ExaminEr moorEfiEld
Transcription
ExaminEr moorEfiEld
It’s beginning to look a lot like Christmas. IT’S TIME Boys Basketball Preview Page 1B Page 3 TWO SECTIONS • 16 PAGES 94¢ USPS 362-300 Photo by Jean Flanagan Wednesday, December 10, 2014 VOLUME 123 - NUMBER 50 moorEfiEld ExaminEr Established 1845 and Hardy County News Commission Joins Petition For Special Prosecutor Donahue Reviews Changes In GWNF Plan High School Construction Projects By Jean A. Flanagan Moorefield Examiner On the advice of their legal counsel, the Hardy County Commission voted to enjoin the Hardy County Prosecuting Attorney’s motion to appoint a Special Prosecutor to represent the commission in the civil action brought by five members of the community. The vote came after an executive session with attorney Bridget Cohee of Steptoe and Johnson PLLC, during the Dec. 2 meeting of the Hardy County Commission. In November 2013, a petition was filed in Hardy County Circuit Court to remove Commissioners J. Michael Teets and William “JR” Keplinger from the commission, void the sale of the Baker building and nullify the emergency ambulance fee. The Hardy County Commission was also named in the action. Wendy Miller, John Elmore, B. Wayne Thompson, Ovid Need and Bonnie Haggerty filed the petition. Miller has since withdrawn from the case. In May, a three-judge panel said there were insufficient grounds to remove the commissioners and remanded the other issues to Circuit Court. Senior Status Judge Andrew N. Frye Jr. was appointed to hear those issues. In August, Frye ruled the sale void and nullified the ambulance fee. In October, Frye ordered Teets and Keplinger to return the $1.13 million to the county coffers. Frye also ruled Hardy County Prosecutor Lucas See represent the County Commission in any further action. See requested a special prosecutor be appointed, citing “a clear violation of the West Virginia Rules of Professional Conduct” and a conflict of interest. The rulings were immediately appealed to the West Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals. On Oct. 30, the WV Supreme Court ordered a stay on the orders, pending resolution of the appeal. County Schools Release 20132014 WESTEST 2 Results The West Virginia Department of Education has lifted the embargo on 2013-2014 WESTEST 2 results as of 11:00 a.m. December 5, 2014. All scores and school designations are now considered final and are able to be released to the public. Five of the six Hardy County Schools participated in WESTEST 2, which tests students in grades 3-11. Moorefield Elementary School is the only school in the county that does not currently participate in state testing, due to its grade span of Pre-K through Grade 2. There are currently 5 school designations based on state assessment results. They are as follows: • Priority Schools are persistently the lowest achieving schools in the state. • Support Schools are schools that are not meeting their index-based trajectories and demonstrate that a majority of their subgroups are not making sufficient academic progress. • Focus Schools are schools with persistent and perContinued on page 3 CONNECT On Twitter News: @MoorefieldEx Sports: @HardyCoSports Commission Meeting Marks Final of A. J. Wade’s Term By Jean A. Flanagan Moorefield Examiner Photos by Jean Flanagan Construction at East Hardy High School is very much a work in progress, with work on the front office (above) and progress on the Media Center (below). Pictured below is EHHS Principal Brad Simmons. Time Running Out for School Contractors By Jean A. Flanagan Moorefield Examiner High School are tired of the noise, the dust and ever-moving classes. Thankfully, accord“I wish they would just fin- ing to Simmons, the students ish one thing,” said East Hardy don’t seem to mind. “I can’t say enough about High School Principal Brad Simmons. “Even if it’s a jani- the adaptability of our staff tor’s closet, I wish they would and the students,” Simmons told the Hardy County Board just finish one thing.” After two years of conduct- of Education at the meeting ing school in a construction held Monday, Dec. 1. “We zone, the faculty, staff and know it will be nice when it’s administration at East Hardy completed, but getting to that www.MoorefieldExaminer.com On Facebook Moorefield Examiner point is becoming tiresome.” As the high school building projects move into their final phases, Construction Managers Howard Shockey & Sons have created punch lists of items yet to be completed. In addition, a dollar amount has been assigned to those items left to do. Those punch lists were presented to the Board of Education. Continued on page 6 Katie Donahue, U.S. Forest Service Ranger for the Lee District of the George Washington National Forest, provided the Hardy County Commission with an overview of the recently approved GWNF Management Plan. The commission met in regular session on Tuesday, Dec. 2. The GWNF and the Jefferson National Forest, which were combined in 1995, contain nearly 1.8 million acres. There are 123,629 acres in West Virginia. There are 50,000 acres of the GWNF in Hardy County, Donahue said. “The biggest change for Hardy County is that some of the land has changed from unsuitable to suitable for timber harvest.” Overall, the revised plan designates a total of 452,000 acres in the GWNF suitable for timber harvest. That is an increase from 350,000 acres. “Currently there is a timber sale on Squirrel Gap Road,” Donahue said. “There has been an increase in biological and geological protected areas. Some boundaries were changed to protect caves, which is really to protect the bats. There is also a protected falcon nest on Big Schloss.” Bats are threatened by a fungus known as white-nose syndrome. Bats are necessary for the control of flying insects, like mosquitoes. Overall, the revised plan increases the amount of biological and geological protected areas from 80,000 acres to 121,000 acres. Donahue said forest-wide controlled burns would be increased from 3,000 acres to 12,000 20,000 acres. Paul Lewis, director of the Hardy County Office of Emergency Management and the 911 Center asked if his office could be notified of controlled burns before they occur. “We get calls and send people out to look for the fire,” he said. Donahue said she was surprised it wasn’t being done, but would make sure it was in the future. The top of Great North Mountain, which separates Virginia and West Virginia, will be changed from a wildlife area to a remote backcountry designation. It will remain unsuitable for timbering. “The most comments received about the new plan had to do with oil and gas leasing,” Donahue said. “While there isn’t much interest in the George Washington National Forest, there is no Marcellus shale in the Lee District, the final plan allows 10,000 acres available for private leasing. There are 167,000 acres of mineral rights in private hands and the National Forest has no control over them.” The Marcellus shale was recently found to Continued on page 6 INDEX Opinion Page 2 News Sports Page 3 Hardy Times Page 3 Obituaries Page 4 Page 1B Classifieds Page 4B 2 - MOOREFIELD (WV) EXAMINER, Wednesday, December 10, 2014 More Bad opinion my UNBaseD OpiNiON I have questions for public school teachers in West Virginia. Do you have any idea of the pervasive apprehension parents of school age children have in sending their offspring off to your care and instruction? Do you know that those children represent the future for families who care about a better place in life? Do you have any feeling for the level of distrust parents have for your power to ruin that future with the stroke of a pen, a withholding of benefit of a doubt, or simply poor instruction. West Virginia state law says all children must attend school between sixth and seventeenth birthdays. Many exemptions and modifications to that law allow various other roads to obtaining an education, but basic law requires public school or a viable alternative. Parochial and other private schools are available for parents who can afford them and home schooling is an option for parents who have qualifications and time to teach. For most, public school is only economically viable option. In short, state law forces us to submit our children to care and This is eighth in a series of editorials listing those elected officials, law enforcement personnel and others who are in positions of authority and responsibility and who have perpetrated illegal, immoral or ethically wrong activities on the people of West Virginia. The positive side is that they have been caught and are processing through the court system. The mayor of Bridgeport who is facing drug charges filed for bankruptcy and resigned from office. He is charged with conspiracy to possess and distribute schedule II controlled substances, distribution of oxymorphone and false or fraudulent material omission. The mayor is also a pharmacist. Following this information it was reported that the former mayor had pleaded guilty to federal drug charges. As part of his plea agreement he would surrender his state pharmacy license. A Princeton police officer has been placed on administrative leave following his arrest on a domestic violence charge. A Marshall County high school teacher has been put on indefinite unpaid suspension. He was charged with possessing child erotica and pled guilty to battery involving a female student. Fifteen Years Ago A Huntington councilman was sentenced to home December 15, 1999 The Department of Highways confinement following his August conviction on charg- said the Corridor H settlement es of domestic battery and violation of a domestic vio- agreement was on track, but details could not yet be released. lence petition. News outlets report a petition seeking The Health Department was revocation of the home confinement when a rifle and proposing a Clean Indoor Air Regulation. 3 pistols were found in his home. Following his arrest County Commissioners were upset that Citizens Telephone Comfor these violations, he resigned from the council. would not release the The former head of a regional food bank in Hun- munications names of users who refused to pay tington was sentenced to one to ten years in prison the E-9-1-1 fee. first “Outpost Library” in for stealing more than $32,000 from the pantry which theThe nation was to be dedicated at served the needy in 17 counties in Ohio, Kentucky and Baker on the East Hardy High School property. West Virginia. Other upcoming dedications A Harrison County magistrate faces charges of sexu- included the new Department ally abusing a girl under the age of 12. He was ar- of Motor Vehicles office and the Health and Wellness Center. raigned following his arrest by WV State Police. There were 89,900 bucks killed in the state. Hardy County reportThe Berkeley County Board of Education has fired ed 3,082 killed. a teacher who is facing sex charges involving a student. John Henry Miller, 99, Mathias, The teacher is charged with third degree sexual assault died Dec. 5...Phillip Harold Lofton, 68, Rig, died Dec. 11...Minnie and computer harassment. Alt Kimble, 86, Upper Tract, died A three-judge panel has ruled that the Kanawha Dec. 7...John William Parsons, 70, Petersburg, died Dec. 6...Jack County prosecutor should be removed from office for Adam Perando, 62, Old Fields, “malfeasance in office.” He has 30 days to appeal. died Dec. 9. Born to Mr. and Mrs. Bill The panel found that the prosecutor should be re- Champ, a son, Tanner James. moved because an incident involving his son “substan- In girls basketball East Hardy lost to Shenandoah Valley Acadetially interfered” with his doing his job. my 66-47...Moorefield beat FrankThe former mayor of Williamson was sentenced to lin in overtime 52-46...16 Hardy County football players received 3 years of probation and fined $5,000 after pleading All State recognition: Justin Wilguilty to lying to federal authorities about suspicious liams, Ashley Eye, Adam Whipp, Jeremy Funk, Adam Simmons, banking activity. Brandon Barb, David Evans, KevUnited States Attorney William J. Ihlenfeld II urges in Connors, Jessie Hornyak, David anyone with information regarding public corruption in their community to call the West Virginia Public Corruption Hotline at 855-WVA-FEDS (1-855-982Shop at Home 3337), or to send an email to [email protected]. Letters to the Editor Policy The Examiner encourages letters to the editor. To receive expedited consideration, letters should be no more than 500 words long. Shorter is better. The Examiner reserves the right to edit letters for length, clarity, grammar and offensive language. All letters, including those e-mailed, must include a mailing address and a telephone number for verification purposes. Please e-mail letters to [email protected]. Letters also may be mailed to Letters to the Editor, the Examiner, P.O. Box 380, Moorefield, WV 26836, faxed to (304) 530-6400 or dropped off at the Examiner, 132 S. Main St., Moorefield. It’s still not too late to make a donation to Community Action, the Ministerial Association, the MAC House, the Salvation Army or any organization or church gathering gifts and food for those less fortunate folks who live among us. Please keep them in mind as you prepare for your own Christmas activities. It’s the giving and sharing part of Christmas that makes it an even more special time of year. Shop at Home The Indiana State Poultry Association donated 65 tons of turkey, chicken, duck and eggs to the By DaviD O. HeisHmaN instruction by persons over whom we have no control. Fortunately we have conscientious school administrators who select and hire most competent teachers they can find to fill empty slots. Parents depend upon that selection process for initial hiring and subsequent retention up to end of tenure qualification. Once three years, plus a fourth commitment is reached, protection by West Virginia Education Association (WVEA), the teacher’s union, kicks in and jobs for life become reality. Yes, teachers can still be removed after achieving tenure, but at high cost. High cost in legal fees by the school system defending against WVEA’s job protections.. High cost in county education funding which won’t be available Riggleman, Jacob Petry, Nathan Miller, Lucas Moyer, Ricky Baker, Ben Pyles and Justin Miller. Thirty Years Ago Week of Dec. 12, 1984 Hardy County’s buck kill was down for the second year with 1,809 reported. State-wide a record was set with 57,596 deer killed. Moorefield was having trouble with lift pump motors at the water plant burning out and causing concerns over the water supply. The County Commission was trying to solve issues involving obtaining a dog warden and the availability of a county coroner. Delsie Wilkins Wilson, 65, Timberville, died Dec. 6...Lory F. Combs, 85, Baltimore, died Dec. 4...Elmer Woodrow See, 69, died Dec. 3...Vern Cain Shobe Pratt, 78, died Dec. 4...Stella Mullin Delawder, 85, Springfield, died Dec. 11. Lisa Wyman and Michael Shaffer were married Sept. 29. Forty-five Years Ago December 10, 1969 Hardy County’s buck kill reached a record 1,360. Sixty-one signatures were needed for the sewer project. In an effort to keep the gypsy moth out of West Virginia the WV for instructional purposes. Projected costs may be so high that administrators back down on firing in order to preserve their operating budget. The teacher may remain in the classroom because county board can’t afford to fire them. I’m a parent of three children who graduated from Moorefield High School and have moved on in life. With that separation, I’m now free from constraint in speaking out about apprehension and distrust in relationships with teachers. Always, always when our children were in classes, Phoebe and I were aware that our words or actions might affect our children’s treatment in school. To my knowledge, only once did an incident occur which appeared to illustrate spite toward our children. Spite in retaliation for opinions expressed in this newspaper. Since my Unbased Opinion several weeks ago addressing inclusion of teacher’s pay signs among posted political campaign materials, I have questioned at least twenty parents and former parents of public school students about the apprehension of which I speak. Every single one I asked said yes, they are/were apprehensive about treatment their child might receive at the hands of a disgruntled teacher. Recent national news is filled with stories about deaths of unarmed men in Ferguson, Missouri and New York, New York, killed by police on the street. Proffered solutions to the widening gap between police and citizens include better training, race relations training, all sorts of adjustments in the way police go about their duties. I wonder how many such problems are caused by incompetent cops who have remained on police forces because public employee unions wouldn’t let them be fired. I wonder how many incompetent teachers remain in classrooms because their unions won’t let them be fired. Again. Give up your tenure protection and I’ll work hard to compensate teachers at higher levels based upon competence, not longevity. Department of Agriculture was requiring all greenery and trees coming from outside the state to be certified pest free. Ethel See May, 74, Mathias, died Dec. 7...Jacob E. Shaver, 77, Linthicum, MD, died Dec. 8... Seymour R. Wilson, 82, died Dec. 2... Ida Jan Ludwig Moton, 80, Rio, died Dec. 2...Della Whetzel Zirk, 84, Romney, died Dec. 3...Otis Garland Keller, 54, Broadway, died Dec. 3. Moorefield lost to Keyser 5444...Mathias lost to Eastern Mennonite High School 84-48. Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Whiteman, a daughter...to Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Jenkins, a son, Dennis Lee. Moorefield defeated Mathias 62-51, Wardensville 69-21 and Fort Hill 61-53. Sixty Years Ago December 15, 1954 The Rural Electrification Administration agreed to recommend approval for Hardy Telephone Company to serve Hardy County in a county-wide system. The South Branch Tavern was to open for business Dec. 18 under the ownership of Ernest Crites. The US Army was postponing the induction of draftees until after the holidays. Several correspondents reported snow and temperatures near zero. Hamil W. Thompson, Purgitsville, died Dec. 6...James Mortimer Wilkins, 72, Dobbin, died Nov. 24...James O. Mongold, 67, died Dec. 11 at Weston...Amos Andrew Deem, 63, Villas, NJ, died Dec. 8...William A. Woerner, 73, Gettysburg, died Dec. 4. Born to Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Wolfe, a son...to Mr. and Mrs. Edward Bill, a daughter...to Mr. and Mrs. Darwin Michael, a son...to Seventy-five Years Ago December 13, 1939 Twenty miles of new power line were constructed and power was available to families in the Fort Run area and the Kessel section. A fire destroyed the contents of the dwelling of Mr. and Mrs. Mervil Morrison of Lost River. Charles Strawderman had butchered a hog weighing 795 pounds. Fannie Gochenour Neff, 89, died at her home near Shenandoah Caverns...Edward F. Patch had died at Walnut Bottom...Aldine Foltz had died in Harrisonburg. Mrs. Olga Solon and Dr. H. L. Gamble were married Nov. 27... Daisye Wilkins and Edward Purcell III were married. Born to Mr. and Mrs. Roy Ludwig, a son...to Mr. and Mrs. Jack Nazelrod, a daughter...to Mr. and Mrs. Charles Wittig, a daughter, Elizabeth. Ninety Years Ago December 11, 1924 C. H. Friddle, Charles E. Williams, Garret Gochenour, W. A. Vanmilyea and Boyd McWhorter were elected officers by the Masons. Verna T. Wilson and Julian Edward See were granted a marriage license...Sylvia D. Wilkins and Marlin W. Bean were married. might appreciate one worker’s effort. An exotic dancer in Martinsburg has sued a gentleman’s club for wages not paid and fees withheld. It’s now in federal court. The dancer says she should have been paid minimum wage and was forced to pay fees for dances performed. We can understand that because she should have been getting tips, she might have been below minimum wage as are many waiters and waitresses. We don’t understand why she was paying a fee to her employers for doing the job she was hired to do. Maybe we’ll find out when the case is tried. Now we have cat cafes. Again, it’s California leading the way. A local shelter out on the West Coast set up the cafe as a way for people to see the felines in a public situation and perhaps adopt one. We do hope the kitties are leashed, because the ones we know have a tendency to jump onto tables with food and drink which might freak out some potential owners. Seems interesting that the cat cafe idea hit the U.S. before restaurants allowing leashed well-behaved dogs to join their owners for a meal. Both activities are popular in Europe. With all the push for increasing minimum wage we thought you Shop at Home Shop at Home on total hours worked, the report credits natural gas exploration with the creation of 45,000 jobs in building trades such as operators, pipefitters, labor, electricians and ironworkers. The study was commissioned by the Institute for Construction Economics Research (ICERES) at Michigan State University and conducted by the Labor Education Program at the School of Labor and Employment Relations at the University of Illinois. The full report can be viewed at http://iceres.org. ********** Gov. Earl Ray Tomblin today announced the launch of West Virginia’s first Behavioral Health Referral & Outreach Call Center, a statewide 24-hour call center, providing resources and referral support for those seeking behavioral health services. Individuals contacting the call center will be offered behavioral health education materials, information on available behavioral health services in or near their respective location, as well as referral to the appropriate level of care based on individual needs in coordination with regional and local providers. Call center staff will track and follow-up with all calls made to the center to ensure timely access, quality assistance and successful outcomes. An Announcement of Funding Availability (AFA) will be issued by the West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources Bureau for Behavioral Health and Health Facilities in the near future. ********** AAA Fuel Gauge says the average price last week for a gallon of regular unleaded gas in West Virginia dropped another 4 cents to $2.889 The national average dropped 4 cents to $2.77 per gallon. The national average has been below the $3.00 per gallon benchmark for exactly one month, and 42 states are now registering averages below $3.00 per gallon. Sharply lower global oil prices have been the driving factor for lower retail gas prices. Prices dropped even lower last week when, despite the falling price of global oil, the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) elected to maintain its collective production ceiling when the group met recently. Across West Virginia prices ranged from a high of $2.980 at Wheeling to a low of $2.794 at Huntington. In Hardy County, gas prices were $2.99 in Moorefield, but stayed at $3.09 in other parts of the county. ********** state’s food pantries. Included in the list of donors were Perdue Farms and Tyson Farms. Nice gift for those who might have slim pickings for the holidays. If the WV Poultry Association has ever done anything like this we would hope they would let us know. Shop at Home News Briefs 132 South Main Street, P.O. Box 380, Moorefield, West Virginia 26836 Telephone: (304) 530-NEWS • F ax: (304) 530-6400 • www.moorefieldexaminer.com Emails: NEWS/EDITORIAL: [email protected] DISPLAY ADVERTISING: [email protected] LINE CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING: [email protected] LEGAL ADVERTISING: [email protected] CIRCULATION: [email protected] SPORTS: [email protected] The Moorefield Examiner is published weekly on Wednesday except between Christmas and New Years at 132 S. Main Street, Moorefield, West Virginia. Periodicals Postage is paid at Moorefield, West Virginia, 26836. USPS 362-300. Subscription Costs: $29.00 per year tax included for Post Offices in Hardy County. $33.00 per year tax included elsewhere in Hardy Co. with Post Offices out of Hardy Co. $35.00 per year tax included for elsewhere in West Virginia. $40.00 per year outside West Virginia. There will be a $6.00 charge to change subscription address to out of state. Three-month, six-month, and nine-month subscriptions also available. $35.00 per year tax included for the Moorefield Examiner Online Edition. $50.00 per year tax included for the Moorefield Examiner Online Edition & Print Edition. POSTMASTER: Send address change to: Moorefield Examiner, P.O. Box 380, Moorefield, WV 26836 Member: National Newspaper Association and West Virgina Press Association THE EXAMINER IS THE DEMOCRATIC NEWSPAPER OFFICIAL PUBLICATION OF HARDY COUNTY Publishers: Mr. and Mrs. David O. Heishman; Editor: Phoebe F. Heishman; General Manager: James O. Heishman; Managing Editor: Jean A. Flanagan; Advertising Manager: Mike Mallow; Staff: Angel Blizzard, Kathy Bobo, D.J. Bosley, Carolyn Burge, Sam R. Fisher, Carl Holcomb, Diane Hypes, Sharon Martin, Faye Staley, Peggy Wratchford. The American Red Cross is promoting a vehicle donation program through Dec. 31. The program offers an easy donation process with convenient, free pick-up and towing and a tax-deductible way to dispose of unwanted vehicles. Cars, trucks, RVs, motorcycles, boats, snowmobiles, jet skis, tractors, farm equipment, in any condition - even salvaged - will be accepted. Contact the Red Cross at http://www.redcross.org/cardonation or call 1-855-927-2227. ********** An estimated 45,000 construction trade jobs have been created in lieu of the Marcellus Shale industry, according to a new study. “Study of Construction Employment in Marcellus Shale Related Oil and Gas Industry: 2008-2014” analyzed employment data in Maryland, Virginia, Pennsylvania, Ohio and West Virginia. Based MOOREFIELD (WV) EXAMINER, Wednesday, December 10, 2014 - 3 There were lights, Christmas songs, scripture, food, fellowship and, of course, Santa. The rain couldn’t dampen the spirits of the Christmas season, with celebrations happening simultaneously in Moorefield, Mathias and Wardensville last Saturday. Magically, Santa appeared at all locations. The turnout in Moorefield and Wardensville were excellent. In Mathias, more than 180 people weathered the rain and the cold to attend the first community Christmas tree lighting hosted by the Mathias Ruritan Club. The community also pitched in and provided a wonderful collection of canned foods for the local food pantry. Santa’s North Pole Express, sponsored by the Hardy County Tour & Craft Association, took eight trains full of excited children to the North Pole and returned them safely home. Photos by Jean Flanagan, Mike Mallow and Sara Riggleman. Look for more photos in the next issue of the The Hardy County Weekender. County Schools Release Continued from page 1 vasive subgroup achievement gaps and/or subgroup graduation rate gaps. • Transition Schools are schools that are not meeting their indexbased trajectories or demonstrate that a majority of their subgroups are making sufficient academic progress. • Success Schools are schools that are meeting their index-based trajectories and demonstrate that a majority of their subgroups are making sufficient academic prog- ress. Hardy County Schools are categorized as follows: • East Hardy High School is a Success School • Moorefield Middle School is a Success School • East Hardy Early Middle School is a Support School • Moorefield Intermediate School is a Support School • Moorefield High School is a Support School “None of us want schools on Support,” said Hardy County Su- perintendent Barbara Whitecotton. “We are working with the principals, meeting with them and arranging for new training on the curriculum.” Whitecotton also said the transition from the Westest to the Smarter Balance, which is West Virginia’s name for the Common Core Standards, is significant. “We need to take this data with some caution,” she said. See next week’s Moorefield Examiner for an analysis of each school’s performance. Additional Deer Muzzleloader Stamps Must be Purchased West Virginia hunters are reminded that the deer muzzleloader season will run from Dec. 8 through Dec. 13, according to Curtis Taylor, Chief of the Wildlife Resources Section of the West Virginia Division of Natural Resources. Subsequently, resident and nonresident hunters who are interested in purchasing an additional deer muzzleloader stamp (RM and RRM) have until Dec. 7, the day prior to the season opening date, to make that purchase. Only one RM stamp (resident additional muzzleloader hunting) or one RRM (nonresident additional muzzleloader hunting) can be purchased. Hunters are reminded of the following muzzleloader deer hunting regulations relating to the Class RM and RRM license: • Class RM or RRM stamps may be used to take one antlered deer in all counties having a muzzleloader season. Logan, McDowell, Mingo and Wyoming counties do not have a deer muzzleloader season. • If you are hunting in a county with a closed antlerless deer season or in a county that you had to apply for an antlerless season permit, then you are allowed to harvest only antlered deer on the RM or RRM stamp. • If you are hunting in a county with an antlerless season bag limit of one or three and were not required to apply for an antlerless permit for that county then you are allowed to harvest one deer of either sex on the RM or RRM stamp. • Bows and crossbows cannot be substituted for a muzzleloader firearm. Concurrent archery hunting is legal during the muzzleloader season subject to all archery deer hunting regulations. • All hunters afield during this week are required to wear blaze orange. Stream Restoration Scheduled At Nathaniel Mountain Nathaniel Mountain Wildlife Management Area (WMA) provides Hardy and Hampshire counties with numerous roads and trails for hiking, ample game for hunting, and 75 primitive camp sites. Visitors this fall may notice a change to one of the roads that will have a big positive impact on the native fish population. A 34 foot long hanging metal culvert previously allowed a tributary of the North River to pass under a road in the WMA, but the hanging culvert impeded fish movement upstream thus preventing access to over 2,600 feet of habitat. A hanging culvert results when the ground surrounding the culvert on the downstream side has eroded leaving the culvert end hanging in the air. Native fish cannot jump into the culvert to continue their upstream journey, so they are cut off from valuable spawning habitat. The culvert at Nathaniel Mountain WMA hung over two feet above the water, and the upstream side of the culvert was routinely clogged with sediment and rocks which hampered water flow. “Fishery surveys in 2009 revealed that an old culvert had be- come a barrier for fish passage,” said Brandon Keplinger, Assistant District Fisheries Biologist for the West Virginia Division of Natural Resources in Romney. “DNR Wildlife Resources Section biologists coordinated the effort to remove the barrier, create a permanent stream crossing that ensures long-term access to Nathaniel Mountain Wildlife Management Area, and develop a naturalized stream channel that will allow fish passage and enhance habitat for native fishes.” Canaan Valley Institute, a nonprofit organization working to ensure clean and healthy streams in the Central Appalachian Mountains, was happy to lend its expertise in stream restoration to improve the aquatic habitat at Nathaniel Mountain WMA. CVI joined forces with several organizations including West Virginia Division of Natural Resources, West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection, and Dominion Energy to remove the culvert, create a drivable ford, and reestablish a stable stream through the affected area. After removal of the culvert, the restoration team removed the extra fill originally brought in to cover the culvert and restored the stream using on-site logs and rocks to create a series of step-pools that will facilitate fish movement through the area. Then a drivable ford was built in the appropriate location to create a stable stream crossing. “The project could not have been completed without the valuable assistance of the Canaan Valley Institute, West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection and Dominion Energy,” Keplinger said. The restoration project was supported by the West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection’s In Lieu Fee Stream and Wetland Mitigation Program. The In Lieu Fee Program provides compensatory mitigation for unavoidable impacts to streams and wetlands to help meet Clean Water Act requirements. The money acquired through the in lieu fees can be used for projects to improve streams and wetlands in the same geographic service area as the unavoidable impact, which in this case benefited Nathaniel Mountain WMA. HARDY TIMES Meeting Change The Dec. 2, meeting of the Moorefield Town council has been moved to Tuesday Dec. 9, at 6:45 p.m. As usual, all meetings are open to the public. If you would like to be put on the agenda, please contact the town office. School PTO works to support the students and staff at Moorefield Intermediate School and they need your help. Meetings are held in the cafeteria. The next meeting is scheduled for Wednesday, Dec. 10 at 5 p.m. Potomac Valley Family Medicine, 8 Lee St. in Moorefield. The discussion will be about viral infections such as enterovirus D68, ebola and influenza. A question and answer session will follow a short presentation. There will be child care available. Everyone is welcome. be obtained at the District office, 500 East Main St., Romney, or by calling 304-822-5174. The public is invited to attend. HARSE Meeting The Hardy County Association of Retired School Employees will meet at 10:30 a.m. on Tues., Dec. 16 at the Ponderosa Steakhouse in The Ivanhoe Presbyterian Moorefield. The annual White ElThe Agriculture Plastics Recy- Church in Lost City will host ComThe Potomac Valley Conservaephant Auction will be held. Also, munity Together on Thursday, cling Program will begin Wednesday, Dec. 10, from 8 a.m. - 3 p.m. Dec. 11 at 7 p.m. There will be a tion District board meeting will be nonperishable food items are beheld on Friday, Dec. 12, at 7:30 pm. ing requested for the local food at the Petersburg Transfer Station. special Christmas meal. The meeting will be held at the pantry. All retired school employFor information, contact the local WV Department of Agriculture ees are invited to attend. WVU Extension office Pediatrician Dr. Ugoeze Otome Building in Moorefield. A copy of will host a community meeting on the agenda will be available three Moorefield Intermediate Friday, Dec. 12 at 5 p.m. at the days prior to the meeting and may Moorefield Middle School will Plastic Recycling Community Together Public Meeting Community Meeting MIS PTO MMS Craft Night host Family Craft Night Wednesday, Dec. 17 from 5 - 6 p.m. in the cafeteria. There will be crafts for all ages and the event is free. Refreshments will be served. Bring the whole family for holiday fun. Medicare Meeting The WV Department of Health and Human Resources will host a meeting on Thursday, Dec. 18 from 10:30 a.m. until noon at the Hardy County Senior Center. The meeting will describe the State Health Insurance Program which can eliminate monthly premiums, help with copays and deductible for Medicare qualified seniors. All are welcome. Pesticide Credits WVU Extension is providing opportunities to attain credits toward the renewal of pesticide licenses. The annual video produced by the WVU Extension Service will be offered Tuesday, Dec. 16, at 6:30 p.m. at East Hardy Early Middle School Ag Classroom and Thursday, Dec. 18, at 6:30 p.m. at Moorefield Middle School LGI Room. If you must have the hours to maintain your certification and cannot attend these training sessions, it may be possible to schedule an individual opportunity to view the video by calling the office at 530-0273. 4 - MOOREFIELD (WV) EXAMINER, Wednesday, December 10, 2014 DOROTHY WALTERS BARR Dorothy Walters Barr, 88 years old, died peacefully on Wednesday, November 19, 2014, at the E. A. Hawse Nursing and Rehabilitation Center in Baker, W.Va. Her strong will to live, unwavering faith in God, and the love and prayers of family and friends had sustained her throughout a prolonged illness. Dorothy was born on February 21, 1926, in Moorefield, W.Va., to the late Amos Ray Walters and Anna Susan Burns Walters. She was also predeceased by two sisters, Betty Mendolia and Helen Walters; four brothers, Albert Walters, Amos Walters, Gene Walters and Paul Walters; grandson Ryan Ludwick; and great-granddaughter Jordan Ludwick. Dorothy is survived by six children: her son, Allen Barr and his wife Nancy of Martinsburg, W.Va., her son, Gary Barr and his wife Barbara of Berryville, Va., her daughter, Joyce Ludwick of Martinsburg, W.Va., her son Kenneth Barr and his wife Trina of Hagerstown, Md., her daughter, Susan Crisler and her husband Terry of Berryville, Va., and her son Eric Barr of Front Royal, Va.. “Her children arise and call her blessed; her husband also, . . .” –Proverbs 31:28. She is also called “Gramma” by ten grandchildren: Melanie Metcalf, Jason Barr, Christopher Barr, Michael Barr, Adam Ludwick, Bradley Barr, Stefanie Trimble, Zachary Crisler, Ashley Crisler Szewczyk and Megan Crisler. In addition to her ten grandchildren, she was proud to have sixteen great-grandchildren: Allison and Matthew Metcalf; C.J., Hannah, Andrew and Claire Barr; Elizabeth, Katherine and Eric Barr; Reese, Ryan and Thaddeus Ludwick; Sofia and Ava Barr; and Logan and Aubrey Crisler. Dorothy is also survived by two sisters: Mary Susan Eye of Moorefield, WV, and Catherine Riggleman of Berkeley Springs, WV, and a brother, Lawrence Walters of Flat Rock, MI. She was preceded in death by her loving hus- band of 53 years, Ruby E. Barr, a teacher and artist. A loving mother and homemaker, Dorothy was an excellent cook and enjoyed preparing meals for her family and friends. In fact, she was a cook for Hardy County Schools for over 15 years. Dorothy had a steadfast faith in God. She was a member of the Oak Dale Presbyterian Chapel in Rig, W,Va. Over the years, she was very involved with the church and Presbyterian Women. She was also a member of the C.E.O.S. and the Order of the Eastern Star in Moorefield, WV. The funeral service celebrating Dorothy’s life was held at the Moorefield Presbyterian Church on Sunday, November 23, 2014, with the Rev. Katherine Jackson officiating. Interment was at the Newhouse Cemetery at Rig, W.Va. Memorial donations may be made to the E.A. Hawse Nursing and Rehabilitation Center, P.O. Box 70, Baker, WV 26801, whose staff is to be commended for the wonderful care given to Dorothy for over seven years, or to the Oak Dale Presbyterian Chapel, P.O. Box 653, Moorefield, WV 26836. Condolences, shared memories and photos may be left on Mrs. Barr’s Tribute Wall at www.fraleyfuneralhome.com . Arrangements were under the direction of the Fraley Funeral Home. obituariEs RAYMOND S. DAVY JR. Raymond S. Davy, Jr., 50, of Rada Road, Purgitsville, W.Va., died Monday, November 24, 2014 at his residence. He was born on October 18, 1964 at Winchester, Va., and was a son of the late Raymond S. Davy, Sr. and Geraldine Marie (McDonald) Davy. Mr. Davy was employed as a heavy equipment operator with Local 132, Heavy Equipment Operators, Petersburg, W.Va. He was an avid hunter, enjoyed running heavy equipment and especially loved his granddaughter, Erin. Surviving are his children, Jessica Davy of Cumberland, Md. and Jeremy Davy of Purgitsville, W.Va.; one brother, Steve Davy of Purgitsville; a half-brother, Rickey Davy and wife Shirley of Capon Bridge, W.Va.; his sister-in-law, Donna L. Davy of Purgitsville; his granddaughter, Erin Kesner; and nieces and nephews, Samantha Davy, Steven Davy, Jr., Jamie Davy and Amy Davy. DAVID ALLEN LEWIS David Allen Lewis, age 47 of Shockey Road, Old Fields, W.Va., passed away Thursday afternoon, November 6, 2014 at his residence. Born August 29, 1967 in Romney, W.Va., he was the son of Sylvia Ann (Wolfe) Unger of Moorefield, W.Va. and the late Delmas Thomas Lewis and a step-son of Jean Lewis Shockey of Old Fields, W.Va.. He was preceded in death by his best friend, John Wilson. An outdoorsman, who enjoyed hunting and fishing, he loved spending time with his dog “Judd”. He loved country music and his Harley but mostly, everyone was touched by him that came into his life. Surviving in addition to his mother is a sister, Carol A. Watts of Ft. Ashby, W.Va.; a special niece, Fallyn Annika Watts; a half- age iN actiON MENU Dec. 15 - 19, 2014 Mathias, Moorefield, Wardensville Mathias & Wardensville Home Delivered Only • No meal for Mathias on Friday Meals Served at 12:00 Noon Monday, Dec. 15 - Cheesy pasta with hamburger, northern beans, pineapple Tuesday, Dec. 16 - Sausage gravy over biscuit, hash browns, lima beans, apricots Wednesday, Dec. 17 - “Christmas Meal”: Ham, sweet potatoes, green beans, roll, dessert Thursday, Dec. 18 - Chicken patty on bun, broccoli casserole, beets, baked apples Friday, Dec. 19 - Potato soup, meat salad on wheat bread, crackers, tropical fruit ************* Due to the availability of delivered food, substitutions are sometimes necessary. If you want to pick up/carry out a meal at the Senior Center call by 9:30. Wardensville area, please call by 9:00 a.m. for a home delivered meal. • Persons under the age of 60 are welcome to come and eat with us at a cost of $3.50 per meal. That’s a deal. Any donation over $3.50 would be greatly appreciated. ************* NEW-NEW-NEW Feed Your Staff Day Local businesses are being invited to treat their employees to lunch at the Senior Center. Watch your mail for your invitation or plan to attend the second Thursday of each month. Lunch served from 11:45 a.m. - 12:30 p.m. Please call in advance if you are coming. ************* ACTIVITIES AT MOOREFIELD SENIOR CENTER Monday, Dec. 15 - Puzzles, Crafts Tuesday, Dec. 16 - Puzzles, Crafts, Senior Shopping, 1:00 Wednesday, Dec. 17 - Puzzles, Crafts, 11:00-12:00, Moorefield Head Start to present Christmas program at 10:00. Thursday, Dec. 18 - Puzzles, Crafts, Bowling, 1:00, Jim Philips, DHHR Rep., J Marsha Meeks, Ship Director, 12:00 - 2:30. Friday, Dec. 19 - Crafts, Bible A funeral service was conducted at the Smith Funeral Home on Sunday, Nov. 30, 2014 with Pastor Daryl Dunsmore officiating. Interment was in the Elijah High Cemetery, Purgitsville. Condolences and personal reflections to the family may be left after Mr. Davy’s obituary at smithfuneralhomes.net. Arrangements were under the direction of the Smith Funeral Home. Study, 11:15. Eat at Petersburg, “Christmas Meal”. Leave at 3:45. Books and magazines are available for your reading pleasure. TV and computer are also available. Need a ride to the Senior Center? Please call us at 304-530-2256 before 10 a.m. Come and join us. We look forward to seeing you. *********** NEW-NEW-NEW Bingo - 11:00 a.m. 2 games to be played before lunch 2 games to be played after lunch Cash Prizes Date to be Announced ************* DONATIONS Those making donations were Lona Sherman, Charlie Hefner, Geraldine Hefner, Lola Crider, Sandra and Jack Evans, Patty Michael, Barbara Hefner, Food Lion, WELD, and the Moorefield Examiner. All donations, time, money, food, etc. are greatly appreciated. ENSURE AND ENSURE PLUS is available at a reduced cost at the Moorefield Senior Center. It is available by a case of 24 cans, Epiphany of the Lord Catholic Church Rt. 55, Moorefield, WV 304-434-2547 Saturday Mass 5:00 PM Sunday Mass 8:30 AM Moorefield Assembly of God Sunday Morning Service 10:00 A.M. Sunday Night Service 6:30 P.M. Wednesday Night Service 6:30 P.M. 139 Chipley Lane Moorefield, WV 26836 (304) 538-6055 “Come celebrate the presence of the Lord” Walnut Grove Church of the Brethren Rt. 55 East, Moorefield just before Corridor H exit Sunday School 10 a.m. Church Service 11 a.m. Pastor Donnie Knotts 1-877-371-9928 EVERYONE WELCOME! brother, John Lewis of Old Fields, W.Va.; a first cousin, Steve Shockey and a Special Friend, Billy Jo Whiteman Funeral Services were conducted 2:00 PM Monday, November 10, 2014 at the Fraley Funeral Home Chapel, 107 Washington St. with the Rev. Wade Sirk officiating. Interment followed at the Smith family Cemetery, Old Fields, W.Va.. Condolences, shared memories and photos may be left on Mr. Lewis’s Tribute Wall at www. fraleyfuneralhome.com . Arrangements are under the direction of the Fraley Funeral Home. NORMA JEAN STARK CLARKE Norma Jean Stark Clarke, 81, of Beaumont, Texas died Monday, November 10, 2014 at Memorial Hermann Houston Hospitals, in Houston, Texas. She was born on March 1, 1933 to Hester Hyre Stark and Lewis Glenn Stark in Petersburg, West Virginia. Survivors include her husband of sixty-two years, Morris H. Clarke, originally of Moorefield, West Virginia, who was a son of P. W. Clarke, an honored Moorefield High School Teacher and Principal. Norma is survived by her daughters, Melody Willey and her husband, Richard; Tara Coco and her husband, Scott Wallace; and Colleen Clarke; son, her son, Mike Clarke and his wife, Cathy; sisters, Naomi Cisper and her husband Tom; Ruth Puffenbauger and her husband, George; and Mary Cath- erine Hyre Hughes and her husband, Charles. Grandchildren include Sam Coco, Anthony Coco, Jude Coco, Rachel Coco, Adam Willey, and Jake Willey; three great-grand-children, Lily Coco, Finn Coco, and Max Coco. She was preceded in death by her parents, and one brother, Lewis Glenn Stark, Jr. A memorial service for Mrs. Clarke was held on Saturday, November 15, 2014 at St. Andrews Presbyterian Church, 1350 North 23rd Street, Beaumont, Texas. A gathering of family and friends followed her service in the Parlor of the Church. Complete and updated information may be found at broussards1889.com. Condolences may be sent to Morris H. Clarke, 5904 Sallie St., Beaumont, Texas 77706-6231. wic DecemBer scHeDUle WIC offers nutrition education and healthy foods to pregnant, breast feeding, and postpartum women, infants and children under the age of 5. Please phone 304-5383382. Hardy County WIC Clinic. Wilson Plaza (first floor), 712 North Main St., Suite 105, Moorefield, W.Va., open on Tuesdays and the first and third Fridays in Dec., 9:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. Hardy County participants can receive services in Petersburg if DUplicate BriDge clUB desired. Petersburg WIC Clinic, Hospital Drive, is open Mondays from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., Wednesdays 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. and on Thursdays from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. with the following exceptions: Dec. 11: Closed - Regional Staff Meeting Dec. 24 and 31: Open 8 a.m. to 12 Noon only. Dec. 25: Closed - Christmas Jan. 1: Closed-New Year’s Day WIC is an Equal Opportunity Provider. Rig Assembly of God Church A Howell game was played on December 3 with 3 1/2 tables in play in the South Branch DupliRev. Brad Taylor cate Bridge Club held at the Hardy County Public Library. There were • Sunday Morning seven pairs playing 24 boards with Service at 10 a.m. an average match-point score of • Sunday Night 24. Service at 6 p.m. Overall winners were Eleanor • Wednesday Night Heishman and Leona Reynolds, Service at 7:00 p.m. 28; Bruce Leslie and Bill Kline, 28; and Sandra and Polly Ours, 26 1/2. 10 Queens Drive The bridge club meets each Rig, WV 26836 Wednesday at the library begin(304) 434-2073 www.rigassemblyofgod.org half case of 12 cans or by a six pack. ning at 7:00 p.m. Flavors available are strawberry, chocolate, vanilla and butter pecan. Regular Ensure and Ensure Plus. We will only accept checks for Ensure. No cash. MEDICARE - Do you need help with Medicare Parts A, B, C, D? Please make an appointment with Arline by calling the Sr. Center at 304-530-2256, 8:00 - 4:00, Monday through Friday. Open enrollment starts October 15 - December 7, 2014. Please call for an appointment. THE MOOREFIELD GROUP “We Work For Those Who Love and Remember” is crafting potato necklaces, beaded items, memorial crosses and Granite • Marble • Bronze other crafts. Please stop by between 8:00 - 4:00, Monday through Friday, to view or purchase these items. They make great gifts. Memorials, L.L.C. HCCOA receives funding from federal and state entities includ540-434-2573 • 459 Noll Drive IMPERISHABLE ing WV Bureau of Senior Services, (Opposite the Plaza Shopping Center) Upper Potomac Area Agency on MEMORials Harrisonburg, Virginia 22802 Aging, local government, donaBRANCH: E. Market St. Charlottesville, VA 22902 • 434-293-2570 tions and memorial contributions. W.A. Hartman social And she brought forth her firstborn Son, and wrapped Him in swaddling cloths, and laid Him in a manger, because there was no room for them in the inn. LUKE 2:7 (NKJV) cOmmUNity caleNDar Of eveNts Every Sunday • AA Meeting, 6:00 p.m., (CS), Gimmee 12 Steps Group, Baker Methodist Church, Old Rt. 55 Every Monday • AA Meeting, 8:00 p.m., Moorefield Presbyterian Church • Al-Anon meeting at the Capon Bridge United Methodist Church (corner of Route 50 and Cold Stream Road) meets at 7:00 p.m. For information, contact Clyde DeWitt at 304-874-4291. Every Second Monday • Friends of the Library meeting, 5:15 p.m., except in Aug. and Dec. All meetings are open to the public and anyone interested is welcomed to attend. Every Third Monday • SCV Camp 582 (Sons of Confederate Veterans) meeting, 7:30, Hardy County Public Library. Visitors are welcome. Every Tuesday • Narcotics Anonymous meeting, (open meetings to everyone), 6:30 - 7:30 p.m., Moorefield Presbyterian Church, S. Main St., Moorefield, WV. For information, call Gary at 304-530-4957. • AA Meeting, 8:00 p.m., St. cHaNgiNg seasONs Mary’s Catholic Church, Grant St., Petersburg. Every Wednesday • Wardensville Lions Club Storytime, 10 a.m., Wardensville Library. • Open Community Lunch, Emmanuel Episcopal Church, corner of Winchester Ave. and South Fork, Rd., 11:00 a.m. - 1:00 p.m. Be our guest for good food, good fellowship, to visit with your neighbors. • Mathias Community Kitchen will serve a meal at the community center in Mathias from 11 a.m.1:00. Everyone is welcome. Sonsored by local churches. • AA meeting, 7:30 p.m., Lost River United Methodist Church For information, call 304-897-6187. Every Second Wednesday • Hardy County Rod & Gun Club meeting, 7:00 p.m. Guests are welcome. • Potomac Highlands Shrine Club meets at Family Traditions Restaurant, Va. Ave., Petersburg, WV. Meeting and meal to start at 5:30 p.m. For information call 304257-4801. • Potomac Highlands Ladies Shrine Club meets the second Wednesday of each month, Grant County Senior Center, Petersburg, 6 p.m. For information call 304-749-7288 or 304-434-7075. Every Fourth Wednesday • The WV Dept. of Veterans Assistance will visit Grant Co. Senior Center, 111 Virginia Ave., Petersburg from 10 a.m. until noon. Every Thursday • Narcotics Anonymous meeting, (open meetings to everyone) 8:00 - 9:00 p.m., St. Mary’s Catholic Church, Grant St., Petersburg, WV. For information call Gary at 304-530-4957. • Friendly Franklin Family Group for parents, spouses and family members whose lives are impacted by a loved ones misuse of substances (alcohol or drugs) meets at 7:00 p.m. at Faith Lutheran Church, 102 Maple Ave., Franklin. For information contact Shelby 304-249-5538. Every Saturday • AA Meeting, 10:00 a.m., Lost River Grill, Rt. 259. • AA Meeting, 8:00 p.m., Grove St. United Methodist Church, Petersburg. Yurcaba Published In Toronto University Magazine University of Toronto, Antioch University/Los Angeles. University of Arkansas/ Monticello, Harvard. To some, this may look like a list of potential colleges at which one might be accepted. For local writer Nicole Yurcaba, these universities are now the homes for her poems and creative nonfiction essays Yurcaba received publication for her Ukrainian diaspora poems “American Born, Ukrainian Soul” and “Email From A Cousin In Kyiv” in University of Toronto’s literary magazine Ascent Aspirations (www.ascentaspirations.ca/ americanborn.htm). Toronto is home to one of Canada’s largest Ukrainian populations, and Yurcaba’s poems comment on the current political situation in Ukraine as well as her own upbringing in the Ukrainian culture. Yurcaba’s poem “Labor Pains” is a small portrait of the punk rock music scene’s continuing influence on culture and music. The poem will be featured in Antioch University’s literary journal Two Hawks Quarterly January 2015 issue (twohawksquarterly.com/). But Yurcaba is not only known for her poetry. Recently The Rain, Party, and Disaster Society, an underground publication hailing from Harvard, opted to publish Yurcaba’s creative nonfiction essay “Write Or Die,” an essay documenting how, for many writers, the need to write is as essential as other basic needs. Her creative nonfiction essay “The Words” was published and touted by University of Arkansas, Monticello for its focus on feminism, education, and Yurcaba’s love of literature and words (www.foliateoak.com/nicoleyurcaba.html). COMP-TEC LLC By Sara Riggleman It was good to watch folks from Another week of crazy Winter the community work together on Weather. If it keeps up like this, planting the Community Christmas Santa won’t know whether to wear Tree. Thanks to the Pastor from his long-johns for his Christmas Eve Mathias Church of the Brethren and trip or to slip into a pair of shorts the Pastor from the Crab Run/Cridand a t-shirt. ers Church of the Brethren, along I understand that Bob, Josh and with Kelly Kipps, Leslie Kipps, Boo Mathias Jenkins of Baltimore, Md. Whetzel, Helen Whetzel, Randy were up at their home place last week and Mathias tried his hand at Shipe, Johnny Wilkins and Buddy hunting with a rifle for the first time. Webster for all the hard work they Well he must be a “chip off the ole put into planting and preparing the block” because he bagged his first tree for this Saturday’s Event. Have a wonderful week and redeer on the first day. I hear everyone is quite proud of him. Congratu- member to contact me to report any lations, young man. news-worthy items for the Lost RivEileen Stultz of Mathias hasn’t er Valley News been feeling well lately and I understand she had to make a visit to the hospital where she still remains today. If you get a chance, send off a card to her and let her know that she’s in your thoughts and prayers. Brian Steffan of Lost River had his 10th Annual After Thanksgiving Leftover Meal this past Friday even though the area was surrounded with over eighteen (18) inches of snow. Over 30 diehard Lost River residents braved the cold weather and bad roads to make it out for some great food and great fun. There were also folks there from Baltimore, MD, Washington, DC, Tacoma Park, MD, Northern Virgin- Dorcas Keplinger of Maysville ia, Richmond, Va., Virginia Beach and Dale Alt of Old Fields are announcing their engagement. and other areas in West Virginia. KeplingerAlt Engaged Lion of the Month Yurcaba is the Developmental Education Coordinator at Eastern WV Community and Technical College. Her first poetry collection is called “Backwoods and Back Words.” For Baby Isaac Ludwig Parents: Mitchell & Sarah Ludwig Ronnie Crites 304-530-3553 Community Christmas Party News From the Lost River Valley BENEFIT BREAKFAST Computer Repair and Maintenance Email: [email protected] MOOREFIELD (WV) EXAMINER, Wednesday, December 10, 2014 - 5 Saturday, Dec. 13 Mathias Fire Station in Mathias Breakfast Served 8 a.m. - 12 p.m. Santa Will Be There From 10 a.m.-12 p.m. Adults $8 • Children $5 • Children Under 3 FREE Isaac has been hospitalized at UVA since birth (6 Months) awaiting a heart transplant John Sherman Sr. is the Lion of the Month for November. John has served for 49 years and is still serving. His first meeting was in the Mullins Hotel in 1965. He is a perfect attendance member and always helps with the repair and cleaning of the BBQ racks. He embodies the Lions Club spirit by keeping the torch burning. Saturday, December 13th 6:30 P.M. Mathias-Baker Fire Station Happy Holidays from our home to yours! Rt. 259 Mathias, WV Games & Refreshments Come on by for a visit with Santa Sponsored by the Mathias-Baker Vol. Fire Co. Auxiliary FROM THE FRIENDS OF THE LIBRARY, HARDY COUNTY, INC. 5 Chicks In An Attic 84 Lumber A Cut Above ACE Hardware Advance Auto Parts Anderson’s Corner Anthony’s Jr. Auto Zone Baker Insurance Veronica Banks Carole Barr Bean & Bean Beauty Saloon Big Ridge Campground Blues Smoke Pit BBQ Chad’s Barber Shop Cinema 6 Shirley & Jerry Cole Colt’s Restaurant Melissa Crites Kathi Davy Doug’s Sport Shop Edward Jones El Rancho Envirco, Inc Jean Flanagan Food Lion Fox’s Pizza Den Frenchy’s Beauty Salon Gifts & Things/ House of Flowers Hair Hut Hardman’s Hardware Hardy County Senior Center Hardy Telecommunications Hawse Shop & Save Gerald Henn Paul & Frances Leatherman Lost River Artisan Coop Lost River Brewing Co Lost River Campground Lost River Grill & B&B Lost River Yoga Barn Main Street Toys & Computers Malcolm’s Grocery Helen Mathias Jack McCullough Melissa’s Hair Design Joan & Bob Mischler Moorefield Chiropractic Moorefield Collision Center Moorefield Examiner Nail Boutique Armeda Nosal O’Neill’s Restaurant Judy Patterson Perfect Stitch Geri Pillar Ponderosa Potomac Lanes Sandy’s Beauty Shop Angela See Sheetz Smith’s NAPA Auto Parts South Branch Animal Hospital South Branch Inn South Branch Tire South Fork Pharmacy Stray Cat The Studio Salon Toll Gate Pawn Shop Tony’s Flea Market Tri-County Tool Rental Video Magic Walters & Krauskopf Linda Wangerin Weimer Automobiles WELD Elizabeth Whitener Betty Wilson Wolfes Garage HARDY COUNTY PUBLIC LIBRARY • 102 N. Main Street, Moorefield • 304-538-6560 • Monday–Friday 8:30 a.m.–5:00 p.m.; Saturday 8:30 a.m.–noon COMMUNITY CHRISTMAS PLAY F RIDAY , D EC . 12 & S ATURDAY D EC . 13 AT 7 p.m. Please join us in celebrating the Miraculous Birth of Our Savior • Great Story • Beautiful Christmas Music • Joyous Singing • Blowing of the Shofar • Worshipful Dancing • Candle Lighting • Refreshments MOOREFIELD CHURCH OF GOD 223 S. ELM ST., MOOREFIELD PASTOR DARYL DUNSMORE COME AND BE BLESSED AND HAVE A VERY MERRY CHRISTMAS! 6 - MOOREFIELD (WV) EXAMINER, Wednesday, December 10, 2014 liBrary wiNDOws Stuff the Stocking at the Library The Hardy County Public Library is now collecting items for its “Stuff the Stocking” Food and Donation Drive. The drive will run until Dec. 20. All donations are welcome. Help those in need this Christmas holiday by dropping off a non-perishable item at the library. New Fiction & Mysteries Tom Clancy Full Force and Effect (Jack Ryan; 17) by Mark Greaney – A North Korean ICBM crashes into the Sea of Japan. A veteran CIA officer is murdered in Ho Chi Minh City, and a package of forged documents goes missing. The pieces are there, but assembling the puzzle will cost Jack Ryan, Jr. and his fellow Campus agents precious time. Time they don’t have. Scorched Eggs (Cackleberry Club; 6) by Laura Childs – When their longtime friend at County services, Hannah Venable, dies in a fire, Suzanne, Petra, and Toni, vowing to find the arsonist, investigate a possible connection with the nearby Prairie Star Casino. Woman With a Gun by Phillip Margolin – Obsessed with finding the answers behind an acclaimed photographer’s photo, novelist Stacey Kim discovers that the woman in the image is Megan Cahill, suspected of killing her millionaire husband on their wedding night. But the murder was never solved. Blood Rubies (Josie Prescott; 9) by Jane K. Cleland – When a priceless Faberge snow globe is stolen and a man is murdered, Josie Prescott must figure out how the two crimes are connected. Suspicion at Seven (Lois Meade; 14) by Ann Purser – Lois Meade has done enough buffing and polishing over the years with her cleaning business, New Brooms, to know that all that glitters is not gold. So when a bag of costume jewelry is the main clue in a murder, she has a strong suspicion that appearances may be deceiving. Once Upon a Grind (Coffeehouse Mystery; 14) by Cleo Coyle – When coffeehouse manager turned amateur sleuth Clare Cosi roasts “magic” beans for Fairy Tale Week, she brews up a vision that leads to a sleeping beauty in Central Park; a big, bad wolf of Wall Street; and an East Side enclave with storybook secrets. Back to Lazarus (Sydney Brennan; 1) by Judy K. Walker – To discover the identity of a desperate Time Running man willing to do anything to keep his secrets safe, private investigator Sydney Brennan must go back to the town where a troubled mother began her inevitable descent over twenty years ago. But by following in the footsteps of the murdered woman, does Sydney risk sharing her fate? Bryant & May and the Bleeding Heart (Peculiar Crimes Unit; 11) by Christopher Fowler – Bryant and May must figure out how two inexplicable, seemingly unrelated mysteries fit together as they begin an investigation that finds them confronting a group of latter-day body snatchers and exploring the corridors of an eerie funeral parlor, all to unearth the truth behind the gruesome legend of Bleeding Heart Yard. New Non-Fiction and Bios When Books Went to War: The Stories That Helped Us Win World War II by Molly Guptill Manning – While the Nazis were burning hundreds of millions of books across Europe, America printed and shipped 140 million books to its troops. The story of how the books were received, how they connected soldiers with authors, and how an army of librarians and publishers lifted spirits and built a new democratic audience of readers is as inspiring today as it was then. Our Daily Poison: From Pesticides to Packaging, How Chemicals Have Contaminated the Food Chain and Are Making Us Sick by Maire-Monique Robin – Robin investigates the links between two concerning trends, revealing how corporate interests and our igno- rance about invisible poisons may be costing us our lives. Empire of Cotton: A Global History by Sven Beckert – The epic story of the rise and fall of the empire of cotton, its centrality in the world economy, and its making and remaking of global capitalism. Fully Alive: Discovering What Matters Most by Timothy Shriver – A memoir and history of the Special Olympics and a meditation on what one can learn about how to live from people with intellectual disabilities, by the chairman of the Special Olympics. The Italian Americans: A History by Maria Laurino – Laurino strips away stereotypes and nostalgia to tell the complicated, centuries-long story of the true ItalianAmerican experience. Companion to the PBS series. Donahue Reviews Photo by Jean Flanagan Continued from page 1 have vast deposits of natural gas. Drilling and hydraulic fracturing to release the gas are controversial operations on national forest land. Donahue provided a pie-chart that indicates the uses and management areas for the forest. They include: • 48 percent wildlife habitat and timber harvest • 19 percent remote backcountry • 7 percent national scenic areas • 7 percent wilderness • 6 percent botanical and/or geological cultural areas • 4 percent threatened, endangered, sensitive species and rare community areas • 8 total percent dispersed recreation, Appalachian Trail, wild and scenic river, utility and administrative areas The band room at East Hardy High School includes lockers for the storage of instruments and acous- Prosecutor’s Budget tic tiles on the walls to contain the sound. The commission approved a request by the Hardy County ProsContinued from page 1 Area A, the main classroom ecuting Attorney to increase his ing installed by the Hardy County “We are holding these contrac- Public Service District. The modi- area, as well as the kitchen and budget by $2,000. According to tors accountable,” said Hardy fications are outside the scope of cafeteria have a 24-page punch list Jessica Liller, the Prosecuting AtCounty Schools Superintendent the building project and will be that has not had costs assigned yet. torney’s Secretary, an expert witA major concern at MHS is ness will be called from Colorado Barbara Whitecotton. “We will paid with school funds. a problem with the stormwater to testify in a child neglect result“We will get pricing later this hold payment.” While the punch lists consist week,” Whitecotton said. “It retention system in front of the ing in death trial scheduled for mainly of housekeeping items, like should be a good price, since the school. “We are looking into why January 2015. caulking, touchup painting and in- contractor already has people and there is an overflow of the storm- Holiday Schedule water retention system and what County Coordinator Rose stalling ceiling tiles, some items are equipment on site.” can be done to fix it,” Knight said. According to the schedule subHelmick requested the commissubstantial, like installing window While a geotechnical survey was sion approve the holiday schedule mitted by Knight, East Hardy High sills, installing water heaters and School will be finished in July 2015. conducted prior to construction, it for 2015. The schedule includes replacing ceramic floor and wall “I believe we are on schedule to was done in February. Excavation New Year’s Day, Martin Luther tiles. The dollar amount tied to the of the stormwater system was done King Jr. Day, President’s Day, Memeet that date,” he said. punch list for Phases 2, 3A and 5 is At Moorefield High School, Ar- in the Spring. morial Day, West Virginia Day, more than $110,000. “The survey found groundwater Independence Day, Labor Day, eas B, C and D still have a substanPhases 2, 3A and 5 include the tial punch list although those areas at 10 feet and bedrock at 17 feet,” Columbus Day, Veterans Day and auditorium, the Machine/Wood were to be completed in April-May Knight said. “They did additional Christmas Day. Shop and Pro-Start section and this year and students are occupy- test borings around the foundaHelmick also requested the the cafeteria and kitchen. Each of ing them. tion, but they were only 2 - 3 feet those areas were to be completed Like East Hardy, most of the deep. We will certainly follow up by November 2014. items are things like touchup paint on this.” “If the punch list items are not and caulk windows, but there is According to the schedule Have your children finished done by Dec. 15, funds will be also electrical and mechanical Knight submitted, Moorefield held,” Stephen Knight of Howard work that needs to be completed. High School may be substantially those Christmas wish lists, because Shockey & Sons said. The value of the work not complet- completed earlier than originally Santa Claus is coming to town. Jolly In addition to the punch list, ed has bee calculated at $45,750. thought. “Our baseline is May 27, ol’ Saint Nick will be at the Southmodifications are necessary to Areas B, C and D include the 2015, but we are anticipating com- ern States Cooperative in Mooreconnect the school’s sewer system former science, home economics pletion around April 28, 2015,” he field on Saturday, Dec. 13 to visit with children. said. to the new public sewer system be- and vo-ag rooms. commission approve the courthouse hours of Monday through Friday from 9 a.m. until 4 p.m. except for the above listed holidays and April 3 (Good Friday), 1/2 day Dec. 24 and 1/2 day Dec. 31. Commissioner A. J. Wade questioned why the courthouse was closed on Good Friday, when it wasn’t a legal holiday. Helmick said historically the courthouse closes on Good Friday. Commissioner William “JR” Keplinger asked about extending hours during tax time to accommodate working families. He will talk to the Sheriff’s Office about the need. Commissioners Teets and Keplinger vote to approve the holiday and courthouse hours schedules. Commissioner Wade voted no. Generators The commission received a grant for $15,000 for portable generators to be used in the event of a disaster, in accordance with the Hardy County Emergency Plan. The 10 portable generators will be used to power water and sewage treatment facilities in the event of an extended power outage. The only bid received for the generators was from J & S Electric for $16,744. Lewis said the OEM would contribute the difference in funding. The commission voted to approve the bid. Other Business • The payroll register for Nov. 1 - 15 was $73,837.50. • The payroll register for Nov. 16 - 30 was $65,732.96. • The county’s contribution to the Farmland Protection Board for October was $3,005.20. • The regional jail bill for October was $42,846. • The commission approved the appointment of Dave Pratt and Lisa O’Leary to the North East Regional Emergency Management Services. • The commission approved custodial services for the new WVU Extension Service office through July. The cost is $1,500. • The commission approved a resolution to accept a grant of $100,000 from the West Virginia Courthouse Facilities Improve Fund for roof repair on the courthouse. • The commission approved the annual contract with the Potomac Valley Conservation District for the maintenance of the county flood control dams. • The commission approved the final disposition of delinquent land from the tax office. The amount from the disposition is $54,565.11. • The commission received a letter from the Hardy County Tax Department reflecting the additional duties of the Hardy County Assessor, which entitles him to an additional $15,000 in compensation. • The commission tabled a request for a maintenance contract for the heating and air conditioning at the new WVU Extension Service office. The next meeting of the Hardy County Commission will be held on Tuesday, Jan. 6, 2015. The meeting will begin at 9 a.m. Anyone wishing to be included on the agenda should contact the County Clerk’s office at 304-530-0250. Santa to be at Southern States in Moorefield Children (that aren’t on Santa’s Naughty List) are invited to come to the store at 567 South Main St. and share their Christmas wish list with Santa and have their picture taken at no charge. Each pre-registered child that visits with Santa will receive a special holiday gift as well as a coloring book and crayons. ‘Tis the season for giving! Register the little ones at www. southernstates.com/workshops. Alt’s Farm Service Don’t forget Christmas gifts for your farm animals! 10’ Bunk Feeder - $110.50 • 3 pc. Medium Duty Hay Feeder w/hay saver panel - $175.50 • 14’ 7 Bar Gate - $92.95 • 16’ 7 Bar Gate - $ 98.15 • 16’ Gooseneck Stock Trailer - call for pricing • Special Order Aluminum, Bumper or Hose Trailers • Wood Pellets - $235.00/ton, $4.85/40# Bag • Renaissance Hi Mag Minerals $12.95/50#, $500.00/ton • Renaissance CTC Medicated Minerals $16.40/50#, $636.00/ton 304-257-1466 • 214 Sears Street, Petersburg, WV 26847 Choose and Cut Christmas Trees Duffy Hill Farm Mike and Kelly Riggleman–Owners • (304) 538-2856 Located on Paskell Hill–across from the Old Woodmark Plant Scotch Pine $25; Douglas Fir $25 and Up Also Available Blue Spruce Norway Spruce White Pine Prices Vary Pre–cut Trees Available We offer tree binding, drilling and stands. Hours: Sunday 1–5 p.m. Tuesday–Friday 12–til dark Saturday 10 a.m.–5 p.m. Closed Monday Happy Holidays from our family to yours! MOOREFIELD (WV) EXAMINER, Wednesday, December 10, 2014 - 7 potomac lifEstylEs Those Who Served Our Country Korean War Army Veteran Foster Edward See Photo by Diane Hypes Editor’s Note: This is the seventeenth in a series of articles on Korean Veterans living in and around Hardy County. By Diane S. Hypes Moorefield Examiner You immediately know its going to be a good day when you arrive at the home of Korean War Army Veteran, Foster Edward See, and he bounds out of his house with a big smile on his face, gives you a hug and welcomes you into his home. As you enter you are also greeted by his lovely, smiling wife, Betty, who offers you a chair at the dining room table where she has organized her husbands photographs and his Army records needed for my article. She asks if I would like a cup of coffee and a piece of her birthday cake, and we are ready to get on with the interview. Foster is a tall, thin good looking guy with devilish eyes, and a lightening quick mind that will have you reeling trying to keep up with his funny remarks to almost any question you might ask. The first thing Foster wants everyone to know is, besides his service in the Korean War, he is from a family who has served their country. “My uncle served in World War I ,” he said, “and my father served in World War II.” Foster was born November 29, 1932, the youngest child and only son in the family of Julian E. B. See and Vernon Tabitha See. He has two sisters, Juanita Riggleman and Eula Wolfe. His father began working at the Tannery on South Fork when he was only 13 years old, Foster said, and then later went to work for M.A. Bean Ford Company eventually becoming a used car salesman. “My father was drafted into the Army when he was 38 years old and served in Germany. When he returned home,” Foster said, “he bought and sold anything he could make a dollar on.” Foster first attended a one room school in the Powder Springs Rd. area, and then went to school in Moorefield. He graduated from Moorefield High School in 1952. He enlisted in the Army in 1953 in Huntington, WV, and took his Basic Training at Fort Campbell, KY. When he completed that training he was sent to Fort Benning, GA to Airborne school. After completing the Airborne training, Foster returned to Fort Campbell where he was assigned to the 11th Airborne 503rd Airborne Infantry Regiment. He was sent to Quartermaster School in Fort Lee, Virginia where he began his training in Parachute Packing, Maintenance and an Aerial Delivery Course. The history of this parachute company started out initially as the 503d Parachute Infantry Battalion and grew into the 503rd Airborne Infantry Regiment, which was first activated at Fort Benning, Georgia in August of 1941. After the U.S.’s entry in World War II the Army’s Airborne Program expanded. On March 3, 1942 the 503d was organized as a Parachute Regiment, the first one in the United States Army. The Regiment was later moved to Fort Bragg, North Carolina, where it trained until October 1942 when it was detached to England. It soon was committed to battle making the first Combat Jump in United States history as American forces T-9’s, and also the T-10’s, parachutes which were slower but the landing had less of an impact. When we finished maneuvers in Alaska,” he said, “we were sent back to Fort Campbell, KY.” Foster was discharged from the Army in 1956 after serving three years in the Army. When Foster returned home he married Betty Delawder, who he had met at a local coffee shop on Main Street in Moorefield where she was working. Then for about a year and a half, Betty and Foster operated the Lighthouse Inn, now known as O’Neill’s Restaurant, and lived in a room behind the restaurant. When they stopped managing the restaurant they moved to a MD where he did maintenance work and drove a truck. You might say Foster returned to the job he was cut out for, that of being up in the air, this time not as a paratrooper, but as a lineman. “I’ve worked as a lineman since 1963,” Foster said. “I worked for the Stone & Webster Construction Co. at Mt Storm until that job was finished. I also helped construct two towers for the Vepco Power Plant.” Foster also helped construct the Pale Line from the substation to the unit that cools the water from the dam to Stoney River. In 1978, Foster was foreman on the electric power line for the Collier Construction Company, a line that ran from Mt. Storm to Middletown, Photo by Diane Hypes Betty and Foster See A mass parachute jump invaded North Africa. Eventually the paratroopers were recognized for their incredible feats and the first parachute combat unit, the 503rd Parachute Battalion was organized. More than a decade passed and by the beginning of 1955, Foster was assigned to the 11th Airborne, 503rd Airborne Infantry Regiment. He had received extensive parachute training and was now preparing to take part in an arctic maneuver known as “Exercise Snowbird” in the subarctic region of Talkeetna, Alaska. “On one of the jumps” he said, “we jumped about 30 miles from Mt. McKinley.” The unit was not just about paratroopers jumping, Foster said, but learning how to pack and land equipment, as large as trucks, plus other battle equipment so it would be ready to go as soon as it hit the ground. “It takes three 100 foot canopies to drop a truck,” he said. “In our training we jumped the house located on Winchester Avenue. They lived there until Foster retired in 1994, and then moved to the Powder Springs Rd. area near where he had grown up and where they still live today. Betty was born November 23, 1933, the next to the last child of Fred and Blanche May Sine Delawder’s family of twelve children, which amazingly included two sets of twins. Her father worked at the Tannery on South Fork. Betty attended Neff school located in the South Fork area for half a year and then went to Moorefield Grade School. She graduated from Moorefield High School in 1953. When Foster was discharged from the Army he took carpenter training, under the G.I. Bill, from Irvin Wratchford. His first carpenter job, he said, was building a log cabin for Gus Muntzing in Brandywine. Foster then went to Westernport, Tent camp in Talkeetna, Alaska during an artic manuever known as “Exercise Snowbird.” VA. He also worked for Richardson and Wayland Construction in Roanoke, VA, the Hoosier Construction Co. in Dublin, OH, N.G. Gilbert Corp. in Munich, IN, and L.K. Comstock Co. in Beaver, PA. In March of 1982, Foster was laid off from a job he had at the Perry Nuclear Power Plant, near Perry, Ohio, due to a cutback in their labor force. He would, however, go on to do more line work for such companies as Allegheny Balilstics, PSA Power, Daidone Co. in NJ, and Hinkle & McCoy. Foster retired in July of 1994 from a line job he had at Nitro Electric in Mt. Storm. Maybe it is better said that he came down from the sky after spending more than 30 years above the earth looking down, as either a lineman or a paratrooper. So what is life like for Foster, who now views life from the ground? Well, it might be the first words he said to me when I met him which was that life is “oatmeal; no meal; or miss a meal !” Foster and Betty are a very gracious, loving couple who compliment each other with their fun loving personalities. They have five children four boys, and a girl: Tony, Lane, Eric, Nathaniel, and Holly. Foster, pictured at the top, on one of his many high line jobs. They also have 14 grandchildren and 12 great grandchildren. There is always activity in the See household with children, grandchildren and great grandchildren coming and going. The day I did the interview happened to be the first day of deer rifle season and when I came to their driveway, it was overflowing with vehicles of family members who had come to hunt. Besides family visiting, there is wood to be cut, and coal to be put in their outdoor furnace during cold weather, dogs to be cared for, cooking to be done for those that are visiting, and of course jokes to be told by Foster. After meeting Foster and enjoying his sense of humor I am reminded of a funny saying I once heard: “Co-operate; remember the banana---every time it leaves the bunch it gets skinned.” 8 - MOOREFIELD (WV) EXAMINER, Wednesday, December 10, 2014 Follow the Action on Twitter @HardyCoSports [email protected] B Section SportS ExaminEr December 10, 2014 Design by D.J. Bosley Cougars Utilize Time for Wins Experienced Jackets Poised for Future Preview By Carl Holcomb Moorefield Examiner Preview By Carl Holcomb Moorefield Examiner The time has come for East Hardy Basketball to maximize the experience and knowledge to orchestrate a winning season with potentially making it the state tournament for the first time since 1995. The Cougars have a talented retuning roster with more experience and plenty of minutes to create victories this season. East Hardy coach Chris Hahn is a 1998 alum of the school and has been the varsity coach since 2007-08 and will be assisted by Dennis Brill and Dane Biller. The Cougars are trying to bounce back from a 7-17 record last year and advance past the sectional semifinals where Pendleton County shut the door. “We are going to try to reach, maximize our potential and win as many games possible,” Coach Hahn remarked. “It would be nice to get a PVC championship, section championship, region championship, state championship. We are going to try get better everyday and hopefully by the end of the year we’re as good as the top teams in the state and make some noise then.” East Hardy doesn’t have a particular set lineup, but rather focuses on rotating the roster depending on who the opponent is to garner the best outcome. Rebounding was an issue last season, but this year the bigs inside have better knowledge and techniques to snatch caroms. The varsity squad has the potential for a phenomenal season: Michael Miller, 6’2” senior shooting guard, was the leading scorer for the Cougars last season averaging 12.5 points per game. Miller has shown tremendous court awareness with the ability to swoop into the paint or hit an outside shot which will help in creating the wins Ricky Robinson, 6’3” sophomore power forward, made dynamic plays last season and has tremendous speed as seen on the football field which will enable fastbreak scoring and improve from his third place team scoring and create another dimension for the Cougars. Bryce Strawderman, 5’9” junior point guard, has the quickness and agility to elude defenders and make solid passes to setup the offense plus a deep shooting threat. Tim Hahn, 5’11” junior shooting guard, was the second leading scorer with 7.2 points per game and has been a key asset in the speed of the offense with a perimeter shooting finesse. Adam Holliday, 6’4” senior forward, has a tremendous shooting range as one of the tallest players on the team and should provide good rebounding. Hunter Miller, 6’4” senior center, will be a formidable force in the paint smashing the boards for the Cougars. Ryan Franks, 6’3” senior forward, has developed into a solid player with good post moves to create scoring opportunities. Tyler Smith, 5’8” senior guard, was one of the fastest players on the football team which translates into great court speed and has been moving the ball with good effort. Dylan Tharp 5’8” senior guard, has been a positive asset in for the Cougars with smooth passing and shooting skills. Ian Im, 5’7” senior guard, provided quality Continued on page 2B The Yellow Jackets have all returning personnel intact to wind the clocks forward and chime the bell to success this season. Moorefield posted a 10-13 record last season, while orchestrating a deep playoff run before falling to Tucker County in the Region II Championship. The Yellow Jackets are gearing up to shatter history as the last state appearance was in 2001 and state championship victory in 1949. It all comes down to the amount of time to weave the team into the right masterpiece and Coach Pat McGregor has the experience to make this happen. Coach McGregor has been a varsity coach since 1995 including his time in Petersburg and has been guiding the Yellow Jackets since 2010-11 along with assistants Scott Stutler and Wade Armentrout. “Ultimately our goal is to have a winning season and to be playing our best basketball come February and March. Our ultimate goal is to make it to the state tournament and have a chance to win the state championship,” Coach McGregor commented. “I know that is a big goal, but that’s everybody’s goal ultimately at the beginning of the season. That’s what everybody wants, so hopefully we can take a charter bus to Charleston one day. We have potential, but we have to work hard to get there.” The Hive has a new appearance this season, but the goal of winning remains the same. Moorefield knows how to develop points off turnovers created by a stout man-to-man defense and the uptempo offense will keep teams reeling. The Yellow Jackets have an explosive offense with a varsity roster full of scoring threats. Tyler Smith, 5’10” senior point guard, created amazing no-look passes last year and had the ability to drive or dish at will. Dylan George, 5’10” senior guard, was one of the best defenders on the team last year due to his quickness on the court. Aaron Cole, 5’11” senior forward, was one of the elite scorers for the Yellow Jackets with a tremendous skill at slicing through the paint in addition to good jump shots and an amazing leaping ability capable of dunking. Austin Williams, 5’10” senior guard, is the best perimeter shooter on the team and plays solid defense. Dakota Vetter, 6’2” senior forward, will be a dynamic player in the post with his athleticism creating points. Ben Vance, 5’10” senior guard, knows the system well and be a great contributor from the perimeter. Chris Paugh, 6’ senior forward, is very aggressive and will be a dominating force inside the paint grabbing rebounds. Tanner Carr, 5’9” senior guard/forward, is an excellent defensive player and can create shots anywhere on the floor. Caleb Kite, 6’1” junior forward, has great skills inside the paint with an impressive vertical which was on display during practice on dunk attempts. Greg Franklin, 6’2” junior forward, showed his dunking abilities during practice, but is a good allaround player with his shooting. Mitchell Martin, 5’10” junior guard/forward, has quick speed covering the floor well and has a crisp jump shot. Shane Myers, 5’10” junior guard, is one of the quickest defenders on the floor and makes solid passes to keep the rythym going. The junior varsity squad brings its own flair to the Continued on page 7B Jackettes Slip in Opener At Berkeley Springs Story & Photo By Carl Holcomb Moorefield Examiner Rain and fog created slippery conditions on a chilly Tuesday evening for the Yellow Jackettes season opener in Berkeley Springs with the deciding point coming in the waning moments during a 4443 loss. “I am proud of my girls coming out and showing that effort that we’ve been asking for everyday. We’re going to be all right come to the end of the season,” Moorefield Coach Paul Keplinger stated. “Shots weren’t falling and we had to be patient. We were hustling after the loose balls, blocking out and rebounding like we should be doing. It was things like that keeping us in the game where we need to be, but shots weren’t falling. We need to run the ball to get back into the contest and that’s what we did.” Coming down to the final minute of the game, Moorefield’s Tara George drilled a 3-pointer for a 41-40 lead moments after a jumper by Berkeley Springs’ Alana Compton. A foul was called and Emily Young hit one of two free throws for the Lady Indians with 54 seconds to go. Berkeley Springs’ Abby Cowles applied pressure forcing a turnover on a five second violation. Katherine McLaughlin grabbed an offensive rebound and made the put-back for a 43-41 edge with 25 seconds left. Moorefield missed a shot, but Natasha Saville was there to collect the carom and score with six seconds remaining tying the game. The inbound pass was stolen by the Yellow Jackettes’ Savannah Kite who didn’t get the shot to fall, then McLaughlin rebounded it and was immediately fouled with .9 seconds on the clock. McLaughlin went to the line and made her first free throw for the game-winner and jumped with excitement. The Yellow Jackettes called a time-out to draw up one last play, Moorefield’s Bethany Smith made a steal as Berkeley Springs defender Abby Cowles hit the floor Continued on page 8B during the season opener. 2B - MOOREFIELD (WV) EXAMINER, Wednesday, December 10, 2014 East Hardy Continued from page 1B minutes from the bench last season and has been a solid ball handler and outside shooter. The junior varsity has a lot of potential this season and will be entertaining to watch: Corey McDonald, Brett Tharp, Austin Whetzel, Antone Tavares, William Mullins, Charlie Mellen, Ashton Mathias, Drew Kelican, Timothy French, Dylan Fogel, Jesse Dove, and Casey Connelley. East Hardy started the season against Class AA Petersburg yesterday and will host Class A powerhouse Tucker County next Tuesday. The Cougars will play at the Ram Hardwood Classic on December 27 & 29 featuring quality Virginia teams: Strasburg, Luray, and Skyline. In addition to Petersburg, East Hardy will also play two other Class AA schools, Grafton and Berkeley Springs. The inter-county rivalry contests with the Yellow Jackets will be on January 30 in Baker and February 20 in Moorefield. East Hardy finishes the regular season at home against Pocahontas County. The Cougars have shown a lot of improvement through the offseason. “We got bigger, we got faster, and we got stronger. The weight program was big for our kids. Just having another year, we were so young last year and inexperienced,” Coach Hahn commented. “We couldn’t even compete, but by the end of the year we could compete. So hopefully this year with that experience combined with what we did this summer and fall in the weight room, we’ll be able to match up physically with teams this year when last year we were outmatched.” Q: How many returning players do you have? A: All of them except for Daniel Vance. We have a stable full of seniors along with Bryce Strawderman, Timothy Hahn, and Ricky Robinson as far as the underclassmen. All of the juniors last year. We expect Michael Miller to be an all-state caliber player, Ryan Franks is going to contribute major minutes for us, Hunter Miller is much improved, Adam Holliday is a senior and he’s going to be really good, Dylan Tharp is going to be right in the mix to start, Tyler Smith and Ian Im are going to provide good minutes off the bench for us. We got a lot of guys coming back, like I said everybody except for Daniel Vance. We’re pretty excited about our experience coming back and hopefully we can get a few more wins this year.” Q: Who are your projected starters? “Similar to last year, but I’m the type where it depends on who we’re matched up against for who we are going to start. It also depends on how guys are going through the week. I have a lot of parity, so some guys get hung up on starting. I tend to share it a little bit and start different guys every week just to break up the monotony. Everybody likes to go out for the tip-off for some reason, but I like to tell them it doesn’t matter who starts, but who finishes. We’ll probably mix it up with about ten guys as far as starters go. Shooting Guard: Michael Miller, Timothy Hahn Point Guard: Bryce Strawderman, Dylan Tharp Two-Guard Position: Tyler Smith,Ian Im 4/5 Position: Ricky Robinson, Ryan Franks, Adam Holliday, Hunter Miller.” Q: How athletic do you think your team is this year? A: “Much more than last year. We have athletes, but now they just got age on them. I don’t expect we’ll come out here and outjump a lot of teams, we’re not going to out-physical a lot of teams; but I think this year we’ll come out and match up evenly with teams. As long as we can execute, we can have some success. Last year we didn’t match up evenly, we gave up 15 pounds and several inches in every position. You’ve got to have at least one or two positions where you match up or are better. This year top to bottom, we’re going to be able to match up. I’ve had some really talented teams and some really physically gifted teams in the past, but we’re not anywhere near where those kids were, but these kids play smart and they do what they tell you and do enough to get by.” Q: Is this team best suited for man-to-man defense? AL “No, we’re still a small single A. We can match up against weaker teams well, but we don’t play a lot of weaker teams in our schedule. A lot of times I’ll try to go to our strengths which is usually trying to hide a guy or hide a mismatch a little bit. We’ll probably do a lot more zone looks than man-to-man, but I’ve always been one to never have a particular philosophy of this is what we’re going to do regardless of what the competition is, because you’ve got to adapt to what your kids can do.” Q: Do you incorporate collegiate offensive styles? A: “Yeah, we have a little bit of this and a little bit of that. I like the simplistic action of the NBA with our kids; it seems a little bit easier to run the not so complex offenses that the NBA employs because they have a shot clock. They have 24 seconds, so they don’t have a lot of time to get too creative. You can’t run a Princeton-style offense when it comes to the NBA stuff. My kids are multisport athletes, so they don’t have a lot of time to pick up the intricacies of those complex offenses. It’s easier for me to teach the more simple style. Usually with basketball, it’s a lot more dynamic with what you’re doing. You really need to read it and react to it more than you just run your X’s and O’s. As long as you know how to cut and how to pick and how to get open and how to score, then you’ll be fine no matter what you run. Some guys like it a little more complex to where you get a little different look and it’s harder for the defense to adjust to it. Honestly, most of our stuff is simple and easy for the kids to digest.” Q: Do you prefer to score in the paint or outside? A: “I’ll take them any way I can get them. Yes, it’s much easier to shoot from two feet, than it is to shoot from 15-feet. Kids these days do a really good job of shooting lay-ups and 3-pointers. So we’re going to shoot a lot of layups and a lot of 3-pointers. Our first option on offense is always a look in the paint.” Q: Does dribble-penetration help setup plays? A: “Absolutely. We’ve got some pretty talented guards this year that can go off the bounce a little bit. Definitely a feature of ours this year will be coming off the dribble, to get the ball deep and if we need to kick it out, we’ll kick it out. Definitely coming off the dribble will be one of our featured attacks for the year.” BOY SCOUTS Christmas Tree & Wreath Sale Friday, Nov. 21st through Wednesday, Dec. 24th White Barn Farmer’s Market (across from Ponderosa in Moorefield) Annual Troop Fundraiser For Troop Supplies and Summer Camp • Frazier Fur • Douglas Fur • Blue Spruce • Balsam Fir • Scotch Pine • White Fur • White Pine • Holiday Wreaths Please Support Boy Scout Troop 60! Questions? Call Robert 304-257-7940 Q: Is it important to rely on one player or spread the responsibility? A: “Everybody usually has one player that is little better than the rest of them and of course the opposing defense is always going to key in and take away your key guy. “Last year for us that was Michael and he did a really good job of scoring against the other team’s best guy or best two guys. We just didn’t have a lot of help for him. We were asking our sophomores to score ten points apiece per game if we were going to be competitive and win. It just didn’t happen consistently enough for us to have a lot of success. This year those kids are a year older and have developed a lot and will take some of the pressure off. I also think our bigs will do a more consistent job of rebounding and scoring to take a lot of the pressure off of Michael to carry the load. Hunter and Ryan, Ricky and Adam. Adam has more range than the other guys, but Ricky has a natural ability and his ability to finish is something I haven’t seen in a very long time coaching.” Q: Would you rather have a team late in a tight game that is in foul trouble and can score or a team that can play really good defense but can’t score? A: “I’d rather have a team that can play really good defense. Anytime you can make a stop or force a turnover, anyone can shoot a lay-up. I’d rather have team that can play defense.” Q: In basketball, how important is team chemistry? A: “It’s very important. These kids have got to know where the guy is cutting to and the confidence to get the job done when they get there. That’s probably the one thing that hurts us the most coaching in West Virginia is not having the time to develop that. We go out from having a successful football program straight into basketball. We don’t have a break-in time to get ready for games. We had three practices in before we had our scrimmage. It takes a little longer than that to be able to come out and compete at a high level which we need to do.” Q: Do you like creative plays, nolook passes, etc.? A: “No. Fundamentals! It’s much easier for the kids to make the fundamental pass or the correct pass, than it is to thread the needle or trying to do something you ned the physical ability to do. You’ve got to know those situations. A lot of times high school students just don’t know how to do that consistently. I’ve seen guards in the past who have done the behind the back passes and no-looks, some of the things you wouldn’t call a fundamental pass, but when you see it on film you see the student section go ‘ooh’. I’d rather see a kid that makes the fundamental pass, takes a fundamental shot, or gets into position to rebound. You give me that kid any day over the flashy kid.” Q: Do you work on fundamentals everyday in practice? A: “Everyday. Everyday we work on defensive positioning. Everyday we work on cuts. We work on our shots everyday. We could do it for the rest of our lives and still do it everyday.” Q: Is it important to screen and pick in the game of basketball? A: “Absolutely or you’re not going to score. You see teams on our schedule and it’s a lot of tight man-to-man pressure. If you don’t cut properly, you’re not going to score. You’re going to have a tough time. We’re not physically stronger or faster than everybody else, so we’re going to have to use the proper technique or we’re going to struggle with our offense.” Q: Is boxing out important? A: “Absolutely. Rebounding was a disaster for us last year. It’s absolutely one of our everyday focuses and everyday goals to win the battle of the boards.” Q: How much do you have helpside defense or trap? A: “It just depends on who we are playing. If we think we have a weak player out there, then we will send out a trap. If we get up against some of these teams with really good guards, then we won’t do a lot of trapping. It makes us vulnerable away from the ball.” Q: Who are your elite players to watch & promising newcomers? “Elite players to watch, Michael Miller is as good as anyone in the state. He’s a little under-appreciated because we didn’t have much success last year. I’ve been coaching for 12 years and Michael’s as good a guard as we’ve had come through East Hardy for sure. I expect Tim Hahn to come in and contribute tremendously and Ricky Robinson is going to have a breakout year for us.” Q: Looking at your schedule, how competitive will you be? “You look at our schedule and Pendleton County is a preseason Top 10 and Tucker County is preseason Top 5. We’ve got Grafton, Strasburg, Skyline or Luray at the Christmas tournament. Petersburg is going to be good. A lot of years we would look at our schedule and say that’s a win and that’s a win. In this case, we don’t have a lot of that this year. We’re going to have to show up and play every night, because it’s going to be a battle. It will help us come sectional tournament time, the fact that we have to show up and play every night. As far as the difficulty of our schedule, it looks better on paper. Being in the HIT , if you’re winning you’re playing good teams. You look at the teams we’ve played the past five years, even though it’s the Hometown Invitational Tournament you’ve still got good teams. You’re seeing the top single A teams in the state. We’ve played competitive schedules in the past, but I think this one is really going to challenge us probably a little more than I have seen since I’ve been coaching here. This is probably the toughest schedule we’ve had.” Q: How do you feel about the out-of-state competition? A: “Any time you can play the Virginia schools, they can coach year round now so you expect those kids to be pretty disciplined and play good fundamental basketball. “We were in that tournament last year. Strasburg does a great job of hosting it and it’s a great tournament for our kids to get into. They treat us great and we’re real excited to go over again this year. Hopefully we can get a couple wins over there and get our season started off good.” Q: How strong do you think the Potomac Valley Conference is? A: “I think the conference is as strong as it has been in a long time. Probably six-eight years ago, I think Tucker County, us, and Pendleton were all Top 10 teams, then you had a little bit of a drop out. This year, Pocahontas is going to be good, Tucker is going to be fantastic, Tucker is the team to beat until somebody actually does it, you’ve got Pendleton who has the Cooper boys and they’re going to be tremendous to deal Continued on page 3B EHHS Varsity and JV East Hardy Continued from page 2B with this year, Moorefield’s got all their returning talent this year, Union won’t have much of a drop off from last year with the Tallman boys. “The PVC is one of the elite single A conferences in West Virginia this year. We may not get the credit for it, but we’re going to have some quality teams this year. We’ve got our work cut out for us.” Q: How much harder is it to focus in a rivalry game? A: “It’s not hard to focus, the ability to execute isn’t always there because you get too worked up. It’s usually not hard to focus in those games or to get the kids going. You’ve just got to get them to maintain that energy and channel it the right way. I think this year’s team will do a good job of handling that coming out. “We’ve got 22 games in the regular season and I think about all of them will be difficult for us. We can’t get too worked up looking to far to one game or another. We’re just going to have to work on what we need to work on and take it one game at a time. “We’ll get excited for the rivalry games when they’re right there in front of us, but until then we kind of have to do our thing and work to get better everyday.” Q: Is it one of your goals to beat Moorefield? A: “Yes, you always want to beat Moorefield. I’m an alumni of East Hardy and it’s always on the ToDo List to go over there and win. It doesn’t make or break your season, but I tell you what it sure adds a little bonus to it if you can get a win or a couple wins away from Moorefield.” The Cougars are gearing up to pass the test of time for a winning season. MHS Varsity MHS JV Hot Chocolate, Coffee & Cookies Free Gift Wrapping December 12 3 – 6 p.m. Receive an “Extra Discount” at the checkout from our “Surprise Ornament Tree” 20% off Country Store Gifts! • 30% off WVU items and Christmas Decor • Crafts to entertain the little ones while you shop • Enter a drawing for a Gift Basket MOOREFIELD (WV) EXAMINER, Wednesday, December 10, 2014 - 3B East Hardy Roster Varsity Ryan Franks ............. 12 ...F ....... 6’3” Adam Holliday ........ 12 ...F ....... 6’4” Ian Im ....................... 12 ...G ...... 5’7” Hunter Miller .......... 12 ...C....... 6’4” Michael Miller ......... 12 ...SG .... 6’2” Tyler Smith ............... 12 ...G ...... 5’8” Dylan Tharp............. 12 ...G ...... 5’8” Timothy Hahn ......... 11 ...SG .. 5’11” Bryce Strawderman. 11 ...PG .... 5’9” Ricky Robinson ....... 10 ...PF..... 6’3” Junior Varsity Dylan Fogel.............. 11 ...F ..... 5’10” Timothy French ....... 10 ...C....... 6’2” Ashton Mathias ....... 10 ...SG .... 5’6” Corey McDonald..... 10 ...PG .... 6’0” Charlie Mellen......... 10 ...G ...... 5’5” William Mullins ....... 10 ...SF ..... 5’7” Austin Whetzel ........ 10 ...SF ..... 5’8” Casey Connelley ...... 9 .....C....... 6’2” Jesse Dove ............... 9 .....PG .... 5’6” Drew Kelican ........... 9 .....PG .... 5’5” Brett Tharp .............. 9 .....SF ..... 6’1” East Hardy Schedule 12/09/14 6 pm .....H 12/16/14 6 pm .....H 12/22/14 6 pm .....A 12/27/14 6 pm .....A 12/29/14 6 pm .....A 1/05/15 ..6 pm .....A 1/07/15 ..6 pm .....A 1/14/15 ..6 pm .....A 1/17/15 ..5:45 pm A 1/20/15 ..6 pm .....H 1/22/15 ..6 pm .....A ...........Petersburg ......Tucker County .Pendleton County .. Strasburg Tourn. .. Strasburg Tourn. ............. Paw Paw ..Berkeley Springs ...................Union ...... Tygarts Valley .Pendleton County ... Pocahontas Co. 1/27/15 1/30/15 2/04/15 2/07/15 2/09/15 2/11/15 2/17/15 2/20/15 2/21/15 2/24/15 2/26/15 ..6 pm .....H ..6 pm .....H ..5:45 pm A ..6 pm .....H ..6 pm .....H ..6 pm .....A ..6 pm .....H ..6 pm .....A ..5:45 pm A ..6 pm .....H ..6 pm .....H ............. Paw Paw ........... Moorefield ......Tucker County ................ Grafton ...... Tygarts Valley ...........Petersburg ...................Union ........... Moorefield ................ Grafton ..Berkeley Springs ... Pocahontas Co. Moorefield Roster Varsity Tanner Carr ........12 .....G/F.... 5’9” Aaron Cole.........12 .....F ...... 5’11” Dylan George ....12 .....G ..... 5’10” Chris Paugh ........12 .....F ........ 6’0” Tyler Smith .........12 .....PG ... 5’10” Ben Vance ..........12 .....G ..... 5’10” Dakota Vetter ....12 .....F ........ 6’2” Austin Williams .12 .....SG ... 5’10” Greg Franklin ....11 .....F ........ 6’2” Caleb Kite ..........11 .....F ........ 6’1” Mitchell Martin .11 .....G/F.. 5’10” Shane Myers ......11 .....G ..... 5’10” Junior Varsity Drake Baker ......10 .....F/G.... 6’1” Adam Harper.....10 .....G ..... 5’10” Nathan Jenkins ..10 .....C........ 6’0” Rion Landis .......10 .....G ....... 5’9” D.J. Zirk .............10 .....F ........ 6’1” Sloan Williams ...10 .....G ....... 5’9” Garrett Haggerty..9 .....G ..... 5’11” Jacob Martin ......9 .......PG ..... 5’9” Matt Mongold....9 .......G ..... 5’11” Jake Ours ...........9 .......F ...... 5’11” Matt Paugh.........9 .......F ........ 6’1” Tanner Saville ....9 .......F ........ 6’0” Matt Wilson .......9 .......G ..... 5’10” Moorefield Schedule 12/12/14 6:15 pm A ..... Pendleton Co. 12/16/14 6 pm ..... A .............Frankfort 12/20/14 6 pm ..... A .......Strasburg,Va 12/23/14 7:45 pm H ..................Union 12/26/14 6 pm ..... A .......Pburg Tourn. 12/27/14 6 pm ..... A .......Pburg Tourn. 1/06/15 .. 6 pm ..... H .....Tucker County 1/09/15 .. 7:30 pm A . Pocahontas Co. 1/13/15 .. 6 pm ..... H .......Strasburg,Va 1/16/15 .. 6 pm ..... A ..........Petersburg 1/20/15 .. 6 pm ..... H ..... Tygarts Valley 1/22/15 .. 5:45 pm H ........ Notre Dame 1/28/15 1/29/15 1/30/15 2/05/15 2/06/15 2/10/15 2/13/15 2/20/15 2/24/15 2/26/15 3/02/15 .. 3 pm ..... A ......... Big Atlantic .. 7 pm ..... A ......... Big Atlantic .. 6 pm ..... A ..........East Hardy .. 6 pm ..... H ..... Pendleton Co. .. 6 pm ..... H ..........Petersburg .. 5:45 pm A .....Tucker County .. 7:45 pm H Pocahontas Co. .. 6 pm ..... H ..........East Hardy .. 6 pm ..... H .............Frankfort .. 5:45 pm A ..... Tygarts Valley .. 7 pm ..... H ...........Sectionals 4B - MOOREFIELD (WV) EXAMINER, Wednesday, December 10, 2014 ClaSSifiEdS ExaminEr FOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS FIREWOOD FOR sale by the truckload or pickup load. 304-8975178. tfn FOR SALE APARTMENTS APARTMENT HOUSE for sale: 110 Rosemary Lane. (2) 2BR, 1BA apartments, shared laundry room, large porch, excellent condition, comes with extra lot. Easily converted back into a home. 304257-6803. 12/17 FOR SALE FARM EQUIPMENT for hunting, lots of deer. Owner will finance with 10% down. 304749-8411. tfn BEAR’S HEIL Hunting Club share for sale. $12,000. Great hunting on Branch Mountain. 304434-2575. 12/13 FOR SALE by owner, 59.51 acres wooded $119,000. 81.61 acres wooded $162,900. Both tracts have good views, mature timber, good cabin sites, excellent hunting and access to 50 acre stocked lake. 304-257-2385. 12/10 8 ACRES ON High Knob near Community Overlook area. $26,000. Call 770-265-7664. 12/6 FOR RENT KUBOTA, GEHL, BushHog, and MOBILE HOMES Befco. 15 Kubota Cab tractors in stock. See Woodstock Equipment Company for Sales, Parts, and Service. Woodstock VA. Call 540459-3233. tfn RITCHIE CATTLE Waterers. Special prices through the end of the year. Call for details. James River Equipment Harrisonburg. (800)900-8970. 12/13 FOR SALE AUTOS 3BR, 1 bath, MOBILE HOME near Baker area. In good condition. Call 304-897-5813 or 304-897-6164. tfn 4BR MOBILE HOME near Fisher, WV. Call 304-703-1573 or 304-530-4881. 12/17 Like new furnished trailer behind Wal-Mart in Moorefield. 2BR and 2 Bath. Utilities included $600/month. Call Robert at 304257-7940. 12/13 2012 CHEVY EXPRESS 15 FOR RENT Passengers Van. 23,000 miles. HOUSES Asking payoff; 2000 SUBURA 3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH, laundry Legacy. Asking $2,500. Call 304- room. Big house for rent on 6 acres 434-2077. 12/17 of land. Good hunting. $1100.00/ month. Please call 304-257-3084. FOR SALE Available January 1, 2015. tfn (2) 3BR, 2BA HOUSES, one LAND/LOTS BUILDING LOTS for sale starting newly built. $575 per month and at $25,000. Also 5 acre tracts $625 per month. Call 304-897starting at $40,000. 5 acre lot great 5334. tfn Seeking Social Security Disability? Contact Tim Huffman now with Jonie Nelson, attorney at law, at our office located at 107 N. Main Street, Petersburg, WV. Mr. Huffman has twenty years of experience with Social Security Disability Claims of all levels in West Virginia. Put our experience to work for you today. Personal representation assured. For a consult, call (304) 257-5050 WARDENSVILLE: NEWLYrenovated single-floor 2BR/2BA single-family home with parking. All new kitchen & appliances, HVAC, utility room, living room, dining room, big back deck, beautiful lawn, garden shed. $650 mo plus utilities, security deposit required, trash included. Call 304490-9004, leave message or email [email protected]. 12/27 LARGE 2 STORY, 3 bedroom home with amenities, economical, natural gas heat. $650 per month rent plus deposit. Call 304-5306553. 12/13 FOR RENT APARTMENTS JOY SENIOR apartments. Income based elderly housing. HUD approved. Adjacent to Senior Center. Potomac Valley Transit available. Phone: 304-257-5494 or 304-400-3428. tfn LEE STREET Apartments in Moorefield are now accepting applications for 1 and 2 bedroom apartments. Adorable housing vouchers accepted. Call 304-5386577. Equal Housing Opportunity. 12/17 Moorefield with sizes, 32x60, 40x60, 40x80, 72x100, and 100x1000 area with truck docks. Large outdoor storage area surrounded by chain link fence also available. Space for commercial and industrial needs also available. 304-530-6707. tfn INDOOR BOAT, R.V., and car storage for the winter. Moorefield. 304-530-6707. 12/13 WANTED TO DO *PAINTING ROOFS* 24 years experience. Houses, Interior, house roofs, barn roofs, church roofs, poultry house roofs, outbuildings, mobile homes, fences, staining log homes, businesses, pressure washing. Call Ronald Kimble, 304358-7208. tfn MOUNTAIN RIDGE Hauling Services. Services available: Hauling junk, metal, domestic, construction, trash etc. Handyman repair services. Commercial/ residential, landscaping, snow, tree and brush removal. Call and leave message. Licensed and insured. Over 25 years experience. 304897-7383. 1/7/15 [email protected] based on skills and duties. Bonuses for exemplary performance. It is okay to have a separate full time job in Moorefield or surrounding area. Please reply to Margaret Pfaff at mpfaff@rosenthalauto. com or call Mon-Fri, 9AM-6PM at 703/553-4300. 12/24 PART-TIME Medical RecordsLPN. The successful candidate will prepare admission records, perform data entry, maintain and audit medical information, assist with nursing records and enter changes in physician orders. The qualified candidate will have medical records/office experience and a candidate with their LPN license is preferred. Excellent organizational skills and computer experience a must. We offer competitive pay, health care benefits, paid professional fees, 401(k) retirement, wellness program and more. E. A. Hawse Nursing & Rehabilitation Center PO Box 70 • Route 259,Baker, WV 26801 • Phone: (304) 8975903. 12/20 Emergency Generators Sales & Installation Cell# 304-257-8882 1407 US Route 220 North Moorefield, WV 26836 Owner Jeff Saville Licensed & Insured WV041077 Furnaces SEPTIC TANKS Pumped M & M Septic Service. Call 304-257-3191. tfn *OLD FIELDS Storage* (Units 5x10) (10x10) (10x20). Located 4.5 Miles on Rt. 220 North of Moorefield. Call 304-538-3300, 304-538-2346 or evenings 304-5386785. tfn MTM STORAGE, sizes 5x10, 10x10, 12x24, Rt. 55 East of Moorefield, additional location in PROPERTY CARETAKER – West Virginia, Part-time, Couples only. Seeking a bi-lingual couple to care for property in West Virginia, between Romney and Moorefield. Medium English language skills required. Duties include occasional gardening, landscaping and butler/cooking/housekeeping on main property. Rent free, cozy caretaker’s home provided and pay Highland Trace Realty, Inc. PO Box 307, 200 E. Main Street, Wardensville, WV 26851 John B. Bowman, Broker Charlotte Bowman, Assoc. Broker Emily Anderson, Sales Agent Office 304-874-3030 • Toll Free 1-877-293-3643 E-MAIL: [email protected] www.highlandtrace.com • ANIMAL HOSPITAL • ELECTRICAL Sales, Installation, & Service of 304-530-5400 NOTICE HELP WANTED FOR RENT STORAGE BUSINESS DIRECTORY • AIR CONDITIONING & HEATING CONTRACTORS FULL/PART TIME Yard/Delivery person. Apply in person Central Tie Moorefield Store. tfn 304-530-7224 (SBAH) 5201 US Rt 220 S Moorefield, WV 26836 [email protected] www.southbranchanimalhospital.com Hours: M–F 8am–7pm; Saturday 9–12 Home, Farm, Mobile Home, Cabin Heritage Insurance, LLC 304-538-6677 • SOLID WASTE HAULER Precision www.envircoinc.com Online Bill Pay EnvircoNews Jim Teter, Owner 304-874-3685 Office 540-539-3200 Cell Kenneth & Denise Dove, Owners License #WV037343 PROMOTE YOUR BUSINESS TO YOUR COMMUNITY Advertise in the Business Directory Call 304-530-6397 Advertising rates in this section: $7.00 first 25 words. Ten cents per word each additional word. Blind ads double the above rates. Display state law. Only current paid-up accounts will be allowed to charge classified and/or display advertising. All others must be paid in advance. Political advertising must be paid in advance. The Moorefield Examiner assumes no financial responsibility for typographical errors in advertisements; only one corrected classified insertion can be printed at no charge, so immediate notification regarding incorrect classified advertisements is required. The Moorefield Examiner reserves the right to be an unlawful employment practice, unless based on bonafide occupational qualifications or except where based upon applicable security regulations established by the United States or the state of West Virginia for an employer or employment agency to print or circulate or cause to be printed or to use in any W. VA. INSURANCE CO. • GARAGE DOORS Overhead Doors Residential & Commercial • INSURANCE Sales • Service • Installation 304-856-3894 Serving WV and VA since 1986 WV002326 HC 71 Box 92A, Capon Bridge, WV 26711 304-897-6060 800-235-4044 West Virginia Certificated Solid Waste Hauler Serving Hardy & Grant counties since 1990 • RUBBER STAMPS Need a NOTARY STAMP? Need an ADDRESS STAMP? (304) 530-6397 Call Kathy at the Moorefield Examiner form or application for employment or to make an inquiry in connection with prospective employment, which expresses the following: Directly or indirectly any limitation, specifications or discrimination as to race, religious creed, color, national origin, ancestry, physical handicap, marital status, sex, age or any intent to make such limitation, specification or discrimination. Rentals and Real Estate: Notice: All real estate advertised herein is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act, which makes it illegal to advertise “any preference, limitation, or discrimination because of race, color, religion, sex, disability, martial status, or national origin, or intention to make any such preference, limitation, or discrimination.” We will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. All persons are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised are available on an equal opportunity basis. MOOREFIELD (WV) EXAMINER, Wednesday, December 10, 2014 - 5B lEgal advErtiSEmEntS MEETING NOTICE The Hardy County Board of Health willmeet in regular session on Wednesday, December 17th, 2014 at 7:00 PM in the Conference Room of the Hardy County Health Department, 411 Spring Avenue, Moorefield, WV. A complete agenda will be available at above address three days prior to the meeting. 12/10, 12/17 2c TRUSTEE’S SALE OF VALUABLE REAL ESTATE By virtue of the authority vested in your undersigned trustee by that certain Deed of Trust dated July 9, 2009, and of record in the Office of the Clerk of the County Commission of Hardy County, West Virginia, in Deed of Trust Book 249, at Page 65, executed by Robert G. Class, Jr., single, to secure the payment of that certain negotiable promissory note described therein, payable to the order of Grant County Bank, a West Virginia Banking Corporation, at its address of P.O. Box 929, Petersburg, WV 26847, and signed by the said Robert G. Class, Jr., as maker and default having occurred in the payment of said negotiable promissory note secured by the Deed of Trust set forth hereinabove, and the said Grant County Bank, as the holder of said note, having notified the undersigned substitute trustee in writing to do so, said trustee, by virtue of that certain document entitled Appointment of Substitute Trustee dated November 19, 2014, and of record in the Office of the Clerk of the County Commission of Hardy County, West Virginia, in Deed of Trust Book 285, at Page 417, will offer for sale at public auction to the highest bidder, the following described tract or parcel of real estate, at the front door of the Courthouse in Moorefield, Hardy County, West Virginia, on TUESDAY, JANUARY 13, 2015 AT 3:00 P.M. All that certain tract or parcel of real estate together with any and all rights, rights of way, easements, improvements, minerals and appurtenances thereunto belonging, together with a dwelling house situate thereon, with dimensions of 112’ x 100’ located and situate on Caledonia Hill, approximately 1 mile northeast of the Town of Moorefield, in Moorefield District, Hardy County, West Virginia, and being known and designated as Lot 28-A of the Hardy County Rural Development Authority Subdivision, and as shown on a revised Plat of said Subdivision of record in the Office of the Clerk of the County Commission of Hardy County, West Virginia, in Deed Book 127, at Page 240, to which reference is now made for a more particular description of the real estate being offered for sale herein. And being the same tract or parcel of real estate conveyed unto Robert G. Class, Jr., by Richard Bissell by that certain Deed dated July 9, 2009, and of record in the Office of the Clerk of the County Commission of Hardy County, West Virginia, in Deed Book 309, at Page 647. Reference is hereby made to the aforementioned Deed for any and all pertinent purposes. The tract or parcel of real estate being offered for sale herein is being offered subject to any and all restrictions, reservations, covenants, conditions, easements and rights of way contained in, provided for or reserved in any and all prior instruments in chain of title. Same shall be incorporated into the Deed of Conveyance to the high bidder of the sale referenced herein. Specific reference is hereby made to those certain covenants contained in that certain Deed dated July 9, 2009, and of record in the Office of the Clerk of the County Commission of Hardy County, West Virginia, in Deed Book 309, at Page 647. Same shall be incorporated into the Deed of Conveyance to the high bidder. The tract or parcel of real estate being offered for sale herein is improved by a modern dwelling house situate thereon. The hereinbefore advertised tract or parcel of real estate shall be conveyed to the highest bidder by special warranty deed by your undersigned Trustee. Real estate taxes on the real estate, the subject of this sale notice shall be paid by the owner or beneficial holder of the negotiable promissory note hereinbefore referred to for all of those taxes becoming due in the 2014 tax year. The high bidder shall be responsible for the taxes to become due in the Fall of 2015, and henceforth without regard to whom or what name they are assessed. In the event there are Federal Tax Liens of record against the real estate the subject of this Sale referenced herein, the United States Government shall have the right to redeem the property within 120 days from the date of said sale or a period allowable for the redemption whichever is longer. Your Trustee shall be under no duty to cause an existing tenant or person occupying subject real estate to vacate said property. TERMS: $5,000.00 deposit is required on day of sale with the balance to be paid in cash at closing. Closing is to occur at the office of your undersigned trustee at 204 North Elm Street, across from the Courthouse, in Moorefield, Hardy County, West Virginia, at a date and time to be mutually agreed upon between the trustee and the high bidder, which said date and Person Charged With Taxes CAPON JARRELL ANTHONY RAY KLINE CAROL A & ARTHUR D JR MORGAN WENDELL LEWIS 1/2; TURNER TOMMY L & KATHY D TURNER TOMMY L & KATHY D WETZEL CHERYL A LOST RIVER BARTLETT ALAN LEE & BARTLETT ALAN LEE & BARTLETT ALAN LEE & BRADY RANDY SCOTT DOBSON THOMAS J FEDDON JAMES FRANKLIN FRIES WILLIAM G FULK CHARLES D HEFNER CAROLYN A HEFNER CAROLYN A HEFNER CAROLYN A JUDY WILLIAM H III & JUSTICE SYMON G KRAYBILL EUGENE DALE & LAMM CHRIS A & MISUZU S QUINTUS JOHN A REESER ROGER R LOT 26 12.138 AC RINARD GEORGE H RINARD GEORGE H RINARD GEORGE H MOOREFIELD GASPARRO RHONDA GASPARRO RHONDA D HEDRICK OLIVER PAUL KOONTZ DIANA L KOONTZ DIANA L KRACHER GREGORY PAUL & MCCOY SHAUNA SCARFF DONNA L & SHELIA SCHWAB MOOREFIELD CORP RESTAURANT MANAGEMENT GROUP SOUTH FORK CRITES ROBERT W & PHYLLIS K EMBLING ROBERT GEORGE & GIBBINS SANDRA HELMICK JOHN LIFE & BETTY LIFE HELMICK JOHN LIFE & BETTY LIFE HELMICK JOHN LIFE & BETTY LIFE SALAMEH AMER HUSSEIN WILLIAMS CARA M Suspended Person Charged With Taxes LOST RIVER JUDY WILLIAM H III MOOREFIELD CORP HISER H DEAN & PENNY L [email protected] time shall not exceed twenty (20) days from the date of sale. Failure to close within the applicable time frame will cause a forfeiture of the deposit paid. Purchaser may elect to pay the entire purchase price on day of sale. Prospective bidders are invited to contact your undersigned trustee or Grant County Bank, prior to the day of sale with regard to any and all questions that might arise. Jack H. Walters, Substitute Trustee WALTERS & KRAUSKOPF P.O. Box 119, Moorefield, WV 26836 (304) 530-6618 H. Junior Wilson Auctioneer 12/10, 12/17, 12/24 3c United States of America State of West Virginia County of Hardy, ss: Notice of Administration Notice is hereby given that the following estate(s) have been opened for probate in the Hardy County Clerk’s Office at 204 Washington Street, Moorefield, WV 26836-0200. Any person seeking to impeach or establish a will must make a complaint in accordance with the provisions of West Virginia Code 41-5-11 through 13. Any interested person objecting to the qualifications of the personal representative or the venue or jurisdiction of the court, shall file notice of an objection with the County Commission within 90 days after the date of the first publication or within thirty days of the service of the notice, whichever is later. If an objection is not filed timely, the objection is forever barred. Claims against the estate(s) must be filed in accordance with the West Virginia Code 44-2-2 if assigned to a fiduciary commissioner. If no reference to a fiduciary commissioner is listed herein, claims against the estate(s) must be filed in accordance with West Virginia Code 44-1-14A(10). ESTATE NUMBER: 1184 ESTATE NAME: VICTOR NORMAN CULLERS ADMINISTRATOR: MADELINE D CULLERS 1212 HOWARDS LICK ROAD MATHIAS, WV 26812 ESTATE NUMBER: 1185 ESTATE NAME: ANDAY WELDEMICHAEL BERHANE ADMINISTRATOR: MEBRAKE G WOLDEMICHAEL 34 BAKER STREET MOOREFIELD, WV 26836 Subscribed and sworn to before me on 12/02/2014 GREGORY L ELY Clerk of the Hardy County Commission 12/10, 12/17 2c Final Disposition of Delinquent Real Property Tax Year: 2013 Sold to Individual Description Purchaser Amount SE SIDE OF TROUT RUN RD OATES 4.3 AC LOT 35 0.5 AC TROUT RUN RD BUTLER TROUT RUN RD LOT 14 5.51 AC SEC 1 HARDY COUNTY HOLDINGS HARDY COUNTY HOLDINGS PURNELL ENTERPRISES, LLC HARDY COUNTY HOLDINGS HARDY COUNTY HOLDINGS HARDY COUNTY HOLDINGS 315.25 1,729.47 981.71 207.18 178.01 262.47 LOT 26 6.11 AC RYE ALEX HELMAN LOT 27 5.84 AC RYE HARDY COUNTY HOLDINGS LOT 24 5.60 AC RYE HARDY COUNTY HOLDINGS 5 AC BRADY HARDY COUNTY HOLDINGS LOT 10 COVE MT EST PURNELL ENTERPRISES, LLC LOT 2 5.53 AC & LOT 3 4.76 AC HARDY COUNTY HOLDINGS LOT 35 6.246 AC COVE MT EST HARDY COUNTY HOLDINGS 8.569 AC INCL. SURVEY WMS HARDY COUNTY HOLDINGS TR W-2 WV SOIL CONSERVATION . HARDY COUNTY HOLDINGS TR W-1 WV SOIL CONSERVATION 19 HARDY COUNTY HOLDINGS S W OF WV RT 14 TR# A MARTIN W. NEARY LOT 21 5.68 AC INGEGNERI WILLIAM H. JUDY III LOT 5 8.7 AC HARDY COUNTY HOLDINGS EAST SIDE OF DOVE HOLLOW HARDY COUNTY HOLDINGS LOT 75 15.28 AC HARDY COUNTY HOLDINGS 5.01 AC ROLLING MEADOWS NATHAN WALTERS HARDY COUNTY HOLDINGS 2,817.54 1/4 INT IN 100 AC MIN RTS WILLIAM H. JUDY III 1/4 INT IN 2.13 AC MIN RTS WILLIAM H. JUDY III 1/4 INT IN 100 AC MIN RTS WILLIAM H. JUDY III 244.39 240.84 397.47 1,030.11 1,575.53 626.90 964.25 1,757.13 83.14 152.98 791.31 143.15 892.26 187.54 3,197.38 3,221.06 NR INTERS RTS 23/2 & 23/15 LOT 34 2.94 AC SEC 2 LOT 16 2 AC SEC 1 .155 AC SO POT TROUGH FARMS LOT 19 3.765 AC SEC B SO POT 30.10 AC LOT 24 SEC 2 ASHTO .25 AC 5.01 AC TR 1 WILLIAMS HARDY COUNTY HOLDINGS HARDY COUNTY HOLDINGS HARDY COUNTY HOLDINGS HARDY COUNTY HOLDINGS HARDY COUNTY HOLDINGS NATHAN WALTERS HARDY COUNTY HOLDINGS HARDY COUNTY HOLDINGS 633.76 225.64 335.59 470.57 132.96 3,516.61 164.54 2,041.84 US RT 220 1.11 AC HARDY COUNTY HOLDINGS 6,381.66 42.5 AC 10.73 AC LOT 82 PHASE 8 NEAR DURGON 3 AC 32 AC 6 AC 11.79 AC LOT 39 PHASE III .9491 AC TR A1 MARTIN W. NEARY HARDY COUNTY HOLDINGS HARDY COUNTY HOLDINGS HARDY COUNTY HOLDINGS HARDY COUNTY HOLDINGS HARDY COUNTY HOLDINGS ALEX HELMAN HARDY COUNTY HOLDINGS 692.04 731.13 599.23 370.50 305.07 105.46 811.45 282.67 Description Purchaser 82.90 81.02 82.90 Amount 1.75 AC .765 AC ROHRBAUGH AVE The owner of any real estate listed above, or any other person entitled to pay the taxes thereon, may, however, redeem such real estate as provided by law. Given under my hand this 2nd day of December 2014. Bryan C. Ward Sheriff & Treasurer of Hardy County I, Bryan C. Ward, Sheriff & Treasurer of the County of Hardy, do swear that the foregoing list is, to the best of my knowledge and belief, complete and accurate, and that I have received none of the taxes listed therein. At a County Commission meeting, held for the County of Hardy at the court house thereof on Tuesday the 2nd day of December 2014. This day, Bryan C. Ward, Sheriff and Treasurer of this County, presented to the Commission a list of real estate in this County delinquent for the non-payment of taxes thereon for the year 2013, verified by this affidavit thereto appended, which said list being examined by the Commission, and found to be correct, is therefore allowed. Gregg Ely Clerk of the Hardy County Commission 12/10 1c ESTATE NAME: ADMINISTRATOR: United States of America State of West Virginia County of Hardy, ss: Notice of Administration / to Creditors Notice is hereby given that the following estate(s) have been opened for probate in the Hardy County Clerk’s Office at 204 Washington Street, Moorefield, WV 26836-0200. Any person seeking to impeach or establish a will must make a complaint in accordance with the provisions of West Virginia Code 41-5-11 through 13. Any interested person objecting to the qualifications of the personal representative or the venue or jurisdiction of the court, shall file notice of an objection with the County Commission within 90 days after the date of the first publication or within 30 days of the service of the notice, whichever is later. If an objection is not filed timely, the objection is forever barred. Any person interested in filing claims against an estate must file them in accordance with West Virginia Code 44-2 and 44-3. Settlement of the estate(s) of the following named decedent(s) will proceed without reference to a fiduciary commissioner unless within 90 days from the first publication of this notice a reference is requested by a party of interest or an unpaid creditor files a claim and good cause is shown to support reference to a fiduciary commissioner. Publication Date: 2014/12/10 Claim Deadline Date: 2015/03/10 ESTATE NUMBER: 1229 ESTATE NAME: ALLEN JACKSON BARB EXECUTRIX: BRENDA K HULVER PO BOX 12 BAKER, WV 26801ATTORNEY: CLYDE M SEE PO BOX 700 MOOREFIELD, WV 26836ESTATE NUMBER: 1227 ESTATE NAME: IDELLA MARY BARR EXECUTOR: DAVID G BARR 3318 HERMITAGE ROAD WAYNESBORO, VA 22980ATTORNEY: JOYCE E STEWART 113 WINCHESTER AVE MOOREFIELD, WV 26836ESTATE NUMBER: 1215 ESTATE NAME: ANNA LEE DEL GALLO EXECUTRIX: KATHLEEN G SHOLL 28 HIDDEN VALLEY CIRCLE SHEPHERDSTOWN, WV 25443ESTATE NUMBER: 1211 ESTATE NAME: ODESSA LOU SEE ADMINISTRATRIX CTA: CONNIE RIDDLE PO BOX 87 13180 RT 259 MATHIAS, WV 26812-0087 ATTORNEY: JACK H WALTERS PO BOX 119 MATHIAS, WV 26836ESTATE NUMBER: 1203 ESTATE NAME: VIOLET LEE (WILT) STEWART ADMINISTRATOR CTA: CARL OSCAR STEWART 175 FARREN LANE BROADWAY, VA 22815ESTATE NUMBER: 1216 ESTATE NAME: SHARON CATHERINE THOMPSON EXECUTOR: WESLEY A THOMPSON 1582 POWDER SPRING ROAD MOOREFIELD, WV 26836ATTORNEY: WILLIAM JUDY III PO BOX 636 MOOREFIELD, WV 26836ESTATE NUMBER: 1257 JOHN TOM VETTER WILLIAM H. JUDY III PO BOX 636 MOOREFIELD, WV 26836- ESTATE NUMBER: ESTATE NAME: CO-EXECUTOR: 1230 STANLEY D SEE SHEILA V PRATT PO BOX 2 MOOREFIELD, WV 26836- CO-EXECUTOR: SHIRLEY M PRATT PO BOX 273 MOOREFIELD, WV 26836- CO-EXECUTOR: SHARON E CHAMP 133 CHURCH ROAD OLD FIELDS, WV 26845- CO-EXECUTOR: SANDRA K STUMP 45 STUMP LANE MOOREFIELD, WV 26836- Subscribed and sworn to before me on 12/02/2014 GREGORY L ELY Clerk of the Hardy County Commission 12/10, 12/17 2c FIDUCIARY NOTICE The account of Ronald W. Eye of the Estate of Anna C. Eye is before the undersigned for a final settlement. Dated this the 5th day of December, 2014. William H. Judy, III Fiduciary Commissioner 12/10, 12/17 2c NOTICE OF REDEMPTION (2013-S-00000002 - Hardy County Gerard M. Folio) To: WARREN ROBERT MILLER, WARREN R. MILLER, WARREN ROBERT MILLER, or heirs at law, devisees, creditors, representatives, successors, assigns, all unknown heirs, guardians conservators, fiduciaries, administrators, or lienholders. You will take notice that GERARD M. FOLIO, the purchaser of the tax lien(s) on the following real estate, Certificate of Sale: 2013-S-00000002, P/O LOT 6 18.432 AC SEC 2 LR RIDGE MILLER, located in CAPON which was returned delinquent in the name of MILLER WARREN ROBERT, and for which the tax lien(s) thereon was sold by the sheriff of Hardy County at the sale for the delinquent taxes made on the 14th day of November, 2013, has requested that you be notified that a deed for such real estate will be made to him or her on or after April 1, 2015, as provided by law, unless before that day you redeem such real estate. The amount you will have to pay on the last day, March 31, 2015 will be as follows: Amount equal to the taxes and charges due on the date of the sale, with interest, to March 31, 2015. $735.25 Amount of subsequent years taxes paid on the property, since the sale, with interest to March 31, 2015. $1,020.69 Amount paid for Title Examination and preparation of the list to be served and for preparation and service of notice with interest from January 1, 2014 following the sheriff’s sale to March 31, 2015. $552.96 Amount paid for other statutory costs with interest from following the sheriff’s sale to March 31, 2015. $0.00 Total Amount Payable to Sheriff - cashier check, money order or certified check must be made payable to the Honorable Bryan Clark Ward, Sheriff and Treasurer of Hardy County. $2,308.90 Continued on page 6 lEgal advErtiSEmEntS 6B - MOOREFIELD (WV) EXAMINER, Wednesday, December 10, 2014 Continued from page 5 Cost of Certification of Redemption cashier check, money order or certified check must be made payable to the The Honorable Glen B. Gainer, III, State Auditor. $35.00 You may redeem at an: time before March 31, 2015, by paying the above total less any unearned interest. Return to WV State Auditor’s Office County Collections Office, Building 1, Room W-118, Charleston, West Virginia, 25305. Questions please call 1-888-509-6568. NOTICE OF REDEMPTION (2013-S-00000050 - Hardy County Nathan Walters) To: BARRY WISEMILLER, NIKI WISEMILLER, BARRY WISEMILLER, NIKI WISEMILLER, MS. CATHY WALLACE, ALLEGHENY POWER, or heirs at law, devisees, creditors, representatives, successors, assigns, all unknown heirs, guardians conservators, fiduciaries, administrators, or lienholders. You will take notice that NATHAN WALTERS, the purchaser of the tax lien(s) on the following real estate, Certificate of Sale: 2013-S-00000050, 21.24 AC LOT 89 SEC 4 ASHTO W V HUNTER LLC, located in MOOREFIELD which was returned delinquent in the name of WISEMILLER BARRY & NIKI, and for which the tax lien(s) thereon was sold by the sheriff of Hardy County at the sale for the delinquent taxes made on the 14th day of November, 2013, has requested that you be notified that a deed for such real estate will be made to him or her on or after April 1, 2015, as provided by law, unless before that day you redeem such real estate. The amount you will have to pay on the last day, March 31, 2015 will be as follows: Amount equal o the taxes and charges due on the date of the sale, with interest, to March 31, 2015. $685.29 Amount of subsequent years taxes paid on the property, since the sale, with interest to March 31, 2015. $973.83 Amount paid for Title Examination and preparation of the list to be served and for preparation and service of notice with interest from January 1, 2014 following the sheriff’s sale to March 31, 2015. $595.42 Amount paid for other statutory costs with interest from following the sheriff’s sale to March 31, 2015. $0.00 Total Amount Payable to Sheriff - cashier check, money order or certified check must be made payable to the Honorable Bryan Clark Ward, Sheriff and Treasurer of Hardy County. $2,254.54 Cost of Certification of Redemption cashier check, money order or certified check must be made payable to the The Honorable Glen B. Gainer, III, State Auditor. $35.00 You may redeem at an: time before March 31, 2015, by paying the above total less any unearned interest. Return to WV State Auditor’s Office County Collections Office, Building 1, Room W-118, Charleston, West Virginia, 25305. Questions please call 1-888-509-6568. NOTICE OF REDEMPTION (2013-S-00000006 - Hardy County TROIKA GROUP INC) To: DANIEL E. LILLY, DANIEL E. LILLY, or heirs at law, devisees, creditors, representatives, successors, assigns, all unknown heirs, guardians conservators, fiduciaries, administrators, or lienholders. You will take notice that TROIKA GROUP INC, the purchaser of the tax lien(s) on the following real estate, Certificate of Sale: 2013-S-00000060, 5.01 AC LOT 19 VALLEY VIEW LR VALLEY TUSCARORA, located in LOST RIVER, which was returned delinquent in the name of LILLY DANIEL E, and for which the tax lien(s) thereon was sold by the sheriff of Hardy County at the sale for the delinquent taxes made on the 14th day of November, 2013, has requested that you be notified that a deed for such real estate will be made to him or her on or after April 1, 2015, as provided by law, unless before that day you redeem such real estate. The amount you will have to pay on the last day, March 31, 2015 will be as follows: Amount equal o the taxes and charges due on the date of the sale, with interest, to March 31, 2015. $812.08 Amount of subsequent years taxes paid on the property, since the sale, with interest to March 31, 2015. $1,148.06 Amount paid for Title Examination and preparation of the list to be served and for preparation and service of notice with interest from January 1, 2014 following the sheriff’s sale to March 31, 2015. $538.00 Amount paid for other statutory costs with interest from following the sheriff’s sale to March 31, 2015. $0.00 Total Amount Payable to Sheriff - cashier check, money order or certified check must be made payable to the Honorable Bryan Clark Ward, Sheriff and Treasurer of Hardy County. $2,498.94 Cost of Certification of Redemption cashier check, money order or certified check must be made payable to the The Honorable Glen B. Gainer, III, State Auditor. $35.00 You may redeem at an: time before March 31, 2015, by paying the above total less any unearned interest. Return to WV State Auditor’s Office County Collections Office, Building 1, Room W-118, Charleston, West Virginia, 25305. Questions please call 1-888-509-6568. NOTICE OF REDEMPTION (2013-S-00000052 - Hardy County NATHAN WALTERS) To: STANLEY E ALLEN III, MELISSA A. ALLEN, TRANS-ALLEGHENY INTERSTATE LINE COMPANY, TRAIL COMPANY, UNIVERSAL FIELD SERVICES INC., or heirs at law, devisees, creditors, representatives, successors, assigns, all unknown heirs, guardians conservators, fiduciaries, administrators, or lienholders. You will take notice that NATHAN WALTERS, the purchaser of the tax lien(s) on the following real estate, Certificate of Sale: 2013-S-00000052, 20.39 AC LOT 106 ASHTON WOOD WV HUNTER LLC, located in MOOREFIELD, which was returned delinquent in the name of ALLEN STANLEY E III &, and for which the tax lien(s) thereon was sold by the sheriff of Hardy County at the sale for the delinquent taxes made on the 14th day of November, 2013, has requested that you be notified that a deed for such real estate will be made to him or her on or after April 1, 2015, as provided by law, unless before that day you redeem such real estate. The amount you will have to pay on the last day, March 31, 2015 will be as follows: Amount equal o the taxes and charges due on the date of the sale, with interest, to March 31, 2015. $668.74 Amount of subsequent years taxes paid on the property, since the sale, with interest to March 31, 2015. $946.89 Amount paid for Title Examination and preparation of the list to be served and for preparation and service of notice with interest from January 1, 2014 following the sheriff’s sale to March 31, 2015. $581.27 Amount paid for other statutory costs with interest from following the sheriff’s sale to March 31, 2015. $0.00 Total Amount Payable to Sheriff - cashier check, money order or certified check must be made payable to the Honorable Bryan Clark Ward, Sheriff and Treasurer of Hardy County. $2,196.90 Cost of Certification of Redemption cashier check, money order or certified check must be made payable to the The Honorable Glen B. Gainer, III, State Auditor. $35.00 You may redeem at an: time before March 31, 2015, by paying the above total less any unearned interest. Return to WV State Auditor’s Office County Collections Office, Building 1, Room W-118, Charleston, West Virginia, 25305. Questions please call 1-888-509-6568. 12/10, 12/17, 12/24 3c Starting Jan. 7 • Every Wednesday for 5 weeks 5:30-6:30 Beginner 4:30-5:30 Stroke Class Instructors Miriam Leatherman and Michelle Pillar Cost $45.00 Hardy County Health & Wellness Center 411 Spring Ave., Moorefield • 304-538-7380 Mon.-Fri. 6 a.m. to 8 p.m. • Sat. 8 am. to Noon DECEMBER SPECIAL Subscribe to the print edition for a year and get a subscription to the online edition for FREE! Mail with payment to: Moorefield Examiner, Circulation Dept., P.O. Box 380, Moorefield, WV 26836 Gift Name: Or call (304) 530-6397 Rate for One Year: In County - $29 , Edge - $33 , In State - $35 , Out of State - $40 Online - $35 Other Rates Available You must have an email address in order to get the Online Edition There will be a $6.00 charge to change subscription address to out of state. .00 .00 .00 Your Name: Gift Address: Your Address: Gift City, State and Zip: Your City, State and Zip: Your E-Mail Address: Gift E-Mail Address: Phone Number: .00, .00 NEW RENEWAL ONLINE Account # from subscription label MOOREFIELD (WV) EXAMINER, Wednesday, December 10, 2014 - 7B Moorefield Continued from page 1B game and will be tough to beat: Drake Baker, Nathan “Moose” Jenkins, Sloan Williams, Rion Landis, D.J. Zirk, Adam Harper, Matt Mongold, Matt Wilson, Jacob Martin, Jake Ours, Tanner Saville, Garrett Haggerty, and Matt Paugh. The Yellow Jackets have one of the most challenging schedules which will translate into a positive learning curve for the post-season. Moorefield’s season opener is at Pendleton County this Friday. The Yellow Jackets battle two Class AA opponents: Frankfort and Petersburg. Moorefield will be returning to the annual Petersburg Holiday Tournament just after Christmas against the Vikings, Pendleton County, and Bath County, Va. The Yellow Jackets will play one additional out-of-state opponent this season which is Strasburg, Va. with an away game n Devcember 20 and a home contest on January 13. Moorefield will host Notre Dame on January 22. The Yellow Jackets will travel to Beckley for the Big Atlantic Classic on January 28-29. The last regular season contest is at Tygarts Valley on February 26. Moorefield will battle intercounty rival East Hardy on January 30 in Baker and Februay 20 in the Hive. Coach McGregor took some time to answer questions. Q: What is your outlook on the season? A:“Our outlook on things is pretty good. We just have to get healthy, we have a lot of banged up guys from football.The outlook on the season is pretty positive. I’m not too sure what the beginning of the season is going to bring, but we are very deep even with Dakota and some of these other guys banged up. We are returning a lot of guys and I have high expectations for these guys. Hopefully they respond and play well.” Q: How do you get back to the point in the playoffs last year and improve on that? “You know, we’re making some adjustments this year. We’ve evaluated things, Coach [Scott] Stutler, Coach [Jared] Wratchford and myself got together and made evaluations. “We had a pretty good summer and we evaluated a lot of things and we will take a different approach to our offense this year. We’ve really tweaked our offense and done a lot with it. We’ll be a little different to watch as far as the offense goes this year. Teams might have to come out and scout us a little bit. We’re going to be different. Defensively, we’re not going to change. Defensively, we’ve been pretty steady with that. We’re going to still be manto-man, we’re going to be up on you. We’re going to play, until the whistle blows. Unfortunately, as the new rules are written the whistle is supposed to blow a lot this year. We’re going to wait and see how that goes, we’ll see how it is played. We’re going to be probably a little more pressure oriented depending on who we are playing, because we are very deep and I can rotate a lot of guys so I’m not so worried about kids getting tired. We can rotate a lot of guys in and out, man-to-man pressure defense is going to be where it’s at for us.” Q: Does dribble-penetration help open up schemes for you on offense? A: “Absolutely, we work on that everyday. That’s always been a weak point of ours is beating guys off the dribble and that’s been a focus for us this year in practice. One of the aspects of our offense demands the dribble drive. If we can draw two, then that’s huge for us on offense. That opens our one player to kick out for the three or if they don’t help, we’ve got to be skilled enough to play one-on-one and score the points.” Q: How athletic do you feel your team is this year? A: “Actually, this is probably one of the more athletic teams we’ve had in a while. Lately we’ve had three or four athletes, but this year I’ve got one to ten, we’re pretty athletic. I’ve got a lot of athletic kids we’ll rely on and a lot of interchangeable parts. If we can keep developing some ball handling, [Tyler Smith] Smitty is my primary ball handler. If we can get somebody to relieve him, get pressure off him out front, then I think we’ll be good to go. Dylan [George] does it sporadically at times and Shane Myers is coming along. We lost him last year for about ten games when he went down with a bad ankle and never got back. He can handle a little bit, but we will wait and see. Smitty is the main ball handler, but if we can relieve the stress of him it will be big for us. Austin [Williams] is back. Austin is Austin. He is not, I mean he can handle the ball at times, but he is my shooter. He is going to spot up and shoot and give me some good solid defense on the other end. He’s just a steady, smart player.” Q: If you had a close game in the fourth quarter, would you rather have a team in foul trouble that can score or a team that can play really good defense? A: “Well, it depends if I have the ball or not. It’s always nice to have a strong defensive team. If your coming down the stretch in a very close ball game, it’s very nice to be able to make defensive stops. That’s what wins games. We do rely heavily on our defense, so if we’re coming down to the last minute or two of a ball game and it is close, we’re going to be wanting to make defensive stops. If we can make a defensive stop, that stops them from scoring gives us the opportunity to take the lead or keep the lead. So we’ll rely heavily on our defense.” Q: How important is youth baskeball for develeopment and experience? A: “You can’t beat that. We want to get more involved with the youth program. We try to get the guys who coach the little league programs to do what we’re doing. What I do here, we do at the little league level. To think it’s too complicated to play at the little league what we do here, it’s not. It’s simple, my little league team will run the same offense as my varsity team runs. It will be scaled down, but it is the same concept.” Q: How confident are you of the quality of teams in the Potomac Valley Conference? A: “The PVC is going to be good this year. Pendleton is returning a lot of kids and they’re expecting to have a nice year up at Pendleton County. Tucker County is going to be strong. Everybody says that they’ve lost a few, but they’ve got a few back and a transfer back. They have their point guard back. They are going to be the biggest team we see this year other than Frankfort. They are going to bang the boards. Pocahontas is going to be strong, the point guard is back. He is fast and quick, so we’re going to have to handle him. Tygarts Valley has a couple kids returning. The PVC is going to be pretty strong. Q: How do you feel about participating in the Big Atlantic Classic again? A: “We’re excited about that. We got the invitation to come back this year and I was glad they extended that invitation to us. We really enjoyed it two years ago when we went. It’s real nice and they’ll give out a scholarship to one of our players. It is good, it gives us an opportunity to travel. It’s a four-hour trip, an overnight trip. If you do make it to Charleston, it does give you a little bit of an advantage there. You get used to traveling and you get to play in the arena-type atmosphere with a big court. It’s an exciting experience for us. We won’t know who we are playing until about a week before we go. Most likely it will be teams we don’t play on a regular basis and won’t be on our schedule. Q: Notre Dame is back on the schedule, how tough will that game be? “We played Notre Dame last year in the regular season over there and it is a return trip for them this year. They’ll be coming in and the West kid will be a sophomore this year and he was a phenomenal player as a freshman. I’m sure they’ve added a few additions as they always do every year. They’ll be tough, they’ll be quick. It will be a good, tough home game for us this year. I’m glad it’s here and not there.” Q: How special is it to return to the Petersburg Holiday Tournament? A: “It’s nice, it’s always nice to be there. I know a lot of people in the community. My roots are from there. I had my first job ever over there. I know a lot of guys from up there and I always get a nice welcome. It’s nice to see the guys. A lot of guys there gave me advice over the years to make me the coach I am today and they’re from Petersburg. It’s nice to go back and see those guys and play in the holiday tournament. It’s a good atmosphere. I expect Petersburg to be very strong this year.” Q: What are some of the changes to the schedule? A: “We’re not going to play Allegany (Md.) this year and one of the reasons was so we could get down to Beckley to play in that tournament. “We added our close single A team with Union. We haven’t played Union in a long time and we’re trying to get back to playing them. It’s an easier commute with the Corridor H opening up, a much easier trip.” Q: How is your team chemistry? A: “Team chemistry is good. Entire team returning from last year.” Q: What specific challenges do you face this year? A: “Getting team healthy and ready to play our best basketball in late Feb. and early March.” DEBTS PILING UP? BANKRUPTCY SHERMAN LAW FIRM CALL TODAY 304-822-4740 Call toll free 800-619-4740 We are a debt relief agency. We help people file for bankruptcy relief under the bankruptcy code. Q: What impresses you the most about your team? A: “Our depth” Q: How do you motivate the players in practice? A: “Practice hard or don’t play.” Q: How often do you need to work on fundamentals? A: “Everyday.” Q: What is the best shooting drill during practice? A: “Full speed/ Game like.” Q: What are your primary offensive and defensive styles? A: “Offensive Style depends on the team we are playing. Share the ball and make open shots. Defensive Style - man-to-man. Q: How important is passing? A: “Very important. Turnovers are one of the main things that lead to failure.” Q: What type of shot is the best? A: “Lay-up” Q: How important is it to drive to the basket? A: “Dribble penetration is very important. We must make the opposing team play help defense to open up shooters.” Q: Is perimeter shooting a better option? A: “Not always. Depends if we are having a good shooting night or not. The dribble drive will make perimeter shooting more available.” Q: What is the best type of defense? A: “Man-to-man, we must have excellent man to man fundamentals before you can play any other type of defense.” Q: How often do you need to send two players to the ball on defense? A: “Only when we get beat on defense or we are trapping.” Q: How crucial is rebounding? A: “The most crucial part of the game. Team that wins the rebounding category wins just about every game. If we rebound, we can win lots of games.” Q: Looking at your schedule overall, how competitive will you be? A: “Very competitive. Looking forward to a positive year.” Q: How intense are rivalry games and is it harder to focus in those games? A: “Rivalry games are extremely intense. Especially East Hardy, Tucker, Pendleton and Notre Dame. Rivalry games are easier to focus. The kids’ focus in some of the other games is what you worry about. It’s off-schedule, not PVC games. Other than your record, they don’t mean a whole lot other than your pride. The rivalry itself brings intensity, it gets them focused, it gets them pumped up. You don’t need to worry whether or not we are going to show up that night. When we play East Hardy, it’s going to be game time all day. When Tucker County and Notre Dame come in, it’s going to be intense all day. They are going to be focused thinking about the game. Some of the other games are trap games you have to look out for. Q: How important is it to get bragging rights for Hardy County? A: “It is, it’s nice to beat your inter-county team. Social media puts it out there for the kids. For myself, it’s a game. It’s a game you want to win, because it is a PVC game and it’s a seed win. When it comes down to seeding at the end of the season the coaches get together and see who the best teams are and who will be number one, two, three, four, five, and six and all the way through. Obviously, you want to be a top-seed, so every game is important. We’ve got to stay focused with that. The guys themselves like to have the social media for who beat who, so it’s out there. They take pride in that, so I think it’s always in the back of their minds.” Q: What is your team motto? A: “Defense wins!” Q: What are some of the attributes or skills each player brings to the team? A: “Chris Paugh: Strong and physical. Rebounds well and plays good around the basket. “Ben Vance: Three point shooter “Tyler Smith: Point Guard. Sees the floor very well. Handles pressure and leads our offense. Good perimeter shooter “Dylan George: Defensive leader. Draws opposing teams best guard/forward. He’s our shut down defender. Need him to rebound this year. “Austin Williams: Shooting guard. Excellent perimeter shooter, looking for him to have a good year shooting the 3 pt. shot. “Aaron Cole: Excellent inside offensive player. Plays hard and aggressive. Good moves to the basket. Needs to rebound better this year. “Dakota Vetter: plays well 15’ and in. Good rebounder. Looking for him to lead team in this category and be more physical. “Tanner Carr: Very heady player (smart), can play all positions on the floor. “Shane Myers: Hustles and brings instant energy. Anticipates very well, excellent on ball defender “Caleb Kite: Very good athlete. Jumps well and finishes around the basket well. Looking for him to be more aggressive this year. “Greg Franklin: Can play inside or outside. He’s a tough match up. Needs to play more intense and physical. Excellent defender at times. “Mitchell Martin: Plays strong and aggressive, okay mid range jump shot.” Moorefield is ready to beat the clock to victories this season. Email us at [email protected] Regarding: • s ubscription requests and questions • o nline subscriptions • p rint requests • o rders for stamps • o rders for topographic maps ESTABLISHED 1845 MOOREFIELD EXAMINER and Hardy County News 8B - MOOREFIELD (WV) EXAMINER, Wednesday, December 10, 2014 Vikings Claim Back-to-Back Titles Story & Photo By Carl Holcomb Moorefield Examiner Petersburg Middle won the 3rd Annual Moorefield Middle Invitational Championship for the second straight season with a 51-22 victory over the Cougars last Saturday afternoon. “It’s great for the kids, but we know what our goal is and that is for us to win a PVL Championship. We just have to get to that point, it’s just a nice award along the way and hopefully we get to the ultimate prize,” Petersburg Middle Coach Dave Rogers noted. The first round of the invitational on Friday night featured Petersburg vs Pendleton County and Moorefield vs EHEMS. The Vikings defeated Pendleton County 43-17. Petersburg was led in scoring by Jacob Hartman with 13 points, followed by Zack Rohrbaugh with 10 points. The Wildcats leading scorer was Dallas Sly with five points. EHEMS defeated the Yellow Jackets 31-22 to setup a championship match with the Vikings. Aden Funkhouser led the Cougars with 10 points, followed by Cole Swanson with seven markers. Blake Watts paced MMS with seven points. The Wildcats defeated MMS in the consolation game 39-28. After a couple turnovers both ways, MMS scored first on a free throw by Ben O’Neill at 5:08. The Wildcats responded with a jumper by Marcus Sites. The lead changed again over two minutes later on a field goal by Kolby Hunt. Tristan Wagoner hit two free throws to regain the lead at 1:56. Hunt scored on the ensuing possession for the Yellow Jackets as the lead swapped again. Draven Roberts notched a basket with 18 seconds left in the frame to go up 6-5. The Wildcats really got separation as Sites drilled a pair of 3-pointers in a minute during the second period for a 16-9 edge. Roberts stole the ball and scored to extend it to 18-9, then MMS’s Grant Keller answered with a trifecta. Josh Wagoner netted a basket to give Pendleton County a 20-12 advantage at halftime. Hunt scored off a steal early in the third period, then Wagoner scored. Keller hit a hook shot for the Yellow Jackets to cut it to 22-16. Blake Watts added a free throw after a bucket by Wagoner. Watts made a jumper later in the third period, but Pendleton County held on to a 29-19 score after three periods. Hunt and Keller made some baskets in the fourth period and Jackson Weese hit a bank shot to slice it down to six, 33-27 with 1:40 left. The Wildcats managed to hit some free throws down the stretch and Colt Smith added a field goal at the buzzer, 39-28. Pendleton County was led by Marcus Sites with 14 points including two 3-pointers, followed by Draven Roberts with 10 points. The leading scorer for the Yellow Jackets was Grant Keller with nine points, followed by Kolby Hunt with eight points. In the championship game, the Vikings cruised to a 12-0 advantage as Hunter Pool scored eight points during the stretch to go along with three steals. Zack Rohrbaugh notched two steals and two points during the opening run. Aden Funkhouser garnered the only points of the first quarter for the Cougars at the 3:15 mark. Petersburg got points from Jacob Hartman and Carter Phares to extend the lead 19-2 through one period. Funkhouser (4) and Adam Larson (2) added the only additional points in the second period for EHEMS. Tyce Wisnewski hit a 3-pointer for a 26-2 lead at 3:27. Petersburg kept the pressure going with steals to build a 35-8 score at halftime with Hartman leading the charge with eight points, followed by Pool with seven. The Vikings made it 44-12 after three periods of play. Logan Whetzel scored on a jumper for the Cougars in the third period and there were a couple prove on,” EHEMS Coach Travis free throws by Funkhouser and Weatherholtz stated. Chance Dove. “Petersburg’s got a great team. EHEMS started the scoring in They basically out-manned us and the fourth period on a jumper by Funkhouser. had more speed and more experiPetersburg’s Nick Fleming ence than us.” nailed a 3-pointer at 4:25, then Pool stole the ball and Funkhouser blocked a shot. Dove netted two baskets in a stretch of 52 seconds to cut the deficit to 47-19. Funkhouser completed an oldfashioned three point play with 1:16 remaining. Kahner Turner added a jumper with 37 seconds left for the final score of 51-22. Hartman scored a game-high 14 points for the Vikings, followed by Pool with seven. Funkhouser paced EHEMS with a dozen points. “It was nice to start the season on a positive note. We can take a lot of positive things from this weekend EHEMS’s Chance Dove shot a and a lot of negative things out of fadeaway jumper over Vikings the weekend. We have a lot to im- defender Carter Phares. The Old MasTer By Jay Fisher It is the Liberty Bowl for WVU! West Virginia returns to the Liberty Bowl (it played in it 50 years ago) to face Texas A&M. It should be an interesting match-up for a few reasons. First, WVU is one of the teams that the Big 12 brought in after Texas A&M left the conference for the SEC. Second, Dana Holgorsen has history with Kevin Sumlin (Holgorsen was Sumlin’s Offensive Coordinator at Houston) and Jake Spavital (he was QB coach under Holgorsen at WVU). Finally, it should be an entertaining game on the field. The Aggies are capable of scoring lots of points, but their defense was suspect all season, and the Aggies also are capable of giving up plenty of points, too. The game will be played Monday, December 29, at 2:00pm. It is in Memphis, Tennessee – home of Blues, great BBQ, and Graceland. If you want tickets, WVU really wants you to purchase them through the WVU Ticket Office. The Big 12 has said that teams are responsible for paying for any unsold tickets, so every unsold ticket will cost the Mountaineers $85. Call 1-800-WVU-GAME or go to www.wvugame.com to order. This will also be the first ever meeting between West Virginia and Texas A&M. The basketball team suffered its first loss of the season, against LSU, 74-73. The athletic Tigers are not a bad team, but this is a game WVU could have won. They held a 14 point lead early in the second half, but couldn’t close the deal. Poor shooting, and lackluster halfcourt defense cost WVU dearly. Speaking of lackluster, the Mountaineers then traveled to Northern Kentucky on Sunday, and pretty much sleepwalked through the first half. They held just a 20-17 lead thanks to poor shooting (again) and less than solid rebounding. Bob Huggins halftime talk helped, though, and WVU pulled away for a deceptive 67-42 win. Hardy County Middle School Basketball EHEMS Boys Basketball: 8th grade: Aden Funkhouser, Logan Whetzel, Ian Tharp, Zach Franks, Adam Larson, Cole Swanson, Chance Dove, Jeffrey Mills; 7th grade: Austin Alt, Noah Miller, Adam Baker, Hinton Shifflet, Colten Spaid, Preston Dove, Seth Smith; 6th grade: Alex Miller, Bryce Tharp, Andrew Tharp. Coach: Travis Weatherholtz. MMS Boys Basketball: 8th grade: Grant Keller, Ben O’Neill, Blake Watts, Matthew Wright, Noah Ketterman, Ean Carr, Ben Pyles; 7th grade: Kolby Hunt, Chase Vance, Thomas Williams, Lane Ours, Brent Moran, Jackson Weese, Anterion Harris, Addison Barb, Javon Fawley, Marcus Dyke, James Brokell; 6th grade: Hayden Baldwin, Kennan Mongold; Coach: Jared Wratchford. EHEMS Girls Basketball 8th grade: Jasmine Abrell, Sierra Dispanet, Hannah Fogel, Molly Yates; 7th grade: Elizabeth Dove, Chelsea Keller, Emily Moyers, Madison Strawderman, Rebecca Whetzel; 6th grade: Kassidy Arnold, Tera Jones, Lillian Shoemaker-Conover, Perry Whetzel. Coaches: Kathy Strawderman and Jodie Witmer. MMS Girls Basketball 8th grade: Rebekah Cook, Emma Baker (not pictured), Ciara Smith, Alyssa Vetter, Macie Zirk; 7th grade: Sydney Hardy, Lindsey Rinker, Anna Riggleman, Gianna Fair, Madison McGregor, Kennedie Hinger, Hanna Carlson; 6th grade: Olivia See, Regan Davy, Gracie O’Neill, Lauren Arbaugh, Remington Hinkle, Alyson Simmons; Coach: Morgan Hill-See. EHEMS Boys MMS Boys Basketball Basketball Schedule Schedule 12/08/14 6 pm .. A ..Pendleton Co. 12/15/14 .6 pm .. H ............Romney 12/18/14 .6 pm .. A .......Moorefield 12/22/14 .6 pm .. A ........Petersburg 1/05/15 ...6 pm .. A ........... Paw Paw 1/07/15 ...6 pm .. H ..Pendleton Co. 1/08/15 ...6 pm .. H .......Moorefield 1/12/15 ...6 pm .. A .. Warm Springs 1/14/15 ...6 pm .. H ........Petersburg 1/15/15 ...6 pm .. H .. Warm Springs 1/21/15 ...6 pm .. H .. Capon Bridge 1/27/15 ...6 pm .. H ........... Paw Paw 1/29/15 ...6 pm .. A ............Romney 2/02/15 ...6 pm .. A .. Capon Bridge 12/16/14 .6 pm .. A .Pendleton Co. 12/18/14 .6 pm .. H ......East Hardy 1/07/15 ...6 pm .. H .......Petersburg 1/08/15 ...6 pm .. A ......East Hardy 1/12/15 ...6 pm .. A . Capon Bridge 1/14/15 ...6 pm .. H ...........Romney 1/15/15 ...6 pm .. H . Capon Bridge 1/21/15 ...6 pm .. H . Warm Springs EHEMS Girls Basketball Schedule 1/27/15 ...6 pm .. A . Warm Springs 12/02/14 ..6 pm ...... H ..Pendleton Co. 1/28/15 ...6 pm .. A .......Petersburg 12/15/14 ..6 pm ...... A ............Romney 12/22/14 ..6 pm ...... H ........Petersburg 2/02/15 ...6 pm .. A ...........Romney 1/05/15 ....6pm ....... A .......Moorefield 2/04/15 ...6 pm .. H .Pendleton Co. 1/08/15 ....6pm ....... A ........Petersburg 2/16-18/15 6 pm. PVL ..East Hardy 1/12/15 ....6 pm ...... H .. Warm Springs knew not to foul in those last few seconds, we were either going to tie it or go to overtime.” The first half was very sloppy with a combined 28 turnovers. The Lady Indians edged Moorefield 7-2 after the first period. Tara George scored the lone points for Moorefield at the 3:30 mark off a steal. The Yellow Jackettes rallied in the second period on an outside jumper by Bethany Smith and a shot in the paint by Natasha Saville early in the frame to make it 10-7. Baskets over a minute stretch by Kite and Alisha Redmon cut the deficit to 12-11 at 4:05. Morgan Smailes and Mckennah Mullen scored off a turnover to boost the lead back up for the Lady Indians. There were a number of missed shots down the stretch of the first half with scattered free throws by Moorefield’s Katlyn Tompkins and a shot by Kite to make it 1615 with 1:09 left. Smith stole the ball and dished to George who scored with 11 seconds remaining, then moments later Tompkins swiped the ball and passed to George for another lay-up to create a 19-16 advantage entering halftime. One controversial mistake during the game came as the referees awarded the ball to the Lady Indians after confusion with the possession arrow which pointed to Moorefield and the Yellow Jackettes weren’t ready on defense as Berkeley Springs scored. Moorefield didn’t get the call reversed and play resumed as 1/14/15 1/15/15 1/21/15 1/27/15 1/29/15 2/02/15 2/15/15 ....6:30 pm .. A ....6 pm ...... A ....6 pm ...... A ....6 pm ...... A ....6 pm ...... H ....6 pm ...... H ....6 pm ...... H ..Pendleton Co. .. Warm Springs ........... Paw Paw .. Capon Bridge ............Romney .. Capon Bridge .......Moorefield Jackettes Slip Continued from page 1B then the next foul shot went awry. There wasn’t enough time to take a shot once the ball crossed mid-court and the game was over. “I’m just so proud of this group. Coach Paul [Keplinger] does a great job there, those kids played hard through some adversity,” Berkeley Springs Coach Dale McCumbee commented. “We’ve got a really young group, we start two freshmen, a sophomore, and two juniors. For us, it’s kind of what we expected. We know we will have some mistakes, some turnovers, and some growing pains. They showed a lot, because they didn’t give up and didn’t quit and that easily could have been the case. It shows a lot about the character of our ladies. I made sure our players normal, despite objections. “Those two points were the difference in the ball game. We were waiting to take the ball out and we had no defense. There were three officials on the floor and they didn’t catch it. The coaches saw it, but the three people that matter the most didn’t catch it. There’s no excuse for that, no excuse,” Coach Keplinger remarked. The Yellow Jackettes played hard, but came up short in the season opener with all the blunders. McLaughlin and Young scored a team-best 12 points apiece for the Lady Indians. George netted a game-high 13 points for Moorefield, followed by Redmon with 10, and Smith with nine. SEE OUR LISTINGS! Visit our website: www.LostRiverRealEstate.com Or call 304-897-6971 David A. Rudich, Broker, Tim Ramsey, Realtor®, Ann Morgan, Realtor®, Paul Yandura, Realtor®, Al Gramprie, Realtor®, Donald Hitchcock, Realtor® 8079 SR 259, Suite B, Lost River, WV 26810 Adjacent to Lost River Grill MMS Girls Basketball Schedule 12/17/14 6 pm .... A ...........Petersburg 1/05/15 .. 6 pm .... H ..........East Hardy 1/12/15 .. 6 pm .... H ..... Capon Bridge 1/14/15 .. 6 pm .... A ...............Romney 1/15/15 .. 6 pm .... A ..... Capon Bridge 1/20/15 .. 6 pm .... H ...........Petersburg 1/21/15 .. 6 pm .... A ..... Warm Springs 1/27/15 .. 6 pm .... H ..... Warm Springs 1/28/15 .. 6 pm .... A .....Pendleton Co. 2/02/15 .. 6 pm .... H ...............Romney 2/05/15 .. 6 pm .... A ..........East Hardy 2/09-11/15 ........... 6 pm ................ PVL ........................................... Tournament WALK AWAY WITH CA$H B UYING G OLD & S ILVER A NTIQUES / C OLLECTIBLES B UYING E NTIRE E STATES Toll Gate Pawn 304-530-2222 220 SOUTH, MOOREFIELD, WV 26836