03.28 SS pages B01,02,03,10.indd

Transcription

03.28 SS pages B01,02,03,10.indd
MYBL
All Stars
Page
Spring
Training
Page
B2
B2
SSentinel.com
Serving Middlesex County and adjacent areas of the Middle Peninsula and Northern Neck since 1896
Vol. 118, No. 51
Urbanna, Virginia 23175 • March 28, 2013
B Section
Chargers
down LHS
in baseball
by Tom Hardin
After absorbing a 17-10 home
loss to Rappahannock last Thursday,
the Middlesex High varsity baseball
team regrouped on Saturday and
edged Lancaster 3-1 at Dream Fields
in Kilmarnock.
The Chargers of head coach Timmy
Blake are 1-1 on the season, and will
travel to Montross to play Washington & Lee at 5 p.m. on Thursday,
March 28.
The Chargers will be idle over
spring break and return to action
Tuesday, April 9, at Rappahannock.
RHS 17, Middlesex 10
On a cold, damp day, the Raiders
of Rappahannock erupted for 16 hits
and took advantage of 12 walks in
their 17-10 win over the Chargers.
MHS scored 4 runs in the 1st inning
on a single by Andrew Dozier, two
hit-by-pitches, a run-scoring walk by
Hunter Davis, a run-scoring single by
John Purcell, and a 2-run error by the
Raiders.
The Chargers didn’t score again
until the 6th inning. Trailing 12-4,
MHS tallied 6 runs to cut the RHS
lead to 12-10. Four straight walks, an
RBI single by Davis, a 2-run double
by Purcell, and run-scoring singles
by both Kyle Shelton and Marshal
Shermer produced the runs.
“We didn’t chase bad pitches in this
game, but our own pitching wasn’t
good. I think the weather conditions
and lack of practice had a lot to do
with that,” said Blake.
Davis was 3 for 3 with 2 RBIs, and
Purcell was 2 for 4 with 3 RBIs to
pace the Chargers. Kyle Lawson also
had a single.
MHS 3, Lancaster 1
On Saturday, MHS starting pitcher
Jeremy Collier hurled 5 strong
innings with 3 strikeouts. He yielded
4 hits, 2 walks and one unearned
run. Kyle Shelton pitched 2 innings
in relief and gave up one hit and no
walks while fanning one.
“We played excellent defense
behind our pitchers,” said Blake. “On
offense we wasted a lot of good scoring opportunities and should have
scored more runs.”
MHS scored twice in the 2nd
inning on a Shelton single; a 2-out
run-scoring double by Dozier; and
three hit by pitches.
The Chargers scored their final run
in the 6th inning on a double by Purcell.
Dozier had a double and single
in the game, and Zach Belcher also
added a single.
The MHS-Windsor game set for
March 26 was canceled.
Daniel T. Nolan Lacrosse Tournament Champions
On Saturday, the Christchurch School lacrosse team defeated a very talented St. Mary’s Ryken (MD) squad 19-15 to win the Daniel T. Nolan
Lacrosse Championship for the second year in a row. On Friday, Christchurch downed Middleburg Academy 18-6. St. Mary’s Ryken beat the
Richmond Shock on Friday to advance to the finals. The Seahorses are coached by Vince Smith and assistant coaches Clay Tharrington, William
Taylor and Lawrence Robinson ’07.
New MHS football coach
has wealth of experience
at high school, pro levels
by Larry Chowning
The Middlesex County School
Board
voted
unanimously
Monday to hire William (Billy)
Jarvis as the new varsity football coach at Middlesex High
School.
Coach Jarvis joins the Chargers’ staff after a successful playoff run with Warhill High School
in Williamsburg-James City
County, where he has been head
football coach since 2008.
Prior to coaching and teaching
at Warhill, Jarvis was the head
football coach at Lancaster High
School for six years. Before his
tenure at Lancaster, Jarvis was
head coach at Hermitage High
School for five years and also
was defensive coordinator in
2012 for the Richmond Raiders, a professional Arena League
football team.
Jarvis will teach social studies
at MHS.
MHS principal Jeannie Duke
said, “I am absolutely thrilled to
welcome Billy Jarvis to the MHS
family. His expertise in teaching
history and coaching football
will bring even more excellence
to the high school.”
MHS athletic director Matthew
Stamm added, “Billy Jarvis is
such a great addition to our coaching staff. He is well respected
throughout the state and will be a
great asset to our student-athletes
on and off the field. I feel very
comfortable having Coach Jarvis
lead our football program in a
positive direction.”
Stamm also announced that
Coach Jarvis will be at Middlesex
High School in the afternoon of
Tuesday, April 9, to meet with
football players. MHS invites all
parents to meet the coach later
that day at 6:30 p.m. in the MHS
media center.
MHS JVs defeat Lancaster
by Larry Chowning
The Middlesex High School JV
baseball team has had several games
rained out, but have played three
games and are 1-2 on the season.
Middlesex lost 11-0 to the Lancaster
Red Devils on March 15 at Deltaville
Ball Park. The Chargers came back on
March 23 to rip Lancaster 16-4.
On March 21, the MHS JVs lost to
Rappahannock 14-0.
Lancaster 11
Middlesex 0
In the March 15 game against
Lancaster, the Chargers allowed too
many walks, which gave their “solid”
defense very little opportunity to
make outs, said MHS JV coach Dustin
Harris.
On the offensive side, Adam White,
Trey Blankenship and Matt Horne all
had a hit in the game. The Chargers
left a total of 7 runners stranded in
scoring position.
White pitched the first 3 innings.
“He had a rough first inning, but was
given the opportunity to come back
and pitched a commendable second
and third innings,” said Harris.
Blankenship pitched the fourth and
fifth innings and allowed only one
run.
The game ended after five innings
Lady Chargers
visit W&L today
by Tom Chillemi
In side
The Middlesex High School varsity
softball team lost 17-1 at Lancaster on
March 23.
For Middlesex, Avis Keeling, Quinlan Moore, Kaitlin Weber and Amanda
White each singled. Tambria Wake
drove in Moore for the only Lady
Chargers’ run.
Things seemed to go downhill after
Moore was injured when she dove for
a foul ball on the warning track and
injured her left shoulder, said head
coach Wade Traynham. “Her off-season conditioning program will help
speed her recovery,” he said. “We’ll
really miss her.”
Ashley Walton pitched the entire
game for MHS but defensive miscues
let her down.
Middlesex lost 14-1 to visiting
Rappahannock on March 21. Weber
doubled and Moore singled for the
Lady Chargers.
Middlesex High varsity soccer action
Middlesex (0-3) will be at W&L on
Thursday, March 28, at 5 p.m., and Middlesex High School varsity soccer player Reed Standate (#4) drives the ball down the field during Friday’s
then be off for spring break until April 5-0 loss to visiting Lancaster. On March 20, the Chargers battled Rappahannock to a 3-3 tie.
(Photo by Larry Chowning)
9 when they are at Rappahannock.
Tom Hardinʼs trivia question of the week...
Middlesex High School captured the State Group A
Division 1 Football Championship in 1993 with a gamewinning touchdown with less than a minute to play. Who
scored the touchdown? Answer on Page B2.
MHS
Track
PAGE B2
due to the mercy rule.
“Overall, I think we have a very
strong team,” said Coach Harris. “If
we can improve our consistency on
the mound and give our defense a
chance to make outs, we will be very
competitive.”
Middlesex 16
Lancaster 4
On March 23, MHS got its first win
of the season. Mason Phillips got the
pitching win for the Chargers, hurling
2 scoreless innings. Maurice Nelson
pitched the fifth inning and allowed
no runs.
“Mason (Phillips) did a great job
on the mound. He trusted his defense
and pitched consistently all game,”
said Coach Harris. “Offensively, this
was the first game of the season our
players have really shown what they
are capable of. This is a core group of
boys who have played together for a
while and their hard work and commitment to the game is beginning to
pay off.”
The Chargers put on a show in
the second inning of the win with 6
hits and 7 runs. They scored 3 runs
in both the third and fourth innings.
White, hit a 3-run home run to dead
centerfield in the inning.
The game was finished in five
innings due to the 10-run mercy rule.
Greg Pitts went 3-3 and had 1 RBI;
Nelson 3-4, 2 RBIs; White 2-3, 3
RBIs; Horne 2-3, 1 RBI; Phillips 1-4,
2 RBIs; Jacob Kirby 1-5, 2 RBIs; and
Blankenship 1-3, 1 RBI.
RHS 14, MHS 0
On March 21, Rappahannock
blanked Middlesex 14-0. Strong
Raider pitching rendered the Chargers hitless in the loss. Blankenship
made the start for MHS with Phillips
and Nelson also making appearances
on the mound.
The MHS JV baseball team consists of: 8th-graders Chipper Anderson, Alex Fitchett, Hunter Harcum,
Kendrick Hunley, Pitts and Elliot
Redmon; 9th-graders Blankenship,
Kirby, Nelson, Phillips, Chris Powell
and White; and 10th-graders Horne
and Vance Medina.
Weather permitting, the JV Chargers will host Washington & Lee
on Thursday, March 28, at 5 p.m. at
Deltaville Ball Park.
Long cards
hole-in-one
at Piankatank
River Golf Club
Spencer Long of Virginia Beach
carded a hole-in-one on hole #5 at the
Piankatank River Golf Club on Saturday, March 23. Long was playing for
Team World in the Bus Games Captains Choice Invitational.
Walden’s Lawn Care
Whit Walden
Licensed/Insured
Grass Cutting/ Mulching
Bush Hogging
Debris Removal
Phone (804) 366-7956
Fax (804 776-9476
[email protected]
B2 • Southside Sentinel • Urbanna, Va. • March 28, 2013
mybl results
Results from last Sunday’s
Middlesex Youth Basketball
League (MYBL) All-Star
Games are as follows:
Junior Boys
All Stars White 40
All Stars Green 29
White (40): Alex Bullock
2, Jomari Gonzalez 15, Zaire
Keyser 6, Jaden Reed 9, Adam
Smith 6, Logan Snyder 2,
Joseph Sears, Xavier Washington, coach Kenny Washington
Green (29): Isaiah Burse
5,Mison Williams 10, Jaylyn
Ruffin 2, Dylan Wells 10,
Brandon Ward, Jr. 2, Dewayne
Wright, Pierce Lambert. coach
Keith Burse.
Girls Division
All Stars Blue 28
All Stars Red 8
Blue (28): Sarah Parker 6,
Emilie Davis 17, Sarah Walton
5, Molly Brown, Shannon
Brown, Natalie Davis,ZHaria
Taliaferro, Kyseria Ackes,
coaches Charles Dixson and
Anthony Kimble
Red (8): Chloe Hodges 2,
Hannah Marx 2, Cameron
Ward 4, Brooke Daniel, Macey
Daniel, Kaitlyn Eubank, Breniah Hart, Amber Self, Lyndsey Greene, coaches Roy Self,
Brian Eubank and Neil Wake
Senior Boys
All Stars Red 34
All stars Green 30
Red (34): Tamaje’ Jones 12,
Raquan Marshall 9, Tyler Scott
5, Simon Unsworth 4, Leke
Robinson 2, Zachary Davis 2,
Elijah Darnell, coaches Stanley
Gresham, Jr., Stanley Gresham,
Sr. and Mae Burke.
Green (30): Jamal Jones 2,
Dre Anthony Key 13, Charles
Keyser 3, Carlos Marshall 6,
Kenneth Reed 4, Stanley Reed
2, Kendrick Reed, Gregory
Dungee, Stephon Coleman,
coaches Kelvin Reed and Ervin
“EJ” Blake.
Appreciation
Thank you to parents and
friends for coming out. Special
thanks to referees Ralph Pollard, Michael Reed, Maurice
Ackes, Stephen Blue and Don
Harris; score table crew, Grace
Rutkowski, Avis Keeling and
Gregory Robinson; concessions, Alfreda Ackes, Miranda
Kimble, Emily Taylor and
Jamel Reed; and admission
door, Courtney Kimble, Kim
South, Brianna South.
Special thanks for Ashley
Young for singing the National
Anthem and to Middlesex High
School girls varsity basketball
coach Neil Wake.
Special congratulations to
league president Rev Janel
(Young) Pleasants on her marriage on Saturday!
Thank you Southside Sentinel for the weekly coverage of
the MYBL in print and photos!
Correction
In the team photo of the
EASI Printing youth basketball team that appeared in last
week’s Southside Sentinel,
Shane Sexton was incorrectly
identified as Mathews Hicks.
The Sentinel regrets any inconvenience this error may have
caused.
Adult soccer signup begins
Middlesex Family YMCA
is currently holding registration for its adult spring soccer
season, which will begin on
April 10 and continue until
May 22.
There will be an “A” league
for the more experienced soccer
players, and a “B” league for
the folks who just want to have
fun. Participants can register
as individuals and be placed on
a team, or captains can register
a complete team.
About 70 children participated in the Middlesex Little League Spring Training event last Sunday at the Middlesex Sports
Complex.
Let’s play ball!
Spring training prepares kids for the upcoming season
Middlesex County Little
League volunteers and 70 kids
weathered the cold for the 2013
spring training annual event.
The event provided instruction
on the fundamentals of throwing, catching, fielding and batting.
The Little League event
was sponsored by Wells Fargo
Advisors, EVB Bank, Colonial
Virginia Bank and Citizens and
Farmers Bank. “These sponsors
have supported this event since
its inception several years ago
and Middlesex Little League
appreciates the partnership we
have developed with our local
banking community,” said
league official Don Harris.
“Special thanks to all the vol-
The cost for Y members is
$30, the cost for non-members
is $50.
As always, the YMCA
Guardian Program is available
for people needing help with
the fees.
“We want everyone who
would like to play, be able
by Larry Chowning
to play. Our adult sport programs promote healthy living
The Middlesex High School
in mind, body and spirit!” Lady Chargers opened its 2013
said YMCA program director track season on March 13 with
Rebecca Panis.
a fourth place finish in the New
Kent High School Invitational.
The New Kent girls won
the meet with 166 points;
King William, was second,
114 points; Mathews, third,
71 points, Middlesex, fourth,
43 points; Washington & Lee,
fifth, 24 points; and Charles
City, sixth, 18 points.
The Lady Chargers showed
strength in the shot put and
discus events. Senior Nila Robinson placed first in the shot
put (28 9”) and also finished
third (70’) in the discus for a
total of 16 points. Brittin Payne
finished fifth (25’4”) in the shot
put to pick up 2 points.
Leigh Harrow scored 8 points
with a second place (6:32.56)
Middlesex High School
in the 1600 meters.
Featured Athletes of the Week
Shannon Bristow scored 4
Sponsored by
points with a fourth (7:01.09)
in the 1600 meters and 2
Bill Hudgins
points more points with a fifth
(3:12.13) in the 800 meters.
Monica Ward scored a point
Varsity Softball
for the Lady Chargers with a
sixth place (13.2) in the 100
meters.
The 4x100 meter relay team
earned fifth place, and the
4x400 relay finished second
(5:06.58). The 4x100 meter
was comprised of Alexis Beverley, Monica Ward, Kabri
Young and Kuasha Parrish. The
Shelby Lewter
Olivia Major
4x400 relay was comprised of
Beth Eanes
unteers who participated at the
event. The day provided young
baseball and softball players
in Middlesex the opportunity
to learn fundamentals and get
excited about the upcoming
2013 season,” said Harris.
Instruction on hitting fundamentals was led by John Waite,
Greg Harrow, Jeff Davis and
Charles Holmes. Randy Blue,
Roy Self, Joey Fitchett, John
Mathew Robins, Austin Revere,
Dustin Harcum, Chucky Oliver
and Michael Harris provided
fielding and throwing fundamentals. Wade Traynham provided pitching instruction.
“League president Craig
Revere had all the fields looking
great for the event. Thanks to
Stevie’s Ice Cream and Sports
Center for their donation of
door prizes and ice cream for
the participants,” said Harris.
“Food is always a big part
of the event and special thanks
to Jacqueline Taylor, Becky
Foster, Donna Anderson, Haley
Harcum, Cindy Lewis and
Johnny Duke for their efforts
Upper Middlesex Volunteer Fire Department
is pleased to present their
Clay Pigeon and
Turkey Shoot
at the Water View Fire Department
Field & Pavilion
Saturday April 6, 1 p.m. until...
Robinson shines
for Lady Chargers
Amanda White
VEHICLE OF THE WEEK
2012 Chevy Impala LTZ
$18,995
#11630
*Tax, title, license and processing fees not included.
Trivia answer to
question on page
A1: Kenny Acree
Food and drinks available
Required shells provided
All ages and skill levels welcome
Harrow, Bianca Rios, Bristow
and Andri Rowe.
MHS’s next meet will be on
Wednesday, April 10, at West
Point against the Pointers and
the Lancaster Red Devils. The
meets start at 4:30 p.m.
All Middlesex High School
track meets are away.
12 and 20 gauge classes
Worked/modified guns allowed but
will compete in separate division
Contact Trey Blake 824-3175
Can we offer you a lift?
Urbanna, Va.
(804) 758-1099 or (800) 718-5737
www.eastcoastboatlifts.com
Boat Lift Features
Boat Lift Types
• Aluminum or Galvanized
Steel Construction
• Stainless Steel Cables
• GFCI Protected Motors
• Enclosed Covers
• Standard & Custom Design
• Optional Remote Controls
• Aluminum Overhead Beam (NEW)
• Galvanized Overhead Beam
• Low Profile
• Jet Ski Lifts
(rotation & standard)
• Boathouse
• Boat Lift Replacement Parts
(motors, switches, cable, beams, etc.)
UMVFD
plans April 6
turkey shoot
A clay pigeon and turkey
shoot will be held Saturday,
April 6, starting at 1 p.m. at
the Upper Middlesex Volunteer Fire Department in Water
View.
Shells will be provided and
there will be 12-gauge and
20-gauge divisions. All ages
and skill levels are welcome.
Food and drinks will be
available.
Worked or modified guns
will be allowed, but will shoot
in a separate division and will
not compete with stock guns
on still targets.
For information, contact
Trey Blake at 824-3175.
in arranging, cooking, and preparing food for the clinic,” said
Harris.
Event organizers Jacqueline
Taylor, Brittany Glenn and
Harris also thanked the sponsors, volunteers, instructors
and everyone who participated
to produce a successful 2013
spring training event.
Weekly Tides
Windmill Point – Sunrise & Moon - March - April, 2013
Fri. 3/29
Sat. 3/30
Sun. 3/31
Mon. 4/1
High 12:52 1.5’
Low 7:33 -0.2’
High 1:14 1.3’
Low 7:40 -0.2’
¾
High 1:38 1.5’
Low 8:21 -0.2’
High 2:00 1.3’
Low 8:27 -0.2’
Sunrise
6:55
Sunset
7:25
Moonset 8:05
Moonrise10:19
Tue. 4/2
Sunrise
6:53
Sunset
7:26
Moonset 8:51
Moonrise11:26
Wed. 4/3
High 2:28 1.5’
Low 9:13 -0.1’
High 2:51 1.3’
Low 9:19 -0.1’
¾
High 3:23 1.5’
Low 10:08 0.0’
High 3:46 1.2’
Low 10:16 0.0’
Sunrise
Sunset
Moonset
Thu. 4/4
6:52
7:27
9:42
Sunrise
6:50
Sunset
7:28
Moonrise 12:29
Moonset 10:40
Corrections
High
Low Height
Piankatank River, Cherry Pt.
Great Wicomico River Light
-1:42
0:30
-1:44
0:20
86%
75%
Fri.
4/5
High 4:23
Low 11:08
High 4:48
Low 11:20
¾
High 5:28
Low 12:12
High 5:55
1.4’
0.1’
1.2’
0.1’
Sunrise
6:49
Sunset
7:29
Moonset 1:27
Moonrise 11:42
1.4’
0.2’
1.2’
Sunrise
6:47
Sunset
7:30
Moonset 2:19
Moonrise12:47
Low 12:29
High 6:37
Low 1:16
High 7:04
¾
Low 1:39
High 7:44
Low 2:16
High 8:09
0.2’
1.3’
0.2’
1.2’
Sunrise
Sunset
Moonset
Moonrise
6:46
7:31
3:04
1:53
0.2’
1.3’
0.1’
1.3’
Sunrise
Sunset
Moonset
Moonrise
6:44
7:32
3:45
2:58
PM times are in boldface type
Advertise Here
Attractive rates & guaranteed exposure!
Call Maeghaen or Wendy at 758-2328 today!
March 28, 2013 • Southside Sentinel • Urbanna, Va.• B3
school
CA auction to feature
music of Jason Jenkins
Mr. Charger
Contest is
rescheduled
The Mr. Charger Contest
returns to Middlesex High
School in Saluda at 7 p.m. on
Wednesday, April 17, in the
MHS auditorium. It was originally set for Wednesday, March
27, but had to be rescheduled
due to unforeseen circumstances.
“Don’t miss your chance to
see some of our senior boys
participate in this womanless
beauty pageant,” said MHS
principal Jeannie Duke.
The evening will consist of
the participants taking part in
two dance routines, an evening
gown competition, a talent
competition, and answering an
interview question.
Tickets can be purchased
any day from Mrs. Jarvis or
Lilly Crown for $5 each. Tickets also will be on sale at the
door. Call 758-2132 for more
information.
Learning self-defense
Jerry Lemon (left front) of Jerry’s Martial Arts Academy in Gloucester brought to
Middlesex Kim Rock’s “Fight Like a Girl” program for girls and women in Middlesex
County Rock is a Hartfield native, a black belt, seven time world karate champion and
an inductee in the Karate and Martial Arts Halls of Fame. The program is designed to
teach women and girls to learn how to protect themselves. Sponsored by Middlesex
Parks and Recreation, the first lesson was held on Wednesday, March 20 at the Tom
Carter Memorial Gymnasium. The Fight Like A Girl program will be held on Tuesdays from 6:30 to 7:30 p.m. for women and girls 13 years of age and older. Karate
classes will be held on Mondays 6:30 to 8 p.m. Both programs will cost $45 per month.
For more information call 758-0057 or 815-9934.
(Photo by Larry Chowning)
Conservation
Camp seeks
applications Applications
Youth Conservation Camp
applications are now available at the Tidewater Soil and
Water Conservation District
for Gloucester, Middlesex, and
Mathews students who are in
grades 9-12 during the 201213 school year.
Youth Conservation Camp
is a week-long camp that is
sponsored by the Virginia
Association of Soil and
Water Conservation Districts
(SWCD). Two students are
chosen by Tidewater SWCD to
attend this free camp at Virginia
Tech each year. Camp admission, meals and lodging during
camp is provided by Tidewater
SWCD. Transportation to and
from camp is the sole responsibility of the camper. While at
camp, students will bunk in the
college dorms and be involved
in many activities and educational events.
The application deadline is
April 5. For more information, contact Carl Thiel-Goin
at the Tidewater Soil and Water
Conservation District office at
693-3562, extension 5.
More school
news on
page B10
being accepted
for Norton
Scholarship
Applications are now being
accepted for the Horace Norton
Memorial Scholarship and are
due no later than May 16.
Those eligible to apply are
seniors who will graduate from
Middlesex High School in
June 2013, or have previously
graduated from this school.
Students must be attending a
four-year college or university
in a course of study leading to
a bachelor of arts or a bachelor
of science degree.
Application forms may be
obtained in the Middlesex
High School guidance counselor’s office or call 758-2115
for further information.
Vest earns
BA degree
at VaTech
Paul Vest of Deltaville
received a bachelor of arts
degree in philosophy from the
College of Liberal Arts and
Human Sciences at Virginia
Tech at the university’s fall
commencement ceremony on
December 21.
The Chesapeake Academy’s
Masquerade in May Auction
on May 4 will feature the Jason
Jenkins Quartet, playing during
the silent auction and dinner.
Jason Jenkins is a premier bassist and group leader on the Virginia jazz scene as well as in
New York and along the East
Coast.
After the silent auction,
dinner and a live auction will be
held. The venue is courtesy of
the Dog and Oyster Vineyard in
Irvington and begins at 6 p.m.
A menu influenced by Louisiana cuisine will be served by
Willaby’s Catering. The wine is
compliments of Specials Wine
Seller and the beer is compliments of NWP Oil and Propane.
All proceeds from the auction benefit Chesapeake Academy’s educational and financial
aid programs. Items up for bid
include many unique and specialty items, including private
cruises, estate jewelry, a guided
bird walk, a Redskin helmet
autographed by Joe Theisman,
a VIP evening for two at The
Richmond Forum, a Chesapeake
Academy style oyster roast for
25, a weeks stay in Nags Head
or in Hampton Roads, a personal regatta, catered dinner
parties, lawn-care programs,
camps for children, golf, art
from local artists, a luncheon
with Tides Inn general manager Gordon Slatford, furniture
from W.F. Booth and Son, auto-
Jason Jenkins
graphed sports memorabilia
and rare wine selections.
Each class at Chesapeake
Academy offers a donation to
the auction including a wine
barrel table, a message board
created from an old window,
a quilt from student’s artwork,
teepee play tents, and hand-decorated garden pavers.
To purchase tickets to attend
the auction, become a sponsor
or to donate an item or service
to the auction, call Chesapeake
Academy at 804-438-5575.
Raffle tickets can be purchased for $10 for a chance
to win one of three monetary
prizes of $5,000, $1,000 or
$500. The tickets can be purchased at Chesapeake Academy
or in Kilmarnock at Specials,
Burke’s Jewelers, Main Street
Pharmacy and Chesapeake Boat
Basin, in Locust Hill at River
Birch Gifts, and at The Daily in
Warsaw.
Eades inducted
into honor society
From left, park director Marvin Tiller and St. Clare Walker
TSA members Brooke Daniel, Chloe Hodges, Tyler RadaThe Honor Society of
baugh, Jack Ruark and Cole Radabaugh look over the students’ signage designs. In the background is museum vice Phi Kappa Phi is pleased to
announce that Michael Eades
president Bill Powell.
of Urbanna was recently initiated into Phi Kappa Phi —the
nation’s oldest and most selective collegiate honor society for
all academic disciplines. Eades
is pursuing a degree in communication disorders at Longwood
University.
by Brooke Daniel
tor Marvin Tiller was held on
Eades is among approxiand Tyler Radabaugh
March 23. The students pre- mately 30,000 students, faculty,
sented the preliminary designs professional staff and alumni to
Members of the St. Clare to Mr. Powell and Mr. Tiller for be initiated into Phi Kappa Phi
Walker (SCW) Middle School their guidance and input by the
Technology Student Associa- club members.
After evaluation and a few
tion (TSA) chapter continue
their construction challenge minor suggested changes, the
project with the Deltaville team settled on the revisions,
which will be presented to the
Maritime Museum.
During the past week, the Deltaville Maritime Museum
students developed signage Executive Board for approval.
designs to meet the needs The TSA chapter members will
of the museum. A meeting be working hard on making the
with museum vice president revisions to the signs and proBill Powell and park direc- totypes prior to meeting with
the museum board.
The TSA students will
continue to keep the public
updated on their progress with
the project. SCW TSA members include: Kenneth Beam,
Brooke Daniel, Jack Graulich, Chloe Hodges, Kevin
Horton, Andrew Hudson, Jeffery Jones, Jerry Lindsey, Cole
Radabaugh, Tyler Radabaugh,
Jack Ruark, and TSA advisor
Matthew Short.
To donate directly to the
Deltaville Maritime Museum,
call 776-7200.
Middle school TSA students
present signage designs
each year. Membership is by
invitation, and requires nomination and approval by a chapter. Only the top 10% of seniors
and 7.5% of juniors, having at
least 72 semester hours, are eligible for membership. Graduate
students in the top 10% of the
number of candidates for graduate degrees may also qualify,
as do faculty, professional staff
and alumni who have achieved
scholarly distinction.
Eades is the son of Cathey and
Michael Eades of Urbanna.
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on Tuesdays.
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B4 • Southside Sentinel • Urbanna, Va. • March 28, 2013
kiwanis news
by Bill Shuman
What if you could save a
baby’s life? Few events are
more joyful than the birth of
a baby, but in 32 countries
around the world, a dreadful
disease quickly turns joy into
tragedy.
Maternal and Neo-Natal Tetanus (MNT) kills one baby every
nine minutes—that’s 60.000
babies every year who will
never grow up, never make a
mother laugh, play with friends
or dream about the future. The
effects of the disease are excruciating—tiny newboms suffer
repeated painful convulsions
and extreme sensitivity to light
and touch. Also, a significant
number of women die every
year from MNT.
In the late 1970s and early
1980s, MNT had disappeared
in the industrialized world. Yet,
one million babies were dying
every year in undeveloped
areas such as Africa, Asia and
the Middle East. The World
Health Organization began
vaccinating in Africa in 1987.
Babies were vaccinated at age
6 months, but tetanus was still
killing them because the mothers didn’t have the immunity
to pass on to their newborns.
The immunization programs
had overlooked that, to protect
newborns from tetanus, mothers-to-be needed to be immunized as well. That oversight
has been corrected.
MNT is one of the easiest
vaccine-preventable diseases
to eliminate. There is a solution, and a strategy. You just
have to reach all women of
child-bearing age wherever
they live. MNT is only prevalent in poor, developing countries.
Kiwanis selected UNICEF
to be its partner in a $110 mil-
lion effort to eliminate Maternal Neo-Natal Tetanus around
the world. With 597,000
adult members and 256,000
youth members, Kiwanis
and UNICEF are changing
the world. The ELIMINATE
project started just over two
years ago and has raised more
than $21 million in gifts and
pledges, which will save or
protect more than 10 million
mothers and their future babies
from maternal and neo-natal
tetanus.
To achieve the goal of $110
million, the project must
secure a per-member average
of $474. The Kiwanis Club of
Middlesex has already contributed $3,000 and pledged
another $1,500 this year for a
total gift of $4,500. That will
give this club an average gift
of $129 per member.
We have a long way to go to
reach our goal and we can use
every bit of help we can get. If
you would like to help us in our
fight to eliminate maternal and
neo-natal tetanus, simply send
a check to Middlesex Kiwanis
at P.O. Box 314, Urbanna, VA
23175, and indicate on the
memorandum section of the
check, “Project Eliminate.”
Over the past few years,
every
dollar
Middlesex
Kiwanis has earned through
our fund-raising efforts has
gone to help the children of
Middlesex and Mathews counties. We have pledged that will
not change. Funds raised for
Project Eliminate will come
from separate fund-raising
efforts.
MNT has been eliminated
in seven countries through
the efforts of UNICEF and
Kiwanis. They are China, East
Timor, Tanzania, Guinea-Bissau, Burkina-Faso, Liberia and
Senegal.
Marketing plan workshops set
Learn the components of
a great marketing plan and
how to write one at a workshop on Tuesday, April 2, at
Rappahannock
Community
College’s Warsaw Campus.
“What is a Marketing Plan?”
will be held from 9-11:30
a.m. in Room 156, and “How
to Create Your Social Media
Plan” will be held from noon2:30 p.m. in Room 204.
Conducting the workshops
Sentinel office
is closed on
Good Friday
will be Sandra Tanner, partnership marketing development
specialist from the Virginia
Tourism Corporation.
The workshops are sponsored
by the Northern Neck Tourism
Commission in partnership
with the Virginia Tourism Corporation, Rappahannock Community College Workforce and
Community
Development,
Northern Neck Planning District Commission, and Northern Neck Chesapeake Bay
Region Partnership.
Dr. Paul C. Reber, chairman of the Northern Neck
Tourism Commission, noted,
“the commission’s objective in
holding these workshops is to
help small businesses increase
their marketing reach to attract
more visitors to stay longer,
and spend more money in the
Northern Neck [and Middle
Peninsula].”
The workshops are free and
open to the public, but registration is required. To register, call
804-333-1919 or email nntc@
northernneck.org.
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Red roof museum pavilion
Roof panel installation began on the east side of the South Pavilion Wing at The Deltaville Maritime Museum this week.
Above, volunteer and pavilion project manager Chuck McGhinnis (left) eyeballs the alignment of the new section. Museum
staffers, from left, D.J. Washington and Glen Northrop adjust and prepare to screw the metal panel in place. Visible to the
right is the completed roofing on the north side of the North Wing. Work on the roofing will continue this week, weather
permitting, until the building is dried in.
academy news
In a school where intellectual
curiosity is valued, it’s essential
to have teachers who model
their love of learning both in
and outside the classroom.
Each week, Chesapeake Academy teachers offer students in
grades 3-8 a variety of activity
period choices that expose students to new experiences in a
fun and productive way.
Whether it be a passion for
international cooking, magic,
drama, movie-making, warfare,
knitting, Spanish or fashion,
activity period offerings let
students in mixed age groups
engage creatively with each
other and their teachers while
building stronger relationships
that are based on shared interests.
Just weeks into the third
marking period, students in
Julia Zimmerman and Kim
Dynia’s War Games Class have
survived a variety of competitions and challenges designed
to get them thinking about any
one of the following: strategy,
subterfuge, the strengths and
weaknesses of one’s opponents,
alliances, and the benefits of
camouflage.
“We played chess, designed
camouflage outfits, ran obstacle
courses with and without team
support, worked in alliances to
disable our enemies by popping
balloons tied to their ankles—
you name it, we tried it,” noted
Dynia, whose final challenge
to the 14-member, mixed-gender group was an all-out, no
boundaries Nurf war.
Equally challenging and
rewarding was the Scavenger
Hunt Activity Class offered
by school academic dean Julia
Keesee, who armed her mixedaged student teams with iPads.
Students had to locate and
scan QR codes strategically
placed around the campus that
unveiled riddles and problemsolving challenges.
Students in Sonja’s Smith’s
International Foods Class
learned to relate food to culture and geography by creating a variety of meals from
different countries. Using their
already honed measuring and
direction-following skills, student made kabobs with locallyprocured venison, which was
a big hit. Both meals required
the students and Mrs. Smith to
use new techniques and less
familiar ingredients.
Mrs. Smith also led the inaugural Project Osprey Activity
Period that brought a bevy of
girls together in the art room
for creative clothing design and
construction using a variety of
materials. “The girls worked
beautifully together, especially
the older ones with the younger
ones, helping them learn to
sew, bead, take measurements,
and make a pattern,” Smith
explained.
Students involved in the
Community Service group
worked with 4th and 5th grade
teacher Kelsey Herman to
complete tasks that were meaningful to members of the local
community. “We read to the
YMCA preschool class, sorted
food at the local food bank,
and picked up trash around our
campus,” explained fifth grader
Chas Faulkner, who liked being
in the role of big brother to the
younger students. Referring to
the group’s time at the Food
Bank, Chas commented, “It
was neat to see how much food
gets donated and how important it is to the community.” For
Mrs. Herman, the experience
was equally rewarding. “I loved
watching students come to life
as they helped others. Working
with or for people really makes
the kids ‘tick.’ They put their
hearts into everything they do,
and it is a beautiful thing to be
a part of,” she said.
Avid photographer and CA
science teacher Paul McAllister
enjoyed sharing his knowledge
of lighting and composition
with students interested in
refining their skills in portrait
and still life photography. One
thing revealed after the sixweek course: “Girls are much
more interested in taking
photos of small details while
boys tend to enjoy capturing
the bigger picture,” he noted.
Mr. McAllister also led an
Activity Period class titled
“Junk Box” that gave students the opportunity to take a
random assortment of household junk and work collaboratively to complete design
challenges. Favorite projects
included the construction of
bridges, marshmallow shooters, and balloon-powered cars.
Equally engaging was the
Games Activity Period offered
by math teacher Ted Cook.
Playing in mixed-age groups,
students challenged each
other in Boggle, Rummikub,
Blokus, Skip-Bo, Jenga, Dominoes, Mancala, and Scrabble.
While to the kids the purpose
seemed to simply have fun, Mr.
Cook thoroughly enjoyed the
“hidden” rewards of the weekly
gathering: honing student skills
in strategy, visual perception,
geometry, and dexterity.
Of great interest to students
of both genders and grades was
Mrs. Dynia’ Volcanoes activity class. Starting with models
made of mashed potatoes, students experimented with different types of eruptions using
a variety of ingredients like
Mentos, Diet Coke, vinegar,
baking soda, and elephant
toothpaste.
Being that Mrs. D’s passion
is ancient history, students were
tasked to design and construct
models of mountains with
historically-recorded eruptions
such as Vesuvius and Mount
St. Helens. “I loved seeing
students work through problems,” noted Mrs. Dynia. “If
a tested eruption didn’t work
as planned, they had to figure
out how to change the shape
of their mountain or the proportions of their chemistry in
order to make it work the way
they wanted to.”
Beth Somers and Kelly Antonio teamed up to offer a Drama
activity class. For information,
visit chesapeakeacademy.org.
Six-week grief support
group to meet Tuesday
Riverside Walter Reed Hospice will sponsor a six-week
grief support group using the
book “Understanding Your
Grief: Ten Essential Touchstones for ‘Finding Hope and
Healing Your Heart’ by Dr.
Alan Wolfelt, Ph.D.
This group is open to anyone
in the community who has lost
a loved one and would like to
join a group of people who are
experiencing similar feelings
of loss.
Group size is limited to 10
people who have lost a loved
one. There is no charge for the
group.
The next group session at
Riverside Walter Reed will be
held at 6 p.m. on the following dates: April 2, 9, 16, 23
and 30, and May 7. Please call
693-1111 to reserve a seat.
RCC’s Ghimire to receive award
A Rappahannock Community College associate professor of accounting and business,
Pradeep Ghimire, has recently
been nominated to receive
one of the National Institute
for Staff and Organizational
Development (NISOD) Excellence Awards.
Ghimire will attend NISOD’s
35th annual International Conference on Teaching and Leadership Excellence in Austin,
Texas, May 26-29, and will
receive a medallion and certificate commemorating his
achievement.
The academic dean of RCC’s
Glenns Campus, Robert Griffin, cites Ghimire’s “positive
attitude with students, his willingness to teach at multiple
locations and in different for-
mats, and his work developing online accounting courses
and submitting them for peer
review” as factors influencing
the college to choose him for
this honor.
Warsaw Campus dean Patricia Mullins said, “His contributions to updating the accounting
certificate program, and creating new accounting courses for
the revised business management degree.”
Ghimire joined RCC in Fall
2010 with a wealth of knowledge, experience, and honors to
his credit. He holds the degrees
of bachelor of engineering in
mechanical engineering from
India’s Bhopal University, and
master of business administration from the University of
Mississippi.
Who dohouseyou
call
for...
painting?
Get your
service
noticed!
plumbing problems?
help with yard work?
legal advice?
cleaning the pool?
fixing a leaky roof?
grading the driveway?
home repairs/remodeling?
servicing the heat or AC?
cleaning the house?
Who can help?
If the answer is YOU, let people know by joining
the Business & Professional Directory appearing
in the Southside Sentinel every week.
Call (804) 758-2328 now!
March 28, 2013 • Southside Sentinel • Urbanna, Va.• B5
Girl Scout day camp set
at Camp Kittamaqund
Girl Scouts of the Commonwealth of Virginia Council (GSCV) is pleased to
announce that it will hold a day
camp at Camp Kittamaqund in
Northumberland County June
17-21 from 9 a.m.-4 p.m. each
day. The programs are for girls
entering grades 1-12.
After a hugely successful reopening in 2008, Camp
Kittamaqund,
affectionately
known as Camp Kitty, is going
to be open for business again.
All Girl Scouts in the Northern
Neck and Middle Peninsula
are welcome to attend the day
camp.
There will be lots of activities for the girls, including an
age-appropriate climbing wall
and ropes course challenge,
swimming in the pool each
day, canoeing, singing, hiking,
and creating arts and crafts
projects. Lunch and a snack
will be provided each day. At
the end of the week, the girls
will receive a customized camp
patch.
In addition to day camp,
several weeks of resident, or
overnight, camp programs
are offered in July. Programs
include: Smooth Sailing, Elite
Mariners and Shutterbugs.
GSCV’s camp programs may
be viewed online at www.comgirlscouts.org. Click on the
COMAR button in the middle
of the page, and then click on
Camp Activities.
The cost of the day camp
is $130 for Girl Scout members. To join Girl Scouts to
attend camp, visit www.comgirlscouts.org and click on
Membership Registration to
register, and pay the $12 joining fee. Space is limited so
make sure to register soon.
For more information contact Wendy Mataya at 4620322 or email wmataya@
comgirlscouts.org; or for more
information on camp or to register, please call the council at
800-472-6884.
RILL course to
trace genealogy
New location for Lowe Tide
Lowe Tide, a store that specializes in fine clothing, jewelry
and gifts, has moved its location to 260 Virginia Street in
the building that formerly housed Papeterie. Lowe Tide was
previously in the 51 Cross Street building. The new store
location has 1,700 square feet and allows ample room to
spaciously display its items. Lowe Tide has a “Coastal Living”
theme and features Lilly Pulitzer Clothing, exclusive to the
Rivah area. Store owner Karen Lowe thanked her staff and
other friends and volunteers who helped with the move.
“My heart was and is overflowing with gratitude to everyone who helped in so many ways. Thank you Urbanna! “
she said. Above, Lowe Tide employees stand in front of the
new location. They are, from left, Kenleighe Longest, Sarah
Grace Hurley, store owner Karen Lowe, Peper Heunemann
and Susan Ray Silver.
RWC receives
significant gifts Signup begins for
Rappahannock
Westminster-Canterbury (RWC) president Stuart Bunting recently
announced that the RWC
Foundation has been designated the recipient of a significant bequest and several
major grants that will allow
the organization to enhance
services and provide support to
residents at the continuing care
community in Irvington.
RWC has received $91,000
from the estate of Calvin
Meadows, a former resident,
to underwrite a program in
memory support.
The Lettie Pate Whitehead
Foundation of Atlanta, which
provides financial assistance
in nine southeastern states to
schools, colleges and a small
number of select retirement
communities serving women,
has made its largest award
to date to RWC, a grant of
$108,000. RWC vice president
for development Whiz Harris
said, “The Whitehead Foundation’s gift will be used to support fellowships for women
residents.”
Two Richmond-area foundations have also made notable
gifts. The Gertrude M. Conduff Foundation, created to
support organizations that promote independent living for
the elderly and those with special needs, has made an award
to RWC for the third time in
seven years.
For the first time, RWC has
received a gift from the Overton & Katherine Dennis Fund,
which supports non-profit
organizations in the region.
“These gifts validate the
work we are doing at RWC,”
said Bunting. “We are grateful for the generosity shown to
us, and intend to remain wise
stewards of any contributions
that allow us to improve the
quality of life for our residents
and the community at large.”
Jessup completes training
ty
ali
Tree Ser
v
ic e
Qu
Navy Seaman Recruit Brandon S. Jessup, son of Dolores M. Field of Urbanna and
Jeffery S. Jessup, of Dutton,
recently completed U.S. Navy
basic training at Recruit Training Command, Great Lakes,
Ill.
During the 8-week program,
Jessup completed a variety
of training, which included
All phases of tree care
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758-3407
classroom study and practical
instruction on naval customs,
first aid, firefighting, water
safety and survival, and shipboard and aircraft safety. An
emphasis was also placed on
physical fitness.
Jessup is a 2012 graduate of
Middlesex High School.
Small business
services offered
The University of Mary
Washington Small Business
Development Center-Warsaw
will provide confidential consulting at the Rappahannock
Community College Kilmarnock Center each Tuesday
from 1-3 p.m. This will enable
the center to provide area small
business owners with consulting services. Call 804-3330286 for details.
‘Bark for Life’ event
Fighting cancer has gone to
the dogs!
The American
Cancer
Society (ACS) is pleased to
announce the first Bark For
Life of Middle Peninsula
event being held on Saturday,
April 20, from 9 a.m.-noon at
Beaverdam Park (Fary’s Mill
Road entrance) in Gloucester.
The registration fee is $20
for one dog/owner and $15
for additional dogs. Bark For
Life is a family-fun event
for all dog lovers. It honors
and celebrates the relationship between cancer survivors
and their beloved dogs that
care and provide hope during
the cancer journey of their
owners.
“Canines care. Give hope.
Save lives. Canine companions represent unconditional
love, joy, security, compassion, and no judgments of
human abilities or appearances,” said ACS representative Lisa Goodall. “Bark For
Life is an incredible way to
‘take a bite out of cancer.’ So
partner with your canine best
friend, join us, and make new
canine and human friends at
this fun-filled event.”
Register at relayforlife.org/
mathewsva, under the “Bark
Jacob’s Ladder
Golf Classic set
The 20th annual Jacob’s
Ladder Golf Classic will be
held Friday, May 17, at the
Golden Eagle Golf Course
in Irvington. Online registration is available at jladder.org.
On the day of the tournament
registration will be at 10:30
a.m. and contests of skills will
follow at 11 a.m.
The shotgun start is at 12:30
p.m. There will be lunch, oncourse refreshments and an
awards dinner.
For Life” team. For more
information, contact Carolyn
Royals at 804-725-8552.
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Sentinel: 804-758-2328
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Dr. Hilary Derby
family history, and history, and
has completed three genealogical missions for the Mormon
Church. She is a member
of several genealogical and
hereditary societies and associations.
Advance registration, with
a tuition payment of $35, is
required to take this course.
For more information on “Discover Your Family History”
and other RILL courses, or to
register, call Sharon Drotleff
at RCC’s Educational Foundation office (804-333-6707, or
toll-free at 877-722-3679), or
email her at [email protected].
Chesapeake Medical Group in Hartfield is able to fly patients to hospitals that can best
take care of their critical or acute conditions.
CMG urgent care office offers
treatment options for patients
by Tom Chillemi
Chesapeake Medical Group
in Hartfield is a primary care
and urgent care office that is
open 6 days a week from 7
a.m. to 7 p.m. “We get a lot
of the urgent care traffic out
of Deltaville,” said Dr. Matt
Jaeger.
The office often sees walkin patients, and patients with
emerging serious medical
conditions. “Sometimes they
say, ‘I didn’t think I would
make it to the hospital emergency department.’ ” said Dr.
Jaeger.
Dr. Jaeger’s office has seen
quite a few emergencies, most
involving heart attacks or
Gloucester Museum
announces exhibits
The Gloucester Museum
of History 2013 daffodil
exhibit “Golden Memories”
will continue to be on display
through May 4. It features
photos and relics related to
the Gloucester County daffodil posters will be on display in the museum basement
which will be open April 6, 7
and 13. Visitors will have the
opportunity to enjoy the posters as well as the farm equipment and household items
used by local citizens as far
back as the mid 1800’s.
The summer 2013 exhibit,
“The Good Old Days,” will be
featured from May 1 to September 30. It includes household items, clothing, toys,
photos, tools, and numerous
other items that were used
in Gloucester County from
the late 1800s to the mid
190’s. Visitors will be able
to visualize the way life was
before electric wiring, indoor
plumbing, television, and air
conditioning,
when fami-
The Rappahannock Community College Educational
Foundation’s Rappahannock
Institute for Lifelong Learning
(RILL) turns to genealogy for
its latest offering. Dr. Hilary
Derby will present “Discover
Your Family History” on April
3, 10, and 17 (Wednesdays),
1-3 p.m., at the headquarters
of the Northumberland Historical Society, 86 Back Street,
Heathsville.
For individuals who are eager
to reconstruct their family stories, but lack the necessary
skills and knowledge, this
basic course will show how to
use available resources for that
purpose. Students will learn to
organize their search, and to
examine records both in historical libraries and archives,
and on the internet. They will
investigate birth and death
certificates, wills, and family
Bibles, as well as census, military, and other primary records,
in order to identify their ancestors and build a family tree.
Dr. Derby is an active genealogist who compiled information for the book “Rocks of
Ages” by Prosser Crowther Jr.,
and is currently at work on her
own book, “Northumberland
County, VA Birth Records
1853-1896.”
Dr. Derby holds undergraduate and graduate degrees
in architectural engineering,
lies milked their own cows,
raised their own vegetables,
fried their own chicken,
slopped hogs, cranked ice
cream freezers, made clothes
from feed sacks, repaired
their own shoes, made bread
at home, and cut their own
firewood.
The museum houses numerous other permanent exhibits,
which include the “Battle of
the Hook” exhibit, “Captain
John Smith’s 1608 Christmas
journey to Gloucester,” “The
Old Country Store,” “Irene
Morgan,” “The HoneyPod
Tree,” “The Hotel Botetourt,”
“Gremer
Doll
Houses,”
“James D. Gardner,” “Warner
Hall,” “Free School House,”
“Fairfield,” and more.
The museum is in the historic Botetourt Building at
6539 Main Street.
It is open 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Monday through Saturday.
Admission is free.
For appointments or tours,
call 693-1234.
strokes. “We have an advantage over hospital emergency
departments in one way; we
are not bound by the regulations that prohibit transferring
patients to another facility
until they are stabilized,” he
explained.
“Chesapeake Medical works
very well with the volunteer
rescue squads which have
protocols regarding unstable
patients who fit certain criteria, such as specific types of
heart attacks,” said Dr. Jaeger.
“When patients meet the
urgent transfer criteria, rather
than transport the patient to the
emergency department, Chesapeake Medical transports
patients with a Life Flight
helicopter from West Point,
or a Nightingale helicopter
based at Sentara Hospital.
Patients are flown to a nearby
tertiary care hospital that can
best take care of their critical
or acute condition. Several
have been wheeled in directly
for cardiac catheterization or
even open-heart surgery.The
outcomes have been tremendous for these folks!”
Flights to Richmond or
Newport News hospitals take
only 15-20 minutes.
The Hartfield Volunteer Fire
Department and Middlesex
Sheriff ’s Office have a protocol for the landing of helicopters that has worked well
at the Chesapeake Medical
Group office in Hartfield.
Stuck?
Call Chuck!
1-800-DOTOWIN
Joseph L. Burton
(804) 824-1886
[email protected]
B6 • Southside Sentinel • Urbanna, Va. • March 28, 2013
CLASSIFIEDS
These ads reach over 11,000 readers in print each week
and get over 4,000 page views online each month!
Place your ad today – here’s how:
Phone: (804) 758-2328 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. weekdays
Online 24/7: Go to SSentinel.com. Click on Classifieds, then the Submit Ad button.
Email 24/7: classifi[email protected]
Mail: Southside Sentinel, PO Box 549, Urbanna, Va. 23175
Real Estate
For Rent
For Sale
Boats/Motors
Help Wanted
Help Wanted
2.5 ACRE LOT in the Hillcrest Subdivision in Wake. Woods on two sides.
Septic and well permits all ready.
$48,000. 758-9691.(2-21-13t)
HORSE BOARDING: New openings
now available @ $400 per month.
www.pidlinacres.com 804-7581555.(8-30-tf)
SEASONAL Yard Help wanted.
Apply in person at Chesapeake Boat
Works, 548 Deagles Rd., Deltaville.
(3-28-3t)
BOAT SLIP: Urbanna Harbor Yacht
Club. Extra large slip just down from
clubhouse & pool. $49,900. Call
804-366-5426. Financing available.
(3-21-tf)
HOUSE IN DELTAVILLE, Stingray
Point area. 2 bedrooms, 1½ baths,
den, family room, deck, kitchen,
utility room with washer/dryer, central AC/heat. Maximum: 3 people.
Large yard. Water access and dock
privileges for boat. $775 month
plus deposit and references. Available 2/1/13. Call 804-815-1453.
(1-10-tfRR)
WE ARE SELLING BOATS! Chesapeake Yacht Sales @ Deltaville
Yachting Center, Virginia’s Dealer
for Catalina Yachts, Mainship
Trawlers & Carolina Classics.
LARGE INVENTORY PREOWNED
POWER & SAIL. 804-776-9898.
www.cysboat.com
WE
TAKE
TRADES & MAKE DEALS ON
NEW BOATS!(3-15-tfRR)
HVAC DUCT MECHANIC: 5 years
experience preferred. Call Ryman’s,
Inc. AC & Heating, Urbanna, 804758-2978. (3-21-2tRR)
499Flat.com Flat Fee MLS Listing
Service. Save thousands when you
sell with us! Investors Realty of Virginia, 804-551-1816.(2-14-tf)
ANTIQUE Eastlake Walnut Furniture: Marble top sideboard; marble
top table with matching mirror; 4
upholstered chairs. Also, Victorian
Rosewood settee frame. 804-7585349.(3-28-2tRR)
LIVE-IN PERSONAL CARE
Live-in Personal Care Aides needed.
Must be able to live with client for 3-4
days per week. Clean background
check. 18+ years with references.
$100/day. Must have passion for
seniors and reliable transportation.
Please send resume to: Brandi@
StayatHomePC.com (3-28-2t)
TOPPING: PRICE REDUCED!
2.5AC lot. 220’ stocked pond frontage. Minutes to marina, golf, airport,
restaurants, shopping. 4BR perc.
protective covenants. $67,500.
Walter Lawson, Mason Realty, 804832-9109.(3-28-1t)
IN THE HEART OF SALUDA:
2BR, 1 bath duplex unit. Kitchen
appliances included. $750 month
plus utilities. References & deposit
required. Call 804-758-5391(w) or
804-815-8867(c). Available 5-1-13.
(3-21-tf)
STAFF NURSE: RW-C is currently
accepting applications for a full time
Registered Nurse in our Healthcare
Center. Position requires the ability
to work a flexible schedule including
evenings and weekends as needed.
Previous nursing experience preferred. Competitive pay with a great
benefits package offered. For more
information or to apply contact
the Human Resources Department, Rappahannock WestminsterCanterbury, 132 Lancaster Drive,
Irvington, VA 22480, 804-438-4244,
or fax your resume to 804-438-4089.
(3-28-1t)
VISIT www.coastalproperties.com
for all your real estate needs or call
Irvin Shackelford at Mason Realty,
804-815-8400.(3-7-tf)
LOCUST HILL / SALUDA: 4 bedrooms, 2 full baths with bonus
room. Large fenced yard. Efficient
heat pump; fireplace. All appliances
including washer/ dryer. $1,100 mo.
$1,100 deposit. No smoking. Pets
nego. with separate deposit. Call or
text Kim 804-543-5195.(3-21-4t)
WAKE: Lot #4, cleared homesite.
4.0 ACRES. Captains Quarters
Lane. Use your own Builder. Below
tax assmt. $65,000. Hometown
Realty, 804-240-0600.(1-12-tf)
2BR & 3BR APT. in Urbanna. Starting at $675. EHO. Call 445-5344.
(3-21-3t)
MARINER’S POINT Waterfront
Condo: Spacious 2bedroom, 2bath,
vaulted ceiling, great-room w/fireplace, furnished, upscale community, pool, tennis courts, covered
parking, deepwater boat slip available. $1,200/mo. 804-586-3368.
(2-7-tf)
3 BEDROOMS, den/4th bedroom,
living & dining rooms, kitchen, 2
baths. Amenities include maintained
pool, dock. Lease $1,150. Sale
$229,500 negotiable. Owner financing. 804-776-9895. (2-28-tf)
OFFICES at Saluda Motor Court
near P.O. & courthouse. Off-street
parking. Starting at $250 per month.
Includes utilities. Call Zani Autry,
owner/agent, 804-512-8350.(3-74t)
3’ MLW CHICK COVE Waterfront
to Piankatank. 2BR, 2BA (1/2 of
duplex). $1,150 lease, security
deposit, appliances, garage, deck,
dock (cable, wifi, utilities $300). No
smoking. 757-293-8482.(3-28-2t)
OPEN DEEPWATER BOAT SLIPS,
Urbanna Creek. $1,200/year, water
& electric included. Call 804-7582663. (3-14-tf))
For Rent
DELTAVILLE MOBILE HOME LOT
for rent across from Chesapeake
Cove Marina on Greens Cove Road.
804-370-4237.(9-29-tf)
DELTAVILLE: Jackson Creek. Furnished 1-bedroom house. Deepwater boat slip, near yacht club. Walk-in
closet, washer/dryer, fireplace.
Utilities included. Adults only. References. 804-824-4304.(12-6-tf)
EXECUTIVE OFFICES: Rent one
office or a suite of offices. On
Route 3 beside Hummel Airport.
Furnished is Electricity, Heat and Air
Conditioning. High speed internet,
phone and TV cabled to each office.
Various sizes with a 12x12 renting
for $158 per month. Call Ms. Leo
804-370-4674 or Oscar 804-3705555.(1-19-tf)
GUEST QUARTERS: 3 bedrooms,
2 baths, washer, dryer, dishwasher.
On river in Hartfield. Available now!
$850 per month. 804-694-6528.
(3-7-4t)
HARTFIELD: 3 bedrooms, living
room, eat-in kitchen, utility room
with hook-ups, attached garage.
$800 monthly. Security deposit and
background check required. 7760727.(3-28-1t)
NICE 2 Bedroom, 2 Bath in Urbanna.
No smoking, no pets. $750 per
month. $750 deposit. 1 year lease
required. Call 804-690-4980.(3-212t)
TOTALLY PRIVATE, long driveway
to historic 3BR, 2BA, 2½ story w/
basement on Robinson Creek near
Urbanna. AC. $995 month. Year
lease. 804-399-3550.(12-6-tf)
TOWN OF URBANNA: 3 Office/
Commercial spaces available.
1500sf, 800sf and 300sf with storefront. Rent single space, or multiple
with discount. Call 804-758-2037 or
804-694-7365.(5-19-tf)
URBANNA’S
18th
CENTURY
Gressitt House. Storybook opportunity @ your choice: $1,100 month
year round or $1,500 month April to
November. 3 BRs; Spacious eat-in
kitchen; LR; den; 2 porches; level,
easy entertain backyard; historic
ambience. John Ryland, son of
owner, John Ryland & Associates,
Realtors, 757-871-1224.(12-13-tf)
BOAT SLIP: Urbanna Harbor Yacht
Club. Extra large slip just down from
clubhouse & pool. $49,900. Call
804-366-5426. Financing available.
(3-21-tf)
FILL DIRT. $90/load delivered.
30-mile radius from Saluda. 7582800.(6-30-tf)
FREE FIREWOOD, Saluda. Trees
down. You cut up and haul away.
804-758-4076.(3-28-2t)
INFRARED HEATER: LifeSmart,
heats up to 1,500sq.ft. area. Oak
cabinet, remote control, new. $125.
Call 758-0536.(3-14-3t)
TV ANTENNA, long range, 22
channels, local news. Digital high
definition. Amplifier included. New.
$45. Call 804-815-9159.(3-14-4t)
Yard Sales
A BIG SALE! Furniture and accessories. March 30, 9a.m. until 1:30p.m.
at Pat’s Gallery, Deltaville.(3-28-1t)
INDOOR / OUTDOOR. 1847 Remlik
Dr., Urbanna. Sat., March 30, 8 to
12.(3-28-1t)
MOVING SALE: Delaware Storage
Unit 324, March 30, 9a.m. to 12
noon. 10’ inflatable boat w/15HP
motor w/trailer, excellent. 11’ wood
sailboat w/dolly, 9’ surfboard, cement
mixer and tools. Home decor, new/
vintage fishing gear. 7962 General
Puller Hwy., Topping. 804-761-4881.
(3-28-1tRR)
Queens Creek FLEA MARKET,
open 8-4 Saturdays only, until midApril. Heated, clean, pleasant. $15
tables/spaces available. Hold your
winter yard sales here! 804-7254055.(1-10-13tRR)
URBANNA AUCTION CO: Auction
every other Thursday 6p.m. Preview 4p.m. Furniture, antiques,
collectibles, household. Call to
consign your items. www.auctionzip.com dealer #18047 for
pictures.
Urbanna, 804-7580909 or 804-296-5752. Matthew
Elliott, VAAL#3760. Terry Smith,
VAAL#3762.(3-28-EOW)
Boats/Motors
15FT. RUNABOUT by Logic. Suzuki
9.9 motor, gas tank, fuel hose, etc.
VGC. Ready to go “creek crawling”
or fishing! $2,200. Call 776-9084 to
see.(3-21-2tRR)
Marine Services
BOAT SLIP: Urbanna Harbour Yacht
Club. Open slip. Sailboat depth.
Water & electric hook-ups. Parking.
Bath house + pool privileges. $125
month with 12-month min. 804-4362973 or 804-436-2591.(3-28-2t)
MARINE SURVEYS. Peter W.
Schacht Co. 804-824-4102.(2-21tf)
QUEENS CREEK MARINA: Home
to Sailboaters. Minutes to Fishing Bay. 7’ MLW. Open slips, new
raised roof boat shed. Dock/electric
upgraded. 804-240-8670 or email:
[email protected] (1-10-13t)
Help Wanted
BANK OF LANCASTER has an
opening for a full time Network
Administrator (system engineer).
College diploma or university degree
in the field of computer science
or information technology and/or
minimum 5 years equivalent work
experience in the IT field required.
Demonstrate a thorough working
knowledge of installing/ configuring/
managing: network and communications infrastructure, server & workstation hardware as well as system
and business application software,
security appliances/ device controls,
and associated peripherals. Applicant must possess excellent organizational skills, adequately document
information, work independently and
be able to analyze/ resolve network/
server & end-user hardware &
software problems in a timely and
accurate fashion. Resumes should
be sent to: Human Resources, P.O.
Box 1869, Kilmarnock, VA 22482.
An Equal Opportunity / Affirmative
Action Employer.(3-28-2t)
CERTIFIED NURSING ASSISTANT: Rappahannock Westminster
Canterbury is currently accepting
applications for Certified Nursing
Assistants on a part-time basis
in our Health Care Center and in
Home Care. Positions require the
ability to work a flexible schedule
including evenings and weekends.
Experience preferred. Interested
applicants should apply to the
Human Resources Department,
Rappahannock Westminster Canterbury, 132 Lancaster Drive, Irvington,
VA 22480.(3-28-1t)
Vacation Rentals
1973 CATALINA 27 Sailboat. Make
an offer! 804-832-0334.(2-21-tf)
WATERFRONT COTTAGE: Pier,
beach, AC/heat, fireplace, two
bedrooms, screened porch, canoe.
www.Rivahvacations.com for information and pictures. (804)7415511 evenings. Summer $800/
week.(4-19-52t)
26FT. S2 SLOOP, 15h.p. inboard
engine. Make offer. 804-758-2663.
(3-14-3t)
DANO’S PIZZA is hiring all positions. Please apply at 10880 General Puller Highway, Hartfield. 804776-8031.(3-21-2tRR)
BOAT SLIP: Urbanna Harbor Yacht
Club. Extra large slip just down from
clubhouse & pool. $49,900. Call
804-366-5426. Financing available.
(3-21-tf)
GENERAL CONTRACTOR hiring
carpenter position. Must have valid
drivers license. Call 804-758-2037.
(3-21-2tRR)
For Sale
ALL SEASONED 15-Month Oak.
$110 trailer load. Delivered and
stacked. 804-758-3858 or 804-4455300. (1-24-13t)
BOAT TRAILER: 1987 Load Rite,
galvanized. $900. 804-832-0334.
(2-21-tf)
GENERAL CONTRACTOR hiring
laborer position. Must have valid
drivers license. Call 804-758-2037.
(3-21-2tRR)
Classified Ad Deadline: 12 Noon on Tuesday
LOCAL CONTRACTOR looking for
a Class A CDL truck driver. Must be
self-motivated. Equipment operating
skills a plus. Call 804-815-6343.
(3-21-tfRR)
MARINA ASSISTANT MANAGER
for Regatta Point Yaching Center,
Deltaville. Position available with
varied responsibilities including
customer relations, clerical and
billings, sales, marketing, events
and other marina and dock related
activities. Computer proficiency in
Quickbooks, Excel, Office, graphics
and social media required. Varying
schedule including partial or some
weekends. Boating skills and experience a must. Email resume and
qualifications for this position to:
[email protected] (3-21-3tRR)
MAXIM HEALTHCARE Services
specializes in Private Duty Nursing
services in the Home Health setting.
We are looking for qualified field
employees (RNs, LPNs, CNAs,
PCAs) to help our patients. If you
are interested in our opportunities
please call our office at 757-5958822.(3-14-4t)
PT/FT Job Opportunities: Fun job
in fast paced carry-out restaurant.
Must have transportation, work
weekends, good work ethic & attitude. References. Call 804-8244042.(3-21-3t)
PUBLIC HEALTH NURSE
(#00594)
The Virginia Department of Health
seeks a full time Public Health
Nurse in the Three Rivers Health
District. This position will be based
in Lancaster County and will require
local travel within the district. Knowledge of general nursing and preventive health measures and experience performing standard nursing
practice skills required. Valid nursing
license required. Applicants must
have a valid driver’s license.
To see complete ad and apply,
go to www.vdh.virginia.gov Only
online applications are accepted
& must be submitted by 5:00 p.m.
4/9/2013. VDH is an Equal Opportunity Employer. (3-28-2t)
SPANISH LANGUAGE
INTERPRETER
Rural Infant Service Program (RISP)
is seeking interpreter on as needed
basis for families of young children
with special needs during service
delivery. RISP central office is in
Urbanna, VA with services primarily
home-based in Middle Peninsula
Northern Neck. Must be fluent
in Spanish and have experience
interpreting; must be able to travel
with staff for home visits periodically
throughout region; must be able
to translate written reports. For
application call MPNN Community
Services Board, 804-758-5314 or
800-693-9667. For additional information, call 800-305-2229. An Equal
Opportunity Employer. (3-28-1t)
UTILITY AID: RW-C is currently
accepting applications for parttime Utility Aids in the Dining Services Department. Responsibilities
include dishwashing, general cleaning of kitchen areas, delivery and
retrieval of tray carts and meals.
Individuals must be dependable
and have the ability to work nights
and weekends. Candidates may
apply to the Human Resources
Department, Rappahannock Westminster Canterbury, 132 Lancaster
Drive, Irvington, VA 22480.(3-281t)
Work Wanted
EXPERIENCED Senior Asst., Companion. Mature and responsible,
with references. Currently available Tues. from 8a.m. until 3p.m.
and Thurs. from 8a.m. until 12p.m.
I reside in the town of Urbanna and
seek work reasonably close by.
Barbara, 631-889-2653.(3-21-2t)
Wanted
BUYING OLDER CARS, small
trucks that run, junk, unwanted
cars. $135 and up, CASH. No title.
Same day removal. General, high
performance repairs available.
804-824-1718.(3-7-13t)
Business Services
*A JOANN’S House Cleaning Service. Reasonable rates. 804-4453527.(2-7-13t)
A ACTION Housecleaning by
Ronda Mae Dependable. 804-3848744.(2-7-13t)
A JUNK YARD DOG: Sell or donate
(tax receipt) your treasures! We pick
up. Great rates. Sterling references.
Get organized! Call today! FREE
estimates. 804-758-4727.(3-7-tf)
A SPECIAL TOUCH: Karen’s Cleaning Service, home, office, new
construction. Competitive rates,
licensed and references available.
804-758-4705 or 804-512-9021.
[email protected] (3-21-13t)
AFFORDABLE LAWN CARE by
Brandon Putney. Monthly, weekly,
bi-weekly, or as needed. Power
washing, debris and leaf removal.
Reasonable rates. Licensed and
insured. 804-832-1797.(3-28-13t)
B. ROY HENNIGAR, Painting contractor serving Middlesex County for
30 yrs. Interior and exterior painting.
Free estimates. 804-776-6497.
(12-6-26t)
BUSINESS DIRECTORY
Got a service? Need customers?
Call (804) 758-2328 today to get your directory listing in front of
over 11,000 potential customers each week!
Handyman Services
Mary Lee Walden, Mgr.
P.O. Box 1174
Deltaville, VA 23043
Tel: 804-776-6602
Fax: 804-776-9476
Cell: 804-824-4232
!54/',!332%0,!#%-%.4sROCK CHIP REPAIR
DRYWALLsDECKSsSHEDSsSIDING
PAINTING-INTERIOR & EXTERIOR
HONEY DO LISTsTRIMsGUTTERS
Bryan McCauley
(804) 776-9487
NO JOB TOO SMALL
Call Merle - 804-815-0701
J.P.L.
Septic Tanks Pumped, Drain Lines
and Distribution Boxes Cleaned
Sand & Gravel • Grass Cutting
Tree Removal • Top Soil
Debris Removal
Carlton H. Brownley
Free Estimates • (804) 758-4818
Hartfield, VA 23071
Phone: Day - 776-9485
Night - 776-6055
Maid For Work
Dawn West
PS
5PMM'SFF
General House Cleaning
4IPXSPPNCZ"QQPJOUNFOU
References Available
.BSZ#BMM3PBE
-JWFMZ7JSHJOJB
757-725-0829
,OCALLY/WNED/PERATEDBY
*ULIEAND!RTIE2ANSOME
Licensed & Insured
CLASSIFIED ADS GET RESULTS!
March 28, 2013 • Southside Sentinel • Urbanna, Va.• B7
USCG Auxiliary to offer safe boater class in Urbanna
U.S. Coast Guard Auxiliary Flotilla 62 of Deltaville
will offer an “About Boating
Safety” class in the Urbanna
Woman’s Club at 210 Virginia
St. in Urbanna on Saturday,
April 13, from 9 a.m.-5 p.m.
There will be a 45-minute
break for lunch (on your own).
Evening boating safety
classes will be offered at
the USCG Auxiliary Training Center, 83 Ball Park Rd.,
Deltaville, on April 16 and
23 (two 4-hour classes) from
6:30-10:30 p.m.
Either of these classes will
enable boaters to meet the Virginia requirements for a boater
safety course.
Business Services
Notices
COMPUTER PROFESSIONAL
SERVICES: Virus spyware/
removal. Pictures/ data recovered.
Home/ Office network installation, hardware/software upgrades,
repairs. Nothing outsourced. Quick
turnaround. Call: 804-776-0885
Visit: www.deltavillecomputers.com
(1-24-13t)
PUBLIC NOTICE
Notice is hereby given that Penny
S. Tuthill has applied for a permit
from the Marine Resources Commission to install 70 linear feet of
riprap revetment a maximum of 13
feet channelward of mean low water
at the applicant’s property along
the Rappahannock River identified
as 2381 Remlik Drive in Middlesex
County, VA.
Send comments/inquiries within
15 days to: Marine Resources
Commission, Habitat Management
Division, 2600 Washington Avenue,
3rd Floor, Newport News, Virginia
23607. (3-28-1t)
COUNTRY TIME LAWNCARE SERVICES, LLC: Lawn maintenance
services. Mulch, gravel, bush hogging. Yard cleanup, leaf removal.
Warren Rainier and David Rainier.
Licensed, insured. 804-370-4019 or
804-445-3513.(11-1-26t)
DAYCARE: State licensed. Two
adults. References. 804-776-9836.
Preschool and meals included.
(1-10-13t)
DOG GROOMING for small to
medium breeds. Affordable, quality
and compassionate care done in
the northern area of Gloucester.
Call for appointment, 804-695-4823.
(1-17-13t)
F O U R S E A S O N S E RV I C E S :
!!!!Spring Landscape Specials!!!!
10% off hardwood mulch delivered
and installed. Contact Four Season
Services at 804-832-4636 to find
more! We also offer:
*Large selection of locally grown
trees *Grading and sod installations
*Lawn irrigation installs and repairs
*Mulch delivered and installed.
CALL today at 804-832-4636 or
email 4seasonservicesva@gmail.
com (3-14-5t)
GRAYSON SHELTON’S LAWN
CARE: *Grasscutting, *Mulching, *Leaf Removal. Covering all
your lawncare needs. Call today
804-815-5908 or 804-815-5713.
(2-21-13t)
HANDYMAN SERVICE: Home
maintenance and repairs; drywall
and painting; siding; trim; decks;
sheds; roofing. 804-815-0701, Merle
Mayhue.(2-23-tf)
HARVEY’S LAWN CARE SERVICE:
GRASSCUTTING: Small yard $45;
medium $55; large $65. 804-7583858 or 804-445-5300.(3-21-13t)
LAWN MAINTENANCE: Grasscutting, mulching, leaf removal, yard
cleanup, odd jobs. Available Saturdays. Affordable, quality work. Call
or text Skip Johnson, 804-725-8772.
(3-7-13t)
PASSPORT PICTURES made
while you wait! Please call to make
an appointment, 804-758-2328,
Southside Sentinel, Urbanna.(tf)
TURNER DRYWALL and Painting
Home Repairs: New work, repair,
renovation, home improvements.
804-761-5410. Over 20 years
experience!(2-14-13t)
Notices
NOTICE OF OYSTER GROUND
APPLICATION
SHELL ISLAND SEAFOOD CO.,
LLC (2013037) has applied for
approximately 11 +- acres of oyster
planting ground in Rappahannock
River near McKans Bay situated in
Middlesex County and described
as follows:
North By: Kirk PF11319
East By: P.G. 1 Middlesex Co.
South By: Rappahannock River
Oysters, LLC
West By: Rappahannock River
Oysters, LLC
Lat/Long: N37-46.0687
W76-40.6140
Send comments or concerns to:
Marine Resources Commission,
Engineering/Surveying Department,
2600 Washington Ave., 3rd Floor,
Newport News, VA 23607.
For more specific application location information call 757-247-2230.
(3-7-4t)
NOTICE
ABANDONED VESSELS
Notice is hereby given that the
following vessels have been abandoned for more than 60 days on the
property of: Chesapeake Boat Works
LLC, 548 Deagles Rd., Deltaville, VA
23043, 804-776-8833.
1964 Alberg 35’ vessel
No hull ID# or Registration #
“Poco Plus Five”
1968 Balco 34’ wooden ketch
No hull ID# or Registration #
White hull, red bottom
“Pilgrim”
Application for Watercraft Registration/Title will be made in accordance
with Section 29.1-733.1 of the
Code of Virginia if this vessel is
not claimed and removed within 30
days of first publication of this notice.
Please contact the Virginia Department of Game and Inland Fisheries
with questions. (3-21-3t)
Publisher’s Notice
All real estate advertised herein is subject
to Virginia’s fair housing law which makes
it illegal to advertise ‘any preference, limitation or discrimination because of race,
color, religion, national origin, sex, elderliness, familial status or handicap, or intention to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination.’ This newspaper
will not knowingly accept advertising for
real estate that violates the fair housing
law. Our readers are hereby informed that
all dwellings advertised in this newspaper
are available on an equal opportunity
basis. For more information or to file a
housing complaint, call the Virginia Fair
Housing Office at (804) 367-8530; tollfree call (888) 551-3247. For the hearingimpaired, call (804) 367-9753. E-mail
[email protected]. Web site:
www.fairhousing.vipnet.org
PUBLIC NOTICE
Notice is hereby given that Travis
Croxton, et al have applied for a
permit from the Marine Resources
Commission to install two 20-foot by
8-foot floating aquaculture upwellers,
install a 2-foot by 24 foot finger pier,
an 8-foot by 24-foot finger pier, a
3-foot by 20-foot finger pier, and
a 5-foot extension of a 10-foot
wide finger pier at Locklies Marina
located along Locklies Creek at 784
Locklies Creek Road in Middlesex
County, VA.
Send comments/inquiries within
15 days to: Marine Resources
Commission, Habitat Management
Division, 2600 Washington Avenue,
3rd Floor, Newport News, Virginia
23607. (3-28-1t)
VIRGINIA:
IN THE MIDDLESEX COUNTY
CIRCUIT COURT
JAMES T. CRITTENDEN, III
LUCINA T. CRITTENDEN
TRUSTEES
Complainants
vs.
CL 13-35
H. E. PACE
FANIE PACE
their devisees, heirs-at-law, if any
as Parties Unknown
Defendants
ORDER OF PUBLICATION
The object of this suit is to declare
a cemetery located on property
owned by James R. Crittenden, III
and Lucina T. Crittenden, in a farmed
field on the north side of Rt. 33,
roughly opposite the Hardyville, Virginia post office, be abandoned and
to remove and reinter the remains of
two persons, identified as H. E. Pace
and Fanie Pace, in a proper cemetery. The cemetery was created
by a deed dated 28 March 1884, of
record in Deed Book 28, Page 171,
in the Middlesex County, Virginia
land records, reserving a graveyard
and one-quarter acre. Although several people have been buried there,
all but two have been removed by
family members. The remains of H.
E. Pace and Fanie Pace remain in
the cemetery. There have been no
known burials in this cemetery since
at least 1960 when the property was
acquired by the Crittenden family.
The interests of the defendants
appear to remain outstanding. It is
unknown who their devisees, heirs
at law, or other successors in interest might be, or whether any such
are alive or dead.
An Affidavit has been made and
signed that any such devisees,
heirs at law, or other successors in
title to H. E. Pace and Fanie Pace
may or may not be alive, that their
whereabouts are unknown, and that
there may be other parties unknown,
parties under a disability, or parties
who may be incompetent, after diligent inquiry was made to ascertain
such information.
IT IS ORDERED that any heir-at law,
devisee, or successor in interest to
H. E. Pace and Fanie Pace, or claiming under them, Parties Unknown,
Parties Under A Disability, or Parties
Incompetent, if any, their heirs, or
successors in title, if any, appear
before the Circuit Court of Middlesex
County, Virignia, 73 Bowden Street,
Saluda, Virginia, on 1 May 2013 at
9:30 AM, to identify themselves, and
do what is necessary to protect their
interests.
IT IS ORDERED that this Order be
published once each week for four
successive weeks in the Southside
Sentinel, Urbanna, Virginia, beginning on 14 March 2013.
Entered: March 8th, 2013.
Lynn L. Dunlevy
Hon. Lynn L. Dunlevy
Clerk of the Circuit Court
Robert P. Brooks, Esq.
(VSB 4579)
Counsel for Complainants
P.O. Box 559
Deltaville, Virginia 23043-0559
Tele: 804-776-9200
Fax: 804-776-9696
(3-14-4t)
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The USCG Auxiliary also
is offering Friends & Family
classes. “All you need to do is
gather up five or more of your
friends, family, neighbors, or
co-workers and we will provide a private boater safety
class for you at a location of
your choice or at our Deltaville
Training Center,” said an auxiliary spokesperson. “Contact
us to arrange your class.”
The changes in Virginia law
requirements include that as
of July 1, 2012 all PWC operators age 14 and older must
complete a boating safety
course.
The next phase-in of the
Education
Compliance
Requirement for all Virginia
boaters begins July 1, 2013.
All motorboat operators ages
40 and younger need to take a
boating safety course.
The class is free of charge;
one may purchase a textbook
for $20.
Please call 301-741-3513 or
email Flotilla [email protected]
to reserve a seat. Walk-ins also
are welcome.
A world of service
for your car & you.
Auto/Marine machine
shop on premises
Follow Rt. 3 to Rt. 200 in White Stone
Call 804-435-6660
Open Monday thru Friday 7:30-5:30
& Drop off Saturday 7:30-10:00
MIDDLESEX COUNTY
WETLANDS BOARD
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
Notice is hereby given pursuant to Section 28.2-1302.6
of the Code of Virginia that a public hearing will be held
by the Middlesex County Wetlands Board on Tuesday,
April 9, 2013 at 9:00 AM to consider the following:
Jennifer Radcliffe of Northumberland High School and
Thomas Hyde and Moira Hull of Lancaster High attended
the Freedoms Foundation Conference.
Students visit Medal of
Honor Grove at Freedoms
Foundation conference
Jennifer
Radcliffe
of
Northumberland High School
and Thomas Hyde and Moira
Hull of Lancaster High visited the 52-acre grove on the
grounds of the Freedoms
Foundation while attending its
4-day leadership conference in
early March. The grove honors
recipients of this highest medal
by allocating to each state a
one-acre plot centered with a
granite obelisk on which all
the recipients’ names from that
state are etched. While there,
the students learned the history
of the medal and viewed a DVD
of a living recipient telling his
story.
Other activities of the leadership conference included
participation in the Mock Congress where sections of the
Patriot Act were debated as to
their constitutionality using the
amendment process to tighten
questionable language. This
was followed by a vote to determine if the debated segment
should be kept or removed.
Participants demonstrated
a firm grasp of the Constitution and Bill of Rights as
they offered their arguments.
Another activity was a session
on the free enterprise system.
This included a seminar followed by an activity where
students were divided into
groups and given an array of
objects from which to choose
in order to produce an item to
be developed for market. Each
group’s presentation included
expected start-up costs, as well
as how and to whom it would
be marketed. A panel of judges
then scored each presentation
in four areas. Mary Ball Washington’s group placed second in
the nine groups.
Students also observed a presentation by two professional reenactors representing Thomas
Jefferson and Alexander Hamilton discussing the language in
parts of the proposed Constitution. Additionally, they visited
General Washington’s Winter
Headquarters, which is the
original stone house he occupied at what is now the Valley
Forge National Park. This park
is adjacent to the Freedoms
Foundation campus. The huts
housing the soldiers, by contrast, are not original but are
accurate reproductions of the
crowded quarters shared during
that brutally cold winter.
The concluding field trip took
the students into the historic
district of Philadelphia where
they visited Independence Hall,
the Liberty Bell and the grave
of Benjamin Franklin at Christ
Church Cemetery.
Mary Ball Washington, the
local chapter of the Freedoms
Foundation at Valley Forge,
sponsored three juniors from
area high schools. They were
selected based on a demonstrated interest in U.S. history
and the Constitution as well as
academic achievement. Each
won a scholarship, one from the
Kiwanis Club of the Northern
Neck and two from the chapter,
which paid all of their tuition
and board expenses. They were
accompanied by two chaperones, Susan Christopher and
Gerry Waring, who are members of the Mary Ball Washington Chapter.
The chapter works with
the three area high schools
of Middlesex, Lancaster and
Northumberland in seeking
nominations from the U.S. history teachers at each school.
Those candidates are then
interviewed by the chapter’s
interview team to determine the
final selections.
The Freedoms Foundation
at Valley Forge sponsors three
Youth Leadership Conferences
each year. Each conference
attracts approximately 135 students from across the country.
Community Foundation
accepting grant applications
River Counties Community Foundation’s Grants
Committee
Chair
Mary
Elizabeth Hoinkes recently
announced that applications
are being accepted for the
2013 Community Grants
Program. Charitable 501c-3 organizations serving
Lancaster, Middlesex, and/
or Northumberland counties are eligible to apply for
funding to support the implementation or continuation
of initiatives having direct
community impact for the
residents of one or more of
these counties. The majority
of grants awarded will be in
the $1,000 to $5,000 range.
Grant guidelines, which
include completing a portrait
on
GiveRiverCounties.org
for certain eligible agencies,
application forms, and deadlines can be found at rivercountiescf.org. The complete
1. Wetlands Application #2013-0308 submitted by
Lucille Morelli-Redmon on behalf of Philip R. Blevins.
This request is to Construct a 210' Vinyl Bulkhead
with a 10' return at the East end of the property and
install a 8'x8' return with Rip-Rap at the West end of
the property to prevent flanking within the Wetlands
Board’s jurisdiction. The proposed project is located
on LaGrange Creek, at Tax Map Parcel #14A-1-5.
The Wetlands Board meeting will be held in the Board
Room of the Historic Courthouse, 865 General Puller
Highway, Saluda, VA, 23149. All interested persons are
encouraged to attend to present their views concerning
this application. A copy of this application is available
for public inspection at the Department of Planning and
Community Development, Woodward Building 2nd floor,
Saluda, VA; our telephone number is (804) 758-3382.
03.21&03.28.13
MIDDLESEX COUNTY
BOARD OF SUPERVISORS
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
The Middlesex County Board of Supervisors will conduct
public hearings on Tuesday, April 2, 2013, to hear
comments regarding the following:
1. An Ordinance to repeal the “Middlesex County
Purchasing and Contracting Ordinance”, adopted May
3, 1983. This ordinance would be replaced by a Small
Purchase Policy to address purchases under $50,000.
Purchases over $50,000 would be addressed through
the Code of Virginia, §2.2-4300, the Virginia Public
Procurement Act.
2. An Ordinance Requiring Those Persons Convicted of
an Offense for the Manufacture of Methamphetamine
to Pay the Expense of Cleanup of Methamphetamine
Laboratories.
Public Hearings will be held during the portion of
the Board’s meeting that begins at 7:00 p.m. The
Hearings will be held in the Board Room, located on the
second floor of the Historic Courthouse, 865 General
Puller Highway, Saluda, VA. All interested persons are
encouraged to present their views concerning the above.
Complete copies of the proposed Policy and Ordinances
are available in the County Administrator’s Office at 877
General Puller Highway in Saluda, and on the County’s
website: www.co.middlesex.va.us.
03.21&03.28.13
MIDDLESEX COUNTY
PLANNING COMMISSION
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
Notice is hereby given pursuant to Section 15.2-2204
of the Code of Virginia that a public hearing will be held
by the Middlesex County Planning Commission on
Thursday, April 11, 2013 at 7:00 PM to consider the
following:
application package must be
received by April 15 at 11
a.m. There will be no exceptions.
Applicants will be notified by the end of May if they
have been selected to receive
a grant. For additional information, call the foundation
office at 438-9414 or email
[email protected].
1. Rezoning #2013-001 submitted by William Berkeley
Fergusson. The request is for the amendment of
previously approved proffers for the Hartfield Green
property, tax map parcel # 37-39c (87.47 acres to be
developed into a maximum of 31 residential lots), zoned
Residential (R) and located off Stormont Rd. (State
Route 629) in the Harmony Village Magisterial District.
The applicant proposes the amendment of previously
approved proffers for the purpose of reducing the
proffered minimum dwelling size from 1900 square feet
to a combination of 1900 square feet for 50% of the lots
and 1400 square feet for the other 50% of the lots.
Submit your
Classified ad online!
The public hearing will be held in the Boardroom of
the Historic Courthouse, 865 General Puller Highway,
Saluda, VA 23149. Copies of this application are available
for public inspection at the Department of Planning and
Community Development, Woodward Building – 2nd
Floor, 877 General Puller Highway, Saluda, VA 23149,
telephone (804) 758-3382. All interested persons are
encouraged to submit written comments or attend the
meeting to present their views on this application.
1. Go to SSentinel.com
2. Click the Classifieds link
3. Click the Submit Ad button
4. Fill out the form
6. Profit!
Easy!
03.28&04.04.13
B8 • Southside Sentinel • Urbanna, Va. • March 28, 2013
':L G,>:EMR
#G<
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Ceelre5b0rayteiang
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‘Pet resort’ is much more
than a boarding facility
by Tom Chillemi
Urbanna Creek 1.4
Piankatank
River
Whiting Creek Area
Urbanna Area 3 BR,
Meachim Creek At-
Piankatank Shores 2
Hartfield – New! 3
Billups Creek 3 BR,
Kilmer’s Point Fire-
acre point... Deep water, pier, rip-rapped
shore... Home with full
basement... Sold as
is.................$379,000
2 BA, views of river...
Sand beach and boat
ramp access... Central
heat and air... Deck...
Estate sale.....$183,500
BR, 2½ tile BA, wood
floors, garage with bonus room... Deeded
water rights.....$179,900
River cottage... Shade
trees! Pier... Boathouse... Sand beach...
On 2 lots with room to
add on............$315,000
tached 2-car garage...
Deep water harbor...
Vinyl bulkhead... Lshaped pier, boathouse............$379,500
2 BA... Manufactured
home... Direct access
to BAY... With 300'
on creek... Garage...
PIER..........$280,000
2,666-SF home with
3½ BA on 1¾ acres...
Built in 2005, Like
new... Attached 2-car
garage........$350,000
BR, 1½ BA and views of
the Piankatank River...
Screened porch... Detached garage/shop...
Storage shed..$189,900
place... Whole-house
generator... Attached
garage, porch, deck...
Water views....$325,000
LaGrange
Topping 3 BR, 2 BA...
LR, Den, Sunroom...
Possibly extra building site... Access to
creek...........$156,000
Cedar Pointe Gas
fireplace, breezeway,
2 porches... 2-car garage... On 1.35 acres...
Water access..$249,000
Creek
Handyman
buy...
fresh paint and carpet... 2 extra rooms for
guests... Outbuildings
with electric...$149,000
For more information on any of our listings, please call Mason Realty first
:EEHK>F:BE?HK?K>>*KHI>KMRKH<ANK>
!>MBG?HKF:MBHGHGHMA>KEBLMBG@L:G=I>KNL>HNK&:G=-><MBHG
H??>KBG@>O>KRMABG@?KHFLF:EE;NBE=BG@EHMLMH:<K>:@>LBM>L
WANTED – We need property to SELL! All types.
Please call! No obligation.
-MHI;RHK<:EE?HKHNK?K>>IKHI>KMR
;KH<ANK>H?:EEHNKEBLMBG@L
w w w. m a s o n r e a l t y. c o m
Eric Johnson . . . . . . . 815-8374
Craig Hall. . . . . . . . . . .815-8494
Marvin Mason . . . . . . .815-8391
Steve Darman . . . . . . .815-2036
R. D. Johnson II . . . . . .815-8320
Walter Lawson, Jr. . . . .758-2836
Realtors
and
Appraisers
Irvin R. Shackelford . .815-8400
Jean Darman . . . . . . . .577-7083
Zani Autry . . . . . . . . . .512-8350
Bill Kallam . . . . . . . . . .832-1024
Anne Powell . . . . . . . . .338-1773
Carolyn Bailey . . . . . . .366-2554
/K;:GG:-:EN=:>EM:OBEE>
AUCTION
SATURDAY, APRIL 6, 2013, 10AM
Estate of Dallas Fritter
206 Wolf Pond Road, Mattaponi, VA 23110
Tractors, Boats, Tools and Lawn Equipment
Plus many more items!
Never a buyer’s premium!
Paul W. Cerny & Son Auctioneers
804-731-2128
VA. A. F. 158 All items sold as is.
See website for complete listing and pictures:
www.cernyauctions.com
MIDDLESEX COUNTY
BOARD OF SUPERVISORS
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
Notice is hereby given pursuant to Section 15.2-2204 of
the Code of Virginia that a public hearing will be held by
the Middlesex County Board of Supervisors on Tuesday,
April 2, 2013 at 7:00 PM to consider the following:
1. 2014 – 2018 Capital Improvements Plan. The
Middlesex County Capital Improvements Plan is strictly
advisory. The Plan is intended for use as a capital
facilities planning document, and is not a request for
funding allocations or a County capital budget. The
CIP is intended as a planning tool to assist the Board
of Supervisors in the development of the County
budget.
The public hearing will be held in the Boardroom of
the Historic Courthouse, 865 General Puller Highway,
Saluda, VA 23149. Copies of this application are available
for public inspection at the Department of Planning and
Community Development, Woodward Building – 2nd
Floor, 877 General Puller Highway, Saluda, VA 23149,
telephone (804) 758-3382. All interested persons are
encouraged to submit written comments or attend the
meeting to present their views on this application.
03.21&03.28.13
“Your pets are our passion,”
is the motto of Sandy Creek Pet
Resort, which offers an extensive variety of services for pets
and even farm animals.
In June, Sandy Creek Pet
Resort will celebrate 10 years
in business at 9689 Burkes
Pond Road at North between
Routes 14 and Route 198.
The pet resort is in Gloucester
County near the Mathews
county line.
Pets are treated like royalty
by resort owners John and
Suzanne Holt, resort manager
Renae Hicks, and the staff of
four. “Our business is built on
customer service,” John said.
“And we go to all ends to make
sure that your pets are well
cared for.”
The Holts live at the facility,
so there is an enhanced level of
security. Pets can be boarded
by the day, week or month.
Sandy Creek Pet Resort
also is a full grooming facility. Groomer Claudia Brooks
has more than 30 years experience. She offers the fulminator de-shedding technique, all
natural shampoo and conditioner blends, hydro-massage
technique, nail trims, sanitary
trims, and more.
Sandy Creek Pet Resort
offers pick up and delivery of
pets, daycare, and long-term
Owners of Sandy Creek Pet Resort, John and Suzanne Holt (left), are pictured with staff
member Shelbey Burns (right) and some of the Jack Russell Terriers the Holts breed.
(Photo by Tom Chillemi)
boarding, veterinary visits,
medication
administration,
obedience training, and even
Reiki (healing touch) therapy.
John has lived in this area
for over 40 years. He has
worked in the food and restaurant industry for many years,
but has bred and raised dogs
RWC announces
board appointments
Stuart
Bunting,
president
of
Rappahannock
We s t m i n s t e r - C a n t e r b u r y
(RWC) in Irvington, has
announced the appointment
of David H. Charlton, Ed.D.,
as chair of RWC’s corporate
board of directors and Marjory
Willis as chair of the RWC
Foundation board. Bunting
also announced the appointment of several new members
for each board.
Charlton, currently president of Church Schools in the
Diocese of Virginia and CEO
of the Episcopal Church Corporation, is a resident of White
Stone. He earned a bachelor’s
degree and doctorate at the
College of William & Mary.
During his career he has held
leadership positions at Virginia
Theological Episcopal Seminary, William & Mary, and
Franklin & Marshall College,
and is a former headmaster at
Christchurch School.
New trustees beginning
terms April 1 include John
E. (Jeb) Byers and Reverend David H. May. Byers
has held several positions at
Christchurch School, where
he now serves as headmaster.
He is a graduate of Washington & Lee University (BA)
and Virginia Commonwealth
University (MA). Prior to joining Christchurch School, he
worked in hotel and restaurant
management. He has served
on the vestries of St. Peter’s
Church in New Kent and Christ
Church in Middlesex.
May is rector at Grace Episcopal Church in Kilmarnock.
Prior to his ordination in 1993,
he worked as an actor in New
York and in the south. He
received his degree in theology from St. Luke’s School at
the University of the South,
Sewanee, Tennessee.
Jeff Joy and Jeff Chase began
their terms on RWC’s corporate board in June 2012. Joy is
CEO of IlliniCare Health Plan.
During his twenty-year career
in healthcare operations he
held various leadership positions at Johns Hopkins HealthCare LLC and CareFirst Blue
Cross Blue Shield and its subsidiaries before assuming his
present post in 2013. Chase, a
lifelong resident of Lancaster
County, is a retired farmer who
has been a leader in a number
of community organizations,
including Bay Transit, and at
Grace Episcopal Church.
Beginning their second
terms on the corporate board
are Mary Lib Hoinkes, Manuel
Haynie, Mary Kay Rotert,
Dean Dort and the Rev. Clay
Macaulay. Continuing second
terms are Cameron Blanford,
Jean Light and General William Louisell.
“We continue to be pleased
with the quality and experience of the individuals who
have agreed to serve on our
corporate board,” Bunting
said. The board provides oversight of RWC’s operations and
works with the president to
determine long-range objectives for the continuing care
community.
Willis, the new Foundation
Board chair, is a resident at
RWC and past president of the
RWC Residents’ Association.
A graduate of Queens College
in Charlotte, N.C., she taught
school for many years before
moving with her husband from
Midlothian to RWC.
Joining Willis on the Foundation Board are William F. (Bill)
Reisner, John F. (Jay) De Pew
and Cecelia Quiett Barton.
Reisner moves to the Foundation Board from the Corporate Board, which he chaired
for the past two years. He is a
graduate of the University of
Maryland and managed his
family’s service stations for
years before becoming owner in
1974. Since 1986 he has lived
in Wicomico Church. Reisner
has held leadership positions
in several community organizations, including New Horizons,
and was recently elected chair
of the board for Bay Aging.
De Pew is a former vice
president in the Chemical Division of EDS’ Energy/Chemical Industry Group, and also
served as managing director
of EDS Netherland and general manager of EDS Kuwait.
He is an active participant in
the RWC Parkinson’s Support
group. Barton is a second-generation resident at RWC, where
she is active in several volunteer groups and clubs. She is a
former high school teacher and
is a certified personal trainer.
Two Foundation Board trustees are beginning a second
term. Jay Tims, a retired
attorney, is active at Campbell Memorial Presbyterian
Church. Reverend W. Clay
Macaulay has been a leader in
several community organizations, including the corporate
board at RWC. He is pastor at
Campbell Memorial Presbyterian Church in Weems.
RWC vice president for
development Whiz Harris said,
“We are delighted to welcome
our new members and sincerely appreciate the willingness of current members to
continue their service. Much
of our success in recent years
in generating funds to underwrite fellowship assistance for
residents and other projects
that enhance the quality of
life for our residents is due to
the efforts of our Foundation
Board.”
for more than 30 years. The
Holts breed Jack Russell Terriers.
Suzanne is a former archeologist. She was born and raised
in Europe, moved to Northern
Virginia, then to the Shenandoah Valley before moving to
this area.
Sandy Creek Pet Resort is
open 7 days a week. It’s hours
are Monday through Friday, 8
a.m.-6 p.m.; Saturday, 8 a.m.-5
p.m.; and Sunday, 2:30-5 p.m.
Call 693-2311 or 888-2663084 for more information,
or visit sandycreekpetresort.
com.
Learn the facts about
the medical and legal
issues involved in aging
On April 16, Rappahannock
Westminster-Canterbury
will
host its “Voyages” program,
a one-day seminar created to
address some of the medical,
legal, administrative and spiritual
dimensions of aging.
The event will take place on the
RWC campus at 132 Lancaster
Drive in Irvington from 8:30
a.m.-2 p.m. A continental breakfast and lunch will be provided as
part of the program.
Although originally designed
for RWC residents and those
who have expressed interest in
moving to the continuing-care
facility, “Voyages” is also open
to the public.
Alice Coates, director of social
services at RWC, says that this
year RWC decided to host the
program in the spring to coincide with National Healthcare
Decisions Day, a collaborative
effort of national, state and community organizations committed
to ensuring that all adults with
decision-making capacity in the
United States have the information and opportunity to communicate and document their
healthcare decisions.
“The goal of National Healthcare Decisions Day is to help
people understand the benefits of
providing advanced-care directives that convey decisions about
medical care before you need it
to family, friends and health care
professionals. Since our Voyages
program includes a discussion
of advanced care directives, we
thought it made sense to offer
our entire program on April 16 to
highlight the importance of these
directives and discuss other matters important to people as they
age,” said Alice Coates of RWC.
During the morning session
of the Voyages program, Coates
will discuss some of the medical
and legal issues seniors should
consider, including advanced
directives that provide instructions for medical care, especially
at end-of-life. She is pleased that
the State of Virginia has developed an internet-based Advance
Health Care Directive Registry.
Voyages is offered at no cost,
but attendance is limited to 50
participants, so those interested
in attending are asked to call
438-4000 by April 10 to reserve
a place.
March 28, 2013 • Southside Sentinel • Urbanna, Va.• B9
Gwynn’s Island
Museum plans
April opening
The Gwynn’s Island Museum
will open for the 2013 season
the weekend of Friday-Sunday,
April 5-7, from 1 to 5 p.m.
each day.
Two floors of exhibits,
research library and gift shop
are housed in a renovated old
schoolhouse, which dates back
to 1895. Highlighting exhibits
this season will be an exhibit
set up by the Smithsonian
Institution, featuring the oldest Eleven William and Mary students spent their spring break volunteering at the NNFHC.
formal artifact dredged up by They are pictured above with VCU School of Dentistry students who were also at the clinic
a Mathews County waterman that week for their final rotation of the school year.
and new data pertaining to it.
The museum is open yeararound for groups of 6 or more
by appointment. Please call
725-7949 or 725-9611. Visit
gwynnsislandmuseum.org for
more information. Admission
is free. Donations are welcomed to help maintain the
museum.
During the week of March gram that focuses on providing and used their time here to
4, 11 students from the Col- projects that bring awareness gain an understanding of the
Harvey’s Tree Service
lege of William and Mary vol- to social justice issues. The struggles faced by members
Licensed & Insured
unteered at the Northern Neck goal is for these projects to of our local population.
Executive director Jean
Tree Removal • Stump Grinding
Free Health Clinic through develop active citizenship, and
Lot Clearing • Demolition
to make a positive change in Nelson commented, “It was
one
of
the
college’s
alternaDriveways
truly a joy to have these stutive break programs called the community.
(804) 695-4897 — c
The students, whose majors dents from William and Mary
“Branch Out.”
(804) 776-7754
Branch Out is a national pro- ranged from pre-med to jour- for the week. Staff and volnalism, had the chance to par- unteers really enjoyed workticipate in a variety of tasks at ing side by side with them.
the clinic. From chart audits As health care continues to
to screenings to patient inter- move forward, my hope is that
BONNIE VEST
views, the students found this experience will influence
804-339-5282
themselves in the midst of the these young people to contribDeltavilleRealEstate.com
clinic’s everyday operations. ute their talents to rural health
804-339-5282
A few students were able to care systems in order to serve
assist with dental work, and the vast need in those areas of
also visit the clinic’s various the country.”
Stingray Point Waterfront Cottage
outreach locations. To round
In a note to the clinic,
Charming 4 bedroom, 1 bath river cottage located on Stingray Point with huge
off the experience, they spent the students expressed their
Rappahannock River & Chesapeake Bay
their nights at the clinic’s aux- thanks for the opportunity.
views. Enjoy incredible sunsets from the
iliary facility in Kilmarnock. “We cannot thank you enough
waterfront screened porch after a long day
While working at NNFHC, for your hospitality this week
on your private sand beach and dock.
the group was able to get a at the clinic. It was truly a
New Price $350,000
sense of how a free clinic privilege to work with such
operates, and how the clinic a dedicated group of people.
“Go with Long & Foster’s BEST, call and ask for Bonnie VEST!”
is addressing the needs of the We hope we made your lives
surrounding area. The visit- a little bit easier this week
ing students were exposed to and we hope to return in the
all types of community issues, future!” said the students.
W&M students volunteer
at NN Free Health Clinic
MICHAEL MARKETING
REAL ESTATE INC.
Deltaville - PRIME location, doesn't get any better than this for
your office. Brick building which used to be a bank. Carpet needs
some work, 2 private offices, kitchenette and balance is open
space.
OWNER WILL FINANCE WITH 20% DOWN! $149,900
Saluda/Urbanna - Three parcels of land ranging in size from 14.13 to
19.64 acres. Nicely thinned wooded lots with stream on rear. Great
hunting spot and location to build your cabin in the woods. Close to
Urbanna and Saluda yet PRIVATE.
$199,000
Gloucester Point Area - 4. 25 acres with long creek frontage with quick
access to York River, house must be on pilings which also gives you a
fabulous view. Older well and septic currently on property. $149,900
566 Gloucester Rd.
Saluda, VA 23149
Office: (804) 758-3093
Mike Jackson: (804) 694-7141
Nancy P. Jackson: (804) 815-9820
Ray Walden: (804) 815-8647
Skip Beattie: (804) 514-4606
Cheryl Teagle: (804) 694-9025
Dennis Mann: (804) 370-0359
Chris Ingram (804) 519-9170
Tina Hutchins (804) 240-5115
Child abuse prevention stressed
by Rebecca Morgan
Middlesex Social Services
Every year, Virginia recognizes April as National Child
Abuse Prevention Month.
Middlesex Department of
Social Services will be holding
its 3rd annual “Go Blue Day”
on April 12. On this day staff
and other community partners
will wear blue to raise awareness in our community about
keeping children safe from
abuse and neglect.
Social Services will have a
pinwheel garden in remembrance of all the children who
were victims of abuse and/or
neglect in our community. The
pinwheel serves as the symbol
for child abuse prevention and
reflects childhood hope, health,
and happiness. Social Services
will also have information
available for parents and other
concerned individuals on ways
to promote child abuse prevention efforts.
For additional information
about “Go Blue Day” or Child
Abuse Prevention Month and
ways to get involved, contact
Middlesex Social Services at
758-2348 during the hours of
8:30 a.m. and 4:30 p.m.
These ads reach over a million Virginia readers for
only $275. Ask this newspaper for more information.
AUCTION
BUSINESS LIQUIDATION AUCTION - April, 6th – 10am; Preview – March 30 9am - 4pm &
Day-of-Sale. Ford-F450, Truck w/
Crane, IR-T30 Compressor, Lincoln Ranger Welder, S/A-Trailer
Welding Equipment, Hand Tools,
Leads, Hose, SS-Rod, Wire Rolls!
NEW-Hardware, Auto, Electric,
Ladders, Dump Carts, Parts! Art
Paper, Tri-Fold, FOAM Boards.
Shelving, Cashier Stations, Service Center Desk! 624 S. 6th
Road, Hopewell CASH/MC/VISA
(VAAL 29070002853)
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY
Motor Club of America is looking for you! A Real Opportunity
to Earn $40-$60K per year.
Investment Required. Visit www.
cashmeals.com or call Travis
757-493-2166.
EDUCATION
Medical Billing Trainees Needed!
Train to become a Medical Office
Assistant. No Experience Needed!
Training & Job Placement available at CTI! HS Diploma/GED &
computer needed. 1-888-4249419.
ATTENTION VETERANS! SPECIAL TRAINING GRANT available for Veterans in VA and NC.
Grant covers Computer, Medical,
or Microsoft training. Call CTI
for program details. 1-888-5285546.
HELP WANTED
JOB FAIR RICHMOND - Bring
your resume and dress to
impress. Free and open to the
public. Attend the Centura College Career Fair - meet employers
like AT&T, Central State Hospital, Grafton Integrated Health
Network, T-mobile, UPS, VCU
Health systems, Virginia State
Police and many others interviewing candidates for open positions. College admissions and
career information will be available and on-site. Thursday, April
18th, 2013 - 10:00am to 2:00pm
at the Sheraton Park South Hotel
- 9901 Midlothian Turnpike. One
day only - Free and open to the
public. For more information and
directions call Centura College
888-242-3624 or www.centuraevents.com/richmond
HELP WANTED / DRIVERS
DRIVERS-CDL TRAINING now
offered in Roanoke 540-857-6188
or Spotsylvania 540-582-8200!
Attend 4 Weeks or 10 Weekends.
Guaranteed Financing and Job
Placement Assistance Available.
1-800-646-2374
Owner Operators – CDL Class
A. Dedicated, No Touch Freight.
Lease Purchase Program w/Payment Assistance. Requires 1 year
driving within the past 5 years.
Call Jennifer 866-242-4976.
Hablamos Español – Belinda
866-566-2071.
Company Driver: Solo and Team
OTR Lanes. Competitive Pay.
Great Hometime. CDL-A with 1
year OTR and Hazmat End. Signon Bonus. $2000 Solo & $5000
Teams. 888-705-3217 or apply
online at www.drivenctrans.com
AVERITT OFFERS CDL-A DRIVERS A STRONG, STABLE,
PROFITABLE CAREER. Experienced Drivers and Recent
Grads – Excellent Benefits,
Weekly Hometime. Paid Training. 888-362-8608 www.AverittCareers.com Equal Opportunity
Employer.
Drivers: CDL-A TEAM WITH
TOTAL 50c/mile for Hazmat
Teams, Solo Drivers Also Needed!
1 yr. Exp. Req’d 800-942-2104
Ext. 7308 or 7307 www.TotalMS.
com
Company Drivers: $2500 SignOn Bonus! Super Service is hiring
solo and team drivers. Excellent hometime options. CDL-A
required. Call 888-691-4472 or
apply online at www.superservicellc.com
LOTS AND ACREAGE
Private 2-acre wooded homesite near Boones Mill in Franklin
County. No Money Down, Fixed
rates, Easy terms! $49,900. 434444-5088
CAMPBELL COUNTY – gorgeous
setting for your dream home,
3-acre homesite in the trees.
A few minutes south of Lynchburg airport. Owner will finance.
$59,900. 434-444-5088
WOODED LAND – 22.8 acres,
perk approved, state road frontage. 10 minutes from Rocky
Mount and Smith Mountain Lake.
Only $79,900 and owner will
finance. 434-444-5088
40,000 SF Warehouse near Natural Bridge. Two dock doors, two
drive-in doors, 24’ ceilings, dust
collection system, 5000SF office
space. Financial incentives for
customization. 540-487-0480.
ANTEBELLUM
ALBEMARLE
MANSION on 200 acres. Totally
restored historic landmark, candidate for conservation easement.
$3,995,000. 540-448-0393
MULTI FAMILY LAND – 7 acres
zoned for 80 apartments or towns.
All utilities. Mile to regional hospital, near I-81/64. Walk to grocery
store. 540-294-2007
1ST TIME OFFERED 1200 SF
COUNTRY HOME & LAND
$124,900. Be the first to place
this new turn-key home how you
want it on large country parcel
with all utilities, paved roads. Perfect mountain views. Excellent
financing. CALL 800-888-1262
MISCELLANEOUS
SAWMILLS from only $3997.00 –
MAKE & SAVE MONEY with your
own bandmill – Cut lumber any
dimension. In stock ready to ship.
FREE Info/DVD: www.NorwoodSawmills.com 1-800-578-1363
ext. 300N
MISCELLANEOUS /
CAREER TRAINING
AIR TRAFFIC CONTROLLER
– Train to become an Air Traffic
Controller in a secure government career at FAA approved
AT-CTI school. Attend class to
earn your associate degree by
training at Aviation Institute of
Maintenance in Chesapeake, VA.
Median salary tops $100,000 (US
BLS) with experience and full certification. Call toll free (877) 5601001 for information. Hampton
University/Aviation Institute of
Maintenance
MEDICAL CAREERS begin here
– Train ONLINE for Allied Health
and Medical Management. Job
placement assistance. Computer
available. Financial Aid if qualified. SCHEV certified. Call 888354-9917 www.CenturaOnline.
com
AIRLINE CAREERS begin here –
Become an Aviation Maintenance
Tech. FAA approved training.
Financial aid if qualified – Housing available. Job placement
assistance. SCHEV certified.
CALL AIM 888-245-9553.
PET SUPPLIES
Control
fleas/ticks/mosquitoes
& mites before heavy infestation
with Happy Jack® DuraSpot®.
Patented technology. Contains
NO Fipronil! At Southern States.
www.happyjackinc.com
SERVICES
DIVORCE WITH OR WITHOUT
children $125.00. Includes name
change and property settlement
agreement. SAVE hundreds. Fast
and easy. Call 1-888-733-7165,
24/7.
STEEL BUILDINGS
STEEL BUILDINGS Perfect for
Homes & Garages. Lower Prices.
Make Offer and LOW Monthly
Payment on remaining cancelled
orders 20x24, 25x30, 30x44,
35x60 CALL 1-757-301-8885
Ashley
WORK FROM HOME
OPPORTUNITIES
NOW HIRING: Companies desperately need employees to
assemble products at home. No
selling, any hours. $500 weekly
potential. Info. 1-985-646-1700
DEPT-VA-4062. Fee.
ISABELL K. HORSLEY
REAL ESTATE, LTD.
www.HorsleyRealEstate.com
CED
2EDU
River Runner Hideaway
Contemporary Beach House
on the Piankatank River
4 Acres… Total Privacy
g7ATERFRONTsg-,7s3AND"EACH
Additional One Room Cottage included!
$495,900
West Point
Charming Cape Cod
+1900 sq. ft.
"2Ss"ATHS
Garage & Workshop
$139,900
Jackson Creek
Deltaville
Your own mini-estate!
g7ATERFRONTsg-,70IERs¢!CRES
Original farmhouse with upgrades & delightful addition. 3 bedrooms,
2 1/2 baths. Multi-car garage w/ potential guest quarters. $699,000
Wilton Creek just off Piankatank River
+3 Acre Homesite • 8' MLW Pier • 200' Waterfront
4 BR septic permit. Driveway installed. $297,300
Whitings Creek Cottage
1 Acre
Water access!
$195,000
Charming 3 bedroom, 2 bath home, cathedral ceiling Great Room,
huge screened porch. Outside shower. Community pier & ramp.
CED
2EDU
Chick Cove… Healy's Creek access
Cape Cod in pristine condition. Fireplace in Living
Room, formal Dining Room, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths,
kitchen with breakfast area. Community pier, ramp,
pool & tennis court.
$199,000
776-9297
758-2430
Deltaville, VA 23043
Urbanna, VA 23175
Neena Rodgers
436-2326
Debbie Rowzee
724-1312
Peggy O'Neill
436-5185
Jerry Salmon
824-8782
Alana Courtney
514-4225
Suzanne C. Chewning 436-4618
Katie Horsley Dew
436-6256
Lee Chewning
758-4661
Ron Courtney
514-5475
Sandra Sturgill
651-6449
Chris Riddick
832-4578
Nelson Horsley, Jr. 435-0773
When you think, shop and
buy locally, YOU help build
schools, improve roads,
support those who employ
your friends and neighbors.
Edwards
Bay & River Properties
776-8494 - Deltaville
Helen Edwards
Broker ABR
815-3333
See website for pictures. www.EdwardsBayandRiverProperties.com
Happy Easter!
Corner of the Bay
3&s-ULTIPLESLIPSs$OCK
$EEDED"EACH$750,000
Waterfront Peninsula
Sturgeon Creek
"AY6IEWSs"EACHs0IERSs
REDUCED!!CRESs$IVIDABLE
3&0IERTO-,7
"OATHOUSEs½CARGARAGE$449,000
REDUCED! $559,000
STRUCTION
.EW#ON
Stutts Creek
Delta Shores
&ARMIN'LOUCESTER
0)%2!002/6%$0RIME!CRES .%7#ONSTRUCTIONs7ATER6IEWS !CHORSEPROPERTY0RIVATEYET
$EEDED0IERs"EDROOMS CENTRAL5PGRADEDBD"ARN
3&3TUDIO0LUSADDITIONAL
"ATHS $225,000
CARGARAGE$245,000
HOMESITE $429,000
sNEW LISTING2EMODELED&ARMHOUSEZONEDFORBUSINESSIN$ELTAVILLE
sCommercial InvestmentRENTALUNITS-AIN3TFRONTAGE
s!WESOME&IXER - 3,400 sf. 6.6 acres. Full basement. 3 bd/3 bath
$129,000
$189,000
$199,000
B10 • Southside Sentinel • Urbanna, Va. • March 28, 2013
Boddie Golf
Tournament
due May 10
MHS boys stumble
in opening track meet
The Father John Boddie
Memorial Golf Classic will
be held on Friday, May 10,
at the Piankatank River Golf
Club in Hartfield. This annual
event, presented by the Catholic Church of the Visitation in
Topping, is a four-player captain’s choice competition open
to all.
Team prizes will be awarded
for first, second, and third place
in each flight. Golfers also will
compete for individual driving,
putting, and accuracy prizes.
The entry fee is $80 per
player, which includes use of
the practice range, golf cart
rental, greens fee, on-course
beverages, and dinner in the
Steamboat Restaurant. Registration begins at 11:30 a.m.
with a shotgun start at 12:30
p.m. To sign up or for more
information, call Gary Richardson at 776-0949.
In its first meet of the season
on March 13, the Middlesex
High School boys track team
finished sixth overall in the
New Kent High School Invitational.
New Kent dominated the
team scoring with 156 points;
King William, second, 105
points; Washington & Lee,
third, 58 points; Charles City,
fourth, 53.50 points; Mathews,
fourth, 53.50 points; and the
Chargers, sixth, 35 points.
Ridge Ellis of MHS placed
fourth in the 200 meters
(26.22) and sixth in the 400
meters (58.06) for a total of
5 points. Gregory Robinson
scored a point in the 110-meter
hurdles with a sixth place finish
(20.24).
Middlesex also scored 2
points with a fifth place in the
4x100 meters relay, and 4 points
CCS Alumni Golf
Tourney is May 31
On
Friday,
May
31,
Christchurch School will host
the 2013 Christchurch School
Alumni Golf Tournament at
King Carter Golf Course in
Irvington. There will be a shotgun start at noon. Dinner and a
cocktail reception will start at 6
p.m. in the course’s clubhouse.
Please call William Taylor at
758-2306, ext. 127, for more
information regarding registration and hole sponsorships.
by Larry Chowning
The Rappahannock Community College Gulls baseball team
RCC Gulls start baseball
season with strong team
With the 2013 season beginning, the Rappahannock Community College men’s baseball
program fields 19 players who
have come from all over the
state and beyond.
The Gulls’ spring lineup
includes Xavier Barriere of
Miami, Florida; Brady Batterfield,
Norfolk;
Christopher Beacorn, Stafford
County; Marcus Bumbrey,
Fredericksburg; Ricky Castro,
City of Richmond; Christopher Carter, Caroline County;
Greg Fleming, Kyle Rodriguez
and Jeremy Sandifer, all of
Virginia Beach; Thomas Gill,
Williamsburg; Deon Hammond, Essex County; Chris
Lewis, Glen Allen; Tyler Lloyd,
Louisa County; Josh Mason,
Austin Owens and Kellyn
Simons, all of Chesapeake;
Jonathan Munn, Mechanicsville; Tyler Ross, Ashland;
6P[[8^[XSPh" !"6B55
1dVdbc" !"6B55
Places to go and things
to do in the Northern Neck
and Middle Peninsula
CT_cT\QTa" !"6B55
Places to go and things
to do in the Northern Neck
and Middle Peninsula
Places to go and things
to do in the Northern Neck
and Middle Peninsula
From the Potomac Rivah to
the York Rivah — A FREE
Guide to the Northern Neck
and Middle Peninsula
Advertise in the
first Rivah of 2013!
17,000 copies on
newsstands April 25!
SUPER SAVINGS by advertising
in more than one issue!
Advertising Deadline: April 11
Call the Southside Sentinel at 758-2328 or
the Rappahannock Record at 435-1701
soon for more information!
Don’t forget to ask about our
Rivah website Special!
2
years
Bridging the Gap in Health Care
Northern Neck
FREE HEALTH CLINIC
1993-2013
and Jacob Stephens, Halifax
County.
Head coach Jack Moore is
supported by assistant coach
Mickey Robertson, whose
daughter Erin is the team manager.
The Gulls’ home games are
held on the Rappahannock
High School field in Warsaw.
Upcoming home games
include: March 29, FultonMontgomery Community College (5 p.m.); April 3, Patrick
Henry Community College (4
p.m.); April 6, Allegany College of Maryland (2 p.m.);
April 10, Louisburg College
(5 p.m.); and April 21, Lackawanna College (2 p.m.).
On all of these dates, two
7-inning games will be played,
with the exception of the event
on April 10, which will be one
9-inning game. All the games
will start at 1 p.m., except
where otherwise noted.
For more information on
the RCC Gulls or their schedule, visit rappahannock.edu/
studentservices/student-activities/rcc-gulls-baseball. Also,
RCC student activities director
Dean Taylor can be reached at
804-333-6734 or at dtaylor@
rappahannock.edu.
with a fourth place in the 4x400
meters relay (4:12.40). The
4x100 meter relay team consists of DeAngelo King, Robert
Lemon, Marquez Holmes and
Brad Gills. The 4x400 meter
relay was run by Ellis, Malik
Green, Tarik Audain and Robinson.
Robert Lemon tallied a point
with a sixth place finish in the
triple jump (35’4”); Caleb
Wake finished a strong second
place in the discus (102’3”);
and Barron Lawson was fourth
in the discus (87’6”).
The Chargers picked up
6 more points in the shot
put as Wake finished fourth
(36’4”) and Lawson was fifth
(36’3.5”).
On April 10 MHS will visit to
West Point to take on the Pointers and Lancaster Red Devils.
The meet starts at 4:30 p.m.
All Middlesex High School
track meets are away.
YMCA yoga retreat
for adults planned
The Kekoka Yoga Retreat
for adults will be held on the
waterfront shores of YMCA
Camp Kekoka in Kilmarnock
on May 17-19.
The cost of the weekend
is $100 and includes lodging, four healthy meals, all
levels of yoga, meditation,
pranayama, yoga anatomy, an
holistic healing panel discus-
Speedway
to feature
new division
With the 2013 season opener
just 30 days away, anticipation
for the first race of the season
is escalating and registrations
have started to pour in from all
five divisions at Virginia Motor
Speedway (VMS) in Jamaica.
“Officials are busy getting
the track and grounds ready for
what should be a tremendous
2013 season,” according to
track general manager Clarke
Sawyer.
With the addition of the Pro
(Crate) Late Model Division
speedway officials are expecting to see some new faces
competing for the track’s coveted championships.
“We are really excited to get
the 2013 season under way as
we put all our focus on our
weekly competitors and our
dedicated local fans,” said
Sawyer.
For 2013 the speedway will
feature the Victory Lap Late
Model, Fastrak Pro (Crate)
Late Model, Truckin Thunder Sportsman and Collision
One Limited Stock divisions.
Champions will be crowned in
each division and each driver
will also compete for an overall
track title in the Virginia Army
National Guard Dirt Series.
The Dirt Series title will net the
overall champion an additional
$2,000.
Bill Sawyer’s Virginia Motor
Speedway, an ASA member
track affiliate, is a 1/2-mile, dirt
oval on Route 17 at Jamaica,
eight miles north of Saluda.
sion, small-group discussions,
laughter yoga, music, campfires, and water activities.
Massages, energy healing
and acupuncture are available
by appointment (additional
costs apply). Space is limited
to 60. All proceeds benefit
scholarships for youth YMCA
campers.
For reservations and information, visit www.ymcacampkekoka.org or contact
Camp Kekoka branch director
Cassie Leichty at cleichty@
peninsulaymca.org or 4353616.
YMCA youth soccer action
Kian Cheatam battles for the ball as Tyler Radabaugh (#11)
and Mason Duke (background) wait for the outcome in
Middlesex YMCA Youth Soccer action on Saturday. The
Middlesex 12-15 year olds defeated the YMCA Northern
Neck 1-0.
(Photo by Larry Chowning)
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Email news and photos to [email protected]
March 30th
is National
Doctorsʼ Day!
Without our doctors, more than
11,000 patients would not have
received more than $60 million
worth of health care.
Please join us in thanking
physicians for their amazing
committment to making this
a healthier community!
The Northern Neck
Free Health Clinic
could NOT operate
without the following
physicians:
David Antonio, MD
Fernando Atienza, MD
Richard Baylor, MD
Joseph Bessler, MD
Rebecca Wright-Bowden, PNP
Richard Carpenter, MD
William Castle, MD
June Daffeh, MD
Bonnie Daniel, FNP
John Daniel, MD
John Deschamps, MD
William Eng, DPM
Tina Frye, DPM
Steve Glessner, MD
Floyd Griffith, OD
James Hamiliton, MD
Ruth Harris, ANP
Ann Kingsbury, MD
Vicki Kinsel, MD
Edist J. Love, DC
Charles Maresh, MD
William McConahey, MD
Kevin McGrath, MD
John Melton, MD
Betty Mill, ANP
David Muffleman, MD
James Prince, OD
Alexander Reeves, MD
Tom Sperry, MD
William Stallings, MD
Kay Stout, MD
Rocky Tingle, MD
Diane Vanlandingham, FNP
Matt Vogel, MD
Mike Vogel, DC
Edward Zakaib, MD
Thank you
for
all you do!
Ad paid for by
anonymous donor.