 20’x14’, Slide Door, 1 - 3/0<br />

Walk-In, Rafters 4’ O.C.<br />

$ 16,200 Erected<br />

48’x80’x14’<br />

1 - 20’x12’, Slide Door, 1 - 20’x14’<br />

Slide Door, Rafters 4’ O.C.<br />

$ 24,250 Erected<br />

60’x80’x14’<br />

2 - 24’x14’, Slide Door, 1 - 3/0<br />

Walk-In, Rafters 4’ O.C.<br />

$ 28,000 Erected<br />

29 gauge metal Cut to your<br />

specifications.<br />

260-760-5431<br />

OSCAR’S<br />

Repair & Rentals<br />

Repairs: Lawn Equipment, Chainsaws,<br />

Compressors, Snowblowers<br />

Renting: Construction Equipment<br />

Homeowners Tools • Trailers • Tow Dolly<br />

AND MUCH, MUCH MORE<br />

4438E 100N, <strong>Bluffton</strong> 565-3350<br />

For as little as ... YOUR BUSINESS IN THE NEWS-BANNER EVERY DAY!<br />

97 ¢ Plus The Ossian Journal, The Echo & Sunriser <strong>News</strong> Every Week! Call 824-0224<br />

PER ISSUE ... you can keep your name in the public eye! or 622-4108<br />

Increase your business with regular advertising! OCT. deadline is Tues., Sept. 27


Page 12 • The <strong>News</strong>-<strong>Banner</strong> • <strong>SAT</strong>URDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 2011<br />

ALL In-Stock % OFF 35<br />

Plants<br />

CASH & CARRY<br />

ONLY<br />

8-5 Mon.-Fri.<br />

8-12 Sat.<br />

2275 N. Main St., <strong>Bluffton</strong> • 824-5189<br />

Local Roundup<br />

Library closed Tuesday<br />

through Saturday for fair<br />

The <strong>Bluffton</strong> branch of the Wells County<br />

Public Library will be closed Tuesday<br />

through Saturday, Sept. 20-24, during the<br />

<strong>Bluffton</strong> Free Street Fair. The library has<br />

scheduled inventory and staff in-service<br />

events during that time.<br />

The <strong>Bluffton</strong> branch will be open on<br />

Monday, Sept. 19, until 5 p.m. and will<br />

reopen for normal business hours on Monday,<br />

Sept. 26.<br />

The Ossian branch of the Wells County<br />

Public Library will be closed Wednesday<br />

and Thursday, Sept. 21-22, for staff training.<br />

The Ossian branch of the library will otherwise<br />

have normal hours this week.<br />

Recycling Center closed<br />

next week for Street Fair<br />

The recycling center will be closed Sept.<br />

20 through Sept. 26 due to <strong>Bluffton</strong> Free<br />

Street Fair.<br />

Normal business hours will resume on<br />

Tuesday, Sept. 27.<br />

Drainage Board to meet<br />

Monday at 200N/200W<br />

The Wells County Drainage Board will<br />

meet Monday, Sept. 19, at a special location.<br />

For this time only, the meeting will convene<br />

at the intersection of 200N-200W in<br />

Rockcreek Township. The board will discuss<br />

proposals to fix the flooding issues that<br />

have been occurring in that area.<br />

The meeting will begin at 8 a.m. Monday.<br />

<strong>Bluffton</strong>’s Board of Works<br />

will meet Tuesday<br />

The <strong>Bluffton</strong> Board of Public Works and<br />

Safety will meet at 1 p.m. Tuesday in the<br />

conference room on the first floor of City<br />

Hall.<br />

Included on the agenda is Common<br />

Wealth Engineering with Ben Adams, a<br />

communication tower with Bob Plummer,<br />

and a right of way permit for the downtown<br />

Dollar General store. Mark Baller will<br />

also bring quotes to the board for removing<br />

sludge from the water filtration plant.<br />

Southern Wells school<br />

board to meet Tuesday<br />

Members of the Southern Wells School<br />

Board will meet in a regular session at 5<br />

p.m. Tuesday, Sept. 20, at the central office.<br />

On the agenda is a second reading of the<br />

policy regarding corporation vehicle use; a<br />

request for maternity leave; a recommendation<br />

for an extra-curricular position; a<br />

proposal to purchase a small bleacher unit<br />

and a snowblower; a proposal for a silent<br />

auction; fundraiser requests from the athletic<br />

department, boys’ basketball program,<br />

and Partners in Education; an FFA field trip<br />

request; conference requests; requests to use<br />

the facilities by the YMCA Mileage Club<br />

and the Southern Wells Community Church<br />

Trunk or Treat; and approval of volunteers<br />

for the eighth-grade Chicago trip.<br />

Board members will also review the<br />

Southern Wells Elementary School improvement<br />

plan.<br />

The meeting will be preceded by an<br />

executive session to discuss collective bargaining.<br />

Northern Wells school<br />

board will meet Tuesday<br />

The board of the Northern Wells Community<br />

Schools will meet at 5:30 p.m. Tuesday,<br />

Sept. 20, in the school district’s administration<br />

building, 312 N. Jefferson St. in Ossian.<br />

Leading off the agenda are three hearings<br />

— on the 2012 bus replacement plan, the<br />

2012 CPF plan, and the 2012 budget. The<br />

Bus Replacement Plan and the CPF Plan are<br />

also scheduled to voted on during the meeting.<br />

Also planned for Tuesday night are a<br />

Family Medical Leave Act request from<br />

Tina Weldy, a teacher at Lancaster Central<br />

Elementary School; consideration of<br />

a $10,900 donation from the Wells County<br />

Foundation to Lancaster Elementary for an<br />

ADA-compliant Touch Accessible Platform<br />

for Interactive Technology system; and consideration<br />

of a contract to work on the roof<br />

at Ossian Elementary School.<br />

The meeting will be preceded by an executive<br />

session which is closed to the public.<br />

The executive session will begin at 5 p.m.<br />

The closed-door session is being called to<br />

discuss collective bargaining, discussion of<br />

confidential records, and to evaluate the job<br />

performance of individual employees.<br />

3 government meetings<br />

called off next week<br />

The Wells County Commissioners, the<br />

Wells County Solid Waste District board,<br />

and the <strong>Bluffton</strong> Common Council have all<br />

canceled their regularly scheduled meeting<br />

this week because of the <strong>Bluffton</strong> Street<br />

Fair.<br />

None of the meetings have been rescheduled.<br />

The Wells County Commissioners will<br />

meet again at 9 a.m. Monday, Oct. 3, and<br />

the Solid Waste District board will meet<br />

again at 11 a.m. Monday, Oct. 17. Both of<br />

those meetings will be in the Wells Carnegie<br />

Government Annex, 223 W. Washington<br />

St. <strong>Bluffton</strong> Common Council members<br />

are not scheduled to meet again until 7:30<br />

a.m. Tuesday, Oct. 4, when they will meet at<br />

<strong>Bluffton</strong> High School.<br />

Wells Court Docket<br />

Wells Circuit Court<br />

Criminal Cases<br />

Petition for revocation<br />

of suspended sentence and<br />

probation filed against Donald<br />

D. Hesher, 61, of <strong>Bluffton</strong>,<br />

originally convicted of<br />

child molesting, following<br />

an alleged violation of the<br />

terms of his probation.<br />

Adam T. Dawson, 23, of<br />

Jonesboro, entered plea of<br />

guilty to one count of theft.<br />

Dawson was charged after<br />

an officer from the Wells<br />

County Sheriff’s Department<br />

investigated a report of<br />

someone on a property allegedly<br />

stealing scrap metal<br />

from a property in rural keystone<br />

on May 20. Sentencing<br />

set for Nov. 22.<br />

Travis J. Patrick, 24, of<br />

<strong>Bluffton</strong>, entered a plea of<br />

guilty to one count of theft.<br />

Patrick was charged after<br />

officers from the Wells<br />

County Sheriff’s Department<br />

investigated a report<br />

of a wallet stolen at Murphy<br />

Oil on June 26. Sentencing<br />

set for Oct. 14.<br />

Initial hearing of charges<br />

against Louis H. Howard Jr.,<br />

32, of <strong>Bluffton</strong>, filed. Howard<br />

was charged with one<br />

count of failure to appear<br />

after he failed to appear at a<br />

hearing in the Wells Circuit<br />

Court on Aug. 25. Status<br />

hearing date not set. Pre-trial<br />

hearing date set for Nov. 22.<br />

John Clifton appointed as<br />

public defender.<br />

Civil Cases<br />

Decree of dissolution of<br />

marriage filed terminating<br />

the marriage between Gary<br />

D. Lesh and Marlene F.<br />

Lesh.<br />

Marriage Licenses<br />

Joseph Robert Beste and<br />

Laura Michelle Gompert.<br />

Chad Michael Davidson<br />

and Katherine Ann Davidson.<br />

Wells Superior Court<br />

Civil Cases<br />

Decree of dissolution of<br />

marriage filed terminating<br />

the marriage between Christine<br />

E. Harrington and Paul<br />

D. Harrington.<br />

Release of judgment filed<br />

in favor of Tye and Amy<br />

Walton of Poneto who have<br />

settled their account with<br />

AAA Acceptance Corporation.<br />

Release of judgment filed<br />

in favor of Calvin Archbold<br />

who has settled his account<br />

with AAA Acceptance Corporation.<br />

Release of judgment filed<br />

in favor of Megan Berry of<br />

Markle who has settled her<br />

account with AAA Acceptance<br />

Corporation.<br />

Release of judgment filed<br />

in favor of Candace Barkey/Martz<br />

of Columbia City<br />

who has settled her account<br />

with AAA Acceptance Corporation.<br />

Judgments in various<br />

amounts filed in favor of<br />

Collecto Services against<br />

Kristan Cogar of Markle<br />

(547.04); Naomi Kipp of<br />

<strong>Bluffton</strong> ($589.06); Denver<br />

Murray of <strong>Bluffton</strong><br />

($1,528.45); and Lily Lopez<br />

of <strong>Bluffton</strong> ($1,238.47).<br />

Default judgment of<br />

$4,018 filed in favor of<br />

Douglas L. Todd against<br />

Amy Arnold of <strong>Bluffton</strong>.<br />

Judgment of $1,490 filed<br />

in favor of Futures against<br />

Amanda Prebble of Ossian.<br />

Default judgment of<br />

$932.53 filed in favor of<br />

<strong>Bluffton</strong> Plumbing and<br />

Heating against William and<br />

Melinda Foreman of <strong>Bluffton</strong>.<br />

Complaint for payment in<br />

the amount of $1,792 filed<br />

by Trenton Markley of Liberty<br />

Center against Robert<br />

Hunnicutt of Liberty Center.<br />

LAND AUCTION<br />

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 18 • 6:00 PM<br />

Farmland,<br />

Indiana<br />

75 ±<br />

Acres<br />

#AC63001224,<br />

#AU10600070<br />

PROPERTY LOCATION: From Farmland,<br />

IN, travel north on SR 1 for 5 miles to CR<br />

600N, west 1.5 miles to the property.<br />

AUCTION LOCATION: Albany Lions Club,<br />

215 S. Water Street, Albany, IN.<br />

TRACT DESCRIPTIONS:<br />

TRACT 1: 35± Acres with approximately<br />

550 ft. of frontage on CR 600N. Mostly<br />

tillable. Soils are Pewamo and Glynwood.<br />

TRACT 2: 40± Acres with 50 ft. of frontage<br />

on CR 600N. Approx. 29 acres tillable along<br />

with an 11 acre woods. Soils are Pewamo<br />

and Glynwood.<br />

Wind farm land lease in place.<br />

CALL THE SALE MANAGER FOR PRIVATE INSPECTIONS<br />

SELLER: BRADLEY SPARKS<br />

AUCTION MANAGER: AL PFISTER, 260-824-5850, 260-760-8922 (cell)<br />

800-451-2709 • 260-244-7606<br />

SchraderAuction.com<br />

AREA/STATE<br />

Recycling crafters<br />

Members of the Good Things Craft Club put together a recycled fall craft project this week<br />

at the Wells County Public Library, as they created leaf wreaths and swags from the pages<br />

of old book. The leaves were cut from yellowed page, had wires glued to them, and then<br />

were attached to a wire wreath or swag. Emily Marshall, at right, of the library staff, led<br />

the Martha Stewart project as she worked at fashioning a ribbon bow. Crafters left to right<br />

were Sheryl Brown, Susan Ealing, Mary Ellen McEvoy and Pat Dyson. Next meeting for the<br />

Good Things Club will be at 1 p.m. Monday, Oct. 11, with a floral arranging demonstration<br />

planned. There is no charge to attend and no reservations are needed. (Photo by Barbara<br />

Barbieri)<br />

5 power plants could be mothballed<br />

TERRE HAUTE, Ind.<br />

(AP) — Duke Energy<br />

expects to close much of a<br />

coal-powered generating<br />

plant in western Indiana<br />

within the next few years.<br />

The company is watching<br />

new federal environmental<br />

regulations that are due for<br />

release in November and<br />

considering shutting down<br />

several of the six units at<br />

Wabash River Station near<br />

Terre Haute as soon as 2014,<br />

Duke spokeswoman Angeline<br />

Protogere said.<br />

“While we haven’t made<br />

any final decisions, our units<br />

at Wabash River Station are<br />

likely to be retired earlier<br />

than expected,” Protogere<br />

told the Tribune-Star (http://<br />

bit.ly/pjhl9g).<br />

The power plant was<br />

completed in stages between<br />

1953 and 1968. Duke owns<br />

five of its generating units,<br />

with the other owned by<br />

Wabash Valley Power Association<br />

and SG Solutions.<br />

Duke has about 100<br />

employees and 40 full-time<br />

contractors at the plant, but<br />

Protogere said the company<br />

didn’t yet know how a<br />

shutdown would affect the<br />

workforce.<br />

The review of the<br />

2011 Street Fair<br />

WEDNESDAY<br />

$15 Wristbands on Rides<br />

5 p.m.-Closing<br />

High School Band & Wells Co.<br />

Alumni Parade<br />

6:30 p.m.<br />

<strong>SAT</strong>URDAY<br />

Heavy Weight<br />

Horse Pulling<br />

(Minitures to follow)<br />

Wabash plant’s future comes<br />

as Duke is completing construction<br />

of a nearly $3 billion<br />

coal-gasification plant<br />

near Edwardsport in south-<br />

Come and see us at the<br />

September 20-24<br />

TUESDAY<br />

Grand Opening<br />

Parade 7 p.m.<br />

Grand Marshal - Don & Mona Strong<br />

<strong>SAT</strong>URDAY<br />

Poor Jack Amusements<br />

ENTERTAINMENT<br />

FRIDAY<br />

6 p.m. - Street Fair Band Concert - Market & Johnson<br />

7-8 & 8:30-9:30 p.m. - Spike and the Bulldogs - Stage - W. Washington<br />

7:30 p.m. - Street Fair Band Concert - Market & Marion<br />

9:00 p.m. - Street Fair Band Concert - Main & Market<br />

<strong>SAT</strong>URDAY<br />

5-6 p.m. - Sounds of Worship - Stage - W. Washington<br />

6 p.m. - Street Fair Band Concert - Courthouse Plaza<br />

6 p.m. - Garden Tractor Pull (weigh-in at 5 p.m.) - 4-H Park<br />

7-9 p.m. - Street Fair Idol - Main Event Stage, W. Washington<br />

8 p.m. - Street Fair Band - Marion & Market<br />

9 p.m. - Street Fair Band - Main & Market<br />

9:30 a.m. -<br />

4-H Park<br />

western Indiana. Duke is the<br />

state’s largest electric utility<br />

with about 780,000 customers<br />

covering much of the<br />

state’s midsection.<br />

<strong>Bluffton</strong> Street Fair!<br />

All Trees<br />

Planted, Staked, Mulched &<br />

GUARANTEED<br />

for one full year.<br />

SEPTEMBER 20-24<br />

Large Shade<br />

Trees<br />

- Locust<br />

- Bradford Pear<br />

- Autumn Blaze Maple<br />

- Silver Queen Maple<br />

- Norway Maple<br />

- Red Sunset Maple<br />

- Northfire Maple<br />

- Crimson King Maple<br />

- October Glory Maple<br />

(When purchasing 2 or more)<br />

SPECIAL FINANCING<br />

AVAILABLE!<br />

Now is the time to Weed and Feed<br />

your lawn for fall.<br />

GERBER LAWN SERVICE<br />

(260) 565-3128<br />

1:30 p.m. -<br />

4-H Park<br />

Heavy Weight<br />

Pony Pulling<br />

For a complete schedule, check out the <strong>News</strong>-<strong>Banner</strong> on Mon., Sept. 19

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