Jury finds in favor of Hannah, Smith, Miller
Transcription
Jury finds in favor of Hannah, Smith, Miller
log onto www.williamsondailynews.com for archive • games • features • e-edition • polls & more DAILY NEWS “In The Heart Of The Trillion Dollar Coalfields” INSIDE WEATHER SPORTS ONLINE Goodman Manor residents’ voices complaint .... Page 3 Humid, chance of thunderstorms. High of 90. Low of 70. Tug Valley, Matewan in little league tourney .... Page 6 Busy? Find us online, anytime at: williamsondailynews.com TUESDAY, JUNE 25, 2013 Vol. 100, Number 124 50 cents daily Jury finds in favor of Hannah, Smith, Miller Hearing held in US District Court Kyle Lovern Sports Editor CHARLESTON — A jury has ruled in favor of former Mingo County Sheriff Lonnie Hannah, Sgt. Joe Smith and Deputy Mike Miller in a lawsuit brought against them by Arvil Runyon of Varney, W.Va. Runyon, 58, sued the Mingo County Sheriff’s Department and Mingo County Commission claim- ing negligent training of law enforcement as to handling someone who is disabled, but had been arrested. “The jury found that no excessive force was used in the stairwell of the Memorial Building,” said attorney Bill Murray, who represented all three of the defendants in the case. The trial was held in U.S. District Court in Charleston and concluded last Thursday. “They were very pleased to be vindicated by the jury,” Murray said of Hannah, Smith and Miller. “This was stressful for these men,” Murray added. “I am sure they are relieved that it is over.” “I’m glad it’s over and justice was served,” Sgt. Smith said. The suit alleged excessive force by law enforcement and that Runyon was not accommodated for a handicap as required by the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA). Murray said the jury didn’t find this to be true under the ADA. The incident took place in February of 2012, when Runyon contacted Hannah about a vehicle which had been impounded by the sheriff’s department while being used by his son. Hannah told him in order to retrieve the vehicle, he would need to come to the sheriff’s office located on the first floor of the courthouse and speak to Chief Field Deputy James Smith to obtain the keys, the suit read. See JURY | 3 Former Sheriff Lonnie Hannah Weekend fatality attributed to DUI Rachel Baldwin Staff Writer PIKEVILLE — According to Public Relations Officer Shaun Little with Pikeville Post 9 of the Kentucky State Police (KSP), a weekend accident near the Mouthcard community claimed the life of a Pike County resident and ended with another behind bars. On Saturday afternoon at approximately 4 p.m., KSP’s Pikeville Post of the received a call of an accident on U.S. 460. Upon arrival, Trooper Ryan Hamilton was told by eye witnesses that William Damron, 48, had lost control of his 1989 Chevrolet Caprice, dropped off of the William Damron charged with DUI and manslaughter. shoulder of the roadway and struck Donald B. Castor, 35, of Mouthcard, who was cutting grass at his See FATALITY | 3 Photos by Rachel Baldwin | Daily News Helping Margie Booth (seated left) celebrate her 95th birthday are Mae Stallard (seated right); (standing, left to right) Missie Hatfield, Danny Williamson, Melissa Dove, Russ Adams, Amber Haugen, Paul Noe, Jocelyn McCown, Elmer Mollett and Jacqueline Atkins, CNE. Celebration of age; perseverance and success Rachel Baldwin Staff Writer WILLIAMSON — One would not think of the physical therapy department of the Williamson Memorial Hospital (WMH) as a location for a birthday party celebration, but the staff members and several patients who attend therapy session there went all out last Friday, putting a big smile on the face of a special 95 year-old Williamson resident. Margie Booth was definitely surprised when she walked into the physical therapy session alongside of her dear friend Mae Stallard, who has also been taking maintenance therapy for well over 10 years. Booth was greeted with shouts of happy birthday and had numerous pictures taken of her and her many friends. While speaking with the Director of Rehab Services for WMH, Russ Adams, he told the Williamson Daily News that Booth originally started taking cardiac therapy a little over 10 years ago and graduated the 36 week session. She then began taking maintenance therapy and has continued to do so for the past 9 years. “Margie is one of several long-term maintenance therapy patients that we have here,” stated Adams. “The purpose of this program is to improve the risk factors associated with growing older and to See CELEBRATION | 3 Submitted Photo Mr. Cedric Greene, who serves as the Deputy Secretary of the W.Va. Department of Administration, will speak at a celebration ceremony for the 150th anniversary of the State of West Virginia on June 30th at the Logan Street First Baptist Church in Williamson. Margie Booth (center), a patient of the WMH Rehab Services Maintenance Therapy Department, is shown doing one of her daily exercises that is part of her maintenance program. Pictured with Booth is Physical Therapy Assistant Melissa Dove and the Director of Cardiac Rehab, Russ Adams. Weekend arrests reported in Mingo County Rachel Baldwin Staff Writer WILLIAMSON — According to criminal complaints received from the Mingo County Magistrate Court, officers within the county have been quite busy as of late, making several arrests on a variety of charges. Stanley Andrew Messer, 31, of Kermit, was taken into custody on a single charge of impersonating a police officer by Mingo County Sheriff’s Department (MCSD) Deputy L. Thomas. According to the criminal complaint, the defendant did identify himself to be a law enforcement officer to Kimberly Marcum, who was allegedly, ran off the roadway by the defendant. Messer reportedly told Marcum that he was a police officer and “could do anything he wanted to on the roadway”. Messer was arraigned before Mag- istrate Dee Sidebottom and was released from custody on a $100 personal recognizance bond. Terry Lee Vance II, 27, of Lenore, was arrested by MCSD Deputy M.J. Miller and West Virginia State Police (WVSP) D. Contos on charges of battery and obstructing an officer. On June 14, the victim of the crime, Billy Dempsey, relayed to the officers that he was working in his bathroom that was under construction when the defendant proceeded to enter his home uninvited, jumped on his back and began choking him. Even after the victim fled his home, Dempsey continued the assault. Eye witnesses to the crime verified the incident played out the exact way the victim said it did. Dempsey had redness and swelling in his neck area from being choked. The defendant is said to have re- fused to get into the police cruiser and reportedly cursed and yelled at the officers. He was arraigned before Magistrate Pam Newsome and was remanded to the custody of the Southwestern Regional Jail at Holden on a $2,000 bond. Delnor Whitt, 60, of Williamson, was placed under arrest by WVSP Senior Trooper C.A. Douglas, Trooper J.J. Dean and MCSD Deputy M.J. Miller on charges of domestic battery and domestic assault. The charges stemmed from a physical altercation that allegedly occurred between Whitt and the victim, his wife Amanda Davis, that began as a verbal argument. After losing him temper and becoming physical with his wife, the defendant is said to have yanked his wife off of their bed to the See ARRESTS | 3 Celebration scheduled at Williamson Church Rachel Baldwin Staff Writer WILLIAMSON — The members of the Logan Street First Baptist Church are cordially inviting the public to attend a special program on Sunday, June 30 that is slated to begin at 3:00 p.m. at their church located at the corner of Logan Street and Joseph Avenue in commemoration and in celebration of the Sesquicentennial of West Virginia having been granted her statehood on June 20,1863. Rev. Gerald Dotson is Pastor of the Church and is excited about the program that is sponsored by the Rose of Sharon Missionary Society that will feature several dignitaries and distinguished persons from our community and state. Guest Speaker will be Mr. Cedric Greene of the office of WV Governor Earl Ray Tomblin and of the State Sesquicentennial committee. Greene is married to Miss Raquel Baker, formerly of Williamson and a former member of the Logan Street First Baptist Church. Greene serves as deputy secretary of the Department of Administration. In this position, he assists the cabinet secretary in overseeing and providing direction for the operation of the agenSee CHURCH | 3 2 ■ TUESDAY, JUNE 25, 2013 WILLIAMSON DAILY NEWS Obituaries Gary Edward Estepp Gary Edward Estepp, age 56 of Kountze, TX formerly of Matewan, WV passed away Friday; June 21, 2013 at St. Luke’s Hospital in Houston, TX. Born January 23, 1957 in Matewan, WV; he was the son of Betty Wright Estepp of Newtown, WV and the late Thomas Edward Estepp. Gary was a U.S. Marine Corps veteran and was a mechanic. Survivors, in addition to his mother, include his wife Inez Estepp; his children Jesse Richard Estepp of Brazolia, TX, Amanda (Matt) Broucher of Kountze, TX, T.J. Estepp of Haleyville, Alabama, Clayton (Kellie) Estepp of Lafayette, LA, shane Edward Estepp, Meagan Estepp, and Mylea Estepp all of Kountze, TX; 1 sister Teresa Hatfield of Newtown, WV; and his grandchildren Kyler Bumstead, Kori Bumstead, Bella Estepp, Khloe Estepp, and Thomas Estepp. Funeral services will be Friday; June 28, 2013 at 11:00 A.M. at the Broussard’s Mortuary, 530 West Monroe, Kountze, TX 77625. Burial will follow in the Old Hardin Cemetery in Kountze, TX. Visitation will be from 5-8 P.M. Thursday, June 27, 2013 at the Broussard’s Mortuary. This obituary is a courtesy of the Hatfield Funeral Chapel of Toler, KY. Ruth Edith Mollett Ruth Edith Mollett, 74, world traveler, horticulture enthusiast, and ornithologist passed away on Monday, June 24, 2013 at OSU Hospital in Columbus, Ohio, due to complications from a three-year battle with ALS. An elementary school teacher for more than four decades and well-loved by her many students, Ruth was a loving mother, wife and grandmother who enjoyed attending her Warfield High School class reunions, Delta Kappa Gamma events, and driving her convertible. Born November 25, 1938 to the late Telia and William H. (Bill) Muncy, she was also preceded in death by her husband Harold Mollett, and siblings, Lakie Sluss and Cecil Muncy. She is survived by her children Jeffrey (Julia) and Victor, her most favorite person on earth, grandson Skyler, and her be- loved pets: Nemo and Lady. A viewing will be held from 6:00 – 8:00 p.m. on Wednesday, and funeral Thursday at 11:00 a.m. Both services will be held at The Wellman Funeral Home in Laurelville, Ohio. An additional viewing will be held Thursday evening from 6:00 – 8:00 p.m. at Richmond-Callaham Funeral Home in Inez, Kentucky, with a funeral on Friday at 12:00 p.m. Community Calendar June 27 Williamson City Council will meet at 6 p.m. at City Hall on 4th Avenue. The public is invited to attend. The Williamson Housing Authority will hold its Regular Board Meeting at 4:45 p.m. The meeting is open to the public. Public comments are welcome. For further info call 304-2353270, ext. 15. June 29 The Mingo County Democrat Women will be having their annual picnic on Saturday, June 29 at the park in Kermit, WV. It will start at 1 pm and continue through the evening. The group encourages all members and families, local and state democratic political office holders, and anyone that would be interested in attending and obtaining more information on our club to attend. Come enjoy the company, good food and fun! Let’s celebrate America. A Singing featuring the gospel group Etched in Stone will be held at 6:30 p.m. at the Airport Bottom Assembly of God located at the lower end of Airport Bottom a few miles above Delbarton. Refreshments will be served. Pastor Calvin Clark welcomes everyone. July 13 The annual Chattaroy Junior High Reunion will be held at the West Williamson Community Center (swimming pool) starting at 6 p.m. All CJHS alumni are encouraged to attend. For more info call 304-235-2190. July 30 - 31 The Mingo Career Center will hold GED testing for candidates who have passed the Official Practice Test. For more information, contact John Webb at 304235-3347, ext. 13. To register for Adult Basic Education to take the Official Practice Test, contact Mary Oliver at 304-235-2022 or email [email protected] Ongoing Celebrate Recovery meets every Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the Chattaroy Church of God. Mingo County Extended Learning Center at Rt. 2, Box 52-A, Delbarton, WV 25670 is applying to become a candidate for accreditation with the Commission of the Council on Occupational Education. Persons wishing to make comments should write to the Executive Director of the Commission, Council on Occupational Education, 7840 Roswell Road, Building 300, Suite 325, Atlanta, GA 30350. Persons making comments must provide their names and mailing addresses. In preparation for a 50 year class reunion, the 1963 class of Belfry High School is in need of a current mailing address for several members of the class: Thelma Bowen, Redia Scott Liebee, Penny Smith Holbrook, Brenda Stafford Tingler, Bonnie Thompson Davis, Donald Evans, Billy Bryan Hatfield and Robert Allen. Please call if you can assist with this information 606 237-4339, 2375896, 237-6094 or 606 432-9704. TOPS (Take Off Pounds Sensibly) meets Saturdays at the Jacob’s Well in the old Cantee’s location on 3rd Avenue in Williamson. Weigh in is 10 - 11 a.m., the program is 11 - noon. The first visit is free of charge. For more information call 304 2353025 or 606 353-6777. Williamson Public Library preschool story hour is held every Wednesday at 11 a.m. For more information call the library at 304 235-6029. Starters Sports Restaurant and Lyrick Promotions, LTD., presents The Acoustic Guitar Revue, featuring live music each Monday from 7:30 p.m. to 11 p.m. at Starters. A Circle of Parents meeting will be held on the third Thursday of each month at 1 p.m. at Logan Street First Baptist Church. Meetings offer anyone in a parenting role to participate in a group meeting to exchange ideas, share information, develop and practice new skills and more. Contact David Bell for more information at 304-443-3041. Mingo Extended Learning Center is accepting applications for our Practical Nursing Program for the Class of 2013-2014. Applicants must take and pass a pre-entrance exam to be considered for the program. Testing dates are March 5, April 9, and May 7. There is a $35 testing fee. For additional information call 304 475-3347 ext. 16 or 29. Mingo Extended Learning Center is accepting applications Dad demands coroner give back daughter Vicki Smith The Associated Press MORGANTOWN — The parents of a 16-year-old West Virginia girl who authorities say was killed nearly a year ago by her best friends canceled a protest planned for Monday outside the office of a coroner in Pennsylvania after receiving assurances that they will be able to see her body within a week, the father said. Dave Neese said the Monongalia County prosecutor’s office called him and persuaded him to call off the protest. Neese said his daughter Skylar will be returned to West Virginia, and the 60428518 state police there will arrange for him and his wife, Mary, to see her body. He had said earlier Monday that he and his wife were frustrated and confused about why Greene County Coroner Gregory Rohanna wouldn’t give them access to their daughter’s body. Rohanna apparently wants to do more tests, Dave Neese said, but it’s been nearly a six months since authorities recovered her remains. “This guy is telling me he needs to do further tests. … He doesn’t have the facilities to do more tests,” Neese said. “He couldn’t even determine the cause of death. Well, all he needs to do is look at the police reports to see the cause of death.” Rohanna didn’t immediately return a telephone call or email messages to his office in Waynesburg, Pa. One of Skylar’s friends — 16-year-old Rachel Shoaf — has pleaded guilty to second-degree murder in the slaying last July in Wayne Township, Pa. Shoaf admitted planning the murder with another girl who hasn’t been identified because her case remains in juvenile court. Skylar Neese was an honors student at University High School, and her father said the three girls were close. But Shoaf, police and prosecutors have all refused to offer a motive for the attack, and Dave Neese said he still has more questions than answers. Police reports aren’t included in Shoaf’s court file, but during her plea hearing last month, she admitted that she and the other suspect drove the victim to a secluded spot in Pennsylvania and stabbed her to death at an agreed-upon moment. They tried to bury Skylar but hid her body under branches when they couldn’t. The cold calculation and brutality of the plot shocked a small town already frustrated by the slow pace and secrecy surrounding the case. Investigators have said nothing publicly about the case since announcing the charges against Shoaf on May 1. Prosecutors say in the court documents they plan to recommend a 20-year prison sentence and will oppose any move to have Shoaf sentenced as a juvenile. But she could get as many as 40 years under the law. Shoaf’s family issued a public apology through a lawyer but has made no further statements. for the Medical Office/Accounting Program for the fall program. For additional information contact Alichia Marsico at 304 4753347, ext. 25. The Pike County Health Department is offering free diabetes management classes. There are various dates and times available including one Saturday during January 2013 at the Pike County Health Department. For more information, call Paula Compton at 606-5095503. Free diabetes self management classes are also offered to business and worksite wellness programs. Southside Elementary School will conduct a preschool story hour program for children between 2 and 4-years-old and not currently enrolled in school. For more information, call the school at 606-353-1284. Narcotics Anonymous meets Sunday at 3 p.m. and Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. at 815 Alderson St. For more information, call John at 235-2093. The West Virginia Army National Guard is taking applications for qualified applicants only. Applicants must be between the ages of 17 - 35 unless they have prior military service. No drug violations of felonies, meet height and weight requirements, be a high school graduate, or have completed the ninth-grade. We offer up to $50,000 student loan repayment, state and federal tuition assistance, medical, dental and life insurance and a part-time career with the opportunity to become full-time. For more information, call recruiter SSG Donna Smith at 3047 201- 3196 or email her at donna. [email protected]. Workforce West Virginia will take all new unemployment claims at its office at 300 Prosperity Lane, Logan, between 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. Please arrive 30 minutes prior to complete an application. This does not affect the intenerate office in Williamson DHHR office on Wednesdays from 8:30 a.m. until 5 p.m. The Parsley Freewill Baptist Food Panty will continue to provide USDA commodities. The pantry gives out the commodities once, monthly, on the fourth Thursday. Mingo Extended Learning Center (formerly Mingo Career and Technical Center) is currently accepting applications for the Medical Office Technology and Legal Office Technology programs for the 2012-2013 school term. For more information, call (304) 475-3347 ext. 25. Hatfield and McCoy Feud descendants are being sought for a special project by Leah Hatfield and Kim McCoy. Specifically, only direct descendants of the feud still carrying the last names of Hatfield or McCoy. Hatfields may contact Leah Hatfield at 843-575-0594 or by email [email protected]. McCoys may contact Kim McCoy at 502751-5200 or by email derby130@ insightbb.com. Operation Charity food pantry will distribute free USDA food from noon until 2 p.m. the last Friday of each month at the New Vision Assembly Church in Hatfield Bottom. Authorities say grain silo explosion kills one UNION MILLS, Ind. (AP) — Authorities say an explosion at a grain silo in northwestern Indiana left one worker dead. The LaPorte County Sheriff’s Department says the explosion occurred Monday afternoon in a concrete grain silo at the Union Mills Co-op. The department says in a news release that the victim was a co-op employee believed to be working in the silo when the blast happened. The cause of the explosion was not immediately clear. The department says all other employees are accounted for and no other injuries were reported. It also says no hazardous chemicals were involved. Indiana Labor Department spokesman Bob Dittment says a workplace safety investigation has begun. The co-op is about 50 miles southeast of Chicago. Deputy Sheriff Neil Lachmund says the co-op has multiple grain and fertilizer storage facilities. Zimmerman portrayed as vigilante SANFORD, Fla. (AP) — George Zimmerman was fed up with “punks” getting away with crime and shot 17-year-old Trayvon Martin “because he wanted to,” not because he had to, prosecutors argued Monday, while the neighborhood watch volunteer’s attorney said the killing was self-defense against a young man who was slamming Zimmerman’s head against the pavement. The prosecution began opening statements in the long-awaited murder trial with shocking language, repeating obscenities Zimmerman uttered while talking to a police dispatcher moments before the deadly confrontation. The defense opened with a knock-knock joke about the difficulty of picking a jury for a case that stirred nationwide debate over racial profiling, vigilantism and Florida’s expansive laws on the use of deadly force. “Knock. Knock,” said defense attorney Don West. “Who is there?” “George Zimmerman.” “George Zimmerman who?” “Ah, good. You’re on the jury.” Zimmerman, 29, could get life in prison if convicted of second-degree murder for gunning down Martin on Feb. 26, 2012, as the unarmed black teenager, wearing a hoodie on a dark, rainy night, walked from a convenience store through the gated townhouse community where he was staying. C&W CARLTON LAW OFFICE, L.L.C. Winning for Decades ROBERT H. CARLTON J.D. M.B.A. LAWYER KY & WV 19 East Fifth Ave Williamson. W.Va. 25661 304-235-7777 www.RobertCarlton.com Bankruptcy, Car Wrecks, Mine Injuries, Comp Fax 304-235-4665 PILAWYER @mikrotec.com 60422654 CARPET HOUSE, INC. 835 CENTRAL AVENUE - SOUTH WILLIAMSON, KY (606) 237-1008 No Wax Vinyl ............. $4.99 sq. yd. Commercial Carpet ... $5.99 sq. yd. 60326358 June 25 - 26 The Mingo Career Center will hold GED testing for candidates who have passed the Official Practice Test. For more information, contact John Webb at 304235-3347, ext. 13. To register for Adult Basic Education to take the Official Practice Test, contact Mary Oliver at 304-235-2022 or email [email protected] Randy Ballengee Bill Curry - Owner 60423916 (304) 235-8080 WILLIAMSON DAILY NEWS TUESDAY, JUNE 25, 2013 ■ 3 From Front... Goodman Manor residents’ voices complaint Williamson Housing Authority Director offers solution Rachel Baldwin Staff Writer WILLIAMSON — Several residents who reside at the Goodman Manor high rise on 4th Avenue in Williamson have contacted the Daily News complaining that the shopping carts that were at the housing complex that were used to transport their groceries, etc. from the bottom floor to their apartments were taken away by the Housing Authority and has created a hardship on those who are non-ambulatory, unable to lift objects or to make multiple trips. Jim Chafin was one of the residents complaining and had penned a letter of complaint to the Mingo County Commission, enquiring if there was anything they could do to help them get the carts back. Chafin explained how difficult it is for a great majority of those who call the Goodman Manor home to carry load after load of groceries and laundry to their apartment, as well as those moving in and out of the high rise. Pauline Sturgell, the Executive Director of the Williamson Housing Authority, talked with the Daily News about the sore subject, and explained that although a few of the metal shopping carts had in fact been donated by a local grocery store, the majority of the 55 carts found and confiscated by staff were not. “We found shopping carts from several local stores,” said Sturgell. “It was brought to my attention that these carts were creating a trip hazard for many of our residents since they were being left in the hallways, on elevators, in the parking lot, on balconies and were also being hidden inside the apartments, which makes it impossible for firefighters or EMS to have room to maneuver a gurney inside, should the need arise.” My staff did a sweep of the building and found a total of 55 shopping carts, which astonished me. I figured we may find 20 to 25 but I wasn’t prepared to hear the number 55,” commented Sturgill. “We transported the carts back to the stored from which they came.” The solution that Sturgell speaks about is one that she says if everyone cooperates and shares like they should, is the purchase of approximately 4 metal carts that resemble a smaller scale shopping buggy with two levels instead of one. They will be stored in a designated room on the 1st floor and can be utilized by the residents with the rule in place that they must be brought back when the resident is finished using it. “If everyone does the Pictured is the Goodman Manor high rise on Fourth Avenue located in Williamson. right thing, we’ll have no problems and it will be a workable solution for everyone involved,” Sturgell stated. “I am placing the order today and as soon as they arrive, we will get them in place.” On another topic regarding Goodman Manor, Sturgell was very excited about activities planned for the upcoming weekend, during which a total of 75 volunteers will be revamping and redoing the playground areas at Victoria Courts and at Liberty Heights. Plans are also in place to construct raised garden areas where residents of those complexes will be able to plant vegetables and flowers. Sturgell also commented on how much the residents of Goodman Manor enjoy the once a month events Fatality Jury From Page 1 From Page 1 residence. Damron’s vehicle is said to have ran over Castor and then re-entered the highway and traveled approximately 500 feet before coming to a complete stop. Emergency Services personnel were dispatched to the scene but were not able to resuscitate Castor. He was pronounced dead at the scene by Pike County Coroner Zeb Hampton. After further questioning of the driver, Damron was placed under arrest and was transported to the Pike County Detention Center on charges of DUI, manslaughter; 2nd degree, no insurance and expired registration. The defendant remains incarcerated on a full cash $500,000 bond. He is scheduled to be arraigned early this week in Pike County District Court. Runyon, who is disabled and walks with the use of a cane, said when he went to the sheriff’s office, he was told by Hannah that neither he nor anyone in the office had the keys to the vehicle. Court documents say Runyon claimed Sgt. Joe Smith “forcibly escorted” him to the door, took his cane and was “dragged down the hallway” by members of the Sheriff’s Department. His suit claimed he was abused. However, the defendants in the case said Runyon cursed them, re- fused requests to leave the courthouse, and continued an outburst until Sgt. Smith arrested him for profanity, swearing and obstructing an officer. Runyon was then arrested and put in handcuffs. After his arrest, Runyon had to be arraigned before a magistrate on the third floor of the Memorial Building. Runyon was provided a wheelchair to go from the Courthouse to the Memorial Building. However, the elevator in the Memorial Building was out of order. Smith and Miller said they offered to have Runyon arraigned in Celebration From Page 1 educate them on exercise, nutrition and medication management. This program can play an important role in increasing one’s lifespan by staying healthy and more active. It allows them to improve and maintain a higher quality of life than those who do not exercise.” Booth relayed to the Daily News that during a medical check-up, her physician told her that her vital signs and ability to remain ambulatory and as active as she presently is compares held under the direction of Activities Director Donna Paterino, who is employed on a part-time basis and is responsible for overseeing the fun activities that are attended by many. “Donna is wonderful with our residents,” said Sturgell. “She puts tremendous effort into creating events that are a great deal of fun and are enjoyed by all. Donna also plans monthly birthday celebrations for our residents and personally cooks a wonderful meal to commemorate the occasion, thanks to generous food donations by several of our local churches.” To enquire about apartments at any of the complexes managed by the Williamson Housing Authority, you may call 304235-3270. the basement, but that he refused. Runyon’s lawsuit claimed he was not offered an alternative to going to the third floor, and that instead of helping him up the stairs, Miller and Smith pushed him as he went up to the third floor. Both Miller and Smith claimed Runyon went to the third floor without incident. Runyon pled guilty to battery of a law enforcement officer. Recently, U.S. District Judge John Copenhaver dismissed the claims of negligent training and excessive force. Church to that of a female who is 65 years of age. “That was wonderful news to hear,” said Booth. “I owe a lot of that to my physical therapy program.” Booth is originally a resident of Wayne County and when asked if a handsome man was the reason she relocated to Williamson, she laughingly stated that “a man wasn’t the reason I first came to Mingo County, but he was the reason I stayed.” Booth was referring to the marriage to her late husband, Aubrey Booth, saying what a wonderful life they had together that produced 2 children, 8 grandsons, 5 great-granddaughters and 3 great-great grandchildren. She has been an active member of the Williamson First Baptist Church and taught Sunday school for over 70 years. Booth was overwhelmed at the number of people and hospital staff members who stopped by the physical therapy department to wish her well, thanking each and every one of them for taking time out of their day to help her celebrate her 95th birthday. She was presented a bouquet of springtime flowers balloons and other presents, as well as birthday cake and all the trimmings. “Margie is one of the most special people I have ever met,” stated Adams. “It has been such a pleasure to work with her to establish an exercise program that has greatly assisted in her living a full, healthy life. We hope that she’s here to celebrate many more birthdays in the future.” If you would like more information on cardiac rehab and maintenance therapy, you may call 304235-2500 and ask for Russ Adams or one of his assistants in the Rehab Services Department. From Page 1 cies under its authority. Additionally, he assists with all personnel matters as they relate to the department. Previously, Greene worked as Chief of Staff for the Secretary of State’s Office and as the Deputy Executive Director for the West Virginia Regional Jail Authority within the Department of Military Affairs and Public Safety. For more than 20 years, Greene served in the United States Marine Corps, stationed on both coasts as well as Okinawa, Japan as a gunnery sergeant. Greene’s last years of service focused on every recruiting duty station in West Virginia, including the recruiting station in Hurricane. Since 1987, he has served on numerous boards including the American Heart Association and has also participated in the Marine Corps’ Toys for Tots Program since 1995. Greene has recently been assigned to the Governor’s Committee for the Purchase of Commodities & Services from the Handicapped as well as the position of chairman for the West Virginia Veteran’s Council. Arrests floor below by grasping her hair and pulling her. While on the floor, Whitt proceeded to place his knee on her chest and applied pressure while he continued to yell verbal threats. Whitt was arraigned by Magistrate Pam Newsome and was transported to jail on a $2,000 bond. Bobby Douglas Cantrell, 21, of Ragland, was arrested and charged with 1 count of fleeing, no vehicle and 2 counts of obstructing an officer. MCSD Sgt. J.W. Muncy went to the residence to serve Catrell with a felony capias warrant. When the officer knocked on the door and ordered him to come outside, the defendant allegedly hid in the attic of the house. After a few moments passed, Cantrell thought Sgt. Muncy had left the location and exited the attic and tried to escape through the front door, only to find officers on the porch. Cantrell was arraigned before Magistrate Newsome and was remanded to the custody of the Southwestern Regional Jail. 60423835 The Aracoma Story presents The Wizard of Oz 60422293 From Page 1 JUNE 18 - JULY 7 8:30PM SHOWTIME TUES.-SAT. LIZ SPURLOCK AMPHITHEATER AT CHIEF LOGAN STATE PARK Charge tickets by phone 304-752-0253 www.loganshows.com 60425707 CATCH THE SPIRIT OF NEW LIFE AND NEW HOPE YOU ARE INVITED! Williamson FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Sunday 11:00 & 6:00, Wed 6:30 A COMMUNITY WIDE EVANGELISTIC, WORSHIP, PRAYER AND PRAISE FAMILY A Caring, Friendly, Loving Family Reaching up, Reaching out, Reaching for you. 5TH AVE AND HARVEY ST Williamson West Virginia 304-235-1930 Jarrod Belcher, Pastor Williamson FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Jarrod Belcher Pastor Reaching up, Reaching out, Reaching for you. YOU ARE INVITED Sunday at 9:45 & 11 & 6 , Wed 6:30 TV ch 17 Sun @ 7 LIVE: Fbcwilliamson.com @ 11 Sun Van transportation local area 235-19 60422664 4 ■ TUESDAY, JUNE 25, 2013 WILLIAMSON DAILY NEWS Editorial WVa can be proud CHARLESTON — When you hear about West Virginia leading the nation in this category or that, it’s often not a designation to be proud of. This one is.Having worked in, written about and visited many states throughout the region as part my job as a food writer and travel editor, I can tell you the Mountain State’s advancement of the “farm-to-table” fresh food movement is better than most. Other states may have more restaurants and chefs promoting the cause, but West Virginia has a more concentrated effort, a dedicated organization and true visionaries who are successfully connecting business owners, chefs and consumers to farmers and food producers. There are farm markets, large and small, across the state. Future Farmers of America and Community Supported Agriculture programs deliver a bounty of fresh-picked produce and local meats, cheeses and more to convenient drop-off points.The Collaborative for the 21st Century Appalachia hosts an entire website, www.WVfarm2u.org, that helps consumers find West Virginia farms and farm products, markets, roadside stands, specialty foods, wineries, greenhouses, nurseries, farm-to-table restaurants and other agri-tourism destinations. Led by director Allen Arnold, the Collaborative also increases awareness of the state’s culinary heritage by hosting a variety of cooking competitions and food events around the state, including a fantastic farm dinner I attended last week on the gorgeous grounds of Swift Level Farm in Lewisburg. In an idyllic scene straight from the pages of Southern Living, guests sipped wine while enjoying a multi-course gourmet meal of local foods prepared by some of the state’s top chefs.The highlight of the night for me came at the start of the meal with an antipasto station of grilled shrimp, marinated shitakes, assorted olives, a fava bean salad with goat milk ricotta and a colorful assortment of roasted vegetables. If was Chef Dale Hawkins’ veggies that blew me away — they were so crisp, fresh and delicious that I swear I’ve never had better. The grilled bok choy alone was mindblowing.Hawkins also served a delicious tortilla chicken soup (with chicken provided by Raleigh County FFA students) with charred corn, roasted red and jalapeno peppers and fresh herb and artisanal cheese garnishes. Next came “Trout 2 Ways,” with Chef Reed VanDenBerghe preparing trout amandine and a trout-with-trout-caviar dish bathed in light, bright yellow sauce (was it saffron? curry-kissed?) you could have sipped as its own soup.Chef Stephen Gustard followed that with a delicious smoked strip steak with melt-in-your-mouth sweet corn pudding and more grilled veggies with a balsamic reduction. Studies find methane in Pa. drinking water PITTSBURGH (AP) — New research in Pennsylvania demonstrates that it’s hard to nail down how often natural gas drilling is contaminating drinking water: One study found high levels of methane in some water wells within a half-mile of gas wells, while another found some serious methane pollution occurring naturally, far away from drilling. The findings represent a middle ground between critics of the drilling technique known as hydraulic fracturing who claim it causes widespread contamination, and an industry that suggests they are rare or nonexistent. The contamination from drilling is “not an epidemic. It’s a minority of cases,” said Rob Jackson, a Duke University researcher and co-author of the study released Monday. But he added the team found that serious contamination from bubbly methane is “much more” prevalent in some water wells within 1 kilometer of gas drilling sites. Methane is an odorless gas that is not known to be toxic, but in high concentrations it can be explosive and deadly. The Duke paper, published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, is an expansion of a 2011 study that attracted Letter to The Editor I would like to hear U.S. Senator Joe Manchin speaking about Obama Care, the future of coal, jobs and the economy, our failing school system, etc. and Hillary Clinton on Benghazi. I don’t know about all of your readers, but I am deeply troubled about the way this country is being run. Hillary Clinton’s query about Benghazi: “At this point what does ■ WHITT, Circulation DREW MARTIN, Advertising Mgr. JENNIFER JAMES, Advertising Mgr. CHADJOSH BYERS, Editor Mgr. 12 Weeks ... $87.50 26 Weeks ... $175.00 PO BOX 1660 Williamson, WV 25661 it really matter?” If we have any interest in maintaining our integrity and stature in the world, it matters quite a bit. And, how about the issues with immigration legislation? The Black Community stands to lose more than any group of workers if the Democrats start hauling in millions more. Get out of your jeans, Joe, and put your suit back on… address the failures of Hillary Clinton and the Obama Administration. Joe, No matter how many times you swing that gun around in the TV ads — West Virginian know you sold us ‘down the river’ on Guns and Coal. Thank you, Alice Click Mt. Alto, WV 25264 State Briefs Clothing voucher applications start July 1 CHARLESTON (AP) — West Virginia residents can begin applying for school clothing vouchers for eligible children on July 1. The Department of Health and Human Resources say the vouchers can be used toward the purchase of school clothing. Families who sew clothing for their children can use the vouchers to buy piece goods. Each eligible child will receive a $200 voucher. Children in foster care will automatically receive the vouchers, along with children in families who currently receive cash assistance from WV WORKS. Other families could be eligible if they meet income guidelines. July 31 is the deadline to submit applications. Families must use the vouchers at participating stores by Oct. 31. widespread attention for its finding that drilling was polluting some water wells with methane. The new study includes results from 141 northeastern Pennsylvania water wells. It found methane levels were an average of six times higher in the water wells closer to drilling sites, compared with those farther away. Ethane, another component of natural gas, was 23 times higher in the homes closer to drilling. Some of the methane was at dangerous levels. The study found 12 homes with levels above the recommended federal limit of 28 milligrams per liter, and 11 of those water wells were closer to gas drilling sites. Jackson said the Huntington researchers believe that landlord sentenced faulty drilling can cause on drug charge methane pollution, but HUNTINGTON (AP) — that natural causes can, too. Eighty percent of all A federal prosecutor says a the water wells they tested Huntington landlord who contained some level of accepted illegal drugs as methane, including many with no nearby drilling. In 2011, Pennsylvania strengthened rules for the steel casing and cement around the top of a gas well that are meant to protect water supplies from contamination, but some older wells weren’t drilled to those standards. ■ payment for rent has been sentenced to three years and 10 months in prison. U.S. Attorney Booth Goodwin says 46-year-old Jerry A. Lowe previously pleaded guilty to distribution of oxycodone. He was sentenced Monday. According to Goodwin, Lowe told police he typically received heroin or prescription painkillers as rent payment from two convicted felons. Lowe also bought oxycodone pills from another resident of the apartment complex, and sold at least 10 pills a month for about two years. W.Va. auditor settles ethics complaint CHARLESTON (AP) — West Virginia Auditor Glen Gainer has settled an ethics complaint stemming from his participation in a Visa online campaign. The Charleston Daily Mail reports that Gainer will donate $1,000 for the Charleston Area Medical Center’s Children’s Advocacy Center as part of an agreement with the West Virginia Ethics Commission. The donation will go to the commission and Gainer won’t take a tax benefit for it. The newspaper says it obtained a copy of the settlement agreement. The Visa campaign promoted West Virginia’s purchasing card program. Gainer and other state officials appeared in the online videos last summer. Gainer’s office manages the program for state government. In April, the ethics commission ruled in an advisory opinion that state officials can’t promote programs on a company’s website. Deliberations to resume in W.Va. doctor’s trial CLARKSBURG (AP) — Jury deliberations are scheduled to resume Monday in the fraud trial of a Clarksburg dermatologist. Dr. Allen George Saoud (seye OOD’) is charged with bankruptcy fraud, health care fraud, identity theft, tax law violations and making false statements to investigators. The Exponent Telegram reports that jury deliberations began Friday. Prosecutors say the 58-year-old Saoud fraudulently billed Medicare and Medicaid. Groups say W.Va. failing at surface mine oversight CHARLESTON (AP) — Environmentalists are rallying in Charleston, fed up with what they say is the state’s chronic failure to protect people and the environment from pollution caused by coal mining. Coal River Mountain Watch, the Ohio Valley Environmental Coalition and other groups are planning a news conference Monday outside the federal Office of Surface Mining and Reclamation Enforcement’s offices. Organizers say they’ll march from there to the governor’s office. They say decades of citizen action has failed to improve the state Department of Environmental Protection’s enforcement of mining laws, especially when it comes to surface mining. The groups are launching a new campaign called CARE, or Citizen Action for Real Enforcement. Its goal is to hold government agencies accountable for failures to protect West Virginians. WILLIAMSON DAILY NEWS TUESDAY, JUNE 25, 2013 ■ 5 Region EPA criticizes plan for King Coal Highway segment School nearing completion Buffalo Mountain section questioned CHARLESTON (AP) — A study of a proposed segment of the King Coal Highway and a related surface mine doesn’t consider alternatives that could reduce the project’s adverse effects on the environment and health, the Environmental Protection Agency said in a letter released Monday. The EPA said that the study is limited and the information it provides is inadequate. The agency recommended that alternatives be evaluated to ensure that the least environmentally damaging option is chosen. The study, a draft supplemental environmental impact statement, received an EU-3 rating (environmentally unsatisfactory — inadequate information) from the EPA. “Our experience in Appalachia demonstrates that it is possible to improve mine design to better protect water quality and the environment, reduce costs and maximize coal recover,” EPA Regional Administrator Shawn Garvin wrote in the letter, which was sent Friday to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, the Federal Highway Administration and the state Department of Transportation. The corps and the FHA prepared the study in cooperation with the state agency. The study involves a segment of the King Coal Highway from Delbarton to Belo. CONSOL Energy plans to grade land for the road bed as part of its proposed Buffalo Mountain surface mine. Buffalo Mountain would bury more than 7 miles of high quality streams and create a dozen valley fills, the EPA said, noting that the mine is one of the largest surface mines ever proposed in Appalachia. “Our concerns focus on the nature and extent of direct, indirect, and cumulative adverse impacts to human health and the environment expected to result from the construction and operation of the proposed Project and the lack of information in the Draft SEIS assessing these effects,” Garvin said. Once completed, the King Coal Highway would run 90 miles from Williamson to Bluefield and be part of the Interstate 73/74 corridor. West Virginia has enlisted coal companies to help build the road. Through these publicprivate partnerships, the companies keep the coal they mine while grading the land for road-building in the process. A 12-mile section opened in 2011. The Charleston Gazette first reported the EPA’s concerns. Kyle Lovern | Daily News The new Nolan Christian Academy school is nearing completion. The school is being built on the site of the old Nolan Grade School property by the Nolan Freewill Baptist Church. The work on the building has been mostly done by volunteers and members of the church. The new Christian school will have spacious class rooms, a library and media center, internet service, a teachers work area and break room and much more. The church is hoping the building will be finished by late summer. Contract OK'ed for Coalfields Expressway connector RICHMOND, Va. (AP) — The Virginia Department of Transportation plans to award a contract in July for the second phase of a highway that will link the Coalfields Expressway to Kentucky. Gov. Bob McDonnell says in a news release that the department received authorization on Friday from the Commonwealth Transportation Board to award the $108 million design-build contract to Rapoca Energy. Rapoca Energy will prepare a road bed to rough grade for a 6-mile section of the U.S. Route 460 Connector in Buchanan ((buhk-AN’-un) County. The first segment is under construction. Transportation department spokeswoman Michelle Earl tells the Bristol Herald Courier that another contract will be awarded later to a company to pave the connector. When completed, the four-lane Coalfields Expressway will run from Buchanan County to Raleigh County, W.Va. Jail and prison misconduct claims cost W.Va. millions CHARLESTON (AP) — Sexual misconduct claims at prisons and regional jails have cost West Virginia nearly $12 million over the last decade, state records show. Board of Risk and Insurance Management records obtained by the Charleston Daily Mail (http:// bit.ly/19v5mXX ) show that prisoners and their lawyers received more than $5 million in settlements and fees from Jan. 1, 2003, to June 1, 2013. The average settlement was about $20,000. Another $6.6 million was spent to pay the state’s lawyers, special investigators, expert witnesses and court fees. The number of sexual miscon- duct claims rose from 21 in 2008 to 83 in 2010. The number then declined to 45 in 2011 and to 26 in 2012. Two claims have been filed this year so far. “We still have too many of them. And we still have too many of them that have a basis of merit as well,” Joe Delong, executive director of the Regional Jail Authority, told the newspaper. Regional jails were the targets of 157 claims, while 97 claims alleged sexual misconduct at prisons from 2003 to 2013. Most of the claims were filed by female inmates against male correctional officers. Most of the female inmates were being held at regional jails awaiting beds in the state’s prison system, DeLong said. There are about 2,000 correctional officers for 5,400 inmates at prisons, compared to about 900 officers for 4,900 inmates at regional jails. “They’re fairly comparable in the number of inmates they have to house, but the (regional jail authority) does it with half the staff. You’re really comparing apples to oranges, to some degree,” he said. In 2012, all state-sentenced female inmates awaiting beds at Lakin Correctional Center were moved to Tygart Valley Regional Jail in Randolph County. Surveillance cameras were installed in all sections and corridors of the jail. Correctional officers are receiving regular training about appropriate relationships with inmates. “It certainly is an ongoing challenge. In a lot of cases you have very young, not far out of high school correctional officers who are working late at night in environments with seasoned criminals,” Delong said. Under state law, inmates can’t give consent for sexual activity with corrections officers. “So even if the inmate is the one who instigates activity, the corrections officer is always at fault because the inmate cannot give consent,” Delong said. “Un- fortunately, there are times that they are able to get our officers to do things that are inappropriate.” Corrections Commissioner Jim Rubenstein said guards at state prisons also are trained to recognize and avoid inmates’ attempts to involve them in illegal activity. “One of the main things from day one that we talk about, you don’t have sex with an inmate and you don’t get lured into the situations that put you in precarious places and situations where you could compromise yourself and other staff in the facility,” he said. Information from: Charleston Daily Mail, http://www.dailymail.com Alpha Foundation closer to choosing from 160 research pitches MORGANTOWN (AP) — A foundation with $48 million to spend on new research into coal miners’ safety and health has reviewed 160 proposals as it moves closer to picking winners by Oct. 1. Chairman Michael Karmis won’t say how many pitches survived the first round or what they centered on. The Alpha Foundation sent letters this week to those with the most promising projects, requesting detailed proposals and budgets for review in August. Eventually, the pool will be whittled to 10-15 projects, and some $10 million in grants will be awarded. The foundation also sent out dozens of rejection letters this week, but Karmis said review teams representing labor, academics and industry sent feedback in hopes of keeping those groups engaged and helping them craft better proposals in the future. “In all the areas, we see quite a lot of ideas — new concepts or papers taking the existing concepts farther than they have before,” said Karmis, a Virginia Tech professor. The Alpha Foundation was formed under a $210 million settlement between the U.S. Department of Justice and Virginia-based Alpha Natural Resources after the Upper Big Branch Mine disaster. Alpha bought the former Massey Energy Co., which owned Upper Big Branch in southern West Virginia when a massive explosion ripped through its underground corridors in 2010, killing 29 men. It was the worst U.S. coal mining disaster in 40 years. The settlement spared Alpha criminal prosecution and wiped out 370 safety violations related to the disaster but kept individuals on the hook. The ongoing criminal probe has already put two former mine officials behind bars, and a third awaits sentencing. The agreement consisted of $35 million in fines for safety violations at Upper Big Branch and other Massey mines, $46.5 million in restitution to the miners’ families and $128 million for safety improvements, research and training. Alpha agreed to invest $48 million of that in a mine-safety research trust, and the foundation was formed the following April. In their first meeting last fall, board members said they want to fill in gaps and overcomer barriers to scientific research, not duplicate existing work. Potential research areas could include black lung disease, technology to prevent explosive buildups of gas and dust, better mine communication systems and better mine-rescue capabilities. Industry groups also want the foundation to consider “soft research,” such as including safety and health management systems, risk management and leadership. Karmis won’t identify anyone who submitted proposals because the process is confidential. But he said only academic institutions and nonprofit 501c3 corporations can apply. “We got a wonderful array of universities, some of whom have a significant track record on health and safety, and some of whom are newcomers,” he said. He said the newcomers are welcome because they can bring a fresh perspective to longstanding problems. The non-prosecution agreement also required Alpha to build a training center, and it opened the $23 million Running Right Leadership Academy in Julian on Thursday. It gives safety instructors a place to create and control crises, while miners get realistic preparation for the day they hope will never come. U.S. Attorney Booth Goodwin said the lab employs some of state-of-theart equipment that Alpha is deploying to its mines under the settlement, including a continuous oxygen system that replaces the belt-worn air packs miners have long used when trying to escape. Mod-Air of Chapman- ville designed a self-contained breathing apparatus that resembles a firefighter’s gear. It has a full face mask, a back-worn tank and stations where those tanks can be replenished. The academy gives manufacturers a place to work out potential problems with their equipment without risking miners’ safety. For example, Goodwin said, Mod-Air learned it needed to make connection hoses in various lengths because multiple miners would be using the oxygen station simultaneously. Feedback from miners also prompted Mod-Air to use magnets to ensure those hoses stay connected. “The hope is that once Alpha deploys and embraces these various aspects of safety technology,” Goodwin said, “that will set a bar for the rest of the industry to reach.” BUNDLE & SAVE! ON DIGITAL SERVICES FOR YOUR HOME DIGITAL TV HIGH-SPEED INTERNET DIGITAL PHONE Offers may be available now in your area from Acceller, Inc. for these top service providers: * BUNDLES STARTING AS LOW AS $89/mo. For first 12 months FIND OUT MORE BY CALLING TOLL-FREE 1-866-636-5984 By Acceller, Inc., an authorized retailer. *Geographic and service restrictions apply to all services. Call to see if you qualify. DAILY NEWS TUESDAY, JUNE 25, 2013 Sports Tug Valley, Matewan in little league tourney Paul Adkins Civitas News Service CHAPMANVILLE — It was an impressive start for the Man 7-8-year-old Coach Pitch All-Stars. The Man Little Leaguers routed Mullens 12-2 on Saturday during the first day of the District 2 allstar baseball tourney at Chapmanville’s Tracy Vickers Field. Man scored one run in the first inning, two each in the second and third and six more in the fourth inning to build an 11-0 lead. Mullens scored two runs in the top of the fifth and Man added a run in the bottom half of the frame to end the game early due to the 10-run mercy rule. Man’s Jordan Adams ended the game in the fifth with a walkoff RBI double. Adams finished the game 4-for-4 with a pair of doubles and an inside-the-park home run. Diezel Cook also hit an inside-thePaul Adkins | Civitas Media Photo park homer for Man and had two hits Tug Valley’s Cody Crum is tagged out trying to reach second with the other being a double. Jerbase in Little League tourney action at Chapmanville. emiah Harless, Drake Veres, Colton Miller, Bo Thompson and John McCoy all had two hits each for Man. Jacob Walls and Jayden Brumfield added hits for Man. Harless had a triple for Man. Veres and Miller both doubled. McCoy also rapped out a triple. Brylon Arvon had two hits to lead Mullens. Conner Stover, Thomas Simmons and Tanner Cook also had hits. Man outhit Mullens 18-5 for the game. Man is slated to get back into all-star action on Tuesday night at 8 against the Madison No. 1 team. Tug Valley 8, Baileysville 6 The Tug Valley Coach Pitch AllStars opened the 7-8-year-old tourney on Saturday with an 8-6 win over Baileysville at Chapmanville’s Tracy Vickers Field. Tug Valley never trailed and outhit Baileyesville 20-10 on the afternoon. Julian Vance, Zach Hall, Dakota Ooten and Cody Crum had three hits each to lead Tug Valley. Paul Preece and Karlie Smith had two hits apiece. Autumn Hall, Kyle Hodge, Conner Lackey and Elijah Fluty had one hit each. Dale Bledsoe, Morgan Massie and Hunter Lester had one hit each for Baileysville. Jessie Lester, Brady Cline, Nathan Brown and Jaiden Bledsoe had one hit each. Matewan 25, Tug Valley 13 Tug Valley dropped to 1-1 in pool play on Sunday with a 25-13 loss to Mingo County foe Matewan at Chapmanville. Julian Vance and Dakota Ooten were each 3-for-3 at the plate to lead Tug Valley. Both had triples. Autumn Hall was 3-for-4 at the plate with a double for Tug Valley. Conner Lackey and Cody Crum were each 2-for-2 with inside-thepark home runs. Karlie Smith, Elijah Fluty and Haskel Horn each had hits for Tug Valley. D.J. Parker and Austin Bragg were each 5-for-5 at the plate to lead Matewan (1-1). Bragg hit an inside-the-park homer. Kaden Bolding was 3-for-4, while Jacob Cantrell, Donovan Johnson See TOURNEY | 7 Logan sweeps Mingo in Babe Ruth action Kyle Lovern Sports Editor LOGAN — The Logan Babe Ruth baseball team swept Mingo County in a doubleheader on Friday night by scores of 7-0 and 8-7. Tommy Adkins recorded shutout for Logan in the first game. He only allowed two hits and struck out five batters. Adkins also had two hits and a pair of RBIs. Zach Shawver had a single and three RBIs, while Jared Shawver had a triple and Chester Bradsher doubled for Logan. Nate Sanger had a double and Thomas Harmon a single for Mingo’s only two hits. Sanger was also the losing pitcher. In the nightcap, Seth Nichols was the winning hurler for Logan. Zach Samuel took the loss on the hill for Mingo County. Dawson Beckett led Logan with two hits, while Peyton Branning, Dillon Brown and Nichols all had base hits. Nichols drove in the winning run to help his own cause. Noah Lucas had a triple and two RBIs to lead Mingo. Zack Curry had a single, Cody Spaulding and Blake Hackney had base hits, while also Harmon had a hit in this game. Spaulding also had an RBI. Raahkim Gray was the starting pitcher and threw 4 1/3 innings before being relieved by Samuel. Nerlens Noel draft status and Dobson signs with Pats ing to the The Kenteam’s webtucky Sports Radio show site. with Matt Jones D o b s o n ’s will broadcast s i g n i n g live at the Coal means that House in Wilall seven liamson today draft picks of from 10 a.m. to New England 12 noon. have agreed The show is to contract aired on stations terms and of East Kenwill be availtucky Broadable at the casting and lostart of preKyle Lovern cally on WBTH season camp. Kyle’s Korner... 1400 AM. AccordThe sports ing to Isaac talk show that features Conner, Dobson’s agent, the Kentucky Wildcats Dobson signed a four-year is making its rounds deal worth a total of $3.4 throughout eastern Ken- million. Of those numbers, tucky. This will be the $1.1 million of the contract only stop in West Vir- is guaranteed and Dobson ginia, when they air received a signing bonus in live from the Tug Valley the vicinity of $873,000. Chamber of Commerce. …Marshall basketball The show is moder- player Dennis Tinnon might ated by Matt Jones, be getting his big break with Drew Franklin and Tyler the Brooklyn Nets. Thompson. They have The former Marshall billed the show as airing University men’s basketball from the land of the Hat- player had a Monday workfield-McCoy Feud. out with the NBA team. There is limited space, The Nets pay airfare and but fans may hang around provide one night of lodgfor a meet and greet after ing and a per diem. the show ends at 12 noon. Tinnon’s schedule Mon…Former Kentucky basday includes a morning ketball star Nerlens Noel workout at the team practice could be the first pick in the NBA draft on Thurs- facility in East Rutherford, day. Noel is tabbed as one N.J., followed by media interviews then lunch and inof the top five prospects. The 7-0 center injured terviews with the Nets. The Marshall spring gradhis knee, but is still exuate is hoping to be taken pected to be a lottery pick. He has been rehabbing the June 27 in the NBA Draft. Tinnon is a 6-foot-8, knee the last few weeks. 232-pound forward who The torn ACL is not the career-ending injury it once collected 641 rebounds in was, with modern surgery two Thundering Herd seasons. Last season he averand treatment. Noel is still on the wish aged 10.5 points and 9.1 rebounds a game. list for many NBA teams. … Former Marshall wide Kyle Lovern is the sports editor for receiver Aaron Dobson the Williamson Daily News. Comsigned his rookie contract ments or story ideas can be sent to with the New England Pa- [email protected] triots on Thursday, accord- or [email protected] Submitted Photo The runners-up in Williamson 6th grade AAU tournament this weekend. Pictured are Gaylen Cisco, Code Maynard, Amare Smith, Jarod Wellman, Case Sartin and C.J. Merrith. Director comments on tourney Letter to The Editor: My name is Gaylen Cisco and I am a former Williamson High School student class of 1987. I have a travel AAU basketball team out of Ceredo Kenova and we were in this weekend Williamson tournament. Hats off to two individuals Brandon Ball and Chris McCoy, they showed class during this function. Not only did they have a great tournament, but also made us feel at home and took us under their wing. It was run the right way like it was supposed to be. I have ■ been involved in many tourneys and Williamson is the top of the list. From the guys in stripes to the people handing out the drinks was over the top. Now that being said I was a little disappointed with the appearance of the Williamson Fieldhouse. I remember it being clean, freshly painted and shinning floor. I understand that the town is in a turn around with the new school but please take pride in your facility. Williamson has a great tradition of youth sports and I would like to see that again. We need for more people to get interested in this great and historic building. A fresh coat of paint and clean restrooms go a long way. I challenge the residents of Williamson and the surrounding area to get involved and bring back Williamson youth sports because you guys are sitting on a gold mine. I’m the director of our youth basketball league in CK and I know first-hand what it takes and I would be willing to share my ideas with the league. I just don’t want people to forget youth sports because folks –it’s for the kids! Gaylen Cisco Sports Calendar Little Miner Basketball Camp Mingo Central basketball coach Brad Napier is having the Little Miner Camp to Wednesday, June 26. It will be for girls and boys age 4-12 and sign-ups begin at 8 am on Monday, June 24. The hoops camp is from 9 am to 12 noon and all campers will receive a T-shirt and their will also be awards ceremony from 12-12:30 on the 26. The cost is $50$ per child, and $80 for a family with two kids in same family. First Baptist Bible Basketball Camp The 19th Annual 1st Baptist Church Bible Basketball Camp will be held July 8 -12, 2013, from 6:00 pm - 7:30 pm. Ages 4 - 8 from 6:00pm - 7:30 pm, ages 9 - 13 from 7:30 pm - 9:00 pm. The church provides a safe environment for the children to learn “Biblical Truths” and basketball fun- damentals. The cost is only $5 per child. Come out and enjoy the fun. Mingo Miner Football Camp The Mingo Central Future Miner Football Camp will be held on Saturday, July 27, from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. at Buck Harless Stadium. Campers will get a free T-shirt and lunch will be provided. The camp is for kindergarten through 8th grade. The cost is $25 per child, $20 for an additional sibling of the first paid camper. Mingo Central Girls Car Show The Mingo Central Girl’s Basketball Boosters will be holding its 2nd annual Car, Truck and Bike Show on Saturday, July 13 at the parking lot of the school. For more information call Bob Hammond at 304-784-8599, Kim Mayanrd at 475-4216 or Skee- ter Runyon at 475-2747. Williamson ML Football registration Williamson Midget Football and Cheerleading league will be having sign-ups for the upcoming season, every Tuesday and Thursday at the Williamson Fieldhouse from 5-9 p.m. The cost is $35.00/player and $15.00/child for a family that has more then 1 child playing in the league. Payment must be made at time of registration. We will need a copy of the childs birth certificate. We are also taking sign-ups for our football/cheerleading camp at the same time/place. The cost of the camp is $25.00 per child, $10.00/ child after the 1st. The camp will be the last two weeks in July, with a free swim day and party at the Williamson Pool on the Saturday after the camp ends. All children will get a camp T-shirt. Williamson ML Football Camp The Williamson Midget Football and Cheerleading League will be hosting their first annual camp this year. The camp will run Monday through Friday during the last 2 weeks of July from 5-7 pm. The children will get one on one instruction and some pre-season playing time. The Saturday following the camp there will be a free swim day with food and refreshments and activities for the day! All campers will receive a t-shirt! The cost is $25.00/child and $10.00/2nd child for families having more than 1 child participating. For more information please contact Lori Phillips at 606-625-0966. Sports Calendar is a service of the Williamson Daily News. If you have submission for the calendar send it to [email protected] WILLIAMSON DAILY NEWS TUESDAY, JUNE 25, 2013 ■ 7 Doc Rivers headed to LA Clippers ■ All-Star Voting BOSTON (AP) — Doc Rivers will be the next coach of the Los Angeles Clippers if the NBA approves the rare but not unprecedented trade of an active coach, a Boston Celtics official told The Associated Press on Sunday night. The deal would bring Boston a first-round draft pick in 2015, according to the official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because it is pending a trade call with the NBA office. Rivers, who had three years and $21 million left on his contract with the Celtics, must also reach an agreement on a new deal with the Clippers. Celtics spokesman Jeff Twiss said the team had no announcement. The tentative agreement on Sunday wraps up weeks of haggling over the deal and frees Rivers from presiding over the dismantling of the team that won the franchise’s record 17th NBA title in 2008. The Celtics and Clippers have also dis- cussed sending Kevin Garnett to Los Angeles in a package with Rivers for draft choices, center DeAndre Jordan and point guard Eric Bledsoe. But NBA commissioner David Stern nixed those talks this week, saying teams aren’t allowed to trade active players for a coach. A deal for Garnett could still happen, but the teams would have to convince the league that it was a separate deal. The 37-year-old big man has a no-trade clause in the contract that will pay him 23.5 million over the next two years, but it is believed he would waive it to be reunited with Rivers on the West Coast. He has also discussed retiring. Boston could also cut ties with Paul Pierce, the longest-tenured member of the team, who is due to earn $15.3 million next season; he could be bought out for $5 million. Pierce will be 36 by the 2013-14 opener and showed signs of slowing down this season, when he averaged the fewest minutes per game in his career. NATIONAL LEAGUE Through June 23 FIRST BASE 1. Joey Votto, Reds, 2,677,813 2. Paul Goldschmidt, Diamondbacks, 2,270,886 3. Allen Craig, Cardinals, 1,801,138 4. Brandon Belt, Giants, 1,323,511 5. Freddie Freeman, Braves, 1,181,657 SECOND BASE 1. Brandon Phillips, Reds, 2,597,742 2. Marco Scutaro, Giants, 2,272,484 3. Matt Carpenter, Cardinals, 2,251,248 4. Chase Utley, Phillies, 1,136,890 5. Daniel Murphy, Mets, 1,088,224 SHORTSTOP 1. Troy Tulowitzki, Rockies, 3,104,285 2. Brandon Crawford, Giants, 1,757,255 3. Jean Segura, Brewers, 1,625,753 4. Pete Kozma, Cardinals, 1,354,974 5. Andrelton Simmons, Braves, 965,016 THIRD BASE 1. David Wright, Mets, 2,917,819 2. Pablo Sandoval, Giants, 2,788,988 3. David Freese, Cardinals, 1,728,322 4. Chris Johnson, Braves, 1,008,552 5. Aramis Ramirez, Brewers, 881,559 CATCHER 1. Yadier Molina, Cardinals, 3,596,858 2. Buster Posey, Giants, 3,506,402 3. John Buck, Mets, 1,087,519 4. Jonathan Lucroy, Brewers, 845,519 5. Miguel Montero, Diamondbacks, 799,837 OUTFIELD 1. Carlos Beltran, Cardinals, 3,473,030 2. Justin Upton, Braves, 2,453,531 3. Bryce Harper, Nationals, 2,363,965 4. Carlos Gonzalez, Rockies, 2,060,388 5. Ryan Braun, Brewers, 2,010,310 6. Matt Holliday, Cardinals, 1,947,864 7. Andrew McCutchen, Pirates, 1,777,568 8. Hunter Pence, Giants, 1,732,843 9. Shin-Soo Choo, Reds, 1,566,597 10. Angel Pagan, Giants, 1,541,055 11. Carlos Gomez, Brewers, 1,393,464 12. Jon Jay, Cardinals, 1,321,149 13. Gregor Blanco, Giants, 1,210,892 14. Domonic Brown, Phillies, 1,107,632 15. Jay Bruce, Reds, 978,994 AMERICAN LEAGUE Through June 22 FIRST BASE 1. Chris Davis, Orioles, 3,960,299 2. Prince Fielder, Tigers, 2,579,031 3. Mike Napoli, Red Sox, 902,562 4. Albert Pujols, Angels, 872,602 5. Mitch Moreland, Rangers, 750,674 SECOND BASE 1. Robinson Cano, Yankees, 3,032,183 2. Dustin Pedroia, Red Sox, 2,135,499 3. Ian Kinsler, Rangers, 1,329,136 4. Omar Infante, Tigers, 1,191,119 5. Jose Altuve, Astros, 850,577 SHORTSTOP 1. J.J. Hardy, Orioles, 2,548,682 2. Jhonny Peralta, Tigers, 1,838,500 3. Elvis Andrus, Rangers, 1,616,834 4. Jed Lowrie, Athletics, 1,207,486 5. Derek Jeter, Yankees, 819,175 THIRD BASE 1. Miguel Cabrera, Tigers 4,337,223 2. Manny Machado, Orioles, 2,097,804 3. Adrian Beltre, Rangers, 1,334,195 4. Evan Longoria, Rays, 1,106,984 5. Josh Donaldson, Athletics, 635,581CATCHER 1. Joe Mauer, Twins, 2,788,972 2. Matt Wieters, Orioles, 2,068,032 3. A.J. Pierzynski, Rangers, 1,054,093 4. Carlos Santana, Indians, 1,029,674 5. Jarrod Saltalamacchia, Red Sox, 966,196 DESIGNATED HITTER 1. David Ortiz, Red Sox, 3,247,462 2. Lance Berkman, Rangers, 1,519,503 3. Edwin Encarnacion, Blue Jays, 1,091,593 4. Victor Martinez, Tigers, 959,646 5. Mark Trumbo, Angels, 919,036 OUTFIELD 1. Adam Jones, Orioles, 3,571,693 2. Mike Trout, Angels, 3,548,195 3. Nick Markakis, Orioles, 1,915,860 4. Jose Bautista, Blue Jays, 1,867,367 5. Torii Hunter, Tigers, 1,851,657 6. Nate McLouth, Orioles, 1,660,080 7. Nelson Cruz, Rangers, 1,595,371 8. Jacoby Ellsbury, Red Sox, 1,289,195 9. Alex Gordon, Royals, 1,239,771 10. Yoenis Cespedes, Athletics, 1,183,926 11. Coco Crisp, Athletics, 1,115,204 12. Austin Jackson, Tigers, 983,469 13. Josh Hamilton, Angels, 897,181 14. Shane Victorino, Red Sox, 823,363 15. Ichiro Suzuki, Yankees, 759,154 Your Protection Is Personal. (304) 475-4500 Paul Adkins | Civitas Media Photo Autumn Hall take a swing for Tug Valley against Baileysville in Little League tourney action from this past weekend. Auto. A uto. Home. H om e. Life. L ife. Business. B u siness . Tourney From Page 6 and Ava Williams had two hits each. Laikyn Hinkle, Peyton Cisco and Cameron Pilkins all had hits. Welch 20, Omar 10 Welch won 20-10 over Omar on Saturday on the first day of the District 2 Coach Pitch Little League tourney at Chapmanville. Andrew Workman and Brycen Tomblin had two hits each for Omar. Workman had an insidethe-park homer, while Tomblin ripped out a double. Hayden McCloud had a triple and Braden Blair and Colton Donahue each had doubles. For Welch, Travis Bell led the way with three hits, including an inside-the-park homer and a double. Jaylen Hall also had three hits. Emilee Harman and Anthony Atkins clubbed two hits each. One of the hits by Atkins was a triple. Alex Gouge also had an inside-theparker for Welch. Chapmanville 17, Matewan 9 The Chapmanville 7-8-year-old Coach Pitch All-Stars banged out 24 hits and defeated Matewan 17-9 on Saturday night in the District 2 tourney at Chapmanville. Brody Dalton had four hits to pace the Chapmanville All-Stars. Keldon Lucas, Adam Mullins, Hayla McGraw and Jacob Blair all had three hits each for Chapmanville. Mullins and McGraw each had doubles. Jacob Toppins, Caleb Whitt and Trey Butcher had two hits each. One of Whitt’s hits was a triple. Keith Ferguson tripled and Josef Brammer added a single. One of the coaches of the Chapmanville All-Stars is J.D. Brammer, a former Logan High School baseball standout pitcher who reached the Triple-A level in the minor leagues. Chapmanville broke the game wide open with eight runs in the sixth inning. Matewan was held to only six hits. Austin Bragg had three hits, including a homer and a triple. D.J. Parker, Laikyn Hinkle and Kaden Bolding all had one hit each. In Saturday’s other game, Pineville routed the Madison No. 2 team, 198. No statistics are available. Also on Sunday in pool play, Mullens played the Madison No. 1 team, Omar took on Pineville, Chapmanville squared off with Baileysville and the Madison No. 2 team battled with Welch. No scores or statistics were available on those games. The pool play tournament continued on Monday with a pair of games as Omar squared off with the Madison No. 2 team and host Chapmanville battled with Tug Valley in a Pool A contest. On Tuesday night, two more games are set to take place as Matewan plays Baileysville at 6 p.m. and Man squares off with the Madison No. 1 team at 8 p.m. Then on Wednesday, Welch is set to do battle with Pineville at 7 p.m. Crossover playoff games are then slated for Thursday, June 27 as the Pool C and Pool B runner-up teams are set to play at 6 p.m. The 8 p.m. game has the Pool C winner facing off with the Pool A runner-up squad. Then on Friday at 6 p.m., the Pool A winner plays takes on an advancing team. The 8 p.m. contest has the Pool B winner taking on another advancing team. The District 2 Coach Pitch championship game is scheduled to be played on Saturday, June 29 at a time to be determined later. Also on June 29, the 9-10-year-old District 2 tourney at Mullens is set to get under way. The 11-12-year-old District 2 Little League tournament at Madison is scheduled to begin on July 6. Nationwide Mutual Insurance Company and Affiliated Companies. Home office: Columbus, Ohio 43215-2220. Nationwide Life Insurance Company. Nationwide, the Nationwide Framemark and On Your Side are service marks of Nationwide Mutual Insurance Company. Subject to underwriting guidelines, review and approval.Nationwide, Nationwide Insurance, the Nationwide framemark, Nationwide is On Your Side and Join the Nation are service marks of Nationwide Mutual Insurance Company. © 2013 Nationwide Mutual Insurance Company. All rights reserved. NPO-0194M1 (01/13) 60428163 publication of the following Notice for four (4) consecutive weeks in The Williamson Daily News, a newspaper published in Varney, WV and available in the vicinity of Timothy Browning Jr.ʼs last known address It is further ORDERED that if the Respondent, Timothy Browning, Jr., does not enter an appearance or otherwise Answer the Petition, further personal service or service by further publication shall be dispensed with and service of any future notices, motions, orders or other legal documents in this matter may be made upon the Respondent, Timothy Browning, Jr., by filing same with the Juvenile Court Clerk for Sevier County, Tennessee. 8 ■ TUESDAY, JUNE 25, 2013 NOTICE TO THE RESPONDENT: Timothy Browning, Jr., The state of Tennessee, Department of Childrenʼs Services, has filed a Petition against you seeking to terminate forever your parental rights to Timothy Browning, Jr.. It appearing that ordinary process of law cannot be served upon you because your whereabouts are unknown. You are hereby ORDERED to serve upon Daniel Smithwick, Attorney for the Tennessee Department of Childrenʼs Services, LEGALS 115 Allensville Rd., Suite 105, Sevierville, TN 37876, Phone No: (865) 429-7012, an Answer to the Petition for Termination of Parental Rights filed by the Tennessee Department of Childrenʼs Service, within thirty (30) days of the last date of publication of this notice or appear personally in the Juvenile Court of Sevier County, Tennessee, at 125 Court Avenue, Sevierville, Tennessee, 37862, on the August 21, 2013 at 9:00 a.m. to personally answer the Petition for Termination of Parental Rights. Failing to appear for the hearing on this date and time, without good cause, pursuant to Rule 39(c) of the Tenn. R. Juv. P., will result in the loss of your right to contest the petition to terminate your parental rights to the child listed above. You may view and obtain a copy of the Petition and any other subsequently filed legal documents at the Juvenile Court Clerkʼs Office, 125 Court Avenue, Sevierville, Tennessee 37862. ENTER the 14th day of May, 2013. IN THE JUVENILE COURT OF SEVIER COUNTY, TENNESSEE STATE OF TENNESSEE, DEPARTMENT OF CHILDRENʼS SERVICES, Petitioner, v. No. 12-001619 TIMOTHY BROWNING, Jr. Father LEGALS NOTICE OF ABANDONED VEHICLE: This notice is in regards to a 1995 Wells Fargo Trailer, VIN: 1WC20013V1075224, that was abandoned at Rt. 2, Box 394, Rockhouse Road, Delbarton, WV, and possession of said vehicle was taken at the same address. this letter will serve as notice that any unknown owner has the right to reclaim the above-referenced vehicle within ten (10) days from the date of this publication, provided they have proper title to send vehicle and provided they supply payment in full of all towing, preservation and storage charges. Your failure to exercise you right to reclaim the motor vehicle within the ten (10) days period shall be deemed a waiver by you, as last known owner, of all right, title and interest in the motor vehicle and of your consent to the sale or disposal of the abandoned motor vehicle or junked motor vehicle at a public auction or to a license salvage yard or demolisher. Mitchell Bias Regional Church of God P.O. Box 236 Delbarton, WV 25670 (304) 475-3468 6:25, Respondent, IN THE MATTER OF: GAVIN JUSTUS, d.o.b: 8-182006 A CHILD UNDER EIGHTEEN LEGALS (18) YEARS OF AGE ORDER FOR SERVICE BY PUBLICATION It appearing to the Court from the allegations of the Petition for Termination of Parental Rights, the returned summons, showing no service, and the Affidavit of Diligent Search that the whereabouts of the Respondent, Tim Browning, are unknown and cannot be ascertained by diligent search, therefore, the ordinary process of law cannot be served upon Timothy Browning, Jr. It is therefore, ORDERED that said Respondent be served by publication of the following Notice for four (4) consecutive weeks in The Williamson Daily News, a newspaper published in Varney, WV and available in the vicinity of Timothy Browning Jr.ʼs last known address It is further ORDERED that if the Respondent, Timothy Browning, Jr., does not enter an appearance or otherwise Answer the Petition, further personal service or service by further publication shall be dispensed with and service of any future notices, motions, orders or other legal documents in this matter may be made upon the Respondent, Timothy Browning, Jr., by filing same with the Juvenile Court Clerk for Sevier County, Tennessee. HON. JEFF RADER SEVIER COUNTY JUVENILE JUDGE APPROVED FOR ENTRY: Daniel K. Smithwick, BPR #023900 Assistant General Counsel Tenn. Dept. of Childrenʼs Services 115 Allensville Rd., Suite 105 Sevierville, TN 37876 (865) 425-7012 NOTICE TO THE RESPONDENT: Timothy Browning, Jr., The state of Tennessee, Department of Childrenʼs Services, has filed a Petition against you seeking to termin6:4,11,18,25 ate forever your parental rights to Timothy Browning, Jr.. It appearing that ordinary process TRUSTEEʼS SALE OF VALUof law cannot be served upon ABLE REAL ESTATE you because your whereabouts are unknown. You are The undersigned Substitute Respondent, hereby ORDERED to serve Trustee, by virtue of the auIN THE MATTER OF: upon Daniel Smithwick, Attorthority vested in him by that GAVIN JUSTUS, d.o.b: 8-18ney for the Tennessee Departcertain Deed of Trust, dated 2006 ment of Childrenʼs Services, the 12th day of April, 2007, A CHILD UNDER EIGHTEEN 115 Allensville Rd., Suite 105, and duly recorded in the Of(18) YEARS OF AGE Sevierville, TN 37876, Phone ORDER FOR SERVICE BY fice of the Clerk of the County No: (865) 429-7012, an AnPUBLICATION Commission of Mingo County, swer to Miscellaneous the Petition for Termin- West Virginia, in Deed Book ation of Parental Rights filed by It appearing to the Court from 406, at page 445, Michael the Tennessee Department of the allegations of the Petition Dillon and Lisa Dillon did conChildrenʼs Service, within thirty for Termination of Parental vey unto Kami Fries, (30) days of the last date of Rights, the returned summons, Trustee(s), certain real proppublication of this notice or apshowing no service, and the erty described in said Deed of pear personally in the Juvenile Affidavit of Diligent Search that Trust; and the beneficiary has Court of Sevier County, Tenthe whereabouts of the Reelected to appoint Seneca nessee, at 125 Court Avenue, spondent, Tim Browning, are Trustees, Inc., as Substitute Sevierville, Tennessee, 37862, unknown and cannot be ascerTrustee by a Substitution of on the August 21, 2013 at 9:00 tained by diligent search, Trustee dated January 31, Are You Still Paying Too Much a.m. to personally answer the therefore, the ordinary proand recorded in the Make2013 the Switch to Dish Your Petition for Termination of Parcess of lawFor cannot be Medications? served aforesaid Clerkʼs office; and ental Rights. Failing to appear Todaydefault and Save tomade You can save up to 90% fill your 50%unupon Timothy Browning, Jr.when It you havingup been forand the hearing on this date and der the aforementioned Deed prescriptions at our is therefore, ORDERED thatCanadian International Pharmacy time, without good cause, pursaid Respondent be served by Service. of Trust, and the undersigned rice to Rule 39(c) of the Our P publication of the following NoSubstitute Trustee having been Get An Extrasuant $10 Off Pr om ot io nal Tenn.On R. Juv. P., will result inPack instructed MOVIE tice forCelecoxib* four (4) consecutive byPREMIUM State Farm Bank, & Free Shipping ag es starting atF.S.B. the loss of your right to conCHANNELS* weeks in$58.00 The Williamson thereunder, YourDaily 1st Order! only ... to foreclose testandthe to terminate Call the number below savepetition an News, Generic a newspaper published will offer for sale at public aucequivalent TM additional $10 plus get free parental shipping rights to the child tion at the front door of the of Celebrex in Varney, WV .and available in your on your first prescription order with Generic price for listed above. You may view the vicinity TimothyCanada BrownMingo County Courthouse in Drug Center. Expires March 200mgofx 100 and obtain a copy of the Peti31, 2013. Offer is valid for prescription mo. ing Jr.ʼs last known address Williamson, West Virginia, on orders only and can not be used in compared to and any other subIt is further ORDERED that if with anytion conjunction other offers. TM sequently filed legal docuCelebrex $437.58 July 2, 2013 at o'clock pm the Respondent, Timothy Order Now! 1-800-341-2398 For2:15 3 months. at the Juvenile Court Typical USJr., branddoes price not Useenter code 10FREEments to receive Browning, for 200mg x 100 this special offer. Clerkʼs Office, 125 Court Avenan appearance or otherwise following described real esCall Now andthe Ask How! with its improveue,and Sevierville, Tennessee Please notePetition, that we do notfurther carry controlled substances a valid tate, together Answer the prescription is required for all prescription medication orders. 37862. personal service or service by ments, easements and appurCall Toll-free: of May, further publication shall 1-800-341-2398 be dis- ENTER the 14th day tenances thereunto belonging, Call 7 days a week 8am - 11pm EST Promo Code: MB0113 Use ofand these services is subject the Terms of Use and 2013. in Hardee pensed with service oftoany *Offer subject to changesituate based on premium channelDistrict, availablity accompanying policies at www.canadadrugcenter.com. future notices, motions, orders Mingo County, West Virginia, HON. JEFF RADER or other legal documents in and more particularly dethis matter may be made upon SEVIER COUNTY JUVENILE scribed as follows: JUDGE the Respondent, Timothy APPROVED FOR ENTRY: Browning, Jr., by filing same BEING DESCRIBED AS .50 A. with the Juvenile Court Clerk SUR. PIGEON CREEK, BEWe’ll Repair Computer Daniel K. Smithwick, BPR for Sevier County, Tennessee. ING Your TAX MAP 283 PARCEL #023900 Through The Internet! 004.0001 OF SAID DISTRICT Assistant General Counsel NOTICE AS CERTIFIED BY THE For: Tenn. Dept. of Childrenʼs Solutions SerTO THE RESPONDENT: SHERIFF OF MINGO Slow Computers • E-Mail & Printer Problems vices Over $10,000 in credit card bills? Timothy Browning, Jr., COUNTY ON CERTIFICATE Spyware & Viruses • Bad Internet Connections 115 Allensville Rd., Suite 105 the minimum TheCan’t statemake of Tennessee, De-payments? OF SALE NO. 2004-S-4. Sevierville, TN 37876 partment of Childrenʼs SerAffordable Rates ✔ WE CAN GET YOU OUT OF DEBT QUICKLY (865) 425-7012 vices, has filed a Petition BEING THE SAME REAL ESHomeUNTO MIWE CAN SAVE YOU against✔you seeking to THOUSANDS termin- OF DOLLARS TATEFor CONVEYED 6:4,11,18,25 CHAEL ate forever yourHELP parental rights DILLON AND LISA ✔ WE CAN YOU AVOID BANKRUPTCY & Business to Timothy Browning, Jr.. It apDILLON FROM REBUILD Not a high-priced consolidation loan or one of those pearing that ordinary process INC., Help BY DEED Call Now AMERICA, For Immediate consumer credit counseling programs of law cannot be served upon DATED MARCH 21, 2007, CREDIT CARD RELIEF you because your whereWHICH DEED IS TO BE REfor your FREE consultation CALL abouts are unknown. You are CORDED CONTEMPORAN877-465-0321 Off Service 00EOUSLY $ hereby ORDERED to serve HEREWITH. We’re here to help you Monday - Friday from 9am-9pm EST Mention Code: MB upon Daniel Smithwick, AttorNot available in all states ney for the Tennessee DepartAt the time of the execution of ment of Childrenʼs Services, the Deed of Trust, this prop115 Allensville Rd., Suite 105, erty was reported to have an Sevierville, TN 37876, Phone address of: WV Rt 65 BaisNo: (865) 429-7012, an Andentown, Baisdentown, WV swer to the Petition for Termin25661. ation of Parental Rights filed by the Tennessee Department of The referenced real estate will Childrenʼs Service, within thirty be conveyed with no coven(30) days of the last date of ants of warranty, and subject publication of this notice or apto all covenants, restrictions, pear personally in the Juvenile easements, rights of way and Court of Sevier County, Tenreservations which may be a nessee, at 125 Court Avenue, matter of record in the aforeSevierville, Tennessee, 37862, said Clerkʼs Office or visible on the August 21, 2013 at 9:00 upon the ground, all prior liens a.m. to personally answer the and encumbrances, including, Petition for Termination of Parwithout limitation, liens for real ental Rights. Failing to appear estate taxes, incinerator, sanitfor the hearing on this date and ary and sewer charges. The time, without good cause, purpurchasers at the sale shall be suant to Rule 39(c) of the responsible for paying the reTenn. R. Juv. P., will result in cording costs and also the tax the loss of your right to conon the privilege of transferring test the petition to terminate real property (the cost of the your parental rights to the child tax stamp to be affixed to the listed above. You may deed). The purchasers shall be Your insurance mayview pay for your diabetic andsupplies obtain awith copyli� oflethe responsible for payment of all to Petino cost to you. tion and any other subreal estate taxes. Call NOW to make sure sequently filed legal docuyou are ge�ing ments at the Juvenile Court The subject property will be the best deal on your Clerkʼs Office, 125 Court Avensold in "AS IS" condition. The Diabetic Supplies! ue, Sevierville, Tennessee Substitute Trustee shall be unmonit 37862. der no duty tooricause ng starting any existaround ����YOU�MAY�QUALIFY�FOR� ENTER the 14th day of May, ing tenant or person occupy• A glucose meter upgrade 2013. ing the subject property to va• Free prescription delivery cate said property. per week • Great deals on products *with $99 customer HON. JEFF RADER ation e and purchase of alarm install monitoring charg services. & services SEVIER COUNTY JUVENILE TERMS: $4,000.00 in cash • And FREE gi� s JUDGE and/or certified funds as deAPPROVED FOR ENTRY: with the balance due and Call Today,posit Protect Tomorrow! AMERICA’S�DIABETIC� payable within 30 days of the SAVINGS�CLUB Daniel K. Smithwick, BPR day of sale. #023900 CALL�NOW!�����-���-���� Mon-Fri 8am 11pm • Sat 9am - 8pmTAX • Sun 10am - 6pm EST Assistant General Counsel FEDERAL LIEN: In the Tenn. Dept. of Childrenʼs Serevent that there are Federal vices Tax Liens against the property, 115 Allensville Rd., Suite 105 the United States would have Sevierville, TN 37876 the right to redeem the prop(865) 425-7012 erty within a period of 120 days IN THE JUVENILE COURT OF SEVIER COUNTY, TENNESSEE STATE OF TENNESSEE, DEPARTMENT OF CHILDRENʼS SERVICES, Petitioner, v. No. 12-001619 TIMOTHY BROWNING, Jr. Father NATIONAL MARKETPLACE for 12 month s 1-888-721-0871 BURIED in CREDIT CARDDEBT? Fix Your Computer Now! 888-781-3386 25 ARE YOU A DIABETIC? 1-888-718-8142 No. 299, default having been made in the payment of the indebtedness thereby secured to be paid and the holder of the note having requested the undersigned so to do, the undersigned Trustee will by virtue of the authority vested in him, on the 19TH day of JULY, 2013 at 9:00 AM at the Front Door of the Courthouse of Mingo LEGALS County, West Virginia, in the City of Williamson, in Mingo County, West Virginia, offer for sale at public auction, to the highest bidder, the property in Mingo County, West Virginia, and being more particularly described as follows, to-wit: All of those certain parcels of real estate situate, lying and being on Baisden Fork of Gilbert Creek Stafford District, Mingo County, West Virginia, to-wit: TRUSTEEʼS SALE OF VALUABLE REAL ESTATE The undersigned Substitute Trustee, by virtue of the authority vested in him by that certain Deed of Trust, dated the 12th day of April, 2007, LEGALS and duly recorded in the Office of the Clerk of the County Commission of Mingo County, West Virginia, in Deed Book 406, at page 445, Michael Dillon and Lisa Dillon did convey unto Kami Fries, Trustee(s), certain real property described in said Deed of Trust; and the beneficiary has elected to appoint Seneca Trustees, Inc., as Substitute Trustee by a Substitution of Trustee dated January 31, 2013 and recorded in the aforesaid Clerkʼs office; and default having been made under the aforementioned Deed of Trust, and the undersigned Substitute Trustee having been instructed by State Farm Bank, F.S.B. to foreclose thereunder, will offer for sale at public auction at the front door of the Mingo County Courthouse in Williamson, West Virginia, on July 2, 2013 at 2:15 o'clock pm the following described real estate, together with its improvements, easements and appurtenances thereunto belonging, situate in Hardee District, Mingo County, West Virginia, and more particularly described as follows: BEING DESCRIBED AS .50 A. SUR. PIGEON CREEK, BEING TAX MAP 283 PARCEL 004.0001 OF SAID DISTRICT AS CERTIFIED BY THE SHERIFF OF MINGO COUNTY ON CERTIFICATE OF SALE NO. 2004-S-4. BEING THE SAME REAL ESTATE CONVEYED UNTO MICHAEL DILLON AND LISA DILLON FROM REBUILD AMERICA, INC., BY DEED DATED MARCH 21, 2007, WHICH DEED IS TO BE RECORDED CONTEMPORANEOUSLY HEREWITH. At the time of the execution of the Deed of Trust, this property was reported to have an address of: WV Rt 65 Baisdentown, Baisdentown, WV 25661. The referenced real estate will be conveyed with no covenants of warranty, and subject to all covenants, restrictions, easements, rights of way and reservations which may be a matter of record in the aforesaid Clerkʼs Office or visible upon the ground, all prior liens and encumbrances, including, without limitation, liens for real estate taxes, incinerator, sanitary and sewer charges. The purchasers at the sale shall be responsible for paying the recording costs and also the tax on the privilege of transferring real property (the cost of the tax stamp to be affixed to the deed). The purchasers shall be responsible for payment of all real estate taxes. The subject property will be sold in "AS IS" condition. The Substitute Trustee shall be under no duty to cause any existing tenant or person occupying the subject property to vacate said property. TERMS: $4,000.00 in cash and/or certified funds as deposit with the balance due and payable within 30 days of the day of sale. FEDERAL TAX LIEN: In the event that there are Federal Tax Liens against the property, the United States would have the right to redeem the property within a period of 120 days from the date of such sale or the period allowable for redemption under local law, whichever is longer. Pursuant to the Deed of Trust, the Trustee may postpone the sale by public announcement at the time and place designated or by posting a notice of the same, and act by agent in the execution of the sale. The parties secured by the Deed of Trust reserve the right to purchase the property at such sale. SENECA TRUSTEES, INC. 6108 Mid Atlantic Drive Morgantown, WV 26508 (304) 413-0044 (304) 292-2918 Toll free: (888) 534-3132 Reference File No. 20-03135412 cc: Wiliamson Daily News 06/18/13, 06/25/13 NOTICE OF TRUSTEEʼS SALE By virtue of that certain deed of trust made on February 14, 2008 by RICKY L. LESTER, to Jerry R. White or Harry K. White, either of whom may act, Trustee, and of record in the Office of the Clerk of the County Commission of Mingo County, West Virginia, in Trust Deed Book No. 408, at Page No. 299, default having been made in the payment of the indebtedness thereby secured to be paid and the holder of the note having requested the undersigned so to do, the undersigned Trustee will by virtue of the authority vested in him, on the 19TH day of JULY, 2013 at 9:00 AM at the Front Door of the Courthouse of Mingo County, West Virginia, in the City of Williamson, in Mingo County, West Virginia, offer for sale at public auction, to the highest bidder, the property in Mingo County, West Virginia, and being more particularly de- PARCEL NO. 1 “BEGINNING at a steel pin in the road right-of-way and corner to the Estel and Phyllis Lester land; thence running in a straight line up the hill seventy (70) feet to a steel pin; thence turning right and running in a straight line in an upcreek direction One Hundred (100) feet to a steel pin; thence turning right and running down the hill Seventy (70) feet to a steel pin; thence turning right and running down the creek with the Estel and Phyllis Lester land One Hundred (100) feet to the point of BEGINNING,” together with all and singular the improvements thereon and the appurtenances thereunto belonging or in any manner thereunto appertaining. PARCEL NO. 2 “BEGINNING at a steel pin in the road right of way and a common corner of the Grantorʼs property and property now owned by the Grantees by virtue of deed of even date herewith from Michael Dave Lester; thence running in a straight line down the hill Twenty-One (21) feet to a steel pin; thence turning right and running in a straight line in an up-creek direction One Hundred (100) feet to a steel pin; thence turning right and running up the hill Twenty-One (21) feet to a steel pin; thence turning right and running down the creek with the land purchased by the Grantees this date from said Michael Dave Lester One Hundred (100) feet to the point of BEGINNING, and being a rectangular parcel abutting the said parcel purchased by the Grantees this date from Michael Dave Lester,” together with all and singular the improvements thereon and the appurtenances thereunto belonging or in any manner thereunto appertaining. Also includes a 1984 CLAZ MODULAR HOME - SN: 7820A&B And being the same property conveyed to RICKY L. LESTER died intestate January 14, 2013, leaving as his sole heir, his wife, SHARON LESTER, who was appointed over his estate in Fiduciary Book 33, at page 385. RICKY LESTER from will of HERBERT LESTER, who died testate on February 8, 2005. Under a provision in his Last Will and Testament of record in the Office of the County Clerk of Mingo County, West Virginia, in Will Book 42, at Page 372, his son, Ricky Lee Lester, inherited the full interest of said property. The last deed was to Herbert Lester from MARIE KATHLEEN LESTER (also known as KATHLEEN LESTER), by a General Warranty deed dated March 3, 1999, and recorded March 19, 1999, in the Office of the Clerk of the County Commission of Mingo County, West Virginia, in Deed Book No. 366, at Page No. 385. TERMS: Cash in hand on day of sale. The property will be sold, “AS IS” and said conveyance will be made subject to all pertinent covenants and restrictions and subject to any and all unpaid property taxes or special assessments. Trustee reserves the right to reject any and all bids. The Sale may be subject to the rights of the Internal Revenue Service to match any offer made on said property within 120 days from said sale. JERRY R. WHITE, TRUSTEE 6:18,25 NOTICE OF TRUSTEEʼS SALE By virtue of that certain deed of trust dated September 29, 2008, from Richard I. Wilkerson to Jerry R. White or Harry K. White, Trustees for the Bank of Mingo, for the principal indebtedness of $83,053.34, and recorded on October 9, 2008, in Trust Deed Book 413, at page 77. A Loan Modification agreement on this trust deed was recorded on December 2, 2010, in Trust Deed 427, at page 537, default having been made in the payment of the indebtedness thereby secured to be paid and the holder of the note having requested the undersigned so to do, the undersigned Trustee, will by virtue of the authority vested in him, on the 19TH day of JULY, 2013 at 8:45 AM at the Front Door of the Courthouse of Mingo County, West Virginia, in the City of Williamson, in Mingo County, West Virginia, offer for sale at public auction, to the highest bidder, the property in Mingo County, West Virginia, and being more particularly described as follows, towit: All those certain, pieces or parcels of property located and situated in the City of Williamson, Mingo County, West Virginia, and being more particularly described as follows: PARCEL 1: “BEGINNING at the line of lot Nineteen (19) and Lot Twenty (20), Block Fifty-Nine (59), where the same joins Vinson Street; thence running with the dividing line between said Lots Nineteen (19) and Twenty (20) towards the alley a distance of Fifty-Six (56) feet; thence turning right and running across Lot Nineteen (19) a distance of Thirty (30) feet to Lot Eighteen (18); thence turning right and running with the division line between Lots Eighteen (18) and Nineteen (19) Fifty-Six (56) feet to Vinson Street; thence turning right and running with the front line of Lot Nineteen (19) and Vinson (20), Block Fifty-Nine (59), where the same joins Vinson Street; thence running with the dividing line between said Lots Nineteen (19) and Twenty (20) towards the alley a DAILY distanceNEWS of WILLIAMSON Fifty-Six (56) feet; thence turning right and running across Lot Nineteen (19) a distance of Thirty (30) feet to Lot Eighteen (18); thenceLEGALS turning right and running with the division line between Lots Eighteen (18) and Nineteen (19) Fifty-Six (56) feet to Vinson Street; thence turning right and running with the front line of Lot Nineteen (19) and Vinson Street Thirty (30) feet to the point of BEGINNING so as to contain the front Fifty-Six (56) feet of Lot Nineteen (19), Block Fifty-Nine (59).” PARCEL 2: “BEGINNING at a point in the line of Vinson Street in the City of Williamson, said point being the dividing line between Lot Nos. 17 and 18 in Block No. 59; thence back from Vinson Street with the said dividing line a distance of 50 feet to a point in said dividing line; thence turning at right angles and in a straight line across the original Lot No.18, a distance of 26 feet to a point inside the original Lot No.18; thence running in a straight line parallel with the dividing line between the original Lots Nos. 18 and 19 a distance of 50 feet to a point in the front of the original Lot 18; thence turning at right angles and running in a straight line with the line of Vinson Street with the front line of Lot 18 a distance of 26 feet to the point of departure between Lots 17 and 18, in Block No. 59.” PARCEL NO. 3: “BEGINNING at the corner of Lot No. 15 adjoining Lot No. 14, in Block No. 53, as shown on the official map of the said City of Williamson, West Virginia, made by Thomas Boggess, Surveyor, said corner being at the line of Boggess Street; thence with the line of Boggess Street twenty-three (23) feet to a hub; thence turning to the left and at right angles a distance of fifty-two and twenty-eight hundredths (52.28) feet to a nail at the end of a stone wall; thence turning to the left and at right angles a distance of twenty-three (23) feet to a hub in the line between said Lots Nos. 15 and 14; thence turning to the left and at right angles and running with the division line between lots Nos. 14 and 15 fifty-two and twenty-eight hundredths (52.28) feet to the beginning;” together with all and singular the improvements thereon and the appurtenances thereunto belonging or in any manner thereunto appertaining. Together with all and singular the improvements thereon andthe appurtenances thereunto belonging or in any manner thereunto appertaining. And being the same property conveyed unto RICHARD I. WILKERSON, single, as follows: PARCEL 1: By deed dated the 18th day of November, 1994, from ARH EMPLOYEES FEDERAL CREDIT UNION, a federal credit union, and recorded in the Office of the Clerk of Mingo County, West Virginia in Deed Book No. 338, at Page No. 91. PARCEL 2: By deed dated July 31, 2008, from BOBBIE C. CHILDRESS, single, PATRICIA ALEXANDER, single, GUY CURTIS ALEXANDER, single, and ROBERT STEVEN ALEXANDER and TERESA ALEXANDER, his wife, being the heirs at law of Robert Alexander, and recorded in the Office of the Clerk of Mingo County, West Virginia in Deed Book No. 421, at Page No. 528. PARCEL 3: A part of the same property conveyed by deed dated December 28, 2001, from THE BANK OF MINGO, a West Virginia banking corporation, and recorded February 19, 2002 in the Office of the County Clerk of Mingo County, West Virginia in Deed Book No. 385 at Page No. 479. TERMS: Cash in hand on day of sale. The property will be sold, “AS IS” and said conveyance will be made subject to all pertinent covenants and restrictions and subject to any and all unpaid property taxes or special assessments. Trustee reserves the right to reject any and all bids. The Sale may be subject to the rights of the Internal Revenue Service to match any offer made on said property within 120 days from said sale. JERRY R. WHITE, TRUSTEE 6:18,25 ANNOUNCEMENTS Happy Ads / Birthday / Anniversary PLACE YOUR CELEBRATION AD TODAY! (Only $5 for 16 words) Birthdays, anniversaries, congratulations or just because. Any reason is good enough to find its way into the Classifieds' greetings and happy ads. Call 304-235-4242, ext 27 for more information. REAL ESTATE SALES Land (Acreage) LAND FOR SALE BY THE HEIRS IN THE BURNWELL KY AREA CONTACT DAVID SMITH @ 304-524-7778 REAL ESTATE RENTALS Houses For Rent Two story home at 362 New Camp Road has three/four bedrooms,two full and a half bathrooms, central heat/air.For serious inquires please call Trio Realty at 606-437-4900 or 606-4225732 from 9:00 a.m. until 5:00 p.m. WILLIAMSON DAILY NEWS TUESDAY, JUNE 25, 2013 ■ 9 Tuesday, June 25, 2013 Comics ComiCs/EntErtainmEnt BLONDIE Dean Young/Denis Lebrun BEETLE BAILEY FUNKY WINKERBEAN HAGAR THE HORRIBLE HI & LOIS Mort Walker Today’s Answers Tom Batiuk Chris Browne Brian and Greg Walker THE LOCKHORNS MUTTS William Hoest Patrick McDonnell Jacquelene Bigar’s Horoscope zITS THE FAMILY CIRCUS Bil Keane DENNIS THE MENACE Hank Ketchum Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman CONCEPTIS SUDOKU by Dave Green HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Tuesday, June 25, 2013: This year you have many exciting options appear, yet a sense of negativity might come forward. You will need to pinch yourself in order to believe your good fortune with some of the events that occur. You start a new 12-year life cycle, and you will feel and see the difference. If you are single and want to change your status, you will meet someone appropriate. If you are attached, what would make your bond more perfect? Know that whatever it is could happen. AQUARIUS is challenging, but he or she is a good friend. The Stars Show the Kind of Day You’ll Have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive; 3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult ARIES (March 21-April 19) HHHH Someone whom you deal with regularly could be out of sorts. Steer clear of this person for now. In the meantime, focus your attention on what counts for you. Check out a real-estate investment in the next few weeks. Tonight: Hang out with friends at a favorite place. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) HHHHH Defer to a boss who has a strong vision of what he or she wants. In fact, the more responsibility this person has, the happier he or she will be. Weigh the pros and cons of a new purchase, whether it is a car or something involving communication. Tonight: Speak your mind. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) HHHHH You will be more willing to venture out than you have been in years. Consider your options carefully regarding a financial matter. You might want to talk to someone who knows more than you do about this. You could be overly optimistic! Tonight: Follow the music. CANCER (June 21-July 22) HHHH Jupiter enters your sign today. This transition brings you good luck, and it also marks the beginning of a new life cycle. Use it well. Right now, a discussion with a partner or close friend has a unique intensity. Listen carefully and revise your plans if need be. Tonight: Dinner for two. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) HHHH You might feel as if you are the center of attention, until you have to bend to keep the peace. In any case, the cards are not stacked in your favor. Avoid taking any risks. News from someone at a distance could leave you wide-eyed. Tonight: Enjoy the moment with friends. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) HHHH Zero in on priorities in your day-to-day life. You might have a lot of energy that’s being focused on organizing and making your life easier. Do not cancel an appointment. Some good fortune will stem from it — maybe not immediately, but soon. Tonight: Hang with friends. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) HHHH Taming your imagination will help you funnel your creativity appropriately. You know the virtues of finding solutions and showing compassion to others. Losing your temper won’t help. A misunderstanding does not need to go any further. Tonight: Act as if there is no tomorrow. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) HHHH You’ll want to rethink a tension-driven reaction. You might not want to think through the issue, but it would benefit you to do so. If nothing else, try to look at the situation from other people’s point of view. A change in perspective will help you. Tonight: Entertain from home. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) HHHH You will be more open with someone — a partner or loved one — than you have been in the past. This person will become more transparent as a result. With gentleness and care, this relationship could open up. Tonight: Visit with friends, but first check in with a loved one. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) HHHH You’ll feel more comfortable relating to others. What had been a problem in the past will be resolved easily. You might have more choices than you realize. Be sensitive to others in a discussion. Know what you want — do not play around. Tonight: Sort through invitations. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) HHHH You need to understand what is happening around you. Observation helps. In the next few weeks, you might notice that you’ll have more energy than you have had for a while. This news will make you smile, as you could have more to do every day. Tonight: Do your own thing. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) HHHH Allow your imagination to lead the way. A loved one might delight in your humor and lightheartedness. You will see a situation from a different perspective as you learn what it’s like to walk in someone else’s shoes. Tonight: You might want to vanish with a loved one. Jacqueline Bigar is on the Internet at www.jacquelinebigar.com. 10 ■ TUESDAY, JUNE 25, 2013 WILLIAMSON DAILY NEWS Nation Senate faces key vote on immigration WASHINGTON (AP) — President Barack Obama campaigned from the White House for immigration legislation on Monday in advance of a Senate test vote on a bill calling for more than $30 billion worth of new security measures along the border with Mexico and offering a chance at citizenship for millions living in the country illegally. Far outnumbered, conservative critics attacked without letup in speeches and electronic appeals. “It will encourage more illegal immigration and must be stopped,” Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, exhorted supporters, urging them to contact their own senators with a plea to defeat the measure. After three weeks of desultory debate, the end game was at hand in the Senate for the most ambitious attempt to overhaul the nation’s immigration system in decades. Supporters exuded confidence they had more than the 60 votes required to send the measure over a key hurdle and on its way toward Senate passage by week’s end. Democrats appeared unified on the issue. Republicans were anything but, as evidenced by the divide among potential 2016 presidential contenders. Among them, Sen. Marco Ru- bio of Florida was an enthusiastic supporter of the bill, while Sens. Rand Paul of Kentucky and Cruz were opposed. Passage would send the issue to the House, where most conservative Republicans in the majority are strongly opposed to citizenship for anyone who came to the country illegally or overstayed their visa. Some GOP lawmakers have appealed to Speaker John Boehner not to permit any immigration legislation to come to a vote for fear that whatever its contents, it would open the door to an unpalatable compromise with the Senate. At the same time, the House Judiciary Committee is in the midst of approving a handful of measures related to immigration, action that ordinarily is a prelude to votes in the full House. “Now is the time to do it,” Obama said at the White House before meeting with nine business executives who support a change in immigration laws. He added, “I hope that we can get the strongest possible vote out of the Senate so that we can then move to the House and get this done before the summer break” beginning in early August. He said the measure would be good for the economy, for business and for workers who are “oftentimes exploited at low wages.” Russian astronauts take spacewalk at Fla. space station CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) — Two space station astronauts took care of a little outside maintenance Monday. Russian flight engineers Fyodor Yurchikhin and Alexander Misurkin replaced a main valve on the International Space Station, after emerging from their 250-mile-high home. “To save the time, I’m embroidering,” one of the spacewalkers said in Russian, holding a clump of cord as he worked on the fluid valve. “It’s not easy to handle all these ropes.” Later, he added, “OK, now we’re doing bead work.” Also on the spacewalkers’ to-do list: installing clamps and retrieving science experiments. Some of the work will pave the way for the arrival of a new Russian compartment at the end of this year. The year’s third spacewalk was under the direction of Russian Mission Control outside Moscow. The four other space station residents monitored the action from inside. Yurchikhin arrived at the space station just a few weeks ago. Misurkin has been on board since March. The crew includes three Russians, two Americans and one Italian. The Italian and one American will conduct a pair of spacewalks for NASA in July. Begun in 1998, the space station still is one room short. The Russian Space Agency plans to launch a research lab to replace the Pirs air lock that has been in place since 2001. An unmanned Proton rocket will hoist the lab, which also will serve as an air lock for spacewalk preparations and a docking port for visiting craft. As for Pirs — Russian for pier — it will be cut loose before the launch of its replacement and burn up upon re-entry as junk. CARLTON LAW OFFICE KY - WV 304-235-7777 • • • • • • Personal Injury Wrongful Death Bankruptcy Dept Settlement Social Security Car Wrecks 19 E. 5TH, Williamson, WV Across from the phone company building This is an advertisement FOR ALL YOUR ADVERTISING NEEDS PLEASE CALL OR EMAIL Peggy Bailey [email protected] or Toni Dardi [email protected] As for the overall economy, he said, “I think every business leader here feels confident that they’ll be in a stronger position to continue to innovate, to continue to invest, to continue to create jobs and ensure that this continues to be the land of opportunity for generations to come.” Leaving little to chance, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce announced it was launching a new seven-figure ad buy Monday in support of the bill. “Call Congress. End de facto amnesty. Create jobs and economic growth by supporting conservative immigration reforms,” the ad said. The non-partisan Congressional Budget Office has estimated the legislation will reduce the deficit and increase economic growth in each of the next two decades. It is also predicting unemployment will rise slightly through 2020, and that average wages will move lower over a decade. At its core, the legislation in the Senate would create a 13-year pathway to citizenship for an estimated 11 million immigrants living illegally in the United States. It also calls for billions of dollars to be spent on manpower and technology to secure the 2,000-mile border with Mexico, including a dou- bling of the Border Patrol with 20,000 new agents. The measure also would create a new program for temporary farm laborers to come into the country, and another for lower-skilled workers to emigrate permanently. At the same time, it calls for an expansion of an existing visa program for highly-skilled workers, a gesture to high tech companies that rely heavily on foreigners. In addition to border security, the measure phases in a mandatory program for employers to verify the legal status of potential workers, and separate effort to track the comings and goings of foreigners at some of the nation’s airports. The legislation was originally drafted by a bipartisan Gang of 8, four senators from each party who negotiated a series of political tradeoffs over several months. The addition of the tougher border security provisions came after CBO informed lawmakers that they could potentially spend tens of billions of dollars to sweeten the bill without fearing higher deficits. The result was a series of changes negotiated between the Gang of 8 and Republican Sens. John Hoeven of North Dakota and Bob Corker of Tennessee. Different, lesser-noticed provisions helped other lawmakers swing behind the measure. In a speech on the Senate floor, Sen. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, likened some of them to “earmarks,” the now-banned practice of directing federal funds to the pet projects of individual lawmakers. He cited a provision creating a $1.5 billion jobs fund for low-income youth and pair of changes to benefit the seafood processing industry in Alaska. Sen. Bernard Sanders, I-Vt., issued a statement on Friday trumpeting the benefits of the first; Alaska Sens. Lisa Murkowski, a Republican, and Mark Begich, a Democrat, took credit for the two others. Grassley also raised questions about the origin of a detailed list of planes, sensors, cameras and other equipment to be placed along the southern border. “Who provided the amendment sponsors with this list?” asked Grassley, who is a member of the Judiciary Committee that approved an earlier version of the bill. Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano “did not provide the committee with any list. Did Sikorsky, Cessna and Northrup Grumann send up a wish list to certain members of the Senate?” Snowden said to seek asylum in Ecuador WASHINGTON (AP) — WikiLeaks officials say former National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden has applied for asylum in Ecuador, Iceland and possibly other countries. WikiLeaks founder Ju- lian Assange (ah-SAHNJ’) says he cannot go into detail about Snowden’s whereabouts except to say that he is safe. Snowden left Hong Kong Sunday to travel to Ecuador through Moscow and other points to avoid extradition to the U.S. He is facing espionage charges stemming from his disclosure of U.S. surveillance programs that collect phone records and online data in the name of national security. Snowden was not on a flight to Cuba Monday as expected. Ecuador says it is considering its asylum requests. Snowden had previously discussed seeking asylum in Iceland. Assange’s lawyer has said Snowden does not have many options for asylum. Heavy rain or other weather needed at Colo. fire DEL NORTE, Colo. (AP) — Tourists and business owners forced to flee a popular summer retreat in the southwestern Colorado mountains resigned themselves to a long wait as fire officials declined to speculate when they might be able to reign in an unprecedented and erratic blaze raging through the Rio Grande National Forest. The fire more than doubled in size over the weekend, growing to an estimated 117 square miles. Incident commander Pete Blume said Monday that firefighters would need a major change in the weather, such as the arrival of heavy rain from the summer monsoon season, to check the fire burning in drought-stricken, beetle-killed forest near South Fork. “It’s a significant fire with significant problems and it’s not going to be significantly contained until we see significant changes in the weather,” said Blume, a commander with the Rocky Mountain Type 1 Incident Command Team. Afternoon thunderstorms producing rain typcially develop in the state in July. The fire has been fueled by beetle-killed trees and fanned by hot, windy weather. More of those conditions were expected Monday there and across much of Colorado, New Mexico, Utah and Arizona. A nearly 119-square-mile wildfire burning in the mountains of southern New Mexico’s Gila National Forest is ex- pected to grow larger this week because of the conditions. In Colorado, firefighters were able to start building about 2 miles of bulldozer line near South Fork on Sunday because the fire didn’t grow much. A break in the wind was expected Tuesday at the fire near South Fork but Blume said that wouldn’t be enough to help stop the fire. Still, he said every day the fire doesn’t advance toward town is a good day. “Things are looking better but are no means secure,” he said of South Fork. Mike and Mary Duffy, who own the South Fork Lodge, were able to get their personal possessions before fleeing fast-advancing flames that officials on Friday feared would overtake the town. But with the fire still within three miles of South Fork, they are worried about the long-term impact of a prolonged evacuation and news reports about the massive blaze threatening the tourism-dependent town. Summer visitors include many retirees from Texas and Oklahoma who come to the mountains to flee the heat. “Here we are the 23rd of June. We had to tell people not to come because we are not there,” Duffy said. “I just don’t how much more of an affect it will have. Everyone’s bottom line is going to get tagged by this. … You still have to pay your property taxes whether you make money or not.” The town has 400 permanent resi- dents, but South Fork Mayor Kenneth Brooke estimates that between 1,000 to 1,500 people were in town when the evacuation was ordered. More than 800 firefighters were battling the blaze, and more are coming every day. No structures have been lost and firefighting efforts remained focused on protecting South Fork, the Wolf Creek ski area and homes along Highway 149 as the newest arm of the fire crept through beetle kill toward the historic mining town of Creede. Creede, near the headwaters of the Rio Grande River, was the last silver boom town in Colorado before the industry went bust in the late 1800s. It has since dwindled in population, making way for a thriving tourist industry that relies on the town’s colorful past. The town also is known for such characters as Robert Ford, who ran a tent saloon there and was best known for shooting and killing outlaw Jesse James in Missouri in 1882. Tim Foley, a fire behavior expert with the same incident command as Blume, said beetles have killed most of the forest’s hundreds of thousands of acres of mature spruce. Elsewhere in Colorado, about a dozen fires also continued to burn. Cooler conditions and clouds helped firefighters hold the line on a 20-square-mile wildfire near Walsenburg in southern Colorado. Ethanol debate heats up as groups want to block E15 WASHINGTON (AP) — It’s a dilemma for drivers: Do they choose a gasoline that’s cheaper and cleaner even if, as opponents say, it could damage older cars and motorcycles? That’s the peril and promise of a high-ethanol blend of gasoline known as E15. The fuel contains 15 percent ethanol, well above the current 10 percent norm sold at most U.S. gas stations. The higher ethanol blend is currently sold in just fewer than two dozen stations in the Midwest, but could spread to other regions as the Obama administration considers whether to require more ethanol in gasoline. As a result, there’s a feverish lobbying campaign by both oil and ethanol interests that has spread from Congress to the Williamson Daily News (304)235-4242 Gilbert Times (304-664-8225 Pineville Independent Herald (304) 732-6060 WE WANT YOUR BUSINESS TO GROW!!! Divorce, Child Custody, Support Modification? White House and the Supreme Court. On Monday, the Supreme Court rejected a challenge by the American Petroleum Institute, the oil industry’s chief lobbying group, to block sales of E15. The justices left in place a federal appeals court ruling that dismissed challenges by the oil industry group and trade associations representing food producers, restaurants and others. Tom Buis, CEO of Growth Energy, an ethanol industry group, hailed the decision as victory for U.S. consumer, who will now have greater choice at the pump. “Now that the final word has been issued, I hope that oil companies will begin to work with biofuel producers to help bring new blends into the marketplace that allow for consumer choice and savings,” Buis said. The API had argued that E15 was dangerous for older cars. Putting fuel with up to 15 percent ethanol into older cars and trucks “could leave millions of consumers with broken down cars and high repair bills,” said Bob Greco, a senior API official who has met with the White House on ethanol issues. The ethanol industry counters that there have been no documented cases of engine breakdowns caused by the high-ethanol blend since limited sales of E15 began last year. “This is another example of oil companies unnecessarily scaring people, and it’s just flatout wrong,” said Bob Dinneen, president of the Renewable Fuels Association, an ethanol industry group.