During the late hours of Monday night and early Tuesday morning, flash flood warnings were broadcast on the radio and via social media to warn travelers against dangerous waters.
During the late hours of Monday night and early Tuesday morning, flash flood warnings were broadcast on the radio and via social media to warn travelers against dangerous waters.
Many dogs and dog owners came to Pawzfest Sunday to participate in a dog walk and games. [portfolio_slideshow]
Children enjoyed many fun games and activities at the annual St. Peter School summer festival Saturday. [portfolio_slideshow]
The couple met when they were classmates at the former Salem School. Scrapbooks and photo albums litter the independent living apartment that the husband moved into several years ago, when his wife was diagnosed with dementia.
For more than six months, 17 teams have been planning an annual event in Wyandot County. Although team members are various ages, both male and female and come from different backgrounds, what bonds this group together for the event is one thing — the desire to raise money for the fight against cancer.
Two buildings that have housed attorneys offices and beautician shops have been gutted as part of the First National Bank of Sycamore’s renovation and expansion project.
Area youth take turns climbing out of a boat used by Wyandot County’s water rescue team during an event Thursday celebrating hometown heroes at the Upper Sandusky Community Library.
It was 8 a.m. Wednesday when Ellie Zeller woke up and decided she wanted to spend her day selling Kool-Aid to raise funds for brain cancer awareness. Two years ago, the third-grade Union Elementary School student lost her 28-year uncle, Jake Zeller, of Bellevue, to the disease.
Shortly after Mary Beth Stinehelfer joined the Wyandot County Board of Health in 1990, she found her place among the public health officials working in the county. After retiring earlier this year, Stinehelfer has looked back on her time as a board member with great reverence.
SYCAMORE — An iconic building that has stood tall in the village of Sycamore for more than a century has been reduced to a pile of rubble. A crew has been demolishing the grain mill at the intersection of North Sycamore and West Saffel avenues, referred to by locals simply as “The Mill,” for about the past week, village officials reported during a regular meeting of Sycamore Council on Tuesday.